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
LUKE
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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INTRODUCTION
THE writer of this Gospel is universally allowed
to have been Lucas (an abbreviated form of Lucanus, as Silas of
Silvanus), though he is not expressly named either in the Gospel or in
the Acts. From
Col 4:14
we learn that he was a "physician"; and by comparing that verse with
Col 4:10, 11
--in which the apostle enumerates all those of the circumcision who
were then with him, but does not mention Luke, though he immediately
afterwards sends a salutation from him--we gather that Luke was not a
born Jew. Some have thought he was a freed-man (libertinus), as
the Romans devolved the healing art on persons of this class and on
their slaves, as an occupation beneath themselves. His intimate
acquaintance with Jewish customs, and his facility in Hebraic
Greek, seem to show that he was an early convert to the Jewish
faith; and this is curiously confirmed by
Ac 21:27-29,
where we find the Jews enraged at Paul's supposed introduction of
Greeks into the temple, because they had seen "Trophimus the Ephesian"
with him; and as we know that Luke was with Paul on that occasion, it
would seem that they had taken him for a Jew, as they made no mention
of him. On the other hand, his fluency in classical Greek
confirms his Gentile origin. The time when he joined Paul's company is
clearly indicated in the Acts by his changing (at
Ac 16:10)
from the third person singular ("he") to the first person plural
("we"). From that time he hardly ever left the apostle till near the
period of his martyrdom
(2Ti 4:11).
EUSEBIUS makes him a native of Antioch. If so, he
would have every advantage for cultivating the literature of Greece and
such medical knowledge as was then possessed. That he died a natural
death is generally agreed among the ancients; GREGORY NAZIANZEN alone affirming
that he died a martyr.
The time and place of the publication of his Gospel are alike
uncertain. But we can approximate to it. It must at any rate have been
issued before the Acts, for there the 'Gospel' is expressly referred to
as the same author's "former treatise"
(Ac 1:1).
Now the Book of the Acts was not published for two whole years after
Paul's arrival as a prisoner at Rome, for it concludes with a reference
to this period; but probably it was published soon after that, which
would appear to have been early in the year 63. Before that time, then,
we have reason to believe that the Gospel of Luke was in circulation,
though the majority of critics make it later. If we date it somewhere
between A.D. 50 and 60, we shall probably be near
the truth; but nearer it we cannot with any certainty come. Conjectures
as to the place of publication are too uncertain to be mentioned
here.
That it was addressed, in the first instance, to Gentile readers,
is beyond doubt. This is no more, as DAVIDSON remarks
[Introduction to the New Testament, p. 186], than was to have been
expected from the companion of an "apostle of the Gentiles," who had
witnessed marvellous changes in the condition of many heathens by the
reception of the Gospel. But the explanations in his Gospel of things
known to every Jew, and which could only be intended for Gentile
readers, make this quite plain--see
Lu 1:26;
4:31; 8:26; 21:37; 22:1; 24:13.
A number of other minute particulars, both of things inserted and of
things omitted, confirm the conclusion that it was Gentiles whom this
Evangelist had in the first instance in view.
We have already adverted to the classical style of Greek which
this Evangelist writes--just what might have been expected from an
educated Greek and travelled physician. But we have also observed that
along with this he shows a wonderful flexibility of style, so much so,
that when he comes to relate transactions wholly Jewish, where the
speakers and actors and incidents are all Jewish, he writes in such
Jewish Greek as one would do who had never been out of Palestine or
mixed with any but Jews. In DA
COSTA'S'S Four Witnesses will be found
some traces of "the beloved physician" in this Gospel. But far more
striking and important are the traces in it of his intimate connection
with the apostle of the Gentiles. That one who was so long and so
constantly in the society of that master mind has in such a work as
this shown no traces of that connection, no stamp of that mind, is
hardly to be believed. Writers of Introductions seem not to see it, and
take no notice of it. But those who look into the interior of it will
soon discover evidences enough in it of a Pauline cast of mind.
Referring for a number of details to DA
COSTA, we notice here only two
examples: In
1Co 11:23,
Paul ascribes to an express revelation from Christ Himself the account
of the Institution of the Lord's Supper which he there gives. Now, if
we find this account differing in small yet striking particulars from
the accounts given by Matthew and Mark, but agreeing to the letter with
Luke's account, it can hardly admit of a doubt that the one had it from
the other; and in that case, of course, it was Luke that had it from
Paul. Now Matthew and Mark both say of the Cup, "This is my blood of
the New Testament"; while Paul and Luke say, in identical terms, "This
cup is the New Testament in My blood"
(1Co 11:25;
Lu 22:20).
Further, Luke says, "Likewise also the cup after supper,
saying," &c.; while Paul says, "After the same manner He took the cup
when He had supped, saying," &c.; whereas neither Matthew nor
Mark mention that this was after supper. But still more striking is
another point of coincidence in this case. Matthew and Mark both say of
the Bread merely this: "Take, eat; this is My body"
(Mt 26:26;
Mr 14:22);
whereas Paul says, "Take, eat, this is My body, which is broken for
you"
(1Co 11:24),
and Luke, "This is My body, which is given for you"
(Lu 22:19).
And while Paul adds the precious clause, "This do in remembrance of
Me," Luke does the same, in identical terms. How can one who
reflects on this resist the conviction of a Pauline stamp in this
Gospel? The other proof of this to which we ask the reader's attention
is in the fact that Paul, in enumerating the parties by whom Christ was
seen after His resurrection, begins, singularly enough, with
Peter--"And that He rose again the third day according to the
Scriptures and that He was seen of Cephas, then of the Twelve"
(1Co 15:4, 5)
--coupled with the remarkable fact, that Luke is the only one of the
Evangelists who mentions that Christ appeared to Peter at all. When the
disciples had returned from Emmaus to tell their brethren how the Lord
had appeared to them in the way, and how He had made Himself known to
them in the breaking of bread, they were met, as Luke relates, ere they
had time to utter a word, with this wonderful piece of news, "The Lord
is risen indeed, and hath appeared to Simon"
(Lu 24:34).
Other points connected with this Gospel will be adverted to in the
Commentary.
CHAPTER 1
Lu 1:1-4.
It appears from the Acts of the Apostles, and the Apostolic Epistles,
that the earliest preaching of the Gospel consisted of a brief summary
of the facts of our Lord's earthly history, with a few words of pointed
application to the parties addressed. Of these astonishing facts, notes
would naturally be taken and digests put into circulation. It is to
such that Luke here refers; and in terms of studied respect, as
narratives of what was "believed surely," or "on sure grounds" among
Christians, and drawn up from the testimony of "eye-witnesses and
ministering servants of the word." But when he adds that "it seemed good
to him also to write in order, having traced down all things with
exactness from their first rise," it is a virtual claim for his own
Gospel to supersede these "many" narratives. Accordingly, while not one
of them has survived the wreck of time, this and the other canonical
Gospels live, and shall live, the only fitting vehicles of those
life-bringing facts which have made all things new. Apocryphal or
spurious gospels, upheld by parties unfriendly to the truths exhibited
in the canonical Gospels, have not perished; but those well-meant
and substantially correct narratives here referred to, used only while
better were not to be had, were by tacit consent allowed to merge in the
four peerless documents which from age to age, and with astonishing
unanimity, have been accepted as the written charter of all
Christianity.
1. set forth in order--more simply, to draw up a narrative.
2. from the beginning--that is, of His public ministry, as is plain
from what follows.
3. from the very first--that is, from the very earliest events;
referring to those precious details of the birth and early life, not
only of our Lord, but of His forerunner, which we owe to Luke alone.
in order--or "consecutively"--in contrast, probably, with the
disjointed productions to which he had referred. But this must not be
pressed too far; for, on comparing it with the other Gospels, we see
that in some particulars the strict chronological order is not observed
in this Gospel.
most excellent--or "most noble"--a title of rank applied by this
same writer twice to Felix and once to Festus
(Ac 22:26; 24:3; 26:25).
It is likely, therefore, that "Theophilus" was chief magistrate of some
city in Greece or Asia Minor [WEBSTER and WILKINSON].
4. that thou mightest know--"know thoroughly."
hast been instructed--orally instructed--literally, "catechized" or
"catechetically taught," at first as a catechumen or candidate for
Christian baptism.
Lu 1:5-25.
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE
FORERUNNER.
5. Herod--(See on
Mt 2:1).
course of Abia--or Abijah; the eighth of the twenty-four orders of
courses into which David divided the priests (see
1Ch 24:1, 4, 10).
Of these courses only four returned after the captivity
(Ezr 2:34-39),
which were again subdivided into twenty-four--retaining the ancient
name and order of each. They took the whole temple service for a week
each.
his wife was of the daughters of Aaron--The priests might marry into
any tribe, but "it was most commendable of all to marry one of the
priests' line" [LIGHTFOOT].
6. commandments and ordinances--The one expressing their
moral--the other their ceremonial--obedience
[CALVIN and
BENGEL], (Compare
Eze 11:20;
Heb 9:1).
It has been denied that any such distinction was known to the Jews and
New Testament writers. But
Mr 12:33,
and other passages, put this beyond all reasonable doubt.
7. So with Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, Elkanah and Hannah,
Manoah and his wife.
9. his lot was to burn incense--The part assigned to each priest in
his week of service was decided by lot. Three were employed at the
offering of incense--to remove the ashes of the former service; to bring
in and place on the golden altar the pan filled with hot burning coals
taken from the altar of burnt offering; and to sprinkle the incense on
the hot coals; and, while the smoke of it ascended, to make intercession
for the people. This was the most distinguished part of the service
(Re 8:3),
and this was what fell to the lot of Zacharias at this time [LIGHTFOOT].
10. praying without--outside the court in front of the temple, where
stood the altar of burnt offering; the men and women in separate courts,
but the altar visible to all.
the time of incense--which was offered along with the morning and
evening sacrifice of every day; a beautiful symbol of the acceptableness
of the sacrifice offered on the altar of burnt offering, with coals
from whose altar the incense was burnt
(Le 16:12, 13).
This again was a symbol of the "living sacrifice" of themselves and
their services offered daily to God by the worshippers. Hence the
language of
Ps 141:2;
Re 8:3.
But that the acceptance of this daily offering depended on the
expiatory virtue presupposed in the burnt offering, and pointing
to the one "sacrifice of a sweet-smelling savor"
(Eph 5:2),
is evident from
Isa 6:6, 7.
11. right side--the south side, between the altar and the candlestick,
Zacharias being on the north side, in front of the altar, while offering
incense [WEBSTER and
WILKINSON]. But why there? The right was the
favorable side
(Mt 25:33)
[SCHOTTGEN and
WESTEIN in
MEYER]; compare
Mr 16:5.
13. thy prayer is heard--doubtless for offspring, which by some
presentiment he even yet had not despaired of.
John--the same as "Johanan," so frequent in the Old Testament,
meaning "Jehovah's gracious gift."
14. shall rejoice--so they did
(Lu 1:58, 66);
but the meaning rather is, "shall have cause to rejoice"--it would
prove to many a joyful event.
15. great in the sight of the Lord--nearer to Him in official
standing than all the prophets. (See
Mt 11:10, 11.)
drink neither wine nor strong drink--that is, shall be a Nazarite,
or "a separated one"
(Nu 6:2,
&c.). As the leper was the living symbol of sin, so was the
Nazarite of holiness; nothing inflaming was to cross his lips;
no razor to come on his head; no ceremonial defilement to be
contracted. Thus was he to be "holy to the Lord [ceremonially] all the
days of his separation." This separation was in ordinary cases
temporary and voluntary: only Samson
(Jud 13:7),
Samuel
(1Sa 1:11),
and John Baptist were Nazarites from the womb. It was fitting
that the utmost severity of legal consecration should be seen in
Christ's forerunner. HE was the
REALITY and
PERFECTION
of the Nazarite without the symbol, which perished in that living
realization of it: "Such an High Priest became us, who was
SEPARATE FROM
SINNERS"
(Heb 7:26).
filled with the Holy Ghost, from . . . womb--a holy vessel for future
service.
16, 17. A religious and moral reformer, Elijah-like, he should
be
(Mal 4:6,
where the "turning of the people's heart to the Lord" is borrowed from
1Ki 18:37).
In both cases their success, though great, was
partial--the nation was not gained.
17. before him--before "the Lord their God"
(Lu 1:16).
By comparing this with
Mal 3:1
and Isa 40:3,
it is plainly "Jehovah" in the flesh of Messiah [CALVIN and OLSHAUSEN] before whom
John was to go as a herald to announce His approach, and a
pioneer o prepare His way.
in the spirit--after the model.
and power of Elias--not his miraculous power, for John did no miracle"
(Joh 10:41),
but his power "turning the heart," or with like success in his
ministry. Both fell on degenerate times; both witnessed fearlessly for
God; neither appeared much save in the direct exercise of their
ministry; both were at the head of schools of disciples; the success of
both was similar.
fathers to the children--taken literally, this denotes the
restoration of parental fidelity [MEYER and others],
the decay of
which is the beginning of religious and social corruption--one prominent
feature of the coming revival being put for the whole. But what follows,
explanatory of this, rather suggests a figurative sense. If "the
disobedient" be "the children," and to "the fathers" belongs "the wisdom
of the just" [BENGEL], the meaning will be, "he shall bring back the
ancient spirit of the nation into their degenerate children" [CALVIN,
&c.]. So Elijah invoked "the God Abraham, Isaac, and Israel," when
seeking to "turn their heart back again"
(1Ki 18:36, 37).
to make ready, &c.--more clearly, "to make ready for the Lord a
prepared people," to have in readiness a people prepared to welcome Him.
Such preparation requires, in every age and every soul, an operation
corresponding to the Baptist's ministry.
18. Whereby, &c.--Mary believed what was far harder without a sign.
Abraham, though older, and doubtless Sarah, too, when the same promise
was made to him, "staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief,
but was strong in faith, giving glory to God." This was that in which
Zacharias failed.
19. Gabriel--signifying "man of God," the same who appeared to
Daniel at the time of incense
(Da 9:21)
and to Mary
(Lu 1:26).
stand, &c.--as his attendant (compare
1Ki 17:1).
20. dumb--speechless.
not able--deprived of the power of speech
(Lu 1:64).
He asked a sign, and now he got it.
until the day that these things shall be performed--See on
Lu 1:64.
21. waited--to receive from him the usual benediction
(Nu 6:23-27).
tarried so long--It was not usual to tarry long, lest it should be
thought vengeance had stricken the people's representative for something
wrong [LIGHTFOOT].
22. speechless--dumb, and deaf also (see
Lu 1:62).
24. hid five months--till the event was put beyond doubt and became
apparent.
Lu 1:26-38.
ANNUNCIATION OF
CHRIST.
(See on
Mt 1:18-21).
26. sixth month--of Elisabeth's time.
Joseph, of the house of David--(See on
Mt 1:16).
28. highly favoured--a word only once used elsewhere
(Eph 1:6,
"made accepted"): compare
Lu 1:30,
"Thou hast found favour with God." The mistake of the Vulgate's
rendering, "full of grace," has been taken abundant advantage of by the
Romish Church. As the mother of our Lord, she was the most "blessed
among women" in external distinction; but let them listen to the Lord's
own words. "Nay, rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and
keep it." (See on
Lu 11:27).
31. The angel purposely conforms his language to Isaiah's famous
prophecy
(Isa 7:14)
[CALVIN].
32, 33. This is but an echo of the sublime prediction in
Isa 9:6, 7.
34. How, &c.--not the unbelief of Zacharias, "Whereby shall I know
this?" but, taking the fact for granted, "How is it to be, so contrary
to the unbroken law of human birth?" Instead of reproof, therefore, her
question is answered in mysterious detail.
35. Holy Ghost--(See on
Mt 1:18).
power of the highest--the immediate energy of the Godhead conveyed
by the Holy Ghost.
overshadow--a word suggesting how gentle, while yet efficacious,
would be this Power [BENGEL]; and its mysterious secrecy, withdrawn, as
if by a cloud, from human scrutiny [CALVIN].
that holy thing born of thee--that holy Offspring of thine.
therefore . . . Son of God--That Christ is the Son of God in His divine
and eternal nature is clear from all the New Testament; yet here we see
that Sonship efflorescing into human and palpable manifestation by His
being born, through "the power of the Highest," an Infant of days. We
must neither think of a double Sonship, as some do, harshly and without
all ground, nor deny what is here plainly expressed, the connection
between His human birth and His proper personal Sonship.
36. thy cousin--"relative," but how near the word says not.
conceived, &c.--This was to Mary an unsought sign, in reward of
her faith.
37. For, &c.--referring to what was said by the angel to Abraham in
like case
(Ge 18:14),
to strengthen her faith.
38. Marvellous faith in such circumstances!
Lu 1:39-56.
VISIT OF
MARY TO
ELISABETH.
39. hill country--the mountainous tract running along the middle of
Judea, from north to south [WEBSTER and
WILKINSON].
with haste--transported with the announcement to herself and with
the tidings, now first made known to her, of Elisabeth's condition.
a city of Juda--probably Hebron (see
Jos 20:7; 21:11).
40. saluted Elisabeth--now returned from her seclusion
(Lu 1:24).
41. babe leaped--From
Lu 1:44
it is plain that this maternal sensation was something extraordinary--a
sympathetic emotion of the unconscious babe, at the presence of the
mother of his Lord.
