Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 22:8

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 22:8

Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy.

Verse 8. Were not worthy.] Because they made light of it, and would not come; preferring earthly things to heavenly blessings. Among the Mohammedans, refusal to come to a marriage feast, when invited, is considered a breach of the law of God. HEDAYAH, vol. iv. p. 91. Any one that shall be invited to a dinner, and does not accept the invitation, disobeys God, and his messenger: and any one who comes uninvited, you may say is a thief, and returns a plunderer.-Mischat ul Mesabih. It was probably considered in this light among all the oriental nations. This observation is necessary, in order to point out more forcibly the iniquity of the refusal mentioned in the text. A man may be said to be worthy of, or fit for, this marriage feast, when, feeling his wretchedness and misery, he comes to God in the way appointed, to get an entrance into the holiest, by the blood of Jesus.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

8. The wedding is ready, but theywhich were bidden were not worthyfor how should those bedeemed worthy to sit down at His table who had affronted Him by theirtreatment of His gracious invitation?

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Then saith he to his servants,…. That were preserved from their rage and malice, and outlived their implacable enemies, and saw their utter ruin and destruction:

the wedding is ready; meaning not the marriage contract, which was secretly performed in eternity; or the calling of God’s elect among the Jews, and their open espousal to Christ, which for the present was now over; but the marriage feast, or the Gospel dispensation, which was ushered in, and the ministry of it, to which nothing was wanting; all the promises, prophecies, types, and shadows, of the former dispensation, were now accomplished; the Lamb of God was slain, and all things to be done by him, were now finished; the ministers of the Gospel, the apostles, were called, their commission enlarged, and they qualified with a greater measure of the Spirit, and were sent to preach both to Jews and Gentiles:

but they which were bidden were not worthy; that is, the Jews, who had notice of this dispensation by the prophets, were told by John the Baptist, that it was at hand; were once, and again externally called unto it by the ministry of the apostles; but they were not only unworthy in themselves, as all men are, of such a blessing and privilege, but they behaved towards it in a very unworthy manner; they were so far from attending on it in a diligent and peaceable way, as becomes all such persons that are blessed with the external ministry of it; who when they do so, may be said to behave worthily, and, in some sense, to be worthy of such a privilege being continued with them; see Mt 10:13 compared with Lu 10:6 that they contradicted and blasphemed it, and by their own outrageous carriage, showed plainly that they were unworthy of it; and were so judged by Christ and his apostles, who ordered them to turn from them, and go to the Gentiles, and which may be intended in the following words.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

8. Then saith he As the Jews are now cast off, God will call the Gentiles to partake of his Gospel. Not worthy They had rendered themselves unworthy of farther offers by their rejection of those they had received.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘Then he says to his servants, “The wedding is ready, but those who were bidden were not worthy.” ’

However, the king was determined that the wedding should go ahead and the marriage feast be a success. The original invitees had proved to be not worthy. They had proved to be rebels and not deserving of his son. Thus he would make other provision.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

New guests:

v. 8. Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy.

v. 9. Go ye, therefore, into the highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the marriage.

v. 10. So those servants went out into the highways, and gathered together all, as many as they found, both bad and good; and the wedding was furnished with guests.

Then , when the report of the failure of his servants to persuade the former guests was made. Time was pressing; great hurry was demanded. So they should go out on the highways, to the place where there is a crossing over of roads, either a crossroads from which the roads radiate in every direction, or a place near the gates where the roads from all directions an together. In either case, many people would be passing by in just a little while, and the chance of finding guests would be much greater. No care should be exercised by the servants to make a careful selection, especially not so far as nationality was concerned: The unworthy guests should be replaced as rapidly as possible by others, whomever they might find. And the servants followed the command literally. Going out on the streets and roads, they brought together all whom they found, bad as well as good, and the nuptial assembly of those that were to partake of the feast was made complete.

The missing wedding-garment:

v. 11. And when the king came in to see the guests, he saw there a man which had not on a wedding-garment;

v. 12. and he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a wedding-garment? And he was speechless.

v. 13. Then said the king to the servants, Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and cast him into outer darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.

v. 14. For many are called, but few are chosen.

The king was naturally pleased over the success of his plan, and as soon as the guests were placed and the wedding-feast was in progress, he came in to welcome them all. But while passing down between the rows of tables his attention was drawn to one man who, although reclining with the rest at a table and partaking of the food, yet was not clothed in a proper wedding-garment. This was not only inexcusable, it was insulting. For the guests of Oriental kings were at all times, but especially upon such an occasion, provided with festal garments, and the accidental guest above all was taken care of in this respect. It was natural, also, and in keeping with the dignity of the occasion that the guests should take unusual care with their dress, in order not to seem insensible to the honor bestowed upon them. No wonder that the king’s surprised inquiry as to the way in which he managed to slip in unobserved, when, as he knew, a wedding-garment was required and might have been obtained for the asking, caused the guilty fellow literally to be strangled in his speech and unable to say a single word in explanation or defense. It was a case of foolishly and deliberately despising the bounty, the largess, of the king. And so the king passed summary sentence. The servants received orders to bind the guilty one hand and foot and to thrust him into the outer darkness of the dungeon, where he would have plenty of time to repent of his folly with weeping and gnashing of teeth. For, adds Jesus, many are called, but few are chosen.

