A Homily for the Eighth Sunday After Pentecost. Preached at All Saints, Collingwood, Anglican Diocese of Toronto.
Readings: Hosea 11:1-11; Psalm 107:1-9, 43; Colossians 3:1-11; Luke 12:13-21
’So it is with those who store up treasures for themselves but are not rich toward God.” (Luke 12:21)
The healthiest body on earth belongs to a man called Bryan Johnson, or at least, that’s what he says, because he has spent millions of dollars making it that way. If you haven’t heard of him, Johnson is one of the those people who made a fortune in technology and who is now pursuing his passion project, which is longevity.
Johnson has a single minded focus on his body, with a daily regimen that includes nutritional supplements, plasma transfers, and light therapy - but his real goal is to live forever. If Johnson has a philosophy, it seems to be “Don’t Die”, and his ultimate hope is that ultimately he can cheat death through a kind of digital consciousness, where artificial intelligence will allow Bryan Johnson - all his thoughts, ideas, and words - to have some sort of post-biological, potentially unlimited lifespan. If Johnson has any kind of religion, it could be described as a religion of permanent existence.
Some immediate critiques of Johnson’s longevity project come to mind, and not necessarily theological ones (though they can easily be made as well). What makes this particular man’s existence significant or worthy of preservation, when children are dying of famine in Gaza? Why should this man be able to spend millions on his health and wellness when countless people lack basic health care? While the ultra rich of previous generations donated money to build libraries and hospitals, the ultra rich of today seem to focus on vanity projects that benefit themselves and the people like them (though we might say a charitable word about the Gates Foundation and it’s anti-malaria campaign).
I can’t resist comparing Bryan Johnson to the rich man in Jesus’ story from today’s gospel because there are some obvious parallels. The man in the story is also quite wealthy and his goal is a comfortable longevity where he will have “ample goods laid up for many years” so that he may “relax, eat, drink, be merry” (Lk 12.19). Jesus frames the story as a caution against greed (“covetousness” in the KJV) which could be summed up colloquially, as I heard someone say recently, as “no one takes a U-Haul to their funeral”. But behind this obvious conclusion is a more subtle caution about misplaced trust in self-sufficiency.
Jesus has a lot to say in the gospels, particularly in Luke, about rich people, and not much of it is complimentary. Usually Jesus portrays wealth and the pursuit of wealth as being contradictory to the values that Jesus associates with the Kingdom of God: faith, humility, charity, and above all a dependence on God. In fact, the story about the man who dies suddenly with full barns is a springboard for a series of teachings that follows in Luke 12, and those teachings focus mostly on the assurance that God will provide for our very existence.
The rest of Luke 12 has some well known phrases, such as Jesus’ “consider teachings: “”Consider the ravens: they neither sow nor reap … and yet God feeds them” (12.24) or “Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; yet I tell you even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these” (12.27). As Jesus explains, if God will do this for birds and flowers, how much more will God do for you? Both examples support Jesus’ promise that the Father will give us what we need.
Then Jesus circles back to our gospel story, and explains what he meant when he said that you can’t gather treasure on earth and also be rich toward God. What did he mean by this? Well, Jesus goes further when he tells his friends not to put their trust in earthly wealth, which can vanish. Instead he tells his friends to “strive for [the kingdom of God” by selling their stuff, giving it away, thus earning “an unfailing treasure in heaven” (12.31-34).
I think Jesus is saying more than just go earn heavenly merit points by doing good things on earth. I think it’s much more profound and much more interesting. By telling us to “strive for the kingdom”, Jesus is encouraging us to fully participate in God’s economy. In other words, if the God who created us provides for us by giving us the essentials of life, then our role in this economy is to share in this provision by attending to the needs of others.
The word “kingdom” is communal, it implies a society that is ultimately created by God and which is dependent upon God for its continued existence. And because the kingdom of God is communal, that means that we can and must speak of a common good. As followers of Jesus, we accept that we can’t just pursue our welfare for others. When Jesus commands us to care for the least among us (see Mt 25), he is reminding us of how striving for the kingdom of God means striving for the common good of those around us.
The rich man in Jesus’ story strives only for his own good. We hear nothing about his desire to share his crops and wealth with those around him. And so he dies, materially wealthy but spiritually bankrupt. He assumed that he could provide for his own existence, and discovered that his self-sufficiency was an illusion.
As Christians, we believe that our existence comes from God. There’s a wonderful passage from the Book of Acts, where Paul tells the Athenian philosophers that God made the whole earth and gave us our existence, and so, in his lovely phrase, he says that it is in God that “we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17.28).
I realize that there are many, many people today who would disagree with this claim. Our self-proclaimed technology visionaries, like Bryan Johnson who I mentioned earlier, believe that we can create and recreate ourselves, and that we can attain an existence in which we aren’t beholden to God and have no obligations to anyone else. Like the man in Jesus’ story, and like so many of his fellow tech overlords, he seems to think that his enormous wealth should be focused on his own needs.
As followers of Jesus, we are challenged to let God provide for our needs, and in return for God’s providing for us, we are challenged to provide for the needs of others. That’s the social contract of the kingdom of heaven. And in return, we are promised something that people like Bryan Johnson long for, the complete and perfect life and joy that God offers us, both in this world and the next. That existence, full of joy and and beauty and eternal light, can’t be purchased by billionaires, but it is there for the asking.