It is NOT easy.... (Reflecting on God, on scripture, on money...)



Today’s parable from Luke is hard.

In fact, most biblical scholars concur – it is probably impossible for us to interpret.

You heard me correctly.

Remember that scripture began as stories and accounts shared person to person, stories told around dinner tables, in worship settings, in the marketplace.  Voice to voice.

Eventually they were written down…and we believe scripture is inspired – so the person that wrote them down was leaning into a call to write them down.

And they were written down in the language of the time and place.  In this case, Luke’s gospel was recorded in very refined Greek.

Over time it was translated – first to Latin.  Then probably to German. And then into a range of other languages.  Each translator picking and choosing nuanced words to drive a point home. 

It’s possible that the way this particular text was recorded, there has been a fragment added from the original oral tradition.  It’s possible that some of the words do not translate to an understandable concept in our current culture.

And there are probably some cultural context clues that don’t fully translate. 

It is likely impossible for us to fully understand this story of the shrewd manager, or the dishonest servant.

But we don’t throw scripture out for that reason.  We read it asking for the Holy Spirit’s wisdom to illuminate the text for us.

We use our tradition, our reason, our experience…and prayer to hear how the Spirit speaks to us.  And we do this together as a community …because imagine the chaos of faith if we each just held our individual belief and didn’t work together to seek meaning.

Today, we’re going to wade through this text and reflect…to see if we can’t gain meaning for us in this time and this place.  Today I’m going to do most of the talking, but I hope you’ll reflect and reread and share your insights with one another over dinner, at choir practice, as you gather for various parts of life. 

In this parable, we have a rich man who has a manager for his business affairs.  It comes to the rich man’s attention that the manager has somehow been wasting funds that have been entrusted to him.  The rich man asks for an accounting of the work that the manager has done.

The manager thinks about his options.  He recognizes that if he loses this job, he is not cut out for hard manual labor, and he realizes that the people he has worked with on the rich man’s behalf will probably not want to help him – we are left to assume that this is because he’s not treated them well up to this point.

He hatches a plan.  He goes to master’s debtors and one-by-one reduces what is owed by each debtor. 

And this is where it gets difficult for us to fully understand.

The rich man surveys what the manager has done, and declares it shrewd. 

The rich man sees the actions to befriend the debtors as a wise one for the manager.  Now these debtors are indebted to the manager somehow.  They owe him some allegiance.

Is there something we don’t fully understand about the debts that the manager forgave?  Perhaps he gave up his own commission. Perhaps he reduced their debt by the amount of interest they owed – because historically interest rates would have been astronomical and charging interest was not in keeping with Jewish law.

There is no consensus about these details.  In fact, scholars collectively scratch their heads and leave a lot of question marks…not a bad thing.

But what comes next in the text helps us a bit.  Jesus closes this text with some key teachings.  Imagine him saying…

In light of this…remember:
Whoever is faithful in little is also faithful in much.
If you can’t be trusted with what you have been given, why would you be given more?
You cannot serve two masters- you cannot serve both God and wealth.

Ah.  These are nice clean statements.  They don’t require so much interpretation about which character is a stand in for whom.  They don’t require us understanding an ancient cultural system.  They don’t require us to know all the ins and outs of a social structure that ceased to exist over a thousand of years ago.

These are guideposts that feel timeless.

I was reminded this week, pondering this parable, of what it is like to be caught between a rock and a hard place.

To find ourselves in a no win situation.

To be at the street corner approached by a panhandler.
We worry that giving the person money might enable a poor choice.
We also see a child of God who clearly has basic needs that are going unmet.
It’s a no win situation.

To be stuck in a job that is soul-sucking – literally life damaging, but we have a mortgage, a car payment, and a family to feed. 

To have two bad candidate choices in front of us in any given election. 

The manager has found himself in a no win situation. Perhaps what is shrewd is his ability to protect himself from risk and exposure.

But then, what about Jesus’ warning about being trusted in little, about serving God?

What about that side-eye comment about making friends for yourself of dishonest wealth so you have a back up plan.

As the story is told and then summarized, there is a suggestion from Jesus that the shifty folks are shrewd, making such alliances; where children of light (the disciples) don’t have such alliances.

Now wait a minute…is Jesus suggesting we should all go hedge our bets with shifty deals? Just in case being good people that follow good rules doesn’t work out for us?

Perhaps this parable and some of Jesus’ commentary has an element of sarcasm to it. 

I mean…I don’t see any emoji that would cue that for me (cue slide at 10 a.m.).  I’ve gotten pretty used to people dropping faces into their emails or texts so that I catch the emotional intent behind their written words…

I don’t know about you, but I’m not really fond of thinking of Jesus using sarcasm as a rhetorical device, but there is evidence that he does if we read and ponder well. I am guessing those sitting around him would have occasionally recognized this.

So…we have a story about being shrewd.  And we have some clear cut statements from Jesus about what is important. And we might have some Jesus throwing shade.

What then, do we take from this text, prayerfully?

How is it that these timeless teachings of Jesus might be guideposts in those no win situations – that we have to be trustworthy with little to be trustworthy with much. That we cannot serve both God and wealth…

I have some thoughts. (Of course I do.)

This parable comes immediately after the story of the prodigal son – a story in which a son, flesh and blood, squanders his father’s wealth and is welcomed back into the fold.  And it precedes Jesus telling a story about a rich man and the beggar Lazarus who waits sick and starving just outside his gates – a situation he regrets only when he lands in Hades.

These stories are all about our relationship to material possessions – to things and specifically to the resources of wealth that set us apart.  These are stories about how material positions take us away from the thing that matters most – God.

The verse that immediately follows our text for today reads:
The Pharisees, who were lovers of money, heard all this and they ridiculed him.  So he said to them, “You are those who justify yourselves in the sight of others; but God knows your hearts; for what is prized by human beings is an abomination in the sight of God.”

I don’t know about you…but I get a little uncomfortable swimming around in these texts.  Because I like my house and my car and my cool shoes and a nice vacation here and there. 

Over coming weeks as we enter into a season of considering how we share our gifts with the community of Faith and the world beyond, we’ll have to talk some about money and our relationship to it.

I feel like Jesus is laying a ground work…and giving us a range of stories to consider how we might understand our relationship to God and our relationship to money. And none of it is super plain and simple.  And none of it is immediately comfortable. 

Because if we are honest with ourselves, we find comfort and strength in things that aren’t God.

And scripture is rich enough to remind us of the complexity of loving God and neighbor when we take time to soak in it, to wrestle with it, to walk alongside one another through it.  When we can, with one another, recognize that we’re all broken.  We’re all trying to figure this out.  Because none of us is perfect. None of us know for sure how all of this work. 

Because God is so big that we cannot know.

(That’s where that faith we’ve talked about comes in handy…God’s got this.)

When someone says, “the Bible says quite clearly…” I will always pause.  Because the bible says very little “quite clearly.”
And that is the invitation.  To dive in.  Together.
To look for the timeless guideposts.
To put God first, and to remind one another that is what we are doing.

May it be so.
Amen.

Sources: Sermon Brainwave podcast, episode 681, from Working Preacher, a resource of Luther Seminary; Connections: A Lectionary Commentary for Preaching and Worship, Proper 20, Donald McKim and Lynn Japinga; also Working Preacher: Preach this Week, commentary by Mitzi Smith (2019) and Lois Malcolm (2013).

Comments