Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO
MARK
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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INTRODUCTION
THAT the Second Gospel was written by Mark is universally agreed,
though by what Mark, not so. The great majority of critics take the
writer to be "John whose surname was Mark," of whom we read in the
Acts, and who was "sister's son to Barnabas"
(Col 4:10).
But no reason whatever is assigned for this opinion, for which the
tradition, though ancient, is not uniform; and one cannot but wonder
how it is so easily taken for granted by WETSTEIN,
HUG, MEYER, EBRARD, LANGE, ELLICOTT, DAVIDSON, TREGELLES, &c. ALFORD goes the
length of saying it "has been universally believed that he was the same
person with the John Mark of the Gospels." But GROTIUS thought differently, and so did SCHLEIERMACHER, CAMPBELL, BURTON, and DA COSTA; and the grounds on which it is concluded that they
were two different persons appear to us quite unanswerable. "Of John,
surnamed Mark," says CAMPBELL, in his Preface to
this Gospel, "one of the first things we learn is, that he attended
Paul and Barnabas in their apostolical journeys, when these two
travelled together
(Ac 12:25; 13:5).
And when afterwards there arose a dispute between them concerning him,
insomuch that they separated, Mark accompanied his uncle Barnabas, and
Silas attended Paul. When Paul was reconciled to Mark, which was
probably soon after, we find Paul again employing Mark's assistance,
recommending him, and giving him a very honorable testimony
(Col 4:10;
2Ti 4:11;
Phm 24).
But we hear not a syllable of his attending Peter as his minister, or
assisting him in any capacity." And yet, as we shall presently see, no
tradition is more ancient, more uniform, and better sustained by
internal evidence, than that Mark, in his Gospel, was but "the
interpreter of Peter," who, at the close of his first Epistle speaks of
him as "Marcus my son"
(1Pe 5:13),
that is, without doubt, his son in the Gospel--converted to Christ
through his instrumentality. And when we consider how little the
Apostles Peter and Paul were together--how seldom they even met--how
different were their tendencies, and how separate their spheres of
labor, is there not, in the absence of all evidence of the fact,
something approaching to violence in the supposition that the same Mark
was the intimate associate of both? "In brief," adds CAMPBELL, "the accounts given of Paul's attendant, and
those of Peter's interpreter, concur in nothing but the name, Mark or
Marcus; too slight a circumstance to conclude the sameness of the
person from, especially when we consider how common the name was at
Rome, and how customary it was for the Jews in that age to assume some
Roman name when they went thither."
Regarding the Evangelist Mark, then, as another person from Paul's
companion in travel, all we know of his personal history is that he was
a convert, as we have seen, of the Apostle Peter. But as to his Gospel,
the tradition regarding Peter's hand in it is so ancient, so uniform,
and so remarkably confirmed by internal evidence, that we must regard
it as an established fact. "Mark," says PAPIAS (according to the
testimony of EUSEBIUS, [Ecclesiastical History, 3.39]), "becoming
the interpreter of Peter, wrote accurately, though not in order,
whatever he remembered of what was either said or done by Christ; for
he was neither a hearer of the Lord nor a follower of Him, but
afterwards, as I said, [he was a follower] of Peter, who arranged the
discourses for use, but not according to the order in which they were
uttered by the Lord." To the same effect IRENÆUS
[Against Heresies, 3. 1]: "Matthew published a Gospel while Peter
and Paul were preaching and founding the Church at Rome; and after
their departure (or decease), Mark,
the disciple and interpreter of Peter, he also gave forth to us in
writing the things which were preached by Peter." And
CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA is still more specific, in a passage preserved to
us by EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 6.14]: "Peter having
publicly preached the word at Rome, and spoken forth the Gospel by the
Spirit, many of those present exhorted Mark, as
having long been a follower of his, and remembering what he had
said, to write what had been spoken; and that having prepared the
Gospel, he delivered it to those who had asked him for it; which, when
Peter came to the knowledge of, he neither decidedly forbade nor
encouraged him." EUSEBIUS' own testimony, however, from other accounts,
is rather different: that Peter's hearers were so penetrated by his
preaching that they gave Mark, as being a follower of Peter, no
rest till he consented to write his Gospel, as a memorial of his oral
teaching; and "that the apostle, when he knew by the revelation of the
Spirit what had been done, was delighted with the zeal of those men,
and sanctioned the reading of the writing (that is, of this Gospel of
Mark) in the churches" [Ecclesiastical History, 2.15]. And giving
in another of his works a similar statement, he says that "Peter, from
excess of humility, did not think himself qualified to write the
Gospel; but Mark, his acquaintance and pupil, is said to have recorded
his relations of the actings of Jesus. And Peter testifies these things
of himself; for all things that are recorded by Mark are said to be
memoirs of Peter's discourses." It is needless to go farther--to
ORIGEN, who says Mark composed his Gospel "as Peter guided" or
"directed him, who, in his Catholic Epistle, calls him his son," &c.;
and to JEROME, who but echoes
EUSEBIUS.
This, certainly, is a remarkable chain of testimony; which,
confirmed as it is by such striking internal evidence, may be regarded
as establishing the fact that the Second Gospel was drawn up mostly
from materials furnished by Peter. In DA
COSTA'S Four Witnesses the
reader will find this internal evidence detailed at length, though all
the examples are not equally convincing. But if the reader will refer
to our remarks on
Mr 16:7,
and
Joh 18:27,
he will have convincing evidence of a Petrine hand in this
Gospel.
It remains only to advert, in a word or two, to the readers for
whom this Gospel was, in the first instance, designed, and the date of it. That it was not for Jews but Gentiles, is evident from the
great number of explanations of Jewish usages, opinions, and places,
which to a Jew would at that time have been superfluous, but were
highly needful to a Gentile. We can here but refer to
Mr 2:18;
7:3, 4; 12:18; 13:3; 14:12; 15:42,
for examples of these. Regarding the date of this Gospel--about which
nothing certain is known--if the tradition reported by IRENÆUS can be relied on, that it was written at
Rome, "after the departure of Peter and Paul," and if by that word
"departure" we are to understand their death, we may date it
somewhere between the years 64 and 68; but in all likelihood this is
too late. It is probably nearer the truth to date it eight or ten years
earlier.
CHAPTER 1
Mr 1:1-8.
THE
PREACHING AND
BAPTISM OF
JOHN.
( =
Mt 3:1-12;
Lu 3:1-18).
1. The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God--By
the "Gospel" of Jesus Christ here is evidently meant the blessed Story
which our Evangelist is about to tell of His Life, Ministry, Death,
Resurrection, and Glorification, and of the begun Gathering of Believers
in His Name. The abruptness with which he announces his subject, and the
energetic brevity with which, passing by all preceding events, he
hastens over the ministry of John and records the Baptism and Temptation
of Jesus--as if impatient to come to the Public Life of the Lord of
glory--have often been noticed as characteristic of this Gospel--a
Gospel whose direct, practical, and singularly vivid setting imparts to
it a preciousness peculiar to itself. What strikes every one is, that
though the briefest of all the Gospels, this is in some of the principal
scenes of our Lord's history the fullest. But what is not so obvious is,
that wherever the finer and subtler feelings of humanity, or the deeper
and more peculiar hues of our Lord's character were brought out, these,
though they should be lightly passed over by all the other Evangelists,
are sure to be found here, and in touches of such quiet delicacy and
power, that though scarce observed by the cursory reader, they leave
indelible impressions upon all the thoughtful and furnish a key to much
that is in the other Gospels. These few opening words of the Second
Gospel are enough to show, that though it was the purpose of this
Evangelist to record chiefly the outward and palpable facts of our
Lord's public life, he recognized in Him, in common with the Fourth
Evangelist, the glory of the Only-begotten of the Father.
2, 3. As it is written in the prophets, Behold, I send my messenger
before thy face, which shall prepare thy way before
thee--
(Mal 3:1;
Isa 40:3).
3. The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of
the Lord, make his paths straight--The second of these quotations is
given by Matthew and Luke in the same connection, but they reserve the
former quotation till they have occasion to return to the Baptist, after
his imprisonment
(Mt 11:10;
Lu 7:27).
(Instead of the words, "as it is written in the Prophets," there is
weighty evidence in favor of the following reading: "As it is written
in Isaiah the prophet." This reading is adopted by all the latest
critical editors. If it be the true one, it is to be explained
thus--that of the two quotations, the one from Malachi is but a later
development of the great primary one in Isaiah, from which the whole
prophetical matter here quoted takes its name. But the received text is
quoted by IRENÆUS, before the end of the
second century, and the evidence in its favor is greater in
amount, if not in weight. The chief objection to it is, that if
this was the true reading, it is difficult to see how the other one
could have got in at all; whereas, if it be not the true reading, it is
very easy to see how it found its way into the text, as it removes the
startling difficulty of a prophecy beginning with the words of Malachi
being ascribed to Isaiah.) For the exposition, see on
Mt 3:1-6;
Mt 3:11.
Mr 1:9-11.
BAPTISM OF
CHRIST AND
DESCENT OF THE
SPIRIT UPON
HIM
IMMEDIATELY
THEREAFTER.
( =
Mt 3:13-17;
Lu 3:21, 22).
See on
Mt 3:13-17.
Mr 1:12, 13.
TEMPTATION OF
CHRIST.
( =
Mt 4:1-11;
Lu 4:1-13).
See on
Mt 4:1-11.
Mr 1:14-20.
CHRIST
BEGINS
HIS
GALILEAN
MINISTRY--CALLING OF
SIMON AND
ANDREW,
JAMES AND
JOHN.
See on
Mt 4:12-22.
Mr 1:21-39.
HEALING OF A
DEMONIAC IN THE
SYNAGOGUE OF
CAPERNAUM AND
THEREAFTER OF
SIMON'S
MOTHER-IN-LAW AND
MANY
OTHERS--JESUS,
NEXT
DAY,
IS
FOUND IN A
SOLITARY
PLACE AT
MORNING
PRAYERS, AND
IS
ENTREATED TO
RETURN, BUT
DECLINES, AND
GOES
FORTH ON
HIS
FIRST
MISSIONARY
CIRCUIT.
( =
Lu 4:31-44;
Mt 8:14-17; 4:23-25).
21. And they went into Capernaum--(See on
Mt 4:13).
and straightway on the sabbath day he entered into the synagogue, and
taught--This should have been rendered, "straightway on the sabbaths
He entered into the synagogue and taught," or "continued to teach." The
meaning is, that as He began this practice on the very first sabbath
after coming to settle at Capernaum, so He continued it regularly
thereafter.
22. And they were astonished at his doctrine--or "teaching"--referring
quite as much to the manner as the matter of it.
for he taught them as one that had authority, and not as the
scribes--See on
Mt 7:28, 29.
23. And there was in their synagogue a man with an unclean spirit--literally, "in an unclean spirit"--that is, so entirely under demoniacal
power that his personality was sunk for the time in that of the spirit.
The frequency with which this character of "impurity" is ascribed to
evil spirits--some twenty times in the Gospels--is not to be overlooked.
and he cried out--as follows:
24. Saying, Let us alone--or rather, perhaps, "ah!" expressive of
mingled astonishment and terror.
what have we to do with thee--an expression of frequent occurrence
in the Old Testament
(1Ki 17:18;
2Ki 3:13;
2Ch 35:21,
&c.).
It denotes entire separation of interests:--that is, "Thou and
we have nothing in common; we want not Thee; what wouldst Thou with
us?" For the analogous application of it by our Lord to His mother, see
on
Joh 2:4.
thou Jesus of Nazareth--"Jesus, Nazarene!" an epithet originally given
to express contempt, but soon adopted as the current designation by
those who held our Lord in honor
(Lu 18:37;
Mr 16:6;
Ac 2:22).
art thou come to destroy us?--In the case of the Gadarene demoniac
the question was, "Art Thou come hither to torment us before the time?"
(Mt 8:29).
Themselves tormentors and destroyers of their victims, they discern in
Jesus their own destined tormentor and destroyer, anticipating and
dreading what they know and feel to be awaiting them! Conscious, too,
that their power was but permitted and temporary, and perceiving in
Him, perhaps, the woman's Seed that was to bruise the head and destroy
the works of the devil, they regard His approach to them on this
occasion as a signal to let go their grasp of this miserable victim.
I know thee who thou art, the Holy One of God--This and other even
more glorious testimonies to our Lord were given, as we know, with no
good will, but in hope that, by the acceptance of them, He might appear
to the people to be in league with evil spirits--a calumny which His
enemies were ready enough to throw out against Him. But a Wiser than
either was here, who invariably rejected and silenced the testimonies
that came to Him from beneath, and thus was able to rebut the
imputations of His enemies against Him
(Mt 12:24-30).
The expression, "Holy One of God," seems evidently taken from that
Messianic Psalm
(Ps 16:10),
in which He is styled "Thine Holy One."
25. And Jesus rebuked him, saying, Hold thy peace, and come out of
him--A glorious word of command.
BENGEL remarks that it was only the
testimony borne to Himself which our Lord meant to silence. That he
should afterwards cry out for fear or rage
(Mr 1:26)
He would right willingly permit.
26. And when the unclean spirit had torn him--Luke
(Lu 4:35)
says, "When he had thrown him in the midst." Malignant cruelty--just
showing what he would have done, if permitted to go farther: it
was a last fling!
and cried with a loud voice--the voice of enforced submission and
despair.
he came out of him--Luke
(Lu 4:35)
adds, "and hurt him not." Thus impotent were the malignity and rage of
the impure spirit when under the restraint of "the Stronger than the
strong one armed"
(Lu 11:21, 22).
27. What thing is this? what new doctrine--teaching
is this?--The audience, rightly apprehending that the miracle was
wrought to illustrate the teaching and display the character and glory
of the Teacher, begin by asking what novel kind of teaching this could
be, which was so marvellously attested.
28. And immediately his fame spread abroad throughout all the region
round about Galilee--rather, "the whole region of Galilee"; though
some, as MEYER and
ELLICOTT, explain it of the country surrounding
Galilee.
29. And forthwith, when they were come out of the synagogue--so also
in
Lu 4:38.
they entered into the house of Simon and Andrew, with James and John--The mention of these four--which is peculiar to Mark--is the first of
those traces of Peter's hand in this Gospel, of which we shall find many
more. The house being his, and the illness and cure so nearly affecting
himself, it is interesting to observe this minute specification of the
number and names of the witnesses; interesting also as the first
occasion on which the sacred triumvirate of Peter and James and John are
selected from among the rest, to be a threefold cord of testimony to
certain events in their Lord's life
(see on
Mr 5:37)
--Andrew being present on this occasion, as the occurrence took place
in his own house.
30. But Simon's wife's mother lay sick of a fever--Luke, as was
natural in "the beloved physician"
(Col 4:14),
describes it professionally; calling it a "great fever," and thus
distinguishing it from that lighter kind which the Greek physicians
were wont to call "small fevers," as GALEN, quoted
by WETSTEIN, tells us.
and anon--immediately.
they tell him of her--naturally hoping that His compassion and power
towards one of His own disciples would not be less signally displayed
than towards the demonized stranger in the synagogue.
31. And he came and took her by the hand--rather, "And advancing, He
took her," &c. The beloved physician again is very specific: "And He
stood over her."
and lifted her up--This act of condescension, most felt doubtless by
Peter, is recorded only by Mark.
and immediately the fever left her, and she ministered unto
them--preparing their sabbath-meal: in token both of the
perfectness and immediateness of the cure, and of her gratitude to the
glorious Healer.
32. And at even, when the sun did set--so
Mt 8:16.
Luke
(Lu 4:40)
says it was setting.
they brought unto him all that were diseased, and them that were
possessed with devils--the demonized. From
Lu 13:14
we see how unlawful they would have deemed it to bring their sick to
Jesus for a cure during the sabbath hours. They waited, therefore, till
these were over, and then brought them in crowds. Our Lord afterwards
took repeated occasion to teach the people by example, even at the risk
of His own life, how superstitious a straining of the sabbath rest this
was.
33. And all the city was gathered together at the door--of Peter's
house; that is, the sick and those who brought them, and the wondering
spectators. This bespeaks the presence of an eye-witness, and is one of
those lively examples of word-painting so frequent in this Gospel.
34. And he healed many that were sick of divers diseases, and cast out
many devils--In
Mt 8:16
it is said, "He cast out the spirits with His word"; or rather, "with a
word"--a word of command.
and suffered not the devils to speak, because they knew
him--Evidently they would have spoken, if permitted,
proclaiming His Messiahship in such terms as in the synagogue; but once
in one day, and that testimony immediately silenced, was enough. See on
Mr 1:24.
After this account of His miracles of healing, we have in
Mt 8:17
this pregnant quotation, "That it might be fulfilled which was spoken
by Esaias the prophet, saying
(Isa 53:4),
Himself took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses."
35. And in the morning--that is, of the day after this remarkable
sabbath; or, on the first day of the week. His choosing this day to
inaugurate a new and glorious stage of His public work, should be noted
by the reader.
rising up a great while before day--"while it was yet night," or
long before daybreak.
he went out--all unperceived from Peter's house, where He slept.
and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed--or, "continued
in prayer." He was about to begin His first preaching and healing
circuit; and as on similar solemn occasions
(Lu 5:16; 6:12; 9:18, 28, 29;
Mr 6:46),
He spent some time in special prayer, doubtless with a view to it. What
would one not give to have been, during the stillness of those grey
morning hours, within hearing--not of His "strong crying and tears,"
for He had scarce arrived at the stage for that--but of His calm,
exalted anticipations of the work which lay immediately before Him, and
the outpourings of His soul about it into the bosom of Him that sent
Him! He had doubtless enjoyed some uninterrupted hours of such
communings with His heavenly Father ere His friends from Capernaum
arrived in search of Him. As for them, they doubtless expected, after
such a day of miracles, that the next day would witness similar
manifestations. When morning came, Peter, loath to break in upon the
repose of his glorious Guest, would await His appearance beyond the
usual hour; but at length, wondering at the stillness, and gently
coming to see where the Lord lay, he finds it--like the sepulchre
afterwards--empty! Speedily a party is made up to go in search of Him,
Peter naturally leading the way.
36. And Simon and they that were with him followed after
him--rather, "pressed after Him." Luke
(Lu 4:42)
says, "The multitudes sought after Him"; but this would be a party from
the town. Mark, having his information from Peter himself, speaks only
of what related directly to him. "They that were with him" would
probably be Andrew his brother, James and John, with a few other choice
brethren.
37. And when they had found him--evidently after some search.
they said unto him, All men seek for thee--By this time, "the
multitudes" who, according to Luke
(Lu 4:42),
"sought after Him"--and who, on going to Peter's house, and there
learning that Peter and a few more were gone in search of Him, had set
out on the same errand--would have arrived, and "came unto Him and
stayed Him, that He should not depart from them"
(Lu 4:42);
all now urging His return to their impatient townsmen.
38. And he said unto them, Let us go--or, according to another reading,
"Let us go elsewhere."
into the next towns--rather, "unto the neighboring village-towns";
meaning those places intermediate between towns and villages, with which
the western side of the Sea of Galilee was studded.
that I may preach there also; for therefore came I forth--not
from Capernaum, as DE WETTE
miserably interprets, nor from His privacy in the desert place, as
MEYER, no better; but from the Father. Compare
Joh 16:28,
"I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world,"
&c.--another proof, by the way, that the lofty phraseology of the
Fourth Gospel was not unknown to the authors of the others, though
their design and point of view are different. The language in which our
Lord's reply is given by Luke
(Lu 4:43)
expresses the high necessity under which, in this as in every other
step of His work, He acted--"I must preach the kingdom of God to other
cities also; for therefore"--or, "to this end"--"am I sent." An act of
self-denial it doubtless was, to resist such pleadings to return to
Capernaum. But there were overmastering considerations on the other
side.
Mr 1:40-45.
HEALING OF A
LEPER.
( =
Mt 8:1-4;
Lu 5:12-16).
See on
Mt 8:1-4.
CHAPTER 2
Mr 2:1-12.
HEALING OF A
PARALYTIC.
( =
Mt 9:1-8;
Lu 5:17-26).
This incident, as remarked on
Mt 9:1,
appears to follow next in order of time after the cure of the leper
(Mr 1:40-45).
1. And again he entered into Capernaum--"His own city"
(Mt 9:1).
and it was noised that he was in the house--no doubt of Simon Peter
(Mr 1:29).
2. And straightway many were gathered together, insomuch that there
was no room to receive them, no, not so much as about the door--This
is one of Mark's graphic touches. No doubt in this case, as the scene
occurred at his informant's own door, these details are the vivid
recollections of that honored disciple.
and he preached the word unto them--that is, indoors; but in the
hearing, doubtless, of the multitude that pressed around. Had He gone
forth, as He naturally would, the paralytic's faith would have had no
such opportunity to display itself. Luke
(Lu 5:17)
furnishes an additional and very important incident in the scene--as
follows: "And it came to pass on a certain day, as He was teaching,
that there were Pharisees and doctors of the law sitting by, which were
come out of every town," or village, "of Galilee, and Judea, and
Jerusalem." This was the highest testimony yet borne to our Lord's
growing influence, and the necessity increasingly felt by the
ecclesiastics throughout the country of coming to some definite
judgment regarding Him. "And the power of the Lord was [present] to
heal them"--or, "was [efficacious] to heal them," that is, the sick
that were brought before Him. So that the miracle that is now to be
described was among the most glorious and worthy to be recorded of many
then performed; and what made it so was doubtless the faith which was
manifested in connection with it, and the proclamation of the
forgiveness of the patient's sins that immediately preceded it.
3. And they come unto him--that is, towards the house where He was.
bringing one sick of the palsy--"lying on a bed"
(Mt 9:2).
which was borne of four--a graphic particular of Mark only.
4. And when they could not come nigh unto him for the press--or, as
in Luke
(Lu 5:19),
"when they could not find by what way they might bring him in because
of the multitude," they "went upon the housetop"--the flat or
terrace-roof, universal in Eastern houses.
they uncovered the roof where he was: and when they had broken it up,
they let down the bed--or portable couch
wherein the sick of the palsy lay--Luke
(Lu 5:19)
says, they "let him down through the tilling with his couch into the
midst before Jesus." Their whole object was to bring the patient
into the presence of Jesus; and this not being possible in the
ordinary way, because of the multitude that surrounded Him, they took
the very unusual method here described of accomplishing their object,
and succeeded. Several explanations have been given of the way in which
this was done; but unless we knew the precise plan of the house, and
the part of it from which Jesus taught--which may have been a
quadrangle or open court, within the buildings of which Peter's house
was one, or a gallery covered by a veranda--it is impossible to
determine precisely how the thing was done. One thing, however, is
clear, that we have both the accounts from an eye-witness.
5. When Jesus saw their faith--It is remarkable that all the three
narratives call it "their faith" which Jesus saw. That the patient
himself had faith, we know from the proclamation of his forgiveness,
which Jesus made before all; and we should have been apt to conclude
that his four friends bore him to Jesus merely out of benevolent
compliance with the urgent entreaties of the poor sufferer. But here we
learn, not only that his bearers had the same faith with himself, but
that Jesus marked it as a faith which was not to be defeated--a faith
victorious over all difficulties. This was the faith for which He was
ever on the watch, and which He never saw without marking, and, in those
who needed anything from Him, richly rewarding.
he said unto the sick of the palsy, Son--"be of good cheer"
(Mt 9:2).
thy sins be forgiven thee--By the word "be," our translators perhaps
meant "are," as in Luke
(Lu 5:20).
For it is not a command to his sins to depart, but an authoritative
proclamation of the man's pardoned state as a believer. And yet, as the
Pharisees understood our Lord to be dispensing pardon by this
saying, and Jesus not only acknowledges that they were right, but
founds His whole argument upon the correctness of it, we must regard
the saying as a royal proclamation of the man's forgiveness by Him to
whom it belonged to dispense it; nor could such a style of address be
justified on any lower supposition. (See on
Lu 7:41,
&c.).
6. But there were certain of the scribes--"and the Pharisees"
(Lu 5:21)
sitting there--those Jewish ecclesiastics who, as Luke told us
(Lu 5:17),
"were come out of every village of Galilee, and Judea, and Jerusalem,"
to make their observations upon this wonderful Person, in anything but
a teachable spirit, though as yet their venomous and murderous feeling
had not showed itself.
and reasoning in their hearts.
7. Why doth this man thus speak blasphemies? who can forgive sins but
God only?--In this second question they expressed a great truth. (See
Isa 43:25;
Mic 7:18;
Ex 34:6, 7,
&c.). Nor was their first question altogether unnatural, though in our
Lord's sole case it was unfounded. That a man, to all appearances like
one of themselves, should claim authority and power to forgive sins,
they could not, on the first blush of it, but regard as in the last
degree startling; nor were they entitled even to weigh such a claim, as
worthy of a hearing, save on supposition of resistless evidence
afforded by Him in support of the claim. Accordingly, our Lord deals
with them as men entitled to such evidence, and supplies it; at the
same time chiding them for rashness, in drawing harsh conclusions
regarding Himself.
8. Why reason ye these things in your hearts--or, as in Matthew,
(Mt 9:4)
"Wherefore think ye evil in your hearts?"
9. Whether is it easier to say to the sick of the palsy, Thy sins be
forgiven thee--or "are forgiven thee";
or to say, Arise, and take up thy bed and walk?--"Is it easier to
command away disease than to bid away sin? If, then, I do the one which
you can see, know thus that I have done the other, which you cannot
see."
10. But that ye may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to
forgive sins--that forgiving power dwells in the Person of this Man,
and is exercised by Him while on this earth and going out and in with
you.
(he saith to the sick of the palsy),
11. I say unto thee, Arise, and take up thy bed, and go thy way into
thine house--This taking up the portable couch, and walking home with
it, was designed to prove the completeness of the cure.
12. And immediately he arose, took up the bed--"Sweet saying!" says
BENGEL: "The bed had borne the man: now the man bore the bed."
and went forth before them all--proclaiming by that act to the
multitude, whose wondering eyes would follow him as he pressed through
them, that He who could work such a glorious miracle of healing, must
indeed "have power on earth to forgive sins."
We never saw it on this fashion--"never saw it thus," or, as we say,
"never saw the like." In Luke
(Lu 5:26)
it is, "We have seen strange [unexpected] things to-day"--referring
both to the miracles wrought and the forgiveness of sins pronounced by
Human Lips. In Matthew
(Mt 9:8)
it is, "They marvelled, and glorified God, which had given such power
unto men." At forgiving power they wondered not, but that a man, to all
appearance like one of themselves, should possess it!
Mr 2:13-17.
LEVI'S
(OR
MATTHEW'S)
CALL AND
FEAST.
( =
Mt 9:9-13;
Lu 5:27-32).
See on
Mt 9:9-13.
Mr 2:18-22.
DISCOURSE ON
FASTING.
( =
Mt 9:14-17;
Lu 5:33-39).
See on
Lu 5:33-39.
Mr 2:23-28.
PLUCKING
CORN-EARS ON THE
SABBATH
DAY.
( =
Mt 12:1-8;
Lu 6:1-5).
See on
Mt 12:1-8.
CHAPTER 3
Mr 3:1-12.
THE
HEALING OF A
WITHERED
HAND ON THE
SABBATH
DAY, AND
RETIREMENT OF
JESUS TO
AVOID
DANGER.
( =
Mt 12:9-21;
Lu 6:6-11).
See on
Mt 12:9-21.
Mr 3:13-19.
THE
TWELVE
APOSTLES
CHOSEN.
See on
Lu 6:12-19.
Mr 3:20-30.
JESUS
IS
CHARGED WITH
MADNESS AND
DEMONIACAL
POSSESSION--HIS
REPLY.
( =
Mt 12:22-37;
Lu 11:14-26).
See on
Mt 12:22-37;
Lu 11:21-26.
Mr 3:31-35.
HIS
MOTHER AND
BRETHREN
SEEK TO
SPEAK WITH
HIM AND THE
REPLY.
( =
Mt 12:46-50;
Lu 8:19-21).
See on
Mt 12:46-50.
CHAPTER 4
Mr 4:1-34.
PARABLE OF THE
SOWER--REASON FOR
TEACHING IN
PARABLES--PARABLES OF THE
SEED
GROWING
WE
KNOW
NOT
HOW, AND OF THE
MUSTARD
SEED.
