A trick to “manage” job loss: a reflection for Day 33 of Lent
“…his master commended the dishonest manager because he had acted shrewdly, for the children of this age are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation than are the children of light.” (Luke 16.8) Jesus and the disciples continue to journey towards Jerusalem. The number of people thronging around Jesus is increasing (Lk. 11.14, 29; 12.1; 13.22; 14.25), and so is the tension between Jesus and the obstinate members of “his generation”. Besides announcing imminent judgment, Jesus is feasting and telling stories. Jesus’ “gospel” is bad news for the self-sufficient, smug and vengeful and good news for the poor, desperate and trusting. As chapter 16 of Luke’s Gospel begins, Jesus is once again telling a parable – in this instance, an infamously ambiguous and intractable story that has occasioned much spilling of ink. [1] The Pharisees remain in the picture, if slightly out of frame (Lk. 16....