Sermons

Kingdom Relationships - Part 3: It's Not Fair

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It’s Not Fair
Kingdom Relationships - Part 3
Sunday, September 20, 2020
Matthew 20:11-12

And when they received it, they grumbled against the landowner, saying, “These last worked only one hour, and you have made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the day and the scorching heat.”

Matthew 20:11-12

If we’re honest, this parable about the laborers in the vineyard receiving equal pay no matter how long or little they worked is one of the most frustrating teachings we have from Jesus. It simply doesn’t fit in our capitalistic society where we must earn everything we have. Not to get political, but in modern terms it almost sounds like Jesus might be promoting some form of socialism, or at the very least a re-distribution of wealth in which the wealthy landowner / employer guarantees a minimum living wage for all of his employees no matter their status.

Before we get defensive and write off this parable because of such political or economic implications, we first need to understand that the people of Jesus’ world had no concept of capitalism, socialism, communism, or any other 20th or 21st century economic system. What they did understand, perhaps better than most of us in our relatively comfortable lives, is the incredible weight and injustice of widespread poverty and the culturally acceptable extortion of the poor by the few who held the most power and money. After all, what could the poor do except be grateful for every meager meal they were able to scrounge up for their families? Even today, cycles of generational poverty are nearly impossible to break.

Although Jesus may not have been writing an economic handbook for all future governments, we cannot ignore the principles he teaches in this parable, particularly around our relationship with money and with those who are less fortunate.

The first is the issue of justice.

As Duke ThD student Alma Ruiz puts it, “We may all be in the same storm, but we are not in the same boat. Some people have much nicer and safer boats.” Justice begins with the recognition that while all the day laborers in Jesus’ day faced the same struggle of trying to find work and not knowing from one day to the next if they would make enough to sustain them and their families, some had a much better chance of getting the work and the income they needed than others. Those who were still waiting at the end of the day were “picked last” for a reason. Think back to the old days of picking teams for a playground basketball game. Team captains always picked the strongest, most athletic and most talented first and eventually one team would “get stuck with” the final pick who likely would be more of a liability than an asset. Likewise, landowners would pick the strongest and hardest workers first, leaving behind the elderly, the disabled, the sick, or others who often due to no fault of their own were unable to be as productive in the fields. In other words, those who needed the income most were the least likely to get it.

The landowner in Jesus’ story was not willing to settle for such a survival-of-the-fittest model. He knew the next day all the workers would start over and those who were chosen last would likely be chosen last again. He knew how much more likely they and their families were to suffer from poor health and other “side-effects” of extreme poverty. But for today, at least this one day, he could offer them something most landowners would never consider… human dignity. Justice is always about dignity. It’s about treating everyone, no matter their circumstances or abilities, as beloved children of God and doing whatever we can to make sure they have what they need. We pray that God might “give us our daily bread,” but most of us have never considered what it would be like not to have enough to eat for even a day, let alone a lifetime. Justice requires that we all do whatever we are able to make sure that no one goes to sleep at night without this most essential prayer being answered. The landowner isn’t giving free handouts to help people “abuse the system.” He’s doing his part to make sure that everyone goes home with their daily bread.

The second major issue in this parable is the issue of grace.

We sing “Amazing Grace… that saved a wretch like me,” but how many of us look in the mirror when we wake up and say “Good morning wretch”? While we believe in salvation by grace, if we’re honest most of us don’t feel like we need much grace. This is evidenced by our sense of unfairness when we read this parable. As Barbara Brown Taylor asks, “Why do we always assume we are the workers who have been there all day?” And even if we have put in a full days work, why do we somehow feel cheated when we get exactly what we were promised? Why does the landowners generosity bother us so much? The workers complain, saying, “you have made them equal to us.” In our lives, who is “them” and who is “us”? And more to the point, why is it so bad for “them” to be equal? Why is our self-worth so tied to being better or having more than someone else?

There are no “one-size-fits-all” answers to these questions, but they are the kinds of questions we must ask ourselves if we are to ever understand the message of this parable. Until we can identify with those who could not find work until the end of the day, we will never appreciate what it means to know that our family will not go hungry that night despite our inability to “earn” enough.

The more tied we are to “fairness” and everybody getting what they deserve, the less we will be able to receive God’s grace. Some of you may remember the old “Roman Road of Salvation.” Along that journey we find two key verses that remind us that grace, simply put, is not fair at all.

All of sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23).

For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans 6:23).

If we are all sinners, the “wages” we deserve is “death.” The greatest scandal of Christianity is that by God’s grace through Christ, none of us get what we deserve. It’s not fair. And yet to those who receive it it is nothing less than the most incredible miracle of salvation we could imagine. How can we receive such an undeserved gift and then complain when others receive the same?

To be fair, it should have been us on the cross instead of Jesus. Thank God grace is not fair!


