1-7 Parables of Israel
The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ is perhaps most clearly seen in His
attitude to Israel. So many of the parables refer in some way to the love
of God and Christ for Israel; and their love for rebellious, indifferent
Israel is the supreme example of pure grace. He felt towards them as a
hen for her chicks (Lk. 13:34). Here again is an element of unreality;
a hen whose very own chicks won't be gathered under her wings. This seems
to go right against nature; the pain of the rejected parent was there
in the experience of the Lord. He wasn't just passively enduring the polemics
of the Pharisees; they were His chicks, He really wanted them under His
wings (cp. Israel dwelling under the wings of the cherubim). We must ever
remember this when we read the records of Him arguing with them and exposing
their hypocrisy. He wasn't just throwing back their questions, playing
the game and winning, just surviving from day to day with them. He was
trying to gather them, and their rejection of His words really hurt Him.
The elder brother in the prodigal story shows an unbelievably self righteous
attitude. Yet, this truly is the position of the legalists of Christ's
day and this. The love of the Father [God] for the son [repentant Israel]
is quite something. Would a father really rush out and kiss him, i.e.
forgive him (Lk. 15:20 cp. 2 Sam. 14:33) without first requiring an explanation
and specific repentance? For this unusual Father, the mere fact the son
wanted to return was enough. And when the vineyard workers refused to
work and beat and killed the Owner’s servants that were sent, the response
we expect is that the Owner sends in some armed men and re-establishes
control. But He doesn’t. Why ever keep sending servants after some are
killed? But this is the loving, almost desperate persistence of the Father
for our response. This is what the parables of Israel teach. In the end,
He does something humanly crazy. He sends a single Man walking towards
them- His only Son. Or think of the parable of the older son. The loving
Father divides all that He has between the two sons- and the son who remained
at home therefore ended up with all that the Father had, seeing
the younger son had blown the other half of it (Lk. 15:31). This was the
extent of God’s love for Pharisaic, hypocritical Israel. He gave them
His all- the blood of His only Son. Elderly oriental gentlemen never run
in public. But the Father will do so when the younger son returns. Such
will be His joy, and such is His joy over every sinner who repents!
The Lord’s initial Palestinian hearers were well used to the scenario
of absentee landlords. The parables of Israel would have been easily
understood by them. The landlords lived far away, were never seen, and
sometimes their workers took over the whole show for themselves. The Lord’s
parable of the absentee landlord in Lk. 20:9-16 alludes to this situation.
He sends messengers seeking fruit from the vineyard, but the tenants abuse
or kill them, and he does nothing. When his son shows up, they assume
that he’s going to do just as before- ignore whatever they do to him.
After all, they’d got away with not giving him any fruit and ignoring
his messengers for so long, why would he change his attitude? He was so
far away, he’d been in a “far country” for a very long time (Lk. 20:9),
they didn’t really know him. The Lord asked the question: “What therefore
shall the lord of the vineyard do unto them?” (Lk. 20:15). The obvious
answer, from the context provided within the story, would be: “Judging
on past experience, not much at all”. But then the Lord presented the
element of unreality in the story, as a sudden, biting trick of the tail:
No, the lord of the vineyard would actually personally come and destroy
them, and give the vineyard to other tenants. Even though his experience
of having tenants farm his land had been a fruitless and painful experience
that had cost him the life of his son. And it was that element of unreality
that brings home to us the whole point of the story. The Father does appear
distant and unresponsive to our selfishness, our rebellion, and our refusal
to hear his servants the prophets. But there is a real judgment to come,
in which He will personally be involved. And yet even His destruction
of the Jewish tenants hasn’t taken away His almost manic desire to have
workers, in His desperate desire for true spiritual fruit. The parables
of Israel surely speak encouragement to each of us.
The parable of the absentee
landlord has a telling twist to it. Absentee landlords who had never
visited their land for ages, and found the people they sent to the
property beaten up, would usually just forget it. They wouldn’t
bother. In the parable which draws on this, the Lord asks what the
landlord will do (Lk. 20:15). The expected answer was: ‘Not much.
He got what he could, he was never bothered to go there for years
anyway’. But this landlord is odd. He keeps on sending messengers
when any other landlord would have given up or got mad earlier on.
But God’s patience through the prophets was likewise unusual. And
then, when the tenants thought they must surely be able to get away
with it because the Lord seemed so distant and out of touch… He
suddenly comes Himself in person and destroys them. He doesn’t hire
a bunch of people to do it. He comes in person, as the Lord will
in judgment. And instead of deciding he’d had his fingers burnt
and giving up vineyards as a bad job, this Lord gives the vineyard
to others- He tries again. And so the Lord is doing with the Gentiles. |