Now I know
the first day of fall
was only Thursday,
but I’m already thinking about Christmas.
Ebenezer Scrooge
is a mean-spirited and selfish old man,
who hates Christmas.
He is very unkind to the people who work for him.
One cold Christmas Eve,
on his way home,
he sees people
taking donations for charity and
he refuses to give anything.
Then,
when his nephew invites him
to spend Christmas with him and his family,
the only people who look past
his old, grumpy demeanor,
Scrooge still refuses.
Eventually, Scrooge makes his way home
and gets into bed.
In his sleep,
he is visited by the ghost of
his old business partner Jacob Marley –
and then three other ghosts –
The first is the ghost of Christmas Past
who takes him on a journey through
Christmases from his past,
through his unhappy childhood,
and showing Scrooge himself as young man
more in love with money
than his own fiancée.
Then the ghost of Christmas Present visits
and Scrooge is whisked away
to observe his clerk’s family.
There outside their home,
Scrooge can see Tiny Tim,
a very ill child,
who is still full of love and joy,
even in the midst of so much heartache.
This ghost also takes him to his nephew’s home
to see the Christmas celebration
he missed.
The final ghost,
the ghost of Christmas Future,
absolutely terrifies Scrooge
with visions of his own death.
In today’s gospel there is a rich man who
reminds me an awful lot of Scrooge.
We don’t know this man’s name,
though Church tradition
would call him Dives.
Jesus describes him
living a lavish lifestyle,
rich in food and friends.
There is a gate around his estate
to keep away the riffraff.
He has the privilege to ignore anyone
who might want to glom onto the lifestyle he lives …
people like Lazarus – a beggar,
who sits outside the rich man’s gate,
who would give anything – anything –
for just the scraps off the rich man’s table.
Lazarus is covered in sores
and adding insult to injury,
even the wild dogs’ attempts at mercy,
bring him more pain.
Through this story,
Jesus repeats a theme
and gives us the metaphor of
an ever-widening chasm,
The chasm between
those who sit in the seats of honor
and those who sit in the lowly places,
the chasm between those who can return a favor
and those who cannot pay you back,
the chasm between those who hoard wealth
and those who sell their possessions
to give to the poor,
the chasm between those who by their dishonesty
enslave people to their debts
and those who are the victims of this system.
And today that chasm grows wider and wider
as a rich man ignores the poor man
who sits just outside his gate.
This chasm is wide,
but not so wide
that the two sides cannot see one another:
See, despite the torment the rich man describes,
there are no signs of remorse.
He calls across the chasm
begging the mercy he never gave,
and once again expecting to be served
by the very man he ignored at his gate,
demanding some cool water.
We don’t hear from Lazarus himself.
Instead,
Father Abraham does the speaking.
Perhaps this is because
Lazarus is finally at rest.
But part of me wonders,
would Lazarus have given the compassion
he never received?
Even so, Father Abraham does not oblige.
The rich man has made his choices
and is now reaping the consequences:
and yet,
these consequences inspire him to ask for
satiation and intervention –
cool water and
a message to his family from the dead.
Father Abraham ignores the rich man’s begging—
pointing out that the rich man’s family
has access to the same prophetic teaching
that he and Lazarus had,
teachings that are centered on caring
for the widows and orphans,
food for the hungry
and clothing to the naked,
whose central theology is compassion and mercy,
doing justice, loving kindness, living humbly.
Faith that is less about philosophy and belief,
but embodied in faithful deeds.
So many times,
I think we get so caught up
in what’s happening inside our own gates,
that we walk right past those in greatest need.
The church is very accustomed to
hearing the plight of those who are
hungry, naked, addicted, or
often ignored by society.
The church is used to,
and in fact prides itself in,
the work of feeding, clothing, and praying
for those outside our gates.
But then there are others that we overlook
because their presence makes us uncomfortable—
people right outside the gates we’ve fixed
between our convenience and their pain,
between our privilege and the injustice we perpetuate,
between the systems we profit from
and the plight of those exploited by those systems,
between birthright citizenship and asylum.
People who would give anything
to have the scraps from this table,
to dip their finger in the baptismal font
to remember who and whose they are,
to have their stories heard,
their hearts mended,
to become partners with us
in making a better world.
And I wonder if our pity,
instead of our actions,
feels like a dog licking their wounds,
and less like the food that fills their stomach
and or the community that fills their souls?
As Lutherans this may be hard to hear.
When someone even hints at works righteousness
the inner Martin Luther rises up in protest.
But sometimes we need to be reminded that it was
Martin Luther also said,
“God doesn’t need our good works,
but our neighbor does.”
After being visited by the ghosts of Christmas,
Scrooge changed his life.
He became a man full of compassion,
not only generous with his wealth,
but with his time and
all that had been entrusted to him.
And while this parable mimics
the typical pattern of Luke,
with justice for the poor
and a strong warning for those who harbor wealth,
it is also a parable of good news,
because as inheritors of the gospel of Luke
we have been given the gift of this story
and the gift of time.
This story is not a threat
of conscious eternal torment
for living an unjust life.
This story is a promise
that Justice is coming.
It will bring grief for those who perpetuate
and profit from injustice.
And it will bring grace for those exploited
and excluded by that injustice.
Beloved, the good news for us this day
is that this gift of time
provides us the opportunity for
repentance and hope,
and the invitation to stand the middle of this chasm,
to join Jesus in cruciform living,
and by our faithful action.
to show the world who God is and how God acts.
This looks like
living out our baptism
by sharing our gifts with the world.
It looks like stepping outside our gates
and close the chasm now,
to meet the poor and needy where they are,
to learn their names
and meet their needs.
This looks like
taking the meal from this altar
and sharing it with the world through gifts of
food for the hungry,
hands outstretched to embrace the lonely,
and words that remind people of their belovedness.
This looks like
taking the story of God’s radical love
by becoming an advocate, an ally, and accomplice,
by asking ourselves
and God some hard questions,
and living out the hard answers.
People of God,
we are not only called to hear this gospel story,
but we are invited to live differently because of it!
And when we join God in this work,
through the grace of Jesus Christ,
the chasm is filled,
becoming a place where the wealthy and the poor,
the named and the unnamed,
the seen and the unseen,
walk on level ground to the glory of God.
May it be so.
Amen.