Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
Drowning In A Sea Of Stuff
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

A 6th grade teacher posed the following problem to her arithmetic classes: "A wealthy man dies and leaves ten million dollars. One-fifth is to go to his wife, one-fifth is to go to his son, one-sixth to his butler, and the rest to charity. Now, what does each get?" After a very long silence in the classroom, little Joey raised his hand.

The teacher called on Joey for his answer. With complete sincerity in his voice, Joey answered, "A lawyer!"

He's probably right. Where there is a will, there is often a lawsuit.

Someone in the crowd listening to Jesus said to him, "Teacher, tell my brother to divide the family inheritance with me."

The more things change, the more they stay the same. How many families have come to grief because of the settling of an estate? Money does that to us, doesn't it? Sometimes at the time of a death, sometimes at the time of a divorce.

You don't know whether to laugh or to cry at some of the news stories that come across the wire. For example, there was a story carried by the British news service Reuters recently that actor Jim Carrey's ex-wife, Melissa, wanted a judge to award her more child support, saying that their daughter must get by on $10,000 a month and cannot afford her own bodyguards, personal trainer or Pilates equipment. Melissa Carrey says in the court papers, obtained by The Smoking Gun Web site, that $10,000 a month "is not sufficient" to meet the needs of her 15-year-old daughter Jane, who wants to pursue a career in the entertainment industry.

"Jane enjoys Pilates and takes classes at the local Pilates studio but does not have her own personal trainer or her own Pilates equipment," the ex-Mrs. Carrey said in the papers, adding that she would like to build a $200,000 studio for the girl to practice the fitness regimen and her musical instruments.

Melissa Carrey, who has primary custody of her daughter, says she pays for her classes in drama, music recording and arranging, singing, tennis, dance, Pilates and computers, but would like to sign her up for horseback riding lessons and a private ski instructor. Jane Carrey also needs money for a talent agent and to be professionally photographed as she begins a career in entertainment, her mother says. Jane is the only child of Jim and Melissa Carrey, who divorced in 1995. (1)

I feel sorry for Jane Carrey. I really do. Not because, as a 15-year-old, she can't get by on $10,000 a month. I mean we all have our crosses to bear. But because she will probably never have a proper perspective on the place of money in life.

In his book The Progress Paradox: How Life Gets Better While People Feel Worse, author Gregg Easterbrook observes that the more prosperous and free a people are, the more likely they are to be discontented with their lives. That's an interesting theory: the more prosperous and free a people are, the more likely they are to be discontented with their lives.

This is certainly true in the United States, where polls consistently register Americans' pessimism and fear of the future. Easterbrook sets forth numerous theories as to why Americans have it so good, yet feel so bad.

His first theory is called the revolution of satisfied expectations. This theory is based on research done by Daniel Kahneman of Princeton University which concludes that "most people judge their well-being not by where they stand but rather on whether they think their circumstances and income will improve in coming years." If we are already prosperous, then we have trouble envisioning our circumstances improving in the coming years. And if our current prosperity doesn't satisfy us, then what will?

Another reason we are discontented is what Easterbrook calls "cataloginduced anxiety." We have access to images of luxury goods we can never own, and so our own sense of satisfaction is diminished.

Another theory Easterbrook sets forth is "abundance denial," which is our natural tendency to be blind to our own prosperity. We always think that the wealthy are those with a little bit more than we have.

Our abundance of choices creates stress, and our fixation on material goods leaves us searching for some deeper meaning in life, claims Easterbrook. But his final theory as to our discontentment revolves around a lack of gratitude. Numerous studies show that a sense of gratitude results in feelings of well-being and optimism. Cultivating a sense of gratitude may be the key to finding contentment in our lives. (2)

Thus we come to our lesson for the day from the Gospel. It is a most familiar story with powerful implications.

Someone in the crowd said to Jesus, "Teacher, tell my brother to divide the family inheritance with me."

But Jesus said, "Friend, who set me to be a judge or arbitrator over you?"

Then Jesus turned to the crowd. "Take care!" he said. "Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; for one's life does not consist in the abundance of possessions." Then he told them a parable: "The land of a rich man produced abundantly. And he thought to himself, 'What should I do, for I have no place to store my crops?' Then he said, 'I will do this: I will pull down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I will say to my soul, 'Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.' But God said to him, 'You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you. And the things you have prepared, whose will they be?'"

You and I may not relate to building bigger barns, but is there anyone in this room who would like larger closets in your home? Let me see your hand. Is there anyone who would simply like more storage space of any kind--just to put away the clutter you have accumulated?

We've been through a financial downturn over the past few years, but there is one investment area that did extremely well in spite of the downturn. Mini--warehouses. Storage facilities. We have so much we have to rent somewhere to keep it! So, maybe we can relate to this farmer who had such a good year he had to build bigger barns to store his goods. Many of us are drowning in a sea of stuff.

Let me ask you a very important question: Does Jesus say this man is going to hell because he built bigger barns? No. Does Jesus call this man a sinner because he built bigger barns? No. Does Jesus even say it is wrong to have nice things? No. He simply calls the man a fool. He's invested his life in stuff that he cannot take with him. This very day he will face judgment and the implication that he is rich in the things of this earth, but poor in the things that are eternal.

