Showing posts with label money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label money. Show all posts

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Luke 3:7-14: In the Advent of Revolution

Presented to TSA Corps 614 Regent Park, Toronto, Ontario on 20 December 2015 by Captain Michael Ramsay

John, ‘the Baptist’ as he is called, is a celebrity preacher in 1st Century Palestine. He is on a speaking tour into all the country around the Jordon (Luke 3:3). People are making an effort to see him. In order to see John in those days you can’t just hop the TTC or catch a ride. You have to walk, by and large, and you have to walk and long way; you probably have to take at least one day off work.
Picture this scenario with me. Pick some famous person you want to see; they are coming near Toronto – maybe a couple of hours away - and you have been given free tickets. (Who might that be?) You take time off work or cancel your plans for the day to go see them. Now imagine that they are a celebrity preacher. Major Danielle Strickland of The Salvation Army was recently named one of the most influential Christian speakers. Imagine she comes to town. Big crowds come to see her and not just Salvationists but all kinds of us. Let’s say we get a bus full of people and we all take the day off kettles – sorry Iris – to hear her. She has this great ministry of telling us to turn to God, to repent of our sins. We are among hundreds or thousands of others who take the time and make the effort to come to see her. And when we get there she says (cf. vv.7-9), “All of you who have come to see me… you are a bunch of snakes, why are you here!?" (Can you imagine?) "Who told you, you could be saved!? You need to start acting like Christians! And don’t tell me you’ve been a Christian since you were six or you had this life changing moment when you were eleven or your great grandmother was saved through William Booth himself on the streets of London 100 plus years ago. Don’t tell me you don’t need saving because you are already a child of God. I tell you the truth God can raise up children from these rocks here if he wants to; if you say you are His children you need to start acting like it!”[1] Can you imagine? How would you feel? What would you think?
This is what it would be like for people in our text today who have made this effort to go hear John in the desert; he addresses the crowds in much the same way, telling them that if they think they are children of Abraham, they’re really not unless they start acting like children of Abraham. In today’s colloquial vernacular, many who went to the desert may have ‘thought they were saved’ but John says, are you so sure about that? This is quite a greeting!
It is effective though.[2] Luke records voices seeking salvation in the disparate crowd calling out to him, “what should we do then?!” (v.10). John tells them, in essence, if you think you are saved, and if you really are a part of the ‘Kingdom to Come’, then, Verse 11, “Anyone who has two shirts should share with the one who has none, and anyone who has food should do the same.”
How many people here have two shirts – or more? How many people in our world have none? How many people here will eat today? How many people in our world won’t? Now I know most of us here are good at sharing with our friends who need food, clothing, and other items – individually and through The Salvation Army. I know there are many people here who would give the shirt right off their own back to someone in need. John, the Baptist, says that that is because you are a part of the Kingdom of God. I love it when we study the Gospel of Luke in Advent because Luke, like the Army's spiritual grandfather John Wesley, is crystal clear in presenting the Gospel as a social justice gospel: Christians will not acquire and hoard wealth while others are in need.[3] The Baptist says, quite the opposite, “produce acts in keeping with repentance” (v.7).
But there is more to the story than just this. After John answers these cries from the crowd about what should anyone do who wants to be saved from the coming wrath (v.7), tax collectors who are part of this crowd say in essence, “yes, we all know that: everybody who is saved will give food and clothes to those in need. But what specifically should WE, saved tax collectors, do when we make this public confession through this baptism that we have come here to make today?”[4]
Verse 13, “Don’t collect any more than you are required to,” John tells them. Now this sounds easy but let’s take a little look at the way things ran back then. It was not all that different from the way things are run today. These tax collectors were probably Jewish toll booth operators working for the Romans. Their job was to collect tolls and they made their money from surcharges applied to the tolls. The Romans used an early franchise system of sorts to collect these taxes.[5] They pseudo-privatized their toll booths. Much like fast food restaurants, big chain stores, and other corporations today; they used a franchise-style system. Judean business people would buy a toll booth franchise or a number of toll booth franchises (such as in the case of Zacchaeus; Luke 19); they would collect the money to cover the fees from their clients and everything else they made after they paid their overhead was profit. This is similar to the way many or most chain stores, franchises, fundraising catalogues, contemporary manufacturers and most businesses in general are run today. They collect what they are required to for head office or whomever and/or to cover the cost of inventory already paid for and then the rest, after expenses, goes to profit.  But John says to them, ‘don’t collect any more than you are required to [by the head office].” Don’t make a profit this way, the free laissez-faire capitalist way, charging what the market can bear in order to make a profit. Well, who would want to be a tax collector then?! Can you imagine if the Baptist told the franchise owners or others today that they are not to make a significant profit off their customers, that they are only allowed to charge what they are legally or otherwise required to charge, what would they do? ... Well, just maybe John, Luke, or even Jesus IS saying just that… I love looking at Luke in the Advent season. Luke is a revolutionary text. Luke's is a gospel to the poor. Luke is the social justice gospel.
Luke’s not so subtle condemnation of this 1st century expression of a market economy that made the rich richer and the poor poorer is as radical then as it would be now if we applied the gospel to our own society today.[6] Anyone who drives in this city knows that the parking meters all collect different amounts of money for an hour or an half hour: a dollar fifty here, $3 there; $8 for a parkade here, twenty dollars for a parkade there. And grocery stores owned by the same person, the same corporation, the same company – you buy the same product at a different outlet and it is a totally different price simply because they know they can get more money from you at that location. This is Adam Smith and Ayn Rand's version of capitalism; this is the free market.[7] But what John is saying to the owners of the Roman tax franchises in the first century is seemingly quite the opposite; he says, “don’t collect any more than you are required to.” And this I think is what Luke is telling us today: poor people in the Kingdom of God should have the same access to life as wealthy people, so do your part, “don’t collect any more than you are required to;” don’t make a profit at the expense of others. I love looking at Luke in Advent. Luke’s is a revolutionary text. Luke’s is a social justice gospel. Luke's Gospel, as Miranda and John Wesley remind us, is good news, gospel for the poor.[8]
Now after these tax collectors/toll booth franchise owners get their answer, the soldiers who have also come here to be baptised are eager to know what is required of them. Like the tax collectors, the soldiers know they need to give food and clothes to the poor - but they don’t own toll booths; they don’t own franchises. They aren’t rich. Quite the opposite: while the tax collectors were apt to get rich from this 1st Century inflationless microcosm of market-driven free enterprise, the Judean soldiers were likely to get poor from it; so, what should they do when they are saved from the impending wrath? Verse 14, John says, “Don’t extort money and don’t accuse people falsely—be content with your pay.”
This sounds easy enough doesn’t it: don’t extort money from people, don’t falsely accuse people, and be content with your pay. Easy? Maybe. These soldiers weren't Romans; they were Judeans just like the tax collectors and just like most of the rest of the crowd. These soldiers worked for the Romans just like the tax collectors but these soldiers were very poorly paid. They didn’t have the freedom of the toll booth operators to set their own wages so they resorted to other ways to make money - basically stealing. But that was okay, they convinced themselves, because ‘everyone was doing it’. But that is not okay. I love looking at Luke in Advent season. Luke is the social justice gospel. It is a revolutionary text.
I remember when we were living in Vancouver, there were many stores in our neighbourhood which would charge you less if you paid in cash because then they wouldn’t have to declare the money as income. I have met many people who are paid 'under the table', who deliberately do not claim income on their taxes – after all they don’t make very much and the government doesn't need their money. When I worked at a military base pre-9/11, one co-worker allegedly regularly used to take discarded copper home to sell for extra money, after all he only made minimum wage; the government didn't need more money. I remember as a janitor when I was a teenager, colleagues who would take food or office supplies from the buildings where they were working: they're only going to throw it out anyway. Why would they miss this food from their coffee room? They have lots of money to buy more. Luke says, “be content with your pay.”
I remember too, we used to be able to make more money by working more hours so we would volunteer to take on extra hours cleaning extra buildings. I –like my fellow janitors – loved that. This is where you could get overtime pay without even working one hour overtime. It was late at night and we often worked alone so some of us could do 16 hours worth of cleaning in just six hours without anyone noticing. The buildings were clean, thus no one complained so we would write 16 hours on our timesheet even though we only worked six; no one cared, everyone was doing it and that way we would not only get paid for 10 hours of work we didn’t do but we would even get time-and-a-half or double-time for some of those hours. It was an easy way to make an extra buck or two. Get paid for hours you don’t work, take food and supplies no one will miss which ‘everyone else is taking anyway’. (I have also seen Salvationists with jobs and money take food or toys meant for the poor as presents for their own families too… ‘everyone is doing it’…)
I remember one security guard at a building where I worked as a janitor for a while. I would chat with him about God, among other things; one day he asked me, “If you are a Christian, why are you leaving early?”
“My work is done.”
“Are you getting paid?”
“Yes.”
“So, do more work.”
“Everyone just leaves when they are done, we’re expected to”
“Isn’t that stealing?”
The baptiser, John, says to those of his day who weren’t paid necessarily a ‘liveable wage’, “be content with your pay.” Luke says to we today who may be tempted to pad our hours, not declare our income, or manipulate our wages, “be content with your pay.” It is always interesting looking at Luke during Advent. Luke is the social justice gospel. It is a revolutionary text. Luke tells as what the impending Kingdom of God looks like. It is a place where the poor will have equal access to life and liberty as (or more than) the rich and everyone who is a part of God’s Kingom will deal openly and honestly with each other.
And honestly, in Advent this revolution is noticeably important. We, as Christians, are called to be holy. We, as Christians, are called to be the advance guard of a just society where the poor do have the same access to life and to forgiveness as the rich. The middle class and the elite - like the tax collectors - are not to make a profit at the expense of the poor and those just barely eking out a living; we are to do it honestly. And all of us, rich or poor, are to be content with our wages for God will provide for us as He provides for the birds of the air and the lilies of the feild (Luke 12:27, Mt 6:28).[9] Everyone, as we are a part of God's proleptic Kingdom, we are to love our neighbour and as they are in need we are to provide for their need just as our Heavenly Father provides for our needs.
Last Sunday we lit the Candle of Joy and as we love our neighbours as ourselves in this way we will experience the joy of the Lord - I promise. This week, we lit the Candle of Peace and as we love our neighbours as ourselves in this way we will experience the peace of the Lord - I promise. This week, as we await the celebration of the penultimate arrival of our Lord as a baby laid in a manger and as we await the ultimate arrival of our Lord at the echaton, let us all be a part of the joyful, peaceful revolution by honestly loving our Lord with all our heart, mind and soul and loving our neighbour as ourselves and as we do I promise God will change our world as He changes us from the inside out.
  
