Jesus' advice to the rich...
Illustration
Jesus' advice to the rich young man focused on the disastrous consequences of substituting love of self, possessions, and power for true love of God. Tragically, the very leadership of the Christian Church has stumbled in the same way. A dramatic illustration comes in the life of Pope Leo X, the leader of the Western Christian Church at the moment when Martin Luther hammered his sentences for debate on the Wittenberg, Germany, church door.
Leo lived in opulent splendor, a lavish patron of the arts, a hedonist of the first rank, and a wastrel who nearly bankrupted the Church. Ascending the throne to an office long identified with the title "Servant of the Servants of Christ," Leo's luxurious descent into self-indulgence made a mockery of the office, which he finally secured through inter-familial intrigue and influence-peddling. At his coronation he quipped, "Since God has given us the papacy, let us enjoy it."
Might our Lord have anticipated such a future for his Church when holding so demanding a yardstick before the rich young man?
-- Sherer
Leo lived in opulent splendor, a lavish patron of the arts, a hedonist of the first rank, and a wastrel who nearly bankrupted the Church. Ascending the throne to an office long identified with the title "Servant of the Servants of Christ," Leo's luxurious descent into self-indulgence made a mockery of the office, which he finally secured through inter-familial intrigue and influence-peddling. At his coronation he quipped, "Since God has given us the papacy, let us enjoy it."
Might our Lord have anticipated such a future for his Church when holding so demanding a yardstick before the rich young man?
-- Sherer
