Luke 16:19-31 · The Rich Man And Lazarus
Do You See Lazarus On Your Doorstep?
Luke 16:19-31
Sermon
by Richard Hasler
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Whenever I think of a rich man I think of Howard Hughes. He was not only extremely wealthy but also extremely eccentric. Hughes once bought a Las Vegas television station for little less than four million dollars simply because he wanted to watch cowboy movies all night, and this station had cowboy movies but not playing all night. Hughes wanted to watch them up until 6 a.m. That is what you do if you are an eccentric millionaire.[1]

Hughes has helped me to understand the rich man in Jesus’ parable. The point of the parable is not a sweeping condemnation of wealth but rather a critique of the rich man’s self-centered ways. He didn’t even “see” the poor man Lazarus sitting on his doorstep.

Jesus’ audience this time was not the twelve disciples but the Pharisees. Those who proclaim the so-called “prosperity gospel” can find some resemblance of it in the book of Deuteronomy where the writers of the book have God not only blessing war but blessing success in the marketplace as signs of God’s favor. The Pharisees had this viewpoint in their theology, but before we go bashing Pharisees, we may have on the conservative or liberal side of the spectrum those we think who are “Pharisees.” Before we condemn them we might first consider the “Pharisee within.” If we press hard enough we might find what is most objectionable in our “Pharisee” might lodge within us too.

Some interpreters of this biblical passage see not one but two parables. The first one, or at least the first part of the parable (19:1-26) is found in a variety of forms among the rabbis; it is a common story in the ancient world.

In the second part of the story (vv. 27-31) we have a reversal of fortune. The rich man was in misery, and the poor man at the gate was at Abraham’s side, an ancient Hebrew expression for ‘being in heaven.” Nonetheless, the rich man still saw Lazarus as someone who ought to serve him, someone who would “dip his finger and cool my tongue; for I am in agony in these flames.” Abraham reminded him that once he had received good things and Lazarus had received evil things, but now Lazarus was the one being comforted. Even if the poor man wanted to, he would not have been able, because, according to this story, “a great chasm had been fixed” so that those who wanted to pass from here to there cannot do so, “no one can cross from there to us.”

Then, forgetting himself for the moment, he remembered his five brothers at home. They should be warned so that they will not come to this place of torment. But Abraham countered saying: “They have Moses and the prophets, they should listen to them.” Then, the rich man in desperation said to Abraham, “If someone from the dead would go to them they would repent.” Abraham’s reply was still the same, if they did not listen to Moses and the prophets, neither would they be convinced even if “someone rises from the dead.”

Now, let us take a closer look at the rich man. He was described as being dressed in purple and fine linen who feasted sumptuously every day. He certainly was rich, but the story does not say that the rich man had a criminal record, nor does it say that he kicked Lazarus as he walked into the house. He might have been considered a model citizen by his close friends, one who even gave to charity and watched the latest shows on PBS. In many respects he might have been considered a “good guy” in his time. But he did not “see” Lazarus on his doorstep.

Now, we take a look at the poor man, named Lazarus. Incidentally, this is the only parable of Jesus where the central figure of the story is given a formal name. Lazarus means “God is my help.” He was described as a poor man sitting on the doorstep of the rich man. He was covered with sores. He was constantly hungry and begged for the crumbs that were dropped from the rich man’s table. We also are told that the dogs of the street came and licked his sores.

Keith F. Nickel in his commentary on Luke has this rather lengthy summary:

“Luke surely expected his community to connect the conclusion of this story with the church’s proclamation of Jesus’ death and resurrection. The testimony of the Jewish scriptures was still true, yet Luke’s colleagues in the faith had experienced people who would believe neither the testimony of scripture nor the witness of Christians to the good news that God had raised one from the dead who not only by his words but by his life demonstrated that God was dead serious about obedience.

Even more pointedly, the story converged with their own inclinations to equivocate. They too had Moses and the prophets; they even had the witness of the greatest of them all, John the Baptist; they had the testimony of Jesus’ preaching of the good news of the restored rule of God; they had the Easter proclamation of Jesus raised by God from the dead. How thoroughly had it been taken? How single-minded were they in their willingness to place their trust exclusively in God? How consistent were they in relying on God alone, wherever they were, whatever happened, no matter what? How about us?”[2]

Tom Wright brought the story up to the present where it involves all of us “rich” people, in case we forget, by almost any human standard we in the United States are “rich“people in contrast to the rest of the world’s population. Wright commented: “We have all seen him. He lies on a pile of newspapers outside a shop’s doorway covered with a rough blanket. Perhaps he has a dog with him for safety. People walk past him, or even step over him. He occasionally rattles a few coins in a tin or cup, asking for more. He wasn’t there when I was a boy, but he’s there now, in all our cities, east, west, north, and south.

