Halloween vs. The World (10.31.2021 & 11.1.2021)

Every year, as a priest, when Halloween approaches, I have struggled to thoroughly answer the question, “Hey Father, what do you think of Halloween?” Every year, then, I would research the traditions and history of Halloween and get closer to providing a more complete answer.

The starting point is to remembet that salvation was offered to humankind as a result of the brutal death of Jesus Christ. Many of the great Saints who have changed the world were also brutally martyred. The death of Christ and the death of the Saints are remembered all the time, in artwork, in poetry, in books, and in hymns. Death itself, today, though, is seen in a much different light than it was in the past. We fear and shun death, but at the same time celebrate it. We are an odd generation. We preserve our lives on this planet by any and all means possible, but we glorify death in movies and video games and celebrate it in abortion “rights” and the push for euthanasia against the elderly and unwanted. Death in the past, in ancient Christendom, was seen as a fact of life and not the enemy of humanity. Death was the seal of one’s life and the moment the door to eternity swung open. Death brought man to his end and to his judgment. Life was oriented toward death, for death initiated the second and final stage of life: life beyond the grave.

Catholicism and the fallen world both have a view and perspective regarding death. These two views are quite opposed to each other. A skeleton, for example, to a Catholic is a true and fitting reminder of the reality of death and the need to prepare for it properly. A skeleton, to the fallen world, is a source of entertainment for those who enjoy being scared, or it presents an uncomfortable reminder of one’s mortality.

So, let us do this easier asking some simple questions:

Is Halloween part of a Catholic feast day? Yes. Halloween is a derivative of All Hallow’s Eve, the Vigil of All Saints Day, the latter being a Solemnity and a Holy Day of Obligation. This is an ancient feast established by the Catholic Church in the eighth century. Therefore, this is truly an incredibly special Catholic feast day – quite unique and important to all souls and therefore worthy of being preserved and even defended.

Is Halloween being used by Satanists and witches? Yes. Particularly today, in the age of the rise of the occult, Satanism and witchcraft make use of this day for evil celebrations. When you research this, it is important to remember that these two groups do not have a central organization. There are a loose band of similarly minded individuals. There is some evidence that Druids looked to October 31st as a special day in which the souls of the dead, and evil spirits, roamed the earth and the living needed to respond appropriately to comfort them or avoid their mischief. Bringing these concepts back to life in our age would surely be a way to corrupt what Halloween has become in the life of the Catholic Tradition.

Has it been corrupted by the intrusion of secularism into the lives of Christians? Yes. The rise of the occult is not the only threat to the sacredness of the public celebration of Halloween, All Saints Day (November 1), and All Souls Day (November 2). The secularization of most Christians is a major contributing factor. As concern for Heaven and belief in Purgatory and Hell have practically disappeared with the emergence of what Pope Benedict called a “practical atheism” among Catholics, any sacredness to All Hallow’s Eve would be completely lost. In the face of strong cultural trends which have nothing to do with Christianity, modern Christians will simply cave to the culture.

Is Halloween clearly a Catholic tradition that has evolved over time and thus may continue to do so? Yes. The feast of All Saints and All Souls, and Halloween with them, has been an evolving Feast with evolving traditions for over a thousand years. Of course, the Feast is now solidified in the calendar, but the Catholic customs that spring up around Halloween are not. The modern custom of dressing up and going door to door for candy is the American version of former Irish and English traditions, as well as others. While it might resemble ancient Druid practices, it also, and more clearly, comes from the tradition of going door-to-door to exchange soul cakes for prayers for the faithful departed in that home. While dressing up like Saints may not be that ancient, it is a fitting and useful element to incorporate.

Is it appropriate to focus on death at Halloween? Yes. Death is the mysterious and often dreadful end of every human life. Death is what sends the Saints to their reward in Heaven. Death is what sends the faithful departed to their period of punishment and purification in Purgatory. Death is what sends the sinner to his condemnation in Hell. Death must not be forgotten. However, when we remember death at Halloween, it must be in the spirit of Christian hope in Christ´s grace and the resurrection.

