Today,
the Gospel proposes a question, which, at first sight, is rather
extraordinary. St. Luke's text, indeed, says: «And the master
commended the dishonest steward for his astuteness» (Lk
16:8).
It
goes without saying we are not being told here to be deceitful in our
relationship amongst ourselves, much less, with our Lord. It is not
therefore a praise to which would simply be a dishonest steward. What
Jesus actually manifests in this example is a grievance for the
shrewdness in dealing with the matters of this world and the lack of
true wit of the sons of light in building God's Kingdom: «The
people of this world are more astute in dealing with their own kind
than are the people of light» (Lk 16:8).
All this, proves —once
again!— that men's hearts still have the same limits and
miseries they have ever had. We, now, may speak of traffic of
influence, corruption, unjustified wealth, counterfeiting
documents... More or less, as in Jesus' days.
But
this poses a double question: Do we actually believe we can deceive
God with our appearance, while pretending to be good Christians? And,
when speaking of shrewdness, we should also speak of personal
interest. Are we really interested in God's Kingdom and in his
justice? Is it the mediocrity of our response as sons of light so
frequent? Jesus also said «For where your treasure is, there
your heart will be also» (Mt 6:21).
Which is for us our
life's treasure? We should rather examine our desires so that we may
find out where do we keep our treasure... St. Augustine tells us:
«Your continuous yearning is your continuous voice. If you stop
loving, your yearning will be silent».
Maybe today, before our
Lord, we have to ponder which our guile, as sons of light, should be,
that is, the sincerity of our relationship with God and our brothers.