( =
Mt 13:1-23, 31, 32;
Lu 8:4-18).
1. And he began again to teach by the seaside: and there was gathered
unto him a great multitude--or, according to another well-supported
reading, "a mighty" or "immense multitude."
so that he entered into a ship--rather, "the ship," meaning the one
mentioned in
Mr 3:9.
(See on
Mt 12:15).
and sat in the sea; and the whole multitude was by the sea on the
land--crowded on the seashore to listen to Him. (See on
Mt 13:1, 2.)
2. And he taught them many things by parables, and said unto them in
his doctrine--or "teaching."
Parable of the Sower
(Mr 4:3-9, 13-20).
Mr 4:3, 14.
THE
SOWER, THE
SEED, AND THE
SOIL.
3. Hearken; Behold, there went out a sower to sow--What means
this? See on
Mr 4:14.
First Case:
THE
WAYSIDE.
(Mr 4:4, 15).
4. And it came to pass, as he sowed, some fell by the wayside--by the
side of the hard path through the field, where the soil was not broken
up.
and the fowls of the air came and devoured it up--Not
only could the seed not get beneath the surface, but "it was trodden
down"
(Lu 8:5),
and afterwards picked up and devoured by the fowls. What means this?
See on
Mr 4:15.
Second Case:
THE
STONY or rather,
ROCKY
GROUND.
(Mr 4:5, 16).
5. And some fell on stony ground, where it had not much earth--"the
rocky ground"; in Matthew
(Mt 13:5),
"the rocky places"; in Luke
(Lu 8:6),
"the rock." The thing intended is, not ground with stones in it which
would not prevent the roots striking downward, but ground where a quite
thin surface of earth covers a rock. What means this? See on
Mr 4:16.
Third Case:
THE
THORNY
GROUND.
(Mr 4:7, 18, 19).
7. And some fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up, and choked it,
and it yielded no fruit--This case is that of ground not thoroughly
cleaned of the thistles, &c.; which, rising above the good seed,
"choke" or "smother" it, excluding light and air, and drawing away the
moisture and richness of the soil. Hence it "becomes unfruitful"
(Mt 13:22);
it grows, but its growth is checked, and it never ripens. The evil here
is neither a hard nor a shallow soil--there is softness enough,
and depth enough; but it is the existence in it of what draws
all the moisture and richness of the soil away to itself, and so
starves the plant. What now are these "thorns?" See on
Mr 4:19.
Fourth Case:
THE
GOOD
GROUND.
(Mr 4:8, 20).
8. And other fell on good ground, and did yield fruit, &c.--The
goodness of this last soil consists in its qualities being precisely
the reverse of the other three soils: from its softness and tenderness,
receiving and cherishing the seed; from its depth, allowing it to take
firm root, and not quickly losing its moisture; and from its cleanness,
giving its whole vigor and sap to the plant. In such a soil the seed
"brings forth fruit," in all different degrees of profusion, according
to the measure in which the soil possesses those qualities. See on
Mr 4:20.
9. And he said unto them, He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.
After this parable is recorded the Evangelist says:
10. And when he was alone, they that were about him with the twelve--probably those who followed Him most closely and were firmest in
discipleship, next to the Twelve.
asked of him the parable--The reply would seem to intimate that
this parable of the sower was of that fundamental, comprehensive, and
introductory character which we have assigned to it (see on
Mt 13:1).
Reason for Teaching in Parables
(Mr 4:11, 12, 21-25).
11, 12. And he said unto them, Unto you it is given to know the
mystery of the kingdom of God: but unto them, &c.--See on
Mt 13:10-17.
13. Know ye not this parable? and how then will ye know all
parables?--Probably this was said not so much in the spirit of
rebuke, as to call their attention to the exposition of it which He was
about to give, and so train them to the right apprehension of His
future parables. As in the parables which we have endeavored to explain
in
Mt 13.,
we shall take this parable and the Lord's own exposition of the
different parts of it together.
14. The sower soweth the word--or, as in Luke
(Lu 8:11),
"Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God." But who
is "the sower?" This is not expressed here because if "the word of God"
be the seed, every scatterer of that precious seed must be regarded as
a sower. It is true that in the parable of the tares it is said, "He
that soweth the good seed is the Son of man," as "He that soweth the
tares is the devil"
(Mt 13:37, 38).
But these are only the great unseen parties, struggling in this world
for the possession of man. Each of these has his agents among men
themselves; and Christ's agents in the sowing of the good seed are the
preachers of the word. Thus, as in all the cases about to be
described, the sower is the same, and the seed is the same; while the
result is entirely different, the whole difference must lie in the
soils, which mean the different states of the human
heart. And so, the great general lesson held forth in this parable
of the sower is, that however faithful the preacher, and how pure
soever his message, the effect of the preaching of the word depends
upon the state of the hearer's heart. Now follow the cases. See on
Mr 4:4.
15. And these are they by the wayside, where the word is sown; but,
when they have heard, &c.--or, more fully
(Mt 13:19),
"When any one heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it
not, then cometh the wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown
in his heart." The great truth here taught is, that hearts all
unbroken and hard are no fit soil for saving truth. They apprehend
it not
(Mt 13:19)
as God's means of restoring them to Himself; it penetrates not, makes
no impression, but lies loosely on the surface of the heart, till the
wicked one--afraid of losing a victim by his "believing to salvation"
(Lu 8:12)
--finds some frivolous subject by whose greater attractions to draw off
the attention, and straightway it is gone. Of how many hearers of the
word is this the graphic but painful history!
16. And these are they likewise which are sown on stony ground,
&c.--"Immediately" the seed in such a case "springs up"--all the
quicker from the shallowness of the soil--"because it has no depth of
earth." But the sun, beating on it, as quickly scorches and withers it
up, "because it has no root"
(Mr 4:6),
and "lacks moisture"
(Lu 8:6).
The great truth here taught is that hearts superficially impressed
are apt to receive the truth with readiness, and even with joy
(Lu 8:13);
but the heat of tribulation or persecution because of the word,
or the trials which their new profession brings upon them quickly
dries up their relish for the truth, and withers all the hasty promise
of fruit which they showed. Such disappointing issues of a faithful
and awakening ministry--alas, how frequent are they!
18. And these are they which are sown among thorns; such as hear the
word,
19. And the cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, and
the lusts of other things entering in--or "the pleasures of this life"
(Lu 8:14).
choke the word, and it becometh unfruitful--First, "The cares of
this world"--anxious, unrelaxing attention to the business of this
present life; second, "The deceitfulness of riches"--of those riches
which are the fruit of this worldly "care"; third, "The pleasures of
this life," or "the lusts of other things entering in"--the enjoyments
in themselves may be innocent, which worldly prosperity enables one to
indulge. These "choke" or "smother" the word; drawing off so
much of one's attention, absorbing so much of one's interest, and using
up so much of one's time, that only the dregs of these remain for
spiritual things, and a fagged, hurried, and heartless formalism is at
length all the religion of such persons. What a vivid picture is this
of the mournful condition of many, especially in great commercial
countries, who once promised much fruit! "They bring no fruit
to perfection"
(Lu 8:14);
indicating how much growth there may be, in the early stages of
such a case, and promise of fruit--which after all never
ripens.
20. And these are they which are sown on good ground; such as hear the
word, and receive it, and bring forth fruit, some thirtyfold, some
sixty, and some an hundred--A heart soft and tender, stirred to its
depths on the great things of eternity, and jealously guarded from
worldly engrossments, such only is the "honest and good heart"
(Lu 8:15),
which "keeps," that is, "retains" the seed of the word, and bears fruit
just in proportion as it is such a heart. Such "bring forth fruit with
patience"
(Mr 4:15),
or continuance, "enduring to the end"; in contrast with those in whom
the word is "choked" and brings no fruit to perfection. The
"thirtyfold" is designed to express the lowest degree of
fruitfulness; the "hundredfold" the highest; and the "sixtyfold"
the intermediate degrees of fruitfulness. As a "hundredfold,"
though not unexampled
(Ge 26:12),
is a rare return in the natural husbandry, so the highest degrees of
spiritual fruitfulness are too seldom witnessed. The closing words of
this introductory parable seem designed to call attention to the
fundamental and universal character of it.
21. And he said unto them, Is a candle--or "lamp"
brought to be put under a bushel, or under a bed? and not to be set on
a candlestick?--"that they which enter in may see the light"
(Lu 8:16).
See on
Mt 5:15,
of which this is nearly a repetition.
22. For there is nothing hid which shall not be manifested,
&c.--See on
Mt 10:26, 27;
but the connection there and here is slightly different. Here the idea
seems to be this--"I have privately expounded to you these great
truths, but only that ye may proclaim them publicly; and if ye will
not, others will. For these are not designed for secrecy. They are
imparted to be diffused abroad, and they shall be so; yea, a time is
coming when the most hidden things shall be brought to light."
23. If any man have ears to hear, let him hear--This for the
second time on the same subject (see on
Mr 4:9).
24. And he saith unto them, Take heed what ye hear--In Luke
(Lu 8:18)
it is, "Take heed how ye hear." The one implies the other, but both
precepts are very weighty.
with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you--See on
Mt 7:2.
and unto you that hear--that is, thankfully, teachably, profitably.
shall more be given.
25. For he that hath, to him shall be given; and he that hath not,
from him shall be taken even that which he hath--or "seemeth to
have," or "thinketh he hath." (See on
Mt 13:12).
This "having" and "thinking he hath" are not different; for when it
hangs loosely upon him, and is not appropriated to its proper ends and
uses, it both is and is not his.
Parable of the Seed Growing We Know Not How
(Mr 4:26-29).
This beautiful parable is peculiar to Mark. Its design is to teach the
Imperceptible Growth of the word sown in the heart, from its
earliest stage of development to the ripest fruits of practical
righteousness.
26, 27. So is the kingdom of God, as if a man should cast seed into
the ground; and should sleep, and rise night and day--go about his
other ordinary occupations, leaving it to the well-known laws of
vegetation under the genial influences of heaven. This is the sense of
"the earth bringing forth fruit of herself," in
Mr 4:27.
28. For the earth bringeth forth fruit of herself; first the blade,
then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear--beautiful allusion
to the succession of similar stages, though not definitely marked
periods, in the Christian life, and generally in the kingdom of God.
29. But when the fruit is brought forth--to maturity
immediately he putteth in the sickle, because the harvest is come--This
charmingly points to the transition from the earthly to the heavenly
condition of the Christian and the Church.
Parable of the Mustard Seed
(Mr 4:30-32).
For the exposition of this portion, see on
Mt 13:31, 32.
33. And with many such parables spake he the word unto them, as they
were able to hear it--Had this been said in the corresponding passage
of Matthew, we should have concluded that what that Evangelist recorded
was but a specimen of other parables spoken on the same occasion. But
Matthew
(Mt 13:34)
says, "All these things spake Jesus unto the multitude in
parables"; and as Mark records only some of the parables which Matthew
gives, we are warranted to infer that the "many such parables" alluded
to here mean no more than the full complement of them which we find in
Matthew.
34. But without a parable spake he not unto them--See on
Mt 13:34.
and when they were alone, he expounded all things to his
disciples--See on
Mr 4:22.
Mr 4:35-5:20.
JESUS
CROSSING THE
SEA OF
GALILEE,
MIRACULOUSLY
STILLS A
TEMPEST--HE
CURES THE
DEMONIAC OF
GADARA.
( =
Mt 8:23-34;
Lu 8:22-39).
The time of this section is very definitely marked by our Evangelist,
and by him alone, in the opening words.
Jesus Stills a Tempest on the Sea of Galilee
(Mr 4:35-41).
35. And the same day--on which He spoke the memorable parables of
the
Mr 4:1-32,
and of
Mt 13:1-52.
when the even was come--(See on
Mr 6:35).
This must have been the earlier evening--what we should call the
afternoon--since after all that passed on the other side, when He
returned to the west side, the people were waiting for Him in great
numbers
(Mr 4:21;
Lu 8:40).
he saith unto them, Let us pass over unto the other side--to the
east side of the lake, to grapple with a desperate case of possession,
and set the captive free, and to give the Gadarenes an opportunity of
hearing the message of salvation, amid the wonder which that marvellous
cure was fitted to awaken and the awe which the subsequent events could
not but strike into them.
36. And when they had sent away the multitude, they took him even as
he was in the ship--that is, without any preparation, and without so
much as leaving the vessel, out of which He had been all day teaching.
And there were also with him other little ships--with passengers,
probably, wishing to accompany Him.
37. And there arose a great storm of wind--"a tempest of wind." To
such sudden squalls the Sea of Galilee is very liable from its position,
in a deep basin, skirted on the east by lofty mountain ranges, while on
the west the hills are intersected by narrow gorges through which the
wind sweeps across the lake, and raises its waters with great rapidity
into a storm.
and the waves beat into the ship--kept beating or pitching on the ship.
so that it was now full--rather, "so that it was already filling." In
Matthew
(Mt 8:24),
"insomuch that the ship was covered with the waves"; but this is too
strong. It should be, "so that the ship was getting covered by the
waves." So we must translate the word used in Luke
(Lu 8:23)
--not as in our version--"And there came down a storm on the lake, and
they were filled [with water]"--but "they were getting filled," that
is, those who sailed; meaning, of course, that their ship was so.
38. And he was in the hinder part of the ship--or stern.
asleep on a pillow--either a place in the vessel made to receive the
head, or a cushion for the head to rest on. It was evening; and after
the fatigues of a busy day of teaching under the hot sun, having nothing
to do while crossing the lake, He sinks into a deep sleep, which even
this tempest raging around and tossing the little vessel did not
disturb.
and they awake him, and say unto him, Master--or "Teacher." In Luke
(Lu 8:24)
this is doubled--in token of their life-and-death earnestness--"Master,
Master."
carest thou not that we perish?--Unbelief and fear made them sadly
forget their place, to speak so. Matthew
(Mt 8:25)
has it, "Lord, save us, we perish." When those accustomed to fish upon
that deep thus spake, the danger must have been imminent. They say
nothing of what would become of Him, if they perished; nor
think, whether, if He could not perish, it was likely He would let this
happen to them; but they hardly knew what they said.
39. And he arose, and rebuked the wind--"and the raging of the water"
(Lu 8:24).
and said unto the sea, Peace, be still--two sublime words of command,
from a Master to His servants, the elements.
And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm--The sudden hushing
of the wind would not at once have calmed the sea, whose commotion would
have settled only after a considerable time. But the word of command was
given to both elements at once.
40. And he said unto them, Why are ye so fearful?--There is a natural
apprehension under danger; but there was unbelief in their fear. It is
worthy of notice how considerately the Lord defers this rebuke till He
had first removed the danger, in the midst of which they would not have
been in a state to listen to anything.
how is it that ye have no faith?--next to none, or none in present
exercise. In Matthew
(Mt 8:26)
it is, "Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?" Faith they
had, for they applied to Christ for relief: but little, for they
were afraid, though Christ was in the ship. Faith dispels fear, but
only in proportion to its strength.
41. And they feared exceedingly--were struck with deep awe.
and said one to another, What manner of man is this, that even the
wind and the sea obey him?--"What is this? Israel has all along
been singing of JEHOVAH, 'Thou rulest the raging
of the sea: when the waves thereof arise, Thou stillest them!' 'The
Lord on high is mightier than the noise of many waters, yea, than the
mighty waves of the sea!'
(Ps 89:9; 93:4).
But, lo, in this very boat of ours is One of our own flesh and blood,
who with His word of command hath done the same! Exhausted with the
fatigues of the day, He was but a moment ago in a deep sleep,
undisturbed by the howling tempest, and we had to waken Him with the
cry of our terror; but rising at our call, His majesty was felt by the
raging elements, for they were instantly
hushed--'WHAT
MANNER OF
MAN IS THIS?'"
CHAPTER 5
Glorious Cure of the Gadarene Demoniac
(Mr 5:1-20).
1. And they came over unto the other side of the sea, into the country
of the Gadarenes.
2. And when he was come out of the ship, immediately--(see
Mr 5:6).
there met him a man with an unclean spirit--"which had devils
[demons] long time"
(Lu 8:27).
In Matthew
(Mt 8:28),
"there met him two men possessed with devils." Though there be no
discrepancy between these two statements--more than between two
witnesses, one of whom testifies to something done by one person, while
the other affirms that there were two--it is difficult to see how the
principal details here given could apply to more than one case.
3. Who had his dwelling among the tombs--Luke
(Lu 8:27)
says, "He ware no clothes, neither abode in any house." These tombs
were hewn out of the rocky caves of the locality, and served for
shelters and lurking places
(Lu 8:26).
4. Because that he had been often bound with fetters and chains,
&c.--Luke says
(Lu 8:29)
that "oftentimes it [the unclean spirit] had caught him"; and after
mentioning how they had vainly tried to bind him with chains and
fetters, because, "he brake the bands," he adds, "and was driven of the
devil [demon] into the wilderness." The dark tyrant-power by which he
was held clothed him with superhuman strength and made him scorn
restraint. Matthew
(Mt 8:28)
says he was "exceeding fierce, so that no man might pass by that way."
He was the terror of the whole locality.
5. And always, night and day, he was in the mountains, and in the
tombs, crying, and cutting himself with stones--Terrible as he was
to others, he himself endured untold misery, which sought relief in
tears and self-inflicted torture.
6. But when he saw Jesus afar off, he ran and worshipped
him--not with the spontaneous alacrity which says to Jesus, "Draw
me, we will run after thee," but inwardly compelled, with
terrific rapidity, before the Judge, to receive sentence of
expulsion.
7. What have I to do with thee, Jesus, Son of the most high God? I
adjure thee by God, that thou torment me not--or, as in
Mt 8:29,
"Art Thou come to torment us before the time?" (See on
Mr 1:24).
Behold the tormentor anticipating, dreading, and entreating
exemption from torment! In Christ they discern their destined
Tormentor; the time, they know, is fixed, and they feel as if it were
come already!
(Jas 2:19).
8. For he said unto him--that is, before the unclean spirit cried out.
Come out of the man, unclean spirit!--Ordinarily, obedience to a
command of this nature was immediate. But here, a certain delay is
permitted, the more signally to manifest the power of Christ and
accomplish His purposes.
9. And he asked him, What is thy name?--The object of this question
was to extort an acknowledgment of the virulence of demoniacal power by
which this victim was enthralled.
And he answered, saying, My name is Legion: for we are many--or, as
in Luke
(Lu 8:30)
"because many devils [demons] were entered into him." A legion, in the
Roman army, amounted, at its full complement, to six thousand; but here
the word is used, as such words with us, and even this one, for an
indefinitely large number--large enough however to rush, as soon as
permission was given, into two thousand swine and destroy them.
10. And he besought him much that he would not send them away out of
the country--The entreaty, it will be observed, was made by one
spirit, but in behalf of many--"he besought Him not
to send them, &c."--just as in
Mr 5:9,
"he answered we are many." But what do they mean by
entreating so earnestly not to be ordered out of the country? Their
next petition
(Mr 5:12)
will make that clear enough.
11. Now there was there, nigh unto the mountains--rather, "to the
mountain," according to what is clearly the true reading. In
Mt 8:30,
they are said to have been "a good way off." But these expressions, far
from being inconsistent, only confirm, by their precision, the minute
accuracy of the narrative.
a great herd of swine feeding--There can hardly be any doubt that
the owners of these were Jews, since to them our Lord had now come to
proffer His services. This will explain what follows.
12. And all the devils besought him, saying--"if thou cast us out"
(Mt 8:31).
Send us into the swine, that we may enter into them--Had they spoken
out all their mind, perhaps this would have been it: "If we must quit
our hold of this man, suffer us to continue our work of mischief in
another form, that by entering these swine, and thus destroying the
people's property, we may steel their hearts against Thee!"
13. And forthwith Jesus gave them leave--In Matthew
(Mt 8:32)
this is given with majestic brevity--"Go!" The owners, if Jews, drove
an illegal trade; if heathens, they insulted the national religion: in
either case the permission was just.
And the unclean spirits went out--of the man.
and entered into the swine: and the herd ran violently--rushed.
down a steep place--down the hanging cliff.
into the sea (they were about two thousand)--The number of them
is given by this graphic Evangelist alone.
and were choked in the sea--"perished in the waters"
(Mt 8:32).
14. And they that fed the swine fled, and told it--"told everything,
and what was befallen to the possessed of the devils"
(Mt 8:33).
in the city, and in the country. And they went out to see what it was
that was done--Thus had they the evidence, both of the herdsmen and of
their own senses, to the reality of both miracles.
15. And they come to Jesus--Matthew
(Mt 8:34)
says, "Behold, the whole city came out to meet Jesus."
and see him that was possessed with the devil--the demonized person.
and had the legion, sitting--"at the feet of Jesus," adds Luke
(Lu 8:35);
in contrast with his former wild and wandering habits.
and clothed--As our Evangelist had not told us that he "ware no
clothes," the meaning of this statement could only have been conjectured
but for "the beloved physician"
(Lu 8:27),
who supplies the missing piece of information here. This is a striking
case of what are called Undesigned Coincidences amongst the
different Evangelists; one of them taking a thing for granted, as
familiarly known at the time, but which we should never have known but
for one or more of the others, and without the knowledge of which some
of their statements would be unintelligible. The clothing which the
poor man would feel the want of the moment his consciousness returned
to him, was doubtless supplied to him by some of the Twelve.
and in his right mind--but now, oh, in what a lofty sense! (Compare
an analogous, though a different kind of case,
Da 4:34-37).
and they were afraid--Had this been awe only, it had been natural
enough; but other feelings, alas! of a darker kind, soon showed
themselves.
16. And they that saw it told them how it befell to him that was
possessed with the devil--("the demonized person").
and also concerning the swine--Thus had they the double testimony of
the herdsmen and their own senses.
17. And they began to pray him to depart out of their coasts--Was it
the owners only of the valuable property now lost to them that did this?
Alas, no! For Luke
(Lu 8:37)
says, "Then the whole multitude of the country of the Gadarenes round
about besought Him to depart from them; for they were taken with great
fear." The evil spirits had thus, alas! their object. Irritated, the
people could not suffer His presence; yet awe-struck, they dared not
order Him off: so they entreat Him to withdraw, and--He takes them at
their word.
18. he that had been possessed with the devil prayed him that he might
be with him--the grateful heart, fresh from the hand of demons,
clinging to its wondrous Benefactor. How exquisitely natural!
19. Howbeit, Jesus suffered him not, &c.--To be a missionary for
Christ, in the region where he was so well known and so long dreaded,
was a far nobler calling than to follow Him where nobody had ever heard
of him, and where other trophies not less illustrious could be raised by
the same power and grace.
20. And he departed, and began to publish--not only among his friends,
to whom Jesus immediately sent him, but
in Decapolis--so called, as being a region of ten cities. (See
on
Mt 4:25).
how great things Jesus had done for him: and all men did marvel--Throughout that considerable region did this monument of mercy proclaim
his new-found Lord; and some, it is to be hoped, did more than "marvel."
Mr 5:21-43.
THE
DAUGHTER OF
JAIRUS
RAISED TO
LIFE--THE
WOMAN WITH AN
ISSUE OF
BLOOD
HEALED.
( =
Mt 9:18-26;
Lu 8:41-56).
The occasion of this scene will appear presently.
Jairus' Daughter
(Mr 5:21-24).
21. And when Jesus was passed over again by ship unto the other side--from the Gadarene side of the lake, where He had parted with the healed
demoniac, to the west side, at Capernaum.
much people gathered unto him--who "gladly received Him; for they were
all waiting for Him"
(Lu 8:40).
The abundant teaching earlier that day
(Mr 4:1,
&c., and Mt 13:1-58)
had only whetted the people's appetite: and disappointed, as would
seem, that He had left them in the evening to cross the lake, they
remain hanging about the beach, having got a hint, probably through
some of His disciples, that He would be back the same evening. Perhaps
they witnessed at a distance the sudden calming of the tempest. The
tide of our Lord's popularity was now fast rising.
and he was nigh unto the sea.
22. And, behold, there cometh one of the rulers of the synagogue--of
which class there were but few who believed in Jesus
(Joh 7:48).
One would suppose from this that the ruler had been with the multitude
on the shore, anxiously awaiting the return of Jesus, and immediately on
His arrival had accosted Him as here related. But Matthew
(Mt 9:18)
tells us that the ruler came to Him while He was in the act of speaking
at His own table on the subject of fasting; and as we must suppose that
this converted publican ought to know what took place on that memorable
occasion when he made a feast to his Lord, we conclude that here the
right order is indicated by the First Evangelist alone.
Jairus by name--or "Jaeirus." It is the same name as Jair, in the
Old Testament
(Nu 32:41;
Jud 10:3;
Es 2:5).
and when he saw him, he fell at his feet--in Matthew
(Mt 9:18),
"worshipped Him." The meaning is the same in both.
23. And besought him greatly, saying, My little daughter--Luke
(Lu 8:42)
says, "He had one only daughter, about twelve years of age." According
to a well-known rabbin, quoted by LIGHTFOOT, a
daughter, till she had completed her twelfth year, was called
"little," or "a little maid"; after that, "a young woman."
lieth at the point of death--Matthew
(Mt 9:18)
gives it thus: "My daughter is even now dead"--"has just expired." The
news of her death reached the father after the cure of the woman with
the issue of blood: but Matthew's brief account gives only the
result, as in the case of the centurion's servant
(Mt 8:5,
&c.).
come and lay thy hands on her, that she may be healed; and she shall
live--or, "that she may be healed and live," according to a fully
preferable reading. In one of the class to which this man belonged, so
steeped in prejudice, such faith would imply more than in others.
The Woman with an Issue of Blood Healed
(Mr 5:24-34).
24. And Jesus went with him; and much people followed him, and thronged
him--The word in Luke
(Lu 8:42)
is stronger--"choked," "stifled Him."
26. And had suffered many things of many physicians--The expression
perhaps does not necessarily refer to the suffering she endured under
medical treatment, but to the much varied treatment which she underwent.
and had spent all that she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather
grew worse--pitiable case, and affectingly aggravated; emblem of our
natural state as fallen creatures
(Eze 16:5, 6),
and illustrating the worse than vanity of all human remedies for
spiritual maladies
(Ho 5:13).
The higher design of all our Lord's miracles of healing irresistibly
suggests this way of viewing the present case, the propriety of which
will still more appear as we proceed.
27. When she had heard of Jesus, came--This was the right experiment
at last. What had she "heard of Jesus?" No doubt it was His marvellous
cures she had heard of; and the hearing of these, in connection with her
bitter experience of the vanity of applying to any other, had been
blessed to the kindling in her soul of a firm confidence that He who had
so willingly wrought such cures on others was able and would not refuse
to heal her also.
in the press behind--shrinking, yet seeking.
touched his garment--According to the ceremonial law, the touch of
anyone having the disease which this woman had would have defiled the
person touched. Some think that the recollection of this may account for
her stealthily approaching Him in the crowd behind, and touching but the
hem of His garment. But there was an instinct in the faith which brought
her to Jesus, which taught her, that if that touch could set her free
from the defiling disease itself, it was impossible to communicate
defilement to Him, and that this wondrous Healer must be above such
laws.
28. For she said--"within herself"
(Mt 9:21).
If I may touch but his clothes, I shall be whole--that is, if I may
but come in contact with this glorious Healer at all. Remarkable
faith this!
29. And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up--Not only
was her issue of blood stanched
(Lu 8:44),
but the cause of it was thoroughly removed, insomuch that by her bodily
sensations she immediately knew herself perfectly cured.
30. And Jesus immediately knowing in himself that virtue--or
"efficacy."
had gone out of him--He was conscious of the forthgoing of His
healing power, which was not--as in prophets and apostles--something
foreign to Himself and imparted merely, but what He had
dwelling within Him as "His own fulness."
turned him about in the press--crowd.
and said, Who touched my clothes?
31. And his disciples said unto him--Luke says
(Lu 8:45),
"When all denied, Peter and they that were with Him said, Master."
Thou seest the multitude thronging thee, and sayest thou, Who touched
me?--"Askest thou, Lord, who touched Thee? Rather ask who touched Thee
not in such a throng." "And Jesus said, Somebody hath touched Me"--"a
certain person has touched Me"--"for I perceive that virtue is gone out
of Me"
(Lu 8:46).
