Saturday, November 12, 2011

The Violent Wedding Feast




This is a paper I wrote for my New Testament class last semester. I'm interested in comments, critiques, and questions.
The Parable of the Wedding Feast
Matthew 22:1-13(NIV)
1 Jesus spoke to them again in parables, saying: 2 “The kingdom of heaven is like a king who prepared a wedding banquet for his son. 3 He sent his servants to those who had been invited to the banquet to tell them to come, but they refused to come.
4 “Then he sent some more servants and said, ‘Tell those who have been invited that I have prepared my dinner: My oxen and fattened cattle have been butchered, and everything is ready. Come to the wedding banquet.’
5 “But they paid no attention and went off—one to his field, another to his business. 6 The rest seized his servants, mistreated them and killed them. 7 The king was enraged. He sent his army and destroyed those murderers and burned their city.
8 “Then he said to his servants, ‘The wedding banquet is ready, but those I invited did not deserve to come. 9 Go to the street corners and invite to the banquet anyone you find.’ 10 So the servants went out into the streets and gathered all the people they could find, both good and bad, and the wedding hall was filled with guests.
11 “But when the king came in to see the guests, he noticed a man there who was not wearing wedding clothes. 12 ‘Friend,’ he asked, ‘how did you get in here without wedding clothes?’ The man was speechless.
13 “Then the king told the attendants, ‘Tie him hand and foot, and throw him outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.’
“This is a giant mess of a parable…”
-Shane Hipps, Teaching Minister at Mars Hill Bible Church[i]
                In the twenty second chapter of Matthew’s account of the life and ministry of Jesus we find what could very easily be described as one of the most disturbing and perplexing teachings Jesus ever told.  In it we see the story of a king who invites a large crowd to the wedding banquet of his son, and upon the rejection of his invitation the king responds with gruesome violence by killing the invited guests and burning down their city. Then the king invites anyone and everyone from off the streets and has his servants bring them into the banquet hall. Upon their arrival the king notices that one of the guests is not properly dressed for an occasion of this magnitude. He orders his servants to bind the man’s hands and feet and throw him outside into the darkness where there will be “weeping and gnashing of teeth”.[ii] But What’s most disturbing about this story is that, according to the classical interpretation, apparently this violent and vengeful king is meant to be understood as representing God and this story is meant to reveal to its audience some truth about what the “Kingdom of Heaven” is like.
Which raises some important questions like what truth should be learned from this understanding of this story? Or maybe the better questions would be: Has this story been misunderstood? Is it possible that there is a different way of reading it? A better way? And if so what is this story really about?

Parables and the Kingdom

Before we can understand this particular story we have to recognize what kind of story Jesus is telling. Jesus is teaching in a particular story-telling style called a ‘parable’. Harris describes a parable as “a short story in which something spiritual is compared to something familiar to the audience”.[iii]  Many times when you hear the purpose of a parable described the assumption is that the story-teller is trying to make something spiritual easier to understand. The problem with this assumption; however, is that many times when Jesus tells a parable this doesn’t seem to be the case.
In fact many times when Jesus tells a parable, His audience seems to be more confused by what He is trying to say. It seems like after hearing a parable from Jesus you would walk away with more questions than answers. His teachings are so perplexing that occasionally He has to explain things to His disciples and at one point when He stops teaching in parables the disciples exclaim, “Now you are speaking clearly and without figures of speech.”[iv]
So it appears that Jesus has no intentions of making things easier to understand. He never breaks His teachings down into six easy steps and a practical application. Instead it would seem that Jesus is trying to get His audience to struggle with what He is saying. He is trying to get them to go deeper than just the surface level. He is trying to engage His audience and challenge them to think, to question, and to respond.
Another characteristic of Jesus’ parables is that they deal with the “Kingdom of God” or as the author of Matthew puts it “Kingdom of Heaven”. In fact, Jesus devotes more of His teaching time to the “Kingdom” than any other subject and He even says of Himself that “proclaiming the Kingdom” is the reason He was sent.[v] Yet He almost never speaks clearly about this kingdom, but instead hides truths about it in parables so that those who “have ears to hear” can hear and understand what He is saying.
There is only one occasion where Jesus really speaks clearly about the Kingdom. One of the Pharisees asks Jesus when the kingdom of God would come and Jesus’ response shows that the Pharisee has assumed too much. Jesus responds, “The kingdom of God does not come with your careful observation, 21nor will people say, ‘Here it is,’ or ‘There it is,’ because the kingdom of God is within you.”[vi]
Jesus, who knows the hearts of all men[vii], knows that the Pharisees are expecting the Messiah to come and lead a physical, violent revolt against the Roman Empire and establish a new Empire or Kingdom of God. They are looking for physical signs of the Kingdom to take place and the revolution to begin, but the revolution that Jesus is talking about is an entirely different kind of revolution, and when He talks about it He speaks in the present, not future tense. Jesus says you are not going to see it coming no matter how hard you look for it because the Kingdom of God isn’t out there somewhere and it isn’t coming sometime in the future it is inside of you right now.
Finally, when understanding the Kingdom of God it is important to realize that the kingdom language Jesus used would have a much different effect on its original audience than it does on us today. Brian McLaren writes,
“As we’ve seen when Jesus spoke of the kingdom of God, his language was charged with urgent political, religious, and cultural electricity. But today, if we speak of the kingdom of God, the original electricity is largely gone, and in its place we too often find a kind of tired familiarity that inspires not hope and excitement but rather anxiety or boredom.
Why is kingdom language not as dynamic today? First, because in our world, kingdoms are a thing of the past. They’ve given ways to republics and democratic republics. Now authority resides in constitutions, parliaments, and congresses. Where kings exist, they are by and large anachronisms, playing a limited ceremonial role in relation to parliaments and prime ministers, evoking nothing of the power and authority they did in Jesus’ day. When people hear the “kingdom of God,” we don’t want them to think “the anachronistic, limited, ceremonial, and symbolic but practically ineffectual rule of God”! If there is any electric charge to the language of the kingdom today, it is the faint current of the quaint and nostalgic, conjuring knights in shining armor, round tables and chivalry, damsels in distress, fire-breathing dragons, and Shakespearean thees and thous that doth go running hitherest and witherest. In Jesus’ day, kingdom language was contemporary and relevant; today, it is outdated and distant.
In addition, for many people today, kingdom language evokes patriarchy, chauvinism, imperialism, domination, and a regime without freedom. Not a pretty picture- and the very opposite of the liberating, barrier-breaking, domination-shattering, reconciling movement the Kingdom of God was intended to be! So for these and other reasons, if Jesus were here today, I am quite certain he wouldn’t use the language of kingdom at all… which leaves us wondering how he would in fact articulate his message today.”[viii]

