Homily for August 8th, 2014: Matthew 16:24-28.
“Whoever wishes to save his life will
lose it,” Jesus says. “But whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.”
What is Jesus trying to tell us? He is speaking about two kinds of people: the
takers and the givers. Takers are the people engaged in what is called “the
pursuit of happiness.” Some seek happiness through pleasure; others
through amassing financial or material possessions. Others seek happiness by
trying to gain positions of power; others still by seeking honor and fame.
All of those things – pleasure,
possessions, power, and honor -- are good. They become harmful
for us only when we make them central in our lives. That is what the takers do. They
think that if only they can get enough of one or more of these four things,
they will be happy. Always and inevitably they end up frustrated. Why? Because
they can never get enough. As a man of great wealth said: “Anyone who thinks he
will be happy if he has a lot of money, has never had a lot of money.” The
takers, then, are those who lose their lives – through frustration at never
having enough. The happiness they seek always and inevitably eludes them.
Who are those who, in losing their
lives for Jesus Christ, find happiness and thus save their lives? They are the
givers. They put the Lord God at the center of their lives. Remembering Jesus’
words in the parable of the sheep and the goats in the 25th chapter
of Matthew’s gospel, “Anything you
do for one of these little ones, you do for me,” their goal in life is to serve. In doing so they discover
that Jesus words are true: “There is more happiness in giving than in
receiving” (Acts 20:35). That is the only saying of Jesus preserved for us
outside the four gospels. Paul quotes it as something already well known in the
Christian community.
So which are you? A taker, or
a giver? If you’re a taker, I can promise you one thing: you will always be
unhappy and frustrated, because you’ll never get enough. You will always be
wanting more and more and more. It is the givers who find true happiness: the
happiness Jesus is talking about when he says: “Give, and it shall be given to
you. Good measure pressed down, shaken together, running over will they pour
into the fold of your garment. For the measure you measure with will be
measured back to you” (Luke 6:38).
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