The Parable of the Landowner in Matthew 21:33–46: Matthean Redaction, Vineyard Imagery, and the Judgment of Unfruitful Stewardship


Matthew 21:33–46 stands within the charged temple-confrontation sequence of Matthew 21–23, where Jesus addresses the chief priests and elders after his entry into Jerusalem, his symbolic action in the temple, and the challenge to his authority in 21:23–27.[1] In Matthew, the parable is not an isolated moral tale about generic wickedness but a concentrated act of prophetic indictment. Its narrative force depends on at least four converging horizons: the Isaianic vineyard tradition, the Psalm 118 stone text, the political-religious location of the chief priests, and Matthew’s own editorial shaping of inherited Synoptic tradition. Read this way, the parable is less about “replacement” in any crude sense than about the transfer of entrusted stewardship from corrupt leadership to a people who will render the fruit appropriate to the reign of God.[2] Matthew’s version is especially important because it sharpens the temple setting, heightens the issue of fruit, and adds the climactic declaration that “the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people producing its fruits” (21:43), a sentence without exact parallel in Mark and one that reveals Matthew’s theological agenda with unusual clarity.[3]

The immediate addressees in Matthew are not “the Jews” as a monolithic category but the chief priests and elders in the temple precincts, those already exposed in the preceding dispute as unwilling to answer honestly regarding John’s authority (21:23–27). Matthew 21:45 then narrows the hearers further: “when the chief priests and the Pharisees heard his parables, they knew that he was speaking about them.” This narrative framing matters. Matthew’s rhetoric is intra-Jewish before it is anything else. The Gospel itself is deeply Jewish in texture, saturated with scriptural citation and temple controversy, and many interpreters from major academic publishers continue to describe Matthew as a Gospel written for a first-century Christian audience negotiating its identity in relation to other Jewish groups and leaders.[4] The parable therefore belongs to a family quarrel within late Second Temple Judaism, though Matthew’s perspective also gives the scene retrospective weight as an explanation of judgment upon Jerusalem and its leadership.[5]

Matthew’s opening line is already theologically suggestive: Anthrōpos ēn oikodespotēs—“there was a man, a landowner/householder” (21:33). The noun οἰκοδεσπότης does more than identify an owner of property. In Matthew it regularly carries the sense of a master of a household whose authority extends over servants, goods, and ordered administration (cf. 10:25; 13:27, 52; 20:1; 24:43).[6] Matthew could have used a simpler term of possession, but οἰκοδεσπότης foregrounds ordered lordship, managerial legitimacy, and delegated responsibility. This lexical choice also resonates with Matthew’s repeated use of household imagery for the reign of heaven. Here the vineyard is not a detached asset but part of a larger household economy under rightful rule. Accordingly, the tenants are not independent farmers but stewards under an owner whose claim remains intact. Matthew’s term therefore intensifies the offense: the tenants do not merely behave badly; they revolt against a legitimate master and attempt to convert stewardship into ownership.[7]

The verb ἐφύτευσεν (“he planted”) likewise deserves more than passing notice. φυτεύω is a verb of intentional establishment, not mere possession.[8] The vineyard exists because the landowner brought it into being through purposeful labor. In the scriptural background, that matters enormously. Isaiah 5 already portrays Israel as Yahweh’s carefully planted vineyard, and the point of the image is divine initiative followed by covenantal expectation. Matthew’s diction preserves that same theological movement: God’s people are not self-generated; they are planted, prepared, and expected to yield.[9] This is why the parable cannot be reduced to a dispute over ownership alone. The one who planted has the right to expect fruit because the vineyard itself is the product of his prior care. Matthew’s Jesus thus places the religious leadership inside a story of gift before demand, privilege before judgment, and divine initiative before human accountability.[10]

The phrase φραγμὸν αὐτῷ περιέθηκεν, “he put a fence/wall around it,” extends the Isaianic echo. φραγμός can denote a fence, hedge, or protective barrier.[11] In Isaiah 5 the enclosure marks election, protection, and separation; the vineyard is not simply planted, it is secured. Matthew’s wording therefore suggests more than agriculture. It evokes a sacredly bounded sphere. That is one reason many interpreters have argued that the vineyard tradition in this context shades toward temple symbolism as well as Israel symbolism.[12] The point is not that “vineyard” and “temple” collapse into a single flat symbol, but that the Matthean scene takes place in the temple and concerns those responsible for Israel’s worshiping life. The boundary imagery thus implies entrusted sacred space. The leaders are not condemned because the vineyard lacked every provision. On the contrary, the fence testifies that what was entrusted to them was protected, structured, and ordered by the owner from the beginning.[13]

