Christ's Object Lessons
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 28: The Reward of Grace
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So God desires us to trust in Him who justifieth the
ungodly. His reward is given not according to our merit
but according to His own purpose, "which He purposed in
Christ Jesus our Lord." Eph. 3:11. "Not by works of
righteousness which we have done, but according to His
mercy He saved us." Titus 3:5. And for those who trust in
Him He will do "exceeding abundantly above all that we
ask or think." Eph. 3:20.
Not the amount of labor performed or its visible results
but the spirit in which the work is done makes it of value
with God. Those who came into the vineyard at the
eleventh hour were thankful for an opportunity to work.
Their hearts were full of gratitude to the one who had
accepted them; and when at the close of the day the
householder paid them for a full day's work, they were [p. 398] greatly surprised. They knew they had not earned such
wages. And the kindness expressed in the countenance of
their employer filled them with joy. They never forgot the
goodness of the householder or the generous compensation
they had received. Thus it is with the sinner who, knowing
his unworthiness, has entered the Master's vineyard at
the eleventh hour. His time of service seems so short, he
feels that he is undeserving of reward; but he is filled with
joy that God has accepted him at all. He works with a
humble, trusting spirit, thankful for the privilege of being
a co-worker with Christ. This spirit God delights to honor.
The Lord desires us to rest in Him without a question
as to our measure of reward. When Christ abides in the
soul, the thought of reward is not uppermost. This is not
the motive that actuates our service. It is true that in
a subordinate sense we should have respect to the recompense
of reward. God desires us to appreciate His
promised blessings. But He would not have us eager for
rewards nor feel that for every duty we must receive
compensation. We should not be so anxious to gain the [p. 399] reward as to do what is right, irrespective of all gain. Love
to God and to our fellow men should be our motive.
This parable does not excuse those who hear the first
call to labor but who neglect to enter the Lord's vineyard.
When the householder went to the market place at the
eleventh hour and found men unemployed he said, "Why
stand ye here all the day idle?" The answer was,
"Because no man hath hired us." None of those called later
in the day were there in the morning. They had not
refused the call. Those who refuse and afterward repent,
do well to repent; but it is not safe to trifle with the first
call of mercy.
When the laborers in the vineyard received "every man
a penny," those who had begun work early in the day were
offended. Had they not worked for twelve hours? they
reasoned, and was it not right that they should receive
more than those who had worked for only one hour in the
cooler part of the day? "These last have wrought but
one hour," they said, "and thou hast made them equal unto
us, which have borne the burden and heat of the day."
"Friend," the householder replied to one of them, "I
do thee no wrong; didst not thou agree with me for a
penny? Take that thine is, and go thy way; I will give
unto this last, even as unto thee. Is it not lawful for me
to do what I will with mine own? Is thine eye evil, because
I am good?
"So the last shall be first, and the first last; for many
be called, but few chosen."
The first laborers of the parable represent those who,
because of their services, claim preference above others.
They take up their work in a self-gratulatory spirit, and do
not bring into it self-denial and sacrifice. They may have
professed to serve God all their lives; they may have been [p. 400] foremost in enduring hardship, privation, and trial, and
they therefore think themselves entitled to a large reward.
They think more of the reward than of the privilege of
being servants of Christ. In their view their labors and
sacrifices entitle them to receive honor above others, and
because this claim is not recognized, they are offended.
Did they bring into their work a loving, trusting spirit,
they would continue to be first; but their querulous,
complaining disposition is un-Christlike, and proves them to be
untrustworthy. It reveals their desire for self-advancement,
their distrust of God, and their jealous, grudging
spirit toward their brethren. The Lord's goodness and
liberality is to them only an occasion of murmuring. Thus
they show that there is no connection between their souls
and God. They do not know the joy of co-operation with
the Master Worker.
There is nothing more offensive to God than this narrow,
self-caring spirit. He cannot work with any who
manifest these attributes. They are insensible to the working
of His Spirit.
The Jews had been first called into the Lord's vineyard,
and because of this they were proud and self-righteous.
Their long years of service they regarded as entitling them
to receive a larger reward than others. Nothing was more
exasperating to them than an intimation that the Gentiles
were to be admitted to equal privileges with themselves in
the things of God.
Christ warned the disciples who had been first called
to follow Him, lest the same evil should be cherished among
them. He saw that the weakness, the curse of the church,
would be a spirit of self-righteousness. Men would think
they could do something toward earning a place in the
kingdom of heaven. They would imagine that when they
had made certain advancement, the Lord would come in to [p. 401] help them. Thus there would be an abundance of self
and little of Jesus. Many who had made a little advancement
would be puffed up and think themselves superior to
others. They would be eager for flattery, jealous if not
thought most important. Against this danger Christ seeks
to guard His disciples.
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