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Bev Franco Essay - San Francisco Theological Seminary

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<strong>Bev</strong>erly <strong>Franco</strong><br />

Treasuring Heavenly Treasures<br />

In Matthew 6:19-24, Jesus warns his disciples to beware the demon of<br />

materialism. In Matthew’s elegant structure, Jesus contrasts three sets of opposite<br />

priorities in nearly perfect parallel. We can treasure treasures on earth, or treasure<br />

treasures in heaven. We can have generous eyes full of light, or greedy eyes full of<br />

darkness. We can love God and hate materialism, or we can despise God and be devoted<br />

to materialism. No middle ground is offered. Three times he gives the same message:<br />

love of God and obsession with material things cannot exist in our hearts together. We<br />

must make a choice.<br />

Like the rest of the Sermon on the Mount, this pericope is carefully structured in<br />

groups of threes. Each of the three separate units consists of two parts: a contrast between<br />

opposing values followed by a warning. Each contrast is a “perfect antithetical<br />

parallelism,” 1 using repetitive phrasing. The only difference in structure between the<br />

three units is that the second and third have brief opening statements (“The eye is the<br />

lamp of the body” in 6:22a and “No one can serve two masters” in 6:24a) while the first<br />

unit does not.<br />

The careful structure of the pericope serves three purposes. First, by structuring<br />

this section, as well as the rest of his gospel, in sets of three, the author of Matthew<br />

makes it easy to memorize. 2<br />

This would have been important in mostly illiterate first<br />

century Palestine. Second, the redundant messages give emphasis. Three separate times<br />

1 Dale C. Allison Jr. Studies in Matthews: Interpretation Past and Present (Grand Rapids: Baker<br />

Academic, 2005): 188.<br />

2 Allison, 199-206.<br />

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we are warned to choose God over materialism. In addition, there are redundant word<br />

choices within each set, which also creates emphasis, 3 such as the use of θησαυρίζετε<br />

µ ν θησαυρο ς, literally, “Treasure for yourselves treasures.” This repetition,<br />

according to Betz, “signifies the mindless piling up of such treasures.” 4<br />

Third, the<br />

placement of these three units together links where our hearts find security, what our eyes<br />

focus on, and who owns our loyalty, our hearts, eyes and service, encouraging us to be<br />

people of integrity, not the hypocrites Jesus so often condemns.<br />

It is unlikely that the author of Matthew’s Gospel was the Apostle Matthew.<br />

Most scholars agree that the book of Mark was the first gospel to be written and that<br />

Matthew and Luke used parts of Mark, along with an additional source called “Q” that<br />

was common to both Matthew and Luke, but missing from Mark. It seems unlikely that<br />

an eyewitness such as the Apostle Matthew would use Mark, who was not an apostle, as a<br />

source. The Gospel of Matthew was probably written in about 85 or 90, which would<br />

have made the Apostle Matthew quite old. In addition, the Gospel of Matthew uses the<br />

word τελώνης (tax collector) almost as a pejorative (11:19, for example). Would the<br />

Apostle Matthew, a former tax collector, have used the word in such a derogatory way 5<br />

It is possible, however, that the Matthean church to which the gospel was addressed was<br />

founded by or associated with the Apostle. 6<br />

But, as Werner G. Marx claims, it is clear that the gospel was written by someone<br />

with a solid understanding of money matters and taxes. Matthew makes 44 references to<br />

3 Hans Dieter Betz, The Sermon on the Mount: A Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount Including the<br />

Sermon on the Plain (Matthew 5:3 – 7:27 and Luke 6:20-49) (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1995): 428.<br />

4 Betz, 433.<br />

5 Werner G. Marx, “Money Matters in Matthew,” Biblioteca Sacra 542 (April – June, 1979): 150 (Arguing<br />

for the opposite. His reasoning is not convincing).<br />

6 Jack Dean Kingsbury. Matthew as Story, 2 nd Edition, Revised and Enlarged (Philadelphia:Fortress Press,<br />

1988): 159.<br />

2


money in his gospel, while Luke has 22 and Mark only 6. In the story of the Pharisees’<br />

question about paying taxes to Caesar, Luke uses the native Greek word φόρον (20:22), <br />

while Matthew uses the Roman term for poll tax, κ νσον. (22:17) Only Matthew tells the<br />

story of the temple tax in which Peter, on Jesus’ instructions, miraculously pulls up a fish<br />

with a coin it its mouth. The writer called the coin a στατ ρα, a “stater,” exactly the<br />

amount needed to pay the temple tax for two people (17:24-27). 7<br />

If the author of Matthew was interested in money, the community seems to have<br />

been also. Based on clues within the gospel and writings from the outside, Jack Dean<br />

