The Parable of the
Workers in the Vineyard
A man hires workers at dawn, again at nine, at noon, at three, and finally at five o’clock — an hour before the day ends. When he pays them all the same wage, the all-day workers are furious. Their complaint is entirely reasonable by any human standard. And that is exactly the point. This parable is not teaching economics. It is dismantling every assumption we have ever made about who deserves God’s grace — and how much.
The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard is one of the most uncomfortable parables Jesus ever told — because the people we instinctively agree with are the ones Jesus corrects. The workers who laboured all day have a completely legitimate grievance by any earthly measure of fairness. And Jesus does not argue with their logic. He simply points to a different economy — one where the owner’s generosity, not the worker’s hours, determines the outcome.
1For the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that is an householder, which went out early in the morning to hire labourers into his vineyard. 2And when he had agreed with the labourers for a penny a day, he sent them into his vineyard.
3And he went out about the third hour, and saw others standing idle in the marketplace, 4And said unto them; Go ye also into the vineyard, and whatsoever is right I will give you. And they went their way. 5Again he went out about the sixth and ninth hour, and did likewise. 6And about the eleventh hour he went out, and found others standing idle, and saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle? 7They say unto him, Because no man hath hired us. He saith unto them, Go ye also into the vineyard; and whatsoever is right, that shall ye receive.
8So when even was come, the lord of the vineyard saith unto his steward, Call the labourers, and give them their hire, beginning from the last unto the first. 9And when they came that were hired about the eleventh hour, they received every man a penny. 10But when the first came, they supposed that they should have received more; and they likewise received every man a penny. 11And when they had received it, they murmured against the goodman of the house,
12Saying, These last have wrought but one hour, and thou hast made them equal unto us, which have borne the burden and heat of the day.
13But he answered one of them, and said, Friend, I do thee no wrong: didst not thou agree with me for a penny? 14Take that thine is, and go thy way: I will give unto this last, even as unto thee. 15Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? Is thine eye evil, because I am good?
16So the last shall be first, and the first last: for many be called, but few chosen.
A Simple Explanation — What Is Jesus Actually Saying?
This parable comes immediately after Peter has asked Jesus what the disciples will receive for having left everything to follow Him. Jesus has just promised them thrones and a hundredfold return. Then He tells this parable — and ends it with “the last shall be first, and the first last.” It is a direct corrective to the disciples’ emerging sense that their early commitment has earned them a privileged position.
The setting is a first-century Palestinian harvest. Grapes must be picked quickly at harvest time or they spoil. The owner goes to the marketplace — the ancient equivalent of a day-labour hiring hall — repeatedly throughout the day because the work is urgent. At each hour he finds people standing idle — not from laziness, as the last group explains, but because “no man hath hired us.” They were waiting to work. They simply hadn’t been chosen yet.
Note: The owner deliberately pays last-to-first. If he had paid first-to-last quietly, there would have been no complaint. He chooses the order that makes his generosity visible — and unavoidably confrontational. This is not an accident in the parable’s structure.
The all-day workers’ complaint is legitimate on every human level. They worked twelve hours in the heat. The last workers worked one hour in the cool of the evening. Equal pay for unequal work violates every standard of fairness the human heart defaults to. And the owner does not deny this. He simply says: you received exactly what you agreed to. I owe you no wrong. And as for the last — it is my right to be generous with what is mine.
Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? Is thine eye evil, because I am good?
Matthew 20:15 · KJV
“Is thine eye evil, because I am good?” In the idiom of the time, an “evil eye” was the look of envy — a person whose wellbeing depends on others not receiving too much. The owner is asking: are you genuinely harmed by my generosity to someone else? You received everything you were promised. Nothing was taken from you. The only thing that has wounded you is the sight of grace going to someone who had less claim to it than you did.
That is the parable. And it is aimed precisely at the person who believes their longer service, earlier arrival, or greater sacrifice gives them a better standing before God than the person who came later, struggled more, or started from behind.
The Workers — What Each Group Represents
Faithful, long-serving. They know exactly what they signed up for. But their confidence in the agreement becomes the seed of resentment when they see grace given to others. They represent those who feel their seniority in faith earns them more than the newcomer.
Received: 1 denarius ✓Hired at various points through the day. They trusted the owner’s word — “what is right” — without a specific guarantee. They worked faithfully on the basis of that trust. They accepted the wage without complaint.
Received: 1 denarius ✓Not idle by laziness — “no man hath hired us.” They were available all day but unchosen until the final hour. They represent those who come to faith late, who were overlooked or excluded, who had no opportunity until the last possible moment.
Received: 1 denarius ✓Represents God — who is faithful to His covenant (he gave the first workers exactly what was agreed), but whose generosity is not bounded by human fairness. He owes no one more than what was promised. And he chooses to give more to those who had less.
