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Liturgical day
: Thursday 20th in Ordinary Time |
Today's Gospel (Mt 22:1-14): Jesus began to address the chief
priests and elders of the people, once more using parables: «This
story throws light on the kingdom of heaven. A king celebrated the
wedding of his son. He sent his servants to call the invited guests
to the wedding feast, but the guests refused to come. Again he sent
other servants ordering them to say to the invited guests: ‘I
have prepared a banquet, slaughtered my fattened calves and other
animals, and now everything is ready; come then, to the wedding
feast’. But they paid no attention and went away, some to their
fields, and others to their work. While the rest seized the servants
of the king, insulted them and killed them. The king became angry. He
sent his troops to destroy those murderers and burn their city.
»Then
he said to his servants: ‘The wedding banquet is prepared, but
the invited guests were not worthy. Go, then, to the crossroads and
invite everyone you find to the wedding feast’. The servants
went out at once into the streets and gathered everyone they found,
good and bad alike, so that the hall was filled with guests. The king
came in to see those who were at table, and he noticed a man not
wearing the festal garment. So he said to him: ‘Friend, how did
you get in without the wedding garment?’ But the man remained
silent. So the king said to his servants: ‘Bind his hands and
feet and throw him into the dark where there is weeping and gnashing
of teeth’. Know that many are called, but few are chosen».
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Commentary: Fr. David Amado i Fernández (Barcelona, Catalonia)
«I
have prepared a banquet, slaughtered my fattened calves and other
animals, and now everything is ready; come then, to the wedding
feast»
Today,
the evangelic parable speaks of the banquet of the Kingdom. It is a
recurrent example in Jesus' preaching. It has to do with that wedding
feast that will happen at the end of time and that will be the union
of Jesus with his Church. She is Christ's spouse that walks in our
world but which will finally espouse his Beloved forever and ever.
God Father has prepared that feast and He wants all men to be
present. This is why He says to all of us «come to the wedding
feast!» (Mt 22:4).
Notwithstanding,
the parable has a tragic development, as many «paid no
attention and went away, some to their fields, and others to their
work...» (Mt 22:5). This is why, every day, God's mercy
is, more often, addressed to the most distant persons. This is like
the groom going to get married and invites his family and friends.
But they do not wish to go; in view of what he decides to call his
acquaintances and co-workers, but they come out with excuses; so
finally, he calls the first persons he meets, because he has prepared
a banquet and he wants to have guests at his table. Something very
similar happens with God.
But the different
characters appearing in the parable may also be images of the
different states of our soul. Thanks to the grace of baptism we are
God's friends and inheritors along with Christ: we have a place
reserved for us in this banquet. If, however, we forget our condition
of sons, God proceeds to treat us as acquaintances while maintaining
his invitation. If we let the grace within us to die, then we become
people found in any crossroad, just passers-by without a penny in
matters of the Kingdom. Yet, God keeps on calling us.
His
call may reach us any time. It is by personal invitation. Nobody has
any right to be there. It is God who finds us and tells us: «Come
to the wedding!». And we have to receive this invitation with
words and facts. This is why that guest who was not properly dressed
is thrown out: «Friend, how did you get in without the wedding
garment?» (Mt 22:12).
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