Let us pray.


---

[1] Cf. N.T. Wright, Luke for Everyone (Louisville, Kentucky, USA: WJK, 2004), 34
[2] Cf. Fred B. Craddock, Luke (Interpretation: Louisville, Kentucky, USA: John Knox Press, 1990), 48.
[3] Captain Michael Ramsay, Analysis of 'The Use of Money': Sermon 50 by John Wesley (Presented to William and Catherine Booth College, Summer 2008) http://sheepspeak.com/reviews_Michael_Ramsay.htm#Use
[4] Walter L. Leifeld, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Luke/Exposition of Luke/III. Preparation for Jesus' Ministry (3:1-4:13)/A. The Ministry of John the Baptist (3:1-20), Book Version: 4.0.2
[5] R. Alan Culpepper, Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon, 1995), 84
[6] N.T. Wright, Luke for Everyone (Louisville, Kentucky, USA: WJK, 2004), 36
[7] William Hendricksen, Exposition of the Gospel According to Luke (NTC: Baker Academic: Grand Rapids Michigan, 2007), 208
[8] Cf. Jose Miranda.  Marx and the Bible: a Critique of the Philosophy of Oppression. Trans., John Eagleson. (New York: Orbis Books, 1979), 250 
[9] R. Alan Culpepper, Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon, 1995), 85.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Week 43: Matthew 6:21:Treasure

Devotional thought composed originally for TSA Devotional Book, June 2015.Presented to River Street Cafe, 26 February 2016 by Captain Michael Ramsay 

Read Matthew 6:19-21

As Christians do we have a responsibility to take care of the poor?

Little children were brought to Jesus for him to place his hands on them and pray for them. But the disciples rebuked those who brought them. Jesus said, "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these." When he had placed his hands on them, he went on from there.

Now a man came up to Jesus and asked, "Teacher, what good thing must I do to get eternal life?"

"Why do you ask me about what is good?" Jesus replied. "There is only One who is good. If you want to enter life, obey the commandments."

"Which ones?" the man inquired.

Jesus replied, " 'Do not murder, do not commit adultery, do not steal, do not give false testimony, honour your father and mother,' and 'love your neighbour as yourself.'"

"All these I have kept," the young man said. "What do I still lack?"

Jesus answered, "If you want to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me." When the young man heard this, he went away sad, because he had great wealth. Then Jesus said to his disciples, "I tell you the truth, it is hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God."

