Homily for
Sept. 5th, 2014: 1 Corinthians 4:1-5.
“Thus should one regard us,” Paul
writes in our first reading, “as servants of Christ and stewards of the
mysteries of God.” Living as servants and stewards is fundamental in Holy
Scripture. We find it already in the second creation tale in Genesis, chapters
two and three. The man whom God places in Eden
is not its owner. The garden belongs to God. God places Adam
in the garden “to till it and care for it.” He is God’s agent, his steward, to tend the garden on behalf of its
creator and owner. As long as Adam
obeys the creator’s laws, he enjoys the garden’s abundant fruits. When he
breaks God’s law, he is expelled from Eden
– a symbol of the ordered, beautiful world of God’s making. In terms simple
enough for a child to understand, the Genesis creation tale proclaims what the
modern ecology movement has rediscovered: that there is a sacred order in
nature. When we respect nature’s laws, we prosper. When we violate the natural
order, we pay a price. We are creation’s stewards, accountable to God, our
creator.
We are stewards of all God’s gifts:
our time, our talents, and treasure – the money and other possessions we have.
These are gifts entrusted to us by God, for a limited time. One day we shall
have to give an account to God of how we have used his gifts. Crucial to the
right use of these gifts is gratitude to their giver, the Lord God.
Hebrew
religion taught the offering of firstfruits.
The Jewish farmer and shepherd offered God the first fruits of field and
flock, out of gratitude, in recognition that everything comes ultimately from
God. Jesus, who learned this practice in childhood from his mother, from St. Joseph, and in the synagogue school at Nazareth, would be shocked
to find many of his present-day followers offering God not the firstfruits but
leavings: what is left over after they have provided themselves and their loved
ones not only with necessities, and often with many luxuries besides.
Show
me someone who is deeply happy, and I’ll show you someone who puts God first --
in all areas of life: who gives the Lord God the first claim on his or her
time, his or her talents (which means the skills and abilities we have
developed by using the gifts God has given us). Such a person also put God first
financially, by giving Him not a tip but the first claim on his or her money
and other possessions. There are such people here in our parish – and in every
parish the world over. They are expressing their gratitude to God for all his bounty. And if a long life has taught
me anything, it is this. Grateful people are happy people: no exceptions!
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