Redeemer Lutheran Church
1084 W. Bullard Ave.
Fresno, CA   93711
Phone: (559) 439-8500
Fax: (559) 439-8585
office@redeemerfresno.com

The Reverend Clarence Eisberg
Phone: (209) 725-9082
Cell:  (209) 631-3108
pastor@redeemerfresno.com

Worship ~ 8:30 a.m. & 10:00 a.m.
Family Ministries ~ 10:00 a.m.
Holy Communion ~ 2nd & 4th Sundays
Connecting People to Jesus
www.lcms.org







The Reverend
Clarence Eisberg
September 26, 2010

“The Punishment of the Man Who Never
Noticed”
ching.  

“We live in a greedy little world that teaches,
every little boy and girl to earn as much as they can  
Then turn around and spend it foolishly We created a credit card mess
So we shop every Sunday at the Mall
All we ever want is more
More than we had before
Can you hear it ring
It makes you want to sing… Ka Ching."

The world philosophy is a four letter word.  More.  The church’s theology is also a four
letter word but is means the opposite of more…. It is love.

Laurence Shames has said  “America’s unofficial motto is “more”.  We want more of
everything.  More fun.  More money. More excitement. More love.  More programs.  More
church members. More. More. More.

Some years ago before the death of Mother Theresa, a television special depicted the
grim human conditions that were part of her daily life.  It showed all the horror of the slums
of Calcutta and her love for these destitute, throw away people.  The producer
interviewed her as she made her rounds in that dreadful place.  Through out the program
commercials interrupted the flow of the discussion.  Here is the sequence of the topics
and then commercials.  Lepers.  (bikinis for sale)  Mass starvation.  (designer jeans for
sale)  Agonizing poverty (fur coats for sale) Abandoned babies.  (ice cream sundaes) The
dying.  (diamond watches.)

The irony was so apparent.  Two different worlds were on display.  The world
of the poor and the world of the affluent.  What about us?  And so we come to this parable
in our text today.

Jesus tells a parable about a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived
in absolute luxury.  At the rich man’s gate lay a beggar named Lazarus.  Lazarus was
covered with sores.  He longed to eat even the scraps that fell from the rich man’s table.  
He lay there day after day in misery.  Dogs came and licked his sores.  

Every day the rich man left his house, down the path to the gate, to make his trip to the
city… or his fields…his business.  When he passed through the gate do you think he ever
paid attention to Lazarus?  Lazarus was a no body in this man’s world.  

The parable is known as “the Rich Man and Lazarus”.  William Barclay in his commentary
on this text correctly identifies the true message of the parable:  “The Punishment for the
Man Who Never Noticed.”  

It is interesting that in Jesus’ parable we know the name of the poor man, Lazarus.  We
don’t know the rich man’s name.  

Take a journey in your mind with me this morning.  The first place we visit is
Guatemala City, Guatemala. It’s one of the ministry stops for “The Sending Place”.  As
you know some of our members have been on mission trips with “The Sending Place” to
Kenya, the Ukraine, and next year Hong Kong.   Those who travel to Guatemala City find
huge contrasts between the rich and desperately poor.  We hail a cab, but when we tell
him our destination is one of the city’s great garbage dumps, he refuses.  Another cab
makes the trip possible but only after the fee is doubled.

The land fill is a foul place, a place whose odor is oppressive.  Once there you see a
small army of young children who swarm over the most recent mounds deposited by
trucks.  “What are they looking for?  You wonder,  “shouldn’t they be in school?  Yes, but
quite frankly, they can make a dollar or two picking through the trash and collecting glass
and paper and other items for recycling.  The trash also provides their meals.  The dump
permeates their clothes, clings to their hair, infiltrates their skin.  No school wants them.   

Does anyone really notice?  

Our next stop is Bihar, India.  There we meet Hardik.  His name means “full of love.”  but
he has known precious little love since his father gave him a few coins and pointed him to
the city to work in a carpet factory.  He is one of the “untouchables.”  He works 12 hour
days for wages which hardly sustain his existence.  He is one of the estimated 20 to 50
million children in this country who are working for the bare necessities of life.  (www.
Pangaea.org/street_children/asia.carpet)

Our last stop could be a Brazilian city, or city in Thailand… but you will find the same in
Portland, Oregon.  Going to your hotel you are approached by and young girl… maybe
12 or 13.  She works the streets… In Portland …she is a “throw away child” from a broken
home…picked up at a mall, or found on a social network site and promised money, and
things.  She approaches  and asks if there is anything she can do for you.  Embarrassed
you quickly reply, “No, no. Nothing but I will pray for you.“   She smiles, shrugs and goes
back to take her place outside the hotel’s front doors.  In the city of Belem, Brazil she
supplies the necessary food and shelter for a family faced with poverty and no work.
(childtrafficking.com/ docs.guardian _angel_ child _prost.)

Does anyone notice?  

As you hear these true stories …do you see the contrast?  What do you feel?  
Why do we have such an abundance in our land?  Has it been a “land of milk and honey”
for those who immigrated here? Of course.  We inhabit a continent overflowing with
natural resources.  Do we have an over abundance of stuff?  What does your garage look
like?  What does my garage look like?   

There are other nations who have many blessings as well.  Not so long ago it was
estimated that Afghanistan has over a trillion dollars in mineral resources.  They have the
natural resources, but ….they don’t have the rest.

So, why do we have, when others have not?  I believe God has entrusted us with these
blessings because He expects us to use them to glorify Him.  He expects us to notice…for
he knows the poor will always be with us…  He expects us to give thanks for Him for
sending His Son, Jesus to save us…. To demonstrate his love to those who are in need of
love, mercy, care and justice.    In our parable today Jesus warns those “who do not
notice”, those who do not show “mercy and justice” will be surprised at the end of their
earthly journey.


C.S. Lewis told about a tombstone that read “Here lies an atheist…all dressed up and no
place to go.“  C.S. Lewis then made this comment.  “I bet he wishes that were so.”   The
parable doesn’t tell us much about the after life but it tells us plenty about the human
heart.   The rich man who did not notice ends up in hell.  

Someone might ask…”if there is a hell, where is it?”  That’s easy to answer.  Hell is found
at the end of life without Jesus.”  I know there is a hell, because Jesus says so.  If there is
no hell, then Jesus did not have to come to seek and save the lost.  If there is no hell,
Jesus would be demoted from Savior to “teacher”.    Without hell, and with only different
levels of heaven waiting for everyone, Jesus didn’t have to give his life as a ransom for
many, because we would all be safe and secure…. .

Any reader, even a casual reader of the Bible will soon see Jesus believed in a literal
hell.  When Jesus walked the earth He talked about many things.  But there are three
themes He came back to again and again.  The first was, how a person can be saved and
be adopted into God’s family by faith.  The second theme was how his followers should
use money, time and talent bestowed by God, caring for the poor, demonstrating mercy
and justice.  The third and final theme was heaven and hell.  His message about Hell is
simple.  It is a nasty place, reserved for Satan and his demons at the final judgment….and
those who reject belief in Jesus… You don’t want to go there. That’s why Jesus tells this
parable of the “rich man who didn’t notice and Lazarus”.   The rich man had trusted in his
wealth.  He had been selfish rejecting both Jesus and Christian charity.  He was not given
a second chance via reincarnation.  

“It was so bad that even a drop of water seemed like an oasis.  He who had lived his life
without concern, or compassion, or charity for those around him, found himself in a place
of torment.”  He had lived his life without respect or reverence for God.  In reflection he
was worried about his brothers…. “Abraham…if someone would return from the dead and
visit my family…”   His request was rejected.  “They have Moses and the Prophets, the
Word of God.”  God has told us how we can be rescued from the torment of hell.  In the
Bible we are told about how Jesus kept all of God’s laws, the ones we have broken.  He
carried our sins to the cross and died the death that we deserve.  He then rose from the
grave and death on the third day.  He showed himself alive….not a ghost, but with a
resurrected body.

Would people really believe if a dead person came back from the dead and warned us
that Hell is a real place.  Don’t go there.  A dead person would be hard to ignore.  A dead
person’s appearance would let us know that death is not the end of life.  Would we listen
to a person that has been on the other side…. With first hand knowledge after our last
breath?  

Which, I imagine, is precisely why God has sent a dead Person back to us.  His name is
Jesus.  Jesus appeared to the disciples, to others.  He ate with them.  He talked with
them.  He walked with them.  He provided proof.  He told them how to be rescued from
hell.  He said, “Believe on me and you will be saved.“  He said He would some day return.  

Let’s return to our first stop… did any one notice…..Guatemala City?   Those who travel
there with the Sending Place…. Provide an evening meal for the families and teach
children and adults the words and stories of Jesus.  In the Ukraine, they provide wheel
chairs for those who can not walk… a camp for children and mothers where they hear
about the love of Jesus.  

In Merced and Atwater a few people provide a home, called “Mary’s Mantle”.
The purpose of Mary’s Mantle is to take in homeless, pregnant women and  young girls.  
They provide parenting skills.  They see that dental and medical help is provided.  They
are provided a loving place, a family.  They are taught skills that enable them to work and
provide for their children when they leave Mary’s Mantle.  Yes, someone noticed.  

In Portland, did anyone notice?   Yes, a volunteer organization of Christians called
“Children of the Night” are rescuing children from the streets.  Children of the Night is a
non-profit, tax exempt organization founded in 1979.  These children require specialized
care for most of these children were first victimized by a parent or caregiver.  About 60%
of those rescued make it and receive their GED, with many going on to college.  (www.
childrenofthenight.org)

While you wait for His return… demonstrate love, care, justice and mercy and support
Christian men and women who are working in the garbage dumps, on the city streets,
sharing the message of God’s love.