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18th Sunday of OT Year C Transcript

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The Eighteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

(Year C)

First Reading Ecclesiastes 1:2; 2:21-23


Response If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts.
Psalm Psalm 90:3-4, 5-6, 12-13, 14 AND 17
Second Reading Colossians 3:1-5, 9-11
Gospel Acclamation Blessed are the poor in spirit,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Gospel Luke 2:13-21

The 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time for Year C gives us yet another passage that is
unique to the Gospel of Luke. It’s one of Jesus’ parables, the Parable of the Rich
Fool. This takes place in Luke 12:13-21. So let’s read the gospel and try to unpack
it together. It says this:

One of the multitude said to him, “Teacher, bid my brother divide the in-
heritance with me.” But he said to him, “Man, who made me a judge or di-
vider over you?” And he said to them, “Take heed, and beware of all cov-
etousness; for a man’s life does not consist in the abundance of his posses-
sions.” And he told them a parable, saying, “The land of a rich man
brought forth plentifully; and he thought to himself, ‘What shall I do, for I
have nowhere to store my crops?’ And he said, ‘I will do this: I will pull
down my barns, and build larger ones; and there I will store all my grain
and my goods. And I will say to my soul, Soul, you have ample goods laid
up for many years; take your ease, eat, drink, be merry.’ But God said to
him, ‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you; and the things you
have prepared, whose will they be?’ So is he who lays up treasure for him-
self, and is not rich toward God.”1

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all Bible citations/quotations herein are from The Holy Bible: Re-
vised Standard Version, Catholic Edition. New York: National Council of Churches of Christ in
the USA, 1994.

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As always, there’s a lot going on here. Notice, the setting of this particular parable
takes place when someone from the crowd steps out and asks Jesus to (basically)
act as a kind of arbiter between him and his brother. He says “make my brother di-
vide the inheritance with me.” Now, in the ancient world as today, when a father of
a family (or a parent) would die, the question of inheritance, of who would inherit
(not just the possessions but in particular the land that was left over), was often a
source of division and conflict between siblings. And if you ever had to be the ex-
ecutor of a will or oversee taking care of someone’s property after they’ve died,
you will know this frequently becomes a time for all kinds of division and conflict
between the surviving members of the family. Families can be torn apart over the
question of who gets the inheritance.

So this man steps out of the crowd and says to Jesus to act as a kind of a judge or
an arbiter between him and his brother, and Jesus responds as usual with a ques-
tion: “Man, who made me judge over you (or divider) over you?” So he kind of re-
bukes the guy for his question but then he follows up that mild rebuke with a deep-
er question and an exhortation to the crowd and to his disciples, namely to beware
of all covetousness. Now, the New American Bible here translates this as “beware
of all greed.” That’s a good translation, although the Greek word (once again, as
always, the Greeks are a little more expressive) is pleonexia. It does mean cov-
etousness, it does mean greed, but one of the most prominent dictionaries in the
New Testament defines it as following: “the state of desiring to have more than
one’s due; insatiableness.” So pleonexia, it means a kind of super abundance or de-
sire to have more than you need, which of course is what greed is all about. It’s a
very expressive Greek word; it’s very rich — no pun intended, I guess it was kind
of intended — Greek word there about greed. So Jesus is saying, beware of all
pleonexia.

And you might think, “Well how do I know that’s what he means?” Well just look
at the next line. You don’t have to know Greek, you just have to read it in context.
Beware of all pleonexia; for a man’s life does not consist in what? The abundance
of his possessions. So it’s an attachment to this kind of super abundance of posses-
sions. Not the necessities of life, but an over-abundance, an insatiableness to ac-
quire more and more and more possessions. That’s what Jesus is getting at here.
That’s the root problem that he’s driving at. So, what he’s trying to teach the disci-
ples here is that’s now what life is about, just getting more and more and more and
more stuff. It’s not about pleonexial; it’s not about wealth.

