Christ's Object Lessons
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 18: "Go into the Highways and Hedges"
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But in order to accept the invitation to the gospel feast,
they must make their worldly interests subordinate to the
one purpose of receiving Christ and His righteousness.
God gave all for man, and He asks him to place His service
above every earthly and selfish consideration. He cannot
accept a divided heart. The heart that is absorbed in
earthly affections cannot be given up to God.
The lesson is for all time. We are to follow the Lamb
of God whithersoever He goeth. His guidance is to be
chosen, His companionship valued above the companionship
of earthly friends. Christ says, "He that loveth father or
mother more than Me is not worthy of Me, and he that
loveth son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of
Me." Matt. 10:37.
Around the family board, when breaking their daily
bread, many in Christ's day repeated the words, "Blessed
is he that shall eat bread in the kingdom of God." But
Christ showed how difficult it was to find guests for the
table provided at infinite cost. Those who listened to His
words knew that they had slighted the invitation of mercy.
To them worldly possessions, riches, and pleasures were [p. 224] all-absorbing. With one consent they had made excuse.
So it is now. The excuses urged for refusing the
invitation to the feast cover the whole ground of excuses
for refusing the gospel invitation. Men declare that they
cannot imperil their worldly prospects by giving attention
to the claims of the gospel. They count their temporal
interests as of more value than the things of eternity. The
very blessings they have received from God become a
barrier to separate their souls from their Creator and
Redeemer. They will not be interrupted in their worldly
pursuits, and they say to the messenger of mercy, "Go
thy way for this time; when I have a convenient season,
I will call for thee." Acts 24:25. Others urge the
difficulties that would arise in their social relations should
they obey the call of God. They say they cannot afford to
be out of harmony with their relatives and acquaintances.
Thus they prove themselves to be the very actors described
in the parable. The Master of the feast regards their
flimsy excuses as showing contempt for His invitation.
The man who said, "I have married a wife, and therefore
I cannot come," represents a large class. Many there
are who allow their wives or their husbands to prevent
them from heeding the call of God. The husband says,
"I cannot obey my convictions of duty while my wife is
opposed to it. Her influence would make it exceedingly
hard for me to do so." The wife hears the gracious call,
"Come; for all things are now ready," and she says, "'I
pray thee have me excused.' My husband refuses the
invitation of mercy. He says that his business stands in the
way. I must go with my husband, and therefore I cannot
come." The children's hearts are impressed. They desire
to come. But they love their father and mother, and since
these do not heed the gospel call, the children think that [p. 225] they cannot be expected to come. They too say, "Have me
excused."
All these refuse the Saviour's call because they fear
division in the family circle. They suppose that in refusing
to obey God they are insuring the peace and prosperity of
the home; but this is a delusion. Those who sow selfishness
will reap selfishness. In rejecting the love of Christ
they reject that which alone can impart purity and
steadfastness to human love. They will not only lose heaven,
but will fail of the true enjoyment of that for which heaven
was sacrificed.
In the parable, the giver of the feast learned how his
invitation had been treated, and "being angry, said to his
servant, Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the
city, and bring in hither the poor, and the maimed, and the
halt, and the blind."
The host turned from those who despised his bounty,
and invited a class who were not full, who were not in
possession of houses and lands. He invited those who were [p. 226] poor and hungry, and who would appreciate the bounties
provided. "The publicans and the harlots," Christ said,
"go into the kingdom of God before you." Matt. 21:31.
However wretched may be the specimens of humanity that
men spurn and turn aside from, they are not too low, too
wretched, for the notice and love of God. Christ longs to
have care-worn, weary, oppressed human beings come to
Him. He longs to give them the light and joy and peace
that are to be found nowhere else. The veriest sinners are
the objects of His deep, earnest pity and love. He sends
His Holy Spirit to yearn over them with tenderness, seeking
to draw them to Himself.
The servant who brought in the poor and the blind
reported to his master, "It is done as thou hast commanded,
and yet there is room. And the Lord said unto the servant,
Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to
come in, that my house may be filled." Here Christ pointed
to the work of the gospel outside the pale of Judaism, in
the highways and byways of the world.
In obedience to this command, Paul and Barnabas
declared to the Jews, "It was necessary that the word of
God should first have been spoken to you; but seeing ye put
it from you, and judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting
life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles. For so hath the Lord
commanded us, saying, I have set Thee to be a light of the
Gentiles, that Thou shouldest be for salvation unto the ends
of the earth. And when the Gentiles heard this, they were
glad, and glorified the word of the Lord; and as many as
were ordained to eternal life believed." Acts 13:46-48.
The gospel message proclaimed by Christ's disciples was
the announcement of His first advent to the world. It bore
to men the good tidings of salvation through faith in Him.
It pointed forward to His second coming in glory to redeem [p. 227] His people, and it set before men the hope, through faith
and obedience, of sharing the inheritance of the saints in
light. This message is given to men today, and at this
time there is coupled with it the announcement of Christ's
second coming as at hand. The signs which He Himself
gave of His coming have been fulfilled, and by the teaching
of God's word we may know that the Lord is at the door.
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