Luke 14:1-14 · Jesus at a Pharisee’s House
Great Feast or Sad Fast
Luke 14:1-14, Luke 14:15-24
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
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As we open God''s word from Luke 14, we find that a grand invitation has been extended by a king to invite persons to a delicious and festive banquet. Our God is a God who invites.

One of the things that we notice about this parable is that it instructs us in what gets us into the kingdom and what keeps us out. 

The kingdom of God or the reign of God is often compared to a grand feast rather than a sad supper.

As we open our scripture lesson, we see that Jesus is having dinner at the home of a distinguished Pharisee. Talk about Jesus showing up in some rather strange places with some very strange people! Jesus immediately becomes the hot topic of conversation when he heals an untouchable hanging around the premises. We see this in verse 4. Jesus is only getting ready for bigger and better things to come.

First of all, Jesus teaches the Pharisee that the first invitation was flawed in its scope.

One of the things that Jesus shares with those who have gathered around him at a meal at a certain home of a Pharisee is that their celebration is incomplete--in that they have used their ability to invite persons to their celebration who can enhance their social prestige and enlarge their circle of similar type people. So many are excluded in their planning.

Jesus is going to be sharing with them a whole new set of guidelines and social etiquette. Often it is true that we only extend a welcome to those who can help better our position in life-- rather than sharing with others a quality of life that comes from our heart rather than our pocketbook.

Some years ago, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas dispatched a 2 page letter inviting Bosko Struminikovski of Memphis, Tennessee, "to accept membership in the Republican Senatorial Inner Circle."

Senator Dole explained to Struminikovski: "The Republican Senatorial Inner Circle is made of individuals who . . . discuss national and regional topics in a comfortable mix of business and social gatherings. Our next Inner Circle briefing will be held in Washington, D.C."

As much as he might have liked to, Bosko Sturminikovski was unable to accept the invitation to join the Doles in Washington. He is a prisoner at a federal penitentiary in Memphis, serving a 23-year sentence for possession of firearms, drug trafficking and bribery. (1)

Sometimes politics do make strange bedfellows, but this invitation was in error according to Senator Bob Dole.

I wonder if our nation can survive if we only invite those into the "Inner Circle" who can pay for it, and keep those in power who have such limited vision. Do we believe in freedom and justice for all--or for those who can afford it?

Do we invite to our dinner table and the Lord''s table only those who can help us--not those whom we can help and assist to find meaning and salvation in life? Yes, Jesus expands the scope-- Jesus gives them a new paradigm. A paradigm is a way of understanding reality. A paradigm is a road map. A paradigm helps us to set boundaries. The Pharisees had one paradigm, and Jesus had another. In a sense, Jesus is returning the nation of Israel and its leaders back to the original paradigm given to them when they were commissioned to be a light to the nations. Unfortunately, they kept the light to themselves rather than sharing it with others who wandered in darkness. They even got to the place where they thought they were the light.

Second, the kingdom of God is like a great feast.

It often comes as a shock to pagan and other nonbelievers that our Christian faith is a journey immersed in joy--not guilt.

Christ invites us to drink the wine of atonement, not the vinegar of vengeance. Some folks act as if the Christian faith has a bleak message rather than good news. There are no sour saints in heaven--only laughter and joy. The Bible says that only in hell will there be gnashing of teeth, crying and moaning. In heaven, there is singing, dancing and eating.

The parables that come after this parable in chapter 15--the parables of the lost sheep, coin, prodigal son--all have as their major theme the joy of salvation. If your religious faith is all sadness and sourness, then you''ve got your wires crossed. If your Salvation experience is more like a funeral than a feast, then you have not experienced the real thing. Please do not tell anyone you are a born again believer until you know God as a pardoning, loving God who invites you to receive the gift and the joy of being forgiven.

I remember cutting out a "Born Loser" cartoon when we lived in the Easton Area which showed a husband buying an anniversary card for his wonderful wife of 25 years. The card conveyed many wonderful expressions of the love that he wanted to share with his wife. The cartoon caption said: "Fantastic. This is the card for my dear wife." The clerk at the Hallmark Card Shop said "That will be $2.00 plus tax." The husband responds "Do you have something cheaper?"

One of my colleagues with whom I exchanged sermons recently said that he''s going to write a novel to introduce people to the real Jesus rather than the one whom we often meet at the church. Yes, when we meet the real Jesus, we won''t ask if there is something cheaper, but rather we will give our soul, our life, our all.

Third, the King has prepared the feast and extends his invitation for all to come.

In verse 17, it reads: "At the time of the banquet, he sent his servants to say to those who had been invited, Come, because everything is now ready.''"

