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Speaker 1: For many are called, but few are chosen. Matthew twenty two fourteen. Dear Lord, you have chosen us to enjoy the fullness of your love and experience the joy of your presence. May we never squander that opportunity because we're too busy or preoccupied with vain things. When you call us, may we come right away with joy. We know that there is nothing greater than your presence. When the world tempts us to deny, you give us a sure foundation and conviction from your spirit. Thank you for calling us, Thank you for choosing us. Thank you that in Christ Jesus, we get to be with you today, tomorrow, and endto eternity. In Jesus' name, we pray Amen. Thank you for praying with me today. You're listening to the Jesus Podcast. Keep listening to be swept away in this cinematic adaptation of Jesus Parables. If you want to partner with us in our mission to bring the Bible to life in new ways, follow this podcast on whatever platform you're listening to. Doing so will keep you updated, but also help us get discovered by more people. That way, we can reach the whole world with the story of Jesus. Jesus gaze was intense and unyielding. The Pharisees and religious leaders hadn't let up with their questioning and righteous posturing. They were too prideful and too preoccupied with their own status to see what was right in front of them. They held themselves and such high esteem that they became blind to God himself standing before them.
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Speaker 2: Are you still not able to understand what I'm telling you? I've spoken plainly to you, but still you do not see the truth. So let me tell you another parable. The Kingdom of Heaven is like a king who sent out invitations for his son's wedding.
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Speaker 3: The Kingdom of Heaven doesn't care if you're rich, poor, tall, short, introverted or extroverted. The Kingdom of Heaven is for those who joyfully accept the invitation from the king. Everyone is invited, but few actually enter. Welcome back to another gripping and challenging episode of the Jesus Podcast. I'm zachwipray dot com. We've been showcasing dramatized and immersive adaptations of Christ parables. Hopefully it's been awakening your imagination in challenging your faith, Jesus doesn't tell these stories to simply entertain us. His desire is to communicate the Kingdom of God. If you've been enjoying this podcast thus far, make sure to share it with a friend. Today's story is about a kingdom. The king, excited to celebrate his son's wedding, invites all the nobles and merchants to come. When they reject his offer, the king extends the invitation to others. This kind of story might seem mundane on the surface, but it was scandalous at the time. Jesus is about to blow people's minds and reveal a revolutionary truth. You can't be grandfathered in to the Kingdom of God. You have to accept the invitation and move. I can't wait for this one. Let's dive into the parable of the wedding banquet.
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Speaker 4: Buckle up, the.
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Speaker 2: King said, with a smile, beaming like the risen sun.
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Speaker 4: We must celebrate.
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Speaker 2: The king could barely contain himself. Excitement flowed from him like a stream after rain.
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Speaker 4: My son has found love and will be married in one month. The entire kingdom will rejoice. Wedding bells will ring, trumpets will sound, and laughter will abound. We must prepare quick let's send invitations to every landowner, noblemen, and merchant in the city. This wedding will have feasts beyond their wildest dreams, music to match the angels, and joy overflowing with wine and laughter.
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Speaker 2: The servants all began the preparations. They wove together beautifully crafted linen wedding garments to give the guests. The finest cotton imported from Egypt. They selected the healthiest calves and began fattening them with milk, barley, and dates. They pressed new wine and stored it in pepperwood barrels. Everything was going to be perfect. The king's son was precious and his wedding would be a celebration for the ages. The king sent off his servants to the cities, governors, noblemen, and elders. He sent the invitations with gifts and promises of feasts and overflowing joy.
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Speaker 5: Come and celebrate with the King. He has invited you to join him in his palace in a place of honor. Yet when the messengers arrived, something unexpected happened. One messenger was sent to a prominent landowner and barley farmer. The invitation was given but refused.
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Speaker 4: I'm far too busy to gawk at the prince.
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Speaker 2: He said with a wave of his hand. The landowner didn't see it as an honor to join the king, but rather as an interruption. He couldn't bother to take the time. His labor was far more important than celebration. The messenger left confused and insulted on the king's behalf. Another messenger arrived at the door of a merchant. He cracked open the door, unenthused by the sight of the king's servant. What do you want, he asked with a snarl.
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Speaker 6: The king has invited you to join him in celebration. His son is engaged to be married in a month's time.
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Speaker 2: The messenger declared, he.
