Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
The Foolish Farmer
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
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Note, first, that God did not say this man was evil. God said he was a fool.

Note, secondly, that most of us would not say he was a fool. We’d say he was an obviously successful businessman. We esteem abundance. Jesus said, "A man’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions." We act as though a man’s life does consist in the abundance of his possessions. We have a saying, "If you’re so smart, why aren’t you rich?" As if that were the test of a person’s life.

Why would God call him a fool? It was not because he saved. Jesus saved even the fragments of a picnic lunch, that nothing be lost.

It was not because he was wealthy. The monastery notwithstanding, poverty is not the requirement nor the guarantee of heaven. The one whom we have called the "rich young ruler" was told to sell all that he had because that was the barrier that kept him from following Jesus. God called this man a fool not because of his wealth, but because of his attitude toward wealth.

Someone asked John D. Rockefeller (of all people) "How much wealth does it take to satisfy a person?" He replied, "Just a little bit more." The Romans had a proverb: "Money is like sea water; the more you drink, the thirstier you become."

Why would God call this man a fool? I once heard the late, great Oscar Blackwelder name four reasons. Let me list them for you (with commentary).

1. He left God out of his gratitude.

He said plenty about himself, but nothing about God. In his prosperity parade he was in the reviewing stand alone. His goods, his fruits, his barns. God? Not the first thought. His planning, his brains, his work, his genius. There is not even the mention of God’s name. There are sixty-one words in this procession of abundance; twelve of them are the first person singular: my.

A grand Christian man once said, "It is not how much of my possessions I use for God; it is how much of God’s possessions I keep for myself."

Recall the nursery rhyme:

Little Jack Horner sat in a corner
Eating his Christmas pie.
He stuck in his thumb
And pulled out a plumb
And said [of all the ridiculous things to say!]
"What a good boy am I."

Not "What a good farmer my father is." Not "What a good cook my mother is." No. "What a good boy am I." The man in this Gospel text could have modeled for that rhyme.

A teacher was talking to a class of little boys about the presence of God in daily life. He asked them if God is everywhere, and they correctly answered, "Yes." In an effort to get the matter closer to their own personal living, he named actual situations. Is God in the church? Yes. Is God in the home? Yes. On the street? Yes. Is God in the city prison? Silence. That one had them stopped. Finally one boy came up with as good an answer as I’ve heard. "Yes, God is there, but those fellows don’t know it."

That was this man’s trouble, wasn’t it? God was in his life, but he didn’t know it. God was in his fruits, God was in his fields, God was in his goods. God was everywhere except in his gratitude.

2. He left other people out of his possessions.

As a nation, we come perilously close to this ourselves. What shall America, beautiful for spacious skies, do with its amber waves of grain? Ship it to the hungry of the world? Evidently not much - for that, we are told, would disrupt the economic structure and cause international problems across the world.

We draw perilously near this foolish farmer, also, in our obsession with material things. It is too easy to become content with what ministers to the body - food, clothes, fine surroundings, and all the gadgets of convenience that make life easy. These things can become ends in themselves and insulate a person from what is happening around him and within him. This obsession with material things can wither our sympathy and blind us to other people’s needs. A concentration on material things can close us in on ourselves until we become first cousin to the farmer in the parable.

In his book The Compassionate Christ, Walter Russel Bowie quotes an unknown author who penned these lines:

He used his health
To store up wealth
To get, to scrimp and save.
Then spent his wealth
To get back health
And only got a grave.

3. He left his soul out of his thoughts.

This often happens when we put material things first, and make them the center of life, as this man did. How much thought do we give to the soul - that intangible, unknowable entity which separates us from the animals? It is the only eternal part of our otherwise temporal nature, but our daily doings often seem more urgent and important.

His higher nature had evidently not been fed at the table of the Lord, so he and God were worlds apart. They weren’t speaking the same language at all. He said, "My goods." God said, "Your soul." When it is a choice between goods and God, which do we choose?

Here is the line of demarcation between what we have and what we are: what we have we must leave behind; what we are we must keep forever. "Then whose will these goods be?" Jesus asked. Always there is the then whose in our life. What we have we leave; what we are we must keep forever.

The governor of one of our States was making a tour of its institutions. While he was touring a home for the mentally retarded he saw one woman working industriously at an old-fashioned sewing machine. "Is that one of the inmates?" he asked. "Yes." "I see no reason for her to be here using the taxpayer’s money. Why can’t she be released?"

He watched the woman for a few minutes. She worked on, never pausing for a moment to rest. She pumped the lever with her foot. She pushed the cloth through the machine with her hands, watching intently and carefully with her eyes. "I order this woman examined for release." Then he looked again. Pumping hard with her feet, pushing the cloth with her hands, watching intently with her eyes - but there was no thread in the needle.

Industrious? Yes. Hard work? Yes - plenty. Goods enough and to spare, but nothing to hold them together and make them meaningful. What are goods and industry if the thread that makes them meaningful is missing? Goods, goods, goods, - pumping, working - to have at last just goods that are never used to make the wedding garment that fits us for the bridegroom’s chamber. Goods - grasping, envying, coveting goods - will leave us at last with full hands and an empty soul.

The farmer said, "My goods." God said, "Your soul." He said, "Soul, thou has much goods," and God said, "You fool!"

4. He left eternity out of his plans.

He said, "For many years." God said, "Tonight." He thought that because he had his goods in one hand he had the future in the other; but God said, "Tonight."

One of my wise seminary professors told us to remember when we stepped into the pulpit that someone there may be hearing the Gospel for the first time, and someone hearing it for the last time. Over the years, many times someone in the church that Sunday has been in the cemetery before the next Sunday comes.

We like to think that life is predictable, and sometimes it is. Like this man, it is our nature to plan for many years; but still we say, "A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush." Heaven is at the end of a heartbeat, and eternity is but one breath away. He left eternity out of his plans. He planned for the probable - many years. He neglected the inevitable, when God says, "Tonight."

He said, "My goods - my goods, for many years." God said, "You fool - your soul - tonight." We would endow him with respectability and call him a success. God endowed him with death and called him a fool.

I have a disturbing thought every time I read about this man. Maybe you are having it, too. How very much he looks like me? I don’t have bursting barns - but how often in my stupid conceit have I left God out of my gratitude? How often in my grasping selfishness have I left other people out of my possessions? There are times when I think much about my goods and little about my soul; when I have planned carefully for next week, and carelessly for eternity. It is a staggering thought, and it drives me to my knees and makes me exclaim, "God have mercy on me - a fool."

Our heavenly Father, help us to take an honest look at ourselves - to try to see ourselves as you see us. Save us from being fools like this man. Amen

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