Readings of the day: Ecclesiastes 1:2, 2:21-23; Psalm 90:3-4, 5-6, 12-13, 14, 17; Colossians 3:1-5, 9-11; Luke 12:13-21
18th Sunday in Ordinary Time
This homily was given at St. Joseph's College, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Who went to Mass today to hear
a discouraging message? I will venture to say that few if anybody here today is
here to hear a discouraging message.
Yet do we not hear just this,
a real “downer,” from the Book of Ecclesiastes today: “Vanity of vanities, says
the Teacher… All is vanity.” All your toil “with wisdom and knowledge and
skill”; your work, even if you work extended or irregular hours for some perceived
good to yourself or to other people, our society, our country, or our world:
All this means nothing. All the benefits of our hard work will be left behind
“to be enjoyed by another.”
“All is vanity,” sorry. The
Jesuit priest and columnist for the newspaper The Catholic Register out of Toronto, Fr. Scott Lewis, who taught
me in a course at Toronto’s Regis College, says (I think rightly) in his Register column, “God’s Word on Sunday,”
for this week that “the author of Ecclesiastes will never win a prize for being
the most joyful or hopeful individual in the Bible.” In fact, Fr. Lewis says,
the Jewish Rabbis a few centuries after the writing of Ecclesiastes who decided
on which books to include in the Bible were leery of including Ecclesiastes in
the Bible as we know it today for a number of reasons: Ecclesiastes is too
discouraging. Its message could have been written for anybody already cynically
dissatisfied with life enough to have been waiting for an authoritative message
to support their cynicism. Ecclesiastes’ message is not particularly religious.
The Book of Ecclesiastes barely mentions God.
For good or for ill, though, the
Book of Ecclesiastes and its “vanity of vanities” message are in our Bible. But
if we fast-forward to the chaotic 1960s, thanks to The Byrds’ 1965 single,
“Turn, Turn, Turn,” it would seem that the message of the cynical teacher of
Ecclesiastes has gained new receptivity. “To everything… there is a season… and
a time to every purpose under heaven”: Today, over fifty years since “Turn,
Turn, Turn” was released, its lyrics are engrained in the memory of many people.
Is this maybe because, in the 1960s (I think this is true of any time period),
people were reflecting on both the joys and the chaos of the time, individual
and social successes and problems, by asking the foremost question, “What does
it all mean”?
If we fast-forward again to
our own just-as-chaotic time, are we not still asking similar questions? What
does our life on earth mean? Of what benefit is wealth, or work, or anything?
After all, the people who die with the most wealth, or having worked the
hardest or the longest, still die. “Vanity of vanities,” it would seem still
today, “All things are vanity.” Yet, at least by my observation,
Ecclesiastes—not usually the reading we hear today, but the “to everything
there is a season” reading, from Ecclesiastes 3—is a staple at Catholic
funerals, when people are, I would think, searching for some message of hope or
meaning in our own lives and in the life of our deceased loved ones.
These questions are age-old:
What is the meaning of our life on Earth? Of what benefit is wealth, or work,
or our acts of justice and kindness toward others? Why bother, anyway, if “all
is vanity”? Our Psalm today, the letter to the Colossians, and the Gospel of
Luke all speak to these enduring questions we have about the meaning of our
earthly life and of our activity during it, although maybe not with the same
cynical edge as the Teacher in Ecclesiastes.
Our Psalm speaks to the
finiteness of our life on earth; our life that is “like grass that… in the
morning… flourishes and is renewed [and] in the evening… fades and withers.”
Still, for the Psalmist, our earthly life and work within it have great meaning
and dignity. We ask God, through our Psalm, to bless our lives, however short,
and our work: “Prosper for us the work of our hands.”
The letter to the Colossians
invites us to prioritize “the things that are above… not… things that are on
earth.” The context of Colossians is both a form of laxity in the practice of
Christian faith that had developed within a few decades of the earthly life of
Jesus, and a response to that laxity. The more time passed after Jesus’
ascension into heaven, we might understand, Jesus’ disciples got increasingly
impatient for Jesus’ promised return to Earth at the end of time. The longer Christian
disciples waited for Jesus’ return, the more they became lax or ignorant about
accumulating material goods that, while not bad in themselves, risked
distracting them from placing their foremost hope in God and in eternal life.
The letter to the Colossians’ response to this laxity is radical, even for its
time. Colossians asks its hearers to think of themselves as already dead: “For
you have died, and your life is hidden in Christ with God.”
In case we think that this
call in Colossians to think of ourselves as already dead is morbid or simply
bizarre, I invite us to think of our own baptism. Our Church’s Rite of Baptism
is full of references to death: Death to our finite earthly life so that we may
rise to eternal life with Christ.
But do we not experience in
our world today the same tension that would have inspired the letter writer to
the Colossians to invite us to think of ourselves as dead to this finite world
in order to place our priority and our hope on God and eternal life? On the one
hand, do we not hear from some people even today an Ecclesiastes-like despair,
without the context of the world and spirituality of the author of
Ecclesiastes, who lament the “vanity”; the lack of any meaning in this earthly
life? On the other hand, maybe more often today, we hear the “evil twin” of
this despair of any meaning in our earthly life; we hear a “prosperity gospel”
mentality that encourages greed and material accumulation, even under sometimes
Christian pretexts. This “prosperity gospel” holds that either the material
poverty of the poor is a curse from God and wealth a blessing, or social
justice and an equitable distribution of earthly goods do not matter anyway,
because God will make all our inequity and injustice right at the end of time,
no matter how justly or unjustly we act now.
In Luke’s Gospel, Jesus offers
us, I think, a counterweight either to a mentality that despairs of any meaning
to our life on earth or to the “prosperity gospel” view, which, similarly to
its evil twin, holds this earthly life to be of no meaning but, in doing so,
encourages greed and social injustice, all too frequently under a religious
mask. In our Gospel reading today, Jesus encounters a man who asks him to order
his brother to divide his inheritance with him. In refusing to do as the man
requests, Jesus turns to “the crowd” and warns them, “Take care! Be on your
guard against all kinds of greed; for one’s life does not consist in the
abundance of possessions.”
Jesus does not say that the
possessions themselves are bad, or even that the man he encounters at the
beginning of today’s Gospel reading is unjust in demanding his share of his
inheritance. For us to understand Jesus as teaching that material possessions
are in themselves bad, or that this man’s demand for his inheritance is in
itself unjust, would miss the point of Jesus’ teaching. Such an understanding
would be inconsistent both with the balance of Biblical teaching and with our
Church’s historical teaching on the meaning of our earthly life and on justice concerning
earthly possessions or wealth.
Neither Jesus, in our reading
today from Luke or elsewhere in the Gospels, nor the author of Ecclesiastes—especially
if we read Ecclesiastes beyond his cynical-sounding “vanity of vanities” lament
we hear today—nor the letter to the Colossians, nor the Psalmist consider all
wealth, all human work, or earthly life to be in themselves meaningless.
Instead, Jesus and the authors of Ecclesiastes, Colossians, and our Psalm
ground all meaning of earthly, material wealth, of labour, and of life itself,
in God.
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