Yes, the multitude "thronged and pressed Him"--they
jostled against Him, but all involuntarily; they were
merely carried along; but one, one only--"a certain
person--TOUCHED HIM," with
the conscious, voluntary, dependent touch of faith, reaching forth its
hand expressly to have contact with Him. This and this only Jesus
acknowledges and seeks out. Even so, as AUGUSTINE
long ago said, multitudes still come similarly close to Christ in
the means of grace, but all to no purpose, being only sucked into the
crowd. The voluntary, living contact of faith is that electric
conductor which alone draws virtue out of Him.
32. And he looked round about to see her that had done this thing--not
for the purpose of summoning forth a culprit, but, as we shall presently
see, to obtain from the healed one a testimony to what He had done for
her.
33. But the woman, fearing and trembling, knowing what was done in
her--alarmed, as a humble, shrinking female would naturally be, at
the necessity of so public an exposure of herself, yet conscious that
she had a tale to tell which would speak for her.
came and fell down before him, and told him all the truth--In Luke
(Lu 8:47)
it is, "When the woman saw that she was not hid, she came trembling,
and falling down before Him, she declared unto Him before all the
people for what cause she had touched Him, and how she was healed
immediately." This, though it tried the modesty of the believing woman,
was just what Christ wanted in dragging her forth, her public testimony
to the facts of her case--the disease, with her abortive efforts at a
cure, and the instantaneous and perfect relief which her touching the
Great Healer had brought her.
34. And he said unto her, Daughter--"be of good comfort"
(Lu 8:48).
thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace, and be whole of thy
plague--Though healed as soon as she believed, it seemed to her a
stolen cure--she feared to acknowledge it. Jesus therefore sets His
royal seal upon it. But what a glorious dismissal from the lips of Him
who is "our Peace" is that, "Go in peace!"
Jairus' Daughter Raised to Life
(Mr 5:35-43).
35. Thy daughter is dead; why troublest thou the Master any further?--the Teacher.
36. he saith unto the ruler of the synagogue, Be not afraid, only
believe--Jesus, knowing how the heart of the agonized father would
sink at the tidings, and the reflections at the delay which would be
apt to rise in his mind, hastens to reassure him, and in His accustomed
style: "Be not afraid, only believe"--words of unchanging preciousness
and power! How vividly do such incidents bring out Christ's knowledge
of the human heart and tender sympathy!
(Heb 4:15).
37. And he suffered no man to follow him, save Peter, and James, and
John the brother of James--(See on
Mr 1:29).
38. And he cometh--rather, "they come."
to the house of the ruler of the synagogue, and seeth the tumult, and
them that wept and wailed greatly--"the minstrels and the people
making a noise"
(Mt 9:23)
--lamenting for the dead. (See
2Ch 35:25;
Jer 9:20;
Am 5:16).
39. And when he was come in, he saith unto them, Why make ye this ado,
and weep? the damsel is not dead, but sleepeth--so brief her state of
death as to be more like a short sleep.
40. And they laughed him to scorn--rather, simply, "laughed at
Him"--"knowing that she was dead"
(Lu 8:53);
an important testimony this to the reality of her death.
But when he had put them all out--The word is strong--"turned them
all out"; meaning all those who were making this noise, and any others
that may have been there from sympathy, that only those might be present
who were most nearly concerned, and those whom He had Himself brought as
witnesses of the great act about to be done.
he taketh the father and the mother of the damsel, and them that were
with him--Peter, and James, and John.
and entereth in where the damsel was lying.
41. And he took the damsel by the hand--as He did Peter's
mother-in-law
(Mr 1:31).
and said unto her, Talitha cumi--The words are Aramaic, or
Syro-Chaldaic, the then language of Palestine. Mark loves to give such
wonderful words just as they were spoken. See
Mr 7:34; 14:36.
42. And straightway the damsel--The word here is different from that
in
Mr 5:39-41,
and signifies "young maiden," or "little girl."
arose, and walked--a vivid touch evidently from an eye-witness.
And they were astonished with a great astonishment--The language here
is the strongest.
43. And he charged them straitly--strictly.
that no man should know it--The only reason we can assign for this
is His desire not to let the public feeling regarding Him come too
precipitately to a crisis.
and commanded that something should be given her to eat--in token of
perfect restoration.
CHAPTER 6
Mr 6:1-6.
CHRIST
REJECTED AT
NAZARETH.
( =
Mt 13:54-58;
Lu 4:16-30).
See on
Lu 4:16-30.
Mr 6:7-13.
MISSION OF THE
TWELVE
APOSTLES.
( =
Mt 10:1, 5-15;
Lu 9:1-6).
See on
Mt 10:1;
Mt 10:5-15.
Mr 6:14-29.
HEROD
THINKS
JESUS A
RESURRECTION OF THE
MURDERED
BAPTIST--ACCOUNT OF
HIS
DEATH.
( =
Mt 14:1-12;
Lu 9:7-9).
Herod's View of Christ
(Mr 6:14-16).
14. And King Herod--that is, Herod Antipas, one of the three sons of
Herod the Great, and own brother of Archelaus
(Mt 2:22),
who ruled as ethnarch over Galilee and Perea.
heard of him; (for his name was spread abroad); and he said--"unto
his servants"
(Mt 14:2),
his councillors or court ministers.
That John the Baptist was risen from the dead--The murdered prophet
haunted his guilty breast like a specter, and seemed to him alive again
and clothed with unearthly powers, in the person of Jesus.
15. Others said, That it is Elias. And others, That it is a prophet,
or as one of the prophets--(See on
Mt 16:14).
16. But when Herod heard thereof, he said, It is John, whom I
beheaded; he is risen from the dead--"Himself has risen"; as if the
innocence and sanctity of his faithful reprover had not suffered that
he should lie long dead.
Account of the Baptist's Imprisonment and Death
(Mr 6:17-29).
17. For Herod himself had sent forth, and laid hold upon John, and
bound him in prison--in the castle of Machærus, near the southern
extremity of Herod's dominions, and adjoining the Dead Sea
[JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 18.5,2].
for Herodias' sake--She was the granddaughter of Herod the Great.
his brother Philip's wife--and therefore the niece of both brothers.
This Philip, however, was not the tetrarch of that name mentioned in
Lu 3:1
(see on
Lu 3:1),
but one whose distinctive name was "Herod Philip," another son of Herod
the Great--who was disinherited by his father. Herod Antipas' own wife
was the daughter of Aretas, king of Arabia; but he prevailed on
Herodias, his half-brother Philip's wife, to forsake her husband and
live with him, on condition, says JOSEPHUS
[Antiquities, 18.5,1], that he should put away his own wife.
This involved him afterwards in war with Aretas, who totally defeated
him and destroyed his army, from the effects of which he was never able
to recover himself.
18. For John had said unto Herod, It is not lawful for thee to have
thy brother's wife--Noble fidelity! It was not lawful because
Herod's wife and Herodias' husband were both living; and further,
because the parties were within the forbidden degrees of consanguinity
(see
Le 20:21);
Herodias being the daughter of Aristobulus, the brother of both Herod
and Philip [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities,
18.5,4].
19. Therefore Herodias had a quarrel against him--rather, as in the
Margin, "had a grudge against him." Probably she was too proud to
speak to him; still less would she quarrel with him.
and would have killed him; but she could not.
20. For Herod feared John--but, as
BENGEL notes, John feared not Herod.
knowing that he was a just man and an holy--Compare the case of
Elijah with Ahab, after the murder of Naboth
(1Ki 21:20).
and observed him--rather, as in the Margin, "kept" or "saved him";
that is, from the wicked designs of Herodias, who had been watching for
some pretext to get Herod entangled and committed to despatch him.
and when he heard him, he did many things--many good things under the
influence of the Baptist on his conscience.
and heard him gladly--a striking statement this, for which we are
indebted to our graphic Evangelist alone, illustrating the working of
contrary principles in the slaves of passion. But this only shows how
far Herodias must have wrought upon him, as Jezebel upon Ahab, that he
should at length agree to what his awakened conscience kept him long
from executing.
21. And when a convenient day--for the purposes of Herodias.
was come, that Herod--rather, "A convenient day being come, when
Herod."
on his birthday, made a supper to his lords, high captains, and chief
estates of Galilee--This graphic minuteness of detail adds much to
the interest of the tragic narrative.
22. And when the daughter of the said Herodias--that is, her
daughter by her proper husband, Herod Philip: Her name was Salome
[JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 18.5,4].
came in and danced, and pleased Herod and them that sat with him,
the king said unto the damsel--"the girl" (See on
Mr 5:42).
Ask of me whatsoever thou wilt, and I will give it thee.
23. And he--the king, so called, but only by courtesy (see on
Mr 6:14).
sware unto her Whatsoever thou shalt ask of me, unto the half of my
kingdom--Those in whom passion and luxury have destroyed self-command
will in a capricious moment say and do what in their cool moments they
bitterly regret.
24. And she said, The head of John the Baptist--Abandoned women are
more shameless and heartless than men. The Baptist's fidelity marred the
pleasures of Herodias, and this was too good an opportunity of getting
rid of him to let slip.
25. I will that thou give me by and by--rather, "at once."
in a charger--large, flat trencher.
the head of John the Baptist.
26. And the king was exceeding sorry--With his feelings regarding
John, and the truths which so told upon his conscience from that
preacher's lips, and after so often and carefully saving him from his
paramour's rage, it must have been very galling to find himself at
length entrapped by his own rash folly.
yet for his oath's sake--See how men of no principle, but troublesome
conscience, will stick at breaking a rash oath, while yielding to the
commission of the worst crimes!
and for their sakes which sat with him--under the influence of that
false shame, which could not brook being thought to be troubled with
religious or moral scruples. To how many has this proved a fatal snare!
he would not reject her.
27. And immediately the king sent an executioner--one of the guards
in attendance. The word is Roman, denoting one of the Imperial Guard.
and commanded his head to be brought: and he went and beheaded him in
the prison--after, it would seem, more than twelve months'
imprisonment. Blessed martyr! Dark and cheerless was the end reserved
for thee: but now thou hast thy Master's benediction, "Blessed is he
whosoever shall not be offended in Me"
(Mt 11:6),
and hast found the life thou gavest away
(Mt 10:39).
But where are they in whose skirts is found thy blood?
28. And brought his head in a charger, and gave it to the damsel: and
the damsel gave it to her mother--Herodias did not shed the blood of
the stern reprover; she only got it done, and then gloated over it, as
it streamed from the trunkless head.
29. And when his disciples heard of it--that is, the Baptist's own
disciples.
they came and took up his corpse, and laid it in a tomb--"and went
and told Jesus"
(Mt 14:12).
If these disciples had, up to this time, stood apart from Him, as
adherents of John
(Mt 11:2),
perhaps they now came to Jesus, not without some secret reflection on
Him for His seeming neglect of their master; but perhaps, too, as
orphans, to cast in their lot henceforth with the Lord's disciples. How
Jesus felt, or what He said, on receiving this intelligence, is not
recorded; but He of whom it was said, as He stood by the grave of His
friend Lazarus, "Jesus wept," was not likely to receive such
intelligence without deep emotion. And one reason why He might not be
unwilling that a small body of John's disciples should cling to him to
the last, might be to provide some attached friends who should do for
his precious body, on a small scale, what was afterwards to be done for
His own.
Mr 6:30-56.
THE
TWELVE ON
THEIR
RETURN,
HAVING
REPORTED THE
SUCCESS OF
THEIR
MISSION,
JESUS
CROSSES THE
SEA OF
GALILEE WITH
THEM,
TEACHES THE
PEOPLE, AND
MIRACULOUSLY
FEEDS
THEM TO THE
NUMBER OF
FIVE
THOUSAND--HE
SENDS
HIS
DISCIPLES BY
SHIP
AGAIN TO THE
WESTERN
SIDE,
WHILE
HE
HIMSELF
RETURNS
AFTERWARDS
WALKING ON THE
SEA--INCIDENTS ON
LANDING.
( =
Mt 14:13-36;
Lu 9:10-17;
Joh 6:1-24).
Here, for the first time, all the four streams of sacred text run
parallel. The occasion and all the circumstances of this grand section
are thus brought before us with a vividness quite remarkable.
Five Thousand Miraculously Fed
(Mr 6:30-44).
30. And the apostles gathered themselves together--probably at
Capernaum, on returning from their mission
(Mr 6:7-13).
and told him all things, both what they had done, and what they had
taught--Observe the various reasons He had for crossing to the other
side. First, Matthew
(Mt 14:13)
says, that "when Jesus heard" of the murder of His faithful
forerunner--from those attached disciples of his who had taken up his
body and laid it in a sepulchre (see on
Mr 6:29)
--"He departed by ship into a desert place apart"; either to avoid some
apprehended consequences to Himself, arising from the Baptist's death
(Mt 10:23),
or more probably to be able to indulge in those feelings which that
affecting event had doubtless awakened, and to which the bustle of the
multitude around Him was very unfavorable. Next, since He must have
heard the report of the Twelve with the deepest interest, and probably
with something of the emotion which He experienced on the return of the
Seventy (see on
Lu 10:17-22),
He sought privacy for undisturbed reflection on this begun preaching
and progress of His kingdom. Once more, He was wearied with the
multitude of "comers and goers"--depriving Him even of leisure enough
to take His food--and wanted rest: "Come ye yourselves apart
into a desert place, and rest a while," &c. Under the combined
influence of all these considerations, our Lord sought this change.
32. And they departed into a desert place by ship privately--"over
the Sea of Galilee, which is the Sea of Tiberias," says John
(Joh 6:1),
the only one of the Evangelists who so fully describes it; the others
having written when their readers were supposed to know something of
it, while the last wrote for those at a greater distance of time and
place. This "desert place" is more definitely described by Luke
(Lu 9:10)
as "belonging to the city called Bethsaida." This must not be
confounded with the town so called on the western side of the lake (see
on
Mt 11:21).
This town lay on its northeastern side, near where the Jordan empties
itself into it: in Gaulonitis, out of the dominions of Herod Antipas,
and within the dominions of Philip the Tetrarch
(Lu 3:1),
who raised it from a village to a city, and called it Julias, in
honor of Julia, the daughter of Augustus [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 18.2,1].
33. And the people--the multitudes.
saw them departing, and many knew him--The true reading would seem to
be: "And many saw them departing, and knew or recognized [them]."
and ran afoot--Here, perhaps, it should be rendered "by land"--running
round by the head of the lake, and taking one of the fords of the river,
so as to meet Jesus, who was crossing with the Twelve by ship.
thither out of all cities, and outwent them--got before them.
and came together unto him--How exceedingly graphic is this! every
touch of it betokening the presence of an eye-witness. John
(Joh 6:3)
says, that "Jesus went up into a mountain"--somewhere in that hilly
range, the green tableland which skirts the eastern side of the
lake.
34. And Jesus, when he came out of the ship--having gone on shore.
saw much people--a great multitude.
and was moved with compassion toward them, because they were as sheep
not having a shepherd--At the sight of the multitudes who had followed
Him by land and even got before Him, He was so moved, as was His wont in
such cases, with compassion, because they were like shepherdless sheep,
as to forego both privacy and rest that He might minister to them. Here
we have an important piece of information from the Fourth Evangelist
(Joh 6:4),
"And the passover, a feast of the Jews, was nigh"--rather, "Now the
passover, the feast of the Jews, was nigh." This accounts for the
multitudes that now crowded around Him. They were on their way to keep
that festival at Jerusalem. But Jesus did not go up to this festival,
as John expressly tells us,
(Joh 7:1)
--remaining in Galilee, because the ruling Jews sought to kill Him.
35. And when the day was now far spent--"began to wear away" or
"decline," says Luke
(Lu 9:12).
Matthew
(Mt 14:15)
says, "when it was evening"; and yet he mentions a later evening of the
same day
(Mr 6:23).
This earlier evening began at three P.M.; the
latter began at sunset.
36. Send them away, that they may go into the country round about, and
into the villages, and buy themselves bread: for they have nothing to
eat--John tells us
(Joh 6:5, 6)
that "Jesus said to Philip, Whence shall we buy bread, that these may
eat? (And this He said to prove him: for He Himself knew what He would
do)." The subject may have been introduced by some remark of the
disciples; but the precise order and form of what was said by each can
hardly be gathered with precision, nor is it of any importance.
37. He answered and said unto them--"They need not depart"
(Mt 14:10).
Give ye them to eat--doubtless said to prepare them for what was to
follow.
And they say unto him, Shall we go and buy two hundred pennyworth of
bread, and give them to eat?--"Philip answered Him, Two hundred
pennyworth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them
may take a little"
(Joh 6:7).
38. He saith unto them, How many loaves have ye? go and see. And when
they knew, they say, Five, and two fishes--John is more precise and
full: "One of His disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, saith unto
Him, There is a lad here which hath five barley loaves and two small
fishes: but what are they among so many?"
(Joh 6:8, 9).
Probably this was the whole stock of provisions then at the command of
the disciples--no more than enough for one meal to them--and entrusted
for the time to this lad. "He said, Bring them hither to me"
(Mt 14:18).
39. And he commanded them to make all sit down by companies upon the
green grass--or "green hay"; the rank grass of those bushy wastes.
For, as John
(Joh 6:10)
notes, "there was much grass in the place."
40. And they sat down in ranks, by hundreds, and by fifties--Doubtless this was to show at a glance the number fed, and to enable all
to witness in an orderly manner this glorious miracle.
41. And when he had taken the five loaves and the two fishes, he
looked up to heaven--Thus would the most distant of them see
distinctly what He was doing.
and blessed--John
(Joh 6:11)
says, "And when he had given thanks." The sense is the same. This
thanksgiving for the meal, and benediction of it as the food of
thousands, was the crisis of the miracle.
and brake the loaves, and gave them to his disciples to set before
them--thus virtually holding forth these men as His future ministers.
and the two fishes divided he among them all.
42. And they did all eat, and were filled--All the four Evangelists
mention this: and John
(Joh 6:11)
adds, "and likewise of the fishes, as much as they would"--to show that
vast as was the multitude, and scanty the provisions, the meal to each
and all of them was a plentiful one. "When they were filled, He said
unto His disciples, Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing
be lost"
(Joh 6:12).
This was designed to bring out the whole extent of the miracle.
43. And they took up twelve baskets full of the fragments, and of the
fishes--"Therefore (says
Joh 6:13),
they gathered them together, and filled twelve baskets with the
fragments of the five barley loaves, which remained over and above unto
them that had eaten." The article here rendered "baskets" in all the
four narratives was part of the luggage taken by Jews on a journey--to
carry, it is said, both their provisions and hay to sleep on, that they
might not have to depend on Gentiles, and so run the risk of ceremonial
pollution. In this we have a striking corroboration of the truth of the
four narratives. Internal evidence renders it clear, we think, that the
first three Evangelists wrote independently of each other, though the
fourth must have seen all the others. But here, each of the first three
Evangelists uses the same word to express the apparently insignificant
circumstance that the baskets employed to gather up the fragments were
of the kind which even the Roman satirist, JUVENAL, knew by the name of cophinus, while in
both the narratives of the feeding of the Four Thousand the baskets
used are expressly said to have been of the kind called spuris.
(See
Mr 8:19, 20.)
44. And they that did eat of the loaves were about five thousand
men--"besides women and children"
(Mt 14:21).
Of these, however, there would probably not be many; as only the males
were obliged to go to the approaching festival.
Jesus Recrosses to the Western side of the Lake Walking on the
Sea
(Mr 6:45-56).
One very important particular given by John alone
(Joh 6:15)
introduces this portion: "When Jesus therefore perceived that they
would take Him by force, to make Him a king, He departed again into a
mountain Himself alone."
45. And straightway he constrained his disciples to get into the ship,
and to go to the other side before--Him.
unto Bethsaida--Bethsaida of Galilee
(Joh 12:21).
John
(Joh 6:17)
says they "went over the sea towards Capernaum"--the wind, probably,
occasioning this slight deviation from the direction of Bethsaida.
while he sent away the people--"the multitude." His object in this was
to put an end to the misdirected excitement in His favor
(Joh 6:15),
into which the disciples themselves may have been somewhat drawn. The
word "constrained" implies reluctance on their part, perhaps from
unwillingness to part with their Master and embark at night, leaving
Him alone on the mountain.
46. And when he had sent them away, he departed into a mountain to
pray--thus at length getting that privacy and rest which He had vainly
sought during the earlier part of the day; opportunity also to pour out
His soul in connection with the extraordinary excitement in His favor
that evening--which appears to have marked the zenith of His reputation,
for it began to decline the very next day; and a place whence He might
watch the disciples on the lake, pray for them in their extremity, and
observe the right time for coming to them, in a new manifestation of His
glory, on the sea.
47. And when even was come--the later evening (see on
Mr 6:35).
It had come even when the disciples embarked
(Mt 14:23;
Joh 6:16).
the ship was in the midst of the sea, and he alone on the land--John
says
(Joh 6:17),
"It was now dark, and Jesus was not come to them." Perhaps they made no
great effort to push across at first, having a lingering hope that
their Master would yet join them, and so allowed the darkness to come
on. "And the sea arose" (adds the beloved disciple,
Joh 6:18),
"by reason of a great wind that blew."
48. And he saw them toiling in rowing; for the wind was contrary unto
them--putting forth all their strength to buffet the waves and bear on
against a head wind, but to little effect. He "saw" this from His
mountain top, and through the darkness of the night, for His heart was
all with them: yet would He not go to their relief till His own time
came.
and about the fourth watch of the night--The Jews, who used to
divide the night into three watches, latterly adopted the Roman
division into four watches, as here. So that, at the rate of three
hours to each, the fourth watch, reckoning from six P.M., would be three o'clock in the morning. "So when
they had rowed about five and twenty or thirty furlongs"
(Joh 6:19)
--rather more than halfway across. The lake is about seven miles broad
at its widest part. So that in eight or nine hours they had only made
some three and a half miles. By this time, therefore, they must have
been in a state of exhaustion and despondency bordering on despair; and
now at length, having tried them long enough.
he cometh unto them, walking upon the sea--"and draweth nigh unto the
ship"
(Joh 6:19).
and would have passed by them--but only in the sense of
Lu 24:28;
Ge 32:26;
compare
Ge 18:3, 5; 42:7.
49. But when they saw him walking upon the sea, they supposed it had
been a spirit, and cried out--"for fear"
(Mt 14:26).
He would appear to them at first like a dark moving speck upon the
waters; then as a human figure; but in the dark tempestuous sky, and
not dreaming that it could be their Lord, they take it for a spirit.
Compare
Lu 24:37.
50. For they all saw him, and were troubled. And immediately he talked
with them, and saith unto them, Be of good cheer: It is I; be not
afraid--There is something in these two little words--given by
Matthew, Mark and John
(Mt 14:27;
Mr 6:50;
Joh 6:20)
--"It is I," which from the mouth that spake it and the circumstances
in which it was uttered, passes the power of language to express. Here
were they in the midst of a raging sea, their little bark the sport of
the elements, and with just enough of light to descry an object on the
waters which only aggravated their fears. But Jesus deems it enough to
dispel all apprehension to let them know that He was there. From
other lips that "I am" would have merely meant that the person speaking
was such a one and not another person. That, surely, would have done
little to calm the fears of men expecting every minute, it may be, to
go to the bottom. But spoken by One who at that moment was "treading
upon the waves of the sea," and was about to hush the raging elements
with His word, what was it but the Voice which cried of old in the ears
of Israel, even from the days of Moses, "I AM";
"I, EVEN I, AM HE!" Compare
Joh 18:5, 6; 8:58.
Now, that Word is "made flesh, and dwells among us," uttering itself
from beside us in dear familiar tones--"It is the Voice of my Beloved!"
How far was this apprehended by these frightened disciples? There was
one, we know, in the boat who outstripped all the rest in susceptibility
to such sublime appeals. It was not the deep-toned writer of the Fourth
Gospel, who, though he lived to soar beyond all the apostles, was as yet
too young for prominence, and all unripe. It was Simon Barjonas. Here
follows a very remarkable and instructive episode, recorded by Matthew
alone:
Peter Ventures to Walk upon the Sea
(Mt 14:28-32).
Mt 14:28:
And Peter answered Him, and said, Lord, If it be Thou, bid me come
unto Thee on the water--not "let me," but "give me the word of
command"--"command," or "order me to come unto Thee upon the
waters."
Mt 14:29:
And He said, Come--Sublime word, issuing from One conscious of
power over the raging element, to bid it serve both Himself and
whomsoever else He pleased!
And when Peter was come down out of the ship, he walked upon the
water--"waters."
to come to Jesus--"It was a bold spirit," says BISHOP
HALL,
"that could wish it; more bold that could act it--not fearing either
the softness or the roughness of that uncouth passage."
Mt 14:30:
But when he saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid: and beginning
to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me--The wind was as
boisterous before, but Peter "saw" it not, seeing only the power of
Christ, in the lively exercise of faith. Now he "sees" the fury of the
elements, and immediately the power of Christ to bear him up fades
before his view, and this makes him "afraid"--as how could he be
otherwise, without any felt power to keep him up? He then "begins to
sink"; and finally, conscious that his experiment had failed, he casts
himself, in a sort of desperate confidence, upon his "Lord" for
deliverance!
Mt 14:31:
And immediately Jesus stretched forth His hand, and caught him, and
said unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou
doubt?--This rebuke was not administered while Peter was sinking, nor till Christ had him by the hand: first reinvigorating
his faith, and then with it enabling him again to walk upon the crested
wave. Useless else had been this loving reproof, which owns the
faith that had ventured on the deep upon the bare word of Christ, but
asks why that distrust which so quickly marred it.
Mt 14:32:
And when they--Jesus and Peter.
were come into the ship, the wind ceased.
51. And he went up unto them into the ship--John
(Joh 6:21)
says, "Then they willingly received him into the ship"--or rather, "Then
were they willing to receive Him" (with reference to their previous
terror); but implying also a glad welcome, their first fears now
converted into wonder and delight. "And immediately," adds the beloved
disciple, "they were at the land whither they went," or "were bound."
This additional miracle, for as such it is manifestly related, is
recorded by the fourth Evangelist alone. As the storm was suddenly
calmed, so the little bark--propelled by the secret power of the Lord of
nature now sailing in it--glided through the now unruffled waters, and,
while they were wrapt in wonder at what had happened, not heeding their
rapid motion, was found at port, to their still further surprise.
"Then are they glad, because at rest
And quiet now they be;
So to the haven He them brings
Which they desired to see."
|
Matthew
(Mt 14:33)
says, "Then they that were in the ship came [that is, ere they got to
land] and worshipped him, saying, Of a truth Thou art the Son of God."
But our Evangelist is wonderfully striking.
and the wind ceased and they were sore amazed in themselves beyond
measure, and wondered--The Evangelist seems hardly to find language
strong enough to express their astonishment.
52. For they considered not the miracle of the loaves; for their heart
was hardened--What a singular statement! The meaning seems to be that
if they had but "considered [reflected upon] the miracle of the loaves,"
wrought but a few hours before, they would have wondered at nothing which He might do within the whole circle of power and grace.
Incidents on Landing
(Mr 6:53-56).
The details here are given with a rich vividness quite peculiar to this
charming Gospel.
53. And when they had passed over, they came into the land of
Gennesaret--from which the lake sometimes takes its name, stretching
along its western shore. Capernaum was their landing-place
(Joh 6:24, 25).
and drew to the shore--a nautical phrase, nowhere else used in the
New Testament.
54. And when they were come out of the ship, straightway they knew
him--"immediately they recognized Him"; that is, the people did.
55. and began to carry about in beds those that were sick, where they
heard he was--At this period of our Lord's ministry the popular
enthusiasm in His favor was at its height.
56. and besought him that they might touch if it were but the border of
his garment--having heard, no doubt, of what the woman with the issue
of blood experienced on doing so
(Mr 5:25-29),
and perhaps of other unrecorded cases of the same nature.
and as many as touched him--or "it"--the border of His garment.
were made whole--All this they continued to do and to experience
while our Lord was in that region. The time corresponds to that
mentioned
(Joh 7:1),
when He "walked in Galilee," instead of appearing in Jerusalem at the
passover, "because the Jews," that is, the rulers, "sought to
kill Him"--while the people sought to enthrone Him!