His economy ≠ oursAre you grateful for your own denarius — or are you watching what God gives to others and finding your contentment diminished by His generosity to them? The parable does not ask you to pretend the comparison doesn’t sting. It asks you to examine where the sting is coming from.
Real WorldModern-Day Scenarios — Where This Parable Lives Today
What This Parable Teaches — 5 Key Lessons
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1God’s grace operates by a different economy than human fairness. Every human system of justice is based on proportion: more work, more reward. God’s kingdom operates on a different principle — not because effort is irrelevant, but because the entrance into life is not earned by accumulated service. It is given by a God whose generosity is not bounded by our calculations of merit. The parable does not abolish fairness — the all-day workers received exactly what was promised. It simply reveals that God’s generosity exceeds the terms of the agreement.
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2Your contentment should not be anchored to what others receive. The all-day workers were perfectly satisfied until they saw what the last workers received. Their dissatisfaction came entirely from comparison, not from injustice. They had what they were promised. Nothing was taken from them. The parable asks every reader: is your sense of being treated fairly dependent on others being treated less generously? If God’s grace to someone else diminishes your experience of God’s grace to you — that is worth examining.
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3Early arrival does not confer elevated status in God’s kingdom. This parable was aimed directly at the disciples who had just asked what they would receive for their early commitment. Jesus is saying: your faithfulness is honoured — your denarius is real — but it does not give you a higher standing than the person who came later. The kingdom of heaven is not a seniority system. The first disciples and the last-hour converts receive the same gift: Christ Himself. The shape of the life built from that foundation differs. The foundation is the same.
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4Those who were unhired all day are not overlooked by God. “No man hath hired us” is one of the most poignant lines in any parable — the people who wanted to work, who showed up, who waited all day, who simply were not chosen until the last hour. The owner specifically goes to find them at 5 PM. This is the same impulse as the shepherd leaving the ninety-nine — God does not forget the ones still standing in the marketplace. He goes to them specifically. And what they receive is full.
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5“Is thine eye evil, because I am good?” is the most important question in the parable. An evil eye in the biblical idiom is the look of envy — the eye that begrudges generosity given to others. The owner’s question cuts through every theological justification the workers have constructed for their anger and arrives at the real issue: are you envying my goodness? Have you reduced your own blessing to nothing because someone else’s blessing seems larger than theirs should be? That is not justice. That is envy dressed in the language of fairness.
A Prayer Based on the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard
This parable calls for a prayer that is honest about the all-day-worker tendency in all of us — and that asks for the freedom that comes from anchoring contentment in God’s grace rather than in what others receive.
Lord, I want to be honest: there is an all-day worker in me. There is a part of me that quietly tracks what others receive — what grace is given to people who came later, who struggled more visibly, who seem to have less claim to Your generosity — and feels something shrink inside when they are treated the same as I am. I have borne burden and heat of the day in ways that feel significant. And when someone who has not borne those things receives the same gift, something in me says: this isn’t fair.
Forgive me, Father. Not because the feeling is shameful — it is deeply human — but because it is built on a misunderstanding of what I was promised and what You owe. You promised me a denarius. You gave me a denarius. You owe me nothing more. And the fact that You are also giving a denarius to the person who came at the eleventh hour does not diminish what I hold in my hand. It only feels that way because I have let comparison become the measure of my contentment.
Free me from the evil eye. From the look that begrudges Your generosity to others. From the quiet arithmetic that says: if they receive this much, then what I have is worth less. Teach me to receive my denarius with full gratitude — not gratitude calibrated against what others received, but the simple, unburdened gratitude of someone who was given exactly what was promised and more than they deserved.
And for those who have been standing in the marketplace all day — who wanted to be found, who were available and willing, who simply had not been hired yet — let them know the owner is coming for them. At whatever hour it is, the invitation is still going out. There is still work. There is still a place. There is still a full day’s wage waiting. Go and find them, Lord. Go at five o’clock as readily as You went at dawn.
Your economy is not ours. Thank God for that.
Amen.“Lord, free me from measuring Your grace to me by what You give to others. My denarius is mine. Let it be enough. And let their denarius be a cause for joy, not resentment. Amen.”
The all-day workers received everything they were promised. Not less than they agreed to — exactly what they agreed to. Their problem was not that they were treated unjustly. Their problem was that justice became insufficient the moment they saw grace. That is the human heart in its most recognisable form — and it is the thing this parable most directly addresses. The owner’s economy is not built on what you deserve. It is built on what he chooses to give. And what he chooses to give is always, to everyone, more than was earned. The right response to that is not complaint. It is to take your denarius and go — grateful, freed from comparison, and quietly astonished that you received anything at all.