¼±±³ºÎ | ¾ç½ÄºÎ | ÀçÁ¤ºÎ | ¿¹¹èºÎ | ±³À°ºÎ | ÀüµµºÎ
UBFÇØ¿Ü|Çѱ¹|¸ð¹ÙÀÏ
  ½É·ÉÀÌ °¡³­ÇÑ ÀÚ´Â º¹ÀÌ ÀÖ³ª´Ï(¸¶ 5:3)   UBF°ø½Ä±îÆä
 
UBF > ¾È¾Ï > Ä÷³ > Damon's Column
¤ýÀÛ¼ºÀÚ igata99
¤ýÀÛ¼ºÀÏ 2015-05-10 (ÀÏ) 09:03
¤ýÃßõ: 0  ¤ýÁ¶È¸: 1063      
¤ýIP: 121.xxx.205
Workers in the Vineyard
Workers in the Vineyard

Matthew 20:1-16
Key Verse: 20:15

¡°Don't I have the right to do what I want with my own money? Or are you envious because I am generous?¡±

In chapters 18-20 of Matthew¡¯s gospel we have heard Jesus¡¯ teaching about life in his kingdom, and applied it to our Christian community. Jesus is the center of our community. Even though we are a Christian community, we are not yet perfect, so there are conflicts and problems. One cause of this is the tendency to compare our blessings and works with others. When we do this, we easily fall into pride and become judgmental, or into a sense of injustice and then complain and grumble against God, hate others, and despair. Either way we cause trouble in the Christian community and make other people unhappy. This all comes from being self-centered instead of God-centered. At the root this stems from not knowing who God is. If we know God and see everything from God's point of view, we can be thankful always. We can be happy and be a blessing to others. In today¡¯s parable, Jesus teaches us who God really is. This parable is bracketed by Jesus¡¯ words in 19:30: ¡°But many who are first will be last, and many who are last will be first,¡± and Jesus¡¯ words in 20:16: ¡°So the last will be first, and the first will be last.¡± Basically Jesus directed this parable at the twelve disciples who had left everything to follow him. They felt superior to the rich young man who loved money more than Jesus and went away sad. Jesus encouraged them and gave them great promises of eternal life and abundant blessing in this life as well. But he also gave them a warning not to be proud, but to have a humble attitude and be thankful for God¡¯s grace always, to the end. Let¡¯s listen to Jesus¡¯ parable, learn who God is, and discover a secret to living a happy life and forming a healthy Christian community.

Matthew¡¯s gospel is rich with parables. It contains 16 in all, more than any other gospel. Among them, nine are unique to Matthew, including today¡¯s parable. Matthew seems to be a great storyteller, which is surprising for a former tax collector who majored in accounting. It happened when he learned the deep grace of Jesus, who often taught through parables.

Look at verse 1. ¡°For the kingdom of heaven is like a landowner who went out early in the morning to hire workers for his vineyard.¡±" Usually, when people think of the kingdom of heaven, they imagine streets of gold, pearly gates, mansions, and angels singing in chorus. Surprisingly, Jesus compared the kingdom of heaven to a landowner who hires workers. The landowner represents God. This parable teaches us mainly about God¡¯s character. In this first part, we can learn three things about God.

First, God takes the initiative to hire workers for his kingdom. We can imagine that this landowner was wealthy, with a vast estate. The vineyard must have been very fertile, producing abundant harvests. Usually rich landowners do not go out and hire laborers to work in the fields. Rather, it is the unemployed who come to the landowner begging for jobs. Landowners usually entrust hiring to their foremen, who selects only the best workers, and send the others away empty-handed. But this landowner got up early and went out personally to hire workers for his vineyard. He continued to go out during the day--again at nine, noon, three and five. The landowner was eager to hire workers for his vineyard and took the initiative to get them.

