Luke 16:19-31 · The Rich Man And Lazarus
Keep Things Flowing
Luke 16:19-31
Sermon
by Richard Patt
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There was a beautiful lake that lost its zesty freshness. The water formerly had been clear. It was alluring to animals and people alike. But it became covered with a green scum. The farm animals became ill from drinking the water. Finally someone came by the lake who understood the problem. Debris collecting from the hard spring rains had stopped up the dam and prevented the free flow of water, not into the lake, but out of the lake. The spillway was cleared, and soon the lake was fresh and clean again. The flow in and out was necessary to keep the water pure!

Doesn't the same principle apply to you and me as human beings? The blessings of life flow to you and me, but we fail to realize that most of these blessings are not meant just to flow to us, but through us, for the good of others around us, especially for those in need.

In this Gospel reading we have one of those sad stories -- even a somber story -- about a person who didn't keep things flowing in his life, with the result that his life became clogged and ended in tragedy.

We don't know the man's name as Jesus told this story. Jesus simply called him "the rich man." We may take that to mean that the man was richly blessed. A lot of life's blessings had flowed to this man. But it seems that very few of those blessings flowed through him, reaching other people.

Jesus gives us this sparse description, "There was once a rich man who dressed in the most expensive clothes and lived in great luxury every day" (v. 19). Jesus doesn't say he was happy because he "dressed in the most expensive clothes." He doesn't say the man was joyful because "he lived in great luxury every day." Jesus simply says that a lot of life's blessings flowed into this man's life. Hardly anything, it seems, flowed through the man -- to other people.

In fact Jesus makes it clear that most of the man's blessings got clogged in his own hand and rarely flowed through his life to others, except by accident. Jesus describes it: "There was also a poor man, named Lazarus, covered with sores, who used to be brought to the rich man's door, hoping to eat the bits of food that fell from the rich man's table" (vv. 20-21).

Surely part of the reason Jesus tells this story is to appeal to us to keep things flowing in our lives. Today Christ wants every Christian to pray, "Lord, as your blessings flow to me, may they continue to flow through me, for the good and encouragement of others!"

Life in general suggests flowing rather than stagnation. We want the blood and air to travel through our bodies; we try to avoid those things that cause a buildup of plaque and clogged arteries. In recent times we've come to appreciate the cycling and recycling that go on in nature. There seems to be a constant flow, the flow of life that cleanses, enriches and makes things new. The leaves of autumn will gradually flow into the soil of a future springtime. We are learning that unless our throwaway society begins to effectively recycle what it discards, we will clog the flow of our waters and atmosphere until we're literally choked to death.

You and I don't have to be financially rich people to apply the force of what Jesus is saying in this story. There are many levels and dimensions of life at which you and I have been greatly blessed. Many blessings have come to us; they are meant in large measure to travel through us to others.

Take the primary matter of our own faith and trust in Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior. This is the greatest blessing we have! We know of salvation in Jesus Christ and we believe it. Think of it: In his mercy and love God has chosen us to be God's own. God's Son has died upon the cross for our sins and our forgiveness. Christ has risen from the grave so that you and I don't need any longer to fear the grave. In this saving work of Christ we are spiritually blessed beyond belief and measure.

But as this love of Christ has flowed to us, it doesn't always flow through us, into the hearts and lives of other people. People around us (like Lazarus around the rich man's table) are spiritually hungry and thirsty for the gospel message that only we can give. The plain question involves how the story of the cross and resurrection will ever come to anyone else if it doesn't flow through your lips and mine. Are we forcing the spiritually hungry Lazaruses around us to scrape for a few gospel crumbs, while the feast of the gospel message remains clogged in our own hearts?

We could start remedying this situation during our Sunday worship services. Let Christ flow through you when you worship with others. Let the hospitality of Christ you have in your heart flow through you to other worshipers as you greet one another before and after the service. Let the joy of Christ that you have in your heart flow through you in the songs and music, as you sing with enthusiasm -- even loudly. Let the conviction of faith in Christ that you have in your heart flow through you as you speak the words of the Creed, not timidly, but firmly and in a spirit of testimony. So much of our public worship is lifeless because our faith is clogged within our hearts and needs to be freed up in vigorous expression and flow.

Equally importantly, you and I need to allow God's loving care and healing to flow through us, to others. Then we will refresh the lives of others, and our own lives will be constantly refreshed. That's what happened in Jesus' own life -- all the way through his ministry. The Bible tells us that when Jesus began his ministry, he was filled with the Holy Spirit. That means that all of God's power and blessing were with Jesus, were in Jesus. Imagine if all of that divine power had gotten clogged within Jesus, if he would not have allowed that power that came to him to flow through him for the good and blessing of others.

But everywhere in his ministry we see God's power for good flowing through Christ. People were healed; people were brought to life; people received new hope for the future; people had their sins forgiven; storms were calmed and bread was multiplied -- because Christ was not a bottleneck for God's saving power but was the very instrument through which God's blessings flowed to others. Jesus once observed that after a certain woman touched his robe, he felt the power of God going out from him to her. Jesus kept things flowing. God's power flowed through him to others.

Jesus never once faulted the man in the gospel story for being rich. That wasn't the point at all. The man's tragedy was that all his blessings got clogged. They never moved beyond his own heart or table. Blessings to him never became blessings through him. There was no recycling. To put it in biblical terms, the man wasn't practicing good stewardship. What was only loaned to him he thought he owned. He stopped the flow, the exhilaration, the fulfillment, the purpose, and the joy of life when he became a container instead of an instrument of God's blessings.

So in what area of life can you and I become instruments of God's loving care and healing? The answer is very simple: in those areas of life where we see human beings in need. Sometimes we see what we want to see and don't see what we don't want to see. But most of the time, I dare say, we see it all. It is just that in our sinful selfishness, we tell ourselves we cannot be bothered by the needs of other human beings. In the lengthy verses of this story that remain, Jesus makes it clear that if we have our minds and hearts made up not to hear and see, we probably won't. Jesus suggests the radical nature of the situation when he concludes here, "If they do not hear Moses and the prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead" (v. 31).

But assuming that we have eyes that see, in what areas of life can we notice human beings in need? In every area. The situation in the text is dramatic and obvious. Lazarus, with his open sores and wretched appearance, was a high profile case of a person in need. The rich man should have known better; he should have noticed Lazarus.

Look around you in the places where you spend your day. You will notice people in need, I can assure you. Some of the people you work with have broken hearts and need ministry. People in your neighborhood are depressed and lonely, despite their cheerful greetings in passing. People in your church are going through crises as well as anyone else. Look around. You will see these people. They need a ministry that you could give. Let God's care for them flow through you.

In all of this maybe some of you are saying, "But that's not my cup of tea. Yes, I can give a buck to someone down and out, like Lazarus; but I don't know how to talk with people about their problems or help them." What you say could be true. But isn't there the possibility that you could learn some of the skills necessary in listening to other people and ministering to them? It is not unusual today for veteran workers in the marketplace to be expected to learn new skills as their jobs develop or expectations become altered. Within our churches today there are usually classes and courses offered for lay people who want to learn how to extend a ministry of caring to persons in need. Many medical and public agencies offer training for volunteers as well. Our friends and others need more than the crumbs of our quick smiles and a pat on the back. In this story Christ is talking about an in-depth ministry that needs to be done and should be done now.

God is blessing you richly each day. Don't become the place where God's blessings become clogged and stop. Keep things flowing. You will feel invigorated, and so will the persons who receive God's blessings through you."

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, All Stirred Up, by Richard Patt