What does it mean to be a faithful steward of what God has entrusted to us? Are we nurturing the blessings in our lives, or are we taking them for granted? Join us as we explore the parable of the vineyard owner and uncover the call to be fruitful tenants in God's kingdom. Let's dive in together!
Prayer Prompts
Use these prompts to guide your prayer time as we prepare our hearts for Sunday.
God, we thank You for leasing us the beauty of our lives, our families, our community, and the opportunities we have to serve in Your vineyard. Help us to recognize and appreciate all that You have entrusted to us, and may we be good stewards of these blessings, reflecting Your love and grace in everything we do.
Lord, let us be the faithful tenants You desire us to be. Help us to work diligently in the fields You have given us, teaching our children Your ways, loving our neighbors, and sharing the light of Jesus with everyone around us. May we strive to honor You in our actions and bear fruit for Your kingdom.
Hey Cross Church family, welcome to the
Sunday setup. It's our time each week
where we digitally gather together to
pray through the passage that we are
going to be studying this week because
every weekend we want to pray through,
we want to praise through, we want to
preach through so that we can practice
God's word. Today we continue on in the
series through the parables. We're
winding down to the final three weeks in
here. And in Matthew chap 21, starting
in verse 33, we're this parable of the
vineyard owner. And Jesus starts here
and says this. Listen to another
parable. There was a landowner who
planted a vineyard, who put a fence
around it, who dug a wine press in it
and built a watchtower. He leased it to
tenant farmers and went away. When the
time came to harvest fruit, he sent his
servants to the farmers to collect his
fruit. The farmers took his servants.
They beat one, killed another, and
stoned a third. Again, he sent other
servants more than the first group, and
they did the same to them. Finally, he
sent his son to them. They will respect
my son, he said. But when the tenant
farmers saw the son, they said to each
other, "This is the heir. Come, let's
kill him, and let's take his
inheritance." So they seized him. They
threw him out of the vineyard, and they
killed him. Therefore, when the owner of
the vineyard comes, what will he do to
these farmers? He will completely
destroy those terrible men, they told
him, "and lease his vineyard to other
farmers who will give him his fruit at
the harvest."
Jesus said to them, "Have you never read
in the scriptures, the stone that the
builders rejected has become the
cornerstone?
This is what the Lord has done and is
wonderful in our eyes. Therefore, I tell
you, the kingdom of God will be taken
away from you and given to a people
producing its fruit. Whoever falls on
the stone will be broken to pieces, but
on whomever it falls, it will shatter
him." When the chief priests and the
Pharisees heard his parables, they knew
he was speaking about them. All they
were they were look although they were
looking for a way to arrest him, they
feared the crowds because the people
regarded him as a prophet.
This parable is packed full of
information. And throughout this, we see
so much prophecy that Jesus is speaking
into here. And he's very specifically
talking to the Jewish leaders and some
of what would transcribe and them and
God moving God moving on from Israel
because they rejected him. But in here,
there's still so much application for
us. And as we begin to set our hearts
towards what God how he would speak to
us and and how we glean the insights and
the truth from this, I want us to start
our prayer prompt uh with a prayer of
thanksgiving. And in verse 33, it talks
about how the vineyard owner, God in
this story, creates this amazing
vineyard and then it says he leased it
to tenant farmers. See, God owns
everything in our world, but he leases
it. He rents it. He lets us borrow. He
lets us work the stuff of our world. And
I want to start with a prayer of
thanksgiving is God, thank you for
leasing me blank. Thank you for leasing
me my family, my job, the place I live.
Thank you for leasing me my church
family. Whatever it is, everything we
have in our world is from God and he's
just leasing it to us for our time being
that we get to work in his world. So
here's our first prayer prompt. God,
thank you for leasing me blank.
Heat.
Heat.
Heat. Heat.
God, we just thank you for leasing us,
God, this world that ever since Genesis,
you put men in men and women in charge
to love the world around us, to take
care of your nature, to take care of the
animals. And God, sometimes I think we
take for granted how beautiful our world
is. And thank you for just Lord leasing
us the ability to live here in Arizona
and Surprise and in the West Valley that
God you have placed us in this great
place. There's so many places in our
world we could be at but for whatever
reason you placed us here and and we are
thankful for that. Thank you for the
fact that we have our families in our
lives, our friends, our community. Lord,
none of it is stuff we've earned. None
of this stuff we've built on our own,
but it is from your goodness, from your
grace, and you allow us to be a part of
it. God, just thank you for leasing us
every good thing that is in our life.
But Lord, with this comes a
responsibility. And as we continue in
this passage, what we're going to see is
God leased it to some people. But in
this parable, the tenants that he's
leasing it to failed time and time
again. This is actually a picture of
Israel throughout the Old Testament and
up to Jesus's teaching there. But if
we're honest, we can be tenants that
fail God time and time again as well.
And then the second prompt as we talk
about how do we make sure we're not
failing God, but we're thriving and
being faithful towards God is we thank
him for the fact that he leases us stuff
in our life. But let's pray about being
the right tenant. And here's our second
prompt. is God, let me be the tenant who
let me be the farmer, the worker, the
the one who's renting, the one who's
enjoying the great things that God has
created. God, let me be the tenant who
works hard, who is faithful to your
word, who is teaching my kids Jesus, who
is loving the people in my workplace.
God, let me be the tenant who fill in
that prayer. Pray that prayer to our
God.
Heat. Heat.
God, let us be tenants who are faithful.
Lord, what we see in this passage is we
see those who are wicked. Those who say,
"God, I know you've given us so many
good things, but we want to hoard it. We
want to take it. We want to make it
ours.
And Lord, when we do that, when we take
our sin into our own hands, and we try
to take the good things of your world
and twist them into our image, twist
them for our gain, God, we fail time and
time again. But Lord, let us not be like
the tenants in this story. Let us use
this as a warning. And God, let us fall
broken before you
to humble ourselves and to be the ones
who work for your kingdom, who follow
you faithfully, who love you holy. And
Lord, make the love of Jesus known to
the world around us. God, we thank you
for this time. We ask that you prepare
in our hearts
for this weekend of how do we make sure
we're not failing you? What are the
warning signs in our life? And Lord, let
us put into practice this passage next
week on how we can live faithfully
and following you and doing the work you
have assigned us to do. And God, that we
can just glorify you through it. And we
thank you for this time. We lift all
this up in Jesus name. Amen. Thank you
guys for joining us today. We'll see you
this Sunday.
Heat. Heat.