Stories from the Bible - Ep 27 A Really Really Awkward Dinner Party (Luke 14)
Episode Date: June 26, 2023Have you ever been at a social gathering where someone says something so awkward everyone is stunned into silence? That's exactly what Jesus does again and again at the dinner party we hear about ...in chapter 14. Before we get to that, we look at what happened in chapter 13, exploring issues of genuine repentance, pride and deflection, and false reasons people have for assuming they will enter heaven. The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
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Beauty, perfection, desire, deception, rebellion, judgment, hope.
You're listening to Stories from the Bible.
Bible stories told in order, using the words of the Bible,
with introductions to give a recap and provide context. Bible Stories Told in Order God or about people. Don't worry if not everything makes sense. Keep listening to each episode and sit with the journey. I'm stoked to have you on the ride. Hello and welcome to episode 27.
Today we'll be hearing stories from Luke chapter 14. Before we get there, what happened in the
stories from last episode, Luke chapter 13? At the start of that chapter, Jesus is told by some people about the unfortunate Galileans
who were killed by the Romans while they were offering sacrifices.
Why did they share this story with Jesus?
Perhaps they wanted Jesus to sympathize with them about the plight of the Jews under the crushing power of Rome.
But I think there is another motive.
If we look closer at the story, Luke tells us that the people who give Jesus this news were present on that occasion.
That is, they were in the crowd hearing the things that Jesus had just been saying.
Their desire to gossip about the Galilean tragedy seems to come as a response to the teaching they'd just heard.
And what was it that Jesus had been speaking about? At the very end of chapter 12, Jesus gives the crowds two sharp little illustrations
to underline the urgency of the times that they are in. In the first picture, Jesus calls the
crowd hypocrites because they think they're clever at discerning what's what when it comes to
understanding weather signals, and yet they don't know how to interpret the very times in which they
live. Recall that Jesus is addressing people who have the privilege of witnessing his wisdom and
miracles, and yet they fail to grasp the truth about Jesus' identity and claim on their lives
that those signs point to. In the second illustration, Jesus gets the crowd
thinking about what they would do if they were going along with their accuser towards a judge.
Jesus points out the obvious thing to do would be to try and settle with your accuser
before getting to the judge. Of course, you wouldn't be so silly as to miss your last window of
opportunity to influence your future for the better. Because presumably in this illustration,
the judge will definitely not be merciful, but your accuser might feel sorry for you and be
generous and punish you less than you deserve. Anyway, the point of this second picture is to help people see the
eternal reality that they have a desperately short window of time in which to hear Jesus' words and
respond to him in repentance and faith, and thus influence their eternal future before it is too
late. It's worth remembering how Jesus wants to help change how people interpret their experiences
on this earth. Back in Luke chapter 6, Jesus taught his disciples to see their lives in an
upside-down way. He taught them to frame their experiences through God's eternal lens and not
to judge their circumstances, or one another for that matter, in the ways that come naturally.
Listen to episode 20 for more on that if you missed it.
And so this illustration of going with an accuser towards a judge
is meant to help people see their years on this earth
not as endless hours to be wasted,
but instead as a very limited window of precious time
where they have the opportunity to influence their eternal destiny.
So that's what Jesus had been speaking about on the occasion that these people give him the news
of the Galilean tragedy. In a nutshell, Jesus has been challenging the crowds to wake up to reality,
the reality that time is short and that they would be wise to listen
seriously to him and take action before it is too late. What action is it that is so urgent
and important? It's repentance. Jesus makes this clear in his response to the people who tell him about the tragedy.
After they give him the news, Jesus says,
Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans because they suffered in this way?
No, I tell you, but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish. And Jesus repeats himself, almost word for word,
with an example from a tower-falling tragedy in Jerusalem. Repetition means it's really important.
And so why did Jesus give this answer? I think it's because Jesus reads the hearts of the people telling him about the tragedy.
The stories that Jesus was telling on this occasion were geared towards showing people the importance of taking him seriously. Jesus wants people to repent of their sin and follow
him. But being urged to repent naturally makes people uncomfortable.
It's because repenting means the humiliation of all my natural pride.
