Teachings of Jesus (Part 28) The Crooked
Servant and Us
Read Luke 16:1-13 “Jesus told his disciples: “There was a rich man whose manager was accused of wasting his possessions. 2 So he called him in and asked him, ‘What is this I hear about you? Give an account of your management, because you cannot be manager any longer.’
3 “The manager said to himself, ‘What shall I do now? My master is taking away my job. I’m not strong enough to dig, and I’m ashamed to beg— I know what I’ll do so that, when I lose my job here, people will welcome me into their houses.’
5 “So he called in each one of his master’s debtors. He asked the first, ‘How much do you owe my master?’
6 “‘Nine hundred gallons of olive oil,’ he replied.
“The manager told him, ‘Take your bill, sit down quickly, and make it four hundred and fifty.’
7 “Then he asked the second, ‘And how much do you owe?’
“‘A thousand bushels of wheat,’ he replied.
“He told him, ‘Take your bill and make it eight hundred.’
8 “The master commended the dishonest manager because he had acted shrewdly. For the people of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own kind than are the people of the light. 9 I tell you, use worldly wealth to gain friends for yourselves, so that when it is gone, you will be welcomed into eternal dwellings.
10 “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with very little will also be dishonest with much. 11 So if you have not been trustworthy in handling worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches? 12 And if you have not been trustworthy with someone else’s property, who will give you property of your own?
13 “No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.”
A Senator by the name of Huey Long was trying to get reelected to the Senate. He was campaigning in southern Louisiana where he was taken aside by a local politician and reminded that he would be speaking to a lot of Catholic voters. Throughout the day Huey told his audiences how as a boy he would get up at six o’clock on Sunday mornings, hitch the family horse to the buggy and take his Catholic grandparents to mass. After he brought them home, he would turn around and take his Baptist grandparents to church.
At the end of the day, the, local politician complimented Huey and expressed his surprise at learning he had Catholic grandparents, to which Huey Long replied: “Don’t be a fool. We didn’t even have a horse.”
At the end of the day, the, local politician complimented Huey and expressed his surprise at learning he had Catholic grandparents, to which Huey Long replied: “Don’t be a fool. We didn’t even have a horse.”
Is this story meant to edify? Would you like to be someone like this? No both of these guys, the one in Jesus’ story and the one I told about the politician were rascals, crooks, liars, and all around pretty unquestionable people.
These stories are not good examples of how we are to live our lives. But this is just the kind of story Jesus told, about this crook, the dishonest steward who was commended despite his dishonesty.
He had cheated his boss and was being fired. But before he lost his job, he thought about how he would take care of himself. He was used to a good living and couldn’t bear to dig ditches or beg, so he decided that the people who owed his boss money would be grateful to him, if their bill could be changed. So, he invited these debtors in, and he told them that they could change their bill.
Well, his boss finds out about it and instead of becoming angry, he commends the guy for using his head, for thinking fast on his feet, so that he would be taken care of in the future.
Jesus was using humor, dry humor to make a point. There is a bit of irony in this story. Now we aren’t to be like this dishonest steward in his dishonest deeds, but I believe Jesus’ point is this, this guy used his head, his wits to figure out how he could get himself out of such a desperate situation.
Jesus is letting his disciples know with a great force, with a dry sense of humor, that the men of the world are outsmarting the men of light, those of faith. This conniving rogue faced the facts, sized up a situation and acted with quick, cold logic. Jesus wished that his followers would do as much from nobler motives.
Jesus is saying, if only the Christian was as eager and ingenious in his attempt to attain goodness as the men of the world are in their attempts to attain money and comfort. I believe that Jesus wants us to act with the same wit and intensity in our discipleship toward him as the rascals, cheats, and crooks act in their attempt to gain comfort and wealth for themselves.
If crooks and those who are only looking out for their own welfare are so ingenious and can act so decisively about things that really don’t matter in the long run, why does a Christian seem so casual about the care of his/her soul? Do we as Christians work as hard at our discipleship in following Jesus, as the two business men in the following story do and trying to cheat people?
“Two partners had a clothing store. One would stay in the back room while the other waited on the people. The one waiting on the people would pretend he was hard of hearing. When a customer would choose a suit he liked, he would ask the price. The clerk would call to his partner in the back room, “How much is this suit, Harry?” Harry would reply loud and clear so the customer would be sure to hear, “$149.00”
The clerk would then say,” He said it is $129.00.”
The clerk would then say,” He said it is $129.00.”
Many people would hurry and buy the suit for $129.00, thinking they were making a good deal because the person waiting on them did not hear the right price. Little did the customer realize that his greed cost him several dollars. The same suit sold for $119.00 or less in other places.”
These two men went to great lengths to assure themselves of a quick sale and a comfortable living at the cost of cheating the public. But do we as children of the light, as Jesus describes those who follow him, act with the same intensity, the same effort in living for Jesus???
Do we practice our prayer life with the same intensity as a professional athlete practices to improve his skills? I read in the Reader’s Digest about a golfer who wanted to make the professional golfers tour, the article said the man practiced so long and so hard that his hands would frequently bleed at the end of the practice session. How many of us have bleeding hands because we have folded them in prayer for so long and with such intensity? Do we have such drive to communicate with God, as that golfer did in trying to put a little ball in a little cup so that he could make big money?
Do you see the point Jesus is making in this parable? He is saying that since the people of the world are so motivated and intense in their way of life, ‘why aren’t my followers?’ If the crooks of the world will stop at nothing to make money, if the professional athlete will practice long and hard to become good, why aren’t those who follow Jesus as committed to Him with such zeal, ambition, and dedication? Jesus says, “for the sons of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation than the sons of light”. Jesus is saying, why aren’t you as committed to me with such shrewdness as the sons or people of this world are in looking out for themselves?
