Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
Fighting Over Daddy's Will
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Permit me to do a little prying. It's for your own benefit. How many of you have made a will? You don't have to raise your hands, but it could be an important question for many of us. Many family squabbles have erupted over the lack of a wellthought out will. There is a book titled THE 400WORD WILL. It contains some interesting wills from Japan. Listen to a few of these. I quote:

"After you finish a simple funeral," wrote Mitsuyo Honda, 43, housewife, "I would like you to grab a handful of ashes and get on a bullet train . . . When you arrive in Tokyo, take a cab and get off at Ginza (in central Tokyo), then find a coffee shop and take a break . . . Then find a nice tree along the street, and quietly cast my ashes at its root."

Or this one: "My dream was to climb a 3,000meter mountain with the two of you, my children, but to this date, it hadn't come true. Take a look at the pictures of mountains I have taken. If you can find one that looks beautiful, try climbing it for me. And please take good care of your mother." Shoichi Nakamura, 45, company employee.

Here's a good one: "The list of my assets is stored in my computer hard disk. If you want to avoid family troubles, you'd better turn on the computer now, and pull it out. I've set the deadline, so the data will be destroyed if you wait too long." Masahiko Hosokawa, 41, teacher.

And one final one: "Pick the red roses from the garden and use them to decorate my funeral. Put the number of roses that match my age inside the coffin. I have never put makeup on my face. Make sure I won't be all madeup by the undertaker. Well, since I'll be meeting your father and some good friends up there, I'll let you apply that orange lipstick, but just a little." Noriko Kamokawa, 41.

Most American wills are probably not that colorful. Recently, however, I heard a shocking true story that was told by an estate planner.

A certain very wealthy man we will call him Mr. Smith died in Tennessee. His attorney was working on settling the estate when he received a telephone call from the Internal Revenue Service. "What about the one milliondollar life insurance on Mr. Smith's life?" asked the I.R.S. agent. "What life insurance policy?" Mr. Smith's attorney answered honestly. He had no idea the policy existed. It seems that unknown to any of his family or friends Mr. Smith had a mistress. He had taken out a one milliondollar life insurance policy and named her as the beneficiary. Now here's the punch line: Because of the way Mr. Smith's will was written, not only did the mistress collect the one million dollars, but Mr. Smith's widow had to pay the taxes on the one million dollars. True story. See your attorney if you have any significant assets. It can matter very much how a will is written. A poorly drawn will can cause a massive headache to those left behind.

Jesus encountered a family plagued with inheritance problems. He was teaching one day when someone called from the crowd, "Sir, please tell my brother to divide my father's estate with me." Now we are not given the juicy details behind this family controversy. Maybe Papa died without leaving a will. Or perhaps there was some subterfuge as in the story of Jacob and Esau. However, the man's request was not totally out of line. Jewish rabbis were often called on to serve as judges and settle disputes. But Jesus replied, "Man, who made me a judge over you to decide such things as that? Beware! Don't always be wishing for what you don't have. For real life and real living are not related to how rich we are." (THE LIVING BIBLE) Then Jesus proceeds to tell the story of the rich fool.

You know the story as well as I. A rich man had barns that were overflowing. He decided to build bigger ones! He said to himself, "Friend, you have enough stored away for years to come. Now take it easy! Wine, women, and song for you!'"

"But God said to him, ˜Fool! Tonight you die. Then who will get it all?'

"Yes," Jesus concluded, "every man is a fool who gets rich on earth but not in heaven."

NOTICE, FIRST OF ALL, THAT MONEY CAN BE A BLESSING OR A CURSE. Family members who have quit talking to one another because of a contested will are evidence that money can be a curse. And all of us have seen people who had abundant wealth but it wasn't enough.

Remember that bizarre case last year of the wealthy St. Paul, Minnesota family that was accused of hiring a shoplifter? According to news accounts, members of the family allegedly gave the shoplifter lists of items to steal including Armani suits and Baccarat crystal. The thief would go to a local department store with list in hand, lift the items in question, then hand them over to the wealthy family for a modest "finder's fee." Charged in the case were a dentist and his wife and their two sons one a former professional football player and the other a lawyer. You and I have a word for a wealthy family that indulges in such behavior: Fools! "The rich farmer," writes Richard Lawrence, "was a fool: an aphron, one who rejects the precepts of God as a basis for life . . . The rich fools' treasures contrast with the treasures of Jesus' followers. The one is on earth. The other in heaven. The one can be exhausted as expenses drain what we save. The other keeps on growing as we add to it. The one brings anxiety, as security systems are installed against thieves, and accountants are hired to avoid taxes. The other frees us from anxiety, for God Himself guarantees its safety. The one can't be taken with us. The other can never be left behind, for like ourselves, it is eternal." (1) Money can be a blessing or a curse.

THE CRITICAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MONEY AS A BLESSING OR A CURSE IS WHETHER MONEY IS A MEANS OR AN END. Is money our servant or our master? Is it our tool or our tyrant?

Bible teacher Howard Hendricks tells about dining with a rich man from a blueblood Boston family. Hendricks asked him, "How in the world did you grow up in the midst of such wealth and not be consumed by materialism?"

