"The kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people who will produce its fruit." Matthew 21:43
There's a moment in Scripture that shakes the ground under both religious and business leaders alike. Jesus tells a story—a simple parable about a vineyard. But don't let the simplicity fool you. What He's really doing is calling out every person and organization who's forgotten why they were given influence in the first place.
This isn't just a Bible verse for Sunday morning—it's a wake-up call for how we lead, live, and build.
Let's unpack it together.
In the parable (Matthew 21:33–46), Jesus describes a landowner who plants a vineyard, equips it, and entrusts it to farmers. When the harvest comes, the landowner sends his servants to collect the fruit. But the tenants refuse. They beat the messengers. Eventually, they kill the landowner's own son.
Jesus looks the religious elite in the eye and says, in essence, "You've mistaken authority for ownership."
This is where it gets real—for all of us.
In life and in business, we've been entrusted with vineyards. Whether it's a company, a team, a talent, a platform, or a family—it's not really ours. It's been given to us, on purpose, for a purpose: to bear fruit.
Let's go 50,000 feet up for a second.
From Genesis to Jesus to today, God has always been planting things with potential. He planted Eden. He planted Israel. He planted His Son as the seed that would die and multiply. And now? He plants gifts, vision, and influence inside you.
But here's the deal: Fruitlessness forfeits stewardship.
If you're not producing what the Owner intends, He reserves the right to reassign it. Sobering? Absolutely. But also empowering—if we let it stir us to action.
Let's break it down for the modern world:
God's definition of fruit is never shallow. It's not just output. It's outcome. It's not numbers—it's nutrients.
It's easy to look productive while being spiritually or morally barren. It's easy to scale something hollow.
Jesus' warning in Matthew 21:43 reminds us that the Kingdom is transferred to those who can be trusted to grow it. Not those with status, but those with substance. Not those with titles, but those who till the ground and bring in a harvest that reflects His heart—justice, mercy, faithfulness, love.
So ask yourself: Are you busy… or are you fruitful?
There's a difference. And that difference determines what God continues to entrust to you.
In the parable, the tenants went rogue. They forgot they were stewards. They acted like owners. They didn't want to give the Owner what was due. How often do we do the same?
You might not be killing messengers, but maybe you're:
In leadership, whether in your home or your organization, this mindset is lethal. You don't own the mission—you're called to serve it. And if you're unwilling to release control, serve people, or give God the glory, don't be surprised when the vineyard starts to wither.
Let's not be the generation that builds something big but fruitless. Let's not be the leaders who are impressive but ineffective.
Here's the paradox Jesus drops in the same breath: Those who seemed last will be welcomed as first. That's not just theological poetry. It's practical strategy.
In business and life, humility is the new hustle. Servant leadership is the real success story. The ones who feel overlooked, underqualified, and unseen? They're often the ones God raises up when others get lazy with the mission.
If you're someone who's been on the sidelines—wondering if you're too late, too flawed, or too far behind—this is your moment.
God is looking for people who will receive the Kingdom and bear its fruit.
Not perfection. Partnership.
As we look toward the cross, here's what we remember: Jesus was the Son who was struck down by the very tenants He came to redeem. But His death became the cornerstone for a whole new Kingdom—one built on grace, truth, and fruitfulness.
This changes everything.
The question is: Will we change with it?
Here are five reflection points for you to take from this truth into your leadership, entrepreneurship, or daily rhythm:
Jesus wasn't just telling a story. He was flipping the world's values upside down. Kingdom leadership is countercultural. It's not about grabbing power. It's about bearing fruit that brings life to others.
Let's build like that. Let’s live like that. Let’s lead like that.
Because at the end of the day, the vineyard we've been given isn't about us. It’s about the fruit we leave behind.
Now go cultivate something that lasts.
Father God, Thank You for entrusting me with a part of Your vineyard. Forgive me for the times I've led with pride instead of purpose, or busyness instead of fruitfulness.
Help me to remember that everything I have—my gifts, my influence, my platform—belongs to You. Root me deeply in Your truth, and prune anything in me that's not producing life.
Teach me to lead with humility, to serve with joy, and to build with integrity. May my life, my work, and my leadership bear fruit that reflects Your heart, fruit that remains, blesses others, and brings You glory.
In Jesus' name, Amen.