The Wedding feast parable and the "outer darkness" -Matthew 22:1-11
Remember that Matthew was written to a Jewish audience, to emphasize Jesus as King and Messiah.
So we need to put on our Jewish sandals and think this through...
The Jewish marriages were performed in the night season, and the hall where the feast was made was greatly illuminated; the outer darkness means, therefore, the darkness on the outside of this festal hall.
[He had, by his action, if not in words, said, ‘I am a free man, and will do as I like.’ So the king said to the servants, ‘Bind him.’ Pinion him; let him never be free again. He had made too free with holy things; he had actively insulted the King.” (Spurgeon)]
This parable demonstrates that those indifferent to the gospel, those antagonistic against the gospel, and those unchanged by the gospel share the same fate. None of them enjoyed the king’s feast.