To read the texts click on the texts: Judges 9:6-15; Mt 20:1-16
The parable of the labourers in the vineyard, who are paid the
same wages for unequal work, is exclusive to the Gospel of Matthew. Many are of
the opinion that the original parable ended at 20:13 or 20:14a, and what
follows from 20:14b–16 or 20:14-16 are Matthean additions. The parable
narrates how the landowner himself goes to the market to hire labourers at
different hours and even at the eleventh hour. While the first group of workers
is told explicitly that they will be paid the day’s wage which was one
denarius, while the others are told that they would be paid whatever is
right. When the time for payment arrives the focus is on the groups hired
first and last, with the last being paid before all the other. They are paid
one denarius, which is the day’s wage. The last are also paid what the
landowner agreed with them. Since the parable does not speak about the amount
work done by each group or say that those who were hired at the eleventh hour
did as much work as those who were hired in the morning, it leaves the reader
stunned. This ending upsets and challenges conventional values. The point that
Jesus seems to make in the parable is that the tax collectors and sinners will
be given the same status as those who have obeyed the law.
The additions by Matthew stress the jealousy and envy of those
who were hired in the morning. The objection is not to what they have received
but about the fact that the others have received as much as they which they
regard as unfair. The difference is that they have received what is theirs
through their hard work and effort; the others have received what they have
because of the landowner’s generosity.
If one can identify with the group who complains, then it is
time that one checks one’s motivation whenever one does good, because if one
does not, one will continue to get frustrated at what one sees happening around
one. Is the work that you do reward in itself? Or do you expect another reward?
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