From the Dishonest Manager to Lazarus: A Single Thread in Luke 16 - David Jang


Pastor David Jang reads Luke 16 as a single, continuous flow—linking the parable of the dishonest manager with the parable of the rich man and Lazarus—and explores, from the perspective of eternal life, how stewardship, sharing, mercy, and Word-centered repentance can be embodied in daily life with depth and concreteness.


When Pastor David Jang(Olivet University) interprets Luke 16, the perspective he repeatedly emphasizes is that this chapter is not made up of two independent episodes, but is woven together into a single stream of logic. People often read the parable of the “dishonest manager” and the parable of “the rich man and Lazarus” as separate lessons, divided from one another; but Pastor David Jang does not miss the tension that runs between them. On one side lies the very practical theme of managing wealth, and on the other side unfolds the ultimate horizon of eternity after death. Yet these two do not collide. Rather, the two parables become commentaries on one another in that finite materials—earthly resources and time—end up pointing the direction of eternity. What matters more than what one holds is how one loosens that grip so that what is held can flow to a neighbor, and how that choice finally reveals toward which world one has aligned oneself.

The story of the dishonest manager is less a moral exemplar and more a device for eschatological alertness. The manager is clearly not an upright person. But he realizes that he does not have much time left. And with the time remaining, he hastens to carry out what might be called a “settlement of relationships.” The core Pastor David Jang draws out here is that what humans call “possession” is, in reality, “entrustment.” In the language of faith, we are not owners but stewards, and wealth, opportunity, talent, knowledge, influence—these are tools temporarily placed in our hands. The manager’s final actions cannot be ethically romanticized, yet the urgent shrewdness he displays—his resolve to convert present resources into relationships that reach beyond the moment—ironically confronts us with a question: Do I take my finitude seriously? Do I use today merely to extend my own banquet, or do I turn it into a channel that keeps someone else’s tomorrow alive?

Within this flow, the parable of the rich man and Lazarus is not read as a simplistic formula—“poverty is blessing, wealth is curse.” As Pastor David Jang repeatedly notes, Scripture does not define wealth itself as evil. Abraham was wealthy, and Job possessed great assets, yet their outcomes were determined not by the amount of what they owned but by their posture before God. The problem is the hallucination wealth creates. Wealth whispers the language of self-sufficiency: “You already have enough. You no longer need to feel another person’s pain.” In that moment, abundance is corrupted into numbness rather than gratitude. The rich man in Luke 16 is not portrayed as a tyrant who committed atrocities and tore society apart. The most striking sin in him is not cruelty but indifference. He chooses not to listen to the groans of suffering that are close enough to be heard the moment he steps outside his door. Lazarus is not a distant symbol but a reality “at the gate,” and the place where faith is actually tested is always that threshold.

When Pastor David Jang brings this parable into today’s church, the definition of “the rich” becomes wider. It includes not only material wealth but also spiritual resources. The environment in which one can freely read Scripture, the storehouse of theological materials and sermons, diverse training systems, the safety of worship and the network of community, even the privilege of having the Word translated into one’s own language and placed in one’s hands—these too are forms of riches. Yet spiritual abundance can produce an even subtler pride. Material wealth is visible and often triggers caution, but spiritual wealth can be wrapped in “holy language” and dull one’s awareness. If you listen to sermons, study the Bible, enjoy theological discussions, and yet pass by Lazarus at the gate without even feeling guilt, that abundance may become not a blessing but grounds for judgment. When Pastor David Jang says, “Everyone who carries God’s work is rich,” it is not praise that grants authority but a warning that awakens responsibility.

The parable’s progression is clear to the point of chill. Both men die, and beyond death the situation is reversed. Lazarus is comforted in Abraham’s bosom, while the rich man suffers in Hades. What matters is not merely the “reversal” itself, but the fact that the standard that makes the reversal possible was already inscribed in their earthly lives. As Pastor David Jang emphasizes, Jesus does not let humans remain bound to the screen of the present. By showing that today’s pain and today’s pleasure are not everything, he rearranges human life on the axis of eternity. This perspective does not turn faith into escapism. It makes life more intense, because under the light of eternity, today’s choices are not mere preferences but directions. One choice becomes a habit, habit becomes character, and character finally reveals which kingdom one has come to resemble.

