ÿþ<HEAD> <meta name="description" content="Homilies and scholarly articles of a Byzantine Catholic Priest."> <meta name="keywords" content="Catholic, Byzantine, Orthodox, Religion, Pope, Homilies, Sermons, Bible, Orthdox, Orthodoxy, Catholicism, OTR, Radio"> <TITLE>Byzantine Catholic Priest: Homilies according to the Byzantine Calendar</TITLE> <link rel="shortcut icon" href="linkicon.ico"> <BODY BACKGROUND="back.jpg" TEXT=#000000 LINK=#7c6262 VLINK=#7c6262 alink=#7c6262> <FONT FACE="Maiandra GD"> <STYLE TYPE="text/css"> <!-- /* $WEFT -- Created by: Michael Venditti (admin@fathervenditti.com) on 7/20/2016 -- */ @font-face { font-family: Maiandra GD; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal; src: url(MAIANDR2.eot); } --> </STYLE> </HEAD> <p align=center><img src="header.jpg"> <table align=center border=0 cellpadding=10 cellspacing=0 rules=none width=95% cols=2> <tr> <td align=right valign=top width=20%><font face="Maiandra GD" color=#7c6262 size=+1><p align=right>It's All Greek to Me.<br><br><small>Lessons from cycle II of the feria, according to the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite:<br><br>Philippians 4: 10-19.<br>Psalm 112: 1-2, 5-6, 8-9.<br>Luke 16: 9-15.</small><br><br>The Thirty-First Saturday of Ordinary Time.<br><br><small>A Votive Mass of the Blessed Virgin Mary.</small></font><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><font face="Maiandra GD" color=#7c6262 size=-1><p align=right>Return to <a href="index.htm">ByzantineCatholicPriest.com</a>.</font></td> <td align=right valign=top width-80%><font face="Maiandra GD"><p align=justify><img src="luke.jpg" align=right hspace=15 vspace=5>10:28 AM 11/8/2014  The difficulty with finding a relevant meaning from some of these Gospel passages has a lot to do with the art of translation, and many of you have heard me take issue with our English translations of Holy Writ many times. The word in question, which causes the difficulty in today's Gospel lesson, is  mammon, or <font face="System">¼±¼É½·</font> in Greek, from the root <font face="System">¼±¼É½âs;</font> and, while it s almost always translated as  wealth or  money, it means something more than that. One of the frustrations in trying to learn some of these ancient languages is that there are so many different words which the Lexicon translates in the same way, because the words don't exist in English which would distinguish between them. So, in your Bible the word may read as  money, and in English money is money. But in Aramaic or Hebrew or, in the case here of St. Luke, Greek, given that he was the son of Greek parents and had a lot of formal education you may have five different words that mean money, and each one says something different about it or the person who owns it or uses it. Mammon is wealth or money, but with a certain quality of personification. When it s used as the object of a sentence, it implies some kind of reciprocal human-like relationship to the subject of the sentence. So when one possesses mammon or <font face="System">¼±¼É½âs,</font> one not only possesses money but is also possessed by it. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;Which kind of sums up our Lord s whole point, doesn t it? St. John Chrysostom explains for us exactly how the choice of this word defines the whole meaning of our Lord s narrative. It s not the possession of the wealth that s the problem; it s the possession that the wealth holds over us that s the problem. The Greek language gives you the option of speaking about inanimate objects as persons because it is a fact of life that such objects can become virtual  persons to those who desire them. Money becomes mammon when obtaining or preserving it becomes the focus of my life, a relationship which should exist only with another person. It s all right to focus on your husband or your wife, it s all right to focus on your children, it s all right to focus on God, but to focus on something that is not a person is wrong. It robs all the other  persons in your life of their humanity. You end up giving human dedication to something that is not human, thus making all the other people in your life less than human by subordinating them to something that has no life. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;And this, I think, is a very good way to understand the point our Lord is making. There are all kinds of things we need to fulfill our obligations to the people whom we love. One of them is money. You can t feed a family or put a roof over their heads without it. But every month you re handed that pay check, as abundant or as meager it may be, it isn t the number of digits on the check that should give you satisfaction; it s what that number should represent to the person who has his life well-ordered: the meeting of his responsibilities to those who depend on him. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;The ancient Desert Fathers we remember as the supreme teachers of holiness. But in another sense we have to recognize that, spiritually speaking, they took the easy way out. By forsaking all material possessions and retreating into the solitude of the desert, they isolated themselves from everything that could possibly come between God and themselves. We don t have that luxury. We depend on others and others depend on us, in marriage, in the priesthood, in any number of situations in which we may find ourselves. <img src="chrysostom.jpg" align=left hspace=15 vspace=5>They were like alcoholics who completely gave up drink; we are more like compulsive over-eaters who can t give up food, but must try somehow to live with it in a modified and detached way which, when you think about it, can be a much more difficult thing. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;We can, therefore, presume that our Lord used the word that he used very deliberately. It isn t a question of how much, but a question of why? When two people get married and look forward to a family, they re concerned with creating a home and an environment in which a family can flourish; but, as the years pass that focus can get lost; we can become so immersed in the various activities that keep the check coming in, that we can forget the reason for it all. Work and job, then, become goals in themselves; not that we consciously make them so, but that through years of going through the motions we have forgotten what it s all for. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;And this is true not only in reference to our families but most especially in reference to God. After all, just as material wealth exists for the benefit of our families, so our families are really nothing more than a means to bring ourselves and others closer to Christ. That s why marriage is a sacrament: it is a way to God. One gets married precisely because two souls seeking perfection have a much better chance of success than one soul alone, because they temper each other, and limit each other, and motivate each other to do what is right. Otherwise, she exists only to please me, and I exist only to please her, when the reality should be that we both exist to help one another please God. And this is self-evident: how many people have we met along the way who would never go the church except that, somewhere along the line, they married someone who practiced the Faith? How many couples are there who honestly know that they would never have continued to practice the Faith after marriage were it not for the fact that they needed a baby baptized, or felt guilty about not raising a child in a religious environment. And while some might question the purity of such motives, the fact is that it s exactly this sort of thing that marriage and family are for. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;The longer I live the more I m convinced that everything we do has some kind of ulterior motive, but that s OK just so long as that ulterior motive is a positive one, and not mammon. In the end, no matter what we do, no matter what reason we think we have for doing it, it must be something that will lead us to God. And it will be, as long as it s not mammon, as long as we can see the will of God in every task of life. And that happens when we train ourselves to see, in everyone who depends on us, the face of Christ. </font> <p align=center><img src="signature.jpg"> </tr> </table>