It is interesting and important to remember that in 1925, Pope Pius XI established the Feast of Christ the King, placing it just before Hallowtide in the calendar. This Feast is a day in which we remember the end of the world and the judgment of humankind. Death and judgment, when depicted in art, can appear ghoulish and dreadful. The manifestation of it in art and costumes, while disturbing, helps secure in the mind the remembrance of death, essential to keeping our minds rooted in the ultimate end of our lives: death and judgment and the next life which we merit by our deeds. As this Holy Father, Pope Pius XI, said in his encyclical, regarding the date of this Feast: «The last Sunday of October seemed the most convenient of all for this purpose, because it is at the end of the liturgical year, and thus the feast of the Kingship of Christ sets the crowning glory upon the mysteries of the life of Christ already commemorated during the year, and, before celebrating the triumph of all the Saints, we proclaim and extol the glory of him who triumphs in all the Saints and in all the Elect»

Byzantine icon that represents Jesus as King of the Universe.

There is more. This may sound creepy to us today, but it is an ancient practice that originated in Catholic countries as a result of the constant exposure to plagues and death. This practice fits well with the Pope’s emphasis on remembering our judgment on the solemn Feast that comes immediately before Hallowtide. The Dance of Death emerged in a time (mid-14th C.) of frequent epidemics and death. In these plays death appeared not as the destroyer, but as the messenger of God summoning men to the world beyond the grave, a conception familiar both to the Holy Bible and to the ancient poets. The purpose of these plays was to teach the truth that all men must die and should therefore prepare themselves to appear before their Judge. The scene of the play was usually the cemetery or churchyard, though sometimes it may have been the church itself. The spectacle was opened by a sermon on the certainty of death delivered by a monk. At the close of the sermon there came forth from the charnel-house, usually found in the churchyard, a series of figures decked out in the traditional mask of death, a close-fitting, yellowish linen suit painted so as to resemble a skeleton. One of them addresses the intended victim, who is invited to accompany him beyond the grave. The first victim was usually the pope or the emperor. The invitation is not regarded with favor and several reasons are given for declining it, but these are found insufficient and finally death leads away his victim. A second messenger then seizes the hand of a new victim, a prince, or a cardinal, who is followed by others representing the various classes of society, the usual number being twenty-four. The play was followed by a second sermon reinforcing the lesson of the representation. Evidence for these plays has been found in Germany, Spain, Belgium, France, England, and Italy. Italy also had something known as the “Triumph of Death.” 

The Dance of Death (1493) by Michael Wolgemut, from the Nuremberg Chronicle of Hartmann Schedel

With all of the conflicting opinions on Halloween, one thing we can truly see is that the agents of Heaven and the agents of Hell are, today, clearly at war on Halloween. When the Church of Christ, the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, is celebrating the victory of Christ who triumphs in His Saints and His Elect, Hell is more and more sneaking onto the scene to undermine this sacred work. Hallowtide is not a time where Hell has more power, as many pagans believe – just the opposite – Hell faces Heaven’s fury in a particular way as more graces are made available to the faithful, such as the graces of the Holy Day and the plenary indulgences for the Poor Souls in Purgatory. Hell, then, through the fallen world which embraces Satan and the occult, would love to distract Christians away from these graces and toward fear and the fright of hopeless death.

So in a proper Catholic spirit what should we do?

Analyze your approach to Halloween. Purge what does not orient your family toward holiness.

Get creative with the “trick or treaters” who come to your door, to oppose the paganism they may manifest.

Reinvigorate the sacredness and Catholic creativity of the Feast.

Create new and sacred traditions, like this Vigil of All Saints.

Pray and go to Mass.

Do good. Avoid evil.

Invoke the Saints. Pray for Holy Souls in Purgatory • AE


Thirty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time

The central focus of the readings of today is on the Commandments. The law given on mount Sinai multiplied into hundreds due to interpretation. Jesus summarized the laws into two – love of God and love of neighbor. By doing this Jesus Christ simplified in a wonderful way the laws through love. In order that love may not be a burden to humanity, he tied love of God and neighbor to the love of self, this way love of self becomes the spring board of loving experience: love your neighbor as you love yourself. The scribe conformed this when he said; «To love him with all your heart, with all your understanding and strength, and to love your neighbor as yourself, this is far more important than any holocaust or sacrifice» Two realities appear in this message; love of God is possible through the love of fellow human being. Secondly, love of self is something that we do always, as such it is not alien to human beings to love with «all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind and with all your strength». This is the exact disposition towards the self. the reality is that we have in our hands what it takes to keep the commandments – love of self. what we need is the inspiration of the Holy Spirit in order to lift our self love to accommodate the other. by doing this, we are not far from the kingdom of God • AE


Fr. Agustin’s Schedule for Thirty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time

Sunday, October 31, 2021.

