Luke 12:13-21 · The Parable of the Rich Fool
Who's the Fool?
Luke 12:13-21
Sermon
by George Reed
Loading...

This parable is often referred to as the parable of the rich fool and has been used to make any number of homiletical points. Some of them have even been relevant to the story! I have heard many a sermon preached on the “eat, drink, and make merry” portion of the scripture. We were warned about the dangers of having a good time. This was taken as a warning against what used to be called a “libertine lifestyle.” But Jesus liked to party and have a good banquet. He made wine for the wedding feast and by his own admission was called a glutton and a drunkard because he enjoyed a good meal and wine. So let’s stay away from this kind of interpretation of Jesus’ parable.

Other times I have heard sermons which were based on those “who store up treasures for themselves but are not rich toward God” with the basic message that it is okay to be rich as long as we are good church members. After all, didn’t Jesus say that? This is the same Jesus who told us we could not serve God and wealth. We must make our choice between the two. We can’t serve two masters. We must also remember that in Jesus’ day, agriculture was a subsistence economy. One did not get rich by working more hours and taking better care of the crops. If one was really diligent, one could hope to be able to feed the family and pay the Roman tax with maybe enough to give to the temple as well. That was really making it in Jesus’ day for the honest farmer.

Those who were rich either inherited it or they became rich because they managed to get someone in their debt and then foreclosed on their land when they couldn’t pay. To be rich, to have a super abundance of grain that required long-term storage was a certain sign that the wealth had been gathered on the backs and lives of others. One did not accumulate that amount of material goods while heeding the messages of justice or mercy. What Jesus is pointing out is the danger of greed, the danger of putting things ahead of God and ahead of people.

Most of us probably feel that while we are not perfect, we certainly would not put wealth before God. We are not idolaters who worship a golden calf. We would not steal land from people and deprive them of their ability to provide for themselves and their family. Or would we? Do we? One does not need to read very much from the Hebrew prophets to understand that God is very much interested in the plight of the poor and the underprivileged. God takes it personally when the poor are used for the gain of others. Jesus makes the point even clearer for those of us who might have missed it in the prophetic literature. He tells the story of the sorting of the sheep and the goats and explicitly states that the way we treat those in need is the way that we are treating him.

So if God self-identifies with the poor, how are we doing in the way we treat the poor and, therefore, God? Most of us probably don’t think of ourselves as being very wealthy. We may be doing okay or we may even admit that we are “comfortable” in our lifestyle but few of us think of ourselves as wealthy. For those of us who live in America that feeling comes primarily from being surrounded by wealth. We are not surprised when we see anyone above the age of twelve carrying a cell phone. And it is probably a smart phone, so they basically have a handheld computer with them. Except for in the large cities, families have multiple cars and teenagers are often driving new, expensive automobiles. Jeans that cost over $100 are not that rare. A family gathered around the one and only television in the house is nearly unheard of anymore.

Yet by global standards, if we have a place to live, any means of transportation, and do not eat the same basic thing for every meal, we are considered among the wealthy. We are so spoiled in this country by the incredible wealth that we do not understand just how much we have. But it is not our fault we were born here. We had nothing to do with our place of birth and we did not choose our parents, after all. And we are not tyrants. We are good people. Aren’t we?

We try to do what is right. We vote according to what we see as the best options being offered to us. We support our local congregation and we give to charities beyond the church. We don’t intend to do harm to folks, poor or otherwise. But the question Jesus brings to us is whether or not we see him when we look at those around us. Would we make the same decisions if we knew that Jesus was being effected by what we say and do?

Would we buy things made in sweatshops if we knew Jesus was working there? Would we be content to believe that it is okay because he is making more than he could if the shop wasn’t there? Or would we want to know a little more about the working conditions? Is the place safe? Are there expectations of hours worked or goods produced that are beyond what we would tolerate from our employer? Are threats and manipulations causing him to work in ways that seriously compromise his health? In a global economy it is difficult to answer all these questions. It takes time and effort to make sure we are not supporting those who would treat our Savior so harshly. It takes time and effort to care. Is Jesus worth it? Or don’t we really believe what he so plainly taught about being present in the persons of need?

There are few of us who would not agree that our welfare system is broken. Yet there are even fewer of us who are willing to do the work of really trying to understand the problem and coming up with ways to fix it other than depriving people of the benefits without understanding the need. We are accustomed to having a minimum wage and a set work week in this country but we forget that when Henry Ford came up with the idea and started these practices that it was a generous wage and reasonable hours that allowed his workers to take care of their families. What he really was offering was a livable wage and a livable work schedule. With only a few rare exceptions we are unwilling to even begin a discussion about a livable wage. Rather, we talk about the need for people to get off welfare and go to work but when people enter the work force at the minimum wage, they cannot earn a living working forty hours, or sixty, or many times, even eighty hours a week! And those hours usually come from working multiple, part-time jobs without benefits.

Now none of the solutions to these questions are easy to come up with. Especially when we take into account that Jesus the Christ is being affected by our decisions. We will not all agree on what solutions are best. But if together we address these issues with Jesus in mind and we trust one another to be seeking what is best for him, we can begin to make progress and we can make our Savior glad.

Counting the cost: Cycle C sermons for proper 13 through proper 22: based on the gospel texts, by George Reed