The rich are getting richer, and we are almost beyond
surprise at how rich that is.
Every day, our newspapers, our televisions, and the
internet, report financial compensations that, even just a
generation ago, were unimaginable: Corporate executives
receiving a hundred million dollar bonuses, an athlete
signing a contract for a hundred million dollars,
entertainers signing contracts for tens of millions,
people in information technology earning billions, and
ordinary folks everywhere joining the millionaire club.
And what's our reaction? Difficult to judge. We express
indignation and protest that this is out of proportion,
even as we nurse a not-so-secret envy: I wish it was me!
We adore the rich and famous, pure and simple, and in the
end, despite our envy, we grant them their due: Good for
them! They worked for it. They have the talent. They
deserve all they get!
But how should we view being rich from a faith
perspective? Jesus warned that riches are dangerous,
dangerous to the soul and dangerous to society. So what
should be our attitude towards having wealth, both as this
pertains to the very rich and as it pertains to us?
First, it is good to avoid a number of things: To begin
with, we must never idealize poverty and see wealth as a
bad thing in itself. God is rich, not poor, and heaven
will not be a place of poverty. Poverty is something to be
overcome, eradicated. The poor don't enjoy being poor.
Next, we must avoid too-quickly politicizing both poverty
and wealth. Our lens must always be moral rather than
political, though obviously both wealth and poverty have
huge political implications. Finally, before attacking the
possession of wealth, we must ensure that we are free from
embittered moralizing which, whatever its moral guise, is
little more than envy.
What principles should guide us in terms of an attitude
towards wealth?
Underlying everything else, we must always keep in mind
Jesus' warning that the possession of wealth is dangerous,
that it is hard for a rich person to enter the kingdom of
heaven. Moreover that warning should be a huge aid in
helping us to accept some other principles:
First: The possession of wealth is not a bad thing of
itself; it is how we use it and what it can do to our
hearts that can be bad. Jesus makes a distinction between
the generous rich and the miserly rich. The former are
good because they imitate God, the latter are bad. When we
are generous, particularly in a very prodigious way,
riches won't close our hearts. But the reverse is also
true. All miserliness, all stinginess, all lack of
generosity closes our hearts in ways that make it hard to
enter the kingdom of heaven, or genuine human community to
put in purely human terms.
And so the challenge for all of us who are rich in any way
is to continually give our wealth away. We need to do
this, not because the poor need what we give them, though
they do; we need to do this so that we can remain healthy.
Philanthropy, of every kind, is more about the health of
the one giving than the health of the one receiving. The
generous rich can inherit the kingdom, the miserly rich
cannot. The poor are everyone's ticket into heaven - and
to human health.
Finally, this too must always be kept in mind as we view
wealth, both our own and that of the very rich. What we
have is not our own, it's given to us in trust. God is the
sole owner of all that is and the world properly belongs
to everyone. What we claim as our own, private property,
is what has been given to us in trust, to steward for the
good of everyone. It's not really ours.
Further still, we need to remember that it wasn't just our
own ingenuity and hard work that gave us what we view as
our own. The fruits of our labor are also the fruits of
other peoples' labor. We too easily lose sight of that.
Here's how Bill Gates Sr. puts it: "Society has an
enormous claim upon the fortunes of the wealthy. This is
rooted not only in most religious traditions, but also in
an honest accounting of society's substantial investment
in creating fertile ground for wealth-creation. Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam all affirm the right of individual
ownership and private property, but there are moral limits
imposed on absolute private ownership of wealth and
property. Each tradition affirms that we are not
individuals alone but exist in community—a community that
makes claims on us. The notion that 'it is all mine' is a
violation of these teachings and traditions. Society's
claim on individual accumulated wealth is ... rooted in
the recognition of society's direct and indirect
investment in the individual's success. In other words, we
didn't get there on our own" (Sojourners,
January-February, 2003).
Indeed, none of us did! If we remember that we will more
easily be generous.
Fr. Ron Rolheiser
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