Exodus 16: 2-15, Psalm 105: 1-6, 37-45,
Philippians 1: 21-30, Matthew 21: 1-16
God takes common sense and turns it upside down. Our God is awesome, generous in spirit, slow to anger, compassionate and gracious, abounding in love and faithfulness.
The Hebrew reading and the Gospel reading reflect God’s love and generosity for people.
When the Apostle Paul reflects on the experience of the people of God down through the centuries his instructions are very simple, he says: "Do not grumble. Do not complain. Do not murmur. Do not fill your life with grumbling against God."
When he said this he was reflecting on the account of the exodus experience. Reflecting on event after event after event where the Israelites experience in the wilderness their need for God—their dependence upon God—but respond to their circumstances with what is called, in some versions, murmuring or complaining or grumbling. Here is an example in Exodus 16.
The whole Israelite community set out from Elim and came to the Desert, which is between Elim and Sinai, on the fifteenth day of the second month after they had come out of
Grumbling. If we had only died in
The first month and a half out of
God, once again, hearing their cries tells Moses that bread will rain from heaven for the morning and in the evening quails came up and covered the camp providing them with meat.
The hardship the Hebrews faced in the wilderness was the result of struggling to find food and water in an unfamiliar place. However, the wilderness was also a place of experiencing God’s abundance and a time of self-discovery. This wandering time reoriented the Hebrews from life in
Jesus’ story in Matthew 20:1–16 is about the wilderness of unemployment. This is a parable that can get quickly get under our skin, offending what we often have come to know as ideas of fairness. What experiences does it bring up for you? How may those experiences uncover new ways of understanding trust in God’s abundance?
The parables of Jesus have long been revered as earthly stories with heavenly meanings. Today’s parable is not any different. Through the parables Jesus proclaims the nearness of the reign of God and communicates the spiritual truths and moral insights related to its advent. (William Herzog
In Jesus’ context a denarius was a normal day’s wage. The landowner hires at 6a.m., 9, 12, 3 p.m. and 5. It is normal for those who are seeking work to look for it at a crossroads or a market. At that time while the wage is unspecified it was thought of as just. Just before sundown around 5 in the late afternoon, the landowner went out again and found others standing around. Asking them why they had not been working all day they tell him because no one hired us. They wanted to work rather than sit idle
At the end of the day when it is time to be paid the landowner told his manager to pay those who came last first. Those who had been there first when seeing what the last were receiving thought they would receive substantially more. However, everyone received the same wage.
It's easy to understand the feelings of the laborers in today's Gospel story who had worked all day in the vineyard under the hot sun. They had, of course, agreed to work for the usual daily wage. But when they saw those who had worked for an hour or two receiving that amount, they were so sure that they would be rewarded more generously. They had worked 12 hours! Was it fair that they received the same amount of pay as those who had worked one hour?
Then we have the landowner who says to them; “Am I not allowed to do what I choose with what belongs to me? Or are you envious because I am generous?”
When have we who live in a country where we have such bounty been exactly like the landowner?
In The Good Book: “Reading The Bible With Mind And Heart”, Peter Gomes wrote that what makes the Bible so compelling is the company of characters who, like ourselves, are so often both confused and confusing and yet play their part in the drama of the human relationship with God. The stories of such characters, he added, are not true because they are “in the Bible;” rather, the stories are in the Bible because they are true to the experience of men and women with this God.
This morning’s Gospel reading is a really tough one. What the landowner decides to do to the laborers particularly those who worked all day, I imagine, in the hot sun is unjust. This allegory in Matthew, and only in the Gospel of Matthew, does not speak well of God’s image when we look at it from an earthly point of view. The unfair treatment of the workers in regard to a fair wage for a day’s work reminded me of the injustice that happens in Employer/employee relations every day in every part of the world. I recalled the young boys that I saw in
I can still see the airport workers in the
I am left wondering in what way I contribute to the injustices that so many workers in our world face.
The parable told by Jesus in Matthew’s Gospel this morning is a parable that offends our sense of fairness; an ethical humanist would be unable to justify such bizarre labor practices. But if we step away from our earthly view for a moment and look at it in the context of spiritually I ask you then what does it say to us. I believe we receive the opportunity to glimpse a God who loves each one of us equally. The parable conveys a truth about God that almost goes too deep for words.
When we look at this allegory from a spiritual point of view what we have then is what the late Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel called “the arduous compassion” of God. We have a God whose desire for goodness and mercy extends to us, even when we are confused, confusing, skeptical, half hearted, or unfathomably wicked. This is the truth of the phrase, “God is Love:” God’s faithfulness far outweighs any thing we can think up, God’s desire for goodness subverts any evil we conspire to do, and God’s economy of justice means so much more than we can possibly imagine. I encourage you to become aware of the injustices you unknowingly support. Move instead towards God’s reign, embrace with wild abandonment God, who is awesome, generous in spirit, slow to anger, compassionate and gracious, abounding in love and faithfulness. Amen.