12.30 p.m.  English Mass @ St. Dominic Catholic Church

3.00 p.m. Misa en Español @ St. Dominic Catholic Church


XXXI Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario (Ciclo B)

A Jesús le hicieron muchas preguntas, y es que la gente lo veía como un maestro que enseñaba a vivir de manera sabia. La pregunta que recoge el pasaje del evangelio de este domingo, el trigésimo primero detro del tiempo ordinario, la hace un hace uno de los escribas. Lo que él pregunta les preocupaba a muchos: ¿Qué mandamiento es el primero de todos? es decir ¿Qué es lo primero que hay que hacer en la vida para acertar? Jesús le responde con unas palabras que, tanto el escriba como él mismo, han pronunciado esa misma mañana al recitar el Shemá»: «Dios es el único Señor: amarás al Señor tu Dios con todo tu corazón, con toda tu alma, con toda tu mente, con todo tu ser». Esto es lo primero y decisivo. A continuación, Jesús añade algo que nadie le ha preguntado: «El segundo mandamiento es semejante: Amarás a tu prójimo como a ti mismo». Ésta es la síntesis de la vida. De estos dos mandatos depende todo: la religión, la moral, el acierto en la existencia. El amor no está en el mismo plano que otros deberes. No es una «norma» más, perdida entre otras normas más o menos importantes. «Amar» es la única forma sana de vivir ante Dios y ante las personas. Si en la política o en la religión, en la vida social o en el comportamiento individual, hay algo que no se deduce del amor o va contra él, no sirve para construir una vida humana. Sin amor no hay progreso. Se puede vaciar de Dios la política y decir que basta pensar en el prójimo. Se puede vaciar del prójimo la religión y decir que lo decisivo es servir a Dios. Para Jesús Dios y prójimo son inseparables. No es posible amar a Dios y desentenderse del hermano. El riesgo de distorsionar la vida desde una religión egoísta es siempre grande. Por eso es tan necesario recordar este mensaje esencial de Jesús. No hay un ámbito sagrado en el que nos podamos ver a solas con Dios, ignorando a los demás. No es posible adorar a Dios en el fondo del alma y vivir olvidado de los que sufren. El amor a Dios, Padre de todos, que excluye al prójimo se reduce a mentira. En menos palabras: lo que va contra el amor, va contra Dios • AE


Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Anonymous Dutch artist, The Healing of the Blind Man from Jericho (c. 1470), oil on oak, Museum Catharijneconvent (Netherlands)

Blind Bartimaeus took a risk. He heard that Jesus was approaching, so he took the risk of calling out to him. Other’s tried to quiet Bartimaeus, but what he lacked in eyesight he made up for in lungs. He just called louder. According to the Gospel reading, Jesus heard Bartimaeus, and then told his disciples to bring him over to him. At first, Bartimaeus hesitated, but then he took a step of trust in the Lord. He threw off his cloak and went to Jesus. This throwing off his cloak might not seem significant to us, but it was an action that was full of meaning. Bartimaeus’ cloak was his mat, his bed, his warmth, his security blanket, and his one possession. It was his everything! To let it go, was to let go of everything he depended on and to trust in the Lord. Bartimaeus let go and let God. And Jesus rewarded his trust, his faith, with sight. Bartimaeus was not just given eyesight. He saw the Work of God. Jesus told him to «Go your way; your faith has saved you,» but Bartimaeus did not go. Instead, he followed the Lord. We are called out of our blindness into the light of the Lord. But to do this, we have to trust in God rather than in ourselves. Many of you took a leap of trust when you fell in love and committed yourselves to that special person who became your spouse. For your love to grow, you know that you cannot hold on to any security other than simple faith, not just in your spouse but, more importantly, in the Lord. You have to have faith that He will help you to love as He loves. That is why it is so important that husbands and wives pray for each other and with each other and pray that they might respond to their vocation to marriage by being good husbands and wives. Certainly, the raising of children demands trusting in the Lord. In this computer age, we check the Internet for the answers to all questions. The only thing is that raising children is not a scientific process. Children have souls, and personalities, and their own unique reflections of God. The closest thing to a handbook on how to raise a child properly is called the Bible. All parents find times that they are overwhelmed. It is a tremendous task to raise a child. You are called to form Christian children, capable of reflecting their unique images of God; yet you have to do this in a society that deifies materialism. You have to trust God to help you raise your children. So, continue to pray for your children every day! Do not be discouraged, continue to ask God to help you be a good Mom, a good Dad, and trust Him! We priests and religious had to take a step of blind faith in the Lord when they decided to embrace the yearning within them to serve God in these special ways. Our whole lives become a matter of just trusting in God. Sometimes that trust involves accepting new assignments. Sometimes that trust is as simple as saying our daily prayers and knowing that God will help us write the homily for next Sunday. The point this Sunday in our prayer time is to consider taking the risk of believing a little more; a Little better; take the risk of jumping, knowing that on the other side we will always find Jesus • AE


Fr. Agustin Schedule for the Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Saturday, October 23, 2021.