When the disciples heard this, they were greatly astonished and asked, "Who then can be saved?" Jesus looked at them and said, "With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible" (Matthew 19:13-26).

“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also (Matthew 6:19-21).”

Canada is one of the richest nations on earth; one in six Canadian children live in poverty. Do I have a responsibility to share my wealth with those who are poor? Yes.

How can we better use our treasures on earth to love our neighbours and in the process store up for ourselves treasures in heaven?





[1] Based on the article by Captain Michael Ramsay, As Christians do we have a responsibility to take care of the poor? Nipawin Journal (January 2008) On-line: http://sheepspeak.com/sasknews.htm#poor

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Week 34: Revelation 3:20: Trust

A devotional thought presented originally to Swift Current Men’s Prayer Breakfast, Thursday 21 May 2015

Read Revelation 3:15-21

The church in Laodicea receives the most negative letter recorded in Revelation. These are Christians Jesus is talking about spewing from Him forever. What is the sin of the Laodiceans? They are rich but they are poor. This is not unlike our nation today. We know that one cannot serve both God and money and as we have grown richer in this country, complacency, crime, pornography, atheism, and self-reliance have sprung up like weeds attempting to choke out the Word of God. Like Laodicea, as we have grown complacent, trusting in our earthly riches, our country is turning further from God.

Laodicea was rich but Laodicea lacked the good water of her neighbouring cities: Hieropolis had great hot mineral springs and Colossae had wonderful clear, cold water. Laodicea’s water was lukewarm by the time it was piped in through its aqueducts. Laodicea was rich in money but poor in the water it needed to survive. Likewise, Laodicea was rich in temporal wealth but poor in living water, which we all need to survive. If only Laodicea was as hot as the waters of Hieropolis or as cool and refreshing as the waters of Colossae! (Important: This passage is NOT referring to ‘spiritual hotness’ as a good thing versus ‘spiritual coldness’ as a bad thing. That was a foreign analogy in the first century!)

This is what John is talking about: The Christians in Loadicea have material wealth but they lack spiritual wealth. They have both the good hot water and the good cold water being poured into them but when they mix together in their wealthy city this becomes useless lukewarm water. This is our nation too but there is good news. Jesus says: “… be earnest, and repent. Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me. To him who overcomes, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne…”

Even in this state of wallowing in their riches while people in their world starve to death; even in our state of wallowing in our riches while people in our world starve to death; even in this state of not having spiritual strength equivalent to the hot springs of Hieropolis or the religious zeal equivalent to the clear, cold waters of Colossae, God does not give up on them. He does not give up on us. Jesus stands at the door and knocks. It isn’t a casual knocking at the door and seeing that the Laodiceans are too busy to hear him, he goes away – this is a persistent knock. The Greek word here refers to a fervent, continual knocking.

And so it is with us today. He is knocking at our door right now. The question is, will we shut Jesus out and so be spewed from Him or will we trust Jesus, let Him in and sit with Him as He reigns forever?





[1] Based on the sermon by Captain Michael Ramsay, Revelation 3:20: Hello, is anybody in there? Presented to Swift Current Salvation Army, 30 August 2009. On-line:  http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.ca/2009/08/revelation-320-hello-is-anybody-in.html

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Matthew 6 Sense and Non-Cents.

Presented to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 18 August 2013
and 614 Warehouse Mission, 15 April 2018
by Captain Michael Ramsay

Some one-liners for you:
Ø      Venison for dinner again? Oh Deer!
Ø      I used to be a banker…until I lost interest
Ø      England has no kidney bank but it does have a…Liverpool
Ø      I tried to catch some fog but I…mist
Ø      Broken pencils are… pointless.
Ø      I know a guy who says he’s addicted to break fluid but he says he can stop anytime.
Ø      How long do marriages typically last? 16 years: 4 better, 4 worse, 4 richer, 4 poor

Matthew Chapter 6 is an interesting chapter. It is a portion of Jesus’ famous Sermon on the Mount, which does address times that are for better, for worse; for richer or for poor. Matthew 6 contains in its lines, the Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9-13), further teaching on prayer (6:5-15), teaching on fasting (6:16-17) and some of Jesus’ very clear teaching on money and possessions (6:1-4, 19-34). Chapter 7, which we may examine next week, also adds to this some of Jesus’ other well-known insights on the matter (7:7-12).

Matthew begins Chapter 6 with Jesus’ words about money and giving to the needy. He warns us not to do this for show, not to do this to please others, but to do this because we love God. Matthew then records that Jesus teaches us the same thing about prayer and fasting (cf. Luke 11:2–4). The point of our praying and fasting should not be to become known as pray-ers and fast-ers or even faster prayers. The purpose of prayer is to come before God, having already forgiven our enemies, to seek His will in our lives and the purpose of fasting is likewise not to be rewarded by people but by our Lord.

Matthew then, returning to his record of Jesus’ teaching on money (6:19-24), notes that you should not acquire possessions on earth where they will just get wrecked over time anyway, but rather you should concentrate your efforts in that regard on storing up treasures in heaven where decay and destruction have no claim to them.

Jesus is telling us here then that our hearts are going to be with what we value, our hearts naturally are committed to that which we treasure. If we treasure our possessions then that is where our heart is. This makes sense. Nothing is too complicated about that. So Jesus tells us that we should not give to the needy just for show, to impress others (Matthew 6:1-4); Jesus tells us that if we do invest our time in acquiring possessions on earth, then that is where our emotions will be invested and that is a very poor investment indeed (6:19-21).

Now in case there is any remaining doubt about what Jesus is saying, as recorded in Verse 24, Jesus is quite clear when He says, “No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.” The word translated ‘money’ or ‘Mammon’ here can refer to any or all belongings or material acquisition.[1] Jesus is quite clear you can either invest in material gain or you can invest in heavenly gain. You cannot invest in both.

To use the analogy of the stock market: if you only have enough money to buy one share in IBM, then you cannot also buy one share of Apple. And if you have tied up all of your money into IBM and Apple increases in value but IBM does not, you are not entitled to a cheque from Apple.

Or another gambling analogy: If you bet all of your money on the Roughriders to win but they cannot contain John Cornish, then the person with whom you placed your bet is not going to give you any money for a Stampeders win. Quite the opposite: he is going to be looking for you to pay what you owe him!

Or another sports analogy. If you are playing in the Grey Cup game yourself and the team you are playing for loses, you do not get to hold the Grey Cup; you do not get to take a ring home with you.

With God and money, like with playing football, you also can’t hedge your bets: you can’t spend the whole game trying to play for both teams. If you come out and start playing defence for one team and then when ball possession switches, all of a sudden you line up playing defence for the other team; one or both teams, or the referee, or the league itself will throw you out of the game. You will not win the prize.

