Grace to you and peace from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
Jesus said, “Take care, and be on your guard against all
covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions.”
A few moments ago, we spoke the Commandments together. The
9th and 10th speak of the gift of possessions and belongings as being gifts of
God and being content with what He gives. The 9th and 10th Commandments also
warn of a duality of idolatry: first, the things we covet become gods in and of
themselves; and second, we make ourselves out to be equal with God as if we
know better what it is that we need. It’s a failure of faith and trust: since
He’s not providing it, we seek to acquire it ourselves and, not believing He
will provide tomorrow’s daily bread tomorrow, we stockpile in fear.
I suggest that it is more difficult than ever to avoid
coveting. After all, our culture and society literally have a whole industry
whose job is nothing more than to inspire within us a burning desire to acquire
ever more stuff. Wherever you turn, you are bombarded by advertisements to buy,
buy, buy. And, buy we do – quickly accelerating from true need to want to
desire to greed. And, then if someone else has what I don’t have, or if I can
get it before someone else does, or even if I have eight of the same thing
already but need - nay, want - number nine, then coveting ensues.
I heard a drug addict say the reason heroin is so addictive
and deadly is that a little is too much but too much is never enough. The same
is true of acquiring possessions. For many people, making a purchase releases a
chemical in the brain not all that unlike a drug. It feels good, and we want to
duplicate it again. That’s a scientific explanation. As Christians, we know
another answer: covetousness and excess. How many of us don’t have closets so
full of clothes that we can hardly fit another thing in amongst all the others?
How many pair of shoes are on the floor? How many toys are in the toy box? How
many hammers, screwdrivers, and wrenches are scattered among the various
toolboxes in the shop? How many books line the wall of a pastor’s study? For
that matter, how many of us have closets and garages that are so full of things
that we have to also rent a storage locker?
I suspect that for many of us, hearing this parable and then
thinking about our clothes and our cars, our garages and our Gucci, our
investments and our retirement accounts, we are in an uncomfortable place.
After all, we could see ourselves in the rich farmer’s position without too
much trouble. He has a windfall crop and seeing that his barns aren’t big
enough, he builds newer, bigger barns so he is able to enjoy life and not work
so hard the rest of his life. This is the American dream; it seems this man is
practicing worldly wisdom. He’s not stealing from anyone – it came out of his fields.
Likewise, don’t read into the parable: there’s no reason to find that he is
selfish or that he didn’t follow the law and leave edge-rows for widows and the
poor to harvest.
Let me say this: possessions in and of themselves are not
intrinsically wicked. In fact, they are gifts God gives to us for the wellbeing
of ourselves, our family, and our neighbors. Likewise, it is not a sin to be
wealthy or to have nice things, be it technology, or a house, or family, or
anything else. The problem is that possessions are fundamentally dangerous
because it is so terrifyingly easy for them to become the all-encompassing
thing we desire.
Jesus asks the question: of what does your life consist? The
teaching was inspired because someone asked Jesus to intervene and make a
brother split the family inheritance. It seems he is more worried about getting
what is his than anything else. Jesus is standing right there in front of the
man, but he only wants Jesus to be a legal representative. He is not seeking the Kingdom of God and the
gifts Jesus delivers in life, salvation, and the Spirit of God, gifts that last
into eternity, but rather he is seeking gifts that last but only a lifetime.
That, then, becomes the motive of the foolish farmer: planning for a lifetime.
Jesus tells the parable so the man would see himself as the
rich farmer. In the parable, we hear the conversation that the farmer has with
himself as he makes his plans. “I will tear down my barns and build larger
ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I will say to my
soul, “Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be
merry.”’
There’s a bit of wordplay here. Our translation speaks of
his soul. A better way to understand this is “life,” as in what is at the
center of a person’s being. Listen again: “I will say to my life, ‘Life, you
have ample goods laid up for many years…” That helps clarify the issue. The
problem is man always has a very narrow and nearsighted view of what “life”
means. He sees life as nothing more than eating, drinking and being merry.
Again, nothing wrong with eating, drinking, or celebrating – all in moderation,
of course – but when that’s all that life is, then life is very hollow. The
rich man is quoting the Preacher in Ecclesiastes, “Eat, drink, and be merry,”
and he wants to use that for his life’s philosophy.
Sadly, he forgot the Preacher’s warning: Eat, drink and be
merry, for tomorrow we die. In the parable, God subpoenas the farmer for
judgement. Because his heart was only filled with his own, selfish desires for
a lifetime, his lifetime is cut short without any life to come that has been
won by Christ. Lifeless and Saviorless, the rich fool dies into eternity.
OF what does your life consist? Are our hearts, our minds,
our eyes, our very lives centered in the coming of the Kingdom of God in Christ
Jesus, or do they wander elsewhere, distracted by the world in which we live?
Examine your heart, your mind, your eyes, your lives. Where are your desires?
Wherein does your trust lie? We quickly realize that there are many things that
get in the way of our life being centered in Jesus Christ as our hearts, our
minds, and our lives are led astray from the cross of Jesus to the covetousness
of the world in which we live. The parable makes us uncomfortable because we
see ourselves in it. While we may try to justify ourselves, our actions, our
covetousness – everyone else is doing it! He who isn’t first is last! Gotta
look out for number one! Who else is going to care for my family! – but we
cannot justify ourselves against God.
The need for repentance is strong and clear. Of what does
your life consist? Is it seeking after earthly blessings, belongings, daily
bread things? Again, its not that these are bad - in fact, we pray for daily
bread in the Lord’s Prayer. It’s allowing the needs to become excessive so that
the desire to acquire more overwhelms. Instead of allowing possessions to be
your identity, remember your identity in Christ. You are baptized in Christ.
Christ is the center. Your life is hidden with Christ in God. Christ the center
of your work, your play, your worship, your wealth, your possessions. He was
rich but became poor. He lived our life under the sun. He worked, He rested, He
bled and died. His death was not a vanity of vanities but a holy of holies. He
redeems and reconciles and raises up your work out of its emptiness and
meaninglessness. He lifts it up as a
sweet smelling priestly sacrifice. He is a the heart and center of all things.
This changes your perspective. Your land, your house, your
wealth, your barns and silos, your grain, your profits and portfolios,
everything is God’s, not yours. They are all on loan from God. You are
stewards, caretakers. You are not your own, either. You’ve been purchased with
a price, the life of Jesus, His blood, His death. He became poor that you might
be rich in eternal riches. You are God’s treasured possession, enabling you to
hold your treasured possessions with the dead hand of faith – offering,
sharing, giving.
And, if you want to love Jesus more while loving your
possessions less, give away more of your money – not all of it, but more of it.
And I don’t necessarily mean to Zion or the pew fund or the campers fund or
whatever your favorite project here might be. Give elsewhere to those who have
so little: Habitat for Humanity, Christ’s Kitchen, VCAM, Golden Crescent Food
Bank, Lutheran World Relief, Orphan Grain Train. Literally, the list is
endless. Then, cull from your closet and garage and storage locker – and I don’t
mean just the stuff that went out of fashion during the first Bush and Clinton
years. There is plenty there you don’t need, let alone use. Give it away, no
strings attached, so that the strings can’t pull back at you. As your hands let
go of the stuff, you’ll be amazed how much more room there is for Jesus and His
cross.
Then, filled with Jesus, centered in Jesus, living in Jesus,
eat, drink and rejoice, for in Him, nothing is vanity.
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