Choosing life: Write down what's right
Hespeler, 22 September
2019 © Scott McAndless
Amos 8:4-7, Psalm 113, 1 Timothy
2:1-7, Luke 16:1-13
Here is some very good, very wise
advice from the First Letter of Timothy. “First of all, then, I urge that
supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for everyone, for
kings and all who are in high positions, so that we may lead a quiet and
peaceable life in all godliness and dignity.” Yes, that seems very sensible.
There are powerful people in this world, politicians, corporations, power
brokers, and if you are smart, if you want to choose to have a good and quiet
and peaceable life you are better off not challenging them, but rather seeking
their blessing and, above all, letting them have their way.
We have had a perfect illustration of this
principle on display for us in Hong Kong for many weeks now. The greatest
political power in Hong Kong is the government of the People’s Republic of
China. So, what do you do if you want to have a quiet and peaceable life in
Hong Kong? Well, I’ll tell you what you don’t do. The very last thing you do is
poke China with a great big stick which is basically what the people of Hong
Kong have been doing for weeks now. And the results have been exactly what 1st
Timothy warned against and life in Hong Kong has been anything but peaceable.
So it is true what it says, but at the
same time, I think there must be more we need to take into account because, of
course, there are some good reasons for why the people of Hong Kong have done
what they’ve been doing. They are concerned and fearful for what China might do.
They see injustice that needs to be resisted now, and really don’t feel as if
they have much choice.
And that is the problem. As a general practice,
not resisting and just praying for the people who have power seems like a good policy
that will lead to life, but there are times and circumstances where a different
approach definitely needs to be taken. Sure, it is great when powerful people
are good or, at least competent. But what do you do when they are openly evil
or criminally incompetent? Without naming any names of any particular politicians
(because I know that you are all thinking of particular names yourselves), this
seems to have become a very pressing issue of our times. Even in Canada with
its long tradition of stable government, there are many things that are making
people very nervous about leadership in the midst of a hyper partisan election
season.
Fortunately, the First Letter to Timothy
is not the only biblical advice that we have to go on when faced with such dire
situations. We read a passage from the Book of Amos this morning where the
prophet is bold to take on the rich and powerful people of his day for the ways
in which they make themselves rich at the expense of the poorest people in
society. He doesn’t just pray for them, he criticizes them. You might even say
he gives them hell. So clearly there is more to what the Bible has to say about
dealing with powerful people.
These two competing passages in the Bible
kind of leave us in a difficult position. Often the Bible seems to be telling
us that we should just support and pray for the people who are in charge, and
at other times it encourages us to challenge them, particularly when they go
wrong or do evil. So which message should we listen to? How do we figure out
how we should act to live a truly abundant life?
Well, as usual, Jesus comes to our rescue,
and he does it in one of the most surprising ways possible with the rather
bizarre parable that we read from the Gospel of Luke this morning. Now, if you
are like most people, you will read this parable of Jesus and you will just say,
“huh?” what on earth is going on in this story.
We have a manager, somebody who works for and
takes care of the financial affairs of his boss or master. Except, he is not a
good worker. He is a bad manager who does a bad job and he is about to get fired
because of it. This is the hero of Jesus’ story. And, when he finds out that he’s
about to be fired, this bad employee comes up with a completely self-centered
plot. He doesn’t steal from his boss, not exactly. But he calls in his boss’s
clients and tells them that they can write down the debts that they owe him.
That, in case you’re not clear on the point, is a felony. It is a criminal act
and, once again, this guy is the hero of Jesus’ story? Jesus praises the guy,
and indeed the guy’s own boss praises him as well. “And his master commended the dishonest manager because he had acted
shrewdly,” Jesus says.
So, what are
we supposed to do with this strange parable of Jesus? How can we take it and
apply it to our lives today, because I am telling you that none of you better
take the fact that I am preaching on this parable today and say that I told you
that it is okay for anybody to commit financial fraud. That is exactly the
danger that comes with interpreting a passage like this outside of its
historical context. We have to read it in its context, so what is the context?
Well, there is
something in this parable that we don’t even notice but that would have really
bothered the people who first heard Jesus tell it. It says that the master in
the story had many debtors. We read that and think, “No big deal,” because debt
is a normal part of life and business for us. You need to understand that when
Jesus said that word, debtor, it would have set off alarm bells in the
crowd. Lending anything at interest at that time was illegal. It was contrary
to the law of Moses and anyone who ran a business where he had multiple debtors
would have immediately been regarded with suspicion for breaking that law.
Now, I understand
that that makes absolutely no sense to us. Our modern economy is actually
structured around debt and the paying of interest. Banks and most businesses
could not function without it and our modern economy would likely collapse if
we followed that Old Testament law and outlawed the charging of interest. But
the people in Old Testament times and even in the time of Jesus lived under a
very different economic system. In their world, people didn’t borrow to do
things like start businesses or purchase property. Those weren’t even options.
The only reason why you would borrow in that world was because you were
starving and in dire straits and it was considered to be extremely unethical to
charge interest in that kind of situation.
So that was
the state of the law: lending at interest was illegal. But, as you can imagine,
there were people, like the master in Jesus’ story, who still sought to profit
by lending. So, what do powerful and wealthy people do when they see an
opportunity to make money but the law gets in the way? Do they just shrug their
shoulders and say, oh well, I guess I just can’t do it? Some do, but you know
that there are always some who find a way. And usually the way that you find
has to do with record-keeping.
If it is
illegal to charge somebody interest, and somebody borrows from you, are you
going to get your client to write down in your ledger book, “I, Samuel son of
Bartholomew owe Scott son of William 80 containers of wheat plus 25% annual interest”?
Of course not. You’re not going to write that because you will have now created
a record of your illegal activity. Rich people don’t get rich by being stupid
so they didn’t do that.
But, of
course, you still need records of what people owe you. So what do you do? You
simply get your debtor to write down, “I, Samuel son of Bartholomew owe Scott
son of William 100 containers of wheat in one year,” but you only give them 80
containers of wheat.
And that is
what happened in Jesus’ world. Everyone knew that it happened and everyone
understood how it worked. But the wealthy people who were in charge got away
with it because there was no proof. Now, I know that it might sound a bit like
I’m saying that powerful and wealthy people are all criminals or that they are
naturally unethical. Of course, that is not true. I honestly don’t think that
they are anymore or any less ethical than any other segment of the population.
But one thing has always been true and it’s still true today. Rich and powerful
people who are unethical get away with it way more often than anyone
else.
So, if you
understand all of that, this parable of Jesus suddenly sounds very different. Everybody
understood what Jesus was saying. When the unscrupulous manager called in the
debtors and told them to change the amount that they owed on the record, he was
actually deducting the interest. He is actually making right what was contrary
to the law. And it’s kind of interesting if you do the math. In the case of the
wheat, he removed 25% interest, which is certainly bad enough. I mean, that is
in the area of what you would get from a payday loan company these days. Don’t
ever go to a payday loan company! But in the case of the olive oil, the
interest rate is actually 100%! That is so clearly wrong that I imagine the
people in the crowd gasped when Jesus said it.
And that is
why the crooked manager got away with it. His master could hardly report him
for what he did because that would mean admitting that he had broken the law in
the first place. In fact, as Jesus says, he had to praise him. I can
just imagine the press conference: “I’d like to thank my manager for drawing my
attention to the errors made in my accounts where the amounts that people owed
were inflated for some unexplained reason. The people responsible for this
mistake will be found and fired.” He didn’t want to say that, he had to say it.
It also
explains, of course, how Jesus can portray this manager as a kind of hero. It’s
not because his actions are all right but because his self-centered actions
nevertheless resulted in some justice. What he had the people write down was
what was right according to Jesus and corrected the injustice committed by the
master.
Now, the
application of this parable can be a little bit tricky. As I said, I don’t want
anyone to take this parable as saying that it’s okay for anyone to commit
financial fraud. I don’t think that was ever the intention. At the same time, I
don’t think that a direct application of the morality of Jesus’ time to today
is very helpful either. Just because the charging of interest was immoral in
the economy of Jesus’ world, doesn’t mean that there is not a legitimate place
for it today.
No, I think
that you need to be a little more subtle when applying this one. The specific
actions taken by the crooked steward are not really something to be followed
literally. I think it’s more of a case of Jesus speaking to the people and
saying, “Look, things are pretty messed up in our world. I mean, when you have
people being charged 100% interest on olive oil, you’ve got problems. But look
here,” he’s saying, “here’s some justice that got done maybe despite the intentions
of everyone involved. Isn’t God amazing?” That’s what Jesus was saying.
But even more
important than that, Jesus is saying that there are ways to write down what’s
right. Maybe the rich and powerful people hold all the cards. Maybe you can’t
challenge them directly. Maybe the wise thing to do is to show that outward
support and pray for them. But maybe God will also send you opportunities to
act for justice, to write down what’s right, and you should take them when they
come. I mean, look what a crooked, conniving and self-centered steward was able
to accomplish. Now, what do you think might happen when the children of light
find their ways to work behind the scenes to write down what’s right.
Choose life;
choose justice. The two don’t have to be at odds with each other.
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