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Speaker 1: For what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? Matthew sixteen twenty six. Dear Lord, we acknowledge and declare that true satisfaction and life is found in you than you alone. Whatever wealth, success or status we gain in this world pales in comparison to the heavenly treasure gained through a relationship with you. May we never lose sight of what truly matters in this life. Teach us what true success is and how a rich life is truly measured. Give us the right mindset to cherish our relationships with family, friends, and you. May our need for more melt away by a supernatural satisfaction in you. In Jesus' name, we pray Amen. Thank you for praying with me today. You're listening to the Jesus Podcast. Now prepare to be swept away in another dramatic retelling of Christ's parables. If you want to partner with us in our mission to bring the Bible to life in new ways, follow this podcast on whatever platform you're listening to. Doing so will keep you updated but also help us get discovered by more people. That way we can reach the whole world with the story of Jesus. Thousands of people trampled on one another to hear a word from Jesus. He sat among his disciples, digging for eternal truths. Like buried treasure. They hung on every word, savoring every moment beside their master.
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Speaker 2: My friends, do not fear those who can kill the body. Fear he who can throw your soul into hell.
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Speaker 3: It is he who should fear.
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Speaker 1: His words were sharp, piercing the pride and vapid expectations of man. As Jesus unearthed these divine truths, a man shoved his way to the front, desperate to speak with Jesus. He wasn't seeking healing, nor was he a messenger for someone in need. He came for judgment.
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Speaker 4: Teacher, my father has died and my brother has received all the inheritance. Tell him that it's only fair to divide the inheritance with me.
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Speaker 1: He gestured to his older brother, who wore an angry and vengeful stare, both men vibrating with rage, torn apart by greed. Jesus was rarely angry and enter options. The sick often interrupted him on the road, and children often interrupted his teachings. However, this man's greedy request irritated Jesus with a stern tone. Jesus raised his hands and said.
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Speaker 2: Sir, who appointed me his judge Between the two of you.
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Speaker 1: He shook his head and stood. He addressed the entire crowd, shouting.
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Speaker 5: Watch out beyond God, against all kinds of greed. Life is not merely about possessions and accumulating wealth. There's more to gain in this life than riches.
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Speaker 1: He turned to the men, but still addressed the crowd and said.
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Speaker 2: Let me tell you a story about a rich young fool.
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Speaker 6: I'll take my faith seriously. When I'm older and I've had my fun I'll go to church next week when I'm not as busy. I'll be more generous. Once I've made more money. I'll invest more time and love in my community when I have my career figured out. But what if tomorrow isn't promised? What if today is all you had? What would you do with your faith?
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Speaker 7: Then?
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Speaker 2: This is the Jesus Podcast.
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Speaker 6: I'm zachwipray dot com here to dive into the story of the rich fool. This parable was told by Jesus as a warning to anyone who says, I'll take my faith seriously once I fill in the blank. This sentence can be filled in with a myriad of different things. I'll take my faith seriously when I finish college. I'll take my faith seriously once I have a career. The truth is, we don't know when our time will come. The time we have here on this earth is precious, and what a waste it turns out to be if we take all this time pursuing material wealth over spiritual riches that will last into eternity in a world where the tangible often triumphs the transcendent Jesus. Is parable of the rich Fool unfolds as a timeless narrative compelling us to reevaluate our deepest values and where we place our trust. You see, the story isn't just about wealth. It's not just another story about why it's bad to become rich. If you read the story like that, you've got it all wrong. This is about where we invest our time. This is about what we ascribe as ultimate value in our lives, and at the heart of it all, it's a question of what truly makes us rich. The parable is set up with Jesus being asked to arbitrate in an inheritance dispute between two men. Gosh, how easily our hearts can be trapped by the material. Jesus is right in front of these men, and instead of listening to his teachings, they are concerned about dividing their wealth. Jesus, ever, the master teacher, shifts the focus from immediacy of material disputes to the eternal perspective, Warning against the perils of being covetous. He proclaims, Sir, who appointed me judge or arbiter over you? And watch out, be on guard against all kinds of greed. Life is not merely about possessions and accumulating wealth. There's more to gain in this life than riches. Jesus is about to tell us a parable of a man who gained wealth. At the end, none of it really mattered. For this man we chose the name Isachar.
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Speaker 2: In the fertile plains of Galilee, where olive trees whispered, ancient secrets, and vineyards stretched like green seas, there lived a young man named Isacar. His story not unlock. The rolling hills of his homeland was one of peaks and valleys of dreams, sowed in hope and reaped in despair. Isaacar was a man of modest beginnings. His unquenchable thirst for success matched his work ethic. His life was fertile soil for growth, gain and sorrow. Isaaca scanned the lush green hills behind his uncle's estate. Wildflowers bloomed with promise, and berries grew without prompting. It was fertile land. Indeed, he turned back and looked at his uncle's farm. The ground had been tilled and properly, and livestock had grazed over the good grass. His uncle's ignorance, coupled with age and disobedient sons, made for squandered lads, and Isaac I was determined to restore the land and make it his own. His uncle was beside him, explaining his reasons for his sorry excuse for a farm.
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Speaker 7: I had dreams that my sons would one day raise their families here, But they have all gone, and my bones are too brittle to work the fields. What are you able to give me for it?
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Speaker 2: Isaacar stroked his beard, one he was pleased to have grown. He was a young man with vigor in dreams for wealth and prominence. He had always acted older than his age, but like his low life cousin who had left their father to rot in his blighted fields, he had an unsatiable appetite for work. Your farmer's in poor condition, Uncle, It's surrounded by fertile land, so I'm surprised it's in such dire straits. You've taken a good pot of land and nearly ruined it beyond restoration. Isaaca sighed and furrowed brow, pretending not to want the land with every fiber of his being. I can give you two and a half talents the three if you leave me with the heifers and bowls to plow the fields. Isaaca kicked up the dust and looked at his uncle.
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Speaker 3: What you say, Let's keep this land in the family.
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Speaker 2: Isaaca's uncle nodded and looked out at the fields with a quiver jar. He extended his hand to shake Isaacer's, but paused and said.
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Speaker 7: I will agree, but on one condition. I dreamed that this land would be the home of my children, grandchildren and great grandchildren. Promise me that you will fill this place with the love of a family.
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Speaker 2: Isaaca took his uncle's hand and firmly shook it. You have my word. Once I turn this place around, I will start a family. We will eat, drink, and enjoy the fruits of our labor. I will pray you are still alive to see it. Uncle, Thus his journey to fulfill his dreams began. Days became nights, and nights slipped into weeks. As Isaaca toiled under the relentless sun and indifferent moon, His hands, once smooth, grew calloused and rugged. His back one straight now bore the weight of his continual labor. He looked out of the green pastures rolling beside his land. One day my fields will be filled with life too.
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Speaker 3: Just you wait.
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Speaker 2: Isaaca hadn't seen his mother or father in weeks. Every waking hour was spent tilling, planting, and planning. The thought of meeting a woman and starting a family never crossed his mind. His focus was on the plow. His world narrowed to the dirt beneath his feet and tools in his hand. Then, like a miracle, the earth responded. After a season of rain. Green shoots pierced the dry soil, Vines in the trellises and trees bowed under the weight of their fruit. Isaaca stood on his land a sea of green and gold, and a prideful smile creased his son's scorched face. He had turned the wasteland into an eden of his own making. He danced in the fields, basking in victory. I must build a barn, he shouted. He sent word to his brothers, who each brought their sons to help Isacar build. He watched his brothers teach their sons how to swing a hammer. A small desire for a family inched into his mind. Then he looked back at his vibrant field and said, once I have enough, I will rest. Isaaca's first reaping was more successful than he could have imagined. In the course of just one harvest, he had made half of what he paid for the entire field. He now even had plenty left over to fill his new barn.
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Speaker 3: He threw a.
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Speaker 2: Celebration and invited his family. Friends in family filled his estate, including his uncle.
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Speaker 7: You've done well, Issakah. Have you given any thought to starting a family?
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Speaker 2: Isaaca smiled and wrapped his arm around his uncle's shoulder.
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Speaker 3: This is my first harvest. There's no telling what will happen for the next one. Let's fill another barn with grain. Then I will enjoy the fruit of my labor.
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Speaker 2: Isaaca hired men from nearby villages to till and plant. He built another barn, and but more of the surrounding land. His workers grew with each harvest, but the number of friends decreased. Isaaca rarely spoke with his family, and he hadn't been to synagogue in ages. Family, friendships, and romance were all sacrificed at the altar of success. His faith was a dying flame, apart from the embers of the word community. As his wealth grew, so did his insatiable desire for more. The barns, one symbols of his success, seemed small and inadequate. With a heart hardened by greed, he tore them down to build larger ones, hoarding his bounty from the world. Year after year, Isaaca's empire expanded. He desperately tried to fill a bottomless pit with wealth and success. Each night, as his aching bones rested in his empty bed, he would sigh a promise to himself.
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Speaker 3: When I'm done working, I'll rest in have fun. It was a lie.
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Speaker 2: He was racing towards a finished line that was continually moving. Isaacar rose one morning to the sound of song birds and plows. His workers were already tilling the fields for planting. His last harvest was the largest yet, producing twentyfold his original investment. There was an aching pain in his chest, one that had bothered him for a few weeks. Now I need a break, he mumbled to himself. Perhaps after this next harvest, all I'll start a family and rest another lie. He hobbled out of his house and stretched his arms welcoming the morning sun. He walked the fields, checked on his overseers, and balanced the books with his money keepers. Then he went to check on the barns. He slid his hands across the wood and gave it a nice thump. The barns were a spectacle to behold. They were fortified with African blackwood, the most substantial lumber in the East. And yet he felt a tinge of regret that he had torn down the one his brothers helped him to build. He hadn't seen them in years, and wondered if his nephews had families of their own. Now I should have been there to help them build barns. As Isaaca returned to the house, a messenger arrived with a note. Isaacar took the note with trembling hands. He opened the note and read it. It was a simple message, brief yet cutting like a dagger.
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Speaker 7: Will you ever fulfill your promise to me?
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Speaker 2: Isaaca's heart ached. That night, he lay down in his empty bed and thought about the promise he had made to his uncle. He thought about the countless hours spent telling fields and filling barns. It had taken years, but he finally felt like he might have had enough.
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Speaker 3: But to morrow, to morrow, I will tear down my barns and build bigger ones. They will be large enough to last a lifetime. Then I will rest and an't be merry with what I've done. With a heavy heart and determination again just a little bit more, he fell asleep. That night, Isaaca tossed and turned in bed. His chest tightened and his breath became shorter. In the throes of a feverish dream, the Lord came to him in a dream. His voice was neither loud nor angry.
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Speaker 2: Yet the words shook Isaaca's soul.
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Speaker 3: Befool this very night, your life would be demanded of you. All the wealth you have built, and things you have prepared, Who will it go to?
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Speaker 2: Now? Isaaca saw our vision of his vibrant fields slowly withering back to the blighted blood of land he had bought from his uncle years ago. In the end, Isaacar had gained nothing for all his wealth. His life would end, and no legacy would live on beyond him. That night, in his bed, Isaaca's heart gave way. As well as vast as it was, could not purchase another breath. He lay alone, a king in an empty kingdom, his dreams of rest and happiness as distant as the setting sun. His legacy cautionary tale whispered in the wind, the life of a man who gained the world but lost his soul.
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Speaker 1: Jesus looked at the two brothers and held their shoulders.
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Speaker 2: This is how it is for those who a mass are wealth for themselves, yet remain impoverished in the sight of the Lord.
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Speaker 1: Jesus addressed his followers again, importing wisdom and love.
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Speaker 2: Let not your hearts be troubled with thoughts of daily sustenance, the food that sustains life, the garments that clothe the body. Understand that life's essence extends far beyond the provisions of the table and the adornments of the flesh observe the ravens, unburdened by the toil of cultivation or the concern of harvest. They have no pantry, they have no barn, yet they are sustained by God's hand. Are you not of greater worth than these creatures? Can any among you, by surrendering to worry, extend the span of your life by even a fleeting moment? If such minor feeds elude your grasp, why then do you succumb to anxiety over matters greater?
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Speaker 1: Jesus attempted to chip away at the notion that anyone could add to their life with worry or work. Although work was necessary to provide, it was the Lord who ultimately brought satisfaction.
