Wednesday, September 14, 2011

The "Whole Enchilada"

My next preaching assignment at Trinity Episcopal Church (Sunday, September 18) coincides with the “Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard” found in The Gospel According to Matthew (20:1-16). Only occurring in Matthew, the parable serves as a clear reminder not to apply the rules of the marketplace to God’s love. In the story, Jesus compares the Kingdom of Heaven to a landowner who decides to pay every harvest worker the same wage, a full day’s wage…even to those who were hired near the end of the day. It doesn’t make sense….you can’t run a business that way. Those who had worked the entire day were understandably irked. But God’s family is not a business, and there is no such thing as a “salary deduction” or a “partial payment” from God. The message is as simple as it is poignant: there is no such thing as a part of God’s love. Every child in God’s family receives the “whole enchilada” as my seminary professor Charlie Price was apt to say. This divine love and our place in God’s family is nothing to which we are entitled, not something we have earned. It is pure gift; freely given….the challenge before us is to lay aside our marketplace mentality when it comes to our faith. We are called to open our hearts, simply receive God’s gift, and respond by allowing thankfulness to rule in our lives.