Kingsbury theorizes that the Matthean Community was prosperous (as evidenced, for<br />

example, by the use of many denominations of coinage in the gospel), and urban (as<br />

evidenced by the frequency of the use of the word “city” in contrast with the other<br />

synoptics). 8<br />

Urbanization meant prosperity, as the economy would be changing from<br />

agricultural to trade based. Urbanization meant that Matthew’s community was likely<br />

moving from “an ethnically homogeneous constituency that was largely unlearned,<br />

relatively poor and of low social status to an ethnically heterogeneous one that included<br />

people more educated, more financially secure and successful, i.e., persons of higher<br />

status.” 9 Therefore, it is not surprising to find these warning against materialism in the<br />

middle of the Sermon on the Mount. The same message is given in other parts of the<br />

gospel. Jesus says in the Parable of the Sower, “but the cares of the world and the lure of<br />

wealth choke the word” (13:22). The Rich Young Man goes away grieving because he<br />

7 Marx, 148-157.<br />

8 Kingsbury, 152.<br />

9 Michael H. Crosby, House of Disciples: Church, Economics and Justice in Matthew. (Maryknoll,<br />

NY:Orbis Books, 1988): 39.<br />

3


loves his possessions too much to give them away and follow Jesus (19:22). Jesus<br />

astonishes the crowd when he tells them, “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of<br />

a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God” (19:23), and when<br />

speaking of those who will not deny themselves in order to follow him, asks “What will it<br />

profit them if they gain the whole world but forfeit their life” (16:26)<br />

Matthew’s Jesus does not, however, suggest a total repudiation of wealth. Rich<br />

men like Joseph of Arimathea (27:57) are considered disciples. Jesus accepts the<br />

hospitality of the rich (26:6, 18). Unlike in Luke, where Jesus orders, “Sell your<br />

possessions, and give alms.” (Luke 12:33), Matthew’ Jesus says only, “Whenever you<br />

give alms, do not sound a trumpet before you” (6:2). “Rather than make a futile and<br />

misplaced call to his community to be poor, Matthew’s gospel offered a challenge for it<br />

to be just toward the poor …While Luke’s has been called the gospel of the poor,<br />

Matthew’s has often been called the gospel of justice.” 10 In the Mediterranean world, it<br />

was accepted that there would be both poor and rich people. Jesus even says, “For you<br />

always have the poor with you” (26:11). According to the parable of the sheep and the<br />

goats (25:31-46), we are to be judged on how we treat the poor, not on whether we have<br />

renounced worldly possessions.<br />

“The parables of Jesus, so many of which have as their major characters<br />

landlords and landowners, masters and stewards, slaveowners and slaves, never once<br />

engage in polemic against the injustices of the economic system. So Jesus did not,<br />

apparently, set himself to abolish private property or to redistribute wealth.” 11 It is not<br />

10 Crosby, 42.<br />

11 W. D. Davies and Dale C. Allison. The Gospel According to Matthew, Vol. 1 (Edinburgh: T & T Clark,<br />

1988): 644.<br />

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wealth or wealthy people that Jesus condemns, but idolatry of material things and a lack<br />

of generosity that lead to oppression of the poor and needy.<br />

Jesus warns us sternly, “No one can serve two masters; for a slave will either hate<br />

the one and love the other, or be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot<br />

serve God and Mammon” (6:24). Mammon, μαμων , is not a Greek word, but<br />

Aramaic. 12 It originally meant anything of value, but later came to mean profit,<br />

especially unjust profit. In rabbinic sources and in each of the four times it is used in the<br />

New Testament, Mammon has a pejorative sense. 13<br />

Because it is perceived as a force,<br />

the best English translation is materialism.<br />

The ancient world knew that the pursuit of money and possessions was a form of<br />

idolatry, and turned Mammon into a “pseudo-deity.” 14 By keeping the Aramaic term in<br />

the passage, Matthew personifies “Mammon” and gives it an almost demonic character.<br />

