Luke 16:19-31 · The Rich Man And Lazarus
The Collateral Damage of Our Attitudes
Luke 16:19-31
Sermon
by Brett Blair
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We continue to gauge how our lives are effected by all this. It has been difficult taking in all the things happening over these past three weeks, much less make sense of it all. Occasionally you read something in the paper or you see something on TV which helps you put things in perspective. I remember Thursday September 13th all of the sporting events that weekend had been cancelled. One of the NFL athletes was asked about playing on Sunday. He said, "Why? Who wants to play? I have a family and my heart just wouldn't be in it."

A TV journalist stopped a woman on the streets and asked about her business. She said, "I'm not interested in making money any more. My family and my relationships are the most important things in life."

The Late Show with David Letterman, as you may well know, is produced in the heart of New York City. It was Monday the 17th before the show was back on the air and Letterman said that the only reason he was back was due to the strength of Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. In his opening monologue he praised the Mayor saying: "If you've been watching and you're confused, and depressed, and irritated, and angry, and full of grief and you don't know how to behave and you're not sure what to do, because we've never been through this before, all you had to do at any moment is watch the Mayor. Watch how this guy behaved. Watch how this guy conducted himself. Watch what this guy did. Listen to what this guy said. Rudolph Giuliani is the personification of courage. He's an amazing man and far better than we could have hoped for. To run the city in the midst of this obscene chaos and attack and also demonstrate human dignity... Who can do that? That's a pretty short list."

It's amazing how events like this can change our perspective. Giuliani was vilified by many. Now he is respected by almost everyone. People appreciate what he is doing for the city. Events like this also tend to bring out the best in us. David Letterman, who makes a living making fun of everyone, including himself, has shown a more human side these past two weeks.

The new Arnold Schwarzenegger movie "Collateral Damage" was due out this Friday [Oct. 5th]. Ironically it is about terrorist, so it has been put on the shelf indefinitely. Target Stores pulled violent video games off their shelves the day after.

The entertainment industry, politicians, corporations suddenly have a new perspective. All of a sudden they care about how their products, images, ideas affect people. For many years, the Church has been trying to get these industries to be more sensitive and caring about the message they are sending to our children and our families and we have made little progress. I suppose they needed to descend into the pit of hell, and look at the life they once had, before they woke up. Perhaps we also in smaller ways see how insensitive we were before September 11th.

That is what happened to the rich man in Jesus' story. When he arrived in the torment of hell and looked across the chasm at poor Lazarus sitting comfortably beside Abraham, his perspective changed. It was too late but he at least saw life from a new vantage point. He suddenly understood how insensitive he had been to poor Lazarus. What does it take to open our eyes? To help us see the collateral damage of our attitudes?

Let’s answer this question by first taking a look at this very interesting story that Jesus told to the Pharisees, who, Luke tells us, loved money. Immediately we recognize that this parable is very different than the rest of Jesus’ stories because it paints a picture of the afterlife. Only the Parable of the Sheep and Goats draws the same kind of vivid images. Next we see that there are two main characters. A poor man who we learn is named Lazarus and another man who is not given a name. He is simply the rich man. It is interesting to note that this is the only parable in which Jesus gave a name to one of the characters. This little piece if information is already a clue to the interpretation. In this life, it is the rich whose names we know, not the poor. They are nameless. That will not be the case in the life to come.

These two men were neighbors. They saw each other every day. Not socially you understand, but there was contact. According to the story, the rich man left his house almost every day. He went out the gate, which tells us he led a somewhat secluded, protected life. Outside that gate the rich man saw a beggar.

The rich man would have felt very comfortable living in our present time. He was a 21st Century kind of a guy: Self-reliant, self-confidant, and self-assured. He was a connoisseur, a lover of the arts, one who knows and appreciates fine living, four-star restaurants.

We are told in vs. 19 that he habitually dressed in purple. Purple was known as the color of royalty because it was the most expensive dye in the ancient world. Only the upper echelon and the high priest could afford this fine material imported from Egypt--only the best for the rich man. It was the lifestyle of the rich and famous.

The other man in the story is Lazarus. How can we describe Lazarus? He is a homeless man who permanently lives on the street outside the gate. We are told in vs. 20 that Lazarus was cripple. Lazarus barely made it from day to day, living off the leftovers thrown to him from the table of the rich man as he daily passed him. He is just a survivor, that’s all you can say of him.

One day, said Jesus, both men died. Death after all is the great equalizer. Death does not care about your social standing, your color, or your standing in the community. Lazarus, said Jesus, was carried away by the angel of death unto heaven, where he occupied the seat of honor next to Abraham. And the rich man? All that Jesus says is that he was buried. Isn’t that strange that that is all that he says. After all the rich man’s funeral must having been something that the community would remember for years to come. Apparently, however, that fact failed to impress Jesus. Oh, Jesus did add one additional fact about the rich man’s death that may be of interest to you. His soul went to hell.

