There’s a silly game I used to play
with my friends when I was younger –
and many of you
have likely played it too –
it’s called: Would You Rather?
Let’s play it.
Would you rather eat a brownie
or a piece of cake?
Would you rather eat breakfast
or dinner?
Then this is the point
where the game gets a bit more challenging.
Would you rather eat an earthworm
or a cockroach?
Would you rather chew gum from under the pew
or lick the bottom of a friend’s shoe?
Now before everyone gets too nauseous we’ll stop
because I think you get the idea …
When I was younger
the questions were silly and disgusting
and, of course, as I got older,
they sounded more like
“Would you rather make out
with [this person] or [that one]?”
Now as an adult,
this game isn’t as fun …
Pastor Jennifer and I play all the time.
Would you rather have chicken or beef for dinner?
Would you rather eat at Cracker Barrel or Culvers?
Would you rather grocery shop at Kroger or Publix?
Trust me,
there are no winners.
In our gospel today,
a manager plays a version of this game:
Would I rather beg
or cheat?
The answer for the shrewd manager
is that he would rather cheat.
You see, this manager is in trouble.
He has not only been charging interest
on behalf of his master,
but he has been adding his own fee as well
and now he’s has been caught cooking the books.
And unless something drastic changes
he will soon be out at the gate
begging like all the others
he has been taking advantage of.
So he devises a plan.
He decides to cut out some of the interest.
This does two things for him:
when the master’s debtors
are able to pay back
their now smaller debts.
he is now also in the good graces
of his once defrauded neighbors,
who might be more inclined to help him out.
He thinks he’s pretty smart,
avoiding potential poverty
and disgrace.
But his seeming generosity
is merely the collateral damage
of saving his own behind.
He is not repentant.
He is not ashamed.
He’s not reformed.
He’s cunning,
shrewd,
conniving.
He’s found a new way to use people
to his own advantage.
In our first reading from Amos,
the prophet relays the word of the Lord.
“Hear this,
you that trample on the needy,
and bring to ruin the poor of the land,
saying, ‘When will the new moon be over
so that we may sell grain;
and the sabbath,
so that we may offer wheat for sale?
We will make the ephah small
and the shekel great,
and practice deceit with false balances,
buying the poor for silver
and the needy for a pair of sandals,
and selling the sweepings of the wheat’
The LORD has sworn by the pride of Jacob:
Surely I will never forget any of their deeds.”
God is not pleased
with those who cheat,
extort,
and enslave their neighbors.
The Psalmist
and the Apostle Paul
give us the contrast:
rather than rest in the glory and splendor of Godliness,
God comes down,
to raise the poor from the dust,
to lift the needy from the ash heap,
and set them among princes.
While there is none like our God,
who is worthy to be praised from sun up to sundown,
this God became a human,
became our ransom,
became debt cancelation for all.
God chooses the side of the beggars,
the poor and the needy,
the bought and paid for,
the broke and extorted,
the trafficked and exploited.
God is not too proud
to stand with beggars
to get down in the dust with the poor,
to kneel in the ashes with the needy,
and to give God’s own self
to cancel our debts.
Jesus becomes a beggar,
choosing solidarity with our poverty
to raise up the lowly
and to call down the proud,
because this is the path of discipleship,
the path of transformation.
Upon his death,
a slip of paper was found in Martin Luther’s cloak.
This slip contained his last words;
“We are beggars, this is true.”
Beloved,
the path of discipleship
calls us to make this true.
We must become beggars.
We must choose to stand in solidarity
with the poor,
with the needy,
with the bought and paid for,
with the broke and extorted,
the trafficked and exploited.
We must give up the idea
that Church,
faith,
discipleship,
is about saving our own behind,
that we come here to be served or saved,
rather than learning how
to serve and save others.
We must not be too proud
to stand with beggars,
to get down in the dust with the poor,
to kneel in the ashes with the needy,
and to give our very selves
to embody God’s debt-canceling love.
We start here in worship,
where the sacraments remind us
that we are indeed beggars before God.
Each time we gather around the font,
we dip our fingers in the water,
making the sign of the cross on our forehead,
asking God to remind us again and again
that our debts are canceled.
Each time we gather around the table,
we put our hands into a beggar’s position
and ask God to offer us a piece of Godself.
And from this font and table
we are raised up
and sent out to serve our neighbors,
to forgive our debtors as we have been forgiven,
to give our money,
to give our time,
in service to those who find themselves
in dust and ashes.
So let us make Luther’s last words
into a kind of prayer.
“Lord, we are already beggars.
Help us to live like this is true.”
Amen.