How Then Shall We, the Rich,
Live?
author unknown
based on Luke 16:19-31
If you should come into a fortune tomorrow, what would you do with it? If you should
win the Big Lotto, which the people at work tell me, is up to $20 million, how would you
spend that money? I know what I'd do. First, I'd pay off my debts. All of them. Then, I'd
make sure that money was set aside for the children's education and inheritance, and for
our retirement. That's not to say I wouldn't retire, at least from the school district,
right away! I like my job at Douglas, but . . . Of course, in all this, I'd establish a
trust fund, or an endowment for the church. That wouldn't negate my weekly giving
obligations, it would simply be my 10% tithe from my winnings. Then, of course, we'd take
a trip. First, to Disney World for two weeks. Fourteen days to see the Magic Kingdom,
Epcot, the new wild animal park, and all the other attractions. I'd make sure the kids got
to Sea World, Nickelodeon, Cypress Gardens, Universal Studios, and to the Kennedy Space
Center. Then, we'd move on up the coast. We'd stop at Hilton Head and enjoy the beach on
our way to a week at Williamsburg my favorite place in the whole world. We'd go to
Jamestown, too. Then it would be on to Washington, D.C., where I grew up. We'd spend four
weeks touring the Capitol, the White House, the Library of Congress, the National
Geographic Society, and of course you'd have to spend at least three of those weeks at the
Smithsonian. Then, there's Mont Vernon, Monticello, General Lee's Mansion, and of course
Arlington National Cemetery, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials.
We'd stay at the Willard Hotel, the hotel of presidents, where Mom and Dad used to take me
for a "grownup lunch" after I got my braces fixed. It would be a trip to
remember. Lazarus, Lazarus, who? There's no one sleeping in the streets in Washington,
D.C. And, anyway, didn't Jesus say, "you will always have the poor with you?"
After our trip, or better, while we were gone, I'd have the house remodeled and
redecorated. First, I'd have the pool equipment moved to the other side of the yard
maybe we'd have the pool rebuilt, too. Then, I'd add another room downstairs for a bigger
office, or maybe just a library for all our books, or a room for all Katie's dolls and
Matthew's Star Wars, Batman, Ghostbusters and Turtles stuff. Above that, I'd make a master
suite. Bob and I would have our own bathroom (and the kids would have theirs). I'd want
the kid's rooms enlarged. Then, I'd combine the kitchen, dining and family rooms into a
great room. My new kitchen would have a baking area, at least two sinks, and a cooking
island. I'd build a deck off the family room, so we could sit on the deck and watch the
kids swim. The family room would have room enough for homework, reading, and a nice big
round dining table. We'd install a computer with a hard drive big enough for the kid's
games, my stuff, and little things like electronic cookbooks, home security management,
etc. We'd even have one of those large-screen monitors (not to mention a large-screen tv)
so we could all look at a web page together. It would be a grand home. Homeless? I don't
ever see any homeless. Not in Springfield. And, anyway, didn't Ronald Regan say "the
homeless are homeless, because they choose to be homeless?" If you were to win the
Lottery tomorrow, how would you then live? Would you live, as the rich man in this story?
Would you feed sumptuously? The words used here for the kind of eating this man did daily,
are the same ones used for the celebration banquet given for the Prodigal Son. It was a
feast beyond compare. The rich man ate such a banquet every day. His was not just blatant
consumption. It was gross over-consumption. He wore purple and fine linen the
clothes of royalty and the very, very rich. In those days, there were no utensils. People
ate with their hands. To clean their hands, they used pieces of bread, which they then
threw on the floor. Lazarus wished for one of those "crumbs" the rich man threw
away.
Jesus doesn't tell us the rich man's name, but we would call him - Gates, Murdoch,
Rockefeller. At the gate to his villa, lay a poor beggar. Unlike most of Jesus's other
stories, we know the beggar's name Lazarus, which means "God helps." This
is one of the few stories in which Jesus names a character. Can you imagine the forgiving
father saying each morning, "Come on, Prodigal, time to get up for school?" Or
the wife saying, "Sower, why did you sow those seeds in the weeds?" Did the
shepherdess call her husband Good? No, we know these people by the names of the stories
they inhabit. But in this story, Jesus names a character, Lazarus. The amazing thing is
that Jesus names Lazarus. We would expect him to name the rich man. We admire the rich.