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And in order to illustrate that truth, in order to illustrate that moral truth, Jesus uses
the parable of the rich fool as an example. So he gives a story of a rich man whose
crops…again, think of an agricultural society…who get rich primarily through
agricultural surplus. It’s a very different economy than what we have today. So his
land brought full of plentifully and he though, “well wait, what am I going to do
with all of these crops? What do I do with all of this surplus food? Oh, I know. I’ll
tear down my barns, I’ll build a larger one; I’m going to store all of this grain and
all of this good up and then how am I going to live?” What does he say? He’s talk-
ing to himself here, the RSV does it right. In the Greek it literally says “soul”,
which means he’s talking to himself like “self” (it is like somebody looking in the
mirror) “self, you have ample goods laid out for many years, take your ease, eat,
drink and be merry.” So what vices does the rich man give in to? Gluttony: eat,
drink, be merry. That means feast sumptuously every day and then take your ease.
In other words, no more labor. The rich man’s surplus in wealth leads him to sloth
(laziness) and also to gluttony. He’s just going to live a life of eating and drink and
being merry, that’s his plan for his life. And in the midst of that God says, “You
fool, you’re going to die tonight. And when you’re dead, who’s things will these
be? Who is all of this stuff, who are these possessions going to belong to?” And
then the final line at the end of the parable, and Jesus will frequently do this, it’s
called the nimshal in Hebrew. It’s the point of the parable. You will have the para-
ble and then sometimes he’ll give a nimshal, he’ll give the “upshot”, would be an-
other way to translate it; a basic point that illustrates and clarifies what the parable
was all about. “So is he who lays up treasure to himself and isn’t rich toward God.”

So what’s Jesus doing here? He’s giving two kinds of wealth. There is the rich fool
who lays up treasure in what kind of manner? A selfish manner. It’s all for him-
self; he lays up a treasure for himself. But then the other category, implicitly, is the
wise person. What does the wise person do? He still accrues wealth but he is rich
toward God. That’s the difference. So he’s setting up a contrast here. So you can
see here that, ultimately, both of these teachings, the response to the man who asks
for Jesus to divide the inheritance and then the parable, the upshot of both of them
is to teach the disciples about the nature of true wealth and the true meaning of life.
True wealth is spiritual wealth, it’s being rich toward God, and then secondly,
earthly wealth is not what life is all about. A man’s life does not consist in the
abundance of his possessions. So you need to beware of the desire (the very human
desire) to devote your energy and to devote your life to accruing more and more
and more possessions. Alright, so that’s the gospel for today.

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Now let’s go back to Ecclesiastes. The Old Testament reading for today is an awe-
some compliment to the gospel because it’s one of my favorite books in the Old
Testament. If you like Winnie the Pooh, Ecclesiastes is the Eeyore of the Old Tes-
tament. It’s the most depressing book. If you’re a melancholic soul like myself, this
is your book. It is just so depressing; it’s so sad, but it’s beautiful in its melancholy.
So I love Ecclesiastes, it’s a fantastic book. And in this case, the Old Testament
reading for today gives us a section from the first two chapters; it gives us the
opening verses of Ecclesiastes and then selects a few verses specifically on the
vanity of earthly wealth. And you’ll easily figure out, once I read it, how this con-
nects with the parable of the rich fool. So let’s just go through that together.

Vanity of vanities, says the Preacher,



vanity of vanities! All is vanity.

Then the lectionary skips all the way down to Ecclesiastes 2:21-23, which says
this:

[S]ometimes a man who has toiled with wisdom and knowledge and skill
must leave all to be enjoyed by a man who did not toil for it. This also is
vanity and a great evil. What has a man from all the toil and strain with
which he toils beneath the sun? For all his days are full of pain, and his
work is a vexation; even in the night his mind does not rest. This also is
vanity.

