I think Alfred Hitchcock must have liked Luke. Likewise,
I’m sure Luke would have been a big fan of Hitchcock’s films, many of which had
twisted endings in which crime and punishment were somehow turned upside down
and left us wondering what just happened. And so it is with Luke 16:1-13. We’re convinced that the dishonest manager is finished, but
is he?
Most of us have jobs that conform to specific job
descriptions that are beholden to specific performance standards to which we
are accountable. If our performance exceeds expectations, we are rewarded;
likewise, if our performance falls short of expectations, we can be subject to
remediation, probation and dismissal. Now the “dishonest manager,” as Jesus has
already named him, is an “employee at will” and fired without so much as an
opportunity to speak, much less redeem himself. The rich man was completely in
his right to fire him for squandering his property.
So, here’s Luke’s surprise ending: instead of being
punished and used as a model for bad behavior, the manager is given credit for
being shrewd because he feathered his
own nest by ingratiating himself to his employer’s debtors by discounting what
is owed without any authorization. Instead of being thrown in jail, he was
acknowledged for using his resources to provide for his future as he was forced
to leave his job. I don’t think we would regard the manager as a model citizen
but he was able to secure his future by establishing new friendships of those
who were at one time in his debt. The dishonest manager was not respectable
because he defied the law. Couldn’t the same be said for Jesus? He broke all
the laws and was executed.
Jesus refused to yield to the love of power and lived the power of love by defying the hypocrisy
of those who sit in judgment. He reached out with compassion to the
“crooks” and “sinners” in us all, who might otherwise never feel worthy of
meeting the expectations of a “harsh judge.”
Are there those we dismiss or overlook as though they
have no value? How about those whose lifestyle is different from ours…do we
dismiss them as having nothing worth contributing? Are they too young, too
old, and too impaired to add anything to our lives and to our Church? Looking
for the good in people is impossible if we treat them as having no
redemptive value.
“If you judge
people, you have no time to love them.” (Mother Theresa)
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