The
Third Sermon,
Held
in the Reformed Church in Germantown,
on
February 4th, new style calendar, 1742.
Exerpt from the new book, Zinzendorf's Pennsylvania
Sermons, tr. by Julie Weber; ed. by Craig Atwood.
Faithful and dearly beloved Savior, may
your grace and truth be with us! Let us speak with each other as children
in your presence. Let us not deal with futile matters, but with matters
which touch our hearts and which will benefit us throughout eternity. Faithful
heart, be with us as you are accustomed to being with souls, because you
purchased them with your blood. May what we discuss with each other be
your word and your own will.
Amen!
Text: Matthew 22:11-14
"Then the king went in to see the guests,
and there he saw a person who did not have on wedding clothes. He said
to him, 'Friend, how did you come in here without wedding clothes?' He,
however, said nothing. Then the king said to his servants, 'Bind his hands
and feet and throw him into the darkest darkness where there will be weeping
and gnashing of teeth. Because many are called, but few are chosen.'"
We want to talk about this important text
together, about the judgment of reprobation or rejection.
First, of what this consists.
Second, to whom it befalls.
Third, how it can be avoided.
The judgment of rejection is when a person who
desires to be saved, who seeks to be saved, cannot be saved. As it says
among other things, "Many will strive to get in and will not be able to
do so." Now this is a divine truth, just as another is that there is a
secret judgment of rejection, when called people cannot be saved, when
people who are called and who come are turned away. Therefore it is surely
worth our trouble to be certain of our salvation and our calling. As it
is written, "make his call and election firm" (I Peter 1:10). This is surely
a very important matter that must be discussed in a Gemeine of the Lord
and in an assembly of souls.
To be rejected naturally means not only
not to be received but also to be sent away when a person is already there.
There is a clear word in the Revelation to John, chapter 22, verse 15,
"the dogs and magicians and fornicators, the persistently bad sinners,
stand outside." The gates of the city stand open, but even so "nothing
common or unclean will enter through them" (Revelation 21:27). So it is.
The judgment of rejection is not when people
are refused entry because of their godlessness, because of their unbelief,
because of their unfaithfulness. Those stand outside. That is the usual
way in which one is saved or not. "Whoever believes will be saved. Whoever
does not believe will be condemned" (Matthew 16:16).
But the judgment of rejection (I want to
say it once again) is when a person diligently tries to become saved and
goes so far that in his own mind, according to the logic of his reason
and theology, he necessarily must be saved. And he dies thinking that it
cannot be otherwise, because everything that he considers part of being
saved applies to him. His reputation is indisputable and this can surely
be confirmed in comparison with others. He is called, and yet when he enters
into eternity, before God's throne, not only is he not saved, not only
is he condemned, he is condemned with scorn and disgrace.
"You will see many coming from the east
and west and sitting at the table in the heavenly kingdom with Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob, but you will be thrown out" (Luke 13:28). Who will be
thrown out? Perhaps children of evil? No, children of the Kingdom (Matthew
8:12). This, however, is clearer in the next section. There we see "whom
this befalls."
"The king went in to see the guests and
saw a person there who was not wearing wedding clothes," and so on. You
see quite plainly from this, dear friends, that it is rare to see such
people in God's kingdom.
These are not people who walk the broad
road, who go down the big street which leads to damnation. These are not
people whom one might lose among the masses and have to look for, who live
godless lives, who will obviously be lost. Rather, these are people whom
God's servants hardly have the heart to call unconverted, who have an appearance
that not only deceives them but also all the others with whom they deal.
These are people who have so much to say about the matter, who know how
to make so many objections, that they even close the mouths of the Lord's
servants. They force themselves, so to speak, upon the community of God’s
children, and not all kinds of God's children are able to fend them off.
"How did you get in?" asks the king, "without
wearing a wedding garment?" However he remained silent. From his silence
we can see clearly that he knew what was going on. He understood what the
king meant by the question, and he knew that there was nothing to reply.
Oh, I very sincerely ask you to consider carefully the subject of reprobation!
The man understood what was going on, I say. He had no good reply.
In what then did his disgrace and his confusion
consist? Precisely in the subject which was being discussed and which then
silenced him.
It would seem that he could have given the
king an important answer. He could have silenced the king. The king asks,
"How did you get in here?" He could have answered, "I was called."
