Nineteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
When I come to a problem, or something that needs fixing, I have a way of seeing one solution to that problem, and proceeding accordingly. However, sometimes my approach is not the best, or won’t work at all. It’s not until the problem is looked at from another angle and another approach is taken that the problem can easily be solved or addressed.
We have lots of issues in society today. And there are twice as many solutions proposed as there are problems. But the solutions all tend to focus on an earthly solution; most look to solve the issue. While laws are important, and policies can help direct funding to needed programs, so many of the issues we deal with cannot be truly solved with earthly solutions. We need to look to heaven.
Christians have sometimes been accused of not caring about the world. They are said to only care about heaven, and so don’t care about the things here on earth. But more often than not, it is only by concentrating on heaven that we come to see the ways that we can treat, not only the symptoms of what ills our world, but the disease, because the way we deal with our world has an impact on whether or not we go to heaven.
Living for heaven takes faith, looking beyond what is seen to what is unseen. Our long reading from the Letter to the Hebrews talks about Abraham as the model of faith. He left his homeland in modern-day Iraq to travel to the Promised Land, not knowing what he would find when he got there, or if this God who had revealed Himself to Abraham and called him to sojourn to a new land would care for him. And then, Abraham trusted that God would give him descendants, though he and Sarah, his wife, were past the childbearing age. And then, when God asked Abraham to sacrifice that son that they had conceived, Abraham trusted that God would raise him up, so that God’s promise that Abraham’s descendants would be as numerous as the stars in the sky would come true.
But Abraham had faith in God, and trusted that, if God promised, He would deliver. So Jesus told His disciples and tells us, that we are to take a different view as we go about this world. We are to act as those awaiting for the Master to return. If we do, then the Master will serve us. But if we don’t, if we don’t act in accordance with the Master’s will, and do whatever we want, then we will be punished for our disobedience to the Master.
What does this practically mean? It means that the choices we make should coincide with God’s will, as much as we are able. It means that we don’t look necessarily to earthly fixes to our problems, as to heavenly guidance and solutions. When it comes to our environment, we have a responsibility to care for the earth. Some would say that we can no longer drive gas cars, or travel in planes, or even eat meat because cows fart too much. That certainly is an earthly point of view (often enough, sadly, wrought with exceptions for the rich and the powerful). From a faith point of view, we look first at ourselves, and examine our stewardship of created goods. Do I waste a lot? Do I use resources unnecessarily? How do I treat the environment in which I live? Laws can help us be good stewards of creation. But when we have that conversion to live as good stewards of creation, as God called us to be in Genesis, then we find even better solutions than mandating rules that apply to “thee but not me.”
When it comes to the violence that plagues our nation, from an earthly point of view, it would seem the easiest to simply outlaw all guns, or types of guns, for most people. I can tell you from my work with the State Police, that there are a large amount of people who don’t care what the laws state; they will do whatever they want, for good or for ill. So simply passing this law, or outlawing that gun, is not going to stop the violence (though perhaps there are certain laws that would help). When we look to a heavenly point of view, we see how broken families are these days, and how that affects the development of children into adolescence and adulthood. We see how much disturbing violence children are exposed to on screens from an early age. We see that people are not taught constructive ways to work out differences, but those who call themselves leaders tend to yell, scream, and destroy whenever they don’t get their way. Do I do all I can to be a loving mother or father (or grandfather or grandmother)? Do I make time for my children (or grandchildren), limit and monitor their screen time and what they are viewing? Do I belittle others and treat them as less than human when they don’t agree with me, or show that each human being has dignity and value, even when we don’t see eye-to-eye?
With these, and countless other issues, we can get stuck in a hamster-wheel of trying to find solutions that don’t solve the bigger problems. We forget God, and forget that God has given us long and lasting ways to solve, not only the symptoms of our human failings, but the deeper disease. Those who keep their eyes on heaven, and on the fact that they will be called to account for their actions to our heavenly Masters, are precisely the ones who are more likely to be good stewards here on earth. Don’t just seek earthly solutions. Seek the answers that come from heaven.