Jesus
once told the temple’s leadership a parable. (See Mat 21: 23 – 34) And
the parable is this. There is a dad who has work that he needs done on his farm
and he asks his two sons to go to the vineyard and do the work. One son is
stubborn and disobedient and says no to his father, but then later he finds
himself able to go and goes into the vineyard and does what his father asks.
The other son tells his dad that he is going to do what he asks, but then he
doesn’t go. He never did the work.
Jesus
asked the leadership of the temple which one did what the dad asked them to do.
The answer is obvious. Actions speak louder than words and what matters
more than what you say you are going to do, is what you in fact do in the end.
Note that it is not so much what we say to God that counts, but what we are DOING.
Perhaps
the son who said no to his father changed his mind because of guilt. We can
at least say that his conscience was working overtime until he decided to do
the right thing. Perhaps he was being disobedient to his father, because he
wanted to make a point, and in the end realised that his disobedience was
wrong.
And
then there is the son who said that he would do the work, and didn’t.
Did he say yes without thinking whether he really could or wanted to do it? Did
he forget about his promise to his dad? Did something come up that kept him
from going? When looking at this son we realise that intentions don’t really
matter as much as practically doing the right things.
Jesus
identifies the one who said no with the tax collectors and the prostitutes; he
identifies this son with the lost. These are the people who made bad
decisions early in their lives and went in the wrong direction, but later
repented. They realized they were heading in the wrong direction and turned
around. They came back and followed Christ.
Jesus
is looking at the leaders of the temple as people who started their lives in
the right direction, but then were sidetracked and ended up not following where
God had led.
Many of us said yes to God early in our lives. Are we going to follow
through with what we promised to do? Are we going to remain faithful to God and
go where he sends us or are we going to turn away from God’s call on our lives?
Or
are we going to take a third way. The best way. This third way would be
a son who says yes to his father and then follows through with it. I believe that if the Church
was full of people following this third way, the Church would be able to do
God’s work according to God’s way and desire.
Do we
respond when Jesus calls? Do we follow through with our promises to him?
When
we accepted the invitation to follow Jesus as our Saviour and Lord, we have
promised ourselves to him. Are we living the way we said we would?
Are
we doing the work we promised to do?
We
said yes to our God.
Are
we now ready to follow through and align our lives with our promises and words?
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