This parable isn’t so much about money, or commending a person for being dishonest, rather this parable is more about one’s commitment or discipleship toward Jesus.
Jesus wants our lifestyle committed to Him. He wants the way we act, the way we think, the way we make decisions, the way we interact with others, all to be influenced by our commitment to Him.
Jesus wants our lifestyle committed to Him. He wants the way we act, the way we think, the way we make decisions, the way we interact with others, all to be influenced by our commitment to Him.
Jesus doesn’t want us for only one hour a week on Sunday morning, rather He wants every hour every day, He wants an intensity in that relationship that comes before anything else on this earth. And he wants us to work at that commitment. Not take it for granted, or leave it all up to him, but he wants our active participation in this relationship.
In this relationship we have with Jesus, we should come to experience His love for us, and then should we take that love and pay it forward to others. We should become like a tool in His hand, or the incarnate presence of Jesus’ in a world that is crying out for someone to care. Jesus wants our presence in the world to be intense, fully commitment to bring His love into all that brokenness.
In this relationship we have with Jesus, we should come to experience His love for us, and then should we take that love and pay it forward to others. We should become like a tool in His hand, or the incarnate presence of Jesus’ in a world that is crying out for someone to care. Jesus wants our presence in the world to be intense, fully commitment to bring His love into all that brokenness.
The gentlemen in the following story is an example of the kind of person Jesus is talking about.
“This man was a retired farmer who was devoutly religious. Each day of his life, he would offer in prayer the names of his offspring, extending to those who were even in the 5th generation. Every day he would pray for these children, and many generations of great grandchildren. He would offer in prayer the needs, the joys, the heartache, the events of celebration that came into their lives and also into his life. He felt that if he prayed for them, if he communicated to God how indeed important all their souls and lives were to him, God would indeed be faithful and play an active part in their lives. But as these generations grew, some would feel awkward and ashamed at his open faith and his reminder that daily he was praying for them, because many of them did not have a relationship to this God that was so important in this man’s life.
When the old gentleman died, one member who was of the third generation finally realized what had been happening in his life.
“This man was a retired farmer who was devoutly religious. Each day of his life, he would offer in prayer the names of his offspring, extending to those who were even in the 5th generation. Every day he would pray for these children, and many generations of great grandchildren. He would offer in prayer the needs, the joys, the heartache, the events of celebration that came into their lives and also into his life. He felt that if he prayed for them, if he communicated to God how indeed important all their souls and lives were to him, God would indeed be faithful and play an active part in their lives. But as these generations grew, some would feel awkward and ashamed at his open faith and his reminder that daily he was praying for them, because many of them did not have a relationship to this God that was so important in this man’s life.
When the old gentleman died, one member who was of the third generation finally realized what had been happening in his life.
Since the moment of his birth, this man had been daily saying his name in prayer. In his mind’s eye, he could now picture this man with his arms and hands uplifted in prayer, heavy with the weight of the entire family, heavy with the weight of his life that needed that kind of prayer that he had not said on his own.
He approached the casket the reached out and touched his grandfather’s hands. It was a belated, but heartfelt act of gratitude and thanksgiving for all the prayers that had been offered.”
He approached the casket the reached out and touched his grandfather’s hands. It was a belated, but heartfelt act of gratitude and thanksgiving for all the prayers that had been offered.”
But sad to say, many people of faith have little intensity, make little effort to portray the love of Christ in their lives or in the lives of others.
This parable is not about money, but about commitment, and really giving of one’s self to Jesus.
This parable is not about money, but about commitment, and really giving of one’s self to Jesus.
I read a story which addresses about a church which became like this. I hope that this will never be said of us:
‘A young pastor was called to a small town in Iowa. He had tried for several months to move the people to a more dedicated Christian life. He visited the membership faithfully. Worked diligently on his sermons. But to no available.
‘A young pastor was called to a small town in Iowa. He had tried for several months to move the people to a more dedicated Christian life. He visited the membership faithfully. Worked diligently on his sermons. But to no available.
He felt his flock, his church was dead. So the pastor placed a notice in the local paper stating that since the church was dead, it was his duty to give it a decent Christian burial. The funeral would be held the following Sunday morning.
Morbidly curious, the whole town turned out for the funeral. In front of the church the people could see a large casket covered with flowers, he read an eulogy, delivered a sermon on how the church had suffered a slow and painful death.
Then he invited the congregation to step forward and pay their last respects to the departed. As they filed by, each one peeked into the casket and quickly turned away with a guilty sheepish look. For in the casket, titled at the correct angle, contained a large mirror. Everyone saw his/her own reflection as perhaps never before!!
The following Sunday, the congregation was in their pews and waiting for the pastor as they realized what indeed the church, the body of Christ was all about. It is about souls, and discipleship, commitment and surrendering one’s whole life over to Christ.”
The following Sunday, the congregation was in their pews and waiting for the pastor as they realized what indeed the church, the body of Christ was all about. It is about souls, and discipleship, commitment and surrendering one’s whole life over to Christ.”
As I mentioned, I pray that our church will never become so complacent.
Jesus closes this parable with a statement which strikes to the heart of the matter as he says: “No servant can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and Mammon.”
Jesus closes this parable with a statement which strikes to the heart of the matter as he says: “No servant can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and Mammon.”
John Ruskin a famous preacher of days gone by, said this as he watched a lamplighter lighting the gas street light . “Now that is what I mean by a Christian. You ought to be able to see where he has been by the lights that he leaves burning behind him.”
Is your light burning for Christ for others to see clearly??
Is your light burning for Christ for others to see clearly??
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