Love of Money ...
The Gospels do not reveal whether the young man later changed his mind
and followed Jesus’s instruction, or forever after agonized over his
inability to follow the command to become perfect by divesting himself
of all his possessions to give to the poor. That the issue remains
painfully difficult for Christians to decide even today, two thousand
years later, is witnessed by, to give only one recent example, the
ongoing bitter dispute at Trinity Wall Street Church in New York, an
Episcopal congregation, over whether it should sell more of its rich
holdings to be able to donate more to the poor. It is a remarkable
strength of Peter Brown’s book that its fair-minded arguments uncover
how and why this unsettling moral uncertainty first came to be,
provoking us to wonder, and perhaps worry, what Jesus would think of its
abiding persistence.
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