There is not one of us here today who could have or would have provided such a grand invitation to all of God''s people. The Great Feast is ready because God has provided everything necessary for our salvation and eternal life.

As James T. Draper writes in his book, Live Up To Your Faith, the only way a person ever comes to be saved is through what God does. There is not a work of righteousness we can do. We are saved by His works of righteousness--His mercy and grace. We are saved by His works, NOT OURS. We are not saved because of an agreement between God and us but because of an agreement between the Father and Christ. God provides salvation. Our part is simply to RECEIVE IT!! (2)

Everybody is worthy to attend the banquet because the King deems them worthy and clothes them in His righteousness. As I said at the beginning of the sermon, the only requirement necessary to get to the banquet is to accept the invitation. The only thing necessary not to get to the banquet is to refuse the invitation. This brings me nicely to my fourth point.

Fourth, notice the flawed excuses offered by those who can''t come to the feast. We see them expressed in verses 18, 19 and 20.

Excuses: Nobody likes excuses but everybody makes them at one time or another. Excuses have been around a long time. Adam blamed Eve, and Eve blamed the serpent. And so it goes.

"An excuse makes reality easier to bear when we make a mistake," said Dr. Charles Snyder, professor of clinical psychology at the University of Kansas.

A story is told of two men who met at a railway station in France at mealtime. One of the men, an alcoholic, begged of the other man enough money to buy a bottle of cheap wine.

The other man said with surprise, "Why should an intelligent-looking man like you sink to the level of living from one drink to another?"

The beggar explained his difficult life. His mother had died when he was young. His father had beaten the children unmercifully. Then, when the war came, the family was permanently separated. "You see," the beggar said, "I never had a chance."

The other man responded, "This is strange. My background is similar to yours. I, too, lost my mother when I was young. My father was also brutal and cruel. I also lost track of my family because of the war. But I felt that I had no choice but to try and overcome my circumstances rather than be overcome by them!"

As the two men continued to talk, they made a startling discovery--they were brothers!

One brother had built his life on excuses--the other brother built his life on the energizing power of God, and it made a world of difference. 

I suppose our modern excuses are as flimsy and ridiculous as those shared in the parable. Listen closely to this litany that one person gave as to why he never washed anymore and see if it sounds like the excuses we hear about why folks do not come to church.

1. I was made to wash as a child.

2. People who wash are hypocrites. They think they are cleaner than others.

3. There are so many different kinds of soap, I could never decide which one was right.

4. I used to wash, but it got boring, so I stopped.

5. I still wash on special occasions, like Christmas and Easter.

6. None of my friends wash.

7. I''m still young--when I''m older and dirtier, I might start washing.

8. People who make soap are only after your money.

This parable is a revealing story of how folks in all generations refuse God''s invitation to the feast of salvation and eternal life. It is a tragic story of persons so caught up in their own make-believe feast that they are too blind and busy to accept the real invitation when it comes. They have accepted so many lesser invitations that they fail to read the mail and answer the phone when the greater invitation to life comes.

It''s like the story of a small lad whose mother, unknown to him, planned a surprise birthday party. After he got home, he went upstairs to his room. Then all his classmates and teachers gathered in the living room. When his mother went to his room to get him, he had climbed down the tree and was hiding in the nearby park. The rest of the children went on to enjoy a good time, but Johnny never turned up. When he came in for supper, his mother asked where he had been; he had missed a wonderful time planned just for him. He tearfully confessed he had heard her call but hid till supper time because he thought she had a chore for him to do! To miss the invitation to the great banquet will be the saddest moment in all your life.

Fifth, notice in verses 21 and 24 that we see the anger of God expressed.

When Elizabeth II was to be crowned Queen of England, invitations were sent to certain people. On the bottom of each invitation read, "All Excuses Ceasing." It seems when royalty invites you, it is a very serious thing to refuse.

In the Apostles'' Creed we recite in our worship service almost every week, we speak the sobering words "he will come to judge the quick and the dead." It is a grand thing to know Jesus as Lord and Savior; it will be a terrible thing to know him as Judge and not to be at the banquet!

I had the opportunity to hear the Jewish theologian Dr. Elie Wiesel. He was simply outstanding. He ended his outstanding lecture by saying that it is a great tragedy to have an important message to share but to have no messengers to share the message. An even greater tragedy is to have a great message and a grand messenger, but the people do not listen to the messenger or the message. However, the greatest tragedy is to have a great message--a great messenger--and the people even listen to the messenger but forget the message and that it was from God.

In conclusion, God gives the invitation to everyone, for God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten son that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have the gift of everlasting life. Have you responded to this invitation?

May God give you grace to do so.

Amen and amen.

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz