6 April 2025
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Lent 5 Vienna, VA
“The Story Continues . . .”
Text: Luke
20:9-20; Isaiah 43:16–21; Philippians 3:4b-14
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Last week, we heard the Parable of the Prodigal
Son. A parable which ends unfinished. We are left wondering whether the
older son ever came in to celebrate his younger brother’s return. So this week,
I want to finish that story, that Parable, if I may, using today’s Parable,
which I think will help us gain a new appreciation for today’s parable . . .
So as you remember from last week’s Parable, the
younger son returns to his father, and in his joy, the father throws a lavish
party. Which makes the older son mad. Mad and jealous. And the father says to
him, Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours.
Which is, in fact, true. He had two sons. The younger already got his portion
of the inheritance, so now all that’s left belongs by right to the older son.
So he’s apparently not just mad and jealous, but greedy, too. Don’t go wasting my
inheritance with a lavish party for your son, my now-disowned brother.
Now, a few years go by. The father is getting
older, can’t do as much, getting tired, so the older son begins to take on more
and more responsibility. He’s really pretty much running things now, and time hasn’t
healed all wounds - he’s still estranged from his brother, though he lives on his
land. He can’t throw him out until the old man dies. So as long as his father
has what he needs, the old codger is giving him a long rope, letting him run
things as he sees fit. And he is . . . and taking advantage of it.
So . . . things begin to slip a bit. He taking
those young goats he accused his father of not letting him have and partying a
little too much with his friends. And not just goats, but fatted calves, and
good wine . . . living the good life he criticized his younger brother for. The
inheritance really isn’t his yet, but, you know, just about. The old man’s
gonna kick the bucket soon.
But much to his surprise - and consternation - his
father begins noticing this. So the father sends one of his faithful servants
to his older son for some of the harvest, and an accounting of things. But the
older son tells him to shove off! So he sends another trusted servant -
servants, remember, that are loyal and faithful to him because he has treated
them so well all these years - and the older son not only sends him back
empty-handed, but with a few bruises as well. Then when yet another servant shows
up from the father, the older son has just about had it with the old coot’s
meddling! So he abuses that one even worse. You know, as a warning: Stay in
your lane, old man!
Well, the father, of course, is upset. This is not
how he raised his son! So finally, he sends the younger son, thinking: he
will respect my son. But, of course, he doesn’t! So when the younger
son shows up, his older brother is done with all this nonsense and does what he
wanted to do all along - gets rid of that pest, that thorn in his flesh, that
leech, that will-never-amount-to-anything brother of his! He kills him. Now,
when the old man goes, no worries! Freedom! It’s all his.
Now at this point, Jesus asks a question: What
then will the owner of the vineyard do? And then He answers His own
question: He will come and destroy those tenants and give the vineyard to
others. That’s the logical thing. The chief priests and scribes and
elders are horrified, because they know Jesus is telling this parable against
them, so they respond: Surely not! But it’s the logical thing.
And then Jesus uncorks the punchline: The stone that the builders
rejected has become the cornerstone. This is the new thing
Isaiah had prophesied about. So here’s how to think of that . . . back to my
story . . .
The older son finally got rid of his brother.
Everything’s falling into place. It won’t be long now . . . except something
unexpected happens . . . something he didn’t plan for . . . something no one
could have guessed . . . his younger brother comes back to life. And
unbeknownst to the older brother, the younger brother had been doing quite
well. In fact, buying up his older brother’s land! It really belonged to him!
So when the younger brother shows up and shows his murderous older brother the
deed to all his property . . . after getting over the shock of seeing his
younger brother alive, the older brother knows he’s sunk! Time for revenge!
What goes around, comes around.
But instead of revenge, the stone that the
builders rejected has become the cornerstone. Instead of
revenge, the younger brother forgives!