Who wants to be a poor beggar lying in someone's doorway, begging for crumbs while dogs
lick your sores? It was the assumption in Jesus's day that the rich were rich because God
had blessed them for some great thing they had done. The poor were poor because they
wanted to be, or because they had sinned against God. In this parable however, it is the
rich man who ends up in Hades, paying for his sin. Can you imagine how surprised the rich
man was to discover himself in Hell? He surely would have demanded the Grand Jury's
definition of sin, for he had never committed a crime that he could see. He ate well,
dressed well, lived well. But was that a sin? Why Hell? He did nothing. And that's the
point. By doing nothing in the face of such great need, he reduced Lazarus to an object.
His sin was not that he was rich. His sin was his indifference to Lazarus. His attitude
toward the poor man even in the afterlife did not change (he wanted Lazarus to be sent to
him as a servant to help him out, and then to be sent to his brothers to warn them). The
rich man shows no regret for how his indifference affected Lazarus when both were alive,
only for how the reversal in the afterlife has affected him. The rich man had the power to
do something, yet he chose to do nothing. By doing nothing, he disobeyed Moses and the
prophets who, speaking for God, commanded the Israelites to show compassion and
hospitality to the strangers, the widows, the fatherless, and the poor. Lazarus, on the
other hand, did nothing because he was powerless. He was at the mercy of the job market.
Perhaps he was ill in some way or maybe he was an outcast. Jesus didn't say. Only that he
was a poor man, covered with sores. There are many things to which we are indifferent,
which we take for granted. The sunrise, the changing seasons, planting time and harvest
time. When I was in third grade, we lived in Alexandria, Virginia, just outside
Washington, D.C. I remember getting off the school bus one day and seeing the colored
kids' school bus go by on the highway. I wondered where those kids went to school. That
was the way it was. The colored had different schools, different bathrooms, different
drinking fountains, they sat in the back of the bus. It never occurred to me that things
could be, or should be, any different. I didn't know any colored because they didn't go
the places I went. I didn't know that I didn't go the places they went. Then the sixties
came, and the colored started saying "this is not right," as did some white
people. Still, for many people, those changes were an assault on the natural order of
things. It was as though people were trying to change the sunrise to the evening, or the
harvest to springtime. No one had ever considered the possibility that things might be,
could be, should be, different. We weren't indifferent. We didn't even notice. The rich
man didn't even notice Lazarus. He walked out of his gate, on his way to the bath house,
or the marketplace, or the court, not even seeing Lazarus. He stepped over Lazarus, walked
around him, not even realizing Lazarus was there. That is what condemned him.
We'd like to think that things are different, almost forty years after the Civil Rights
movement began. We'd like to think that the War on Poverty has been won, or that people of
all colors are equal. Yet, Will Willimon tells us: In the early 1830's a member of French
nobility visiting America . . . noted that a major characteristic of this young nation was
the pervasive sense of equality. He said that nothing so struck him as the "general
equality of condition among American people" with few who were very rich, and few who
were terribly poor, [he] felt that this was fertile soil for the development of true
democracy. . . . Today, perhaps the most noticeable aspect of American economics and
perhaps the most dangerous aspect of American politics is the growing gap between rich and
poor. . . . Today the gap between the poorest Americans and the wealthiest Americans may
be larger than at any point in the last 50 years. The richest 1% of us have nearly as much
wealth as the entire bottom 95%.