"Why don't you have on a beautiful garment?"
"Where should the people who were fetched from the roads and fields get
them? They were fetched just as they were, beggars, blind people, and lame
people. Where should they have gotten them? Just as they all came in their
rags, so did I."
That would have been an answer to which
there was no rebuttal, if the talk had been about beautiful clothing at
all. Thus there must have been something else behind the wedding clothing.
It does not have to say "beautiful clothing." It does not have to say,
"How did you get in here without beautiful clothing on?" but rather, "You
do not have the clothing on that others are wearing." Because the beggars
were wearing wedding clothing given to them. He was the only exception;
he did not have this.
Why didn't he have it? Because without a
doubt he had the most beautiful clothing of those who had arrived at the
same time he did.
It was easy to persuade the beggars, the
blind, and the lame that they needed different wedding clothing. As they
were about to enter the wedding hall, they thanked God that they had been
given a garment of honor to wear, for which they were not allowed to pay.
But when the proud man, the well-dressed man who came pretty much as he
had been on the street, was supposed to put on a garment, he says, "My
garment looks better. I do not need one. No prince can be ashamed of a
garment like mine." The servants thought this was surely so and let him
in. The king came to see the guests and found a single one sitting among
them who did not have on the robe which the king had had distributed.
So that my friends do not think that this
is just an invention of mine, I will explain it clearly. In the country
in which the Savior spoke, it was customary for everyone who came to a
wedding, or who was a guest of a respected man, to receive festive clothing
when he entered the house. This was made so that it was put on over the
other clothing. In Turkey this is called a "Pelz" or also a "Caftan" and
even today this is customary in the whole Orient. If the ambassador of
a great potentate, of the Roman emperor himself, wants to have an audience,
he must put on such a robe of honor. Even if his own clothing abounds with
gold and silver and is set with precious stones, the gentleman must appear
with the robe of honor over this.
Now you can understand the mystery of why
the well-dressed man did not accept the wedding garment. Now you can see
why the king addresses him thus and why he does not have an answer for
the king. His heart tells him that he has nothing honorable to say. He
sees what the robe means. His head begins to swim with the realization
that he is wrong, but it is too late.
"Bind his hands and feet," says the king,
"and throw him out into the darkest darkness." That is the judgment of
rejection.
"He brings down the powerful from their
seats and raises the lowly" (Luke 1: 52). All haughty people, all conceited
people, all self-righteous people, all sanctimonious people, all people
who have justification other than that based in the blood of Jesus and
his merits, who try to amass holiness from all books, experiences and exercises
and who spend their lives doing this and are worshipped by half the world,
these are the people who need no wedding garment. When they are offered
the wedding garment, when you tell them about Christ's blood and righteousness
and that this is the jewelry and garment of honor with which one must stand
before God, as long as they are in the world they think these are children's
matters, these are details. They could have experienced this in another
way. They knew better; they were either well beyond this or they had deeper
insights into this.
And they come out of the world before God's
throne with this same proud, blind mind, without becoming sober. They are
let in, resulting in their prostitution. They are asked why they come and
yet do not have the very customary wedding garment on. They know nothing
to answer. They have often heard, "You will be sent away before all sinful
saints, not with the Savior's compassion like the other creatures, but
with disdain." Because this is part of being rejected.
That is the reason. That is what it means
when the Savior says, "Many are called, but few are chosen." The called
ones always have a reason. One person is called and does not come, but
excuses himself. The other comes, but does not come rightly. Rather he
comes with a proud spirit, with pretensions about himself. He would rather
bring things along with him than be given things.
If we ever have to be prostituted, how
fortunate we would be, how good it would be, if this happened here in the
world! Esau was a great despiser. He thought it would be a small thing
to sell his birthright. When he later wanted to have it back again, he
found no way to do this even though he tried with tears. "Beware" says
the apostle, "that no one among you is the kind of man who disregards common
grace, the beggar's grace" (Hebrews 12:15-16, alt.).
This is not unusual. Naaman almost did
just the same. He thought a prophet should have a lot of special ceremonies,
or lead deep discussions. "The prophet said, 'Wash yourself in the Jordan.'
'Oh,' he thought, 'if there is nothing else, I could have done this better
in my country.’ His servants, however, said, 'Dear Father, if the prophet
had told you to do something great, you would not have taken it lightly.
