How hard it is for those who have wealth to enter the Kingdom of God.
I have just returned from my trip to Omaha. While there, I visited four of my friends suffering pancreatic cancer.
I would call my trip a "treasuere hunt" for these and other friends are indeed treasures.
So being "rich" is a relative term. I feel very rich in the friends I have in my life. I visited with another friend who is rich in the sense of money: many shares in Berkshire Hathaway. She and I discussed today's Gospel, and I assured her that Jesus is only referring to the self centered, the narcissistic:
hoarders who allow greed to rule theor lives, not to the generous like her.
At our 65th high school reunion there were poignant moments when I learned that at least 5 of our classmates from our Jesuit high school are now caretakers for their wives who suffer from Altzheimers.
They are caring for and maintaining the true treasures in their lives.
When I returned to Scottsdale this afternoon, I learned that my neighbor Dorothy right across from my patio, was moved into asisted living this very morning.
So when I passed her darkened home, I felt not only sad, but impoverished.
I had lost a treasure.
The beautiful first reading from today's mass tells us where our true treasures lie:
"I preferred wisdom to scepter and throne and deemed riches nothing in comparison with her, nor did I liken any precious gem to her, because all gold , in view of her, is a little sand."
And so we pray:
O God send us wisdom:
the wisdom to discern,
the wisdom to learn,
the wisdom to remember:
where our true treasures lie.
Amen.