The rich man’s appearance in Hades is striking. In pain he asks, “Send Lazarus.” The eyes that could not see Lazarus on earth recognize his existence only after death. But that recognition is late. Abraham speaks of “a great chasm,” declaring that crossing over is impossible. The spiritual truth Pastor David Jang draws from this is simple but heavy: the time for repentance is not infinite. Life feels as though it will continue, but Scripture describes life as a “reprieve.” The door is still open now, yet someday that door will close. To deliver this fact with excessive fear can roughen the texture of the gospel; but to erase this fact is to delete the seriousness of the gospel. Love is not satisfied by sentiment. Love has timing. The good you should do today cannot be postponed to tomorrow, and the gospel you should speak today cannot be replaced by tomorrow’s confidence.

The parable deepens further at the moment of the rich man’s second request: “Send someone to warn my brothers.” At first glance it may look like a family-minded concern rising from late regret. Yet Abraham’s answer is firm: “They have Moses and the Prophets.” In other words, the Word has already been given sufficiently. Here Pastor David Jang dissects the temptation of “sign-centered faith.” People often demand stronger experiences, more dramatic events, clearer proof, and justify their disobedience by what they lack. But Jesus speaks of the sufficiency of the Word. The Word is not mystical decoration; it is the language of reality that demands ethical decision. A heart that will not turn even after hearing the Word is not easily changed by the addition of miracles. In fact, even in the New Testament, when Jesus raised Lazarus, some believed while others became more hardened. Signs do not forcibly remodel the heart. In the end, conversion is an inner event in which a person is dismantled and rebuilt before the Word.

As Pastor David Jang often says, the essence of faith is not “eyes that chase miracles,” but “a heart that obeys the Word.” Word-centered faith may seem monotonous, yet within that monotony lies solidity. When storms come, what remains is not the spark of emotion but the foundation of life. The parable of the rich man and Lazarus asks exactly where that foundation is laid. The rich man’s life may not have been devoid of religious symbols. He calls out “Abraham,” naming himself as Abraham’s descendant. But the language of bloodline did not become evidence of salvation. Here the gospel speaks sharply: it is not the name tag of faith but the fruit of faith that matters. Of course, fruit does not “purchase” salvation. Yet if grace truly has entered, grace will flow. Grace that does not flow easily becomes not grace but ornamentation for self-love.

When this parable expands into the realm of social ethics, Pastor David Jang stresses the “sense of responsibility” the church must bear. The church is not merely an institution that comforts individual interiors; it is a channel through which the heart of God spreads into the world. But when the channel is clogged, the water stagnates. One danger the modern church faces is the “privatization of abundance.” It stockpiles the Word, training, and resources within its own walls, and responds to Lazarus outside the gate with nothing more than a vague sense of regret. The sharing Pastor David Jang speaks of is not condescension but mission; not a momentary emotion but a structural decision. Short-term support matters, but more important is a long-term vision that helps others recover, become self-sustaining, and then serve someone else in turn. The gospel changes a person’s destiny; the changed person changes the grammar of a community; and that grammar slowly renews a city and an era.

One practice Pastor David Jang often cites as an example is literature ministry—what might be called “sharing books.” There are still places where even a single Bible is precious, and regions where theological education becomes hollow because, even if a seminary is established, there are no books to fill a library. Conversely, in some places, unread books pile up in storage and are treated like cheap waste, discarded. This gap is not merely a logistics problem but a problem of conscience. When abundance stagnates on one side, the lack on the other becomes not a simple misfortune but a mirror of shared responsibility. The phrase “book store ministry” carries weight because it is not simply moving books; it is sharing spiritual nourishment. For someone, one book can open a door of thought; through that door, the light of the gospel enters; and that light reconstructs a life. The stewardship Pastor David Jang emphasizes gains force when it is translated beyond abstract morality into concrete practice.