CHAPTER 7
Mr 7:1-23.
DISCOURSE ON
CEREMONIAL
POLLUTION.
( =
Mt 15:1-20).
See on
Mt 15:1-20.
Mr 7:24-37.
THE
SYROPHŒNICIAN
WOMAN AND
HER
DAUGHTER--A
DEAF AND
DUMB
MAN
HEALED.
( =
Mt 15:21-31).
The Syrophœnician Woman and Her Daughter
(Mr 7:24-30).
The first words of this narrative show that the incident followed, in
point of time, immediately on what precedes it.
24. And from thence he arose, and went into the borders--or "unto
the borders."
of Tyre and Sidon--the two great Phœnician seaports, but here
denoting the territory generally, to the frontiers of which Jesus now
came. But did Jesus actually enter this heathen territory? The whole
narrative, we think, proceeds upon the supposition that He did. His
immediate object seems to have been to avoid the wrath of the Pharisees
at the withering exposure He had just made of their traditional
religion.
and entered into an house, and would have no man know it--because He
had not come there to minister to heathens. But though not "sent but
to the lost sheep of the house of Israel"
(Mt 15:24),
He hindered not the lost sheep of the vast Gentile world from coming to
Him, nor put them away when they did come--as this incident was
designed to show.
but he could not be hid--Christ's fame had early spread from Galilee
to this very region
(Mr 3:8;
Lu 6:17).
25. For a certain woman, whose young daughter had an unclean
spirit--or, as in Matthew
(Mt 15:22),
"was badly demonized."
heard of him--One wonders how; but distress is quick of hearing.
and fell at his feet:
26. The woman was a Greek--that is, "a Gentile," as in the Margin.
a Syrophœnician by nation--so called as inhabiting the
Phœnician tract of Syria. JUVENAL uses the
same term, as was remarked by
JUSTIN
MARTYR and
TERTULLIAN. Matthew
(Mt 15:22)
calls her "a woman
of Canaan"--a more intelligible description to his Jewish readers
(compare
Jud 1:30, 32, 33).
and she besought him that he would cast forth the devil out of her
daughter--"She cried unto Him, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son
of David: my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil"
(Mt 15:22).
Thus, though no Israelite herself, she salutes Him as Israel's promised
Messiah. Here we must go to
Mt 15:23-25
for some important links in the dialogue omitted by our Evangelist.
Mt 15:23:
But he answered her not a word--The design of this was first,
perhaps, to show that He was not sent to such as she. He had said
expressly to the Twelve, "Go not into the way of the Gentiles"
(Mt 10:5);
and being now among them Himself, He would, for consistency's sake, let
it be seen that He had not gone thither for missionary purposes.
Therefore He not only kept silence, but had actually left the house,
and--as will presently appear--was proceeding on His way back, when
this woman accosted Him. But another reason for keeping silence plainly
was to try and whet her faith, patience, and perseverance. And it had
the desired effect: "She cried after them," which shows that He
was already on His way from the place.
And His disciples came and besought Him, saying, Send her away; for
she crieth after us--They thought her troublesome with her
importunate cries, just as they did the people who brought young
children to be blessed of Him, and they ask their Lord to "send her
away," that is, to grant her request and be rid of her; for we gather
from His reply that they meant to solicit favor for her, though not for
her sake so much as their own.
Mt 15:24:
But He answered and said, I am not sent but unto the lost sheep
of the house of Israel--a speech evidently intended for
the disciples themselves, to satisfy them that, though the grace He was
about to show to this Gentile believer was beyond His strict
commission, He had not gone spontaneously to dispense it. Yet
did even this speech open a gleam of hope, could she have discerned it.
For thus might she have spoken: "I am not SENT,
did He say? Truth, Lord, Thou comest not hither in quest of us,
but I come in quest of Thee; and must I go empty away? So did
not the woman of Samaria, whom when Thou foundest her on Thy way to
Galilee, Thou sentest away to make many rich!" But this our poor
Syrophœnician could not attain to. What, then, can she answer to
such a speech? Nothing. She has reached her lowest depth, her darkest
moment: she will just utter her last cry:
Mt 15:25:
Then came she and worshipped Him, saying, Lord, help me!--This
appeal, so artless, wrung from the depths of a believing heart, and
reminding us of the publican's "God be merciful to me a sinner," moved
the Redeemer at last to break silence--but in what style? Here we
return to our own Evangelist.
27. But Jesus said unto her, Let the children first be
filled--"Is there hope for me here?" "Filled
FIRST?" "Then my turn, it seems, is coming!--but
then, 'The CHILDREN first?' Ah! when, on that rule,
shall my turn ever come!" But ere she has time for these ponderings of
His word, another word comes to supplement it.
for it is not meet to take the children's bread, and to cast it unto
the dogs--Is this the death of her hopes? Nay, rather it is life from
the dead. Out of the eater shall come forth meat
(Jud 14:14).
"At evening-time, it shall be light"
(Zec 14:7).
"Ah! I have it now. Had He kept silence, what could I have done but go
unblest? but He hath spoken, and the victory is mine."
28. And she answered and said unto him, Yes, Lord--or, as the same
word is rendered in
Mt 15:27.
"Truth, Lord."
yet the dogs eat of the children's crumbs--"which fall from their
master's table"
(Mt 15:27).
"I thank Thee, O blessed One, for that word! That's my whole case. Not
of the children? True. A dog? True also: Yet the dogs under the
table are allowed to eat of the children's crumbs--the droppings from
their master's full table: Give me that, and I am content: One crumb of
power and grace from Thy table shall cast the devil out of my
daughter." Oh, what lightning quickness, what reach of instinctive
ingenuity, do we behold in this heathen woman!
29. And he said unto her--"O woman, great is thy faith"
(Mt 15:28).
As BENGEL beautifully remarks, Jesus "marvelled"
only at two things--faith and unbelief (see
Lu 7:9).
For this saying go thy way; the devil is gone out of thy
daughter--That moment the deed was done.
30. And when she was come to her house, she found the devil gone out,
and her daughter laid upon the bed--But Matthew
(Mt 15:28)
is more specific; "And her daughter was made whole from that very
hour." The wonderfulness of this case in all its features has been felt
in every age of the Church, and the balm it has administered, and will
yet administer, to millions will be known only in that day that shall
reveal the secrets of all hearts.
Deaf and Dumb Man Healed
(Mr 7:31-37).
31. And again, departing from the coasts of Tyre and Sidon, he came
unto the Sea of Galilee--or, according to what has very strong claims
to be regarded as the true text here, "And again, departing from the
coasts of Tyre, He came through Sidon to the Sea of Galilee." The
manuscripts in favor of this reading, though not the most numerous, are
weighty, while the versions agreeing with it are among the most ancient;
and all the best critical editors and commentators adopt it. In this
case we must understand that our Lord, having once gone out of the Holy
Land the length of Tyre, proceeded as far north as Sidon, though without
ministering, so far as appears, in those parts, and then bent His steps
in a southeasterly direction. There is certainly a difficulty in the
supposition of so long a detour without any missionary object: and
some may think this sufficient to cast the balance in favor of the
received reading. Be this as it may, on returning from these coasts of
Tyre, He passed
through the midst of the coasts--frontiers.
of Decapolis--crossing the Jordan, therefore, and approaching the
lake on its east side. Here Matthew, who omits the details of the cure
of this deaf and dumb man, introduces some particulars, from which we
learn that it was only one of a great number. "And Jesus," says that
Evangelist
(Mt 15:29-31),
"departed from thence, and came nigh unto the Sea of Galilee, and went
up into a mountain"--the mountain range bounding the lake on the
northeast, in Decapolis: "And great multitudes came unto Him, having
with them lame, blind, dumb, maimed"--not "mutilated," which is but a
secondary sense of the word, but "deformed"--"and many others, and cast
them down at Jesus' feet; and He healed them: insomuch that the
multitude [multitudes] wondered, when they saw the dumb to speak, the
maimed to be whole, the lame to walk, and the blind to see; and they
glorified the God of Israel"--who after so long and dreary an absence
of visible manifestation, had returned to bless His people as of old
(compare
Lu 7:16).
Beyond this it is not clear from the Evangelist's language that the
people saw into the claims of Jesus. Well, of these cases Mark here
singles out one, whose cure had something peculiar in it.
32. And they bring unto him one that was deaf . . . and
they beseech him to put his hand upon him--In their eagerness they
appear to have been somewhat too officious. Though usually doing as
here suggested, He will deal with this case in His own way.
33. And he took him aside from the multitude--As in another case
He "took the blind man by the hand and led him out of the town"
(Mr 8:23),
probably to fix his undistracted attention on Himself, and, by means of
certain actions He was about to do, to awaken and direct his attention
to the proper source of relief.
and put his fingers into his ears--As his indistinct articulation
arose from his deafness, our Lord addresses Himself to this first. To
the impotent man He said, "Wilt thou be made whole?" to the blind men,
"What will ye that I shall do unto you?" and "Believe ye that I am able
to do this?"
(Joh 5:6;
Mt 20:32; 9:28).
But as this patient could hear nothing, our Lord substitutes
symbolical actions upon each of the organs affected.
and he spit and touched his tongue--moistening the man's parched
tongue with saliva from His own mouth, as if to lubricate the organ or
facilitate its free motion; thus indicating the source of the healing
virtue to be His own person. (For similar actions, see
Mr 8:23;
Joh 9:6).
34. And looking up to heaven--ever acknowledging His Father,
even while the healing was seen to flow from Himself (see on
Joh 5:19).
he sighed--"over the wreck," says
TRENCH, "which sin had brought
about, and the malice of the devil in deforming the fair features of
God's original creation." But, we take it, there was a yet more painful
impression of that "evil thing and bitter" whence all our ills have
sprung, and which, when "Himself took our infirmities and bare our
sicknesses"
(Mt 8:17),
became mysteriously His own.
"In thought of these his brows benign,
Not even in healing, cloudless shine."
KEBLE
|
and saith unto him, Ephphatha, that is, Be opened--Our Evangelist, as
remarked on
Mr 5:41,
loves to give such wonderful words just as they were spoken.
35. And straightway his ears were opened--This is mentioned first as
the source of the other derangement.
and the string of his tongue was loosed, and he spake plain--The cure
was thus alike instantaneous and perfect.
36. And he charged them that they should tell no man--Into this very
region He had sent the man out of whom had been cast the legion of
devils, to proclaim "what the Lord had done for him"
(Mr 5:19).
Now He will have them "tell no man." But in the former case there was
no danger of obstructing His ministry by "blazing the matter"
(Mr 1:45),
as He Himself had left the region; whereas now He was sojourning in it.
but the more he charged them, so much the more a great deal they
published it--They could not be restrained; nay, the prohibition
seemed only to whet their determination to publish His fame.
37. And were beyond measure astonished, saying, He hath done all
things well--reminding us, says TRENCH, of the
words of the first creation
(Ge 1:31,
Septuagint), upon which we are thus not unsuitably thrown back,
for Christ's work is in the truest sense "a new creation,"
he maketh both the deaf to hear and the dumb to speak--"and they
glorified the God of Israel"
(Mt 15:31).
See on
Mr 7:31.
CHAPTER 8
Mr 8:1-26.
FOUR
THOUSAND
MIRACULOUSLY
FED--A
SIGN FROM
HEAVEN
SOUGHT AND
REFUSED--THE
LEAVEN OF THE
PHARISEES AND
SADDUCEES--A
BLIND
MAN AT
BETHSAIDA
RESTORED TO
SIGHT.
( =
Mt 15:32-16:12).
This section of miscellaneous matter evidently follows the preceding one
in point of time, as will be seen by observing how it is introduced by
Matthew.
Feeding of the Four Thousand
(Mr 8:1-9).
1. In those days the multitude being very great, &c.
2. I have compassion on the multitude--an expression of that deep
emotion in the Redeemer's heart which always preceded some remarkable
interposition for relief. (See
Mt 14:14; 20:34;
Mr 1:41;
Lu 7:13;
also
Mt 9:36,
before the mission of the Twelve; compare
Jud 2:18; 10:16).
because they have now been with me--in constant attendance.
three days, and have nothing to eat:
3. And if I send them away fasting to their own houses, they will faint
by the way--In their eagerness they seem not to have thought of the
need of provisions for such a length of time; but the Lord thought of
it. In Matthew
(Mt 15:32)
it is, "I will not send them away fasting"--or rather, "To send them
away fasting I am unwilling."
4. From whence can a man satisfy these men with bread here in the
wilderness?--Though the question here is the same as when He fed the
five thousand, they evidently now meant no more by it than that
they had not the means of feeding the multitude; modestly leaving
the Lord to decide what was to be done. And this will the more appear
from His not now trying them, as before, by saying, "They need not
depart, give ye them to eat"; but simply asking what they had, and then
giving His directions.
5. And he asked them, How many loaves have ye? And they said, Seven--It was important in this case, as in the former, that the precise number
of the loaves should be brought out. Thus also does the distinctness of
the two miracles appear.
9. And they that had eaten were about four thousand: and he sent
them away--Had not our Lord distinctly referred, in this very
chapter and in two successive sentences, to the feeding of the five
thousand and of the four thousand as two distinct miracles, many
critics would have insisted that they were but two different
representations of one and the same miracle, as they do of the two
expulsions of the buyers and sellers from the temple, at the beginning
and end of our Lord's ministry. But even in spite of what our Lord
says, it is painful to find such men as NEANDER
endeavoring to identify the two miracles. The localities, though both
on the eastern side of the lake, were different; the time was
different; the preceding and following circumstances were different;
the period during which the people continued fasting was different--in
the one case not even one entire day, in the other three days; the
number fed was different--five thousand in the one case, in the other
four thousand; the number of the loaves was different--five in the one
case, in the other seven; the number of the fishes in the one case is
definitely stated by all the four Evangelists--two; in the other case
both give them indefinitely--"a few small fishes"; in the one case the
multitude were commanded to sit down "upon the green grass"; in the
other "on the ground"; in the one case the number of the baskets taken
up filled with the fragments was twelve, in the other seven; but more
than all, perhaps, because apparently quite incidental, in the one case
the name given to the kind of baskets used is the same in all the four
narratives--the cophinus (see on
Mr 6:43);
in the other case the name given to the kind of baskets used, while it
is the same in both the narratives, is quite different--the
spuris, a basket large enough to hold a man's body, for Paul was
let down in one of these from the wall of Damascus
(Ac 9:25).
It might be added, that in the one case the people, in a frenzy of
enthusiasm, would have taken Him by force to make Him a king; in the
other case no such excitement is recorded. In view of these things, who
could have believed that these were one and the same miracle, even if
the Lord Himself had not expressly distinguished them?
Sign from Heaven Sought
(Mr 8:10-13).
10. And straightway he entered into a ship--"into the ship," or
"embarked."
with his disciples, and came into the parts of Dalmanutha--In
Matthew
(Mt 15:39)
it is "the coasts of Magdala." Magdala and Dalmanutha were both on the
western shore of the lake, and probably not far apart. From the former
the surname "Magdalene" was probably taken, to denote the residence of
Mary Magdalene. Dalmanutha may have been a village, but it cannot now
be identified with certainty.
11. seeking of him a sign from heaven, tempting him--not in the
least desiring evidence for their conviction, but hoping to entrap Him.
The first part of the answer is given in Matthew alone
(Mt 16:2, 3):
"He answered and said unto them, When it is evening, ye say, It will be
fair weather; for the sky is red. And in the morning, It will be foul
weather to-day: for the sky is red and lowering [sullen, gloomy].
Hypocrites! ye can discern the face of the sky; but can ye not discern
the signs of the times?" The same simplicity of purpose and careful
observation of the symptoms of approaching events which they showed in
common things would enable them to "discern the signs of the times"--or
rather "seasons," to which the prophets pointed for the manifestation
of the Messiah. The scepter had departed from Judah; Daniel's seventy
weeks were expiring, &c.; and many other significant indications of the
close of the old economy, and preparations for a freer and more
comprehensive one, might have been discerned. But all was lost upon
them.
12. And he sighed deeply in his spirit--The language is very strong.
These glimpses into the interior of the Redeemer's heart, in which our
Evangelist abounds, are more precious than rubies. The state of the
Pharisaic heart, which prompted this desire for a fresh sign, went to
His very soul.
and saith, Why doth this generation--"this wicked and adulterous
generation"
(Mt 16:4).
seek after a sign?--when they have had such abundant evidence
already.
There shall no sign be given unto this generation--literally, "If
there shall be given to this generation a sign"; a Jewish way of
expressing a solemn and peremptory determination to the contrary
(compare
Heb 4:5;
Ps 95:11,
Margin). "A generation incapable of appreciating such
demonstrations shall not be gratified with them." In
Mt 16:4
He added, "but the sign of the prophet Jonas." (See on
Mt 12:39, 40.)
13. And he left them--no doubt with tokens of displeasure.
and entering into the ship again, departed to the other
side.
The Leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees
(Mr 8:14-21).
14. Now the disciples had forgotten to take bread, neither had they in
the ship with them more than one loaf--This is another example of that
graphic circumstantiality which gives such a charm to this briefest of
the four Gospels. The circumstance of the "one loaf" only remaining, as
WEBSTER and
WILKINSON remark, was more suggestive of their Master's
recent miracles than the entire absence of provisions.
15. And he charged them, saying, Take heed, beware of the leaven of
the Pharisees--"and of the Sadducees"
(Mt 16:6).
and of the leaven of Herod--The teaching or "doctrine"
(Mt 16:12)
of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees was quite different, but both
were equally pernicious; and the Herodians, though rather a political
party, were equally envenomed against our Lord's spiritual teaching.
See on
Mt 12:14.
The penetrating and diffusive quality of leaven, for good
or bad, is the ground of the comparison.
16. And they reasoned among themselves, saying, It is because we have
no bread--But a little while ago He was tried with the obduracy of the
Pharisees; now He is tried with the obtuseness of His own disciples. The
nine questions following each other in rapid succession
(Mr 8:17-21)
show how deeply He was hurt at this want of spiritual apprehension, and
worse still, their low thoughts of Him, as if He would utter so solemn
a warning on so petty a subject. It will be seen, however, from the
very form of their conjecture, "It is because we have no bread,"
and our Lord's astonishment that they should not by that time have
known better with what He took up His attention--that He ever left
the whole care for His own temporal wants to the Twelve: that He
did this so entirely, that finding they were reduced to their last loaf
they felt as if unworthy of such a trust, and could not think but that
the same thought was in their Lord's mind which was pressing upon their
own; but that in this they were so far wrong that it hurt His
feelings--sharp just in proportion to His love--that such a thought of
Him should have entered their minds! Who that, like angels, "desire to
look into these things" will not prize such glimpses above gold?
17. have ye your heart yet hardened?--How strong an expression
to use of true-hearted disciples! See on
Mr 6:52.
18. Having eyes, see ye not? and having ears, hear ye not?--See
on
Mt 13:13.
and do ye not remember?
19. When I brake the five loaves among five thousand--"the five
thousand."
how many baskets full of fragments took ye up? &c.
21. How is it that ye do not understand?--"do not understand that the
warning I gave you could not have been prompted by any such petty
consideration as the want of loaves in your scrip." Profuse as were our
Lord's miracles, we see from this that they were not wrought at random,
but that He carefully noted their minutest details, and desired that
this should be done by those who witnessed, as doubtless by all who read
the record of them. Even the different kind of baskets used at the two
miraculous feedings, so carefully noted in the two narratives, are here
also referred to; the one smaller, of which there were twelve, the other
much larger, of which there were seven.
Blind Man at Bethsaida Restored to Sight
(Mr 8:22-26).
22. And he cometh to Bethsaida--Bethsaida Julias, on the northeast
side of the lake, whence after this He proceeded to Cæsarea Philippi
(Mr 8:27).
and they bring a blind man unto him, and besought him to touch
him--See on
Mr 7:32.
23. And he took the blind man by the hand, and led him out of the
town--Of the deaf and dumb man it is merely said that "He took him
aside"
(Mr 7:33);
but this blind man He led by the hand out of the town, doing it
Himself rather than employing another--great humility, exclaims BENGEL--that He might gain his confidence and raise his
expectation.
and when he had spit on his eyes--the organ affected--See on
Mr 7:33.
and put his hands upon him, he asked him if he saw aught.
24. And he looked up, and said, I see men as trees, walking--This is
one of the cases in which one edition of what is called the received
text differs from another. That which is decidedly the best supported,
and has also internal evidence on its side is this: "I see men; for I
see [them] as trees walking"--that is, he could distinguish them from
trees only by their motion; a minute mark of truth in the narrative, as
ALFORD observes, describing how human objects had appeared to him during
that gradual failing of sight which had ended in blindness.
25. After that he put his hands again upon his eyes, and made him look
up; and he was restored, and saw every man clearly--Perhaps the one
operation perfectly restored the eyes, while the other imparted
immediately the faculty of using them. It is the only recorded
example of a progressive cure, and it certainly illustrates similar
methods in the spiritual kingdom. Of the four recorded cases of sight
restored, all the patients save one either came or were brought to the Physician. In the case of the man born blind, the Physician came
to the patient. So some seek and find Christ; of others He is found who
seek Him not.
26. Neither go into the town, nor tell it to any in the town--Besides
the usual reasons against going about "blazing the matter," retirement
in this case would be salutary to himself.
Mr 8:27-38.
PETER'S
NOBLE
CONFESSION OF
CHRIST--OUR
LORD'S
FIRST
EXPLICIT
ANNOUNCEMENT OF
HIS
APPROACHING
SUFFERINGS,
DEATH, AND
RESURRECTION--HIS
REBUKE OF
PETER, AND
WARNING TO
ALL THE
TWELVE.
( =
Mt 16:13-27;
Lu 9:18-26).
For the exposition, see on
Mt 16:13-28.
CHAPTER 9
Mr 9:1-13.
JESUS
IS
TRANSFIGURED--CONVERSATION ABOUT
ELIAS.
( =
Mt 16:28-17:13;
Lu 9:27-36).
See on
Lu 9:27-36.
Mr 9:14-32.
HEALING OF A
DEMONIAC
BOY--SECOND
EXPLICIT
ANNOUNCEMENT OF
HIS
APPROACHING
DEATH AND
RESURRECTION.
( =
Mt 17:14-23;
Lu 9:37-45).
Healing of the Demoniac Boy
(Mr 9:14-29).
14. And when he came to his disciples, he saw a great multitude about
them, and the scribes questioning with them--This was "on the next
day, when they were come down from the hill"
(Lu 9:37).
The Transfiguration appears to have taken place at night. In the
morning, as He came down from the hill on which it took place--with
Peter, and James, and John--on approaching the other nine, He found
them surrounded by a great multitude, and the scribes disputing or
discussing with them. No doubt these cavillers were twitting the
apostles of Jesus with their inability to cure the demoniac boy of whom
we are presently to hear, and insinuating doubts even of their Master's
ability to do it; while they, zealous for their Master's honor, would
no doubt refer to His past miracles in proof of the contrary.
15. And straightway all the people--the multitude.
when they beheld him, were greatly amazed--were astounded.
and running to him saluted him--The singularly strong expression of
surprise, the sudden arrest of the discussion, and the rush of the
multitude towards Him, can be accounted for by nothing less than
something amazing in His appearance. There can hardly be any doubt that
His countenance still retained traces of His transfiguration-glory.
(See
Ex 34:29, 30).
So BENGEL,
DE
WETTE,
MEYER,
TRENCH,
ALFORD.
No wonder, if this was the case, that they not only ran to Him, but
saluted Him. Our Lord, however, takes no notice of what had attracted
them, and probably it gradually faded away as He drew near; but
addressing Himself to the scribes, He demands the subject of their
discussion, ready to meet them where they had pressed hard upon His
half-instructed and as yet timid apostles.
16. And he asked the scribes, What question ye with them?--Ere they
had time to reply, the father of the boy, whose case had occasioned the
dispute, himself steps forward and answers the question; telling a
piteous tale of deafness, and dumbness, and fits of epilepsy--ending
with this, that the disciples, though entreated, could not perform the
cure.
17. And one of the multitude answered, and said, Master, I have brought
unto thee my son--"mine only child"
(Lu 9:38).
which hath a dumb spirit--a spirit whose operation had the effect of
rendering his victim speechless, and deaf also
(Mr 9:25).
In Matthew's report of the speech
(Mt 17:15),
the father says "he is lunatic"; this being another and most
distressing effect of the possession.
18. And wheresoever he taketh him, he teareth him; and he foameth, and
gnasheth with his teeth, and pineth away--rather, "becomes withered,"
"dried up," or "paralyzed"; as the same word is everywhere else rendered
in the New Testament. Some additional particulars are given by Luke,
and by our Evangelist below. "Lo," says he in
Lu 9:39,
"a spirit taketh him, and he suddenly crieth out; and it teareth him
that he foameth again, and bruising him hardly [or with difficulty]
departeth from him."
and I spake to thy disciples that they should cast him out; and they
could not--Our Lord replies to the father by a severe rebuke to the
disciples. As if wounded at the exposure before such a multitude, of
the weakness of His disciples' faith, which doubtless He felt as a
reflection on Himself, He puts them to the blush before all, but in
language fitted only to raise expectation of what He Himself would do.
19. He answereth him, and saith, O faithless generation--"and
perverse," or "perverted"
(Mt 17:17;
Lu 9:41).
how long shall I be with you? how long shall I suffer
you?--language implying that it was a shame to them to want the
faith necessary to perform this cure, and that it needed some patience
to put up with them. It is to us surprising that some interpreters, as
CHRYSOSTOM and CALVIN, should
represent this rebuke as addressed, not to the disciples at all, but to
the scribes who disputed with them. Nor does it much, if at all, mend
the matter to view it as addressed to both, as most expositors seem to
do. With
BENGEL,
DE
WETTE, and
MEYER, we regard it as
addressed directly to the nine apostles who were unable to expel this
evil spirit. And though, in ascribing this inability to their "want of
faith" and the "perverted turn of mind" which they had drunk in with
their early training, the rebuke would undoubtedly apply, with vastly
greater force, to those who twitted the poor disciples with their
inability, it would be to change the whole nature of the rebuke to
suppose it addressed to those who had no faith at all, and were
wholly perverted. It was because faith sufficient for curing this
youth was to be expected of the disciples, and because they should by
that time have got rid of the perversity in which they had been reared,
that Jesus exposes them thus before the rest. And who does not see that
this was fitted, more than anything else, to impress upon the
by-standers the severe loftiness of the training He was giving to the
Twelve, and the unsophisticated footing He was on with them?
Bring him unto me--The order to bring the patient to Him was instantly
obeyed; when, lo! as if conscious of the presence of his Divine
Tormentor, and expecting to be made to quit, the foul spirit rages and
is furious, determined to die hard, doing all the mischief he can to
this poor child while yet within his grasp.
20. And they brought him unto him: and when he saw him, straightway
the spirit tare him--Just as the man with the legion of demons, "when
he saw Jesus, ran and worshipped Him"
(Mr 5:6),
so this demon, when he saw Him, immediately "tare him." The
feeling of terror and rage was the same in both cases.
and he fell on the ground, and wallowed foaming--Still Jesus does
nothing, but keeps conversing with the father about the case--partly to
have its desperate features told out by him who knew them best, in the
hearing of the spectators; partly to let its virulence have time to show
itself; and partly to deepen the exercise of the father's soul, to draw
out his faith, and thus to prepare both him and the by-standers for what
He was to do.
21. And he asked his father, How long is it ago since this came unto
him? And he said, Of a child, &c.--Having told briefly the affecting
features of the case, the poor father, half dispirited by the failure of
the disciples and the aggravated virulence of the malady itself in
presence of their Master, yet encouraged too by what he had heard of
Christ, by the severe rebuke He had given to His disciples for not
having faith enough to cure the boy, and by the dignity with which He
had ordered him to be brought to Him--in this mixed state of mind, he
closes his description of the case with these touching words:
22. but if thou canst do anything, have compassion on us, and help
us--"us," says the father; for it was a sore family affliction.
