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Lay ministers serve RLC

Resurrection lay ministers Gary Kresge, Jeff Johns, and John Hazzard have been doing a great  job serving the church since the resignation of Pastor Chris Boyd.  Pastor Boyd resigned at the end of January. His ministry still extends to the Catawba Island Fire Department as its chaplain and as a volunteer fireman. He is in the process of being called to a new church within the Missouri Synod closer to his home town of Dayton. Until an interim pastor through the NALC is in place at RLC, the congregation will receive pastoral care from three lay ministers.  Pastor Dan Pennington has been providing communion.

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Sermons

Gospel Text: Luke 16: 1-15                                                                                             March 30, 2025

Lay Minister John Hazzard                                                                          

 

“Faithful Stewardship Under God’s Grace”

 

GRACE TO YOU AND PEACE FROM GOD OUR FATHER AND THE LORD JESUS CHRIST

One of Jesus’s most powerful teaching tools is his parables. Jesus knew the power of a good story. A story can captivate the mind, spark the imagination, and encourage self-reflection in anyone who listens. Our sermon text today finds Jesus sitting with his disciples telling them a story, packed with life lessons for a shrewd listener to discover for themselves. However, today’s parable can be a bit of a head scratcher at first glance, as it seems to contradict everything we know about our honest, kind, and loving Lord. However, this is a good example of where context makes all the difference. Before we can understand what Jesus’s message was to His disciples, we first need to set the stage.

 

Our text this morning is nestled in the heart of Luke’s Gospel, following Jesus’s teachings known as the “lost parables,” in chapter 15 He speaks about lost coins, lost sheep, and wayward sons who seemed to have lost their way in life. These parables are far more comforting to us, as we learn how God will tirelessly pursue those who stray away from Him and joyously receive them if they would only turn back to Him. However, our parable, the parable of the shrewd manager, paints a different picture. One where our ties to temporal objects and ideals create a stumbling block for us on our journey toward our eternal relationship with God.

 

To better express this point let’s look at the parable in question. The parable begins with a rich man who had employed someone to manage his financial affairs. Jesus tells us, “There was a rich man who had a manager, and charges were brought to him that this man was wasting his possessions. So, 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.’ Upon discovering that this steward had mismanaged his wealth, the rich man confronted the steward, demanding him to give an account of the financial ledger and stripped him of his position. In other words, he informed the manager that he had been looking at the books and things weren’t adding up, so he was fired!

 

In these two verses, we are introduced to the protagonist of our story, a manager who does not deny his part in the mismanagement of the rich man’s wealth. As He always does, Jesus pointed a mirror directly at us, so that we may reflect on our own misgivings. We are all guilty of mismanaging our own riches, and we will all be called to give an account of our management, both sinners and saints alike. God has blessed each one of us with our time, our possessions, and our talents. These gifts are generously given to us to enrich our life and the lives of those around us, and we are meant to use them to glorify God and for the benefit of others.

 

However, like the manager in our parable today, we often misuse these wonderful gifts that God has bestowed upon us. We waste our time with meaningless pursuits that gratify us in the moment but ultimately do more harm than good, like doom scrolling through Facebook or TikTok at 3:00 AM knowing how tired we’re going to be in the morning. We ignore our talents or do not pursue our passions out of fear of failing, the pain associated with hard work, or our fear of what others may think. We cling to our worldly possessions, hoping that they might bring us joy or fill the hole in our hearts that deepens every time a new obsession is outdated, broken, or boring.

We do not have to live meaningless lives, but many of us do, by what we choose to do with our lives. Many live their lives as if they will never have to stand in front of God or give an account of the things they have done or worse, the things they have left undone. Every day we have a choice. A choice to give in to what we deem as comfortable or what we think others would admire us for, or to follow in God’s example by using the gifts that He has given us. God did not create us in His image to lead meaningless lives, nor did he create us to be self-serving, focused only on momentary gratifications or on accumulating things that we think might make us happy.

We won’t find the meaning of life printed on a tee shirt that says, “whoever dies with the most toys wins.” This attitude only furthers the rift between us and God like some wayward prodigal daughters and sons. Like many of Jesus’s parables, this one is not just a tale of warning. Our parable also provides us with insight into how we might avoid the pitfalls of this world. Christ does this in what seems like a twist that would rival an Agatha Christie murder mystery. As He goes on to tell us, “… 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. I have decided what to do, so that when I am removed from management, people may receive me into their houses.’ So, summoning his master’s debtors one by one, he said to the first, ‘How much do you owe my master?’ He said, ‘A hundred measures of oil.’ He said to him, ‘Take your bill, and sit down quickly and write fifty.’ Then he said to another, ‘And how much do you owe?’ He said, ‘A hundred measures of wheat.’ He said to him, ‘Take your bill, and write eighty.’


