Friends, this passage from Luke 19 and 20 paints a powerful picture of Jesus rescuing true religion. It’s a sad truth that religion can be twisted and corrupted by those seeking profit and power, just like those TV preachers with their private jets and mansions, discrediting authentic faith. This isn’t a new problem; it’s an age-old one. Jesus himself confronted these hypocrites, these “broods of vipers,” head-on. He saw what they were doing to the temple, turning the court of the Gentiles, meant for prayer and seeking God, into a marketplace. They were exploiting people, lining their pockets with exorbitant fees for temple taxes and animal sacrifices. Jesus, in his righteous anger, drove them out, reclaiming the temple as a house of prayer.
This act of cleansing was a powerful statement. Jesus wasn’t just tidying up; he was fulfilling prophecy, coming as the refiner’s fire to purify the priesthood and restore righteous offerings. He was taking back what was meant to be a place for all nations to encounter God’s love. But the religious leaders weren’t about to let him disrupt their lucrative system. They challenged his authority, demanding to know who gave him the right to act. Jesus, ever wise, outmaneuvered them with a question of his own about John the Baptist, leaving them trapped between admitting their hypocrisy and facing the wrath of the people.
Then Jesus tells the parable of the vineyard. A man entrusts his vineyard to tenants, expecting a share of the fruit. But the tenants, consumed by greed, abuse and kill the messengers sent by the owner, even his own beloved son, hoping to claim the vineyard for themselves. This story wasn’t random; it was a direct confrontation with the religious leaders. They were the tenants, entrusted with God’s people and the temple, but they had turned it into a self-serving enterprise. Jesus was the beloved son, rejected and soon to be killed. He was warning them, offering them a final chance to repent.
This parable reveals the heart of the problem: these leaders had lost sight of true religion. They had traded covenant love for personal gain, turning God’s house into a den of robbers. Jesus, in contrast, embodies true religion. He empties himself for our sake, laying down his authority and ultimately his life as a ransom for many. He gives himself away in self-sacrificing love, the very opposite of the tenants’ greed. He is the cornerstone, the foundation of true faith, and everything rests upon him.
So, friends, what about us? We live in a world filled with counterfeit religious leaders, those who exploit and abuse for their own gain. But these counterfeits point to the genuine article, the real deal: Jesus. He is the faithful heir, the true cornerstone. He offers us a firm foundation, a life built on something that will never crumble. Will we let him rescue our religion? Will we turn away from the distortions and embrace the authentic faith he offers? Will we build our lives on Jesus, the cornerstone that will never let us down? He is the heart of it all.