Jesus
was never particularly soft on rich people.
“Good teacher,” the young man asks, “What must I do to inherit eternal
life?”
His
question is one that all the faithful ask at one time or another; the rich
young ruler’s words are echoed in my own thoughts. His question resounds with the individuality
that we’ve come to expect today; it is doused with a liberal dose of
flattery. “What must I do…?”
There is no need to hear what anyone else should do; the only important
person is me. All the others who are listening are inconsequential to me because I
have everything – I am young, I am rich and I am in charge of a rabble much
like this. I know just enough to be dangerous and I am pious enough to fake my
way through the religious shallows of life.
I
stand back in the shadows of this story, smirk on lips, as Jesus brings this
arrogant young man back to reality.
Enough of the flattery – don’t presume to know who I am by simply
because you’ve heard my name in the streets:
“Why do you call me good?” You
don’t know anything about me. You’ve
been raised in a religious family. You
can repeat the commandments, I’m sure – “Do not commit adultery.” Interesting that Jesus puts this commandment
first for the rich man because he is probably unaware that his own love affair
with himself and his wealth had broken the back of the commandments in his life
for most of his adult existence. “Do not murder, do not steal, do not give
false testimony, honor your father and your mother.”
Jesus
doesn’t even put the commandments in the right order. Didn’t he ace his confirmation lessons?
My
guess is that Jesus was watching this young man very closely. Inwardly, the young man might be checking off
the list of the commandments on his fingers and piously - and shallowly -
examining his own life.
You
can almost see him blowing on his knuckles and polishing them on his
chest. “All these I have kept since I
was a boy.” Maybe his voice was raised
so that the entire crowd could witness the blessing that would be coming from
the ‘good teacher’ for his righteousness from birth. It was obvious, wasn’t it, that he was born
under a lucky star – fame, fortune and glory followed him. Now, it was only a matter of time that God’s
almighty presence would bestow spiritual glory also.”
“You
still lack one thing,” Jesus says.
Standing
the in the back of the crowd, the shadows wrapping me and my voice like a
blanket, hiding me from the rich ruler’s eyes, “Yes, Jesus, give it to
him. He lacks humility. He lacks empathy. He lacks generosity. He lacks all the good things that any
self-respecting Christian would covet – peace, patience, meekness" – I use my
fingers as counting tools, checking them off in my own external judgment of
this man that I so desperately want to be.
I want his looks, his past, his future, his money – I feel dis-comfortable
with my own lack of resources which make me doubt God’s existence and blessing.
And
in my own casting of the first stone, I would guess that Jesus eyes turn towards
me and he points the same finger at me, “Sell everything you have and give it
to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.”
To
contemporary western Christian culture there are no harder words that Jesus
spoke. Sell everything – not just the
things that you’ve outgrown and grown to dislike – but everything. Sell it all and give it to the poor.
Surely
Jesus isn’t serious. Selling everything
would swap me positions with the poor.
Then I would be one of them. Then
I would have to depend on other people.
Then I would have to depend on God…
Then,
I get it. The impossibility of the
scenario that Jesus places before us is that it is easier for a camel to pass
through the eye of a needle than it is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of
God – whatever (and wherever) that is.
All the storing up that I’ve done for myself, my addiction to having
enough for tomorrow and the next day, all the manna that has fallen from heaven
into my lap, the blessing of God’s daily goodness, has been stored up and
rotted because I have collected so much stuff that I no longer need God.
My
soul has begun to decompose under the detritus weight of my idolatry.
Those
that no longer need God no longer see the kingdom of heaven as a treasure and
they then fail to realize that the pressure of protecting the things with which
they been gifted is a betrayal of God’s blessing in and to this world. When all of our treasures on earth are
rusting and our clothing becomes moth-eaten and moldy, we recognize how traitorous
we have become.
Back
to the garage sale, I guess.
If
Jesus says to the rich man (and I certainly am one of those attempting to hide
in the crevices of affluence) “Go and sell all that you have and give to the
poor,” I guess it’s time for one more excruciating episode of hauling what I
once thought to be treasures out the door to be sold on the pavement of my
driveway for less than one hundredth of what I bought them for. Each item, whether table or table cloth, with
memory attached, will be priced to sell.
Early morning garage sailors will be swarming around our lane, picking
through our things before we’ve even put up the sign. I want to slap their hands away, chastise
them for their rudeness because I know in my heart of hearts that they aren’t
the poor that Jesus is talking about. I
pull out the garage sale chair, watch baseball with my little girls,and
hope that Jesus can see my sad face as all these memories are sold.
But
then I read a little farther in the New Testament, in I Corinthians 13, the
amazingly repeated scripture that is used ad
nauseum at almost every wedding that I’ve officiated. Almost always we start at verse four: love is
patient and kind – check… but almost always we skip the first three verses.
Let me
show you the most excellent way.
If I
speak in tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am only a
resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. If
I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and
if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am
nothing. If I give all I possess to the
poor and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain nothing.
Shedding
my things might be hard, but added to the recipe is a full measure of
love. That might be even more
difficult. But when we truly understand
love in this world, a love that always looks outward and away from self: an agape kind of love expressed by God in
his son, Jesus, the pain of loss morphs into something different.
Joy.
Not
happiness. But joyful contentedness in
whatever might happen and the true blessing of shedding that which is
conceivably dearest to me is a genuine need to depend on God and others. In those dependent relationships we find
freedom. Strange, isn’t it? The bondage of mammon enslaves us to selfishness, but the freedom of a Christian
binds us to God.
1 comment:
The “sell” in this passage has always meant to me that all my stuff needs to be second to God.
Our stuff should not stand between us and our discipleship and our Christian calling.
We need to take our stewardship seriously. We need to resist the pressures of a consumer culture which puts us in constant need of more and newer possessions. Our priorities and commitments cannot be divided.
Contentment is a worthy goal! It is indeed different than happiness. I think it feels better than happiness. It is more of a comfort feeling or being at ease.
I absolutely love your last sentence, Reid (I had to look up the word mammon). It is worth repeating:
The bondage of mammon enslaves us to selfishness, but the freedom of a Christian binds us to God. I would add: and the love pours in.
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