This was probably intentional. Like false idols, materialism is a powerful force that leads<br />

us away from God and down paths of greed, self-indulgence, and addiction. Our<br />

possessions begin to control us. By likening materialism to a demonic power, Jesus is<br />

clear about its threat.<br />

We need to be threatened, because materialism is insidious. In the prosperous<br />

world of the Matthean community and in modern America, there is a danger that instead<br />

of owning our possessions, our possessions begin to own us. In a survey of college<br />

freshmen in 1966, 44% thought it was important to be well off, but that number had risen<br />

to 73% thirty years later. It is probably even higher today. In 1966, 83% of the freshmen<br />

thought a “philosophy of life” was important, but only 42% did in 1996. In modern<br />

12 Christoffer H. Grundmann. “Mammon – It’s Biblical Perception.” Mission Studies 12 no. 2 (1995): 157.<br />

13 Ibid. 158.<br />

14 Betz, 458.<br />

5


America, as was probably true in Matthew’s community, people think amassing<br />

possessions will make them happier, but companionship and family are what actually do.<br />

“Materialistic personalities” are more anxious, depressed, alienated, and aggressive. The<br />

quest for material goods is competitive, and competition eventually erodes trust. 15<br />

We<br />

believe in the myth that wealth will makes us free, but instead find ourselves chained by<br />

mistrust and jealousy. According to John C. Haughey, materialism “is a kind of illness<br />

that has discernable symptoms. One of these is having an unshakable, low-grade anxiety.<br />

If my trust is not deeply rooted in God, I have to conduct my life as if I were a sovereign,<br />

since it all depends on me.” 16<br />

Why can’t we balance both God and Mammon Obviously, in spite of what Jesus<br />

says, it is possible to serve two masters. We can have two parents, two or more<br />

employers, serve both our country and our church. If the two masters are in agreement,<br />

all is well. The problems begin when our two masters are opposed. One parent says yes,<br />

the other no. Both bosses need us to be at meetings at the same time. Our country asks<br />

us to shoot and kill, but our church teaches reverence for life. Then we must<br />

compromise, negotiate, or fail in our service to one of our masters.<br />

But the word Matthew uses here, δουλεύειν, can mean both service and slavery. 17<br />

We are to consider who owns us. God is no ordinary master, who will allow us to<br />

negotiate a compromise when demands collide. “God, who demands self-sacrifice,<br />

commands an exclusive allegiance and obligation which must transcend all other<br />

15 Julian Edney, “Materialism, a Deepening Shadow,” www.onlinejournal.com/artman/publish<br />

/article_910.shtml (June 15, 2006).<br />

16 John C. Haughey, “God and Mammon.” Living Pulpit 6 no.3 (July – September, 1997): 6.<br />

17 Bauer, Walter; Danker, Frederick W.; Arndt, William F.; and Gingrich, F. Wilber. A Greek-English<br />

Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature. 3 rd ed. (Chicago: The University of<br />

Chicago Press, 2000): 259.<br />

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claimants for a person’s soul; while mammon, once it has its hooks in human flesh, will<br />

drag it where it wills, all the time whispering in to the ear dreams of self-aggrandizement.<br />

The marching orders of God and of mammon are in entirely different directions.” 18<br />

There can be no compromise or sharing of loyalty between God and Mammon as<br />

there can be between two employers. Instead, we will love one and hate the other. In<br />

Jewish thought, “love” and “hate” can have emotional connotations, or they can indicate<br />

choice. In the parallel phrase, Matthew uses νθέξεται, to cling to, and καταφρονήσει, <br />

to despise or scorn. To love and to cling to is to prefer; to hate and despise it to turn<br />

away. God acclaims Jesus, “You have loved righteousness and hated wickedness”<br />

(Hebrews 1:9a). Jesus warns the disciples, “Those who love their life lose it, and those<br />

who hate their life in the world will keep it for eternal life” (John 12:25). Jesus tells the<br />

disciples, “Whoever comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and children,<br />

brothers and sisters, yes, and even life itself cannot be my disciple” (Luke 14:26). In<br />

these cases, love and hate do not indicate emotion, but choice. Jesus is asking to make a<br />

simple choice: God or materialism. We can only serve one.<br />

Haughey also tells us, “Another symptom of mammon illness is that we become<br />

so taken up with self-provision and invested in the immediate objects of our trust that we<br />

become unaware of others and their needs. One in fact becomes neighbor-numb, not<br />

necessarily because of any intentional callousness but because there is so little time to<br />

attend to anything or anyone else except our own objects of trust and ourselves.” 19<br />

