Sermon 04-07-2019 Tucson

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Pastor Timothy Patoka 5 Sunday In Lent: April 7, 2019 th

May It Never Be! Luke 20:9-19 1) Rejecting Jesus As Faith’s Cornerstone 2) Withholding Faith’s Expected Fruits Parable, an earthly story with a heavenly meaning. That’s the definition I learned in Sunday School. Lately I’ve grown to like how our recently revised Catechism defines it: a story told to teach a spiritual truth or lesson. No matter how you cut it, a parable is a teaching tool. Regardless if it’s true or not, the point of a parable is to teach something that comes from God. But in order to know what a parable is teaching, you first have to identify its details. Because if your identification of the smaller details is flawed, then so is the resulting conclusion from the details. Take our parable before for this morning, the parable of the wicked tenant farmers from Luke chapter 20. We have a vineyard, its owner, and some wicked tenant farmers who won’t share the expected fruit or correctly treat the people sent to them. As we break down those details and its resultant conclusion, we’ll see how we too will say with the crowds, “May it never be!” (Luke 20:16b) First, may it never be that we reject Jesus as the cornerstone of our faith. And secondly, may it never be that we withhold the expected fruits of our faith. 1) Rejecting Jesus As Faith’s Cornerstone If the key to understanding a parable to is correctly identify its details, then let’s start there. We have the vineyard owner who is God above. The vineyard he plants is the body of believers, those who are his children because of the faith he has given them. The tenant farmers are the religious leaders who are supposed to watch over and guide their people. The fruit that God is expecting is the godly living which every Christian should be modeling. The servants whom God sends to the religious leaders are his Old Testament prophets. And the beloved son who’s the last to come and ultimately killed is none other than God’s own Son, Jesus Christ. Now that we’re on the same page about the details, let’s look at the parable again to see what Jesus was trying to teach the Passover crowds in Jerusalem. God graciously gave his gift of faith to many within the Israelite nation and called men to be their religious leaders. Yet the religious leaders were not always good role models. Time after time, Old Testament Israel chased after idols and grudgingly gave God their leftovers. Time after time, God sent his prophets to call Old Testament Israel to repentance to varying levels of success. But the religious leaders always returned to their self-seeking ways despite the prophets’ best efforts. So God decided to send his beloved Son, Jesus Christ, in one last effort to bring Israel to its senses. He warned them about the consequences of rejecting this beloved Son with the words of Psalm 118 and its application, “’The stone that the builders rejected has become the 1


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