If we work to acquire material wealth for ourselves, then we are not working to acquire eternal wealth in the Kingdom of Heaven.[2] You can strive for one or you can strive for the other; you cannot strive for both. There is an old expression: You cannot eat your cake and still have it to look at and show off to all your friends; you can’t have your cake and eat it too. Does this make sense? You can’t serve both God and money.

There are a few natural questions that arise from this then: If I cannot work for both money and God, then what should I do about planning for the future? Don’t I have a responsibility to ensure that I make enough money to feed my family and myself? Don’t I need to make enough money to make sure that my children can go to college or to make sure that I can retire someday? I’ll get you to think about these questions for a while; we will come back to them in a moment…if we can’t serve money/ material acquisition/ life savings, then how do we save for the future? Let this percolate for a moment and we will come back to it. First though, I want to look at Matthew 6:22-23. Right after Jesus says,

“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal.  But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moths and vermin do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also”;

He says, Verse 22-23 (see Luke 11:34-36),

The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eyes are unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness!

Then he says, “No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.”

So how does all of this about light in ourselves and in our eyes relate to money and material acquisition and the eternal savings plans that we are talking about today?[3]

This parable of the eye – due to its placement in the text - obviously relates to our relationship with money; so, what does it mean? It says that A) my eye itself is a lamp: lamps give off light but how does that relate to our eyes and our possessions? And it says that B) If your eye (the lamp) is unhealthy you will be full of darkness, so much that the light itself that is within you will turn to darkness?[4]

Now this is a controversial text and scholars do not unanimously agree upon an interpretation but I will let you know what I think based on the journal articles that I have read. I think that it is really speaking to what we focus on. If we focus on God we will be enlightened but if we focus on money we may be blinded by greed or develop a dependency upon acquisition and so fall into that bottomless pit of eternal separation from God.[5]

Now this brings us quite logically – if not necessarily so nicely – to the questions that we left to percolate on the coffee counter of our brain a little while ago: if we can’t work for money/ material acquisition/ monetary life savings, then how do we save for the future? How do we plan ahead? How do we plan for retirement? How do we plan for our children's education? How do we make long term plans without putting trust in money that is held in trust for the future? These are the questions that Jesus answers in our next pericope today.

When the listeners to these comments heard them the first time, they were probably thinking the very same sort of thing as we are talking about. What about the future then? Even more: First Century Judea wasn’t nearly as wealthy as 21st Century Canada. They weren’t worried about college or retirement. They were probably tempted to worry about whether they could even afford clothes or food to eat. To them and by extension to us then Jesus says, Verse 24-25 “You cannot serve both God and money. Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or what you will wear. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothes?” To those who are thinking that they need money to plan for the future, Jesus says you can’t serve both God and money so don't worry about money at all.[6] You serve God and God will take care of your money and other needs.

Remember Jesus’ disciples. Remember when Peter tells Jesus that they have given up everything for Him (Matthew 19:27, Mark 10:28). They have left their jobs. They have left their homes. They have left everything. Jesus continues, Verse 26 on:
Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?
    “And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labour or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendour was dressed like one of these. If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.

When people who are living in an occupied territory, without much food, let alone money, are worrying about having enough for the future; Jesus tells them, “don’t worry about it.” Don’t waste your time with useless plans. Don’t work for your retirement. Don’t work for your financial security. Jesus says rather we should work for God, Verse 33: “seek first His Kingdom and His Righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.”

Now this is important. I am not saying that we should all quit our jobs and live off welfare. That would be dishonest and God is not a liar and God will not be mocked (cf. Galatians 6:7). Welfare and EI are for people who cannot work. The Bible says we are to work at all things as if we are working for the Lord. (Colossians 3:23; Cf. Ephesians 4:28; cf. also John 6, Acts 20:35, Romans 4:4-6, 1 Corinthians 12:6) What I am saying is that we need to trust God for the future. There is no point in putting our faith in investments, if 1929 taught us anything it is that investments can be wiped out in the twinkling of an eye.

Now I will tell you that there are a few verses in the Bible that are indeed very near and dear to my heart. As a child, I was never the best at memory verse work but I have memorized Matthew 6:33: “Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you.” This verse has been very important to me in my life. It was important to me when I was a child; it was important to me when I was a young adult and a university student who at times couldn’t make ends meet. It was important to me when I was a businessman experiencing times of richer and poorer, better and worse. This verse -“Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness and all these things (whether we will have enough to eat, drink, or wear, or whatever) shall be added unto you.” - is important to me when I think of others who suffer today in the world and when I think of you who are going through struggles here in the corps. This verse -“Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you.” - is important to me when I think back to our decision to give up our whole lives and become first urban missionaries and later Officers with The Salvation Army. This verse is very important to me when I am overwhelmed with life. This verse is very important to me when I am plagued by deadlines, pressures, and the emotional toll, of not only my work, but also of my family and my own emotional and spiritual health. I sometimes am tempted to pack it all in, move back to Vancouver or to the Island, buy another business or two and earn money like I did before I came into ministry so as to better save for the future.

Now I do enjoy my life here immensely. No one could ask for a better corps (church) or a better community than this one here. We have the best people: congregation members, soldiers, adherents, volunteers, employees… We are so blessed to be here. No one really understands when I tell them just how good this community is. But nonetheless the Enemy can still catch us off guard and cause us to wonder about the future and to worry. I honestly sometimes look back to the certainty that we left on the coast and forward to the uncertainty of what’s ahead and sometimes I may feel like crying but I claim this promise: “Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you.” And I claim this promise often. God knows our problems and God knows what we need. God promises that if we seek first the Kingdom of God then all these things will be added unto us so we should not worry about tomorrow for each day does have enough trouble of its own.

These are words of comfort. So today I want us all to take our worries, our cares, our struggles, and our burdens and leave them at the cross as they say; I want us all to be free from them. We don’t need to worry about starving children in China; we don’t need to worry about our debts; we don’t need to worry about our eviction notices, we don’t need to worry about where we are going to live or whether or not we are going to eat. We need instead to seek first the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness and He will take care of the rest. He promises. God takes care of the birds of the air and the grass of the field and each of us here today are so much more important to Him than these. So today I ask us to cast all of our burdens upon Jesus. Today I ask us to seek first the Kingdom of God – and everything will be okay – one way or another – everything will be okay. God knows what we need even more than we do and He loves our children and He loves us even more than we do, so please let us just seek first the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness through praying and reading the Scriptures and through loving Him and then He promises that everything will be okay.

