Sunday Gospel Reflection
September 21, 2025 Cycle C
Luke 16:1-13
Reprinted
by
permission of the “Arlington Catholic Herald
Whose
Prudence,
Which Dwellings?
by Fr. Steven G. Oetjen
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The Lord gives us a
parable today about
a steward about to be fired for squandering his master’s
property. Father Pablo
Gadenz, a Scripture professor at Mount St. Mary’s Seminary in
Emmitsburg, Md.,
pointed out that when Our Lord previously told a parable about a
steward, he
followed it up by asking, “Who, then, is the faithful and
prudent steward, whom
the master will set over his household, to give them their
portion of food at
the proper time?” (Lk 12:42) The two qualities highlighted were
“faithfulness,”
or “trustworthiness,” and “prudence.”
It makes sense why these
two qualities
would be important for a steward to have. Since a steward is
entrusted with
managing his master’s property, he should first be faithful to
his master,
someone in whom his master can trust. The steward could have all
the competence
in the world, but if he lacks loyalty, then how can the master
trust that he is
really acting in the master’s best interest rather than his own?
How does the
master know that the competent but disloyal steward is not using
his cunning to
steal from him, for example? On the other hand, someone could be
the most loyal
and trustworthy person imaginable, but if he lacks prudence and
competence in
managing the property, then, despite his best intentions, he
will run the
master’s household into the ground. Both faithfulness and
prudence are required
in a good steward.
In today’s parable,
found four chapters
later, Jesus describes a steward who certainly does not have
both qualities. He
has a certain prudence, and for this he is commended, but he is
not faithful to
his master. We hear immediately that he has squandered his
master’s property,
and so when he finds out that he is about to lose his job, he
uses his prudence
to come up with a plan. This plan involves making friends with
his master’s
debtors, but at his master’s expense. He visits each one and
replaces their promissory
notes with fraudulent ones that show they owe less than they
really do.
Why does Jesus have us
reflect on this
cunning but dishonest steward? It is to make this observation:
“For the
children of this world are more prudent in dealing with their
own generation
than are the children of light.” It is the steward’s prudence
being commended,
not his lack of trustworthiness. As the author and philosophy
professor Peter
Kreeft put it, the steward knows how to use money in service of
a higher good.
He uses money to make friends, not friends to make money.
But then Our Lord
continues with this,
saying: “I tell you, make friends for yourselves with dishonest
wealth, so that
when it fails, you will be welcomed into eternal dwellings.”
Notice the big
difference between the kind of prudence the dishonest steward
has and the kind
of prudence we are called to have. He used his master’s money to
make friends
here on earth who will welcome him into their dwellings after he
loses his job.
We are told to use our wealth to make friends, yes, but not so
that we will be
repaid in this life. After all, Jesus teaches elsewhere, “When
you give a
dinner or a banquet, do not invite your friends or your brothers
or your
kinsmen or rich neighbors, lest they also invite you in return,
and you be
repaid. But when you give a feast, invite the poor, the maimed,
the lame, the
blind, and you will be blessed, because they cannot repay you.
You will be
repaid at the resurrection of the just” (Lk 14:12–14).
This is what it means to
make friends
who will welcome us into eternal dwellings. Use your wealth in
generous service
of the poor. Those are the friends who will welcome you into
eternal dwellings.
The dishonest steward is
prudent in a
worldly way, and so he is able to make provision for himself in
this life. We
are called to be prudent regarding our supernatural life and
destiny — that is,
to give to the poor. In doing so, we make friends who will
welcome us, not into
earthly dwellings, but into eternal ones.