Today's Reading: Matthew 20:1-19 ( NRSVUE)
I find it fascinating that Jesus makes his third prediction of his condemnation by the religious authorities from his own tradition after telling the parable of the laborers in the vineyard. It is almost as if he recognizes how difficult this teaching is for people to accept.
I can imagine Jesus saying, "Well, if my teachings on divorce, children and wealth don't put them over the edge, this parable ought to do it."
As we think about this parable relationally, the workers in the vineyard are concerned about their own value. Notice that those who worked all day complain that the owner has made the late arrivals equal to those that bore the heat of the day. It is clear that we like our comparisons with other people when we imagine that we are on top. If someone is just elevated to our status without merit, it can be rather offensive.
Now if we spiritualize this, it might be more acceptable because we can understand God loving us as parents loving their children. And it may indeed be that God will love all humanity equally, but if we put that into practice on earth, what does that do to our social strata?
Can I learn to see people in a different light?
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| How do you feel about people cutting lines? |
What does the owner's charity look like at this point?
The first hired would be the ones that were always winning. Maybe the followers of Jesus put the last first because the last never get put first. If you had 5 children and 2 of them always got to go first in everything, would you put the others to the head of the line some of the time?
It may be that God's preference for the disadvantaged is simply a desire to even out the universe.
Our question may be will we allow ourselves to help this to happen here on earth or will we take offense for the occasions that it does? At the very least, Jesus's prediction may make more sense to us.
Prayer for the day:
Eternal God, out of whose mind this great cosmic universe, we bless you. Help us to seek that which is high, noble and good. Help us in the moment of difficult decision. Help us to work with renewed vigor for a warless world, a better distribution of wealth, and a siblinghood that transcends race or color. Amen.
Prayer by Martin Luther King, Jr., Civil Rights Leader, 20th Century
Photo by Todd Lappin via Flickr.com. Used under the Creative Commons license.






