Sunday 4 October 2020

How was your harvest?

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Isaiah 5.1-7, Matthew21.33-46

 

What’s your harvest been like this year, and what are you doing with it? Back at the beginning of lockdown, many people seemed to be taking up gardening for the first time. There was quite a run on compost and seeds. Growing things is a sign of hope for the future, and profoundly good for the soul.  

But here we are, at the end of the season, with whatever harvest our little patch produced.

 

In my garden the Runner beans and courgettes were fruitful, and I’ve had a bumper crop of tomatoes in the green house, so the freezer is bursting at the seams.

 

One thing that nearly always does well – and hasn’t disappointed this year – is our grapevine, which is ironic, because I didn’t really plant it for the fruit. I just wanted something to grow up a trellis as a windbreak, but within a couple of years it was bearing wonderful grapes, and it would take over the world if I didn’t keep up with the pruning. I sometimes make grape and apple jelly with the glut and suppose we could produce some Chateau Le Bas wine, but we usually regard this particular harvest as largely a gift to the birds.

 

Grapevines twine their way through all three readings today, which isn’t surprising, because they were, and still are, a very important crop in Israel. Often in the Bible the vine is a metaphor for the nation, God’s people are likened to a vineyard he has planted.

 

But as today’s readings remind us, vine growing is not always straightforward.

 

Isaiah writes of a vineyard that is in trouble. He is writing at the time of the cataclysm of the Exile in Babylon, and the destruction of Jerusalem. God is heartbroken, he says, because he loves the vineyard of Israel, and hoped for so much from it. But his love has been thrown back in his face. He wanted his people to enjoy the fruits of peace and joy, but it hasn’t turned out that way. “he expected justice, but saw bloodshed; righteousness, but heard a cry!” The vines he planted with such hope have produced small, hard, bitter wild grapes, no use to anyone. Isaiah goes on in the next few verses to describe the way people have heaped up possessions for themselves – joining house to house, adding field to field – leaving no room for anyone else to share in the goodness they have been given. In the end, though, says God, we can only truly thrive when everyone thrives, and has a fair share of the world’s resources. This vineyard has been left to go to wrack and ruin, so wrack and ruin will claim it.

 

In the Gospel, Jesus speaks to the religious elites of his time. He tells them a story about a vineyard which had been let to tenant farmers. Their rent was a share of the produce. They were just tenants – it was still the landowner’s property. But they refused. They behaved as if it was theirs to do what they liked with. All those who he sent to collect his fair share of the harvest were ill-treated  and when he sent his son, they thought that if they got rid of him, they would then inherit the vineyard themselves – how they thought that was going to work isn’t at all clear. It’s pretty obvious they would be the last people the landowner would choose to leave this land to. But when we are consumed with greed, logic and common sense often go out of the window! So, they killed the son….

 

At that point Jesus turns to the religious leaders and says, “what do you think happened next? How would you expect the landowner to react?” They are the ones who come up with what they think would be the inevitable result – the tenants would face a miserable death, and the vineyard would be given to others – that’s the kind of thing that would have happened in their world. At this point they start to shift uneasily from foot to foot, realising that this story was about them, people who think somehow that their nation, their faith, the gifts they have been given ,are theirs to possess and control. Prophets like Isaiah had warned – like the slaves in the story – but they had taken no notice.  

 

This is a story we have to be careful with. Christians have sometimes read it as a condemnation of the Jewish faith, and permission to regard themselves as the true heirs of God’s promise. It has been used to justify anti-Semitism. But it’s really not saying that at all – Jesus was Jewish and didn’t ever seem to intend to found a new religion. This is a warning to anyone who thinks that they are entitled to own and control the world, to own and control faith, even to own and control God, and people of all faiths and none are more than capable of thinking and behaving that way.

 

It’s a nonsense to think it’s possible, though. All that we have, the air we breathe, the water we drink, the life we live is a gift to us, from a power that is infinitely greater than we are.  We are dependent on the earth, and on the God who gave it, not the other way around. We are tenants, not owners, called to produce fruit, and to share that fruit, but always remembering who it was that made it possible. When we forget that, it brings disaster on all of us – economic disaster, ecological disaster, and spiritual disaster too, because we cut ourselves off from our true source of life.

 

So, what’s your harvest been like this year – not just the tomatoes and beans, but the fruit of the Spirit of God working in you, the Spirit that brings love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, faithfulness and self- control? What have you been given? What have you been entrusted with to nurture and to share? And what will you do with it now?

 

I’m going to hand over to James Langstaff, the Bishop of Rochester, to talk about one initiative, the Poverty and Hope project, which seeks to spread the goodness of God’s harvest among some of those who need it most.

Amen

 

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