13 August 2007 Monday of the 19th Week in Ordinary Time
Matthew 17, 22-27 The Way to Pay our Debts
The Gospel tells us that upon the return of the disciples to
It would have been nice if we take the passage literally: In our financial difficulties, we can wait for God to give us a miracle. We have tried waiting for God to shower us with the money we need to pay our unpaid sum. But we know that money will not come down from heaven.
We can therefore read the passage with a little humor. How then should we pay our debts? Jesus tells Peter, who is a fisherman that his financial source will be the fish that he catches.
Thus, a lawyer will find his source of income from his law books. A teacher will find it in the chalk and blackboard. A musician with his or her instrument. A painter with his medium. A tricycle driver with his tricycle.
Hesiod (Ἡσίοδος Hesiodos), a Greek poet and writer, once said, that the immortal gods have put sweat in the pursuit of excellence; and the way to it is steep and long. This is how we pay what is due: Before making money out of his ‘fish’, the lawyer has to study his law books; the musician has to master his instrument. The road is long and steep, but not impossible.
1 comment:
hey jboy,
nice.
never saw this passage in this way before. thanks for this new take on an "old" (and oftentimes over-used) passage.
yeah, in the end, we pay our "debts" (and even our debt to ourselves) by living out who we really are and doing what we do. indeed, the glory of God is man fully alive.
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