Luke Twenty
And it came to pass on one of the days,
while he was teaching the people and
preaching in the temple, the high priests and
the scribes with the elders rose up against
him. And they said to him, Tell us by what authority
you do these things, and who gave
you this authority? Jesus answered and said to them, I will
also ask you a word, and you tell me; The baptism of John, was it from heaven
or from men? And they reasoned with themselves, saying,
If we should say from heaven, he will
say to us, Why then did you not believe him? And if we should say from men, all the
people will stone us; for they regard John as
a prophet. So they said to him, We do not know
whence it is.
Jesus said to them, Neither will I tell you
by what authority I do these things.
¶ And he began to say this parable to the
people, A man planted a vineyard, and leased
it to laborers, and went on a journey for a
long time. And at the season he sent his servant to
the laborers to give him of the fruit of the
vineyard; but the laborers beat him and sent
him back empty. And again he sent another of his servants;
but they beat him also, and treated him
shamefully, and sent him back empty. And again he sent the third one; but they
wounded him also, and threw him outside. Then the owner of the vineyard said,
What shall I do? I will send my beloved son;
perhaps they will see him and feel ashamed. But when the laborers saw him, they reasoned
with themselves, saying, This is the
heir; come, let us kill him, and the inheritance
will be ours. So they cast him out of the vineyard, and
killed him. What therefore will the owner of
the vineyard do to them? He will come and destroy those laborers,
and give the vineyard to others. And when
they heard it, they said, This will never happen. But he looked at them and said, What is
it that is written, The stone which the builders
rejected, the same became the cornerstone? Whoever falls on that stone will be broken;
and on whomever it falls it will scatter
him. The high priests and the scribes sought
to lay hands on him that very hour; but they
were afraid of the people; for they knew that
he had spoken this parable against them.
¶ So they sent spies disguised as righteous
men, to ensnare him by a word, and to
deliver him to the judge, and then to the authority
of the governor. So they asked him, and said to him,
Teacher, we know that you speak and teach
truthfully, and you do not discriminate between men, but you teach the way of God
justly. Is it lawful for us to pay head-tax to
Caesar or not? But he understood their craftiness and
said, Why do you tempt me? Show me a penny. Whose image and inscription
are on it? They said, Caesar’s. Jesus said to them, Give therefore to
Caesar that which is Caesar’s and to God
what is God’s. And they were not able to get a word
from him before the people; and they were
amazed at his answer, and kept silence.
¶ Then came to him some of the men of
the Sadducees, those who say there is no resurrection;
and they asked him, Teacher, Moses wrote to us, that if a man’s
brother should die, and has a wife without
children, let his brother take his wife and raise
up offspring for his brother. Now there were seven brothers; the first
married and died without children. The second married his wife, and he died
without children. And the third one married her again; and
likewise the seven of them; and they died
leaving no children. And at last the woman also died. Therefore at the resurrection to which
one of them will she be a wife? for seven of
them married her. Jesus said to them, The sons of this world
marry women, and women are given to men
in marriage. But those who are worthy of the other
world, and the resurrection from the dead,
neither take women in marriage nor are
women given in marriage to men. For they cannot die again, because they
are like angels; and they are sons of God,
because they are sons of the resurrection. Now concerning the resurrection of the
dead, even Moses pointed out; for he referred
to it at the Bush when he said, The Lord God
of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. God is not the God of the dead but of the
living; for all live to him. And some of the men of the scribes answered
and said to him, Teacher, you have
well said. And they did not dare again to question
him concerning anything.
¶ And he said to them, How can the scribes
say concerning the Christ, that he is son of
David? And yet David said in the book of Psalms,
The Lord said to my Lord, Sit at my right
hand, Until I put down your enemies under your
feet. If, therefore David calls him my Lord,
how then can he be his son?
¶ And while all the people were listening,
he said to his disciples, Beware of the scribes, who like to walk
in long robes, and love to be greeted in the
streets, and the chief seats in the synagogues,
and the high places at the banquets; Those who embezzle the property of
widows with the pretence that they make long
prayers; they will receive a greater judgment.
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