This is an unnerving story. It has the effect that Jesus intended. Perhaps, Jesus must have thought, if they can hear the shocking realization of the rich man whose behavior toward other people has left him with a tragic irreversible consequence, then they might hear my words and change their lives. Jesus hopes this story will move us to act. Awaken our souls. Help us reorder our lives, so that money, possessions, occupations, commitments, or any of the other myriads of things do not control who we are and how we love those around us

I hope this story can help you. As I read this parable there are three things we can learn.

I

First, we can learn that the rich man was a distracted person. Jesus so firmly understood how occupations and things and money can occupy our mind that when he sent disciples out to preach the Gospel he told them to take nothing with them. …….. The rich man is perhaps the supreme example. He was presented with the opportunity every morning when he left home and every evening when he returned to help poor Lazarus. But alas he did not. He was too occupied. Business must get done. The leak in the roof needs a patch. The gate must be repaired. We get into a rut, the rut becomes a grave, and soon we are buried in the hole of our over occupied life.

For this man he was occupied with the making of money but our occupations can be many. I have seen hundreds of images this month that I will never forget. One that keeps playing in my mind over and over is that upper middle class woman who, when asked about her business, said that making money was no longer important to her, that her family and other people were her new priority. And that is as it should be.

But riches are often a foil to good intentions. From the beginning God has warned his people. Just before the Israelites cross over Jordan to enter the promised land of Canaan, Moses issues a warning: When you eat and are satisfied. When you build fine houses and settle down. When your herds and flocks are large and your silver and gold increase. When all you have is multiplied do not become proud in your heart and forget the Lord your God (Deut 8:12-14).

II

Let me start the second point by asking a question. What parable would make a man with three doctoral degrees (one in medicine, one in theology, one in philosophy) leave civilization with all of its culture and amenities and depart for the jungles of darkest Africa? What parable could induce a man, who was recognized as one of the best concert organists in all of Europe, go to a place where there were no organs to play. What parable would so intensely motivate a man that he would give up a teaching position in Vienna, Austria to go and deal with people who were so deprived that they were still living in the superstitions of the dark ages. The man who I am talking about, of course, is Dr. Albert Schweitzer. And the single parable that so radically altered his life, according to him, was our text for this morning. It was the parable of the rich man and Lazarus.

And this is the second thing we can learn from this parable. Some people you have to shake in order to wake. Money, power, material possessions can become such strong distractions they effect our ability to share with others. In figurative language, Jesus creates stark images of a rich man burning in hell because he ignored the poor man in front of his home. It is a disturbing image. But, sometimes disturbing images are what we need to shape our convictions and give us the courage to make tough decisions.

It is a sad fact though that some people just can’t be reached. The story is told of a well-dressed European woman who was on a safari in Africa. The group stopped briefly at a hospital for lepers. The heat was intense, the flies buzzing, the conditions unsanitary. She noticed a nurse bending down in the dirt, tending to the pus-filled sores of a leper.

With disdain the woman remarked, "Why, I wouldn't do that for all the money in the world!"

The nurse quietly replied, "Neither would I."

When face to face with catastrophes we should be humbled and reshaped. If we are not then we reveal to the world that we have no soul. I was amused by an Associated Press story about a Starbucks Coffee shop near the World Trade Center that charged ambulance personnel $130 for three cases of bottled water right after the attack. The workers had to pull the cash out of their own pockets. The rescue workers were using the water to treat people whose eyes were overcome with ashes. After the incident became public Starbucks’ president Orin Smith wisely sent a $130 check back to the ambulance crew and has donated coffee and other services throughout New York City since the attacks (1). Starbucks didn’t want to be accused of having no soul. Neither do we.

III

What’s the third lesson that we can learn from Jesus’ parable? Well, first, we can learn that the rich man was a distracted person. Second, we can learn some people you have to shake in order to wake them from those distractions. And third, we learn that we must heed the warnings we are given in this life.

Many theologians believe that the main point of this parable is not that the rich man went to hell and the poor man went to paradise. Neither is it a description of the after life. They say that the story stands as a warning to those who are still alive. Some have suggested that the parable should not be styled the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus; rather, it should be called parable of the Six Brothers. The one who died and landed in hell and the five surviving brothers who are like him living in selfish luxury, deaf to God's word, and unaware that life does not end after death.

And it is here that we come to the main point of the story. The brothers still have the chance to repent and change their ways. And that’s the Good News for you and me. There is still time. Time to submit to God’s word. Time to rearrange our priorities. Time to meet Lazarus at the gate. Time to keep from sharing in the fate of the rich man. Time to be sensitive to the needs of those who suffer.

The alternative is a dire picture. To live for oneself, to allow others to suffer by themselves, to die behind the stone cold walls of luxury will land us in hell and perhaps our family with us. This is the catastrophic collateral damage of an uncaring attitude. Amen.


1. Tuesday September 25, 8:04 pm Eastern Time, Starbucks Apologizes for Water Flap, By ALLISON LINN, AP Business Writer, SEATTLE.

www.Sermons.com, Collected Sermons, by Brett Blair