The Wedding Feast

So now that we have some context in which to understand parables and the Kingdom we can look further into the specific teaching that Jesus gives in the twenty-second chapter of Matthew. While Jesus is teaching in the temple courts in the city of Jerusalem the chief priests and elders of the people come up to Him and start questioning His authority. Jesus responds with a tough question of His own, one that the chief priests and elders do not answer. So Jesus tells them that until they are willing to answer His question He will not answer theirs.
Then Jesus tells three stories to the religious elite, all of which are in the form of parables. After telling the first two, which we now know as the Parable of the Two Sons and the Parable of the Tenants, the religious elite realize that Jesus is using these parables as a way of condemning them and their ancestors. They try to find a way to have him arrested but they were too afraid because Jesus was popular with the people. Then he tells them a third parable, the Parable of the Wedding Feast.
This parable, with all its violence and odd details, has proven to be one of the most disturbing teachings of Jesus and because of that it seems that much has been assumed about it.  Shane Hipps observes, “The way that this is classically understood is that the ‘king’ is God, that the servants who went to invite the guests are the prophets and Jesus, the first set of guests are the Jews, and the banquet is heaven…  God sends Jesus and the prophets to the Jews; the Jews reject, and apparently kill the servants and then the king decides to go out and invite anyone off the streets, as many people as he can find from the streets, which many interpret to be the gentiles, the rest of the people who aren’t Jews.”[ix]
Most scholars rightly point out that this parable seems to be a continuation of the theme that Jesus is carrying through the two parables directly before this one. Carter points out, “In the third of three parables (21:28-22:14), Jesus continues to announce God’s punishment of the religious elite and their rejecting city (22:1-14).”[x] And Byrne follows suit saying, “Jesus presumably told the parable as a comment on the lack of response he was getting from the religious establishment (those first invited), contrasted with the positive response from those on the margins. With these he was already celebrating the joy of the Kingdom (9:10-17).”[xi]
Smith says, “It is fairly obvious that it must have been addressed to the professedly religious who were failing to respond to the call to repentance, the final summons to the heavenly banquet, and that the men from off the streets have their counterpart in the tax-collectors and sinners. But care must be taken not to misinterpret the story. The parable is not meant to teach that God had not from the first wished the sinful to be his guests. The mission of Jesus to the outcasts was certainly not undertaken because others had turned a deaf ear to the good news of the Kingdom. But the story is told from the point of view of the critics on that mission. Granted that they are right in thinking of the heavenly feast as prepared for themselves, they still must not be surprised if their places are filled by the men they so greatly despise!”[xii]
Towards the end of the parable is when the story starts to get especially problematic. The king sees that one of the guests who was brought in off the streets is not in proper wedding attire. When the king questions the man about his wardrobe the man is speechless. This is reasonable to understand, because he was literally just brought in off the streets. He has no idea that he is going to be attending a wedding on this day, and when the invitation comes it appears that he is not allowed time to go home and change into his finest clothes. So why would the king be so offended that he is not properly dressed? In fact, one could presume none of the guests that have been brought in off the streets are properly dressed, and it appears for whatever reason the king is singling out this one person.
Even more disturbing than that is how the king responds to this individual. Rather than asking the man to leave, the king has him bound hand and foot and thrown into the darkness where there is “weeping and gnashing of teeth”, which seems to be an extreme and violent response to this situation. Shane Hipps asks, “Now how many of you at the end of this parable are like, ‘If this is what the kingdom of Heaven is like is there a way I can get a pass?” and then he adds, “If God is the king it would appear that God is a narcissistic sociopath, because the king exhibits these kinds of behaviors”.[xiii]
                Byrne does not see these details as anything to be overly concerned about saying, “While people still hear the parable as a story, it is probably best to make clear from the start that it is an allegory through and through and that we should not be too dismayed by all the aspects that fail to add up.”[xiv]
                And H. H. Halley claims that it is just merely adding a warning to the parable. He says, “God’s Elect nation, for its shameful treatment of God’s messengers, was now to be cast off, and other nations called in. Also, it is a sort of double parable: having a warning for the newcomers, that they be careful, lest they meet the same fate.”[xv]
                Still it appears that these random acts of violence and lack of any sort of forgiveness seem to be opposing the nature of a loving, forgiving God. Is this the image of God that Jesus really meant to stir up when He was telling this story? Is this how we are supposed to understand the Kingdom of God? Or has this story been misunderstood? Is there a better way to read this?
                “There is one Greek word that betrays [the classical understanding, and conveys] that this is something very different than all the other parables” says Hipps.[xvi] In all the other parables Jesus tells He uses the phrase “the kingdom of heaven is like x” and in all the other parables the Greek phrase He uses literally means “is like”. Matthew 22 is the only time we see Jesus use this same phrase but in a different tense and a different voice. Verbs can be past or present tense and active or passive. In all the other parables we see an active present tense verb, but in this case we have a past tense, passive verb. So in all the other passages the Kingdom is doing the action (it is like) but in this passage the kingdom of heaven is receiving the action (it has been made into).
