Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
Full Barns--empty Souls
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

Motivational speaker Danny Cox tells an interesting story in his book, Seize the Day. Danny and his wife took a hot air balloon trip early one morning in Africa. As the balloon rose gracefully, they saw a herd of wildebeest running frantically across the vast expanse below. The herd stopped suddenly and began looking around as if they were confused. Danny asked their pilot why the herd had stopped so suddenly and what they were looking for.

He told them that the wildebeest, which migrate by the millions across grassy African plains, are not good learners. An entire herd will take flight at the slightest indication of danger. They will run wildly for a short time and then stop, forgetting why they began running in the first place.

Meanwhile, lions, who are good learners, simply follow the stampeding wildebeest herd at a leisurely pace and wait for them to stop. When the wildebeest forget why they are running, it's dinner time for the lions. Their guide said that wildebeest are so memory-challenged that they will even walk up to a sleeping lion and sniff at it. The lion wakes up and has breakfast in bed. (1)

Poor stupid wildebeest. Imagine running and running and then forgetting why you are running in the first place. Come to think of it, I know people like that. They are so frantically running here and there that they forget what it is they are running after.

That is the real story behind this wealthy landowner that Jesus told about. This man had enjoyed a banner year. His fields had produced a bumper crop. There was such an enormous yield that he had no place to store it all. So what did he do? He decided to tear down his barns and build bigger ones to hold all his produce. Then he would have it made. He could take life easy. He could eat, drink and be merry. And just when he thought he had arrived, just when he thought he had made it to the top, just when he thought that nothing could touch him, God came to him and said . . . Well, what did God say to him? You know the story as well as I. God said, "You fool! This very night your soul is required of you. Then whose will these things be?"

Isn't that the way life works out? Just when you think you have it made, just when you think you will be rewarded for all your hard work, just when you've moved into that new home, life goes awry. Your health breaks down. The stock market drops and with it all that you've put away in your 401K. You lose your spouse to a fatal disease. Just when you think that you finally have life figured out, SURPRISE!!!

Friends, THIS IS LIFE!

Maybe we need to look at this familiar story with fresh eyes. Maybe we need to have some sympathy for this man whose bounteous crops had his warehouses bursting at the seams. Maybe he is as much a victim as a villain. We don't have to read into this story that God was taking this man's life. Maybe God came to him simply to warn him. "You think you have it made. You think you are secure. You think nothing can touch you," God may be saying to him, "but this is a cruel world. That which you treasure the most can be taken from you in a moment. What will you do then?"

There is a woman named Gretchen who could stand here today and tell you a story of a good life gone awry. It is a story that would break your heart.

Gretchen's world changed one morning in 1982 when a drunk driver forced her car into a fatal spin, hurtling it across the freeway, where it exploded into a burning inferno. Her mother was instantly killed, and Gretchen was miraculously saved from burning to death, though she was dreadfully disfigured.

Before that dreadful day, Gretchen had led a sun-filled life. Beautiful, wealthy, with an attentive husband, she seemed to be living every girl's dream. But in a moment she lost it all.

She was in a coma for six weeks. When she finally understood that her face was virtually gone, she did not want anyone to see her. She stayed in seclusion for seven years while she underwent more than seventy operations. Even after all that surgery, her face and body was deeply scarred. She now had only one arm and one eye. Television was her only companion. She did not venture out for fear of rejection and pain. (2) Once her barns had been full, her life had been golden, she had it all, but now she had nothing but sorrow and hurt. How do you deal with such a sudden and complete change of fortune? The truth is that without strong spiritual resources to draw on, you will not cope very well.

SOME PEOPLE DROWN THEMSELVES IN BITTERNESS. That is certainly an option. Gretchen could have done that. She could have turned all her hurt into anger--at life, at God, at the world.

In Peter DeVries' novel The Blood of the Lamb, the title character, Don Wanderhope grows up in a religiously fluctuating environment. The death of Don's older brother pushes Don into atheism at the age of twenty.

Don later marries and has a daughter, Carol. Don's wife struggles with alcoholism and other problems, and she eventually commits suicide. Then Don's beloved daughter Carol is stricken with leukemia. While dealing with the tragedy of his daughter's illness, Don makes tentative steps back toward his faith.

One day, Don stops at a church and prays in front of a statue of St. Jude, the Patron of Lost Causes, that his daughter be allowed at least one more year. In that year, Don planned to celebrate every single moment that he and Carol had together.

That morning at the hospital, the nurses tell Don that Carol is in remission. Don comes back the next day with a cake to celebrate with Carol. Before going to the hospital, Don stops at the church to pray again. On the way out, Don comes across the night nurse from the hospital. She tells Don that an infection has spread through the leukemia ward. That afternoon Carol dies.

