Luke 12:13-21
Holy Redeemer
Lutheran Church
Jerusalem
July 31, 2016
The Bible starts
with a liturgy of abundance says theologian Walter Brueggermann. Genesis 1 is a
song of praise for God’s generosity. God blesses and endows. All is good. All
is good. Even in the desert God’s love comes down as manna, a gift of heaven, a
miracle feeding. Everyone had enough until some started to hoard. Later in the
Gospel story about loaves and fishes, Jesus too performed a miracle feeding; he
blessed, broke, and gave the bread away. 5,000 were fed and 12 baskets left
over. More than enough. All was good. Jesus that “brown-skinned Palestinian
Jew”, as Rev. Barber referred to him the other night at the Democratic National
Convention, came for the hungry, the poor, the sick, the widow, the orphan, and
all unacceptable or marginalized others. He came to remind us of about our
origins and original blessing of goodness and abundance. That first Eucharist
of loaves and fishes is the model we are called to participate in as receivers
and as givers: bless, break, and give away. This is sacramental living; for all
is God’s and all is to be shared.
Brueggermann
believes that the central problem in our lives is that we are torn apart by the
conflict between our attraction to God’s abundance and the power of our belief
in scarcity and that this belief makes us anxious, greedy, mean, and un-neighborly.
He says we spend our lives trying to sort out this ambiguity. Or we don’t.
Many of us live
into this myth of scarcity and claim it as our Gospel like that billionaire
John D. Rockefeller who believed we are born to consume. “We are not enough if we don’t produce, consume, and store a surplus of
money and stuff. The more you have, the better your life will be. You can’t
have too much.” Sounds like our Rich Fool does it not church?
But this is not
what Jesus believes, “Take care! Be on
your guard against all kinds of greed; for one’s life does not consist in the
abundance of possessions.” Or as it is translated in the Message, “Life is not defined by what you have, even
when you have a lot.”
To illustrate his
point to or to make sure his disciples understood he told them a story about a
farmer who produced a big crop, so big he didn’t know what to do with his
surplus. After talking to himself he decided that he would build a bigger barn
to store his excess a harvest.
Now I wish to
pause here in the story and talk about excess and greed. And I would to
illustrate this point by doing a small demonstration with my Pythagoras cup
that I bought in Crete a few years ago. As you can see it looks like any other
clay cup from the outside but inside it has a column that has a special
function. Let me demonstrate. I am going to pour the water up to the line and
then past that line.
When you go past the line all the
water comes out. When we go past our limit of what is necessary or just we lose
it all. So this farmer, so absorbed in himself, so self-satisfied with his own
accomplishments he decided to go past this line, “I will build bigger barns.” Then God stepped in to remind him of
that final line, death. Yes God, who rarely speaks in the Gospel stories says, “You fool! This very night your life is
being demanded of you. And the things you have prepared, whose will they be? So
it is with those who store up treasures for themselves but are not rich toward
God” or “That’s what happens when you
fill your barn with self and are not rich towards God.”
Last year at
the beginning of August a Turkish couple spent their wedding day feeding 4,000
Syrian refugees. They decided that instead of feeding their well fed family and
friends they would feed the victims of the civil war next door. Is this not a
modern enactment of the loaves and fishes? Is this not being rich towards God?
Pastor
Steve Craig says the Rich Fool was impoverished, not rich, on a variety of
levels. The first is a poverty of gratitude to God for the success he has in
his life. The second is a poverty of relationships because he doesn’t seem to
have a community to discuss this important decision around what to do with his
surplus. Third is a poverty of vision because he doesn’t know how to see beyond
himself into the future. And lastly, he has a poverty of generosity because he
doesn’t know how to share. This Rich Fool has bought into the scarcity myth. He
must also be Rockefeller’s inspiration.
Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. also preached on this parable and like Pastor Craig sees that this
Rich Fool is not just greedy but also lacking in judgment. “He allowed the means by which he lived to out distance the ends for
which he lived.” King believes each of us has two realms--- within and
without. The within realm is our spiritual nature expressed in art, literature,
religion, and morals. The without realm is our physical reality expressed by our
house, our clothes, our money. This man was
“a fool because he maximized the minimum
and minimized the maximum.” He became so involved with the means by which
he lived he couldn’t extend himself beyond that world. He had lost touch with
his within realm. I think Pastor Craig might categorize this under his poverty
of vision.
And because King believed we are tied
together in a interconnected universe or garment of destiny this man is a fool
because he failed to realize his dependence on others; he lost the capacity to
say “we” and “our” and could only say “I” and “my.” He forgot that his wealth
is the result of the commonwealth. And finally, he failed to realize his
dependence on God and acted like he was the creator of his good fortune.
I find both of
these frameworks illuminating in helping us move beyond a story about the dangers
of greed. But these frameworks don’t leave me with a place to go with the story
because I don’t really identify with the Rich Man. I don’t see myself having
enough to save or hoard and like you I try to share what I do have.
However I do see
people building bigger and bigger barns by destroying our natural living
systems to get quick energy fixes instead of sharing resources or developing
cleaner more green friendly systems. I see my country consumed by moneyed
interests and scandals, which are corrupting our democracy. And I see there and
here an escalation in the use of violence, whole barns full of new missiles,
surveillance equipment, and “crowd control” weapons. And sadly I see water
resources stolen and contaminated here and there, not shared. And I see barns
full of new settlements and displaced families standing in rubble heaps which
used to be their homes. I see religion used as a silo for those within the
flock and the expulsion of others. I see barns full of materials for building
walls instead of bridges. I see barns full of keys for the wealthy 1% and
trunks full of keys for refugees who are still waiting to return.
What kind of
barns do you see church? And to get personal for a moment, what is in your barn
that you have been saving or not sharing? Do you really believe there is and
will be enough?
How are you
living rich toward God? What songs of praise do you sing and when? What threads
of interdependence are part of your garment of destiny? And when you act
foolishly, as we all do, how do you bring yourself back to the center so that
you can find that line again or stop building more barns?
And finally, where
and with whom are you blessing and breaking bread? Who are you feeding with
your one special life?
“
No comments:
Post a Comment