One of my all-time favorite movies is Amadeus. . .
One of my all-time favorite movies is Amadeus. It is loosely based
on the 1979 stage play of the same name, which is even more loosely based on
the lives of Antonio Salieri and Wolfgang Mozart. It is not a biography of the two men, but
rather an imaginative look at Salieri’s own struggle to understand how God
could lavish such musical genius on a young, boorish individual like Mozart.
In a sense, Amadeus poses the same question as the
biblical book of Job—only inverted. The
author of Job ponders the question of why God would “punish” the most righteous
man on the face of the earth, while Amadeus
ponders why God would “reward” an undeserving, preadolescent brat. It just doesn’t seem fair.
But then
again, God has a long history of doing things that many of us would call
unfair. For example, why would God
choose Jacob, who was a conniver and con artist, over the more dutiful (albeit
somewhat duller) Esau? Why would God
specifically instruct Samuel to bypass Jesse’s older sons in favor of anointing
a young, inexperienced shepherd boy as Israel’s next king?
Even some of
Jesus’ own parables force us to wrestle with the question of fairness. Is it fair that the prodigal son is welcomed
back with a party instead of repentance?
Is it fair that the one-talent servant is cast aside for playing it safe
and keeping his master’s original investment intact? Is it fair that the stalwarts who labored
twelve hours under the blazing sun receive exactly the same pay as those who
come waltzing in right before the final whistle blows and barely break a sweat?
From our
perspective, the answer is a resounding “No!”
In fact, the story of the laborers in the vineyard doesn’t even make economic
sense; and that may have been Jesus’ intent.
He is trying to get us to understand grace—not as something we toil to
earn, or perform well enough to deserve—but as a gift from God!
Bear in mind
that the owner of this vineyard doesn’t cheat anyone. The full-day workers get paid exactly what
they were promised; and more to the point, exactly what the wage agreement was. Had the owner pulled a “bait-and-switch” and
paid them less than what they were promised, then they may have had a
legitimate complaint. But as it is, they
are receiving the same rate of pay that their contracts clearly stipulated.
The problem
is that, in their minds, it wasn’t what they deserved. After all, they worked longer than the
others, they worked harder than the others, and therefore, they deserved to be
paid more than the others. However, the
fact of the matter is that, when it comes to grace, none of us gets what we
rightfully deserve—and thank God for that!
I don’t know about you, but if I thought God was going to give me
exactly what I deserved, I’m not sure I would sleep very well at night. What allows me to sleep is the firm belief
that God is not going to give me what I most deserve, but rather what I most
need!
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