Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time (B), Conversations with Consequences Podcast, October 12, 2024

Fr. Roger J. Landry
Conversations with Consequences Podcast
Homily for the Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time, B, Vigil
October 12, 2024

 

To listen to an audio recording of this short Sunday homily, please click below: 

 

The following text guided the homily: 

  • This is Fr. Roger Landry and it’s a privilege for me to be with you as we enter into the consequential conversation the Risen Lord Jesus wants to have with each of us this Sunday, as we eavesdrop on his famous dialogue with the young adult whom Christian tradition has dubbed the Rich Young Man.
  • The Rich Young Man was a good man. He had kept the commandments of the Lord from a young age. He was concerned about the deepest and most important questions, like the one he asked Jesus, “What good must I do to inherit eternal life?” He already had some faith in Jesus, coming to him not just as a rabbi who knew a lot but as a “Good Teacher,” whose whole bearing intrigued him to approach and ask about the way he should live in order to live for ever. He also recognized that, despite all his material wealth, despite even his moral goodness, there was something missing in his life. His heart yearned for more. He knew he was called to something greater. The life God intends for us consists, he realized, in so much more than merely not breaking the Decalogue. And so he asked in St. Matthew’s account of the same scene, “What do I lack?” Jesus looked at him with love and gave him the challenging, brutally honest, direct answer to his question, “You lack one thing. Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me!” It was a highly paradoxical answer. What he lacked was precisely thathe had too much. He lacked total detachment from substitutes so that he could attach himself to the Absolute. He had previously lived a good life, but Jesus was now calling him to greatness. “If you wish to be perfect,” Jesus indicated. He already had some faith in Jesus as a “good Teacher” who was reflecting the goodness of God alone, but Jesus was now calling him to an upgrade in faith, a total commitment. He had previously kept the “second tablet” of the Ten Commandments, all about love of neighbor, but now Jesus was calling him to a much more radical following of both tablets of Decalogue: to love his neighbor to the point of using all his possessions to care for them and to loving God to the point of accounting him more valuable than all his stuff and following him on the path of total self-giving love.
  • Therese of Lisieux, whose feast we celebrated at the beginning of this month, taught that we grow in the spiritual life by subtraction, not by addition. When a novice once sighed in her presence, saying, “When I think of everything I still have to acquire!,” the Little Flower replied, “You mean, tolose! … You are wanting to climb a great mountain and the good God is trying to make you descend it; he is waiting for you at the bottom in the fertile valley of humility.” The Rich Young Man needed to learn this lesson, how to grow through subtraction, how to become great through humility and dependence on God, how to have it all through giving oneself away. Unfortunately, he wasn’t ready for the challenge that spiritual perfection requires because he had so many possessions that owned him. He looked at the path of holiness as something he could add on to what he already had, whereas it was an emptying precisely so that Christ could fill him. The Lord is always asking us to let go of many of his gifts in order through using them for others to help us to recognize that the greatest gift of all is the divine Giver.
  • The Rich Young Man got from Jesus the clear, direct answer to the question that was erupting from the depths of his being, buthe didn’t like it. In fact, St. Mark tells us, “His face fell and he went away sad, for he had many possessions.” When given a choice between Jesus and his money, the young man chose the money, and went away sad, because he was still lacking something, that, with all his wealth, left him self-consciously imperfect and incomplete. This young man couldn’t give up the wealth to follow the Creator of every earthly treasure. Without a doubt, he was thinking he could both have his money and what he was lacking. But Jesus said very clearly at another time, “You cannot serve two masters. You will either hate the one and love the other, or be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money” (Mt 6:24).
  • We can similarly be trapped by our own hanging on to our money. Jesus this Sunday uses the image of a needle and says that we’ll never be able to pass through the eye of the needle into the kingdom of heaven as long as we’re still grasping onto the fruit of our labor. It’s not that material wealth or possessions are bad in themselves; in fact they’re blessings. The harm comes when we start to become attached to them, when they begin toown us rather than our stewarding them as gifts of God. St. Paul tells us that it is the love of money, not money itself, that is the root of all evil, because we begin to worship the ancient golden calf, because, when push comes to shove, we begin to place our faith, hope, love and security in material possessions and the things of this world more than we do in God. The person who puts his treasure in earthly mammon isn’t necessarily one we’d define as evil. He may even keep the ten commandments like the Rich Young Man said he did from his youth. The lover of wealth might even consider God really important, but for him, God is not really God. God is not the most important thing in his life. Like with the Rich Young Man, when it comes to the time when he has to make a choice, to part with his money or to serve Christ, he can’t let go of his money. He chooses his money. And, like the Rich Young Man, he will remain sad, because happiness is something that even all the money in the world cannot buy. That’s why Jesus says, not once but twice in this Sunday’s Gospel, “How hard it is for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God!”
  • So what is a rich man and woman — and almost all of us are rich in relation to the vast majority of people in the world today, not to mention those who have lived in previous centuries — to do? Jesus’ disciples were “exceeding astonished” at the severity of Christ’s statement and asked, “Then who can be saved?” We ourselves can ask, “Do any of us have a chance, or are we like camels before a microscopic hole?” Jesus stresses in the Gospel that God makes it possible for us to be saved. Jesus shows us the way, but those looking for an easy way are going to be disappointed: “Go, sell what you have, give the money to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me.”
  • Some preachers have done harm to people by trying to water-down the stark and challenging three-fold imperative of Jesus. But other preachers have perhaps done more harm, because they have interpreted what Jesus said in a univocal way, saying that what the Lord is asking of us, with all our responsibilities, is to go down to the local pawn shop, get rid of all our stuff, and then go give it in lump sums to individual poor people, or the St. Vincent de Paul Society, or the Catholic Charities Appeal, the local Food Pantry, or the Salvation Army. It all comes down to what the Lord means by “selling what you have.” What he’s getting at is spending our money, putting all our resources at the service of love of others. There are many ways to give this money away. We give it away when we use it to support — not spoil — the members of our family. We give it away, when, if we’re a business owner, we use our capital to create jobs so that people can have work and support themselves and their loved ones or when we pay not just a fair wage but a generous wage to our loyal employees, so that they can make ends meet more easily. We give it away when we give it to the Church Christ founded to support the apostolic works of God, especially like the spread of our faith through the Missions or through the support of Catholic education. We give it away when we see that our overworked waitress is pregnant and give her an extremely generous tip. And we give it away, obviously, when we make it a priority in life to seek out Christ in the person of the poor and needy around us, those in the streets, those families struggling financially to survive, those worthy causes that every month wonder how they’re going to pay their bills. It is by emptying ourselves of all greed, of giving ourselves and what God has given us out of love to others, that we become capable of receiving what the Lord wants to give us. In order for the material wealth we have not to become millstones bringing us down, but rather blessings bringing us an eternal treasure, we have to transfer the funds, not to a Swiss bank account, not to the Cayman Islands, butto heaven, by putting these blessings, directly or indirectly, into the hands of Christ disguised in others. There are so many opportunities for us to transfer those funds. But we have to ask God intelligently in prayer, “How, Lord, should I best spend the material blessings you have given me?”
  • Someone who showed us how to live this way is Blessed, soon to be Saint, Carlo Acutis, whose feast the Church remembers on Saturday, October 12, who died on that day just 18 years ago in 2006 at the age of 15. He’s most famous, rightly, for the ardor of his Eucharistic love, calling the Eucharist “My highway to heaven,” living a truly Eucharistic life, and trying to bring his friends, classmates, neighbors to appreciate the wondrous gift of Jesus in the Holy Eucharist and even the whole world, through his Eucharistic miracles of the world exhibit, which continues to crisscross the globe. Carlo sought to pattern his life on the Lord’s charity in the Eucharist, giving his body, blood and his possessions away to others. “Life is a gift,” he said, “because as long as we are on this planet, we can increase our charity.” He was able to do what the Rich Young Man in the Gospel didn’t. To the homeless, he would spend his allowance buying them sleeping bags, blankets and thermoses so that he could fill them with warm drinks with food to bring to them. When he was very young, he brought his whole piggy bank to school to give to students who needed it more. He would turn down the offer for new clothes or sneakers and ask that the money instead go to the poor. He used every opportunity he could to use what God, his parents and others had given him to love those around him. “Money is nothing more than shredded paper,” he said. “What counts in life is the nobility of the soul, that is, the way we love God and neighbor.” He’s praying for us to adopt with him this Eucharistic form of Christian life.
  • At Mass this Sunday, the Lord will give us a choice, a choice between his wisdom and worldly wisdom, between an earthly treasure and an eternal treasure, which moths can’t destroy, rust corrode, or IRS agents tax and take away. The apostles left everything to follow the Lord, putting their whole lives at God’s service. The saints like Carlo Acutis have followed suit. The hard working people who sacrificed so much to build most of our parishes have been all in. What’s our response going to be as Jesus invites us, like he did the Rich Young Man, onto the path of perfection and holiness? May we learn from the mistake of the Rich Young Man and the choice of the apostles how to give away everything in following the Lord so that we may experience 100-fold in this life and eternal life that Jesus promises.

