Matthew 22:1-14
Jesus responded by telling still more stories. 2
"God's kingdom," he said, "is like a king who threw a wedding
banquet for his son. 3 He sent out servants to call in all the invited guests.
And they wouldn't come! 4" He sent out another round of servants,
instructing them to tell the guests, 'Look, everything is on the table, the
prime rib is ready for carving. Come to the feast!' 5 "They only shrugged
their shoulders and went off, one to weed his garden, another to work in his
shop. 6 The rest, with nothing better to do, beat up on the messengers and then
killed them. 7 The king was outraged and sent his soldiers to destroy those
thugs and level their city. 8" Then he told his servants, 'We have a
wedding banquet all prepared but no guests. The ones I invited weren't up to
it. 9 Go out into the busiest intersections in town and invite anyone you find
to the banquet.' 10 The servants went out on the streets and rounded up
everyone they laid eyes on, good and bad, regardless. And so the banquet was
on-- every place filled. 11 "When the king entered and looked over the
scene, he spotted a man who wasn't properly dressed. 12 He said to him,
'Friend, how dare you come in here looking like that!' The man was speechless.
13 Then the king told his servants, 'Get him out of here-- fast. Tie him up and
ship him to hell. And make sure he doesn't get back in.' 14" That's what I
mean when I say, 'Many get invited; only a few make it.' "
Food for thought!
This parable has much to tell us.
(a) It reminds us that the invitation of God is to
a feast as joyous as a wedding feast. His invitation is to joy. To think of
Christianity as a gloomy giving up of everything which brings laughter and joy
and happiness is un-Christian. It is to joy that the Christian is invited; and
it is joy he misses, if he refuses the invitation.
(b) It reminds us that the things which make men
deaf to the invitation of Christ are not necessarily bad in themselves. One man
went to his estate; the other to his business. They did not go off on a wild
carnival or an immoral adventure. They went off on the, in itself, excellent
task of efficiently administering their business life.
It is very easy for a man to be so busy with the
things of time that he forgets the things of eternity, to be so preoccupied
with the things which are seen that he forgets the things which are unseen, to
hear so insistently the claims of the world that he cannot hear the soft
invitation of the voice of Christ.
The tragedy of life is that it is so often the
second bests which shut out the first bests, that it is things which are good
in themselves which shut out the things that are supreme. A man can be so busy
making a living that he fails to make a life; he can be so busy with the
administration and the organization of life that he forgets life itself.
(c) It reminds us that the appeal of Christ is not
so much to consider how we will be punished as it is to see what we will miss,
if we do not take his way of things. Those who would not come were punished,
but their real tragedy was that they lost the joy of the wedding feast. If we
refuse the invitation of Christ, someday our greatest pain will lie, not in the
things we suffer, but in the realization of the precious things we have missed.
(d) It reminds us that in the last analysis God's
invitation is the invitation of grace. Those who were gathered in from the
highways and the byways had no claim on the king at all; they could never by
any stretch of imagination have expected an invitation to the wedding feast,
still less could they ever have deserved it. It came to them from nothing other
than the wide-armed, open-hearted, generous hospitality of the king. It is
grace which offers us the invitation and it is grace which gathers us in.
No comments:
Post a Comment