He Came unto His Own but His Own did not Receive Him
Matthew 21:28-22:14
A few days before Jesus died on the cross He told the people
more stories and parables. And this time
Jesus told stories that were not mainly about God’s love and blessing towards
his people but stories that were about God’s anger and judgment and about God
taking away his blessings from his people.
These are difficult stories to read and I didn’t want to include them in
my blog, but of course I have to. There
are some preachers today who only tell the nice happy stories in the Bible and
leave these dark mysterious stories alone.
But we must read all of God’s Word! The words of love and grace and the words of
warning and judgment. The words we
understand and the words we don’t. Take
in the whole counsel of God. And the
same Bible that tells us that our God is a God of love and mercy also tells us
that our God is a God of justice and judgment.
God loves everyone and wants to forgive every person on
earth. God wants all of his wandering
children to come home to Him. But God
doesn’t make everyone come to Him or force everyone to love Him! Never! God’s children can refuse to accept His gift
of forgiveness and love. We can reject
God and refuse to speak to Him. And when
we cut Him off long enough our actions will have consequences!
In speaking about Jesus Christ the Scriptures say: “He came
unto his own, and his own did not receive Him.
But as many as received Him, to them He gave the power to become the
children of God, to those who believe in his name.” (John 1:11-12) Jesus came first to his own people, the
Jewish people. Scripture says: “to the
Jew first, and also to the Greek.” (Romans 1:16)
Once during Jesus’ ministry a non-Jewish woman comes to
Jesus and begs him to heal her sick child.
But when she first asks, Jesus ignores her request! Finally He explains to her why He had ignored
her. He tells her that the food should
be given to the children and not to the dogs – meaning that Jesus’ gift of salvation
and his healing miracles (the food) were meant first for the “children” (the
Jewish people) who believed in God and not for the “dogs” (the non-Jewish
people who were idol worshippers).
But then the Gentile
(non-Jewish) woman keeps begging Jesus and finally she tells Jesus that even
the dogs eat the scraps that are dropped under the table by the children while
they are eating. At this Jesus is so
moved by this humble woman that He heals her daughter and commends her for her
faith. This story illustrates how Jesus’
gifts were meant to be given to the Jewish people first before any non-Jew at
that time. The time for the Gentiles to be
included in salvation and blessings had not come then, and that is why Jesus
put the non-Jewish woman off at first.
These things are God’s mysteries that we can only wonder about.
When Jesus’ gift of salvation was not received by the Jewish
religious leaders of his generation and also with many of the Jewish people, it
was finally time for this precious gift of salvation that Jesus brought to be
shared with non-Jews as well. And Jesus’ parables that He tells to the
religious leaders gets this point across.
Jesus’ Parable of the
Wedding Feast begins with the king inviting his very closest friends and
relatives (the Jewish people) to this special wedding feast for his son. Many fine dinner preparations are made but
the relatives and friends of the king make fun of the king’s invitation and
don’t bother to answer him as to whether they will be attending. Several of the king’s relatives harm the
king’s servants who come with the invitations and others even kill some of the
servants delivering the invitations.
The king is angry and hurt that his own loved ones and
family have treated him badly and he sends out his armies to destroy some of
them. Then he tells his servants to go
out into the highways and invite as many people as they can find both bad and
good so that the wedding halls will be filled with guests feasting and celebrating
his son’s wedding. The story ends with
the king arriving and looking around at all of the guests enjoying his lavish wedding
party. The king is pleased; however one
man is not wearing a wedding garment.
(The king had given each guest a special garment to wear to the
wedding.) So Jesus’ story ends with this
man who is not wearing the correct attire being thrown out of the wedding party. (Matthew 22:1-14)
Of course the king’s beloved relatives who were given their
invitations first and refused were the
children of Israel ,
God’s people. In antiquity the nation of
Israel
had learned to worship God alone while all of the other nations were heathens sacrificing
to idols. So the king in the story (God)
invites his people (Israel )
to the wedding for his son – (offers them salvation through his Son, Jesus and
eternal life in his kingdom) .But many of the king’s relatives and close
friends ignore his invitation and the king is angry and deeply hurt.
A lavish dinner
(spiritual blessings) has been prepared and a gala party is to be given but
there are no guests to come and enjoy.