The next phrase, ὤρυξεν ἐν αὐτῷ ληνόν, “he dug in it a wine press,” is especially significant. ληνός refers to the winepress or vat associated with the crushing of grapes and the production of wine.[14] Theologically, this detail indicates that the owner has not only planted for beauty but prepared for yield. A vineyard with a winepress is a vineyard built for harvestable fruitfulness. Matthew therefore intensifies the absurdity of the tenants’ rebellion: they inhabit an estate already provisioned for productive return. The winepress is a sign that the owner’s claim on the fruit is neither arbitrary nor delayed beyond reason; the infrastructure of accountability is present from the start. Intertextually, it also ties the parable more closely to the Isaianic vineyard song, where the vineyard’s failure is scandalous precisely because every necessary provision has been made.[15] Matthew’s parable moves the source of the failure away from the vineyard itself and onto the tenants. The issue in Isaiah 5 is bad grapes; in Matthew 21, the issue is corrupt custodians of a vineyard whose structures imply that fruit should indeed have been forthcoming.[16]

Matthew continues with ἐξέδετο αὐτὸν γεωργοῖς, “he rented/leased it to tenant farmers.” The verb ἐκδίδωμι in the middle voice can mean to let out for one’s own advantage, to lease, to farm out.[17] This word is central to the social texture of the parable. It marks an economic arrangement, not abandonment. The owner remains owner; the tenants receive delegated use under obligation. Here a first-century audience would have recognized a familiar arrangement in large-estate agriculture, including the social tensions that such structures could generate under absentee ownership.[18] Yet Matthew is not romanticizing peasant resistance. The leasing arrangement is narrated as legitimate, and the tenants’ violence is narrated as lawless seizure. Their cry, “this is the heir; come, let us kill him and seize his inheritance” (21:38), reveals the moral logic of rebellion: stewardship has metastasized into possessiveness.[19] Matthew’s theological burden is therefore not anti-landlord populism but anti-usurpation. Those entrusted with God’s vineyard have mistaken delegated responsibility for autonomous possession.

The final verb of verse 33, ἀπεδήμησεν, “he went away” or “went on a journey,” does not imply indifference. ἀποδημέω denotes being away from one’s home or going abroad.[20] In parabolic discourse, such absence creates the space in which stewardship is tested. Theologically, the landowner’s departure is not divine remoteness in an ontological sense but the narrative condition under which covenant fidelity can be manifested. The owner’s absence does not cancel his rights; it exposes the tenants’ hearts. Matthew uses similar master/absence imagery elsewhere to underscore accountability in the time before reckoning (cf. 24:45–51; 25:14–30). Here the “journey” functions as an eschatological delay motif: divine patience should have yielded fruit, but it instead becomes the occasion for rebellion.[21]

When the season of fruit approaches, the owner sends τοὺς δούλους αὐτοῦ, his “slaves/servants,” to receive his produce (21:34). The noun δοῦλος in ordinary usage denotes a slave or bondservant, one under the authority of another.[22] In this context, the term is important precisely because Matthew does not choose a softer word. The emissaries are not neighbors or contractors; they bear the authority of the master. Their mistreatment thus amounts to the rejection of the owner himself. Within the parable’s allegorical horizon, these δοῦλοι correspond naturally to the prophets and other emissaries sent to Israel.[23] Matthew’s sequence—beating one, killing another, stoning another—compresses a long scriptural history of resisted prophetic speech into a stylized pattern of escalating violence. The sending of “other slaves, more than the first” (21:36) emphasizes divine persistence, while the same response exposes a settled posture of recalcitrance rather than a single rash act. Divine patience, in Matthew’s rendering, does not abolish judgment; it establishes its justice.[24]

The owner’s claim is expressed through καρπός, “fruit,” in 21:34 and then climactically in 21:43, where Matthew alone speaks of a people “producing its fruits.” καρπός can denote fruit, crop, produce, and by extension conduct or moral result.[25] This semantic range is crucial for Matthew. Throughout the Gospel, fruit is an ethical and covenantal category: trees are known by fruit (7:16–20), repentance must bear fruit (3:8, 10), and now the kingdom is given to a people doing the fruit of the kingdom. Weren rightly observes that Matthew’s phraseology here reflects his characteristic idiom of “doing fruit” and develops Isaiah 5 beyond what he received from Mark.[26] Thus the parable is not primarily about ethnicity but productivity in relation to God’s reign. The κρίσις falls not because Israel as such is rejected, but because leaders entrusted with Israel’s vocation have failed to render the justice, righteousness, and obedience God sought from the vineyard.[27]

