Twenty Eighth Sunday in OT B 2024
I would be glad to have the rich young man in today’s Gospel account as a parishioner of St Joseph’s. What we know about him was that he kept the commandments. He was a good rule keeper. He was in Church every Sunday. He contributed to the support of the parish and perhaps the CMA as well. He probably would volunteer to serve on the parish council. Sounds pretty good, does it not! What is there not to like about this rich young man in the Gospel account?
He knelt before the Lord and asked the right question: “What must I do to inherit eternal life? Hopefully that is our question to the Lord in prayer as well. Jesus looked on him with great love and said there is one thing you lack. “Go, sell what you have and give to the poor and then come follow me.” Wow! Talk about being asked to get outside your comfort zone.
Placing ourselves in the young man’s shoes as we come before the Lord, what would we ask to inherit? Would it be financial security for you and your family? Would it be a vacation home? Would it be good health for all the members of your family? Would it be that you win the lottery? Would it be that you find the perfect life partner?
Would eternal life be in the top three requests you make of the Lord? Would it be in the top five or even in the top ten requests. Eternal life is what the rich young man in the Gospel account asked for. When we come to think of it, our relationship with God is the one thing we take with us into the next life – all else will be left behind. Doesn’t it make sense to cultivate our relationship with God while we can?
We all need to ask the question the rich young man asked of Jesus. What must I do to inherit eternal life? The rich young mas has a leg up on many of us as he responded to the Lord that has kept all the commandments. I am very impressed by anyone who gets A plus in keeping the ten commandments. Am I right?
How do we answer the Gospel demand when the Lord asks us: “You are lacking one thing. Go. Sell what you have and give to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven, then come, follow me.”
This challenges us to ask what is our relationship with God? What is the real treasure of your life? What is the North Star for you that everything else is seen in relationship to it?
So, what is your treasure? We all have treasures – what is yours? It’s serious question. What is your treasure? What do you give your time, your energy, your love to mostly?
Your treasure may be your good reputation, your beautiful family, the job you are very successful at, your golf game, the Buffalo Bills or the fighting Irish of Noter Dame, or your hard-earned assets?
In the Gospel, the man with many possessions wasn’t able to let go of them in order to follow Jesus more completely. I need to ask myself: what possessions do I cling to? Am I possessed by my possessions, or do I use what I have as an opportunity to serve and share with others?
What is my tipping point in terms of prayer?? What is my limit? Is it the hour for Sunday Eucharist? Does it happen 52 weeks a year? How much time each day do I commit to prayer? Is family prayer a part of my spirituality in any way?
If there was a competition to my use of social media and my addiction to the smart phone or to develop a life of prayer? Would my time I spend in prayer each day match in any way my time with my smart phone?
What is my tipping point in sharing with those in need? -- whether in parish ministry, Penfield Hope, or responding to people in need anywhere? How much time am I willing to share to be of service to others?
What is my tipping point in terms of treasure? What percentage of income do I tithe? Do I give generously to the Catholic Ministries Appeal? What is my comfort zone with financial generosity?
Does the use of my time, energy, and resources indicate what are the important relationships of my life?
The first scripture reading is from the book of Wisdom: the sacred writer prays “I prayed, and prudence was given me; I pleaded, and the spirit of wisdom was given me.”
May we be givent he wisdom indeed not to be possessed by our possessions. May we use what we have to share with others. This is the kind of wisdom we desperately needs. The whole world needs this kind of wisdom. Instead of using and violence to solve our differences, may we be given the gift of wisdom to value and to share all of God’s creation with one another.
The Gospel lesson is clear. Our relationship with God must be our greatest, our prime relationship, the one which gives meaning to all our other relationships. If it is not so for us, we doom ourselves to go hungrily seeking for substitutes which invariably disappoint – a succession of dashed hopes and new infatuations, leaning us empty and cynical. When we come to think of it, our relationship with God is the one thing we take with us into the next life – all else will be left behind. Doesn’t it make sense to cultivate our relationship with God while we can?
The invitation and challenge is clear. Jesus is asking each one of us to give priority to God in our lives and to get rids of all that we love more than Him, everything which prevents us from saying yes to His wonderful invitation: “come, follow me.”
Have a Blessed Day.
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