Sermon Title: The Invitation
I. Left to ourselves we are clothed in filthy rags.
II. Through Christ we are clothed in wedding garments.
THROUGH
THE CROSS WE ARE CLOTHED IN CHRIST JESUS AND HIS RIGHTEOUSNESS AND
ALLOWED INTO THE FEAST OF THE BRIDEGROOM AND THE BRIDE.
In
the name of the Father, and the Son + and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Grace,
mercy and peace from God our Father and our LORD and Savior Jesus
Christ. Amen.
The
text for today's sermon is taken from the Gospel lesson just read.
Dear
Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
Or
we've traipsed out to the mail box months ago to find tucked among
the long envelopes of bills and catalogs and Little Caesar's coupons
something decidedly different than the rest of the mail – a more
squarish-shaped, highly decorative envelope, one adorned with
calligraphy and gold embossing, one that has a bit of a heft to it –
a wedding invitation.
I.
Today's
text deals with a similar situation – only in this case it is
infinitely more important and eternally more devastating if forgotten
or neglected.
In
the previous chapter to our Gospel lesson Jesus enters the Temple –
having just cleansed it two days prior – and He is immediately
challenged by the chief priests and elders asking about His authority
to do and say what He has done and said.
Jesus
begins to speak to them in parables. First He tells of the two sons
who are told to go to work in the vineyard (Matthew 21:28-32). One
says no but then goes and works and the other says yes and then
doesn't go out to work.
The
second parable Jesus tells is about the tenants of the vineyard who
have beaten and stoned the Landlord's servants, and then when the
Landlord sends His own Son to them, they kill Him (Matthew 21:33-46).
In
the last parable that Jesus tells – our text today – Jesus speaks
of a wedding of a King who throws a wedding feast for His Son and His
Bride (Matthew 22:1-14). Those who were invited have found other
things to occupy themselves – they don't have time for a wedding!
So the King sends out servants to invite any and all who would come
be a part of His Son's wedding feast.
In
all three parables Jesus is speaking to the chief priests and elders,
the scribes and the Pharisees and Sadducees – in other words Jesus
is speaking to GOD'S chosen people! And what He says to them is wake
up before it's too late! They are – in each of the parables – the
son who said yes, but then didn't go out to work, the tenants who
keep killing the servants and then the Son of the Landlord, and then
the invited guests who were too busy to be bothered with this wedding
feast.
These
servants whom the tenants beat and stone, and the servants whom
the original invited guests from our text today kill and treat shamefully –
these servants are the very prophets of Israel whom the Israelites
themselves beat and killed.
In
these three parables Jesus tells this brood of vipers that the
Kingdom will be given to prostitutes and tax collectors, to Gentiles
who will produce fruits unlike the sterile fig tree Jesus cursed in
Matthew 21, to complete strangers out on the roads who will be
brought to the feast led by the Holy Spirit of the LORD. These will
be those who will inherit the Vineyard, these will inherit the
Kingdom of the LORD, these will inherit the true promised land –
Heaven itself!
But
before we get too caught up in our pride and begin to think we are so
much better than they – let us take a long gaze into the mirror at
ourselves and begin attacking the log in our own eye.
We
too have been invited to this feast and whether we are honest with
ourselves or not, the mirror on the wall doesn't lie – it shows
clear and true what we are. Sinners.
For
we too set aside the invitation. And we know better – as did the
Pharisees. We know we should be at church on Sundays. We know we
should read our Bibles daily. We know we should be in Bible study on
a regular basis. We know we should be setting aside time to pray. We
know we should love the LORD our God with all of our heart and soul
and mind. We know we should love our neighbor as our self. So did
the Pharisees!
And
just like the Pharisees – we do what we want versus what the LORD
wants. We love ourselves way more than the LORD. We despise
preaching and His Word. We lie, cheat, steal and lust. And if we
love ourselves more than the LORD, what chance does our neighbor
have?
We
are poor. We our miserable. And we are certainly sinners – by what
we have done and what we have left undone. We stand in the middle of
the wedding feast without – as St. Matthew writes – a wedding
garment. We might as well put our hands behind our backs and our
feet together and wait to be bound and thrown out into the outer
darkness amongst the weeping and gnashing of teeth. Left to
ourselves, left to our own pitiful attempts at self-preservation,
left to redeem ourselves, this hell in the outer darkness would be
our lot – for eternity.
II.
Thanks
be to GOD this is not the case! Thanks be to GOD He had a plan of
reclamation, redemption, and salvation! For the LORD sent out His Son
to do exactly what He was doing that Holy Week – to preach and
teach and even go the way of the Cross. Yes, the Son of Man must be
lifted up. And just like the serpent lifted up by Moses in the
wilderness for the healing of Israel, so Jesus lifted up on the
Cross heals you, and it heals me.
“Behold
the Lamb of GOD who takes away the sin of the world,” [John 1:29] shouted John
upon seeing Jesus. The innocent Lamb laid upon the Cross for us, for
the forgiveness of our sins.
And
where do we receive this forgiveness? Look no further than the Cross
of Christ. There the Word become flesh is nailed to the tree –
water and blood pour from His side. There captured in this picture of
our Savior, Jesus Christ, the Son of GOD, we have the only place to
find the forgiveness of sins.
St.
John writes in his first epistle...
For
there are three that testify: the Spirit and the water and the
blood; and these three agree. [1 John 5:7-8]
So
here in this pulpit where the Word is rightly preached, we have the
Spirit – the One who inspired the writing of the Holy Scriptures,
the very Word of GOD. In this font we have the life giving waters of
Holy Baptism. On this altar we have the very body and blood of our
Savior – all three for the forgiveness of sins.
These
three testify – the Spirit, the water and the blood – that Jesus
is the Christ, the Son of the living GOD. Just like Adam and Eve
were clothed in the skins of animals sacrificed for their well being
– through the Word and Baptism and Communion we are clothed with
Christ's sacrifice on the Cross for our well being – truly for our
forgiveness. It is in Jesus that we find we are not without a wedding
garment.
It's
by design that the Church calls for a an outer white garment for the
infant (or adult) in Holy Baptism. And at the end of life a white
pall is placed over the casket before it proceeds into the church for
the funeral. These represent Christ and His righteousness – earned
in a perfect life, death and resurrection – covering us completely
from the beginning of our life in Him to the end of our earthly life.
Not
too far down the road we will begin the season of the Church year
called Advent and in the beginning couple of weeks we will set our
eyes – not on the Baby Jesus born in Bethlehem – but on the
resurrected Jesus and His second coming. St. John writes in the book
of Revelation...
These are the white garments given us in our faith in Baptism and in death in Christ – these are our wedding garments. May Christ's return find us ever watchful, ever vigilant, ever ready by the means of His Holy Spirit giving us our very faith and steadfastness in Christ Jesus. Amen.
In the name of the Father, and the Son + and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
The peace of the LORD – which surpasses all understanding – will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus our LORD. Amen.
+
Soli Deo Gloria +
