Making the Cut: Everyone’s Invited!

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In my junior year of high school I was cut from my high school basketball team. I can still remember where I was and how I felt when I learned that I didn’t make the cut. I was standing outside the office of the athletic director/coach of the boys’ team where the list was posted. All around me were other young men, celebrating their shared joy of finding their names on that white sheet of paper hanging on the bulletin board. But alas, as I surveyed the sheet, my name wasn’t included. I surely wasn’t the only one that was cut from the team that year, but it sure felt like it in that moment. I felt isolated, unwanted, and unworthy.

As I reflect back all these years later, I can see the growth that came from that experience and I understand the difficulty and unenviability of the coach’s position. But, the pain was extremely disorienting and discouraging. And, while the impetus of the pain is different for everybody, each of us, at some point in time, has or will experience the heartache of being excluded.

Jesus continues to issue unexpected invitations to and through unworthy people like me and you.

In the gospel of Mark, there’s a story about a guy who knew the pain of being excluded all-too-well. He was a tax collector named Matthew. One could argue that Matthew had earned his exclusion through poor life choices. Tax collectors were collaborators with an extremely unpopular and oppressive government. They became very rich by using their positions to effectively legally rob the people in their community. Consequently, most people avoided tax collectors at all costs and they certainly didn’t invite them to participate in any communal functions. Matthew knew what it was to be isolated, unwanted, and unworthy, but everything changed when he met a man named Jesus.

In Matthew 9:9-13, Mathew makes the cut as Jesus issues an invitation to become part of His crew. What’s of most interest to me, however, is not Matthew’s response to the invitation but what immediately follows. The passage indicates that Matthew’s first course of action following His induction into Jesus’s entourage is to invite several other unwanted and unworthy people, referred to as “tax collectors and sinners” to join him for dinner with Jesus. Upon hearing the religious elites questioning the morality of Jesus’s social circle including such people, Jesus famously declares, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’ For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.”

Part of what makes the gospel good news is that it is available to all who hear and are willing to receive it. It’s an invitation that is unlimited in scope. John 3:16 famously tells us, “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son,” not to condemn the world, “but to save the world through Him.” 1 Timothy 2:4 tells us that God “wants all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth.” And several times throughout the gospel narratives, Jesus Himself issues the invitation for any who were willing to come and follow Him, extending to all much the same invitation He extended to Matthew.

God’s amazing grace carries an invitation that is open to all who are willing to receive it; EVERYONE’S INVITED!

I wonder if the alienation and accompanying hurt and heartache Matthew had felt before Jesus invited him to follow didn’t inspire Matthew’s actions in the immediate aftermath. Could it be that the pain of being excluded in the past drove him to invite others to join him when he was finally invited in? The truth is that Matthew was unworthy, but Jesus still wanted Him. That same truth extends to each of us. Though we have sinned time without number, though we have rebelled against God’s holy expectations for our lives, Christ came and sacrificed His life on our behalf. And, Jesus continues to issue unexpected invitations to and through unworthy people like me and you.

I pray that each of you reading this experience the amazing grace of Jesus. I hope that you, in response, seek to spread the love to others who are on the outside looking in. The grace of God is a free gift, but it’s not something we are to hide away for ourselves. Just as we have freely received, so too we should freely give to others. While all of us will feel the sting of failing to make the cut or being uninvited, that shouldn’t be the case when it comes to salvation and the gospel. God’s amazing grace carries an invitation that is open to all who are willing to receive it; EVERYONE’S INVITED!

About the author

Jeremy Myers

Jeremy Myers is the Lead Pastor of First Baptist Church of Seymour, Indiana, where he has served since 2017. He has over 25 years of experience in local church ministry and not-for-profit leadership. He has a passion for helping emerging and existing generations learn to make space for each other and caring for the under-served and marginalized. In 2016, he earned his Doctor of Ministry degree from Palmer Theological Seminary, with his thesis focusing on developing connections between senior adults and youth in the church. He is a passionate and gifted communicator and is regularly invited to speak at retreats, camps, conferences, and other events. He lives in Seymour, Indiana with his wife Robyn, their two children, Mikayla and JJ, and their Golden Doodle, Evie.

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Jeremy Myers

Jeremy Myers is the Lead Pastor of First Baptist Church of Seymour, Indiana, where he has served since 2017. He has over 25 years of experience in local church ministry and not-for-profit leadership. He has a passion for helping emerging and existing generations learn to make space for each other and caring for the under-served and marginalized. In 2016, he earned his Doctor of Ministry degree from Palmer Theological Seminary, with his thesis focusing on developing connections between senior adults and youth in the church. He is a passionate and gifted communicator and is regularly invited to speak at retreats, camps, conferences, and other events. He lives in Seymour, Indiana with his wife Robyn, their two children, Mikayla and JJ, and their Golden Doodle, Evie.

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