1-4 The 11th Hour Worker
The servant goes at the 11th hour and hires the men who others had refused,
presumably because they didn't look strong enough for the work. And they
get paid the very same wage as those who had worked all day. This element
of unreality serves to highlight the (humanly) irrational zeal of the
Lord for the spread of the Gospel in the last days before His return.
He will take on anyone who is willing to work, no matter how feebly, no
matter for how short a time; the fact they are standing there ready and
willing to do their little bit is what is important to Him. A man does
not usually go out between 4 and 5 p.m. looking for more labourers, with
sunset approaching. He must have had an unusually great need for workers,
racing against time to get the harvest in. And this is the very urgency
of the Gospel, and the passion of the Lord's desire to get the harvest
reaped. God could reap the harvest of the earth, requiring not help from
man. But He has chosen to work through men in the preaching of the Gospel,
and therefore the number of workers and their zeal reflects the amount
of harvest of souls that can be reaped. The eternal destiny of others
is therefore seen to depend on our extent of labour in preaching. It’s
also apparent that the amount of harvest was unreally huge- hence the
unusual running backwards and forwards to get more workers. One expects
the manager to know the size of the harvest and hire the right number
of labourers at the start of the day. But in this parable, he doesn’t.
The awesome size of the potential harvest out there in this world means
that never should we conclude that ‘nobody’s interested’. There
is a huge harvest out there. And in passing, it can be noted
that grapes have to be harvested at just the right time. If they’re left
even a day too long on the vine, the sugar content becomes too high and
they are no use. We can perhaps infer that the parable describes a scene
on a Friday, with the Sabbath coming on when nobody can work- and yet
it is just the right day for reaping the harvest. This makes
the obvious connection in our minds- that just before the Sabbath day
of the Millennium, in the last days, there is an abnormally huge harvest
to be reaped. And this would connect with other Biblical teaching about
a great appeal being made to all nations, just prior to the Lord’s return.
The parable also yields the lesson that those men would not normally
work for one hour. We are to imagine those men with families at home who
needed feeding. No pay that day, no food. But they were willing to do
at least something. And their generous Lord simply pitied their poverty,
so he gave them a day's wage- even to the 11th hour workers. And this
is the Lord who has graciously hired us. Likewise, no rich King who finds
that the wedding of his son will be poorly attended would go out and invite
beggars. The element of unreality is that he so wants every place filled.
No human King, nor his son, would want riff raff at the wedding, just
because his own class of people turned down the invitations. But the King
of Heaven is unlike any human king. He wants others to share in the joy
of His Son, and absolutely nobody is too low to share; and moreover, He
has a compelling desire to fill those places. The implication is that
the net is being spread wider and more compulsively as the days shorten
unto the supper.
No employer really pays all workers the same amount as the 11th hour
worker; no creditor would really cancel debts simply because the debtors
can’t afford to pay, and take nothing at all from them; no father would
really give preferential treatment to a wayward son over a son who had
never disobeyed him. But the point is, God acts in the very opposite way
to how we do or would do. His grace to sinners makes no human sense. And
He asks us through these parables of His Son to walk out against the wind
and follow His example in our treatment of sinners. Our own natural sense
cries out that he who works most should have the most pay; but the unreality
of the parable teaches us that this principle is set aside in the way
God deals with us. Any gift from the Father and Son is by grace
alone. The elements of unreality in the parables often bring out the extent
of God’s grace. The fruit farmer [=God] asked His worker [= the Lord Jesus]
to cut down a barren fig tree. But this worker had such fondness for the
tree, he was so unusually concerned for it, that he pleaded that it be
given some more time. This reflected the Lord’s love for Israel, a love
beyond all reason. Likewise, which wealthy person would ever arrange a
banquet and invite the very dregs of society to it? Here is the Father’s
amazing grace. Sometimes we have to fill in the details [another feature
of the Lord’s amazing stories] in order to perceive this grace. The younger
son, for example, demanded his share of the inheritance; and thus he lost
his name, forfeited any claim to family membership, and openly showed
that he did not wish to be part of his father’s family. And yet he was
received back with such grace and longing by the Father.
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