The Marriage Feast
Matthew 22:1-14
There is an intimate connection
between the 43rd verse in the 21st chapter, and this parable. That verse read, "The Kingdom of God shall be taken
away from you, and shall be given to a nation bringing forth the fruits
thereof." This chapter begins, "And
Jesus answered and spake again in parables unto them, saying, The Kingdom of
heaven is likened unto a certain king, which made a marriage feast."
The linking of those two verses help us to see the immediate significance of
what our Lord was saying, and to discover the fact that it had a wide
application, wider perhaps than we have been accustomed to think. God has
always has a problem with the Jewish nation from its inception as far as His
leadership which came to the eventual asking of a King like the nations in
Samuel that caused an adjustment in His handling of their sorrowful request .
He gave them their request which still plagues them today. Here He excommunicates
them. At His first Advent and their rejection of His Kingship the Church is unveiled through Paul. Paul and John and Peter reveal to us the eventual return of
the Jewish nation after a 7 year period of tribulation.
But this chapter begins in a
strange and arresting way. It says, "Jesus
answered." Answered what? No question had been asked Him. There is no
account of anything that had been said immediately to Him. Yet Matthew, going
straight on with his account, says, "And
Jesus answered." Again we go back and look at the verses at the close
of the previous chapter. The 44th verse reads, "And he that falleth on this stone shall be broken to pieces; but
on whomsoever it shall fall, it will scatter him as dust. And when the chief
priests and the Pharisees heard His parables, they perceived that He spake of
them. And when they sought to lay hold on Him, they feared the multitudes,
because they took Him for a prophet. And Jesus answered," that is, He
answered their attitude, answered the question in their minds, which had now
become a conviction, perhaps suddenly and startlingly so.
Our Lord had spoken the two
parables of the sons and of the vineyard; and they had expressed their opinion
upon the accounts He had told them; and by so doing they had found a verdict
against themselves, and passed sentence upon themselves. Then they suddenly
awoke to the fact of what they were doing, and their anger was stirred, and
they would have liked to kill Him. And the Lord answered. It was the result of
their frame of mind. It was an answer to this mental attitude of those who were
His enemies, of those rulers whom He had now come to Jerusalem thus to condemn.
These were the final days in the
life of our Lord on earth, and these parables all move in that realm. On this
third day, He was there in the Temple as the great Prophet of God, the King,
and Prophet, dealing with the nation in august majesty and dignity. The two
parables we have considered had dealt with responsibility. Now He gave them a
parable which dealt with privilege. In the former two parables, laborers were
in view, and the vineyard was the background. Now guests are in view, and the
background is a marriage feast. In the former, two commandments were laid upon
men to fulfill obligations. In this, an invitation is offered to men to accept
hospitality. So there is that difference between this parable and the two
former, though they are all linked together.
As He had been dealing by parabolic
illustration with the fulfillment of the responsibility of the rulers, and
consequently of the nation, He now gave to these selfsame rulers a parable
which dealt with the refused invitation, which had come through His ministry.
Still further, glancing at the whole of these fourteen verses, we see their
structure. The parable He now uttered was, in a remarkable way, predictive. He
was looking over the whole fact of His own ministry, to the ministry of His
servants that should follow to the end of the age. That is clearly seen if we
study this carefully. Three invitations are offered. The marriage feast is in
the background, to which men are asked, but there are three distinct
invitations.
During His earthly ministry our Lord had specifically foretold of such a reoffer. The prediction is recorded in Matthew 22:1-7, clothed in the form of a parable of "the kingdom of heaven," in which a certain king makes a marriage feast for his son (vs. 2). Two calls are sent out by the King, both addressed to a special group of people who had previously been invited, "them that were bidden" (vs. 3, perfect tense), a reference to the original and abiding call of this nation through Abraham to enjoy the blessings of the Messianic Kingdom, and renewed over and over again in the Old Testament. The first call of the parable was issued by our Lord through His disciples (Matt. 10:1-15; Luke 10:1-9), directed exclusively to the chosen nation; and it was officially rejected (Matt. 22:3). Then there was to be a second call announcing that the dinner is now "prepared" and "all things are ready" (vs. 4) — certainly a reference to our Lord's finished work of redemption at Calvary. Such a call could not have gone forth until after the Resurrection. But again the call is rejected, this time by actions which help to identify it in Biblical history: some Jews would turn away with contemptuous indifference, according to the parable, while others would mistreat and kill the messengers (vs 6). This points to the post-Pentecostal offer, as described in the Book of Acts, when the officials of Israel did exactly that. During the gospel period not an official disciple of Christ was killed by the Jews, but during the period of the Acts the terrible persecution and killing of the messengers began. And there is no third call for this generation of Israel, but judgment falls: the King sends forth his armies, destroys the murderers, and burns their city —a parabolic prediction of the awful destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 (vs.7).
