Wednesday, March 06,
2013, 7:38 a.m. – the Lord Jesus woke me with the song “Broken Hearts” playing in my mind. Speak, Lord, for your servant
is listening. I read Matthew 21:33-44
(ESV): http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%2021&version=ESV
“Hear another parable. There was a master of a house who
planted a vineyard and put a fence around it and dug a winepress in it and
built a tower and leased it to tenants, and went into another country. When the
season for fruit drew near, he sent his servants to the tenants to get his
fruit. And the tenants took his servants and beat one, killed another, and
stoned another. Again he sent other servants, more than the first. And they did
the same to them. Finally he sent his son to them, saying, ‘They will respect
my son.’ But when the tenants saw the son, they said to themselves, ‘This is
the heir. Come, let us kill him and have his inheritance.’ And they took him
and threw him out of the vineyard and killed him. When therefore the owner of
the vineyard comes, what will he do to those tenants?” They said to him,
“He will put those wretches to a miserable death and let out the vineyard to
other tenants who will give him the fruits in their seasons.”
Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the Scriptures:
“‘The stone that the builders rejected
has become the
cornerstone;
this was the Lord's doing,
and it is marvelous
in our eyes’?
Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away
from you and given to a people producing its fruits. And the one who falls on
this stone will be broken to pieces; and when it falls on anyone, it will crush
him.”
Young’s Literal Translation: “…and he who is falling on this stone shall be broken, and on
whomsoever it may fall it will crush him to pieces.”
The Vineyard
At the time Jesus spoke these words, it appears that the
vineyard represented the people of God, Israel, the Jews of that time. The
tenants were the Jewish people and/or their leaders. The servants were the OT
prophets and the Son was Jesus Christ, whom they crucified. The kingdom of God
was taken away from the Jews, as a nation, because they rejected Jesus Christ
as their Messiah, and the gospel of Jesus Christ was given to the Gentiles.
So, how does this apply to us today? The Bible says that “All scripture is God-breathed and is useful
for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness”
(2 Tim. 3:16). So, that means there is a Biblical principle here that can be
applied to our lives yet today.
Since the vineyard represents the people of God, today that
would be the church. The tenants can be the people of God, as well as the
leaders, for we have all been given the responsibility of sharing the gospel,
making disciples, helping people grow in their faith and in the knowledge of
God, encouraging one another, building one another up in the faith, speaking
the truth in love, confronting sin, exposing the deeds of darkness, and living
lives pleasing to God, holy and acceptable to him, and thus letting our lights
shine before men. Yet I do believe a greater responsibility lies with those in
leadership positions.
God’s Care
God has gone to great lengths to take care of his vineyard,
the church. He first of all sent his Son Jesus Christ to die on the cross for
our sins so that we may be saved. Then, he brought his Son back to life, thus
conquering death, hell, Satan and sin so that we might be free from the penalty
of sin, free from slavery to sin, and free to live lives pleasing to God in his
power and strength within us. He gave us the gift of his grace and even the
ability to believe, to turn from our sins, and to obey him. He sent his Holy
Spirit to indwell us to guide, direct, counsel, encourage, teach, correct, and
to train us in righteousness. He gave us the prophets, the apostles,
evangelists and pastors and teachers to help us to grow in our faith, though
not all are teaching the true gospel today, so we must be discerning. And, he
gave us one another to help encourage, strengthen and build one another up in
the faith.
God also put a hedge of protection around this vineyard of
his, i.e. he gave us the Holy Spirit within us, and he has promised us his
continual presence, love, nurturing and care. God is absolutely sovereign over
every area of our lives and nothing can touch us but what God allows it, and he
allows it for a purpose. To believe otherwise limits God and says he is not who
he says he is. He also promises us his peace, assurance, joy, counsel,
provisions, etc. for all that we need to live lives holy and pleasing to him
while we still live in these flesh bodies on the face of this earth. We don’t
ever have to be afraid, because he is always there, and he will supply all we
need if we would just humble ourselves before him and call upon him in honesty,
sincerity and with submissive hearts ready to do his will.
The Season for Fruit
In the life of a follower of Christ it is always the season
for fruit, for the scriptures speak much of the necessity that we bear fruit in
keeping with repentance and that we bear fruit for the gospel of Jesus Christ
in our lives. This fruit can take many forms, but it is always centered in
obedience to Jesus Christ and in relationship with God’s Son. We should all
reflect the fruit of the Spirit, we should love one another as Christ has loved
us and gave his life up for us, and we should love God by obeying his commands
(see 1 John). We should also share the gospel of Jesus Christ with others, let
our lights shine before men, and we should be busy making disciples of Christ
of all peoples, teaching them to obey Christ.
The Servants
The servants sent to gather the fruit should be our pastors
and teachers within the church who are there not only to teach us, but to
disciple, to nurture, counsel, direct, love and help us to grow in our faith
and to not follow the ways of this fallen world, as well as we each have a responsibility
toward one another for the spiritual growth of our brother or sister in Christ.
