Here is the manuscript for the sermon preached on August 21, 2011 at
Trinity Lutheran Church of Layton, Utah for the Ninth Sunday after
Trinity.

-- 
Pax in Christo, non te pox;
Rev. Kurt Hering, Pastor
Trinity Lutheran Church
Layton, Utah
www.trinitylayton.org


How Much Do You Owe?

TEXT: “1[Jesus] also said to the disciples, “There was a rich man who
had a manager, and charges were brought to him that this man was
wasting his possessions. 2And he called him and said to him, ‘What is
this that I hear about you? Turn in the account of your management,
for you can no longer be manager.’ 3And the manager said to himself,
‘What shall I do, since my master is taking the management away from
me? I am not strong enough to dig, and I am ashamed to beg. 4I have
decided what to do, so that when I am removed from management, people
may receive me into their houses.’ 5So, summoning his master’s debtors
one by one, he said to the first, ‘How much do you owe my master?’”
Luke 16:1–5

Dear people of God,

How Much Do You Owe?
•       Mortgage-- the average homeowner owes $95,000
•       Car loan-- the average new car loan is over $27600
•       College-- The average college senior graduated this year with more
than $19000 in debt.
•       Credit Cards— The average American household with at least one
credit card has nearly $10700 in credit-card debt.
•       Total household debt--The average household has $117951 in debt.
•       Share of Federal Debt-- $109,792 per household

Now that’s a lot of debt!

But if you think about it, it isn’t even a drop in the bucket compared
to what we owe our master, God the Father of us all. After all, what
do you have that has not been given to you? Do you think you have
earned and deserve all that you have in this world? Think again.

The parable Jesus presents in our Gospel text today is all about debt.
On the face of it, commends a hired hand for acting dishonestly to
save his own hide when he realizes how unmanageable his debt has
become. Unless we understand what is going on around this parable we
walk away from it thinking it is a lesson on dealing with our finances
and investments in this world in order to win friends and influence
people, because in doing so we somehow are feathering a heavenly
retirement nest. But as always, in reading the Scripture and hearing
the Word of God, if all we get out of it is what we have to do to pay
off our debt and gain access to our heavenly home, we leave ourselves
on the outside of the window looking in.


The very first words of our Gospel text that introduce this parable of
the “steward of unrighteousness.” are very important. They tell us
Jesus has turned from addressing the Pharisees and is speaking to His
disciples. However, we also must remember that the Pharisees are still
present. They are listening in as Jesus teaches, i.e. catechizes His
disciples. But they are not listening in to gain wisdom and
understanding, they are listening in to gather testimony against Jesus
because He is nothing but trouble for them and they seek His death. So
Jesus teaches His disciples in a parable that makes for one of those
difficult and cloudy texts, impossible to understand apart from other
parts of Scripture that clear the clouds.

As Jesus himself warns the Pharisees on another occasion, "You search
the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life;
and it is they that bear witness of me, yet you refuse to come to me
that you may have life. John 5:39 40

Furthermore, let us remember that earlier in chapter 9 of His Gospel
Luke indicates a point in Jesus ministry where He clearly is heading
to Calvary and needs to prepare His disciples for that day:
Now it came to pass, when the time had come for Him to be received up,
that He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem, and sent
messengers before His face . . . to prepare for Him. "For the Son of
Man did not come to destroy men's lives but to save them." Luke 9:51-
56

So, here in today’s parable we have Jesus catechizing His disciples,
preparing them for His death on the cross and His subsequent
departure, which will leave them in charge of proclaiming and
spreading the message of the kingdom of heaven. This He does with a
parable so that hearing, the Pharisees will not understand, because
they do not recognize Him as the Christ, who by His crucifixion is THE
key to understanding all of Scripture -- and therefore, also this
parable.

Now that we have an idea of what is going on here, let us take a
closer look at the story Jesus tells. For today, rather than getting
all caught up in the details in the middle, let’s focus on the
beginning and the end of the story. It is at the beginning and the end
that we see what is truly happening and why.

