WHAT is the big problem of the rich? Christ spelled it out
when he said, “It is easier for a camel
to pass through the eye of a
needle than for a rich man to enter the
kingdom of God.” (Mt 19,24)
The big problem of the rich, in short, is his attachment
to his wealth such that he cannot give
himself fully to God. He may
give the appearance that he is giving a
lot, but if it is not the
whole of himself, then it is not total
self-giving which God deserves
and expects from each one of us.
Let us always remember that God wants the whole of
ourselves. He wants our entire heart,
not a divided heart. He wants to
be everything to us, the first and the
last, the Alpha and the Omega.
He wants to be given priority over
everything else, including our own
life.
This is not selfishness on his part, an act of
ego-tripping. It is simply in
recognition of the basic truth that
everything, including our life, comes
from him and also belongs to
him. We have no right whatsoever to
expropriate as our own what
actually comes and belongs to God.
We need to understand that our intelligence and will, our
freedom and rights that enable us to be
and to do what we want, and to
be rich in many ways, also come from God
and belong to him. They can
only be properly exercised when used in
accord with God’s will and
ways.
And to be rich here does not mean only those with a lot of
money and resources. It can mean those
who are well-endowed in the
other aspects of life—power, fame,
health, intelligence, luck, etc.
We need to remind ourselves constantly that even if we can
say we are the owners of such wealth,
resources, talents, power, fame,
and indeed of our whole life, we
actually are at best only stewards
who have to give account to the absolute
owner of all these things
that we possess.
We have to continually fight against the tendency and the
constant temptation to think that all
these things are simply are own,
that we are their absolute owners. This
is not going to be easy, of
course, because even within ourselves we
have the villain that will
always push us to think that way.
That is why we really would need to make use of strong and
constant measures to see to it that we
are properly detached from
whatever form of human and worldly
wealth we can own and possess in
this life.
It is not that we avoid acquiring wealth in this life. The
acquisition of wealth can be an
expression of the productivity and
fruitfulness that is also expected of
us. But we need to always
rectify our intentions, seeing to it
that everything we do in this
department is always for the glory of
God and for the common good of
the people.
This should be shown in the way we live our life that
should be marked by the qualities of
simplicity, austerity, humility,
generosity, magnanimity, honesty,
integrity, etc.
We need to be spiritually strong and tough such that we
would be willing to lose everything that
we may have acquired with
great effort in just an instant. We have
to constantly remind
ourselves that with God we would already
have everything. “Solo Dios
basta,” as St. Teresa used to say.
Let us never forget that wealth in whatever form, if not
related to God, is the worst corrupting
agent we can have in life.
Everyday, we should devise a plan of
protecting ourselves from the
strong attraction of wealth that would
take us away from God and from
others.
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