ON CHRISTIAN STEWARDSHIP
Every
Sunday at Mass, we proclaim in the Apostle’s Creed, “I believe in God,
the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth.” The Nicene Creed’s
version is more insightful. It goes: “We believe in one God, the Father,
the Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all that is seen and
unseen.”
“Of all that is seen and unseen” — God owns everything, not only the visible
world but even the invisible. Nothing escapes His authority. The
Christian God is not just one deity among many others. God is beyond the
world. No one and nothing therefore is beyond God’s province and
provenance. It is also within this framework that we should understand
the biblical principle, “Give unto Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God
what is God’s” (Matthew 22:21). What is Caesar’s? Limited jurisdiction.
What is God’s? Unlimited jurisdiction and boundless
allegiance.
The Gospel parable speaks of a rich man who calls on his manager to
make an accounting of all his property. God is the rich man. We are all
His managers. If God owns everything, then even as managers we are but
stewards. Everything that we have, we possess only in borrowed time, in
limited fashion. Since we are but stewards, we will face the owner
during the time of reckoning. There will be a time of accounting.
As tenants and stewards of God’s gifts, we are given the privilege to
dispose of God’s wonderful creation. The question we need to ask is
this: Did my enjoyment of God’s bounty take the direction of responsible
use or did it take the path of misuse and abuse? One way to determine
the answer is to imagine ourselves at the end of our life’s journey.
Christian writer Rick Warren proposes an insightful imagery: “When your
time comes, can you say like Jesus, ‘It is finished,’ or would you say,
‘I am finished.’” “It is finished” means mission accomplished. “I am finished” means mission failed.
Fellow steward, what will it be for you? Fr. Joel Jason
REFLECTION
QUESTION: Today make an inventory of your economic, physical and
spiritual assets and assess if they have been well-managed.
At the sunset of my life, may I gladly face You, O Lord, and say, “It is finished.” Amen.
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