\u201cWould you declare war on us, Doctor? \u201cI\u2019m so old now, I used to have so much mercy. You get one warning. That was it.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
\n- One warning seems fair. Picture a landowner finding out that three of his men were killed trying to bring back the grain. Let me take that back. One warning seems more than fair enough. One warning is plenty of mercy shown. I would have carted those tenants off to the local authorities and thrown them in jail, or kicked them off the land.<\/li>\n
- But our landowner sends back another group to receive the grain. And when everyone he has sent has been killed, he sends his son. His one and only son. Rather than bring armies down on top of these wicked tenants, he sends his son. His heir. This parable shows a lot more mercy than any of us would have.<\/li>\n
- These wicked tenants had three chances to give back to the Lord what they owed him\u2026 how many chances have you been given?<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
\u00a04. A parable about grace<\/div>\n
\n- If mercy is about NOT getting what you deserve, we have to remember that grace is getting what you DON\u2019T deserve. Grace is always a gift. It is a surprise. But the word we translate into grace also has roots in the idea of favor, of being loved and appreciated. In spite of our many failings, God abundantly bestows grace and life and love upon us. We may not deserve it, but because of the goodness of God, we have been blessed.<\/li>\n
- You and I are sinners. Throughout our lives, in little and big ways, we have turned our backs upon God. We are only human, after all, and there are so many things in this world that tempt us.<\/li>\n
\n- This parable has reminded us of the many times that we have not gotten what we deserve as a result of those failings\u2026 the many chances that we have had to reform our ways, but the end of this parable brings the reminder of judgment.<\/li>\n
- As the people and the religious leaders hear the story, they know what the outcome should be. When asked what the owner should do, they quickly respond: He\u2019ll kill them \u2013 those tenants are a rotten bunch. Good riddance! (the Message).<\/li>\n
- And Jesus seems to lean this way as well. He quotes scripture, reminding them that the stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone. He tells them that the one who falls on this stone will be broken to pieces. He says that if we refuse to produce fruit and give God his glory that the kingdom will be taken away from us. The hammer of justice is about to fall\u2026 that seems to be the message here.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
- Yes, there will be judgment.<\/li>\n
\n- Because when the Son of our Master comes to collect what we have promised to give\u2026 in our sinfulness, we refuse. In our pride, we take instead of receiving. In our anger, we kill him. And out of God\u2019s justice, the kingdom is taken away.<\/li>\n
- If the story ended there, we might consider it a fair ending. We get what we deserve. Probably less than what we deserved.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
- But the story doesn\u2019t end there\u2026 this parable continues to be told throughout the gospel, because you see, we know what happens when the Son of God is killed. It isn\u2019t the end. It isn\u2019t over.<\/li>\n
- We stand today on the other side of the Resurrection.<\/li>\n
\n- \u00a0We know that our act of hatred was responded to with an act of absolute love.<\/li>\n
- We know that in being rejected, Jesus Christ gave all the rejected a place to belong.<\/li>\n
- We know that in giving up his life, Jesus Christ gave life to us all.<\/li>\n
- And we see in this parable the greatest irony of all: we may have killed the Son hoping to take away his inheritance and keep it all for ourselves\u2026 but in his resurrection, he made us all brothers and sisters, children of God, and heirs of the Kingdom of God.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
- You see, the life, death and resurrection of Jesus\u2026 the sending of the Son to the greedy tenants in the vineyard\u2026 was not a test, not a trap, not a plan to bring judgment, not a warning\u2026 it was grace. It was a gift. It was an act of love. Jesus sat down with his disciples on the night in which they betrayed him and he took bread, broke the bread and gave it to them saying: this is my body, broken for you. And he passed around the cup reminding them: this is my blood shed for you.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
5. Today, we are the tenants in the vineyard. We have been given the awesome task of being servants in God\u2019s kingdom and we have been asked to bear fruit for our Lord. No matter how many times we have failed in the past, today we have the chance to start all over again. We have the chance to recommit ourselves: to confess our sins\u2026 to receive God\u2019s mercy and grace\u2026 and to go out there into the world as his children. May we not take these precious gifts for granted.<\/div>\n