The “‘Sumptions” of Grace
Matthew 20:1-16
“I
choose to give to this last worker as I give to you. Am I not allowed to do
what I choose with what belongs to me?
Or
do you begrudge my generosity?”
Everybody
wants to know, What does the Bible have to say about my life? Perhaps what’s
behind the question is a fear that either the Bible isn’t relevant to us OR our
lives aren’t relevant to God.
The
conundrum is, Christians will complain about God’s not showing up for them, or
God’s not speaking to them, not answering their prayers. We are very quick to
complain and to blame God or the preacher or the teacher or a committee for our
disconnect with faith, with God, and with the Bible.
The
parable today demonstrates that grudges, complaints and idleness are not
conducive to living into God’s gift of grace in our lives. Quite simply, if you
want to be with God, understand his plan for your life, you have to show up in
the “marketplace” willing to answer God’s call and go into God’s vineyard. It’s
in the vineyard that we reap God’s sumptuous harvest of grace. We won’t find
grace by standing around all day, idle in the marketplace of faith, complaining
“no one has hired us.” Here’s the good news: you got the job! Will you accept
it? Will you labor in God’s vineyard of grace?
The
parable of the Laborers in the Vineyard is the longest parable that Jesus
told. Matthew is the only gospel that
contains “The parable of the Laborers in the Vineyard.” And the Parable of the Laborers in the Vineyard
can teach us a lot about the theology of work, but today we will focus on what
the story teaches us about God’s extravagant gift of grace.
Maybe
you’ve heard this definition of grace: “Grace is when God gives us what we
don't deserve, and mercy is when God doesn't give us what we do deserve”
(Unknown). Grace comes from God—we cannot bestow it upon ourselves. Grace is a
gift that comes from God—we cannot buy it, earn it, make it or take it. And the
gift of grace that God gives is God’s choice alone. It’s a faulty faith to believe
that we can persuade God to save us——that can lead to all kinds of ‘sumptions
that will lead us astray:
· Assumption
· Consumption
· Presumptions
· Resumption
The
Parable of the Laborers in the Vineyard reveals to us that we hold onto
‘sumptions about God’s desire to save us by his grace. There are at least four
‘sumptions that Christians are prone to believing, yet these ‘prove the truth
of the Kingdom of Heaven in the last line of the parable, “the last will be
first and the first will be last, for many are called but few are chosen.”
The
first ‘sumption is “assumption.” Look at verses 9-10: “And when those hired
about the eleventh hour came, each of them received a denarius. Now when those
hired first came, they thought they would receive more, but each of them
received a denarius.”
We
assume that we are chosen people. Why not?
We are in worship almost every week; we say grace over our meals; we do
good works, we try to be kind. Assumptions are actually a mix of arrogance and
laziness. You know what they say about people who assume, don’t you?!
The
second ‘sumption is “consumption.”
Look at verses 11-12: “And on receiving it they grumbled at the master of the
house, saying, ‘These last worked only one hour, and you have made them equal
to us who have borne the burden of the day and the scorching of the heat.’
We
are often consumed by envy when we think others have received more than they
deserved. We strive to be so strong and devoted to God; we pray harder than
another that our loved one would respond to chemotherapy treatments and
survive, but they didn’t—and someone who did less than we did received for
themselves what we prayed so hard for and yet did not receive. Be consumed by
God, not by the evil eye of envy. God will be generous with what is his to
give.
The
third ‘sumption is “presumption.”
Look again at verses 12-13: “‘These last worked only one hour, and you have
made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the day and the scorching of
the heat.’ But he replied to one of them, ‘Friend, I am doing you know wrong.
Did you not agree with me for a denarius?’
We
cannot presume that we are any better
a Christian than the person
who
sits beside us in the pew or stands in the Pulpit before us, or
sits
in the coffee shop behind us because we presume we have
struggled
more or suffered more, sacrificed or served more.
The
fourth ‘sumption is “resumption.”
Look at verses 14-15: God alone can resume
our salvation from the shallow graves of assumption, consumption and
presumption. The resumption happens at this table before us, which is spread
with the flesh and blood of Jesus Christ who died for us, the food and drink of
God’s sumptuous grace.
Only
God can save us—only God can resume the plan of salvation he wants for us; we
cannot save ourselves. We have a situational faith but what we must learn is to
practice a diligent faith—that our hearts are always on the path to share love
and hope with those in the marketplace.
We
may not get paid in this world what we are worth, yet we will surely receive
God’s grace when we bear the burden of the day and the scorch of the heat for
the sake of the kingdom. God does not choose to us because we are the best or
the worst; God does not love us more because we are the first or the last; and
God does not give us more or less because we are the most or the least in his
kingdom.
God
is generous and loving; God is faithful and trustworthy; God is merciful and
just; and God is God and we are not. The advice from the parable is sweet and
simple: “Take what belongs to you and go” with it—that’s how God has designed
it. The Master says, “I choose to give to this last worker as I give to you.”
Because God’s grace is his to give, whenever and wherever and to whomever, we will
always receive from God far more than we will ever be able to give back. Thanks
be to God for the ‘sumptions of grace. Amen.
March 1, 2015
First Parish Federated Church of
South Berwick, ME
The Reverend Donna Lee Muise, Pastor
Think
God can’t use y ou? Consider these people – God used them for amazing purposes
despite the fact that:
Jacob
was a cheater
Peter
had a temper
David
had an affair
Noah
got drunk
Jonah
ran from God
Paul
was a murderer
Gideon
was insecure
Miriam
was a gossip
Martha
was a worrier
Thomas
was a doubter
Sarah
was impatient
Elijah
was moody
Moses
stuttered
Zaccheus
was short
Abraham
was old
AND
Lazarus
was DEAD!
If
God can use them, what’s our excuse?