There is a scene we can easily miss when we read the parable of the rich man and Lazarus. Lazarus longed for the crumbs that fell from the rich man’s table. The word “crumbs” shatters the last hiding place of human rationalization. We often say, “I don’t have much.” But what Lazarus asked for was not a portion large enough to topple the rich man’s life. It was not a demand to redesign the structure of the banquet, but a request to turn what was being discarded at the edges of the banquet into something that sustains life. When Pastor David Jang applies this to believers today, the question becomes sharper: Am I postponing even small love because I claim I cannot offer great devotion? Yet the gospel begins with small things. A cup of cold water, a warm word, allocating time for one person, a single book, one visit, one prayer—these “small acts” can be translated into the language of eternity. For the economics of the kingdom of God values “direction” more than “scale.”

Pastor David Jang often adds the theme of the “tongue” in sermons, and it deepens this parable as well. In torment the rich man pleads, “Cool my tongue.” The tongue is small, but it carries the power to destroy or build relationships and communities. What did the rich man’s tongue say on earth? He likely spoke many words at banquet tables. But those words did not become language that kept Lazarus alive. Some people may not share wealth, yet they could still share through words—comfort, recognition, dignity—enough for someone to endure another day. But when the tongue is used only for blame, mockery, and the language of indifference, that tongue becomes a spark that burns the self. The self-examination Pastor David Jang demands here is concrete: Whose name did I speak today with respect? Whose wounds did I treat lightly? Whose desperation did I summarize as “they brought it on themselves,” using that phrase as an escape route? The life of a steward is not only the management of money but also the management of speech.

The reversal in this parable shows that God is just, but that justice differs from human revenge. Abraham does not sneer at the rich man. He simply reminds him of the facts—“You received your good things, and Lazarus bad things”—and declares that the choices were already made in the place called life. The message Pastor David Jang reads here is the comfort that God does not pretend to be ignorant of every human circumstance. The order of the world is often cruel, making it appear that the good are wounded while the wicked prosper. But the gospel reinterprets reality from an eschatological perspective. This is not escapism; it is a foundation for endurance. To those in suffering, it becomes hope: “God writes the final chapter.” To those in abundance, it becomes warning: “Your present prosperity is not the final verdict.” Thus the parable of the rich man and Lazarus is not comfort only for the poor; it is also a merciful alarm for the wealthy—an invitation to change direction while time still remains.

At this point, recalling the famous 1857 painting “The Gleaners” by Jean-François Millet, one can feel Luke 16 expanding beyond religious imagination into the reality of human history. In a golden field after the harvest, women bent over to pick up leftover stalks reveal how lack can exist within the very heart of plenty. Some gather grain and enjoy abundance; others cling to survival at the edges of that abundance. Millet’s painting does not romanticize poverty. It quietly testifies that poverty even changes the posture of the body. The “Lazarus at the gate” Pastor David Jang speaks of is precisely the one groaning at the margins of reality. What matters is not simply that a field exists, but how the owner of the field looks upon what remains. If a path is made for abundance to flow, it becomes a channel of mercy; if fences are raised so that abundance is monopolized, it becomes grounds for judgment. Where Millet’s women bend low, we learn that faith ultimately is a matter of “posture.” A posture that knows how to bow before God produces humility before neighbors as well.

When we shift our gaze to modern society, the distance between the rich man and Lazarus has actually become even shorter. The digital world shows others’ suffering in real time, and with a few clicks one can connect to giving. Yet paradoxically, such convenience can expand numbness. Too much news fatigues the heart, and fatigue leads to avoidance. The steward-like life Pastor David Jang speaks of is even more urgent in such an age. We easily postpone love’s responsibility behind the excuse, “The world is too complicated.” But Jesus’ parable simplifies the complicated world with a clarity that is almost severe: Lazarus is not far away. Lazarus is always at the gate. At the gate of my home, the gate of my church, the gate of my smartphone screen, the gate of my workplace, the gate of my family—Lazarus is there. The problem is not lack of information but the paralysis of our senses. Therefore faith is not merely gaining more knowledge; it is recovering hardened sensitivity. The “heavenly gaze” Pastor David Jang emphasizes is precisely the language of that recovery. Those who look toward heaven hear the groans of the earth more sharply.