3.30 p.m. Sacrament of Reconciliation

5.00 p.m. English Mass @ St. Dominic Catholic Church

Sunday, October 24, 2021.

7.30 a.m. English Mass @ St. Dominic Catholic Church

10.00 a.m. @ St. Dominic Catholic Church


XXX Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario

Es posible hacer algo cuando sentimos que la fe se va poco a poco apagando en nuestro interior? ¿Es posible reaccionar? ¿Podemos salir de la indiferencia? El evangelista narra la curación Bartimeo quizá para animar a sus lectores a vivir un proceso que pueda cambiar sus vidas. No es difícil reconocernos en la figura de Bartimeo. Vivimos a veces como ciegos, sin ojos para mirar la vida como la miraba Jesús. Sentados o, mejor dicho, apoltronados en una religión convencional, sin fuerza para seguir sus pasos. Descaminados, al borde del camino. ¿Qué hacer? A pesar de su ceguera, Bartimeo oye que Jesús está pasando y comienza a gritar. Esto es siempre lo primero: abrirse a cualquier llamada o experiencia que nos invita a curar nuestra vida. El ciego no sabe recitar oraciones hechas por otros. Sólo sabe gritar y pedir compasión porque se siente mal. Este grito humilde y sincero, repetido desde el fondo del corazón, podría ser el comienzo de una vida nueva porque Jesús nunca pasa de largo. Bartimeo da unos pasos que van a cambiar su vida. Arroja el manto porque le estorba para encontrarse con Jesús. Luego, aunque todavía se mueve entre tinieblas, da un salto decidido. De esta manera se acerca a Jesús. Es lo que necesitamos muchos de nosotros: liberarnos de ataduras que ahogan nuestra fe; tomar, por fin, una decisión sin dejarla para más tarde; y ponernos ante Jesús con confianza sencilla y nueva. Cuando Jesús le pregunta qué quiere de él, el ciego no duda. Sabe muy bien lo que necesita: «Maestro, que pueda ver». Es lo más importante. Cuando uno comienza a ver las cosas de manera nueva, su vida se transforma. Cuando una comunidad recibe luz de Jesús, se convierte. El evangelio de este domingo nos dice pues que dentro de Bartimeo había aún una fe que le hizo reaccionar. Aquel ciego percibió que el Señor no andaba lejos y por eso pidió a gritos su ayuda. A nadie se le puede convencer desde fuera para que crea. Para descubrir la verdad, cada uno tiene que experimentar que Cristo hace bien y que la fe ayuda a vivir de una manera más gozosa, más intensa y más joven. Dichosos los que creen, no porque un día fueron bautizados, sino porque han descubierto por experiencia que la fe hace vivir • AE


Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time

French artist, Jesus washing the feet of this apostles (second quarter of the 14th century), Ivory, Louvre Museum(Paris)