Matthew’s differences from the parallels are therefore theologically decisive. First, unlike Mark 12:9, Matthew lets Jesus’ interlocutors pronounce the judgment upon themselves more fully in 21:41: “he will put those wretches to a miserable death and lease the vineyard to other tenants.” The verbal play κακοὺς κακῶς ἀπολέσει may itself echo the wordplay texture of Isaiah 5 more strongly than Mark does.[28] Second, Matthew alone adds 21:43, the kingdom-transfer saying, thereby moving the parable from mere prediction of judgment to explicit ecclesiological reconfiguration.[29] Third, Matthew’s placement is sharper than Luke’s because the parable stands as the second in a triad of vineyard/son parables (21:28–32; 21:33–46; 22:1–14) directed against the leadership in Jerusalem.[30] Fourth, Matthew’s diction often presses the text toward fruit-bearing and accountability, not simply toward rejection and reversal. In short, Matthew is not satisfied to reproduce a passion-prediction allegory; he recasts the tradition so that failed stewardship, temple leadership, and kingdom-fruit come into a single focus.[31]

The citation of Psalm 118:22–23 in 21:42 seals the argument: “The stone that the builders rejected, this has become the cornerstone; this was from the Lord, and it is marvelous in our eyes.” In its psalmic context, the rejected stone is bound up with Yahweh’s vindication of the one rejected by hostile powers. Lanier’s analysis is especially helpful here: the original context of Psalm 118 points toward the vindication of the Davidic king, and the “builders” become those who should have recognized but instead rejected the chosen figure.[32] In the immediate Matthean setting, this is explosive. The tenants who reject the son are also the builders who reject the stone. Matthew thereby overlays vineyard and temple imagery: those responsible for the vineyard are also those who are supposed to build rightly. The move from agricultural to architectural imagery is not a clumsy shift but a scripturally natural one, because Psalm 118 already joins kingship, temple, and festive procession, and because Isaiah itself can move from vineyard to built structure without embarrassment.[33] The LXX matters here as well. Matthew’s wording follows the familiar Greek form of Psalm 117:22–23 (LXX numbering), which had already become fertile for messianic interpretation in early Jewish and Christian circles.[34] The citation thus does not merely decorate the parable; it interprets the son’s rejection as the paradoxical means of his enthronement and the leaders’ failure as both moral and hermeneutical.

The chief priests, then, are not incidental villains. In Matthew’s narrative world they are the custodians of the temple, the overseers of sacrificial and worshiping life, and, from Matthew’s perspective, leaders who have turned priestly responsibility into self-protective power.[35] Dorothy Jean Weaver’s work is illuminating here: Matthew portrays the chief priests as those charged with guarding God’s house as a house of prayer, yet in practice aligned with political expediency, conspiratorial counsel, and finally the destruction of Jesus, the very one whose ministry fulfills what their office had failed to embody.[36] Read back into 21:33–46, this means the parable is not only about generic unbelief. It is an accusation that temple leadership has attempted to seize what belongs to God and has therefore forfeited its role as steward of sacred space. That Matthew’s audience, living after the destruction of the temple, would hear this parable with intensified historical resonance is almost certain.[37] Yet even here Matthew’s argument is not nihilistic. The vineyard remains the owner’s vineyard. Judgment falls on murderous tenants, not on the owner’s purpose. The kingdom is not abolished; it is re-entrusted to a people who will bear its fruit.[38]

Matthew 21:33–46 is therefore best read as a densely layered prophetic judgment speech embedded in parabolic form. Its Greek diction is not ornamental but strategic. οἰκοδεσπότης emphasizes rightful lordship; ἐφύτευσεν underscores divine initiative; φραγμός and ληνός testify that the vineyard was fully provisioned; ἐξέδετο defines leadership as tenancy rather than ownership; ἀπεδήμησεν creates the temporal field of stewardship; δοῦλοι identify the rejected emissaries of the owner; and καρπός establishes the criterion of judgment as covenantal productivity. Matthew’s redaction of the Synoptic tradition sharpens all of this by directing the parable squarely at the chief priests and Pharisees, adding the kingdom-transfer saying, and merging Isaianic vineyard theology with Psalmic stone theology. The result is a profoundly Matthean vision of judgment: God’s gifts do not nullify responsibility, sacred office does not secure immunity, and the Son rejected by the builders becomes the cornerstone of the renewed people of God.[39]