Sadly enough, though, many of our leaders, and even our fellow Christians, are
like the tenants who beat, stoned and killed those whom God had sent to collect
his fruit.
They have fallen prey to the ways of this world themselves,
and are choosing the ways of men over the ways of God, and over the ways of
truth in many instances, and in numerous respects. And, those God is sending to
the church and to church leaders today to “collect”, i.e. to give an account
for what they are doing with Jesus Christ and with his gospel, may not be who
we might think. If God can use a donkey to get a message to a misguided prophet
and to help him to see the angel in his path, and if God can speak through all
creation (rocks crying out, mountains singing and trees clapping their hands),
then he can speak through anyone, and even those we least expect.
I believe very much that God is sending his servants to the
church today to “collect,” i.e. to call to repentance and renewed faith and to
warn of judgment if the messages are refused. And, many pastor and church leader
is treating those servants sent of God in the same manner in which the Jewish
people treated the prophets of old and Jesus Christ. Jesus said that whatever
we do to one of the least of these we do to him, and how we treat his followers
who are obeying him with child-like faith is how we are treating him. So, when
we persecute, reject, ostracize, kick to the curb, mock, ridicule and snub our
noses at those truly humble servants of God sent with his messages, who are
truly just obeying their Lord in loving God and his church, then we are just
like these tenants who did the same to the prophets of old and to Jesus Christ,
the Son, the stone that the builders rejected.
Be
Humble or Be Humbled – taken in part from “Fall, or Fallen?”
May 2012 - http://christsfreeservant.blogspot.com/2012/05/fall-or-fallen.html
Then Jesus said: “He who falls on this stone
will be broken to pieces, but he on whom it falls will be crushed” (NIV84). I
believe, in the context here of the dual people types, i.e. those from whom the
kingdom of God will be taken away, and those whom the kingdom will be given who
will produce its fruit, the “but” (or “and”) in Jesus’ statement must be seen as
depicting contrasting thoughts, not complimentary thoughts.
In other words, I believe Jesus was saying
that to fall upon the stone means to willingly come to Christ in humility and
repentance with broken and contrite heart. The brokenness is a result of
falling upon the stone, i.e. putting our faith and trust in Jesus Christ via
repentance (turning from sin) and via choosing to turn to Christ in faithful
obedience and surrender of our wills to his will for our lives. This is the
kind of fruit God was hoping his vineyard would produce and the kind the
prophets were to “collect.”
In contrast to that, those who choose to not
fall upon the stone, i.e. who refuse Christ either by refusing to believe in
him or by refusing, by our lifestyles, to walk with him, obey him, and honor
him as holy, will be crushed (will face the judgment of God). First of all I
see here that there are those who have fully rejected Christ and they will face
the final judgment of eternity in hell. Yet, the Lord says that he disciplines,
rebukes, chastises and punishes those he loves in order to make us holy, so
sometimes we can be crushed in spirit because of sin in our lives that the Lord
wants to purify out of our lives. And, his discipline in our lives is his way
of humbling us so that we do fall upon the stone in humility and repentance.
So, we humble ourselves by falling upon the
rock, i.e. by coming to Christ willingly in brokenness of spirit and with
contrite heart, in repentance (turning from sin) and in surrendering our wills
to the will of God over our lives, truly making him our Lord and master. Or, we
refuse Christ and/or we refuse his requirements for salvation (the appropriate
wedding attire – see Matt. 22), and we do not humble ourselves or become
obedient to the cross of Christ in dying to our old lives of sin so that Jesus
Christ and his righteousness can live in and out through us, bearing much fruit
in keeping with repentance. The choice is ours. Humble ourselves, fall upon the
Rock, Jesus Christ, and experience the brokenness of a heart given over to
Christ Jesus. Refuse the Rock, and the Rock will fall on you, i.e. God will
judge your heart for your refusal of his Son. Which will you choose?
Broken Hearts /
An Original Work / December 14, 2012
Based off Jeremiah 31:15 (cf. Matt. 2:18)
Weeping in Ramah;
Her children no more.
Rachel is weeping;
Her comfort forlorn.
Jesus is waiting;
Her comforter be,
When she calls on Him,
Down on bended knee.
He has provided our
Sins’ sacrifice,
When He died for our
sin,
Paying the price.
Our hearts are broken;
We’re feeling her
pain;
Looking for answers
And someone to blame.
Jesus is calling us;
Him to believe;
Turning from our sins,
So we can be free.
Trust in His promises.
Lean on His grace;
Living for Jesus,
Eternal life gain.
Days of confusion,
Distress, pain and
grief;
Looking for someone
To give us relief.
Our God and Father
In heaven above
Is looking down to us;
Providing love.
Call upon Him in your
Sadness and pain.
Trust your life with
His Son;
Live life again.
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