Before time began, God made a plan for world salvation (Eph 1:4). He began to announce this plan right after the Fall, in Genesis 3:15. God has carried out this plan step by step since then. After the flood of Noah¡¯s time, people began to spread all over the world. They lived without God and worshiped idols. There seemed to be no hope for mankind. But God did not give up his plan. He began world salvation work by calling one man Abraham. In succeeding generations, God called Isaac and Jacob. It was God who called Moses to save his people from bondage in Egypt. In the time of Judges, God called Samuel and raised him as a spiritual father of the nation. God called a shepherd boy David from tending the flock, and made him a shepherd of his people Israel. In the darkest times, God called prophets like Elijah. Elijah was so distressed about the spiritual condition of Israel that he said, ¡°The Israelites have rejected your covenant, and torn down your altars, and put your prophets to death with the sword. I am the only one left, and now they are trying to kill me, too¡± (1Ki 19:14). He thought everything was over for God¡¯s salvation work. But God answered, ¡°Yet I have reserved 7,000 in Israel--all whose knees have not bowed down to Baal and whose mouths have not kissed him¡± (1 Ki 19:18). God was doing great things by his own initiative, which only God knew. In coming to this world, Jesus expressed God¡¯s initiative. After proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, he called people diligently: ¡°Follow me....¡± The Risen Jesus called Paul as an Apostle to the Gentiles. Most of us here realize that we were called by God, who took the initiative to seek and choose us. Thank God for his calling. Our times seem to be dark. Sometimes we feel that we are all alone. But God is working very hard to choose and call people for his own purpose and glory. Once Jesus said, ¡°My Father is always at his work to this very day, and I too am working¡± (Jn 5:17). God still works to call people. Let¡¯s learn to see God¡¯s initiative in calling people from darkness to light and participate in what he is doing.

Second, God gave mission. Look at verses 2-4. ¡°He agreed to pay them a denarius for the day and sent them into his vineyard. About nine in the morning he went out and saw others standing in the marketplace doing nothing. He told them, ¡®You also go and work in my vineyard, and I will pay you whatever is right.¡¯¡± At that time, there were many people who survived by working as day laborers. They needed to find a job every day. They hung around the marketplace hoping that someone would hire them. If they were hired, it was a happy day and they could give their family members something to eat. But if they were not hired, it was a very sorrowful day, and their household went hungry. To them, being hired to do something was a matter of life and death. Spiritually speaking, the unemployed in the parable are not simply those who do not have a job. They are those who have no mission from God. Throughout her history, Israel was referred to as the ¡°vine¡± or ¡°vineyard¡± of God (Isa. 5:1--7). More broadly speaking, the world is the vineyard of God (Gen 2:8). So the analogy of working in a vineyard represents working for God's kingdom in this world. Therefore, being hired is comparable to receiving a mission from God. When God made mankind, he gave us a mission. He did not make us to be like animals, which live merely by instinct - constantly consumed by the task of hunting food just to survive. God gave man holy mission to work with him to rule the world. However, since Adam¡¯s fall, the relationship between God and man was broken. The relationships between people, and between man and nature, were also damaged. Man lost mission and was cursed to work the ground for three meals a day. Jesus came to restore our relationship with God and our holy mission. Jesus wants to restore God¡¯s world completely, including the relationships between people, and between man and nature. Jesus calls believers to his mission of helping to restore broken relationships (Ro 1:5). This is a glorious mission. In the parable, doing nothing means not having this glorious mission. People without mission may be very active. But in the end they are caught in an endless repetition of meaningless activity, and this drives them crazy. On the other hand, those who have a mission from God find the meaning of life. They are happy to work hard and sacrifice to fulfill their mission. In Matthew 28:18-20, Jesus gives us a glorious mission to preach the gospel and make disciples of all nations. Our specific vineyard is the college campuses of America and the world. Raising spiritual leaders among college students by teaching them the Bible is a core value of our ministry. Before having a mission from God, even though we worked hard and ate good food, we were like the people doing nothing. This is why many say, "Meaningless, meaningless, everything is meaningless." But now we have a mission from God that gives us the real meaning of life. There is no retirement from this mission. We can retire from our careers, but not from our mission.

God not only gave us a mission, but also provides for the needs of those who serve him. The landowner agreed to give each worker a denarius. This would meet the need of him and his family for that day. Likewise, when we carry out God's mission wholeheartedly, God provides all our needs. Matthew 6:33 says, ¡°But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.¡±

Third, God¡¯s compassion to save even one more person. A striking fact of this parable is that the landowner returned to the marketplace again and again to hire workers for his vineyard. To do so early in the morning and at nine, or even at noon, is understandable. But to do so at three p.m. and again five p.m. seems crazy. Hiring someone for one hour at the end of the day is inefficient and unproductive. Why did the landowner do so? It was not to maximize his profit. Rather, out of his great compassion, he provided jobs for people who needed them. He hired people in order to save them. Out of his great compassion, God wants to save one more person. God¡¯s work is done with compassion, not a business mind. Of course, we should be good stewards of God¡¯s blessings. Yet in dealing with people in God¡¯s kingdom we must have God¡¯s heart, God¡¯s mind, God¡¯s compassion. God¡¯s heart¡¯s desire is to save even one more person (1 Ti 2:3-4).


