Responding to God’s Invitation and Getting Properly Dressed, Twenty-Eighth Sunday (A), October 15, 2023

Fr. Roger J. Landry
Convent of the Missionaries of Charity, Bronx, New York
Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A
October 15, 2023
Is 25:6-10, Ps 23, Phil 4:12-14.19-20, Mt 22:1-14

 

To listen to an audio recording of today’s homily, please click below: 

 

The following text guided the homily: 

  • In today’s Gospel, Jesus speaks to us about the kingdom of heaven, the invitation he has given us to join him there forever, and about how we need to respond to that invitation. He does so within the context of a parable about salvation history in which he illustrates for us, basically, how not to respond. He concludes the parable by saying, “Many are invited, but few are chosen.” We are all here, with our respective vocations, because we desire and hope to be numbered among the “chosen few.” Those who are chosen are not those whom God somehow arbitrarily favors over others. Those who are chosen are the ones who respond fully to having been chosen by God. Therefore, it’s important for us to pay close attention to what Jesus tells us today so that we will respond to his invitation, choose him who has chosen us, and help the “many” we know also learn how to become among the chosen as well!
  • Jesus compares the kingdom of heaven to a wedding banquet a king is throwing for his son. This banquet will be the fulfillment of the prophecy of Isaiah from the first reading: there will be a true feast where everyone present will say, “Behold our God, to whom we looked to save us! This is the Lord for whom we looked; let us rejoice and be glad for he has saved us!” God wants to invite all people to this feast, he wishes all people to be saved, but there are three parts of this parable that we need to ponder:
  • The first is the invitation. Jesus says that the King sent his servants to call those who had been invited to the wedding banquet, but they would not come. It’s an unbelievable response. When there’s a royal wedding, like, for example, Charles and Diana or William and Kate, it becomes one of the hottest tickets of all time. People do everything they can to come. But not in the parable. The invitees refused. When they didn’t respond the first time, the hard-working King who wanted them there gave them a second chance. He sent other servants, saying, “Tell those who have been invited: Behold, I have prepared my banquet, my calves and my fattened cattle have been slaughtered, and everything is ready; come to the feast.’” But, again, they made light of it. Jesus says one went to his farm and another to his business, too busy to reprioritize their daily affairs for the once-in-a-lifetime royal wedding. They were too self-absorbed to care about the king. Other invitees, Jesus says, seized the king’s servants, mistreated them and killed them. They killed the king’s heralds who were doing nothing to them except inviting them to the royal banquet, because not only did they not want to change their priorities, but they couldn’t handle even hearing the invitation, and so they extinguished the messenger. The servants that Jesus has been describing up until then are the prophets who had been sent by God to invite his chosen people to this feast, but, as we talked about last week in the parable of the tenant farmers, all of the prophets were mistreated and killed by some of the religious leaders and elders of the people receiving the invitation to communion with God. Only some, like obviously the Blessed Virgin, St. Joseph, the Apostles and those women and men who became Jesus’ disciples, responded to Jesus’ invitation.
  • But God kept inviting. As Pope Francis once said in an Angelus meditation on this Gospel, “Despite the lack of response from those called, God’s project wasn’t interrupted. Despite the refusal of the first invitees, he is not discouraged, he doesn’t suspend the feast, but enlarges the guest list.” The King said to his servants, “The wedding is ready, but those invited were not worthy. Go therefore into the main streets and invite everyone you find to the wedding banquet.” The servants went out into the streets and “gathered all whom they found, both good and bad,” Jesus says in the parable, “so the wedding hall was filled with guests.” This is the mission of the Church. Beginning from the apostles down to our own day, we are sent out into the streets to invite all we find, both good and bad. Everyone is invited. The author James Joyce once described the Catholic Church with this famous expression: “Here comes everybody!” We don’t have a Church only for the good and the holy, for those of a particular economic class, for those of a special race or background. All are invited. We shouldn’t be surprised, therefore, that in the Church we find great saints and great sinners, the faithful and the hypocrites. Jesus gave two other parables — the Wheat and Weeds and the Dragnet — about this reality. All are invited; the only ones excluded are those who exclude themselves. But the invitation is supposed to change us. If we’re invited and we’re good, the privilege should spur us to become better; if we’re invited and we’re bad, the honor should provide the occasion to become honorable.
  • It’s good to focus on the priorities of those in the parable who turn down the invitation and the priorities of us today. Why didn’t the ones first called come to the banquet? They all excused themselves from it thinking something else was more important. As St. Luke’s Gospel reinforces (Lk 14:16-20), one used his home as an excuse, another his job, a third his family. Pope Francis said in his Angelus meditation, “None of those chosen first accepts to take part in the feast. They say they have other things to do. Some even show indifference, alienation, indeed annoyance.” Notice that none of those who refused the invitation said that they wanted to go out and engage in a life of crime. No, all of them were interested in good things — caring for the home, working, and spending time with one’s spouse or family — but that became relative evils because they prevented them from something better. When it came down to a choice between the wedding banquet and these other tasks, the wedding banquet lost. The King lost. God lost. So everyone needs to ask whether God is truly our priority, not just in theory but in practice. Does he come first? Do we sacrifice other things for him or sacrifice him for other things?
