The rich man also died and was buried. In Hades, where he was being tormented, he
looked up and saw Abraham far away with Lazarus by his side. He called out... father Abraham, I beg you to send Lazarus to
my father’s house----for I have five brothers----that he may warn them, so that
they will not also come into this place of torment.
Nick ---was
the second brother in the family, the first being the rich man who just passed
away. Nick was the manager of the quarry
in Sepphoris (just outside Nazareth). His brother, being the first born had
inherited the quarry from their father, that’s how he was rich – a landowner
with large amounts of stone, in a time when the Herods were doing mega building
projects in and around Jerusalem. The
rich man gave his brother the job of manager. Nick’s inclusion in the riches of his
brother’s, had Nick think, like his brother, that the riches were God’s
affirmation of them. The riches were theirs because God was bestowing blessing
on them.
In return, he
offered Sabbath to God. It looked good
for him to attend the Synagogue on Sabbath, in Nazareth, and give his tithe,
with extra: for the good of the people, the good of his workers, for the good
of his quarry.
Zack --- also
thanks to his older brother’s influence (and a large monetary bribe to Herod
for the position) was granted the position of project engineer for the outer
buildings of the newly completed Temple in Jerusalem. He was king of the worksite, so to speak,
with 1000s from the guild of stone masons working under his hand. His work was
secure as there were many projects, for which foremen jobs could be arranged at
a price; the Herodians were building not just the Temple, but, the palace, a magnificent
tomb, a theatre, and a hippodrome.
Not to outdo
his brothers, well maybe just a little, he was proud that he was following in
his grandfather’s foot steps –for he had been a priest, one of the thousand
hired to be a stone mason by King Herod for the building of the Temple; it was
pious work, dictated by God, that the priests be the builders of sacred
building. The gifts of God being used for the people of God.
Matt --- was a
scribe – a Pharisaic lawyer of the Sanhedrin.
He was content with the latitude given Jews under Herod, to govern themselves
while under Roman occupation; it did come at a price, spots on the council were
chosen by Herod so as to be amenable to his administration. Matt’s family were friends of sorts with
Herod, so Matt had no trouble following Herod’s will and politics. This job had security; once a councilman, the
term was a lifetime. The council tried to pattern the Sanhedrin like the group of
elders formed by Moses in his day. Moses
appointed elders to share the burden of ruling the people.
Matt, a strict
Pharisee, thought of his oldest brother as a breaker of the law. Sure he
followed most of the Jewish law, but, somewhere along the way, the rich brother
was so taken by wealth and ownership, that his attitude became that of being
entitled. Entitlement meant a turning
from the lesser brothers in the family, and embarrassingly for Matt, away from
the heart of Jewish law and Jewish living which was one of a basic attitude of
open generosity. The rich brother was acting like a pagan, more so everyday,
especially breaching hospitality by ignoring the poor at his gate. Lazarus, who
was a neighbour who had fallen on hard times because of sickness.
James --the banker
of the family had a blossoming business; with no help from his older
siblings. He happily exchanged currency
(charging only a little extra for his trouble), undertook demands for credit,
issued international loans, plus proffered savings accounts, safety deposits,
mortgages, emergency loans with interest rates at 12.5%, but, sometimes soring
to 50%. James was careful in one regard, he didn’t charge interest on money
loaned to the poor, as it was outlawed in God’s covenant made with Moses.
Bart -- the
youngest was a herald in Herod’s court.
This was a job that had him make public announcements for the king and
court. It was a government job, and not
always appreciated by his people, in fact even seen as a treason-ness kind of
job, as they did not necessarily approve of the decrees of Herod or those
coming through Herod at the behest of the Emperor. Bart didn’t mind one bit. He had a 9-5 job that he could leave at the
end of the day without a care in the world.
Bart thought
of his oldest brother as pompous and arrogant; definitely selfish. While out
listening to the Jewish religious teachers and philosophers in the marketplace,
he had chance to hear Jesus. He particularly enjoyed the day the rebel preacher
Jesus rubbed it in his face. Jesus went
so far as to mention his clothes, and this was not Jesus’ regular practice. Imagine walking around in high-fluting purple
robes, with a linen undergarment. Linen
undergarments, extravagant, they were woven of Egyptian yellow flax called
byssus, so luxurious the Egyptians called it “woven air.”