The rich man's sin was not that he was rich. It was his attitude toward Lazarus. Yes,
he could have thrown Lazarus a piece of bread, but that would not have saved him. The
deeper issue is the rich man's unwillingness to enter into relationship with Lazarus. It
is one thing to hand out services and food to the poor, but it is a harder thing to
actually establish a relationship with a child of God who is poor and/or broken. To offer
food and help to the poor is part of the responsibility of the Christian life, but the
real treasure lies in giving of ourselves in relationship. George Buttrick wrote,
"The story offers no support to the glib assumption that [the rich man] would have
fulfilled [his] duty had he dressed Lazarus' sores and fed his hunger. True charity is
more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it is not spasmodic or superficial. Ameliorations
such as food and medicine are necessary, but there is a more fundamental neighborliness.
My friend Steve Taylor tells about an encounter he had: Several years ago, I lived in
Fayetteville, NC and was blessed with the opportunity to spend much time at Maranantha
Ministries, a home and half-way house for men, women, and children. One glorious spring
day, I was sitting on the porch with a woman named Cheryl. We were just sitting and
chatting, watching large puffy white clouds gently dance across the blueist of skies, the
cool breeze lightly brushing our faces. We sat and we rocked, sometimes talking, sometimes
just rocking in silence as we listened to the calming creak of the old chairs. I can still
vividly recall the surreal nature of the experience, as I sat there communing with this
attractive and articulate woman, talking about children, her time in high school and
college, her past experiences as a buyer for one of the largest national retail
chains-sitting and chatting and watching the world go by with this woman who had lost
everything to Crack addiction. Perhaps she felt protected by the beauty of the day,
perhaps she just needed to share her past with someone who was not a preacher, drug
counselor, or fellow addict, but for whatever reason, she chose to share the trauma of her
childhood, the destructive forces which acted on her life, the loss of her mother and the
abuse of her father. For whatever reason, she shared her deepest nightmares and her
greatest dreams. I was overcome by the magnitude of her gift - it was the gift of her
life. As we talked, by and by the conversation turned to our church fellowship on
Wednesday night. All the women and children from Maranantha would come to our church and
join us for dinner and bible study. I always thought it was a joyful occasion where maybe,
just maybe some of those classist barriers fell...where maybe, just maybe, immersed in
this world of "church" we might just be able to move beyond some of those walls
which separate us one from another and ultimately, separate us from God. I remarked that
since we had such a wonderful time on Wednesday night, I just didn't see any reason we
couldn't continue having a wonderful time on Sunday morning. Cheryl looked at me and for a
long moment. She was completely still. She looked at me with sorrow in her eyes and the
shadow of sadness over her face and she slowly said, "We could never go there on
Sunday." And then with more hurt than anger she said, "The people there already
view us as a charity cases. How on Sunday, as they all stood there in their Sunday finest
and we stood there in our cast-off clothing, how could they look at us as anything but
less than human?" And as we sat there watching the wonderment of God's creation, as
we sat there basking in the miracle of Spring, I struggled for a dissenting sentence, some
remark, just a few words that would explain she was wrong. But instead I sat in silence.
For I knew, I knew that she was right, that they
that I, would see her
one
of "those" people.
That was the rich man's sin, he saw Lazarus, if he saw him at all, as one of
"those people."
Yet there is more to this parable than a condemnation of the rich. This parable is also
about hope. It is about Christian hope. For what this parable tells us is that no matter
how bad things get, no matter how difficult life gets, God does notice, and God cares.
Remember Lazarus' name, God helps. God is not indifferent to us, to our situations, to our
hurts. God does notice us, and God cares for each one of us. For the Christian, hope is
not a vaguely optimistic feeling that life will be good. Christian hope is the belief that
the world was created by God, who is good, and that God is at work in the world, and in
us, to bring about good things. We in the church are called to share God's work. And, even
when it looks as if evil is winning, we have God's promise that, in the end, God will win.
Are you Lazarus, or the rich man? It's all a matter of perspective, isn't it? Compared
with Bill Gates, the Vanderbilts or the Rockefellers, we are Lazarus. Yet, all of us are
rich, for we know the Lord. We may not drive Beemers, or Corvettes. We may not wear
designer clothes, or live in mansions. We may never take a cruise, win the lottery, or
remodel our homes. Yet we are rich beyond all measure, for we have been called by God to
share God's work in the world.
How then, shall we, the rich, live?