To read the texts click on the texts: Rom 4:20-25; Lk 12:13-21
The
text begins with someone in the crowd asking Jesus to serve as judge in the
division of an inheritance. While Jesus will not accept this role, he points
the man and the crowd to a different understanding of the meaning of wealth and
life.
This different understanding is explicated through a parable, which is
found exclusively in Luke. It is about a rich man who had more than he required
and soon became possessed by his riches. This possession leads him to focus on
making provision to store his great wealth so that he can use it exclusively
for himself in future. It is self-centeredness at its worst.
The only ones in
the parable are the rich man and his wealth. In the midst of all his planning
and calculations, God speaks to him addressing him as “fool”. There is a sharp
contrast between the rich man’s planning for “many years” and the “this very
night” of God. It is clear that first of all when God calls, he will have to go
and second that when he goes he can take nothing of what he has stored with
him. There is the very real danger of forgetting God if one allows oneself to
be possessed by one’s riches.
The
manner in which some of us accumulate things seems to indicate on the one hand
that we think we are going to live forever and on the other hand that even if
we have to die that we can take all of which we have accumulated.
The parable
of today calls us to realise first that we can be called at any time and hence
must live in such a manner that we will have no regrets no matter when that
might be and second that whenever we are called we can take nothing of what we
have gathered together but will have to leave it all behind. Thus while
planning for the future may be necessary, obsession with the future is uncalled
for.
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