Skip to main content

Matthew 22:8-12 Gather all that you find - Day 22

Good afternoon fellow hearers and doers of the Word

As I look back on what I wrote over a year ago, I think I may not have been consistently using Luther's 4 strand analogy.  The instruction/text book strand is to focus on what we learn about God, not trying to find ourselves in the passage..  Not sure where I picked up the "thoughts converge on God" but it gets this concept across.  

Second, we have heard how "pray moves the hand of God."  But my experience has been that by the time  a praise God for who He is and confess that I am not living the truth of who He is, my "daily need" petitions are not nearly so important as I thought they were.  In this passage, the servants don't get to ask the King why they are doing this, they just obey.

Maybe this explains why I was uncertain after I wrote this last year.

Blessings,

Jeff

Converge on God - if the invited guests were the Jews, then the guests who were invited in their place are we Gentiles. Indiscriminate gathering by God's servants.  Both bad and good are present. Like the wheat and the tares, the visible church is not made up of only believers. Of course, it should have been obvious to all who had a wedding garment and who doesn't. But only the king can make this distinction.  Activity in the Church is not the sign of spiritual rebirth. Transformed minds and lives are the wedding garments. 

We are instructed to invite indiscriminately. 

P.M. - so why do I spend so much time thinking about prayer and how it changes the one who prays?  What's the big deal?  Did the servants in this parable pray about what they were doing or did they just obey?  Did they learn something about the king's relationship with the Gentile invitees?  

I feel very uncertain about what this message is to accomplish.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

2 Chronicles 33:7-9 Thoughts on Davidic covenant - Day 362

Good morning faithful readers, The finish line is in sight!!!  One of the themes of scripture is that God is a covenant keeping God.  There are many between God and man. Adam, Noah, David are examples.  Covenants are more than promises.  They are made between a superior and inferior with conditions for each side and blessing and penalties based on keeping the conditions.  These are covenants of works which fallen man was unable to keep.  Thanks be to God that the Father made a covenant of grace with Christ, the second Adam, which he fully kept. Blessings, Jeff The promise in v8 was made to David when he had planned to build the temple and God promised to build him a house forever. (2 Sam 7:10).  Seems like there are only two possibilities about Manasseh's disobedience.  Either he knew of this covenant that God had made with his 13th great grandfather and chose to disregard it, or he didn't know of it and was unaware of the penalty.  Let's con...

2 Chronicles 30:16-20 Hearts set to seek the Lord - Day 359

Good morning fellow members of the household of God, After writing the devotional, I am thinking about the Passover as a household event.  In ancient Israel, the physical household of man was covered by the blood of the lamb.  Now, it is the spiritual household of God that is covered by the blood of the Lamb. Blessings, Jeff The account of the greatest celebration of Passover since time of Solomon (v 26).   Observations: One of the things that made this one great is participation of some of the tribes from the northern kingdom.  Israel was a united kingdom and Solomon and now toward the end of the northern kingdom, there is at least a semblance of being united. God allows some exemptions: Who offers the sacrifice:  The original Passover was a family by family sacrifice of a lamb.  However in  Deuteronomy 16:5-6 this changed to a centralized location once they entered the promised land.  (You may not offer the Passover sacrifice within any of ...

2 Chronicles 35:23-26 Lament for the last good king - Day 364

Good morning fellow exiles and pilgrims, One more day of devotions.  We are indeed exiles and pilgrims in this world as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen.  The 20th anniversary of 9/11 attacks can serve as a reminder that this world is not our home. Blessings, Jeff The lamentations for Josiah written by Jeremiah.  However, the book of Lamentations does not include any reference to Josiah as they are focused on the fall of Jerusalem.  While these lost lamentations were "made the rule" there are only 4 more kings and none of them were good like Josiah and none died in Jerusalem.  The phrase "to this day" generally refers to the time of the author (post exile).  Taken together, it may be that these laments were for the last good king and during the exile the people were longing for the next good king. Zerubbabel in a way was the next good king as temple and Jerusalem were rebuilt. But Jesus truly was the next king and He...