|
|
Parable
of the Marriage Feast
[The following sermon is taken from volume V:227-235 of The Sermons of Martin Luther, published by Baker Book House (Grand Rapids, MI, 1983). It was originally published in 1905 in English by Lutherans in All Lands (Minneapolis, MN), as The Precious and Sacred Writings of Martin Luther, vol. 14. The pagination from the Baker edition has been maintained for referencing. This e-text was scanned and edited by Richard P. Bucher, it is in the public domain and it may be copied and distributed without restriction.]
Page
227 ---------------------------
PARABLE
OF THE KING WHO MADE A MARRIAGE FEAST FOR HIS SON.
1.
This Gospel presents to us the parable of the wedding; therefore
we are compelled to understand it differently than it sounds and
appears to the natural ear and eye. Hence we will give attention
to the spiritual meaning of the parable, and then notice how the
text has been torn and perverted.
2.
First, the King, who prepared the marriage feast, is our heavenly
Father. The bridegroom is his Son, our Lord
Page
228 ---------------------------
Jesus
Christ. The bride is the Christian Church, we and the whole world,
in so far as we believe, of which we shall hear later.
3.
God first sent out his servants, the Prophets to invite guests
to this wedding; they were to bid them, that is, preach, and preach
only faith in Christ. But those invited did not come; they were
the Jews, to whom the Prophets were sent, they would not hear
nor receive those sent to them. At another time he sent other
servants, the Apostles and martyrs, to bid us come, and to say
to the bidden guests, "Behold, I have made ready my dinner;
my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all things are ready;
come to the marriage feast."
4.
These words beautifully picture to us and teach how we should
make use of the life of the saints; namely, to introduce examples
by which the doctrine of the Gospel may be confirmed, so that
we may the better, by the aid of such examples and lives, meditate
upon Christ, and be nourished by and feast upon him as upon fatlings
and well fed oxen. This is the reason he calls them fatlings.
Take an example: Paul teaches in Rom. 3, 23f. how the bride is
full of sin and must be sprinkled by the blood of Christ alone,
or she will continue unclean, that is, she must only believe that
the blood of Christ was shed for her sins, and there is no other
salvation possible. Then he beautifully introduces the example
of Abraham and confirms the doctrine of faith by the faith and
life of Abraham, and says, 4, 3: "And Abraham believed God,
and it was reckoned unto him for righteousness." That is
a true ox, it is properly slain, it nourishes us, so that we become
grounded and strengthened in our faith by the example and faith
of Abraham. Again, soon after Paul lays before us a fine fatling,
when he cites David the Prophet of God and proves from him, that
God does not justify us by virtue of our works, but by faith,
when he says, Rom. 4, 6-8: "Even as David also pronounceth
blessing upon the man, unto whom God reckoneth righteousness apart
from works," saying in Ps. 32, 1-2: "Blessed are they
whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered.
Page
229 ---------------------------
Blessed
is the man to whom the Lord will not reckon sin." Behold,
that fattens and nourishes in the true sense, when we use the
example and doctrine of pious saints to confirm our own doctrine
and faith. And this is the true honor that we can give to the
saints. Follow now further in this Gospel:
5.
"But they made light of it, and went their ways, one to his
own farm, another to his merchandise; and the rest laid hold on
his servants, and treated them shamefully, and killed them."
These are the three barriers that prevent us from coming to the
marriage feast. The first, or the farm, signifies our honor; it
is a great hindrance that we do not think of Christ and believe
in him; we fear we must suffer shame and become dishonored, and
we do not believe that God can protect us from shame and preserve
us in honor. The second go to their spheres of business, that
is, they fall with their hearts into their worldly affairs, into
avarice, and when they should cleave to the Word, they worry lest
they perish and their stomachs fail them; they do not trust God
to sustain them. The third class are the worst, they are the high,
wise and prudent, the exalted spirits, they not only despise but
martyr and destroy the servants; in order to retain their own
honor and praise, yea, in order to be something. For the Gospel
must condemn their wisdom and righteousness and curse their presumption.
This they cannot suffer; therefore they go ahead and kill the
servants who invited them to the dinner and the marriage feast.
They were the Pharisees and scribes, who put to death both Christ
and his Apostles, as their fathers did the Prophets. These are
much worse than the first and second classes, who, although they
despised and rejected the invitation, yet then went away and neither
condemned nor destroyed the servants.
6.
Further, the Gospel says: "But the king was wroth; and he
sent his armies and destroyed those murderers, and burned their
city." That happened to the Jews through the Romans under
Titus and Vespasian, who burned Jerusalem to the ground, to its
very foundation. However I prefer to have it understood spiritually,
since the whole Gospel is to
Page
230 ---------------------------
be
explained spiritually. Hence this came to pass when God totally
destroyed and burned to the ground the synagogue at Jerusalem,
he entirely abandoned faith, scattered the people hither and thither,
so that none remained together and they were robbed both of their
priesthood and of their kingdom; so that there is not now a poorer,
a more miserable and forsaken people on the earth than the Jews.
Such is the end of the despisers of God's Word.
7.
