🙏 God has prepared the banquet of salvation. Why do so many souls refuse the invitation?
In this traditional Catholic explanation of the Second Sunday after Pentecost, we explore the Parable of the Great Supper from Luke 14:16–24 through the timeless catechesis of Rev. Leonard Goffine.
What does the banquet represent? Why do the invited guests refuse to come? What do the three excuses teach about worldly attachments, spiritual indifference, and the rejection of grace?
This Gospel is not merely a story about a feast. It is a profound lesson about God’s continual invitation through grace, the danger of preferring created things to the Creator, and the urgency of responding while the time of mercy remains.
In this video:
✠ The meaning of the Great Supper
✠ Grace as God’s invitation to the soul
✠ The symbolism of the three excuses
✠ Spiritual indifference and its dangers
✠ The invitation extended to the poor and humble
✠ The relationship between grace, salvation, and eternity
✠ Why God’s invitation will not last forever
God has prepared everything necessary for salvation. The Church remains open. The sacraments remain available. Heaven remains offered.
The question is not whether God invites.
The question is whether we will answer.