Luke
14:15-24
It's
not hard to
sum
up
what Jesus was saying in this short story. But
what he says is blunt.
Very
blunt.
So
are
you
prepared
for
this?
Jesus
is saying, 'Don't
make
excuses.
Do
not
make
feeble
excuses
for rejecting my invitation – they just make me angry.'
Now
you
might
not
expect
Jesus
to
speak
like
that,
so
let's
look
carefully
at
what
he
really
says
and
why
he
says
it.
We
begin
by
reminding
ourselves
of
the
scene:
Jesus
is
at
the
home
of
a
senior
religious
leader.
Some other
Pharisees
are there
as
well,
and they're all
watching
Jesus
and
looking
for
a
chance
to
catch
him
out
– v1.
Then
in
v2,
we
hear
that
a
man
with
a
very
obvious
medical
condition
is
there
as
well.
And
we
suspect
that
there as a
tactical manoeuvre – that
he's
been
invited
by
the
Pharisees
as
a
test
for
Jesus
to see if Jesus
will heal
the
man
on
the
Sabbath,
breaking
one
of
their
many
rules,
and
giving
them
an
opportunity
to
discredit
him.
Well,
Jesus
does
heal
the
man,
but,
v5,
he
doesn't
give
the
Pharisees
a
chance
to
criticise
him
because
he
turns
the
tables
on
them,
revealing
their
hard-hearted,
self-serving
hypocrisy
– they'd
do
anything
to
rescue
their
own
son
or
ox
on
a
Sabbath,
but
they
won't
lift
a
finger
to
help
anyone
else
– all
the
time
claiming
that
this
is
God's
will.
Perhaps
because
he's
embarrassed
at
the
scene
Jesus
is
making,
the
host
invites
them
all
to
be
seated
– and
suddenly
it's
as
if
someone's
fired
the
starting
gun
for
the
final
of
the
110m
high
hurdles
– dignity
goes
out
of
the
window
as
they
scramble
for
the
best
seats.
When
Jesus
sees
this,
he
tells
them
a
little
story
about
people
who
take
honour
for
themselves,
and
concludes,
'Everyone
who
exalts
himself
will
be
humbled,
and
anyone
who
humbles
himself
will
be
exalted.'
As
if
even that
weren't
enough,
in v12, Jesus rebukes
the
host
for
inviting
all
his
friends
so
he'll
get
a
return
invitation
but
ignoring
the
poor, crippled, lame & blind because
they
can't
repay
him.
So
you
can
just
imagine
the
atmosphere
as
the
meal's
served
– a
stunned,
embarrassed
silence
engulfs
the
room. And
then,
in
v15,
perhaps
to
break
the
silence,
one
of
the
guests
says
to
Jesus,
'Blessed
is
the
man
who
will
eat
at
the
feast
in
the
Kingdom
of
God.' And
he's
absolutely
right!
In
the
OT
said
that
the
future
he
had
planned
for
his
people
would
be
like
the
most
amazing,
free
banquet!
God's
people
will
feast
on
the
superabundant
blessing
and
love
of
God.
That's
why
hospitality
is
so
important
amongst
God's
people
– as
we
eat
together
we
get
a
foretaste
of
the
new
heavens
&
the
new
earth. But
the
question
is,
who
will
be
at
that
great
feast?
Who
will
be
in
heaven?
Who
will
be
welcomed
by
God
and
who
will
be
rejected?
Of
course
the
Pharisees
around
the
table
assume
that
they,
naturally,
will
be
there.
They've
earned
their
place.
They
obey
the
rules.
So
Jesus
tells
another
parable.
A
story
about
a
man
who
was
preparing
a
great
banquet
– and
he'd
invited
loads
of
people. When
Jesus
says
that,
the
Pharisees
all
know
what
he's
talking
about
– he's
talking
about
God's
plan
for
his
great
feast
to
which
all
his
people
were
invited
– and
since
they
were
the
elite
of
God's
people,
they
would,
perhaps,
have
looked
at
one
another
and
nodded
knowingly.
So
Jesus
continues,
'At
the
time
of
the
of
the
banquet,
the
man
sent
his
servants
out
to
tell
those
who
had
been
invited,
'Come
for
everything
is
now
ready! But
they
all
alike
began
to
make
excuses.'
Just
think
about
what
Jesus
has
just
said
– people
who
have
been
invited
to
share
in
God's
blessings,
in
his
heaven,
in
his
kingdom,
in
his
eternal
banquet
are
making
excuses!
And their excuses are absolutely pathetic.
And their excuses are absolutely pathetic.
The
first
says,
'I've
just
bought
a
field
and
I
must
go
and
see
it.
Please
excuse
me.' OK.
So
there's
a
2.5
acre
field
for
sale
in
Sussex
today
for
£39k,
and
you're
saying
you've
spent
that
sort
of
money
and
you
haven't
even
looked
at
it?
Tell
us
another!
Another
person
said,
'I've
just
bought
five
yoke
of
oxen,
and
I'm
on
my
way
to
try
them
out.
Please
excuse
me.' So
you've
bought
a
6
yr
old
John
Deere
tractor
for
£30k
and
you'd
rather
go
and
plough
a
field
than
come
to
the
most
incredible
free
banquet
that
you've
ever
been
asked
to?
