Dedication of St. John the Baptist in Lateran Gardens: Nov. 8, 2014
Loans and Extortion
We live in a world based upon the flow of money. Businesses and individuals borrow money to buy commodities. The business that sold the commodity made money, and so did their suppliers, and so on. This flow of money helps the economy grow.
What happens when the percentage of the loan is too high? Imagine repaying a loan at twenty five or thirty five percent interest. Or fifty percent interest. The loaner becomes the loan shark, the extortionist. Businessmen in the time of Jesus loaned at such rates. Below the parable of the talents lay the reality of extortion. Jesus told the story of three extortionists to shock his audience and make them reconsider their notions of God’s Kingdom.
WEEKLY BLOG LINK Why don't we have a discussion about economic justice in this country?
NEW!!! VIDEOCAST!!! In this videocast series connecting the Catechism of the Catholic Church with the weekly gospel reading, we consider the parable of the Talents and the subject of free will. (Please note: the link for this videocast is to my YouTube page.)
MP3 PODCAST In this week’s audio podcast, we investigate how faith is risky. Sharing one’s beliefs can lead to controversy. The believer must be aware of and ready for negative consequences, but these reactions cannot overshadow the burning need to share personal faith.
FIRST READING The book of Proverbs presented its idea of the perfect wife: a faith-filled servant of her husband. While our culture might reject this image, we must look beyond our notions to see what was admirable in the image. Faithfulness.
PSALM Psalm 128 described the blessed man, an industrious person of faith surrounded by a family of faith. Hard work and fidelity to God were the ingredients of a happy life.
SECOND READING In his first letter to the Thessalonians, St. Paul advised his audience to be ready for the coming of the Lord. His arrival will be sudden. We should not take the calm of the moment as a reason to be lax in our lives as Christians.
GOSPEL The parable of the talents in Matthew’s gospel presented three servants who “invested” their employer’s money. Westerners seem to readily accept the parable, but the contemporaries of Jesus were shocked by the images. Jesus used the figures of loan sharks to describe the missionary efforts of his ministry and his followers. How could this be? He preached on the Kingdom, a reality that was vastly different from anything we can imagine.
CHILDREN’S READINGS In the discussion for the first reading, we realize moms are the smartest people in the world. In the story for the gospel, no matter what Mark did, he could not please his soccer coach. Mark learned that some people are never happy, but that is not the case for God.
CATECHISM LINK In this week’s Catechism Link, we investigate free will and conscience.
FAMILY ACTIVITY The parable of the talents really addressed the subject of trust. The rich man trusted his servants to earn him more money. One servant did not trust the rich man, so he hid the money until he could return it; this man did not believe in himself. Trust means believing in others and in ourselves.
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