Compare the language of the Syrophœnician woman regarding her
daughter, "Lord, help me." Still nothing is done: the man is but
struggling into faith: it must come a step farther. But he had to
do with Him who breaks not the bruised reed, and who knew how to
inspire what He demanded. The man had said to Him,
"If Thou canst do."
23. Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe--The man had
said, "If Thou canst do anything." Jesus replies.
all things are possible to him that believeth--"My doing all depends
on thy believing." To impress this still more, He redoubles upon the
believing: "If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that
believeth." Thus the Lord helps the birth of faith in that struggling
soul; and now, though with pain and sore travail, it comes to the birth,
as TRENCH, borrowing from
OLSHAUSEN, expresses it. Seeing the case
stood still, waiting not upon the Lord's power but his own faith, the
man becomes immediately conscious of conflicting principles, and rises
into one of the noblest utterances on record.
24. And straightway the father of the child cried out, and said with
tears, Lord, I believe: help thou mine unbelief--that is, "It is
useless concealing from Thee, O Thou mysterious, mighty Healer, the
unbelief that still struggles in this heart of mine; but that heart
bears me witness that I do believe in Thee; and if distrust still
remains, I disown it, I wrestle with it, I seek help from Thee against
it." Two things are very remarkable here: First,
The felt and owned presence of unbelief, which only the strength of
the man's faith could have so revealed to his own consciousness.
Second, His appeal to Christ for help against his felt unbelief--a
feature in the case quite unparalleled, and showing, more than all
protestations could have done, the insight he had attained into the
existence of a power in Christ more glorious them any he had besought for his poor child. The work was done; and as the commotion and
confusion in the crowd was now increasing, Jesus at once, as Lord of
spirits, gives the word of command to the dumb and deaf spirit to be
gone, never again to return to his victim.
26. And the spirit cried, and rent him sore, and came out of him; and
he was as one dead; insomuch that many said, He is dead--The malignant,
cruel spirit, now conscious that his time was come, gathers up his whole
strength, with intent by a last stroke to kill his victim, and had
nearly succeeded. But the Lord of life was there; the Healer of all
maladies, the Friend of sinners, the Seed of the woman, "the Stronger
than the strong man armed," was there. The very faith which Christ
declared to be enough for everything being now found, it was not
possible that the serpent should prevail. Fearfully is he permitted to
bruise the heel, as in this case; but his own head shall go for
it--his works shall be destroyed
(1Jo 3:8).
27. But Jesus took him by the hand, and lifted him up; and he arose.
28. Why could not we cast him out?
29. And he said unto them, This kind can come forth by nothing but by
prayer and fasting--that is, as nearly all good interpreters are
agreed, "this kind of evil spirits cannot be expelled," or "so desperate
a case of demoniacal possession cannot be cured, but by prayer and
fasting." But since the Lord Himself says that His disciples could not
fast while He was with them, perhaps this was designed, as
ALFORD hints,
for their after-guidance--unless we take it as but a definite way of
expressing the general truth, that great and difficult duties require
special preparation and self-denial. But the answer to their question,
as given in
Mt 17:20, 21
is fuller: "And Jesus said unto them, Because of your unbelief. For
verily I say unto you, If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye
shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place, and it
shall remove; and nothing shall be impossible unto you"
(Mt 17:20).
See on
Mr 11:23.
"Howbeit this kind goeth not out but by prayer and fasting"
(Mt 17:21),
that is, though nothing is impossible to faith, yet such a height of
faith as is requisite for such triumphs is not to be reached either in
a moment or without effort--either with God in prayer or with ourselves
in self-denying exercises. Luke
(Lu 9:43)
adds, "And they were all amazed at the mighty power of God"--"at the
majesty" or "mightiness of God," in this last miracle, in the
Transfiguration, &c.; or, at the divine grandeur of Christ
rising upon them daily.
Second Explicit Announcement of His Approaching Death and Resurrection
(Mr 9:30-32).
30. And they departed thence, and passed--were passing along.
through Galilee; and he would not that any man should know it--By
comparing
Mt 17:22, 23
and Lu 9:43, 44
with this, we gather, that
as our Lord's reason for going through Galilee more privately than usual
on this occasion was to reiterate to them the announcement which had so
shocked them at the first mention of it, and thus familiarize them with
it by little and little, so this was His reason for enjoining silence
upon them as to their present movements.
31. For he taught his disciples, and said unto them--"Let these sayings
sink down into your ears"
(Lu 9:44);
not what had been passing between them as to His grandeur, but what He
was now to utter.
The Son of man is delivered--The use of the present tense expresses
how near at hand He would have them to consider it. As
BENGEL says,
steps were already in course of being taken to bring it about.
into the hands of men--This remarkable antithesis, "the Son of man shall be delivered into the hands of men," it is worthy of notice,
is in all the three Evangelists.
and they shall kill him--that is, "Be not carried off your feet by
all that grandeur of Mine which ye have lately witnessed, but bear in
mind what I have already told you and now distinctly repeat, that that
Sun in whose beams ye now rejoice is soon to set in midnight gloom."
and after he is killed, he shall rise the third day.
32. But they understood not that saying--"and it was hid from them,
[so] that they preceived it not"
(Lu 9:45).
and were afraid to ask him--Their most cherished ideas were so
completely dashed by such announcements, that they were afraid of laying
themselves open to rebuke by asking Him any questions. But "they were
exceeding sorry"
(Mt 17:23).
While the other Evangelists, as WEBSTER and WILKINSON remark, notice their ignorance and their fear,
Matthew, who was one of them, retains a vivid recollection of their
sorrow.
Mr 9:33-50.
STRIFE AMONG THE
TWELVE
WHO
SHOULD
BE
GREATEST IN THE
KINGDOM OF
HEAVEN, WITH
RELATIVE
TEACHING--INCIDENTAL
REBUKE OF
JOHN FOR
EXCLUSIVENESS.
( =
Mt 18:1-9;
Lu 9:46-50).
Strife among the Twelve, with Relative Teaching
(Mr 9:33-37).
33. What was it that ye disputed among yourselves by the way?--From
this we gather that after the painful communication He had made to
them, the Redeemer had allowed them to travel so much of the way by
themselves; partly, no doubt, that He might have privacy for Himself to
dwell on what lay before Him, and partly that they might be induced to
weigh together and prepare themselves for the terrible events which He
had announced to them. But if so, how different was their occupation!
34. But they held their peace: for by the way they had disputed among
themselves, who should be the greatest--From
Mt 18:1
we should infer that the subject was introduced, not by our Lord, but
by the disciples themselves, who came and asked Jesus who should be
greatest. Perhaps one or two of them first referred the matter to
Jesus, who put them off till they should all be assembled together at
Capernaum. He had all the while "perceived the thought of their heart"
(Lu 9:47);
but now that they were all together "in the house," He questions them
about it, and they are put to the blush, conscious of the temper
towards each other which it had kindled. This raised the whole question
afresh, and at this point our Evangelist takes it up. The subject was
suggested by the recent announcement of the Kingdom
(Mt 16:19-28),
the transfiguration of their Master, and especially the preference
given to three of them at that scene.
35. If any man desire to be first, the same shall be last of all,
and servant of all--that is, "let him be" such: he must be prepared
to take the last and lowest place. See on
Mr 10:42-45.
36. And he took a child--"a little child"
(Mt 18:2);
but the word is the same in both places, as also in
Lu 9:47.
and set him in the midst of them: and when he had taken him in his
arms--This beautiful trait is mentioned by out Evangelist alone.
he said unto them--Here we must go to Matthew
(Mt 18:3, 4)
for the first of this answer: "Verily I say unto you, except ye be
converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the
kingdom of Heaven:" that is, "Conversion must be thorough; not only
must the heart be turned to God in general, and from earthly to
heavenly things, but in particular, except ye be converted from that
carnal ambition which still rankles within you, into that freedom from
all such feelings which ye see in this child, ye have neither part nor
lot in the kingdom at all; and he who in this feature has most of the
child, is highest there." Whosoever, therefore, shall "humble himself
as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven":
"for he that is [willing to be] least among you all, the same shall be
great"
(Lu 9:48).
37. Whosoever shall receive one of such children--so manifesting the
spirit unconsciously displayed by this child.
in my name--from love to Me.
receiveth me; and whosoever shall receive me, receiveth not me, but
Him that sent me--(See on
Mt 10:40).
Incidental Rebuke of John for Exclusiveness
(Mr 9:38-41).
38. And John answered him, saying, Master, we saw one casting out
devils in thy name, and he followeth not us: and we forbade him,
because he followeth not us--The link of connection here with the
foregoing context lies, we apprehend, in the emphatic words which our
Lord had just uttered, "in My name." "Oh," interposes John--young, warm,
but not sufficiently apprehending Christ's teaching in these
matters--"that reminds me of something that we have just done, and we
should like to know if we did right. We saw one casting out devils "in
Thy name," and we forbade him, because he followeth not us. Were we
right, or were we wrong?" Answer--"Ye were wrong." "But we did it
because he followeth not us." "No matter."
39. But Jesus said, Forbid him not: for there is no man which shall do
a miracle in my name, that can lightly speak evil of me--soon, that is,
readily "speak evil of me."
40. For he that is not against us is on our part--Two principles of
immense importance are here laid down: "First, No one will readily speak
evil of Me who has the faith to do a miracle in My name; and second, If
such a person cannot be supposed to be against us, ye are to
consider him for us." Let it be carefully observed that our Lord
does not say this man should not have "followed them," nor yet that
it was indifferent whether he did or not; but simply teaches how such a
person was to be regarded, although he did not--namely, as a reverer
of His name and a promoter of His cause.
41. For whosoever shall give you a cup of water to drink in my name,
because ye belong to Christ, verily I say unto you, he shall not lose
his reward--(See on
Mt 10:42).
Continuation of Teaching Suggested by the Disciples' Strife
(Mr 9:42-50).
What follows appears to have no connection with the incidental reproof
of John immediately preceding. As that had interrupted some important
teaching, our Lord hastens back from it, as if no such interruption had
occurred.
42. For whosoever shall offend one of these little ones that believe in
me--or, shall cause them to stumble; referring probably to the effect
which such unsavory disputes as they had held would have upon the
inquiring and hopeful who came in contact with them, leading to the
belief that after all they were no better than others.
it is better for him that a millstone were hanged about his
neck--The word here is simply "millstone," without expressing of
which kind. But in
Mt 18:6
it is the "ass-turned" kind, far heavier than the small hand-mill
turned by female slaves, as in
Lu 17:35.
It is of course the same which is meant here.
and he were cast into the sea--meaning, that if by such a death that
stumbling were prevented, and so its eternal consequences averted, it
would be a happy thing for them. Here follows a striking verse in
Mt 18:7,
"Woe unto the world because of offences!" (There will be stumblings and
falls and loss of souls enough from the world's treatment of disciples,
without any addition from you: dreadful will be its doom in
consequence; see that ye share not in it). "For it must needs be that
offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!" (The
struggle between light and darkness will inevitably cause stumblings,
but not less guilty is he who wilfully makes any to stumble).
43. And if thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to
enter into life maimed, than having two hands to go into hell--See
Mt 5:29, 30.
The only difference between the words there and here is that there they
refer to impure inclinations; here, to an ambitious disposition, an
irascible or quarrelsome temper, and the like: and the injunction is to
strike at the root of such dispositions and cut off the occasions of
them.
47. And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is better for
thee to enter into the kingdom of God with one eye, than having two
eyes to be cast into hell-fire--On the words "hell" and
"hell-fire," or "the hell of fire," see on
Mt 5:22.
48. Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not
quenched--See on
Mt 5:30;
The "unquenchablesness" of this fire has already been brought before us
(see on
Mt 3:12);
and the awfully vivid idea of an undying worm, everlastingly consuming
an unconsumable body, is taken from the closing words of the
evangelical prophet
(Isa 66:24),
which seem to have furnished the later Jewish Church with its current
phraseology on the subject of future punishment (see LIGHTFOOT).
49. For every one shall be salted with fire, and every sacrifice shall
be salted with salt--A difficult verse, on which much has been
written--some of it to little purpose. "Every one" probably means "Every
follower of mine"; and the "fire" with which he "must be salted"
probably means "a fiery trial" to season him. (Compare
Mal 3:2,
&c.). The reference to salting the sacrifice is of course to that maxim
of the Levitical law, that every acceptable sacrifice must be sprinkled
with salt, to express symbolically its soundness, sweetness,
wholesomeness, acceptability. But as it had to be roasted first,
we have here the further idea of a salting with fire. In this case,
"every sacrifice," in the next clause, will mean, "Every one who would
be found an acceptable offering to God"; and thus the whole verse may
perhaps be paraphrased as follows: "Every disciple of Mine shall have a
fiery trial to undergo, and everyone who would be found an odor of a
sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable and well-pleasing to God, must have
such a salting, like the Levitical sacrifices." Another, but, as
it seems to us, farfetched as well as harsh, interpretation--suggested
first, we believe, by MICHAELIS, and adopted by
ALEXANDER--takes the "every sacrifice which must
be salted with fire" to mean those who are "cast into hell," and the
preservative effect of this salting to refer to the preservation
of the lost not only in but by means of the fire of hell.
Their reason for this is that the other interpretation changes the
meaning of the "fire," and the characters too, from the lost to the
saved, in these verses. But as our Lord confessedly ends His discourse
with the case of His own true disciples, the transition to them in
Mr 9:48
is perfectly natural; whereas to apply the preservative salt of the
sacrifice to the preserving quality of hell-fire, is equally contrary
to the symbolical sense of salt and the Scripture representations of
future torment. Our Lord has still in His eye the unseemly jarrings
which had arisen among the Twelve, the peril to themselves of allowing
any indulgence to such passions, and the severe self-sacrifice which
salvation would cost them.
50. Salt is good; but if the salt have lost his saltness--its power
to season what it is brought into contact with.
wherewith will ye season it?--How is this property to be
restored? See on
Mt 5:13.
Have salt in yourselves--See to it that ye retain in yourselves those
precious qualities that will make you a blessing to one another, and to
all around you.
and--with respect to the miserable strife out of which all this
discourse has sprung, in one concluding word.
have peace one with another--This is repeated in
1Th 5:13.
CHAPTER 10
Mr 10:1-12.
FINAL
DEPARTURE FROM
GALILEE--DIVORCE.
( =
Mt 19:1-12;
Lu 9:51).
See on
Mt 19:1-12.
Mr 10:13-16.
LITTLE
CHILDREN
BROUGHT TO
CHRIST.
( =
Mt 19:13-15;
Lu 18:15-17).
See on
Lu 18:15-17.
Mr 10:17-31.
THE
RICH
YOUNG
RULER.
( =
Mt 19:16-30;
Lu 18:18-30).
See on
Lu 18:18-30.
Mr 10:32-45.
THIRD
EXPLICIT AND
STILL
FULLER
ANNOUNCEMENT OF
HIS
APPROACHING
SUFFERINGS,
DEATH, AND
RESURRECTION--THE
AMBITIOUS
REQUEST OF
JAMES AND
JOHN, AND THE
REPLY.
( =
Mt 20:17-28;
Lu 18:31-34).
Third Announcement of His approaching Sufferings, Death, and
Resurrection
(Mr 10:32-34).
32. And they were in the way--on the road.
going up to Jerusalem--in Perea, and probably somewhere between
Ephraim and Jericho, on the farther side of the Jordan, and to the
northeast of Jerusalem.
and Jesus went before them--as GROTIUS says, in the style of an
intrepid Leader.
and they were amazed--or "struck with astonishment" at His courage
in advancing to certain death.
and as they followed, they were afraid--for their own safety. These
artless, lifelike touches--not only from an eye-witness, but one whom
the noble carriage of the Master struck with wonder and awe--are
peculiar to Mark, and give the second Gospel a charm all its own; making
us feel as if we ourselves were in the midst of the scenes it describes.
Well might the poet exclaim:
"The Saviour, what a noble flame
Was kindled in His breast,
When, hasting to Jerusalem,
He march'd before the rest!"
COWPER
|
And he took again the twelve--referring to His previous announcements
on this sad subject.
and began to tell them what things should happen unto him--"were going
to befall Him." The word expresses something already begun but not
brought to a head, rather than something wholly future.
33. Saying, Behold, we go up to Jerusalem--for the last time, and--"all
things that are written by the prophets concerning the Son of man shall
be accomplished"
(Lu 18:31).
the Son of man shall be delivered unto the chief priests and unto the
scribes; and they shall condemn him to death, and shall deliver him to
the Gentiles--This is the first express statement that the Gentiles
would combine with the Jews in His death; the two grand divisions of the
human race for whom He died thus taking part in crucifying the Lord of
Glory, as WEBSTER and
WILKINSON observe.
34. And they shall mock him, and shall scourge him, and shall spit
upon him, and shall kill him: and the third day he shall rise
again--Singularly explicit as this announcement was, Luke
(Lu 18:34)
says "they understood none of these things; and this saying was hid
from them, neither knew they the things which were spoken." The meaning
of the words they could be at no loss to understand, but their import
in relation to His Messianic kingdom they could not penetrate; the
whole prediction being right in the teeth of their preconceived
notions. That they should have clung so tenaciously to the popular
notion of an "unsuffering" Messiah, may surprise us; but it
gives inexpressible weight to their after-testimony to a suffering and
dying Saviour.
Ambitious Request of James and John--The Reply
(Mr 10:35-45).
35. And James and John, the sons of Zebedee, come unto him,
saying--Matthew
(Mt 20:20)
says their "mother came to Him with her sons, worshipping Him and
desiring," &c. (Compare
Mt 27:56,
with Mr 15:40).
Salome was her name
(Mr 16:1).
We cannot be sure with which of the parties the movement originated;
but as our Lord, even in Matthew's account, addresses Himself to James
and John, taking no account of the mother, it is likely the mother was
merely set on by them. The thought was doubtless suggested to her sons
by the recent promise to the Twelve of "thrones to sit on, when the Son
of man should sit on the throne of His glory"
(Mt 19:28);
but after the reproof so lately given them
(Mr 9:33,
&c.) they get their mother to speak for them.
Master, we would that thou shouldest do for us whatsoever we shall
desire--thus cautiously approaching the subject.
36. And he said unto them, What would ye that I should do for you?--Though well aware what was in their mind and their mother's, our Lord
will have the unseemly petition uttered before all.
37. Grant unto us that we may sit, one on thy right hand, and the
other on thy left hand, in thy glory--that is, Assign to us the two
places of highest honor in the coming kingdom. The semblance of a plea
for so presumptuous a request might possibly have been drawn from the
fact that one of the two usually leaned on the breast of Jesus, or sat
next Him at meals, while the other was one of the favored three.
38. But Jesus said unto them, Ye know not what ye ask--How gentle the
reply to such a request, preferred at such a time, after the sad
announcement just made!
can ye drink of the cup that I drink of?--To "drink of a cup" is in
Scripture a figure for getting one's fill either of good
(Ps 16:5; 23:5; 116:13;
Jer 16:7)
or of ill
(Ps 75:8;
Joh 18:11;
Re 14:10).
Here it is the cup of suffering.
and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized
with?--(Compare for the language,
Ps 42:7).
The object of this question seems to have been to try how far those two
men were capable of the dignity to which they aspired and this
on the principle that he who is able to suffer most for His sake will
be the nearest to Him in His kingdom.
39. And they said unto him, We can--Here we see them owning
their mother's petition for them as their own; and doubtless they were
perfectly sincere in professing their willingness to follow their
Master to any suffering He might have to endure. As for James,
he was the first of the apostles who was honored, and showed himself
able to be baptized with his Master's baptism of blood
(Ac 12:1, 2);
while John, after going through all the persecutions to which
the infant Church was exposed from the Jews, and sharing in the
struggles and sufferings occasioned by the first triumphs of the Gospel
among the Gentiles, lived to be the victim, after all the rest had got
to glory, of a bitter persecution in the evening of his days, for the
word of God and for the testimony of Jesus Christ. Yes, they were dear
believers and blessed men, in spite of this unworthy ambition, and
their Lord knew it; and perhaps the foresight of what they would have
to pass through, and the courageous testimony He would yet receive from
them, was the cause of that gentleness which we cannot but wonder at in
His reproof.
And Jesus said unto them, Ye shall indeed drink of the cup that I drink
of; and with the baptism that I am baptized withal shall ye be
baptized--No doubt this prediction, when their sufferings at length
came upon them, cheered them with the assurance, not that they would sit
on His right and left hand--for of that thought they would be heartily
ashamed--but that "if they suffered with Him, they should be also
glorified together."
40. But to sit on my right hand and on my left hand in not mine to
give; but it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared--"of My
Father"
(Mt 20:23).
The supplement which our translators have inserted is approved by some
good interpreters, and the proper sense of the word rendered "but" is
certainly in favor of it. But besides that it makes the statement too
elliptical--leaving too many words to be supplied--it seems to make our
Lord repudiate the right to assign to each of His people his place in
the kingdom of glory; a thing which He nowhere else does, but rather
the contrary. It is true that He says their place is "prepared for them
by His Father." But that is true of their admission to heaven at all;
and yet from His great white throne Jesus will Himself adjudicate the
kingdom, and authoritatively invite into it those on His right hand,
calling them the "blessed of His Father"; so little inconsistency is
there between the eternal choice of them by His Father, and that public
adjudication of them, not only to heaven in general, but each to his
own position in it, which all Scripture assigns to Christ. The true
rendering, then, of this clause, we take it, is this: "But to sit on My
right hand and on My left hand is not Mine to give, save to them for
whom it is prepared." When therefore He says, "It is not Mine to give,"
the meaning is, "I cannot give it as a favor to whomsoever I
please, or on a principle of favoritism; it belongs
exclusively to those for whom it is prepared," &c. And if this be His
meaning, it will be seen how far our Lord is from disclaiming the right
to assign to each his proper place in His Kingdom; that on the
contrary, He expressly asserts it, merely announcing that the principle
of distribution is quite different from what these petitioners
supposed. Our Lord, it will be observed, does not deny the
petition of James and John, or say they shall not occupy the
place in His kingdom which they now improperly sought:--for aught we
know, that may be their true place. All we are sure of is, that
their asking it was displeasing to Him "to whom all judgment is
committed," and so was not fitted to gain their object, but just the
reverse. (See what is taught in
Lu 14:8-11).
One at least of these brethren, as ALFORD
strikingly remarks, saw on the right and on the left hand of their
Lord, as He hung upon the tree, the crucified thieves; and bitter
indeed must have been the remembrance of this ambitious prayer at that
moment.
41. And when the ten heard it, they began to be much displeased with
James and John--or "were moved with indignation," as the same word is
rendered in
Mt 20:24.
The expression "began to be," which is of frequent occurrence in
the Gospels, means that more passed than is expressed, and that we have
but the result. And can we blame the ten for the indignation which they
felt? Yet there was probably a spice of the old spirit of rivalry in
it, which in spite of our Lord's recent lengthened, diversified, and
most solemn warnings against it, had not ceased to stir in their
breasts.
42. But Jesus called them to him, and saith unto them, Ye know that
they which are accounted to rule--are recognized or acknowledged as
rulers.
over the Gentiles exercise lordship over them: and their great ones
exercise authority upon them--as superiors exercising an acknowledged
authority over inferiors.
43. But so shall it not be among you: but whosoever will be great
among you, shall be your minister--a subordinate servant.
44. And whosoever of you will be the chiefest--or "first."
shall be--that is, "let him be," or "shall be he who is prepared
to be."
servant of all--one in the lowest condition of service.
45. For even the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to
minister, and to give his life a ransom for many--"instead of
many," that is, "In the kingdom about to be set up, this principle
shall have no place. All My servants shall there be equal; and the only
greatness known to it shall be the greatness of humility and
devotedness to the service of others. He that goes down the deepest in
these services of self-denying humility shall rise the highest and hold
the chiefest place in that kingdom; even as the Son of man, whose
abasement and self-sacrifice for others, transcending all, gives Him of
right a place above all!" As "the Word in the beginning with God," He
was ministered unto; and as the risen Redeemer in our nature He
now is ministered unto, "angels and authorities and powers being
made subject unto Him"
(1Pe 3:22);
but not for this came He hither. The Served of all came to be the
Servant of all; and His last act was the grandest Service ever beheld
by the universe of God--"HE GAVE HIS LIFE A
RANSOM FOR MANY!", &c. "Many"
is here to be taken, not in contrast with few or with
all, but in opposition to one--the one Son of man for the
many sinners.
Mr 10:46-52.
BLIND
BARTIMAEUS
HEALED.
( =
Mt 20:29-34;
Lu 18:35-43).
See on
Lu 18:35-43.
CHAPTER 11
Mr 11:1-11.
CHRIST'S
TRIUMPHAL
ENTRY INTO
JERUSALEM, ON THE
FIRST
DAY OF THE
WEEK.
( =
Mt 21:1-9;
Lu 19:29-40;
Joh 12:12, 19).
See on
Lu 19:29-40.
Mr 11:11-26.
THE
BARREN
FIG
TREE
CURSED WITH
LESSONS FROM
IT--SECOND
CLEANSING OF THE
TEMPLE, ON THE
SECOND AND
THIRD
DAYS OF THE
WEEK.
( =
Mt 21:12-22;
Lu 19:45-48).
11. And Jesus entered into Jerusalem, and into the temple: and when he
had looked round about upon--surveyed.
all things, and now the eventide was come, he went out into Bethany
with the twelve--Thus briefly does our Evangelist dispose of this His
first day in Jerusalem, after the triumphal entry. Nor do the Third and
Fourth Gospels give us more light. But from Matthew
(Mt 21:10, 11, 14-16)
we learn some additional and precious particulars, for which see on
Lu 19:45-48.
It was not now safe for the Lord to sleep in the city, nor, from the
day of His Triumphal Entry, did He pass one night in it, save the last
fatal one.
The Barren Fig Tree Cursed
(Mr 11:12-14).
12. And on the morrow--The Triumphal Entry being on the first day of
the week, this following day was Monday.
when they were come from Bethany--"in the morning"
(Mt 21:18).
he was hungry--How was that? Had he stolen forth from that dear roof
at Bethany to the "mountain to pray, and continued all night in prayer
to God?"
(Lu 6:12);
or, "in the morning," as on a former occasion, "risen up a great while
before day, and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed"
(Mr 1:35);
not breaking His fast thereafter, but bending His steps straight for
the city, that He might "work the works of Him that sent Him while it
was day?"
(Joh 9:4).
We know not, though one lingers upon and loves to trace out the every
movement of that life of wonders. One thing, however we are sure of--it
was real bodily hunger which He now sought to allay by the fruit
of this fig tree, "if haply He might find any thing thereon"; not a
mere scene for the purpose of teaching a lesson, as some early
heretics maintained, and some still seem virtually to hold.
13. And seeing a fig tree--(In
Mt 21:19,
it is "one fig tree," but the sense is the same as here, "a certain fig
tree," as in
Mt 8:19,
&c.). Bethphage, which adjoined Bethany, derives its name from its
being a fig region--"House of figs."
afar off having leaves--and therefore promising fruit, which in the
case of figs come before the leaves.
he came, if haply he might find any thing thereon: and when he came to
it, he found nothing but leaves; for the time of figs was not yet--What
the precise import of this explanation is, interpreters are not agreed.
Perhaps all that is meant is, that as the proper fig season had not
arrived, no fruit would have been expected even of this tree but for the
leaves which it had, which were in this case prematurely and unnaturally
developed.
14. And Jesus answered and said unto it, No man eat fruit of thee
hereafter for ever--That word did not make the tree barren,
but sealed it up in its own barrenness. See on
Mt 13:13-15.
And his disciples heard it--and marked the saying. This is introduced
as a connecting link, to explain what was afterwards to be said on the
subject, as the narrative has to proceed to the other transactions of
this day.
Second Cleansing of the Temple
(Mr 11:15-18).
For the exposition of this portion, see on
Lu 19:45-48.
Lessons from the Cursing of the Fig Tree
(Mr 11:20-26).
20. And in the morning--of Tuesday, the third day of the week: He
had slept, as during all this week, at Bethany.
as they passed by--going into Jerusalem again.
they saw the fig tree dried up from the roots--no partial blight,
leaving life in the root; but it was now dead, root and branch. In
Mt 21:19
it is said it withered away as soon as it was cursed. But the full
blight had not appeared probably at once; and in the dusk perhaps, as
they returned to Bethany, they had not observed it. The precision with
which Mark distinguishes the days is not observed by Matthew, intent
only on holding up the truths which the incident was designed to teach.
