January 27 2008—Third Sunday after Epiphany
Lectionary Texts: Isaiah 9:1-4; Psalm 27:1, 4-9; 1 Corinthians
1:10-18; Matthew 4:12-23
Sermon Text: Luke 16:19-31
The Blindness of Those
Who See
I was in senior high at a camp meeting in Arizona in August.
During our morning chapel service they announced an all-night hike for
those who wanted to participate. Of coarse one major objectives for teenagers
is to find any excuse for staying up all night. So we got on a bus and
then went to a trail with our flashlights and started walking down the
path. We went about 300 yards and the leaders stopped us for a little
devotional. We all turned off our lights and we had a devotional about
stillness and the beauty of God’s creation. At the end of the devotional
they told us to pass in our flashlights. After we did that, they said,
“Okay, now the hike starts.” And so it did. We went on a 5
mile hike in the high Arizona desert. The hike went well but you really
had to rely upon each other. For most of the hike we looked like kindergartners
all holding hands as we made our way on the trial. Now what plant is Arizona
most known for . . . you guessed it: cactus. So it was very important
that you helped your friends. But as was true of all human nature you
were very concerned about staying connected to the person ahead of you,
while the person behind you could fall behind and it would be easy not
to notice. It was easy to become blind to the needs of those you did not
“need.”
In the 16th chapter of Luke the issue of money has been
the latest hot topic. The Pharisees and Jesus disagree quite heatedly
over this issue. The Pharisees had found explicitly in the Law of Moses
this simple idiom which today I think makes a great deal of sense. It
is quite simple: Obedience to God’s commandments equals blessed
of God equals wealth.
Furthermore, if the logic holds true here, then anyone who
was poor or suffered diseases simply was experiencing the judgment or
punishment of God. This solves the problem of suffering in the world.
Many of the rich could defend themselves against helping the poor, because
they did not want to get in the way of God’s punishment.
Jesus comes along not to supersede the Law, but to give
it a proper reading. The law and the prophets read clearly that the Law
of Moses specifically required the harvest be shared with the poor and
the transient. (See Leviticus 19.9-10; Deuteronomy 15:7-11). Jesus came
to read the Law in its spirit and entirety not take pieces out to make
it fit our comfortable lifestyle.
This story given to us by Jesus sets up two characters who
in literary terms serve as a foil for one another.
Clothing
We first meet this rich man who is without a name. But we
know he lives in excess. His clothing not only exudes power and posterity
it bleeds prestige. Wool was used to produce vestments that advertised
the social status. While white garments indicated membership among the
elite, they were regarded as modest when compared with clothing dyed purple.
Life/Party Prodigal
Not only is there excess in his clothing but his life was
dripping in abundance. Remember the feast/party given to the prodigal
son who is returned home. They killed the fattened calf. While that party
was for a special occasion this man has a spread like that every day.
Gate
Furthermore, we learn the rich man’s estate is so
big he has a gate. It is clear everything associated with this nameless
rich man is an ostentatious display of wealth.
In Greek the word order places significance in a sentence.
The first word in verse 20 that describes our next character is “poor.”
This word not only describes the man’s socio-economic status, it
really defines who he is. He appears to be a crippled beggar since he
is thrown at this rich man’s gate. This is most likely his home
and place of business all rolled into one. He has a spot at a gate.
He would not be tolerated near the actual entry door, but
his location would enable him to be noticed by all who came and went from
the rich man’s house. Not only is he crippled, he is covered with
sores. He is unclean, unkempt, and a wretched sight. Of course he is hungry.
He thinks to himself, Surely they will throw me their bread scraps from
one of the banquets or feasts. It was customary to use bread like we use
napkins to wipe their hands and faces after a meal. Maybe I will get a
scrap or a crumb from his table.
The rich man could easily have sent a servant out with some
of the scraps, but the man’s longing continued unfulfilled. Instead
of food all he gets are licks from the master’s dogs. Instead of
a servant coming with fallen scraps, the dogs come from having consumed
the scraps and continue their meal on the afflicted man’s sores.
Disgusting and wretched, why does he not simply curse God and die?
Hope in a Name
The only glimmer of hope the listeners would have for this
man is that he has a name. His name is Lazarus--which means “God
helps.”
These two men are set up diametrically opposed to one another.
With clarity of the excessive life of the rich man we also clearly see
the despair and rejected life of this poor man.
Burial
In their death nothing changes (v. 22). The poor man is
carried away by angels to the “side of Abraham,” translation:
he received no burial. In Jewish tradition, to be refused burial, to be
left exposed as carrion for scavenger animals, was bearing the curse of
God. The rich man received burial. The rich man was honored in life and
in death. Lazarus was also consistent. He was wretched and disgraceful
in life and death.
Until now the story is fairly boring and ordinary for Jesus’
hearers, except the order of their deaths is reversed. Somehow Lazarus
is placed on a level with the supremely privileged of the Old Testament
saints. Coming to Abraham’s side simply means they had close intimacy.
This rich man suddenly finds himself in Hades. Now something is wrong,
Jesus must have mixed up His words. The rich man should be at Abraham’s
side, and the poor man must be in torment in Hades. But Jesus continues.
