연중 제 25 주일 Fr. Don Webber 강론

25 Sunday of Ordinary
Time

September 20, 2020

 

For many of us, our day to day life can be fairly predictable.
One day is much the same as the day before.

I am sure we observed this during the  shutdown and even now with limitations. We have a certain routine

that we
tend to keep to. 
Beyond our looking forward to those l imitations   being dropped,
we normally

do not like our routine to be disturbed. However, we also know from experience that the unexpected can

suddenly  come along and throw our routine up
into the air. 
Some misfortune, like COVID 19 or a forest fire

that gets out of
control, can  
strike us or those  we love and nothing is ever quitethe same
again.

Or some wonderful news can come to us out of the blue, like winning the  lottery or a new

drug that cures cancer,  and everything we subsequently do is bathed in a new light.

 

That element of the unexpected is very present in todays gospel (Matthew 20: 1-16).

There is
something very surprising, even 
shocking, about the way the landowner operates. 

Most employers do not give a full  days wage to somebody who only does an
hour
work;

their business  would not last
very long. That is simply common sense that we understand.

Why would anyone want to work for a day if they were sure of getting days wage for

an hours work?  The story that Jesus tells is
not about the human  
way of doing business. 

Rather, Jesus is giving us a picture of Gods way of doing things.

He is showing us
that God
s way of doing things is very different and   unexpected from

our way. In todays
first  
reading Isaiah reminds us, my
thoughts are not your thoughts;

my ways are not  your ways. Because Gods
ways 
are not our ways, we will  often find 

God surprising and disturbing.   This
is the one parable of Jesus that is most likely to get

people upset and
alarmed. We feel that an 
injustice  is being done to those who worked all day.


Yet, the vineyard owner gave those who  
worked  all day a just wage; and then he
gave those

who worked fewer hours the same wage.

 

We know from experience that people can surprise us. Some
people might surprise us in a negative sense. 

They do not measure  up to our legitimate expectations of them; they disappoint us. Others can surprise 

us in
a positive sense. 
They far exceed our expectations; they show us that there is
more to them than 

we realized.  Todays
parable suggests that God will surprise us in 
a positive sense. 

Gods goodness is always  greater than we
might expect; God
s generosity goes beyond our
expectations.

God does not give to us in accordance with what we have earned.
God does not put our efforts on one side of

 the scale and then put an equal
amount 
of grace on the other side of the scale to balance our efforts. 

God
graces us in unexpected and undeserving ways. God gives us the equivalent of a
day
s wages for 

 an hours work. The grace and love of God transcends
our human calculations. If we stop to think about it,

the same is true of our
relationship with others.  
The love and goodness  that we  receive from family
cannot be

fully understood or evaluated merely in terms of our goodness or  what
we deserve at the moment.

 

If the strangeness of Gods
ways, like the behavior of the landowner, seem disconcerting to us at first,

Gods strange ways are ultimately very reassuring for us. The parable suggests that Gods
favor is not

parceled out on the basis of what we have earned. God is
constantly  
gracing us  through his Son in ways

that bear no relationship to what
we have done, or failed to do. 
How we hear this parable will to some extent 

depend on those with whom we identify in the story. 

If we identify with the men
who  
worked all day, we will be tempted to feel resentful at Gods generosity

towards those we consider
less deserving. However, if we  
identify with the undeserving ones, those who 

were called into the field at the end of the day, we can allow ourselves to experience the thrill of divine generosity. 

 Maybe, that is where the parable invites us to
place ourselves. 

We are all undeserving, and, yet, God continues to grace us in
and through his Son every day,

 if we have eyes to see. The parable invites us
to  
allow something of Gods
ways to shape our ways,

so that we too begin to relate to others not on the
basis
of what they deserve but out of the generosity 

of our heart, the generous
heart that is motivated and 

fashioned by Gods
heart.

 

Fr. Don Webber, C.P.