The upset king sends his servants into the highways (Matt.21:8-9) to
invite everyone- the rich and the poor, the good and the bad -to receive his
gift of salvation. (Evangelization of
the Gentiles or non-Jews) But when a
wedding guest tries to slip into the wedding but does not bother to wear the
proper clothing, he is thrown out. (Jesus takes away our sins and clothes us
with his righteousness. We cannot enter
heaven on our own strength – wearing our own dirty clothes. We must be clothed
in the righteousness of our Savior. Our
own righteousness (our dirty clothes) is not appropriate for the kingdom
wedding and not good enough!
The second parable Jesus tells is similar to this first one
and has a similar meaning I believe. - The Parable of the Wicked Vinedresser. (Matthew
21:33-41) The story goes that the owner
of a vineyard goes on a long trip and leaves his vineyard in the care of
renters who are supposed to care for the vineyard and live off of it. Each year the owner will send his servants to
the vineyard to see how it is doing and to collect the owner’s share of the
yearly crop. (or the rent) But each year
when the owners’ servants travel back to the vineyard to collect his share of
the fruits from the yearly crop they are beaten up by the renters and the owner
of the vineyard never receives his share of the grapes that were grown on his
land.
Finally the owner
sends his son to collect the rent.
“Surely, my renters will respect my son and give him my part of the
fruit from the crop,” he thinks. But instead,
when the renters see the son coming down the road they decide to kill him! They reason that since the son will inherit
the vineyard from the owner that if they kill him they can take over the
vineyard. So the scheming renters ambush
the son and kill him! When word gets
back to the owner he is terribly grieved and angry and sends his soldiers to
throw the murdering renters out of his property. And then the owner rents his vineyard out to new
people. Jesus was saying that the new tenants (everyone who accepts Christ)
would enjoy the king’s lush vineyard now ands the original tenants (the Jewish
nation) would lose their favored spot in the vineyard because they rejected the
son.
Jesus tells another story about the “Cornerstone”.(Matthew
21:42-44) He starts out by reading this
Scripture: “The stone which the builders rejected has become the chief
cornerstone.” (Psalm 118:22) And concerning this “stone” Jesus says:
“Whoever falls on this stone will be broken: but on whomever it falls, it will
grind him to powder.” (Matthew 21:44) Jesus is the Cornerstone in the story. (Ephesians 2:20, 1 Corinthians 3:11 and Acts.
4:11) He was talking about Himself. Jesus, the Cornerstone holds up everything
and his church is built upon Him. We believers
are called “living stones”. Jesus is
telling the religious leaders that they have rejected the very stone that is
the chief cornerstone. And then Jesus
warns that rejecting this stone that holds everything in place (rejecting
Jesus) has consequences. Smaller stones
can be broken or ground to powder if the builder disregards the Cornerstone by
not putting these stones in their right place.
These stories of Jesus teach that after He was rejected by
his own people, the Gentiles – and many Jews too, were to have their time where
they were to become the Church through Jesus Christ. (Romans 11 and 12) The Jewish nation had their special time and
now it seems to be the Gentile’s turn.
But Scripture also teaches that the whole nation of Israel will
once again be brought to Jesus and will acknowledge him as their Messiah and
Savior at the close of the time of the Gentile prominence. (Romans 11:25) We cannot understand these mysteries of God,
but God would not be God if we could understand everything He does. But we can trust that God who knows the
beginning from the end and has created everything and is just and all knowing
and merciful and loving knows what He is doing.
And His plans for all of his children are past finding out.
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Have you ever considered publishing an ebook or guest authoring on other sites?
ReplyDeleteI have a blog centered on the same information you
discuss and would really like to have you share some stories/information.
I know my subscribers would value your work.
If you're even remotely interested, feel free to shoot me an email.
Look at my blog post Vita Creams
Hello! I don't have your e-mail address. Send it to me if you want to and I can answer. I checked out your blog and unfortunately it did not come up on my screen. Then when it did come up it was in another language that I cannot translate at this time. I will try again another time.
ReplyDeleteYes, maybe when I have more time I could consider publishing an ebook. Feel free to share some of my blog stories on your blog if you wish.
blessings,
Jane