Eighteenth Sunday of Ordinary
Time (C) [Lk 12:13-21]
03.08.2025
The Parable of the Rich Fool
1.
Theme in brief
Christian
attitude toward wealth
2. Focus Statement
We need to be on our guard against
all kinds of greed for possessions because our life does not consist in the
abundance of our possessions.
3. Explanation of
the text
According to today’s gospel, when
someone in the crowd requests Jesus to tell his brother to divide the family
inheritance with him, he refuses to be a “judge” or arbitrator in the property dispute
between brothers, though other Rabbis used to do it in his time (12:13-14). Instead,
he uses this request as an occasion to teach a lesson about the dangers of greed for
wealth and the
trap laid by it (12:15). He sees behind this dispute over land and
property, human tendencies toward greed or covetousness. In order to emphasize the foolishness
of putting full trust
in one’s wealth, he tells them the parable of the Rich Fool. Through this
parable Jesus wants to teach the lesson that their quarrel over family
inheritance would come to an end without his intervention, if they could root
out greed from their hearts over possessions and show genuine love for each
other.
The main character of the given
parable is a rich man who is not rich enough. He is rich in people’s sight but poor in God’s,
or as Jesus says he is not rich toward
God (12:21). He is in fact a Poor Rich Fool. What exactly is the fault of this
rich farmer? There is no hint in the parable to suggest that he has amassed his
wealth by illegal/corrupt means or by paying unjust wages to his labourers. He
must have gained it by his hard work. He seems to have become the envy of many
neighbours because his fields have produced so abundant crops that he has no
place to store them (12:17). After all,
what is wrong in making plans and building “larger barns” for storing one’s
“grain and goods” (12:18)? Yet, Jesus finds him at fault. His first fault is
found in his relentless use of the first person pronouns "I" and "my."
This is what he says in his self-talk after his land “produced abundantly”
(12:16): “I will do this…. I will pull down…. I will build…. I will store…. my
grain… my goods…. say to my soul….” (12:18-19). He uses the word "I"
six times and the word "my" five times. For him everything is
"I" and "my." This sort of self-chatting portrays him as a
man who is totally preoccupied with self or one who is at the height of his
selfishness or egoism.
This first fault leads to a second
one: with the abundance of his wealth he believes that he can make his future
totally secure.
This makes him declare to his own soul his philosophy of life: "Soul, you
have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry" because
nobody knows what will happen tomorrow (12:19). With all the wealth, he is so poor
that he is unable exercise total control over his life. All his calculations
and plans are shattered as he is interrupted by the Word of God, “This very
night your life is being demanded of you,” that is, you are going to die
(12:20). He sadly comes to know that his larger barns cannot save his life. He
lately realizes his miscalculation: forget about tomorrow, tonight itself his
life will end!
God himself calls this rich man, “You fool”
(12:20). According to the Psalmist, only “fools say in their hearts that there
is no God“ (Ps 14:1). His foolishness consists in keeping God “out of sight,
out of mind” by placing his full trust and ultimate security in wealth and believing that it
will save him from all troubles. He lives a life of practical atheism: when it comes to managing his life he relies on his
possessions leaving God totally out of his schemes. In other words, his
foolishness consists in forgetting the fact that he is not the master of
his life and destiny
and has no total control over it.
The egoistic outlook of this Rich Fool
eliminates not only God from his consideration or scheme but also neighbours. His
covetousness towards possessions makes him blind to the rights and needs of others. The thought that he
needs to share at least something of his wealth with the less fortunate never
enters his mind. He allows his possessions to possess him or the property he owned
to own
him. His total reliance
on material possessions
and money with a philosophy of life mentioned above (12:19) is the sign of a
totally dissipated
life as Luke tells in another place in his gospel (12:45).
4.
Application to life
As it happens in the life of the
Rich Fool, excessive
greed
can lead to the following consequences for us also. We can observe a number of “foolish”
points in this man’s way of thinking and action-plan: (1) He fails to
recognize where his wealth comes from. He lives a materialistic life-style and forgets that
his wealth is God’s
gift. It is the Lord who gives everything and the Lord who takes
away (Job 1:21), sometimes all of a sudden. (2) He thinks that wealth is meant
for only to build larger barns and store up goods for himself. It never occurs to
him that when his existing barns are already filled with his goods, it is high
time to share
them with the have-nots. (3) He plans for an early retirement from duties
because he considers the abundance of his wealth as his total security
for the future,
as if it would save him from any calamity. (4) He never thinks about
the possibility that he may not live to enjoy what he has accumulated and
somebody who never worked for it may enjoy it.
We can very well notice that the attitudes
of this rich man towards wealth are totally contrary to Jesus’ teachings. He
keeps God out of his schemes and thinks that all his wealth is his own
achievement and not a blessing from God. He does not think of the
possibility of sharing
even a small portion of his wealth with the have-nots. This man has become a worshipper
of the most popular gods of today: "I,” “My” and “Mine” – a sort of Unholy
Trinity. He is called "fool" not because of the abundance of his
wealth or his ambitious plans but because he considers finite and passing things as if
they had an infinite
and permanent value. In spite of such a wonderful
scientific progress and technological advances of our times, today the whole of
human race has become more vulnerable and fragile than before. Anywhere at
any time a terrorist attack can take place in spite of meticulous security
measures of our Governments. Life is full of uncertainty and insecurity.
After all, nobody can fully control one’s own life neither with one’s own
wealth nor achievements.