Listen to this week’s sermon here:

Video of the complete worship service available at http://asburyumc-huntersville.com/live


 








































Kingdom Relationships - Part 2: It's Complicated (Forgiveness)

Kingdom Relationships - Part 2: It's Complicated (Forgiveness)

Can you imagine having to forgive the same person 7 times? What happened to the old “3 strikes and you’re out” rule? For some, even 3 is too many. We have another saying about trusting people that says, “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.” In other words, we will give someone the benefit of the doubt the first time, but once they hurt us, we’re done. Given how quickly we are willing to turn against or at the very least avoid those who hurt us, Peter’s question to Jesus seems more than reasonable.

OK Jesus, I’m supposed to give them three chances. Just to show how loving I am, I’ll forgive them twice as many times and then I’ll even throw in one more for good measure. But after seven, who could possibly be expected to keep forgiving? At this point it is more than obvious that they are simply not going to change. How can I keep forgiving when they are not even repentant?

“Not seven times, Peter,” Jesus says, “but seventy times seven.”

Ugh. Now I not only have to forgive, but you expect me to do math to. How am I supposed to keep track of 490 times for every person who sins against me?…

Kingdom Relationships - Part 1: Reconciliation

Kingdom Relationships - Part 1: Reconciliation

The next few weeks we find Jesus talking a lot about one of his favorite subjects… relationships. While we like to beat others over the head about what to think or believe, Jesus consistently says love your neighbor, love your enemy, and pray for those who persecute you. He does not make exceptions for heretics or dare I say, people of opposing political parties.

When it comes to relationships. the answer is LOVE… Period.

What else is there to be said?…

Kingdom Transformation - Part 3: Re-orient

Kingdom Transformation - Part 3: Re-orient

“You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.”

Such a simple statement of faith, at least from where we sit in our comfortable and often privatized religious world. How easy it is today to say Jesus is Lord and Messiah. How easy it is to say we believe.

For Peter, this may have been a declaration of faith, but it was far more. Likely standing within eyesight of the imperial cult sites of Cesarea Phillipi where Caesar alone was worshiped as the son of God, this declaration was nothing short of treason under the penalty of death…

Kingdom Transformation - Part 2: Re-evaluate

Kingdom Transformation - Part 2: Re-evaluate

…Who in our lives do we see as “less than” in some way? Who do we instinctively turn away from? Who do we assume are the people furthest away from God?

Might it be that those are the very ones God has placed in our path to wake us up to our own prejudice and self-righteousness? Might it be that the very people we assume have no faith at all are the ones who might remind us what faith is really all about?

Kingdom Transformation - Part 1: Re-focus

Kingdom Transformation - Part 1: Re-focus

…Peter walks on the water. Surely he didn’t do that on his own. This has to be the work of Jesus and nobody else.

Well, yes… and no.

You see, if the miracle was only dependent on Jesus, then why would Peter sink? There is no evidence that Jesus was holding him up with some kind of Star-Wars like force and then simply lets go to teach Peter a lesson. Jesus didn’t make Peter sink because Jesus wasn’t actually holding him up to start with. Peter was able to walk on water not because Jesus gave him some magical power, but because he had the faith that Jesus was greater than the wind and the waves around him. Peter always gets a bad wrap for his lack of faith, but remember, Peter is the one who had the faith to step out of the boat in the first place when none of the others even considered the possibility…

Cultivating Kingdom Values - Part 4: Abundance

Cultivating Kingdom Values - Part 4: Abundance

…We often look at this miracle of Jesus feeding the 5,000 and celebrate how he saved the day. So long as Jesus is around, we have nothing to worry about. He’ll fix it. He’ll take care of it. If he won’t send them away, he can feed all the people.

The only trouble is that’s not exactly what happens in the text. Jesus doesn’t send them away and Jesus doesn’t technically feed all those people.

Instead, we read in verse 16, “Jesus said to them, ‘They need not go away; you give them something to eat.’”

“Whoa. Hold up now preacher. What do you mean telling us to do it. That’s what we pay you for?”

“We have nothing here except five loaves of bread and two fish,” they reply. “What do you expect us to do?”…

Cultivating Kingdom Values - Part 3: Worth

Cultivating Kingdom Values - Part 3: Worth

… God saw you and me and every person who ever lived scraping our way through this sin ridden life and believed we were valuable enough to sacrifice his only Son just to dwell with us as it was in Eden. Do we value God and the Kingdom of Heaven as much as God values us? As one of my former pastors used to ask every Sunday, “Will you say yes to the one who said yes to the cross for you?”

Cultivating Kingdom Values - Part 2: Patience

Cultivating Kingdom Values - Part 2: Patience

… Odds are the enemy has sown a few weeds in the soil of our hearts. Instead of being so anxious to clear every weed from our sight, maybe we need to pause and give thanks to God for granting us mercy and allowing the good wheat to grow in fullness rather than cutting us off with those weeds before we ever have a chance to bloom.