The Grace of God and the Parable of
the Laborers – Is God Just?
Everyone is pleased to have the grace of God in their
life but are we disturbed by it when his grace shows up in the lives of others
seemingly more generously than in our own?
I am afraid that is sometimes the case.
The parable of the laborers found in Matt. 20:1-16 is a perfect example
and is also an excellent illustration of how man feels he knows more about what
is just and right than God does.
The passage is too long to quote here but I will jog your
memory and summarize it for you. A man
had a vineyard and needed workers. He
went out to hire workers for his vineyard 5 different times during the course
of the day each time sending them directly to work as they were hired. At day’s end, as was the custom back then,
each was paid. A problem arose in the
hearts of the early hires at the end of the day when the owner of the vineyard
paid those who came into the field last, late in the day, the same amount as
those who had gone to work first. They
complained feeling they had been treated unjustly. “These last men have worked only one hour,
and you made them equal to us who have borne the burden and the heat of the
day.” (Matt. 20:12 NKJV)
It is easy to read this account and at first impulse feel
that indeed the earliest workers were mistreated. We have all been raised to believe in the
concept of quid pro quo, so much money for so much work, pay based on the
amount of work done, the more work the more money. The last workers in this parable did not do
equal work, far less, yet received equal pay.
To an American this seems most unjust but what was the vineyard owner’s
response? “Is your eye evil because I am
good?” (Matt. 20:15 NKJV) The ESV reads,
“Do you begrudge my generosity?” The NAS
reads, “Is your eye envious because I am generous?” The bottom line is that they were jealous and
angry over the generosity shown by the vineyard owner to those hired last.
One must understand, and I think we do, that this parable
is about God’s dealings with those who believe and obey the gospel. God’s grace gives a man what he needs and not
what he deserves. Such was the case in
this parable. His grace is not based on
works, not on how much work one has done, not on how difficult
it has been, not on how long one has had to endure.
God is always just in the sense that he treats us
honestly and fairly and does not go back on the word he has given. In the parable those who went to work in the
vineyard earliest in the day were glad to go, to have the opportunity, and
agreed that the wage set was fair and the work required was just. He did not ask of them more than they could
do or were willing to do.
These early workers were blessed and enjoyed grace from
the vineyard owner. What had he done for
them? He had given them work. Not every man was so blessed with a job. He had given them security. At the end of the day they knew their need to
feed their family was going to be met.
He had given them dignity and self respect. They need not hang their head in
embarrassment and shame as those who could not provide for themselves and their
family.
Those were great blessings in that day and they are great
blessings in this day. These men were
treated not only with justice but with grace in being given these blessings. They should have been in a state of
thanksgiving and rejoicing and perhaps they were for a time – until the time
they learned of grace given to others, grace beyond what they perceived had
been given to them. Envy and jealousy
arose. If we are not careful the same
attitude can develop within us and for the same reason. It is the age old complaint that men have
that God is not fair. In the parable the
vineyard owner is representative of God.
Was he fair? Did he do what was
right?
In the parable, as the day went on, others were hired
with the last being hired at the eleventh hour, quite late in the work
day. When this last set of men were
hired they were told, “whatever is right you will
receive.” (Matt. 20:7 NKJV) When they
were paid at the end of the work day what did they receive? They received the same amount as did those
who had worked far more hours of the day, who had endured a much greater work
load because of it, and who had borne the heat of the day. But, note what those at the eleventh hour
received - they had received was what was “right.” (Matt. 20:7)
How could that be?
If I owned a business today and went out and hired men as in the parable
and acted accordingly in paying them would I be doing what was right? Most would say no. In what sense then could this be said to be
“right”? If it was “right” then it would
have been wrong to have done it the way most think it should have been done –
pay based on the amount of work done.
Here is what made it “right.” Every man hired that day had an equal need –
the need to feed himself and his family if he had one which is most likely. If it is in my power to do good
and make that possible for a man can I be righteous and fail to do it? “Therefore, to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin.” (James 4:17
NKJV)
Paul told Timothy to command the rich to “be rich in good
works, ready to give, willing to share.” (1 Tim. 6:18 NKJV)
In Matt. 25 who is it that is going to be condemned in
the last day? “Then he will also say to
those on the left hand, ‘Depart from me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his angels:
for I was hungry and you gave me no food; I was thirsty and you gave me
no drink; I was a stranger and you did not take me in, naked and you did not
clothe me, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.’” (Matt. 25:41-43 NKJV)
“But whoever has this world’s goods, and sees his brother
in need, and shuts up his heart from him, how does the love of God abide in
him?” (1 John 3:17 NKJV) The eleventh
hour men in the parable had a need. The
vineyard owner, since he had it in his power, could not have been a just man
with the love of God in his heart and done anything other than what he
did. What he did was good and
right. If these laborers had not had
need they would not have been laboring so there was a need to be met that could
not now be met by any other principle.
