8 Pentecost/Year C – August 3, 2025
Track 2 Scriptures: Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14; 2:18-23; Psalm 49:1-11; Luke 12:13-21
Rev Julie Platson
Opening Prayer: (Feasting on the Word: Worship Companion)
Holy God, allow us your wisdom. By the power of the Holy Spirit, open the Scriptures to us today that in the Word read and proclaimed we might know your truth. Amen.
I admit I chuckled to myself a bit, as I first read the gospel reading that was assigned for today. My mind immediately returned to the gospel reading several weeks back, when Martha wanted Jesus to intervene, as she was calling out Mary, for sitting at his feet, while she was busy doing all the physical tasks to prepare for the dinner and visit from him and his disciples.
Only today’s lament and wanting Jesus to intervene was about a different topic; and Jesus responds as he does in the Mary and Martha gospel, with a teaching and reminder, that it’s about putting God first, it’s about centering our lives, our work, our hearts and minds on Jesus and his love…and by doing so…we come to understand what truly matters in this world…loving one another, caring for one another, serving one another, sharing the abundance of our riches with one another for the well-being of all God’s people…
Today’s readings help us think more about that…focusing on what we are working for…
Do you ever stop to think about your views on work? What you always liked about it? What you didn’t like about it? What kind of work you would still be doing, if you had the opportunity?
Perhaps, you’ve been retired for a long time now, or just recently retired…and now these questions fall fresh on your mind…did you give yourself to work so fully, that it was difficult to find that balance of work and rest that Jesus was trying to teach us, as commanded by God…Or perhaps now that your “usual day job” is done…you don’t really know who you are any more…or what it is you are supposed to do with this new rhythm of a different kind of work and rest…
Work often consumes our life and takes over every ounce of our being…either because we have a strong passion for what we are doing or sometimes because we have an obligation to work to make sure we can pay all the bills that we never seem to be able to catch up on…and to take care of our families….sometimes, we work ourselves to the bone so we can pay for all the extra “stuff” we want…and then the day comes and we look around at all this “stuff” we accumulated over the years and ask ourselves this question: “And the things you have prepared, whose will they be?”
Most of us could probably identify with having a job that we didn’t particularly like…or at least know someone personally who held a job who for years grudgingly went to work every day, and came home and collapsed from shear exhaustion…and vented for a time every evening, about how much they despised their job…only to have to get up the next day and start all over again…
In our first reading this morning, from Ecclesiastes…we hear these words of grumbling about work…
I hated all my toil in which I had toiled under the sun, seeing that I must leave it to those who come after me -- and who knows whether they will be wise or foolish?
The writer, Solomon, in his old age, who became so immersed in the everyday world, forgetting his connection to God, seemed to be focusing on “I, me” and thinking that whatever work he did should be for the benefit of himself only…why should any of this work “I do”…benefit anyone else? Perhaps the frustration comes with the thinking that it is he alone who is responsible for doing all the work….or perhaps the frustration comes because of his focus and attention to his own needs and his own wants…and not seeing the connection between his work in relation to his neighbors or for the needs of his neighbors?
Then Solomon gives us a glimpse of a change of focus and attitude about all the toil and work when he says this: So, I turned and gave my heart up to despair concerning all the toil of my labors under the sun, because sometimes one who has toiled with wisdom and knowledge and skill must leave all to be enjoyed by another who did not toil for it.”
The shift in focus and attention…appears to show us that Solomon turned his heart once again back to God’s abundant gifts and acknowledges “the others” in God’s family...understanding…that we are part of a community…and that all the work we do today for our family, and church, and communities… we may never see the fruits of our labors in our lifetime…
By our baptisms…we are a New Creation…our work in this world is about building up God’s Kingdom rooted in love and abundance of plenty for everyone…working from the center of our hearts by loving God and loving our neighbors as ourselves…
By our baptisms, we are called to put God, Jesus and his love, first, and at the center of our lives…being obedient to the work they are calling us to do, for the well-being of all God’s people…today, and for future generations…
In the book, St Benedict’s Toolbox: The Nuts and Bolts of Everyday Benedictine Living…one of the chapters talks about listening and obedience…and its’ influence of putting God at the center of our lives, of all that we are working for…and it has nothing to do with storing up an abundance of possessions and treasures for ourselves…
Giving our Life to God…pg 72
St Benedict gathered ordinary people around him, giving them a new way of looking at the world that put God at the center of their lives. This is key, for once this starts to happen we see and experience life differently.
The work which was boring and tedious takes on a new resonance and significance. Deeds which are performed, not out of love of self, but out of love for God, have an infinite depth of meaning and value of the deeds themselves, which may be quite small.
But, be careful. It is much easier to talk about obedience than to live it. So, to do more than talk, we need to place our lives in the hands of God. When we choose to give away our lives to God, we begin to realize that we’re co-collaborators with God and are not responsible for everything. We use what’s been given to us creatively, attentive to our lives and to God’s presence. Through obedience we grow. Listening and responding in love, we take our part in furthering Christ’s kingdom in the world. (end of book excerpt)
“This very night your life is being demanded of you. And the things you have prepared, (for yourself),whose will they be?”
What are you working for?
Who are you working for?
Who are you working with?
Who will benefit from your toil under the sun? or the rain…which is more relatable to us here in Sitka…
Will your persistent prayers and whatever work you are led to do, illuminate what truly matters to God in this world…loving one another, caring for one another, the hungry, the poor, the unhoused, the suffering, the lonely, the oppressed, the refugees…
Will your persistent prayers and whatever work you are led to do, enliven what truly matters to God in this world, by leading you to serve one another, and share the abundance of our riches with one another for the well-being of all God’s people…in this time, and in this place…and for future generations…
This very night your life is being demanded of you. And the things you have prepared, (for yourself), whose will they be?”
Let us pray: For the Right Use of God's Gifts (BCP 827)
Almighty God, whose loving hand has given us all that we possess: Grant us grace that we may honor you with our substance, and, remembering the account which we must one day give, may be faithful stewards of your bounty, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Today’s a new day…morning has broken….let us begin again…and turn to the one who gives purpose and meaning to the work we are called to do throughout the ages…
Closing Prayer/Hymn: Morning is broken (H) 8