One thing I discovered when I became a homeowner is how much work keeping up a house really is. My wife and I are very grateful for our house and the previous owners were as well. It was kept up very well and has served many people well. Yet, regardless of its good condition, the house still requires almost continuous maintenance of some degree to keep it in good shape.
At the same time, almost anything we acquire can require some sort of ongoing investment to maintain. I once heard someone say, "The more stuff you have, the more time you spend taking care of it." Along these lines, the more things we have the more of our lives we spend taking care of things rather than people. And I have noticed (even in my own life at times) that it is all too easy to get so wrapped up in taking care of our stuff that we forget why we are taking care of it. This leads us to the question at point. Why do we spend so much time acquiring and caring for our stuff? What is the reason we have what we have? And what is the reason caring for our things can preoccupy our thoughts?
Yesterday's gospel reading for the Mass was quite a thought provoking and convicting one. It was the story about the farmer who had a great harvest and tore down his old barns to build new bigger ones. Is there anything wrong with that? No. But what was really his motivation behind building bigger barns for his crop? His motivation was to rest, eat, drink, and be merry for years to come. He was thinking about his own satisfaction. An even harsher description comes to mind, GREED. Hoarding thing for his own pleasure.
What was the farmer's alternative? Maybe sharing the surplus with those in need or using the extra blessing the Lord gave in the harvest to bless others as well.
So, what do we (I/you) invest our time and talents in? And how do we invest the fruits that come from those things? What do we do with the fruit of our labors? This question is important because we need to remember that it is God that brings forth the fruit. We just plant the seed and do the work.
If we have difficulty processing these questions, perhaps we could see them a little more clearly from the perspective of the farmer...through the lens of death. "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?’" (Luke 12:20) If we were to die, what would be the value of all our stuff at that point? Would all your labor benefit others even at your death? Or would it be found worthless with the fruits to simply sit and rot or be thrown away?
"Thus will it be for all who store up treasure for themselves but are not rich in what matters to God.” (Luke 12:21)
Remember that thou hast made me of clay;
and wilt thou turn me to dust again?
- Job 10:9
- Job 10:9
1 comment:
My Dad would always say,"spread the wealth", perhaps that was good advice after-all.
Sometimes we forget that all we have and all that is given comes from the Lord. What we do with it isn't always up to us, Let us remember to ask Him what we should do with our many blessings.
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