As Don heads home, he passes the church, where he absent-mindedly left the cake. Don picks up the cake and takes it outside to where there is a large statue of the crucified Christ hanging over the door. Don throws the cake as hard as he can at the statue. It hits the statue of Jesus right in the face. And Don Wanderhope resumes his life of atheism and despair. And that is how the story ends. It is only fiction, of course. But DeVries meant it to be a parable of the way many people live in this world. In fact, the name he gave his lead character is a play on words. The name Wanderhope is taken from the Dutch word "wahhoop," which means "despair." (3)

And that is how some people live. And we can appreciate their dilemma. Life was good. Their barns were full. Their prospects were excellent. Then boom, out of the blue, their lives were turned upside down. No wonder some people respond with bitterness and anger.

OTHERS FACE LIFE WITH RESIGNATION. Anger won't sustain you for a lifetime. Bitterness is draining on the soul. So, many people simply give up on life. They don't have the energy for anger nor the enthusiasm for joy. They simply live one day at a time. They go to their job. They take care of their family, but they never feel any real zest for life. They are simply going through the motions.

Interestingly enough, some of these people have barns that are full. You don't have to experience a great tragedy in life to become resigned to life.

One of the immortal Greek dramatists was a man with full barns. His name was Sophocles. Sophocles was a man who had everything. He was handsome, healthy, wealthy, brilliant. He lived to be ninety years old--a remarkable achievement in that day and time--and he retained his brilliant mental powers to the end. At age eighty-nine he wrote Oedipus at Colonus. His plays won more first prizes than those of any other playwright. He did not even suffer the sorrow of having any of his children die before him as most people in that time did. He was a general of the armies. When young he was so physically handsome that he paraded naked before the Greeks who prized the beauty of the physical body.

In a word, he had everything most people fantasize about. Do you know how Sophocles summed up life. He said the best thing is never to be born. (4) What? A man with everything handsome, healthy, powerful, brilliant--and he's saying he wished he had never been born? Is there something wrong with this picture?

Jesus was not pitying the rich man because he had full barns. He was pitying him because had an empty soul. Jesus summed up this man's life like this: "This is how it will be with anyone who stores up things for himself but is not rich toward God."

This is life! It matters very little how much money you have in your bank account. Here is the question that really matters: Are you prepared for that day when your soul will be required of you? Are you prepared for that day when that which you most treasure is snatched away? Just as importantly, are you living an empty, going-through-the-motions existence right now? It's a terrible thing when your barns are full and your soul is empty.

The historian, Gibbon, tells about a man named Abdulrahman. Abdulrahman was one of the Muslim Caliphs of Spain. He built for his pleasure the city, palace, and gardens of Zehra, beautifying them with the costliest marbles, sculptures, gold and pearls. He had sixty-three hundred persons--wives, concubines, and eunuchs--at his service. His guard had belts and scimitars studded with gold. And yet, at his death, the following authentic memorial was found commemorating his life: "I have now reigned above fifty years in victory and peace . . . Riches, honors, power, pleasure . . ." Then the caliph adds these words to his epitaph: "the days of pure and genuine happiness which have fallen to my lot: they amount to fourteen." (5)

A reign of more than fifty years, but only fourteen genuinely happy days. Full barns--empty souls.

BUT IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE THAT WAY. Just ask Gretchen.

Yes, the same Gretchen who spent seven years in seclusion because of her disfiguring automobile accident, whose only companion was a television set. But one night watching television she turned to a Billy Graham crusade and she gave her heart to Jesus. And she believed that God had a purpose for her life. She began to volunteer at a rehabilitation center where her own disabilities gave her the credibility to reach out to others. There are still scars on her body--but there is joy within her soul. Those who know her best speak of the "transcendent glow of her inner strength."

Now, please do not misunderstand. It was not her misfortune that gave her that glow, that strength. It was giving her life to Christ that filled her life with meaning and purpose. It is possible to have full barns and a full soul. Unfortunately, most of us do not search our souls until it is too late. That's why God called the rich man a fool. It was because he was looking after his material security but not his spiritual security. It was because he was putting off the most important matter in his life the renewal of the inner person.

And, of course, the question is, how about us? Are we making the same mistake? We are a wealthy nation. Drive to the malls of our cities and you will see the opulence that is ours. Notice the parking lot filled with expensive foreign cars and SUVs. Drive through some of the better neighborhoods in the suburbs. And you will see that we have full barns. The only question that really matters is this, how is your soul?

How stupid those poor wildebeest are. Running, running, running and forgetting what they are running after.


1. With John Hoover, (Hawthorne, N.J.: Career Press, 1994).

2. Billy Graham, Hope for the Troubled Heart (Dallas: Word Publishing, 1991), pp. 41.

3. John Timmer, God of Weakness (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Books, 1988) pp. 107-109.

4. Contributed. Source Unknown.

5. Illustrations of Bible Truths compiled by Ruth Peters, AMG Publishers, Chattanooga, TN, 1995.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan