Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
Rich Toward God
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
by John G. Lynn
Loading...

The southern California cities of San Diego and Los Angeles are well known for their misty mornings. Each day in Los Angeles, in the Beverly Hills section, the sky is thick with fog. "Don't worry," the natives will tell you, "it will burn off by noon." And sure enough it does. Every morning it is the same thing ... thick, cold fog until 11 or 12:00. Then sunshine for the rest of the day.

In Annapolis, Maryland, on the east coast, it is exhilarating to walk to the end of the Naval Academy campus and there watch the sun break through the haze over the Chesapeake Bay. It's one of God's great miracles that he sends his sun each day to burn off the fog in southern California or break through the early morning haze over the bay.

The predawn beauty of the early morning is rarely appreciated for its ability to seduce and yet obscure perceptions. The quality of light in that hour is amazing. A murky sort of light, it blends in with the early morning haze and the mist from the face of the earth. Nothing is very clear in that hour before dawn. Trees look like giant ghosts. A man walking in the distance looks like a walking tree. Each thing's identity is confused and bewildering.

The Scandinavians call that hour before dawn the hour of the wolf. In their folklore this is the hour when most men die and most men are born.

That hour appears in today's gospel when Jesus says to the young man who wants to force his brother to divide the inheritance, "Life does not consist in the abundance of possessions." That word "possessions" refers to that hour before dawn: that murky, foggy twilight time. In Jesus' mind this man uses his possessions in a murky, foggy, twilight kind of way.

Who is this young man? And what does he want from his brother? This is a younger brother who wants to separate off his share of the inheritance so he can be independent. The problem is that it was never a 50-50 split in those days. The elder brother got at least two-thirds and the younger, at most, one-third of the inheritance. So what this young man wanted to do was take just enough land from his brother to aggravate him and retain just enough for himself that he could barely make a living. He would have been better off to work the land in union with his brother. That's why Psalm 133 prays, "Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity." But this younger man, so consumed by a desire to aggravate his older brother, won't do that. "Give me one-third," he says. His brother says, "No way." Then he goes to Jesus to say, "Make him give me enough that I can barely live on. Make him cooperate with my desire to aggravate him."

That's why Jesus says in response, "Man, you are trying to make me a judge and that is not my relationship to you or your brother. This is predawn stuff on your part. Your vision is murky and your desires are still in the fog of the hour of the wolf. I will not be part of your desire to aggravate your brother or your intention to self-destruct. Life does not consist in the abundance of predawn shadow dances."

Later on in this same chapter of Luke's gospel, Jesus will say, "I have a fire to cast over the earth, and how I long that it be enkindled." That fire, in Jesus' mind, is the Word of God: the Word of God burning off the early morning haze in our decisions toward one another, a ball of fire chasing away the fog of early morn lest we allow ourselves to linger in the shadows of petty quarrels and cloaked in self-destruction.

Those glossy picture magazines are handy and entertaining to read while standing in line in a supermarket or waiting for a free chair at the hairdresser. Often these publications will feature articles on entertainment personalities with an opportunity for readers to correspond with their favorite star. One comedian received a letter from a young man named Jeff. Jeff wrote, "My name is Jeff and I'm 12 years old. I got two crummy sisters, aged eight and four. Well, bye for now. Signed Jeff." That boy was not in the twilight zone. He did not operate in the mists before dawn or the murky haze over the earth. Everyone who read that letter knew just how he felt about his sisters. No camouflage in Jeff. His life did not consist in the abundance of twilight activities or feelings.

The gospel wants us to be rich toward God. What does that mean? The gospel is not advocating poverty, destitution, annoyance, or aggravation. Human nature is advocate enough of such feelings. The gospel promotes abundance, overflow and motion toward God.

The young boy in today's gospel wants to aggravate his brother and sell himself short. That kind of activity leads no one to abundance. No rivers will overflow their banks with this boy. He will have his one-third or less, his brother will have his share diminished and nobody wins. Jesus says he is like a man who spends his whole life tearing down barns instead of letting the river of his life overflow toward God.

So often Christian preachers go haywire when it comes to abundance and overflow. The gospel clearly advocates both, so long as they are both in motion toward God. Human nature, so uncomfortable with abundance, loves to tear down barns. It's a different story when it comes to gathering in the grain. Notice how the man in the story never does gather anything in. He just plans to. Jesus says don't let your life be simply a storehouse of aggravations or a barn filled with self-destructive actions. Let your life be an overflow toward God and abundance in motion toward him.

Martin Luther, when he was about 48 years old, spent some time with a friend, Hans Loser, to get some physical exercise. During that time Hans took Luther on a hunting trip on his lands. The prize that Luther "bagged" on that excursion was his commentary on Psalm 147. He later wrote to Hans that this was his happiest hunt and grandest game. He also went on to say that he was sharing all of it -- 100 percent -- with his friend. In this way Luther demonstrates how we can give away God's gifts of grace and mercy and still have all of it left for our own needs.

This kind of magnanimity is what Jesus is talking about in today's gospel: an open-hearted attitude toward abundance and a positive outlook about the goods of the earth, prayer, possessions, psalms and commentaries on the psalms. God does not want us to be stuck in the hour before dawn. He wants us to be rivers overflowing with his goods and gifts, creatures abundant in him. Let us give thanks to God for his grace toward us and the joyous revelation of his richness toward us. "

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, Trouble Journey, by John G. Lynn