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The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard
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'These men who were hired last worked only one hour,' they said, 'and you have made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the work and the heat of the day.'
Read the entire parable in Matthew 20:1-16
My wife has breakfast every morning with our six-year-old son and three-year-old daughter and discusses a Bible story with them. One morning when she read the parable of the workers in the vineyard, my son was indignant. The people hired at the end of the day received as much pay as the ones who had worked all day long! He was furious. He wanted an explanation, and it had better be good.
Why is it that we appreciate good things that happen to others, but are angry when it appears to happen at another's expense?
I am a marketing director for a small education publisher, and I am young. Though I have been with the company only a few years, my position draws a higher salary than most the other people on staff. One of the men who works in our warehouse is probably 20 years older than I. He has worked for the company longer and is one of the nicest, most decent people I know. But he also works a second job cleaning offices at night to make ends meet. Where is the justice for him?
Recently I told my wife that I would like to invite this man and his wife to dinner, but I would be embarrassed for him to see our nice house compared to his. In the parable's terms, I haven't worked in the vineyard nearly as long or hard as he.
One problem I fall into—and what I see in my son's unvarnished reaction—is that the wrong measure of justice? I evaluate a person's life by financial reward, material possessions, or social position—which I also use to evaluate my own life. But the true measure of a person's worth is the extent to which that person can see the world through Jesus' eyes.
There is in the world a great equalizer: God's love for us disregards our levels of obedience, performance, or achievement. He loves us no matter how long we have been working in the field. How do I reconcile that? I don't. All I can do is recognize my sin, repent, and give myself to knowing Him a little more. In fact, I think I will find my friend from the warehouse later today and invite him over for dinner.
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© 2001 – 2012 H.E. Butt Foundation. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission from Laity Lodge and TheHighCalling.org.

reader comments
Anonymous
"There is in the world a great equalizer: God's love for us disregards our levels of obedience, performance, or achievement. He loves us no matter how long we have been working in the field." I'd add "no matter how long we've been planting bad seeds and bearing crappy fruit." As a middle-aged guy going through recovery from messing up the first part of my life, I take comfort in this parable, because it says that it's never too late in life for "Johnny-come-latelys." You make a good point about evaluating oneself not on the external goods but the internal potential, which is what God sees, as evidenced by the story of Jesus seeing the light in Lazarus (despite his stinky bandages) and bringing him back to life. Moments of grace and a mustard seed of faith can bring about such renewal.
SavedByGrace
Thank you for this post, such moving parable of Jesus. God Paid our sins, our lifetime of sins. Is that is unfair? One Might say, I am 40 yrs old and have been a Christian and God's servant for 10 Years YOU are 40 yrs old and have been Christian and God's servant for 1 Day and yet YOU, your sins for 40 years have been forgiven? I am dissapointed with God! now, imagine in a death bed of an 40 yr old unbeliever in her dying moments. She accepted Jesus and got saved. Is that unfair to those who have been born again for 66 years? Jesus paid our sins in full! past (9am) present(noon) and future(6pm) "Therefore, I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven--for she loved much. But he who has been forgiven little loves little." - Luke 7:47
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