Parable of the Unjust Steward
(Shrewd Manager)
Luke 16:1–13
Opening: A Manager Called to
Account
Jesus tells of a rich man who learns his manager has been wasting
possessions. The manager faces dismissal and a final audit. With
time short, he calls in the master’s debtors and reduces their
bills. The lord commends the manager’s foresight. Jesus then turns
to His disciples and draws out lessons for every steward of God’s
gifts—use what is passing to secure what endures, prove trustworthy
in small things, and choose your master with a single heart.
What the Story Shows
The manager awakens to reality: accountability is coming, resources
remain for a moment, and future relationships will matter. He
leverages the present to improve his reception later. Jesus
identifies the insight: people immersed in this world often plan
with sharp attention to consequences. Disciples need equal clarity
with higher goals. Wealth fails; judgment stands; relationships
shaped by generosity follow into “everlasting dwellings” (Luke
16:9).
Stewardship: Ownership,
Trust, and Audit Day
The field, assets, and ledgers belong to the Lord (Psalm 24:1). We
manage time, money, abilities, relationships, and influence on His
terms (1 Corinthians 4:1–2). Scripture ties stewardship to review:
“Give an account of your stewardship” (Luke 16:2). A wise heart
lives today with that meeting in view.
“Make Friends” with Fading
Wealth
“Make friends for yourselves by means of unrighteous mammon, that
when it fails, they may receive you into everlasting dwellings”
(Luke 16:9). Money belongs to the temporary order. Its highest use
is to bless people and advance the Lord’s work so that eternal fruit
remains. The New Testament names this outcome: treasure in heaven
(Matthew 6:19–21), a harvest of righteousness and “fruit that
abounds to your account” (Philippians 4:17), a firm foundation for
the age to come (1 Timothy 6:17–19). Generosity toward the needy,
support for the gospel, and quiet mercy toward the weak turn
currency into welcome.
Faithfulness in Little and in
Much
“He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much” (Luke
16:10). Daily choices around bills, promises, time, and truth tell
the story of the heart. A disciple handles small sums with clean
hands, returns what is due, pays fairly, refuses deception, and
speaks straight. The Lord calls this training for “true riches”
(Luke 16:11). If we prove true in the lesser, we are prepared for
the greater.
Single Allegiance: God or
Mammon
“No servant can serve two masters… You cannot serve God and mammon”
(Luke 16:13). Wealth makes claims—security, status, and control. The
Father claims the whole heart. The ledger and the calendar reveal
the throne. Jesus sets a clear fork in the road: pursue money as
master or use money as a tool under God’s rule.
Hearing in a World That
Scoffs
Luke notes that the Pharisees, lovers of money, ridiculed Jesus, and
He replied, “God knows your hearts” (Luke 16:14–15). Public applause
can crown the wrong loyalties. The Lord’s eyes reach the motives
that shape every transaction. A disciple seeks commendation at that
level.
Practical Wisdom for Today’s
Stewards
Budget with eternity in view. Plan an intentional portion for
benevolence and sound teaching. Keep honest books. Settle debts
promptly. Practice contentment (Hebrews 13:5). Write wills that
reflect kingdom priorities. Learn to say “enough,” and let surplus
flow toward people and purposes that honor Christ.
Obedient Response to the King
The Lord links approval to doing the Father’s will (Matthew 7:21).
Scripture describes the pathway into Christ: hear the gospel (Romans
10:17), believe Jesus is the Son of God (Mark 16:16), repent (Acts
17:30), confess His name (Romans 10:9–10), and be baptized to wash
away sins (Acts 22:16), rising to walk in newness of life (Romans
6:3–4). Then continue in all He commanded (Matthew 28:20).
Stewardship grows inside that life of obedience.
Conclusion: Use Today to
Prepare for Forever
The manager’s window was short; ours is, too. Resources pass from
hand to hand. The account appointment approaches. Arrange your
affairs so that people helped by your faith and generosity will be
there to welcome you. Prove faithful in the little. Choose God as
Master. Let every decision show it.
Exhaustive Sermon Outline
- Context and Audience
- Setting: Jesus speaks
to disciples; Pharisees listening (Luke 16:1, 14)
- Theme continuity:
money, mercy, and eternity in Luke 15–16
- Parable Retold (Luke
16:1–8)
- Accusation, impending
audit, swift plan
- Debt reductions, social
capital, commendation for foresight
- Doctrinal Anchors
- Ownership: God owns; we
manage (Psalm 24:1; 1 Corinthians 4:1–2)
- Accountability: “Give
an account” (Luke 16:2; Romans 14:12)
- Transience of wealth:
“When it fails” (Luke 16:9; Proverbs 23:4–5)
- “Make Friends” Explained
(Luke 16:9)
- Aim: eternal welcome
- Means: generous giving,
benevolence, gospel support (Matthew 6:19–21; Philippians
4:15–17; 1 Timothy 6:17–19; Luke 12:33)
- Faithfulness Principle
(Luke 16:10–12)
- Little → much; earthly
→ true riches
- Tests: honesty,
promises, time, integrity (Proverbs 11:1; Ephesians 4:28)
- Mastery Principle (Luke
16:13)
- Exclusive allegiance
- Diagnostics: budget,
schedule, ambitions
- Warning to Scoffers (Luke
16:14–15)
- God knows the heart;
public esteem misleads
- Applications
- Personal: budget for
generosity; avoid debt traps; refuse shady gain
- Family: teach children
stewardship; practice open ledgers and simple living
- Congregational:
transparent benevolence; prioritize sound teaching; support
evangelism
- Obedient Entry and Growth
- Hear, believe, repent,
confess, be baptized (Romans 10:17; Mark 16:16; Acts 17:30;
Romans 10:9–10; Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21)
- Continue in all He
commanded (Matthew 28:20)
- Closing Appeal
- Plan with eternity in
view, prove faithful in little, choose God as Master
Call to Action
- Review last month’s
spending. Identify one recurring expense to reduce and redirect
that amount to benevolence or gospel work.
- Settle any outstanding
obligation this week. Clean ledgers build trustworthy habits.
- If you have not obeyed the
gospel, arrange today to be baptized into Christ (Acts 22:16)
and begin a steward’s life under the Lord’s rule.
Scripture Reference List
- Luke 16:1–13 — Parable,
lessons on foresight, faithfulness, and single allegiance
- Luke 16:14–15 — Lovers of
money scoff; God knows the heart
- Matthew 6:19–21 — Treasure
in heaven directs the heart
- Luke 12:33 — Give alms;
unfailing treasure above
- Philippians 4:15–17 —
Giving as “fruit” to your account
- 1 Timothy 6:17–19 — Do
good, be generous, store up a good foundation
- Proverbs 23:4–5 — Riches
sprout wings; do not trust wealth
- Proverbs 11:1 — Honest
measures please God
- Ephesians 4:28 — Work and
share with those in need
- Romans 14:12 — Each will
give account to God
- Matthew 7:21 — Entrance
tied to doing the Father’s will
- Romans 10:17 — Faith comes
by hearing
- Mark 16:16 — Belief and
baptism in the Lord’s commission
- Romans 10:9–10 — Confession
of Christ
- Acts 22:16 — Arise, be
baptized, wash away sins
- Romans 6:3–4 — Buried with
Christ, raised to new life
- 1 Peter 3:21 — Baptism as
appeal for a good conscience
- Matthew 28:20 — Continue in
all He commanded
Prepared by David Hersey of the
church of Christ at Granby, MO |