Still
another
said,
'I've
just
got
married,
so
I
can't
come'.
Well,
I
know
you
want
to
fulfil
your
duty
to
your
new
wife,
but
honestly,
can't
you
wait
just
a
little
longer?!
These
excuses
are
just
pathetic.
Every
so
often
a
good
friend
of
mine
would
take
me
out
for
supper
– it
was
a
great
arrangement
– he
earned
at
least
10x
what
I
do,
so
he
insisted
that
he
would
pay. So
from
time
to
time
I'd
get
an
email
suggesting
a
few
dates
when
we
could
meet
up. Can
you
imagine
the
insult
if
I
replied,
'Sorry,
can't
come,
just
got
an
allotment
– must
go
&
dig
it.
Sorry
can't
come,
just
bought
new
lawnmower,
must
test
it.'
(I'm
not
going
to
give
a
personal
parallel
to
the
last
man's
excuse!)
The
bottom
line
of
all
these
excuses
is,
'Sorry,
I'm
too
busy.
Too
busy
doing
things
I'd
rather
do
than
coming
to
your
banquet - they're more important to me that you are. Sorry
mate,
I've
got
better
things
to
do
than
come
to
your
feast.'
Well,
once
all
the
excuses
have
been
made,
the
servants
come
back
and
report
to
their
master.
When
he hears the excuses people have been coming up with he becomes very
angry,
v21 –
he'd
made
all
these
careful
preparations,
arranged
everything
perfectly,
ordered
in
the
best
food
&
wine,
booked
a
Michelin
starred
chef,
decorated
the
house,
paid
the
waiters
– and
you're
too
busy
wandering
round
a
field,
trying
out
your
new
oxen
or satisfying
your
lust
with
your
wife!
You
can
understand
why
the man wasn't
too
happy!
So
and
ordered
his
servants,
'Go
out
quickly
into
the
streets
and
alleys
of
the
town
and
bring
in
the
poor,
the
crippled,
the
blind
and
the
lame.
Go
and
get
the
people
who
are
despised
by
those
I
invited
earlier.'
'Sir,'
the
servant
said,
'what
you
have
ordered
has
been
done,
but
there's
still
room.'
'Go
out
into
the
roads
and
country
lanes
and
make
them
come
in,
so
that
my
house
will
be
full.
I
tell
you,
not
one
of
those
men
who
were
invited
will
get
a
taste
of
my
banquet.'
Of
course
what
Jesus
is
doing
here
is
mirroring
what's
actually
happening
all
around
him.
The
Pharisees
are
Jews
– members
of
God's
people
who
have
been
invited
to
the
banquet.
But
they've
all
rejected
the
invitation
because
they've
rejected
Jesus
and
his
kingdom
of
generous
love.
So
now
Jesus
turns
his
attention
to
the
sick,
the
poor,
the
sinners
of
the
Jewish
nation
– those
who
the
Pharisees
despise
– and
they
accept
him
and
his
healing,
life-giving
blessing.
And
when
they've
all
come
in,
then
he
goes
to
the
non-Jews
– the
Gentiles
– and
they
are
urged
to
come
in
– yes,
yes
– even
you!
And
the
invitations
will
keep
going
out
until
the
house
is
full.
But
those
who
rejected
the
invitation
– 'none
of
them
will
get
a
taste
of
my
banquet'
says
the
man.
So,
was
I
right
to
summarise
this
as
Jesus
saying,
'Don't
make
excuses.
Do
not
make
feeble
excuses
for rejecting my invitation – they just make me angry'? Surely
that's precisely what Jesus was saying – and he says it today to
each and every one of us here this morning.
This
morning, I stand here as one Jesus' servants going out into the roads
and country lanes, inviting you to come in and enjoy God's banquet. And
the Lord God demands a response. What is your answer today?
You
may think, 'I'm not ready to respond, don't rush me' – but that is
a response. Just as the man who bought the oxen said, 'Not today', so
you're saying, 'I'm not coming to your banquet today.' So your answer
is no.
You
may think, 'Life's just too full of urgent things to do to be
thinking about religion. I know this is important, but other things
are more urgent.' You
are saying, 'No'.
There
are only two responses to this invitation. Yes or no.
It's
been said that busyness is the enemy of heaven. How true that is.
Busyness with unimportant things means that thousands of millions of
people will not enjoy God's feast but will be turned away from
heaven.
Are
you too busy for God?
Would
you be too busy if someone offered you free tickets to see England at
Twickenham or Wembley, or a 5* holiday in Australia, or dinner at
Thackeray's?
If
you've no excuses for things like this, why is it that you have so
many excuses for Jesus Christ?
You
cannot keep putting him off with feeble excuses.
Well,
I told you that this was a blunt message this morning. But I hope you
can see that I'm not exaggerating what Jesus himself was saying in
this parable.
If
you want to respond to him, please do talk to me or to a Christian
friend.
A
great way to respond would be to join our Simply Christianity course
starting this week. And don't say you're too busy – your field will
wait, your oxen will wait, and your wife's not going anywhere.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Leave a message...