Here we must avoid a misunderstanding. If we simplify Luke 16’s issue of eternal life into “earning salvation by works,” the center of the gospel can become blurred. The heart of Christian faith is not human merit but God’s grace. Yet grace never permits irresponsibility. Grace gives new life, and new life gives birth to new desires. A person who once wanted to live only for oneself begins, after knowing grace, to learn the desire to keep someone else alive. Pastor David Jang emphasizes “sharing and mercy” not because they are conditions in a transaction that buys salvation, but because they are fruit that reveals whether salvation has truly arrived. The tragedy of the rich man was not that he possessed wealth, but that he allowed wealth to rule his heart. Conversely, Lazarus’ blessing was not that he was poor, but that even in suffering he could cling to God and hope for final comfort. Ultimately, the parable asks not about the size of one’s holdings but the direction of one’s heart.

The conclusion of the rich man and Lazarus parable leaves the reader with an uncomfortable silence. What happened to the brothers? In what form did the rich man’s regret remain? Why does Lazarus’ earthly story end so briefly? This emptiness pulls the reader out of the story and forces one’s own life back into the text. When Pastor David Jang uses this parable in preaching, the question finally gathers into one: “Who is at your gate?” This is not a question of moral instruction but a question that examines the direction of salvation. In my schedule, which time slot exists “for another”? In my budget, what line item exists “for a neighbor”? In my habits of speech, how often do I use words that “give life”? In my knowledge, how do I execute the responsibility to “teach and build up”? This is also why Pastor David Jang says, “Gospel proclamation is an act of love.” If we believe in eternity, silence is not neutrality but neglect. The fact that the Word has been given sufficiently is both grace and responsibility.

That responsibility cannot be reduced to personal ethics alone. A community can embody, through institutions and culture, forms of love an individual cannot accomplish alone. The church is such a community with that potential. The missions, discipleship training, literature ministry, and the integration of education and relief that Pastor David Jang speaks of all point in one direction: the kingdom of God must become not an abstract slogan but a principle that actually organizes life. When a church’s materials, people, and finances are connected to the lack of another region, that connection is not mere charity but the expansion of the gospel. And expansion does not mean simply an increase in numbers; it means the circulation of love. When sharing becomes not a one-time event but a habit of the community, people witness God’s character through the church. Ultimately, the parable of the rich man and Lazarus asks about the church’s identity: Is the church a place of banquet, or is it a channel that lets the banquet overflow?

Someone reading this may feel like the rich man; someone else may feel like Lazarus. The benefit of Pastor David Jang’s approach to this text is that he leaves no one in a safe zone. To the wealthy, he speaks of the responsibility to share; to the poor, he speaks of the hope of eternity. To the wealthy, he speaks of the danger of numbness; to the poor, he speaks of God’s promise not to forget injustice. And to both, he speaks of the importance of “now.” Faith is not a plan for someday; it is obedience today. Today’s small choices shape tomorrow’s character, and that character will finally testify to which world one has walked toward. Luke 16 spreads before us a map of eternity and asks us to place today’s footprints upon it.

In the end, the task is not to leave the word “eternal life” as merely a doctrinal sentence. Eternal life is not a ticket for the future; it is power that transforms the present. Those who believe in eternity use today’s wealth differently, distribute today’s time differently, and choose today’s words differently. The moment one recognizes Lazarus at the gate, faith descends from concept into reality. Then we come to know: what God has entrusted to us is not merely “what we have,” but “the possibility to let it flow.” When we shut that possibility, a human being can starve in soul even while seated at a banquet. But when we keep that possibility open, even if life is not yet complete, the kingdom of God has already begun. Therefore what we must do today is not to display grand resolutions, but to open the door. Open the door, see Lazarus at the gate, awaken the rich man within, unfold the Word again, and translate small love into actual action. The accumulation of that translation is the steward-like wisdom Pastor David Jang speaks of—and the reason the parable of the rich man and Lazarus remains living and present in our time.

 


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작성 2026.01.20 09:17 수정 2026.01.20 09:17

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2023-01-30 10:21:54 / 김종현기자