25th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Sept. 23, 1990
Matt 20: 1-16
Holy Cross, Fairfield, Conn.
Still without a Sunday ministry in the D.C. area. Here's an oldie for this Sunday's readings.
“This
last group did only an hour’s work, but you have put them on the same basis as
us who have worked a full day in the scorching heat” (Matt 20: 12).
Last
week’s parable of the unforgiving servant was fantastic—a story not true to
life. But its point was quite
clear. Today’s parable is quite true to
life, its point a bit difficult to fathom.
The Laborers in the Vineyard by Jacob Willemsz de Wet |
The
scene which Jesus describes was all too familiar. The unemployed stand around
the village square hoping some landowner or overseer will hire them for the day
at the going laborer’s rate of a denarius for dawn-to-dusk fieldwork. A denarius, a small silver coin, just about
supports a laborer’s family for the day.
A
landowner comes out at dawn and hires some of them. At various times later in the day, he returns
and hires additional laborers of his vineyard.
Perhaps he’s not too good at estimating the work to be done. Perhaps he simply feels compassion for these
men who want work in order to feed their families tomorrow.
If,
indeed, it’s compassion that moves this wealthy man, then we understand also
his generosity in overpaying the late-hired workman. He’s giving alms; for if he pays them only
for an hour or a half-day, they will go hungry, they or their children. There is no public welfare of any kind. The unemployed are completely at the mercy of
those with money or the power to hire.
Jesus would be telling his followers to have a minimum of compassion for
society’s least fortunate, to see that they have at least their daily bread and
clothing and shelter. This doesn’t entitle
others, more fortunate, to squawk for handouts as well, in the name of
fairness.
But
probably this issue of fairness is what we need to concentrate on. The vineyard owner is certainly just. You contracted for a denarius. Here’s your denarius. Yet he’s not fair. He’s treated as equals those who worked 1
hour, 3 hours, 6 hours, 9 hours, and 12 hours in the Palestinian sun. Who wouldn’t be angry in the place of those
who worked all day? You would be; I
would be.
Every
parent, every teacher, every employer has heard that same wail: “It’s not fair.” How come he got a bigger piece than I
did? How come she gets to go and I
don’t? How come he got a better mark
than I did? How come she got promoted
and I didn’t? There isn’t always a clear
answer. We can’t always say even, “I
want to be generous.”
When
Jesus told the parable of the laborers in the vineyard, who would have been
protesting the preaching and behavior of Jesus as unfair? Who would have thought God’s generosity,
God’s forgiveness, were unfair? It would
have been the Pharisees and all those who strictly and faithfully followed
Jewish moral and ritual laws. They found
Jesus’ behavior impossible. Jesus had
dealings with all sorts of disreputable people: people whose daily lives evidently left them
little leisure or inclination to study Torah; people whose livelihoods were
unclean or scandalous, such as shepherds, tanners, tax collectors, and
prostitutes; people whose very selves were unclean and cursed, such as lepers,
Samaritans, Roman soldiers, and women. (You’ve heard about the Arabic culture into
which our GIs have moved. That’s very
like the world of Jesus.) The Pharisees
and other sincere people couldn’t believe that God would give his mercy and the
fullness of eternal life to such outsiders, as Jesus indicated. They felt it was unfair of God. After all, weren’t they carrying the full
burden of legal observance and moral rectitude?
Of course, they couldn’t see the burden of confessing one’s guilt and
trying to turn around a lifetime of sin; or the burden of having to keep faith
while living as an outcast or a 2d-class person even with God’s spiritual
favor. We know there are no easy ways to
heaven. God is generous to all, but all
still have to get to the resurrection by way of Calvary.
God
has been remarkably generous with us. If
most of us have a place in the parable, the danger is that we take the part of
the laborers hired 1st and begrudge God’s generosity toward others. In that sense, this parable is like last
week’s. It hardly fits us who have been
called by the Lord into his vineyard, i.e., to be part of his chosen people—it
hardly fits us to fault his generosity toward others. We ought, rather, to rejoice in it. It is that divine generosity, that divine
favor, which we call grace, that has saved us too. We ought to imitate it, as far as we can,
taking to heart Jesus’ admonition, “Be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is
perfect” (Matt 5:48). Whether our
generosity takes the form of almsgiving or of a patient and forgiving heart, we
will not outdo God’s goodness. In the
kingdom of heaven, there will be no 1st and no last, only full and eternal joy.
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