Glance at the three sections. "The Kingdom of heaven is likened unto
a certain king, which made a marriage feast for his son." The marriage
feast is a figure of speech, and here our Lord was using an Eastern picture. We
need not go into any details. We are not concerned with them, except as we
remember that the figure was borrowed from the Old Testament ideal of God's
relationship with man. The Old Testament symbolism was often strange and
wonderful. Hosea speaking the words of God to the people, had said, "I will betroth thee unto Me forever."
Our Lord now took that symbolism of the betrothal and marriage when
illustrating the Kingdom of heaven. He has desired communion through a supper
from the very beginning and while on earth was continually sharing food with
those He was close to.
In what sense can that be said to
illustrate the Kingdom of heaven? We have seen in the previous parables how
they had failed to fulfill responsibility, and that judgment would follow
later. Now our Lord turned definitely from responsibility to privilege. The
Kingdom of heaven which He had come to proclaim, and to be proclaimed, and
which He is still continuing to proclaim; He likened it to a marriage feast,
something characterized by all joy, gladness, and merriment. So the Kingdom of
heaven.
This Gospel of Matthew is peculiarly
the Gospel of the King. Jesus is seen therein as King. When He first came to
His work, He enunciated the laws of the Kingdom in the Sermon on the Mount.
After that He gave an exhibition of the benefits of His Kingship and the
Kingdom of God in the wonders He wrought (8-9:35). In those chapters we see Him
moving in every realm of human dereliction, material, mental, moral; healing
the sick, casting out demons, forgiving sin sick souls. First the laws of the
Kingdom and then its benefits. From that point we see Him constantly enforcing
the claims of the Kingship of God. Keeping that in mind, then imagine a
community wholly and absolutely yielded to those laws, and sharing in the
benefits of the power of that Kingdom, because themselves obedient to the claims
of the King, seeking first the Kingdom of God. Imagine that community, what
have we? The best answer is to let Paul speak. "The Kingdom of God is not eating and drinking." What is
it? "Righteousness, joy,
peace." (Rom. 14:17) Those are the issues of the Kingship of God, when
it is recognized and yielded to. The Kingdom of God is not a place of somber
gravity and dread solemnity. It is that, but it is infinitely more. It is the
place first of righteousness, then of joy, and of peace. Like the marriage
feast, it is filled with gladness and song; to use a word the father used when
the prodigal came home,—merriment. The privileges He offered men were all there
in the Kingdom of heaven. He had been revealing that Kingdom, calling men into
it. The king sent his servants to call to the feast with the son.
What happened? They would not
come. Here our Lord declared the national response. Of course individuals were
answering the invitation. There were those within the nation who had heard, who
had seen the joy, and blessedness; the righteousness, joy and peace of the Kingdom,
and had yielded to it so far as the light had come; that little band of
disciples, and the larger band seen in the upper room later, and the five
hundred brethren at once to whom our Lord appeared in Galilee. There was the
elect remnant of the nation and there always is an elect remnant. But He was
dealing with the nation and their rulers, and with the national outlook, and
response as revealed through those rulers. They would not come. So our Lord
here declared, on the human level, the failure of His own mission. He, the Son,
had come to bring men into that marriage feast, the marriage of men with God
that issues in righteousness, joy, and peace; and they had refused it. "They would not come."
"Again." There is tremendous force in that word.
Following through the historic sequence, we know what they did with the Son. We
saw that in the previous parable. "This
is the heir; come, let us kill him, and take his inheritance." He knew
He was on His way to that death. The Son Himself was cast out, and cast out to
death. But there was no failure from the Divine standpoint. The failure was of
the nation to accept the invitation to enter into the glad joy and peace and
merriment of the Kingdom of God.