To truly repent means I admit that I am totally wrong in the way I have been living and what I have been living for, and I recognise I need to turn 180 degrees
away from living my way and instead submit to living by what Jesus says.
There's no bigger blow to human pride than true repentance.
So when my pride is threatened, what do I naturally do?
I become defensive and seek to justify myself.
And a classic, non-confrontational way of doing this is deflection.
I turn the conversation away from my faults and onto someone else.
This is what I think is happening here. Jesus reads the hearts of the people who
bring up the Galilean tragedy, and he knows what they are really implying, which is that people
who died in such a horrible way must have been dreadful sinners. They are deflecting attention
away from themselves and onto others who they assume must be worse than them to have had such a dreadful end.
Rather than face up to their own need of repentance, these people are finding false comfort in the idea that they aren't as bad as others.
Jesus knows that people naturally try to feel good about themselves by way of making horizontal comparisons.
This is a deadly trap.
Jesus exposes it immediately by refusing to be distracted by the gossip,
and instead he twice repeats the necessity of personal repentance to avoid death.
And then Luke records a parable Jesus told about a man who waited three
years for his fig tree to produce fruit. None came, so he asked his gardener to chop it down
and free up space in his garden. But the gardener said, look, let me fertilize it and we'll give it
another year. If there's still no fruit, then let's cut it down. With this parable, Jesus
is again trying to help people who are complacently living life their own way. The fig tree is the
person who hasn't repented. Back in episode 17, we heard how John the Baptist explained the fruit
that proves true repentance is a changed life towards God and others.
After this, we're told how Jesus was judged by a religious leader
for healing a woman on the Sabbath day.
Now, the Sabbath command was given by God to the Israelites
after he'd rescued them from Egypt.
It said,
God wanted his people to remember that they were his free children,
rescued by him from cruel bondage.
Back in Egypt, when they were oppressed slaves of Pharaoh,
they were forced to work seven days a week.
Now, as God's dearly loved rescued people, they were not to
return to a slavish way of living. Central to the Sabbath command was enabling those under your
authority to also rest, your children, your servants, your animals. But what happened over
time was that the religious elite lost sight of the real purpose of God's command
and instead created a multitude of human rules that focused on defining what did and didn't count as work.
When Jesus heals the woman who was bent over so that she is finally free to stand tall,
the religious leader is indignant. Healing,
according to religious tradition, counted as work and was forbidden on the Sabbath day.
And so the leader points this out to the witnesses of the miracle.
But Jesus answers, you hypocrites, you untie your animal on the Sabbath to make sure it gets a drink.
This poor woman has been tied up by Satan for 18 years. Shouldn't she be set free on the Sabbath?
By this response, Jesus exposes the religious tradition as totally inconsistent with God's
true Sabbath command of celebrating freedom and rest. He publicly humiliates the
religious leaders, and the watching crowds love it. Thus Jesus grows in popularity with the people.
But his response is to tell two parables of the kingdom that emphasize its hiddenness. He says the kingdom of God begins like a mustard seed in the ground
or yeast in some dough. It doesn't look like anything much from the outside.
One day it will be very visible, but that time is not yet come.
Jesus knows the people are excited about his growing popularity and the evidence of his power
and wisdom. He knows they crave a visibly mighty king who will save them from their visible bullies.
But the kingdom of God is not a worldly kingdom built upon force and power. It's a kingdom built not by human strength, but by God's strength
working through human weakness. And so Jesus continues his journey towards Jerusalem,
the place where he will experience betrayal, rejection, mockery, and painful death someone asks him along the way lord are only a few people going
to be saved and jesus gives a scary answer he tells the people listening to strive to enter
through the narrow door and that many people will come after the narrow door to heaven has been shut,
wanting to enter, expecting they will be able to enter,
and then getting told to leave.
Outside the door will be a place of incomprehensible suffering.
And what is the reason these many people are expecting to be led into heaven?
Their confidence rested on the fact they associated with Jesus and heard the things he taught.
They say, we ate and drank in your presence and you taught in our streets.
