2015-06-21 Luke 12:15-21 Money Matters (2): Tonight Could Be The Night
Notes
Transcript
MONEY MATTERS (2): TONIGHT COULD BE THE NIGHT
(Luke 12:15-21)
June 21, 2015
Intro – Life is very temporary. A 19th century American tourist visited Polish
rabbi Hofetz Chaim. Astonished at the simple home he found – a single room
filled with books, a table and bench, the tourist asked, “Rabbi, where is your
furniture?” “Where is yours?” asked the rabbi. The American replied,
“Mine? But I am a visitor here. I am only passing through.” “So am I,”
replied the rabbi. And so are we all. But you’d never know it by how we live.
Our actions often say, “Life is stuff.” Jesus begs to differ. V. 15, “for one’s life
does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” Life isn’t stuff.
We’ve entitled this series (13-21) “Money matters” because we get great
insight into Jesus’ teaching on money here.
The Inquiry (13) – Last week we saw Jesus teaching with urgency on the
unpardonable sin and the need to fear the Lord who can cast you into hell. But
some lightweight interrupts, “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance
with me.” Jesus’ message means nothing. He wants to use Jesus to straighten
out his brother. He is fixated on some 20-30 year portion of his eternal
existence. He’s a fool – using Jesus instead of worshiping Him.
The Interdiction (14) – Thus Jesus rebukes his short-sightedness. Jesus
didn’t come to judge between trivial matters of insanely small importance.
He’s not come to give us what we think will make our lives; He has come to
be our life. His claims force us to a decision point, and that is what He is
doing here. That leads to the next 3 parts of this account.
III.
The Instruction (15)
15 And he said to them, “Take care, and be on your guard against all
covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his
possessions.” Here is the key phrase in the whole passage: “one’s life does not
consist in the abundance of his possessions.” “Life isn’t stuff.” Jesus warns,
“Guard against covetousness.” You are responsible. Don’t let this dominate.
The root word in covetousness is “to have”. To have what? Just, to have. That
is the heart of covetousness. It wants to have. Whatever it already has, it
wants to have more. It’s a thirst that is never quenched. It is like a man on the
ocean who is dying of thirst. He drinks the only thing available – the salty
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ocean water. That only makes him more thirsty. So he drinks again and again
until his thirst kills him. That’s how covetousness destroys. Ecc 5:10: “He
who loves money will not be satisfied with money.” No matter how much he
gets, he will always want more. Why? Paul tells us in Col 3:5, “Put to death
therefore what is earthly in you: sexual immorality, impurity, passion, evil
desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry.” No wonder covetousness kills.
It’s an idol – something we love more than God – and idols always promise
what they cannot deliver and eventually kill. Covetousness is a fool’s game.
Covetousness is insidious because we don’t see it in ourselves. We are blind to
this condition. St. Francis of Assisi said, “Men have confessed to me every
known sin except the sin of covetousness.” Money sickness hides inside us,
like cancer cells that lie dormant inside the body for years before they kill! So
Jesus says, “Watch out! Be on your guard against all covetousness.” Send in a
“seek and destroy” mission against hidden covetousness cells. It’s there.
Jesus never says, “Watch out! Be on guard against adultery.” Why? Because
it’s not as destructive as greed? No. It’s because adultery isn’t as deceptive as
greed. You know when you are committing adultery – outwardly or in your
mind. You know. But you almost never know when you’ve gotten into the
equally soul-destroying sin of greed, money sickness. We see it in others;
we’re blind to it in ourselves. Tim Keller tells of doing a series of weekly
sermons on the 7 deadly sins. His wife said, “You watch. The lowest
attendance will be for greed.” Keller says, “She was right. They said, ‘Pride
– oh, I do that. Lust – yeah.’ They even came out for sloth, which amazed
me. But not greed. Why? Not because they were resentful. They just said,
‘Not me. Moi materialistic? Not me.” It’s hides from us, Beloved. We won’t
find it until too late unless we smoke it out. Our affluence hides our greed.
We must always question: Do you really need that? Do you really need more?
Could we live more simply? Am I comparing with others? Is this what God
wants us to do with His money? It is His, after all. We’re just stewards.
Jesus gives perspective: “for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his
possessions.” He uses zoe here, quality of life. Real life is not things! The
word “abundance” means excess, more than enough. Jesus is saying, “Even
if you have way more than you need – that’s not real life.” You’d think so to
watch us. The more the better. But Jesus warns, “That’s way too shortsighted.” Enjoy what God gives. But don’t get fooled into thinking that is
what life is all about. Even if it brought you some measure of comfort and
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ease for 60 years – what about the eternity to follow? Mark Twain defined
civilization as “a limitless multiplication of unnecessary necessities.” Most of
what we want is an unnecessary necessity. We’re like the desert tribe moving
to a new oasis. To get rid of some of some old things they held a mirage sale.
