Luke 16:19-31 · The Rich Man And Lazarus
Worse Than It Sounds
Luke 16:19-31
Sermon
by George Reed
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The story of the rich man, often called Dives, and Lazarus is a heartrending tale of suffering on the part of the poor man and indifference on the part of the rich one. If that was all the story was about it would be dreadful enough but it also shows us the horrors of society when it is divided into classes. We see this clearly in the attitude of the rich man.

While the rich man is comfortably situated in his luxurious home there is a beggar outside his gates who is starving to death. He is a miserable wretch and the rich man could not have missed seeing him. Even today where we go from our homes directly into our garages, get in our cars, and drive away from our homes we would see if someone was lying at the end of our driveway. There is no reason to suspect that this man had darkened glass on his camel. He knew the man was there but he didn’t care because the man was not worth caring about.

He may have thought him a nuisance but he didn’t see him as another human being in need. It was not just that the man had no compassion or care for others. Later in the story he is very concerned about his own brothers. Those who were like him, he cared for. Those who are beneath him were not worth bothering with. He was just a worthless old beggar who was getting what he deserved. If he was a good person God would take care of him. If he was an industrious person who worked hard, he would have resources to take care of himself. If he was a likeable guy then his family or friends would take care of him.

I am sure the rich man saw nothing wrong with being rich. He was a hard worker and he contributed to the local synagogue. He probably even went to temple at Passover. God had blessed him with abundance because he was such a good fellow. He certainly felt that he had received what he deserved.

I wonder about Lazarus. Did he feel the same way? It is not out of the question. Often when people are down on their luck, get laid off because the company is down-sizing, or are stricken with illness, they feel as if they deserve it. Often they don’t express it quite so directly but we hear someone say, “It happened for a reason.” And most of the time the reason is known by God who has sent this hardship on them for their own good. Because of some lack they have or some sin they have done, they feel they deserve to receive the hardship. We have no record of Lazarus rising up and going to the door and demanding food. We have no record that he even went to the door to beg. He just laid there. And the rich man let him lie and so did the community. Until finally Lazarus died at the rich man’s gate and in time the rich man also died.

It would seem that equality had finally been achieved but that was not so. Lazarus was received into the arms of Father Abraham and the rich man was buried and found himself in torment. When the rich man asked Father Abraham about this he was told that while Lazarus suffered on earth and he had good things, the tables had been switched.

But listen to the rich man. Here he was looking up at Lazarus in the bosom of the eternal while he was being tormented and he asked Father Abraham to “send” Lazarus down to quench his thirst. Even in this situation, he still sees Lazarus as beneath him, as someone who should be taking care of him. The man who never lifted a finger to help the poor beggar wanted that beggar to leave his place of comfort and go down and serve him! The arrogance never ends.

When Father Abraham explained that it was impossible for anyone “down there” to come up to them and that a gulf was fixed so that anyone “up here” who would want to could not go down, the rich man still saw Lazarus as the underling. He wanted Lazarus to be sent on an errand to warn the rich man’s brothers about this place. “Well, you know, they have Moses and the prophets who have told them how to live and they should listen to them,” Father Abraham said. “Oh, but if someone rose from the dead they would listen,” he rejoined. But Father Abraham knew that if they were blind to the truth, it didn’t matter what form it took. They would still be blind.

When we judge people and place them in categories we are beginning an incredibly fast descent down a slippery slope. When we see people who are suffering and do not see them as children of God — as our sisters and brothers — we are setting ourselves up for a very nasty fall. Jesus was very clear in telling us not to judge, not to condemn others. Don’t set up standards and then decide that others have not met them. That was his message for us. We are called to be like our God who makes the sun shine on the good and the bad, who sends the rain on the just and unjust. It is that kind of unconditional love that we are often not able to grasp.

When Jesus went about his ministry he reached out to all. He went in to eat in the houses of tax collectors and sinners and he went in to eat in the houses of the religious leaders. Their reactions to him differed in many ways but Jesus was open to share God’s love with them all. The only words of rebuke we ever hear from the lips of Jesus are directed against those who tried to shut others out from the grace and love of God.

Who do we see and who don’t we see as children of God? Who do we have compassion for and who are we willing to believe that they are just getting what they deserve when they have bad things happen to them?

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