Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
The Real Real Estate
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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I officiated at a funeral recently of a man who died of a heart attack two weeks after he declared bankruptcy. With his beautiful wife, five kids, and many grandchildren circling the grave, this is how I began the eulogy:

One of the wealthiest men in the world died on [....] His name was . . . . He made his wealth in real estate. The real real estate of life.

You say: how cruel can you be? In front of his grieving family you are calling a man “wealthy” who died right after declaring bankruptcy.

I say: how crude can you be? You are calling a “wealthy” person someone who made their fortune from the real estate of land and property and not the real real estate of life.

In our Scripture lesson this morning, Jesus gives us a different understanding of wealth than the one we’re used to. In fact, according to Jesus, the wealthiest person in the world is someone you’ve never heard of — someone who made their wealth in something other than land.

Not that there isn’t wealth to be made from real estate.

Forget that one word “Plastics.” Here’s the word that created some of the biggest fortunes of the past 50 years: “Autopia.”

“Autopia” is a word invented by Rayner Banham to describe the car culture that started in California in the wake of the Interstate Highway System and spread to the rest of the US, and from the US to the world. “Autopia” is what gave us suburbia, malls and the whole panorama of cartocracy, or even better, autocracy. In an auto-cracy or autocratic culture, Car Is King and Real Estate is King Maker.

Thanks to autopia and autocracy, the need for inexpensive family housing after the Second World War pushed new developments beyond the boundaries of existing cities and towns. Cornfields and pasture lands were bulldozed into pre-planned, pre-fabricated suburbs. And what was good for the growing “baby boom” families was good for small farmers as well. Hardscrabble farmlands were suddenly gold mines, as developers greedily subdivided grassy meadows into grids of cheap houses. Old family farms became one-time windfalls, the land itself being the final cash crop for a generation of farmers who could make more money off the interest from the sale of their farms to suburban developers than from selling the products of their labor.

Owning real estate has always seemed like the “golden ticket” — whether it was “forty acres and a mule” or forty acres and a bulldozer. Stock values can evaporate overnight. Paper money is only worth what the government backing decides is its value. But real estate is, well, REAL. You can see it. You can hold it in your hand. You can walk on it. You can build on it. Real estate is never worth nothing. Even with “underwater” mortgages – that’s when the house isn’t worth as much as the money owed on it the property still has value. That’s why the bank will eagerly take it back.

But for the people whose names are on the bottom line of an “underwater” mortgage, what seemed like their best, most reliable investment, is suddenly worth nothing to them.

Nevertheless the message of today’s gospel lesson is clear. Real estate is the BEST investment you can make. But the “real estate” Jesus is talking about isn’t measured by the acre. The real estate of Jesus’ parable isn’t buildable with water rights. The real estate Jesus implores us to invest in is the real estate of life real relationships that bind us together and help work together to usher us into the presence of God.

This was the source of the immense wealth of my friend who died bankrupt: the real estate of relationships. The real estate of people who loved him, people who treasured his friendship, people who were bettered by his decency and kindness, people who called him the best husband in the world, the best father in the world, the best friend in the world, the best grandfather in the world.

You want to be wealthy in life? Invest in real estate, but the only real estate to invest in is relationships. The primary relationship which makes all others possible is our relationship with God the Father, through Jesus Christ the Son, and the power of the Holy Spirit. Those relationships are the only real source of “wealth” we have in our lives. We will be wealthy beyond all imagining if we only invest in the “real estate” of real relationships, with our God, with our family, with our friends, with our church, with our community.

Like any good investment “property,” in the real estate of relationships the three most important factors are “location, location, location.” The location of your heart. The location of your soul. The location of your strength. The grounding that makes all other relationships possible is the commitment to “love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your might” (Deuteronomy 6:4-5). If you get those love “locations” right, then you will be among the wealthiest people in the world.

In today’s gospel text the rich farmer invested in the wrong kind of real estate. He measured his wealth according to the standards of this world.

How many bushels per acre did his land produce?
How many barns did he need to hold all his grains and goods?
How big a nest egg could he build so that he could “retire” to “eat, drink, and be merry” for the rest of his days?

But this rich farmer had no investment in relationship with God or with others in his community. In Jesus’ parable the rich man only talks to himself. Why? Because he is the only person he truly cares about. He loves his “stuff.” He loves himself. The rest of the world, its people, its problems, are none of his concern. He believes that by increasing his worldly wealth he will assure himself a long, carefree existence.

The truth is this: What the rich man guaranteed was that he would die a pauper. He had no relationship with God. No cords of compassion tied him to anyone else in his life. He had no one to “eat, drink, and be merry” with. His vision of a perfect future was huge hoards, bursting barns, and himself. His notion of nirvana was glorying and gloating over his riches. But he entertains no notions of sharing his bounty with others — no family, no friends, no community of faith.

The richest real estate is only found in relationship. It is the only “real” investment we can make in our lives. Commitment and compassion have no off-seasons, no recessions, no soft markets. Loving with all our heart, and soul, and strength always brings a “profit” of blessing and bounty, even if those we love will not or cannot return our love.

Real relationships are not based on tit-for-tat, or quid-pro-quo. Real relationships never keep score. All of our real estate, our real relationships, are built on the same base, the same foundation, as our relationship with God. That foundation is grace. Grace is a terrible bookkeeper. Grace never records profits or losses. Grace never assesses value according to a return on investment.

We can only establish and maintain graced relationships if we have experienced grace ourselves in our relationship with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Real relationships don’t pretend to be perfect. Real relationships don’t cover up and conceal flaws and foibles. Real relationships offer forgiveness, compassion, joy, grace. love.

The new iPhone 4 has a problem. Actually it has two problems. The first problem is the one everyone has been hearing about, blogging about, tweeting about. Just the tiny, little problem that you cannot hold the phone up to your left ear and still keep your call online.

It seems that the cleverly concealed antennae in the iPhone 4 is uncleverly placed just in the spot where most people put their hand in order to put the phone to their ear. The simple act of putting your iPhone to your head blocks the signal and causes calls to be dropped.

Apple has been all over this issue. You betcha. The problem, they insist, is NOT a design flaw. It is an issue of user patterning. In other words, their phone design is not the problem, YOU, the consumer, are the problem. The “fix” that Apple is distributing is a free cover, a kind of rubber bumper think band-aid -which will protect the antennae from you, the faulty user, covering up its reception area.

The second problem with the iPhone 4 is that Apple has misunderstood the nature of a true relationship, with customers, with human beings.

A relationship that has to “cover up” its imperfections is not a real relationship. “Real” relationships are not built on “cover ups.” Real relationships see flaws, acknowledge flaws, and accept the flawed one into relationship regardless. That is grace. That is the grace that has been offered to us through Jesus Christ. We are not told to cover up our flaws, hide our transgressions, pretend we are perfect. Christ’s gift to us was the gift of forgiveness for all our sins, all our imperfections, all our huge horrors, all our accrued atrocities. It is the gift of grace Christ offers to us that makes it possible for us to offer graced relationships, loving with heart and soul, and strength, to all those we share our lives with.

Want to be wealthy in life?

Invest in “real” estate. Invest in the people you love and live with. Invest in the people you work next to and encounter on the street. Build up your “real” value, your divine dividend, by being “rich toward God,” not rich in “things.”

We can all be wealthy beyond the world’s imagining, if we are invested in the “real” estate of a relationship with the God who has given everything for us.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Commentary, by Leonard Sweet