Luke 16:1-15 · The Parable of the Shrewd Manager
Living With Pizzazz
Luke 16:1-15
Sermon
by King Duncan
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What a story! This is the strangest story Jesus ever told! At least it's the strangest one we have in the Bible! There are some other rather strange stories that appear in collections like the Gospel of Thomas. But they didn't make it into the Bible! Think about it! If we're reading this thing correctly, Jesus is telling us to imitate a crook! A downright scoundrel! He cheats on his employer. He lies to his business associates. And yet, says Jesus, here's somebody from whom we need to learn!

How could he do that? What are we missing, that the people in Jesus' world knew? How did they hear this story, and receive it with some sense of religious authority? Let's take a second look at it.

A Fortune 500 tycoon finds out that his administrator has mismanaged things horribly. He's squandered away properties. He's reduced the value of holdings. He's brought the estate to the edge of bankruptcy. Time for drastic action. The tycoon calls the manager in. The manager knows immediately that he's finished. Out the door, and no severance! What can he do now? His hands are too soft, and his back is too weak for life as a laborer. And he's too proud to beg! So he picks up Dale Carnegie's book: HOW TO WIN FRIENDS AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE. And he checks the stack of accounts due, and he calls in the people who owe his boss money, and he slices their bills drastically.

Obviously the debtors are rather pleased! But, get this! So is the tycoon! He praises the manager for being such a shrewd duck! Why? Why commend the fellow for his dishonesty especially since it rips another chunk off the value of the estate?

And why does Jesus want us to be like him?

What's Jesus' point? Let's run it down from the top, once again:

Richie Rich is the big man in town. He's the local millionaire. Much of the regional economy depends on his holdings and his doings. Lots of people work for him. Many others are renters and sharecroppers on his estate. He's got a big operation to run, he brings in Dirk Director, with his freshly stamped MBA. Things go well for a number of years. Richie Rich gradually gives Dirk Director full responsibility for the operation. It allows Richie some time to get away and visit the health spas down at Masada. But Richie Rich is no fool. And he still reads the annual reports. And he smells something suspicious. So he does a little investigation. And Dirk Director's fingerprints show some pretty ugly smudges. Time for the boss to take control again. So he calls Dirk in, shows the evidence, and tells him to pack. And Dirk knows he's been caught. He doesn't protest. He doesn't point fingers. He doesn't argue that it's all a mistake. He hangs his head, and turns away beaten. And here the story gets interesting.

Richie Rich could put Dirk in jail; Jesus tells other stories like that! But he doesn't! And he could trumpet Dirk's indiscretions far and wide, making sure Dirk would never work in the neighborhood again. But he doesn't do that either! In fact, this Fortune 500 tycoon seems to be a rather caring gentleman. He keeps the matter quiet, so that Dirk Director can bow out gracefully. Dirk's no longer managing the estate. But only Dirk and Richie Rich know that yet. And that gives Dirk time to play his final hand of cards. Instead of packing, Dirk runs quickly to some of Richie's debtors who live close by. They've always done business with Dirk. And now, they have no idea that he's been canned. When he comes to their houses, they assume he's still in charge of Richie's estate. Quick! he says. Where's your I.O.U. with my Master? Let me tear it up! Let's rewrite this thing for half the amount. So they do it. Now, you've got to understand something: the fact that these people so easily allowed Dirk to change the bills means two things: first, they sincerely believed that he was still the manager, and that he had the authority to act as an agent for Mr. Rich; second, they also were very sure that Mr. Rich had stipulated these transactions. If they thought Dirk was doing this thing on his own and Mr. Rich found out about their collaborations, they could be thrown in jail! Partners in a swindle all nabbed the punishment.

It all happens very quickly. The contract for 800 gallons of olive oil is cut in half; the bill for a thousand bushels of wheat is reduced by two hundred. Actually, each of these slicings has about the same monetary value: roughly 500 denarii. So you get the idea that Dirk was acting in haste. He had no time to figure percentages, or calculate market trends. He just lopped off about 500 denarii's worth from each settlement package. And the deed is done.

Now, says Jesus, it doesn't take long for Richie Rich to find out what's happened. After all, good news spreads fast. And the word on the street is that he's become quite a hero. In fact, those who've just had their debts reduced come crowding his door. Local custom requires that they voice their thanks! So there they are, mobbing his mansion, and shouting his praise! What a generous man he is!

So what does he do? What can he do? Actually, he has two alternatives: either he can tell the tale of Dirk Director's scheme, and revoke the cuts Dirk made on their bills; or he can keep quiet about the affair, and let things stand as they are. If he does the first, he stands to lose face. None of the debtors would have grumbled about the bills before. They were lawful and binding. But now, they've seen a moment of grace. And even though they weren't expecting it, they've begun to live out of its freedoms and its promises. If Mr. Rich takes away the blessings they've just received, he'll look stingy and greedy. It'll seem like he cares more for his wealth than he does for his people. Besides that, Dirk Director will come out smelling like a rose! After all, he wasn't cheating himself! He was only seeking the welfare of the debtors! He can't be a bad man when he works for the good of the community! So he'll have a welcome in every home! Which is just what he wanted in the first place! Now, if Mr. Rich decides to keep the matter quiet, a whole different scenario will unfold. The people of the community will praise him for his generosity, and his esteem will increase enormously.