That’s things – a mirage! They look so real -- but have a very limited lifetime.
In The Treasure Principle, Randy Alcorn says, Suppose you follow a bunch of
pickups loaded with computers, stereo systems, furniture, appliances, fishing
gear, and toys. Eventually you reach a parking lot and everyone begins
unloading their cargo over a cliff. You look down and realize you’re at a
landfill, a junkyard – the final resting place for stuff. Sooner or later
everything we own ends up there. Everything. Even the recycled stuff.
Christmas and birthday gifts, cars, boats, hot tubs, clothes, stereos, bar-b-ques.
All the treasures that we scratched and clawed and sacrificed character and
marriages for. It all ends up at the dump! Every single little piece. Because
“one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” People last
forever, but the stuff will all get left behind. Life is not stuff. That instructive.
IV.
The Illustration (16-20)
To drive His point home, Jesus gives an illustration to the
whole crowd: 16And he told them a parable, saying, “The land of a rich
man produced plentifully, 17 and he thought to himself, ‘What shall I do, for I
have nowhere to store my crops?’ 18 And he said, ‘I will do this: I will tear
down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and
my goods. 19 And I will say to my soul, “Soul, you have ample goods laid up
for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.” ’ 20 But God said to him, ‘Fool!
This night your soul is required of you, and the things you have prepared,
whose will they be?’ Okay. This guy had a retirement plan. Store up as much
as you can for 65 years – get the bank account flowing over. Then live it up
for the next 15. Sound familiar. That’s the retirement plan for 95% of the
people living in America. How could we criticize it when we are living it! The
60/20 or 65/15 plan.
What does God think of the plan? He answers in one word, “Fool!” “You
fool!” Now, listen. This is the only time in the Bible where God directly calls
someone a fool. Jesus calls the Pharisees fools once in Mt 23:17. Otherwise,
this is it. So, if your retirement plan looks like this and you don’t want on
God’s fool list, you might want to listen up. 3 reasons this guy was a fool.
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. He Was Self-Centered, Not Other-centered – He had forgotten. We are
gifted to give, not to hoard. Every effort of his life was aimed at his own
comfort and ease. And now he was ready for the payoff. He had no thought of
sharing his excess. He had a common philosophy. “I earned it; I’ll spend it.
God had nothing to do with it. I worked hard for everything I got.” I think
God might have something to say to that, don’t you? “You earned it? Who
gave you the health that enabled you to work? Who gave you the skills that
brought success? Who caused the seed to grow or the weather to cooperate or
the market conditions to flourish at just the right time or a thousand other
events outside your control? Who gave you life to begin with? You? All you
did was maximize my gifts. But I didn’t gift you so you can spend it all on
yourself. You are gifted to give, not to get.”
Eph 4:28: “Let the thief no longer steal, but rather let him labor, doing honest
work with his own hands, so that [he can put away for retirement! Is that what
it says? No, so that] he may have something to share with anyone in need.”
God’s not against preparing for retirement, Beloved. But it must be in the
context of sharing what He gives us with those in need. Prov 21:26, “All day
long he craves and craves, but the righteous gives and does not hold back.”
I Jn 3:17, “But if anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need,
yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him?” God gifts
us so we can share. Just like His own Son: “For you know the grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor,
so that you by his poverty might become rich” (II Cor 8:9). That’s the example
and it was the last thing on this guy’s mind. He was selfish to the core, and
selfish people are fools. J. Vernon McGee exemplifies them with a poem: “I
had a little tea party / This afternoon at three. / ‘Twas very small -- / Three
guests in all / Just I, Myself and Me. / Myself ate all the sandwiches, / While
I drank up the tea. / ‘Twas also I who ate the pie / And passed the cake to
Me.” Is that us, Beloved? Oh, maybe we slip a sandwich to someone on rare
occasions –to salve our conscience. But our heart is not in it. And it counts for
nothing. We’re like the self-centered young lady of whom it was said, “Edith
lived in a little world, bounded on the north, south, east and west -- by
Edith.” Is it possible that we are also living a fool’s existence?
. He was Earth-Centered, Not Heaven-Centered – His every effort was to
build up his worldly portfolio. He gave no thought to laying up treasure in
heaven. He lived like this life is all there is. If that’s true, his plans make
sense. Work for 60, party for 20. “You only go round once, so get all the
gusto you can.” Makes sense – if this is all there is, right? Why not? Peggy
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Lee was right when she sang, “Is that all there is, is that all there is / If that's
all there is my friends, then let's keep dancing / Let's break out the booze
and have a ball / If that's all there is.” She got it right.