In Matthew the whole is represented as taking place at once, just as
the two stages of Jairus' daughter--dying and dead--are represented by
him as one. The only difference is between a more summary and a more
detailed narrative, each of which only confirms the other.
21. And Peter calling to remembrance saith unto him--satisfied that
a miracle so very peculiar--a miracle, not of blessing, as all His
other miracles, but of cursing--could not have been wrought but with
some higher reference, and fully expecting to hear something weighty on
the subject.
Master, behold, the fig tree which thou cursedst is withered away--so
connecting the two things as to show that he traced the death of the
tree entirely to the curse of his Lord. Matthew
(Mt 21:20)
gives this simply as a general exclamation of surprise by the disciples
"how soon" the blight had taken effect.
22. And Jesus answering saith unto them, Have faith in God.
23. For verily I say unto you, That whosoever shall say unto this
mountain, Be thou removed . . . he shall have whatsoever he saith--Here
is the lesson now. From the nature of the case supposed--that they might
wish a mountain removed and cast into the sea, a thing far removed from
anything which they could be thought actually to desire--it is plain
that not physical but moral obstacles to the progress of His kingdom
were in the Redeemer's view, and that what He designed to teach was the
great lesson, that
no obstacle should be able to stand before a confiding faith in God.
24. Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye
pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them--This verse
only generalizes the assurance of
Mr 11:23;
which seems to show that it was designed for the special encouragement
of evangelistic and missionary efforts, while this is a
directory for prevailing prayer in general.
25. And when ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have aught against
any; that your Father also which is in heaven may forgive you your
trespasses, &c.--This is repeated from the Sermon on the Mount (see
on
Mt 6:12);
to remind them that if this was necessary to the acceptableness of
all prayer, much more when great things were to be asked and
confidently expected.
Mr 11:27-33.
THE
AUTHORITY OF
JESUS
QUESTIONED--HIS
REPLY.
( =
Mt 21:23-27;
Lu 20:1-8).
See on
Mt 21:23-27.
CHAPTER 12
Mr 12:1-12.
PARABLE OF THE
WICKED
HUSBANDMEN.
( =
Mt 21:33-46;
Lu 20:9-18).
See on
Mt 21:33-46.
Mr 12:13-40.
ENTANGLING
QUESTIONS ABOUT
TRIBUTE THE
RESURRECTION, AND THE
GREAT
COMMANDMENT, WITH THE
REPLIES--CHRIST
BAFFLES THE
PHARISEES BY A
QUESTION ABOUT
DAVID, AND
DENOUNCES THE
SCRIBES.
( =
Mt 22:15-46;
Lu 20:20-47).
The time of this section appears to be still the third day (Tuesday) of
Christ's last week. Matthew introduces the subject by saying
(Mt 22:15),
"Then went the Pharisees and took counsel how they might entangle Him
in His talk."
13. And they send unto him certain of the Pharisees--"their disciples,"
says Matthew
(Mt 22:16);
probably young and zealous scholars in that hardening school.
and of the Herodians--(See on
Mt 12:14).
In
Lu 20:20
these willing tools are called "spies, which should feign themselves
just [righteous] men, that they might take hold of His words, that so
they might deliver Him unto the power and authority of the governor."
Their plan, then, was to entrap Him into some expression which might be
construed into disaffection to the Roman government; the Pharisees
themselves being notoriously discontented with the Roman yoke.
Tribute to Cæsar
(Mr 12:14-17).
14. And when they were come, they say unto him, Master--Teacher.
we know that thou art true, and carest for no man; for thou regardest
not the person of men, but teachest the way of God in truth--By such
flattery--though they said only the truth--they hoped to throw Him off
His guard.
Is it lawful to give tribute to Cæsar, or not?--It was the
civil poll tax paid by all enrolled in the "census." See on
Mt 17:25.
15. Shall we give, or shall we not give? But he, knowing their
hypocrisy--"their wickedness"
(Mt 22:18);
"their craftiness"
(Lu 20:23).
The malignity of their hearts took the form of craft, pretending what
they did not feel--an anxious desire to be guided aright in a matter
which to a scrupulous few might seem a question of some difficulty.
Seeing perfectly through this,
He said unto them, Why tempt ye me?--"hypocrites!"
bring me a penny that I may see it--"the tribute money"
(Mt 22:19).
16. And they brought it. And he saith unto them, Whose is this
image--stamped upon the coin.
and superscription?--the words encircling it on the obverse side.
And they said unto him, Cæsar's.
17. And Jesus answering said unto them, Render to Cæsar the things
that are Cæsar's--Putting it in this general form, it was impossible
for sedition itself to dispute it, and yet it dissolved the snare.
and to God the things that are God's--How much is there in this
profound but to them startling addition to the maxim, and how
incomparable is the whole for fulness, brevity, clearness, weight!
and they marvelled at him--"at His answer, and held their peace"
(Lu 20:26),
"and left Him, and went their way"
(Mt 22:22).
The Resurrection
(Mr 12:18-27).
18. Then come unto him the Sadducees, which say there is no
resurrection--"neither angel nor spirit"
(Ac 23:7).
They were the materialists of the day. See on
Ac 23:6.
and they asked him, saying--as follows:
19-22. Master, Moses wrote unto us--
(De 25:5).
If a man's brother die, and leave his wife behind him
. . . And the seven had her, and left no seed: last of all
the woman died also.
23. In the resurrection therefore when they shall rise, &c.
24. Do ye not therefore err, because ye know not the scriptures--regarding the future state.
neither the power of God?--before which a thousand such difficulties
vanish.
25. For when they shall rise from the dead, they neither marry, nor
are given in marriage--"neither can they die any more"
(Lu 20:36).
Marriage is ordained to perpetuate the human family; but as there will
be no breaches by death in the future state, this ordinance will cease.
but are as the angels which are in heaven--In Luke
(Lu 20:36)
it is "equal unto the angels." But as the subject is death and
resurrection, we are not warranted to extend the equality here taught
beyond the one point--the immortality of their nature. A
beautiful clause is added in Luke
(Lu 20:36)
--"and are the children of God"--not in respect of character,
which is not here spoken of, but of nature--"being the children
of the resurrection," as rising to an undecaying existence
(Ro 8:21, 23),
and so being the children of their Father's immortality
(1Ti 6:16).
26. And as touching the dead, that they rise: have ye not read in the
book of Moses--"even Moses"
(Lu 20:37),
whom they had just quoted for the purpose of entangling Him.
how in the bush God spake unto him--either "at the bush," as the same
expression is rendered in
Lu 20:37,
that is, when he was there; or "in the [section of his history
regarding the] bush." The structure of our verse suggests the latter
sense, which is not unusual.
saying, I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob?--
(Ex 3:6).
27. He is not the God of the dead, but the God of the living--not
"the God of dead but [the God] of living persons." The word in brackets
is almost certainly an addition to the genuine text, and critical
editors exclude it. "For all live unto Him"
(Lu 20:38)
--"in His view," or "in His estimation." This last statement--found
only in Luke--though adding nothing to the argument, is an important
additional illustration. It is true, indeed, that to God no human being
is dead or ever will be, but all mankind sustain an abiding conscious
relation to Him; but the "all" here means "those who shall be accounted
worthy to obtain that world." These sustain a gracious covenant
relation to God which cannot be dissolved. (Compare
Ro 6:10, 11).
In this sense our Lord affirms that for Moses to call the Lord the
"GOD" of His patriarchal servants, if at that
moment they had no existence, would be unworthy of Him. He "would be
ashamed to be called their God, if He had not prepared for them
a city"
(Heb 11:16).
It was concluded by some of the early Fathers, from our Lord's resting
His proof of the Resurrection on such a passage as this, instead of
quoting some much clearer testimonies of the Old Testament, that the
Sadducees, to whom this was addressed, acknowledged the authority of no
part of the Old Testament but the Pentateuch; and this opinion has held
its ground even till now. But as there is no ground for it in the New
Testament, so JOSEPHUS is silent upon it; merely
saying that they rejected the Pharisaic traditions. It was because the
Pentateuch was regarded by all classes as the fundamental source of the
Hebrew religion, and all the succeeding books of the Old Testament but
as developments of it, that our Lord would show that even there the
doctrine of the Resurrection was taught. And all the rather does He
select this passage, as being not a bare annunciation of the doctrine
in question, but as expressive of that glorious truth out of which
the Resurrection springs. "And when the multitude heard this" (says
Mt 22:23),
"they were astonished at His doctrine." "Then," adds
Lu 20:39, 40,
"certain of the scribes answering said, Master, thou hast well
said"--enjoying His victory over the Sadducees. "And after that they
durst not ask Him any [question at all]"--neither party could; both
being for the time utterly foiled.
The Great Commandment
(Mr 12:28-34).
"But when the Pharisees had heard that He had put the Sadducees to silence,
they were gathered together"
(Mt 22:34).
28. And one of the scribes--"a lawyer," says Matthew
(Mt 22:35);
that is, teacher of the law.
came, and having heard them reasoning together, and perceiving that he
had answered them well, asked him--manifestly in no bad spirit. When
Matthew
(Mt 22:35)
therefore says he came "tempting," or "trying him," as one of the
Pharisaic party who seemed to enjoy the defeat He had given to the
Sadducees, we may suppose that though somewhat priding himself upon his
insight into the law, and not indisposed to measure his knowledge with
One in whom he had not yet learned to believe, he was nevertheless an
honest-hearted, fair disputant.
Which is the first commandment of all?--first in importance; the
primary, leading commandment, the most fundamental one. This was a
question which, with some others, divided the Jewish teachers into rival
schools. Our Lord's answer is in a strain of respect very different from
what He showed to cavillers--ever observing His own direction, "Give not
that which is holy to the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before
swine; lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and rend
you"
(Mt 7:6).
29. And Jesus answered him, The first of all the commandments
is--The readings here vary considerably. TISCHENDORF and TREGELLES read
simply, "the first is"; and they are followed by MEYER and ALFORD. But though the
authority for the precise form of the received text is slender, a form
almost identical with it seems to have most weight of authority. Our
Lord here gives His explicit sanction to the distinction between
commandments of a more fundamental and primary character,
and commandments of a more dependent and subordinate
nature; a distinction of which it is confidently asserted by a certain
class of critics that the Jews knew nothing, that our Lord and His
apostles nowhere lay down, and which has been invented by Christian
divines. (Compare
Mt 23:23).
Hear, O Israel; the Lord our God is one Lord--This every devout Jew
recited twice every day, and the Jews do it to this day; thus keeping up
the great ancient national protest against the polytheisms and
pantheisms of the heathen world: it is the great utterance of the
national faith in One Living and Personal God--"ONE
JEHOVAH!"
30. And thou shalt--We have here the language of law,
expressive of God's claims. What then are we here bound down to
do? One word is made to express it. And what a word! Had the essence of
the divine law consisted in deeds, it could not possibly have
been expressed in a single word; for no one deed is comprehensive of
all others embraced in the law. But as it consists in an affection
of the soul, one word suffices to express it--but only one.
Fear, though due to God and enjoined by Him, is limited
in its sphere and distant in character. Trust, hope, and
the like, though essential features of a right state of heart towards
God, are called into action only by personal necessity, and so
are--in a good sense, it is true, but still are
properly--selfish affections; that is to say, they have respect
to our own well-being. But LOVE is an
all-inclusive affection, embracing not only every other
affection proper to its object, but all that is proper to be
done to its object; for as love spontaneously seeks to please
its object, so, in the case of men to God, it is the native well spring
of a voluntary obedience. It is, besides, the most personal of
all affections. One may fear an event, one may hope for an
event, one may rejoice in an event; but one can love only
a Person. It is the tenderest, the most unselfish,
the most divine of all affections. Such, then, is the affection
in which the essence of the divine law is declared to consist.
Thou shalt love--We now come to the glorious Object of that demanded
affection.
Thou shalt love the Lord, thy God--that is, Jehovah, the
Self-Existent One, who has revealed Himself as the "I
AM," and there is none else; who, though by
His name JEHOVAH apparently at an unapproachable
distance from His finite creatures, yet bears to Thee a real and
definite relationship, out of which arises His claim and Thy
duty--of LOVE. But with what are we to love
Him? Four things are here specified. First, "Thou shalt love the Lord
thy God"
with thy heart--This sometimes means "the whole inner man" (as
Pr 4:23);
but that cannot be meant here; for then the other three particulars
would be superfluous. Very often it means "our emotional nature"--the
seat of feeling as distinguished from our intellectual nature or
the seat of thought, commonly called the "mind" (as in
Php 4:7).
But neither can this be the sense of it here; for here the heart is
distinguished both from the "mind" and the "soul." The "heart," then,
must here mean the sincerity of both the thoughts and the
feelings; in other words, uprightness or
true-heartedness, as opposed to a hypocritical or
divided affection. But next, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God"
with thy soul. This is designed to command our emotional nature: Thou
shalt put feeling or warmth into thine affection.
Further, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God"
with thy mind--This commands our intellectual nature: Thou shalt put
intelligence into thine affection--in opposition to a blind
devotion, or mere devoteeism. Lastly, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God"
with thy strength--This commands our energies: Thou shalt put
intensity into thine affection--"Do it with thy might"
(Ec 9:10).
Taking these four things together, the command of the Law is, "Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy powers--with a
sincere, a fervid, an intelligent, an
energetic love." But this is not all that the Law demands. God
will have all these qualities in their most perfect exercise. "Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God," says the Law, "with all thy
heart," or, with perfect sincerity; "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy soul," or, with the utmost fervor; "Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy mind," or, in the fullest exercise
of an enlightened reason; and "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with
all thy strength," or, with the whole energy of our being! So
much for the First Commandment.
31. And the second is like--"unto it"
(Mt 22:39);
as demanding the same affection, and only the extension of it, in its
proper measure, to the creatures of Him whom we thus love--our
brethren in the participation of the same nature, and
neighbors, as connected with us by ties that render each
dependent upon and necessary to the other.
Thou shall love thy neighbour as thyself--Now, as we are not to love
ourselves supremely, this is virtually a command, in the first place,
not to love our neighbor with all our heart and soul and mind and
strength. And thus it is a condemnation of the idolatry of the
creature. Our supreme and uttermost affection is to be reserved for God.
But as sincerely as ourselves we are to love all mankind, and with
the same readiness to do and suffer for them as we should reasonably
desire them to show to us. The golden rule
(Mt 7:12)
is here our best interpreter of the nature and extent of these claims.
There is none other commandment greater than these--or, as in
Mt 22:40,
"On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets" (see on
Mt 5:17).
It is as if He had said, "This is all Scripture in a nutshell; the
whole law of human duty in a portable, pocket form." Indeed, it is so
simple that a child may understand it, so brief that all
may remember it, so comprehensive as to embrace all possible
cases. And from its very nature it is unchangeable. It is
inconceivable that God should require from his rational creatures
anything less, or in substance anything else, under any
dispensation, in any world, at any period
throughout eternal duration. He cannot but claim this--all this--alike
in heaven, in earth, and in hell! And this
incomparable summary of the divine law belonged to the Jewish
religion! As it shines in its own self-evidencing splendor, so it
reveals its own true source. The religion from which the world has
received it could be none other than a God-given religion!
32. And the scribe said unto him, Well, Master--Teacher.
thou hast said the truth: for there is one God; and there is none other
but he--The genuine text here seems clearly to have been, "There is
one," without the word "God"; and so nearly all critical editors and
expositors read.
33. And to love him with all the heart . . . and to love his neighbour
as himself, is more than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices--more, that is, than all positive institutions; thereby showing insight
into the essential difference between what is moral and in its own
nature unchangeable, and what is obligatory only because enjoined, and only so long as enjoined.
34. And when Jesus saw that he answered discreetly--rather,
"intelligently," or "sensibly"; not only in a good spirit, but with a
promising measure of insight into spiritual things.
he said unto him, Thou art not far from the kingdom of God--for he
had but to follow out a little further what he seemed sincerely to
own, to find his way into the kingdom. He needed only the experience of
another eminent scribe who at a later period said, "We know that
the law is spiritual, but I am carnal, sold under sin": who
exclaimed, "O wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me?" but who
added, "I thank God through Jesus Christ!"
(Ro 7:14, 24, 25).
Perhaps among the "great company of the priests" and other Jewish
ecclesiastics who "were obedient to the faith," almost immediately
after the day of Pentecost
(Ac 6:7),
this upright lawyer was one. But for all his nearness to the Kingdom
of God, it may be he never entered it.
And no man after that durst ask any question--all feeling that they
were no match for Him, and that it was vain to enter the lists with Him.
Christ Baffles the Pharisees Regarding David
(Mr 12:35-37).
35. And Jesus answered and said, while he taught in the temple--and
"while the Pharisees were gathered together"
(Mt 22:41).
How say the scribes that Christ is the son of David?--How come they
to give it out that Messiah is to be the son of David? In Matthew
(Mt 22:42),
Jesus asks them, "What think ye of Christ?" or of the promised and
expected Messiah? "Whose son is He [to be]? They say unto Him, The son
of David." The sense is the same. "He saith unto them, How then doth
David in spirit call Him Lord?"
(Mt 22:42, 43).
36. For David himself said by the Holy Ghost, The Lord said to my
Lord, Sit thou on my right hand, till I make thine enemies thy
footstool--
(Ps 110:1).
37. David therefore himself calleth him Lord; and whence is he then
his son?--There is but one solution of this difficulty. Messiah is at
once inferior to David as his son according to the flesh, and superior
to him as the Lord of a kingdom of which David is himself a subject, not
the sovereign. The human and divine natures of Christ, and the
spirituality of His kingdom--of which the highest earthly sovereigns are
honored if they be counted worthy to be its subjects--furnish the only
key to this puzzle.
And the common people--the immense crowd.
heard him gladly--"And no man was able to answer Him a word; neither
durst any man from that day forth ask Him any more questions"
(Mt 22:46).
The Scribes Denounced
(Mr 12:38-40).
38. And he said unto them in his doctrine--rather, "in His teaching";
implying that this was but a specimen of an extended discourse, which
Matthew gives in full
(Mt 23:1-39).
Luke says
(Lu 20:45)
this was "in the audience of all the people said unto His disciples."
Beware of the scribes, which love--or like.
to go in long clothing--(see on
Mt 23:5).
and love salutations in the market-places,
39. And the chief seats in the synagogues, and the uppermost rooms--or
positions.
at feasts--On this love of distinction, see on
Lu 14:7;
Mt 6:5.
40. Which devour widows' houses, and for a pretence make long prayers:
these shall receive greater damnation--They took advantage of their
helpless condition and confiding character to obtain possession of their
property, while by their "long prayers" they made them believe they were
raised far above "filthy lucre." So much the "greater damnation" awaited
them. (Compare
Mt 23:33).
A lifelike description this of the Romish clergy, the true successors
of "the scribes."
Mr 12:41-44.
THE
WIDOW'S
TWO
MITES.
( =
Lu 21:1-4).
See on
Lu 21:1-4.
CHAPTER 13
Mr 13:1-37.
CHRIST'S
PROPHECY OF THE
DESTRUCTION OF
JERUSALEM, AND
WARNINGS
SUGGESTED BY
IT TO
PREPARE FOR
HIS
SECOND
COMING.
( =
Mt 24:1-51;
Lu 21:5-36).
Jesus had uttered all His mind against the Jewish ecclesiastics,
exposing their character with withering plainness, and denouncing, in
language of awful severity, the judgments of God against them for that
unfaithfulness to their trust which was bringing ruin upon the nation.
He had closed this His last public discourse
(Mt 23:1-39)
by a passionate lamentation over Jerusalem, and a solemn farewell to
the temple. "And," says Matthew
(Mt 24:1),
"Jesus went out and departed from the temple"--never more to re-enter
its precincts, or open His mouth in public teaching. With this act
ended His public ministry. As He withdrew, says OLSHAUSEN, the gracious presence of God left the
sanctuary; and the temple, with all its service, and the whole
theocratic constitution, was given over to destruction. What
immediately followed is, as usual, most minutely and graphically
described by our Evangelist.
1. And as he went out of the temple, one of his disciples saith unto
him--The other Evangelists are less definite. "As some spake," says
Luke
(Lu 21:5);
"His disciples came to Him," says Matthew
(Mt 24:2).
Doubtless it was the speech of one, the mouthpiece, likely, of others.
Master--Teacher.
see what manner of stones and what buildings are here--wondering
probably, how so massive a pile could be overthrown, as seemed implied
in our Lord's last words regarding it. JOSEPHUS, who gives a minute
account of the wonderful structure, speaks of stones forty cubits long
[Wars of the Jews, 5.5.1.] and says the pillars supporting the
porches were twenty-five cubits high, all of one stone, and that of the
whitest marble [Wars of the Jews, 5.5.2]. Six days' battering at the
walls, during the siege, made no impression upon them
[Wars of the Jews, 6.4.1]. Some of the under-building, yet
remaining, and other works, are probably as old as the first temple.
2. And Jesus answering said unto him, Seest thou these great
buildings?--"Ye call My attention to these things? I have seen
them. Ye point to their massive and durable appearance: now listen to
their fate."
there shall not be left--"left here"
(Mt 24:2).
one stone upon another, that shall not be thrown down--Titus ordered
the whole city and temple to be demolished
[JOSEPHUS, Wars of the Jews, 7.1.1]; Eleazar wished they had all
died before seeing that holy city destroyed by enemies' hands, and
before the temple was so profanely dug up [Wars of the Jews, 7.8.7].
3. And as he sat upon the Mount of Olives, over against the temple--On
their way from Jerusalem to Bethany they would cross Mount Olivet; on
its summit He seats Himself, over against the temple, having the city
all spread out under His eye. How graphically is this set before us by
our Evangelist!
Peter and James and John and Andrew asked him privately--The other
Evangelists tell us merely that "the disciples" did so. But Mark not
only says that it was four of them, but names them; and they were the
first quarternion of the Twelve.
4. Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign when
all these things shall be fulfilled?--"and what shall be the sign of
Thy coming, and of the end of the world?" They no doubt looked upon the
date of all these things as one and the same, and their notions of the
things themselves were as confused as of the times of them. Our Lord
takes His own way of meeting their questions.
Prophecies of the Destruction of Jerusalem
(Mr 13:5-31).
5. And Jesus answering them began to say, Take heed lest any man
deceive you:
6. For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ--(see
Mt 24:5)
--"and the time draweth nigh"
(Lu 21:8);
that is, the time of the kingdom in its full splendor.
and shall deceive many--"Go ye not therefore after them"
(Lu 21:8).
The reference here seems not to be to pretended Messiahs, deceiving
those who rejected the claims of Jesus, of whom indeed there were
plenty--for our Lord is addressing His own genuine disciples--but to
persons pretending to be Jesus Himself, returned in glory to take
possession of His kingdom. This gives peculiar force to the words, "Go
ye not therefore after them."
7. And when ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars, be ye not
troubled--(See on
Mr 13:13,
and compare
Isa 8:11-14).
for such things must needs be; but the end shall not be yet--In Luke
(Lu 21:9),
"the end is not by and by," or "immediately." Worse must come before
all is over.
8. These are the beginnings of sorrows--"of travail-pangs," to which
heavy calamities are compared. (See
Jer 4:31,
&c.). The annals of TACITUS tell us how the Roman
world was convulsed, before the destruction of Jerusalem, by rival
claimants of the imperial purple.
9. But take heed to yourselves: for--"before all these things"
(Lu 21:12);
that is, before these public calamities come.
they shall deliver you up to councils; and in the synagogues ye shall
be beaten--These refer to ecclesiastical proceedings against them.
and ye shall be brought before rulers and kings--before civil tribunals next.
for my sake, for a testimony against them--rather "unto them"--to
give you an opportunity of bearing testimony to Me before them. In the
Acts of the Apostles we have the best commentary on this announcement.
(Compare
Mt 10:17, 18).
10. And the gospel must first be published among all nations--"for a
witness, and then shall the end come"
(Mt 24:14).
God never sends judgment without previous warning; and there can be no
doubt that the Jews, already dispersed over most known countries, had
nearly all heard the Gospel "as a witness," before the end of the
Jewish state. The same principle was repeated and will repeat itself to
"the end."
11. But when they shall lead you, and deliver you up, take no thought
beforehand--"Be not anxious beforehand."
what ye shall speak, neither do ye premeditate--"Be not filled with
apprehension, in the prospect of such public appearances for Me, lest ye
should bring discredit upon My name, nor think it necessary to prepare
beforehand what ye are to say."
but whatsoever shall be given you in that hour, that speak ye: for
it is not ye that speak, but the Holy Ghost--(See on
Mt 10:19, 20.)
13. And ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake--Matthew
(Mt 24:12)
adds this important intimation: "And because iniquity shall abound, the
love of many"--"of the many," or "of the most," that is, of the
generality of professed disciples--"shall wax cold." Sad illustrations
of the effect of abounding iniquity in cooling the love even of
faithful disciples we have in the Epistle of James, written
about the period here referred to, and too frequently ever since.
but he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be
saved--See on
Mt 10:21, 22;
and compare
Heb 10:38, 39,
which is a manifest allusion to these words of Christ; also
Re 2:10.
Luke
(Lu 21:18)
adds these reassuring words: "But there shall not an hair of your heads
perish." Our Lord had just said
(Lu 21:16)
that they should be put to death; showing that this precious
promise is far above immunity from mere bodily harm, and furnishing a
key to the right interpretation of
Ps 91:1-18
and such like.
14. But when ye shall see--"Jerusalem compassed by armies"--by
encamped armies; in other words, when ye shall see it besieged, and
the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet,
standing where it ought not--that is, as explained in Matthew
(Mt 24:15),
"standing in the holy place."
(let him that readeth understand)--readeth that prophecy. That "the
abomination of desolation" here alluded to was intended to point to the
Roman ensigns, as the symbols of an idolatrous, and so unclean pagan
power, may be gathered by comparing what Luke says in the corresponding
verse
(Lu 21:20);
and commentators are agreed on it. It is worthy of notice, as
confirming this interpretation, that in 1 Maccabees 1:54--which,
though aprocryphal Scripture, is authentic history--the
expression of Daniel
(Da 11:31; 12:11)
is applied to the idolatrous profanation of the Jewish altar by
Antiochus Epiphanes.
then let them that be in Judea flee to the mountains--The
ecclesiastical historian, EUSEBIUS, early in the fourth century, tells
us that the Christians fled to Pella, at the northern extremity of
Perea, being "prophetically directed"--perhaps by some prophetic
intimation more explicit than this, which would be their chart--and that
thus they escaped the predicted calamities by which the nation was
overwhelmed.
15. And let him that is on the housetop not get down into the house,
neither enter therein, to take any thing out of his house--that is,
let him take the outside flight of steps from the roof to the ground; a
graphic way of denoting the extreme urgency of the case, and the danger
of being tempted, by the desire to save his property, to delay till
escape should become impossible.
16. And let him that is in the field not turn back again for to take
up his garment.
17. But woe to them--or, "alas for them."
that are with child, and to them that give suck in those days--in
consequence of the aggravated suffering which those conditions would
involve.
18. And pray ye that your flight be not in the winter--making escape
perilous, or tempting you to delay your flight. Matthew
(Mt 24:20)
adds, "neither on the sabbath day," when, from fear of a breach of its
sacred rest, they might be induced to remain.
19. For in those days shall be affliction, such as was not from the
beginning of the creation which God created unto this time, neither
shall be--Such language is not unusual in the Old Testament with
reference to tremendous calamities. But it is matter of literal fact
that there was crowded into the period of the Jewish war an amount and
complication of suffering perhaps unparalleled; as the narrative of
JOSEPHUS, examined closely and arranged under different heads, would
show.
20. And except that the Lord had shortened those days, no flesh--that
is, no human life.
should be saved: but for the elect's sake, whom he hath chosen, he hath
shortened the days--But for this merciful "shortening," brought about
by a remarkable concurrence of causes, the whole nation would have
perished, in which there yet remained a remnant to be afterwards
gathered out. This portion of the prophecy closes, in Luke, with the
following vivid and important glance at the subsequent fortunes of the
chosen people: "And they shall fall by the sword, and shall be led away
captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the
Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled"
(Lu 21:24).