The disciples were businessmen themselves and would understand all too well the situation the manager in our story found himself. They, like us, would realize that this manager deserved his punishment, for taking advantage of the kindness and trust of the rich man. Unlike us, however, they would know that this manager was not simply losing a job. In exchange for managing his wealth, the master would provide for the manager’s every need. The manager lost a position that afforded him comforts he could not get anywhere else. Additionally, we are told that the manager is physically unable to do the kind of work that would be readily available to him, that of a common laborer. With few other options, he devised a shrewd plan. He summoned his master’s debtors and cut large amounts from their bills. He excused 50 percent from the measures of oil and 20 percent from the measures of grain. He did all of this to garner favor with the debtors, hoping that once he was fired, he might still be cared for. What many might find surprising about this is the reaction of the rich man after learning about the manager’s plan. “The master commended the dishonest manager for his shrewdness. For the sons of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation, than the sons of light. And I tell you, make friends for yourselves by means of unrighteous wealth, so that when it fails, they may receive you into eternal dwellings.” This is the twist in our story. Why would someone who was already furious about being cheated out of his own wealth commend the manager for cheating him out of what is owed? To understand what is happening here, we need to understand first century Jewish culture. The manager was not a salaried employee, besides his daily needs, which the master was expected to provide for, the manager’s pay came from an agreed upon surcharge that was part of every business transaction.

 

This was not an interest charged on the commodities; we know from Leviticus that such a practice was against Jewish law when they dealt with one another. No, this was a normal markup on goods that was the manager’s only source of income. The disciples, and all others who were gathered around listening to this parable would have known this. They would have known that this manager was not further cheating his master out of what he was owed. He was simply reducing each bill by the built-in markup that would normally be his share to keep. This man, who was desperate and out of options, made the shrewdest decision he could make. He gave up what was owed to him, money I am sure he would need after being let go of from his master’s care, to secure his future.


This is it. This is the lesson that Jesus wanted his disciples to hear and the lesson He wants us to take to heart. His disciples were prominent figures in business, highly successful and highly influential. It would be easy for most of them to give up their travels with Christ and return to comfortable, worldly lives. A temptation that we all have. Like the disciples, we can turn away from Christ, cling to our temporal possessions and our spheres of influence. Where we feel comfortable in living meaningless lives. Jesus emphasizes this point when He tells us, “The sons of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation, than the sons of light.” Worldly people and unbelievers will go to great lengths to get ahead. They will take risks; they will go back to school to get recertified; and they will quit one job to advance in another, climbing the ever-growing corporate ladder. In other words, people do not hesitate to do whatever it takes to increase their financial interests so that they might enjoy a secure future with a sizable retirement. None of these things are necessarily evil, I am not suggesting that. Jesus is encouraging His saints, and all of us, to “lookout for ourselves.” We need to secure our future and invest in our spiritual wealth. Christ wants us to store up treasures in heaven, for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also (Matthew 6:20 - 21).


Jesus goes on to explain, “One who is faithful in very little, is also faithful in much, and one who is dishonest in very little, is also dishonest in much. If then we have not been faithful in the unrighteous wealth, who will entrust to us the true riches? And if we have not been faithful in that which is another’s, who will give us that which is our own? No servant can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. We cannot serve God and money.”

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Jesus teaches us that all wealth belongs to God, and we are merely stewards of it, entrusted with resources to serve His kingdom. The dishonest manager understood how to use wealth to secure his future; I ask you then, how much more should we, as God’s people, use our resources for His mission? Faithfulness in these matters begins with the small things. Christ calls us to integrity in our daily vocations, relationships, and service. Whether in our jobs, our families, or within the Church, our commitment to honesty and responsibility in small tasks shapes our faithfulness in greater ones. Furthermore, Jesus also warns that we cannot serve two masters. While money is not inherently evil, when it shackles us, competing with our devotion to Christ, it endangers our eternal future. Our culture tempts us to seek security in wealth, but true peace is found only in the promises of God. It is when we forgo such temporal treasures, turning ourselves over to God that we can secure our future. Something that becomes abundantly clear when Jesus reminds us that, “It is easier for a camel to go through a needle’s eye, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God” (Matthew 19: 26). But it is not enough for us to simply renounce all our worldly possessions. We must invest them - cherish our time, hone our talents, and invest our resources – in the things that last. We cannot change the past and the future is not for us to know. So, I implore you to listen to Christ as He urges us all to act, while we still can, and invest in our eternal future.

 

May the peace of God keep your hearts and minds in Jesus Christ, our Risen Lord and Savior. Amen

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RLC

EST.  1967

ADDRESS

2370 NE Catawba Road  Port Clinton, OH 43452

SERVICE TIME

Sundays at 9am

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©2023 Resurrection Lutheran Church

John E. Braun
Memorial Park

 

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