Suddenly in Hades, torment surrounds the rich man. Hades represents the
place of the dead quite generally. It was the place of a preliminary experience
of what is to be the individual’s ultimate fate at the final judgment.
In verse 24 the nameless rich man calls out to Abraham for
mercy, and asks that Lazarus come and provide temporary relief. He is
calling out for mercy.
First, it is noteworthy that the wealthy man knows Lazarus’
name. Second, and most noteworthy, the man has not been humbled by his
new and undoubtedly startling circumstances. He calls Abraham father and
treats Lazarus like a servant.
It is ironic that the poor crippled man at his gate every
day was crying out for mercy and he the rich man showed him none. Now
the rich man expects this Lazarus to serve his needs and extend mercy
to him.
But Abraham replied, “Son, remember that in your lifetime
you received your good things, while Lazarus received bad things, but
now he is comforted here and you are in agony. And besides all this, between
us and you a great chasm has been fixed, so that those who want to go
from here to you cannot, nor can anyone cross over from there to us.”
(v. 25)
Both the wretchedness of Lazarus and the rich man’s
wealth are things that came as gifts. Now in the afterlife the situation
appears is balancing out the life before death.
We need to be very careful we should not take this as expressing
the view that there will be some kind of automatic eschatological reversal
of present fortunes. We should not understand everyone who is poor and
suffers on earth will receive eternal life simply based on their earthly
condition. The rich man’s attitude and stewardship of his resources
already shows more is involved than an evening up of the balance of good
and ill.
Abraham denies this man’s request on two accounts.
First he asserts he is the victim of his own choices. Second, the gate
that could have been crossed in life to extend mercy to Lazarus but was
not, has now become fixed.
Once he recognizes no relief will come, the man’s
name is reduced to child, (once a powerful rich man) and he asks Abraham
(father) to send Lazarus to his father’s house and warns them of
this reality.
Does this remind you of anything?
I am reminded of Charles Dickens’ classic The Christmas
Story. In one of the opening scenes Jacob Marley visits Ebenezer to warn
him of his fate if he does not change his life.
Those who are yet living should not expect a personal messenger
from the world of the dead to warn them; what is needed is already clearly
set out for them in the law and the prophets.
In verse 29 Abraham responds: “They have Moses and
the prophets.” These are the appointed means by which God makes
His will plain to those concerned to know it. The parable suggests there
is a profound challenge to the social status quo to be found in the Law
and the prophets, and there is a desperate need for the privileged to
search out their requirements of wealth and to act upon them. These words
of Abraham suggest the situation of this man as well of his brothers is
hopeless.
In verse 30 we see the man’s recognition of the situation.
He knows what is needed: repentance. No one told him. But it has become
clear. There is the implication the rich man is aware of a moral responsibility
for his own fate: He could and should have acted differently. He knew
it.
What is repentance? Repent describes the proper response
to the hearing of God’s word through a prophet. The use of the term
implies the rich man’s fate was not simply the result of a mechanical
reversal, but was a punishment for not heeding the prophets and repenting
during his lifetime.
Verse 31 is very intriguing. If Moses is not enough, then
someone rising from the dead will certainly be a spectacle but will not
lead to transformation. The implications are that Moses and the prophets
are enough.
This Gospel was written approximately 50 years after Christ’s
ascension. This is most likely in reference to the many who still did
not believe even after Jesus was raised from the dead.
Those who are economically benefited by the status quo must
here is a warning against the self-serving and self-satisfied life that
so easily results from such privilege.
The sin of the rich man did not exist in his wealth. It
is a basic stewardship question; he lived as though this life was it.
He lived blind to the needs of those around him--he was simply living
out his life with blinders. His riches were focused on personal extravagance.
This is a major statement about community responsibility.
The Titanic was a picture of abundant wealth, power, as
humanity’s technological achievement. With it came an attitude or
arrogance that claimed it was indestructible. On that boat ranged the
spectrum of socio-economic status. Clearly the higher you were in power
and prestige the closer you were to the deck.
Not to spoil the movie, but the boat hit an iceberg in the North Atlantic.
As the boat began to sink there were 20 lifeboats that were partially
filled and able to get away from the sinking vessel.
(TITANIC clip [if appropriate] of boats sitting by while people are screaming).
Titanic Quote: “1,500 people went into the sea when
Titanic sank from under us. Six were saved from the water. Six out of
1,500. Afterward the seven hundred people in the boats had nothing to
do but wait . . . wait to die, wait to live, wait for an absolution which
would never come.”
We waited too long. Today the rich and poor alike are living
lives of quiet desperation. They are blowing their whistle and few are
doing anything. It is true going back is costly. But in the story of the
Titanic and in the story of Lazarus and the rich man it is more costly
not to go back. We must have eyes of compassion for those who are lost
and broken.
Maybe some of you have been blowing your whistle, crying
out for hope, and no one seems to notice. Our Lord wants you to know He
desires for you to lay your burdens at His feet and He will walk with
you through your hour of despair.
So where are you?
• In the boat comfortable, content, and oblivious
to the needs of those around me.
• In boats looking for those hurting.
• In the water, crying and screaming inside for help.
• Just been pulled from the water, but realize you need to go and
look for others
It is the power of God’s love: love holds us close
during storms.
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