Eighteenth Sunday
in Ordinary Time Year C
Does life have any meaning? When things in life are
going well and we are happy and content, the question of the purpose and the
meaning of life really doesn’t matter. But this particular needling question
does pop up when we hit a crisis, a season of depression or a time of change.
Both during youth and old age, the question of life’s purpose and meaning
becomes particularly relevant, but for different reasons. With an infinite
future ahead and limitless possibilities and choices, the youth wonders what the
purpose of his life is and what he should do – get married and raise a family,
seek further education and a professional career, get a good-paying job, or a
billion other options. The older person who is retired, perhaps widowed,
watching friends and family die all around him, also wonders what the purpose
and meaning of life is – but for a very different reason than the youth.
Choices become more limited. Those things that used to give life purpose and
meaning seem to be slipping away.
So what is the real purpose and meaning of life? Is it
to make a lot of money and be successful? Is it to marry and raise a family? Is
it to obtain lots of material possessions – fancy car, big house, a fat bank
account? Is it to make lots of friends, be popular and socialise? But, is that
all? Is there no greater meaning or purpose to this amazing gift of life? For
some, maybe these sources of meaning and purpose are enough—even if they don’t
quite fulfill. Why? Because there is something very deep within us that says
there is more to life than any of these, that there is something very great and
meaningful that we are here for. But what is that purpose?
Sigmund Freud said it bluntly, and he is right: “…
only religion can answer the question of the purpose of life.” The Second
Vatican Council also expressed something similar in the first paragraph of its
Declaration on the Relation of the Church to Non-Christian Religions (Nostra Aetate): “Men expect from the
various religions answers to the unsolved riddles of the human condition, which
today, even as in former times, deeply stir the hearts of men: What is man?
What is the meaning, the aim of our life? What is moral good, what is sin?
Whence suffering and what purpose does it serve? Which is the road to true
happiness? What are death, judgment and retribution after death? What, finally,
is that ultimate inexpressible mystery which encompasses our existence: whence
do we come, and where are we going?” This Sunday’s first reading from
Ecclesiastes also seeks to find an answer to these fundamental questions.
Ecclesiastes sets up the whole book as a kind of
experiment, in which he searches for the meaning of life through a series of
projects. He starts off searching for wisdom, but decides in the end that, “in
wisdom is much vexation” (1:18). Then he moves on to pleasure and tries to find
meaning in life by satisfying all of his base desires, but again “all was
vanity and a striving after wind” (2:11). And then he turns to the third
option, finding happiness in one’s labour, one’s achievements and even here he
judges it as mere vanity. By this point, the author has already exhausted three
possible routes to happiness, meaning and fulfillment: knowledge, pleasure and
work. The gospel throws in a fourth option, wealth, and you have a “winning” or
“losing” formula”: “Vanity of vanities. All is vanity!”
Now, the meaning of “vanity” has changed over the
centuries. For the modern man, vanity is synonymous to narcissism and excessive
pride, both pervasive problems of our age. But the word “vanity” in this
context has a different meaning. “Vanity” translated from the Hebrew hebel,
which means “vapour” or “breath.” Of course the word is used here in a densely
metaphorical sense, causing translators throughout the ages to struggle to
capture the proper sense of the claim that all things are ‘fleeting’, ‘empty’,
‘futile’, ‘vain’, ‘absurd,’ or ‘meaningless’. So a modern rendering may sound
like this, “Meaningless, meaningless! Everything is meaningless!” All of this may seem depressing and
fatalistic but it is notable that the Book of Ecclesiastes ends by urging the
reader to place his trust in God as the only Eternal Being.
True, there is a widespread hunger for religion and
various forms of spiritualities. This is evidence of the abiding human need to
find meaning. But too often these “spiritual” solutions often prove to be
either fraudulent or as fragile as the options the world offers – knowledge,
pleasure, work and possessions – they all end in futility. In contrast, St Paul
in the second reading points us to a vision of human reality based on Christ.
We were buried with Christ in baptism, and raised with Him through faith in the
power of God. Since we have been raised with Christ, we should “look for the
things that are in heaven, where Christ is sitting at God’s right hand.” Of course, St Paul is not saying that we
should become angels. That is not possible. But our present existence should be
seen and lived in the light of 'heaven, where Christ is'.
Why is this heavenly perspective so crucially
important, you might ask? This is because meaning is experienced as
fulfillment. In other words, one who lives a meaningful life—i.e., a life which
seeks to fulfill its purpose—is one who is fulfilled. And the fulfillment of a
life well-lived is integral to our arriving at our destined end. What is our
destined end? The answer to the second question of the Penny Catechism tells us:
“We were made to know God, to love Him, to serve Him and be with Him in
Paradise forever.” Every human being is destined for glory – we were created to
be with Him in Paradise forever. Heaven is our destiny and therefore heaven is
what ultimately gives life meaning.
Finally, the parable in our gospel today provides us
with a stark and well needed reminder: If this world is all there is, then you
will be disappointed. If you live in pursuit of the things of this world in an
attempt to satisfy the longing of your soul, then you will die empty. Whatever
you possess, you acquire, you achieve in this life, you would not be able to
carry into the next. You see - the things of this world were never intended to
ultimately satisfy. While their pleasures provide momentary satisfaction, in
the end, you will be left wanting more. The things of this world are designed
to point you to God and seek Him. This is because only God can truly satisfy.
Life pursued apart from God is as futile as trying to catch the wind in a cup.
At the end of the day, when we do not place our
priorities in their proper order, life starts to lose its meaning. Life is no
longer a joy to live. Everything seem chaotic and meaningless. But when our
life is in God’s order, life is a joyous adventure! Our Lord tells us that this
is the proper order, “Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and
all these things will be given to you as well.” What’s the first thing? God.
What is the second thing? Everything else. It is important not to get the two
confused. Because when God becomes the second thing, and other priorities
become the first thing, we lose God, and then our lives get lost in meaningless
living.
But when the Lord takes first place in our hearts, we
will find that life is far from the meaninglessness. Instead, we discover in
God that we are made for a beautiful eternal communion, the ultimate
fulfillment of our nature, our purpose, our destiny. We now understand what St
Teresa of Avila is trying to remind us,
“Let nothing disturb you, Let nothing frighten you,
All things are passing away:
God never changes.
Patience obtains all things
Whoever has God lacks nothing; God alone suffices.”
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