Again, beyond His rejection, He
sent forth other servants. The apostolic age began, the preachers went forth
everywhere, as Mark says. We know all the account. They were still to go to
them that were bidden, to the people who had rejected Him; even to the rulers
who had rejected Him, the privileged, bidden people; and they were to say, "Behold, I have made ready my dinner;
my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all things are ready; come to the
marriage feast." Here is an account of the sending out of invitations
to come into all the blessedness of the Kingdom again, after the first apparent
failure. We see them going, and as we watch them, they are going with the same
message. Notice the simplicity, and yet the beauty of it. What were they to
say? "All things are ready."
"Killed," is a figure of speech here, which meant that God had
done everything to provide for the joy, peace, and gladness of humanity in the
proclamation of His Kingdom. He had done everything. By the time when these went
out, the Cross was accomplished, and the hatred of men was transmuted by His
grace into something that provided for that very righteousness, joy and peace. "All things are now ready."
Go back again to those that were
bidden. Go even to those who would not come in the days of My own ministry, as
though the Lord had said. Give them another opportunity. Go to them that were
bidden. Tell them that all things are ready, that everything is done to create
the joy, happiness, gladness, singing and rapture of My Kingdom; and bid them
come.
What was the response? Again we
necessarily go back to the center of things where Jesus exercised His ministry.
Our Lord said that the invitation would be treated with indifference by each
one. "They made light of it, and went
their ways." Mark the process, "one
to his own farm, another to his merchandise"; and then by definite
rebellion. Then the ill-treatment of the messengers, and their beating and
casting out. All that happened in that earlier apostolic age. Jesus clearly revealed
what the result would be of the second refusal by those who were bidden.
Then "the king was wroth, and he sent his armies, and destroyed those
murderers, and burned their city." That happened a generation afterwards.
As the Lord God Almighty in the past had girded Cyrus for the carrying out of
the punitive action against His own people, so surely He girded the Roman
armies, under Titus, as they swept upon the city that for the second time had
rejected the call; first the actual call of Jesus, and secondly the call of
Jesus by the Holy Spirit, through the messengers. The King was standing there,
talking to these rulers, and He clearly saw the things that were about to
happen.
What then? "Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they that
were bidden were not worthy"; because they were blind, they did not
see; and they were evil and self-centered, turning everyone to his own way, and
ill-treating the very messengers of the king because they were blind to the
meaning.
What is to be done now? "Go ye therefore unto the partings of
the highways"—a great phrase that,—"the
partings of the highways." The words were uttered by our Lord in that
Roman world, celebrated for its highways. Perhaps nothing more remarkable was
done by that Roman Empire than the building of those highways. They are still
there in Europe. They beat out from Rome over the entire known world, and along
them Roman cohorts passed, and Greek merchantmen traveled. They were the
great media of travel throughout the known world. Therefore go there to the
partings of the highways. Over leap the boundaries which are merely
geographical. Those who were bidden, who had the privileges of nationality, and
who, lived in the land where My ministry was conducted, are not worthy. Their city
will be destroyed. It will be burned with fire. Then the larger invitation
will begin. Go to the partings of the highways, and as many as ye shall find,
bid to the marriage feast. When the bidden were demonstrated unworthy, then
the invitation to the marriage feast, to the benefits and beneficence's of the
Kingdom of God, were offered to all men. Go where the highways part, where they
divide. Stand where the crowds will press and throng and cross each other; and
into those highways pass, calling men everywhere to this great Kingdom. (Acts
1:8; Matt. 28:18-20)
Moreover He said, "Those servants went out into the
highways, and gathered together all as many as they found, both bad and good;
and the wedding was filled with guests." That does not mean that there
was to be no further reference to moral conduct, or standing in the Kingdom.
But if men in the highways have no character, no moral standing, if they are
bad, call them in. If they are good, by the standards of the world, true to
the light in them, and in that way they are good, call them in, good and bad.
The servants brought them in, guests of the King, admitted to all the great
privileges of the Kingdom of God.
That solemn word of Jesus at the
end shows how true it is that there is moral discrimination in the Kingdom, in
spite of the use of the word "bad"
there. We must interpret that by this. "When
the king cometh in to behold the guests," to inspect them, "he saw there a man which had not on a
wedding garment, and he saith to him, Comrade, Friend, how camest thou in
hither not having a wedding garment?" A man had found his way in, but
he lacked the true insignia of relationship. He was violating the true order of
that Kingdom. This man has been described in modern parlance as a gatecrasher.
