Paul wrote "and greed (which is idolatry)." All three readings this week look at greed and/or idolatry, and greed is clearly an issue in our lives today.
Proper 13 C
Transcribed from a
sermon given on
August 1, 2010
By the Rev. Valerie
Ann Hart
At St. Barnabas
Episcopal Church
Luke 12:13-21
Colossians 3:1-11
Hosea 11:1-11
I’d like you to imagine you had an
opportunity to talk to Jesus. Not in prayer in an abstract sense, but that he
was physically here. Or, if not Jesus, then think of whatever spiritual teacher
has been most meaningful to you. Someone like a Billy Graham or a Thomas
Keating or whoever it might be who you believed to be really, really wise and
holy, and perhaps a healer. Imagine that person is coming to give a talk right
her in Arroyo Grande and you’re going to get a chance to ask a question. To ask
something of that person. What is it that you would ask?
In the Gospel reading we have
someone who has a chance to ask Jesus for something, and what he asks is, “Tell
my brother to share the inheritance with me.” It kind of echoes back what we
heard a few weeks ago where Martha said to Jesus, “Tell my sister Mary to get
in the kitchen with me.” Both are wanting Jesus to take care of a family
dispute. To fully understand this you have to understand that in Jesus’ time
the inheritance all went to the eldest - the eldest son inherited everything.
And sometimes, if the parent wanted to, he would give a part of it to the
younger children, but legally the eldest son got the inheritance. So clearly
this person speaking is a younger son who is saying, “I want to get a share of
that.” Of course Jesus’ response is don’t be so greedy. “Who am I to make that
decision?” “Why are you asking me?” Is that really the most important thing for
you right now? Jesus looks at this man makes up a parable.
A man had this wonderful harvest,
more than he could fit into his barn. So he tore down his old barns and built
new ones and filled them up to the brim and said, “Ah, I have enough to live
off for a long time. It is time to retire. Now I can just relax and have peace
of mind.” And then he died that night.
Where was the peace of mind? Or
was it really greed? Jesus uses the word greed. In the second reading today,
Paul is writing to some of the people he has converted. He has taught them about
Christianity. Basically he says to them, “Now that you are baptized in Christ
everything is different. You should be seeking that which is above, not things
of this world.” And then he has a list. Paul seems to like lists of things that
are not good. And at the end of the list is greed. Then it says, and this is very
interesting, and then he writes “which is idolatry.” That greed, to be greedy,
is idolatry.
What is idolatry? In the first
reading from the Old Testament we have Hosea talking about the people of Israel
who are worshiping other Gods. They are worshiping the Baals, they are
worshiping idols, they are worshiping trees, they are worshiping everything
except the one true holy and living God. That’s idolatry. Idolatry is
worshiping anything other than the one true God. It is making anything more
important than God. It is making anything in your life more important than
serving God, of trying to do God’s will, of being loving and caring and a good
person and all those things that God wants from you. Idolatry is making something
more important than God. And Greed is making things more important than God.
That is why it is idolatry. And greed of course can be for more than just
money. It can also be for power, greed for possessions, greed for all kinds of
different things. It is that sense of wanting more, of wanting to have it as
your own. Greed is idolatry. Putting something before God. Greed is when you
are the CEO of a company and you are already getting a million dollars and this
year you are getting a million and a half but you are laying off a lot of
people because you can’t afford to pay them. Nobody needs a million and a half.
I don’t think any CEO needs any more than what the president of the United States
gets paid. Four hundred and forty thousand dollars should be enough to get you
through the year, don’t you think?
That’s greed. It is not wanting
money because you need it to live. It is because you are looking for some kind
of false security. Jesus says we are allowed to ask for what we need. In the
Lord’s Prayer we say give us daily bread. Give me what I need today. But we are
not supposed to be worried about a security blanket. Greed is when it is more
than what I need for today. Greed is trying to make yourself safe. If I just
have a little more then I won’t need to worry any more. For some people that
little more is, “I’ve got twenty thousand in the bank, I need five thousand
more and I’ll be set for retirement.” While others it’s, “I’ve got a million
dollars in the bank and if I just have 500 thousand dollars more than I’ll have
enough for retirement.” It’s that sense of needing more and more. It is when
things become more important than God. It’s idolatry
Hosea says that the people of Israel
have looked for their security in worshiping idols. But God wants to be like a
parent. He beautifully describes God as caring for them, nurturing them,
holding them up, guiding them just like a good parent. So greed is like the 13-year-old
that is bothered by the fact that the parents have rules and says, “Well I’ve
saved up my allowance and I stole the money out of the cookie jar and now I
have this wad of money I can take care of myself. I’m going to leave home and
take care of myself. I don’t need them anymore.” And of course we laugh at
that. Of course you need your parents for much more than just some money. No
matter how much money you have it is not going to be enough to thrive without
the love and care and support of your parents. So when we go under the illusion
that when I just have enough money I don’t need God, that is idolatry, that is
greed.
One of the good things that came
out of this recession and this economic downturn is a reality for all those
people who thought that by having a house, a big house, and by having lots of
good investments that they would be secure for the rest of their lives. They
were placing their security and trust in that. And we discovered that that
wasn’t a very good place to put your security. House, money, savings, can
disappear, but your relationship with God can’t be taken away. No one can touch
that. That if you put your thoughts and your mind and energy into a whole and
healthy and trusting relationship with God then everything else will get taken
care of.
We all know that wonderful little
song, “Seek ye first the kingdom of God and God’s righteousness and these
things will be given unto you.” That’s the message that Paul is trying to teach
the people to whom he is writing. That’s the message that Jesus is giving to us
in that parable. Seek first the kingdom of God and everything else, everything
else, will follow.