Excuses
“But they all alike began to make excuses. The first said, ‘I have just bought a field, and I must go and see it. Please excuse me.’ “Another said, ‘I have just bought five yoke of oxen, and I’m on my way to try them out. Please excuse me.’ “Still another said, ‘I just got married, so I can’t come.” — Luke 14:18-20
In Luke 14:15–24, Jesus tells the parable of the great banquet—a lavish
feast prepared by a generous host. Invitations go out, but one by one, the
guests decline. Their reasons? A new field, a pair of oxen, a recent marriage.
On the surface, these seem reasonable. But beneath them lies a deeper truth:
they simply didn’t want to come.
Excuses are the stories we tell ourselves—and others—to justify why
something didn’t happen the way it should have. At first glance, they seem
harmless, even protective. But when we look deeper, excuses often reveal more
about our fears, insecurities, and resistance to growth than about the
obstacles we claim to face.
Jesus consistently challenges excuses as barriers to faith, obedience,
and participation in God's kingdom. He views them not as harmless delays, but
as signs of misplaced priorities. Excuses
expose what we value most. When we make
excuses, we're not just avoiding a task or commitment—we're revealing what
matters more to us in that moment.
Excuses are the most elegant destroyer of success ever invented. They are seductive. They wear the disguise of
reason, cloaked in logic and wrapped in self-preservation. But beneath their
polished surface lies a quiet saboteur—one that dismantles ambition not with
force, but with finesse.
Excuses feel so justified because they’re often rooted in psychological
self-protection. They don’t just explain failure—they cushion it. They feel
justified because they’re emotionally convenient. When we make excuses, we’re not always trying
to deceive others. Often, we’re trying to protect ourselves from discomfort,
shame, or fear. They give comfort to inaction. They are the language of
retreat.
Excuses are like a warm blanket on a cold morning. They wrap us in
temporary relief, shielding us from the sting of effort, risk, or failure. But
that comfort comes at a cost: momentum. They
validate our fears: “I’m not ready” feels safer than “I’m afraid to try.” They
justify delay: “I don’t have time” lets us avoid the discomfort of
prioritizing. They protect our image: “It wasn’t my fault” preserves
pride, even if it stalls progress.
Inaction feels safe because it avoids immediate consequences. But over
time, it breeds regret. Excuses make us feel like we’re choosing wisely, when
in reality, we’re often just choosing not to choose. The moment we stop making excuses is the
moment we reclaim our power. Action—even imperfect—is the only path forward.
It’s uncomfortable, yes. But it’s also where growth lives.
Excuses are soft. They don’t shout, they whisper. They don’t slam doors,
they gently close them. That’s what makes them dangerous. They offer comfort in
the moment—relief from pressure, escape from accountability—but they do so at
the expense of our future. Excuses may
comfort us in the short term, but they quietly rob us of the future we’re
capable of building.
The host’s response in Luke 14 is striking—he opens the banquet to the
poor, the crippled, the blind, and the lame. Those who were overlooked become
honored guests. Those who were invited first miss out, not because they were
unworthy, but because they were unwilling.
The parable of the great banquet isn’t just about missed invitations—it’s
about misplaced values. Jesus doesn’t entertain excuses lightly. He calls for
wholehearted devotion. In Luke 9:62, He says, “No one who puts a hand to the
plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God.” That’s not
harsh—it’s honest. The kingdom requires focus, not divided attention.
We all have fields, oxen, and relationships—modern versions might be
careers, social obligations, or personal goals. But Jesus asks: Will you let
those things keep you from the feast?
This parable isn’t just about saying yes to God once. It’s about
continually choosing Him over the distractions that compete for our attention.
It’s about making space for the sacred amid the ordinary.
What Our Excuses Reveal
- Our fears: “I’m not
ready” might mean you’re afraid of failure, change, or vulnerability.
- Our priorities: “I don’t have
time” could mean something else is taking center stage—work, comfort,
control.
- Our identity: “I’m not good
enough” might point to a deeper struggle with self-worth or shame.
- Our trust
level: “What if it doesn’t work?” may show hesitation to trust God’s plan
over your own.
None of these are indictments—they’re invitations. Jesus doesn’t shame
people for their excuses. He simply shows what’s at stake when we let them rule
our decisions.

Very powerful! Thank you Pastor.
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ReplyDeleteI think over my life and all the excuses I used to use to keep the evilness in my life without really understanding what evil was.
ReplyDeleteToday , I make no excuses out of fear. I have no desire to keep people happy or satisfied with my excuses. If I lose everything and everyone I still have my Father God that loves me unconditionally.
I only have a deep desire to please, my Father God at all costs no matter what I lose or who I lose because those are the people places and things I need to lose out of my life now.
If I was to make an excuse. I look at it this way. It's like, God changing me, me going back to my old ways and insulting God which I've done that way too many times.
I am done pleasing the world full of excuses. I want to please God fully.