October 4, 2020 Grace-Tucson Sermon

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Matthew 20:1-16 [Pentecost 18—CWS A] Pastor Ron Koehler

Grace-Tucson, AZ

October 4, 2020

Jesus Guides His Church with Inconceivable Grace “Inconceivable!” “You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.” Many of you know that those lines come from the movie The Princess Bride, which is, of course, the greatest movie of all time. I mean, to think otherwise would, naturally, be…inconceivable. That one word—inconceivable—has been so embedded into pop culture because of that movie that if you type it into google or search for a gif or a meme with it, the movie’s characters and their quotes pop up immediately. “Inconceivable”—not able to be imagined or mentally grasped, incredible. Inigo Montoya did not agree that the things Vizzini thought were inconceivable, were actually beyond imagining. But today, we have something before us that is truly inconceivable, something that is incredible and unable to be fully grasped. We’re talking about the Inconceivable Grace of God. God’s grace is his undeserved love, which he has extended to sinful people and with which Jesus Guides His Church. We have pretty strong feelings about fairness, right? Walk into the kitchen, take one large piece of cake, one knife, two forks and two kids and you’ll receive a lesson in how we perceive fairness! Accusations of “You got more than I did!” soon follow. If you kick back this afternoon to watch some football and you see a multi-millionaire athlete who gets paid ten times more for one game than you make in a year, that delicate sense of fairness inside you could start to get annoyed! There are all sorts of things that can set off our “fairness sensor.” We struggle with this spiritually too. Jesus’ disciple—even his “lead disciple—Peter felt the struggle. You want to hear his question that prompted Jesus to tell this teaching story? Jesus had been talking about salvation, and the disciples were confused about how anyone can be saved at all, considering God’s expectations of perfection Then their spokesman, Peter, asked “Look, we have left everything and followed you! What then will we have?” Do you see what they were thinking? Jesus followers were thinking about the reward they felt they deserved because they followed Jesus. For those men and for us today who sometimes think that God owes us something for following him, Jesus tells this story of the landowner and the workers in the vineyard. He shows them that what human beings think about “fairness” is irrelevant when it comes to God’s Inconceivable Grace. It is exactly that Grace the Guides His Church.


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October 4, 2020 Grace-Tucson Sermon by gracelutheransaz - Issuu