I WILL BUILD BIGGER ONES
‘I will pull down my barns and build bigger ones’.
The farmer had a good year and his ambitions soared. But he wasn’t able to
handle success. He started to focus on ‘bigger and better’ only. He ignored any
other consideration. He cleared room in the Amazon forests without thinking of
the effects.
In other words, he thought only of himself. He
became greedy. An adage of the socialist movement is, ‘the world can provide
for people’s needs, but not for their greed’. I am old enough to have witnessed
the surge of Communism in the nineteen forties and fifties and how it was
contained in the sixties, the surge of nuclear weapons – the ‘arms race’ - in
the seventies and how it was restrained in the eighties, the surge of
multinational corporations in the eighties and nineties and how it was tamed in
recent decades. But I am deeply worried about the present surge of ‘progress’
which is destroying our planet.
‘Record-breaking’ temperatures are recorded day
after day. The ice caps are melting and methane gas is released at levels never
reached before. The Secretary General of the United Nations says ‘the will to
tackle the crisis is fading’. We are like people on the Titanic who see the
danger ahead but do not change course.
When Jesus gives us the parable of the greedy farmer
who thinks nothing of the future – least of all that he might die that night –
he observes, ‘a person’s life is not made secure by what he owns’ and he says
‘beware of avarice of any kind’. And
elsewhere, ‘Blessed are the poor in spirit’.
How can we change our way of thinking? The
advertisers want us to buy newer and better gadgets all the time. People do not
even think of repairing fixtures, machines, plumbing etc. It is too complicated
and time consuming. Throw it away and buy a new one.
You, who are reading this, have heard all this many
times. But our gospel today does ask why
we are ‘so slow to believe’? All the evidence is mounting up and we – well, a
powerful number of us - still carry on creating the conditions that are
inexorably destroying us. We are like
smokers who say, ‘you have to die of something’. That is hardly good enough. It is not me, as an individual, who is dying:
it is everyone on the planet. And we are destroying our – that is, the generations
that will follow us - future too.
Can we contain, restrain, tame this thing? It is the
question.
4 August 2019 Sunday 18 C
Ecclesiastes (Qoheleth) 1:2, 2:21-23 Colossians 3:1-5,9-11 Luke 12:13-21
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