So You Thought It Was Your Vineyard?
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A vineyard planted with care, tenants entrusted with everything they need, and a shocking grab for what was never theirs—Jesus’ parable lands with precision on our modern church life. We walk through the story in Matthew 21, link it to Isaiah 5’s vineyard song and Psalm 118’s cornerstone, and confront the subtle ways religious confidence mutates into control. The message is both direct and freeing: the mission belongs to God, and the Son is the non‑negotiable center of the kingdom.
We talk plainly about how stewardship turns into ownership when leaders and congregations make church about style, platform, or tribe. Grace becomes offensive when it reaches people we’d rather keep outside, and that’s exactly where Jesus presses. From there, we explore what fruit looks like in real terms—repentance that sticks, generosity that costs, service that doesn’t seek applause, and discipleship that resists the pull to become consumers. If everything we have is on loan—time, money, reputation—then returning the harvest to the Owner changes how we plan, spend, and lead.
Along the way, we contrast empty religion with a surrendered life anchored in Jesus alone. The cornerstone both supports and confronts: bow to him and be built up; stumble over him and fracture on pride. Our aim is simple and sweeping—use every gift God has placed in our hands to make heaven crowded. If this conversation helps you refocus on the mission, share it with a friend, subscribe for more teaching, and leave a review so others can find the show. What part of your “vineyard” will you return to the Owner this week?