The parable begins: "“There was a rich man who had a manager, and
charges were brought to him that this man was wasting his
possessions.”

The word “charges,” i.e. accusation, is very important here for two reasons.
1. Nowhere in the parable do the charges become fact born out by evidence.
2. The person or persons making the charges are never revealed.

The Greek word for “accusation” here is “diabollo,” the same word from
which we get the devil’s name. Satan was our accuser before the throne
of God until Jesus ascended victorious to cast Him out of heaven, and
throughout His ministry the Pharisees were Christ’s accusers. Keep
this thought in mind, we will come back to it shortly.

But now, let us take a quick look at how Jesus closes the parable:
“The master commended the dishonest manager for his shrewdness.” Here
the Greek word so often translated “shrewd” is perhaps better
understood by us as “prudent” or even “wise.”

What was so prudent and wise about the steward’s actions toward the
debtors? It could only be the forgiving of their debts. Here is the
nugget of the story that prepares the disciples for what is to come,
that journey to Jerusalem to which Jesus had steadfastly set His face
that He might be received up on the cross to forgive the debts of a
sinful world that owes the Master, the Lord their very lives. It is
the same nugget that leaves the Pharisees shaking their heads and
leads to their being the agents for Christ’s death.


These Pharisees were continually trying to trap Jesus, accusing Him of
sinning against the Scriptures and blaspheming God and His name.
Eventually they succeeded in making their accusations stick--at least
in the realm of this unrighteous world. The result was that the only
righteous one among us was slain on a cursed tree to bear the
unrighteousness of those He came to serve. Jesus, the very Son of God
who knew no sin and was falsely accused, became sin for us so that He
could pay the price and wipe out all our debt before His father, the
rich man and Lord of Heaven to whom we all owe our very lives and all
that we have.

On the cross, Jesus the Christ, the steward of unrighteousness--that
is, the one who managed our sin and bore its consequences for
us--begged His Father, the master of the estate, “Father forgive them,
for they know not what they do.”

He paid our debts, delivering us from sin and bondage to the accuser.
Having done so, He is received up into heaven where He has prepared a
place for us to live with Him forever. And having completed His task
of clearing away the slate of our debt, He sends us forth as His
forgiven people to deliver that forgiveness to others that they may
know all accusations the evil one brings against them have been wiped
clean as well.

This is what we pray in The Fifth Petition of the Lord’s Prayer as
recorded in Matthew 6:12: “And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our
debtors.” What does this mean? “We pray in this petition that our
Father in heaven would not look at our sins, or deny our prayer
because of them. We are neither worthy of the things for which we
pray, nor have we deserved them, but we ask that he would give them
all to us by grace, for we daily sin much and surely deserve nothing
but punishment. So we too will sincerely forgive and gladly do good to
those who sin against us.”

So, dear people of God, I ask you again, “How Much Do You Owe?”

And the answer is, “Nothing!”

That is what Baptism is all about. The forgiveness for which Jesus
begged His Father as He poured out His blood saying, “forgive them,
for they know not what they do.”; the forgiveness of which Jesus spoke
when He cried out on the cross, “It is finished!” is poured over your
head in Holy Baptism.

That is what the Sabbath Day preaching and teaching of the Word in the
Divine Service is all about. Once again, after a week or more of
having the world pile the weight of supposed debt upon you, our dear
Lord proclaims to you that you owe Him nothing. Your debt has been
paid by His dear Son. You are forgiven.

And, of course, that is also what the Sacrament of Holy Communion is
all about as well. In the body and blood of Christ, the One Who bore
and paid off your unbearable and unpayable debt for you, you are being
given the very body and blood by which He made your payment so that
you owe nothing to Father.

And in that body and blood of Christ, as well as in Holy Baptism and
God’s Word of absolution that forgive you all your sins, you are
receiving what you could never earn or pay off—a forever home in
heaven—in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen
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