42-44. What beautiful superiority to envy have we here! High as was
the distinction conferred upon herself, Elisabeth loses sight of it
altogether, in presence of one more honored still; upon whom, with her
unborn Babe, in an ecstasy of inspiration, she pronounces a benediction,
feeling it to be a wonder unaccountable that "the mother of her Lord
should come to her." "Turn this as we will, we shall never be able
to see the propriety of calling an unborn child "Lord," but by supposing
Elisabeth, like the prophets of old, enlightened to perceive the
Messiah's Divine nature" [OLSHAUSEN].
43. "The mother of my Lord"--but not "My Lady" (compare
Lu 20:42;
Joh 20:28)"
[BENGEL].
45. An additional benediction on the Virgin for her implicit faith, in
tacit and delicate contrast with her own husband.
for--rather, as in the Margin, "that."
46-55. A magnificent canticle, in which the strain of Hannah's ancient
song, in like circumstances, is caught up, and just slightly modified
and sublimed. Is it unnatural to suppose that the spirit of the blessed
Virgin had been drawn beforehand into mysterious sympathy with the ideas
and the tone of this hymn, so that when the life and fire of inspiration
penetrated her whole soul it spontaneously swept the chorus of this
song, enriching the Hymnal of the Church with that spirit-stirring
canticle which has resounded ever since from its temple walls? In both
songs, those holy women, filled with wonder to behold "the proud, the
mighty, the rich," passed by, and, in their persons the lowliest chosen
to usher in the greatest events, sing of this as no capricious movement,
but a great law of the kingdom of God, by which He delights to
"put down the mighty from their seats and exalt them of low degree."
In both songs the strain dies away on
CHRIST; in Hannah's under the name
of "Jehovah's King"--to whom, through all His line, from David onwards
to Himself, He will "give strength"; His "Anointed," whose horn He will
exalt
(1Sa 2:10);
in the Virgin's song, it is as the "Help" promised to Israel by all the
prophets.
My soul . . . my spirit--"all that is within me"
(Ps 103:1).
47. my Saviour--Mary, poor heart, never dreamt, we see, of her own
"immaculate conception"--in the offensive language of the Romanists--any
more than of her own immaculate life.
54. holpen--Compare
Ps 89:19,
"I have laid help on One that is mighty."
55. As he spake to our fathers--The sense requires this clause to be read as a parenthesis. (Compare
Mic 7:20;
Ps 98:3).
for ever--the perpetuity of Messiah's kingdom, as expressly promised
by the angel
(Lu 1:33).
56. abode with her about three months--What an honored roof was that
which, for such a period, overarched these cousins! and yet not a trace
of it is now to be seen, while the progeny of those two women--the one
but the honored pioneer of the other--have made the world new.
returned to her own house--at Nazareth,
after which took place what is recorded in
Mt 1:18-25.
Lu 1:57-80.
BIRTH AND
CIRCUMCISION OF
JOHN--SONG OF
ZACHARIAS AND
PROGRESS OF THE
CHILD.
59. eighth day--The law
(Ge 17:12)
was observed, even though the eighth day after birth should be a
sabbath
(Joh 7:23;
and see
Php 3:5).
called him--literally, "were calling"--that is, (as we should say)
"were for calling." The naming of children at baptism has its origin
in the Jewish custom at circumcision
(Ge 21:3, 4);
and the names of Abram and Sarai were changed at its first performance
(Ge 17:5, 15).
62. made signs--showing he was deaf, as well as dumb.
63. marvelled all--at his giving the same name, not knowing of any
communication between them on the subject.
64. mouth opened immediately--on thus palpably showing his full
faith in the vision, for disbelieving which he had been struck dumb
(Lu 1:13, 20).
65. fear--religious awe; under the impression that God's hand was
specially in these events (compare
Lu 5:26; 7:16; 8:37).
66. hand of the Lord was with him--by special tokens marking him out
as one destined to some great work
(1Ki 18:46;
2Ki 3:15;
Ac 11:21).
68-79. There is not a word in this noble burst of divine song about
his own child; like Elisabeth losing sight entirely of self, in the
glory of a Greater than both.
Lord God of Israel--the ancient covenant God of the peculiar people.
visited and redeemed--that is, in order to redeem: returned after
long absence, and broken His long silence (see
Mt 15:31).
In the Old Testament, God is said to "visit" chiefly for
judgment, in the New Testament for mercy. Zacharias
would, as yet, have but imperfect views of such "visiting and
redeeming," "saving from and delivering out of the hand of enemies"
(Lu 1:71, 74).
But this Old Testament phraseology, used at first with a lower
reference, is, when viewed in the light of a loftier and more
comprehensive kingdom of God, equally adapted to express the most
spiritual conceptions of the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.
69. horn of salvation--that is "strength of salvation," or "mighty
Salvation," meaning the Saviour Himself, whom Simeon calls "Thy
Salvation"
(Lu 2:30).
The metaphor is taken from those animals whose strength is in
their horns
(Ps 18:2; 75:10; 132:17).
house of . . . David--This shows that Mary must have been known to be of the royal line,
independent of Joseph; of whom Zacharias, if he knew anything, could
not know that after this he would recognize Mary.
70. since the world began--or, "from the earliest period."
72. the mercy promised . . . his holy covenant . . .
73. the oath . . . to . . . Abraham--The whole work and kingdom of
Messiah is represented as a mercy pledged on oath to Abraham and his
seed, to be realized at an appointed period; and at length, in "the
fulness of the time," gloriously made good. Hence, not only
"grace," or the thing promised; but "truth," or fidelity to the promise, are said to "come by Jesus
Christ"
(Joh 1:17).
74, 75. That he would grant us, &c.--How comprehensive is the view
here given! (1) The purpose of all redemption--"that we should
serve Him"--that is, "the Lord God of Israel"
(Lu 1:68).
The word signifies religious service distinctively--"the
priesthood of the New Testament" [BENGEL].
(2) The nature of this service--"in holiness and righteousness
before Him"
(Lu 1:75)
--or, as in His presence (compare
Ps 56:13).
(3) Its freedom--"being delivered out of the hand of our
enemies." (4) Its fearlessness--"might serve Him without fear."
(5) Its duration--"all the days of our life."
76-79. Here are the dying echoes of this song; and very beautiful
are these closing notes--like the setting sun, shorn indeed of its
noontide radiance, but skirting the horizon with a wavy and quivering
light--as of molten gold--on which the eye delights to gaze, till it
disappears from the view. The song passes not here from Christ to John,
but only from Christ direct to Christ as heralded by His forerunner.
thou child--not "my son"--this child's relation to himself being
lost in his relation to a Greater than either.
prophet of the Highest; for thou shalt go before him--that is, "the
Highest." As "the Most High" is an epithet in Scripture only of
the supreme God, it is inconceivable that inspiration should apply
this term, as here undeniably, to Christ, unless He were "God over all
blessed for ever"
(Ro 9:5).
77. to give knowledge of salvation--To sound the note of a needed
and provided "salvation" was the noble office of John, above all
that preceded him; as it is that of all subsequent ministers of Christ;
but infinitely loftier was it to be the "Salvation" itself
(Lu 1:69
and Lu 2:30).
by the remission of . . . sins--This stamps at once
the spiritual nature of the salvation here intended, and
explains
Lu 1:71, 74.
78. Through the tender mercy of our God--the sole spring, necessarily,
of all salvation for sinners.
dayspring from on high--either Christ Himself, as the "Sun of
righteousness"
(Mal 4:2),
arising on a dark world [BEZA, GROTIUS, CALVIN, DE WETTE, OLSHAUSEN, &c.], or the light which He sheds. The sense,
of course, is one.
79. (Compare
Isa 9:2;
Mt 4:13-17).
"That St. Luke, of all the Evangelists, should have obtained and
recorded these inspired utterances of Zacharias and Mary--is in
accordance with his character and habits, as indicated in
Lu 1:1-4"
[WEBSTER and
WILKINSON].
80. And the child, &c.--"a concluding paragraph, indicating, in
strokes full of grandeur, the bodily and mental development of the
Baptist; and bringing his life up to the period of his public
appearance" [OLSHAUSEN].
in the deserts--probably "the wilderness of Judea"
(Mt 3:1),
whither he had retired early in life, in the Nazarite spirit,
and where, free from rabbinical influences and alone with God, his
spirit would be educated, like Moses in the desert, for his future high
vocation.
his showing unto Israel--the presentation of himself before his
nation, as Messiah's forerunner.
CHAPTER 2
Lu 2:1-7.
BIRTH OF
CHRIST.
1. Cæsar Augustus--the first of the Roman emperors.
all the world--so the vast Roman Empire was termed.
taxed--enrolled, or register themselves.
2. first . . . when Cyrenius, &c.--a very perplexing
verse, inasmuch as Cyrenius, or Quirinus, appears not to have been
governor of Syria for about ten years after the birth of Christ, and
the "taxing" under his administration was what led to the insurrection
mentioned in
Ac 5:37.
That there was a taxing, however, of the whole Roman Empire under
Augustus, is now admitted by all; and candid critics, even of skeptical
tendency, are ready to allow that there is not likely to be any real
inaccuracy in the statement of our Evangelist. Many superior scholars
would render the words thus, "This registration was previous to
Cyrenius being governor of Syria"--as the word "first" is rendered in
Joh 1:15; 15:18.
In this case, of course, the difficulty vanishes. But it is perhaps
better to suppose, with others, that the registration may have been
ordered with a view to the taxation, about the time of our Lord's
birth, though the taxing itself--an obnoxious measure in Palestine--was
not carried out till the time of Quirinus.
3. went . . . to his own city--the city of his
extraction, according to the Jewish custom, not of his
abode, which was the usual Roman method.
4, 5. Not only does Joseph, who was of the royal line, go to
Bethlehem
(1Sa 16:1),
but Mary too--not from choice surely in her condition, but, probably,
for personal enrollment, as herself an heiress.
5. espoused wife--now, without doubt, taken home to him, as related
in
Mt 1:18; 25:6.
6. while they were there, the days were accomplished that she should
be delivered--Mary had up to this time been living at the wrong place
for Messiah's birth. A little longer stay at Nazareth, and the prophecy
would have failed. But lo! with no intention certainly on her part, much
less of Cæsar Augustus, to fulfil the prophecy, she is brought from
Nazareth to Bethlehem, and at that nick of time her period arrives, and
her Babe is born
(Ps 118:23).
"Every creature walks blindfold; only He that dwells in light knows
whether they go" [BISHOP HALL].
7. first-born--So
Mt 1:25;
yet the law, in speaking of the first-born, regardeth not whether any
were born after or no, but only that none were born
before [LIGHTFOOT].
wrapt him . . . laid him--The mother herself did so. Had she then none
to help her? It would seem so
(2Co 8:9).
a manger--the manger, the bench to which the horses' heads were tied,
on which their food could rest [WEBSTER and
WILKINSON].
no room in the inn--a square erection, open inside, where travellers
put up, and whose rear parts were used as stables. The ancient
tradition, that our Lord was born in a grotto or cave, is quite
consistent with this, the country being rocky. In Mary's condition the
journey would be a slow one, and ere they arrived, the inn would be
fully occupied--affecting anticipation of the reception He was
throughout to meet with
(Joh 1:11).
Wrapt in His swaddling--bands,
And in His manger laid,
The hope and glory of all lands
Is come to the world's aid.
No peaceful home upon His cradle smiled,
Guests rudely went and came where slept the royal Child.
KEBLE
|
But some "guests went and came" not "rudely," but reverently. God
sent visitors of His own to pay court to the new-born King.
Lu 2:8-20.
ANGELIC
ANNUNCIATION TO THE
SHEPHERDS--THEIR
VISIT TO THE
NEWBORN
BABE.
8. abiding in the fields--staying there, probably in huts or tents.
watch . . . by night--or, night watches, taking their turn of watching.
From about passover time in April until autumn, the flocks pastured
constantly in the open fields, the shepherds lodging there all that
time. (From this it seems plain that the period of the year usually
assigned to our Lord's birth is too late). Were these shepherds chosen
to have the first sight of the blessed Babe without any respect of their
own state of mind? That, at least, is not God's way. "No doubt, like
Simeon
(Lu 2:25),
they were among the waiters for the Consolation of Israel" [OLSHAUSEN]; and, if the simplicity of their rustic minds,
their quiet occupation, the stillness of the midnight hours, and the
amplitude of the deep blue vault above them for the heavenly music
which was to fill their ear, pointed them out as fit recipients for the
first tidings of an Infant Saviour, the congenial meditations and
conversations by which, we may suppose, they would beguile the tedious
hours would perfect their preparation for the unexpected visit. Thus
was Nathanael engaged, all alone but not unseen, under the fig tree, in
unconscious preparation for his first interview with Jesus. (See on
Joh 1:48).
So was the rapt seer on his lonely rock "in the spirit on the Lord's
Day," little thinking that this was his preparation for hearing behind
him the trumpet voice of the Son of man
(Re 1:10,
&c.). But if the shepherds in His immediate neighborhood had the
first, the sages from afar had the next sight of the
new-born King. Even so still, simplicity first, science next, finds its
way to Christ, whom
In quiet ever and in shade
Shepherds and Sage may find--
They, who have bowed untaught to Nature's sway,
And they, who follow Truth along her star-pav'd way.
KEBLE
|
9. glory of the Lord--"the brightness or glory which is represented
as encompassing all heavenly visions" [OLSHAUSEN].
sore afraid--So it ever was
(Da 10:7, 8;
Lu 1:12;
Re 1:17).
Men have never felt easy with the invisible world laid suddenly open to
their gaze. It was never meant to be permanent; a momentary purpose was
all it was intended to serve.
10. to all people--"to the whole people," that is, of Israel; to
be by them afterwards opened up to the whole world. (See on
Lu 2:14).
11. unto you is born--you shepherds, Israel, mankind
[BENGEL]. Compare
Isa 9:6,
"Unto us a Child is born." It is a birth--"The Word is made
flesh"
(Joh 1:14).
When? "This day." Where? "In the city of David"--in the
right line and at the right "spot"; where prophecy bade us look
for Him, and faith accordingly expected Him. How dear to us should be
these historic moorings of our faith! With the loss of them, all
substantial Christianity is lost. By means of them how many have been
kept from making shipwreck, and attained to a certain external
admiration of Him, ere yet they have fully "beheld His glory."
a Saviour--not One who shall be a Saviour, but
"born a Saviour."
Christ the Lord--"magnificent appellation!"
[BENGEL]. "This is the
only place where these words come together; and I see no way of
understanding this "Lord" but as corresponding to the Hebrew
JEHOVAH"
[ALFORD].
12. a sign--"the sign."
the babe--"a Babe."
a manger--"the manger." The sign was to consist, it seems, solely in
the overpowering contrast between the things just said of Him and
the lowly condition in which they would find Him--Him whose goings forth
have been from of old, from everlasting, "ye shall find a Babe"; whom
the heaven of heavens cannot contain, "wrapt in swaddling bands"; the
"Saviour, Christ the Lord," lying in a manger! Thus early were these
amazing contrasts, which are His chosen style, held forth.
(See
2Co 8:9.)
13. suddenly--as if only waiting till their fellow had done.
with the angel--who retires not, but is joined by others, come to
seal and to celebrate the tidings he has brought.
heavenly host--or "army," an army celebrating peace!
[BENGEL]
"transferring the occupation of their exalted station to this poor
earth, which so seldom resounds with the pure praise of God"
[OLSHAUSEN]; to let it be known how this event is regarded
in heaven and should be regarded on earth.
14. Glory, &c.--brief but transporting hymn--not only in articulate
human speech, for our benefit, but in tunable measure, in the form of a
Hebrew parallelism of two complete clauses, and a third one only
amplifying the second, and so without a connecting "and." The
"glory to God," which the new-born "Saviour" was to bring, is the
first note of this sublime hymn: to this answers, in the second clause,
the "peace on earth," of which He was to be "the Prince"
(Isa 9:6)
--probably sung responsively by the celestial choir; while quickly
follows the glad echo of this note, probably by a third detachment of
the angelic choristers--"good will to men." "They say not, glory
to God in heaven, where angels are, but, using a rare
expression, "in the highest [heavens]," whither angels aspire
not,"
(Heb 1:3, 4)
[BENGEL]. "Peace" with God is the grand necessity
of a fallen world. To bring in this, and all other peace in its train,
was the prime errand of the Saviour to this earth, and, along with it,
Heaven's whole "good will to men"--the divine complacency on a new
footing--descends to rest upon men, as upon the Son Himself, in whom
God is "well-pleased."
(Mt 3:17,
the same word as here.)
15. Let us go, &c.--lovely simplicity of devoutness and faith this!
They are not taken up with the angels, the glory that invested them, and
the lofty strains with which they filled the air. Nor do they say, Let
us go and see if this be true--they have no misgivings. But "Let us
go and see this thing which is come to pass, which
the Lord hath made known unto us." Does not this confirm the view
given on
Lu 2:8
of the spirit of these humble men?
16. with haste--Compare
Lu 1:39;
Mt 28:8
("did run");
Joh 4:28
("left her water-pot," as they do their flocks, in a transport).
found Mary, &c.--"mysteriously guided by the Spirit to the right
place through the obscurity of the night" [OLSHAUSEN].
a manger--"the manger," as before.