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Speaker 6: Would like to give you a seat at his table, enjoy the wedding and fellowship in the king's halls.
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Speaker 2: The invitation seemed enticing, but the merchant simply shrugged and said.
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Speaker 4: Go away. The king's business is none of my concern.
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Speaker 2: And he slammed the door. The messenger left with a furled brow and a disquieted spirit. It seemed odd that nobody wanted to attend this feast. The king was generous, He wasn't a tyrant. The prince was a man of charity and had done nothing to deserve the hatred of these men. Each nobleman, elder, and prominent figure who received an invitation either rejected it or took it with indifference. In fact, a growing hatred for the king and his messengers grew by the day as they heard more and more about this wedding. A month had passed and the time had come for the great celebration.
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Speaker 4: It is about time for the wedding, the king declared.
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Speaker 2: The indifference of his subjects hadn't quenched the joy of his son's union. He still desired everyone to come, eat and enjoy a beautiful time of music, laughter and love. He turned to his servants and said.
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Speaker 4: Tell everyone who has been invited that I have prepared everything. The oxen have been fattened and butchered. The banquet table is set, and the ceremony will commence with joy.
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Speaker 2: The servants stared at each other with worry on their faces. They scattered throughout the city, knocking on doors and presenting the wedding garments to each person. The landowner from before shewed them away and went back to his field. Meanwhile, the merchants spat in their faces and returned to his business. Believe it or heart, there were some who had even greater hate for the King than others. One of the king's messengers knocked on the door of an influential noble His house was adorned with cedar beams and with ivory crested engravings. The servant nervously walked the steps leading up to the great double doors. He knocked twice and stood back. The nobleman opened the door. Spite was painted all over his face. The messenger bowed and said.
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Speaker 6: The King has sent me to tell you that the wedding feast in celebration of his son has been prepared. He would love to dine with you and give you a seat of honor.
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Speaker 2: The nobleman said nothing. He stepped down from his doorway and slowly approached the servant. With a staff firmly grasped in his hand, he struck the servant, sending him flying down the stairs.
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Speaker 7: What makes you think I want to sit beside the king?
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Speaker 4: Hm? Did I not refuse your invitation the first time?
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Speaker 7: Why have you come back?
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Speaker 2: The nobleman thrust his staff down again at the king's servant. The servant gasped for air, but nobody came to his aid. The servant tried to run, but the nobleman grabbed him by the collar of her shirt and pulled him back to the floor. He beat the young man to death, all in defiance of the king. Two more servants scaled the winding path leading up to the home of a rich elder. He was a man of high class and status. Although he had gained considerable wealth by being a loyal friend to the king, he didn't care much for the king's son. When the servants arrived to extend the invitation, he had his guards, seized them and tied them to whipping posts. He disgraced them before his household, spat on their faces, and then executed them. All of it seemed senseless, but their hatred ran deep for the king and his son. When word reached the king about his servants death, he was sorrowful.
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Speaker 4: Why have they done this? What has possessed them to deny my kindness?
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Speaker 2: The King's sadness simmered within him, slowly turning to indignant rage.
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Speaker 4: They will pay for this. Send out my armed men. Tell them to bring torches and burn their properties as if it wasn't enough to deny my invitation. They had to kill my messengers, destroy them all.
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Speaker 2: The king's army scoured the city in search of those who had killed his servants. They dragged them out of their homes and set them on fire. The murderers were executed in the city square, proof that the king cared deeply for his servants. Not even the wealthy and prominent was safe from his wrath. The king leaned over his balcony overlooking the city. Plumes of smoke rose from different corners. He shook his head and.
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Speaker 4: Sighed, they didn't deserve to come.
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Speaker 2: The wind shifted and the smoke blew away from the city, revealing the streets below. The king gazed down at the commoners walking to and fro. He looked at the farmers, the traders, and the beggars. He gazed at all the men and women who made the city flourish with their humble, quiet work. Then he thought about his servants, those without status or clout, but faithful to the end. He turned back to his messengers and said.
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Speaker 4: Take the invitations and wedding garments and give them to anyone who will come. Go to the alleyways and wells, the farms, and the infirmaries. Tell everyone who will hear that a banquet has been prepared just for them. They will be my honored guests, adorned in wedding garments, and given a seat at my table.
