This is Franciscan Father Greg Friedman with the
"Sunday Soundbite" for the Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time.
A favorite contemporary singer-songwriter of mine is Greg Brown. His blues and
folk tunes tell down-to-earth stories. In one of his songs, entitled "The
Cheapest Kind," Brown sings a first-person account of a man who grew up as the
son of a preacher. The family was poor, and they traveled about the country
preaching the Good News. Their poverty led the parents to reluctantly settle
for always buying the "cheapest kind" of food or clothing. But Brown sings that
the love in that family wasn't cheap: It was, rather, what made them truly
rich.
His song comes to mind as I reflect on today's Gospel. Jesus invites us to ponder what are the true riches in human
life. In the story Jesus tells, the man whose barn is bursting with an abundant harvest, plans on building bigger barns.
He believes he's totally self-sufficient with all that stored-up wealth.
Jesus teaches that those who rely solely on material goods, and allow them to control their existence to
the point of greed and possessiveness are storing up treasures that will not
last. It's being "rich in what matters to God" that is true wealth in the Kingdom. Examine your heart this Sunday. Have you focused on material goods,
treasures that will not last? Or have you allowed God to fill you with lovewith wealth of the "richest kind?"
I’m Father Greg Friedman, with the "Sunday Soundbite" for St. Anthony
Messenger Press, on the Web at FranciscanRadio.org.
Franciscan Father Greg Friedman, O.F.M., is creative director for American Catholic Radio and is on the production team for video and audio projects for Franciscan Communications, a ministry of St. Anthony Messenger Press. He is a member of the development team for AmericanCatholic.org, OnceCatholic.org and FranciscanRadio.org. He assists each weekend at a parish that ministers to college students and serves as a member of the leadership team of the Cincinnati-based Franciscan Friars.