18 September 2022 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Pentecost 15
Vienna, VA
“Be Like the World? Yes!
Only Better”
Text:
Luke
16:1-15; 1 Timothy 2:1-15
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Desperate times call for desperate measures. When
time is short, your priorities change. What you would have put off, you no
longer do. What you thought could wait no longer can. What wasn’t so important
to you suddenly now is. You know you should have fixed your sump pump and now
your basement is flooding. You know you should have stopped at the gas station
and now you’re out of gas. You know you should have started that assignment
earlier . . . now you’re just hoping to get something, anything, done to
hand in or present. It can be more serious than that, though. Like when it
comes to matters of your physical health, life and death stuff. That test, that
procedure you know you should have had. But most of all, really, though I don’t
think we often think like this, is when it comes to
matters of your spiritual health. Spiritual life and death stuff.
So when the manager in the parable today heard
these words, Turn in the account
of your management, for you can no longer be manager, his life changed
in a heartbeat. Desperation set in. What he thought was so important suddenly
wasn’t any longer. Charges had been made against him that he was wasting his
master’s possessions. And the word for wasting there is
the same word Jesus had used in the parable He told right before this one, the Parable
of the Lost Son, sometimes called the Prodigal Son. This situation
is even worse, though, for that younger son was wasting his own possessions,
but the manager was wasting his master’s. But for both, desperation made them
change. The Lost Son went home. The manager now did what he could to take care
of his future.
So since he was not strong enough for manual
labor and was too proud to beg, he starts slashing the accounts of those who
owe his master. Whatever time he has left, he’s going to use to his advantage
and make friends who can help him. Now some scholars think the manager had been
padding the books to enrich himself and that’s what he was slashing. Or maybe
he was just manipulating the accounts in other ways. But either way, the end
result was the same: friends. Friends who, he hoped,
would take care of him the same way.
But I think it must have been quite a surprise to
him when not just those who owed his master, but the master himself speaks well
of him! When the master, who not long before this had believed the accusations
made against him and fired him, now commends him! For what he did
was very shrewd, or prudent or practical or wise. And the world is like that.
The world knows the world’s ways. How to get along. How to get ahead. How to use the system to
get what you want. We do it, too. Maybe some do it more than others,
maybe some play the game better than others, but we all know the game.
So Jesus’ question for us today is this: how
come you’re not like this spiritually?
For the day is coming
when the Master of all, the Lord of all, is going to call us to account. Charges of sin brought
against us. For wasting the gifts given to us. The
gifts of life and health and wealth and faith and all that our Lord has so
abundantly blessed us with . . . and what have you done with it? Have you loved
the Giver with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength? Have you loved your
neighbor? Or have you loved you? Have you loved being at ease? Have you
loved having a big bank account? Have you loved sinning and not really been too
concerned with your spiritual health and wealth? The Scriptures in your home
gathering dust. Prayers left unsaid. Your baptism a distant
and oft forgotten memory. The new day gifted to you each morning taken
for granted? Your husband, wife, children, parents, friends, left to fend for
themselves? Your wants, your desires, your pleasures,
your hopes, your dreams all that matter?
And then what happens when you are called to
account for all this?
Now, in the parable, it might have sounded a bit
funny that the manager who was fired still had time to cook the books - why
would the master do that? Well, it’s not meant to be a true story, but to teach
us something about our situation. And that your day of reckoning is
coming. And maybe sooner than you think. So how should
you be living? If you knew that day was coming for you tomorrow, or next week,
or even next year, would that change how you live today? I think it would. When
time is short, priorities change. When time is short, we start doing those
things we should have been doing all along. If there’s still
time.
We don’t know what happened to this manager after
this. Were his efforts successful? Was he taken care of? Was the master so
impressed with his shrewdness that he kept him on? Or did it all not
work, and the manager left to live out his days lonely and broke? We don’t
know. But what we do know is that’s not how our heavenly
Father wants us to live - in uncertainty about our future, if we’ll have enough
time to change. I can tell you right now with absolute certainty that if it
were up to us, if it were on us, we don’t have enough time and our
future is not a bright one.
So how good, then, that there is someone who took
our debt to our heavenly Father, and didn’t cut it by a half or three-quarters
- though that would have been generous enough! But still not
enough. So the faithful one, the one who came and did exactly and
perfectly what His Father wanted, 100%, took our debt and paid it for us. 100%!
And He didn’t dishonestly just cancel it - He paid it, with His death on
the cross. And when that debt was paid, Jesus said tetelestai,
which means, it is finished (John 19:30). But did you know that’s the exact same
word that was used in those days to write on the accounts when a debt was fully
paid off? Tetelestai. The debt is finished. Paid in full.
Written on your account with the blood of
Jesus, the Son of God. No matter how enormous your debt,
or the debts of all in the world, the death of God’s Son and our brother,
Jesus, more than enough to pay it all. You are free.
You heard it again this morning in the absolution.
And you’ll receive it again in the communion of Jesus’ Body and Blood. Because our heavenly Father doesn’t want us to live in fear or
uncertainty and thus selfishly concerned about our salvation. No! He
wants us to live in joy and confidence in Him and His love, that our future is
secure, and thus be able to live for and be concerned about our neighbor.
You see, the manager who slashed the debts owed
to his master did so hoping to make friends who would take of him. But when Jesus
paid our debt in full, while He did so to make us His friends, He did not
do so in the hopes that we would take care of Him. He doesn’t need anything
from us! So, He said, if you’re grateful to Me for
what I did - and why wouldn’t we be! - take care of your neighbor. Use all that
I’ve given you in this world to make friends - and not just for this physical world
and life - but who will welcome you into the eternal dwellings. So that they’ll be there, too. Help them be there,
too. For the time is short. Maybe shorter than we know.
So you’ve been richly and lavishly forgiven - forgive
others! Stop selfishly holding onto grudges and bitterness and anger. Their debts tetelestai. Finished. Paid in full. You’ve been
blessed in baptism to be a child of God - so pray! Pray, as Paul told
Timothy and his churches, that all people be saved and come to the knowledge of
the truth. For that’s what your Father desires and wants than anything else.
That they know their debts are tetelestai. Finished. Paid in full. And what else? What else have you been given in this
unrighteous world and life - that is passing away and isn’t going to last -
that you can use to help your neighbor? And especially for
them to be with us in the next, righteous world and life that is eternal.
Desperate times call for desperate measures. And while you aren’t desperate,
they might be. And the time is short. Maybe shorter than we
think. Maybe it’s time to change how we live . . . for their sake?
To love as we have been loved? That our confidence and
joy may be other’s, too? That when they Last Day comes, they,
with us, will NOT hear the voice of a master calling us to account, but
the voice of the Father welcoming home His sons and daughters, into eternal
dwellings. That’s what Jesus has done for us. And so how we
get to live now. Shrewdly. Wisely.
Faithfully. Freely. Like the
free son and daughters we are.
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.