Ok, very uplifting words there from the book of Ecclesiastes. So let’s just unpack
them together. The first thing that’s absolutely essential to understand when it
comes to this first reading is the meaning of the word “vanity.” Now this is the tra-
ditional translation of the opening lines of the book of Ecclesiastes. “Vanity of van-
ities…everything is vanity.” People have probably heard that before. The problem
with that translation is that in English, the noun “vanity” has come to be used more
with reference to pride or a disordered self-love; in other words, a person being
vain. Like the famous song, “You’re so vain, you probably think this song is about
you.” I know you’ve heard that; I grew up in the 70’s listening to that on the radio.
When we think of someone being vain, or if we think of vanity, we might think of
Vanity Fair, the famous novel, or the magazine that stole the title of that novel. So
the idea of focusing on image, focusing on appearances, someone who’s self-ab-
sorbed, someone who’s prideful, someone who’s egotistical; that’s what we think
of when we hear the word “vanity”. That’s not what Ecclesiastes is referring to; it’s
not that kind of vanity. The English translation of the word vanity in Ecclesiastes is

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rooted in the terminology of doing something in vain, or doing something in a fu-
tile manner, or doing something in a way that isn’t going to be efficacious; it’s “in
vain’.” That’s the meaning of this term. So you can see this in the Hebrew behind
it. The Hebrew word translated vanity here is hebel. And I’ll give you a parallel
from the Book of Job that will give you an idea of what this means. The word
hebel is literally defined as a vapor, a mist or a breath; like a “breath of the lungs”.
So in Job 7:16, Job says:

I loathe my life; I would not live for ever.



Let me alone, for my days are [hebel] a breath.

So what is Job saying when he says that his “days are a breath” (or you could
translate it, “my days are vanity”)? He’s talking about the fleeting nature of his life,
about the fact that there’s a sense in which, because his life is so short, all that he
does is vanity. It’s all a passing. It’s all a breath or a mist or a vapor. It’s a passing
thing. So when Ecclesiastes begins by saying, “hebel of hebel, all is hebel”, what it
means is that everything in this world is passing. It’s all, in a sense, done in vain
because it’s so fleeting, it’s so ephemeral. With that prelude in mind, what Ecclesi-
astes goes on to do in the first couple of chapters is give examples of just how
ephemeral, just how fleeting, and just how passing all of the good things of this
world that people chase after really are. So whether it’s the pleasures of the flesh,
the pleasures of food and drink, the pleasure of wealth; all these things which tradi-
tionally Solomon is associated with (because the book is traditionally associated
with and attributed to Solomon), all of that earthly good is passing. It’s all hebel.
It’s all just a breath. And so the lectionary, what is does is it skips down to verse
21, where Ecclesiastes is giving an example of how fleeting and how vain earthly
labor and earthly wealth is.

So with that background in mind, you can look at the verses again. It basically de-
scribes the fact that when a person has worked to acquire wisdom and knowledge
and skill, he’s going to leave everything that he acquires on the basis of that skill to
someone who didn’t work for it. It says “this also is hebel and a great evil.” So he’s
talking about the fact that a person can spend their whole life, in our times as in an-
tiquity, accruing wealth and then the second they die, it’s going to go to someone
else who didn’t do a thing to earn it. Whether it is that person’s children, or the
state, or the government (through taxation or whatever it might be), all of it is left
behind. “You can’t take it with you” is the famous proverb there. Now what it’s
getting at then is, what’s the point!? That’s what Ecclesiastes is doing. What’s the

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point then. If everything that I’ve worked for and all that I possess is going to be
left to someone who didn’t do a thing to earn it; then isn’t it just in vain? “What
has a man for all the toil and strain that would put you towards beneath the sun?
All his days are for the pain and his work is a vexation. Even in the night his mind
does not rest.” So if you read the fuller context of Ecclesiastes 2, you’ll see that, in
particular, what the book is highlighting is the anxiety that comes with wealth. The
book will talk about the fact that the poor man, the laborer, the day laborer, when
he’s done with his hard day’s work, he just sleeps like a log. He sleeps a peaceful
and restful sleep. But the rich man, the wealthy man, the wise man who has put so
much energy and effort into acquiring all these possessions, his possessions begin
to (in a sense) possess him, and he can’t even get a goodnight’s sleep. He can’t
even rest at night because the anxiety that comes with ownership robs him of the
most simple pleasures of life: namely, a goodnight’s sleep, a goodnight’s rest.
“This too is hebel”, Ecclesiastes is saying. This anxiety over earthly possessions is
also in vain. It’s also a breath, a mist, a vanity, because the moment you die it’s all
gone, and you can’t take it with you and it’s going to belong to someone else. So
you can see here the parallel very clear between the rich man who thinks that once
he has all of these possessions, he’s now safe and he can just eat and drink and be
merry and all will be well (in the gospel parable that Jesus uses), and then the rich
man in the book of Ecclesiastes who devotes everything to this vain pursuit of ac-
quiring all this wealth that’s not going to be his the second he passes away. It’s all
fleeting, it’s all passing, it’s all vanity. So that’s the parallel there between the Old
Testament and the New Testament.

