16th Sunday after Pentecost – September 28, 2025

Luke 16:19-31

This morning…Luke introduces two characters.

  • Two really different guys.
  • One is rich…well-dressed…well-fed…secure in a gated home.
  • Interesting…he’s never given a name.
  • He is defined only by his wealth and possessions.

 

The other…lays outside of the gate.

  • His name is Lazarus.
  • (Not Mary and Martha’s brother…not that Lazarus).
  • We do not know why he is poor.
  • We do not know how he ended up at the gate of the rich man.

 

The Greek word translated as “lay” implies that someone threw him at the gate.

  • That he was “dumped” at the gate.
  • Did someone want to get rid of him?
  • Was he dumped once…or did someone dump him every day?

His stomach growls from emptiness.

  • Life has so stripped him of dignity that he longs for the scraps that fall from the rich man’s table.
  • Dogs also hang around the gate.
  • Wild dogs…waiting for the rich man to throw out his trash.
  • The dogs lick Lazarus’ sores.
  • We should not see this as comfort.
  • Lazarus is too weak and sick to fight them off.
  • He has nothing but a name:
  • Lazarus…the Greek form of Eliezer…meaning…God is my help.
  • The Lord be with you.

Death…the great equalizer…hits them both.

  • We read that the rich man was buried.
  • But Lazarus was not.
  • His body was likely dumped in the Gehinnom Valley…
  • A garbage dump that lay just outside of Jerusalem…to get it out of the way.
  • Many churches hold a service once a year for all the people in the city who die on the streets but have not had a proper burial.
  • Those churches would recognize Lazarus during that memorial service.
  • So…Lazarus would finally find dignity in those gracious memorial liturgies.

It is here that the story turns……that is…after their deaths…everything flips.

  • Lazarus…the man who was dumped at the gate is carried by angels up to Abraham…the great patriarch.
  • After experiencing no dignity in life…Lazarus receives a place of honor in death.
  • The rich man…who lived a life of comfort and indulgence…ends up in a place of torment.

We do not know exactly how Lazarus experienced this great reversal.

  • He utters no words and Luke does not share his thoughts.
  • We assume he felt gratitude and comfort at the end of his misery.

We do know how the rich man experienced his punishment.

  • But even in retribution…he had a sense of entitlement.
  • He thought Lazarus should come take care of him.
  • He wanted relief from his agony…
  • And he expected Lazarus to provide it.
  • He gave nothing to Lazarus before death.
  • But thinks Lazarus should meet his needs after death.
  • This is the way of the world.

The television series This Is Us concluded its six-year run with a moving episode about death…and hope.

  • This Is Us chronicled the lives of the Pearson Family over 50 years.
  • But in an orderly narrative…each episode jumped from the present to the past to the future.
  • We saw how the family’s past shaped their present.
  • How the experiences they encountered in the present set the stage for the challenges to come.

 

In one of the series’ final episodes…eighty-year-old Rebecca…the family matriarch…is dying.

  • She is bedridden and in the final stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
  • The nurse has summoned the family.
  • Rebecca probably will not make it through the night.

 

As Rebecca’s body shuts down…her spirit begins its journey to eternity…on a train.

  • The kind of vintage train she rode with her father when she was a child.
  • A train decorated in brocade and plush seats.
  • A train on which passengers dress in elegant formal wear.

 

Rebecca is again as young and beautiful as she was the day she married her beloved husband…Jack…a half century before.

  • As Rebecca moves through the train…she sees her children at every stage of their lives.
  • All happily hanging out with each other.
  • In each car…she is greeted by the many wonderful people who have blessed her life.
  • Including her daughter-in-law and sons-in-law and grandchildren.
  • The light in Rebecca’s eyes reveals the joy she is experiencing in remembering again.

 

In the lounge car she is greeted by Dr. K…the obstetrician who delivered her three children.

  • He’s serving as bartender.
  • As he mixes a cocktail for her…
  • Rebecca confesses her fear that she made too many mistakes in raising her family.
  • K assures her that there are no perfect games in parenting.
  • No one ever came back and said to me‘Doc…I got this parent thing down.’ 
  • K tells Rebecca that even in the sadness and mess she and her family experienced…
  • Rebecca made something beautiful and wonderful.
  • What a thing you made of it all…Rebecca. 
  • What a big…messy…gigantic…spectacular thing!

 

As her children say their goodbyes to Rebecca in real time…

  • Rebecca’s soul continues to move from car to car on the mythical train…
  • Reliving one memory after another.

 

Finally…at the moment of her death…Rebecca comes to the last car…the caboose.

  • There she is reunited with her husband…Jack…
  • Who died years before as the result of a house fire.
  • As they embrace…Jack tells her: You did so good. 

 

Rebecca confides to Jack her fear of leaving her family now when they need her.

  • It’s hard to explain…Jack says…you will do all those things with them…you will be there.

 

On her train ride to eternity…Rebecca sees her life in its totality.

  • She comes to a new awareness of the good she did as a mom.
  • The blessings she realized in her marriage.
  • The many broken hearts…and bones…she was able to mend.

 

So…here’s the thing…to follow Jesus is to be aware of the good that has blessed our lives.

  • The good we and others possess because we are all created by God.
  • And the good we can do as a result.

 

That is the failing of the rich man in today’s story:

  • His complete ingratitude for all that he was granted in life.
  • And his lack of awareness of the good he could do for Lazarus at his gate.
  • Stepping over Lazarus as he walked out his front door.

 

With humility and gratitude…

  • Today’s gospel opens our hearts and spirits to discover…
  • As Rebecca comes to see on the train
  • The blessing…the good…the hope that is us.