  • Many saints and preachers throughout the history of the Church the saints have applied this parable to the Mass, not just because the Mass is a banquet with the choicest food of all — the Body and Blood of the precious Lamb of God — but because it is also the foretaste of heaven. Our attitude toward God, toward heaven, toward God’s kingdom, is often shown by how we respond to the invitation Jesus makes to us of the Mass. On Holy Thursday, Jesus said, “I have eagerly desired to eat this Passover meal with you.” Jesus always eagerly desires to share Mass with us each Sunday. More than the greatest saints have hungered to receive the Lord in Holy Communion, the Lord desires to feed us. He wants us present at Mass more than the most loving mother in the history of the USA wants all her kids present at Thanksgiving dinner. But very often we hear the same excuses given for missing Mass as are found in the parable Jesus uses: people prioritize work over God, cleaning up the house or the yard over God, family over God, sleep over God, even Sunday cartoons, political talk shows or football preview programs over God. To come to the kingdom of heaven, to be not just the many invited but the chosen few, we first need to prioritize God, to accept his invitation, to treat it as the awesome privilege it really is and not take it for granted. One confirmation that we’re doing so is by the way we prioritize Jesus’ eager invitation to the Mass. In the United States, one of the reasons why we are in the midst of a Eucharistic Revival is because of the sad fact that only one of six Catholics invited to the feast of God on the Lord’s day responds to the invitation and comes. Just like those in the parable, most Catholics today prioritize other things. The word “Church” comes from the Greek word ekklesia, which means those having been called! Those having been invited! The Church is supposed to be characterized by those who have responded to Jesus’ invitation. The first thing we learn from this parable is that God invites everyone but that each of us needs to prioritize God over the other good and important things in life. Without that prioritization, we won’t enter God’s kingdom because we’ll be too busy trying to construct our own.
  • The second thing we learn is about how we’re supposed to arrive when we respond to the invitation. In the parable, Jesus says, “But when the king came in to meet the guests, he noticed a man there who was not dressed in a wedding garment, and he said to him, ‘Friend, how is it that you came in here without a wedding garment?’ And the man was speechless. Then the king said to the attendants, ‘Bind his hands and feet and cast him into the darkness outside, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.’”At first glance, it might seem that the King is both crazy and cruel: he commanded his servants to invite the man to the feast and then he’s picky about what he’s wearing? The truth is that in the ancient world, when kings would summon commoners to a feast, they, knowing that most would be too poor and would not have proper vesture, would normally send out the royal tailors to make proper clothing for everyone invited or otherwise provided fitting attire. It would be like a rich man today inviting homeless people to a black-tie dinner but then giving them free hotel rooms to shower and providing free tuxedos, shoes or gowns to wear. With this history, it’s not difficult to recognize why the king would be so upset about seeing this improperly attired man: this man deliberated refused to wear the clothing that was required and made available. The lesson for all of us is that it’s not enough to show up. We, too, have to be properly dressed for the feast. But what clothing has been provided for us? What does God want us wearing? What apparel is fit for the banquet?
  • Paul describes the proper vesture in two of his epistles. In his Letter to the Colossians, he wrote, “As God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience. … Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony” (Col 3:12-14). In the Letter to the Ephesians, he talks about our clothes as a spiritual armor: “Therefore, put on the whole armor of God: … fasten the belt of truth around your waist, and put on the breastplate of righteousness.  As shoes for your feet put on whatever will make you ready to proclaim the gospel of peace. With all of these, take the shield of faith, with which you will be able to quench all the flaming arrows of the evil one. Take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God” (Eph 6:11-17). It’s easy to get the picture: the wedding garments God wants us to don are weaved with acts of faith, love, hope, kindness, compassion, humility, patience, meekness, truth, holiness.
  • To make the image even simpler, more concrete, and more specific, God wants us to show up with the garment he himself gave us when we became his adopted children. As we were vested with our baptismal garment, the baptizing bishop, priest or deacon said to us, “You have become a new creation, and have clothed yourself in Christ. May this white garment be a sign to you of your Christian dignity. With your family and friends to help you by word and example, bring it unstained into eternal life.” Christ himself is meant to be our garment! We are to be clothed in him, in his risen life. As long as we live in him and vest ourselves in his virtues, then we will always be ready and unstained for eternal life. To talk about arriving properly dressed means we’re adorned in our baptismal graces, we’re living the life with Christ that flows from our baptism, we’ve chosen a moral and holy life, rejecting Satan, his empty promises and evil works and living by faith in God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, in communion with the saints in the Catholic Church.