17. made known abroad--before their return
(Lu 2:20),
and thus were the first evangelists [BENGEL].
20. glorifying and praising God, &c.--The latter word, used of the
song of the angels
(Lu 2:13),
and in
Lu 19:37,
and Lu 24:53,
leads us to suppose that theirs was a song too, probably some canticle
from the Psalter--meet vehicle for the swelling emotions of their
simple hearts at what "they had heard and seen."
Lu 2:21.
CIRCUMCISION OF
CHRIST.
Here only recorded, and even here merely alluded to, for the sake of the
name then given to the holy Babe, "JESUS," or
SAVIOUR
(Mt 1:21;
Ac 13:23).
Yet in this naming of Him "Saviour," in the act of circumcising Him,
which was a symbolical and bloody removal of the body of sin, we have a
tacit intimation that they "had need"--as John said of His
Baptism--rather to be circumcised by Him "with the circumcision made
without hands, in the putting off of the body [of the sins] of the
flesh by the circumcision of Christ"
(Col 2:11),
and that He only "suffered it to be so, because thus it became Him to
fulfil all righteousness"
(Mt 3:15).
Still the circumcision of Christ had a profound bearing on His own
work--by few rightly apprehended. For since "he that is circumcised is
a debtor to do the whole law"
(Ga 5:3),
Jesus thus bore about with Him in His very flesh the seal of a
voluntary obligation to do the whole law--by Him only possible in the
flesh since the fall. And as He was "made under the law" for no ends of
His own, but only "to redeem them that were under the law, that
we might receive the adoption of sons"
(Ga 4:4, 5),
the obedience to which His circumcision pledged Him was a redeeming
obedience--that of a "Saviour." And, finally, as "Christ hath
redeemed us from the curse of the law" by "being made a curse
for us"
(Ga 3:13),
we must regard Him, in His circumcision, as brought under a palpable
pledge to be "obedient unto death, even the death of the cross"
(Php 2:8).
Lu 2:22-40.
PURIFICATION OF THE
VIRGIN--PRESENTATION OF THE
BABE IN THE
TEMPLE-SCENE
THERE WITH
SIMEON AND
ANNA.
22, 24. her purification--Though the most and best copies read
"their," it was the mother only who needed purifying from the legal
uncleanness of childbearing. "The days" of this purification for a male
child were forty in all
(Le 12:2, 4),
on the expiry of which the mother was required to offer a lamb for a
burnt offering, and a turtle dove or a young pigeon for a sin offering.
If she could not afford a lamb, the mother had to bring another turtle
dove or young pigeon; and, if even this was beyond her means, then a
portion of fine flour, but without the usual fragrant accompaniments of
oil and frankincense, as it represented a sin offering
(Le 12:6-8; 5:7-11).
From the intermediate offering of "a pair of turtle doves or two young
pigeons," we gather that Joseph and the Virgin were in poor
circumstances
(2Co 8:9),
though not in abject poverty. Being a first-born male, they "bring him
to Jerusalem, to present him to the Lord." All such had been claimed as
"holy to the Lord," or set apart to sacred uses, in memory of the
deliverance of the first-born of Israel from destruction in Egypt,
through the sprinkling of blood
(Ex 13:2).
In lieu of these, however, one whole tribe, that of Levi, was accepted,
and set apart to occupations exclusively sacred
(Nu 3:11-38);
and whereas there were two hundred seventy-three fewer Levites than
first-born of all Israel on the first reckoning, each of these
first-born was to be redeemed by the payment of five shekels, yet not
without being "presented (or brought) unto the Lord," in
token of His rightful claim to them and their service
(Nu 3:44-47; 18:15, 16).
It was in obedience to this "law of Moses," that the Virgin presented
her babe unto the Lord, "in the east gate of the court called Nicanor's
Gate, where she herself would be sprinkled by the priest with the blood
of her sacrifice" [LIGHTFOOT]. By that Babe, in
due time, we were to be redeemed, "not with corruptible things as
silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ"
(1Pe 1:18, 19),
and the consuming of the mother's burnt offering, and the sprinkling of
her with the blood of her sin offering, were to find their abiding
realization in the "living sacrifice" of the Christian mother herself,
in the fulness of a "heart sprinkled from an evil conscience," by "the
blood which cleanseth from all sin."
25. just--upright in his moral character.
devout--of a religious frame of spirit.
waiting for the consolation of Israel--a beautiful title of the
coming Messiah, here intended.
the Holy Ghost was--supernaturally.
upon him--Thus was the Spirit, after a dreary absence of nearly four
hundred years, returning to the Church, to quicken expectation, and
prepare for coming events.
26. revealed by the Holy Ghost--implying, beyond all doubt, the
personality of the Spirit.
should see not death till he had seen--"sweet antithesis!"
[BENGEL].
How would the one sight gild the gloom of the other! He was, probably,
by this time, advanced in years.
27, 28. The Spirit guided him to the temple at the very moment when
the Virgin was about to present Him to the Lord.
28. took him up in his arms--immediately recognizing in the
child, with unhesitating certainty, the promised Messiah, without
needing Mary to inform him of what had happened to her. [OLSHAUSEN]. The remarkable act of taking the babe in his
arms must not be overlooked. It was as if he said, "This is all my
salvation and all my desire"
(2Sa 23:5).
29. Lord--"Master," a word rarely used in the New Testament, and
selected here with peculiar propriety, when the aged saint, feeling that
his last object in wishing to live had now been attained, only awaited
his Master's word of command to "depart."
now lettest, &c.--more clearly, "now Thou art releasing Thy servant";
a patient yet reverential mode of expressing a desire to depart.
30. seen thy salvation--Many saw this child, nay, the full-grown "man,
Christ Jesus," who never saw in Him "God's Salvation." This estimate of
an object of sight, an unconscious, helpless babe, was pure faith. He
"beheld His glory"
(Joh 1:14).
In another view it was prior faith rewarded by present
sight.
31, 32. all people--all the peoples, mankind at large.
a light to the Gentiles--then in thick darkness.
glory of thy people Israel--already Thine, and now, in the believing
portion of it, to be so more gloriously than ever. It will be observed
that this "swan-like song, bidding an eternal farewell to this
terrestrial life" [OLSHAUSEN], takes a more comprehensive view of the
kingdom of Christ than that of Zacharias, though the kingdom they sing
of is one.
34, 35. set--appointed.
fall and rising again of many in Israel, and for a sign spoken
against--Perhaps the former of these phrases expresses the two
stages of temporary "fall of many in Israel" through unbelief, during
our Lord's earthly career, and the subsequent "rising again" of
the same persons after the effusion of the Spirit at pentecost
threw a new light to them on the whole subject; while the latter clause
describes the determined enemies of the Lord Jesus. Such opposite views
of Christ are taken from age to age.
35. Yea, &c.--"Blessed as thou art among women, thou shalt have
thine own deep share of the struggles and sufferings which this Babe is
to occasion"--pointing not only to the continued obloquy and rejection
of this Child of hers, those agonies of His which she was to witness at
the cross, and her desolate condition thereafter, but to dreadful
alternations of faith and unbelief, of hope and fear regarding Him,
which she would have to pass through.
that the thoughts, &c.--Men's views and decisions regarding Christ
are a mirror in which the very "thoughts of their hearts" are seen.
36. Anna--or, Hannah.
a prophetess--another evidence that "the last times" in which God
was to "pour out His Spirit upon all flesh" were at hand.
of the tribe of Aser--one of the ten tribes, of whom many were not
carried captive, and not a few reunited themselves to Judah after the
return from Babylon. The distinction of tribes, though practically
destroyed by the captivity, was well enough known up to their final
dispersion
(Ro 11:1;
Heb 7:14);
nor is it now entirely lost.
lived, &c.--she had lived seven years with her husband
(Lu 2:36),
and been a widow eighty-four years; so that if she married at the
earliest marriageable age, twelve years, she could not at this time be
less than a hundred three years old.
37. departed not from the temple--was found there at all stated
hours of the day, and even during the night services of the temple
watchmen
(Ps 134:1, 2),
"serving God with fastings and prayer." (See
1Ti 5:5,
suggested by this.)
38. coming in--"presenting herself." She had been there already but
now is found "standing by," as Simeon's testimony to the blessed Babe
died away, ready to take it up "in turn" (as the word rendered
"likewise" here means).
to all them, &c.--the sense is, "to all them in Jerusalem that were
looking for redemption"--saying in effect, In that Babe are wrapt up all
your expectations. If this was at the hour of prayer, when numbers
flocked to the temple, it would account for her having such an audience
as the words imply [ALFORD].
39. Nothing is more difficult than to fix the precise order in which
the visit of the Magi, with the flight into and return from Egypt
(Mt 2:13-23),
are to be taken, in relation to the circumcision and presentation of
Christ in the temple, here recorded. It is perhaps best to leave this
in the obscurity in which we find it, as the result of two independent,
though if we knew all, easily reconcilable narratives.
40. His mental development kept pace with His bodily, and "the grace
of God," the divine favor, rested manifestly and increasingly upon Him.
See
Lu 2:52.
Lu 2:41-52.
FIRST
CONSCIOUS
VISIT TO
JERUSALEM.
"Solitary flowered out of the wonderful enclosed garden of the thirty
years, plucked precisely there where the swollen bud, at a
distinctive crisis (at twelve years of age), bursts into flower. To
mark that is assuredly the design and the meaning of this record"
[STIER].
42. went up--"were wont to go." Though males only were required to
go up to Jerusalem at the three annual festivals
(Ex 23:14-17),
devout women, when family duties permitted, went also, as did Hannah
(1Sa 1:7),
and, as we here see, the mother of Jesus.
when twelve years old--At this age every Jewish boy was styled "a
son of the law," being put under a course of instruction and trained to
fasting and attendance on public worship, besides being set to learn a
trade. At this age accordingly our Lord is taken up for the first time
to Jerusalem, at the passover season, the chief of the three annual
festivals. But oh, with what thoughts and feelings must this Youth have
gone up! Long ere He beheld it, He had doubtless "loved the habitation
of God's house and the place where His honor dwelt"
(Ps 26:8),
a love nourished, we may be sure, by that "word hid in His heart," with
which in afterlife He showed so perfect a familiarity. As the time for
His first visit approached, could one's ear have caught the breathings
of His young soul, he might have heard Him whispering, "As the hart
panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after Thee, O God.
The Lord loveth the gates of Zion more than all the dwellings of Jacob.
I was glad when they said unto me, Let us go unto the house of the
Lord. Our feet shall stand within thy gates, O Jerusalem!"
(Ps 42:1; 87:2; 122:1, 2).
On catching the first view of "the city of their solemnities," and high
above all in it, "the place of God's rest," we hear Him saying to
Himself, "Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth is Mount
Zion, on the sides of the north, the city of the great King: Out of
Zion, the perfection of beauty, God doth shine"
(Ps 48:2; 50:2).
Of His feelings or actions during all the eight days of the feast not a
word is said. As a devout child, in company with its parents, He would
go through the services, keeping His thoughts to Himself. But methinks
I hear Him, after the sublime services of that feast, saying to
Himself, "He brought me to the banqueting house, and his banner over me
was love. I sat down under his shadow with great delight, and his fruit
was sweet to my taste"
(So 2:3, 4).
43. as they returned--If the duties of life must give place to worship,
worship, in its turn, must give place to them. Jerusalem is good,
but Nazareth is good, too; let him who neglects the one, on pretext
of attending to the other, ponder this scene.
tarried behind . . . Joseph and his mother knew not--Accustomed to the
discretion and obedience of the lad [OLSHAUSEN], they might be thrown
off their guard.
44. sought him among their kinsfolk and acquaintances--On these sacred
journeys, whole villages and districts travelled in groups together,
partly for protection, partly for company; and as the well-disposed
would beguile the tediousness of the way by good discourse, to which the
child Jesus would be no silent listener, they expect to find Him in such
a group.
45, 46. After three sorrowing days, they find Him still in
Jerusalem, not gazing on its architecture, or surveying its forms of
busy life, but in the temple--not the "sanctuary" (as in
Lu 1:9),
to which only the priests had access, but in some one of the enclosures
around it, where the rabbins, or "doctors," taught their scholars.
46. hearing . . . asking--The method of question and
answer was the customary form of rabbinical teaching; teacher and
learner becoming by turns questioner and answerer, as may be seen from
their extant works. This would give full scope for all that
"astonished them in His understanding and answers." Not that He assumed
the office of teaching--"His hour" for that "was not yet come,"
and His equipment for that was not complete; for He had yet to
"increase in wisdom" as well as "stature"
(Lu 2:52).
In fact, the beauty of Christ's example lies very much in His never at
one stage of His life anticipating the duties of another. All would be
in the style and manner of a learner, "opening His mouth and panting."
"His soul breaking for the longing that it had unto God's judgments at
all times"
(Ps 119:20),
and now more than ever before, when finding Himself for the first time
in His Father's house. Still there would be in His questions far
more than in their answers; and if we may take the frivolous
interrogatories with which they afterwards plied Him, about the woman
that had seven husbands and such like, as a specimen of their present
drivelling questions, perhaps we shall not greatly err, if we suppose
that "the questions" which He now "asked them" in return were just the
germs of those pregnant questions with which He astonished and silenced
them in after years: "What think ye of Christ? Whose Son is He? If
David call Him Lord, how is He then his Son?" "Which is the
first and great commandment?" "Who is my neighbour?"
49. about my Father's business--literally, "in" or "at My Fathers,"
that is, either "about My Father's affairs," or "in My Father's
courts"--where He dwells and is to be found--about His hand, so
to speak. This latter shade of meaning, which includes the former, is
perhaps the true one, Here He felt Himself at home, breathing His
own proper air. His words convey a gentle rebuke of their obtuseness in
requiring Him to explain this. "Once here, thought ye I should so
readily hasten away? Let ordinary worshippers be content to keep the
feast and be gone; but is this all ye have learnt of Me?" Methinks we
are here let into the holy privacies of Nazareth; for what He says they
should have known, He must have given them ground to know. She
tells Him of the sorrow with which His father and she had sought
Him. He speaks of no Father but one, saying, in effect, My Father
has not been seeking Me; I have been with Him all this time; "the
King hath brought me into His chambers . . . His left hand is under my
head, and His right hand doth embrace me"
(So 1:4; 2:6).
How is it that ye do not understand?
(Mr 8:21).
50, 51. understood not--probably He had never expressly
said as much, and so confounded them, though it was but the true
interpretation of many things which they had seen and heard from Him at
home. (See on
Joh 14:4.)
But lest it should be thought that now He threw off the filial yoke,
and became His own Master henceforth, and theirs too, it is purposely
added, "And He went down with them, and was subject unto
them." The marvel of this condescension lies in its coming after
such a scene, and such an assertion of His higher Sonship; and the
words are evidently meant to convey this. "From this time we have no
more mention of Joseph. The next we hear is of his "mother and
brethren"
(Joh 2:12);
whence it is inferred, that between this time and the commencement of
our Lord's public life, Joseph died" [ALFORD], having now served the double end of being the
protector of our Lord's Virgin--mother, and affording Himself the
opportunity of presenting a matchless pattern of subjection to both
parents.
52. See on
Lu 2:40.
stature--or better, perhaps, as in the Margin, "age," which implies
the other. This is all the record we have of the next eighteen years of
that wondrous life. What seasons of tranquil meditation over the lively
oracles, and holy fellowship with His Father; what inlettings, on the
one hand, of light, and love, and power from on high, and outgoings of
filial supplication, freedom, love, and joy on the other, would these
eighteen years contain! And would they not seem "but a few days" if they
were so passed, however ardently He might long to be more directly
"about His Father's business?"
CHAPTER 3
Lu 3:1-20.
PREACHING,
BAPTISM, AND
IMPRISONMENT OF
JOHN.
(See on
Mt 3:1-12;
Mr 6:17,
&c.).
1, 2. Here the curtain of the New Testament is, as it were, drawn
up, and the greatest of all epochs of the Church commences. Even our
Lord's own age
(Lu 3:23)
is determined by it [BENGEL]. No such elaborate
chronological precision is to be found elsewhere in the New Testament,
and it comes fitly from him who claims it as the peculiar
recommendation of his Gospel, that he had "accurately traced down all
things from the first"
(Lu 1:3).
Here, evidently, commences his proper narrative. Also see on
Mt 3:1.
the fifteenth year of Tiberius--reckoning from the period when he
was admitted, three years before Augustus' death, to a share of the
empire [WEBSTER and
WILKINSON], about the end of the year of Rome 779,
or about four years before the usual reckoning.
Pilate . . . governor of Judea--His proper title was Procurator, but with more than the usual powers of
that office. After holding it
about ten years he was ordered to Rome, to answer to charges brought
against him, but ere he arrived Tiberius died (A.D. 35), and soon after
Pilate committed suicide.
Herod--(See on
Mr 6:14).
Philip--a different and very superior Philip to the one whose
wife Herodias went to live with Herod Antipas. (See
Mr 6:17).
Iturea--to the northeast of Palestine; so called from Ishmael's son
Itur or Jetur
(1Ch 1:31),
and anciently belonging to the half tribe of Manasseh.
Trachonitis--farther to the northeast, between Iturea and Damascus;
a rocky district, infested by robbers, and committed by Augustus to
Herod the Great to keep in order.
