Matthew 21:28-32 October 11, 2020 Grace-Vail and Grace-Benson We like options. Go to the office, or work from home. Not: you must work from home because everything is locked down and you can’t go out of your house. Take a walk outside, or read a book inside. Not, you better stay inside because it is so incredibly hot that you’ll be singed if you stay outside any longer than 5 minutes. We like options, and God has determined to give a certain amount of options. Jesus’ story teaches us how to handle options in life. We have a lot to learn because we don’t always do so well with the options we have. You go to the kitchen thinking, “I’ll have a salad,” but along the way you see a donut, and the salad is not interesting anymore. You start a day thinking, “I’ll listen to God,” but along the way all kinds of things get you off track and derailed, and at the end of the day you wonder, “what went wrong?” Though God could choose to exclude all other options besides himself, he chooses to leave other options available to us, yet he leads us to grow in the habit of choosing him over all else. Jesus told this story on the Tuesday before he died. On Sunday he had entered Jerusalem to a crowd praising him as king, waving palm branches. When the ultra-religious leaders and the experts in the Old Testament law saw, they were disgusted and upset. These were people who if you asked them, “Will you do the will of God?” They would have said, “Yes that’s exactly what we want, and that’s exactly what we’re doing.” Jesus was there to say, “But what if what God wants is for you to believe in what John the Baptist said? What if to do the will of God is to believe in and follow me?” They were totally unwilling and unprepared to do that. The option was open to them; but they were refusing. So Jesus told them a simple story to put his finger on the problem and point them in the direction of a solution. There was a master, a vineyard, and 2 sons. He told them to go and work in his vineyard. He gave the command, but he didn’t force them to obey, he left the option open to them. Now I’m going to add a few details to the story to make it clear, there were options available to these 2 sons. What options? I’ll start with the second son. He got up in the morning. His father said, “Go to the vineyard and work.” The son said, “Yes.” He thought, “I’m an obedient son, I do what my father wants. I’ll go to the vineyard today.” But when he got to the vineyard, he took a look, and it was kind of ordinary. Kind of basic. Nothing exciting that he could see. He thought, “You know, this isn’t really the place for my skills to be put to the best use. I’m a talented person, I’m a smart person, I can do more for my father than work in the vineyard today. I need a place where I can really do something significant.” Then he remembered the olive grove. It was right next to the vineyard. The olive grove was a place where he could really reach his full potential. It was more of a challenge for him, it would mean more exertion and effort, and he was up for it. So he went to the olive grove, and worked hard all day cultivating and digging and moving things around arranging them the way he thought best. All the while he thought, “Wait til my father sees what I’ve been up to.” The first son got up that day, and he wasn’t thinking about the olive grove or the vineyard. He was thinking about the sugar cane field. There was so much sweet sugar, and it grew so easily, it took almost no effort at all. He’d gone there many times before, and that was his intention. His father came