Let us pray


[1] R. T. France, Matthew: An Introduction and Commentary. Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1985 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 1), S. 143
[2] Cf. M. Eugene Boring, ‘Matthew’, (NIB 8: Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press, 1995), 210.
[3] Cf. Sinai "Tamas" Turan, 'A neglected rabbinic parallel to the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 6:22-23; Luke 11:34-36)', Journal of Biblical Literature 127, no.1 (2008): 81-93.
[4] Cf. Thomas Zockler, 'Light within the human person: a comparison of Matthew 6:22-23 and Gospel of Thomas 24', Journal of Biblical Literature 120, no. 3 (2001): 487-499.
[5] Cf. R. T. France, Matthew: An Introduction and Commentary. Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1985 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 1), S. 143
[6] Cf. Ellen T. Charry, 'The Grace of God and the Law of Christ,’ Interpretation 57 (2003): 40.

Friday, March 15, 2013

John 12:8, Mark 14:7, Matthew 26:11: The Poor Will Always Be With You.

Presented to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 17 March 2013
By Captain Michael Ramsay

Today is St. Patrick’s Day so I thought that I would start off our time here with a little St. Patrick’s Day quiz. (ANSWERS AT BOTTOM)

1. Where was St. Patrick born?
  1. Ireland
  2. Scotland
  3. France
  4. Saskatchewan

2. What was the nationality of St. Patrick's parents?
  1. Irish
  2. Scottish
  3. Roman
  4. Martian

3. What is the traditional colour associated with St. Patrick?
  1. Blue
  2. White
  3. Green
  4. Orange

4. What object to St. Patrick famously use to share the gospel?
  1. Clover
  2. Shamrock
  3. Rainbow
  4. Snake

5. In Eire what would one call criminal who comes down with a skin disease?
  1. a criminal with a skin disease
  2. a leper con

We know basically the story of St. Patrick, right? He is the one credited with bringing the Gospel to Ireland. He is famously known for using the shamrock as a metaphor for the trinity in his evangelistic efforts and he is mythically credited with driving the snakes from Ireland.

In the Gospel of John that we are looking at today is the record of the woman who poured out a year’s wages worth of perfume onto Jesus’ feet and the resultant objection that that perfume could have been sold and the money given to the poor.

St. Patrick started out as anything but poor. He was born in Scotland, the wealthy son of Roman parents in the 4th Century. He did however discover poverty and lived out much of his life that way. He was kidnapped and taken away from his family to Ireland. He escaped and then returned to Ireland bringing with him freedom in Christ to the country in which he was held in captivity.[1]

Our story from the Bible today – that of the lady with the perfume – I find quite shocking. This story or its parallels are found in all four of the Gospels (Matthew 26:6-13, Mark 14:3-9, Luke 7:36-50, John 12:1-8). There is quite a scandal that unfolds in our text to which three of the four gospels draw particular attention.[2]
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Picture the scene with me as John presents it, as that is the text that we are primarily dealing with today. Jesus, along with his disciples, goes to the home of some of his closest friends –Mary, Martha, and Lazarus. We know that, as it says in Verse 1 of our text that Jesus’ has just raised Lazarus from the dead and because of that more and more people are following Jesus.  We know as well that his detractors are becoming more and more nervous of a Roman military crackdown with so many people following Jesus that they are even now plotting the death of both Jesus and Lazarus in order to, among other things, save the people from Roman reprisals (John 11:38-53).
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Mary, Martha, and Lazarus are close friends and close allies of Jesus; they are committed to Jesus and the Lord has done so much for them. They are having this dinner for Jesus, in Jesus’ honour. His disciples are there. Lazarus is present at the table. Others are likely in attendance. Martha is faithfully serving her Lord as she waits on him, her brother, and the other invited guests. This would be quite a gathering and remember that everyone would probably be talking about all that had just happened with Jesus’ resurrection of Lazarus from the dead. It would have been in the buzz of all this activity with people talking and eating their meal that Mary enters this account. Verses 3-5 record, “Then Mary took about a pint of pure nard, an expensive perfume; she poured it on Jesus’ feet and wiped his feet with her hair. And the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume. But one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was later to betray him, objected,  ‘Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s wages.’”
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Verse 6 tells us that Judas, “he did not say this because he cared about the poor but because he was a thief; as keeper of the money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it.” Now this may be Judas’ motivation in making this comment but the other gospel writers tell as that there were others who had reason to make this same objection. Matthew mentions that this same question is on the lips of Jesus’ other disciples as well (Matthew 26:8-9).[3] As such this is an important question so let’s spend some time exploring it today.
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Mary has somehow gotten this really expensive perfume. There is no indication that Mary, Martha, and Lazarus are extremely wealthy. They have just had all the expense as well of Lazarus’ funeral – before Jesus raised him from the dead. The average annual income in Canada today is $47 200.00 (February 2013). It wasn’t so much back then and they didn’t have credit cards back then and -I don’t know about you but- even if I wanted to run out and pay $47 000.00 on perfume in this day and age to pour on someone’s feet so that it would all run into the ground, I doubt that I could manage that. And back in the first century, in the world of our text today, when the average person in Palestine was just trying to make enough to eke out a living, I don’t imagine that Mary, Martha, and Lazarus had so much money that they could just let the equivalent of $47 000 CDN run out of their savings, over the Lord, and onto the floor. But this is exactly what is happening in our text today.
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We can see, can’t we, how we might even find ourselves in this same situation asking alongside Judas and the other disciples, Verse 5, “Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s wages.” And then how about Jesus’ response: Verse 8, Jesus says, “You will always have the poor among you”
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There is even more to this too when we think about who Jesus was and who Jesus is and when we think about how Jesus interacted with his followers and how Jesus interacted with his disciples and how Jesus interacted with his close friends in the first century. What did Jesus say about our spending money when there are still poor people around? And what does Jesus say about even saving money when there are still poor people around? Jesus says, Matthew 19:21, “…If you want to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.” Jesus says, Luke 12:33 (and Matthew 6:20), “Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will never fail...” Luke 6:20, “Looking at his disciples, he said: ‘Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God.’” Luke 12:13-21 even records a parable of a man who saved for his retirement instead of giving his money to the poor and this parable concludes with Verses 20 and 21: “But God said to him, ‘You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?’ This is how it will be with whoever stores up things for themselves but is not rich toward God.” And Acts 2:45 records of Jesus’ early followers even after his resurrection that “they sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need.”
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So how can someone who has taught all of this about not saving up money and instead taking care of the poor and needy to his disciples, to his friends, and even to the population at large - how can someone who has taught all of this about taking care of the poor and needy then turn around when one of his friends and followers pours the 1st Century equivalent of $47 000 CDN (2013) onto his feet and then onto the floor - - how can someone who has taught all of this about taking care of the poor and needy then turn around and tell his disciples, “leave her alone”, Verse 7; and Verse 8, “You will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me”? How does what Jesus is doing here match up with everything that he has been teaching all along about taking care of the poor and the marginalized instead of saving money for ourselves. And so much so that his followers, to whom he is addressing, even give up everything they have to follow him. How does this match up with that?
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I think that Jesus gives us a bit of a clue in John here. John 12:7: “Jesus replied. ‘It was intended that she should save this perfume for the day of my burial.’” Funerals were very important in the 1st Century. Mary and Martha had just had one too, remember, for their brother Lazarus. Funerals were a big deal and family and people would walk for miles and days to attend a funeral. Mary and Martha had just gone through the whole grieving process and were prepared for when one might arise again. Funerals in our day and age can cost upwards of $10 000 with caskets accounting for as much as a quarter of that cost. Today we have many people who plan in advance for their funeral services and it says in Verse 7 of our text that Mary (probably even in concert with Jesus) had likewise planned in advance for Jesus’ funeral. She had already acquired this expensive perfume for Jesus’ funeral and she is presently saving this expensive perfume for Jesus’ funeral when all of a sudden here she is pouring this perfume out on Jesus for the purpose of his funeral and burial.[4]
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We remember too that just a very short time before this event at Lazarus’ funeral; Jesus has this exchange with Mary’s sister, Martha. John 11:25-27:
Jesus said to her [Martha], “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though [one] dies; 26 and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?”
27 “Yes, Lord,” she replied, “I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, who is to come into the world.”
Jesus then raises Lazarus from the dead. So here we have a glimpse of the ultimate resurrection of the dead that is penultimately viewed in that example. Jesus’ death and resurrection and return to his Father is coming in the next few chapters of John. He is with his friends for only a short time now as plans are already being made for his execution. This perfume is a foreshadowing and -even more- it is an integral part of the preparation for his death that is about to come but we know that this death is not the end. Jesus is the first fruits of the resurrection. This expenditure on the perfume is not a meaningless or self-indulgent extravagance. This pouring out of Jesus’ funeral nard is a prophetic and divinely inspired worship of our Lord and Saviour.
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So then, revising and applying the questions to our own lives that we asked earlier: while we are here today eagerly awaiting Jesus’ return, is there ever an occasion when we would better spend a year’s wages on something other than the poor? With Jesus teaching so much about taking care of the poor and the marginalized –as much as he apparently teaches on anything else – and with Jesus saying that indeed how we treat the poor and the marginalized, the least of these brothers and sisters of ours, is an accurate reflection of how we treat him (Matthew 25:31ff); given how much Jesus cares about the poor are there instances in our own time and place when there is something more important to spend our money on that on the poor and the needy?
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I would say that only if we do so for the gospel: only if we do so at the direct revelation and bequest of our Lord Jesus Christ Himself. Jesus is God and God is the only one who is more important than our neighbour here and as we turn our whole lives over to Him, He promises that we can trust him that everything will be okay. Matthew 6:33: “… seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.” Matthew 25:45: whatever you do for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you do for Jesus. And, Matthew 6:34, “Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.” It is said that the whole Bible, like the Decalogue, can be summed up with ‘love God and love your neighbour’; so then let us do just that. Let us turn to Jesus, let us worship God and let us in trust Him who alone holds the keys to eternal live because as Jesus says in John 11:25-26 “…I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though [he] dies; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die.”

