“Rich in What Matters to God” by Rev. Paul Berghout (@FatherPB)
Piety
Abraham did not doubt God's promise in unbelief; rather, he was
empowered by faith and gave glory to God and was fully convinced that what God
had promised he was also able to do. That is why it was credited to him as
righteousness. Romans 4:20-21
But God said to him, 'You fool, this night your life will be
demanded of you; and the things you have prepared, to whom will they belong?' Thus,
will it be for the one who stores up treasure for himself but is not rich in
what matters to God." Luke
12:20-21
Study
God is in complete control of every aspect of our lives. How could it possibly make sense to put our
faith in anything but God?
True faith means trusting in Him completely, even when things make no
sense at all. Things made no sense for the man storing up treasures on
earth. Things made no sense for the
powerless widow and the dishonest judge, either.
In considering the judge from Sunday’s Gospel, a scholar said that if
he were the judge's therapist, he would resist the temptation to be disgusted
or withdraw. Instead, the scholar would try
to become curious. He hypothesized that
the judge (“who neither feared God nor respected any human being”) once felt as
this widow does: angry, baffled, and rejected. To put it differently, the judge
may, as an adult, just be mimicking the behavior of those upon whom he once
depended. As others controlled him and then put him down for resisting that
control, he now dominates this woman and blames her for his resulting distress.
Understanding is also crucial for the Militant Church.
In Sunday’s First Reading, Amalek attacked first. Typically, this shows
us that sin takes the offensive in the life of a Christian to cause us to
regress. Amalek has chiefly a symbolic
function, standing for any person, group, or nation who, by attacking Israel,
resists the divine will.
Two passages stress the gratuitous nature of the Amalekite assault: in
Exodus 17, they come and fight without any provocation, probably before the
Israelites have a chance to assuage their thirst. In Deuteronomy 25, they snipe, in cowardly
fashion, at fatigued stragglers among the Israelites.
The Lord will wage war on Amalek (sin) from generation to generation
(Exodus 17:16). That is part of the terms of the spiritual life in this world
for the baptized.
But the present moment is never intolerable. What's intolerable is
what's going to happen in the next four hours. To have your body here at 8 pm
and your mind at 10:30 pm, that's what causes us suffering.
A disciple asked, “What can I do to see reality as it is?"
The spiritual master smiled and said, "I have good news and bad
news for you, my friend." "What's the bad news?" "There's
nothing you can do but to see it as a gift." "And what's the good
news?" "There's nothing you can do but to see it as a gift.
The fruits of this acceptance are that we will find ourselves with more
serenity and fulfillment in daily life, with more gratitude for the simple joys
of life, as well as how to appreciate the role we play in the grand scheme of
things.
Prayer is the secret of keeping the faith. "Will the faith (that
God will vindicate His people) be found on the earth at the coming of the Son
of Man?" A delay in his coming does not nullify the certainty.
The faith mentioned here naturally means that faith, which sustains,
like the widow in that town, kept going to the judge and say “render a just
decision for me against my adversary.” Her adversary was either exacting money
from her unjustly or she needed her rightful portion of an inheritance. The
powerless widow doesn't have a chance against this powerful and uncompassionate
judge.
Likewise, in Sunday’s First Reading, we encountered the inadequacy of
Moses. He cannot keep his hands aloft. Moses' hands were heavy, yet he prevailed
with the support of Aaron and Hur. The
widow also prevailed with Power out of Weakness.
Action
You can interpret the whole action theologically. When we quit praying,
we cut ourselves off from the power of God, and then our cynicism becomes
self-fulfilling. When we cut ourselves
off from a supportive community, we also cut ourselves off from the power of
God.
Feel like a poor widow? The word for “widow” in Hebrew means “one who
is silent.” “To have nothing, vulnerable, no voice.” What she did have was persistence.
The parable encourages us to tackle difficult issues with confidence.
But there will be difficult issues because that is part of life’s terms. The motto, “Living life on life’s terms,”
means to accept the circumstances, environment, and things out of our control.
This message achieves its fullest force in the passion, death,
resurrection, and ascension of Jesus. He seemed helpless in the face of his
powerful governmental executioners. Jesus transforms helplessness into the very
defeat of the powers of sin and death.
St. Paul teaches us to draw on the power of apparent weakness to
overcome death-dealing forces.
The bottom line is a resounding call (can there be any other kind of
call?) to persistence in prayer, and not to "become weary, tired" or
"lose heart, despair."
The parable cautions us not to expect immediate results. Galatians 6:9 warns
us not to become weary in well-doing. Then,
2 Corinthians 4:1 refers to the ministry of reconciliation. Don’t get tired.
Amen.
2 comments:
I loved the insight on the meaning of Widow.
Nice editing and additions again.
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