But simply hearing Jesus' words and even agreeing with what he says or even hanging out with him doesn't equal repentance from sin.
As the door to heaven is shut in their faces, these people are condemned as workers of evil.
They are like the foolish man in the parable who built his house on the sand by hearing Jesus' words, but not actually putting those words into
practice. Entering the narrow door is difficult. Jesus said back in chapter 9 that anyone who
desires to come after him must deny himself, take up his cross daily and follow him.
Jesus is not paving the way towards a temporary human kingdom defined by power and popularity.
He is establishing God's eternal kingdom,
defined by sacrificial love,
currently hidden, yet to be revealed in splendour.
The stories from chapter 14 start here. hidden, yet to be revealed in splendour.
The stories from chapter 14 start here.
Now, one Sabbath, when Jesus went to dine at the house of a leader of the Pharisees,
they were watching him closely.
There, right in front of him, was a man whose body was swollen with fluid.
So Jesus asked the experts in religious law and the Pharisees,
Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath or not?
But they remained silent.
So Jesus took hold of the man, healed him, and sent him away.
Then he said to them,
Which of you, if you have a son or an ox that has fallen into a well on a Sabbath day, will not immediately pull him out? But they could not reply to this.
Then when Jesus noticed how the guests chose the places of honour, he told them a parable.
He said to them, When you are invited by someone to a wedding feast, do not take the place of honour He told them a parable. Then, ashamed, you will begin to move to the least important place.
But when you are invited, go and take the least important place,
so that when your host approaches he will say to you,
Friend, move up here to a better place.
Then you will be honoured in the presence of all who share the meal with you.
For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but the one who humbles himself
will be exalted. He said also to the man who had invited him, when you host a dinner or a banquet,
don't invite your friends or your brothers or your relatives or rich neighbours so you can be
invited by them in return and get repaid. But when you host an elaborate meal, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame and the blind.
Then you will be blessed because they cannot repay you,
for you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous.
When one of those at the meal with Jesus heard this, he said to him,
Blessed is everyone who will feast in the kingdom
of God. But Jesus said to him, a man once gave a great banquet and invited many guests. At the time
for the banquet, he sent his slave to tell those who had been invited, come because everything is
now ready. But one after another, they all began to make excuses.
The first said to him,
I have bought a field and I must go out and see it.
Please excuse me.
Another said,
I have bought five yoke of oxen and I am going out to examine them.
Please excuse me.
Another said,
I just got married and I cannot come.
So the slave came back and reported this to his master. Then the master of the household was
furious and said to his slave, go out quickly to the streets and alleys of the city and bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame.
Then the slave said,
Sir, what you instructed has been done and there is still room.
So the master said to his slave,
Go out into the highways and country roads
and urge people to come in so that my house will be filled.
For I tell you, not one of those individuals who were invited will taste
my banquet. Now large crowds were accompanying Jesus and turning to them, he said, if anyone
comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and
sisters and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple.
Whoever does not carry his own cross and follow me
cannot be my disciple.
For which of you, wanting to build a tower,
doesn't sit down first and compute the cost
to see if he has enough money to complete it?
Otherwise, when he has laid a foundation
and is not able to finish the tower,
all who will see it will begin to make fun of him.
They will say,
this man began to build and was not able to finish.
Or what king, going out to confront another king in battle,
will not sit down first and determine whether he is able,
with 10,000, to oppose the one coming against him with 20,000. If he cannot succeed, he will
send a representative while the other is still a long way off and ask for terms of peace.
In the same way, therefore not one of you can be my disciple if he does not renounce all of his own possessions.
Salt is good.
But if salt loses its flavour, how can its flavour be restored?
It is of no value for the soil or for the manure pile.
It is to be thrown out.
The one who has ears to hear had better listen.
The story ends here.
Thank you for joining us for today's stories. You might like to take a moment to pause and
think about what you noticed. Things you liked, things you didn't like, something the story showed you about Jesus.
To read it for yourself, it's in the book of Luke chapter 14.
If you can find someone willing to read it and talk about it with you, even better.
You've been listening to Stories from the Bible.
I'm Jen, and I look forward to sharing more stories with you.