Luke 16:1-15 · The Parable of the Shrewd Manager
The Necessary Book
Luke 16:1-13
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Spiritual well-being is the ultimate "necessary" of life.

In the not-so-distant past, modest men and polite women might find themselves needing to be excused from the family by pleading a trip to "the necessary," or even "the nessie." A "necessary," of course, was a discreet reference to the outhouse, the outdoor receptacle for the Sears and Roebuck catalog. In earlier days, when the term "necessary" appeared on a road sign, it served as a code-word for travelers, letting them know that the next town was the last one capable of meeting all their basic necessities for perhaps many, many miles. Thus the town was a stop "necessary" for the well-being, even survival, of the travelers. (Some towns in Pennsylvania and Virginia still have "Necessary" in their names.)

Until quite recently, one could buy at a local stationery supply store a volume entitled "The Necessary Book." Indeed a thoughtful, responsible provider would not neglect keeping his or her "Necessary Book" up-to-date and easily accessible. The Necessary Book was a volume containing all the pertinent information family members might need if some unforeseen event - for example, a death or disaster - befell the owner of the books. Within The Necessary Book were bank account numbers, insurance policies, wills, funeral instructions and other crucial bits of information we often carry around only in our minds.

Filling the pages of a Necessary Book was undoubtedly a time for contemplating what was really important in one's life. A wealthy man's book might record the existence of a great deal of wealth. But if it failed to designate where or to whom that money was to go after his death, it would appear that the rich man's concern was primarily with accumulating wealth, not circulating it back into service.

On the other hand, a man of modest means who carefully catalogs a long list of people, organizations and causes to which he wants to distribute his goods seems to suggest that the man was vitally interested in seeing money turned back into things that matter. The Necessary Books of both these individuals record similar information. They look the same. But the motivations, commitments and faith shared by the different individuals reveal a very different story written on the pages of their two books.

The master in today's Gospel text employs a steward, a business manager, to oversee his investment concerns. The steward himself must keep "necessary books" to keep track of the debts and credits owed his master. But this book of columns and figures becomes a very different kind of necessary book as Jesus tells this parable. For the steward it becomes a tool for easing his re-entry into the harsh world of unemployment. By adjusting the debts downward he lands himself on the good side of the debtors.

But it is for the master that this book becomes most critically necessary. The master, deceived by his employee, has fallen to a place of low esteem in the eyes of all those doing business with him - whether a poor farmer or another wealthy landowner. When the steward expunges portions of the unfair debts that had been incurred, he also restores the master's name among the honorable. As a book of dollars and cents, the steward's pay book now gleams with red ink at the master's expense. However, as a Necessary Book, an illustrated version of the master's moral integrity, this volume is clearly in the black. In fact, the master sees no red ink at all. The value of his restored relationship with the community is beyond price. As a Necessary Book, the accounting of the master's reputation is clearly in the black.

Jesus' parable finds the master gladly welcoming economic loss if it means that he has an ensured and restored standing in the community. The master believed that there was far more at stake on the ledger than a profit margin. Likewise, the Christian preparing his or her own Necessary Book of vital information passes the economic in favor of the relational. The Christian's Necessary Book should be filled with what is necessary to attain life eternal, not worldly security. Spiritual well-being is more important than financial well-being, as important as that is.

How does your Necessary Book read?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet