The needle’s eye, according to some scriptural scholars, may refer to a narrow gate that merchants used to enter Jerusalem. And, since this small, oval-shaped gate could not allow a camel with baggage to pass through, a merchant traveler would have to remove the baggage first and literally push or pull the camel through the narrow gate, called the needle’s eye. Thus it was not impossible to pass through the needle’s eye, but it was not easy. It could only be done by applying a lot of effort.

Everyone has had the experience of being burdened by some kind of baggage that prevented him or her from being truly free and fulfilled. No one can possess the happiness of the children of God, which is within, while being attached to material things, especially money. You cannot have it both ways. You must let go of your attachment to money but, not only money, your attachments to power, to possessions, to persons, to things, if you are to enter the kingdom of God. Once you do this, you can fully enjoy the things of God’s kingdom because you are not attached or controlled by any material thing.

The problem with the rich man in today’s gospel story is, not that he was rich, but that he was attached to wealth and possessions. You cannot serve God and money. Love of money, as St. Paul says, is “the root of all evil” for it becomes a substitute for the love of God which is the source of all good. Thus Jesus offered the rich young man a gift but he was too encumbered to accept it. The young man, who approached Jesus, clearly was seeking the kingdom of God. In fact, his long adherence to the commandments proves as much. Jesus appreciated his good intentions, but He pointed out the one impediment or obstacle to becoming part of God’s kingdom – his attachment to wealth and material riches. The young man had not the will to lay aside his cargo of material things. Sadly, Jesus pointed out how this burden would bulge and bloat to camel-size and hinder the way to God’s kingdom.

This message is particularly challenging in today’s culture wherein the lure of money is subtly consuming and destroying the lives of so many. It is a difficult message to put into practice for most people, but especially for those who have a lot of it. In our consumer culture, we tend to buy into the lie that we need to have the latest, the biggest, the brightest and the most expensive gadget or toy. The list seems endless and people worry, uselessly, about not having enough. What if there is a better way? But there is a better way, and that is to trust God to do what He promises and supply our every need. No mere thing and, certainly, no mere person can meet your every need. This is what entering into the kingdom of God is about. Put your trust in Him and you will lack nothing.

Detachment from possessions, riches, and material things, in the interest of the kingdom of God, is no easy matter. That’s why Jesus said to His disciples, who found this message baffling, “with man it is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” It takes a special grace to accept this teaching.

The truth of the matter is that every one of us is carrying some kind of baggage: attachment to a darling little possession such as a car, a house, a career, or whatever that keeps our hearts from being open to receive the gift of God’s kingdom. It is not just the rich person who has this problem of attachment to the wrong things. A poor person can have it also. A rich person might be detached from his riches and do great things whereas a poor person might be attached to the smallest of his possessions and fail to grow in grace. Whatever it is in your life, therefore, that prevents you from following the Lord, be assured it is dulling you and tarnishing your spirit.

Let go of your burden and let the Lord gift you with His grace. Like other generous-spirited people, slip through the needle’s eye and come sparkling into the kingdom of light.

-Fr. Hugh Duffy