Twenty Third Sunday in Ordinary Time
“For the corruptible body burdens the soul and the earthen shelter weighs down the mind that has many concerns.”
We “get” what the author of the Book of Wisdom seems to be driving at in this passage. And while the passage uses the image of a “body”, we know that this same insight applies to many things --- basically anything that is “of the earth”. And the reason is pretty simple --- because the concerns that often weigh people down are concerns about the world we live in, and specifically the challenges that come with trying survive and thrive in uncertain circumstances.
And we shouldn’t consider our concerns about the world as being “bad” or “misguided” or evidence of some sort of diminished faith. That can be a trap we fall into from time to time, seeing spiritual things as “good” and worldly things as “bad”. We must never forget that in the beginning our loving God created everything good.
For example, our bodies (and the drives that arise from them) are absolutely good, but sometimes get us into trouble. And the need to work and provide for ourselves and our families are good, but sometimes lead to greed if left unchecked. And our need to be loved and to love are both necessary and beautiful, but can sometimes lead us to look for those things in the wrong places.
And our need to be safe can sometimes get us to violate the freedoms of others. And our deep desire to be loved by our God can sometimes drive us to consider ourselves to be better than or more important than others. At times the things of this world can become over-burdensome, controlling and dominating our daily lives.
But God wants something different for us.
If you’ve ever had to sell a home you know that one of three things can happen. The first is something we hope never happens --- our home sells in one day. And while every case is different, a house that sells in one day often means that the price asked was way too low, that the people undervalued their home.
The second possibility can be equally frustrating, the times when a person’s home sits on the market forever. No reasonable offers. Just waiting and waiting and waiting. When that happens, the real estate agent will almost always go to the seller and say. “Clearly, we’ve set the price too high. We’ve over-valued your home.” But what most people hope for is possibility number three --- those times when lots of offers come in just under the asking price, indicating that the people selling got the “value” just about right. In that situation, the sellers don’t have to worry that they either overvalued or undervalued their home. They achieved the “balance” they hoped for, that real-estate “sweet spot”.
That same sort of idea can apply to our spiritual lives. At the heart of every God-centered life is a life being in proper balance. And that involves “valuing” everything in the proper way and to the proper degree --- making judgments about what a certain thing or certain pursuit is really worth. And it will come as no surprise to hear me say that when it comes to the things of this earth --- things that don’t last --- we tend to “overvalue” them in all sorts of ways and often to our great harm whereby we give up peace and joy. In a sense, every temptation is precisely that, a giving too high a value (and being willing to pay too high a cost) to something that in fact falls far short of something else, someone else. In those situations, the fulfilling of our own needs and wants moves to the front seat rather than remain in the back seat. It’s evidence of a life out of balance.
On the other end of the spectrum, the things we often “undervalue” are surprisingly the realities that matter the most, the Gospel values that last, the God-things that give meaning, purpose, peace and joy to every aspect of our lives on into eternity. And so, striving to live out the commandments and beatitudes might not sound that great because that would mean adjusting our calendars, priorities and routines.
Yet, in faith, we know better.
Our Gospel passage today from Luke drives this point home. In it Jesus uses examples to show the importance of understanding what something “costs”, what something is “worth” --- whether that be someone doing a construction project or someone going into battle. And Jesus sandwiches these examples with two extreme declarations. First he says that people have to hate their family members or they can’t be his disciple. And he ends by saying that a person who is unwilling to renounce all possessions cannot be his disciple. That’s rough stuff. It’s hard to hear. And it’s difficult to wrap our minds around. What exactly is Jesus saying?
From this story (and others in Scripture) it seems pretty clear that Jesus wants us to always maintain the proper balance, always keep things in right relationship, always value things in an accurate way.
And it doesn’t mean the things of this world aren’t important, or don’t have value, or aren’t worth pursuing. We don’t have to consider them worthless. In fact, we should never do that. It just means that one true reality is always worth more than everything else and that is God.
And once we realize that (and start living accordingly) our lives will take on a kind of beauty, fullness, peace, joy and meaning we can’t possibly imagine. But we don’t have to just imagine it. We can find out for ourselves --- if we want this state of mind, body and soul enough.
And rest assured --- no price is too high.