Abilene--still more to the northeast, so called from Abila,
eighteen miles from Damascus [ROBINSON].
2. Annas and Caiaphas . . . high priests--the former, though deposed,
retained much of his influence, and, probably, as sagan or deputy,
exercised much of the power of the high priesthood along with Caiaphas
(Joh 18:13;
Ac 4:6).
Both Zadok and Abiathar acted as high priests in David's time
(2Sa 15:35),
and it seems to have become the fixed practice to have two
(2Ki 25:18).
(Also see on
Mt 3:1.)
word of God came unto John--Such formulas, of course,
are never used when speaking of Jesus, because the divine nature
manifested itself in Him not at certain isolated moments of His life.
He was the one everlasting manifestation of the Godhead--THE
WORD
[OLSHAUSEN].
5. Every valley, &c.--levelling and smoothing, obvious
figures, the sense of which is in the first words of the proclamation,
"Prepare ye the way of the Lord."
6. all flesh, &c.--(quoted literally from the Septuagint of
Isa 40:5).
The idea is that every obstruction shall be so removed as to reveal to
the whole world the Salvation of God in Him whose name is the "Saviour"
(compare
Ps 98:3;
Isa 11:10; 49:6; 52:10;
Lu 2:31, 32;
Ac 13:47).
10-14. What shall we do then?--to show the sincerity of our
repentance. (Also see on
Mt 3:10.)
11. two coats--directed against the reigning avarice.
(Also see on
Mt 3:10.)
12. publicans, &c. (Also see on
Mt 3:10.)
13. Exact no more, &c.--directed against that extortion
which made the publicans a byword. (See on
Lu 19:2;
Lu 19:8).
(Also see on
Mt 3:10.)
14. soldiers . . . Do violence to none--The word
signifies to "shake thoroughly," and so to "intimidate," probably in
order to extort money or other property. (Also see on
Mt 3:10.)
accuse . . . falsely--acting as informers vexatiously, on frivolous
or false grounds.
content with your wages--"rations." We may take this as a warning
against mutiny, which the officers attempted to suppress by largesses
and donations [WEBSTER and
WILKINSON]. And thus the "fruits" which would
evidence their repentance were just resistance to the reigning sins,
particularly of the class to which the penitent belonged, and the
manifestation of an opposite spirit.
15-17. whether he were the Christ--showing both how successful
he had been in awakening the expectation of Messiah's immediate
appearing, and the high estimation, and even reverence, which his own
character commanded. (Also see on
Mt 3:10.)
16. John answered--either to the deputation from Jerusalem (see
Joh 1:19,
&c.), or on some other occasion, simply to remove impressions
derogatory to his blessed Master which he knew to be taking hold of the
popular mind. (Also see on
Mt 3:10.)
saying unto them all--in solemn protestation. So far from
entertaining such a thought as laying claim to the honors of
Messiahship, the meanest services I can render to that "Mightier than I
that is coming after me," are too high an honor for me. Beautiful
spirit, distinguishing this servant of Christ throughout!
one mightier than I--"the Mighter than I."
18. many other things, &c.--such as we read in
Joh 1:29, 33, 34; 3:27-36.
(Also see on
Mt 3:12.)
19, 20. But Herod, &c.--See on
Mr 6:14,
&c. (Also see on
Mt 3:12.)
and for all the evils which Herod had done--important fact here only
mentioned, showing how thoroughgoing was the fidelity of the Baptist
to his royal hearer, and how strong must have been the workings of
conscience in that slave of passion when, notwithstanding such
plainness, he "did many things and heard John gladly"
(Mr 6:20, 26).
20. Added yet, &c.--(Also see on
Mt 3:12).
Lu 3:21, 22.
BAPTISM OF AND
DESCENT OF THE
SPIRIT UPON
JESUS.
(See on
Mt 3:13-17.)
21. when all the people were baptized--that He might not seem to be
merely one of the crowd. Thus, as He rode into Jerusalem upon an ass,
"whereon yet never man sat"
(Lu 19:30),
and lay in a sepulchre "wherein was never man yet laid"
(Joh 19:41),
so in His baptism He would be "separate from sinners."
Lu 3:23-38.
GENEALOGY OF
JESUS.
23. he began to be about thirty--that is, "was about entering on His
thirtieth year." So our translators have taken the word (and so CALVIN,
BEZA,
BLOOMFIELD,
WEBSTER and
WILKINSON, &c.): but "was about thirty
years of age when He began [His ministry]," makes better Greek, and
is probably the true sense [BENGEL,
OLSHAUSEN,
DE
WETTE,
MEYER,
ALFORD,
&c.]. At this age the priests entered on their office
(Nu 4:3).
being, as was supposed, the son of Joseph, &c.--Have we in this
genealogy, as well as in Matthew's, the line of Joseph? or is this
the line of Mary?--a point on which there has been great difference
of opinion and much acute discussion. Those who take the former opinion
contend that it is the natural sense of this verse, and that no
other would have been thought of but for its supposed improbability and
the uncertainty which it seems to throw over our Lord's real descent.
But it is liable to another difficulty; namely, that in this case
Matthew makes Jacob, while Luke makes "Heli," to be Joseph's
father; and though the same man had often more than one name, we ought
not to resort to that supposition, in such a case as this, without
necessity. And then, though the descent of Mary from David would be
liable to no real doubt, even though we had no table of her line
preserved to us (see, for example,
Lu 1:2-32,
and see on
Lu 2:5),
still it does seem unlikely--we say not incredible--that two
genealogies of our Lord should be preserved to us, neither of which
gives his real descent. Those who take the latter
opinion, that we have here the line of Mary, as in Matthew that
of Joseph--here His real, there His reputed
line--explain the statement about Joseph, that he was "the son
of Hell," to mean that he was his son-in-law, as the husband of
his daughter Mary (as in
Ru 1:11, 12),
and believe that Joseph's name is only introduced instead of Mary's, in
conformity with the Jewish custom in such tables. Perhaps this view is
attended with fewest difficulties, as it certainly is the best
supported. However we decide, it is a satisfaction to know that not a
doubt was thrown out by the bitterest of the early enemies of
Christianity as to our Lord's real descent from David. On
comparing the two genealogies, it will be found that Matthew, writing
more immediately for Jews, deemed it enough to show that the
Saviour was sprung from Abraham and David; whereas Luke, writing more
immediately for Gentiles, traces the descent back to Adam, the
parent stock of the whole human family, thus showing Him to be the
promised "Seed of the woman." "The possibility of constructing such a
table, comprising a period of thousands of years, in an uninterrupted
line from father to son, of a family that dwelt for a long time in the
utmost retirement, would be inexplicable, had not the members of this
line been endowed with a thread by which they could extricate
themselves from the many families into which every tribe and branch was
again subdivided, and thus hold fast and know the member that
was destined to continue the lineage. This thread was the hope that
Messiah would be born of the race of Abraham and David. The ardent
desire to behold Him and be partakers of His mercy and glory suffered
not the attention to be exhausted through a period embracing thousands
of years. Thus the member destined to continue the lineage, whenever
doubtful, became easily distinguishable, awakening the hope of a final
fulfilment, and keeping it alive until it was consummated" [OLSHAUSEN].
24-30. son of Matthat, &c.--(See on
Mt 1:13-15). In
Lu 3:27,
Salathiel is called the son, while in
Mt 1:12,
he is called the father of Zerubbabel. But they are probably
different persons.
38. son of God--Compare
Ac 17:28.
CHAPTER 4
Lu 4:1-13.
TEMPTATION OF
CHRIST.
(See on
Mt 4:1-11.)
Lu 4:14-32.
JESUS
ENTERING ON
HIS
PUBLIC
MINISTRY,
MAKES A
CIRCUIT OF
GALILEE--REJECTION AT
NAZARETH.
Note.--A large gap here occurs, embracing the important transactions
in Galilee and Jerusalem which are recorded in
Joh 1:29-4:54,
and which occurred before John's imprisonment
(Joh 3:24);
whereas the transactions here recorded occurred (as appears from
Mt 4:12, 13)
after that event. The visit to Nazareth recorded in
Mt 13:54-58
(and
Mr 6:1-6)
we take to be not a later visit, but the same with this first one;
because we cannot think that the Nazarenes, after being so enraged at
His first display of wisdom as to attempt His destruction,
should, on a second display of the same, wonder at it and ask
how He came by it, as if they had never witnessed it before.
16. as his custom was--Compare
Ac 17:2.
stood up for to read--Others besides rabbins were allowed to address
the congregation. (See
Ac 13:15.)
18, 19. To have fixed on any passage announcing His sufferings
(as
Isa 53:1-12),
would have been unsuitable at that early stage of His ministry. But He
selects a passage announcing the sublime object of His whole mission,
its divine character, and His special endowments for it; expressed in
the first person, and so singularly adapted to the first opening of
the mouth in His prophetic capacity, that it seems as if made
expressly for this occasion. It is from the well-known section of
Isaiah's prophecies whose burden is that mysterious "SERVANT OF THE LORD," despised of
man, abhorred of the nation, but before whom kings on seeing Him are to
arise, and princes to worship; in visage more marred than any man and
His form than the sons of men, yet sprinkling many nations; laboring
seemingly in vain, and spending His strength for naught and in vain,
yet Jehovah's Servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob and be His
Salvation to the ends of the earth
(Isa 49:1-26,
&c.). The quotation is chiefly from the Septuagint version, used
in the synagogues.
19. acceptable year--an allusion to the jubilee year
(Le 25:10),
a year of universal release for person and property. (See also
Isa 49:8;
2Co 6:2.)
As the maladies under which humanity groans are here set forth under
the names of poverty, broken-heartedness, bondage, blindness,
bruisedness (or crushedness), so, as the glorious HEALER of all these maladies, Christ announces Himself in
the act of reading it, stopping the quotation just before it comes to
"the day of vengeance," which was only to come on the rejecters of His
message
(Joh 3:17).
The first words, "THE SPIRIT
of the LORD is upon ME," have
been noted since the days of the Church Fathers, as an illustrious
example of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost being exhibited as in
distinct yet harmonious action in the scheme of salvation.
20. the minister--the chazan, or synagogue-officer.
all eyes . . . fastened on Him--astounded at His putting in such
claims.
21. began to say, &c.--His whole address was just a detailed
application to Himself of this and perhaps other like prophecies.
22. gracious words--"the words of grace," referring both to the
richness of His matter and the sweetness of His manner
(Ps 45:2).
Is not this, &c.--(See on
Mt 13:54-56).
They knew He had received no rabbinical education, and anything
supernatural they seemed incapable of conceiving.
23. this proverb--like our "Charity begins at home."
whatsoever, &c.--"Strange rumors have reached our ears of Thy
doings at Capernaum; but if such power resides in Thee to cure the ills
of humanity, why has none of it yet come nearer home, and why is all
this alleged power reserved for strangers?" His choice of Capernaum as a
place of residence since entering on public life was, it seems, already
well known at Nazareth; and when He did come thither, to give no
displays of His power when distant places were ringing with His fame,
wounded their pride. He had indeed "laid his hands on a few sick folk
and healed them"
(Mr 6:5);
but this seems to have been done quite privately the general unbelief
precluding anything more open.
24. And he said, &c.--He replies to the one proverb by another,
equally familiar, which we express in a rougher form--"Too much
familiarity breeds contempt." Our Lord's long residence in Nazareth
merely as a townsman had made Him too common, incapacitating them
for appreciating Him as others did who were
less familiar with His everyday demeanor in private life. A most
important principle, to which the wise will pay due regard. (See also
Mt 7:6,
on which our Lord Himself ever acted.)
25-27. But I tell you, &c.--falling back for support on the well-known
examples of Elijah and Elisha (Eliseus), whose miraculous power, passing
by those who were near, expended itself on those at a distance,
yea on heathens, "the two great prophets who stand at the commencement
of prophetic antiquity, and whose miracles strikingly prefigured those
of our Lord. As He intended like them to feed the poor and cleanse the
lepers, He points to these miracles of mercy, and not to the
fire from heaven and the bears that tore the mockers"
[STIER].
three years and six months--So
Jas 5:17,
including perhaps the six months after the last fall of rain,
when there would be little or none at any rate; whereas in
1Ki 18:1,
which says the rain returned "in the third year," that period is
probably not reckoned.
26, 27. save . . . saving--"but only." (Compare
Mr 13:32,
Greek.)
Sarepta--"Zarephath"
(1Ki 17:9),
a heathen village between Tyre and Sidon. (See
Mr 7:24.)
28, 29. when they heard these things--these allusions to the
heathen, just as afterwards with Paul
(Ac 22:21, 22).
29. rose up--broke up the service irreverently and rushed forth.
thrust him--with violence, as a prisoner in their hands.
brow, &c.--Nazareth, though not built on the ridge of a hill, is in
part surrounded by one to the west, having several such precipices.
(See
2Ch 25:12;
2Ki 9:33.)
It was a mode of capital punishment not unusual among the Romans and
others. This was the first insult which the Son of God received, and it
came from "them of His own household!"
(Mt 10:36).
30. passing through the midst, &c.--evidently in a miraculous way,
though perhaps quite noiselessly, leading them to wonder afterwards what
spell could have come over them, that they allowed Him to escape.
(Similar escapes, however, in times of persecution, are not unexampled.)
31. down to Capernaum--It lay on the Sea of Galilee
(Mt 4:13),
whereas Nazareth lay high.
Lu 4:33-37.
DEMONIAC
HEALED.
33. unclean--The frequency with which this character of impurity is applied to evil spirits is worthy of notice.
cried out, &c.--(See
Mt 8:29;
Mr 3:11).
35. rebuked them, &c.--(See on
Lu 4:41).
thrown him, &c.--See on
Mr 9:20.
36. What a word--a word from the Lord of spirits.
Lu 4:38-41.
PETER'S
MOTHER-IN-LAW AND
MANY
OTHERS,
HEALED.
(See on
Mt 8:14-17.)
41. suffered them not to speak--The marginal reading ("to say
that they knew him to be Christ") here is wrong. Our Lord ever refused
testimony from devils, for the very reason why they were eager to
give it, because He and they would thus seem to be one interest, as
His enemies actually alleged. (See on
Mt 12:24,
&c.; see also
Ac 16:16-18.)
Lu 4:42-44.
JESUS
SOUGHT
OUT AT
MORNING
PRAYER, AND
ENTREATED TO
STAY,
DECLINES FROM THE
URGENCY OF
HIS
WORK.
See on
Mr 1:35-39,
where we learn how early He retired, and how He was engaged in solitude
when they came seeking Him.
42. stayed him--"were staying Him," or sought to do it. What a contrast
to the Gadarenes! The nature of His mission required Him to keep
moving, that all might hear the glad tidings
(Mt 8:34).
43. I must, &c.--but duty only could move Him to deny entreaties so
grateful to His spirit.
CHAPTER 5
Lu 5:1-11.
MIRACULOUS
DRAUGHT OF
FISHES--CALL OF
PETER,
JAMES, AND
JOHN.
Not their first call, however, recorded in
Joh 1:35-42;
nor their second, recorded in
Mt 4:18-22;
but their third and last before their appointment to the
apostleship. That these calls were all distinct and progressive,
seems quite plain. (Similar stages are observable in other eminent
servants of Christ.)
3. taught . . . out of the ship--(See on
Mt 13:2).
4. for a draught--munificent recompense for the use of his boat.
5. Master--betokening not surely a first acquaintance, but a
relationship already formed.
all night--the usual time of fishing then
(Joh 21:3),
and even now Peter, as a fisherman, knew how hopeless it was to "let
down his net" again, save as a mere act of faith, "at His word" of
command, which carried in it, as it ever does, assurance of success.
(This shows he must have been already and for some time a follower of
Christ.)
6. net brake--rather "was breaking," or "beginning to break," as in
Lu 5:7,
"beginning to sink."
8. Depart, &c.--Did Peter then wish Christ to leave him? Verily no.
His all was wrapt up in Him
(Joh 6:68).
"It was rather, Woe is me, Lord! How shall I abide this blaze of glory?
A sinner such as I am is not fit company for Thee." (Compare
Isa 6:5.)
10. Simon, fear not--This shows how the Lord read Peter's speech.
The more highly they deemed Him, ever the more grateful it was to the
Redeemer's spirit. Never did they pain Him by manifesting too lofty
conceptions of Him.
from henceforth--marking a new stage of their connection with Christ.
The last was simply, "I will make you fishers."
fishers of men--"What wilt thou think, Simon, overwhelmed by
this draught of fishes, when I shall bring to thy net what will beggar
all this glory?" (See on
Mt 4:18.)
11. forsook all--They did this before
(Mt 4:20);
now they do it again; and yet after the Crucifixion they are at their
boats once more
(Joh 21:3).
In such a business this is easily conceivable. After pentecost,
however, they appear to have finally abandoned their secular
calling.
Lu 5:12-16.
LEPER
HEALED.
(See on
Mt 8:2-4.)
15. But so, &c.--(See
Mr 1:45).
Lu 5:17-26.
PARALYTIC
HEALED.
(See on
Mt 9:1-8).
17. Pharisees and doctors . . . sitting by--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.
power of the Lord . . . present--with Jesus.
to heal them--the sick people.