                Another point of interest about this parable can be found in the original Greek. According to Hipps where our English translations say the Kingdom of Heaven is like a king, the Greek uses a very specific word for king. The word that is found in the Greek literally means a “human king”. It is not the same phrase that would be used for a divine king, or God as king.[xvii]
                So according to the literal translation of this parable it would appear that what Jesus is actually saying is that the Kingdom of Heaven has been made into a human kingdom with a human king. Jesus is not telling the religious leaders what the Kingdom is like; He’s calling them out on what they have tried to turn it into. He knows they want the Messiah to be a human king who will ride in with power and overthrow the Romans and rule over Israel like David once did. He knows they have come to believe that violence and hatred are the ways in which they hope to achieve their victory. The religious leaders of Israel are trying to twist and contort the message of Jesus into a message that suits them and as the narrative unfolds it becomes increasingly clear that they will use the same kind of violence that Jesus warns against here when they have him tortured and crucified.
It’s also worth pointing out that in this story the king is throwing a wedding feast for his son, but one crucial guest seems to be missing. Nowhere in this story do we see the son. It would appear that the one person for whom this feast is being thrown is not present. This feast is supposed to be all about the king’s son and yet it would appear that in the midst of all his violence and spontaneity the king in this story has entirely missed the point.
                This parable is not a comparison, then but a contradiction for the religious leaders of Israel to ponder over. Jesus tells two stories prior to this one to show what the Kingdom is like and how they are going to miss out on it, then He turns it around and shows how they have tried to distort and corrupt the Kingdom by turning it into something that it isn’t. They can’t seem to understand that this Kingdom is not coming in physical power that they can see, but it is rooted within you.
                But this leads to another question. If the king is not the hero of this story then who is? To understand that we have to reference back to the thirteenth chapter of Matthew in which Jesus tells some parables to his disciples and a large crowd. He tells what we know now as the Parable of the Sower, the Parable of the Mustard Seed, and the Parable of the Hidden Treasure. In all three of these particular stories there is a common factor, the field. The field in these stories is always the location of the Kingdom of Heaven. The kingdom of heaven can be found out in the field.
                So going back to the Parable of the Wedding Feast we see an interesting detail. When the invitation to the feast is first sent one man ignores it and returns to his field. What happens to the man who goes to his field? He is neither murdered nor murders, neither goes to the feast nor gets kicked out. This man returns to his field and he avoids all the violence and despair surrounding this wedding feast. It would appear that maybe this man knows something. Maybe he recognizes that this feast is missing the point and so he returns to his field.
                Finally it’s worth noting that in Luke’s account we have basically the same story except for some crucial differences.  For starters, in Luke, Jesus uses the Greek phrase for “is like” (present, active) which contrasts the past, passive verb used by Matthew. This indicates that in Luke’s account he is not giving an “anti-parable” or contradiction parable but rather a comparison parable. Secondly it is worth noting that Luke’s parable leaves out all of the violence and chaos that make Matthew’s account so much of a mess. In Luke’s account the guests miss out on the feast, which is not specifically a wedding feast, but the king does not respond with violence. Finally, in Luke’s account, the time and location differ noticeably from Matthew’s account. Matthew’s version appears late in the ministry of Jesus but Luke’s appears much earlier. Also Luke’s account happens as a conversation with some Pharisees at one of their homes but Matthew’s account happens outside the temple as the climax of a scene which takes place a day after Jesus clears the temple for apparently a second time (it seems they went back to the corrupt dealings after His first temple clearing at the very start of His ministry) and immediately follows two other parables in which Jesus calls into light the corrupt and wicked ways of the Pharisees.
                So it appears that Matthew’s account may actually be an entirely different instance, in which Jesus refers back to a previously told story about what the kingdom is like, but in this situation He expresses the ways in which they have corrupted even his earlier message about the kingdom and how they have even tried to provoke the movement of Jesus into a violent-earthly kingdom. Which is exactly what they wanted Jesus’ kingdom to be like all along, and they were sorely disappointed when they realized the kingdom Jesus was preaching was an entirely different kind of kingdom; a kingdom that was misunderstood by the religious elite during the time Jesus was on earth and in many ways a Kingdom that is still misunderstood by religious people today. A Kingdom that wouldn’t be found in temples, palaces, churches, cathedrals and the banquet halls of kings but instead in the fields, on the mountains, and in the wilderness outside. This is all a very Jewish way of saying that it was for the whole world and refers all the way back to the prophet Isaiah, the Exodus from Egypt, and even the Garden of Eden.


