Tuesday, August 3, 2010



In the name Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Let us pray, “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.” Psalm 19:14

NBC, for a number of years now, has been running a program called “the Apprentice.” It’s theme song title is “Money, money, money, money.” Donald Trump is the host and the prize is a job in his company. Teammates live in the lap of luxury till they are voted off, FIRED, by the Trump himself.

Computer programmers turned billionaires like Bill Gates and Steve Jobs have turned a simple “toy” into a powerful machine. Computers have transformed industries from health care to higher education. And the driving force behind all these ventures is money.

Money. It rules our lives, our nations, our world, and even the church. Without it, we could not function (or so we think anyway). It has invaded our lives and causes us only to desire more of it. It is an addiction. If you don’t believe me, take a trip out to Las Vegas or Atlantic City and watch how every individual’s eyes light up when they see a slot machine or a sign that says, “WIN A MILLION DOLLARS!!!!” Money is all we ever think about but yet it is such a taboo subject in the church. I cannot think of a single pastor, other than maybe a bishop or supply preacher, who says, “SURE, I WOULD LOVE TO PREACH A SERMON ON MONEY. THEY ARE MY FAVORITE!” It is not an enjoyable topic but it doesn’t have to be that way.

Lutherans love to talk about Justification by Faith, Love, God’s grace. We even enjoy talking about things not found in the bible like Martin Luther. How quickly we move towards theological ideas like these that may only appear in scriptures 10 or 15 times (some not at all) but yet avoid preaching and teaching about one of the most talked about subject in the entire bible--MONEY and ECONOMICS!

It is for good reason that money and economics talked is mentioned a lot in the bible. We all have this notion that Hebraic Law is very complicated (frankly, any law system is complicated though) but there is one main theme throughout Hebraic Law--TAKE CARE OF THE POOR. Every law could be ignored as long as the poor were taken care of. God does not practice survival of the fittest. It is never okay to leave someone behind because they are too weak, too poor, too much like an outcast. The decision to leave someone behind, an act still forbidden by God, should never be determined by any kind of human classification but especially because of an individual’s economic status.

Money and economics has always been a main topic of scripture but our way of thinking about economics is slightly different from biblical economics. We think more globally but the early prophets and writers did not have such a global mindset. The world was a much smaller place 2000-3000 years ago in their understanding. But there are still similarities between the ancient civilizations and us today. Mainly, humanity has always been concerned with the short term. This short term focus is what biblical scholars call Human economics. In human economics, we ask, “How do I make the most money the fastest? It is all me, me, me. We are never thinking about the long term--not just 15-20 years long term but rather generations down the road. That is the divine economy. God’s economy looks at the whole picture. We look through a telescope but God looks at the entire sphere--God looks at the past, present and future--to create a plan. We want instant gratification but God wants sustainable gratification.

Well okay preacher, sustainable gratification. I can deal with that. So preacher, tell me, how is storing up grain in a barn or storing up money in a bank account not sustainable gratification? To answer that question, I need to tell a story my father told me once.

There was a man who was dying. The night before he died he summoned his wife. He told his wife to put everything he had in a box, all his money and gold, and place it in the window upstairs. Once he died, he would take the chest up to heaven with him. His wife did as he asked and later that evening, the man died. The next morning, his wife went upstairs, found the chest in the same spot she left it and still full of all the man’s riches. The wife said, “Shucks, I knew I should have put this chest in the basement.

The moral of both the biblical parable and this parable is that it doesn’t matter how much you have on earth. Once you die, it means absolutely nothing to you or God. The men in both of these parables, the one Jesus told and the one my father told, were both fools. Joel B. Green, NT scholar defines a fool, in biblical terms, as someone who denies God through their actions. Storing up an abundance rather than trusting in God’s promised of sustainable gratification--sustainable abundance--is foolish. Now this word abundance needs to be defined more clearly. If you look at the text very closely, it says he filled up his first barn. I believe, this text is saying he has enough to make it through winter. He is able to get through till the next harvest. Once his barn is full, he is left with an over abundance of crops. Instead of using the abundance to help those who do not have an abundance, he hoards it for himself. The poor are not able to reap the bounty, the hungry go away empty, but the rich fool sits on top of his “extra-large barn” and says, “relax, eat, drink, be merry.” The text never says it is bad to save what is needed to live rather it is bad to hoard what is not needed.

In Jesus’ day, one did not get wealthy by simply working harder. One got wealthy by hurting, trampling, and stealing from the their family, friends, and community. What is even more startling is the people Jesus is speaking to know this all too well. One commentary writes:
“Greed was widely regarded as a form of depravity, both in Jewish literature and in the larger Greco-Roman world.”
Greed was essentially seen as stealing--taking candy from a baby. This man was wealthy because he withheld God’s abundance from the community. He is wealthy because he saw his abundance as his own and not God’s own abundance. Think about what is going on here economically. By holding back his abundance, he is able to increase the market price of his goods and sell them at a high cost. Supply and demand. Low supply means high demand. High demand means high prices. Higher prices means a larger profit. Instead of helping his community, he only cripples them even more. He secures his economic status by being the “big dog on campus.” He doesn’t trust in God to secure his future but tries to do it himself. If recent news has shown us anything, the only one worth trusting in anymore is God. Banks can fail, governments can fail, and computers can fail (unless you buy a Mac but they can even fail).

My friends, this text is not all about money. This text is about faith. That is what Stewardship is about. It is about our faith in GOD providing for us. How do we trust in God? Do we do it by hoarding or do we share it confident God will provide for us in the future just as God has provided for us in the past? We commit our abundance, rather God’s abundance, to the community and ensure a better community for everyone. It does not mean depriving ourselves our own basic needs but sharing what we do not need. We do this by spreading the gospel, clothing the naked, feeding the hungry, caring for the widows and orphans, the abused, the neglected. This is God’s divine economy. We need to think long-term and not short term. Yes, there is God’s grace if we mess up and yes, maybe God’s divine economy is just a utopia and unattainable but that doesn’t mean we abuse God’s grace and abundance by hoarding it all for ourselves. It doesn’t mean we do not try. We have been graced with abundance and we trust that God will continue to bless us with the same abundance in the future--we are not to be or act like a fool. If you forget everything I have said today, remember this; God was not cheap with us--God sacrificed God’s Son so that we might see the revelation of God’s love. God was not cheap with us, why then should we be cheap with God’s grace and abundance? Amen.

In the name Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

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