19. housetop--the flat roof.
through the tiling . . . before Jesus--(See on
Mr 2:2).
24. take up thy couch--"sweet saying! The bed had borne the man; now
the man shall bear the bed!" [BENGEL].
Lu 5:27-32.
LEVI'S
CALL AND
FEAST.
(See on
Mt 9:9-13;
and
Mr 2:14.)
30. their scribes--a mode of expression showing that Luke was writing
for Gentiles.
Lu 5:33-39.
FASTING.
(See on
Mt 9:14-17.)
The incongruities mentioned in
Lu 5:36-38
were intended to illustrate the difference between the genius of
the old and new economies, and the danger of mixing up the one
with the other. As in the one case supposed, "the rent is made worse,"
and in the other, "the new wine is spilled," so by a mongrel mixture
of the ascetic ritualism of the old with the spiritual freedom of the
new economy, both are disfigured and destroyed. The additional
parable in
Lu 5:39,
which is peculiar to Luke, has been variously interpreted. But the
"new wine" seems plainly to be the evangelical freedom which Christ was
introducing; and the old, the opposite spirit of Judaism: men long
accustomed to the latter could not be expected "straightway"--all at
once--to take a liking for the former; that is, "These inquiries about
the difference between My disciples and the Pharisees," and even
John's, are not surprising; they are the effect of a natural
revulsion against sudden change, which time will cure; the new
wine will itself in time become old, and so acquire all the added
charms of antiquity. What lessons does this teach, on the one hand,
to those who unreasonably cling to what is getting antiquated; and, on
the other, to hasty reformers who have no patience with the timidity of
their weaker brethren!
CHAPTER 6
Lu 6:1-5.
PLUCKING
CORN-EARS ON THE
SABBATH.
(See on
Mt 12:1-8
and
Mr 2:23-28.)
1. second sabbath after the first--an obscure expression, occurring
here only, generally understood to mean, the first sabbath after the
second day of unleavened bread. The reasons cannot be stated here, nor
is the opinion itself quite free from difficulty.
5. Lord also--rather "even" (as in
Mt 12:8).
of the sabbath--as naked a claim to all the authority of Him
who gave the law at Mount Sinai as could possibly be made; that is,
"I have said enough to vindicate the men ye carp at on My account:
but in this place is the Lord of the law, and they have His
sanction." (See
Mr 2:28.)
Lu 6:6-11.
WITHERED
HAND
HEALED.
(See on
Mt 12:9-15
and
Mr 3:1-7.)
7. watched whether, &c.--In Matthew
(Mt 12:9)
this is put as an ensnaring question of theirs to our Lord, who
accordingly speaks to the state of their hearts
(Lu 6:9),
just as if they had spoken it out.
9. good, or . . . evil, save . . . or
destroy--By this novel way of putting His case, our Lord teaches
the great ethical principle, that to neglect any opportunity of
doing good is to incur the guilt of doing evil; and by this law He
bound His own spirit. (See
Mr 3:4.)
11. filled with madness--The word denotes senseless rage at the
confusion to which our Lord had put them, both by word and deed.
what . . . do to Jesus--not so much whether to
get rid of Him, but how to compass it. (See on
Mt 3:6.)
Lu 6:12-49.
THE
TWELVE
APOSTLES
CHOSEN--GATHERING
MULTITUDES--GLORIOUS
HEALING.
12, 13. went out--probably from Capernaum.
all night in prayer . . . and when . . . day, he
called, &c.--The work with which the next day began shows
what had been the burden of this night's devotions. As He
directed His disciples to pray for "laborers" just before sending
themselves forth (see on
Mt 9:37;
Mt 10:1),
so here we find the Lord Himself in prolonged communion with His Father
in preparation for the solemn appointment of those men who were to give
birth to His Church, and from whom the world in all time was to take a
new mould. How instructive is this!
13-16. (See on
Mt 10:2-4.)
17. in the plain--by some rendered "on a level place," that is,
a piece of high tableland, by which they understand the same thing, as
"on the mountain," where our Lord delivered the sermon recorded by
Matthew
(Mt 5:1),
of which they take this following discourse of Luke to be but an
abridged form. But as the sense given in our version is the more
accurate, so there are weighty reasons for considering the discourses
different. This one contains little more than a fourth of the other; it
has woes of its own, as well as the beatitudes common to both; but
above all, that of Matthew was plainly delivered a good while
before, while this was spoken after the choice of the
twelve; and as we know that our Lord delivered some of His weightiest
sayings more than once, there is no difficulty in supposing this to be
one of His more extended repetitions; nor could anything be more worthy
of it.
19. healed--kept healing, denoting successive acts of mercy till it
went over "all" that needed. There is something unusually grand and
pictorial in this touch of description.
20, 21. In the Sermon on the Mount the benediction is pronounced upon
the "poor in spirit" and those who "hunger and thirst
after righteousness"
(Mt 5:3, 6).
Here it is simply on the "poor" and the "hungry now." In this form of
the discourse, then, our Lord seems to have had in view "the poor of
this world, rich in faith, and heirs of the kingdom which God hath
promised to them that love Him," as these very beatitudes are
paraphrased by James
(Jas 2:5).
21. laugh--How charming is the liveliness of this word, to express
what in Matthew is called being "comforted!"
22. separate you--whether from their Church, by excommunication,
or from their society; both hard to flesh and blood.
for the Son of man's sake--Compare
Mt 5:11,
"for MY SAKE"; and immediately before, "for
righteousness' sake"
(Lu 6:10).
Christ thus binds up the cause of righteousness in the world with
the reception of Himself.
23. leap for joy--a livelier word than "be exceeding glad" of "exult"
(Mt 5:12).
24, 25. rich . . . full . . . laugh--who have all their good things
and joyous feelings here and now, in perishable objects.
received your consolation--(see on
Lu 16:25).
shall hunger--their inward craving strong as ever, but the materials
of satisfaction forever gone.
26. all . . . speak well of you--alluding to the court
paid to the false prophets of old
(Mic 2:11).
For the principle of this woe, and its proper limits, see
Joh 15:19.
27-36. (See on
Mt 5:44-48;
Mt 7:12;
and
Mt 14:12-14.)
37, 38. See on
Mt 7:1, 2;
but this is much fuller and more graphic.
39. Can the blind, &c.--not in the Sermon on the Mount, but recorded
by Matthew in another and very striking connection
(Mt 15:14).
40. The disciple, &c.--that is, "The disciple aims to come up to his
master, and he thinks himself complete when he does so: if you then be
blind leaders of the blind, the perfection of one's training under you
will only land him the more certainly in one common ruin with
yourselves."
41-49. (See on
Mt 7:3-5,
Mt 7:16-27.)
CHAPTER 7
Lu 7:1-10.
CENTURION'S
SERVANT
HEALED.
(See on
Mt 8:5-13.)
4. he was worthy--a testimony most precious, coming from those who
probably were strangers to the principle from which he acted
(Ec 7:1).
5. loved our nation--Having found that "salvation was of the Jews," he
loved them for it.
built, &c.--His love took this practical and appropriate form.
Lu 7:11-17.
WIDOW OF
NAIN'S
SON
RAISED TO
LIFE.
(In Luke only).
11. Nain--a small village not elsewhere mentioned in Scripture, and
only this once probably visited by our Lord; it lay a little to the
south of Mount Tabor, about twelve miles from Capernaum.
12. carried out--"was being carried out." Dead bodies, being
ceremonially unclean, were not allowed to be buried within the cities
(though the kings of David's house were buried m the city of David), and
the funeral was usually on the same day as the death.
only son, &c.--affecting particulars, told with delightful simplicity.
13. the Lord--"This sublime appellation is more usual with Luke and
John than Matthew; Mark holds the mean" [BENGEL].
saw her, he had compassion, &c.--What consolation to thousands of
the bereaved has this single verse carried from age to age!
14, 15. What mingled majesty and grace shines in this scene! The
Resurrection and the Life in human flesh, with a word of command,
bringing back life to the dead body; Incarnate Compassion summoning its
absolute power to dry a widow's tears!
16. visited his people--more than bringing back the days of Elijah and
Elisha
(1Ki 17:17-24;
2Ki 4:32-37;
and see
Mt 15:31).
Lu 7:18-35.
THE
BAPTIST'S
MESSAGE THE
REPLY, AND
CONSEQUENT
DISCOURSE.
(See on
Mt 11:2-14.)
29, 30. And all the people that heard--"on hearing (this)." These
are the observations of the Evangelist, not of our Lord.
and the publicans--a striking clause.
justified God, being baptized, &c.--rather, "having been baptized."
The meaning is, They acknowledged the divine wisdom of such a
preparatory ministry as John's, in leading them to Him who now spake to
them (see
Lu 1:16, 17);
whereas the Pharisees and lawyers, true to themselves in refusing the
baptism of John, set at naught also the merciful design of God in the
Saviour Himself, to their own destruction.
31-35. the Lord said, &c.--As cross, capricious children, invited
by their playmates to join them in their amusements, will play with them
neither at weddings nor funerals (juvenile imitations of the joyous and
mournful scenes of life), so that generation rejected both John and his
Master: the one because he was too unsocial--more like a demoniac than a
rational man; the other, because He was too much the reverse, given to
animal indulgences, and consorting with the lowest classes of society.
But the children of Wisdom recognize and honor her, whether in the
austere garb of the Baptist or in the more attractive style of his
Master, whether in the Law or in the Gospel, whether in rags or in
royalty, for "the full soul loatheth an honeycomb, but
to the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet"
(Pr 27:7).
Lu 7:36-50.
CHRIST'S
FEET
WASHED WITH
TEARS.
37, 38. a sinner--one who had led a profligate life.
Note.--There is no ground whatever for the popular notion that this
woman was Mary Magdalene, nor do we know what her name was. (See
on
Lu 8:2.)
an alabaster box of ointment--a perfume vessel, in some cases very
costly
(Joh 12:5).
"The ointment has here a peculiar interest, as the offering by a
penitent of what had been an accessory in her unhallowed work of sin"
[ALFORD].
38. at his feet behind him--the posture at meals being a reclining
one, with the feet out behind.
began to wash, &c.--to "water with a shower." The tears, which were
quite involuntary, poured down in a flood upon His naked feet, as
she bent down to kiss them; and deeming them rather fouled than washed
by this, she hastened to wipe them off with the only towel she had, the
long tresses of her own hair, "with which slaves were wont to wash their
masters' feet" [STIER].
kissed--The word signifies "to kiss fondly, to caress," or to "kiss
again and again," which
Lu 7:45
shows is meant here. What prompted this? Much love, springing from a
sense of much forgiveness. So says He who knew her heart
(Lu 7:47).
Where she had met with Christ before, or what words of His had brought
life to her dead heart and a sense of divine pardon to her guilty soul,
we know not. But probably she was of the crowd of "publicans and
sinners" whom Incarnate Compassion drew so often around Him, and
heard from His lips some of those words such as never man spake, "Come
unto Me, all ye that labour," &c. No personal interview had up to this
time taken place between them; but she could keep her feelings no
longer to herself, and having found her way to Him (and entered along
with him,
Lu 7:45),
they burst forth in this surpassing yet most artless style, as if her
whole soul would go out to Him.
39. the Pharisee--who had formed no definite opinion of our Lord,
and invited Him apparently to obtain materials for a judgment.
spake within himself, &c.--"Ha! I have Him now; He plainly knows
nothing of the person He allows to touch Him; and so, He can be no
prophet." Not so fast, Simon; thou hast not seen through thy Guest yet,
but He hath seen through thee.
40-43. Like Nathan with David, our Lord conceals His home thrust under
the veil of a parable, and makes His host himself pronounce upon the
case. The two debtors are the woman and Simon; the criminality of the
one was ten times that of the other (in the proportion of "five
hundred" to "fifty"); but both being equally insolvent, both are with
equal frankness forgiven; and Simon is made to own that the greatest
debtor to forgiving mercy will cling to her Divine Benefactor with the
deepest gratitude. Does our Lord then admit that Simon was a forgiving
man? Let us see.
44-47. I entered . . . no water--a compliment to guests. Was this "much
love?" Was it any?
45. no kiss--of salutation. How much love was here? Any at all?
46. with oil . . . not anoint--even common olive oil in contrast
with the woman's "ointment" or aromatic balsam. What evidence was
thus afforded of any feeling which forgiveness prompts? Our Lord speaks
this with delicate politeness, as if hurt at these inattentions of
His host, which though not invariably shown to guests, were the
customary marks of studied respect and regard. The inference is
plain--only one of the debtors was really forgiven, though in the
first instance, to give room for the play of withheld feelings, the
forgiveness of both is supposed in the parable.
47. Her sins which are many--"Those many sins of hers," our Lord, who
admitted how much more she owed than the Pharisee, now proclaims in
naked terms the forgiveness of her guilt.
for--not because, as if love were the cause of forgiveness, but
"inasmuch as," or "in proof of which." The latter clause of the verse,
and the whole structure of the parable, plainly show this to be the
meaning.
little forgiven . . . loveth little--delicately ironical intimation of
no love and no forgiveness in the present case.
48. said unto her, &c.--an unsought assurance, usually springing up
unexpected in the midst of active duty and warm affections, while often
it flies from those who mope and are paralyzed for want of it.
49, 50. they that sat . . . Who is this, &c.--No wonder they were
startled to hear One who was reclining at the same couch, and partaking
of the same hospitalities with themselves, assume the awful prerogative
of "even forgiving sins." But so far from receding from this claim, or
softening it down, our Lord only repeats it, with two precious
additions: one, announcing what was the one secret of the "forgiveness"
she had experienced, and which carried "salvation" in its bosom; the
other, a glorious dismissal of her in that "peace" which she had already
felt, but is now assured she has His full warrant to enjoy! This
wonderful scene teaches two very weighty truths: (1)
Though there be degrees of guilt, insolvency, or inability to wipe out the
dishonor done to God, is common to all sinners. (2)
As Christ is the Great Creditor to whom all debt, whether great or small,
contracted by sinners is owing, so to Him belongs the
prerogative of forgiving it. This latter truth is brought out in the
structure and application of the present parable as it is nowhere else.
Either then Jesus was a blaspheming deceiver, or He is God manifest in
the flesh.
CHAPTER 8
Lu 8:1-3.
A
GALILEAN
CIRCUIT, WITH THE
TWELVE AND
CERTAIN
MINISTERING
WOMEN.
(In Luke only).
1. went--travelled, made a progress.
throughout every city and village--through town and village.
preaching, &c.--the Prince of itinerant preachers scattering far and
wide the seed of the Kingdom.
2. certain women . . . healed, &c.--on whom He had the
double claim of having brought healing to their bodies and new life to
their souls. Drawn to Him by an attraction more than magnetic, they
accompany Him on this tour as His almoners--ministering unto Him
of their substance. Blessed Saviour! It melts us to see Thee living
upon the love of Thy ransomed people. That they bring Thee their poor
offerings we wonder not. Thou hast sown unto them spiritual things, and
they think it, as well they might, a small thing that Thou shouldst
reap their material things
(1Co 9:11).
But dost Thou take it at their hand, and subsist upon it? "Oh, the
depth of the riches"
(Ro 11:33)
--of this poverty of His!
Mary Magdalene--that is, probably, of Magdala (on which see
Mt 15:39;
see on
Mr 8:10).
went--rather, "had gone."
seven devils--
(Mr 16:9).
It is a great wrong to this honored woman to identify her with the once
profligate woman of
Lu 7:37,
and to call all such penitents Magdalenes. The mistake has
arisen from confounding unhappy demoniacal possession with the
conscious entertainment of diabolic impurity, or supposing the one to
have been afflicted as a punishment for the other--for which there is
not the least scriptural ground.
3. Joanna, wife of Chuza, Herod's steward--If the steward of
such a godless, cruel, and licentious wretch as Herod Antipas (see on
Mr 6:14,
&c.) differed greatly from himself, his post would be no easy or
enviable one. That he was a disciple of Christ is very improbable,
though he might be favorably disposed towards Him. But what we know
not of him, and may fear he lacked, we are sure his wife possessed.
Healed either of "evil spirits" or of some one of the "infirmities"
here referred to--the ordinary diseases of humanity--she joins in the
Saviour's train of grateful, clinging followers. Of "Susanna," next
mentioned, we know nothing but the name, and that here only. But her
services on this memorable occasion have immortalized her name.
"Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached throughout the whole world,
this also that she hath done," in ministering to the Lord of her
substance on His Galilean tour, "shall be spoken of as a memorial of
her"
(Mr 14:9).
many others--that is, many other healed women. What a train! and
all ministering unto Him of their substance, and He allowing them to do
it and subsisting upon it! "He who was the support of the spiritual life
of His people disdained not to be supported by them in the body. He was
not ashamed to penetrate so far into the depths of poverty as to live
upon the alms of love. He only fed others miraculously; for Himself, He
lived upon the love of His people. He gave all things to men, His
brethren, and received all things from them, enjoying thereby the pure
blessing of love: which is then only perfect when it is at the same time
both giving and receiving. Who could invent such things as these?
It was necessary to live in this manner that it might be so recorded"
[OLSHAUSEN].
Lu 8:4-18.
PARABLE OF THE
SOWER.
(See on
Mr 4:3-9,
Mr 4:14-20.)
16. No man, &c.--(see on
Mt 5:15,
of which this is nearly a repetition).
