Sunday, September 22, 2019

God looks upon our faith – Luke 16:1-13, Amos 8:4-7

25th Sunday in Ordinary Time; Holy Infant parish.


In general, the beginning is a very good place to start, but there are some stories with which it’s best to start at the end. I think this parable, which is confusing and strange in a lot of ways, is one of those.


It ends with the master commending his manager. He praises him. And, like in most of Jesus’ parables, one helpful way to start applying them to our lives is to imagine God as the master and us as the servant. Straight off, doing that, we come to an awareness of what God has entrusted us with. Huge sums, valuable, precious gifts, all of the amazing gifts in our lives: God’s goods, given for us to administer, in the service of His Kingdom. And the end of the story is God praising us. I don’t know if that’s an image of God we think of very often, but it’s profoundly biblical. Just as God proclaimed of Jesus at his baptism, “this is my beloved son, in whom I am well-pleased,” so in each baptized follower does God delight and proclaim his love and his good pleasure. I think these two moments give us prompts for our prayer. We talk a lot about the need to examine our conscience, to acknowledge our sins. And that is important. But what might it look like to put just as much energy into examining our gifts, what God has entrusted us with, and imagining vividly that moment of God praising us? It’s such a human need, and maybe we’d be less needy about, if we regularly prayed about God’s praise of us.

Now, that would be incomplete as prayer if that was all we ever prayed out, and the story is just as incomplete if that’s all we retell of it. It starts with the news that the manager, the servant in whom we’re meant to see ourselves, has royally screwed up. He’s squandered his master’s property. Not necessarily through any ill will, quite possibly just through carelessness. And as much as we resonate with the desire to be praised, we probably also resonate with this feeling: the awareness that we have not used the gifts God has given us as they ought to be used; we have not lived lives of stewarding all of our gifts for the greater glory of God. And maybe we feel we’ve been there with the manager in knowing the shame of having been found out, or maybe we are reminded of our fear that something we’ve done or haven’t will be exposed, or maybe we know a little bit of both, for different aspects of our sinfulness. Regardless, looking at the beginning and end of our story, we see our fear and our hope, our shame and our glory; the awareness we’ve sinned and squandered, the longing for praise, the conviction that God is bringing us there.

That dynamic, that tension of being caught between those two things, is capture brilliantly in what I think is one of the most beautiful prayers of the Mass. Right after the Our Father, the priest prays in our name to Jesus that he might “Look not upon our sins, but on the faith of your Church.”  It’s a prayer that recognizes the reality of our sin, but asks Jesus not to look there; to look instead on the faith that gathered us together. It’s a prayer prayed with confident, daring hope that God will answer it. God will look not upon our sin, but upon our faith, and rejoice and erupt in praise.

Note that it doesn’t say, “look not upon our sin but upon our accomplishments;” our resume, our transcript, our merit badges; no, upon our faith, our trust. I think in this way, the liturgy interprets our scripture for us. For what does the man do when he realizes he’s getting the boot?  His first step is to take an honest inventory of himself, to become aware that he can’t do all the things, that manual laborers and beggars (people he probably looked down upon) have gifts that he doesn’t have. He doesn’t doubt that God has given him gifts, but he comes to a deeper awareness of his limitations, and of others’ giftedness.

And this equips him for action. As a lame duck debt collector, he really has the opportunity to do whatever he wants in this last day or so, or, should I say, extort whatever he wants. But, he doesn’t. Rather than making a quick buck on these hapless clients of his soon-to-be-ex-master, he plays the long game, which is prudent, but it’s only prudent if you basically trust people. He plays the trusting game, the game that assumes the best of others. His ploy only works on the basis that he assumes that if he’s kind to people now, they’ll be kind to him later. In short, he assumes the people around him are people, basically good people, not pawns (like the poor being cheated by the merchants Amos castigated), and not out-to-get-him. He has respect for other people’s gifts, and faith in their good nature.


And the Lord looks not upon his sins, but upon his faith, and praises him. We want our faith to be so much bigger than that. But a grand faith is big at every level; our faith in God’s love and mercy grows as we nourish it at the lower levels, as we grow in our respect for and trust in humanity. Not as Pollyannas, who deny sin, but as faithful people, who call out our own before suspecting another’s, and live lives of trust that God is working, not just in us, but in each and every person we meet. When we ask God to look upon our faith, that’s not asking him to look on something amazing we’ve built, but to see that we’ve seen his handiwork, our awe at what, and whom, he is building up around us. The opposite of faith isn’t so much doubt, as suspicion and pride. Coming face-to-face with his sin lets this steward build up his faith, and readies him for praise.

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