Let us pray.

 
ANSWERS: 1) b. Scotland, 2) c. Roman, 3) a. Blue, 4) b. Shamrock
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[2] But cf. Merrill C. Tenney, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Luke/Exposition of Luke/IV. The Galilean Ministry (4:14-9:50)/C. Ministry to Various Human Needs (7:1-9:17)/4. Anointed by a sinful woman (7:36-50), Book Version: 4.0.2
[3] Colin G. Kruse, John: An Introduction and Commentary. Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity Press, 2003 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 4), S. 260: The ‘you’ in John’s text is also plural.
[4] Cf. Gail R. O’Day, The Gospel of John, The New Interpreter's Bible, Vol. 9, ed Leander E. Keck, et. al. (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1995),702.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Freedom 55: Luke 12:13-21 and the Parable of the Wicked RSP

Presented to Swift Current Corps 03 September 2010
By Captain Michael Ramsay


We had a great time at camp and a lot of really interesting things happened, the Lord really spoke through the speaker: Major Don Law, who was -of course- the corps officer here once upon a time. At men’s camp there are always lots of stories and I would love to tell you some of them but there is that old rule that whatever happens at men’s camp stays at men’s camp so no sharing of any secrets; isn’t that right, Sparrow? Men’s camp really was a great time of fishing and fellowship and fishing and eating and fishing and teaching and fishing – I think we felt a lot like Jesus’ original disciples: they were predominantly fisherman after all and they enjoyed getting out on the water for some good fellowship and great teaching.

This pericope that we read today in the meeting is part of a great teaching time of Jesus’. Jesus is a very engaging teacher: I have previously compared Jesus to some of those popular or shock-TV show hosts.[1] He does a lot out of the ordinary in his lessons with miraculous healings, casting out of demons (cf. for ex. Luke 11:14-28; cf. also Matthew 12:22-45, Mark 3:23-27) wonderful stories and parables (ex. Luke 10:25-37, 11:29-32, 33-36), great teaching of course (ex. Luke 11:37-54, 12:1-12), and much, much more. You can read in Luke’s text how big crowds are gathering repeatedly and constantly and more and more people are coming to see him all the time. The crowd today is mentioned in Luke 11:27 and it continues to increase. Luke 11:29: Jesus then goes for dinner at a Pharisee’s house and by the time he leaves there a crowd of many thousands has gathered (Luke 11:37, 53). The word here in Luke 11:53 for many thousands, “myrias means properly ‘ten thousand’ (in Acts 19:19 five ‘myriads’ amount to 50,000). But the term is often used indefinitely of a large crowd and that will be the meaning here. The article with it in the Greek may mean ‘the usual large crowd.’”[2] Whatever the details of this crowd, this great amount of people, Luke 12:1 records that there are so many people that they are trampling on one another.

Picture this scene with me, if you will. Jesus is popular. I don’t know if people still get trampled waiting in line to buy tickets for popular concerts with all the on-line tickets available nowadays and with less festival seating than there was years ago but I can remember in my teen years waiting in a line-up to see a concert and people were starting to push and trample and I got knocked down and caught in the middle of it. When I got up, disoriented as I was from my experience, my eyesight was even blurry for quite a while. I wasn’t seeing right. It was scary. It was quite a thing and there weren’t even thousands, let alone tens of thousands, in that crowd. I know in my time people have even died being crushed in concert or in ticket line-ups for popular acts.

