HG140-144 Matthew 26:1-20, Mark 14:1-17, Luke 22:1-16, 24-30, John 12:2-8
An article in The Christian Observer refers to an interesting painting that portrays man’s sinister lust for gold and its consequences. Harry Montgomery says of that unforgettable portrait: “It depicts a narrow highway along which a gold coin is rolling. The road is crowded with men and women who rush madly after the treasure. Their eyes are aflame with greed and their faces drawn with intense desire.
“In their midst rides a man on a horse.
Clinging fearfully to him is his devoted wife. In his eagerness to reach the coveted gold, he is roughly pushing her aside, for she is a hindrance to him in his race for wealth. He tramples on all who block his way, leaving them crushed and bleeding.”
From the time he became a naturalized Frenchman until he died in 1661, Cardinal Mazarin, the successor of Richelieu, was supreme in the councils of the French court.
When about to die, he dragged himself through the rooms of his gorgeous palace. Pausing weakly at every step, he gazed first on one side and then on the other, letting his eyes wander over each of the magnificent objects which he had collected in a lifetime.
Someone hiding behind the tapestry overheard him saying—”All these must be left behind … and that, too, what trouble I have had to obtain all these things. I shall never see them again. Where am I going?”