Trinity Vineyard Sunday Morning
Trinity Vineyard Sunday Morning
The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard
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“But he answered one of them, ‘I am not being unfair to you, friend… Don’t I have the right to do what I want with my own money? Or are you envious because I am generous?’”
— Matthew 20:13–15
Jesus tells a story that sets off our fairness meter. People work different hours and receive the same pay. The early workers aren’t cheated, they get exactly what they agreed, but they’re furious that the late workers are treated as equals.
That’s the sting of the parable. The landowner refuses to send anyone home empty-handed. And Jesus uses that to expose what happens in us when grace doesn’t match our instincts for reward. Our “fairness meter” doesn’t just care about justice, it also cares about comparison. It doesn’t just ask, “Is this right?” It asks, “How did I do compared to them?”
The landowner’s question lands like a mirror. “Are you envious because I am generous?” It’s an invitation to drop the scoreboard. To stop turning faithfulness into a claim, and obedience into leverage. To receive what we were promised and still have joy when mercy meets someone else.
It’s also a word of hope for anyone who feels late, overlooked, or behind. The landowner keeps going back. He keeps calling people in. Grace is welcome, not scraps.
So this week, ask God for the freedom this parable offers. Gratitude instead of grumbling, celebration instead of comparison, belonging instead of anxious performance. The kingdom doesn’t run on earning. It runs on grace.