The language as well as the idea of this remarkable statement is taken
from
Da 8:10, 13.
What, then, is its import here? It implies, first, that a time is
coming when Jerusalem shall cease to be "trodden down of the Gentiles";
which it was then by pagan, and since and till now is by Mohammedan
unbelievers: and next, it implies that the period when this treading
down of Jerusalem by the Gentiles is to cease will be when "the times
of the Gentiles are fulfilled" or "completed." But what does this mean?
We may gather the meaning of it from
Ro 11:1-36
in which the divine purposes and procedure towards the chosen people
from first to last are treated in detail. In
Ro 11:25
these words of our Lord are thus reproduced: "For I would not,
brethren, that ye should be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be
wise in your own conceits; that blindness in part is happened to
Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in." See the
exposition of that verse,
from which it will appear that "till the
fulness of the Gentiles be come in"--or, in our Lord's phraseology,
"till the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled"--does not mean "till the
general conversion of the world to Christ," but "till the Gentiles have
had their full time of that place in the Church which the Jews
had before them." After that period of Gentilism, as before of
Judaism, "Jerusalem" and Israel, no longer "trodden down by the
Gentiles," but "grafted into their own olive tree," shall constitute,
with the believing Gentiles, one Church of God, and fill the whole
earth. What a bright vista does this open up!
21. And then, if any man shall say to you, Lo, here is Christ; or, lo
he is there; believe him not--So
Lu 17:23.
22. For false Christs and false prophets shall rise, and shall show
signs and wonders. No one can read JOSEPHUS'
account of what took place before the destruction of Jerusalem without
seeing how strikingly this was fulfilled.
to seduce, if it were possible, even the elect--implying that this,
though all but done, will prove impossible. What a precious
assurance! (Compare
2Th 2:9-12).
23. But take ye heed; behold, I have foretold you all things--He had
just told them that the seduction of the elect would prove impossible;
but since this would be all but accomplished, He bids them be on their
guard, as the proper means of averting that catastrophe. In Matthew
(Mt 24:26-28)
we have some additional particulars: "Wherefore, if they shall say unto
you, Behold, He is in the desert; go not forth: behold, He is in the
secret chambers; believe it not. For as the lightning cometh out of the
east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the
Son of man be." See on
Lu 17:23, 24.
"For wheresoever the carcass is, there will the eagles be gathered
together." See on
Lu 17:37.
24. But in those days, after that tribulation--"Immediately after the
tribulation of those days"
(Mt 24:29).
the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light.
25. And the stars of heaven shall fall--"and upon the earth distress
of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring; men's hearts
failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are
coming on the earth"
(Lu 21:25, 26).
and the powers that are in heaven shall be shaken--Though the grandeur
of this language carries the mind over the head of all periods but that
of Christ's Second Coming, nearly every expression will be found used of
the Lord's coming in terrible national judgments: as of Babylon
(Isa 13:9-13);
of Idumea
(Isa 34:1, 2, 4, 8-10);
of Egypt
(Eze 32:7, 8);
compare also
Ps 18:7-15;
Isa 24:1, 17-19;
Joe 2:10, 11,
&c. We cannot therefore consider the mere strength of this language a
proof that it refers exclusively or primarily to the precursors of the
final day, though of course in "that day" it will have its most
awful fulfilment.
26. And then shall they see the Son of man coming in the clouds with
great power and glory--In
Mt 24:30,
this is given most fully: "And then shall appear the sign of the Son of
man in heaven; and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and
they shall see the Son of man," &c. That this language finds its
highest interpretation in the Second Personal Coming of Christ, is most
certain. But the question is, whether that be the primary sense of it
as it stands here? Now if the reader will turn to
Da 7:13, 14,
and connect with it the
preceding verses,
he will find, we think, the true key to our Lord's meaning here. There
the powers that oppressed the Church--symbolized by rapacious wild
beasts--are summoned to the bar of the Great God, who as the Ancient of
days seats Himself, with His assessors, on a burning Throne: thousand
thousands ministering to Him, and ten thousand times ten thousand
standing before Him. "The judgment is set, and the books are opened."
Who that is guided by the mere words would doubt that this is a
description of the Final Judgment? And yet nothing is clearer than that
it is not, but a description of a vast temporal judgment,
upon organized bodies of men, for their incurable hostility to the
kingdom of God upon earth. Well, after the doom of these has been
pronounced and executed, and room thus prepared for the unobstructed
development of the kingdom of God over the earth, what follows? "I saw
in the night visions, and behold, one like THE
SON OF MAN came with the
clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and they [the
angelic attendants] brought Him near before Him." For what purpose? To
receive investiture in the kingdom, which, as Messiah, of right
belonged to Him. Accordingly, it is added, "And there was given Him
dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and
languages should serve Him: His dominion is an everlasting dominion,
which shall not pass away, and His kingdom that which shall not be
destroyed." Comparing this with our Lord's words, He seems to us, by
"the Son of man [on which phrase, see on
Joh 1:51]
coming in the clouds with great power and glory," to mean, that when
judicial vengeance shall once have been executed upon Jerusalem, and
the ground thus cleared for the unobstructed establishment of His own
kingdom, His true regal claims and rights would be visibly and
gloriously asserted and manifested. See on
Lu 9:28
(with its parallels in
Mt 17:1;
Mr 9:2),
in which nearly the same language is employed, and where it can hardly
be understood of anything else than the full and free establishment
of the kingdom of Christ on the destruction of Jerusalem. But what
is that "sign of the Son of man in heaven?" Interpreters are not
agreed. But as before Christ came to destroy Jerusalem some appalling
portents were seen in the air, so before His Personal appearing it is
likely that something analogous will be witnessed, though of
what nature it would be vain to conjecture.
27. And then shall he send his angels--"with a great sound of a
trumpet"
(Mt 24:31).
and shall gather together his elect, &c.--As the tribes of Israel
were anciently gathered together by sound of trumpet
(Ex 19:13, 16, 19;
Le 23:24;
Ps 81:3-5),
so any mighty gathering of God's people, by divine command, is
represented as collected by sound of trumpet
(Isa 27:13;
compare
Re 11:15);
and the ministry of angels, employed in all the great operations of
Providence, is here held forth as the agency by which the present
assembling of the elect is to be accomplished. LIGHTFOOT thus explains it: "When Jerusalem shall be
reduced to ashes, and that wicked nation cut off and rejected, then
shall the Son of man send His ministers with the trumpet of the Gospel,
and they shall gather His elect of the several nations, from the four
corners of heaven: so that God shall not want a Church, although that
ancient people of His be rejected and cast off: but that ancient Jewish
Church being destroyed, a new Church shall be called out of the
Gentiles." But though something like this appears to be the primary
sense of the verse, in relation to the destruction of Jerusalem, no one
can fail to see that the language swells beyond any gathering of a
human family into a Church upon earth, and forces the thoughts onward
to that gathering of the Church "at the last trump," to meet the Lord
in the air, which is to wind up the present scene. Still, this is not,
in our judgment, the direct subject of the prediction; for
Mr 13:28
limits the whole prediction to the generation then existing.
28. Now learn a parable of the fig tree--"Now from the fig tree learn
the parable," or the high lesson which this teaches.
When her branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves--"its leaves."
29. So ye, in like manner, when ye shall see these things come to
pass--rather, "coming to pass."
know that it--"the kingdom of God"
(Lu 21:31).
is nigh, even at the doors--that is, the full manifestation of it;
for till then it admitted of no full development. In Luke
(Lu 21:28)
the following words precede these: "And when these things begin to come
to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption
draweth nigh"--their redemption, in the first instance certainly, from
Jewish oppression
(1Th 2:14-16;
Lu 11:52):
but in the highest sense of these words, redemption from all the
oppressions and miseries of the present state at the second appearing
of the Lord Jesus.
30. Verily I say unto you, that this generation shall not pass fill
all these things be done--or "fulfilled"
(Mt 24:34;
Lu 21:32).
Whether we take this to mean that the whole would be fulfilled within
the limits of the generation then current, or, according to a usual way
of speaking, that the generation then existing would not pass away
without seeing a begun fulfilment of this prediction, the facts
entirely correspond. For either the whole was fulfilled in the
destruction accomplished by Titus, as many think; or, if we stretch it
out, according to others, till the thorough dispersion of the Jews a
little later, under Adrian, every requirement of our Lord's words seems
to be met.
31. Heaven and earth shall pass away; but my words shall not pass
away--the strongest possible expression of the divine authority by
which He spake; not as Moses or Paul might have said of their own
inspiration, for such language would be unsuitable in any merely human
mouth.
Warnings to Prepare for the Coming of Christ Suggested by the
Foregoing Prophecy
(Mr 13:32-37).
It will be observed that, in the foregoing prophecy, as our Lord
approaches the crisis of the day of vengeance on Jerusalem and
redemption for the Church--at which stage the analogy between that and
the day of final vengeance and redemption waxes more striking--His
language rises and swells beyond all temporal and partial vengeance,
beyond all earthly deliverances and enlargements, and ushers us
resistlessly into the scenes of the final day. Accordingly, in these
six concluding verses it is manifest that preparation for
"THAT DAY" is what our Lord designs to
inculcate.
32. But of that day and that hour--that is, the precise time.
knoweth no man--literally, no one.
no, not the angels which are in heaven, neither the Son, but the
Father--This very remarkable statement regarding "the Son" is
peculiar to Mark. Whether it means that the Son was
not at that time in possession of the knowledge referred to, or
simply that it was not
among the things which He had received to communicate--has been
matter of much controversy even among the firmest believers in the
proper Divinity of Christ. In the latter sense it was taken by some of
the most eminent of the ancient Fathers, and by LUTHER,
MELANCTHON, and
most of the older Lutherans; and it is so taken by BENGEL,
LANGE,
WEBSTER and
WILKINSON,
CHRYSOSTOM and others understood it to mean that
as man our Lord was ignorant of this. It is taken literally by
CALVIN,
GROTIUS,
DE
WETTE,
MEYER,
FRITZSCHE,
STIER,
ALFORD, and
ALEXANDER.
33. Take ye heed, watch and pray; for ye know not when the time is.
34. For the Son of man is as a man taking a far journey, &c.--The
idea thus far is similar to that in the opening part of the parable of
the talents
(Mt 25:14, 15).
and commanded the porter--the gatekeeper.
to watch--pointing to the official duty of the ministers of religion
to give warning of approaching danger to the people.
35. Watch ye therefore; for ye know not when the master of the house
cometh, at even, or at midnight, or at the cock-crowing, or in the
morning--an allusion to the four Roman watches of the night.
36. Lest, coming suddenly, he find you sleeping--See on
Lu 12:35-40;
Lu 12:42-46.
37. And what I say unto you--this discourse, it will be remembered,
was delivered in private.
I say unto all, Watch--anticipating and requiring the diffusion of
His teaching by them among all His disciples, and its perpetuation
through all time.
CHAPTER 14
Mr 14:1-11.
THE
CONSPIRACY OF THE
JEWISH
AUTHORITIES TO
PUT
JESUS TO
DEATH--THE
SUPPER AND THE
ANOINTING AT
BETHANY--JUDAS
AGREES WITH THE
CHIEF
PRIESTS TO
BETRAY
HIS
LORD.
( =
Mt 26:1-16;
Lu 22:1-6;
Joh 12:1-11).
The events of this section appeared to have occurred on the fourth day
(Wednesday) of the Redeemer's Last Week.
Conspiracy of the Jewish Authorities to Put Jesus to Death
(Mr 14:1, 2).
1. After two days was the feast of the passover, and of unleavened
bread--The meaning is, that two days after what is about to be
mentioned the passover would arrive; in other words, what follows
occurred two days before the feast.
and the chief priests and the scribes sought how they might take him
by craft, and put him to death--From Matthew's fuller account
(Mt 26:1-75)
we learn that our Lord announced this to the Twelve as follows, being
the first announcement to them of the precise time: "And it came to
pass, when Jesus had finished all these sayings"
(Mt 26:1)
--referring to the contents of
Mt 24:1-25:46,
which He delivered to His disciples; His public ministry being now
closed: from His prophetical He is now passing into His
priestly office, although all along He Himself took our
infirmities and bare our sicknesses--"He said unto His disciples, Ye
know that after two days is [the feast of] the passover, and the Son of
man is betrayed to be crucified." The first and the last
steps of His final sufferings are brought together in this brief
announcement of all that was to take place. The passover was the
first and the chief of the three great annual festivals, commemorative
of the redemption of God's people from Egypt, through the sprinkling of
the blood of a lamb divinely appointed to be slain for that end; the
destroying angel, "when he saw the blood, passing over" the
Israelitish houses, on which that blood was seen, when he came to
destroy all the first-born in the land of Egypt
(Ex 12:12, 13)
--bright typical foreshadowing of the great Sacrifice, and the
Redemption effected thereby. Accordingly, "by the determinate counsel
and foreknowledge of God, who is wonderful in counsel and excellent in
working," it was so ordered that precisely at the passover season,
"Christ our Passover should be sacrificed for us." On the day following
the passover commenced "the feast of unleavened bread," so called
because for seven days only unleavened bread was to be eaten
(Ex 12:18-20).
See on
1Co 5:6-8.
We are further told by Matthew
(Mt 26:3)
that the consultation was held in the palace of Caiaphas the high
priest, between the chief priests, [the scribes], and the elders of the
people, how "they might take Jesus by subtlety and kill Him."
2. But they said, Not on the feast day--rather, not during the feast;
not until the seven days of unleavened bread should be over.
lest there be an uproar of the people--In consequence of the vast
influx of strangers, embracing all the male population of the land who
had reached a certain age, there were within the walls of Jerusalem at
this festival some two million people; and in their excited state, the
danger of tumult and bloodshed among "the people," who for the most part
took Jesus for a prophet, was extreme. See JOSEPHUS
[Antiquities, 20.5.3]. What plan, if any, these ecclesiastics fixed
upon for seizing our Lord, does not appear. But the proposal of Judas
being at once and eagerly gone into, it is probable they were till then
at some loss for a plan sufficiently quiet and yet effectual. So, just
at the feast time shall it be done; the unexpected offer of Judas
relieving them of their fears. Thus, as BENGEL remarks, did the divine
counsel take effect.
The Supper and the Anointing at Bethany Six Days before the
Passover
(Mr 14:3-9).
The time of this part of the narrative is four days before what has
just been related. Had it been part of the regular train of events which
our Evangelist designed to record, he would probably have inserted it in
its proper place, before the conspiracy of the Jewish authorities. But
having come to the treason of Judas, he seems to have gone back upon
this scene as what probably gave immediate occasion to the awful deed.
3. And being in Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper, as he sat at
meat, there came a woman--It was "Mary," as we learn from
Joh 12:3.
having an alabaster box of ointment of spikenard--pure nard, a
celebrated aromatic--(See
So 1:12).
very precious--"very costly"
(Joh 12:3).
and she brake the box, and poured it on his head--"and anointed," adds
John
(Joh 12:3),
"the feet of Jesus, and wiped His feet with her hair: and the house was
filled with the odor of the ointment." The only use of this was to
refresh and exhilarate--a grateful compliment in the East, amid the
closeness of a heated atmosphere, with many guests at a feast. Such was
the form in which Mary's love to Christ, at so much cost to herself,
poured itself out.
4. And there were some that had indignation within themselves and
said--Matthew says
(Mt 26:8),
"But when His disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying," &c. The
spokesman, however, was none of the true-hearted Eleven--as we learn
from John
(Joh 12:4):
"Then saith one of His disciples, Judas Iscariot, Simon's son, which
should betray Him." Doubtless the thought stirred first in his breast,
and issued from his base lips; and some of the rest, ignorant of his
true character and feelings, and carried away by his plausible speech,
might for the moment feel some chagrin at the apparent waste.
Why was this waste of the ointment made?
5. For it might have been sold for more than three hundred
pence--between nine and ten pounds sterling.
and have been given to the poor. And they murmured against
her--"This he said," remarks John
(Joh 12:6),
and the remark is of exceeding importance, "not that he cared for the
poor but because he was a thief, and had the bag"--the scrip or
treasure chest--"and bare what was put therein"--not "bare it off" by
theft, as some understand it. It is true that he did this; but the
expression means simply that he had charge of it and its contents, or
was treasurer to Jesus and the Twelve. What a remarkable arrangement
was this, by which an avaricious and dishonest person was not only
taken into the number of the Twelve, but entrusted with the custody of
their little property! The purposes which this served are obvious
enough; but it is further noticeable, that the remotest hint was never
given to the Eleven of his true character, nor did the disciples most
favored with the intimacy of Jesus ever suspect him, till a few minutes
before he voluntarily separated himself from their company--for
ever!
6. And Jesus said, Let her alone; why trouble ye her? she hath wrought
a good work on me--It was good in itself, and so was acceptable to
Christ; it was eminently seasonable, and so more acceptable still; and
it was "what she could," and so most acceptable of all.
7. For ye have the poor with you always--referring to
De 15:11.
and whensoever ye will ye may do them good: but me ye have not always--a gentle hint of His approaching departure, by One who knew the worth of
His own presence.
8. She hath done what she could--a noble testimony, embodying a
principle of immense importance.
she is come aforehand to anoint my body to the burying--or, as in
John
(Joh 12:7),
"Against the day of my burying hath she kept this." Not that she, dear
heart, thought of His burial, much less reserved any of her nard to
anoint her dead Lord. But as the time was so near at hand when that
office would have to be performed, and she was not to have that
privilege even after the spices were brought for the purpose
(Mr 16:1),
He lovingly regards it as done now. "In the act of love done to
Him," says OLSHAUSEN beautifully, "she has erected
to herself an eternal monument, as lasting as the Gospel, the eternal
Word of God. From generation to generation this remarkable prophecy of
the Lord has been fulfilled; and even we, in explaining this saying of
the Redeemer, of necessity contribute to its accomplishment." "Who but
Himself," asks STIER, "had the power to ensure to
any work of man, even if resounding in His own time through the whole
earth, an imperishable remembrance in the stream of history? Behold
once more here the majesty of His royal judicial supremacy in the
government of the world, in this, 'Verily I say unto you.'"
10. And Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, went unto the chief priests,
to betray him unto them--that is, to make his proposals, and to bargain
with them, as appears from Matthew's fuller statement
(Mt 26:14, 15)
which says, he "went unto the chief priests, and said, What will ye
give me, and I will deliver Him unto you? And they covenanted with him
for thirty pieces of silver." The thirty pieces of silver were thirty
shekels, the fine paid for man- or maid-servant accidentally killed
(Ex 21:32),
and equal to between four and five pounds sterling--"a goodly
price that I was prized at of them!"
(Zec 11:13).
11. And when they heard it, they were glad, and promised to give him
money--Matthew alone records the precise sum, because a remarkable and
complicated prophecy, which he was afterwards to refer to, was fulfilled
by it.
And he sought how he might conveniently betray him--or, as more fully
given in Luke
(Lu 22:6),
"And he promised, and sought opportunity to betray Him unto them in the
absence of the multitude." That he should avoid an "uproar" or "riot"
among the people, which probably was made an essential condition by the
Jewish authorities, was thus assented to by the traitor; into whom,
says Luke
(Lu 22:3),
"Satan entered," to put him upon this hellish deed.
Mr 14:12-26.
PREPARATION FOR, AND
LAST
CELEBRATION OF, THE
PASSOVER--ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE
TRAITOR--INSTITUTION OF THE
SUPPER.
( =
Mt 26:17-30;
Lu 22:7-23, 39;
Joh 13:21-30).
See on
Lu 22:7-23;
Lu 22:39;
and see on
Joh 13:10, 11;
Joh 13:18, 19;
Joh 13:21-30.
Mr 14:27-31.
THE
DESERTION OF
JESUS BY
HIS
DISCIPLES AND THE
FALL OF
PETER,
FORETOLD.
( =
Mt 26:31-35;
Lu 22:31-38;
Joh 13:36-38).
See on
Lu 22:31-46.
Mr 14:32-42.
THE
AGONY IN THE
GARDEN.
( =
Mt 26:36-46;
Lu 22:39-46).
See on
Lu 22:39-46.
Mr 14:43-52.
BETRAYAL AND
APPREHENSION OF
JESUS--FLIGHT OF
HIS
DISCIPLES.
( =
Mt 26:47-56;
Lu 22:47-53;
Joh 18:1-12).
See on
Joh 18:1-12.
Mr 14:53-72.
JESUS
ARRAIGNED BEFORE THE
SANHEDRIM,
CONDEMNED TO
DIE, AND
SHAMEFULLY
ENTREATED--THE
FALL OF
PETER.
( =
Mt 26:57-75;
Lu 22:54-71;
Joh 18:13-18, 24-27).
Had we only the first three Gospels, we should have concluded that our
Lord was led immediately to Caiaphas, and had before the Council. But as
the Sanhedrim could hardly have been brought together at the dead hour
of night--by which time our Lord was in the hands of the officers sent
to take Him--and as it was only "as soon as it was day" that the Council
met
(Lu 22:66),
we should have had some difficulty in knowing what was done with Him
during those intervening hours. In the Fourth Gospel, however, all this
is cleared up, and a very important addition to our information is made
(Joh 18:13, 14, 19-24).
Let us endeavor to trace the events in the true order of succession,
and in the detail supplied by a comparison of all the four streams of
text.
Jesus Is Brought Privately before Annas, the Father-in-Law of
Caiaphas
(Joh 18:13, 14).
Joh 18:13:
And they led Him away to Annas first; for he was father-in-law to
Caiaphas, which was the high priest that same year--This
successful Annas, as ELLICOTT remarks, was appointed high priest by
Quirinus, A.D. 12, and after holding the office for several years, was
deposed by Valerius Gratius, Pilate's predecessor in the procuratorship
of Judea [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 18.2.1, &c.]. He appears,
however, to have possessed vast influence, having obtained the high
priesthood, not only for his son Eleazar, and his son-in-law Caiaphas,
but subsequently for four other sons, under the last of whom James, the
brother of our Lord, was put to death [Antiquities, 20.9.1]. It is
thus highly probable that, besides having the title of "high priest"
merely as one who had filled the office, he to a great degree retained
the powers he had formerly exercised, and came to be regarded
practically as a kind of rightful high priest.
Joh 18:14:
Now Caiaphas was he which gave counsel to the Jews, that it
was expedient that one man should die for the people.
See on
Joh 11:51.
What passed between Annas and our Lord during this interval the beloved
disciple reserves till he has related the beginning of Peter's fall. To
this, then, as recorded by our own Evangelist, let us meanwhile
listen.
Peter Obtains Access within the Quadrangle of the High Priest's
Residence, and Warms Himself at the Fire
(Mr 14:53, 54).
53. And they led Jesus away to the high priest: and with him were
assembled--or rather, "there gathered together unto him."
all the chief priests and the elders and the scribes--it was then a
full and formal meeting of the Sanhedrim. Now, as the first three
Evangelists place all Peter's denials of his Lord after this, we should
naturally conclude that they took place
while our Lord stood before the Sanhedrim. But besides that the
natural impression is that the scene around the fire took place
overnight, the second crowing of the cock, if we are to credit
ancient writers, would occur about the beginning of the fourth watch, or
between three and four in the morning. By that time, however, the
Council had probably convened, being warned, perhaps, that they were to
prepare for being called at any hour of the morning, should the Prisoner
be successfully secured. If this be correct, it is fairly certain that
only the last of Peter's three denials would take place while our
Lord was under trial before the Sanhedrim. One thing more may require
explanation. If our Lord had to be transferred from the residence of
Annas to that of Caiaphas, one is apt to wonder that there is no mention
of His being marched from the one to the other. But the building, in all
likelihood, was one and the same; in which case He would merely have to
be taken perhaps across the court, from one chamber to another.
54. And Peter followed him afar off, even into--or "from afar, even
to the interior of."
the palace of the high priest--"An oriental house," says
ROBINSON,
"is usually built around a quadrangular interior court; into which there
is a passage (sometimes arched) through the front part of the house,
closed next the street by a heavy folding gate, with a smaller wicket
for single persons, kept by a porter. The interior court, often paved or
flagged, and open to the sky, is the hall, which our translators
have rendered 'palace,' where the attendants made a fire; and the
passage beneath the front of the house, from the street to this court,
is the porch. The place where Jesus stood before the high priest
may have been an open room, or place of audience on the ground floor, in
the rear or on one side of the court; such rooms, open in front, being
customary. It was close upon the court, for Jesus heard all that was
going on around the fire, and turned and looked upon Peter
(Lu 22:61)."
and he sat with the servants, and warmed himself at the fire--The
graphic details, here omitted, are supplied in the other Gospels.
Joh 18:18:
And the servants and officers stood there--that is, in the hall,
within the quadrangle, open to the sky.
who had made a fire of coals--or charcoal (in a brazier probably).
for it was cold--John alone of all the Evangelists mentions the
material, and the coldness of the night, as WEBSTER and
WILKINSON remark. The elevated situation of Jerusalem, observes
THOLUCK,
renders it so cold about Easter as to make a watch fire at night
indispensable.
And Peter stood with them and warmed himself--"He went
in," says Matthew
(Mt 26:58),
"and sat with the servants to see the end." These two minute
statements throw an interesting light on each other. His wishing to
"see the end," or issue of these proceedings, was what led him into the
palace, for he evidently feared the worst. But once in, the serpent
coil is drawn closer; it is a cold night, and why should not he take
advantage of the fire as well as others? Besides, in the talk of the
crowd about the all-engrossing topic he may pick up something which he
would like to hear. Poor Peter! But now, let us leave him warming
himself at the fire, and listening to the hum of talk about this
strange case by which the subordinate officials, passing to and fro and
crowding around the fire in this open court, would while away the time;
and, following what appears the order of the Evangelical Narrative, let
us turn to Peter's Lord.
Jesus Is Interrogated by Annas--His Dignified Reply--Is Treated with
Indignity by One of the Officials--His Meek Rebuke
(Joh 18:19-23).
We have seen that it is only the Fourth Evangelist who tells us that
our Lord was sent to Annas first, overnight, until the Sanhedrim could
be got together at earliest dawn. We have now, in the same Gospel, the
deeply instructive scene that passed during this non-official
interview.
Joh 18:19:
The high priest--Annas.
then asked Jesus of His disciples and of His doctrine--probably
to entrap Him into some statements which might be used against Him at
the trial. From our Lord's answer it would seem that "His disciples"
were understood to be some secret party.
Joh 18:20.
Jesus answered him, I spake openly to the world--compare
Joh 7:4.
He speaks of His public teaching as now a past thing--as now all over.
I ever taught in the synagogue and in the temple, whither the Jews
always resort--courting publicity, though with sublime
noiselessness.
and in secret have I said nothing--rather, "spake I nothing";
that is, nothing different from what He taught in public: all His
private communications with the Twelve being but explanations and
developments of His public teaching. (Compare
Isa 45:19; 48:16).
Joh 18:21:
Why askest thou Me? ask them which heard Me what I have said to
them--rather, "what I said unto them."
behold, they know what I said--From this mode of replying, it
is evident that our Lord saw the attempt to draw Him into
self-crimination, and resented it by falling back upon the right of
every accused party to have some charge laid against Him by competent
witnesses.
Joh 18:22:
And when He had thus spoken, one of the officers which stood by
struck Jesus with the palm of his hand, saying, Answerest Thou the
high priest so?--(see
Isa 50:6).
It would seem from
Ac 23:2
that this summary and undignified way of punishment what was deemed
insolence in the accused had the sanction even of the high priests
themselves.
Joh 18:23:
Jesus answered him, If I have spoken evil--rather, "If I spoke
evil," in reply to the high priest.
bear witness of the evil; but if well, why smitest thou Me?--He
does not say "if not evil," as if His reply had been merely
unobjectionable; but "if well," which seems to challenge something
altogether fitting in the remonstrance. He had addressed to the high
priest. From our Lord's procedure here, by the way, it is evident
enough that His own precept in the Sermon on the Mount--that when
smitten on the one cheek we are to turn to the smiter the other also
(Mt 5:39)
--is not to be taken to the letter.