It now follows: "Then saith he to his servants, The wedding
is ready, but they that were bidden were not worthy." This
has also come to pass; for the Jews have not desired to know anything
at all of Christ; they put him to death, also the Prophets and
Apostles, and from that time to the present they have not been
worthy to hear a word concerning Christ.
8.
Further: "Then he said to them, Go ye therefore unto the
partings of the highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to
the marriage feast." Hence they went out into the highways,
namely, to us heathen, and gathered us together from the ends
of the world into a congregation, in which are good and bad.
9.
Then the King goes in to behold the guests. This will take place
on the day of judgment, when the King will let himself be seen.
10.
Then he will find one, not only a single person, but a large company
not clothed with a wedding garment, that is, with faith. These
are pious people, much better than the foregoing; for you must
consider them the ones who have heard and understood the Gospel,
yet they cleaved to certain works and did not creep entirely into
Christ; like the foolish virgins, who had no oil, that is, no
faith.
11.
To them the King will say: "Bind him hand and foot, and cast
him out into the outer darkness," that is, he condemns their
good works, that they no longer avail anything; for the hands
signify their work, the feet their walk in life, and he will then
cast them into the outer darkness.
12.
Now, this outer darkness is in contrast with the inner light,
since faith alone must see within the heart. There our
Page
231 ---------------------------
light,
our reason must be covered and cease, and faith alone lighten
us. For if a person will act according to reason and open it,
there is nothing but death, hell and sin before his eyes. Reason
then considers itself a candidate for death; yet it finds no help
in any creature, all is a desert and dark. Therefore reason must
be barred out here, or it must despair and surrender itself as
a captive to the light of faith alone. This same light then sees
that it is God in heaven who is interested in us, who cares for
us, upon whom the heart can meditate, who rejects all aid of reason
and depends upon no creature; then man will be sustained. Now
this is the sense of the words, that those cast thus into outer
darkness will be robbed of faith, and thus cast out. Since they
do not cleave to God's mercy alone through faith, they must despair
and be condemned.
13.
Let us now briefly notice what is taught by this marriage feast.
First, this marriage feast is a union of the divine nature with
the human. And the great love Christ has for us is presented to
us in this picture of the wedding feast. For there are many kinds
of love, but none is so ardent and fervent as a bride's love,
the love a new bride has to her bridegroom, and on the other hand,
the bridegroom's love to the bride. True love has no regard for
pleasures or presents, or riches, or gold rings and the like;
but cares only for the bridegroom. And if he even gave her all
he had, she would regard none of his presents, but say: I will
have only thee. And if on the other hand he has nothing at all,
it makes no difference with her, she will in spite of all that
desire him. That is the true nature of the love of a bride. But
where one has regard to pleasure, it is harlot-love; she does
not care for him, but for the money; therefore such love does
not last long.
14.
This true bride-love God presented to us in Christ, in that he
allowed him to become man for us and be united with our human
nature that we might thus perceive and appreciate his good will
toward us. Now, as the bride loves her betrothed, so also does
Christ love us; and we on the other hand will love him, if we
believe and are the true
Page
232 ---------------------------
bride.
And although he gave us even heaven, the wisdom of all the Prophets,
the glory of all the saints and angels, yet we would not esteem
them unless he gave us himself. The bride can be satisfied by
nothing, is insatiable, the only one thing she wants is the bridegroom
himself; as she says in the Song of Solomon, 2, 16: "My beloved
is mine, and I am his." She cannot rest until she has her
beloved himself. So is Christ also on the other hand disposed
toward me: he will have me only, and besides nothing. And if I
gave him even all I could, it would be of no use to him; he would
have no regard for it, even if I wore all the hoods of all the
monks. He wants my whole heart; for the outward things, as the
outward virtues, are only maid servants, he wants the wife herself.
He demands, that I say from the bottom of my heart: I am thine.
The union and the marriage are accomplished by faith, so that
I rely fully and freely upon him, that he is mine. If I only have
him, what can I desire more?
15.
Now, what do we give to him? An impure bride, a dirty, old, wrinkled
outcast. But he is the eternal wisdom, the eternal truth, the
eternal light, an exceptionally beautiful youth. What does he
give us then? Himself, wholly and completely. He does not cut
a piece off for me or give me a little morsel, but the whole fountain
of eternal wisdom, not a little brooklet. If then I am thus his
and he mine, I have eternal life, righteousness and all that belongs
to him. Therefore I am righteous, saved, and in a sense that neither
death, sin, hell, nor satan can harm me. If he gave me only a
part of his wisdom, righteousness and life, I would say: That
is of no help to me, but I want thee, without thee nothing is
real and true. When he gives me his servants, his Prophets, he
gives me only a part and a morsel; the gifts are only concubines,
among whom there is only one who is the true bride. They are distinguished
thus: there are many souls to whom gifts are made, as, wisdom,
love and the like; but they are not the true brides, for they
do not say, Thou art mine: but they court your purse on the side,
for they love the gifts. But the true bride says: Thee alone will
I
Page
233 ---------------------------
have,
thou art mine, and not the ring, not the jewel, not the present.
The above is all spoken of love.
16.