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Speaker 2: The servants agreed, with smiles on their faces. They brought the invitations to the masses, inviting anyone who would hear. Those who were poor would be treated like royalty. Those who were cast aside would dine with the king. Those who were begging for scraps just earlier that morning would feast in the prince's presence. The palace halls were filled with serfs and servants, beggars and barley farmers. The King stood at the doors, welcoming each of them in with love and joy.
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Speaker 4: Come, my friends, feast and enjoy dance to the music, Fill your cups, and honor my son.
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Speaker 2: Never before had anyone seen anything quite like it. The King's palace was filled to the brim with the outcasts. The last were made to be first, and the first were now made to be last. The King's love was accepted by those who truly appreciated it. Looking from afar was one of the nobles who had rejected the invitation. He had finished his work for the day and now passed by out of curiosity. When he saw servants and commoners pouring in, he decided to get a close look. He entered the palace to see the walls adorned with beautiful tapestries and a table spread with a decadent feast. The nobleman smelled the wine pouring forth from pepper barrels and listened to the music and laughter.
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Speaker 7: If these peasants can sit at the table, then certainly I can.
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Speaker 2: He said to himself. He took a seat at a table and began to feast. He filled his belly with freshly big bread and fattened meat. Was the most delicious meal he'd ever had. From the corner of his eye he saw the king. The nobleman straightened his chest and prepared to greet the king.
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Speaker 4: My lord, hello, I am pleased to have been able to make it for this fine banquet.
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Speaker 2: He said, with a regal tone. The King placed a hand on his shoulder and looked the nobleman up and down.
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Speaker 4: My friend, how did you get in without wedding clothes?
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Speaker 2: The noblemen looked down at his robes, and then looked around him. All the other guests were adorned in beautifully woven linen. It was a symbol of their invitation, the one that they had accepted with joy. He had never expected to compare his clothes to those of commoners and servants.
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Speaker 4: I well, I was offered, but then I didn't Actually I was going to uh.
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Speaker 2: The man kept stumbling over his words, embarrassed and worried. The King's warm demeanor faded, His fist clenched and his jaw tightened. This nobleman had denied the king's invitation and dishonored him. Then at the last minute, he had snuck into the banquet without bothering to wear suitable garments. It proved that the nobleman didn't care about the King, his son, or honor. He only followed his own whims. One day he didn't want to come, the next day he did. It was a disgrace to the king.
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Speaker 4: Bind him hand and foot.
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Speaker 2: The king shouted to his guards. They tackled him to the ground and tied him up.
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Speaker 4: Throw him outside into the darkness, where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth.
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Speaker 2: The man was tossed out of the palace and rolled down a dirt hill, hitting the jagged stones below. He laid there for hours, forced to listen to the sound of music and laughter from up above.
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Speaker 1: Jesus looked out at the faces listening. They had all been called by God. He was pleading with them to come near and accept his invitation. Yet the religious leaders couldn't grasp it. They were lost and too self absorbed to see the squandered opportunity. Jesus placed his arm at his side and sighed.
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Speaker 2: Many are called, many are invited to the table, yet few are chosen. Few accept the invitation, few wear their garments, and few enjoy what God has offered them.
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Speaker 3: Grace gives invitation rejection. This story is jam packed with intense commentary on the Kingdom of God. Did you catch it? On the outset, we are introduced to a king who arranges a marriage for his son. It doesn't take a biblical scholar to understand that metaphor, the king is God and the son is Jesus. The imagery of the wedding is a symbol of our union, joy, and celebration in the Kingdom of Heaven. It represents God's invitation to humanity to partake in the eternal communion with him. In Revelation, the church is brought into the fold of God and it's referred to as a wedding feast. You see, this king extends an invitation with eagerness and generosity, desi iring nothing more than for the presence of his guests, but these people refuse. Their rejection is puzzling, and honestly, it becomes tragic. Over time. They show ambivalence and even anger at the invitation, as if joining the king for a feast is somehow insulting. But isn't this how life is When people are invited into the kingdom of God. Some people treat it with ambivalence and others treat it with straight up anger. You see, this story reflects a reality deeply ingrained in the human condition. It's the tendency to disregard God's gracious invitation to a life of abundance and purpose. These invited guests, absorbed with their own pursuits, are indifferent to the King's call. This symbolizes the resistance often encountered by the Gospel in people's hearts, but at the time it was also a commentary on the resistance of the religious elite and the Pharisees and the priests.
