Reflection on the
readings of the 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time
What Matters to God?
I will reflect on three
vignettes from the readings: “All things are vanity!”, “Christ is all and in all”, and “one’s life does not consist of possessions”.
In his book, Jesus, An
Historical Approximation, Spanish theologian and scripture scholar Jose Pagola
writes, “For those who seek God’s will, the important thing is not to read laws
written on stone tables, but to discover the requirements of love in people’s
lives. There are no sacred places in
which we can encounter God alone; we cannot worship God in the temple and
neglect those who suffer; love of God becomes lie when neighbor is
excluded. What goes against love, goes
against God.” In my context of
understanding, “neighbor” does not only mean humans, it includes the whole of
creation~ the Earth and all its inhabitants.
The writer of Luke
11:21 attributed to Jesus explaining ‘what matters to God.” That life is much bigger than material
possessions, “that one’s life does not consist
only of possessions,” and that one must “guard against greed.” What matters to God is the primacy of
love. The love of God and neighbor is
the essence of the law. Love of God
comes first, all other things are vanity! For Jesus, seeking God’s will, trusting in
the forgiving love, to be in relationship with God, to accept God’s love is
primal. Then acknowledging Love of God
in us, like a flame, must spread. Love
of God in us is consummated into solidarity with those who suffer and those
excluded in the reign of God, it is, as Pagola wrote, “precisely in our love of
neighbor that we show the truth of our love for God” (p.249). Love of God is manifested in our awe to life
itself, in the magnificence of God’s creation, and to our refusal to the evil
of greed that destroys life itself---humans and the planet.
The second reading ends
with the phrase, “Christ is all and in all” (Col. 3: 11). Saint Paul speaks of the “putting on the new
self in Christ”, “who is being renewed in the knowledge of the image of creator.” These words signify .Saint Paul understands of
a new paradigm, a shift in the current understanding of one’s relationship in
the light of one’s relationship with Jesus the Christ. If Christ is the arrow of creation, being one
with Christ means evolving into being like Christ. Theologian Ursula King wrote
about Teilhard de Chardin’s Soul of the World which refers Jesus Christ as “universal
Christ” whom he understands as the “organic center of the universe,” of all
physical and spiritual growth, of evolution.
This meant, in the words of theologian Beatrice Bruteau that “God is
making the world by means of evolution.
God is self-expressing and self-realizing in evolution. The creativity
that makes the world is built into the world as its own essence. And in this
self-creating world there is gradually growing the most Godlike capacity,
consciousness. And with humans, consciousness is aware of the fact that it is
conscious.” Hence, Christ is all and in
all.
The Gospel reminds us of
praxis of the consciousness that we are a new being in Christ, that talents and
wealth are important but not the essence of our humanity, “to take care to
guard against all greed.” Physical
wealth and richness is a sign of positive development but it must be for the
service of those who are still suffering and those who are excluded, those left
furthest behind in the development.
Unfortunately, national and corporate greed has created “development apartheid” in our world
which is destroying people’s lives, nature itself and the life-support systems
in the planet. The Earth’s sixth mass extinction
is well along the way leaving uncertain pathways of existence for the next generations. We must practice our cosmic consciousness,
our Christ consciousness: we must refuse
and fight all greed.
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