Sunday, July 31, 2016

Daily HOMILY for July 31, 2016: 18th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Cycle C


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18th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Cycle C
St. Mark Church, Fallston, 9:00 & 11:00
July 31, 2016

Preventing Need to Turn to Greed
By (Rev. Msgr.) Nicholas P. Amato


The Executive and the Cleaning Woman

The psychologist Victor Frankl tells an interesting story about a woman who works for a cleaning service at the corporate offices of a multimillion dollar firm.

The woman — Alice — wears blue jeans and a Marlboro cigarette tee shirt. The executive — Matthew Millionaire — wears a dark blue business suit and white dress shirt with gold cuff links.

Alice vacuums carpets and cleans the toilets and bathroom floors. Matthew Millionaire  directs his multimillion dollar enterprise.

Alice works evenings. Matthew Millionaire  works days and evenings to keep up with the pace of business and the social life that this demands.

Alice works to send her son to the state college. Matthew Millionaire  works to make more money for people who are already wealthy, including himself.

Alice finds her work bearable and light, but Matthew Millionaire  finds his work stressful and draining. Every evening they pass each other in the hallway of the office building and they are puzzled.

Alice wonders: “Why does he look so preoccupied when he makes so much money and lives so comfortably?” Matthew wonders: “Why is she always cheerful when she has to do this demeaning work?”

Victor Frnakl says that the difference between the two of them lies in their goals. The cleaning woman has the goal of educating her son, while the executive has no goal beyond himself and profit making.

Need and Greed

Frankl’s story and his observations help us to appreciate God’s Word to us today.

In the Gospel parable, Jesus is not condemning us for working to meet our family’s needs and to maintain a reasonable lifestyle. But he is saying that greed can be a problem.

Greed means that we feel that we never have enough and we always want more. The challenge is to tell the difference between need and greed.

When are our needs satisfied and where does greed begin?  The Scripture readings offer us two guiding principles to prevent need from becoming greed.

Looking Beyond Yourself to Others

First, we must look beyond ourselves to others.

The rich man in the Gospel is totally focused on himself. Notice that the words of his conversation are all “I” and “me” words.

“What shall I do? I will tear down my barns and build larger ones. All my grain and my goods will go there. Then I can relax and I will have security for the rest of my life.”

This individual thinks that satisfaction and happiness are found in himself and in material security. He is very much like the corporate executive in Frankl’s story.

He totally misses the higher value of living for someone else and sharing what we have with others, as the cleaning woman was doing. Because he does not look beyond himself to others, his need has turned into greed.

Looking beyond World to God

A second guiding principle to prevent need from becoming greed comes to us in the reading from St. Paul.

Paul tells us to “Seek the things that are above. Set your minds on things that are above and not on things that are on earth.”

When we look beyond the material world, we contact a God who satisfies like nothing else. We touch a presence that relates to our deepest longing for love, affirmation, and belonging.

Repeated contacts with this presence through silence, prayer and reflection, we become increasingly united to a presence that is our final goal and purpose in life.

As the Gospel puts it, we will realize that “Our life does not consist in an abundance of possessions.”

Conclusion

To conclude, Jesus does not condemn financial security, comforts, or possessions.

He does, however, caution us (1) To look beyond ourselves to others, and (2) To look beyond this world to God.

On both counts, doing so will allow us not to be carried away and allow our need to turn into greed.

“Where are we looking for our deepest satisfaction?” is a question each of us must answer.



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