Luke 14:12-14

Luke 14:12-14

[12] Then  also  to him that bade  him,  When  thou makest  a dinner  or  a supper,  call  not  friends,  nor  brethren,  neither  kinsmen,  nor  thy rich  neighbours;  they  also  again,  and  a recompence  be made  [13] But  when  thou makest  a feast,  call  the poor,  the maimed,  the lame,  the blind:  [14] And  blessed;  for  they cannot  recompense  for  shalt be recompensed  at  the resurrection  of the just. 

What does Luke 14:12-14 Mean?

Contextual Meaning

Jesus addressed the former parable to His fellow guests, but He directed this teaching particularly to His host. This lesson, like the former parable, could have applied only to social relationships. However, Jesus" teaching was never simply ethical. It always had a spiritual dimension (cf. Luke 6:32-36). Jesus was teaching on both levels. If the Pharisees did not perceive or rejected the lesson about Jesus" ministry, they could at least profit from the ethical instruction. In much of Jesus" teaching the alternatives were not really "do not do this but do that" as much as "do not do as much of this as that." This was common Semitic idiom, and it accounts for Jesus" strong statements.
The principle that Jesus recommended to His host for selecting guests is one that God had used in inviting people to the messianic banquet. Inviting those who could not repay the favor resulted in the greater glory of earthly hosts as well as the divine host. If earthly hosts behaved as the heavenly host, that behavior would demonstrate true righteousness, and God would reward it. Otherwise they would only receive a temporal reward from their guests. This lesson vindicated Jesus" ministry to the "have nots" and explained why He did not cater to the "haves" (cf. Luke 4:18; Luke 6:20-21). It also indirectly appealed to the Pharisees to receive Jesus" invitation to believe on Him for blessing.
"We cannot be certain that the ruler of Luke 14was a silent believer like the ones mentioned in John 12. Perhaps he was not, because he had invited Jesus to dinner at the risk of criticism from his fellow Pharisees. But one thing we do know is that he was a believer, for if he had not been, then a guarantee of reward could not have been given to him.
"What a fortunate host this man was! In return for this dinner, he gets from our Lord an invaluable lesson in Christian etiquette. If a believer uses his hospitality to entertain people who have no way of repaying him for it, God Himself becomes the Paymaster. And the resurrection of the just, which includes of course the Judgment Seat of Christ, becomes the payday!
"When was the last time that you or I extended hospitality in such a way that it would only be repaid to us in that future resurrection payday? Maybe we should rethink our guest lists!" [1]