To read the texts click on the texts: Judges 2:11-19; Mt 19:16-22
The story
found in Matthew has sometimes been called the one of “The Rich young ruler”.
However, these words appear nowhere in the New Testament, and is a conglomerate
of the figures in Mark (rich), Matthew (who alone adds “young”) and Luke (who
alone adds “ruler”). Matthew alone gives us a picture of a youth, twice calling
him “a young man”. He would thus be a person in his twenties. He addresses
Jesus as “teacher’, which signals that he is an outsider – in Matthew, real
disciples address Jesus as “Lord”. In his answer to the young man, Jesus is
portrayed as an advocate of the Law rather than its opponent. In response to
the second question of the young man, Jesus takes him further to “perfection”,
which does not mean “to be blameless”, but rather to be “whole”, “undivided” in
love.
However, he
was not able to say YES to the call of Jesus not merely because he was a man of
great wealth, but rather because instead of possessing wealth, he let wealth
possess him. This “being possessed”, did not leave him free, and consequently,
he was unable to make a free choice.
We
are living in a world in which it is easy to get so taken up with material
things that we lose sight of everything and everyone else. We can if are not
careful make the acquisition of things an end in itself.
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