17. For nothing, &c.--(See on
Lu 12:2).
18. how ye--in
Mr 4:24,
"what ye hear." The one implies the other. The precept is very
weighty.
seemeth to have--or, "thinketh that he hath" (Margin).
The "having" of
Mt 13:12
(on which see), and this "thinking he hath," are not different. Hanging
loosely on him, and not appropriated, it is and is not
his.
Lu 8:19-21.
HIS
MOTHER AND
BRETHREN
DESIRE TO
SPEAK WITH
HIM.
(See on
Mt 12:46-50).
Lu 8:22-25.
JESUS
CROSSING THE
LAKE,
STILLS THE
STORM.
(See on
Mt 8:23-27,
and
Mr 4:35-41).
23. filled--literally, "were getting filled," that is, those who
sailed; meaning that their ship was so.
Lu 8:26-39.
DEMONIAC OF
GADARA
HEALED.
(See on
Mt 8:28-34;
and
Mr 5:1-20).
Lu 8:40-56.
JAIRUS'
DAUGHTER
RAISED AND
ISSUE OF
BLOOD
HEALED.
(See on
Mt 9:18-26;
and
Mr 5:21-43).
40. gladly received him, for . . . all waiting for
him--The abundant teaching of that day (in
Mt 13:1-58;
and see
Mr 4:36),
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. Here at
least they are, watching for His return, and welcoming Him to the
shore. The tide of His popularity was now fast rising.
45. Who touched me?--"Askest Thou, Lord, who touched Thee? Rather
ask who touched Thee not in such a throng."
46. Somebody hath touched--yes, the multitude "thronged" and
pressed Him--"they jostled against Him," but all involuntarily;
they were merely carried along; but one, one only--"Somebody
TOUCHED"
HIM, with the conscious, voluntary, dependent touch of faith,
reaching forth its hands expressly to have contact with Him. This and
this only Jesus acknowledges and seeks out. Even so, as the Church
Father 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.
47. declared . . . before all--This, though a great trial to the
shrinking modesty of the believing woman, was just what Christ wanted in
dragging her forth, her public testimony to the facts of her case--both
her disease, with her abortive efforts at a cure, and the instantaneous
and perfect relief which her touch of the Great Healer had brought her.
55. give her meat--(See on
Mr 5:43).
CHAPTER 9
Lu 9:1-6.
MISSION OF THE
TWELVE
APOSTLES.
(See on
Mt 10:1-15).
1. power and authority--He both qualified and
authorized them.
Lu 9:7-9.
HEROD
TROUBLED AT
WHAT
HE
HEARS OF
CHRIST
DESIRES TO
SEE
HIM.
(See on
Mr 6:14-30).
7. perplexed--at a loss, embarrassed.
said of some, that John was risen--Among many opinions, this was the
one which Herod himself adopted, for the reason, no doubt, mentioned on
Mr 6:14.
9. desired to see him--but did not, till as a prisoner He was sent
to him by Pilate just before His death, as we learn from
Lu 23:8.
Lu 9:10-17.
ON THE
RETURN OF THE
TWELVE
JESUS
RETIRES WITH
THEM TO
BETHSAIDA, AND
THERE
MIRACULOUSLY
FEEDS
FIVE
THOUSAND.
(See on
Mr 6:31-44).
Lu 9:18-27.
PETER'S
CONFESSION OF
CHRIST--OUR
LORD'S
FIRST
EXPLICIT
ANNOUNCEMENT OF
HIS
APPROACHING
DEATH, AND
WARNINGS
ARISING
OUT OF
IT.
(See on
Mt 16:13-28;
and
Mr 8:34).
24. will save--"Is minded to save," bent on saving. The pith of
this maxim depends--as often in such weighty sayings (for example, "Let
the dead bury the dead,"
Mt 8:22)
--on the double sense attached to the word "life," a lower and a
higher, the natural and the spiritual, temporal and eternal. An entire
sacrifice of the lower, or a willingness to make it, is indispensable
to the preservation of the higher life; and he who cannot bring himself
to surrender the one for the sake of the other shall eventually lose
both.
26. ashamed of me, and of my words--The sense of shame is one of
the strongest in our nature, one of the social affections founded on our
love of reputation, which causes instinctive aversion to what is
fitted to lower it, and was given us as a preservative from all that is
properly shameful. When one is, in this sense of it, lost to shame,
he is nearly past hope
(Zec 3:5;
Jer 6:15; 3:3).
But when Christ and "His words"--Christianity, especially in its more
spiritual and uncompromising features--are unpopular, the same
instinctive desire to stand well with others begets the
temptation to be ashamed of Him, which only the 'expulsive power' of a
higher affection can effectually counteract.
Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh, &c.--He will render to that
man his own treatment; He will disown him before the most august of all
assemblies, and put him to "shame and everlasting contempt"
(Da 12:2).
"Oh shame, to be put to shame before God, Christ, and angels!" [BENGEL].
27. not taste of death fill they see the kingdom of God--"see it come
with power"
(Mr 9:1);
or see "the Son of man coming in His kingdom"
(Mt 16:28).
The reference, beyond doubt, is to the firm establishment and
victorious progress, in the lifetime of some then present, of that new
Kingdom of Christ, which was destined to work the greatest of all
changes on this earth, and be the grand pledge of His final coming in
glory.
Lu 9:28-36.
JESUS
TRANSFIGURED.
28. an eight days after these sayings--including the day on which this
was spoken and that of the Transfiguration. Matthew and Mark say
(Mt 17:1;
Mr 9:2)
"after six days," excluding these two days. As the "sayings" so
definitely connected with the transfiguration scene are those
announcing His death--at which Peter and all the Twelve were so
startled and scandalized--so this scene was designed to show to the
eyes as well as the heart how glorious that death was in the
view of Heaven.
Peter, James, and John--partners before in secular business; now sole
witnesses of the resurrection of Jairus' daughter
(Mr 5:37),
the transfiguration, and the agony in the garden
(Mr 14:33).
a mountain--not Tabor, according to long tradition, with which
the facts ill comport, but some one near the lake.
to pray--for the period He had now reached was a critical and
anxious one. (See on
Mt 16:13).
But who can adequately translate those "strong cryings and tears?"
Methinks, as I steal by His side, I hear from Him these plaintive
sounds, "Lord, who hath believed Our report? I am come unto Mine own
and Mine own receive Me not; I am become a stranger unto My brethren,
an alien to My mother's children: Consider Mine enemies, for they are
many, and they hate Me with cruel hatred. Arise, O Lord, let not man
prevail. Thou that dwellest between the cherubim, shine forth: Show Me
a token for good: Father, glorify Thy name."
29. as he prayed, the fashion, &c.--Before He cried He was answered,
and while He was yet speaking He was heard. Blessed interruption to
prayer this! Thanks to God, transfiguring manifestations are not quite
strangers here. Ofttimes in the deepest depths, out of groanings which
cannot be uttered, God's dear children are suddenly transported to a
kind of heaven upon earth, and their soul is made as the chariots of
Amminadab. Their prayers fetch down such light, strength, holy
gladness, as make their face to shine, putting a kind of celestial
radiance upon it
(2Co 3:18,
with Ex 34:29-35).
raiment white, &c.--Matthew says, "His face did shine as the sun"
(Mt 17:2),
and Mark says
(Mr 9:3),
"His raiment became shining, exceeding white as snow, so as no fuller
on earth can white them"
(Mr 9:3).
The light, then, it would seem, shone not upon Him from
without, but out of Him from within; He was all
irradiated, was in one blaze of celestial glory. What a contrast to
that "visage more marred than men, and His form than the sons of men!"
(Isa 52:14).
30, 31. there talked with him two men . . . Moses and Elias . . .
appeared in glory--"Who would have believed these were not angels had not their human names been subjoined?"
[BENGEL].
(Compare
Ac 1:10;
Mr 16:5).
Moses represented "the law," Elijah "the prophets," and both together
the whole testimony of the Old Testament Scriptures, and the Old
Testament saints, to Christ; now not borne in a book, but by
living men, not to a coming, but a come Messiah,
visibly, for they "appeared," and audibly, for they
"spake."
31. spake--"were speaking."
of his decease--"departure"; beautiful euphemism (softened term) for
death, which Peter, who witnessed the scene, uses to express his own
expected death, and the use of which single term seems to have recalled
the whole by a sudden rush of recollection, and occasioned that
delightful allusion to this scene which we find in
2Pe 1:15-18.
which he should accomplish--"was to fulfil."
at Jerusalem--Mark the historical character and local
features which Christ's death assumed to these glorified men--as
important as it is charming--and see on
Lu 2:11.
What now may be gathered from this statement? (1) That a dying
Messiah is the great article of the true Jewish theology. For a
long time the Church had fallen clean away from the faith of this
article, and even from a preparedness to receive it. But here we have
that jewel raked out of the dunghill of Jewish traditions, and by the
true representatives of the Church of old made the one subject of talk
with Christ Himself. (2) The adoring gratitude of glorified men for
His undertaking to accomplish such a decease; their felt dependence
upon it for the glory in which they appeared; their profound interest
in the progress of it, their humble solaces and encouragements to go
through with it; and their sense of its peerless and overwhelming
glory. "Go, matchless, adored One, a Lamb to the slaughter!
rejected of men, but chosen of God and precious; dishonored, abhorred,
and soon to be slain by men, but worshipped by cherubim, ready to be
greeted by all heaven. In virtue of that decease we are here; our all
is suspended on it and wrapped up in it. Thine every step is watched by
us with ineffable interest; and though it were too high an honor to us
to be permitted to drop a word of cheer into that precious but now
clouded spirit, yet, as the first-fruits of harvest; the very joy set
before Him, we cannot choose but tell Him that what is the depth of
shame to Him is covered with glory in the eyes of Heaven, that the
Cross to Him is the Crown to us, that that 'decease' is all our
salvation and all our desire." And who can doubt that such a scene
did minister deep cheer to that spirit? It is said they
"talked" not to Him, but "with Him"; and if they told
Him how glorious His decease was, might He not fitly reply, "I
know it, but your voice, as messengers from heaven come down to tell it
Me, is music in Mine ears."
32. and when they were awake--so, certainly, the most
commentators: but if we translate literally, it should be "but
having kept awake" [MEYER, ALFORD]. Perhaps "having roused themselves up"
[OLSHAUSEN] may come near enough to the literal
sense; but from the word used we can gather no more than that they
shook off their drowsiness. It was night, and the Lord seems to
have spent the whole night on the mountain
(Lu 9:37).
saw his glory, &c.--The emphasis lies on "saw," qualifying them to
become "eye-witnesses of His majesty"
(2Pe 1:16).
33. they departed--Ah! bright manifestations in this vale of tears are
always "departing" manifestations.
34, 35. a cloud--not one of our watery clouds, but the
Shekinah-cloud (see on
Mt 23:39),
the pavilion of the manifested presence of God with His people, what
Peter calls "the excellent" of "magnificent glory"
(2Pe 1:17).
a voice--"such a voice," says Peter emphatically; "and this voice
[he adds] we heard, when we were with Him in the holy mount"
(2Pe 1:17, 18).
35. my beloved Son . . . hear him--reverentially,
implicitly, alone.
36. Jesus was found alone--Moses and Elias are gone. Their work is
done, and they have disappeared from the scene, feeling no doubt with
their fellow servant the Baptist, "He must increase, but I must
decrease." The cloud too is gone, and the naked majestic Christ, braced
in spirit, and enshrined in the reverent affection of His disciples, is
left--to suffer!
kept it close--feeling, for once at least, that such things were
unmeet as yet for the general gaze.
Lu 9:37-45.
DEMONIAC AND
LUNATIC
BOY
HEALED--CHRIST'S
SECOND
EXPLICIT
ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS
DEATH AND
RESURRECTION.
(See on
Mr 9:14-32.)
43-45. the mighty power of God--"the majesty" or "mightiness" of God
in this last miracle, the transfiguration, &c.: the divine grandeur
of Christ rising upon them daily. By comparing
Mt 17:22,
and Mr 9:30,
we gather that this had been the subject of conversation between the
Twelve and their Master as they journeyed along.
44. these sayings--not what was passing between them about His grandeur
[MEYER, &c.], but what He was now to repeat for the second time about
His sufferings [DE
WETTE,
STIER,
ALFORD, &c.]; that is, "Be not carried
off your feet by all this grandeur of Mine, 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." "The Son of
man," says Christ, "into the hands of men"--a remarkable
antithesis (also in
Mt 17:22,
and Mr 9:31).
45. and they feared--"insomuch that they feared." 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.
Lu 9:46-48.
STRIFE AMONG THE
TWELVE
WHO
SHOULD
BE
GREATEST--JOHN
REBUKED FOR
EXCLUSIVENESS.
46-48. (See on
Mt 18:1-5).
49, 50. John answered, &c.--The link of connection here with the
foregoing context lies in the words "in My name"
(Lu 9:48).
"Oh, as to that," said John, young, warm, but not sufficiently
apprehending Christ's teaching in these things, "we saw one casting out
devils in Thy name, and we forbade him: Were we wrong?" "Ye were
wrong." "But we did because he followeth not us,'" "No matter. For (1)
There is no man which shall do a miracle in My name that can lightly
[soon] speak evil of Me'
[Mr 9:39].
And (2) If such a person cannot be supposed to be 'against us,'
you are to consider him 'for us.'" Two principles of immense
importance. Christ does not say this man should not have
followed "with them," but simply teaches how he was to be regarded
though he did not--as a reverer of His name and a promoter of
His cause. Surely this condemns not only those horrible attempts by
force to shut up all within one visible pale of discipleship, which
have deluged Christendom with blood in Christ's name, but the same
spirit in its milder form of proud ecclesiastic scowl upon all who
"after the form which they call a sect (as the word signifies,
Ac 24:14),
do so worship the God of their fathers." Visible unity in Christ's
Church is devoutly to be sought, but this is not the way to it.
See the noble spirit of Moses
(Nu 11:24-29).
Lu 9:51-56.
THE
PERIOD OF
HIS
ASSUMPTION
APPROACHING
CHRIST
TAKES
HIS
LAST
LEAVE OF
GALILEE--THE
SAMARITANS
REFUSE TO
RECEIVE
HIM.
51. the time was come--rather, "the days were being fulfilled," or
approaching their fulfilment.
that he should be received up--"of His assumption," meaning His
exaltation to the Father; a sublime expression, taking the sweep of His
whole career, as if at one bound He was about to vault into glory. The
work of Christ in the flesh is here divided into two great stages;
all that preceded this belonging to the one, and all that follows it to
the other. During the one, He formally "came to His own," and
"would have gathered them"; during the other, the awful consequences
of "His own receiving Him not" rapidly revealed themselves.
he steadfastly set his face--the "He" here is emphatic--"He Himself
then." See His own prophetic language, "I have set my face like a flint"
(Isa 50:7).
go to Jerusalem--as His goal, but including His preparatory visits
to it at the feasts of tabernacles and of dedication
(Joh 7:2, 10; 10:22, 23),
and all the intermediate movements and events.
52. messengers before his face . . . to make ready for him--He had not
done this before; but now, instead of avoiding, He seems to court
publicity--all now hastening to maturity.
53. did not receive him, because, &c.--The Galileans, in going
to the festivals at Jerusalem, usually took the Samaritan route [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 20.6.1], and yet seem to
have met with no such inhospitality. But if they were asked to prepare
quarters for the Messiah, in the person of one whose "face was
as though He would go to Jerusalem," their national prejudices
would be raised at so marked a slight upon their claims. (See on
Joh 4:20).
54. James and John--not Peter, as we should have expected, but
those "sons of thunder"
(Mr 3:17),
who afterwards wanted to have all the highest honors of the Kingdom to
themselves, and the younger of whom had been rebuked already for his
exclusiveness
(Lu 9:49, 50).
Yet this was "the disciple whom Jesus loved," while the other willingly
drank of His Lord's bitter cup. (See on
Mr 10:38-40;
and
Ac 12:2).
That same fiery zeal, in a mellowed and hallowed form, in the beloved
disciple, we find in
2Jo 5:10;
3Jo 10.
fire . . . as Elias--a plausible case, occurring also in
Samaria
(2Ki 1:10-12).
55, 56. know not what . . . spirit--The thing ye
demand, though in keeping with the legal, is unsuited to the
genius of the evangelical dispensation. The sparks of
unholy indignation would seize readily enough on this example of
Elias, though our Lord's rebuke (as is plain from
Lu 9:56)
is directed to the principle involved rather than the animal
heat which doubtless prompted the reference. "It is a golden sentence
of Tillotson, Let us never do anything for religion which is contrary
to religion" [WEBSTER and WILKINSON].
56. For the Son of man, &c.--a saying truly divine, of which all
His miracles--for salvation, never destruction--were one continued
illustration.
went to another--illustrating His own precept
(Mt 10:23).
Lu 9:57-62.
INCIDENTS
ILLUSTRATIVE OF
DISCIPLESHIP.
The Precipitate Disciple
(Lu 9:57, 58).
(See on
Mt 8:19, 20.)
The Procrastinating Disciple
(Lu 9:59, 60).
(See on
Mt 8:21).
The Irresolute Disciple
(Lu 9:61, 62).
