It’s painful to have someone you trust tell you that
they are going to do something for you---and they don’t. Many of us can tell
stories about people who have let us down by making promises and then not
following up on them. For example, there is a story of a young widow whose
husband died suddenly and left her to raise their two children. She told her
minister that during the wake for her husband, a lot of family and close
friends came up to her and told her that they would be there for her. During
the following years, some people were there for her when she needed them,
including some people who never made that promise, but there were others who
were so eager during the wake to offer help and never called or visited.
Jesus’ parable asks us how we will respond to the Gospel. Will we change our minds and believe, or not? Will we be the son who says he will obey and does not, or will we be the son who turns around and changes his mind? The parable is an example of the old adage that “actions speak louder than words”. We will be judged not by what we say, but by what we do. The religious leaders wrongly thought that they were better than they really were, and they imagined that they did not need to repent. How many times have we made commitments to God, only to fail on the follow through? How many times have we made promises to God that for one reason or another, we have not kept? How often do we find ourselves responding to God when we have already told God “no”? What we believe needs to be evident in the way we live and relate. There must not be any break between our words, actions and faith. We must be able to discern God’s voice in those expected and unexpected places. We must not only listen but be willing to change as we grow in our personal and corporate faith.
Bibliography
Life has taught us to be wary of certain people, and
it is a lesson I have learned the hard way. These people include not just
blatant liars but those who are all talk with no follow-through. There is an
old saying that “a promise made is a debt unpaid”. We expect family and friends
to keep their word and come through for us when we have a pressing need, but
sometimes they don’t. When a friend disappoints us we are not terribly upset.
When someone close to us makes a promise and then fails to fulfill it, we are
blindsided because often we do not see it coming.
At the same time, we must acknowledge that that there
have been times when we have made promises and then not kept them. There might
also have been times when, in order to avoid discomfort or confrontation, we’ve
given a half-hearted “yes” to someone or something which we never planned to
follow up on. Whether we have been on the receiving end of broken promises, or
have given a half-hearted investment of ourselves to commitments we have made,
we are in need of the healing and the challenge the Word of God offers us
today.
The Gospel reading from Matthew 21:23-32 is another
discussion between the Pharisees and Jesus. It occurs just after Jesus has
chased the moneychangers and animal sellers from the temple. Both types of
businesses needed the approval of religious authorities to operate in the
temple. They provided a necessary service. Only temple currency could be used
in the temple, so foreign currency had to be converted to temple currency,
albeit at outrageous rates of exchange. Animals that were offered for sacrifice
had to be free of blemishes as determined by the temple authorities. Both of
these services evolved into profitable enterprises, so it is not surprising
that the chief priests and elders were upset. They wanted to know who gave
Jesus the authority to do what he did. They wanted God to play by their rules,
and they insisted that God’s prophets must make the distinctions they make.
Like John, Jesus thinks that God’s freedom includes the freedom to forgive
people who are not children by blood of the Covenant, who haven’t offered
sacrifice, even the poor person’s sacrifice of a dove, in the Temple, who
haven’t done anything to deserve forgiveness.
Jesus’ actions in the Temple not only broke the
powerful connection between money and religion, they also freely heal and
forgive those who are perceived as cursed, those who are perceived as under
punishment, those who need some serious blood atonement. Jesus sought to
redirect the tradition of Israel away from ritual legalism and a dominant
priesthood toward a more meaningful trust by the individual in the gracious and
forgiving love of God. Jesus’ actions are a bullet in the heart of sacrificial
religion, and they challenge the ultimate structuring of relationships proffered
by the so-called authorities. Like Jesus, we too may be called by God to engage
in acts of conscience, acts that defy authorities and challenge their right to
exist as authorities. We may end up paying a price like Jesus did, but we will
also have the chance to turn the questions of our accusers back upon themselves
in the hopes that they might see and repent.
We know the answer to the Pharisees’ question, but the
chief priests and Pharisees did not. God gave Jesus the authority. The
Pharisees and chief priests were rabbis, and they could not believe that Jesus’
authority was greater than theirs. They forgot that God is the ultimate
authority. He gave the Jews the Ten Commandments. The Pharisees expanded them
with all of their rules and regulations because they were obsessed with not breaking
any of the Ten Commandments. The Pharisees considered themselves to be so
righteous that they thought they were doing God’s work, but Jesus pointed out
in the parable of the sons in Matthew 21:28-32 they were sadly mistaken.
But
Jesus uses this trick question to teach the Pharisees about the Kingdom of God.
You see, they were living examples of the second son in the parable.
Self-righteous Jews were the ones who always gave the appearance of serving
God. They followed all the picky religious rules; rules about what they should
eat, and what they should wear, and how they should say their prayers. They
looked and sounded very religious. But when it came to issues like loving their
neighbor, or showing kindness to the poor, or showing compassion to the lowly,
they never showed up in the vineyard! They said they would; their religion was
very impressive when they were at the synagogue, but they did not live it out
in their daily lives.
If we profess that Jesus is our Lord, we must do what
he tells us to do. The religious people were the ones who were a problem for
Jesus. They were oblivious to the true demands of God’s righteousness. They
just didn’t get it. They did not see that God was not so much interested in the
pious rhetoric and ceremonial formality.
When Jesus asked the Pharisees if the baptism of John
came from heaven or from man, he was really asking them if they thought John
was a true prophet or a false prophet. They were caught between the proverbial
“rock and a hard place”. If they said that John’s baptism came from heaven,
they would be faced with John’s witness to Jesus and their failure to respond
to John’s preaching. If they said that it was from man, they would risk
upsetting the crowd, many of whom believed in Jesus and John. The Pharisees had
the responsibility to know who was and who was not a false prophet. They had
the duty to protect the people from false prophets. Their final decision, which
was the refusal to answer Jesus, compromised their own authority.
Jesus also indirectly asked the Pharisees if they
thought that his authority came from heaven or from man. If Jesus authority is
from heaven, then his messianic claim is valid, and the church must stake claim
to a unique mission, a mission that relinquishes power in bringing Christ to
the world, just as Christ relinquished power in bringing himself to the world.
The church living under Christ’s present, heavenly authority will embody
Christ’s own ministry as a gracious transformation, a divine reclamation of the
world.
Tax collectors and prostitutes were prepared to change
their ways, but the religious leaders were not, even though they had time to
change. In the parable of the two sons, the older son represented the religious
leaders and the younger son represented outsiders such as tax collectors and prostitutes.
The faithful son represents the faces of people such as a recovering alcoholic,
a small band of worshippers in a storefront, a church that reaches out to the
needy in the community, a church member who decided to tithe-all of whom,
however reluctantly or painfully, obey Christ. The second son is the person in
the pew who refuses Christ entry to the deepest recesses of his or her
heart---a preacher whose sermon is designed to please people rather than to
please God; the Christian who refuses to obey God in the sensitive areas of
sex, money or power; a church that ignores issues of justice and mercy. In
other words, they are the people who appear to be faithful but, deep down, are
not.
The parable of the two sons means that
those who are not religious may sometimes respond to the good news of God’s
forgiving love more readily than those whose self-serving religious superiority
makes them immune to its appeal. The main key is a person’s sense of self-worth
which can deceive even the most perceptive to think of ourselves more highly
than they ought to think. The truth is that even
keeping the rules can lead us astray if we end up with the attitude that we're
good and righteous people, pure as the driven snow. To believe this is a
dangerous deception. It can cause us as much grief as if we dive headlong into living
an immoral life.
When
we believe ourselves to be good and righteous people, then we ignore a large
part of who we are. We overlook our dark side, what some psychologists call the
shadow. The shadow then acts on its own, swallows us up, and takes others along
with us. This can happen without us even recognizing it.Jesus’ parable asks us how we will respond to the Gospel. Will we change our minds and believe, or not? Will we be the son who says he will obey and does not, or will we be the son who turns around and changes his mind? The parable is an example of the old adage that “actions speak louder than words”. We will be judged not by what we say, but by what we do. The religious leaders wrongly thought that they were better than they really were, and they imagined that they did not need to repent. How many times have we made commitments to God, only to fail on the follow through? How many times have we made promises to God that for one reason or another, we have not kept? How often do we find ourselves responding to God when we have already told God “no”? What we believe needs to be evident in the way we live and relate. There must not be any break between our words, actions and faith. We must be able to discern God’s voice in those expected and unexpected places. We must not only listen but be willing to change as we grow in our personal and corporate faith.
Most of us have been pretty religious for most of our
lives. Still, there are those whose religion seems to be lovely when they are
surrounded by other religious persons. They can quote scripture verses by the
boatload. They know all the religious language, all the religious rituals. But
they don’t go to work in the vineyard. And all the love, and all the kindness,
and all the compassion that they speak of in church…tends to stay at church. But
there are also those whose lives are laced with sin, whose language would make
a sailor blush, and who wouldn’t know a bible from a dictionary if it were
handed to them, but they are kind, and generous, and compassionate to no end.
They don’t get it when it comes to religion, and yet they are walking examples
of the very people Jesus came to love.
Which of those people is doing the will of God? It’s a
trick question because neither of them is. But here is the word of grace: Which
one of them is God’s daughter or son, which one of them does God want to
nurture, and mold and change into walking examples of righteousness in the
vineyard? All of us.
Jesus says that it isn’t the religious folk who are first
in the kingdom of heaven. It is those who are most open to turning their lives
around who are first in line, those who take action when Jesus says, “follow
me”. We need to be careful lest we get to feeling that God owes us something.
God sent Christ into the world to die for our sins, because we are sinners, and
we are in need of redemption. That applies to all of us---Sunday school
teachers, choir members, clergy, and members of the congregation. God does not
owe us anything. Our hope for heaven is based on one thing and one thing
alone---and that is the grace of God. This parable comes with the flame of
Jesus’ Spirit to quicken our resolve to try again to change what needs
changing. We have hope that this time, in some small or large way, change is
possible because we have heard God’s word and experienced the living Christ
through it.
When we look over our recent past and notice the trend
our lives have taken, with the thoughts and deeds that speak of our lukewarm
disciples, we want the second chance this parable offers us. We want to be able
to change our minds, repent and do the good things we know we are called to
do---and do them with the wholehearted “Yes” the gospel requires of us.
1.
Charles
F. Stanley Life Principles Bible, NASV
2.
Exegesis
for Matthew 21:23-32. Retrieved from www.sermonwriter.com
3.
Jude
Siciliano, O.P., “First Impressions, 26th Sunday (A)”. Retrieved
from www.preacherexchange.org
4.
Karl
Jacobson, “Commentary on Matthew 21:23-32”. Retrieved from www.workingpreacher.org/preaching_print.aspx?commentary_id=1047
5.
Ira
Birt Diggers, “Commentary on Matthew 21:23-32”. Retrieved from www.workingpreacher.org/preaching_print.aspx?commentary_id=144
6.
Preaching
Peace, XVII Pentecost, Year A. Retrieved from www.preachingpeace.org/lectionaries/yeara-proper21
7.
Saturday
Night Theologian, 28 September 2008. Retrieved from www.progressivetheology.org/SNT/SNT-2008.09.28.html
8.
Daniel
Clenendin, Ph.D., “Repentance: Cleaning Up a Messy House”. Retrieved from www.journeywithjesus.net/Essays/20080922JJ.shtml?view=print
9.
Sarah
Dylan Breuer, “Dylan’s Lectionary Blog, Proper 21, Year A”. Retrieved from www.sarahlaughed.net/lectionary/2005/009/proper_21_year_.html
10.
The
Rev. Debbie Royals, “Sept.28, 2008-Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost, Proper 21,
Year a (RCL)”. Retrieved from www.episcopalchurch.org/sermons_that_work_100542_ENG_HTM.htm
11.
The
Rev. Beth Quick, “Paved With…Intentions”. Retrieved from www.bethquick.com/sermon9-25-05.htm
12.
John Shearman’s Lectionary
Resource, Fifteenth Sunday After Pentecost, September 25, 2011. Retrieved from http://lectionary.seemslikegod.org/archives/fifteenth-sunday-after-pentecost-september-25-2011.html
13.
Pastor
Steve Molin, “Trick Questions”. Retrieved from www.lectionary.org
14.
Dr.
Mickey Anders, “Show Me Now”. Retrieved from www.lectionary.org
15.
The
Rev. Charles Hoffacker, “The Strange Parade”. Retrieved from www.lectionary.org
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