How much more so when he says, ‘Wash yourself, you will become clean.’
And he washed himself and became clean" (II Kings 5:13-14).
Thus it is always as the Savior says, "The
strong do not need a doctor, but the sick" (Matthew 9:12).
Whoever needs nothing receives nothing.
Whoever is not poor will not become rich.
Whoever bears no sorrow will not be comforted.
Whoever is not sick will not become healthy.
Whoever is not lost will not be sought
by the Lamb, much less found.
Whoever is not naked, whoever does not
feel his nakedness and desire clothing, receives none.
This is a sad but true matter. And therein
lies the whole mystery of the truth of rejection. This means that all proud
spirits who do not want to bow down, who do not want to get down in the
dust, who are not poor in spirit, who do not want to be ill, who do not
want to go on the same road which every other poor sinner and beggar takes
when he goes to heaven, will perhaps be let in, but for no other purpose
than being all the more publicly thrown out.
Thus their security comes during their life.
Thus it happens that their pretensions about themselves increase from year
to year. It is just the same hardness of heart which Pharoah experienced.
Because he who so loves broken hearts demonstrates his power on such proud
spirits and demonstrates it rightly on them. He can wait them out. He can
bear them with patience, with immeasurable patience. But they go to the
well too often.
" ‘Just for this I have let you recover
over and over, awakened you out of unconsciousness, reestablished you time
after time, so that through you I might make quite public my power to help
and to ruin,’ says the Lord of Pharaoh" (Exodus 9:16).
And when they break, then it happens cum
emphasi, with emphasis, with power, with a clatter. They are cast out
as an example for others.
"And the rain fell and the floods came and the
winds blew agains that house, and it fell; and great was the fall of it."
(Matthew 7:27).
Thirdly, how can this be avoided? Who will
gladly come for nothing? Who will gladly deceive himself about his eternal
salvation? Who will gladly leave the broad road and take the narrow road
to the wedding house with the others, and afterwards still be sent away?
Surely no one wants this.
Now there is two-fold advice against this.
The first advice is for people like those who have just been described.
The other is for people who have the fortune of being poor, blind and so
on.
The first advice is, briefly, that which
the Savior himself gives in Luke 14, when he gave a warning to people who
were fighting over positions at a public meal. This serves all the more
for our purpose since he gave it to them on an occasion which has some
relationship to the parable of the wedding.
"If you are invited to a wedding," he says,
"do not sit at the head of the table, because someone more honorable than
you may have been invited. Then the one who invited both of you will come
and say to you, ‘Give this place to him,’ and you must then sit with disgrace
at the foot of the table. Rather when you are invited, go and sit at the
foot of the table. Then when the one who invited you comes he will say,
‘Friend, move to a better place.’ Then you will have the honor before those
with whom you sit at the table. Because whoever exalts himself will be
humbled and whoever humbles himself will be exalted" (Luke 14:8-11).
It is no different in the world. Whoever
has exalted himself and yet has so much love for his soul that he does
not want to continue this drama into eternity, whoever does not want to
be openly shamed in eternity, must allow himself to be brought down from
his heights in the world. He must allow people to say, "The poor sinners
are more honest than you are; let them move up to the head of the table.
You sit down at the foot."
Whoever loves his soul must be satisfied
with the disgrace that for twenty, thirty years he dreamed a false Christianity
for himself, made a religion that had no basis. He would have been saved
if he had remained with the simple foundations he learned from the catechism
from his youth on. He will be lost because he fooled himself, studied all
the theosophists, and in the process lost his way and his faith.
If a man can admit, and does not allow
himself to regret saying, "The beetles have eaten the past years; I want
to turn to the Lamb. I will change and become a child. He may replace my
years out of grace and do what he pleases with me," this is what it means
then to sit at the foot of the table.
In this way a person can be helped. And
this is a blessing a person must manage in the world, because if he waits
until eternity then he will be sent away with disgrace and insult. And
if a person knew what to say in the world, had plenty of responses, always
had to have the last word, then he has to remain silent in eternity.
The second thing people who recognize themselves
as poor and wretched, who know that there is nothing good about themselves,
should note is this. They must be lost if they are not helped. They will
be called from the streets and fields and come and say, "What should we
do? We are not dressed for the wedding. It must not be meant for us. What
will the Lord Jesus do with such a bad person, with such a greedy, arrogant,
envious, irksome person as I am? What will he do with such a dumb person
who hardly knows what he wants, who hardly has a concept of what goes along
with salvation? Surely he does not mean me."
