Homily
for November 8th, 2013: Luke 16:1-8.
“The master commended that dishonest
steward for acting prudently.” From antiquity Bible commentators have disputed
about who is meant by “the master.” Is he the man’s employer – or Jesus
himself? It is difficult to believe that the praise can have come from an employer
who has just told his steward – we would call him a manager -- that he is about
to be fired. So the praise must come from Jesus himself. How is that possible?
Clever the manager may have been. But honest? Hardly. How can Jesus praise what
all can see is a swindle?
Jesus does not
praise the manger’s dishonesty. He praises the man’s ability to recognize his
desperate situation. For him, it is now or never. Jesus addresses the parable
to those who remain indifferent to his message. The story is Jesus’ attempt to
shake them out of their complacency. His message confronted them with the need
to decide: for him, or against him. To postpone this decision, to continue
living as if nothing had changed, with the attitude of “business-as-usual”, was
in fact to decide against Jesus. That meant disaster. Trapped in what looks
like a hopeless situation, the manager cleverly found a way out and acted while
there was still time. It is this cleverness and enterprise which Jesus
commends, not the man’s dishonesty.
Jesus Christ asks us for the same
decision today: for him, or against him. It is not a once-for-all decision –
something like learning to ride a bicycle: once you’ve learned, you know it for
life. Our decision for Jesus Christ needs to be renewed every day.
For those who are trying to renew
their decision for Jesus Christ every day, joy awaits, beyond our imagining:
eternal life with Him who alone can fulfill the deepest longings of our hearts.
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