The rich man answered like this: "My parents taught us that everything in our home was either an idol or a tool." That's the difference: money as an idol or a tool, money as a servant or a master, money as a means or an end.

Industrialist Armand Hammer once said, "Money is my first, last and only love." If so, that is sad. Money is only an instrument, not the symphony itself.

There was an interesting story in FORBES magazine recently about Victor Jacobs, the chief executive of Allou Health & Beauty Care, Inc. Jacobs has never laid eyes on a Harvard Business School case study or hired an M.B.A. or rented management consultants. According to FORBES, Jacobs and his sons, Herman, 36, and Jack, 34, use a much older management text. They consult the Talmud, the rabbinic commentary on Jewish Biblical Law written more than 1,500 years ago. "It opens your mind and teaches you how to think," says Herman Jacobs.

Over the past five years, his company's sales have climbed from $71 million to $206 million and profits have quadrupled, to $3.7 million.

The Jacobs family belongs to one of the most ultra orthodox Jewish sects. Victor Jacobs, born in Hungary in 1932, escaped when most of his family perished in Auschwitz during World War II. He survived, with his older sister, by obtaining false birth certificates and assuming a nonJewish identity.

Running their company does get a bit complicated for the Jacobses during the Passover holidays. Over the eight days of Passover, Jews are prohibited from eating, using or even owning anything leavened. Each year many religious Jews symbolically sell the leavened foods in their homes to a rabbi, who then sells it to a gentile. Since their warehouse is filled with nonkosherforPassover items, the Jacobs family temporarily turns over all 1.2 million of their shares to longtime employee Ramon Montes, executive vice president in charge of sales, a Roman Catholic. Says Montes: "Each year I go with them to the rabbi, who hands me a handkerchief, and then I own the company." "Shh," admonishes Herman Jacobs. "Don't tell the SEC." (2) This is the Jacobs brothers' symbolic way of saying that they are but temporary stewards of their wealth. God is the owner. Money can be a blessing or a curse. It can be a tool or a tyrant.

THE WAY TO TELL WHETHER MONEY IS AN END OR A MEANS IS HOW WE DISTRIBUTE IT. Do we use it only for our own satisfaction or do we use it to bless the lives of others? Money that is used for a high and noble purpose brings the greatest ultimate satisfaction. Let me tell you a great American success story.

Andras Grof shared some of the boyhood experiences of Herman Jacobs. Andras was born and raised in Budapest, Hungary, where his boyhood was continually marked by tragedy. At the age of four, Andras contracted a raging case of scarlet fever. He barely survived and lost most of his hearing to the effects of the disease. Andras was often picked on for being a Jew, but it wasn't until 1944 that his ethnicity became deadly. It was that year that Nazi forces began rounding up Budapest's Jews and sending them off to concentration camps. Andras' father was taken away and sent to a labor camp. He and his mother hid out with a Christian family. They survived the war. In 1956, the Soviet army began taking over Budapest, and Andras knew it was only a matter of time before they, too, would begin persecuting and killing Jews. So he and a friend fled Hungary. By train, they traveled to just outside Austria. The border was heavily guarded, but if they could make it across, they would be free. Aided by a hunchbacked smuggler, they walked across fields and hid in forests until they made it safely into Austria.

Aided by the International Rescue Committee, Andras came to America, where he started a whole new life. With the committee's help he bought the best hearing aid on the market. He entered the City College of New York, where he was an excellent student. He also married and started a family. And in his new country, Andras found success with a capital S! Today, Andras Grof is known worldwide as Andrew Grove, the head of Intel, the world's leading manufacturer of microprocessors. This year, he was TIME's Man of the Year. Colleagues and employees speak of him as a brilliant, hardworking, visionary, and kind man. A man of integrity, with a commitment to excellence. His net worth is estimated at $300 million.

Andrew Grove and his wife have two daughters, and someday they plan to leave their girls a small inheritance. But the bulk of their fortune will be split up in three ways: some of it will go to create chemistry scholarships at the City College of New York; some of it will go to fund prostate cancer research (Grove was recently diagnosed with the condition); and some of it will go to the International Rescue Committee, the organization that helped a young refugee start his life over. (3)

Andy Grove is no fool. He is a successful businessman. Even more important, he is making certain his money is used for something greater than himself.

That is a good lesson for us. You and I do not have the millions that Andy Grove has, but we can have the same satisfaction with what we have that he does with his wealth. By giving to our church we can make sure that our money is being used for a great and worthy cause the sharing of Jesus Christ with our community and our world.

A man comes to Jesus and asked him to settle a family dispute about a contested will. Jesus responds with a parable about a rich fool. And in the process he teaches us that money can be a blessing or a curse depending upon whether it is our servant or our master. And we see that the greatest use we can make of our material possessions is to give them to something that will live on after we are gone.


1. The 365-Day Devotional Commentary (Colorado Springs: ChariotVictor Publishing, 1990), 734-735.

2. Matthew Schrifrin, "Shh! Don't tell the SEC," Forbes, November 21, 1994, p. 126.

3. Joshua Cooper Ramo, "A Survivor's Tale," Time, December 29, 1997January 5, 1998, p. 55-58, 70.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan