Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Squishing Grapes

Biblegateway's verse of the day today is Matthew 20:17-19, where Jesus again predicts His death. I decided to read the rest of the chapter, and found that, just prior to His dire prediction, He told the parable of the vineyard.

In this parable, Jesus tells a story about a man who goes out in the morning to hire people to work his vineyard for the day. The thing is, he goes out multiple times throughout the day, hiring different groups of people--but all for the same wage. When he pays them, he pays them in reverse order, causing those who had been working longer to expect higher wages. They don't get them, though, and the owner of the vineyard has some pretty choice things to say to them when they complain.

I think the overall point of this is that we all get the same thing in the end: either angels soaring or devils drooling. It doesn't matter if you've been following Christ since you were five or if you were a deathbed confession; ultimately, the same gift is promised (crowns and other confusing symbols in Revelation aside).

Something that I found interesting was that the master of the vineyard tells the workers that he is not being unfair to them. He says that they all agreed to work for the same wage, so why are they complaining? I do not find it irrelevant that in the very same chapter the Zebedee brothers approach Jesus with their mother and ask for positions at His left and right hands.

I don't know if we will all be treated entirely equally in heaven. Revelation seems to imply that some will be rewarded more than others, perhaps on the basis of works (I think Jesus may have also told some parables to that effect as well). But what I do know is that we should be satisfied with what we have. We work towards a vague notion of implied bliss, not because we deserve it, but because God gives it to us. We have eternal life at our fingertips; now, what the Dickens are we doing asking, "Please sir, I want some more?" If God wants to play favorites with the exact degree of giftedness, I fail to see how that is any of our concern. God knows I'm not going to be the one seated at Jesus' right (does such a position even exist? Or was Jesus just messing with them? I would love for them to get to heaven and for Jesus to say, "Hi guys! April Fool's!")

Another thing I found somewhat interesting is that the master says, "Don't I have the right to do what I want with my own money?" This is more potent when you consider that God is actually saying it. It makes me think back to God's response to Job, when Job finally got fed up with all of the horrible things happening to him--it's essentially the same thing. You, the world, and everything in it are Mine, all Mine, whether I am acknowledged or not, and I can do whatever I want with it. Trust me to do what's in your best interest. I wonder if God asks this question every day in answer to so many questions that we have.

The final thing the master asks is, "...are you envious because I am generous?" This is a bit puzzling, because I see two distinct possible meanings for it.

First, the obvious meaning and most direct meaning is that we are envious of what God gives to the people around us. So-and-so is smarter, or prettier, or more athletic, or whatever than I am, and it's not fair that God gave that talent(s) to him and not to me. I think this can sometimes be a real problem in my own life, since I often feel the need to compare myself to others and realize that they are better than I am at something. Why? I dunno.

But the way the sentence is phrased confuses me somewhat. Other translations talk about evil eyes caused by the goodness of the master, which only clouds the issue even more (the best I can figure is that it is some sort of idiom for what the NIV translates it to--some of the translations even have mixtures of the two).

What's interesting to me about this is that, if you take the sentence literally, their envy is a direct result of the master's generosity. I think this might show a consequence of their sin.

What's happening here is that the master is doing something good: he's being generous, but his good deed is being twisted and is indirectly causing these other people to sin. I wonder if this is a less obvious meaning behind the parable: when we envy, we take something that God has given someone else and turn it into something evil for our own descent into sin. Not that the gift itself becomes evil, but for us it does, because it encourages our envy.

If we take this to its logical conclusion, the gift itself becomes a point of contention, perhaps even division. Does the gift become evil? Not in itself, but suddenly it becomes the catalyst of a host of other sins like pride or lust. Marriages have fallen apart over things like this--people leave churches all the time over contrived reasons that have envy at their root.

I wonder if this is put here as a warning to us.

Ramble ramble ramble...

1 comment:

Chris Rohleder said...

And I think all too often we think we are entitled to more than we really are. We think we deserve that or have to have that. I wonder if we would be more content in our lives if instead of getting the next thing or more of something to make us happy, we just took what God gave us and ran with it. Many times we just fail to realize what God really has given us in His Son, and the awesome Hope we have in the future. As it says in Colossians 1, our faith and love really should spring from these. (I kind of strayed from the topic a bit, but thank you very much for sharing!)