61. I will follow . . . but--The second disciple had a "but" too--a
difficulty in the way just then. Yet the different treatment of the
two cases shows how different was the spirit of the two, and to that
our Lord addressed Himself. The case of Elisha
(1Ki 19:19-21),
though apparently similar to this, will be found quite different
from the "looking back" of this case, the best illustration of which is
that of those Hindu converts of our day who, when once persuaded to
leave their spiritual fathers in order to "bid them farewell which are
at home at their house," very rarely return to them. (Also see on
Mt 8:21.)
62. No man, &c.--As ploughing requires an eye intent on the furrow
to be made, and is marred the instant one turns about, so will they come
short of salvation who prosecute the work of God with a distracted
attention, a divided heart. Though the reference seems chiefly to
ministers, the application is general. The expression "looking back" has
a manifest reference to "Lot's wife"
(Ge 19:26;
and see on
Lu 17:32).
It is not actual return to the world, but a reluctance to
break with it. (Also see on
Mt 8:21.)
CHAPTER 10
Lu 10:1-24.
MISSION OF THE
SEVENTY
DISCIPLES, AND
THEIR
RETURN.
As our Lord's end approaches, the preparations for the establishment of
the coming Kingdom are quickened and extended.
1. the Lord--a becoming title here, as this appointment was an act
truly lordly [BENGEL].
other seventy also--rather, "others (also in number), seventy";
probably with allusion to the seventy elders of Israel on whom the
Spirit descended in the wilderness
(Nu 11:24, 25).
The mission, unlike that of the Twelve, was evidently quite
temporary. All the instructions are in keeping with a brief and
hasty pioneering mission, intended to supply what of general
preparation for coming events the Lord's own visit afterwards to the
same "cities and places"
(Lu 10:1)
would not, from want of time, now suffice to accomplish; whereas the
instructions to the Twelve, besides embracing all those to the Seventy,
contemplate world-wide and permanent effects.
Accordingly, after their return from this single missionary tour, we
never again read of the Seventy.
2. The harvest, &c.--(See on
Mt 9:37).
pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he would send forth
labourers into his harvest--(See on
Mt 9:38).
3-12. (See on
Mt 10:7-16).
10. son of peace--inwardly prepared to embrace your message of
peace. See note on "worthy," (see on
Mt 10:13).
12-15. (See on
Mt 11:20-24).
for Sodom--Tyre and Sidon were ruined by commercial prosperity; Sodom
sank through its vile pollutions: but the doom of otherwise correct
persons who, amidst a blaze of light, reject the Saviour, shall be
less endurable than that of any of these.
16. He that, &c.--(See on
Mt 10:40).
17. returned--evidently not long away.
Lord, &c.--"Thou hast exceeded Thy promise, for
'even the devils,'" &c. The possession of such power, not being
expressly in their commission, as in that to the Twelve
(Lu 9:1),
filled them with more astonishment and joy than all else.
through thy name--taking no credit to themselves, but feeling lifted
into a region of unimagined superiority to the powers of evil simply
through their connection with Christ.
18. I beheld--As much of the force of this glorious statement depends
on the nice shade of sense indicated by the imperfect tense in the
original, it should be brought out in the translation: "I was beholding
Satan as lightning falling from heaven"; that is, "I followed you on
your mission, and watched its triumphs; while you were wondering at the
subjection to you of devils in My name, a grander spectacle
was opening to My view; sudden as the darting of lightning from
heaven to earth, lo! Satan was beheld falling from heaven!" How
remarkable is this, that by that law of association which connects a
part with the whole, those feeble triumphs of the Seventy seem to have
not only brought vividly before the Redeemer the whole ultimate result
of His mission, but compressed it into a moment and quickened it into
the rapidity of lightning! Note.--The word rendered "devils,"
is always used for those spiritual agents employed in
demoniacal possessions--never for the ordinary agency of Satan in
rational men. When therefore the Seventy say, "the devils [demons]
are subject to us," and Jesus replies, "Mine eye was beholding
Satan falling," it is plain that He meant to raise their minds not
only from the particular to the general, but from a very
temporary form of satanic operation to the entire kingdom of evil.
(See
Joh 12:31;
and compare
Isa 14:12).
19. Behold, I give you, &c.--not for any renewal of their mission,
though probably many of them afterwards became ministers of Christ; but
simply as disciples.
serpents and scorpions--the latter more venomous than the former:
literally, in the first instance
(Mr 16:17, 18;
Ac 28:5);
but the next words, "and over all the power of the enemy, and
nothing shall by any means hurt you," show that the glorious power
of faith to "overcome the world" and "quench all the fiery darts of the
wicked one," by the communication and maintenance of which to His
people He makes them innocuous, is what is meant
(1Jo 5:4;
Eph 6:16).
20. rejoice not, &c.--that is, not so much. So far from forbidding
it, He takes occasion from it to tell them what had been passing in His
own mind. But as power over demons was after all intoxicating, He gives
them a higher joy to balance it, the joy of having their names in
Heaven's register
(Php 4:3).
21, 22. Jesus . . . said, &c.--The very same sublime
words were uttered by our Lord on a former similar occasion (see on
Mt 11:25-27);
but (1) There we are merely told that He "answered and said" thus;
here, He "rejoiced in spirit and said," &c. (2) There it was
merely "at that time" (or season) that He spoke thus, meaning with a
general reference to the rejection of His gospel by the
self-sufficient; here, "In that hour Jesus said," with express
reference probably to the humble class from which He had to draw the
Seventy, and the similar class that had chiefly welcomed their message.
"Rejoice" is too weak a word. It is "exulted in spirit"--evidently
giving visible expression to His unusual emotions; while, at the same
time, the words "in spirit" are meant to convey to the reader the
depth of them. This is one of those rare cases in which the veil
is lifted from off the Redeemer's inner man, that, angel-like, we may
"look into it" for a moment
(1Pe 1:12).
Let us gaze on it with reverential wonder, and as we perceive what it
was that produced that mysterious ecstasy, we shall find rising in our
hearts a still rapture--"Oh, the depths!"
23, 24. (See on
Mt 13:16, 17).
Lu 10:25-37.
QUESTION OF A
LAWYER AND
PARABLE OF THE
GOOD
SAMARITAN.
25. tempted him--"tested him"; in no hostile spirit, yet with no tender
anxiety for light on that question of questions, but just to see what
insight this great Galilean teacher had.
26. What is written in the law--apposite question to a doctor of the
law, and putting him in turn to the test [BENGEL].
27. Thou shalt, &c.--the answer Christ Himself gave to another
lawyer. (See on
Mr 12:29-33).
28. he said, &c.--"Right; THIS do, and life is thine"--laying such
emphasis on "this" as to indicate, without expressing it,
where the real difficulty to a sinner lay, and thus nonplussing the
questioner himself.
29. willing--"wishing," to get himself out of the difficulty, by
throwing on Jesus the definition of "neighbor," which the Jews
interpreted very narrowly and technically, as excluding Samaritans and
Gentiles [ALFORD].
30. A certain man--a Jew.
from Jerusalem to Jericho--a distance of nineteen miles northeast, a
deep and very fertile hollow--"the Temple of Judea" [TRENCH].
thieves--"robbers." The road, being rocky and desolate, was a notorious
haunt of robbers, then and for ages after, and even to this day.
31, 32. came down a . . . priest . . . and a Levite--Jericho, the
second city of Judea, was a city of the priests and Levites, and
thousands of them lived there. The two here mentioned are supposed,
apparently, to be returning from temple duties, but they had not
learnt what that meaneth, 'I will have mercy and not sacrifice'
[TRENCH].
saw him--It was not inadvertently that he acted.
came and looked--a further aggravation.
passed by--although the law expressly required the opposite treatment
even of the beast not only of their brethren, but of their
enemy
(De 22:4;
Ex 23:4, 5;
compare
Isa 58:7).
33. Samaritan--one excommunicated by the Jews, a byword among them,
synonymous with heretic and devil
(Joh 8:48;
see on
Lu 17:18).
had compassion--His best is mentioned first; for "He who gives outward
things gives something external to himself, but he who imparts
compassion and tears gives him something from his very self"
[GREGORY
THE
GREAT, in
TRENCH]. No doubt the priest and Levite had
their excuses--It is not safe to be lingering here; besides, he's past
recovery; and then, may not suspicion rest upon ourselves? So might the
Samaritan have reasoned, but did not
[TRENCH]. Nor did he say, He's
a Jew, who would have had no dealings with me
(Joh 4:9),
and why should I with him?
34. oil and wine--the remedies used in such cases all over the East
(Isa 1:6),
and elsewhere; the wine to cleanse the wounds, the oil to
assuage their smartings.
on his own beast--himself going on foot.
35. two pence--equal to two day's wages of a laborer, and enough for
several days' support.
36. Which . . . was neighbour?--a most dexterous way of putting the
question: (1) Turning the question from, "Whom am I to love as my
neighbour?" to "Who is the man that shows that love?" (2) Compelling the
lawyer to give a reply very different from what he would like--not only
condemning his own nation, but those of them who should be the most
exemplary. (3) Making him commend one of a deeply hated race. And he
does it, but it is almost extorted. For he does not answer, "The
Samaritan"--that would have sounded heterodox, heretical--but "He that
showed mercy on him." It comes to the same thing, no doubt, but the
circumlocution is significant.
37. Go, &c.--O exquisite, matchless teaching! What new fountains of
charity has not this opened up in the human spirit--rivers in the
wilderness, streams in the desert! What noble Christian institutions
have not such words founded, all undreamed of till that wondrous One
came to bless this heartless world of ours with His incomparable
love--first in words, and then in deeds which have translated His words
into flesh and blood, and poured the life of them through that humanity
which He made His own! Was this parable, now, designed to magnify the
law of love, and to show who fulfils it and who not? And who did this as
never man did it, as our Brother Man, "our Neighbor?" The priests and
Levites had not strengthened the diseased, nor bound up the broken
(Eze 34:4),
while He bound up the brokenhearted
(Isa 61:1),
and poured into all wounded spirits the balm of sweetest consolation.
All the Fathers saw through the thin veil of this noblest of stories,
the Story of love, and never wearied of tracing the analogy
(though sometimes fancifully enough) [TRENCH].
Exclaims GREGORY NAZIANZEN
(in the fourth century), "He hungered, but He fed thousands; He was
weary, but He is the Rest of the weary; He is saluted 'Samaritan' and
'Demoniac,' but He saves him that went down from Jerusalem and fell
among thieves," &c.
Lu 10:38-42.
MARTHA AND
MARY.
38. certain village--Bethany
(Joh 11:1),
which Luke so speaks of, having no farther occasion to notice it.
received him . . . her house--The house belonged to her, and she
appears throughout to be the older sister.
39. which also--"who for her part," in contrast with Martha.
sat--"seated herself." From the custom of sitting beneath an
instructor, the phrase "sitting at one's feet" came to mean being a
disciple of any one
(Ac 22:3).
heard--rather, "kept listening" to His word.
40. cumbered--"distracted."
came to him--"presented herself before Him," as from another apartment,
in which her sister had "left her to serve (or make preparation)
alone."
carest thou not . . . my sister, &c.--"Lord, here am I with everything
to do, and this sister of mine will not lay a hand to anything; thus I
miss something from Thy lips, and Thou from our hands."
bid her, &c.--She presumes not to stop Christ's teaching by calling
her sister away, and thus leaving Him without His one auditor, nor did
she hope perhaps to succeed if she had tried.
41. Martha, Martha--emphatically redoubling upon the name.
careful and cumbered--the one word expressing the inward
worrying anxiety that her preparations should be worthy of her Lord;
the other, the outward bustle of those preparations.
many things--"much service"
(Lu 10:40);
too elaborate preparation, which so engrossed her attention that she
missed her Lord's teaching.
42. one thing, &c.--The idea of "Short work and little of it suffices
for Me" is not so much the lower sense of these weighty words, as
supposed in them, as the basis of something far loftier than any
precept on economy. Underneath that idea is couched another, as to the
littleness both of elaborate preparation for the present life and
of that life itself, compared with another.
chosen the good part--not in the general sense of Moses' choice
(Heb 11:25),
and Joshua's
(Jos 24:15),
and David's
(Ps 119:30);
that is, of good in opposition to bad; but, of two good ways of
serving and pleasing the Lord, choosing the better. Wherein,
then, was Mary's better than Martha's? Hear what follows.
not be taken away--Martha's choice would be taken from her, for
her services would die with her; Mary's never, being spiritual
and eternal. Both were true-hearted disciples, but the one was absorbed
in the higher, the other in the lower of two ways of honoring their
common Lord. Yet neither despised, or would willingly neglect, the
other's occupation. The one represents the contemplative, the other
the active style of the Christian character. A Church full of Marys
would perhaps be as great an evil as a Church full of Marthas. Both are
needed, each to be the complement of the other.
CHAPTER 11
Lu 11:1-13.
THE
DISCIPLES
TAUGHT TO
PRAY.
1. one, &c.--struck with either the matter or the manner of our Lord's
prayers.
as John, &c.--From this reference to John, it is possible that
disciple had not heard the Sermon on the Mount. Nothing of John's
inner teaching (to his own disciples) has been preserved to us, but
we may be sure he never taught his disciples to say, "Our Father."
2-4. (See on
Mt 6:9-13).
3. day by day, &c.--an extension of the petition in Matthew for
"this day's" supply, to every successive day's necessities. The
closing doxology, wanting here, is wanting also in all the best and most
ancient copies of Matthew's Gospel. Perhaps our Lord purposely left
that part open: and as the grand Jewish doxologies were ever
resounding, and passed immediately and naturally, in all their hallowed
familiarity into the Christian Church, probably this prayer was never
used in the Christian assemblies but in its present form, as we find it
in Matthew, while in Luke it has been allowed to stand as originally
uttered.
5-8. at midnight . . . for a friend is come--The heat in warm countries
makes evening preferable to-day for travelling; but "midnight" is
everywhere a most unseasonable hour of call, and for that very
reason it is here selected.
7. Trouble me not--the trouble making him insensible both to the
urgency of the case and the claims of friendship.
I cannot--without exertion which he would not make.
8. importunity--The word is a strong one--"shamelessness"; persisting
in the face of all that seemed reasonable, and refusing to take a
denial.
as many, &c.--His reluctance once overcome, all the claims of
friendship and necessity are felt to the full. The sense is obvious: If
the churlish and self-indulgent--deaf both to friendship and
necessity--can after a positive refusal, be won over, by sheer
persistency, to do all that is needed, how much more may the same
determined perseverance in prayer be expected to prevail with Him whose
very nature is "rich unto all that call upon Him"
(Ro 10:12).
9-13. (See on
Mt 7:7-11.)
13. the Holy Spirit--in Matthew
(Mt 7:11),
"good gifts"; the former, the Gift of gifts descending on the Church
through Christ, and comprehending the latter.
Lu 11:14-36.
BLIND AND
DUMB
DEMONIAC
HEALED--CHARGE OF
BEING IN
LEAGUE WITH
HELL, AND
REPLY--DEMAND OF A
SIGN, AND
REPLY.
(See on
Mt 12:22-45.)
14. dumb--blind also
(Mt 12:22).
20. the finger of God--"the Spirit of God"
(Mt 12:28);
the former figuratively denoting the power of God, the latter
the living Personal Agent in every exercise of it.
21, 22. strong man--meaning Satan.
armed--pointing to all the subtle and varied methods by which he
wields his dark power over men.
keepeth--"guardeth."
his palace--man whether viewed more largely or in individual
souls--how significant of what men are to Satan!
in peace--undisturbed, secure in his possession.
22. a stronger than he--Christ: Glorious title, in relation to
Satan!
come upon him and overcome him--sublimely expressing the Redeemer's
approach, as the Seed of the woman, to bruise the Serpent's head.
taketh from him all his armour--"his panoply," "his complete armor."
Vain would be the victory, were not the means of regaining his lost
power wrested from him. It is this that completes the triumph and
ensures the final overthrow of his kingdom. The parable that immediately
follows
(Lu 11:24-26)
is just the reverse of this. (See on
Mt 12:43-45.)
In the one case, Satan is dislodged by Christ, and so finds, in
all future assaults, the house preoccupied; in the other, he
merely goes out and comes in again, finding the house "EMPTY"
(Mt 12:44)
of any rival, and all ready to welcome him back. This explains the
important saying that comes in between the two parables
(Lu 11:23).
Neutrality in religion there is none. The absence of positive
attachment to Christ involves hostility to Him.
23. gathereth . . . scattereth--referring probably to gleaners. The
meaning seems to be, Whatever in religion is disconnected from Christ
comes to nothing.
27, 28. as he spake these things, a . . . woman of the
company--of the multitude, the crowd. A charming little incident
and profoundly instructive. With true womanly feeling, she envies the
mother of such a wonderful Teacher. Well, and higher and better than
she had said as much before her
(Lu 1:28, 42);
and our Lord is far from condemning it. He only holds up--as
"blessed rather"--the hearers and keepers of God's word; in
other words, the humblest real saint of God. (See on
Mt 12:49, 50.)
How utterly alien is this sentiment from the teaching of the Church of
Rome, which would excommunicate any one of its members who dared to
talk in the spirit of this glorious saying! (Also see on
Mt 12:43.)
29-32. (See on
Mt 12:39-42.)
33-36. (See on
Mt 5:14-16;
Mt 6:22, 23.)
