What Will the Owner of the Vineyard Do?
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“Then the owner of the vineyard
said, ‘What shall I do? I will send my beloved son; perhaps they will respect
him.’ But when the tenants saw him, they said to themselves, ‘This is the heir.
Let us kill him, so that the inheritance may be ours.’ And they threw him out
of the vineyard and killed him. What then will the owner of the vineyard do to
them? He will come and destroy those tenants and give the vineyard to others”
(Luke 20:13-15).
Grace to you and peace from God our
Father and the Lord Jesus Christ!
The key to understanding any of the
parables is to look for the point where it departs from everyday life. Well,
good luck with this one! No one behaves in the way that we would normally
expect them to behave. I mean, what landowner would keep sending his servants
to collect the rent when they’re being so mistreated? Couldn’t he send a couple
of big guys with swords? Maybe the sheriff? Or the militia? And then he’s even
so naïve as to send his beloved son! What kind of father would do that?
And the tenants. “Oh, we’re not
paying any rent. Get lost! And here’s a little beating just to show that we
mean business.” Then they get so crazy that somehow in their mind, they think
that if they just kill the son, if they just get rid of the heir, they will
somehow get the owner’s inheritance. Who could be that foolish? That
rebellious? That bloodthirsty? It could never, ever happen. Or could it?
The parable itself is allegorical.
It describes the history of Israel in the same way as the Song of the Vineyard
in Isaiah 5:1-7. God is the Lord of the vineyard. The vineyard is Israel,
especially the city of Jerusalem. The tenants are the Jewish religious
establishment, namely, the Sadducees and chief priests in charge of the public
temple ministry in Jerusalem and the Pharisees and scribes who govern the
people’s piety within the synagogues outside Jerusalem.
As Jesus relates this parable, Luke
has just noted that the chief priests, scribes, and the Sanhedrin are seeking
to destroy Jesus but are reluctant to do so because the people are carefully
listening to Jesus’ teaching (Luke 19:47). Jesus had just entered Jerusalem to
the cheers of the crowd. He had wept over the city as He reflected on the
destruction of Jerusalem that would be coming because of its rejection of Him
as Messiah. He had driven out of the temple those who had turned God’s house of
prayer into a den of robbers. In the verses immediately preceding, these
religious leaders challenged Jesus as to what authority He had to these things.
The first four stanzas of the
parable retell the history of God’s work through the prophets for the salvation
of Israel. Every time God sent a prophet to Israel, it created a “critical
time,” a “right season,” because prophets speak for God. They declare His
intentions to save and His judgment upon those who reject Him, setting up a
time that is right for bearing fruit of the faith.
The three servants who are sent into
the vineyard represent all of God’s prophetic activity during the Old Testament
era, when the prophets called people to repentance and to show fruits of
repentance, but when that call fell so often on deaf ears. The servants are
mistreated and sent away empty-handed. In the words of Isaiah 5:7, “For the
vineyard of the Lord of hosts is the house of Israel, and the men of Judah are
His pleasant planting; and He looked for justice, but behold, bloodshed; for
righteousness, but behold, an outcry!”
Now it’s time for God’s own beloved
Son to visit the vineyard.
In the phrase, “beloved Son,” there
are echoes from both the Old Testament and the ministry of Jesus. The near
sacrifice of Isaac, Abraham’s beloved son, foreshadowed Christ’s bloody
sacrifice (Genesis 22:2ff). But the most significant echo is from the Gospel
itself, where the Father said at Jesus’ baptism, “You are My beloved Son; with
You I am well pleased” (Luke 3:22). Jesus, the beloved Son, will not be treated
any better than the prophets who went before Him.
At this point, Jesus breaks off the
parable and asks: “What then will the owner of the vineyard do to them?” Here
we find a link to Isaiah 5:4, where God asks, “What more was there to do for My
vineyard, that I have not done in it?” The answer in Isaiah is clear: the
fruitless vineyard must be destroyed. Equally clear is Jesus’ answer to His own
question: “He will come and destroy those tenants and give the vineyard to
others” (Luke 20:16).
After Pentecost, the vineyard is not
leased to new farmers but is given to them (Luke 12:32). Those new farmers do
not include the previous abusive tenants. They begin with the twelve apostles
who, through their commission go out into the world to make more disciples
through baptizing and teaching, thus reconstituting the Church as the new
Israel.
The people’s response is fear.
“Surely not!” probably refers to all three events: the killing of the Son, the
killing of the farmers, and the transfer of the vineyard to others. But it must
happen, for the unstoppable plan of God calls for His Son to die just outside
Jerusalem.
Jesus looks at the people to
communicate nonverbally that these words are for them. Jesus looks with
enlightened eyes at the crowds because He know the end of the story and meaning
of Scriptures. But do they? Jesus asks them in a form of a question, “What then
is this that is written: ‘The stone that the builder has rejected has become
the cornerstone’?” (Luke 20:17).
Jesus gives no answer, because the
events of His life in the next few days will provide the answer. The people and
the religious leaders already have had the answer for a long time in the
Scriptures. After the resurrection, Jesus will chide the Emmaus disciples as
“foolish ones, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken”
(Luke 24:25). They should have known that according to Moses and all the
prophets, it was “necessary that the Christ should suffer these things and
enter into His glory” (Luke 24:26).
At the beginning of Luke’s Gospel,
Simeon predicts: “Behold, this child is appointed for the fall and rising of
many in Israel, and for a sign that is opposed” (2:34). Throughout Jesus’
ministry, we see this come true time after time as those who one would most
expect to receive Jesus reject Him, while those who seem least likely to
believe that Jesus was bringing the kingdom receive Him in faith.
From the moment Jesus entered
Jerusalem, the scribes and Pharisees were seeking an opportunity to seize Him.
His teaching in the temple—particularly this parable—confirmed how dangerous
Jesus was for them. But they were equally aware that many believed His
teaching, and they were afraid to arrest Jesus because of how the people might
react.
More importantly, these religious
leaders were fully aware that Jesus told this parable against them. They even
may have been aware that Jesus’ reading matched up with the Scriptures. Jesus
spoke the parable as a warning call to repentance and faith in Him who would
become the Cornerstone. In their unbelief and rejection, the parable’s
application to them was only Law.
And so, how do these “tenants” in
the crowd respond? They want to kill the Son that very day; and in a few days,
they will.
And what does the “owner of the
vineyard” do? He takes the vineyard from them and lets it out to other tenants.
True to His Word, He uses the death of His beloved Son for the good of sinners.
Rather than stomping the world out of existence like an annoying bug, God uses
His Son’s death as the Sacrifice for the sins of the world. The Son dies on the
cross for the sins of the terminally foolish and faithless tenants who kill
Him. Then He rises again three days later. Why? To judge and condemn? No,
judgment will eventually come; but for now, He rises to declare peace, to
declare that His death was for the sins of the world, and that whoever believes
in Him will be saved. The Lord uses the murder of His Son to gain redemption
for the sinners who rebel against Him. Now that’s crazy!
But upon further review, maybe the
parable isn’t quite so outlandish after all. That’s because it’s not about how
people are supposed to treat each other. If it were, the parable is just crazy.
But the parable is about how sinners treat God and how God treats sinners.
Sinners treat God terribly with
disrespect and irreverence. God gives them daily bread and they fail to be
thankful. God gives them things to use in service, and they hoard it for
themselves and use it to boast of their accomplishments. God gives them bodies
and minds to be used for honorable purposes, and they misuse and pollute them
both for temporary pleasure in self-destructive ways. God gives spouses, and
sinners covet those that they’re not married to. God gives family and friends
and neighbors to serve, and sinners neglect them or take advantage of them for
selfish gain. The Lord warns of sin so that sinners repent and don’t die, and
sinners get ticked off that the Lord would tell them how to live. The Lord
says, “Here I am” in His Word and Sacraments, and sinners say, “There’s really
other stuff that I consider more important.”
That’s how sinners treat God.
If you examine yourself, you’ll
confess that that is how you treat God, too. And if your first response is,
“No, I don’t!”, it is only an echo of the scribes in the text saying, “Surely
not.” Apart from the Holy Spirit, there is no one who seeks after God. This is
not a pleasant truth to confess, but it is true all the same and important to
confess. As long as you hold onto sins, discount them as something that God
doesn’t care about, or resent God for telling you they’re wrong, then you are
not forgiven. You may well be saying, “Jesus died to take away all of my sins,”
but you’re also saying, “I don’t want Him to take away quite all of my sins.”
If you hold onto your sins, then you are not forgiven; and on Judgment Day, you
will be crushed. You will not be crushed because God wants to, but because
you’ve refused the gift of grace that He has given to you time and again.
For this is how Jesus treats
sinners: with patience, mercy, and grace. 2 Peter 3:9 declares: “The Lord is
not slow to fulfill His promise as some count slowness, but is patient toward
you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance.”
He patiently waits. He continues to send His Word and preachers to proclaim it.
He patiently showers you with forgiveness in His Word and Sacraments to keep
you in the true faith, even as He patiently gives this dying world more time so
that more might hear and be saved.
This parable offers us an
opportunity for corporate self-evaluation, to take a closer look at how we, the
Church, have been doing with the work God has given us. We could even borrow
language from the epistle reading for this week,
Have we counted everything as
rubbish in comparison to knowing Christ Jesus our Lord? Or have our wandering
hearts turned us toward the things of this world that lack any lasting value?
Have we continued faithfully to
press on toward the goal of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus? Or have we
grown weary in our Christian living and succumbed to just going through the
religious motions?
Are we trusting the promises and
Spirit of God to provide a new way forward that might look a little differently
than it has in the past? Or are we clinging to what lies behind, to the “good
old days” before everything went off the rails?
There is an honest answer to these
questions, and it is humbling. The fact is the Church has not tended to the
vineyard as faithfully as we should, and we are still not. We can get defensive
about this and make excuses, but then we would start to sound even more like
those scribes and priests who refused to repent when Jesus first told this
parable.
The good news, of course, is that,
like the landowner in this parable, God is patient toward us, not wishing that
any should perish, but that all should reach repentance. God suffers long to
give grace to the sinner, you, me, and others—even when it means suffering the
death of His only, beloved Son to win that grace in the first place. He does
not want you to be crushed in judgment. He desires that you be built upon the
Rock, Jesus Christ, for eternity. Forgiven for your sins, you are in His
vineyard forever.
One of the Lord’s many prophets,
Joel, declared, “Return to the Lord your God, for He is gracious and merciful,
slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love” (Joel 2:13). His grace, His
mercy, His patience and steadfast love are all yours for the sake of Jesus;
because, for the sake of Jesus, you are forgiven for all your sins.
In the name of the Father and of the
Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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