Twenty Fifth
Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C
“So clever! So clever” so says the astute Fr Dominic.
He is of course referring to how some people (priests included) are able to
wrangle themselves out of work commitments by the flimsiest of excuses. What augments
their “cleverness” is that they often push the buck to others, and poor Fr
Dominic often ends up “covering” for them, which makes him lament his own
condition, “So stupid! So stupid!”
The “cleverness” of the steward in today’s parable
seems apparent and yet for us Christians, seem utterly disturbing and even
scandalising. The steward who was called to account for having wasted his rich
landlord’s property chooses fraud as the “clever” way out. He finds a way to
extricate himself at the last minute from the mess – his clever and dubious
calculations consist in ensuring that, when he loses his position, he will find
refuge with those whom he had helped, those whose debts he had written off. We
can imagine him congratulating himself, “So clever! So clever! I’m so clever!”
Far from being inspiring, the behaviour of the steward may actually invoke
disgust in many of us. But instead of cautioning His disciples to stay away
from such unscrupulous behaviour, our Lord does the shocking and unthinkable;
He commends the steward and offers him as a model for discipleship!
On the surface it looks like the Lord is extoling the
dishonesty of the steward. Yet when we hear what follows we recognise that He
is not using the dishonest servant to give the disciples an example to follow
regarding dishonest wealth; rather, He is making a comparison and calling to
greater commitment to discipleship.
He uses the parable and the character of the dishonest
servant to demonstrate the great extent someone will go to, so that they may
preserve their status or wealth or position. The dishonest servant goes to
great effort, albeit dishonest and corrupt; to cover up his duplicity and
greed, and thereby maintaining his job and ill-gained wealth. The dishonest
servant, when he learns of his master’s intention, contemplates his situation,
makes a plan then immediately acts to complete it. All this, just to maintain
something that is not only ill gained but is fleeting and temporary. The point
is, “bad” people are often “clever” people. Their cleverness helps them to see
a goal and to go after it. Yet they are foiled because they are looking for
something which is a pale imitation of the real good. Being clever isn’t clever
enough if it brings us nowhere closer to our ultimate goal – eternal life and
heaven.
Jesus uses the parable to have His disciples — that
includes us — to reflect on the efforts we make not so much with wealth,
position or status but the things that really matter in life. Survival was the
driving force behind the servant’s life. For us, attaining salvation should be
our primary motivation in every action, every decision, every planning and
every enterprise of ours.
Being a good Christian does not mean that you have to
be a bad manager, a bad worker, a poor student, or someone who “sucks” at
managing your personal and worldly affairs. What Christians should learn from
this dishonest steward is that their actions and decisions must be intentional
and purposeful. Every action, deed, decision and word, should ultimately be
geared towards winning a place in the “tents of eternity.”
The last four statements our Lord makes about money
insist on trustworthiness in money matters even in the Church, for money
entrusted to the Church for good purposes must be administered conscientiously.
So it is not a case of 'God is good, money is bad'; in fact, not even of 'money
is good, but God is better'. Rather, money is good, and God is the source of
that goodness, the meaning and perfection of all goodness. That is why canon
law stipulates that the temporal goods of the Church are to be used especially
for the following in descending order: “the regulation of divine worship, the
provision of fitting support for the clergy and other ministers, and the
carrying out of works of the sacred apostolate and of charity, especially for
the needy.”
Yet money is tainted. Not in itself, but because of
what we human beings have made of our world. We have made a world in which
people can so easily become enslaved to money - to greed. Those who have
enslaved themselves to money have thereby failed to put it to the good work for
which it is intended, and instead drawn others into that terrible slavery. Even
ministers of the Church have not been spared and thus today’s readings call us
to practice good stewardship of the temporal goods of the Church. Ultimately,
our Lord is giving us a powerful reminder: God and money cannot share dominion
– where one is king, the other must become the subject. If God is king, then
our material goods and possessions, money, ambition, cannot rule us. “No man
can serve two masters……You cannot be slave both of God and money”. The Beatles,
though hardly exemplary Christians, understood the wisdom of this when they
sang, “I don't care too much for money, money can't buy me love.”
To be “clever” is to be astute, and to be “astute” is
to have foresight. Only fools do not see what’s coming and fail to plan and
prepare for the eventuality of disaster. Foresight is the mark of wise
discipleship. As the steward was forewarned that his service was about to be
terminated, so are we forewarned that our death could come at any moment. A
fool would think that “tomorrow” is guaranteed, he is deluded into thinking
that he can live forever and so continues to waste every opportunity accorded
to him to make amends of his life in order to avert the doom that comes with
the Final Judgment. A fool aspires and plans for a more secure future, a better
job, and more fulfilling relationships, yet he forgets that he can lose all
these things in an instance. We should, therefore, wisely make decisions and
plan not just for a better and more comfortable earthly life, but for the
heavenly life which we hope for.
In the case of the crafty steward in the parable, he
was able to come to his senses before the end. This too is a lesson that we
Christians and others can and should learn. We may have started on a wrong
footing, just like the shrewd and crafty steward, but this need not be how our
story ends. Repentance can help us rewrite the end of the story, all our
stories. The road to redemption is always open for passage before we arrive at
the end of our journey. Once, we’ve come to the “dead end” of our lives, there
will be no more chances to repent, no more openings to change direction, no
further opportunities to make a U-Turn. But until then, God, in His Mercy,
offers us countless opportunities to make amends and change the course of our
lives – to choose the road that leads to salvation instead of perdition. The
most intelligent thing an intelligent human being can do is to turn to God, not
away from Him. Wise men still seek Him, wiser men find Him, and the wisest come
to worship Him.
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