Imagine what it must be like for the people pushing and fighting to see and hear Jesus in such large numbers. I imagine that a good number of the crowd continues to wait outside even when he goes to have dinner with the Pharisee and I imagine that others have even at this point been waiting for days, trying to get close enough to catch a glimpse of Jesus. I know that when I first went to college, we camped out all night in a rainstorm once - mind you that wasn’t to see a celebrity of any kind; it was to get a parking pass for the year. They never had enough for all the students who had cars. If we are that persistent and that tenacious when it comes to waiting for a parking permit, think of how much more persistent people would and should be waiting to see the Messiah.

When Jesus then finally does exit the Pharisee’s house, it seems that there is still this large enthusiastic crowd waiting for him but before addressing it, before making any public proclamations to the audience who has for quite a while been eagerly awaiting him to begin speaking, before saying anything directly to the crowd that is waiting for the Jesus Show to begin; he first instructs his helpers, his assistants: he first tells his disciples who are near to him (if there was a stage they would be on it with him). He instructs them to beware of the Pharisees (Luke 12:1): as the Pharisees had been fiercely opposing him and had just finished (for the time being) trying to trick Jesus into saying something that would get him in trouble (Luke 11:54-55).

Jesus speaks with his disciples and as Jesus speaks about this for a while (Luke 12:1-11) he goes on to encourage and warn his disciples that if they deny or disown him before men, he will likewise disown them to God but if they acknowledge him before men, he will acknowledge them before God (Luke 12:8-9). The crowds, in this time, as he is speaking with his disciples, they continue to gather around him. It would probably be like he was standing up here on the platform discussing with members of the worship team before the service and the congregation is pressing up against the platform waiting eagerly for the meeting to start. Or it would be even more like a famous singer on stage speaking with his or her band or crew while screaming teenagers are pushing up against the security guards at the front. This is what it is like with Jesus here.

It is in this setting and in this context where someone in this crowd of thousands of people calls to him – picture Mosaic Stadium, the crowd is probably at least that large; this crowd might very well be more than the population of Swift Current and is almost certainly more than the population of most of the cities in Saskatchewan and remember they were just trampling themselves to get to Jesus. Someone in this crowd calls out to Jesus: “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me” (Luke 12:13).

At first this sounds a little strange. Can you imagine if you went to hear a concert or a Billy/Franklin Graham Crusade in Saskatoon and someone yells out to the celebrity, “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me.” This would seem a little out of place. But Jesus is a teacher, remember, and “a person who recognized Jesus as a ‘teacher’ (Luke 12:13) would naturally expect him to have the ability to render a judgment in ethical matters (Luke 12:14). Rabbis were often thus consulted, and in later years some traveled from place to place to render legal decisions. Jesus’ refusal to answer is not a denial of his right or ability to answer, nor of his concern for social and ethical matters.”[3] It is just neither the place nor the time to address the details of such matters with the large crowds pressing him but there is something quite significant in what this man calls out that Jesus does readily address at this time and in this venue. This man is concerned about money and what he feels is due him and he is very likely concerned about a real injustice! He calls out: “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me” (Luke 12:13). And Jesus had just been talking about something very similar with his disciples (Luke 12: 1-12) so Jesus answers the whole crowd this man’s legitimate (he wasn’t trying to trick Jesus) question. Jesus says this to the man who cries “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me”:

"Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; a man's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions."
And he told them this parable: "The ground of a certain rich man produced a good crop. He thought to himself, 'What shall I do? I have no place to store my crops.'
"Then he said, 'This is what I'll do. I will tear down my barns and build bigger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I'll say to myself, "You have plenty of good things laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink and be merry." '
"But God said to him, 'You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?'
"This is how it will be with anyone who stores up things for himself but is not rich toward God."


Jesus rebukes this man who brings to him a (probably very legitimate) question about inheritance that encompasses how his presumably older brother should treat him fairly (cf. Deuteronomy 21:17, Numbers 27:1-11, 36:7-9)[4] and which could be a surprise because Jesus especially in Luke has a reputation for showing preferential treatment to the poor (cf. Luke 8:21, 11:28, 16:19-31, 18:18-30; cf. also: Exodus 23:6,11, Leviticus 19:10,15, 23:22, 27:8, Deuteronomy 15:4, 15:7, 15:11, 24:12-15, 1 Samuel 2:8, Psalms 22:26, 34:6, 35:10, 82:3, Isaiah 61:1, Ezekiel 16:49, 18:12, 22:29, Amos 2:7, 4:1, 5:11-12, 8:4-6, Zechariah 7:10).[5] Jesus tells this man who has probably been wronged that rather than worry about justice he should just not to be so greedy and then he tells this parable of the rich fool (Luke 18:18-30; cf. Matthew 19:16-29, Mark 10:17-30).[6]

What about the parable? What is the sin of the man in the parable? What does he do? Well, the rich fool in the story is certainly very blessed by God because it says that his crops were so successful that, Verse 17, he didn’t even have enough room to store all of his crops. (I’m sure a lot of the farmers around here would love to have that problem this year!) The man in the parable, instead of squandering his wealth to date, this rich person has been preparing for his future. By saving his crops, he is basically investing in RSPs. He had seemingly gone to a retirement planning seminar and this is nothing less than his Freedom 55 plan: he tears down the old barns; he builds new ones. He has been building up his retirement nest egg for years it says, Verse 19, and now he plans to take a cruise, retire on the beach in Florida, or do whatever it is that retired folk do in first century Palestine. Whatever it is, it sounds exactly like an ad for retirement savings in our day and age.

You can just picture a TV commercial like this can’t you? There is the man sitting in a deck chair by the pool speaking to a future version of himself saying, verse 19, “You have plenty of good things laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink and be merry.” But this ad has a very different ending to the ones we are used to seeing on TV. In this ad, when the announcer cuts onto the screen, instead of giving us the fine print of how to save and invest, Jesus comments, with the man relaxing on his proverbial pool chair in the background, Verses 20-21, “But God said to him, ‘You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?’ This is how it will be with anyone who stores up things for himself but is not rich toward God.” This is not quite the ending we have become accustomed to hearing in our day and age. I have always found this parable interesting to say the least. It is often referred to as the parable of the rich fool. I would probably call it the parable of the wicked RSP; the wicked retirement savings plan.