James and John in today’s gospel acted…weird. They felt that they should sit at the right hand and left hand of the Lord when Jesus came into His Glory. They wanted to be clear that they were much better than the others.  Jesus told them that they were clueless. They didn’t understand where greatness came from. There are many people in all walks of life who strut around as legends in their own minds. They may be professionals who look down on others, or they may be people who hold a position of respect in their families, like parents or grandparents, but do so in an arrogant way, as tyrants rather than as sources of family love.  Perhaps we all do this at times. We don’t understand from where greatness comes. Jesus understood how to be great, though. He told James and John, and He tells us, that greatness comes through service.  On the night of the Last Supper, before Jesus gave us His Body and Blood, He washed the feet of His disciples, and then gave them and us this mandate: what you have seen me do, you also must do.  That was the path to greatness. Think about St. Teresa of Calcutta. She died in 1997, so most of us have been blessed to have been witnesses to some of  her life.  Everyone would admit that she was a great lady.  But how did she become great?  She became great by emptying herself to serve the poorest of the poor, first in Calcutta and then throughout the world.  Think about people you know that you can say with confidence that he or she is a great person. My guess is that person is someone who continually reaches out to other people.  Someone is sick, he or she is there.  Someone is having a bad day, he or she is there.  Someone needs help with a difficult job, he or she doesn’t even need to be asked.  You see, truly great people have learned how to be great from He who is the One True Goat, Jesus Christ, the Greatest of All Time. All of us have different gifts. We have a responsibility to develop our gifts in service to the Lord. What can I do best?  What do you do best?  Some people are capable of caring for the incarcerated with mercy, compassion, and justice.  Others have a great deal of empathy for the sick.  Still others have a heart for the poor.  Some are capable of teaching. Others are great parents not just to their own children but to those orphaned by the circumstances of their lives.  We all have many talents. Our talents are given to us to serve others.  We are called to develop these talents.  We are called to greatness. The Lord understands our failures, our limitations, our fears, the times that we lack confidence in ourselves to do His work. He sees this, but He also sees so much more. He sees our talent. He sees our love. He sees our determination to seek Him out in others and serve His Presence. Christ has called us to be his disciples.  We are Christians. We did not take Christianity on ourselves. We were given this Grace freely by the Lord. We are good enough. He makes us good enough. It is not the size of a person’s entourage that demonstrates that he or she is great.  It is not the position of authority that a person holds that demonstrates his or her greatness.  True greatness come from Jesus Christ. He calls us to be people of service • AE


Fr. Agustin’s Schedule for Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Sunday, October 17, 2021.

12.30 p.m.  English Mass @ St. Dominic Catholic Church

3.00 p.m. Misa en Español @ St. Dominic Catholic Church


XXIX Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario (Ciclo B)

Lo más importante en la vida no es tener éxito y superar a los demás. Lo verdaderamente decisivo es saber crecer como ser humano. Sin embargo, con frecuencia, nos equivocamos desde el punto de partida. Creemos que para afirmar nuestra propia vida y asegurar nuestra pequeña felicidad y libertad, debemos necesariamente dominar a los demás e insatisfechos por no tener siempre todo lo que queremos, temerosos de perder felicidad, queremos asegurarnos frente a todo y frente a todos, tratando de dominar la situación desde una posición de superioridad y de poder sobre los demás. Y así es como tratamos de manipular de mil maneras a quienes son más débiles que nosotros, esforzándonos por mantenerlos al servicio de nuestras expectativas e intereses. Basta con echar un vistazo a las relaciones que hay entre jefes y subordinados, entre poderosos y económicamente débiles, entre profesores y alumnos, esposos y esposas. Se diría que no acertamos a ser algo, si no es manipulando, dominando y oprimiendo a los demás. Una pura neurosis. Este deseo de ser grandes dominando a los demás, no proviene de la fuerza que uno posee, sino precisamente de la debilidad y el vacío personal. Es un intento equivocado de conseguir por la fuerza lo que uno no sabe vivir desde la propia libertad y capacidad de amar. Lo importante es darnos cuenta de que existen otros caminos para encauzar nuestra vida y ser auténticamente grandes. El Señor, en el evangelio de hoy, nos dice que quien quiera ser grande tiene que renunciar a su deseo de poder sobre los demás y aprender sencillamente a servir desde una postura de amor fraterno. Los que viven desde la generosidad, el servicio y la solidaridad son personas con una autoridad moral que arrastra. No necesitan amenazar, manipular, sobornar ni adular. Son hombres y mujeres que atraen por su nobleza de vida. En su existencia resplandece la grandeza del Señor que no vino a ser servido, sino a servir, y dar su vida en rescate por todos[1]. La vida de esos cristianos -alejados del ruido de las redes sociales casi siempre- es grande precisamente porque saben darla sin guardarse nada para sí. Es pues el evangelio de este domingo un llamado a la forma en que debemos asumir nuestro servicio apostólico; en nuestra Iglesia, los puestos no deben de existir como alimento de nuestro ego, sino como compromiso para trabajar por los demás • AE

[1] Cfr Marcos 10, 4


Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time.