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Speaker 1: Of the time.
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Speaker 3: Their rejection wasn't grounded in any reason, but rather a wilful disregard of Jesus's invitation the King's generosity. This parable was meant to jabb a little bit at the Jewish system of the time that had seemed to reject the Kingdom of God altogether. But this can also speak to our hearts in modern day. Sometimes our hearts are too consumed with self to appreciate the wonderful invitation God offers to us. Ses Lewis described it like a child playing in the mud, so content with his little game in the dirt that he actually rejects an invitation of a lifetime of adventure out at sea. In this parable, even though the people showed indifference, the King still invites them again a second time. He sends servants to tell everyone that it's time for the wedding feast, so get prepared and come on over. But this time the people invited act out with anger and spite, some even resort to violence. This is a pattern that happens today. Some people start indifferent towards the gospel, but the more they hear it, the more angry and hostile they become. That's because the methods of Jesus challenges us. It challenges our flesh and our earthly understanding. It calls us to humility and love over pride and selfishness. Not everyone welcomes that type of invitation, and this was certainly true with the Pharisees, the priests, and the religious system of the time that Jesus was trying to rebuke. Here, in a dramatic turn of events, the king decides to open up the invitation to everyone, So not just the nobles and the landowners of the time, but also to the paupers, the cobblers, the beggars on the streets. Everyone, the bad and the good, from the highways to the hills, are invited to dine with the king. This radical inclusivity was scandalous to say at the time, and it also underscores the boundless grace of God, extending beyond conventional boundaries to embrace all of humanity. The wedding hall filled with guests is a powerful image of the church, a community of the cult comprised not just of the inherently righteous, but those who have responded to the call of grace from the alleyways from the brothels from the miri clay. This was a reflection of Jesus's ministry. He dined with tax collector sinners. He welcomed vagabonds in vague ragrance. Jesus welcomes priests and prostitutes alike. Yet within the celebration of grace, a moment of reckoning actually emerges. The King notices a guest without a wedding garment. This is an emblem of righteousness in preparation, highlighting a stark reality. Accepting the invitation carries the responsibility to honor the King's provision. You see, this noble was willing to enter into the King's court, but he wanted to do so on his own terms, his own timing. He wanted to wear his own garment. He refused to accept the covering that the King offered. This man's presence without a wedding garment is not merely a social full paw. It signifies a more profound disregard for our King's authority in the nature of the event itself, this man's expulsion into the outer darkness as a sobering reminder of the fate that befalls any of us. Who treat the Kingdom of Heaven with contempt, any of us that think we can wear our own garments, that, by our own righteousness and according to our own rules, we can somehow enter into eternity with God. If you want to accept the king's invitation, you have to wear the king's garment. That's just how it goes. You don't get it your own way. And that's actually a good thing, because what the King provides is far better than what you and I can provide for ourselves. If you want to enjoy the king's feast, you have to wear the king's clothes. Listen. If you want to enjoy eternal life with God, you have to wear the identity of Christ. It's only through faith and Him that were welcomed into the party. In good news, being given that garment isn't dependent on your performance, your morality, whether you're a noble, a landowner, but rather your willingness to accept God's grace and follow him. These vagrants, these beggars, they all got to enter into the wedding feast. They all got to wear wedding garments. Didn't matter what their socioeconomic status was, what their cultural creed was. They were welcomed in because they were willing to accept the generosity of the king. And that's really what it boils down to. Are we willing to accept the generosity of our king? This parable, culminating the declaration that many are called, but few are chosen, invites us to reflect on the nature of our response to God's invitation. It challenges us to consider whether we approach the Kingdom of God with the reverence and readiness at demands, or do we take for granted the grace that invites us into the feast. As we contemplate this parable, let's remember the wedding feast of the Lamb is prepared and the invitation is extended to all of us, no matter what our past was. May we not only accept the invitation with joy, but also adorn ourselves in the garments of righteousness provided through Christ. In doing so, we affirm our place at the feast, participating fully in the joy and celebration of the Kingdom of Heaven. Thanks for joining me on today's episode of the Jesus Podcast. If this podcast has offered any value to your life, we would love it if you left us a review. The reviews are pouring in and we love seeing your testimonies. Keep them coming. We read each and every one of them, and for more inspiring stories, daily devotionals in wisdom to last a lifetime. Download the Prey dot com AFT today