October 4, 2020 Grace - Benson & Vail Sermon

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October 4, 2020 Matthew 20 Sermon Grace-Vail Grace-Benson A boss is hiring, and you’re considering working for him. A key question always is: what’s the payment? What’s the wages? And is what you’re offering fair compared to what others who do the same job can make from other bosses? You’d be a fool not to ask before agreeing to work. You’d be a fool not to compare wages with others who do similar things. That’s why it’s so hard to come to the kingdom of heaven and have to learn a different way of doing things. Jesus had to work so hard to retrain his disciples to understand, fairness is not the only consideration when thinking of working for the master in the kingdom of heaven. And thankfully, Jesus is still willing to retrain us as well. In Matthew 19, a rich young man, well intentioned, well qualified, morally upstanding, ran up to Jesus, desperate to learn from him how to have eternal life from God. Jesus rejected him because he was not willing to give up riches to follow Jesus. His disciples were amazed and asked, how can anyone be saved? Jesus told them, “With man it's impossible, with God all things are possible.” Then Peter spoke up and asked, “Jesus, we have given up everything to follow you, what will we receive?” Jesus told him great reward would come in this life and the next. But he needed to make sure they didn’t misunderstand. They would not receive so much because their willingness to sacrifice had somehow qualified them for God to pay them back. Instead it was all grace, all gift. Jesus needed to teach them the extreme generosity of God which defies human definitions of fairness. God needs us to know he will do what he wants with his own currency, and that’s ok, in fact that’s best. To teach them and us, Jesus said, “the kingdom of heaven is like a master who owned a vineyard.” The master in the story is God. The vineyard is the created world. There is work he wants done; the growing, cultivating, harvesting fruit of people. Does God need any help in maintaining the universe? Does he really need workers to maintain the vineyard? This master can actually do all the work himself; but he chooses to include workers in the joy of cultivating good grapes, and harvesting them and turning the grapes into fine wine that can be enjoyed. He invites workers to participate in his good work, though he could do it all by himself. He wants people to have useful purposeful responsibilities, because he created not robots, but image bearers of himself. And he actually pays them. He could say, you will work for me for no payment. I made you and I will tell you what to do; but in order to cultivate independent agency in us, he pays us. I can remember times when my parents had me do jobs without pay. On the farm when I was young I fed the calves and did not get paid. But around age 10 my parents said they would pay me $2.00 every time I helped milk the cows. A job that took about an hour and a half. They didn;t have to pay me, they could’ve said, this is how you get your food and shelter; but they wanted to teach me responsibility with money. I think I spent most of it on sports cards, gum, and cd’s that I don’t have anymore; but I learned the value of working and getting paid and spending. Like a good parent, God doesn’t want lazy entitled children just expecting father to do everything and give everything. He made us to be active agents for good in this world. And though he doesn’t need to pay us he chooses to so that we become more responsible like him. Notice that this master is persistently out looking for more workers to hire. He is not sitting back waiting for workers to come to him, he’s not in an office evaluating resumes; he’s out actively engaging in conversation and hiring.


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