Materialism changes the way we look at the world.<br />

18 Davies, 642.<br />

19 Haughey, 6.<br />

7


Jesus tells us, “The eye is the lamp of the body. So if your eye is healthy, your<br />

whole body will be full of light; but if your eye is unhealthy, your whole body will be full<br />

of darkness. If then the light in you is darkness, how great is the darkness!” Jesus is<br />

speaking about being generous. He is making the observation that “what one does with<br />

one’s eyes (a common vehicle by which desires enter into one’s life) colors one’s entire<br />

self.” 20 The ancient association of eyes with lamps means that the eye gives off its own<br />

light. “Pre-modern people tended to believe that the eyes contain a fire or light, and that<br />

this fire or light is what makes sight possible.” 21 A lamp does not reflect or absorb light<br />

from other sources, but shines from within. “The body is understood as something like a<br />

vessel that is dark inside unless it is illuminated; the eyes serve as the instruments of such<br />

illumination.” 22<br />

In other words, eyes display the quality of light within the body.<br />

Matthew contrasts two types of eyes here, πλο ς, which means “being<br />

motivated by singleness of purpose so as to be open and aboveboard, single, without<br />

guile, sincere, straightforward, i.e. without a hidden agenda,” 23 and πονηρ ς, which can<br />

mean either wicked, evil and vicious, or unhealthy. 24 Thus, some have interpreted this<br />

verse to be a contrast between the healthy and unhealthy eye, some between the good and<br />

evil eye, and some between the generous and envious eye. This last is based on the use<br />

of φθαλμός πονηρ ς (evil eye) in 20:15, where the landowner of the vineyard tells the<br />

20 Craig L. Blomberg, “On Wealth and Worry: Matthew 6:19-34 – Meaning and Significance,” Criswell<br />

<strong>Theological</strong> Review 6 (Fall, 1992): 78.<br />

21 Davies, 635.<br />

22 Betz, 451.<br />

23 Bauer, 104.<br />

24 Ibid. 851-852.<br />

8


workers who felt cheated, literally, “Is your eye bad because I am good” meaning, “Are<br />

you envious because I am generous”<br />

In Greek Jewish literature, such as The Testament of the Twelve Patriarchs,<br />

πλο ς “denotes the ideal of the pious person who is devoting his life to the perfect<br />

fulfillment of God’s will.” 25 Such a one is “a person of integrity… who resists the<br />

world’s temptation; there is no duplicity in that person’s acting and thinking … that<br />

person does not grudge one’s neighbor or pay attention to one’s defects…The true<br />

person’s life is directed toward one goal: to love God and every human being.” 26<br />

Hence,<br />

in the passage from Matthew, the contrast is between the eye of integrity and mercy and<br />

the eye of corruption.<br />

The concept of an “evil eye” was prevalent in the ancient world. It could mean<br />

anything from jealousy to a magical device for evil. According to Allison, “a bad eye …<br />

is a selfish, ungenerous, miserly spirit, the companion of inner darkness.” 27<br />

The evil eye<br />

“comes from the ethical vocabulary of Judaism. It expresses the antithesis of generosity<br />

– selfishness, covetousness, an evil and envious disposition, hatred of others.” 28 Because<br />

of the location of the unit on the eyes in the center of two passages about devotion to<br />

money, it seems that the best interpretation of the φθαλμός πλο ς and the φθαλμός <br />

πονηρ ς are generous and greedy eyes, which, as lamps of the body, show forth the<br />

generous or greedy characters within.<br />

But eyes, of course, do more than reflect our characters. They focus our vision on<br />

the things we find important and let the less important fade out. Materialism narrows our<br />

25 Thomas Zockler, “Light within the Human Person: A Comparison of Matthew 6:22-23 and the Gospel of<br />

Thomas 24.” Journal of Biblical Literature 120 no. 3 (Fall, 2001): 489-490.<br />

26 Ibid. 490.<br />

27 Davies, 640.<br />

28 Allison, 143.<br />

9


focus. We only see our own needs – the things we have that must be protected from<br />

decay and theft, and the things we want and need. Those whose loyalty belongs to God,<br />

on the other hand, are focused outwardly and are aware of the needs and sufferings of<br />

others. Just as we can choose to focus either on things near or far when looking out at the<br />

world, we can choose whether our spiritual focus is on the wide world or strictly on our<br />

material possessions.<br />

In this passage, Jesus also contrasts light and dark bodies. Light is a quality of<br />

