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Well today is Father’s Day and as you have undoubtedly noticed I didn’t go all crazy with our Father’s Day service this year
No duck calls, no tricycle races around the oval, which I think would have to be a drag race now anyway with the current configuration of the pews
I may return to those ways in the future cause I do have a few ideas that I think would be great, but for today, yes we want to honour the fathers that are amongst us and make it clear just how much we appreciate and need them,
But this morning I want to instead place my focus on our heavenly Father
I want to talk about what it is our Heavenly Father expects out of us and how we can respond in such a way as to make Him proud of us
To do that we are going to take a look at one more of the lessor known parables of Jesus, it is called The Parable of the Two Sons
Let’s open our Bibles to Matthew’s gospel the 21st chapter and we’ll begin at verse 28
I have a lot of stuff that I want to get through this morning so let’s jump right in
First there are a few background things about this parable that you need to know to help you understand it
First the timing, Jesus speaks this parable during what we have come to call passion week, those several days leading up to His arrest and crucifixion
It comes after the triumphant entry, the cleansing of the temple, the healing of many people at the temple, and the withering fig tree
Secondly is the audience
Because of everything Jesus had been saying and doing His popularity began to skyrocket and the religious authorities began a full court press as it were to knock Him down and so they began to publically question where He got His authority to do these things
This parable is a direct response to those religious leaders
Finally His opening statement
Jesus begins this parable unlike any other that He teaches, when He says, ”What do you think?”
This serves two purposes, one is that it was a figure of speech used to tie together what was about to follow with what proceeded
Secondly, and more importantly, Jesus used this expression to involve His audience in the outcome of this parable
Matthew Henry’s Commentary refers to this as a ‘Reproving’Parable’ and says, “Reproving parables are appeals to the offenders themselves, and judge them out of their own mouths.”
It’s similar in nature to what the prophet Nathan did with King David after David had sinned with Bathsheba and lied and murdered to cover it up
Instead of simply condemning the religious leaders Jesus puts out there the scenario and let’s them make the call which He then uses against them
So let’s look at the parable
The first thing that I want to look at is the Father and what His will is
The basis of the Father’s call
“There was a man who had two sons” that’s it, that’s the basis upon which God predicates His call upon us, we are His sons (and daughters)
Paul wrote in Romans,
Romans 8:12-
The Father has work that needs to be accomplished and who more than anyone should be interested in the accomplishing of that work if not His children
Hirelings can be had for a certain wage, but it is love and duty that ought to compel us to do what the Father wants
Secondly is the desire of the Father’s heart, ‘Son, go and work today in the vineyard.’
In Jesus said to His disciples, to His disciples!
“The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few.
Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field.”
There’s a lot of work to be done and far too many of God’s children are sitting idly simply waiting for the day of their inheritance instead of being out working for the Father
‘What does it mean to work for the Father?’
You might ask
Well I don’t think that it was a coincidence that Jesus used the image of the vineyard in this parable
John 15:1-
The job that the Father has for you is to be fruitful, to display the fruit of the Spirit in your life in increasing measure as you continue to focus on Christ
He’s not asking you to go out and “get people saved” but to work in the vineyard where He can prune you and make you fruitful and He will produce the results
The third thing that we see is the urgency of the Father’s call, “…go and work today...”
In the original Greek language those words are written in the emphatic imperative tense which means it was commanded with the utmost urgency
A number of years ago I was in Ottawa taking a weekend course to be licensed for display fireworks
That’s not those little ones that you can buy in a store but the large ones like the city uses on Canada day and the such
These licenses are federally issued by the Explosives Regulatory Division of Natural Resources Canada because you get to work with some pretty powerful stuff
One of my professors on that weekend had a shirt that read, “Explosives Expert.
If I’m running, you better run”
That’s an emphatic imperative!
We are not called to work for the Father once we have enough information, or once we have enough training, or enough experience, or are old enough, or young enough, or when we feel like it, or once we get around to it
God calls you TODAY because He knows what you don’t, He knows what lies ahead tomorrow and why that will be too late
John 9:
Is God calling you to take a meal to your neighbor?
Do it today!
Is God calling you to speak some encouragement to someone else? Do it today!
Is God calling you to step out in faith in some way that scares you?
Do it today!
Now let’s switch our focus and take a look at the two sons in this parable
First their response to the call of the Father
The first son doesn’t mince his words and he flatly rejects the father and says that he will not do what has been asked of him
Maybe the weather was bad that day, or maybe his dad woke him up too early, or he already had other plans, or any of a thousand other reasons that we could think of, regardless he, in short order shoots down the father’s call
The other son however, look at his response, “I will, sir”
“Sir” this kid knows how to play the game, he has the lingo down and can say just the right things at the right time
But something happens, both sons have a change of heart
The first, for whatever reason, recognizes the sin of his attitude, swallows his pride, and commits himself to the will of the father
Whatever the reason was for his initial refusal, he repents and follows through with his obligations as a son
The second son though, Jesus doesn’t say why he didn’t go to work, maybe he never intended to or maybe he just got busy, or maybe something else came up that he deemed more important but the reality is “he did not go”
Unfortunately the big “C” Church is full of people who know the right things to say, they know how to talk the talk but they come up short when it comes time to walk the walk
Jesus refers to these same people when He quotes from the prophet Isaiah in
As one author that I read put it, ‘Some promise more than they prove; others prove more than they promise’
God is looking for workers not talkers or as the great theologian of the late 19th century, W.F. Adeney put it, ‘God prefers rude obedience over polite disobedience’
As a son I feel what just about every other person on Earth feels, I want to make my father proud of me and as a father I also want to be proud of my children, which I am by the way
Likewise our Heavenly Father wants to be proud of us and it should be our desire to make Him proud and the way that we do that is to respond to His call
To work at becoming fruitful for His glory and to not put off to another time what He has called us to do today
There is an old proverb that says, ‘The best time to plant a tree is 25 years ago.
The second best time is today.’
So let me close with a couple more passages about what it means to work for God and make Him proud,
Matthew 25:31-46
let’s pray
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