Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
Real Security
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
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One of the multitude said to him, "Teacher, bid my brother divide the inheritance with me." But he said to him, "Man, who made me a judge or divider over you?" And he said to them, "Take heed, and beware of all covetousness; for a man’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions." And he told them a parable, saying, "The land of a rich man brought forth plentifully; and he thought to himself, ‘What shall I do, for I have nowhere to store my crops?’ And he said, ‘I will do this: I will pull down my barns, and build larger ones; and there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I will say to my soul, Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; take your ease, eat, drink, be merry.’ But God said to him, ‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you; and the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’ So is he who lays up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God." (Luke 12:13-21)

Sounds a bit like Lent again, doesn’t it? And right here in the middle of Pentecost. Do you remember the Gospel (Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18, 19-21) about the discipline of Lent - prayer, fasting, and almsgiving? The last three verses are optional; they don’t have to be read, but when they are, they find an echo in Luke’s story of the man who wanted Jesus to act like a judge in a legal dispute that he was obviously having with his brother. Matthew reported that Jesus said, as part of the Sermon on the Mount:

"Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust consume and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also."

And, remember, Ash Wednesday is the day to face up to your mortality: "Remember, man, you are dust, and unto dust you shall return."

And Jesus seems to be speaking to our age, especially, across the centuries, doesn’t he? A decade ago William Barclay wrote, in Daily Celebration:

There never was an age which puts its trust so much in material things. We think we will be happy if we get more pay, if we get a new television set, if we ... acquire a car or a house of our own, if we manage this year to have an expensive holiday abroad, or something like that. And yet a man has signally failed to learn the lesson of life, if he does not see that it is not in the power of things to bring happiness to anyone.

Barclay goes on with a story:

You will remember the old story of the king who was dying of melancholy, The doctors tried every cure; and then it was suggested that the king’s melancholy could be cured if he managed to procure and wear the shirt of a perfectly happy man. So a search was made throughout his realm for a perfectly happy man.

At last they found such a man. He was a tramp on the road, bronzed, carefree, utterly happy. They offered him any price he cared to name for his shirt - only to find that the happy tramp did not possess a shirt to his back.1

Poverty, of course, does not bring people happiness in this life; too many people in this world cry out in hunger and want for this to be so. But - Jesus contends - wealth and financial success offer no sinecure to security; security is not to be found in the things of this world. Genuine security is the treasure God gives to those who believe in him, love and trust him. But the most clearly articulated message from the media in our day is this: "Take advantage of the IRA; begin saving $2,000 per year in a tax-sheltered IRA and you can be a millionaire - if you start at twenty-five or thirty years of age - by sixty or sixty-five, retirement age." Almost anyone can participate in this program, and it is sound financial advice because, depending on the economy, inflation, and interest rates, it should provide a program to support a financially stable retirement program for people. But people, according to Jesus, can’t depend on that as ultimate security. Too many of us do.

The lesson that most of us ought to be learning from these unsettled financial, political, and physical times is that life and all that supports it are so fleeting and fragile. So many people have lost their jobs in the recession we have been going through; they never expected that "this would happen to me." When I moved to the city of Minneapolis, most of Washington Avenue - stretching from the hub of the city all the way out to the University of Minnesota - was inhabited by derelicts and human wrecks. They sat on the doorsteps of dilapidated buildings. Some staggered along the street and occasionally fell into the gutter. They begged for food and they slept where they could. Over the course of a quarter of a century, all that has changed. The downtown area has been transformed with numerous new buildings and high rises. The bums and beggars have disappeared. The whole area has been cleaned up and given a face lifting. But suddenly there is a man, interviewed on television, who slept outdoors in a frigid Minnesota winter; he had no place to go. Soup kitchens have appeared for the first time since the depression, and men and women who recently had good jobs and thought they were secure find themselves in these lines. The newest shopping mall is inhabited by groups of men - not the ones from Washington Avenue, but younger, quieter, sober men - who sit around wondering and waiting; they have nothing to do. They have lost jobs and security and, in some cases, find no meaning or purpose in life any longer. Everything in life is fragile and delicate and easily lost, isn’t it?

Jesus never said, "Take up your cross, follow me - and be certain that you will find security in this life." Rather, he told us to follow him and serve God and our brothers and sisters on earth who need our help. Where did we ever get the idea that the Christian life is supposed to be one in which God pours out upon us the blessings of heaven - in the form of earthly riches and treasure - because we believe and try to live "good" lives? Time and again, I have heard television preachers promise their listeners financial success and security if they will contribute generously and continually to their fund drives. God doesn’t reward us that way, does he? And don’t too many of us misread Malachi (3:10) - "Bring the full tithes and dues to the storehouse so that there may be food in my house, and then see if I do not open the floodgates of heaven for you and pour out blessing for you in abundance" - confusing the "blessing" of heaven with the riches of the earth? That is a technique for raising money that apparently still works, if we are to judge by the "pitch" of some television preachers and parish pastors, too - and the vast sums of money they raise. Religion - as the Christian faith envisages it - is not meant to be a means of getting rich.