 

The Gospel on which the homily was based was: 

As Jesus was setting out on a journey, a man ran up,
knelt down before him, and asked him,
“Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”
Jesus answered him, “Why do you call me good?
No one is good but God alone.
You know the commandments: You shall not kill;
you shall not commit adultery;
you shall not steal;
you shall not bear false witness;
you shall not defraud;
honor your father and your mother
.”
He replied and said to him,
“Teacher, all of these I have observed from my youth.”
Jesus, looking at him, loved him and said to him,
“You are lacking in one thing.
Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor
and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me.”
At that statement his face fell,
and he went away sad, for he had many possessions.

Jesus looked around and said to his disciples,
“How hard it is for those who have wealth
to enter the kingdom of God!”
The disciples were amazed at his words.
So Jesus again said to them in reply,
“Children, how hard it is to enter the kingdom of God!
It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle
than for one who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.”
They were exceedingly astonished and said among themselves,
“Then who can be saved?”
Jesus looked at them and said,
“For human beings it is impossible, but not for God.
All things are possible for God.”
Peter began to say to him,
“We have given up everything and followed you.”
Jesus said, “Amen, I say to you,
there is no one who has given up house or brothers or sisters
or mother or father or children or lands
for my sake and for the sake of the gospel
who will not receive a hundred times more now in this present age:
houses and brothers and sisters
and mothers and children and lands,
with persecutions, and eternal life in the age to come.”

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