God. “O Lord my God,” the psalmist sings, “You are very great. You are clothed with<br />

honor and majesty, wrapped in light as with a garment” (Psalm 104:1-2). “For the Lord<br />

will be your everlasting light, and your God will be your glory” (Psalm 60:19). Darkness<br />

is the absence of God, which is why Hell, in spite of its fire, is a dark place. 29<br />

If our eyes are generous, focused on the needs of the world, our bodies will be<br />

filled with light. If our eyes are greedy, focused on our own or others’ material<br />

possessions, the light is removed, and our bodies are dark. As Jesus laments, if the light<br />

of God goes out in us, how great is the darkness! It is the difference between heaven and<br />

hell.<br />

We focus on and give our hearts to the things that we think will bring us security.<br />

“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust consume and<br />

where thieves break in and steal, but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where<br />

moth and rust do not consume and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where<br />

your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (6:19-21).<br />

Treasure can be anything valued, loved and protected. In this passage, however,<br />

because the earthly treasure can be eaten by insects or stolen by thieves, it clearly refers<br />

29 Allison, 144.<br />

10


to material possessions. Jesus warns us not to treasure material things for two reasons:<br />

they are temporal and can be destroyed or taken away from us, and storing them up keeps<br />

us from storing up spiritual treasure. We are given an either/or choice. Our hearts can<br />

only be in one place.<br />

Materialism blinds us to the ephemeral nature of earthly possessions. Betz says,<br />

“Everything on this earth is subject to perishability. This is a fact of life and everyone<br />

should know it, but people are normally ignorant or defiant, thinking that they alone can<br />

escape from the destiny awaiting all material goods.” 30 The Psalmist warns that we can’t<br />

take it with us. “Do not be afraid when some become rich, when the wealth of their<br />

houses increases. For when they die they will carry nothing away; their wealth will not<br />

go down after them” (Psalm 49:16-17). Belief in the security of material things is folly.<br />

Fine fabrics draw moths, money corrodes, riches are stolen away from us. “‘Take care!<br />

Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; for one’s life does not consist in the<br />

abundance of possessions’” (Luke 12:15). Jesus then goes on to tell the Parable of the<br />

Rich Fool who stored up his abundance of grain and said to himself, “‘Soul, you have<br />

ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink and be merry.’ But God said to<br />

him, ‘You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you. And the things you<br />

have prepared, whose will they be’ So it is with those who store up treasures for<br />

themselves but are not rich toward God” (Luke 19-21). The rich fool is not an evil man,<br />

just a fool who thought extra material things would keep him safe. 31<br />

Seeking security in earthly possessions keeps us from seeking security in God.<br />

When our time, talents and money are given over to earning and protecting things, we<br />

30 Betz, 433.<br />

31 Barbara Brown Taylor, “Treasure Hunt: Luke 12:13-21” Review & Expositor 99 no.1 (Winter 2002):<br />

101.<br />

11


lose our focus on God and are easily led astray. The author of First Timothy says, “Those<br />

who want to be rich fall into temptation and are trapped by many senseless and harmful<br />

desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all<br />

kinds of evil, and in their eagerness to be rich some have wandered away from the faith<br />

and pierced themselves with many pains” (1 Timothy 6:9-10). We should “strive first for<br />

the kingdom of God and his righteousness” (6:33), because those who strive first to store<br />

up possessions can find everything wiped out in a single moment. If we try to find<br />

security in material things, we are tempted by pride, idolatry, greed, and selfishness. We<br />

can then be tempted to cheat others, steal, falsify records, and lie to the authorities.<br />

Sabbath rest is given over to the making and spending of money, and we begin to judge<br />

people solely by their wealth. We must be on guard against the “love of money” which<br />

steals our loyalty.<br />

Jesus does not explain what treasures in heaven are, other than they are beyond<br />

the threat of destruction and theft. Because of the location of the pericope, it is likely<br />

Matthew considered treasuring treasures in heaven to be doing deeds of righteousness:<br />

giving alms, fasting and prayer, which were discussed in the previous triad of the Sermon<br />

on the Mount. Fasting helps us realize what (and how little!) we truly need, and leads us<br />

to a spirit of gratitude. Prayer keeps us humble, as we recognize and submit to the power<br />

of the Holy One and keep ourselves focused on God. Almsgiving especially fits, because<br />

it has the dual advantage of reducing earthly treasure while depositing acts of piety in<br />

heaven. The Book of Tobit says, “If you have many possessions, make your gift from<br />

them in proportion; if few; do not be afraid to give according to the little you have. So<br />

you will be laying up a good treasure for yourself against the day of necessity. For<br />