As I see him, I hear voices, “it’s his own fault,” they say. He’s chosen it. There are agencies to help him. He should go and get a job. If we give him money he’ll only spend it on drink. Stay away — he might be violent. Sometimes, in some places, the police will move him on, exporting the problem somewhere else. But he’ll be back, and even if he isn’t, there are whole societies like that. They camp in tin shacks on the edges of large, rich cities. From the door of their tiny makeshift shelters, you can see the high-rise hotels and office blocks where, if they’re very lucky, one member of the family might work as a cleaner. They have been born into debt and in debt they will stay, through the fault of someone rich and powerful who signed away their rights, their lives in effect, a generation or two ago, in return for arms, a new presidential place, a fat Swiss account, and even if rich and poor don’t always live side by side so blatantly, the television brings us together.”[3]

Yes, we have all seen Lazarus many times, but have we really “seen“ him?

 We must always remember this is a parable, a story with “picture language” about something going on in Jesus’ ministry. We must not take all the details literally but probe to the essential message. The rich man never really “saw” the poor man.

Annie Dillard, in her Pulitzer Prize winning book, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, told stories of people blind from birth or people who had lost their sight for a long time. “Finally, a 22-year-old girl was dazzled by the world’s brightness and kept her eyes shut for two weeks. When at the end of that time she opened her eyes again, she did not recognize any objects, but the more she now directed her gaze upon everything about her, the more it could be seen how an expression of gratification astonishment overspread her features; she repeatedly exclaimed ‘Oh God! How beautiful!’ How we should praise God, if we can really see!”[4]

We may see two lovers say “sweet nothings” to each other. We may even say, “I don’t know what she sees in him.” But the parties involved see things differently. As the lyrics in Sheldon Hanrick’s song in Fiddler on the Roof exclaimed that of all of God’s miracles, no matter the size, the most miraculous is the gift of one person to another.

In Rob Bell’s book, Love Wins, he has a chapter on hell. In this chapter he talked about all kinds of hell. He discussed the rich man in the parable ignoring his neighbor. He contended that if enough rich men treated Lazarus outside their gates like that, it could conceivably lead to a widening gap between the rich and the poor and would eventually mean we would have an “individual” hell and a “societal” hell too.

Bell also discussed the scriptural passages that never mention the word “hell” but seem to be talking about it nonetheless. For example, take the story of Sodom and Gomorrah in chapter 19 of the book of Genesis. The judgment upon that city because of its sinfulness involved sulfur raining down from the heavens destroying all the living including even the vegetation of the land. Since that time Sodom and Gomorrah has become a sign of God’s swift and certain judgment.

But is that the last we hear of Sodom and Gomorrah? In Ezekiel 16:53 we read: ”I will restore the fortunes of Sodom and her daughters… Sodom and her daughters shall return to their former state.” The story isn’t over for Sodom and Gomorrah.

Also, in the New Testament we read in Matthew 10:15 speaking of the town the disciples may be visiting: “Truly I tell you, it will be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah on the day of judgment than for that town.” Bell went on to say: “More bearable for Sodom and Gomorrah?” He told highly committed, pious, religious people that it would be better for Sodom and Gomorrah than for them on the judgment day? And if there’s still hope for Sodom and Gomorrah, what does that say about all of the other Sodoms and Gomorrahs?[5]

We can agree with Bell when he stated that the dominant theme of the Bible is healing and restoration. God judges in order to discipline, correct, and eventually restore.

 We don’t want to give up on the Lazarus on our doorstep or anyone else. God’s compassionate grace continually seeks us.

Amen.


[1]. Peter Harry Brown and Pat H. Broeske, Howard Hughes: The Untold Story (New York: A Dutton Book, Penguin Group, 1996), 339.

[2]. Keith Nickel, Preaching the Gospel of Luke: Proclaiming God’ Royal Rule (Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press, 2000), 169-170.

[3]. Tom Wright, Luke for Everyone, 199-200.

[4]. Annie Dillard, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek (New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 1998), 31.

[5]. Rob Bell, Love Wins: A Book about Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of every Person (New York: Harper One, An Imprint of Harper Collins Publishers, 2011), 83-93.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., The last days: Cycle C sermons for Proper 18, Ordinary Time 23, Pentecost 13 through Christ the King Sunday on the Gospel texts, by Richard Hasler