Therefore, in this parable Jesus
teaches that if we want to avoid various kinds of greed, we must “take care” or
watch out
and “be on our guard”
against its dominion over us (12:15). He insists that unless we are always vigilant
against the onslaught of greed and resist its dominion over us with spiritual
power that comes from God, we can become easy victims to its designs. As per
Christian attitude, money and wealth are not exclusively for oneself. If we
allow greed and covetousness to take control of our mind and hearts, it can
produce the following consequences: (1) constant quarrels, disputes and court
cases over money and property in our homes and neighbourhoods resulting in the
failure of any advice, reconciliation and arbitration; (2) cases of unequal
division of ancestral land among brothers in some families and grabbing
of others’ land through intimidation; (3) temptation to acquire money and
wealth by any available means, no matter how dubious or immoral they may be; (4) to be
blind to the rights
and
needs of others, especially of the poor; (5) to forget to look
beyond ourselves and be conscious of our stewardship or responsibility
to share
something of our wealth with the have-nots. Like the Rich Fool, excessive greed
can take away any compassion for the needy. God does not bless
us with sufficient wealth to hoard it for ourselves but to use a part of it
for the service of others or building up of his Kingdom, where the poor who lack
basic necessities of life and the poor in spirit (who need spiritual food) are
taken care of. Then only, as Jesus says, we shall “be rich toward God” (12:21).
In our consumerist society today, we
are constantly bombarded with the display of glamorous goods and are enticed
with advertisements to acquire the latest gadgets. We fall victims to this
allurement and acquire the latest goods by discarding the old ones. We forget
the fact that our wealth gives us only a relative degree of security and comfort.
By itself it does not produce genuine love, a good relationship with neighbours, a meaning
in life, peace
of mind and existential joy. During one of my social awareness seminars,
when I asked some Catholic leaders to make two columns in their notebooks and
write in the first column, the things money could buy and in the second, the
things money could not, one of them wrote that money could buy both sin
and virtue,
and left the other column blank. One wonders how one can buy virtue with money.
We can buy costly food to eat with our money but not appetite; a cosy bed to
sleep in but not a peaceful sleep; and the best Bible but not faith in God’s Word.
A boy may buy a girl and vice versa with money, but cannot buy genuine care,
concern, forgiveness of hurts, mutual adjustments and self-sacrifice which are
essential ingredients of a happy married life. We cannot buy all the precious virtues
and values as well as character with money. Then why treat it as the be-all and end-all
of life?
This is the reason why Jesus tells
us to live by this principle: “One’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions”
(12:15). Any amount of accumulation of goods sufficient enough for ages to come
will not produce real life. Life is not meant for accumulating wealth only
or merely
for self-enjoyment.
As Jesus says, you are never sure “the things you have prepared, whose they
will be” ultimately (12:20). Like the Rich Fool, we too sometimes have wrong
priorities. What is the priority of our life? Life does not consist
only in acquiring and accumulating wealth or eating and drinking. The rich man
in today’s parable lives a life not only of egoism but also of hedonism
and practical atheism. He represents people who are always at the service of
dollars/ pounds/ euros/ rupees to such an extent that they are willing to bow
to their demands at the cost of human relationships. They forget that the real
purpose of our life is to become rich toward God by putting our total security
in him alone and not in wealth, and by cultivating a spirit of detachment
towards possessions. Ultimately our life is far superior to our possessions. It
does not depend on our riches either.
The
message of today’s gospel calls upon us to set our priorities regarding
possessions. Riches are not bad in themselves, but can become bad if we put our full
security in them instead of God, and if they are used exclusively for our own selfish
purposes. For that matter, even poverty does not make one free from
selfishness. While some poor people generously share even the little they have,
others become greedy toward those little things. The problem is not
owning possessions as such but allowing our possessions to possess
us. It is our foolishness to place our full trust and security in wealth
(money) and to believe that it will save us from all troubles and make us truly
happy. Our true
value is not determined by our valuables. All our plans and human calculations
made by trusting in the abundance of accumulated wealth will be shattered like
the Rich Fool if we put God out of our scheme of things. The real contrast as
well as the battle is between being rich in the world’s eyes and being rich in
God’s. As God is rich in mercy, as his children, we too are called to be rich in
showing mercy towards the poor by sharing what we have, instead of storing it
up only for ourselves.
What
about the right use of money? Money represents value. What we do with our money
shows what we value in your heart. If we value only eating, drinking and making
merry, then we spend money for these things extravagantly, making a public
display of it especially at weddings and parties. If we value service to
neighbours, helping the poor and the needy, and participation in the mission of
the Church, then we shall spend our money for these things also. Jesus says:
“Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also” (Lk 12:34).
How and where we spend our money shows what we value the most in life. The
question is whether we value our possessions more than God, or whether we value
God more than our possessions.
5.
Response to God's Word
What is our attitude towards money and
wealth? Do we trust in wealth more than in God? Do we have a sense of
detachment towards wealth so as not to put our full security and trust in it? What
is the priority of our life? Is it amassing wealth, eating and drinking or
something beyond that? Do we seriously try to root out greed from our hearts?
Do we share something of what we have with those who don’t have even that much?
6.
A Prayer
Deliver us, O Lord, from all
covetousness and from attachment to possessions. You alone are our
greatest treasure and portion. All that we have and we are is your gift.
Grant that we may make good use of your gifts which come also in the form of
material blessings you give us. May we use them generously for your glory and share
a part of them with the less fortunate ones. Amen.