Nor is it God’s business to provide prosperity for us - as far too many people believe - and for our country. God doesn’t take sides in matters of finance and business, any more than Jesus would step in between the two brothers and act as a judge by redividing the estate the one had inherited. It isn’t his business - and he won’t do it - to preserve the American way of life and the business and financial institutions that support it. Missing, the movie made about American involvement in the overthrow of the Allende government in Chile in 1973, is a true story about a New York businessman, played by Jack Lemmon, who goes to Chile to search for his son who disappeared in the military coup. He joins up with his son’s wife (Sissy Spacek), but they have little in common; their life styles are totally different. The son/husband, it turns out, isn’t missing; he’s dead - but they don’t learn that until they have - with the help of the United States Embassy staff - searched hospitals, morgues, and the sports stadium where thousands of prisoners were being held. When the father finally learns that his son is dead and realizes that he could not have been killed without acquiescence by the American military forces in Chile, he confronts the Ambassador and demands that he level with him. The ambassador gives an impassioned speech about the more than 1,000 businesses operating in Chile and how the role of the military is to "preserve the American way of life" - and the father/business man is part of that; in a way, without knowing it until then, he had contributed to the death of his only son.

In an earlier scene, as an embassy official is about to drive them on a tour of hospitals, he asks the father: "If you don’t mind my asking, what’s Christian Science (the father’s faith) about?" He answers, "faith." And the official presses him, "Faith in what?" American involvement in the coup. And not quite accepting his role realizes that only later does the truth of what he believes in - the American way of life and all that sustains it - come out. Suddenly he understands why his son died. He knew too much about the American involvement in the coup. And not quite accepting his role and responsibility in it all as a businessman, he threatens to sue the ambassador and the military people who not only knew of his son’s death but probably had approved of it. The sad thing about the movie is that it is a true story.

The Christian life and the American way of life are not synonymous, you know. The business of being Christian is to respond to his grace to us in Jesus Christ by loving, trusting, and enduring those things that might happen to us in life. God secures our souls - through Christ - and his business is to make us into new creatures in this life so that, secure in his love, we might serve him in faith as long as we live. Amazingly, God accepts us as we are, especially when we admit our inability to save and secure ourselves by anything that we can do. In one of his sermons at Riverside Church, William Sloane Coffin, Jr., said:

Human beings are never finished products. And we are not perfected because we are not perfectible ... (but) there is more mercy in God than there is sin in us ... So let us live not as sinners but as forgiven sinners - and what a world of difference there is. Now we can live gratefully, joyfully ..."

He might have added, "securely" - in God’s love.

Last year - before auto sales had begun to sag too badly - I met a young man selling cars. He was personable, polite, obviously bright, and he didn’t try to pressure me into purchasing a car that was about to be replaced by a new line. As we chatted, I discovered that we had lived in the same community a few years previous to our meeting. His father had suffered a heart attack and had died; the family had no warning because he had been - they and he believed - in excellent health. The business had to be sold and now the young salesman was attempting to learn the business of selling automobiles in the hope that someday he would be able to have his own agency. He said to me, "If Dad hadn’t had that heart attack and died so suddenly, I’d probably be running the business today - and I’d have nothing to worry about for the rest of my life." That’s not the way that Jesus saw things, is it?

No one can really say, "Soul, you have ample good laid up for many years; take your ease, eat, drink, and be merry." The end of the road of life is reached too suddenly, too unexpectedly, for many of us. That’s what had happened to the salesman’s father: "This night your soul is required of you; and the things you have prepared, whose will they be?" Suddenly, it is Lent again - and maybe this echo, in different words, will get through to us this time: "Remember, you are dust, and to dust you shall return." We all need "a piece of the rock" - as the well-known insurance commercial with the two men in white suits make their unexpected visits to people who seem to be well and happy - only to discover that "their souls have been required of them" - that day or that night. But our Rock is Jesus Christ, not an insurance policy in an earthly institution programmed into financial security.

It is for us to "lay up for ourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." Our lives do not consist of what we can earn and accumulate, or "in the abundance of possessions" we own, but in a living and enduring relationship with God the Father, which our Lord has made possible for us through his death and resurrection. When we know that we are God’s - and he is ours - then and only then can we know what real and lasting security is. That’s why Robert Muller could write:

When the moment will come to close my eyes on this beautiful planet, my heart will thank and honor all those who gave me life and the warmth of love, and Him who permitted me to devote my earthly sojourn to peace, justice, and the betterment of the human condition in one of the noblest organizations (the United Nations) ever born from the heart of man. I will go in peace and joy, thankful for having been blessed with the miracle of life.

He adds,

I will have loved my life with passion, embraced it with fervor, cherished every single moment of it. I will have contemplated with wonder the sky and its running clouds, my brethren the humans, my sisters the flowers and the stars. I will have feasted unceasingly on the treasure of life in all its forms. I will not have dwelled in mediocre ambitions, vain hatred, and useless complaints.

And, finally, he says,

I will depart with the belief that there is no end to the flow of life in the universe, that there is no death but only an unceasing change of worlds.2

Those are the treasures Christ was talking about - and offers to us all. Amen.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,