The lesson of this parable is similar to that of the previous one, and was probably understood by the Jews in its first part. In the second part it went beyond the Jewish Church and contains a warning for all time. God Himself is the king. The wedding-feast is that of the Messiah’s kingdom, the marriage of the Lamb. The first invitation was issued to the chosen people of the Old Testament, the nation of the Jews. The prophets came to them in increasing numbers, with increasing clearness of message. Then came John the Baptist, Christ Himself, the apostles, with their urgent call to repentance and salvation. But the answer was indifference, hatred, blasphemy, murder. Then God’s patience was exhausted, then His judgment was executed upon Jerusalem and upon the Jewish nation, the Romans under Vespasian and Titus laying siege to their capital and destroying both Temple and city, 70 A. D. Since that time the Lord has faithfully attempted to get other guests for His wedding-feast. His messengers have gone forth on the highways and byways of the Gentile nations throughout the world. The Christian Church has spread to practically every country of the earth. Men of every tongue have been assembled in the great hall of the Lamb’s wedding-feast. Good and bad, hypocrites and sincere believers, are joined in the outward communion known as the visible Church. But the time of the King’s reckoning is coming. He has provided, through His Son Jesus Christ, a wedding-garment of spotless righteousness and purity for every sinner that is called to the feast. His mercy and grace are indeed free for all men, but they cannot partake of the meal without having first accepted this festal garment to cover the filth and nakedness of their sin. He will lay bare the deceit, if not before, then on the great Day of Judgment. And the insult to the love of God will be properly punished when every person that puts his trust in his own merit and works will be cast into the dungeon of hell with its everlasting torments. “That will be the punishment that the time of visitation has not been recognized nor accepted, that we were invited, had Sacrament, Baptism, Gospel, absolution, and still did not believe it, nor made ourselves of use. Would to God that the dear Lord would teach us thoroughly and brings to that point that we would realize what great mercy we have received in being invited to such a blessed feast, where we shall find salvation from sin, devil, death, and eternal wailing! He that will not accept this with thanks, but despises such grace, shall have eternal death instead of it. For one of the two it must be: Either receive the Gospel and believe and be saved, or do not believe and be condemned eternally.”

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Mat 22:8-10. The wedding is ready, &c. The 8th verse is well explained by Act 13:46-47 which was an accomplishment of this part of the parable. In the next verse, the calling of the Gentiles is represented by the king’s servants going forth, and compelling all that they met to come in, (see Luk 14:23.) whether they were maimed or halt, worthy or unworthy, good or bad; for they were to make no distinction. The phrase, , signifies the ways most frequented, the places where several streets and roads met. This intimates that the Gentiles had as little reason to expect the call of the Gospel, as common passengers and travellers to expect an invitation to a royal banquet.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Mat 22:8 . ] Comp. Act 13:46 . “ Praeteritum indignos eo magis praetermittit ,” Bengel. To represent the expedition against the rebels, and the destruction of their city as actually taking place while the supper is being prepared, a thing hardly conceivable in real life, is to introduce an episode quite in accordance with the illustrative character of the parable, which after all is only a fictitious narrative. Comp., for example, the mustard seed which grows to a tree ; the olive on which the wild branch is engrafted, Rom 11 , etc.; see also note on Mat 25:1 f.

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

8 Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy.

Ver. 8. They which were bidden were not worthy ] Who were then? Such as came from the highways and hedges, Mat 22:9 , that is, such as fit and show their sores to God, as the cripple and others do by the highway side to every passenger, to move pity. Such sensible sinners shall walk with Christ in white, for they are worthy.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

8 10. ] On see Act 13:46 . , as Bengel, “ prteritum indignos eo magis prtermittit .”

are the places of resort at the meetings of streets, the squares, or confluences of ways. De Wette and Meyer are wrong in saying that they are not in the city, ‘for that was destroyed:’ it is not the city of the murderers, but that in which the feast is supposed to be held , which is spoken of: not Jerusalem, but God’s world.

. . . ] Both the open sinners and the morally good together. See ch. Mat 13:47 , where the net collects . Stier remarks that we might expect, from ch. Mat 21:31 , to find the guest who by and by is expelled, among the .

is here the feast, not the place where it was held .

Here, so to speak, the first act of the parable closes; and here is the situation of the Church at this day; collected out of all the earth, and containing both bad and good. , as Meyer well remarks, is emphatic.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Mat 22:8-10 . : after the second set of servants, as many as survived, had returned and reported their ill-success. , he says to them . , ready, and more.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

Then, &c. This, as to time, leaps over the present Dispensation, and takes up the yet future preaching of Mat 24:14, for it has to do with the same people.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

8-10.] On see Act 13:46. , as Bengel,-prteritum indignos eo magis prtermittit.

are the places of resort at the meetings of streets, the squares, or confluences of ways. De Wette and Meyer are wrong in saying that they are not in the city, for that was destroyed: it is not the city of the murderers, but that in which the feast is supposed to be held, which is spoken of: not Jerusalem, but Gods world.

. . .] Both the open sinners and the morally good together. See ch. Mat 13:47, where the net collects . Stier remarks that we might expect, from ch. Mat 21:31, to find the guest who by and by is expelled, among the .

is here the feast, not the place where it was held.

Here, so to speak, the first act of the parable closes; and here is the situation of the Church at this day;-collected out of all the earth, and containing both bad and good. , as Meyer well remarks, is emphatic.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Mat 22:8. , …, then, etc.) see Act 13:46.-, …, saith He, etc.) The Lord frequently reveals the principles of His counsel to His servants.- , is ready) and will not be dispensed with on account of the ingratitude of them which were bidden.[956]- , were not worthy) cf. Act 13:46. No one is considered unworthy until the offer has been made to and refused by him: by doing which he betrays himself. The past tense, were not worthy, is used to show that the opportunity of the unworthy has passed away.

[956] The Wedding is truly even still ready for the guests who are willing to come.-V. g.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

The wedding: Mat 22:4

but: Mat 10:11-13, Mat 10:37, Mat 10:38, Luk 20:35, Luk 21:36, Act 13:46, 2Th 1:5, Rev 3:4, Rev 22:14

Reciprocal: Luk 14:21 – being Luk 14:24 – General Eph 6:9 – knowing

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

22:8

They which were bidden means the Jews who were first called to the honors of the kingdom of heaven. Were not worthy or deserving on account of the way they treated the notice that it was time to come to the wedding feast.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Mat 22:8. Not worthy. Compare Pauls language to the Jews at Antioch in Pisidia (Act 13:46): judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Mat 22:8-10. Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready That is, the marriage-feast is prepared; but they which were bidden were not worthy Were not disposed to receive the gospel, not willing to repent and believe, and behave kindly to the preachers of it: which is the description Christ gives to his apostles of those whom they were to account , worthy, Mat 10:11-14. These here spoken of were , (Mat 22:5,) slighters, despisers of the spiritual banquet, out of love to their secular interests; they loved other things more than Christ and the blessings of his kingdom; which he that doth, says Christ, is not worthy of me, because he will not take up his cross and follow me, Mat 10:37-38. Go ye therefore, &c. As if he had said, Yet let not the provisions I have made be lost; but go into the highways, Gr. , the byways, or turnings of the road: or, as others interpret the expression, the ways most frequented, or the places where several streets and roads meet. As this is intended of the calling of the Gentiles, it intimates, that the Gentiles had as little reason to expect the call of the gospel, as common passengers and travellers to expect all invitation to a royal banquet. The offer of Christ and salvation to them, was, 1st, unlooked for; for they had had no previous notice of any such thing being intended: whereas the Jews had had notice of the gospel long before, and expected the Messiah and his kingdom. See Isa 65:1; Isa 2:2 d, It was universal, and undistinguishing; go and bid as many as you find, high and low, rich and poor, bond and free, young and old, Jew and Gentile; tell them all they shall be welcome to gospel privileges upon gospel terms; whoever will, let him come, without exception. So those servants went out As their Lord had commanded them, and gathered as many as they found, good and bad Giving a free invitation to all, whatever their character had formerly been. Thus, when the gospel was rejected by the Jews, the apostles, in obedience to Christs command, went into all parts of the world, and preached it to every creature that was willing to hear it; preached repentance and remission of sins in Christs name among all nations, Mar 16:16; Luk 24:47. And the wedding was furnished with guests Great multitudes were gathered into the gospel church.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

22:8 Then saith he to his servants, The {b} wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy.

(b) The marriage feast.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

The king did not begin the wedding feast then. He sent out more slaves to invite anyone to attend. The original guests were not worthy because they disregarded the king’s invitations. They failed to respond to his invitation to come freely. The king sent His slaves out into the "main highways" (NASB, Gr. tas diexodous ton hodon, lit. "street corners," NIV, places where people congregated) to invite everyone to the feast (cf. Mat 8:11; Mat 21:43). His slaves went out into the streets and gathered everyone who would come, the evil and the good in the sight of men. Finally the wedding hall was full of guests.

"The calling of other guests now (still going on) takes the place of the first invitation-a new exigency and preparation being evolved-and the supper, until these guests are obtained . . . is postponed to the Second Advent." [Note: Peters, 1:379.]

The majority of the Jews were not worthy to attend the messianic banquet at the beginning of the kingdom because they rejected God’s gracious offer of entrance by faith in His Son. Therefore God’s slaves would go out into the whole world to invite as many as would to come, Jews and Gentiles alike (Mat 28:19). Jesus predicted that many, not just Jews but also Gentiles, would respond so when the kingdom began the great banquet hall would be as full as God intended.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)