BUT – what if that’s not all there is. What if the Bible is right? What if Jesus
was right? What if the longing in your heart that says, “There has to be more
than this,” is right? What if there is more? Then an earth-centered lifestyle
that doesn’t see beyond age 80 doesn’t look so smart, does it? If things end,
but people are forever, then “relax, eat, drink, be merry” isn’t exactly
brilliant! If death isn’t the end, then this man’s plan looks foolish even if his
soul had not be required that very night, right? He’s put every drop of his
effort into what he’s going to do for 15 years, but he’s going to live forever.
That’s just plain stupid, isn’t it? That’s like the young man who was asked by
a wiser, older companion, “What are you going to do.” He replied, “I will
learn my trade.” “And then?” said the older man. “I will set up in business.”
“And then?” “I will make my fortune.” “And then?” “I suppose that I shall
grow old and retire and live on my money.” “And then?” “Well, I suppose
that some day I will die.” “And then?” There’s the question! Then what? The
Bible answers in Heb 9:27, “It is appointed for man to die once, and after that
comes judgment.” If you haven’t prepared for that “then”, you haven’t
prepared for anything. You’ve studied for everything but the final that the
whole grade rides on. Are you seeing why Jesus calls this man a fool?
C. He was Actuarially-Centered, Not God-Centered -Among other things, actuaries estimate how long you’ll live. This man
assumed he’d get his full actuarial allotment. The 60/20 plan! But now comes
the crushing blow. It turns out it is not the actuary who determines how long
we live; it is God. And God says, “Not only don’t you get your lucky 20, you
don’t even get a day. “This night your soul is required of you.” There is no
arguing your way out of that one. “End of this life” is not a negotiation. It is
strictly determined by God. And though there is an average, it is meaningless
to this man personally. No one is guaranteed anything. Like this man, our
time could come tonight. Then who will all this “stuff” belong to? If he
looked foolish before, targeting 20 party years – now he looks really foolish,
getting nothing. He’s invested in the wrong place. He never looked beyond
the day he would die – yet that is where he was going to spend forever.
The application is easy, isn’t it? Every life hangs by a thread. None of us know
when we are going to hear, “This night your soul is required of you.” We may
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have a guess, but we don’t know. So the only wise thing to do is to assume
that it will be tonight. Submit to God’s sovereignty which you can’t do
anything about anyway, assume it’s going to end tonight and prepare
accordingly. That’s what Moses meant when he said in Psa 90: 12) So teach us
to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom.” You can be a fool and
trust the actuary, or you can get wisdom and trust God. Your choice. But
remember God is the one who eventually will say, “This night your soul is
required of you.” “You thought your life was yours to do with as you will?
Tonight you will find out how wrong you are.” Are you ready if tonight is
your night?
A lady was starting a new government job. She needed proof of citizenship so
she brought along her driver’s license and birth certificate. The clerk to the DL
and copied info. Then she picked up the birth certificate and gave it a long
look. “Is something wrong?” asked the applicant. The clerk replied, “Yes, I
can’t find an expiration date.” Here’s a news flash. No one’s birth certificate
comes with an expiration date. That is in God’s hands. It could be today. On
Nov 22, 1963, President Kennedy smiled and waved at Charles Brehm and his
wife. The actuary said he had at least 30 years yet to live. But five seconds
later, SS agent Clint Hill was looking down at a massive head wound and
knew the President was already dead. There are no guarantees, Beloved.
Tonight could be your night. Are you ready?
V.
The Insight (21)
“So is the one who lays up treasure for himself and is not rich toward God.”
The fool lays up treasure toward himself – spend himself totally on things that
will shortly end one way or the other. The wise man lays up treasure in
heaven. Wise people give of themselves and their resources to the Lord’s work
and to benefit those in need – praying all the while that He will accept it,
multiply it and give it eternal worth. Because He will. The wise person
worships God rather than things. The wise person sees beyond “now” and is
preparing now for eternity.
Suppose a woman goes away on a business trip. She calls home the first night:
“Honey, guess what? I re-did my hotel room. It’s gorgeous. I had the carpet
replaced, repainted, did the bathroom over – a local contractor did it for
$10,000.” Her husband says, “But – but you’re only going to be there for 3
days.” “I know, but it’s worth it.” Crazy? No more so than the fool who
assumes that life is stuff! But the one who invested in eternity is ready. “This
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night, your soul is required of you.” “Great. I’m ready to go. I’ve even sent
my treasure on ahead.” Are you ready if tonight is your night? Before long, it
will be. This life has a very limited shelf life. We’re just passing thru here.
Eternity is elsewhere. Are you ready? Let’s pray.
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