To read the texts click on the texts: Gen 37:3-4, 12-13, 17-28; Mt 21:33-43, 45-46
This Parable is
known variously as the parable of the wicked tenants or the Parable of the
Vineyard. While the parable in Mark has been allegorised, it is not clear
whether there was a non-allegorical parable going back to Jesus. Those who are
of the opinion that there was a non-allegorical parable interpret it to mean
that just as the tenants took radical action, so radical action is required in
order to gain the kingdom. Others see the parable to mean that the kingdom will
be taken away from Israel ’s
false leadership and given to gentiles and sinners. Still others see the
parable to mean that God does not abandon and relentlessly seeks and searches
for them and longs for a response from them.
In Matthew, this parable is the center of Jesus’
threefold parabolic response to the chief priests and elders. The first of
these is about the two sons (21:28 -32)
and the third is about the great supper (22:1-14). He also links it to the
previous parable of the two sons by means of common words like vineyard, son
and the common theme of both which is doing God’s will rather than paying lip
service.
In Matthew, the one who gives the vineyard to tenants
is a “landowner” and not simply a “man “as he is in Mark. This helps Matthew to
use the term “Lord” towards the end of the parable. The vineyard is described
much like the one in Isa 5:1-7 which indicates that Matthew intends the
vineyard to be read as “Israel ”
which it is in Isaiah. If in Mark the man who hired out the vineyard wants only
his share, here he wants all the fruit. This indicates that God’s claim on the
human person and all possessions it total and not partial. There are no half
measures with God. It is all or nothing. The two groups of servants which are
sent before the Son probably represent in Matthew the former and latter
prophets whom God sent to Israel
to bring the nation back to him. It is only after the two groups of servants
are abused and murdered that the landowner decides to send his Son. In Matthew
the son is first taken out of the vineyard and then killed (unlike in Mark
where he is first killed and then thrown out of the vineyard) to correspond
with what actually happens at the passion and death of Jesus (27:32). In Mark
the question about the response of the owner of the vineyard is asked and
answered by Jesus, while in Matthew, Jesus asks the questions and the Jewish
leaders answer and through the answer pronounce their own condemnation. The
tenants had been unfaithful and will have to pay for this unfaithfulness. The
quotation of Ps 118:22-23 here results in increasing and intensifying the
condemnation of the tenants to whom what was given was given in trust. Since
they have been proved untrustworthy and unfaithful, they will be denied further
tenancy and others will be given the vineyard to tend.
The Jewish leaders realize that the parable is about
them and this only hardens their stance against Jesus and strengthens their
resolve to destroy him.
All that we possess is given to us in trust. This
means that while we may use what we have, we have also to be concerned about
those who do not have and be generous with them. Selfishness on our part leads
to our thinking that we must use the things we have exclusively without even
the thought of sharing them with others.
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