Friday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time
Matthew 6:19-23
“… where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.”
Today’s Gospel passage from the Sermon on the Mount seems to have two distinct sections. Nevertheless, a connection suggests itself. The first section concerns wealth of different types. The second concerns the human eye and light. What does human vision have to do with human wealth?
In the first part of today’s Gospel passage we hear one of the more famous of Jesus’ sayings: “where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.” The truth of this saying is so plain that it would surely be recognized by persons of all types of religious faith (or even by those with little or no faith). It’s not necessarily a religious saying. It’s a saying about human nature. Of course, as the medieval principle puts it, “grace builds upon nature.” God wishes for our sake that He be our treasure, but we are free to choose something merely human to serve as our treasure (or rather, as it turns out, for us to serve).
Whatever we choose as the treasure of our life, there will our heart gravitate. There will we spend the energies of our heart, mind and soul. But how does one go about choosing one’s treasure? This is where the second half of today’s Gospel passage comes into play.
How does someone choose his treasure? Is this process of choosing purely random and spontaneous? Or does it come about by virtue of where we train the gaze of our soul? Part of Christian realism is believing that knowledge comes through the human senses. What we choose to look at has a profound influence on whether we choose something earthly as the treasure we will serve, or whether we choose God’s self-sacrifice of Jesus in the Eucharist as our treasure. Spend at least five minutes today, then, looking at a crucifix and reflecting upon Jesus’ self-gift as given specifically for you.