I have a lot of conversations with people that don't go to church and are not really interested in going to church.
One
of the main reasons they give for not going to church is that they will say
that they have learned everything there is to know about being a good person.
Someone
will often say to me something like, "I am a good person. I know what is
the right thing to do so I don't need church."
I
have given other sermons about how the church is not about being a good person.
But
today I want us to think together about what it would actually mean to be a
good person in the world.
Our
Gospel for this morning is for me a good example of why we have not learned
all there is to know about how to navigate the world we live in.
Jesus
tells a fascinating parable.
A
parable that is not easy to interpret.
And
says even, "Make for yourselves friends of dishonest wealth."
That
seems like a really weird thing to say.
What
is Jesus talking about this morning?
What
is Jesus trying to get us to see?
I
want to say off the top that every commentary I read about this text also
struggled with the exact lesson that Jesus is teaching.
But
in order to understand we first need to understand the economic system of first century Palestine under the occupation of the Roman Empire.
In
that system, there was the super-rich.
They
owned the land.
And
they hired people to manage that land.
The
rich owners of the land also paid a tribute to Rome in order to keep that land.
They
passed that expense onto peasants who worked the land, by charging interest on
goods and services they borrowed.
The
managers would also charge interest on what ordinary people borrowed from the
land owners.
This
system actually reminds me of sharecropping in the south after the civil war.
Where
the people actually working the land could never get ahead because the land
owner charged them for everything.
In
the story we see the manager offer the people at the bottom of this system a
way to pay off their debts without interest.
In
this way, he helps the people struggling under the unjust system of the Roman
Empire.
Another
thing we should mention is that under Jewish law it was forbidden to lend
people money with interest.
It
is in the Bible that we should not be lending people things with interest.
The
Bible sees this as an unjust system, and the manager in the story had forgotten
the teachings of his ancestors.
There
is a lot going on.
It
is complicated.
But
for me that is the point.
We
too live in a complex world.
It
is a complex world economically, politically, and socially.
How will we as people of faith navigate our way through it?
How
do we know we are doing the right thing?
How
do we know that we are "good people"?
The
thing about being a "good person" is that we all believe we are good
people.
I
don't know anyone who has ever said to me, "You know pastor I am a real
jerk."
We
are good at convincing ourselves that whatever we think or do is the right
thing to think or do.
I
would argue this morning that the only way we can check ourselves is by
continuing to learn.
It
is through continuing to understand how God works in our lives, and how that
helps us navigate this complex world.
That
begins in Sunday School.
It
begins when we are just learning about the world.
And
it starts in very stark terms.
When
kids are young, we know that developmentally they see the world through right
and wrong, good and bad.
Think
about the way kids talk.
They
will say, "Hey that is not fair".
I
remember when my kids were younger and they would say that to me.
I
would often respond, "Yeah, the world is not fair."
Because
as we grow we see the world in much richer colors.
We
see that there is not always a simple choice between right and wrong.
We
make compromises.
We
can understand that not everyone sees and understands the world the way that we
do.
Hopefully, we come to see that what really holds things together is not an absolute, but
rather grace.
Grace
to help us navigate our lives.
Grace that helps us to be shrewd in this life.
Shrewd
enough to see injustice and expose it for what it is.
Grace
that helps us to see every person as a child of God.
Grace
that helps us to see that God is more important than wealth.
Jesus
this morning only asks us to be shrewd enough to see through the lies of the
world.
Jesus
asks us to be shrewd enough to be able to see through the lie that "greed
is good".
Jesus
asks us to be shrewd enough to put God's grace first in our lives.
And
it is here together that we learn those lessons.
It
is here where we grapple with complex issues together.
This
is what I love about Bible study.
We
will always come across texts like our Gospel this morning.
Texts
that challenge us to think about God differently, or our lives differently.
Texts
that challenge us to ask hard questions about if we are good or not.
Because
being good in this world is harder than you would think.
It
isn't just about being nice.
(Just
to be clear being nice is good.)
But
God demands of us something more.
We
are called to be patient, humble, loving, joyful, hopeful, and grace-filled.
We
are called to care for the least among us.
To
welcome the stranger, feed the hungry, house the homeless, care for the widow, and uplift the broken-hearted.
Anytime
I get to spend with people experiencing poverty I am always amazed at the ways
they are fighting to survive.
I
am amazed at the systems they developed to stay alive and change the economic
systems of the world.
And
they do it with creativity, grace, and love.
It
is really an amazing thing to see.
I
only hope that God gives me the ability to be shrewd in this world.
God
helps me to learn how to fight against oppressive systems.
God
helps me not to become complacent, just because I have all the things I need in
this world.
As
we kick off this year of Christian Education, let us be mindful of why it
matters.
It
matters because we live in a very complex world.
Even
more complex than that of the wealthy landowner and manager in the first century.
We
live in a world where we can be doing what we think is the right thing and not
even realize the damage it is doing to others.
But
that is why we need God, it is why we need church, to grow and learn.
We
come here on Sundays with a desire to grow into the fullness of God's grace.
For
that grace to be what we take into the complex world.
So
that we become shrewd in how we go about our lives.
This
year may we all continue to learn and grow into the fullness of God's grace.
Let
us not fall into the complacency of thinking we are good people, but through God's
grace be willing to learn about how we might learn to be God's people in this
complex world.
Amen
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