Now, what do we bring to him? Nothing but all our heart-aches,
all our misfortunes, sins, misery and lamentations. He is the
eternal light, we the eternal darkness; he the life, we death;
he righteousness, we sin. This is a marriage that is very unequal.
But what does the bridegroom do? He is so fastidious that he will
not dwell with his bride until he first adorns her in the highest
degree. How is that done? The Apostle Paul teaches that when he
says in Tit. 3, 5-6: "He gave his tender body unto death
for them and sprinkled them with his holy blood and cleansed them
through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit."
He instituted a washing; that washing is baptism, with which he
washes her. More than this, he has given to her his Word; in that
she believes and through her faith she becomes a bride. The bridegroom
comes with all his treasures; but I come with all my sins, with
all my misery and heart-griefs. But because this is a marriage
and a union, in the sense that they become one flesh, Gen. 2,
24; Mat. 19, 5, and they leave father and mother and cleave to
one another, they should embrace each other and not disown one
another, although one is even a little sick and awkward; for what
concerns one, the other must also bear.
17.
Therefore, the bride says, I am thine, thou must have me; then
he must at the same time take all my misfortune upon himself.
Thus then are my sins eternal righteousness, my death eternal
life, my hell heaven; for these two, sin and righteousness, cannot
exist together, nor heaven and hell. Are we now to come together
the one must consume and melt the other in order that we may be
united and become one. Now his righteousness is truly incomparably
stronger than my sins, and his life unmeasurably stronger than
my death; for he is life itself where all life must be kindled,
Therefore my death thus vanishes in his life, my sins in his righteousness
and my condemnation in his salvation. Here my sin is forced between
the hammer and the anvil, so that it perishes and vanishes. For
now since my sin, my filth is
Page
234 ---------------------------
taken
away he must adorn and clothe me with his eternal righteousness
and with all his grace until I become beautiful; for I am his
bride. Thus then I appropriate to myself all that he has, as he
takes to himself all that I have; as the Prophet Ezekiel 16, 6f
says: "I passed by thee, and thou wast naked, and thy breasts
were fashioned and were marriageable; then I spread my skirts
over thee and covered thy nakedness, gave thee my Word and put
on thee beautiful red shoes." Here he relates many kind acts
he did for her; and later he complains in verse 15, how she became
a harlot. He tells us all this, that he clothed us with his riches
and that we of ourselves have nothing. Whoso does not here lay
hold of this as sure, that he has nothing of himself, but only
Christ's riches and cannot without doubt say, Thou art mine, he
is not yet a Christian.
18.
Now since Christ is mine and I am his: if Satan rages, I have
Christ who is my life; does sin trouble me, I have Christ who
is my righteousness; do hell and perdition attack me, I have Christ,
who is my salvation. Thus, there may rage within whatever will,
if I have Christ, to him I can look so that nothing can harm me.
And this union of the divine with the human is pointed out in
the picture here of the marriage feast, and the exalted love God
has to us, in the love of the bride.
19.
Now the wedding garment is Christ himself, which is put on by
faith, as the Apostle says in Rom. 13, 14: "Put ye on the
Lord Jesus Christ." Then the garment gives forth a lustre
of itself, that is, faith in Christ bears fruit of itself, namely,
love which works through faith in Christ. These are the good works,
that also flash forth from faith, and entirely gratuitously do
they go forth, they are done alone for the good of our neighbor;
otherwise they are heathenish works, if they flow not out of faith;
they will later come to naught and be condemned, and be cast into
the outermost darkness.
20.
This is indicated here in the binding of his hands and feet. The
hands, as said, are the works, the feet the manner of life in
which he trusted and failed thus to cling to Christ
Page
235 ---------------------------
alone.
For we blame him that he had not on the wedding garment, that
is, Christ; therefore he must perish with his works; for they
did not sparkle forth from faith, from the garment. Hence will
you do good works, then believe first; if you will bear fruit,
then be a tree first, later the fruit will follow of itself.
21.
The mistake is also readily observed here, by which many have
perverted the Gospel in that they say: Although the Pope and his
following are wicked, yet we must obey him and acknowledge him
as the head of Christendom. Let him do what he may, and yet he
cannot err, and although he may not have on the wedding garment,
nevertheless he is in the congregation. But they are not so good
that one might compare them to the one who had not on the wedding
garment. They are the villains and murderers who killed the servants
of the King; and even if they were worthy to be compared to him,
yet the Gospel in this parable does not teach us to follow them,
but to cast them out and protect ourselves against them. For whoever
has not on the wedding garment does not belong to the congregation,
is filth, like the slime, pus, and ulcers in the body; it is indeed
in the body, but it is no part of the healthy body. Counterfeits
are among money, but they are not money; chaff is among the wheat,
but it is not wheat; so these are among Christians, but they are
not Christians. This is sufficient on to- day's Gospel. Let us
pray God for grace, that none of us may come to such a precious
and glorious marriage feast without a wedding garment.
This article was made available on the
internet via REFORMATION INK
(www.markers.com/ink).
Refer any correspondence to Shane Rosenthal: ReformationInk at mac.com (connect and write as @mac.com -- when I connect them I get a lot of junk mail).