Sunday Gospel Reflection

August 3, 2025 Cycle C
Luke 12:13-21
Reprinted by permission of the, “Arlington Catholic Herald.”

True Wealth     
by Fr. Joseph M. Rampino


Home Page
To Sunday Gospel Reflections Index

It is a fascinating feature of human behavior that we both spend incredible effort to build and ornament the tombs of our great and mighty and continue to visit them as touchstones of our unique cultures.

Mausolea from Arlington to Paris to Florence to Egypt to Beijing serve as tourist destinations either outright celebrating the glory of the deceased, telling their tales as legends, or at least offering them as curiosities. So often, these tombs are to the present day covered in precious artwork and materials, and those whose mortal remains rest therein often lived lives surrounded in worldly honor and comfort commensurate with the beauty of their graves. It is difficult to visit these sorts of places without thinking of axioms as great as “sic transit gloria mundi” (“thus passes the glory of the world”), or as simple as “you can’t take it with you.” No matter what the grand and honored dead once possessed or ruled, they entered death alone, and no amount of funeral splendor can enrich them any longer.

Christ in today’s Gospel calls us to reflect on precisely this stark truth. “This night your life will be demanded of you; and the things you have prepared, to whom will they belong?” This is a simple truth, and it might seem obvious to us. No matter how much we save up, we cannot enjoy our stockpiles once life ends.

Yet, Christ’s teaching about the impermanence of worldly goods refers to much more than possessions, since our possessions are always about more than themselves. What we own and our desire to possess are an extension of our spiritual state and our fundamental attitude toward reality. Greed is never just greed, but is tied up with gluttony, whereby I long for more and more pleasure or comfort, as well as with fear and the desire to control, since my accumulation of wealth is my defense against the future. What’s more, greed is connected to pride, since by accumulating possessions, I believe that in searching for True wealth: I am drawing more and more of the world to myself, building myself up rather than my neighbor or the church of God.

Christ teaches today that all these desires for pleasures and comfort, for defense against the future, for building myself up, are not only off the mark, but will all end in vain. No matter how comfortable, secure or grand I might become in this world, all of it will be taken at the moment of my death. The mightiest figures of human history all entered God’s throne room as paupers. Presidents, kings, pharaohs, emperors, generals, artists, philosophers, scientists, tycoons, and heroes of this world have all gone before the presence of almighty God as poor little souls, entirely dependent on divine mercy.

Of course, there is one thing that makes it possible for a human being, though small, to enter heaven as one who is glorious. Jesus refers to it when he mentions being “rich in what matters to God.” That one thing by which greatness is measured in eternity is charity, that is, love for God above all things, and love for others because they have come from God. It is by degrees of charity that the saints are ranked in God’s kingdom, the greatest being those who have loved God and neighbor most.

So then, the only way for my worldly possessions or status to give me comfort, security, or grandeur in eternal life is if I use them to become rich in charity, that is, if I use what is mine to practice love for God and for my neighbor. If I do this, then no matter the glory of my tomb here in this world, I will share in the glory that belongs to God himself.


Home Page
To Sunday Gospel Reflections Index