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			 Wedding Banquet (Royal 
			Marriage) 
			Matthew 22:1–14 
			Opening: The King’s Invitation and the Only Safe Response 
			Jesus pictures a king who prepares a marriage feast for his son, 
			sends invitations, and waits for guests to come. Those first invited 
			shrug off the summons—one to a farm, another to business—while 
			others seize the king’s servants and kill them. Judgment follows, 
			the hall is filled with new guests from the highways, and one man is 
			discovered without a wedding garment. He is speechless, bound, and 
			cast into outer darkness. Jesus closes with a sober line: “Many are 
			called, but few are chosen.” The kingdom stands open by royal 
			invitation, yet entry rests on coming when called and coming as the 
			King requires. 
			Context: Confrontation in 
			Jerusalem 
			This parable follows Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem, the cleansing of 
			the temple, and a series of parables aimed at leaders who rejected 
			God’s rule (Matthew 21:23–46). The Wedding Banquet continues that 
			theme: Israel had long been invited through prophets; many refused 
			and mistreated the messengers (Matthew 22:3–6; cf. 23:34–37). The 
			burning of the murderers’ city (Matthew 22:7) foreshadows national 
			judgment (Luke 21:20–24). Yet the story does not end in ruin—the 
			King fills His hall by sending servants to invite “as many as you 
			find” (Matthew 22:8–10). 
			The Royal Marriage: Three 
			Movements 
			First, the initial invitees decline and attack the messengers. This 
			shows settled refusal toward God’s will (Acts 13:46; John 1:11). 
			Second, the King widens the call. Guests come from every road—“both 
			bad and good”—until the hall is full (Matthew 22:10). The gospel 
			reaches all nations (Matthew 28:19; Romans 1:16). Third, the King 
			inspects the guests. One is present without a wedding garment. The 
			King questions him; he has no answer. Presence without preparation 
			fails the inspection (Matthew 22:11–13). 
			Called to Come; Required to 
			Come Right 
			God calls through His word. He expects a response that matches His 
			revealed pattern. Jesus ties entrance to doing the Father’s will 
			(Matthew 7:21) and is the author of eternal salvation to all who 
			obey (Hebrews 5:9). The wedding garment points to the life God 
			requires of those who accept the invitation: putting on Christ and 
			putting off the old life (Galatians 3:27; Ephesians 4:22–24; 
			Colossians 3:10–14). Isaiah spoke of “garments of salvation” (Isaiah 
			61:10); Revelation identifies the bride’s fine linen as “the 
			righteous acts of the saints” (Revelation 19:7–8). The King provides 
			the way; guests submit to His terms. 
			The Rejected Invitation: A 
			Warning Against Indifference and Violence 
			Some shrugged and walked away; others raged and harmed the servants 
			(Matthew 22:5–6). Spiritual danger wears both faces—apathy and 
			hostility. Indifference says, “I have other things to do”; hostility 
			says, “I do not want to hear.” Both end outside the feast. The 
			servants represent the steady work of teaching and urging. The King 
			notes every refusal, and He also notes every faithful messenger who 
			keeps going into the streets with the call (Romans 10:14–15). 
			The Wedding Garment: 
			Inspection at the Door 
			The guest without proper clothing teaches that accepting the 
			invitation includes accepting the King’s conditions. Obedience 
			begins at conversion—believe, repent, confess Christ, and be 
			baptized for the remission of sins (Mark 16:16; Acts 2:38; Acts 
			22:16; Romans 10:9–10; 1 Peter 3:21; Romans 6:3–4). Obedience 
			continues in a transformed life—clean hands, a pure heart, sincerity 
			in worship, truth in speech, integrity in conduct (Psalm 24:3–4; 
			Matthew 5–7). The man is “speechless” because there is no defense 
			for entering on personal terms when the King has spoken (1 
			Corinthians 4:6). 
			Many Called, Few Chosen: 
			Making Calling and Election Sure 
			The call reaches many; those finally chosen are the ones who answer 
			in the King’s way. Scripture urges a diligent response: “Make your 
			call and election sure” (2 Peter 1:10). Jesus also speaks of the 
			narrow gate and the hard way that leads to life (Matthew 7:13–14). 
			Hearing without doing leaves a person outside (Luke 6:46–49). The 
			feast is ready; the terms are clear. 
			Applications for Today 
			Welcome widely: take the invitation to every road—neighbors, family, 
			strangers (Luke 14:21–23). Prepare thoroughly: do what the King has 
			required without adding or removing (Deuteronomy 4:2; 12:32; 1 
			Corinthians 4:6; Revelation 22:18–19). Examine honestly: the King 
			inspects. Measure beliefs and practices by Scripture (Acts 17:11). 
			Reject excuses: work and commerce are good, yet never rise above the 
			King’s summons (Matthew 22:5; Matthew 6:33). Keep teaching: some 
			will refuse; others will listen. The hall fills through patient, 
			persistent invitation. 
			Conclusion: The Hall Is Ready 
			The table is set, the lamps are lit, and the doors stand open. The 
			King still sends servants with a simple message: “Look, I have 
			prepared my dinner… Come to the wedding” (Matthew 22:4). Come when 
			called and come clothed as the King requires. That is safety. That 
			is joy. 
			Exhaustive Sermon Outline 
			