All the
brothers, were Jews of first century Jerusalem, with good to elite jobs. In their positions, each had come to an
understanding of their relationship to the practice of the Law of Moses. They
each determined the laws which they would or could bend, how they personally
would determine what was ethical, and what relationship there was between one’s
heart and one’s relationship with God. To varying degrees, they attended
Synagogue, fulfilled required sacrifices to be made at the Temple, celebrated
Passover and other festivals.
Of them, the
rich brother who has passed away, is concerned for them and their place in life
after death. Looking back from torment,
he sees how his choices could have been different, how he could have applied
himself to hospitality and living the fullness of the law and into covenant
relationship with God.
Abraham replied, “They have Moses and the prophets;
they should listen to them.”
The rich man said, “No, father Abraham; but if someone
goes to them from the dead, they will repent.”
Abraham said to him, “if they do not listen to Moses
and the prophets, neither will they be convinced even if someone rises from the
dead.”
The family I created, while demonstrating life,
practices, and facts from the first century – the time of Jesus- the five
brothers from the Gospel of Luke are fictitious. We know nothing about the five
brothers, other than they had a rich brother who was callous and disregarded
the needs of the poor at his gate. The
point of the story is the rich man’s lack of hospitality; not adhering to the
Jewish law on relationship and the responsibility of others, and this was caused
by an alienation of his heart from God and God’s covenant.
If we apply
this reading in someway to our living lives today, think for a moment of your siblings
or cousins. Based on family dynamics, your birth order, varying degrees of
relationship with each, what can you tell your siblings? Have you ever wanted to
tell them exactly how you feel? Have you ever wanted them to act a certain way,
to have faith, certain beliefs, to live a certain lifestyle, to go to church,
to get rid of what you consider “bad habits?” Have you wanted to proselytize –
or perhaps have and found it just doesn’t work. Is there forgiveness required
in the relationship?
I have a
brother. I would say “yes” to some of
that list.
Consider
yourself the 7th sibling in this family and you have chosen to
follow this upstart philosopher, teacher, rebel Jesus. Your brothers, other
than maybe Bart, will hear nothing of it. It is a hopeless endeavour and a
great way to drive a wedge into the relationships. So how do you act to not follow Jesus
example, but, continue in Jesus’ ministry:
With Nick, don’t
hold it against him that he has a better job because the eldest brother gave it
to him as owner of the quarry. Even
though he thinks himself better (swallow hard and bite your tongue), then treat
him like the others; making sure he gets an invite to thanksgiving dinner and a
pair of socks in his Christmas box.
With Zack,
take coffee to him on the work site; attend the opening of the buildings he has
built.
With Matt,
refrain from criticizing his political allegiances, and corporate decisions in
which he took part; comment and commend those that uphold society by seeking justice
and peace; and those that support the poor and disenfranchised.
With James, no
matter what the sibling relation, do business with him to support his business.
With Bart,
make a to-do of his accomplishments, show interest, send him a text, despite your
frustration that he has the least earned job of the family and a work ethic
that might not satisfy you.
And if over a lifetime: they end up sick you
visit them, dispossessed you welcome them into your home, hungry or thirty you
feed and water, naked you provide clothing, in prison you visit them; where
there is hurt you forgive. You share your faith by the way you live. You invite
them to join you for church, not to convert them, but, because you are seeking
relationship with them. In all things
you are hospitable.
And perhaps
this is another meaning of this passage – for the living:
Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus to
dip the tip of this finger in water and cool my tongue; for I am in agony in
these flames.” When life is
over as we know it, it is too late for relationships. In the present God’s kingdom can come through
us and alleviate the agony of flames (living hell). Be hospitable; generous and
friendly to strangers, guests, or visitors; creating an environment where
plants, animals, and people can live and grow easily; and ready and willing to
accept and consider something new.
No comments:
Post a Comment