Homily for September 27th, 2018: Ecclesiastes
1:2-11.
“Vanity of vanities, says the
Preacher. Vanity of vanities!’ Is that good news -- to be told that life is
empty and without meaning, which is what those words are saying? Hardly. The
book which begins with those words, Ecclesiastes, repeats them like a refrain.
Ecclesiastes has been called the most cynical book in the Bible. It contains
the bad news that we need to hear to prepare us for the good news brought to us
by Jesus Christ.
The bad news is that life is indeed
empty B Avanity,@ Ecclesiastes calls it B if we organize our lives apart from
God. Is there anyone here who has done that? Probably not. Your presence here
at a weekday Mass shows that God does have a place in your life. The question
for us, therefore, is not: ADoes God have a place in my life?@ but rather: AWhat place does God have in my life? Is
he at the center? Or have I pushed God out toward the fringe of my life?@
As long as our lives are not centered on God – but on our own
desires, our plans for a wonderful future, for possessions, pleasure, power
over others, for recognition and fame – then we’ll never be happy. Why? Because
if any of those things is central to us, our life will be organized around
getting; and we’ll always be frustrated, because we’ll never get enough.
The World War II British Prime
Minister, Winston Churchill B not an especially religious man B said once: AWe make a living by what we get. We
make a life by what we give.@ Churchill was right. Jesus says the same in different words:
“There is more happiness in giving than in receiving” (Acts 20:35).
At the end of the day, there are
basically two kinds of people: takers and givers. It is only the givers who
find true and lasting happiness. No generous giver ever found life empty and
meaningless –“vanity,” to use Ecclesiastes’ word. Giving people find life full
of joy. And it was to give us joy that the Lord God sent his Him into the word
who says in John’s gospel: “Live on in my love . . . that my joy may be yours and
your joy may be compete” (15:9-11).
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