Annas Sends Jesus to Caiaphas
(Joh 18:24).
Joh 18:24.
Now Annas had sent Him bound unto Caiaphas the high priest--On the
meaning of this verse there is much diversity of opinion; and according
as we understand it will be the conclusion we come to, whether there
was but one hearing of our Lord before Annas and Caiaphas together,
or whether, according to the view we have given above, there were
two hearings--a preliminary and informal one before Annas, and a
formal and official one before Caiaphas and the Sanhedrim. If our
translators have given the right sense of the verse, there was but one
hearing before Caiaphas; and then
Joh 18:24
is to be read as a parenthesis, merely supplementing what was
said in
Joh 18:13.
This is the view of CALVIN,
BEZA,
GROTIUS,
BENGEL,
DE
WETTE,
MEYER,
LUCKE,
THOLUCK.
But there are decided objections to this view. First: We cannot but
think that the natural sense of the whole passage, embracing
Joh 18:13, 14, 19-24,
is that of a preliminary non-official hearing before "Annas first," the
particulars of which are accordingly recorded; and then of a
transference of our Lord from Annas to Caiaphas. Second: On the other
view, it is not easy to see why the Evangelist should not have inserted
Joh 18:24
immediately after
Joh 18:13;
or rather, how he could well have done otherwise. As it stands, it is
not only quite out of its proper place, but comes in most perplexingly.
Whereas, if we take it as a simple statement of fact, that after Annas
had finished his interview with Jesus, as recorded in
Joh 18:19-23,
he transferred Him to Caiaphas to be formally tried, all is clear and
natural. Third: The pluperfect sense "had sent" is in the
translation only; the sense of the original word being simply "sent."
And though there are cases where the aorist here used has the sense of
an English pluperfect, this sense is not to be put upon it unless it be
obvious and indisputable. Here that is so far from being the case, that
the pluperfect "had sent" is rather an unwarrantable
interpretation than a simple translation of the word;
informing the reader that, according to the view of our
translators, our Lord "had been" sent to Caiaphas before the
interview just recorded by the Evangelist; whereas, if we translate the
verse literally--"Annas sent Him bound unto Caiaphas the high
priest"--we get just the information we expect, that Annas, having
merely "precognosced" the prisoner, hoping to draw something out
of Him, "sent Him to Caiaphas" to be formally tried before the proper
tribunal. This is the view of
CHRYSOSTOM and
AUGUSTINE among the Fathers; and of the moderns, of
OLSHAUSEN,
SCHLEIERMACHER,
NEANDER,
EBRARD,
WIESELER,
LANGE,
LUTHARDT.
This brings us back to the text of our second Gospel, and in it to
The Judicial Trial and Condemnation of the Lord Jesus by the
Sanhedrim
(Mr 14:55-64).
But let the reader observe, that though this is introduced by the
Evangelist before any of the denials of Peter are recorded, we have
given reasons for concluding that probably the first two denials took place while our Lord was with Annas, and the last only during the
trial before the Sanhedrim.
55. And the chief priests and all the council sought for witness
against Jesus to put him to death--Matthew
(Mt 26:59)
says they "sought false witness." They knew they could find
nothing valid; but having their Prisoner to bring before Pilate, they
behooved to make a case.
and found none--none that would suit their purpose, or make a decent
ground of charge before Pilate.
56. For many bare false witness against him--From their debasing
themselves to "seek" them, we are led to infer that they were
bribed to bear false witness; though there are never wanting
sycophants enough, ready to sell themselves for naught, if they may but
get a smile from those above them: see a similar scene in
Ac 6:11-14.
How is one reminded here of that complaint, "False witnesses did rise
up: they laid to my charge things that I knew not"
(Ps 31:11)!
but their witness agreed not together--If even two of them had
been agreed, it would have been greedily enough laid hold of, as all
that the law insisted upon even in capital cases
(De 17:6).
But even in this they failed. One cannot but admire the providence
which secured this result; since, on the one hand, it seems astonishing
that those unscrupulous prosecutors and their ready tools should so
bungle a business in which they felt their whole interests bound up;
and, on the other hand, if they had succeeded in making even a
plausible case, the effect on the progress of the Gospel might for a
time have been injurious. But at the very time when His enemies were
saying, "God hath forsaken Him; persecute and take Him; for there is
none to deliver Him"
(Ps 71:11),
He whose Witness He was and whose work He was doing was keeping Him as
the apple of His eye, and while He was making the wrath of man to
praise Him, was restraining the remainder of that wrath
(Ps 76:10).
57. And there arose certain, and bare false witness against
him--Matthew
(Mt 26:60)
is more precise here: "At the last came two false witnesses." As
no two had before agreed in anything, they felt it necessary to secure
a duplicate testimony to something, but they were long of succeeding.
And what was it, when at length it was brought forward?
saying--as follows:
58. We heard him say, I will destroy this temple that is made with
hands, and within three days I will build another made without
hands--On this charge, observe, first, that eager as His enemies
were to find criminal matter against our Lord, they had to go back to
the outset of His ministry, His first visit to Jerusalem, more than
three years before this. In all that He said and did after that, though
ever increasing in boldness, they could find nothing. Next, that even
then, they fix only on one speech, of two or three words, which they
dared to adduce against Him. Further, they most manifestly pervert the
speech of our Lord. We say not this because in Mark's form of it, it
differs from the report of the words given by the Fourth Evangelist
(Joh 2:18-22)
--the only one of the Evangelists who reports it all, or mentions even
any visit paid by our Lord to Jerusalem before His last--but because
the one report bears truth, and the other falsehood, on its face. When
our Lord said on that occasion, "Destroy this temple, and in three days
I will raise it up," they might, for a moment, have understood
Him to refer to the temple out of whose courts He had swept the buyers
and sellers. But after they had expressed their astonishment at
His words, in that sense of them, and reasoned upon the time it had
taken to rear the temple as it then stood, since no answer to
this appears to have been given by our Lord, it is hardly conceivable
that they should continue in the persuasion that this was really His
meaning. But finally, even if the more ignorant among them had done so,
it is next to certain that the ecclesiastics, who were the
prosecutors in this case, did not believe that this was His
meaning. For in less than three days after this they went to
Pilate, saying, "Sir, we remember that that deceiver said, while he was
yet alive, after three days I will rise again"
(Mt 27:63).
Now what utterance of Christ known to His enemies, could this
refer to, if not to this very saying about destroying and rearing up
the temple? And if so, it puts it beyond a doubt that by this time, at
least, they were perfectly aware that our Lord's words referred to
His death by their hands and His resurrection by His own. But
this is confirmed by
Mr 14:59.
59. But neither so did their witness agree together--that is, not
even as to so brief a speech, consisting of but a few words, was there
such a concurrence in their mode of reporting it as to make out a decent
case. In such a charge
everything depended on the very terms alleged to have been used. For every one must see that a very slight turn, either way, given to
such words, would make them either something like indictable matter, or else a ridiculous ground for a criminal charge--would either give
them a colorable pretext for the charge of impiety which they were bent
on making out, or else make the whole saying appear, on the worst view
that could be taken of it, as merely some mystical or empty boast.
60. Answerest thou nothing? what is it which these witness against
thee?--Clearly, they felt that their case had failed, and by this
artful question the high priest hoped to get from His own mouth what
they had in vain tried to obtain from their false and contradictory
witnesses. But in this, too, they failed.
61. But he held his peace, and answered nothing--This must have
nonplussed them. But they were not to be easily baulked of their
object.
Again the high priest--arose
(Mt 26:62),
matters having now come to a crisis.
asked him, and said unto him, Art thou the Christ, the Son of the
Blessed?--Why our Lord should have answered this question, when He was
silent as to the former, we might not have quite seen, but for Matthew,
who says
(Mt 26:63)
that the high priest put Him upon solemn oath, saying, "I adjure
Thee by the living God, that Thou tell us whether Thou be the Christ,
the Son of God." Such an adjuration was understood to render an answer
legally necessary
(Le 5:1).
(Also see on
Joh 18:28.)
62. And Jesus said, I am--or, as in Matthew
(Mt 26:64),
"Thou hast said [it]." In Luke, however
(Lu 22:70),
the answer, "Ye say that I am," should be rendered--as DE WETTE, MEYER, ELLICOTT, and the best
critics agree that the preposition requires--"Ye say [it], for I am
[so]." Some words, however, were spoken by our Lord before giving His
answer to this solemn question. These are recorded by Luke alone
(Lu 22:67, 68):
"Art Thou the Christ [they asked]? tell us. And He said unto them, If I
tell you, ye will not believe: and if I also ask [interrogate] "you, ye
will not answer Me, nor let Me go." This seems to have been uttered
before giving His direct answer, as a calm remonstrance and dignified
protest against the prejudgment of His case and the unfairness of their
mode of procedure. But now let us hear the rest of the answer, in which
the conscious majesty of Jesus breaks forth from behind the dark cloud
which overhung Him as He stood before the Council. (Also see on
Joh 18:28.)
and--in that character.
ye shall see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of power, and
coming in the clouds of heaven--In Matthew
(Mt 26:64)
a slightly different but interesting turn is given to it by one word:
"Thou hast said [it]: nevertheless"--We prefer this sense of the word
to "besides," which some recent critics decide for--"I say unto you,
Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sit on the right hand of power,
and coming in the clouds of heaven." The word rendered "hereafter"
means, not "at some future time" (as to-day "hereafter" commonly does),
but what the English word originally signified, "after here," "after
now," or "from this time." Accordingly, in
Lu 22:69,
the words used mean "from now." So that though the reference we have
given it to the day of His glorious Second Appearing is too obvious to
admit of doubt, He would, by using the expression, "From this time,"
convey the important thought which He had before expressed, immediately
after the traitor left the supper table to do his dark work,
"Now is the Son of man glorified"
(Joh 13:31).
At this moment, and by this speech, did He "witness the good
confession" emphatically and properly, as the apostle says in
1Ti 6:13.
Our translators render the words there, "Who before Pontius
Pilate witnessed"; referring it to the admission of His being a
King, in the presence of Cæsar's own chief representative.
But it should be rendered, as LUTHER renders it,
and as the best interpreters now understand it, "Who under
Pontius Pilate witnessed," &c. In this view of it, the apostle is
referring not to what our Lord confessed before Pilate--which,
though noble, was not of such primary importance--but to that sublime
confession which, under Pilate's administration, He witnessed before
the only competent tribunal on such occasions, the Supreme
Ecclesiastical Council of God's chosen nation, that He was THE MESSIAH, and THE SON OF THE BLESSED ONE; in the former word
owning His Supreme Official, in the latter His Supreme
Personal, Dignity.
63. Then the high priest rent his clothes--On this expression of
horror of blasphemy, see
2Ki 18:37.
and saith, What need we any further witnesses? (Also see on
Joh 18:28.)
64. Ye have heard the blasphemy--(See
Joh 10:33).
In Luke
(Lu 22:71),
"For we ourselves have heard of His own mouth"--an affectation of
religious horror. (Also see on
Joh 18:28.)
what think ye?--"Say what the verdict is to be."
they all condemned him to be guilty of death--or of a capital
crime, which blasphemy against God was according to the Jewish
law
(Le 24:16).
Yet not absolutely all; for Joseph of Arimathea, "a good
man and a just," was one of that Council, and "he was not a
consenting party to the counsel and deed of them," for that is the
strict sense of the words of
Lu 23:50, 51.
Probably he absented himself, and Nicodemus also, from this
meeting of the Council, the temper of which they would know too well to
expect their voice to be listened to; and in that case, the words of
our Evangelist are to be taken strictly, that, without one dissentient
voice, "all [present] condemned him to be guilty of death."
The Blessed One Is Now Shamefully Entreated
(Mr 14:65).
Every word here must be carefully observed, and the several accounts put
together, that we may lose none of the awful indignities about to be
described.
65. And some began to spit on him--or, as in
Mt 26:67,
"to spit in [into] His face." Luke
(Lu 22:63)
says in addition, "And the men that held Jesus mocked him"--or cast
their jeers at Him. (Also see on
Joh 18:28.)
to cover his face--or "to blindfold him" (as in
Lu 22:64).
to buffet him--Luke's word, which is rendered "smote Him"
(Lu 22:63),
is a stronger one, conveying an idea for which we have an exact
equivalent in English, but one too colloquial to be inserted here.
began to say unto him, Prophesy--In Matthew
(Mt 26:68)
this is given more fully: "Prophesy unto us, thou Christ, Who is he
that smote Thee?" The sarcastic fling at Him as "the Christ,"
and the demand of Him in this character to name the unseen perpetrator
of the blows inflicted on Him, was in them as infamous as to Him it
must have been, and was intended to be, stinging.
and the servants did strike him with the palms of their hands--or
"struck Him on the face"
(Lu 22:64).
Ah! Well did He say prophetically, in that Messianic prediction which
we have often referred to, "I gave My back to the smiters, and My
cheeks to them that plucked off the hair: I hid not My face from shame
and spitting!"
(Isa 50:6).
"And many other things blasphemously spake they against Him"
(Lu 22:65).
This general statement is important, as showing that virulent and
varied as were the recorded affronts put upon Him, they are but
a small specimen of what He endured on that dark occasion.
Peter's FIRST
DENIAL of His Lord
(Mr 14:66-68).
66. And as Peter was beneath in the palace--This little word
"beneath"--one of our Evangelist's graphic touches--is most
important for the right understanding of what we may call the topography
of the scene. We must take it in connection with Matthew's word
(Mt 26:69):
"Now Peter sat without in the palace"--or quadrangular court, in
the center of which the fire would be burning; and crowding around and
buzzing about it would be the menials and others who had been admitted
within the court. At the upper end of this court, probably, would be
the memorable chamber in which the trial was held--open to the
court, likely, and not far from the fire (as we gather from
Lu 22:61),
but on a higher level; for (as our verse says) the court, with
Peter in it, was "beneath" it. The ascent to the Council chamber was
perhaps by a short flight of steps. If the reader will bear this
explanation in mind, he will find the intensely interesting details
which follow more intelligible.
there cometh one of the maids of the high priest--"the damsel that
kept the door"
(Joh 18:17).
The Jews seem to have employed women as porters of their doors
(Ac 12:13).
67. And when she saw Peter warming himself, she looked upon him--Luke
(Lu 22:56)
is here more graphic; "But a certain maid beheld him as he sat by the
fire"--literally, "by the light," which, shining full upon him,
revealed him to the girl--"and earnestly looked upon him"--or, "fixed
her gaze upon him." His demeanor and timidity, which must have
attracted notice, as so generally happens, "leading," says OLSHAUSEN, "to the recognition of him."
and said, And thou also wast with Jesus of Nazareth--"with Jesus the
Nazarene," or, "with Jesus of Galilee"
(Mt 26:69).
The sense of this is given in John's report of it
(Joh 18:17),
"Art not thou also one of this man's disciples?" that is, thou as well
as "that other disciple," whom she knew to be one, but did not
challenge, perceiving that he was a privileged person. In Luke
(Lu 22:56)
it is given as a remark made by the maid to one of the
by-standers--"this man was also with Him." If so expressed in Peter's
hearing--drawing upon him the eyes of every one that heard it (as we
know it did,
Mt 26:70),
and compelling him to answer to it--that would explain the different
forms of the report naturally enough. But in such a case this is of no
real importance.
68. But he denied--"before all"
(Mt 26:70).
saying, I know not, neither understand I what thou sayest--in Luke
(Lu 22:57),
"I know Him not."
And he went out into the porch--the vestibule leading to the
street--no doubt finding the fire-place too hot for him; possibly
also with the hope of escaping--but that was not to be, and perhaps he
dreaded that, too. Doubtless by this time his mind would be getting into
a sea of commotion, and would fluctuate every moment in its resolves.
AND THE COCK CREW--(See on
Lu 22:34).
This, then, was the First Denial.
Peter's SECOND
DENIAL of His Lord
(Mr 14:69, 70).
There is here a verbal difference among the Evangelists, which without
some information which has been withheld, cannot be quite extricated.
69. And a maid saw him again--or, "a girl." It might be rendered
"the girl"; but this would not necessarily mean the same one as before,
but might, and probably does, mean just the female who had charge of the
door or gate near which Peter now was. Accordingly, in
Mt 26:71,
she is expressly called "another [maid]." But in Luke
(Lu 22:58)
it is a male servant: "And after a little while [from the time
of the first denial] another"--that is, as the word signifies, "another
male" servant. But there is no real difficulty, as the challenge,
probably, after being made by one was reiterated by another.
Accordingly, in John
(Joh 18:25),
it is, "They said therefore unto him, &c.--as if more than one
challenged him at once.
and began to say to them that stood by, This is one of them--or, as
in
Mt 26:71
--"This [fellow] was also with Jesus the Nazarene."
70. And he denied it again--In Luke
(Lu 22:58),
"Man, I am not." But worst of all in Matthew--"And again he denied with
an oath, I do not know the man"
(Mt 26:72).
This was the Second Denial, more vehement, alas! than the first.
Peter's THIRD
DENIAL of His Lord
(Mr 14:70-72).
70. And a little after--"about the space of one hour after"
(Lu 22:59).
they that stood by said again to Peter, Surely thou art one of them:
for thou art a Galilean, and thy speech agreeth thereto--"bewrayeth
[or 'discovereth'] thee"
(Mt 26:73).
In Luke
(Lu 22:59)
it is, "Another confidently affirmed, saying, Of a truth this [fellow]
also was with him: for he is a Galilean." The Galilean dialect had a
more Syrian cast than that of Judea. If Peter had held his
peace, this peculiarity had not been observed; but hoping,
probably, to put them off the scent by joining in the fireside
talk, he was thus discovered. The Fourth Gospel is particularly
interesting here: "One of the servants of the high priest, being his
kinsman [or kinsman to him] whose ear Peter cut off, saith, Did not I
see thee in the garden with Him?"
(Joh 18:26).
No doubt his relationship to Malchus drew his attention to the man who
had smitten him, and this enabled him to identify Peter. "Sad
reprisals!" exclaims BENGEL. Poor Peter! Thou art
caught in thine own toils; but like a wild bull in a net, thou wilt
toss and rage, filling up the measure of thy terrible declension by one
more denial of thy Lord, and that the foulest of all.
71. But he began to curse--"anathematize," or wish himself accursed
if what he was now to say was not true.
and to swear--or to take a solemn oath.
saying, I know not this man of whom ye speak.
72. And the second time the cock crew--The other three Evangelists,
who mention but one crowing of the cock--and that not the first, but the
second and last one of Mark--all say the cock crew "immediately," but
Luke
(Lu 22:60)
says, "Immediately, while he yet spake, the cock crew." Alas!--But now
comes the wonderful sequel.
The Redeemer's Look upon Peter, and Peter's Bitter Tears
(Mr 14:72;
Lu 22:61, 62).
It has been observed that while the beloved disciple is the only one of
the four Evangelists who does not record the repentance of Peter, he is
the only one of the four who records the affecting and most beautiful
scene of his complete restoration
(Joh 21:15-17).
Lu 22:61:
And the Lord turned and looked upon Peter--How? it will
be asked. We answer, From the chamber in which the trial was going on,
in the direction of the court where Peter then stood--in the way
already explained. See on
Mr 14:66.
Our Second Evangelist makes no mention of this look, but dwells on the
warning of his Lord about the double crowing of the cock, which would
announce his triple fall, as what rushed stingingly to his recollection
and made him dissolve in tears.
And Peter called to mind the word that Jesus said unto him, Before
the cock crow twice, thou shalt deny me thrice. And when he thought
thereon, he wept--To the same effect is the statement of the First
Evangelist
(Mt 26:75),
save that like "the beloved physician," he notices the "bitterness" of
the weeping
(Lu 22:62).
The most precious link, however, in the whole chain of circumstances in
this scene is beyond doubt that "look" of deepest, tenderest import
reported by Luke alone
(Lu 22:61).
Who can tell what lightning flashes of wounded love and piercing
reproach shot from that "look" through the eye of Peter into his
heart!
And Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how He had said unto
him, Before the cock crow, thou shalt deny Me thrice.
Lu 22:62:
And Peter went out and wept bitterly--How different from the
sequel of Judas' act! Doubtless the hearts of the two men towards the
Saviour were perfectly different from the first; and the treason of
Judas was but the consummation of the wretched man's resistance of the
blaze of light in the midst of which he had lived for three years,
while Peter's denial was but a momentary obscuration of the heavenly
light and love to his Master which ruled his life. But the immediate
cause of the blessed revulsion which made Peter "weep bitterly"
(Mt 26:75)
was, beyond all doubt, this heart-piercing "look" which his Lord gave
him. And remembering the Saviour's own words at the table, "Simon,
Simon, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat;
but I prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not"
(Lu 22:31, 32),
may we not say that this prayer fetched down all that there was in
that look to pierce and break the heart of Peter, to keep it from
despair, to work in it "repentance unto salvation not to be repented
of," and at length, under other healing touches, to "restore his soul?"
(See on
Mr 16:7).
CHAPTER 15
Mr 15:1-20.
JESUS
IS
BROUGHT BEFORE
PILATE--AT A
SECOND
HEARING,
PILATE, AFTER
SEEKING TO
RELEASE
HIM,
DELIVERS
HIM
UP--AFTER
BEING
CRUELLY
ENTREATED,
HE
IS
LED
AWAY TO
BE
CRUCIFIED.
( =
Mt 26:1, 2, 11-31;
Lu 23:1-6, 13-25;
Joh 18:28-19:16).
See on
Joh 18:28-19:16.
Mr 15:21-37.
CRUCIFIXION AND
DEATH OF THE
LORD
JESUS.
( =
Mt 27:32-50;
Lu 23:26-46;
Joh 19:17-30).
See on
Joh 19:17-30.
Mr 15:38-47.
SIGNS AND
CIRCUMSTANCES
FOLLOWING THE
DEATH OF THE
LORD
JESUS.--HE
IS
TAKEN
DOWN FROM THE
CROSS AND
BURIED--THE
SEPULCHRE
IS
GUARDED.
( =
Mt 27:51-66;
Lu 23:45, 47-56;
Joh 19:31-42).
See on
Mt 27:51-56;
and
Joh 19:31-42.
CHAPTER 16
Mr 16:1-20.
ANGELIC
ANNOUNCEMENT TO THE
WOMEN ON THE
FIRST
DAY OF THE
WEEK, THAT
CHRIST
IS
RISEN--HIS
APPEARANCES AFTER
HIS
RESURRECTION--HIS
ASCENSION--TRIUMPHANT
PROCLAMATION OF
HIS
GOSPEL.
( =
Mt 28:1-10, 16-20;
Lu 24:1-51;
Joh 20:1, 2, 11-29).
The Resurrection Announced to the Women
(Mr 16:1-8).
1. And when the sabbath was past--that is, at sunset of our
Saturday.
Mary Magdalene--(See on
Lu 8:2).
and Mary the mother of James--James the Less (see
Mr 15:40).
and Salome--the mother of Zebedee's sons (compare
Mr 15:40
with Mt 27:56).
had bought sweet spices, that they might come and anoint him--The
word is simply "bought." But our translators are perhaps right in
rendering it here "had bought," since it would appear, from
Lu 23:56,
that they had purchased them immediately after the Crucifixion, on the
Friday evening, during the short interval that remained to them
before sunset, when the sabbath rest began; and that they had only
deferred using them to anoint the body till the sabbath rest should be
over. On this "anointing," see on
Joh 19:40.
2. And very early in the morning--(See on
Mt 28:1).
the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulchre at the rising
of the sun--not quite literally, but "at earliest dawn"; according to
a way of speaking not uncommon, and occurring sometimes in the Old
Testament. Thus our Lord rose on the third day; having lain in the
grave part of Friday, the whole of Saturday, and part of the following
First day.
3. And they said among themselves--as they were approaching the sacred
spot.
Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulchre?
. . . for it was very great--On reaching it they find their difficulty
gone--the stone already rolled away by an unseen hand.
And are there no others who, when advancing to duty in the face of appalling difficulties, find their stone also rolled away?
5. And entering into the sepulchre, they saw a young man--In
Mt 28:2
he is called "the angel of the Lord"; but here he is described as he
appeared to the eye, in the bloom of a life that knows no decay. In
Matthew he is represented as sitting on the stone outside the
sepulchre; but since even there he says, "Come, see the place where
the Lord lay"
(Mt 28:6),
he seems, as ALFORD says, to have gone in with
them from without; only awaiting their arrival to accompany them into
the hallowed spot, and instruct them about it.
sitting on the right side--having respect to the position in which
His Lord had lain there. This trait is peculiar to Mark; but compare
Lu 1:11.
clothed in a long white garment--On its length, see
Isa 6:1;
and on its whiteness, see on
Mt 28:3.
and they were affrighted.
6. And he saith unto them, Be not affrighted--a stronger word than "Fear
not" in Matthew
(Mt 28:5).
Ye seek Jesus of Nazareth, which was crucified!--"the Nazarene, the
Crucified."
he is risen; he is not here--(See on
Lu 24:5, 6).
behold the place where they laid him--(See on
Mt 28:6).
7. But go your way, tell his disciples and Peter--This Second Gospel,
being drawn up--as all the earliest tradition
states--under the eye of Peter, or from materials chiefly furnished by
him, there is something deeply affecting in the preservation of this
little clause by Mark alone.
that he goeth before you into Galilee; there shall ye see him, as he
said unto you--(See on
Mt 28:7).
8. And they went out quickly, and fled from the sepulchre: for they
trembled and were amazed--"for tremor and amazement seized them."
neither said they anything to any man; for they were afraid--How
intensely natural and simple is this!
Appearances of Jesus after His Resurrection
(Mr 16:9-18).
9. Now when Jesus was risen early the first day of the week, he
appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had cast seven
devils--There is some difficulty here, and different ways of removing
it have been adopted. She had gone with the other women to the sepulchre
(Mr 16:1),
parting from them, perhaps, before their interview with the angel, and
on finding Peter and John she had come with them back to the spot; and
it was at this second visit, it would seem, that Jesus appeared to this
Mary, as detailed in
Joh 20:11-18.
To a woman was this honor given to be the first that saw the risen
Redeemer, and that woman was NOT his
virgin-mother.
11. And they, when they had heard that he was alive, and had been
seen of her, believed not--This, which is once and again repeated
of them all, is most important in its bearing on their subsequent
testimony to His resurrection at the risk of life itself.
12. After that he appeared in another form--(compare
Lu 24:16).
unto two of them as they walked, and went into the country--The
reference here, of course, is to His manifestation to the two disciples
going to Emmaus, so exquisitely told by the Third Evangelist (see on
Lu 24:13,
&c.).
13. And they went and told it unto the residue: neither believed
they them, &c.
15. And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the
Gospel to every creature--See on
Joh 20:19-23
and
Lu 24:36-49.
16. He that believeth and is baptized--Baptism is here put for the
external signature of the inner faith of the heart, just as "confessing
with the mouth" is in
Ro 10:10;
and there also as here this outward manifestation, once
mentioned as the proper fruit of faith, is not repeated in what follows
(Ro 10:11).
shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned--These
awful issues of the reception or rejection of the Gospel, though often
recorded in other connections, are given in this connection only by
Mark.
17, 18. And these signs shall follow them that believe
. . . They shall take up serpents--These two verses also
are peculiar to Mark.
The Ascension and Triumphant Proclamation of the Gospel
Thereafter
(Mr 16:19, 20).
19. So then after the Lord--an epithet applied to Jesus by this
Evangelist only in
Mr 16:19, 20,
when He comes to His glorious Ascension and its subsequent fruits. It
is most frequent in Luke.
had spoken unto them, he was received up into heaven--See on
Lu 24:50, 51.
and sat on the right hand of God--This great truth is here only
related as a fact in the Gospel history. In that exalted attitude He
appeared to Stephen
(Ac 7:55, 56);
and it is thereafter perpetually referred to as His proper condition in
glory.
20. And they went forth, and preached everywhere, the Lord working with
them, and confirming the word with signs following. Amen--We have in
this closing verse a most important link of connection with the Acts of
the Apostles, where He who directed all the movements of the infant
Church is perpetually styled "THE
LORD"; thus illustrating His own
promise for the rounding and building up of the Church,
"LO,
I AM WITH
YOU
alway!"
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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