Message of the Week

Take Care to Guard against All Greed

The Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

The second reading from the Letter to the Colossians goes well with the first reading and the Gospel.  Those passages warn about how useless material wealth will be when we die.  St. Paul continues this warning by reminding us that we have already died with Christ in baptism and risen to new life.  To live this new life we must put to death whatever tendencies keep us from Christ.

Wealth can be a gift from God.  The abuse is not necessarily in the possession of wealth.  More likely, we abuse wealth in the way we attain it.  How does that happen?  I can give an obvious answer, such as robbing a bank.  Instead, do I work a full day for my pay, or do I spend a lot of time visiting with other employees or texting my friends?  Am I honest with my customers, charging only for work I have done?

As for using our wealth, we usually think of family first.  Do we spoil our kids, so they can “have the things I couldn’t afford when I was young”?  Or do we teach them to work for what they get?  Do we teach our children to be generous to others?

Notice that Paul goes deeper, pointing out the thoughts and desires that lead to a life centered on wealth.  In baptism, we put to death passion and greed, tendencies that push us to own more or to control another person.  Paul uses the image of taking off these vices as if they were clothing and putting on a new self that shows Christ in us.  We begin to see Christ in others, for as Paul says, “Christ is all and in all” (Colossians 3:11).

Tom Schmidt, Diocesan Publications

Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time | USCCB

For where your Treasure is, There Also will your Heart Be.

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