12


almsgiving delivers from death and keeps you from going into the Darkness” (Tobit 4:8-<br />

10). In Acts, Cornelius is told by an angel, “’Your prayers and your alms have ascended<br />

as a memorial before God’” (Acts 10:4). Jesus tells The Rich Young Man that if he sells<br />

his possessions and gives the money to the poor, he will have treasure in heaven (19:21).<br />

Jesus promises heavenly rewards to those who perform acts of mercy. At the last<br />

judgment, those who take care of the hungry, the thirsty, the stranger, the naked, the sick,<br />

and the imprisoned (the “least of these who are members of my family”) will “inherit the<br />

kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world” (25:31-46). Those who give<br />

up houses or family for Jesus “will receive a hundredfold, and will inherit eternal life”<br />

(19:29-30). The issue is not whether we should expect a reward for our deeds, but<br />

whether the reward will be earthly or heavenly. 32<br />

The heavenly reward, however, as Allison tells us, is “in no way calculable.” 33<br />

The basis for our reward is love, which cannot be quantified or balanced. How can we<br />

hope to love enough to match the love of God In The Parable of the Workers in the<br />

Vineyard (20:1-16), those who worked only an hour received the same pay as those who<br />

had worked all day, which tells us that God is unexpectedly generous (although our first<br />

inclination is to shout, “That’s not fair!”). We often receive much more than we deserve.<br />

“Despite his words about reward and punishment, Jesus discouraged people from<br />

measuring their religious achievements and calculating divine rewards.” 34<br />

According to Betz, the verses about treasure are concerned with abundance and<br />

with the Golden Rule of treating others as we would hope to be treated. “Abundance, to<br />

the extent that it is available, is there to be shared. Its purpose is not to be hoarded as<br />

32 Ibid. 634.<br />

33 Ibid.<br />

34 Ibid.<br />

13


useless treasures. The faithful disciples, therefore, will share in what God provides, and<br />

that means they will partly use it and partly pass it on to others.” 35 Our excess goods are<br />

not to be stored up and hoarded. They are to be given away. “One is to accept God’s<br />

generosity in the spirit of human generosity, and in turn it will generate more generosity;<br />

this increase in generosity will not only assure survival in the present circumstances but it<br />

will also amount to ‘treasures in heaven.’” 36 As an illustration, my church supports Heifer<br />

International, a charity group that provides young female cows, goats, chickens and other<br />

animals to villages in Africa and throughout the world. The idea is that the animal will<br />

provide milk or eggs to the village, and then be bred so that another young female can be<br />

given to another village. A simple act of generosity leads to abundance which can then<br />

be shared. As Betz would say, the villagers give their surplus animals away so that their<br />

generosity can generate more generosity. Through their giving, the villagers store<br />

treasures in heaven.<br />

Jesus expects us to be people of integrity, whose security and focus and loyalties<br />

are all in accord and oriented in the same direction: serving and loving God by being<br />

open-hearted and generous to all of God’s people. Matthew has placed three parallel<br />

sayings about money together to reflect three ways of doing so: trusting in the long-term<br />

reward of heaven over the transient rewards of earthly possessions, having a generous<br />

focus that is aware of the needs of others instead of a selfish focus that only sees our own<br />

desires, and avoiding the enslavement of materialism. We should serve instead to our<br />

loving, merciful and gracious God, for only then will our souls be filled with light.<br />

35 Betz, 432.<br />

36 Ibid.<br />

14


BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Allison, Dale C. The Sermon on the Mount: Inspiring the Moral Imagination. New York:<br />

Herder & Herder, 1999.<br />

Attridge, Harold W. ed., The HarperCollins Study Bible, New Revised Standard Version.<br />

<strong>San</strong> <strong>Francisco</strong>: HarperCollins<strong>San</strong><strong>Francisco</strong>, 2006.<br />

Bauer, Walter; Danker, Frederick W.; Arndt, William F.; and Gingrich, F. Wilber. A<br />

Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian<br />

Literature. 3 rd ed. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2000.<br />

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