What was that principle?
The principle of grace. God is a God of grace. If we are his children we too must have grace
for others. When we take the position
everyone has to earn all he gets then that locks us all out of heaven “for all
have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” (Rom. 3:23 NKJV) Remember this parable is in reality about
spiritual matters, not economics.
Many who work hard and make a living develop an attitude
toward those who have been less fortunate than themselves. It goes something like this. See me, see what I have done, anyone could
have done the same and would have if they had any get up and go about them and
were not so shiftless. Look at me. Vanity, pride, arrogance all fit into one
body made of dust to which it will in due time return. I have even heard preachers talk along this
line.
It would be good to look closer at the eleventh hour
laborers. In the parable when the
vineyard owner was preparing to hire the eleventh hour workers he quizzes them
before doing so and asks them, “Why have you been standing here idle all day?”
(Matt. 20:6 NKJV) Their answer is,
“Because no one hired us.” (Matt. 20:7 NKJV)
It was not that they were lazy, not that they had not been seeking
work. It may well have been simply a
matter of not being in the right place at the right time. I say that because the vineyard owner had
been seeking day laborers evidently all day long hiring it seems about any who
would answer the call. He only runs into
these men at the eleventh hour and yet they had obviously been here long enough
to have been passed over by other employers as per their answer to the vineyard
owner’s question.
Why were they passed over? Was it unwillingness to work? They went to work at the eleventh hour
knowing the work day was pretty much over and that they could not realistically
expect anything close to a full day’s wages yet they went being willing to work
for what they could get. They had been
passed over but it was not because of failure to seek work or unwillingness to
work. People are passed over for
employment for a great many reasons that have nothing to do with character in
the least little bit and yet we so often see their plight as their fault for
look at us, we raised ourselves up by the bootstrap and if they have any grit
about them they would do the same.
We, if we are not careful, see ourselves, because we were
hired, as worthy, as talented, as deserving while looking down on the other guy
who was not hired. We can sin in our
attitude toward others if we are not awfully careful and it is not just a
matter of attitude but also of judging.
Where is compassion and mercy?
Where is grace?
I do not judge those first hired in the parable as
regards their attitude toward the eleventh hour workers for their attitude was
not revealed save in one particular.
They, in concern for self only, lost sight of compassion for others who
had a like need (provide for myself and for my
family). How easy that is to do. It is easy to do but it is still sin.
Were the first hour workers treated fairly? Most certainly for they got exactly what they
had been happy to agree to. Had they of
been paid in private and left unaware of what the later laborers received they
would have walked away fully satisfied and content. But, as it was, they were made jealous by the
generosity of another, one who gave grace.
Bible teaching is that we “rejoice with those who
rejoice.” (Rom. 12:15 NKJV) The proper
attitude is to be happy and thankful for the good fortune of others. I think we know this but we have to battle
human nature (which tends towards jealousy and envy) and overcome it if we are
to become the person of character that we need to be having the kind of
attitude God would have us have. Those
first hired in the parable fell short in this respect.
Jesus used the parable about the laborers in the vineyard
to teach how God’s grace works for those who become Christians. We become Christians at different stages in
life and in different circumstances and environments. Some have much longer to live and labor as
soldiers of Christ than do others.
Likewise some suffer much greater persecution than do others with the
apostles being perfect examples of that.
Yet, we all, if we will live faithfully unto death, receive the same
inheritance.
Is it fair? Would
you have it any other way? If it is your
son, your daughter, your wife, your husband, your mother or dad who is the
eleventh hour worker you would have it no other way. Give praise to God for his grace. We are pleased with his promise to us no
matter what hour worker we end up being and rejoice in the grace he gives
others. No, we would have it no other
way. We will not complain and we are
overcome with joy to know there is hope even yet that some will come to work at
the eleventh hour, even some of our loved ones.