Friday, September 22, 2023

Daily Bread: A Sermon for the 17th Week After Pentecost


Grace, Mercy, and Peace to you in the name of Christ our Saviour. Amen.

 

The Gospel story today is often called the Labourers in the Vineyard. It begins and revolves around two kinds of people.

 

The first is a landowner or, more specifically, the owner of a vineyard. As is true today, if you own a vineyard, you’re probably doing pretty well in life. The other characters are the day laborers, and they live at pretty much the other end of the economic ladder. Day laborers are people who don’t have a regular job. People who go into the town each morning hoping they’ll find work so they can feed their family. They’re not beggars, they’re not destitute, but they pretty much live right on the edge of poverty.

 

When the parable starts, the owner of a vineyard needs some help. It’s likely harvest time and the work is plentiful, so he goes into town at dawn to hire some additional workers, agreeing with them on a wage of one denarius for a 12 hour day, about the amount it takes to feed a family for a day.

 

As the day goes on, it turns out that the land owner needs more help, so he goes out again at 9 in the morning and tells some more laborers that if they work, he’ll pay then what is right. No amount is named, just a promise that he will do right by them. And then he goes out again at noon, and then once more at 3 in the afternoon, and finally one last time at 5 p.m., which is kind of a head-scratcher, because there’s only one hour left in the twelve-hour work day. But he hires them too and sends them into the vineyard.

 

At 6 in the evening, he tells his manager to settle accounts, and the folks who came last and worked only one hour are paid first. When they show up, they are likely astounded that they received a full day’s wage. That’s right. They’ve worked just one hour – about 8 ½ % of the work day, but they’re getting a 100% of a full day’s wage. Which means they’re likely not just surprised, but probably overjoyed. Maybe the only people happier than those hired at the last hour are those hired at the first. Think about it. They worked twelve hours and just saw the dudes who only worked one hour get a full day’s wage. So, it’s not hard to imagine that they’re expecting to get more, maybe a lot more. But when they show up to be paid, they also get a single denarius. That doesn’t seem fair. I mean, they worked for twelve hours, enduring, as they understandably grumble, the scorch of the sun all day long. They feel they deserve more.

 

It’s all too easy for us to dismiss these laborers as ungrateful or selfish or, to borrow a biblical phrase, hard of heart. But their reaction is pretty much what most of us would have felt had we been in their shoes. What happens to them simply does not add up and so doesn’t seem fair. Never mind it’s what was contracted – if those who worked an hour received a day’s wage, then those who worked so much longer deserve more. But in an act of generosity, the owner of the vineyard throws aside normal practices for payment. Rather, he gives the laborers what is “right.” While it seems terribly wrong to the diligent folks who have worked all day, it is right in the owner’s eyes that everyone goes home with enough pay to buy food for their families.

 

But these workers want fairness; who can blame them. They feel cheated because they calculated their wages in accord with what the manger paid the latecomers. The manager responds that he has acted not with fairness in mind but rather with love expressed through generosity.

If you’re someone who works in the financial industry, this parable goes against pretty much every business practice. But we can’t get bogged down in the economics of this story. If we do, we will miss the whole point. The parable was not told to teach about money; it was told to teach about grace.

 

Let’s take a look back at the verses that come right before today’s gospel reading:

“Then Peter said in reply, “Look, we have left everything and followed you. What then will we have?” Jesus said to them, “Truly I tell you, at the renewal of all things, when the Son of Man is seated on the throne of his glory, you who have followed me will also sit on twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel. And everyone who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or fields for my name’s sake will receive a hundredfold and will inherit eternal life. But many who are first will be last, and the last will be first.”

 

Peter is saying, “look Jesus, we were your first choice, we’ve been around since the beginning, following you around, what do we get out of it?” and Jesus goes, “Pete, stop worrying so much about who’s first and who’s last. In the end, everyone gets into the Kingdom of God.”

 

There is this belief that the longer you’ve been doing God’s work, the longer that you’ve been following Christ, the bigger your reward should be in the afterlife. And that the stronger your faith, the more you’ve earned your spot in heaven. But the thing is, God is a terrible bookkeeper. God doesn’t keep a tally of all the things you’ve done in your life, as if ticking your way to the front of the line at Heaven’s Gates.

 

The landowner in our story pays every laborer the same because that’s the way God operates. God does not show partiality. God does not require payment for love. In this parable, Matthew is reminding us of the wonder of God’s grace and that God’s love for us, for everyone, is unconditional. Imagine a world in which preferences are not shown to some, where all people are welcomed and treated the same. Such a world could really become a priesthood of all believers.

 

None of us are born Christians. We don’t become Christians until baptism, whether as a baby or by choice when you’re older. But the God we discover in Jesus is the God who looks at us in love and overlooks all those places we fall short and chooses to treat us with unmerited grace, mercy, and generosity.

 

We are the latecomers to the vineyard, those who had no good reason to expect such lavish generosity. Instead of worrying about getting what we deserve, we need to see the world through the lens of the Kingdom of God. What would happen if everyone got their “daily bread”? Who are we neglecting or pushing to the margins, instead of making sure they are being see as equal and worthy?

 

The labourers in this story thought they weren’t getting what they deserved even though it was exactly what they agreed to. It’s a good time to remind ourselves of the overwhelming gospel message:

            Justice is getting what we deserve.

            Mercy is not getting what we deserve.

            Grace is getting what we don’t deserve.

 

We don’t deserve God’s mercy. We didn’t earn God’s love. And yet, here we are. Receiving our “daily bread” from God – peace, love, mercy, and grace. Perhaps only those who think they don’t measure up are ready to receive God’s grace. To have faith is to embrace this possibility and to discover grace as hope and vindication for our lives. Even those coming to this faith late in life will have a spot in heaven. They too will receive their “daily bread”.

 

And that is good news indeed.

 

Amen





Resources:
pulpitfiction.com
"Feasting on the Word" edited by David Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor
"The Parables of Jesus" by Neal F Fisher

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