  • To be properly dressed spiritually is so important today. The Church is not only “Here comes everybody!” in which all people are invited, but the Church also seeks to remind everyone of the need spiritually to dress appropriately, to “put on” and adorn ourselves with Jesus Christ (Rom 13:14). In practical terms, it means that everyone is both welcome and called to be cleansed, summoned to look at their clothing and see if their soul still sparkles with the brilliance of their white baptismal garment. Many are invited but not everyone chooses to take advantage of the Lord’s help through his Church to change their vesture. In the Book of Revelation, there’s an image of what it takes to get to the banquet of the kingdom of heaven. It’s an image of the saints, a “great multitude that no one could count from every nation, race, people, and tongue. They stood before the throne and before the Lamb, wearing white robes and holding palm branches in their hands. They cried out in a loud voice: ‘Salvation comes from our God, who is seated on the throne, and from the Lamb.’” St. John is told, “These are the ones who have survived the time of great distress; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.” The way God cleanses our garments and makes them white is through Jesus’ blood, which is, paradoxically, the most powerful bleach ever known. But we need to be humble to let him do it, and it’s in the Sacrament of Reconciliation that Jesus wants to bathe us in that cleansing detergent that can wipe out even the darkest stains of sin. That’s what we need to do to clean the garment of our soul so that we are always ready for the banquet. To receive the invitation to eternal life but to respond without conversion, without change, without even wanting to show up with our baptismal garment full of Christ’s virtues, is to fail to acknowledge the dignity of the King, of the banquet and of the invitation. And there’s a very important additional reason: we’re ultimately not meant to be just guests at the wedding feast, but the Bride. That’s why the King so much wants all of us there. To stand him up by refusing the invitation is for us to leave Christ the Bridegroom at the altar; to show up improperly dressed, however, is like a bride showing up with sweatpants to her own royal wedding. God give us the clothing to wear and we have to have the humility, dignity and love to wear it.
  • The third and last lesson is about sharing the faith with others. Just like the prophets, just like the apostles, so we, too, have a role as God’s servants in calling everyone to the feast and helping them to get dressed for it. That’s our task in the world, the continuation of Jesus’ mission. We want our family members to get to heaven. We want our friends, neighbors, coworkers, fellow priests or religious sisters, even strangers and those who persecute us to come to heaven. But we need to correspond with God’s work, let others know of the invitation, help them to say yes to it, and then assist them to get ready. Pope Francis said in the Angelus meditation that we’re not supposed to be concerned only with those who are coming, but are supposed to seek to bring news of the invitation of our faith to all. “The goodness of God has no limits,” he said, “and for this reason Lord’s banquet is universal, it’s meant for all. … We are all called not to reduce the Kingdom of God to the confines of ‘little churches’ — our own ‘little Church’ — but to expand the Church to the dimensions of the Kingdom of God.” The Lord does not just want us to respond to his invitation and show up properly vested, but he wants us to go out to crossroads to invite others.
  • One clear application of the lessons of this parable is to the Synod on Synodality taking place in the Vatican. As Pope Francis has emphasized, the Synodal Church he seeks must live what the Church has always sought to be, the continuation of Christ’s mission inviting everyone, including and especially those on the peripheries of existence. The King of Kings wants to exclude no one and invite everyone. But as today’s parable makes clear, the Church not meant to be a come-as-you-go affair. As the King seeks to welcome everyone to the banquet — those who up until that point were good and others who were bad — he wants all to convert, all to get dressed, all to welcome him in return at the depth he wants to be received. There are some who dream of a Church that welcomes everyone but converts no one, who, rather than helping people become the saints to which their baptism summons them, just want to ignore their sins and even attempt to bless those sins. Because God loves each of us sinners, however, he wants to free us not just from the consequences of our sins but from our sins themselves. But we have to take off our dirty rags and put on anew our dazzling baptismal garments, rejecting Satan, his empty promises and evil works, and living in communion with God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit who is holy, holy, holy. Let’s pray that the Synod helps the whole Church live out to the full what today’s parable teaches, about welcoming everyone and helping everyone welcome the Lord and put on his virtues and holiness.
  • “Come to the Feast,” the King in the Parable tells us today. He says it both about the Mass and about heaven. If we put God first, respond to his invitation in life by coming to the new and eternal Passover he eagerly desires to eat with us, arrive well-prepared and well-dressed, and seek to invite others to join us, we can be confident that we will be ready to greet him whenever he comes to call us to the eternal nuptial feast. The more we arrive at Mass with readiness, joy and a clean wedding garment full of virtues and the love of God, the greater our preparation for eternity. This will be the best means for us to be numbered among the “chosen few” who will say, in the words of King David from today’s responsorial psalm, “I shall live in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.” Blessed, indeed, are those called to the Supper of the Lamb!

