Matthew 6:14-21
If all of your money is in a certain bank or
investment, you will be very concerned about that bank or investment. Your treasure is there, and your heart will
follow. If you invest your time, energy,
and effort in any relationship or any activity, you will value it highly. You give your life to it, and your heart
follows.
We
are all given a blessed opportunity during Lent to invest our lives in God and
our neighbors. For the treasure of our
lives is our love, our attention, our time, and our actions. Too often, that treasure is wasted, is
squandered, on matters of no importance at all.
We use our minds to hold grudges and our lips to condemn others. We use food and drink simply for pleasure in
ways that weaken us spiritually and physically.
We fixate on money as though it is the measure of our worth and, no
matter how much or how little we have, we are never satisfied. Our hearts follow our treasure. So we come to love putting others down and
building ourselves up. We come to love
pleasing ourselves in whatever way possible.
And, of course, we come to love material possessions more than God and
neighbor.
As
St. Paul wrote to the Romans, it is time to wake up from our slumber. For without acknowledging what we are doing,
we have all been stumbling in the dark, spending ourselves on that which cannot satisfy us, wasting life
itself on the bad dreams of our passions.
Yes, it’s time to wake up, for Lent is like an alarm clock reminding us
to stop throwing our lives away and to “put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make
no provision for the flesh, to fulfill its lusts.”
We
need to pay attention to St. Paul’s warning.
For too long, we have used our time, energy, and attention to fulfill
whatever self-centered desires we have.
Instead of focusing on forgiving those who have wronged us, we have
remembered the offenses of others and fantasized about how to get even. Instead of using food or other pleasures with
self-restraint so that they have their proper place in our lives, we have
indulged ourselves and become their slaves.
Instead of using our financial resources to help the needy and support
the ministries of the Church, we have selfishly loved our money and possessions. In other words, we have learned to love what
we treasure: ourselves and the things
that help us get what we want.
Jesus
Christ calls us to a different kind of life, of course. He calls us to invest ourselves in Him, to
offer our time, energy, possessions, relationships, and bodily appetites for
the healing, fulfillment, and transformation of the Kingdom. “Where your treasure is, there will your
heart be also.” If we want to be pure of
heart, if we want to love God with every ounce of our being and our neighbors
as ourselves, we must learn to treasure the new life that Christ has brought to
the world. We do that by taking
deliberate, intentional steps to redirect our hearts to Him, by investing the
treasure of our lives in the ways of the Kingdom.
If
there is anything that takes focused effort, it is forgiveness. How easy and seductive it is to brood over
the wrongs other have done us, to judge them
again and again in our minds, and to make ourselves feel better by
comparing ourselves with those on whom we like to look down. But when we do so, we simply make provision
for the flesh and fulfill its lusts. We
sink deeper and deeper into a spiral of self-righteous delusion. We end up wasting the treasure of our lives
and damaging our hearts.
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