Twenty-fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time / Msgr. Owen F. Campion
The Sunday Readings
The first reading for Mass this weekend is from the Book of Amos. This prophet, regarded as one of the group of minor prophets of the Old Testament, was from Tekoa, a rural area of Judea. It was about 10 miles from Jerusalem.
Amos was a shepherd and obviously knew well the religious traditions of his ancestors. He also had a sense of events occurring beyond his own environment, even events happening in other lands.
His pastoral occupation and keen knowledge not only of tradition but also of life far beyond his own situation give his book of only nine chapters a special quality.
The reading for this weekend is frankly monetary in its wording. It speaks of ancient units of currency, such as the shekel. It also is highly critical of any quest to gather great sums of money, insisting that a higher standard, a higher reward, exist in life.
For its second reading, the Church presents a passage from St. Paul’s First Letter to Timothy. Early Christian history, including that of the apostolic era, includes the names of deeply committed pioneer converts to Christianity.
Timothy was one of these converts. He was so close to Paul that the Apostle referred to him in some translations of this passage as his “beloved son,” although of course nothing suggests that Timothy literally was the Apostle’s biological child (1 Tm 2:1). Son of a Greek father and a devout Jewish mother, and therefore Jewish under the laws of Judaism, Timothy became a Christian through Paul’s influence. Tradition holds that Timothy was the first bishop of the Christian community in Ephesus.
In this weekend’s reading, Timothy is asked especially to pray for rulers and for other people in authority. Such officials are especially vulnerable to the temptations of greed and ambition.
St. Luke’s Gospel supplies the last reading. It is a parable. An irresponsible manager fears the results if his employer discovers the manager’s mishandling of his duties. So, the manager called his employer’s debtors and ordered them to reduce the amount they owed. In fact, he cancelled his own commission, but obviously the commission was excessive.
This arrangement would have been as unacceptable then as it would be now. The employer would have had every right to repudiate the manager’s bold discounting of the amounts owed. If the manager had insisted on the original figures, he would have been upholding the outrageous commission, but he would have lost the regard of the community and appeared to be out of control of his own business.
In the end, for him, saving honor was more important than collecting the money owed as debts.
The message is clear. The frenzy of doing the world’s business can create trouble.
Reflection
Money is a fact of life, interwoven with necessity. The Gospel reading informs us that any of us, now as in ancient times, can be consumed with acquiring money, obsessed with accumulating more than we need.
Grasping and clutching have become ways of life.
For more than a century, beginning with Pope Leo XIII, the popes successively have extensively and precisely looked at modern practices in economics and industry in the light of the Gospel. They have called the faithful and all humanity to keep in mind the absolute dignity of every human being first and foremost when it comes to judging the propriety or impropriety of business and monetary matters.
Seeing excesses, the mania in this quest for wealth and the blindness as to the truly important things of life, each pontiff since Leo XIII has made a great contribution to the realities of finance and commerce. Let their messages become a new attitude. Let this attitude create a new law of commerce, a new way to judge business, production, profit and loss, a new way to judge what is important.
The world would be a better place if these papal admonitions had been, and were, heeded. †