				- Setting and Purpose
				
				
					- Temple confrontations 
					and prior parables (Matthew 21:23–46)
 
					- Wedding Banquet as a 
					continuation of accountability
 
				 
				 
				- Parable Movement 
				(Matthew 22:1–14) 
				
					- Invitations refused; 
					servants mistreated (vv. 3–6)
 
					- Judgment on murderers 
					and their city (v. 7)
 
					- Hall filled from the 
					highways (vv. 8–10)
 
					- Inspection; the 
					speechless man without a garment (vv. 11–13)
 
					- Summary statement: many 
					called, few chosen (v. 14)
 
				 
				 
				- Doctrinal Anchors
				
				
					- Entrance and obedience 
					(Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9)
 
					- Universal invitation 
					(Matthew 28:19; Romans 1:16)
 
					- “Put on Christ”—the 
					garment (Galatians 3:27; Isaiah 61:10; Revelation 19:7–8)
 
					- Transformed life as 
					required clothing (Ephesians 4:22–24; Colossians 3:10–14)
 
				 
				 
				- Warnings and Lessons
				
				
					- Indifference and 
					hostility end the same way (Matthew 22:5–7; Acts 13:46)
 
					- The King’s 
					inspection—presence is not preparation (Matthew 22:11–13)
 
					- Do all things by His 
					word, neither adding nor taking away (Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 
					Corinthians 4:6)
 
					- Make calling and 
					election sure (2 Peter 1:10)
 
					- Narrow gate; hard way 
					(Matthew 7:13–14)
 
				 
				 
				- Applications
				
				
					- Evangelistic urgency—go 
					to the highways (Matthew 22:9–10; Luke 14:23)
 
					- Congregational 
					self-examination—teach, correct, restore (Acts 20:27; James 
					5:19–20)
 
					- Personal 
					preparation—initial obedience and continuing faithfulness 
					(Mark 16:16; Romans 6:3–4; Matthew 5–7)
 
				 
				 
				- Invitation and Decision
				
				
					- Respond today; come 
					clothed in obedience (Acts 2:38; Acts 22:16)
 
					- Live worthy of the call 
					(Ephesians 4:1)
 
				 
				 
			 
			Call to Action 
			The King calls. Answer today by obeying the gospel—believe in Jesus, 
			repent of sins, confess His name, and be baptized for the remission 
			of sins. If you have accepted the invitation yet neglected the 
			garment, repent and be restored. The hall is ready; enter in the way 
			the King has spoken. 
			Scripture Reference List 
			(with notes) 
			
				- Matthew 22:1–14 — Parable 
				text: invitation, refusal, judgment, garment, “many called, few 
				chosen”
 
				- Matthew 21:23–46 — Context 
				of conflict and accountability
 
				- Luke 21:20–24 — Judgment on 
				Jerusalem foreshadowed in v. 7
 
				- John 1:11 — He came to His 
				own; many did not receive
 
				- Acts 13:46 — Turning to the 
				Gentiles after rejection
 
				- Matthew 28:19; Romans 1:16 
				— Universal scope of the invitation
 
				- Matthew 7:21 — Entrance 
				requires doing the Father’s will
 
				- Hebrews 5:9 — Eternal 
				salvation to those who obey
 
				- Galatians 3:27 — Baptized 
				into Christ, “put on” Christ
 
				- Isaiah 61:10 — Garments of 
				salvation
 
				- Revelation 19:7–8 — Fine 
				linen as righteous acts of the saints
 
				- Ephesians 4:22–24; 
				Colossians 3:10–14 — Put off the old; put on the new
 
				- 1 Corinthians 4:6; 
				Deuteronomy 4:2; 12:32; Revelation 22:18–19 — Do not add or take 
				away
 
				- Matthew 7:13–14 — Narrow 
				gate and hard way
 
				- 2 Peter 1:10 — Make calling 
				and election sure
 
				- Mark 16:16; Acts 2:38; Acts 
				22:16; Romans 10:9–10; 1 Peter 3:21; Romans 6:3–4 — The 
				appointed response to the gospel
 
				- Luke 14:21–23 — Compel them 
				to come in; fill the house
 
				- Acts 17:11 — Search the 
				Scriptures; honest examination
 
			 
			Prepared by David Hersey of the 
			church of Christ at Granby, MO  |