 

The readings for today’s Mass were: 

Reading 1

On this mountain the LORD of hosts
will provide for all peoples
a feast of rich food and choice wines,
juicy, rich food and pure, choice wines.
On this mountain he will destroy
the veil that veils all peoples,
the web that is woven over all nations;
he will destroy death forever.
The Lord GOD will wipe away
the tears from every face;
the reproach of his people he will remove
from the whole earth; for the LORD has spoken.
On that day it will be said:
“Behold our God, to whom we looked to save us!
This is the LORD for whom we looked;
let us rejoice and be glad that he has saved us!”
For the hand of the LORD will rest on this mountain.

Responsorial Psalm

R. (6cd) I shall live in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.
The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.
In verdant pastures he gives me repose;
beside restful waters he leads me;
he refreshes my soul.
R. I shall live in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.
He guides me in right paths
for his name’s sake.
Even though I walk in the dark valley
I fear no evil; for you are at my side
with your rod and your staff
that give me courage.
R. I shall live in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.
You spread the table before me
in the sight of my foes;
you anoint my head with oil;
my cup overflows.
R. I shall live in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.
Only goodness and kindness follow me
all the days of my life;
and I shall dwell in the house of the LORD
for years to come.
R. I shall live in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.
Brothers and sisters:
I know how to live in humble circumstances;
I know also how to live with abundance.
In every circumstance and in all things
I have learned the secret of being well fed and of going hungry,
of living in abundance and of being in need.
I can do all things in him who strengthens me.
Still, it was kind of you to share in my distress.My God will fully supply whatever you need,
in accord with his glorious riches in Christ Jesus.
To our God and Father, glory forever and ever. Amen.

Alleluia

R. Alleluia, alleluia.
May the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ
enlighten the eyes of our hearts,
so that we may know what is the hope
that belongs to our call.
R. Alleluia, alleluia.

Gospel

Jesus again in reply spoke to the chief priests and elders of the people
in parables, saying,
“The kingdom of heaven may be likened to a king
who gave a wedding feast for his son.
He dispatched his servants
to summon the invited guests to the feast,
but they refused to come.
A second time he sent other servants, saying,
‘Tell those invited: “Behold, I have prepared my banquet,
my calves and fattened cattle are killed,
and everything is ready; come to the feast.”‘
Some ignored the invitation and went away,
one to his farm, another to his business.
The rest laid hold of his servants,
mistreated them, and killed them.
The king was enraged and sent his troops,
destroyed those murderers, and burned their city.
Then he said to his servants, ‘The feast is ready,
but those who were invited were not worthy to come.
Go out, therefore, into the main roads
and invite to the feast whomever you find.’
The servants went out into the streets
and gathered all they found, bad and good alike,
and the hall was filled with guests.
But when the king came in to meet the guests,
he saw a man there not dressed in a wedding garment.
The king said to him, ‘My friend, how is it
that you came in here without a wedding garment?’
But he was reduced to silence.
Then the king said to his attendants, ‘Bind his hands and feet,
and cast him into the darkness outside,
where there will be wailing and grinding of teeth.’
Many are invited, but few are chosen.”
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