And so in this case, it’s beautiful, the responsorial psalm for the day that the
Church has given us is Psalm 90. And the motif (or the theme) that’s at the heart of
this psalm is that life is short and that true wisdom comes from knowing to number
your days. In other words, living life aware of the fact that this life is very brief,
that it’s not all that there is, and that the Lord is ultimately in charge of our lives.
So I’ll just read a few verses from this very beautiful psalm. It’s psalm 90. I’ll just
read verses 3-6 and then verse 12 and following. So it says this, the psalmist is
praying to God, verse 3, it says:

Thou turnest man back to the dust,



    and sayest, “Turn back, O children of men!”


For a thousand years in thy sight



    are but as yesterday when it is past,


    or as a watch in the night.

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Thou dost sweep men away; they are like a dream,

    like grass which is renewed in the morning:


in the morning it flourishes and is renewed;



    in the evening it fades and withers.

Alright, so pause there. Notice what the psalmist is doing. It’s comparing the life-
span of a human being to the eternal character of God. So for someone who always
is, is now and always shall be, namely the Lord, our lives are like grass. They’re so
fleeting, it’s like grass that grows in the mornings (sprouts in the morning) and then
withers by the evening. That’s how quickly our lives pass. And then it goes on to
actually say that in verse 9 and following. It says:

For all our days pass away under thy wrath,



our years come to an end like a sigh.

The years of our life are threescore and ten,

or even by reason of strength fourscore;

yet their span is but toil and trouble;

they are soon gone, and we fly away.

And then in verse 12:

So teach us to number our days



that we may get a heart of wisdom.

So here we go again, the contrast between foolishness in the parable and wisdom in
the psalm. What is the nature of a wise person? According to the psalm, it’s some-
one who knows that life is short; it’s someone who has perspective on human life
that recognizes that in the grand scheme of things our lives are like the grass: here
today, gone tomorrow. And by the way, I can’t help but…let me do a little soap box
real quick. Notice that in Psalm 90, which is thousands of years old, what is human
life expectancy? What does it say here? Our lives are three score and ten, or by
reason of strength fourscore. In other words, our lives are about 70 years ordinarily,
and if you’re strong, you’ll live until your eighties, alright. I bring this up because
over the years I’ve had either students or I’ve seen it on television this idea that in
antiquity the life span of a person was dramatically shorter and that they only ex-
pected to live thirty or thirty five years. So when someone was 20 they were mid-
dle-aged or something. That is absurd and completely erroneous. Please, if some-
one tells you that, just say “why don’t you go read the Bible, Psalm 90.” It’s very
clear. In antiquity, people expected to live about seventy years, and eighty if you’re

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strong. So maybe you could say today that we expect to live about eighty years and
ninety if you’re strong, but life expectancy is basically the same. It was not that
much dramatically shorter in antiquity. People who say that just haven’t read
enough ancient literature. There are plenty examples of people living into their
eighties and nineties. Even St. John the Apostle, for example, is regarded as living
until the time he was one hundred. Ok, end of soap box.

