Luke 16:1-15 · The Parable of the Shrewd Manager
Jesus and the Rascal
Luke 16:1-15
Sermon
by Carveth Mitchell
Loading...

Why in the world would Jesus tell this story? On casual reading it seems as though he is making a hero out of a villain. What does it mean? To help us answer that we put the spotlight on three verses; but first, a bit of background.

In Palestine there were absentee landlords who employed overseers to manage the property in their absence. The tenants paid their rents "in kind" - that is, with a portion of their produce; in this case, a hundred measures of oil, a hundred measures of wheat. Any thought that Jesus lived in an ivory tower, unaware of the hard and often sordid facts of life, is banished by this parable.

This overseer was a rascal. There can be no doubt about that. He wasted his master’s goods and he falsified the entries in his master’s books. Furthermore, he was dealing with a lot of other rascals, and he knew it.

First, turn the spotlight on verse two. The master called the steward and said, "Turn in the account of your stewardship, for you can no longer be steward." As the steward discovered, tomorrow really does come. For better or for worse, tomorrow is loaded with the inescapable consequences of today. Robert Louis Stevenson wrote, "Everybody soon or late sits down to a banquet of consequences." Tomorrow is God’s judgment on today.

A man bought a parrot. He taught that bird to say one word. That word was, "Today." When he got up in the morning and when he came home at night it was beaten into his eardrums: "Today." There was no procrastination around that bird. "Today, today, today," he screamed.

About six months later the man bought another parrot. He taught that bird to say one word. That word was "Tomorrow." He said, "I have been living as if there were no future. Today is all there is, and I’ve found it isn’t so." The two birds together helped him keep his mind on the realities of life: today and tomorrow. Would that the steward could have heard both voices. Tomorrow is God’s judgment on today.

Today is important. It is the only time we can call our own. God’s Word is full of the significance of today. The psalmist wrote, "This is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it." (Psalm 118:24) Paul wrote to the Corinthians, "Behold, now is the acceptable time. Now is the day of salvation." (2 Corinthians 6:2) We are to live today - but not only for today. Tomorrow does come. We, too, are only stewards - of life itself and all that it contains. We need both words, for we also, like this ancient overseer, must give an account of our stewardship.

Second, turn the spotlight on verse eight. The first part reads, "The master commended the dishonest steward for his prudence." Here is where a casual reading could lead us astray. You remember what the steward did: he cheated the master by doctoring the books. He changed the bills from one-hundred measures of oil to fifty, and from one-hundred measures of wheat to eighty so that they would be beholden to him when he was no longer steward. We must remember that the master commended the steward not for his criminal rascality, but for his prudence. He handled his material calamity with resourcefulness (even though it was dishonest). He did the best he could with the circumstances that beset him, handling them with diligence and foresight. Jesus is telling his disciples that they are to serve God like that. The "children of light" are to have the same wisdom and foresight in serving God as the "children of this world" have in serving themselves.

The "children of this world" are not necessarily rascals. They are simply those whose main concern is material things. They serve their own interest above all else. They have little or no concern with spiritual things, or with other people’s welfare. With time and patience, with diligence and foresight they serve material things in their own interest!

As the "children of light" whose chief concern is supposedly with spiritual things and with other people’s needs - kindness, love, prayer ant’ their relationship with God - as the "children of light," how does our wisdom and foresight compare with theirs? Do we study our Bibles with the same diligence and persistence as the computer operater and the insurance man study their manuals? Do we devote time and patience to our prayers and our witnessing like the investor to his accounts or the sportsman to his skills?

Jesus said, "In the world you shall have tribulation." (John 16:33) When our calamities come - illness, sorrow, injustice, disappointment or misfortune - we are to handle them with the same wisdom and foresight with which the crooked steward handled his calamity. We are not to let them rob us of our trust in God’s power and love.

For example, when Leland Stanford lost his son, he did not handle the calamity with bitterness and resignation. Out of his heartache he built a school for other boys. It has become one of America’s great universities. He handled his calamity with wisdom and foresight. He did not let his sorrow rob him of his trust in God’s power and love.

Third, the spotlight shines the brightest on verse thirteen. "No servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon."

Jesus is using strong language here to press the importance of his point. He is not making a judgment; he is stating a fact. He does not say. "You ought not"; he says. "You cannot." Perhaps a closer reading of his words would be, "no man can be a slave to two owners."

The word "mammon" itself simply means "material things." Like other words, its meaning changed somewhat as time went by. It later referred to material things entrusted to someone to keep safe for him, like this steward, or like a banker. Gradually it came to mean things in which a person puts his trust, and was regarded as an evil god. So Jesus is saying, "You cannot put your complete trust in God and material things." It had of necessity to be one or the other. Complete trust in either naturally excludes the other.

Jesus does not teach that it is necessarily wrong to have material things, but it is wrong (and futile, one might add) to put one’s trust in material things. All of us, of necessity, deal with the material things of life. The question is not how much or how little of this world’s goods we have, but what our attitude is toward them, what we believe about them and what we do with them. They are to be our servants, not our masters. When we arrange our life around them, treasure them above integrity, friendship, honesty and generosity, they have become our master. No person can be a slave to two masters.

When we use money, and the other material things of life which money can buy, in order to accomplish good purposes, we are on solid Christian ground. We thus provide for our needs, provide for the family and help other people. But when, as so often happens, we desire things just to have more things (not to live on, but to live for), then mammon has become our master. It has then become, as the ancients called it, a little god, and has taken the place that only God should have. So Jesus says, "You cannot be a servant of these two masters." We choose our ultimate allegiance. We reveal that choice by what we do with what has been entrusted to our care by God or by other people.

A man in California plunged into his burning house and threw out his securities, but did not escape himself. He sacrificed his security for his securities, and he lost them both. God is the only capitalist, the ultimate owner. In everything we are overseers of his wealth. The wealth this rascal wrongfully used was not his own, but his master’s. The things we use, rightly or wrongfully - time, talent and possessions - are not our own, but God’s. In everything we are stewards, not owners.

A little girl, romping through fields of wildflowers, was reminded how wonderful God is to provide us with such beautiful fields. She asked, "Do you think God would mind if I picked some of his flowers?" She had the right idea.

Now the spotlight shifts once more. It shines on you and on me. Having material things - little or much - is not a sin, but a danger. The danger is this: the more things we have, the more inclined we are to put our trust in them, to give them the place that only God should have, and thus to be a slave to mammon. The possession of things - little or much - is a matter for prayer, in order that they may be our servants, and never be allowed to become our masters; prayer that they may be used as the owner God would have them used.

No matter how we sugar-coat it or try to evade it, this is the cold, hard fact as Jesus stated it. No person can serve two masters. We cannot put our trust in God and mammon. It is not that we ought not, but rather that we cannot. It sounds simple, but true happiness, peace of mind and eternity depend on which one it is.

"Today" and "tomorrow" - we need both words in our ears every day. Parrots we may not have, but somehow, deep inside us the words they spoke need to reverberate. Like this overseer of old, we modern overseers must give an account of our allegiance when God says, in the words of this Gospel, "Turn in the account of your stewardship."

Our Father, we are constantly surrounded by the acquisition of, and the need for, material things. Help us to acquire them honestly and use them wisely, as in your sight. Save us from being rascally stewards of your bounty. In Jesus’ name. Amen

CSS Publishing Company, The Sign in the Subway, by Carveth Mitchell