God¡¯s vineyard has been opened widely for anyone and everyone to go and work for him. However, in the parable, the workday comes to an end at six p.m. We live in a time when the vineyard is still open. But closing time will come. After that, the chance to work in the vineyard will be gone. Then comes the time to settle accounts.

Look at verse 8. ¡°When evening came, the owner of the vineyard said to his foreman, ¡®Call the workers and pay them their wages, beginning with the last ones hired and going on to the first.¡¯¡± The workers who were hired about five in the afternoon came and each received a denarius. Legally speaking, they should only receive one-twelfth of a denarius, for they worked only one hour out of twelve. They never expected to receive a full denarius. But the landowner, out of his generosity, gave them a full denarius. He did not pay them based on their works, but gave them a generous gift to meet their needs. Most likely, he was mindful of their family members. The workers were overjoyed. It was much more than they imagined. They jumped and danced and shouted, ¡°Thank you, Landowner!¡±

Look at verses 10-12. ¡°So when those came who were hired first, they expected to receive more. But each one of them also received a denarius. When they received it, they began to grumble against the landowner. ¡®These who were hired last worked only one hour,¡¯ they said, ¡®and you have made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the work and the heat of the day.¡¯¡± Their grumbling seems reasonable. From their point of view, they worked harder and suffered more and deserved a greater reward. However, they had forgotten that it was a great privilege to work in the vineyard. When they forgot the owner¡¯s grace and became self-centered, they also became self-righteous. If they had seen this from the landowners¡¯ point of view, or from the other workers¡¯ point of view, they could have found reason to be happy and thankful. But in their self-centeredness, they only complained and grumbled against the landowner. Such people do not know God¡¯s heart or care about others. Jesus¡¯ parable anticipates the complaint of the Jews as they saw Gentiles enter God¡¯s kingdom by grace alone.

How did the landowner respond? Look at verses 13-15. ¡°But he answered one of them, ¡®I am not being unfair to you, friend. Didn¡¯t you agree to work for a denarius? Take your pay and go. I want to give the one who was hired last the same as I gave you. Don¡¯t I have the right to do what I want with my own money? Or are you envious because I am generous?¡¯¡± Objectively speaking, the landowner was not unfair. He honored his original agreement and paid a denarius to those hired first. The denarius refers to salvation and eternal life. God gives salvation and eternal life to sinners by his grace. Ephesians 2:8-9 say, ¡°For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God--not by works, so that no one can boast.¡± God carries out his salvation work based on his covenant grace. God¡¯s covenant promises flow through the Bible from the beginning to the end. God made covenants with Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses and Israel, David and Jesus. The covenants with Adam and Moses and Israel were conditional. They are marked by the words, ¡°If you obey me....¡± (Ex 19:5). Man¡¯s obedience was required for these covenants to be honored. The covenants with Abraham, David and Jesus concern God¡¯s promise of salvation and are unconditional. They are marked by God¡¯s words, ¡°I will....¡± (Gn 12:2; 2 Sa 7:12). This is the covenant of grace.

According to this covenant of grace, God sent his one and only Son Jesus Christ to save mankind from their sins. God did everything for our salvation through Jesus¡¯ death and resurrection. Even though he did everything for us, God does not force us to accept his covenant. He asks our agreement, which is trusting in him and having faith in his promise. God wants us to make a decision of faith to accept his generous offer. Based on this covenant agreement, God grants us eternal life. Anyone who receives this grace receives eternal life as a gift. The same gift is given equally to all who believe. It does not depend on any human works, but on God¡¯s grace, so we should not compare our works with others. No one can boast. We can only thank God.

This covenant grace is based on God¡¯s sovereignty. Almighty God can use his power however he pleases. He did not have to use his power to save us from our sins. But he chose to do so out of his mercy and generosity. God intervenes in history to call undeserving people by grace. God does this to carry out his good purpose to bless mankind with salvation. As we see this worked out in our times, we should thank God always. We should not compare our lives with others and ask God, ¡°What are you doing?¡± We should not complain to God when an undeserving person receives grace, for we are all undeserving people. All we should do is be thankful and trust God.

