RSVPing the King: the Party Animals

Jesus describes party poopers, party animals, and party crashers in his parable in Matthew 22:1-14. These represent the various responses men made to the king’s invitation to the wedding feast for his son.

Party Poopers, rather than enjoying the king and the bounty of his provision, prefer that the attention be focused on their work, their labor, their accomplishments, even if the only attention so focused is their own.

After the Poopers no-showed for the king’s party, he took a different approach and sent his servants to the street corners to bring in everyone they could find, both “good and bad,” and there was apparently no problem in filling the banquet hall with these.

Always up for a good time, willing to party anytime, anywhere, this second group are the Party Animals.

When the Cure is Worse (& Better) than the Disease

Many treatments of the story of Jesus calming the stormy sea (Mark 4 and parallel passages) take the form of inspirational sofa talk: “Jesus will calm the storms of your life.”

What is true about this approach is that believers will have storms. There is no doubt whatsoever that Christ-followers are not exempt from suffering, from trials, from tribulations, and in the already-but-not-yet kingdom of Christ nets still break, illness still strikes and jobs get lost.

In fact, we are told “it has been granted to you that for the sake of Christ you should not only believe in him but also suffer for his sake” (Philippians 1:29).

RSVPing the King: the Party Crashers

If the parable of the wedding feast (Matthew 22:1-14) describes those who refuse the king’s invitation as Party Poopers, then the one who attends but gets kicked out is the Party Crasher.

This guy, like the rest of the Party Animals, was apparently willing to attend the wedding feast at the king’s invitation on short notice, and as the “scabs” of the social order: they were, after all, the king’s second choice.

RSVPing the King: the Party Poopers

Jesus describes three kinds of people: party poopers, party animals, and party crashers.

In Matthew 22:1-14, a king has invited several groups of people to the wedding feast for his son, the prince. Jesus explained that the first group — which had already received personal invitations in advance — refused to come. Their reaction to the renewed invitation was indifference: they went their own way, went to their own farm, went to their own business. Like the guys who always had a test to study for, and the ladies who were always washing their hair, they were the Party Poopers.

Does Your Reputation Reflect Resurrection?

Sometimes we are asked how we know that Jesus rose from the dead.

Sometimes we ask ourselves how we know that Jesus rose from the dead.

What people mean most of the time with that question is that they’d like a demonstration of the physical evidence, and what people mean most of the time is that the best physical evidence would be Jesus himself coming over to my place for coffee and a serious Ted Talk.

How to Get In on a Sure Thing

People are frequently taken in by a “sure thing.” We like the idea of a guaranteed result with no risk, no loss, and no waste of time.

Friends may suggest that using the latest diet you will surely drop ten pounds, with minimal effort and no change of eating habits. Pundits and experts think there is no way to lose the election. The football team is a shoe-in for the playoffs (so place your bets…). We even respond to requests in a way that appeals to the desire for guarantee: “sure thing, Dad/son/honey/boss…”

But the sure thing becomes not so sure when we run into that box of donuts or bag of chips. The election is not a cinch when skeletons leap from the candidate’s closet. Injuries and drug problems and payoffs jeopardize the playoffs. And on the way to perform that “sure thing” for whomever we step from the curb and get run over by a chicken truck.

Though we are quite familiar with the aphorism that “nothing is certain but death and taxes,” we fall for the pretenders, anyway.

Our gullibility reveals a deep desire for something to be certain, and, well, death and taxes don’t quite satisfy.

What does satisfy is knowing that God will accomplish his plan.

Jesus displayed this certainty, the “sure thing” of God’s plan, as he faced persecution and death. He prayed in John 17 that he had done all that God gave him to do, that he had kept all the people that God had given him. As he symbolically crossed the Kidron brook, which flowed with the blood of animals sacrificed for the annual Passover festival, he anticipated his arrest, trial, torture and death with certainty (John 18 & 19).

One with his Father, Jesus was certain that whatever he faced was part of God’s plan of redemption, and that God was surely going to accomplish what he set out to do: Jesus would surely obey his Father in all things, Jesus would surely testify to truth, Jesus would surely die as a substitute for humans, Jesus’ sacrifice would surely satisfy God’s justice and avert his wrath, and all those that God had called would surely be saved.

Want in on a “sure thing”?

Repent and believe the good news of salvation in Jesus Christ, and God will surely save you.

Five Ways to Work Your Spiritual Muscles with Others

“One another” commands appear about thirty times in the New Testament, depending on how you count.

If you are only working your spiritual muscles through personal disciplines, your spiritual physique will be distorted, much like the body builder who has a massive chest and arms, but toothpick legs. A significant aspect of our spiritual walk with the Lord is in the context of growing with and alongside other believers.

Much of the reason for this is that proximity to other people invariably reveals weaknesses in our character that we tend to hide when we are only dealing with ourselves. With the personal disciplines, then, we also practice corporate, or group disciplines.

Worship & Ordinances. These are the most obvious outward acts of the church, and they must be done with others. If the world observes an individual Christian worshiping and baptizing, it will assume he’s simply taking his hygiene very seriously. A Christian should certainly worship alone, but worshiping with others demonstrates the power of God, and forces us to put our personal preferences in their place.

You might be the only one getting wet in baptism, but the congregation is there to testify that it agrees with your profession of faith and to confirm mutual commitments of membership. You may receive an individual portion of juice and bread, but you eat with others to jointly proclaim the Lord’s death and to testify to your repentance and forgiveness in him.

Hearing the Word. One reason that simply gathering regularly with other believers to do many of the things that you could do alone is to proclaim to one another that assembling together to face God and proclaim his greatness affirms to one another that for that time, no other people on earth are as important. Gathering to hear the word together solidifies group bonds forged with the truth of God.

Bible Study. Digging into the Word for greater understanding is enhanced when we study together. This might occur in Sunday school, small groups, Bible studies or with one-on-one accountability, but studying together helps us avoid conclusions that might be biased or the result of blind spots in our personal application.

Prayer. “Prayer Meetings” are going the way of the proverbial dinosaur, though attendance might increase significantly if one were the featured speaker or topic of conversation. The Bible is clear, however, that God’s people should be praying together, and saying grace before meals or listening to the Deacon of the Week on Sunday morning doesn’t meet our need for this discipline. If you are not praying with others from your congregation, you are not obeying Christ, and rather than contributing to the operation of the Spirit in your midst, you are constraining Him.

Fellowship. In the South, where I’m from, “fellowship” happens whenever and wherever there is fried chicken and sweet tea. But biblical fellowship is much more than the youth pizza party, the men’s group bowling contest, or the senior adult bus outing. Biblical fellowship is the camaraderie shared with others based upon a mutual salvation and centered on the cross of Christ. As such, fellowship will include the following:

  • Membership. Though it is increasingly out of favor among many professing Christians, membership in a local congregation is a biblical concept, and the obligation of every believer. Believers should avoid earning for themselves the “regular attender” moniker. If you’ve attended enough to be “regular,” you’ve made a commitment; go ahead and formalize the commitment biblically through membership.
  • Participation. Membership, though, is not enough on its own. Many churches have a list of those who are “inactive members,” but aside from being an oxymoron, the concept relieves both the actives and the inactives from the biblical work of disciplemaking. Each believer should be participating in the life of the church.
  • Service. A crucial component of participating is serving. Biblical participation in the church is not merely observing others labor, or receiving blessing from others, but actually serving others.
  • Spiritual Gifts. Some might disagree that the spiritual gifts are active today, but whether you classify them “spiritual gifts” or “body roles”, each believer has a part to play in the health of the local congregation. Playing that part outside the congregation doesn’t meet each believer’s obligation to the body, much like the orchestra member who only plays his fiddle in the local tavern.
  • Stewardship. Godly management of all one’s resources — whether finances, or passions, or time, or spiritual gifts — will effect the overall health of the local body. Thinking of all our resources as tools for the health of the body requires discipline, and helps us put on righteousness.
  • Evangelism. Individual believers each have a duty to proclaim the gospel to unbelievers, but in this series I have not listed the practice as a personal spiritual discipline. Instead, I encourage everyone to think of evangelism as an personal, individual responsibility supported and informed by the interpersonal, corporate duty of the church to make God known. Each congregation should have, as one author puts it, a “culture of evangelism” in which individuals are equipped to evangelize, alone and with others, and in which efforts to evangelize are strategic, prayerful, and celebratory.
  • Giving. There are many advantages to giving our offerings to the church secretly, by using envelopes or automatic drafts or ATM-style kiosks in the foyer. But there is a reason that taking up offering is a part of most worship services. The practical reality is that churches need funds to operate, but the spiritual component of giving is not that each member know what the others contribute, but know that everyone contributes. We affirm one another when we say by our presence that it is more important for me to be here rather than there, and when we say by our giving that is more important for my money to be here rather than there.

We work, yet it is God working in us. He will complete in us what he started, which is to conform us to the image of his Son, Jesus Christ. The Spirit of Holiness works in us to produce holiness, which we must pursue else we not see God.

Behold the glory of God in the gospel of Jesus Christ, and be transformed as you discipline yourself for godliness.