"MANY that are first," Jesus just said, "will be last and the last first." Now he illustrates this by telling a story. "The kingdom of the heavens," he begins, "is like a man, a householder, who went out early in the morning to hire workers for his vineyard."
Jesus continues: "When [the householder] had agreed with the workers for a denarius a day, he sent them forth into his vineyard. Going out also about the third hour, he saw others standing unemployed in the marketplace; and to those he said, 'You also, go into the vineyard, and whatever is just I will give you.' So off they went. Again he went out about the sixth and ninth hour and did likewise. Finally, about the eleventh hour he went out and found others standing, and he said to them, why have you been standing here all day unemployed?' They said to him, 'Because nobody has hired us.' He said to them, 'You too go into the vineyard.'"
The householder, or owner of the vineyard, is Jehovah God, and the vineyard is the nation of Israel. The workers in the vineyard are persons brought into the Law covenant; they are specifically those Jews living in the days of the apostles. It is only with the full-day workers that a wage agreement is made. The wage is a denarius for the day's work. Since "the third hour" is 9:00 a.m., those called at the3rd, 6th, 9th and 11th hours work, respectively, only 9,6,3 and 1 hours.
The 12-hour, or full-day, workers represent the Jewish leaders who have been occupied continually in religious service. They are unlike Jesus' disciples, who have, for most of their lives, been employed in fishing or other secular occupations. Not until the fall of 29 C.E. did the "householder" send Jesus Christ to gather these to be his disciples. They thus became "the last," or the 11th hour vineyard workers.
Next time: Conclusion of Workers In The Vineyard
The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived, 1991
5.12.2009
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