Scripture: Exodus
32:1-14 and Psalm
106:1-6, 19-23 • Isaiah
25:1-9 and Psalm
23 • Philippians
4:1-9 • Matthew
22:1-14
Just when we think we've got the lesson of the parable this week, Jesus turns the tables on us... again. In Luke's account of this parable, as in the first part of Matthew's account, we get the message - all are welcome at the wedding feast given by the king, cutting through the legalism, hypocrisy, self righteousness, ownership and control asserted by the religious leaders of the day. But things take a violent turn in Matthew's version of the parable. When a guest does not have a wedding robe, the king orders him taken out, bound and thrown into the outer darkness. Why the violence? Is God rejecting him? Is there no room at the feast for him? What is meant by "many are called but few are chosen?" What is the wedding robe? What is God's grace in all of this? What is meant by Bonhoeffer's saying that there is no such thing as "cheap grace."
Consider John van de Laar's "The Uncomfortable Invitation," and Samuel Zumwalt's "Ready for the Feast." Debie Thomas asks if we believe in a God of wrath and cruelty, and asks what if Jesus is teaching us not to project our own rationalizations and wishes on God in "The God Who Isn't."
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