"Yes," say the servants. "We have instructions.
We are supposed to bring people in from the streets and fields, as we find
them, bad and good, without distinction. We are not supposed to treat the
good ones better and the bad ones worse."
"May I also come then?" "Yes, indeed."
If a person comes, then someone says to
him, "You were afraid and worried about how you should appear at the wedding
because you have no wedding garment. This is taken care of. I will give
you a garment, a white garment, which you can put on."
"That would be well enough. But I cannot
pay."
"You will receive it as a gift. This is
the garment which all receive, the righteousness of Jesus Christ, the white
silk of the saints, the innocence of the Lamb, sprinkled with his blood."
That is the adornment and the garment of honor in which one can stand before
God.
And then a person only needs to be childlike
and simple, just allow this to be given to him and take it, and in the
name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, to put on the clothing he is given
as a person puts on his robe early without great effort. He should think,
"I am indeed not allowed to do anything. I am only allowed to receive gifts.
I want to do this too. He can give me as much grace and give to me as richly
as he wants to. He can adorn me as he pleases. I know well that I have
no right to this, but I will accept it." To be joyful about the clothing
and to accept it with deep gratitude, this is to have a taste for the matter,
to desire it, to have a will for it. This is enough.
But now actually to say, "What then does
the garment mean?" It means precisely what a proper garment means in the
world.
People are generally accustomed to dressing
properly. Then, if they appear before people for whom they have respect,
they dress even more respectably. They do not do this out of arrogance,
not because of their own person, but out of respect for those persons who
come to them or to whom they go. If someone is dressed in his everyday
manner and someone for whom he has respect comes to him, it is not arrogance
if he then puts on a coat or vest if he was in his shirt. It is, rather,
an act of respect.
Thus it is proper for a person to come to
heaven overdressed. Respect for the living God, the impression which is
already in his mind, brings this along with it. The apostle says this about
it, "Thus indeed, where we are dressed and not just found naked. We have
a building, we have a palace, but we must go there dressed" (II Corinthians
5:2-3). That is all that we are lacking.
Now if we look at ourselves in our misery,
in our bad circumstances, we say, "Dear God, I cannot dress and adorn myself.
I cannot make myself beautiful. Where do I get a garment? I cannot appear
before the majestic God." It is written, "What you do not have, he has
in abundance." The death of the Lamb, the blood that was shed on the cross,
adorned all of us at once. And whoever has received a living impression
of this in his heart, whoever has sincerely sighed and pleaded, "Oh, clothe
me in your righteousness!" puts on the Savior's merit and "the blessing
of his cross, like a shirt, like a robe." That is a biblical way of speaking.
Just as we put on Satan's evil nature, his
evil being, through the fall, we put on the Lord Jesus, his blessing, his
merit, everything holy and glorious about him. This is extended to a person;
it is given. The Father in heaven looks at a person as someone who is blessed
in his Son, who is pardoned, who is covered with his Son, who no longer
appears in his natural nakedness, but rather stands with Jesus under one
cloak, under one garment, under one glorious adornment of honor.
I do not hesitate to include the making
honest of dishonest children under the cloak, because what happens to them
truly happens to us. It is, in the end, what the prophet says, "He put
the clothing of salvation on me and dressed me in the cloak of righteousness,
like a groom is adorned with priestly finery and like a bride adorns herself
with jewels" (Isaiah 61:10).
It is given purely as a gift, purely someone
else's, nothing of our own. All of our virtues, all of our goodness, all
of our gentleness, humility, childlikeness, beneficence, and whatever names
the virtues have, this is all clothing which is completely good. However,
it is not the clothing in which we can stand before God. "Above all this,
the Lord Jesus Christ," above all this, his righteousness, his blood and
death. It is thus the closest thing, the lowest and highest, shirt and
caftan, the necessary and the honorable.
All external exercises, all good things
are also to be used if we have the Savior, but above all things we must
have him. If our nakedness is covered with him, then all virtues, all the
happiness that is given to us, all levels of sanctification are put on
us like jewelry. But over all of this comes the garment of honor, so that
a person can stand on the day of the Lord, not in virtues, not in beautiful
things, but rather in the only royal garment on which the little Lamb has
sprinkled his blood, in which he has wrapped his believers.