In the end, Matthew 21:33–46 is not merely a story about bad men long ago; it is a living warning to every generation entrusted with the things of God. The landowner reminds us that the church belongs to the Lord, not to pastors, boards, denominations, or personalities. He planted the vineyard, built the wall, prepared the winepress, and expects fruit because everything we have first came from his care and grace. The tenants warn us how easily stewardship can become ownership, ministry can become control, and sacred trust can become self-interest. The servants remind us that God repeatedly sends truth, correction, and prophetic voices, yet leaders often resist the very voices meant to heal them. The Son reveals the deepest tragedy: humanity can become so protective of power that it rejects the rightful heir standing in front of them. Yet the rejected stone becoming the cornerstone means that Christ still builds even where human leadership fails. For the modern church, this parable calls pastors and people alike to humility, repentance, and fruitfulness. We are tenants, not owners. We are stewards, not kings. Our task is not to preserve our platforms but to honor the Son, receive his authority, and cultivate a vineyard marked by justice, mercy, truth, holiness, and love. Wherever churches become protective of image, money, influence, or tradition at the expense of Christlike fruit, this parable speaks again. But wherever leaders kneel before the Son and remember whose vineyard it is, the church can once more become a place of harvest, healing, and joy.

Endnotes

[1] Donald A. Hagner, Matthew 14–28, Word Biblical Commentary 33B (Dallas: Word, 1995), 617.

[2] R. T. France, The Gospel of Matthew, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2007), 808–12.

[3] Wim J. C. Weren, “The Use of Isaiah 5,1–7 in the Parable of the Tenants (Mark 12,1–12; Matthew 21,33–46),” Biblica 79 (1998): 19.

[4] Craig S. Keener, A Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), 45–51.

[5] Dorothy Jean Weaver, “‘What Is That to Us? See to It Yourself’ (Mt 27:4): Making Atonement and the Matthean Portrait of the Jewish Chief Priests,” HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies 70, no. 1 (2014): art. #2703, 7–8.

[6] Walter T. Wilson, The Gospel of Matthew, Vol. 2: Matthew 14–28, ECC (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2023), 280–83.

[7] Bill Mounce, “οἰκοδεσπότης,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[8] Bill Mounce, “φυτεύω,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[9] Weren, “Use of Isaiah 5,1–7,” 1–3, 19.

[10] Craig S. Keener, The IVP Bible Background Commentary: New Testament, 2nd ed. (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2014), 124–25.

[11] Bill Mounce, “φραγμός,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[12] Weren, “Use of Isaiah 5,1–7,” 19.

[13] Ben Witherington III, Matthew, Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary (Macon, GA: Smyth & Helwys, 2006), 398–401.

[14] Bill Mounce, “ληνός,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[15] Weren, “Use of Isaiah 5,1–7,” 1–3.

[16] Klyne Snodgrass, Stories with Intent: A Comprehensive Guide to the Parables of Jesus, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 287–90.

[17] Bill Mounce, “ἐκδίδωμι,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[18] John S. Kloppenborg, The Tenants in the Vineyard: Ideology, Economics, and Agrarian Conflict in Jewish Palestine (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2006), 33–61.

[19] David L. Turner, Matthew, BECNT (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2008), 511–14.

[20] Bill Mounce, “ἀποδημέω,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[21] France, Matthew, 810–11.

[22] Bill Mounce, “δοῦλος,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[23] Hagner, Matthew 14–28, 618–19.

[24] Snodgrass, Stories with Intent, 288–89.

[25] Bill Mounce, “καρπός,” Mounce Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament, accessed April 18, 2026.

[26] Weren, “Use of Isaiah 5,1–7,” 19.

[27] Turner, Matthew, 514–16.

[28] Weren, “Use of Isaiah 5,1–7,” 19.

[29] France, Matthew, 815–16.

[30] Hagner, Matthew 14–28, 617.

[31] Turner, Matthew, 516–18.

[32] Gregory R. Lanier, “The Rejected Stone in the Parable of the Wicked Tenants: Defending the Authenticity of Jesus’ Quotation of Ps 118:22,” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 56, no. 4 (2013): 745–47.

[33] Lanier, “Rejected Stone,” 744–46.

[34] Lanier, “Rejected Stone,” 746–48.

[35] Weaver, “Making Atonement,” art. #2703, 2–5.

[36] Weaver, “Making Atonement,” art. #2703, 4–8.

[37] Weaver, “Making Atonement,” art. #2703, 7–8.

[38] N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, Christian Origins and the Question of God 2 (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1996), 497–501.

[39] France, Matthew, 808–17.

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