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Eighteenth Sunday after Pentecost (proper 20): September 18, 2005.


Jonah 3:10-4:11

Psalm 145:1-8

Philippians 1:21-30

Matthew 20:1-16

First Reading

Let's call the theme here "grumbling over mercy for another." Matthew, in a parable unique to this Gospel, talks money. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Josephus, after Herod's death representatives of the Jewish aristocracy went to Rome to plead for the country, as it had been bled dry by taxes. Herod was a great builder and a great taxer. These taxes put great pressure on the peasants already living at subsistence. Debt was the solution for many.

These laborers in the marketplace may be the displaced or those barely hanging on to their land looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 extra cash. As the parable indicates, many more were looking for work than jobs available. This displacement from the land also helps to explain the 5,000-plus in chapter 14 and the 4,000 men plus women and children in chapter 15 that Jesus feeds. They have been with Jesus for 3 days and have nothing to eat (15:33).

This parable may be given to further answer Peter's question in 19:27, "What then will we have?" Jesus promises in 19:29: "And everyone who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or children or fields, for my name's sake, will receive a hundredfold, and will inherit eternal life."

To put it in terms from the American Depression, people are looking for a "new deal." Yet Jesus' solution still strikes those hired early as unfair. We may look to our own society as we discuss what is fair in regard to taxes, Social Security, and benefits from government. The church is not free from the discussions about money and a fair wage. What we pay clergy is a matter that can generate plenty of tension. Perhaps the issue laid before us in the parable is more about money than spirituality, or maybe it really gets to the heart of our faith. After all, what the landowner pays is the "usual daily wage." Assuming that this is a subsistence wage subsistence wage nsueldo de subsistencia , all the landowner is doing is providing a day's life to those hired later in the day. This is mercy, not justice.

Jonah, son of Amittai from Gath-hepher (2 Kgs 14:25) was a prophet during the reign of the Northern Kingdom's King Jeroboam II Jeroboam II, in the Bible, king of Israel, son of Jehoash, whom he succeeded. His reign was marked by increasing prosperity and expansion northward, but also by corruption. Amos and Hosea appeared under Jeroboam.  (786-746 B.C.E.). We might call Jonah an historical tale or parable. The first word is vayehi, which can be translated "And it happened" or, as in the King James, "Now it came to pass" (James Limburg, Interpretation: Hosea-Micah (Atlanta: John Knox, 1988), 137). But what is the author getting at? Is Nineveh chosen because it is the worst city imaginable? and Jonah a prophet conveniently of the period before the destruction of the North? If so, isn't the destruction of the North (722 B.C.E.) a contradiction of the tale? Or is Nineveh spared so it can pummel pum·mel  
tr.v. pum·meled also pum·melled, pum·mel·ing also pum·mel·ling, pum·mels also pum·mels
To beat, as with the fists; pommel: The angry crowd pummeled the thief.
 Israel?

Likewise, Jonah is confused. Jonah prays fervently blaming God for being slow to anger and gracious and merciful mer·ci·ful  
adj.
Full of mercy; compassionate: sought merciful treatment for the captives. See Synonyms at humane.



mer
 and abounding in steadfast love. But hasn't Israel always held these up as God's virtues? Merciful to me, yes! Merciful to them, no!

Nineveh is no theoretical city, and this is no idle tale. God's mercy led to the destruction of our cousins and the pillaging of our nation, Israel. God loves not just the other but the enemy, too.

Jonah's grumbles are our grumbles. In Matthew's parable we groused over pennies. Here we question God's right to love us and our tormentors. Jonah prefers death to living in such a world. Like Jonah, some might cite the lives of the notorious still living as proof that there is no God--or no God worth caring about.

Pastoral Reflection

"We hand folks over to God's mercy, and show none ourselves," remarked George Eliot in Adam Bede Adam Bede, the first novel written by George Eliot (the pen name of Mary Ann Evans), was published in 1859. It was published pseudonymously, even though Evans was a well-published and highly respected scholar of her time.  (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: Penguin Putnam, [1859] 1985, 427).

The book of Jonah Noun 1. Book of Jonah - a book in the Old Testament that tells the story of Jonah and the whale
Jonah

Old Testament - the collection of books comprising the sacred scripture of the Hebrews and recording their history as the chosen people; the first half of
 is not widely known even among churched adults. All anybody remembers is the whale or big fish. So the book itself can be the sermon. Likewise, Matthew's parable is a narrative sermon.

Veggie Tales chose Jonah for its first full-length motion picture. It is the humor humor, according to ancient theory, any of four bodily fluids that determined man's health and temperament. Hippocrates postulated that an imbalance among the humors (blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile) resulted in pain and disease, and that good health was  in the original and in the more intentionally humorous movie that allows us to hear the whole book. Both Jonah and Nineveh are caricatured. Nineveh's residents, after all, do not know their right hand from their left (4:11).

Matthew begins his parable, "For the kingdom of heaven is like...." So also the book of Jonah is a story about the kingdom of heaven. Here is God's dream for us and the world. The landowner starts the process by hiring laborers early in the morning and at 9:00, noon, 3:00, and 5:00. We can see this as at infant baptism This article may contain original research or unverified claims.

Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details.
This article has been tagged since March 2007.
, Luther League The Luther League is a religious association for young people in the United States of America. It began with a local society founded by delegates of six Lutheran church societies in New York City in 1888. , campus ministry, first child, death of a loved one--points when the kingdom becomes real in our lives. God's call may be constant, but we often fail to hear it. There are moments when we respond to the dream that God has dreamed. That dream includes those people who are our neighbors and, surprisingly, our enemies.

It strikes me how often some individual has told me that his or her grasp of the Christian life is better than mine. If these supremely confident evangelists knew me, that would be one thing. But they do not. Instead they are convinced that everyone should be like them. But is it God's dream they speak or merely their own dream?

One such evangelist evangelist (ĭvăn`jəlĭst) [Gr.,=Gospel], title given to saints Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. The four evangelists are often symbolized respectively by a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle, on the basis of Rev. 4.6–10.  kept asking me "Are you born again?" as if those words alone captured all that is God's dream. That I was a Christian and a pastor was not sufficient. The brochure he left stated that at this church everyone enjoyed the love of Christ. After our conversation I did not feel loved. How can we dream God's dream with him and welcome strangers and foreigners into the kingdom--indeed, not be angry when God brings them to our house of worship Noun 1. house of worship - any building where congregations gather for prayer
house of God, house of prayer, place of worship

bethel - a house of worship (especially one for sailors)
?

We err gravely if we confuse tolerance with love. Jonah cries out at the top of his lungs, "Forty days more and Nineveh shall be overthrown!" (3:4) Nineveh repents. Do not mistake God's change of heart for acceptance of "their evil ways and the violence that is in their hands." God turns from the destruction God intended, not from the dream that is the kingdom.

"And earthly power doth doth  
v. Archaic
A third person singular present tense of do1.
 then show likest God's/ When mercy seasons justice. Therefore, Jew,/ Though justice be thy plea, consider this,/ That in the course of justice none of us/ Should see salvation: we pray for mercy,/ And that same prayer doth teach us all to render/ The deeds of mercy." So says Portia to Shylock Shylock

shrewd, avaricious moneylender. [Br. Lit.: Merchant of Venice]

See : Usury
 in William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (4.1.193-98).

May God be merciful to my enemies who are sinners. Even if they are wrong in their opinion may God be merciful. May I receive the same mercy. May God reveal to me God's dream of the kingdom. GH
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Preaching Helps
Author:Hilfiger, Gary
Publication:Currents in Theology and Mission
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 1, 2005
Words:1174
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