This is their priestly cloak, their sign
that they belong to the Savior, their uniform. With this a person can show
God that he has a part in him.
"Friend! How did you get in here?" "You
dressed me in righteousness."
Because salvation depends on this: the Savior
must acknowledge us. If the Savior does this, then we are helped. However,
if the Savior does not announce someone and acknowledge him before his
Father, but says, "I do not know you or where you come from," then even
if a person has driven out devils, "brought half the world to God and under
the feet of religion," he can still be sent away.
God looks at the heart. He makes himself
known to the lowliest child who has grace. If the Savior does not find
an honest heart and a soul wrapped in righteousness in the most important
witness, the most respected saint, the greatest prophet who had many blessings
in the world, then he does not declare himself to him. Thus everything
depends on the Savior and on his declaration.
Being rejected thus amounts to a person
being called, coming, and still sent away. But this happens only to those
who stand high, who have no need of righteousness, who are holy enough
that, in their imagination, they lack nothing.
Those, however, who come to Jesus as poor
sinners, who bring no righteousness, no words, no holiness, nothing but
nakedness and poverty, they can receive the garment of honor. Such people
are not turned away. They are not thrown out into the darkness but can
walk in the light of life.
May the Savior bring about such a mind in
us so that we faithfully guard against all such pretensions of our own
and allow ourselves to be saved from them. They have brought ruin to so
many people in so many hundreds of years; they have completely destroyed
people and blinded them throughout their lives. They set the Bishop of
Laodicia in such a troubled state that the Lord said to him, "You say,
'I am rich and have enough to eat and need nothing,’ and do not know that
you are a wretched, poor person" (Revelation 3:17).
Let us not look for these people among
the Turks and Tartars or among the heathen, but in the places where we
see and hear the most good. The angel of the Gemeine at Laodicia describes
such a person, and he has many like him.
Although there are not a lot in an assembly,
there are still many in general, and it will not be easy to find a place
where there are none. Surely the most necessary thing is for us to allow
ourselves to be called and to come.
Perhaps a very few among us will be worried
that they will be sent away in this way with disgrace and insult. Because
of spiritual arrogance, they will not begin their conversion. However,
it is like this with anyone who is this foolish and does not consider the
matter great enough, not important enough, anyone who excuses himself with
his nourishment or with his sins or with his household (as we hear in this
same chapter from which our text comes, that one person excuses himself
this way and another one another way). They do not get around to it at
all. "I swear," it is written, "that none of the men who are invited will
taste my Holy Supper" (Luke 14:24).
Thus two dangerous issues arise with the
wedding invitation. On the one hand there is not coming, being lazy, indolent,
being negligent, if the voice of God's Son allows itself to be heard. That
is called remaining outside.
On the other hand there is depending on
yourself, on your own authority, on your beautiful clothing, on your own
sanctity. This brings reprobation.
The kind of people, however, who allow themselves
to be called and then come with trembling and shaking and think, "What
should I do there? This grace is too great for me!" These are the ones
who accept it. They allow it to be given to them because Jesus came to
bless us. They put on the clothing of righteousness, the merit of Jesus.
These are the ones who rejoice over the great salvation. In that clothing
they await the appearance of his joy. They will taste the wedding. They
will not only celebrate the Lord's Supper with Jesus, and he with them,
but they will also eat his flesh and drink his blood until they have something
new again with Jesus in his Father's kingdom.
My dear Savior, you great and living Lord,
you King of Saints who were saved by grace, through faith, and this not
from themselves. It was your gift! We ask you in a childlike way and sincerely
to accept all of us and to call many in this service to yourself, and to
give them the clothing of your righteousness. We ask you to let them be
numbered among your guests. Let them enjoy a foretaste here of what they
will have there completely.
Have mercy also on the others who consider
themselves wise, clothed, rich, completely satisfied, and who do not know
their wretchedness. On their behalf we also call upon you in a childlike
way to present yourself before their eyes so authoritatively, so bloodily,
so divinely, that they learn to lower themselves in the world and are not
finally sent away from there with disgrace and insult.
Give us, your poor children, the grace to
know you and to remain clothed in your righteousness, and to wash our own
clothes in your blood and not to put on our finery until your day. Do this
for your own sake. Amen!
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