Luke
Luke 20:17ESV·traditional attribution

But he looked directly at them and said, “What then is this that is written: “‘The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone’?

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

Christ spoke this parable against those who were resolved not to own his authority, though the evidence of it was ever so full and convincing; and it comes very seasonably to show that by questioning his authority they forfeited their own. Their disowning the lord of their vineyard was a defeasance of their lease of the vineyard, and giving up of all their title. I.

Commenting on Luke 20:9-19

John Gill Reformed Baptist @doctorgill

And the chief priests, and the Scribes, that same hour,.... As soon as he had delivered the above parable, together with that of the two sons: sought to lay hands on him; they had a good will to it, being exceedingly gravelled with the question he put to them concerning John's baptism, which confounded them, and put them to silence; and with the parables he...

Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Reformed @jfbcommentary

written--(in Psa 118:22-23. See on Luk 19:38). The Kingdom of God is here a Temple, in the erection of which a certain stone, rejected as unsuitable by the spiritual builders, is, by the great Lord of the House, made the keystone of the whole.