George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
April 4
The Eleventh-Hour Man
And about the eleventh hour he went out,
and found others standing idle--Mat 20:6
Staying outside the Kingdom to the Last
By the eleventh-hour man I mean the man who
at five o'clock is still outside the Kingdom, and one would notice first that
in the parable there is no hint of this man being bad. There was another
eleventh-hour man, who had taken to evil courses on the highway. He had left
home, and broken his mother's heart, and we see him at last hanging on a cross.
But this first man was a much more usual type, haunting the marketplace in
search of work, not forgetful of his wife and children. If you want the prodigal,
go to the far country. If you want the brigand, take the road to Jericho. Our
Lord, in that most masterly way of His, has always a fitting background for His
characters. And this man, against the back ground of the market-place, stands
for the ordinary, well-intentioned person--yet at the eleventh hour he is still
outside the Kingdom.
Not without Excuse
One notes, too, that he was not without
excuse. It is so like our Lord to touch on that. When the man was asked why he
was standing there, he could truly say that nobody had hired him. That this
excuse was not entirely valid is, I think, embodied in the parable. For at the
third hour and at the sixth and ninth hours the householder had been out
looking for workers. Now had this man been tremendously in earnest he would
have thrown himself in the employer's way; but there is not a hint that he did
that. Probably at nine o'clock he was in bed; men out of work are prone to
oversleep. At twelve o'clock he would be having dinner, and at three enjoying
his siesta. But the beautiful thing is that, though this be true, the Master
sees, and is at pains to show us, that this man was not without excuse. There
are men outside at the eleventh hour who are utterly without excuse. Deaf to
every call, they have resisted the inviting Spirit. But there are others who
are different from that, and one of the charming things about our Lord is that
He finds room for that suggestion in His story. Such may have sat under a
sapless ministry, or had the Gospel presented in repellent ways. They may have
been plunged, when little more than boys, into dubious or soul-destroying
businesses. Someone they loved, who made a great profession, may have proved
(long years ago) a whited sepulchre--and at the eleventh hour they are still
outside the Kingdom.
The Lord Still Calls at the Eleventh
Hour
Now the wonderfully hopeful thing is this,
that this man was called at the eleventh hour, for the eleventh hour (as Bible
students know) is an hour when nothing ever happens. With the exception of this
single parable I am not aware that the eleventh hour is mentioned from the Book
of Genesis to Revelation. The third hour is a great hour of Scripture, for then
(according to St. Mark) our Lord was crucified. And the sixth and ninth are
both great hours of Scripture, and all three are Jewish hours of prayer. But
the eleventh hour is an hour unchronicled--it is an hour when nothing ever
happens--and it was just then that this man was called. Nobody had ever heard
of such a thing. Nobody ever expected such a thing. The oldest frequenter of
the market-place had never known anyone to call at five o'clock. And yet that
is what happened in the story and our blessed Lord would never have told the
story if it could not happen now--and to you.
God Is an Extraordinary Employer
For this employer is an extraordinary
person. It is that which Jesus is eager to impress on us. Had the employer been
thinking of nothing but his grapes, he would never have acted in this amazing
fashion. What! to hire men when the work day is closing, and to pay them with
an insane extravagance? Whoever heard of a businessman like that! Such conduct
in an employer is unthinkable. And then our Lord would smile, and flash a
glance at them, and say, "Children, that is exactly what I am driving at,
for remember that My householder is God." "My ways are not your ways,
neither are My thoughts your thoughts." This is an extraordinary
householder because God is an extraordinary God, giving His only begotten Son
to die for us, waiting and watching and yearning for the prodigal, putting a
ring on his hand and shoes upon his feet, when in the evening he comes home.
He Got More Than He Ever Dreamed Of
And then this eleventh-hour man got far
more than he had ever dreamed of. It was almost incredible, but it was true.
The men who came at break of day were bargainers. They began by driving a
bargain with the master. They said, "Let us settle the wages question
first," and he settled it, and gave them what they bargained for. But the
eleventh-hour man did not drive a bargain; filled with gratitude, he left
things to the Master, and he got more than he had ever dreamed of. That is the
kind of faith which God delights in, not the conditional faith that drives a
bargain, not the faith that says, "If Thou wilt do so-and-so for me, I
will do so-and-so for Thee"; but the faith, born of a wondering gratitude
that leaves all issues in the Master's hands, perfectly certain that His name
is Love. Think of the amazement of the eleventh-hour man when the whole penny
was lying in his hand. "What! all this for me? All this for me?" Yes:
"eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of
man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love Him" (1Co 2:9).
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