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Speaker 6: There's a ways Tomorrow right wrong. As it turns out, Issacar was building wealth for absolce lutely nothing. At the end of the day, it was all fruitless. He worked himself to the bone and gained all this wealth, but for what he died alone, without having made any meaningful connection with people and, most importantly God. There's nothing inherently wrong with wanting to build wealth. Those who have made industries have the potential to bless a lot of people. Those who have gained a lot of wealth have the opportunity to be incredibly generous. It's possible to have profit and purpose, but this parable warns us against the futile pursuit of wealth in and of itself. The tragedy of the rich fool is not in his wealth, but in his failure to be rich towards what actually matters. This narrative forces us to confront mortality in the ultimate futility of placing our hope in temporal riches. This man gained so much, but at the end of the day, all of it seems kind of void, meaningless. Jesus's teaching cuts to the core of our existence, challenging the pervasive cultural narrative that equates success with material accumulation. We've all been told money doesn't buy us happiness, but as it turns out, money also doesn't buy us meaning to build wealth, as the ultimate goal is to miss what it means to be human. Jesus said, what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul? You see, money can't buy us a fulfilling life, nor can it fill a God shaped hole in our hearts. At the end of the day, there's going to be this void in our hearts that needs to be filled by the Holy Spirit. But also there's going to be a void in the world. There's this space and time where we could have inserted purpose, meaning genuine relationship. Yet if we spend all this time just building wealth, just building an empire for ourself, when we die, the world isn't that much better of a place because we existed. The rich fool's folly was not in his industry or his success, but in his belief that security and happiness could somehow be achieved through wealth. Listen, this man was prudent from a worldly perspective if he was able to rapidly gain wealth and capitalize in a place where other people had failed. But his plans lacked this eternal perspective, or this relational perspective that acknowledges God's sovereignty over life and death, but also his ability to just bless the people around him.
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Speaker 3: With who he is.
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Speaker 6: He refused to build a family, he refused to acknowledge his family. He didn't keep up with the people that mattered to him, and he missed out on a rich and vibrant relationship with God. You see, because at the end of the day, there's a legacy we leave in the people that we've touched, and then into eternity there's our relationship with God that we've invested in. Those are the two things that live beyond us. Our wealth are riches, it's all fleeting. It doesn't live beyond us, and neither can we take it with us into the next life. Like many parables told by Jesus, this story serves as a mirror for us, reflecting the folly of investing our identities and security in the impermanent things of life, the things that moth and rust can destroy. It invites us to consider what it means to actually be rich. Do we want to be rich by worldly standards or rich in our relationship with God and the impact we've left on others. This richness is not about amassing spiritual merit, but about orienting our lives towards God's kingdom, seeking his will, and loving the people around us. This parable is a call to invest in relationships, give generously, show compassion, and pursue justice. These are treasures that rust can't destroy and thieves can't break in and steal the impact we've made in people's lives. The irony is that this man's wealth would probably end up dispersed among strangers. He was constantly building for the future, but at the end of it all, none of it lasted past him. Jesus said this in Matthew chapter six. Don't lay up for yourself treasures on earth, where moth and rust can destroy, and where thieves break in and steel. But lay up for your SEL's treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in and steel. For where your treasure is there, your heart will be. Also this verse has a dual meaning. First, there are eternal rewards for our faithfulness here on earth. Second, the seeds of love and devotion you pour into the people around you, we'll have a glorious ripple effect, outlasting your life and into the generations that come after you. As we navigate the complexities of the modern world, the parable of the rich fool stands as a beacon to us, reminding us of the fleeting nature of material wealth and the enduring value of a life lived of a rich relationship with God. Ultimately, this story is not just about the dangers of wealth. It's about the liberating invitation to find our true worth and security and a thriving relationship with God. Let's ponder on how to reflect the ideals taught in this parable. Let us ponder on where our treasure actually lies and where our treasure is, because where our treasure is, there our heart will be also. Let's strive not just for the riches of the world, but to lay it for ourselves treasures in heaven, to leave a legacy of helping others, to leave an impact on this earth that stretches into the generations after us. Let's cultivate hearts that are rich towards God and in so doing discover the true essence of a life well life. I loved joining you today on this podcast. Be sure to tune in next time for our next parable. It's also going to have to do with property, but this time the land is going to be occupied by very wicked people, and we're going to explore the dynamics between the Pharisees and the gentiles of the time. If this podcast has blessed you in any way, we would love it if you left us a review I was pouring through some of them and got to see how it's impacted a few of you. How you're reading it on the drive with your kids, how it's gotten you through harsh times like going through chemotherapy or enduring a bad miscarriage. We love that the story of Jesus has been impacting you. We love how these truths from God's Kingdom have been offering value to your faith. Keep those reviews coming. They help us as a Prey dot com team to know that we're making an impact. They also help us get discovered by more people, and we want the hope of Jesus to be known throughout the world. Thanks for making all of that possible.