It is a very suggestive description. Yes, he had gone in, and the fact he had
not on a wedding garment showed indifference, carelessness, or objection. He
was not of that company. He had not a wedding garment. (Matt. 7:21)
Matthew says, The King "saw there a man which had not on a
wedding garment." Then he said, "Friend,
how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment?" The little
word not appeared twice over, but it is not the same word on those two
occasions. The first word, Ou simply
marks a fact; he had not it on. But when the king asked him the reason, Jesus
used a slightly different word for "not"
Me, which suggested not merely the fact that he lacked the wedding garment, but
that he did so definitely, of his own thought, and will, and intention. When
the man came in not having a wedding garment, and the king talked to him, he
said, it is not only a fact that you have not a wedding garment; you did not
intend having one. Your "not"
is the not of definite willing. You are determined not to have it on. Your
presence in here is the highest sign of your rebellion against the order set
up, of which this marriage feast is the great symbol, "And he was speechless"; he had nothing to say.
Then follows the terrible sentence.
"Cast him out into the outer
darkness," where there shall be sorrow and rebellion; "there shall be the weeping and
gnashing of teeth." This was His revelation. That is the continuity of
sin. "Cast him out into the outer
darkness."
The Kingdom of God has its
responsibilities. They rest upon all of us who profess to belong to that
Kingdom. (Matt. 7:22) The vineyard and the two sons revealed to us our
responsibilities. This picture shows us all the glory and beauty of the
Kingdom, resulting from its presentation by our Lord Christ.
We ask, How does this apply to us
as to responsibility? The fruit of the Kingdom of God as the Kingdom of heaven.
I do not want to waste time discussing the difference between those terms.
There is no difference, except that the Kingdom of heaven—a phrase Matthew
mostly used, and used as employed by Jesus—expresses the result. The Kingdom of
heaven is the realization of the Kingship of God. We are praying that His
Kingdom may come on earth as it is in heaven. When the prayer is answered, we
have the Kingdom of heaven. The measure in which it is answered in our life, in
the community of souls loyal to Him that is the Kingship of God. The Kingdom
does not merely mark a territory, but it marks the fact of authority,
and the exercise of it; the Kingdom of God sought, yielded to, realized. Then
look abroad, and the result is the Kingdom of heaven. Are we realizing it? The
Jewish nation refused to let Him rule. And those in Matt. 7:22 were professing
tasks that were not assigned to them. There was only 2 parties that were given
this 3-fold command. In Isaiah 35:5 and 61:1 scripture reveals that One was the
Son of Man acting as the Messiah and the other were the twelve apostles in Matt
10:8.
That drives us back to another
question. How far are we really submitted to the Kingdom of God? If we are, we
know what it is to live in the Kingdom of heaven, righteousness the foundation,
joy the result, and quiet peace the issue. It is the marriage feast. The bells
are always ringing, and the music always sounding.
But there is a stern necessity for
the wedding garment. The call is to all, but there must be the wedding garment.
Jesus ended with that strange and wonderful word in connection with this
parable, "Many are called, but few
chosen." Many years ago, at a great meeting in London, Moody was
speaking on this parable. Sitting on the platform by him was one of the great
scholars of the Church, and a theologian, a mighty man. When Moody got to that
point in his address, "Many are
called, but few are chosen," he stopped, and said, "Hold on, what does chosen mean?”
He turned to Dr. L, this scholar, and said, "I
would like to read it like this, many are called, but few are choice.” Dr.
L said, "You are quite right, Mr.
Moody, that is the whole intention of it." It is good to have such an
authority. Jesus did not say, I am calling people, and choosing some, who are
the chosen ones, those who accept the call. Those who do not accept will return
to their own imaginings and their own affairs. Those who obey, and fulfill the
responsibility of the vineyard, and accept the invitation, will go in as guests
in the festive house of God, to the feast which He has spread in His great
Kingdom. Many are called, but few are chosen, choice in that sense.
This is a great vision, sweeping
over the centuries. Our Lord saw the Kingdom not only as a vineyard, having to
be cultivated, but as a feast, a marriage of merriment, and of peace.
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