George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
June 23
The Great Supper -- Part I
And sent his servant at supper time to
say to them that were bidden, Come; For all things are now ready. And they all
with one consent began to make excuse. Then the master of the house being angry
said to his servant bring in hither the poor, and the maimed, and the halt, and
the blind--Luk 14:17, Luk 14:18, Luk 14:21
The Peril of the Neglected Invitation
At the table of the chief Pharisee, where
Jesus was reclining when He spoke this parable, the guests were almost without
exception His enemies in disguise. But there was one man among them who was
favorably inclined to Jesus. He had been impressed, in spite of his prejudices,
by the lofty teaching of the young prophet. So strong, indeed, had the
impression been that to the great amazement of his fellow-guests he cried out,
when Jesus had finished speaking, "Blessed is he that shall eat bread in
the kingdom of God." Now there can be no doubt that the speaker was
blessing himself. It never occurred to him to question for a moment that he
would share in the feasting of the kingdom. Christ therefore turns to him and
addresses to him the parable of the Great Supper. It was meant to rouse that
guest out of his self-complacency. It comes with the same message to you and
me. There are few perils so great and so unnoticed as the peril of the
neglected invitation.
A certain man, then, said our Lord, made a
great supper. He sent his invitations for it freely. And when the table was
served, and everything was ready, he despatched his servant with a courteous
reminder, in accordance with an old custom of the East (Pro 9:3), which, as the
travelers tell us, has not yet quite died out. But with one voice all the
guests begged off. They were all busy--might they not be excused? And there was
nothing for it but for the servant to go home again, and tell his master that
they refused to come. Then the master was angry at his slighted welcome, for he
saw clearly what the excuses implied. So he sent out his servant into the
streets and lanes, and bade call in the poor and the blind and the lame, and we
know that in the streets of Eastern cities a man does not walk far to light on
these. It was done quickly; so quickly indeed that some would have it that the
servant had anticipated his master's wish. But even yet, so spacious was the
chamber, the places at the table were not all full. "Away then, out
through the city gates!" cries out the host. "Away to the country
roads, and to the hedge-banks, and compel the waifs and the vagrants to come
in." And I dare say the servant, looking through the hedges, saw the first
guest, who had excused himself, strutting and fussing in his new piece of
ground. But the house of the entertainer was filled at last. The door was shut,
and the glad feast begun. I wonder if the man who sat at the table with Jesus,
and to whom this wonderful parable was spoken--I wonder if he was as ready now
with his self-satisfied ejaculation, "Blessed is he that shall eat bread
in the kingdom of God."
The Kingdom of God Is Like a Great
Supper
Note first that the kingdom of God is
described as a supper. That is the figure Christ chooses for it here. Now it
is, of course, quite true that supper is an evening meal--it is the last meal
of the day. And some have thought there was a hint in that of the final nature
of the Gospel-call; as if God, who had fed the world with many an earlier
banquet, closed His provision for the world's day with Jesus. But it is better
and safer to remember that this meal called supper was the principal meal. It
was the chief hour for appeasing hunger; it was the chosen time of fellowship
and rest. And all these features of the supper table, idealized long since in
Psalm and prophecy, made it very expressive, for our Lord, of the rich and
varied blessings of His kingdom. Had not He come to satisfy men's cravings, to
bring them to a knowledge of His Father? Had He not said, "Come unto Me
and I will give you rest"? Was He not often speaking of His joy? It was
such things that were symbolized for Christ under this figure of the Gospel
supper. Neither the mustard-seed nor yet the hidden treasure more truly and
fully conveyed the message of God's grace, than did the great supper of our
parable.
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