Sunday Gospel
Reflection
August
31, 2025
Cycle C
Luke 14:1, 7-14|
Reprinted by permission of the “Arlington Catholic
Herald.”
Selfless Giving
by Fr.
Joseph M.
Rampino
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Christ in today’s
Gospel commands that
Christians “invite the poor, the crippled, the lame” to their
feasts “because
of their inability to pay,” and in doing so, gives us a
teaching that is both
immediately beautiful and deeply challenging. This command to
incredible and
free generosity shows us the greatness and glory of Jesus’ own
heart, and
paints for us a near utopian vision in which precisely those
in most need are
the ones fed. At the same time, this command to serve without
expecting
anything in return counters a human tendency to assert our own
will, a tendency
as common in Christ’s time as in our own.
In the Roman political
system, it was
expected of the city government that they should provide free
grain, corn or
bread for the poor. This began with 40,000 eligible households
during the late
Roman Re-public and increased up to 200,000 households during
the reign of the
emperor Augustus. Augustus, who reigned during the first
decade of Christ’s
life, even went so far as to provide this food out of his own
personal funds,
and every emperor after him would likewise pay for the bread
dole themselves.
This program became a necessary civic institution, up until
the end of the
Roman Empire, and those who received this bread ration were
proud to do so,
some even proclaiming on their tombstones that they had
received the emperor’s
bread.
While Christ does not
mention the
imperial bread dole, his teaching does offer a comparison that
allows us to
understand the difference between Christian charity and Roman,
secular charity.
The Roman dole immediately became a tool of power. Political
figures could
increase the size or distribution of the bread dole for
instant secular gain.
They could, and did, use the continuation of the bread dole,
on which hundreds
of thousands relied, as a method of influencing the public on
matters wholly
unrelated, gaining votes or public approval at will. In this
way, the poor
repaid their patrons with power in this life. The emperors of
the Roman era
took advantage of the fact that survival would matter more
than matters of
policy to the average citizen; their charity always had
strings attached.
In contrast, Christ
makes clear that
Christian giving expects no such reciprocation from the poor,
or from anyone in
this earthly life. Far from using charity and patronage as a
means of gaining
honor or influence, Christ’s disciples are even to refuse
higher places at the
table, accepting honorable positions only when granted freely,
unsought. Rather
the Christian gives disinterestedly in this life, does not
seek advancement for
worldly ends, and receives true repayment only in eternity,
“at the resurrection
of the righteous.” This is not just a lesson in humility, but
also a lesson in
the purpose of our charity; since charitable giving is aimed
at eternal gain,
our eyes should always remain fixed on heaven without getting
caught up even in
the good temporal results of our works. Whereas the Roman
patron would direct
their clients back toward their patron, the Christian directs
the recipient of
their charity toward God, who alone is the patron of all.
So then, we must ask
ourselves, how is
it that I give to my neighbor? Does my charity come with
strings attached? Even
in something as simple and small as an act of kindness to a
family member, do I
love freely, or am I seeking to influence the other person for
my own benefit?
Christ promises all those who give freely and for God’s sake a
reward in
eternity. That reward is God himself, and it is more than
worth forgetting
ourselves in our gifts.