It may be that the biggest spiritual problem you and I have is our reliance on our possessions. We have so much. And we want so much more. If we don't have what everyone else has, we give in to covetousness. If we are among the fortunate few who revel in abundance, we are tempted to look down on those who have not done as well. Even more serious, the richer our bank account, the less we feel our dependence upon God. No wonder Jesus talked about the use of money more than any other one topic. Our possessions can be assets, but they can also be spiritual liabilities.

At the turn of the century, actress Alla Nazimova was one of this country's earliest stars. Unlike many of her colleagues, Nazimova did not become trapped by a glamourous lifestyle. How did she escape? Her perspective on material things changed the day a fire swept through her Hollywood neighborhood. As the fire moved ever closer to her home, Nazimova ran from room to room, searching for her most valuable possessions to save. To her surprise, none of her pretty furnishings and knick-knacks mattered to her at that moment. The only things she took with her were a few photographs. The fire never reached Nazimova's house, but when she returned to it, nothing felt the same. She began getting rid of her possessions, and reported greater happiness with less things. (3)

Most of us can relate to that if we will think about it. Why do we get trapped in this cycle of wanting more and more nice things? When push comes to shove, we know that things do not add to our happiness. And yet think of the hours, days, months and years we spend working for and worrying about our possessions. Imagine if we put our time and energy to better uses. Jesus knows we are not evil people; simply foolish.

Dr. Richard Halverson, while serving as chaplain of the U.S. Senate, made a speech in which he said that modern man suffers from what he calls "Destination Sickness." Destination Sickness is the tendency to focus all one's time and energy in the wrong direction. It is marked by the belief that money and success are the most important things in life. Halverson describes the victim of Destination Sickness like this:

"He's the man who has become a whale of a success downtown and a pathetic failure at home. He's the big shot with the boys at the office and a big phony with the boys at home. He's the status symbol in society and a fake in the family. "˜Destination Sickness'--the illness peculiar to a culture that is affluent and godless." (4)

That may seem a little harsh. But Destination Sickness is a serious problem in our society. Many people are focusing all their time and energy in the wrong direction.

It's a question of priorities. What is most important in your life? Christian author Bruce Wilkinson was attending a conference when he was approached by a young boy asking for contributions to a mission fund. Wilkinson told the boy that he only contributes if he knows that the person asking has also contributed some of his own money first. He offered to give double, triple, or even quadruple the boy's contribution, depending on how generous the boy was willing to be. The young boy confessed that he couldn't give any more. He had already given all the money he had to the mission fund. For a little kid on vacation, this was a big sacrifice. He wouldn't be able to buy snacks or souvenirs for the rest of the trip. When Bruce Wilkinson heard that, he knew he needed to respond in kind. So he, too, gave every bit of money he had on him to the fund--even though, on that very morning, he had gone to the bank and withdrawn a sizeable amount of cash. But he handed over the whole envelope of cash to the speechless little boy.

(5) Bruce had just illustrated for the boy a principle that he himself believes, that whatever we give to God's work here on earth will be repaid to us many times over in heaven.

Now you may be thinking, I wish I could afford to be that generous. Generosity is not a state of the pocket book, but a state of the soul. Rarely are the people who have the most things also the most generous. In fact, as we've noted before, they are usually the least generous. The rich man in Jesus' parable probably did not accumulate his wealth by being generous with others. And there is no suggestion that now that he had it made, he was going to begin sharing. It was too late. No, he was simply going to build bigger barns. His money had snared him just as it has snared many others.

Sam Foss, a writer and traveler, discovered a rustic little house in England situated at the top of a hill. A signpost read: "Help yourself to a cool drink." Nearby he found a spring of ice-cold water. An old-fashioned gourd dipper hung above the spring, and on a bench was a basket of summer apples, along with another sign inviting passersby to help themselves. Foss was curious about the people who showed such hospitality to strangers. An elderly couple answered when he knocked at the door. Foss asked them about the well and the apples. They explained that their little plot of ground yielded a scant living, but because they were fortunate enough to have a well with abundant cold water, they wanted to share it with anyone who happened by. "We're too poor to give money to charity," said the husband, "but we thought that this would be a good way to do something for the folks who pass our way." (6)

It's amazing how some people whom the world categorizes as smart, God sees as foolish. And how others whom the world sees as foolish, God knows to be wise. Have your possessions become a spiritual problem? Do you suffer from Destination Sickness--are your priorities out of whack? Have you learned the spiritual principles of gratitude and generosity? Neither have any reference to the size of your bank account--both have to do with the size of your heart. God said to the rich man, Thou fool! And that's exactly what he was.


1. Copyright 2003 Reuters Limited.

2. "If Life is Good, Why Do the Old Days Look Better?" by Gregg Easterbrook, Time, December 15, 2003, pp. 66-67. Condensed from The Progress Paradox: How Life Gets Better While People Feel Worse (Random House, 2003).

3. Peter Hay, Movie Anecdotes (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990) pp. 205-206.

4. Richard Halverson, "A Day at a Time," cited by Robert Lewis. Raising a Modern-Day Knight (Colorado Springs, CO: Focus on the Family Publishing, 1997), p. 68.

5. Bruce Wilkinson, with David Kopp. A Life God Rewards (Sisters, OR: Multnomah Publishers, 2002), pp.76-78.

6. Donald E. and Vesta W. Mansell, Sure As The Dawn (Review & Herald Publishing Association, 1993).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan