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The Parable of the Hired LaborersSeptuagesima Sunday; Matthew 20:1-16A Sermon by Martin Luther; taken from his Church Postil of 1525. |
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[The
following sermon is taken from volume II:106-112 of The Sermons
of Martin Luther, published by Baker Book House (Grand Rapids,
MI). It was originally published in 1906 in english by Lutherans
in All Lands Press (Minneapolis, MN), as The Precious and Sacred
Writings of Martin Luther, vol. 11. The original title of this
sermon appears below. The pagination from the Baker edition has
been maintained for referencing. This e-text was scanned and
edited by Richard Bucher, it is in the public domain and it may
be copied and distributed without restriction.] The
Parable of the Householder Who Hired the Laborers Page
106 --------------------------- 1.
Some church fathers applied this Gospel to all the preachers
from the beginning to the end of the world, and taught the first
hour was the time of Adam, the third that of Noah, the sixth
that of Abraham, the ninth that of Moses, and the eleventh hour
that of Christ and his apostles. Such talk is all right for pastime,
if there is nothing else to preach. For it does not harmonize
with Scripture to say that the shilling signifies eternal life,
with which the first, or Adam and the holy patriarchs, were dissatisfied,
and that such holy characters should murmur in the kingdom of
heaven, and be rebuked by the householder and made the last,
that is, be condemned. 2.
Therefore we will let such fables pass and abide by the simple
teaching and meaning of Christ, who wishes to show by this parable
how it actually is in the kingdom of heaven, or in Christendom
upon the earth; that God here directs and works wonderfully by
making the first last and the last first. And all is spoken to
humble those who are great that they should trust in nothing
but the goodness and mercy of God. And on the other hand that
those who are nothing should not despair, but trust in the goodness
of God just as the others do. 3.
Therefore we must not consider this parable in every detail,
but confine ourselves to the leading thought, that which Christ
designs to teach by it. We should not consider what the penny
or shilling means, not what the first or the last hour signifies;
but what the householder had in mind and what he aims to teach,
how he desires to have Page
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goodness esteemed higher than all human works and merit, yea,
that his mercy alone must have all the praise. Like in the parable
of the unrighteous steward, Lk 16,5f., the whole parable in its
details is not held before our eyes, that we should also defraud
our Lord; but it sets forth the wisdom of the steward in that
he provided so well and wisely for himself and planned in the
very best way, although at the injury of his Lord. Now whoever
would investigate and preach long on that parable about the doctors,
what the book of accounts, the oil, the wheat and the measure
signify, would miss the true meaning and be led by his own ideas
which would never be of any benefit to anyone. For such parables
are never spoken for the purpose of being interpreted in all
their minutia. For Paul compared Christ to Adam in Rom 5, 18,
and says, Adam was a figure of Christ; this Paul did because
we inherited from Adam sin and death, and from Christ life and
righteousness. But the lesson of the parable does not consist
in the inheritance, but in the consequence of the inheritance.
That just like sin and death cling to those who are born of Adam
and descend by heredity, so do life and righteousness cling to
those who are born of Christ, they are inherited. Just as one
might take an unchaste woman who adorns herself to please the
world and commit sin, as a figure of a Christian soul that adorns
itself also to please God, but not to commit sin as the woman
does. 4.
Hence the substance of the parable in today's Gospel consists
not in the penny, what it is, nor in the different hours; but
in earning and acquiring, or how one can earn the penny; that
as here the first presumed to obtain the penny and even more
by their own merit, and yet the last received the same amount
because of the goodness of the householder. Thus God will show
it is nothing but mercy that he gives and no one is to arrogate
to himself more than another. Therefore he says I do thee no
wrong, is not the money mine and not thine; if I had given away
thy property, then thou wouldest have reason to murmur; is it
not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? Page
108 --------------------------- 5.
Now in this way Christ strikes a blow first against the presumption
(as he also does in today's Epistle) of those who would storm
their way into heaven by their good works; as the Jews did and
wished to be next to God; as hitherto our own clergy have also
done. These all labor for definite wages, that is, they take
the law of God in no other sense than that they should fulfil
it by certain defined works for a specified reward, and they
never understand it correctly, and know not that before God all
is pure grace. This signifies that they hire themselves, out
for wages, and agree with the householder for a penny a day;
consequently their lives are bitter and they lead a career that
is indeed hard. 6.
Now when the Gospel comes and makes all alike, as Paul teaches
in Rom 3,23, so that they who have done great works are no more
than public sinners, and must also become sinners and tolerate
the saying: "All have sinned", Rom 3, 23, and that
no one is justified before God by his works; then they look around
and despise those who have done nothing at all, while their great
worry and labor avail no more than such idleness and reckless
living. Then they murmur against the householder, they imagine
it is not right; they blaspheme the Gospel, and become hardened
in their ways; then they lose the favor and grace of God, and
are obliged to take their temporal reward and trot from him with
their penny and be condemned; for they served not for the sake
of mercy but for the sake of reward, and they will receive that
and nothing more, the others however must confess that they have
merited neither the penny nor the grace, but more is given to
them than they had ever thought was promised to them. These remained
in grace and besides were saved, and besides this, here in time
they had enough; for all depended upon the good pleasure of the
householder. 7.
Therefore if one were to interpret it critically, the penny would
have to signify temporal good, and the favor of the householder,
eternal life. But the day and the heat we Page
109 --------------------------- transfer
from temporal things to the conscience, so that work-righteous
persons do labor long and hard, that is, they do all with a heavy
conscience and an unwilling heart, forced and coerced by the
law; but the short time or last hours are the light consciences
that live blessed lives, led by grace, and that willingly and
without being driven by the law. 8.
Thus they have now each a penny, that is, a temporal reward is
given to both. But the last did not seek it, it was added to
them because they sought first the kingdom of heaven, Mt 6, 33,
and consequently they have the grace to everlasting life and
are happy. The first however seek the temporal reward, bargain
for it and serve for it; and hence they fail to secure grace
and by means of a hard life they merit perdition. For the last
do not think of earning the penny, nor do they thus blunder,
but they receive all. When the first saw this, by a miscalculation
they thought they would receive more, and lost all. Therefore
we clearly see, if we look into their hearts, that the last had
no regard for their own merit, but enjoyed the goodness of the
householder. The first however did not esteem the goodness of
the householder, but looked to their own merits, and thought
it was their's by right and murmured about it. 9.
We must now look at these two words "last" and "first,"
from two view points. Let us see what they mean before God, then
what they mean before men. Thus, those who are the first in the
eyes of man, that is, those who consider themselves, or let themselves
be considered, as the nearest to or the first before God, they
are just the opposite before God, they are the last in his eyes
and the farthest from him. On the other hand those who are the
last in the eyes of man, those who consider themselves, or let
themselves be considered, the farthest from God and the last
before him, they also are just the opposite, in that they are
the nearest and the first before God. Now whoever desires to
be secure, let him conduct himself according to the saying: "Whosoever
exalteth himself, shall be humb- Page
110 --------------------------- led."
For it is here written: The first before men are the last before
God; the last in the eyes of men are first in the eye of God.
On the other hand, the first before God are the last before men;
and those God esteems as the last are considered by men to be
the first. 10.
But since this Gospel does not speak of first and last in a common,
ordinary sense, as the exalted of the world are nothing before
God, like heathen who know nothing of God; but it means those
who imagine they are the first or the last in the eyes of God,
the words ascend very high and apply to the better classes of
people; yea, they terrify the greatest of the saints. Therefore
it holds up Christ before the apostles themselves. For here it
happens that one who in the eyes of the world is truly poor,
weak, despised, yea, who indeed suffers for God's sake, in whom
there is no sign that he is anything, and yet in his heart he
is so discouraged and bashful as to think he is, the last, is
secretly full of his own pleasure and delight, so that he thinks
he is the first before God, and just because of that he is the
last. On the contrary should one indeed be so discouraged and
bashful as to think he is the last before God, although he at
the time has money, honor and property in the eyes of the world,
he is just because of this the first. 11.
One sees here also how the greatest saints have feared, how many
also have fallen from high spiritual callings. David complains
in Ps 131,2: "Surely I have stilled and quieted my soul;
like a weaned child with his mother." Likewise in another
place, Ps 36, 11: "Let not the foot of pride come against
me". How often he chastises the impudent, and haughty, Ps
119, 21. So Paul in 2 Cor 12, 7 says: "That I should not
be exalted overmuch there was given to me a thorn in the flesh,"
etc. And as we have heard in today's Epistle what honorable men
have fallen. To all of whom without doubt the sad secret ill-turn
came because they became secure, and thought, we are now near
to God, there is no need. We know God, we have done this and
that; Page
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did not see how they made themselves the first before God. Behold,
how Saul fell! How God permitted David to fall! How Peter had
to fall! How some disciples of Paul fell! 12.
Therefore it is indeed necessary to preach this Gospel in our
times to those who now know the Gospel as myself and those like
me, who imagine they can teach and govern the whole world, and
therefore imagine they are the nearest to God and have devoured
the Holy Spirit, bones and feathers. For why is it that so many
sects have already gone forth, this one making a hobby of one
thing in the Gospel and that one of another? No doubt, because
none of them considered that the saying, "the first are
last," meant and concerned them; or if applied to them,
they were secure and without fear, considering themselves as
the first. Therefore according to this saying, it must come to
pass that they be the last, and hence rush ahead and spread shameful
doctrines and blasphemies against God and his Word. 13.
Was not this the fate of the pope when he and his followers imagined
they were the vice- regents and representatives of and the nearest
to God, and persuaded the world to believe it? In that very act
they were the vicegerents of Satan and the farthest from God,
so that no mortals under the sun ever raged and foamed against
God and his Word like they have done. And yet they did not see
the horrible deceiver, because they were secure and feared not
this keen, sharp, high and excellent judgment, "The first
shall be the last." For it strikes into the lowest depths
of the heart, the real spiritual darkness, that considers itself
as the first even in the midst of poverty, dishonor and misfortune,
yea, most of all then. 14.
Hence the substance of this Gospel is that no mortal is so high,
nor will ever ascend so high, who will not have occasion to fear
that be may become the very lowest. On the other hand, no mortal
lies so low or can fall so low, to whom the hope is not extended
that he may become the highest; because here all human merit
is abolished and God's Page
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alone is praised, and it is decreed as on a festive occasion
that the first shall be last and the last first. In that he says,
"the first shall be last" he strips thee of all thy
presumption and forbids thee to exalt thyself above the lowest
outcast, even if thou wert like Abraham, David, Peter or Paul.
However, in that he also says, "the last shall be first,"
he checks thee against all doubting, and forbids thee to humble
thyself below any saint, even if thou wert Pilate, Herod, Sodom
and Gomorrah. 15. For just as we have no reason to be presumptuous, so we have also no cause to doubt; but the golden mean is confirmed and fortified by this Gospel, so that we regard not the penny but the goodness of the householder, which is alike and the same to high and low, to the first and the last, to saints and sinners, and no one can boast nor comfort himself nor presume more than another; for he is God not only of the Jews, but also of the Gentiles, yea, especially of all, and it matters not who they are or what they are called. |