EPISODE · Nov 1, 2012 · 42 MIN
Parable of the Vineyard Workers (Matthew 19:16-20:16)
from Wednesday in the Word · host Krisan Marotta
A wealthy, earnest young man asks Jesus what good thing he must do to inherit eternal life—and walks away sad. Then Jesus tells a story about vineyard workers who all get paid the same, no matter how long they worked. In this episode on Matthew 19:16–20:16, we explore how these two scenes fit together to expose our belief that God owes us something, and to reveal instead a kingdom where salvation is impossible to earn and always given as sheer, undeserved grace. In this week’s episode, we explore:Why the rich young ruler’s question, “What good thing shall I do…?” reveals a deeply religious but deeply mistaken view of righteousnessHow Jesus’ command to sell everything and follow him clashes with the highest loyalties of first-century culture—family and land—and exposes what the man truly lovesWhat Jesus means by the camel and the eye of a needle, and why this image underlines the impossibility of anyone earning their way into God’s kingdomHow the disciples’ shock (“Then who can be saved?”) opens the door to Jesus’ answer: “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible”Peter’s “We have left everything” moment—and why even costly discipleship does not put God in our debt or “earn” eternal lifeThe vineyard workers who labor for twelve hours, nine, six, three, or just one—and all receive the same day’s wageHow the landowner’s repeated trips to the marketplace show his compassion, and why hiring the workers at all is the first act of graceWhy the first workers grumble, not because they were cheated, but because they cannot stand seeing others receive the same generosityHow this parable challenges both ancient and modern versions of religious bookkeeping—using quiet times, Bible study, giving, and service as a way to feel “ahead” of others and to think God now owes us rewardAfter listening, you’ll see the rich young ruler and the vineyard workers as two sides of the same coin: our instinct to turn faith into a wage-earning system, and God’s insistence on giving us what we need, not what we deserve. You’ll be invited to examine your attitude toward religious practices—whether they are quiet, grateful responses to grace or subtle ways of building a résumé before God—and to rest in the good news that every genuine desire to obey, serve, or seek him is itself a gift from his hand.Series: Parables of JesusMost people fail at Bible study because no one ever taught them how. Bible Study Boot Camp fixes that: one short email a day for a week, plus a worksheet you can use on any passage for the rest of your life.Sign up for Bible Study Boot Camp
What this episode covers
A wealthy, earnest young man asks Jesus what good thing he must do to inherit eternal life—and walks away sad. Then Jesus tells a story about vineyard workers who all get paid the same, no matter how long they worked. In this episode on Matthew 19:16–20:16, we explore how these two scenes fit together to expose our belief that God owes us something, and to reveal instead a kingdom where salvation is impossible to earn and always given as sheer, undeserved grace. In this week’s episode, ...
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Parable of the Vineyard Workers (Matthew 19:16-20:16)
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