God is always good. God is always generous. God is always trustworthy. God is always faithful. God is always just. Knowing who God is gives us true happiness and a deep sense of stability. Let¡¯s live based on God¡¯s covenant of grace with us and be thankful always.
  0
3500
Bookmark and Share
¹øÈ£ ±Û Á¦ ¸ñ Á¶È¸
176 JESUS RESTORES A DEMON POSSESSED MAN 972
175 HAVE FAITH IN JESUS 249
174 PARABLES ABOUT THE KINGDOM OF GOD 231
173 LISTEN TO THE WORD OF GOD 218
172 JESUS¡¯S FAMILY 221
171 FOLLOW JESUS 469
170 People from all over come to Jesus 220
169 JESUS IS LORD OF THE SABBATH 383
168 THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS NEAR 587
167 THE BEGINNING OF THE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST, THE SON OF GOD 421
166 ZECHARIAH¡¯S SONG 322
165 JESUS IS THE WAY 432
164 The gift of God 313
163 The Word Became Flesh 366
162 The Power of Prayer 1491
161 Repentance That Leads to Life 411
160 Jesus Is Lord of All 358
159 Living as a child of God 396
158 The Church Multiplies 609
157 God¡¯s Chosen Instrument 440
156 He Has Redeemed His People 505
155 Preach the Word Wherever You Go 818
154 The Spread of the Word of God 551
153 The God of Jeshurun 668
152 God¡¯s Words Are Our Life 516
151 The Things Revealed Belong to Us and Our Children Forever 724
150 Walk in Obedience to God 815
149 The Righteous Will Live by Faith 547
148 The People of the Lord 691
147 You Are God¡¯s Chosen People 532
146 Deal Honestly with Others 537
145 Remember What the Lord Has Done for You 586
144 The Lord Wants to Bless His People 528
143 Love Your Neighbor as Yourself 551
142 Therefore, Go and Make Disciples 554
141 The Lord Fights for You 631
140 Love the Lord Your God and Walk in His Ways 575
139 The Lord is Your Inheritance 615
138 The Word Became Flesh 571
137 Follow Justice 642
136 Your Joy Will Be Complete 657
135 God Will Richly Bless You 695
134 A People Holy to the Lord 792
133 Hold Fast to the Lord 730
132 Be Careful to Obey the Lord Your God 691
131 Love the Lord Your God 850
130 A Savior Has Been Born 753
129 What God Requires of You 949
128 God Goes Before You to Keep His Promise 705
127 The Righteous Will Live By His Faith 767
126 The Lord¡¯s Prayer 805
125 Do Not Forget the Lord 924
124 A People Holy to the Lord Your God 1426
123 Walk in Obedience 994
122 Keep His Decrees and Commands 756
121 The Lord Your God Will Fight for You! 878
120 Follow the Lord Wholeheartedly 623
119 The Grace of Jesus Be with You 701
118 Mutual Edification 784
117 Living a Victorious Christian Life 685
116 Be Transformed by the Renewing of Your Mind 763
115 God¡¯s Remnant 718
114 God¡¯s Message to the World 772
113 JESUS FEEDS THE FIVE THOUSAND 1158
112 God¡¯s Sovereignty 690
111 More Than Conquerors 630
110 Free to Live by the Spirit 807
109 Now We Belong to Jesus 700
108 Dead to Sin, Alive to God 642
107 God Demonstrates His Love 853
106 Finish the Race 1051
105 Feed My Sheep 602
104 Saving Faith: The Faith of Abraham 617
103 Seek First His Kingdom 601
102 God Justifies Sinners by His Grace 682
101 God¡¯s Righteous Judgment [1] 802
100 God¡¯s Creation Reveals God¡¯s Invisible Qualities 1059
99 A Righteousness From God 663
98 The Lord Restores Job 939
97 God Is Mighty But Despises No One 650
96 Let Us Learn Together What Is Good 1164
95 Fix Your Eyes on Jesus 591
94 Jesus: God's Gift 618
93 The Word Became Flesh 645
92 God Grants Life and Steadfast Love 1200
91 What is Mankind That God Notices Us? 850
90 Blessed is the One Whom God Corrects 932
89 The Great Deception 1013
88 The Risen Jesus¡¯ Command and Promise 777
87 Jesus¡¯ Death Opened the Way to God 766
86 Jesus' Prayer and Victory, Peter¡¯s Pride and Failure 891
85 The Blood of the Covenant 723
84 When the Son of Man Comes 898
83 The Son of Man is Coming 889
82 Jesus¡¯ Shepherd Heart for the Religious Leaders 789
81 BE TRANSFORMED 1526
80 What Do You Think About the Messiah? 805
79 The Banquet 808
78 Produce Fruit for God 914
77 The Son of Man Came to Serve and Give His Life 1089
12