[i] Hipps, Shane. (speaker)(2010, November 7). “Returning to the Field” [Podcast]
Mars Hill Bible Church. Grand Rapids, MI. Retrieved April 4, 2011 from Mars Hill Bible Church iTunes Podcast.
[ii] Matt. 22:13 (NLT)
[iii] Harris, S. L. (2009). The New Testament: A Student’s Introduction (pg. 472)
New York: McGraw Hill
[iv] John 16:29 (NIV)
[v] Luke 4:43 (NIV)
[vi] Luke 17:20 (NIV), Due to the troubling nature of this truth some interpretations attempt to use the phrase “among you” rather than “within you”. However, this is probably a bad translation. The Greek word Jesus uses here is the same word He uses when he describes how the Pharisees clean the outside of the cup but not the inside. So taking the “among you” interpretation seems to assume that Jesus accused the Pharisees of not cleaning among the cup, which doesn’t make any sense.
[vii] John 2:24 (NIV)
[viii] Mclaren, B. D. (2006). The Secret Message of Jesus: Uncovering the Truth that could change everything. (pg. 138-139)
Nashville: W Publishing Group.
[ix] Hipps, Shane. (speaker)(2010, November 7). “Returning to the Field” [Podcast]
Mars Hill Bible Church. Grand Rapids, MI. Retrieved April 4, 2011 from Mars Hill Bible Church iTunes Podcast.
[x] Carter, Warren. (2000). Matthew and the Margins: A Sociopolitical and Religious Reading. (pg. 432)
Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books
[xi] Byrne, Brendan. (2004). Lifting the Burden: Reading Matthew’s Gospel in the Church Today. (pg. 163)
Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press.
[xii] Smith, B. T. D.  (1937). The Parables of the Synoptic Gospels: A Critical Study. (pg. 203)
Cambridge: University Press.
[xiii][xiii] Hipps, Shane. (speaker)(2010, November 7). “Returning to the Field” [Podcast]
Mars Hill Bible Church. Grand Rapids, MI. Retrieved April 4, 2011 from Mars Hill Bible Church iTunes Podcast.
[xiv] Byrne, Brendan. (2004). Lifting the Burden: Reading Matthew’s Gospel in the Church Today. (pg. 164)
Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press.
[xv] Halley, H. H. (1965). Halley’s Bible Handbook: New Revised Edition. (pg. 444-445)
Grand Rapids: Regency Reference Library.
[xvi] Hipps, Shane. (speaker)(2010, November 7). “Returning to the Field” [Podcast]
Mars Hill Bible Church. Grand Rapids, MI. Retrieved April 4, 2011 from Mars Hill Bible Church iTunes Podcast.
[xvii] Hipps, Shane. (speaker)(2010, November 7). “Returning to the Field” [Podcast]
Mars Hill Bible Church. Grand Rapids, MI. Retrieved April 4, 2011 from Mars Hill Bible Church iTunes Podcast.

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