Also you might think, well why do people say that? It’s because they confuse the
difference between a death mean and a life expectancy. So a mean (the average life
expectancy) was brought dramatically down statistically because so many people
died in childhood or they died young. But that has nothing to do with life ex-
pectancy. In other words, how long did ancient people expect to live? They did not
expect to live thirty five years. They expected to live seventy years and eighty if
you’re strong. That’s what the psalm is reflecting here, ancient life expectancy. So I
just bring this up because sometimes people might think, “Oh, they even thought of
life as more fleeting than we do.” That’s just not the case, alright. In the ancient
world, they are expected to live about as long as we expect to live today. End of
soap box, ok, so I’m done with that. I had to get that off my chest. Alright, so
please don’t say that anymore if you have been of that opinion. Now with that
done, let’s go back to the psalm. What do we need to do? “Teach us to number our
days.” The wise person recognizes how short life is. And then there’s one final
prayer here that’s in verse 17, in which the wise person says:

Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us,



and establish thou the work of our hands upon us,

yea, the work of our hands establish thou it.

Now, in a little archaic expression, what does that mean? The psalm ends in saying
my life is short, so Lord I trust you to establish the work of my hands. So it doesn’t
mean that human beings don’t labor. Human beings are called to labor. If you look
in Genesis 1, Adam is put in a garden to till it and to keep it. In other words, to
work it and to garden. So labor is a valuable and even essential part of the human
condition. Work in itself is good. However, work is a means to an end. It’s not the
end itself. Human beings aren’t made to work. They are made to have communion
with God. And so what the psalmist is saying is that all the work of my life, I hand
it over to you. I order it to you, God. I offer it to you and thereby show that my
work is not in idle, my work is not my God, my labor is not my God, the wealth
that I acquire from my labor is not what I was made for; I am made for you. I’m

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ultimately ordered to you. Which by the way, that’s why animal sacrifice is so im-
portant in the Old Testament. That’s why tithing was so important in the Old Tes-
tament. You would take the first root of your crop. You take the firstlings of your
flock. You take the tithe of your possessions and you would give them to the Tem-
ple. You would offer them to God on the altar as a way of showing that everything
I have is yours, Lord. Everything I possess I got from you and so I offer it back to
you because you are my ultimate end. You are what I was made for. I wasn’t made
to give myself to these earthly things. They are meant to sustain me, they are good
in themselves, but all that’s ultimately ordered toward God as the final end, as we
would say in Thomistic philosophy. But that’s what the psalmist is expressing here.
Wisdom means recognizing that life is short and taking my labor and offering it to
God as my ultimate end, as my ultimate purpose, as my ultimate reason for exis-
tence.

Ok, so with all of that in mind, lets bring it full circle to Jesus' parable of the Rich
Fool. What’s the difference between the rich fool and the person who is rich toward
God? Well the fool thinks that by having an abundance of earthly possessions he’s
secured happiness for himself, when he forgot that the basic truth is that life is
fleeting and life is short. That’s why he says “you fool, tonight yours soul is de-
manded of you and all these possessions, whose will they be?” So he was foolish
because he didn’t have an eternal perspective about his labor, about his property
and about his wealth. By contrast, Jesus says (he’s calling his disciples and he’s
teaching people in the audience) to be “rich toward God”. And the Greek there is
interesting, eis theon ploutōn. The preposition eis literally means “toward”. It has a
directional force to it. So how do I be rich toward God? I order the possessions, the
things that I have, I order them to God and not rich to myself. What did the rich
man do? He laid up treasure for himself (as Jesus says), but you should be rich to-
ward God. So notice the different movement there. That’s in Luke 12:21.

So is he who lays up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God.

Note the two different movements there. One, the wealth is ordered to me; the oth-
er, it’s ordered to God. That’s the difference between foolishness and wisdom.

In closing then, what do we make of this particular parable in the living tradition of
the church? In this case, one of my favorite early Church Fathers, St. Basil the
Great, who was one of those so called Cappadocian fathers — these were 4th Cen-
tury Christian writers who helped define the doctrine of the Trinity during a lot of
the debates that were taking place in the 4th Century over the Trinity. St. Basil of

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Caesarea — he was in Caesarea, but he becomes known as Basil the Great — he
actually had homilies on wealth. This was a big theme in early Christianity. How
do Christians deal with the issue of property and possessions and wealth? And in
his homily, St. Basil the Great uses the parable of The Rich Fool as an example to
how Christians should relate to earthly possessions. So let’s listen to what he has to
say about what it means to be “rich toward God.”:

[W]hat do we find in this man? A bitter disposition, hatred of other people,


unwillingness to give. This is the return he made to his Benefactor. He for-
got that we all share the same nature; he felt no obligation to distribute his
surplus to the needy. His barns were full to the bursting point, but still his
miserly heart was not satisfied. Year by year he increased his wealth, al-
ways adding new crops to the old. The result was a hopeless impasse:
greed would not permit him to part with anything he possessed... You who
have wealth, recognize who has given you the gifts you have received...
You are the servant of the good God, a steward on behalf of your fellow
servants. Do not imagine that everything has been provided for your own
stomach. Take decisions regarding your property as though it belonged to
another. Possessions give you pleasure for a short time, but then they will
slip through your fingers and be gone, and you will be required to give an
exact account of them. “What am I to do?” It would have been so easy to
say: “I will feed the hungry, I will open my barns and call in all the
poor...”2

So notice, Basil does three things that are really important here. First, he hones in
on in the fact that part of the rich man’s problem was that he wasn’t satisfied with
the earthly possessions. In other words, he didn’t just get what he needed, he had
more than he needed. He was driven by pleonexia, by greed. And you could see
this in the world all around us. How much is enough money? Well, there’s never
enough money. How many possessions are enough possessions? There’s never
enough. I don’t know if you’ve ever seen any of these television shows about
hoarders, the people who have this disorder where they just acquire more and more
and more things. Well, that disorder resides in all of our hearts in some way shape
or form. It’s in concupiscence,; the desire to possess more and more things, and the
heart is never satisfied with those earthly possessions because they’re all finite.
And ultimately what our hearts are made for is the infinite God. There’s no number

2 Basil, Homilies on Riches [trans. E. Barnecut], p. 104-105

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of finite possessions that are ever going to satisfy the desire of the heart. So it be-
comes a disordered love of possessions or greed. That’s the first point.

Secondly, notice Basil also points out the fact that man treats his wealth as if it’s all
for him. He never even stops to consider whether God has blessed him so that he
could bless others. What does he say? “I’m going to fill up my barn…” and then
he’s completely self-focused. “Soul, eat, drink, take leisure, be merry, rest.” You’ve
got everything you need. This is very similar to the parable of Lazarus and the Rich
Man. Remember, the rich man, it doesn’t say he was an idolater, it doesn’t say he
was an adulterer, it doesn’t say he bore false witness in court; he doesn’t break any
of the commandments explicitly. What does he do? He neglects to feed and care
for the poor man who is lying on his doorstep. He fails gravely in love of neighbor.
Well the rich fool does the same thing. He thinks all this food and this wealth is
just for him and it doesn’t even occur to him that there might be someone in need.
Which again, in a 1st Century context, the poor were everywhere. There was ready
access to the poo. Jesus says this, “the poor you always have with you, but you
don’t always have me.” So the rich man here misses the opportunity to show chari-
ty to the poor because he’s so focused on himself.

And then third and finally, Basil points out the fleetingness of life. Look, posses-
sions are going to give you pleasure for a short time, but eventually they’re going
to slip through your fingers, they’re going to be gone and you will have to give an
account of them. And this is the final aspect of this that’s really important, the idea
of the particular judgment. What happens in the parable? He dies. “Fool, this night
your soul is required of you.” And what Basil is saying here is that implied in that
is that we (get ready for this) will all have to give an account of stewardship. What
did we do with the possessions that we have? How did we order the blessings God
has given us? Whether it’s in the form of money or land or clothing, whatever it
might be, books; what do you with your possessions? How do you order them? Are
you laying up treasure for yourself or are you rich toward God and toward your
neighbor? And what Basil is saying is that the easy answer to the man’s question,
“what am I to do?” is, “open the barns and feed the poor.” That would’ve been the
right thing to do in order to show his love of neighbor. But he’s so in love with
himself and with his stuff that he can’t see it. So in closing then, this parable to me
really brings up the question of, are we living our lives as disciples of Jesus ac-
cording to the wisdom of God, when it comes to wealth, or are we acting like the
rich fool? And so the prayer for today from the Psalm is “Lord, teach us to number
our days and you establish the work of our hands.”

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