And that's the picture Jesus leaves us with. Richie Rich stands at the door of his home, surrounded by the praise of the community. At his side is Dirk Director, grinning at the success of his scheme. And Mr. Rich slaps him on the shoulder, laughing at the good joke that's been played. Dirk gained lots of friends. Mr. Rich rose in the esteem of the community. Everyone feels good and the whole town celebrates!

Now, how is Jesus going to give a moral to this story? What does he want to say to his disciples? Well, obviously he's not telling people to be dishonest. He's not just saying: Go and do likewise! He's probably got some attitude in mind which he wants people to copy. And if there's one thing that holds the story together, if there's one idea around which everything revolves, if there's one quality of character on which all the details hinge, IT HAS TO BE THE GENEROSITY OF THE MASTER.

Think of it! It was the generosity of Mr. Rich that made it possible for Dirk to do what he did! The generosity of the master gave his CEO time to put his affairs in order, rather than sending him right off to prison in public disgrace! The generosity of the master was the key to the scheme: the debtors heard Dirk change the terms of the bills in their favor, and they said to themselves, "Yeah! Isn't that like Mr. Rich! He's a generous man, all right!" And when the crowds gather at the mansion house, as Jesus concludes his story, the cry of delight celebrates the master's great generosity.

So the main point of the parable is not to teach us how to be dishonest, in order to make a buck, or to secure something for ourselves. Instead, the main point is this: DO YOU KNOW THE GREAT GENEROSITY OF GOD, AND ARE YOU MAKING FULL USE OF IT? Have you mined the resources of heaven to their fullest extent? Does the world around you celebrate the great goodness of your Master? The master commends the steward for making fine use of his generosity, not to line his own pockets, but to spread the blessings of the master throughout the community! And in the same way, Jesus expects his followers to learn the great generosity of their Lord, and to make use of it in spreading his blessings throughout the world. As the manager knew that the most admirable character of his master was his generosity, so we should learn that about our Father in heaven.

That rings true with Jesus' statements in verses 8 and 9 the "son of this world," that is, the steward, was wise. He knew that using the generosity of his master was the only way he could survive the pressures of the times in which he lived. So too we, the "people of the light," ought to be wise enough to know that if we hope to survive the pressures of the times in which we live, our only hope is found in the generosity of God. In the words of the old hymn: "He giveth more grace when the burden grows greater. He sendeth more strength when the labors increase. To added affliction He addeth His mercy; To multiplied trials, His multiplied peace. His love has no limit, His grace has no measure, His pow'r has no boundaries known unto men; For out of His infinite riches in Jesus, He giveth and giveth and giveth again." The generosity of God. Only those who discover God's great generosity become generous people themselves.

The character of our spirituality is not seen and known primarily by how many times we go to church, or by the songs we sing, or by the prayers we pray, or by the confessions we make. Rather, THE CHARACTER OF OUR SPIRITUALITY IS FELT IN THE LEVEL OF OUR GENEROSITY TOWARD THOSE AROUND US. One person put it this way: if you want to know the quality of a person's heart, check it in the mirror of her checkbook! If you're greedy in little ways, you'll be tiny in the dimensions of your soul. If generosity doesn't characterize your use of money, your heart's not in time with your Master.

It's like a character in Roland Pertwee's short story, THE VOICE THAT SAID ˜GOOD NIGHT.' Philip Gaylor is found dead in his chair one morning. Someone twisted his neck and broke it. But who? Could have been anybody, says Charles Chrichton to the investigating officer. After all, he says, Gaylor was the kind of beast who kept his soul in his trousers pocket, along with his other small change! Can you see it? A man who keeps his soul in his pocket with the rest of his "small change"! The man is spiritually bankrupt! Just like, says Jesus, those who haven't learned the generous spirit of God.

Do you know what it is to revel in the generosity of God? Annie Dillard does. In PILGRIM AT TINKER'S CREEK, she writes: "[God's] creation loves pizzazz!" What she meant by "pizzazz" is the outlandish generosity of God that sparkles through the universe. Jesus knew the pizzazz of heaven's great grace. After all, he was part of it!

Poet William Wordsworth praised those who'd found the pizzazz of God in their lives. He spoke of the "generous spirit," whose "high endeavors are an inward light That makes the path before him always bright . . . " Have you discovered that pizzazz in your own life? Are you living in the generosity of God? The character of our spirituality is felt in the level of our generosity toward those around us. In that way we reflect the generosity of our Master.

Wayne Brouwer is pastor of Harderwyck Christian Reformed Church, Holland, Michigan.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan