Jesus'
parable of the rich man and Lazarus tells us a great deal about the extent and
depth of arrogance to be found in the unrighteous. We are told the rich man,
after living in comfort and luxury, went to Hell, while the diseased beggar
Lazarus at death to Abraham's side. But this is not, for me, a story about the evils of
wealth versus the virtues of suffering.
Our Lord
told this story not long after rebuffing the Pharisees, who we are told in
Luke's gospel, "were lovers of money." Jesus had said to them,
"You are those who justify yourselves before men, but God knows your
hearts. For what is exalted before men is an abomination in the sight of
God." So it is not money itself or wealth that makes one unrighteous, but
placing it above God. That seems worse when one has to defend or explain away the skewing
of priorities.
What
amazes me about the parable is the rich man's gall in asking Abraham to have
Lazarus serve him. He knew the name of the beggar with sores, and he could not,
even then, could only think of his as a being below him. Further, when Abraham tells the
rich man why his request will not be granted, the rich man again asks Abraham
to "send him to my father's house" in order to warn his still living
brothers. Again, he sees Lazarus as a servant who can be ordered from his comfort
to do the bidding of those of higher status.
The rich man did not go to Hell because he was
rich, but because he rejected God. The sign of that rejection is that he would not
see anything in the world as less important than him, and even death and the
torment of flames did not burn such selfishness and arrogance out of him.
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