Let us not forget that Jesus tells this story in response to someone simply asking Jesus to tell his brother to give him what he deserves (Luke 12:13). So what was the sin of the parable? Was it that the man invested in his future retirement? This is part of it. The man who asked Jesus the question wanted some probably deserved inheritance for himself. The character in the parable Jesus tells is showing self-reliance here rather than relying on God.[7] This is like – for those of us who have been attending the Tuesday evening Bible study – the Israelites that declined to put their trust in God and who refused to let the land lie fallow as they were instructed to do every seventh year (Leviticus 25:2-7, 19-22; 26:14-46; cf. Exodus 23:10f). After extending them many, many years of grace, God then removes them from His land and keeps them away until the land has had all the rest that God commanded the Israelites to give it (Leviticus 26:14-46, 2 Chronicles 36:22, Jeremiah 25:11-12, 29:10; cf. Daniel 1:1, Daniel 9)! This man in the parable of the wicked retirement savings plan here is likewise not putting his trust in God. He is looking after his own future rather than looking after others and relying on God (cf. Exodus 16:17-20 where the same sin occurs with manna).

What about us? We should not be storing up our wealth for an unknown future here. We should not be concerned about how much money we will have to retire or even whether or not we can retire. “The fact is, says Jesus, that anxiety reflects a lack of trust in God, a lack of interest in the kingdom, [and] is not productive.”[8] We have been learning about our time, talents, and now treasures here in Swift Current lately and that God doesn’t just get a tenth of our money, time, and talents. He doesn’t just get 10%. God shouldn’t just get 20%. If we really are His followers, He gets 100% of us. He is our Lord. We know this but do we ever put our trust in whatever is in our storehouses instead?

Do we ever put our trust in our monetary savings or whatever else is in our storehouses instead of trusting in God? Luke warns us again and again and again about the dangers of wealth (Luke 8:21, 11:28, 16:19-31, 18:18-30); it is harder for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven than it is for a camel to go through the eye of the needle (Luke 18:15). Luke later in his gospel here tells Jesus’ parable of the rich young ruler (Luke 18:18-29; cf. Matthew 19:16-29, Mark 10:17-30). This man kept all of the commandments since he was young (Luke 18:21) but Jesus told him that he still lacked one thing and he needed to sell everything, give it to the poor, and follow him (Luke 18:22). This rich man instead went away very sad (Luke 18:23). He was sad, I imagine, because he believed Jesus and knew that what he was telling him was true: why else would he be sad?

In Canada we have been given a lot of wealth like the men in the parables. Even the poorest person in Canada is among the wealthiest in the world. Canada –in response to the horrors of the American civil wars (1774-1789; 1861-1865) was intentionally founded on the Word of God (in particular Psalm 72)[9] and for many years we kept His commandments but now it appears that we are instead going away sad. Like the rich man in the parable of the wicked retirement savings plan, we have been blessed greatly by God and like the same man in that same parable we have corporately hoarded our resources into proverbial RSPs or storehouses so that we can “have plenty of good things laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink and be merry” (Luke 12:19). This is alarming. As a society, we are that rich fool in the parable. Individually, we not to be; we need to wake up!

It is only when we are rich toward God that we are safe. Jesus goes on beyond what we have read already here to explain this parable further to his disciples (Luke 12:22-44). He tells them that “therefore…do not worry about your life, what you will eat, or about your body, what you will wear. For life is more than food, and the body more than clothing (vv.22-23).” Jesus repeats his comforting command not to worry or be afraid 5 times in verses 22-40. God will provide just as God provides for the birds and the lilies; therefore, we should not concern ourselves with that. As Jesus is recoded as teaching (12:31-34) to his disciples:

For it is the nations of the world that strive after all these things, and your Father knows that you need them. Instead, strive for his kingdom, and these things will be given to you as well. “Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions, and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

So then, Jesus says, we should not be storing up our wealth for an unknown future here. We should not be concerned about how much money we will have to retire or even whether or not we can retire. “The fact is, says Jesus, that anxiety reflects a lack of trust in God, a lack of interest in the kingdom, [and this] is not productive.” [10] We should not be concerned with the things of this present age like what we are to eat, drink, and wear. The Lord knows what we need and, like the father when his child asks for an egg (Luke 11:13), He will provide what is needed (Luke 12:31). Rather than be concerned about financial matters, we would be better to strive for the Kingdom of God and do the will of the Father.

Let us pray:
Lord, please help us not be concerned with the things of this present age like what we are to eat, drink, and wear. Lord help us to realise that everything that we seem to own really is yours and Lord help us to use that which you have given us stewardship over for your Kingdom and your Glory. Lord help us to actively put our faith in you, in Jesus’ name, Amen.

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[1] Captain Michael Ramsay, 'Luke 8:1-18 - The Jesus Show', presented to each the Nipawin and Tisdale Corps 15 July 2007. Available on-line at: http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2007/08/luke-81-18-jesus-show.html
[2] Leon Morris, ‘Luke: An Introduction and Commentary’, Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1988 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 3), S. 225
[3] The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Luke/Exposition of Luke/V. Teaching and Travels Toward Jerusalem (9:51-19:44)/D. Teachings on Times of Crisis and Judgment (12:1-13:35)/2. Parable of the rich fool (12:13-21), Book Version: 4.0.2
[4] R. Alan Culpepper, Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon, 1995), 255
[5] Cf. Theodore W. Jennings Jr., ‘Good News to the Poor: John Wesley’s Evangelical Economics’ (Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn: 1990), 47 and Jose Miranda. Marx and the Bible: a Critique of the Philosophy of Oppression. Trans., John Eagleson. (New York: Orbis Books, 1979) 250
[6] William Hendriksen, ‘NTC: Luke’ (Baker Academic: Grand Rapids, Mi, 2007), 661-662.
[7] Leon Morris, ‘Luke: An Introduction and Commentary’, (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1988 Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 3), S. 231. Cf. also E. Earle Ellis, ‘TNCBC: The Gospel of Luke’ (Eerdmans: Grand Rapids, Mi.: 1981), 177.
[8] Fred B. Craddock, Luke (Interpretation, a Bible commentary for teaching and preaching: Louisville, Kentucky: John Knox Press 1990), 164.
[9] Cf. Captain Michael Ramsay, 'Psalm 72: the Credit Card of Justice and Righteousness', presented to Nipawin and Tisdale Corps 01 July 2007. Available on-line at http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2007/08/psalm-72-credit-card-of-justice-and.html
[10] Fred B. Craddock, Luke (Interpretation, a Bible commentary for teaching and preaching: Lousiville, Kentucky: John Knox Press 1990), 164.