This Sunday’s gospel lesson (Luke 16:1-13) contains a
parable that gives me great trouble. The parable of the dishonest manager is so
strange, so confusing, so…wrong!, that I read it and read it and look for a
clear answer only to find half-guesses and unconvincing conjectures. Whether
you’re preaching on Sunday or simply showing up to hear a sermon, you’d better
start preparing now if it’s going to make any sense.
Speaking to his disciples, Jesus tells the story of a dishonest
manager whose master had discovered his treachery. When an account of his
management was demanded by the owner, the manager panicked. “What will I do? I
am not strong enough to be a laborer, and I am too arrogant to beg.” After
considering his options, he did what many people in a similar position would do—make
friends with his master’s creditors by using under-the-table deals to curry
favor with them. “What, you owe my master 100 jugs of oil? Make it 50! And you—you
owe 100 containers of wheat? Make it 80!” Then, what is surely the manager’s
worst nightmare comes true: the master discovers the plot. And then the
unthinkable happens. The owner praises the dishonest, deceitful,
self-interested manager for his shrewdness.
What? Just in case the disciples missed the point, Jesus
finishes by saying, “Make friends for yourselves by means of dishonest wealth
so that when it is gone, they may welcome you into the eternal homes.”
Yeah, that’s right. Crazy town. How do we deal with this
madness? What do you do with a dishonest manager who neglects his duties in
order to provide a golden parachute for himself? You praise him for his
cunning. What is the lesson we are supposed to learn from this bizarre parable?
Use whatever means necessary to make sure you’ll be taken care of in the end. I
can’t wait to hear how the children’s sermon in children’s chapel goes.
Really, though, what’s the point? I think the mistake is
trying to read too much into this. The preacher who attempts to cast this
parable as Jesus’ prescription for the entire Christian life will find herself
or himself in some trouble. The point can’t be that we’re supposed to be
dishonest. But it also can’t be a sarcastic or satirical portrayal. I don’t
think Luke would have portrayed Jesus telling a parable whose meaning isn’t apparent
to the reader. And that’s where I think we should stay—on the surface.
This parable is about doing whatever it takes to get a place
in the kingdom. Period. Say no more than that. It’s not about honesty v.
dishonest. It’s not about a heartless owner who demands too much interest from those
to whom he lends. It’s not about Jesus calling into question the capitalist
influences that are taking over first-century Palestine. It’s about kingdom-first
living.
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