Now, the older brother has a choice to make:
receive the forgiveness and love and generosity of his brother and live on his
land. OR, stay stubborn, reject his brother’s love, and in the end, incur his
wrath. Or in other words, to put it in Jesus’ words that we heard today, fall
over this stone, be broken, swallow his pride, and live. OR, stay unrepentant
and have this stone crush him. And as you heard, the chief
priests and scribes chose the latter. They sought to lay hands on him at
that very hour . . . they watched him and sent spies . .
. and tried to catch him in something he said, so as to deliver him up to
the authority and jurisdiction of the governor.
Now, I wanted to fuse these two parables together
like this so that you’d understand just how mind-blowing and utterly surprising
this parable we heard today is. I think we hear about Jesus’ forgiveness so
much that we maybe take it for granted. But that the Son of God, who was not
just slain, but crucified because of our sins, would then rise from the dead and
forgive! No revenge, just love and care and forgiveness . . . I mean, really?
Can you wrap your mind around that? Is that not mind-blowing?
It is so much to some people that
they cannot believe it. It cannot be true. The apostle Paul was one of those
people. He started out down the path of the older brother, of the chief priests
and scribes. He was going to make it on his own! He was doing everything right,
and more than right - he was the best of the best! Until he tripped over the
cornerstone . . . until Jesus showed him it was all rubbish, his
accomplishments worthless in God’s sight. So what would he do? Continue to
resist? Double down? Stick to his guns? And be crushed in the end? OR be
broken, swallow his pride, repent, and live in the joy of Christ’s forgiveness?
Well, you know the answer. And he went on to be used by God in great and
wonderful ways.
But now the same question is for you and me. What will you do?
How will you be? Trip and fall, be broken, swallow your pride, and repent? OR
resist and end in the be crushed? The choice seems easy, you’re here after all!
Confessing and repenting, like we all did once again at the beginning of the
service. But did you do that more in word than in deed? Was it more of the mind
but not so much of the heart? And when the service is over, do you continue
in your old sin and rebellion? Impure thoughts and desires, damaging words,
hurtful deeds? Mad at your brother or sister in Christ? Selfishly insisting
your way or the highway? Judging, spiteful, jealous, unforgiving?
If you see any of that older brother in yourself,
as I see it in myself, good. Face plant here once again in
repentance, and receive again the forgiveness of your brother and
Saviour. And as the Father embraced His Son and the
Son embraces you, be built - in your thoughts, desires, words, and
deeds - in the kingdom of your Father, on the cornerstone of Jesus. A living
stone in His Church (1
Peter 2:5). A
member of His Body, with His Body and Blood in you, changing you and conforming
you into His image. That the old sinner in you grow weaker, and the new
Christ-man in you grow stronger.
And then, as Paul said and did, forgetting
what lies behind - forgetting the past sins you committed, for they
have been forgiven, and forgetting the sins committed against you, not dredging
them up to use them as weapons and re-igniting that bitterness and rage in your
heart - forgetting what lies behind, all that, look forward
to what lies ahead, the goal, the prize of the upward call of God
in Christ Jesus. Or in other words, don’t let the past ruin the present
and make you miss the future. Rather, as we’ve been singing this whole
Lenten season, fix your eyes on Jesus (Gradual). On Christ crucified for
you. Who endured the cross for you. Who despised the
shame for you. And who, risen from the dead, is seated at
the right hand of the throne of God, for you. To rule all things
for your good and for your salvation.
Next week, we’re going to hear how the chief
priests and scribes did what they wanted and delivered Jesus over to the
governor. How they killed the Son of the Father, but how in that very death and
resurrection, He became the cornerstone of the Church, accomplishing the
salvation of the world. And if God can do that, can He not also
do that in your life? Give life. Work good, even in difficulty. Raise you up.
Accomplish your salvation. Whatever is going on. Whatever you are facing. We
not only know that He can, but He has promised to do so!
So come now and receive the Body and Blood of the
Son, the Body and Blood that was crucified for you, then raised
for you, and now lives in you with His forgiveness and life. The
inheritance is yours! The love of the Father is yours! And then go and live -
at home, at work, wherever you are - with His peace and joy. Freely giving as
you have freely received.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and
of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.