Sermon Luke 12:13-21 August 4, 2019
The Guard of our Heart
Psalm 121 is a psalm that provides comfort and offers
the reminder that in all things God is with us. In the NRSV it goes like this: I lift up my eyes to the hills—
from where will my help come?
2 My help comes from the Lord,
who made heaven and earth.
from where will my help come?
2 My help comes from the Lord,
who made heaven and earth.
3 He will not let your foot be moved;
he who keeps you will not slumber.
4 He who keeps Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.
he who keeps you will not slumber.
4 He who keeps Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.
5 The Lord is your keeper;
the Lord is your shade at your right hand.
6 The sun shall not strike you by day,
nor the moon by night.
the Lord is your shade at your right hand.
6 The sun shall not strike you by day,
nor the moon by night.
7 The Lord will keep you from all evil;
he will keep your life.
8 The Lord will keep
your going out and your coming in
from this time on and forevermore.
he will keep your life.
8 The Lord will keep
your going out and your coming in
from this time on and forevermore.
In this psalm it is clear to the
reader that the Lord is the guard of our hearts, our lives and our very being.
Our children’s catechism begins with the question, “who am I?” and we all
answer, “I am a child of God.” From the beginning to our very end we belong to
God. When we remember this, it becomes the heart of all of our life and our
decisions. It isn’t just on Sundays or on days when we find ourselves worried
about a moral dilemma.
God isn’t the guardian of our hearts when we are in poor
health or in need of our prayers to be answered.
God is our guardian from our
going out and our coming in, from this time and forever more.
With this understanding of God’s
ever-presence we find ourselves without excuse for not consulting God in of our
circumstances, whether we are rich or poor or satisfied or hungry, filled with
abundance or scraping the barrel.
God insists that we belong to him in all of
this.
Strange isn’t it that when it comes
to money, parables about money, straight talk from Jesus about money, anything
written in the Bible about money, we preachers completely avoid it. There is a
fear of preaching these Biblical texts. The fear that one of may be offended.
There is a fear to speak of these texts because it can mis-interpreted into a
need for more funds for the church and the preacher is finding him/herself
caught up in the annual capital campaign for the church. There is a legitimate
fear of preaching or even talking about these texts of money because they speak
directly to our hearts, our nature, our real personhood.
The heart of this story
reveals the greed, the idolatry of this man. The last thing we want to do is
relate to a man in a parable that has a poor heart toward God.
If I had had time this
week, it would have been delightful to turn this parable into one of the skits
similar to what our youth did all week at VBS. The skits were hilarious and
brought the point home of what was most important in each of the stories. The
children were really able to understand the power of God’s love within them as
it related to faith, boldness, kindness, thankfulness, and hope.
The parable is
self-explanatory and really needs no interpretation.
Perhaps what is most
important with this text is our self-reflection.
Let’s consider together a
few elements of the parable.
It starts
out with a man asking Jesus to arbitrate a family dispute.
How many police
officers have been trained to save lives, to help people in trouble, to really be there to defend us-but spend more time arriving at homes caught trying to solve domestic disputes that have gone violent?
Jesus warns the man that
he will not come between he and his brother, but tells him to be on guard for
greed.
Perhaps, the question before we enter into the parable is to ask
ourselves where do we find greed in our life?
Where do we find ourselves
worried about the fairness of life? Because life is not fair-it is truly not fair.
Where are we screaming to our moms that our
brother has the bigger piece of cake?
Where are we more concerned about what we
believe is ours than we are about our relationship?
Where is it more important
in our lives to build up bigger and bigger things, our reputation, visual
wealth, positions, name dropping, tall, tall silos, than it is to spend time in
prayer consulting with God regarding our decisions?
Jesus enters into this
parable to respond to the man who is worried about what his brother will do
with his inheritance.
We discover the man in the parable only considers his soul as
a storehouse. This man has great wealth but only talks to himself about what to
do with it. He shows no gratitude to God.
He neither prays, nor kneels, nor
offers up anything in appreciation to God.
He doesn’t show gratitude to any of
the workers who helped him achieve his wealth. He doesn’t show any gratitude to
his family or his neighbors. The man in the parable is living his life in a selfish bubble.
The man fails to realize
that all he plans to do requires the work of the hands of others. He has
ignored completely the process of how he was able and continues to be able to
live a life of wealth. He can do nothing on his own and yet assumes he is
alone. And this is where God and God’s laws come in.
The condition is not that
wealth or building storehouses or being rich is bad. Nor is it bad for those
who are seeking to improve their lives to gain a better foothold in life, who
struggle and scrimp and save to make ends meet, is also not bad or good or
anything in between. But, where is God?
If our idolatry is the
paycheck, the 401k, the social security, the inheritance from our family, then
these things come first in our thoughts and our planning and our relationships
and we have considered our "self-interest as our cardinal virtue". (Quote from Working Preacher) This is where
Jesus is rebuking the brother who wants Jesus to act as executor. This world
view ruins relationships. It ruins how we approach God and how we approach
everyone in our family and in our life.
The tenth commandment is
probably the hardest commandment of them all. We have all fallen to it. We do
not see the wealth in our own home but see it beyond our walls. The Lord comes
to us with gentleness in many things but he comes to us without shame and with
boldness when it comes to our allegiances.
Jesus offers the truth in
this parable about who and whose we are. It is not a parable to those who have
great wealth or live comfortably to feel guilty at all. When there are those
who accumulate and enjoy the life and the possessions they have, all with the
understanding that these do not define them, they live their life of faith with
fullness.
The point isn’t the possessions but the greed and the idolatry.
Our
hearts our very being belong to God and God is jealous of our allegiance to
anything else.
What a joyful gift that is to know how much God really wants to
be fully present with us at all times and through all things.
Jesus is the guard of our
hearts. He wants to be first. He wants us to put all else aside and seek him in
all things.
Seek the kingdom of God and all these things shall be added unto
you.
Let us call upon God to come by here and reside in us, reside in our
hearts now and forever. Amen.
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