There is that great movie starring Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson called The Bucket List. Two men who were dying but in temporary remission, one of them is rich so he decided to make out a list of the things they wanted to do before they died. In the middle of the movie there is an extremely beautiful scene. The Jack Nicholson character made the huge step and was reconciled with his daughter with whom he had been estranged for years. Then she showed him his little five-year-old grand-daughter. He gave her a hug and a kiss. When he left the house, he crossed off, “Kiss the most beautiful girl in the world.” So, The Bucket List is a good idea for us, an invitation to consider the things we want to do and need to do in our lives, a reminder of some other lists we need to compile. The question today’s readings ask us is simply, “What are the most important things on our lists?” In the first reading, Solomon responds to the invitation by God to ask for anything in return for his constructing the Temple in Jerusalem[1]. To the surprise of many, Solomon doesn’t ask for riches.  He asks for wisdom. Next to wisdom, he says, gold and silver are like mud. But when he possesses wisdom, the Wisdom of God, everything else comes to Him. In the gospel reading, the young guy is asked about his list.  He was sincere. He really wanted to have God’s life. He told Jesus he had kept the commandments all his life. Jesus knew he had and that’s why he offered him treasure in heaven.  What He said to the man shocked him.  It left the man in turmoil. Jesus told him to sell everything he had and give it to the poor, and then follow Him[2]. Jesus was offering the man a place among his apostles. The guy wasn’t ready for this. He was surprised, perplexed, and dismayed. So, what is on your list? What is on my list?  What is there that we could not live without? What is on that list that would leave us devastated if it were destroyed? If it is anything other than the lives of others, the presence of God in their lives and the Presence of God in our lives then we really don’t understand what it means to be a Christian! Some Catholics right now have lost everything they owned and are waiting to lose their lives. Others have refused to sacrifice their faith for the sake of advancing in business and are living far more frugally than ever but they possess all that matters in life: the friendship of Jesus Christ. So, the Liturgy of the Word today hit us to the core of our lives, it is an invitation to consider where we find meaning in life. All of us want to be happy. All of us want to live lives of meaning.  All of us want to finish our physical lives united to God.  To do all this we need to keep the priorities of life straight. God Himself will take care of the rest of our needs.  Solomon said that along with wisdom, all good things came to him. Jesus promises that those who live only for His sake and the sake of the Gospel will receive a hundred times more than they gave up in this age and eternal life in the next[3]. So, what is on our bucket lists, The Word of God, that two-edged sword, asks us today to consider where we are seeking happiness • AE

[1] Wis 7:7-11 [2] Mk 10:17-30 or 10:17-27 [3] Cf Mark 10:30.


Fr. Agustin Schedule for Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Saturday, October 9, 2021.

3.30 p.m. Sacrament of Reconciliation

5.00 p.m. English Mass @ St. Dominic Catholic Church

Sunday, October 10, 2021.

7.30 a.m. English Mass @ St. Dominic Catholic Church

10.00 a.m. @ St. Dominic Catholic Church


XXVIII Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario (Ciclo B)

Vivimos en una cultura donde tener es importante. Poco a poco el estilo de vida del hombre de hoy se ha ido orientando hacia el poseer. Para muchos es la única tarea rentable y sensata. Todo lo demás viene después. Ciertamente ganar dinero, poder comprar cosas y poseer toda clase de bienes produce bienestar. La persona se siente más segura, más importante, con mayor poder y prestigio. Pero cuando la vida se orienta en esa única dirección, el ser termina arruinándose. El tener no basta, no sostiene, no hace crecer. Sin darse cuenta, la persona va introduciendo cada vez más necesidades artificiales en su vida, olvidando poco a poco de lo esencial. Se rodea de objetos, pero se incapacita para la relación viva con las personas. Se preocupa de muchas cosas, pero no se fija en lo importante. Víctor Frankl hablaba del vacío existencial y de cómo, para desplegar su ser, el individuo necesita salir de sí mismo, servir a una causa, entregarse, amar a alguien, compartir. Es cierto: Sin esta autotrascendencia no hay verdadera felicidad. De este vacío no libera ni siquiera la religión cuando también ella se convierte en objeto de consumo. Y es que podemos vivir en una religión, pero con el corazón lejos de Dios. Podemos tener un magnífico catálogo de verdades que confesamos con los labios, pero podríamos no estar abiertos la verdad de Dios. Acumulamos méritos repitiendo mecánicamente momentos espirituales quasi-perfectos, pero quizá no estamos abiertos a amar de verdad. En el evangelio de este domingo un hombre que es rico se acerca a Jesús. No le pregunta por esta vida, pues la tiene asegurada. Lo que busca es que alguien – ¿Jesús? – le asegure la otra vida, la eterna. Jesús es claro: «Una cosa te falta: Ve y vende lo que tienes, da el dinero a los pobres y así tendrás un tesoro en los cielos. Después, ven y sígueme»[1]. A mí hoy me dice lo mismo, ¿seré capaz de mirarle a los ojos y responder algo? • AE

[1] Cf Mc 10, 17-30