George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
April 3
The Labourers in the Vineyard
The kingdom of heaven is like unto a man
that is an householder, which went out early in the morning to hire labourers
into his vineyard--Mat 20:1
The Divine Plan in the Ordering of
Scripture Chapters
As we move through chapter nineteen of
Matthew's Gospel, we seem to breathe a different atmosphere than that of the
twentieth. Yet the two chapters, though seemingly separated, stand in the
closest connection with each other. In the former we meet with the rich young
ruler and witness his sorrowful departure from the face of Christ; we hear,
too, the question of Peter, "we have forsaken all, and followed thee; what
shall we have therefore?" (Mat 19:27). It is then that Jesus begins
speaking about rewards of service. It is then, as if summing up the visible
contrast between the rich young ruler and His poor disciples, that He says, "Many
that are first shall be last; and the last shall be first" (Mat 19:30).
And then, as though to show forth in a picture some of the mysteries He has
been dealing with, He speaks the parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard.
God's Kingdom Is Like a Vineyard
Note first, then, God's kingdom is like a
vineyard. It is an excellent exercise for all of us to recall the things that the
Kingdom of God is like. It is equally good for us to gather together some of
the Bible references to the vine. The vines of Palestine were famous for their
growth, and for the immense clusters of grapes which they produced. We all
remember that splendid bunch that the spies bore on the staff from the valley
of Eshcol (Num 13:23). We cannot wonder, then, to find the vine and the
vineyard among the most precious of the Bible metaphors. Israel is a vine
brought out of Egypt, and planted in the Land of Promise by the Lord (Psa
80:8-10). To dwell under the vine is the choice emblem of domestic happiness
(1Ki 4:25). It is a vine which Jesus selects to typify the union between His
disciples and Himself (Joh 15:1-6). And the vineyard becomes the figure of
God's kingdom. Long centuries before, Jeremiah had cried, "Many pastors
have destroyed my vineyard" (Jer 12:10); and now our Lord, who had very
profoundly studied Jeremiah, presses the same emblem into His service. Can we
give two or three of the clear likenesses that would make this metaphor a
favourite with Jesus?
As the Vineyard Needs Workers, So Does
God
Again, observe God's anxiety for workers.
Above the door of the tramway office in a certain city there is written just
now, "No men wanted: none need apply." All posts are full; there is
no call for hands; men may be very poor and very hungry, but there is no help
for them there. But the householder whom we read of in our story had no such
notice on his vineyard gate. His great concern was not to keep workers out, but
somehow or anyhow to get them in. So we find him early in the morning going out
to the marketplace to hire his men--how different a scene from the London
Docks, for instance, where early in the morning the men are clamouring at the
gates, and only a few out of the crowd are hired! And then at nine o'clock he
is out again, and then in the height of noon, and then at three. These hours
were the great hours of prayer in Jewry: was not this householder's work a kind
of prayer? And he has not done yet: he will make one more effort--an hour before
sunset he is out again. It is clear that the great passion of the man is to get
the idlers set to honest work. May we not say, with reverence and gratitude,
that that is the passion of the Father of Jesus Christ? He has service for all,
and He wants all to come and serve Him. His finger never wrote, "No men
need apply." Whenever any of our young people, then, get the opportunity
of doing something kind, when the hour comes that they can make some little
sacrifice, and help in any way the cause of Jesus, let them not say,
"Bother!" or do it with a grudge; but just let them think that the
Lord of the vineyard has come with this very bit of work for them to do.
Labourers Are Rewarded in God's Vineyard
Note once more that God rewards all
service. In the old times of feudal law in Scotland, there was many a man who
laboured all his days, and never got a penny of reward. In the Southern states,
while slavery existed, the men and the women who did all the work dreamed often
of the lash, but never of a wage. And in many a campaign, written of in our
histories, the soldiers never saw their hire. But this householder was so
careful of his word, that he began with the last comers in making account; and
none of his men got less than they expected, while the great majority of them
got far more. All of which, I take it, is meant to teach us this--that all our
service for Christ shall be rewarded. No worker shall ever get less than was
agreed on; and the great multitude, to their own sweet surprise, shall be given
more than they could ask or think. Now if it should seem to any of my readers
that this is a mercenary view of spiritual things, I would bid them remember
that even the choicest parable can only rudely embody the things of God. The
reward of plucking grapes may be a penny--there is a kind of gulf between the
two. But, spiritually, the wage of service is new power to serve; and the
reward of love is ever-deepening capacity of loving; and the hire for all
honest effort to know Jesus, is to know Him at last as the chiefest among ten
thousand.
God's Measures of Rewards Differ from
Ours
Lastly, observe God's measures are not
ours. Do not think that this parable is meant to teach us that the self-same
reward is to be given to all. If that were so, what about the talents? It so
happens that all the workers get the penny; but it is not on this that the
stress of the story lies. Had the latest comers chanced to begin at dawn, we
feel that the householder would have given them sixpence. He was delighted with
them because of their earnest spirit. They came at once; they did not stop to
haggle. He saw that their whole heart was in their work, and he really paid
them according to their heart. Do we not learn, then, that God does not measure
service by length of time or anything external? God measures service by the
motive of it, by the spirit that prompts it, by the secret heart. An hour with
the heart in it for Jesus Christ is better and worthier than a heartless day.
We really have not been serving well, if the first thing we do at sunset is to
murmur (Mat 20:11). "My son, give me thine heart?' "Yes, Lord, we
give it, and all these questions of the pence we leave with Thee!"
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