But
Lu 11:36
here is peculiarly vivid, expressing what pure, beautiful, broad
perceptions the clarity of the inward eye imparts.
Lu 11:37-54.
DENUNCIATION OF THE
PHARISEES.
38. marvelled, &c.--(See
Mr 7:2-4).
39-41. cup and platter--remarkable example of our Lord's way of drawing
the most striking illustrations of great truths from the most familiar
objects and incidents of life.
ravening--rapacity.
40. that which is without, &c.--that is, He to whom belongs the outer
life, and right to demand its subjection to Himself--is the inner man
less His?
41. give alms . . . and . . . all . . . clean--a principle of immense
value. As the greed of these hypocrites was one of the most prominent
features of their character
(Lu 16:14;
Mt 23:14),
our Lord bids them exemplify the opposite character, and then their
outside, ruled by this, would be beautiful in the eye of God,
and their meals would be eaten with clean hands, though never so fouled
with the business of this worky world. (See
Ec 9:7).
42. mint . . . rue, &c.--rounding on
Le 27:30,
which they interpreted rigidly. Our Lord purposely names the most
trifling products of the earth, as examples of what they punctiliously
exacted the tenth of.
judgment and the love of God--in
Mt 23:25,
"judgment, mercy, and faith." The reference is to
Mic 6:6-8,
whose third element of all acceptable religion, "walking humbly with
God," comprehends both "love" and "faith." (See on
Mr 12:29;
Mr 12:32, 33).
The same tendency to merge greater duties
in less besets us still, but it is the characteristic of hypocrites.
these ought ye, &c.--There is no need for one set of duties to
jostle out another; but of the greater, our Lord says, "Ye
ought to have done" them; of the lesser, only "ye ought
not to leave them undone."
43. uppermost seats--(See on
Lu 14:7-11).
greetings--(See on
Mt 23:7-10).
44. appear not, &c.--As one might unconsciously walk over a grave
concealed from view, and thus contract ceremonial defilement, so the
plausible exterior of the Pharisees kept people from perceiving the
pollution they contracted from coming in contact with such corrupt
characters. (See
Ps 5:9;
Ro 3:13;
a different illustration from
Mt 23:27).
46. burdens grievous, &c.--referring not so much to the irksomeness
of the legal rites (though they were irksome,
Ac 15:10),
as to the heartless rigor with which they were enforced, and by men of
shameless inconsistency.
47, 48. ye build, &c.--Out of pretended respect and honor, they
repaired and beautified the sepulchres of the prophets, and with whining
hypocrisy said, "If we had been in the days of our fathers, we should
not have been partakers with them in the blood of the prophets," while
all the time they "were witnesses to themselves that they were the
children of them that killed the prophets"
(Mt 23:29, 30);
convicting themselves daily of as exact a resemblance in spirit and
character to the very classes over whose deeds they pretended to mourn,
as child to parent.
49-51. said the wisdom, &c.--a remarkable variation of the words in
Mt 23:34,
"Behold I SEND." As there seems plainly an
allusion to ancient warnings of what God would do with so incorrigible
a people, so here Christ, stepping majestically into the place of God,
so to speak, says, "Now I am going to carry all that out." Could
this be other than the Lord of Israel in the flesh?
50. all . . . required of this generation--As it was
only in the last generation of them that "the iniquity of the Amorites
was full"
(Ge 15:16),
and then the abominations of ages were at once completely and awfully
avenged, so the iniquity of Israel was allowed to accumulate from age
to age till in that generation it came to the full, and the whole
collected vengeance of Heaven broke at once over its devoted head. In
the first French Revolution the same awful principle was exemplified,
and Christendom has not done with it yet.
prophets--in the New Testament sense
(Mt 23:34;
see
1Co 12:28).
51. blood of Zacharias--Probably the allusion is not to any recent
murder, but to
2Ch 24:20-22,
as the last recorded and most suitable case for illustration.
And as Zacharias' last words were, "The Lord require it," so
they are warned that "of that generation it should be
required."
52. key of knowledge--not the key to open knowledge, but
knowledge, the only key to open heaven. In
Mt 23:13,
they are accused of shutting heaven; here of taking away the
key, which was worse. A right knowledge of God's Word is eternal
life
(Joh 17:3);
but this they took away from the people, substituting for it their
wretched traditions.
53, 54. Exceedingly vivid and affecting. They were stung to the
quick--and can we wonder?--yet had not materials for the charge they
were preparing against Him.
provoke him, &c.--"to harass Him with questions."
p
CHAPTER 12
Lu 12:1-12.
WARNING AGAINST
HYPOCRISY.
1-3. meantime--in close connection, probably, with the foregoing scene.
Our Lord had been speaking out more plainly than ever before, as
matters were coming to a head between Him and His enemies, and this
seems to have suggested to His own mind the warning here. He had just
Himself illustriously exemplified His own precepts.
his disciples first of all--afterwards to "the multitudes"
(Lu 12:54).
covered--from the view.
2. hid--from knowledge. "Tis no use concealing anything, for all will
one day come out. Give free and fearless utterance then to all the
truth." (Compare
1Co 4:3, 5).
4, 5. I say, &c.--You will say, That may cost us our life. Be it so;
but, "My friends, there their power ends." He calls them "my friends"
here, not in any loose sense, but, as we think, from the feeling He then
had that in this "killing of the body" He and they were going to be
affectingly one with each other.
5. Fear Him . . . Fear Him--how striking the repetition here!
Only the one fear would effectually expel the other.
after he hath killed, &c.--Learn here--(1) To play false with
one's convictions to save one's life, may fail of its end after all,
for God can inflict a violent death in some other and equally
formidable way. (2) There is a hell, it seems, for the body as
well as the soul; consequently, sufferings adapted to the one as well
as the other. (3) Fear of hell is a divinely authorized and
needed motive of action even to Christ's "friends." (4) As Christ's
meekness and gentleness were not compromised by such harsh notes as
these, so those servants of Christ lack their Master's spirit who
soften down all such language to please ears "polite." (See on
Mr 9:43-48).
6, 7. five . . . for two farthings--In
Mt 10:29
it is "two for one farthing"; so if one took two farthings' worth, he
got one in addition--of such small value were they.
than many sparrows--not "than millions of sparrows"; the charm and
power of our Lord's teaching is very much in this simplicity.
8, 9. confess . . . deny--The point lies in doing it
"before men," because one has to do it "despising the shame."
But when done, the Lord holds Himself bound to repay it in kind
by confessing such "before the angels of God." For the rest, see on
Lu 9:26.
10. Son of man . . . Holy Ghost--(See on
Mt 12:31, 32).
Lu 12:13-53.
COVETOUSNESS--WATCHFULNESS--SUPERIORITY TO
EARTHLY
TIES.
13. Master, &c.--that is, "Great Preacher of righteousness, help;
there is need of Thee in this rapacious world; here am I the victim of
injustice, and that from my own brother, who withholds from me my
rightful share of the inheritance that has fallen to us." In this most
inopportune intrusion upon the solemnities of our Lord's teaching, there
is a mixture of the absurd and the irreverent, the one, however,
occasioning the other. The man had not the least idea that his case was
not of as urgent a nature, and as worthy the attention of our Lord, as
anything else He could deal with.
14. Man, &c.--Contrast this style of address with "my friends,"
(Lu 12:4).
who, &c.--a question literally repudiating the office which Moses
assumed
(Ex 2:14).
The influence of religious teachers in the external relations of
life has ever been immense, when only the INDIRECT effect of their teaching; but whenever they
intermeddle DIRECTLY with secular and
political matters, the spell of that influence is broken.
15. unto them--the multitude around Him
(Lu 12:1).
of covetousness--The best copies have "all," that is, "every kind of
covetousness"; because as this was one of the more plausible forms of
it, so He would strike at once at the root of the evil.
a man's life, &c.--a singularly weighty maxim, and not less so
because its meaning and its truth are equally evident.
16-19. a certain rich man, &c.--Why is this man called a "fool?"
(Lu 12:20)
(1) Because he deemed a life of secure and abundant earthly enjoyment
the summit of human felicity. (2) Because, possessing the means of
this, through prosperity in his calling, he flattered himself that he
had a long lease of such enjoyment, and nothing to do but give himself
up to it. Nothing else is laid to his charge.
20, 21. this night, &c.--This sudden cutting short of his career is
designed to express not only the folly of building securely upon the
future, but of throwing one's whole soul into what may at any moment be
gone. "Thy soul shall be required of thee" is put in opposition to
his own treatment of it, "I will say to my soul, Soul," &c.
whose shall those things be, &c.--Compare
Ps 39:6,
"He heapeth up riches and knoweth not who shall gather
them."
21. So is he, &c.--Such is a picture of his folly here,
and of its awful issue.
and is not rich toward God--lives to amass and enjoy riches
which terminate on self, but as to the riches of God's favor,
which is life
(Ps 30:5),
of "precious" faith
(2Pe 1:1;
Jas 2:5),
of good works
(1Ti 6:18),
of wisdom which is better than rubies
(Pr 8:11)
--lives and dies a beggar!
22-31. (See on
Mt 6:25-33).
25, 26. which of you, &c.--Corroding solicitude will not bring you the
least of the things ye fret about, though it may double the evil of
wanting them. And if not the least, why vex yourselves about things of
more consequence?
29. of doubtful, &c.--unsettled mind; put off your balance.
32. little flock, &c.--How sublime and touching a contrast between
this tender and pitying appellation, "Little flock" (in the original a
double diminutive, which in German can be expressed, but not in
English)--and the "good pleasure" of the Father to give them the
Kingdom; the one recalling the insignificance and helplessness of that
then literal handful of disciples, the other holding up to their view
the eternal love that encircled them, the everlasting arms that were
underneath them, and the high inheritance awaiting them!--"the kingdom";
grand word; then why not "bread"
(Lu 12:31
[BENGEL]). Well might He say, "Fear not!"
33, 34. Sell, &c.--This is but a more vivid expression of
Mt 6:19-21
(see on
Mt 6:19-21).
35-40. loins . . . girded--to fasten up the long outer garment, always
done before travel and work
(2Ki 4:29;
Ac 12:8).
The meaning is, Be in readiness.
lights, &c.--(See on
Mt 25:1).
36. return from the wedding--not come to it, as in the parable of
the virgins. Both have their spiritual significance; but
preparedness for Christ's coming is the prominent idea.
37. gird himself, &c.--"a promise the most august of all: Thus will
the Bridegroom entertain his friends (nay, servants) on the solemn
Nuptial Day" [BENGEL].
38. second . . . third watch--To find them ready to receive Him at any
hour of day or night, when one might least of all expect Him, is
peculiarly blessed. A servant may be truly faithful, even though taken
so far unawares that he has not everything in such order and
readiness for his master's return as he thinks is due to him, and both
could and would have had if he had had notice of the time of his coming,
and so may not be willing to open to him "immediately," but fly to
preparation, and let his master knock again ere he admit him, and even
then not with full joy. A too common case this with Christians. But
if the servant have himself and all under his charge in such a state
that at any hour when his master knocks, he can open to him
"immediately," and hail his "return"--that is the most enviable,
"blessed" servant of all.
41-48. unto us or even to all?--us the Twelve, or all this vast
audience?
42. Who then, &c.--answering the question indirectly by another
question, from which they were left to gather what it would be:--To you
certainly in the first instance, representing the "stewards" of the
"household" I am about to collect, but generally to all "servants" in My
house.
faithful and wise--Fidelity is the first requisite in a servant,
wisdom (discretion and judgment in the exercise of his functions),
the next.
steward--house steward, whose it was to distribute to the servants
their allotted portion of food.
shall make--will deem fit to be made.
44. make him ruler over all he hath--will advance him to the
highest post, referring to the world to come. (See
Mt 25:21, 23).
45. begin to beat, &c.--In the confidence that his Lord's return will
not be speedy, he throws off the role of servant and plays the master,
maltreating those faithful servants who refuse to join him, seizing on
and revelling in the fulness of his master's board; intending, when he
has got his fill, to resume the mask of fidelity ere his master appear.
46. cut him in sunder--a punishment not unknown in the East; compare
Heb 11:37,
"sawn asunder"
(1Sa 15:33;
Da 2:5).
the unbelievers--the unfaithful, those unworthy of trust
(Mt 24:51),
"the hypocrites," falsely calling themselves "servants."
48. knew not--that is knew but partially; for some knowledge
is presupposed both in the name "servant" of Christ, and his being
liable to punishment at all.
many . . . few stripes--degrees of future punishment proportioned to
the knowledge sinned against. Even heathens are not without knowledge
enough for future judgment; but the reference here is not to such. It is
a solemn truth, and though general, like all other revelations of
the future world, discloses a tangible and momentous principle in its
awards.
49-53. to send--cast.
fire--"the higher spiritual element of life which Jesus came to
introduce into this earth (compare
Mt 3:11),
with reference to its mighty effects in quickening all that is akin to
it and destroying all that is opposed. To cause this element of
life to take up its abode on earth, and wholly to pervade human hearts
with its warmth, was the lofty destiny of the Redeemer" [OLSHAUSEN: so CALVIN, STIER, ALFORD, &c.].
what will I, &c.--an obscure expression, uttered under deep and
half-smothered emotion. In its general import all are agreed; but the
nearest to the precise meaning seems to be, "And what should I have to
desire if it were once already kindled?" [BENGEL and
BLOOMFIELD].
50. But . . . a baptism, &c.--clearly, His own bloody baptism, first
to take place.
how . . . straitened--not, "how do I long for its accomplishment,"
as many understand it, thus making it but a repetition of
Lu 12:49;
but "what a pressure of spirit is upon Me."
till it be accomplished--till it be over. Before a promiscuous
audience, such obscure language was fit on a theme like this; but oh,
what surges of mysterious emotion in the view of what was now so near at
hand does it reveal!
51. peace . . . ? Nay, &c.--the reverse of peace,
in the first instance. (See on
Mt 10:34-36.)
The connection of all this with the foregoing warnings about hypocrisy,
covetousness, and watchfulness, is deeply solemn: "My conflict hasten
apace; Mine over, yours begins; and then, let the servants tread in
their Master's steps, uttering their testimony entire and fearless,
neither loving nor dreading the world, anticipating awful wrenches of
the dearest ties in life, but looking forward, as I do, to the
completion of their testimony, when, reaching the haven after the
tempest, they shall enter into the joy of their Lord."
Lu 12:54-59.
NOT
DISCERNING THE
SIGNS OF THE
TIME.
54. to the people--"the multitude," a word of special warning to
the thoughtless crowd, before dismissing them. (See on
Mt 16:2, 3).
56. how . . . not discern, &c.--unable to perceive what a critical
period that was for the Jewish Church.
57. why even of yourselves, &c.--They might say, To do this requires
more knowledge of Scripture and providence than we possess; but He sends
them to their own conscience, as enough to show them who He was, and win
them to immediate discipleship.
58. When thou goest, &c.--(See on
Mt 5:25, 26).
The urgency of the case with them, and the necessity, for their own
safety, of immediate decision, was the object of these striking
words.
CHAPTER 13
Lu 13:1-9.
THE
LESSON,
"REPENT OR
PERISH,"
SUGGESTED BY
TWO
RECENT
INCIDENTS, AND
ILLUSTRATED BY THE
PARABLE OF THE
BARREN
FIG
TREE.
1-3. Galileans--possibly the followers of Judas of Galilee, who, some
twenty years before this, taught that Jews should not pay tribute to the
Romans, and of whom we learn, from
Ac 5:37,
that he drew after him a multitude of followers, who on his being slain
were all dispersed. About this time that party would be at its height,
and if Pilate caused this detachment of them to be waylaid and put to
death as they were offering their sacrifices at one of the festivals,
that would be "mingling their blood with their sacrifices" [GROTIUS, WEBSTER and WILKINSON, but doubted by DE WETTE, MEYER, ALFORD, &c.]. News of this being brought to our Lord, to
draw out His views of such, and whether it was not a judgment of
Heaven, He simply points them to the practical view of the matter:
"These men are not signal examples of divine vengeance, as ye suppose;
but every impenitent sinner--ye yourselves, except ye
repent--shall be like monuments of the judgment of Heaven, and in a
more awful sense." The reference here to the impending destruction of
Jerusalem is far from exhausting our Lord's weighty words; they
manifestly point to a "perdition" of a more awful kind--future,
personal, remediless.
4, 5. tower in Siloam--probably one of the towers of the city wall,
near the pool of Siloam. Of its fall nothing is known.
6-9. fig tree--Israel, as the visible witness of God in the world,
but generally all within the pale of the visible Church of God; a
familiar figure (compare
Isa 5:1-7;
Joh 15:1-8,
&c.).
vineyard--a spot selected for its fertility, separated from the
surrounding fields, and cultivated with special care, with a view solely
to fruit.
came and sought fruit--a heart turned to God; the fruits of
righteousness; compare
Mt 21:33, 34,
and Isa 5:2,
"He looked that it should bring forth fruit"; He has a
right to it, and will require it.
7. three years--a long enough trial for a fig tree, and so denoting
probably just a sufficient period of culture for spiritual fruit.
The supposed allusion to the duration of our Lord's ministry is
precarious.
cut it down--indignant language.
cumbereth--not only doing no good, but wasting ground.
8. he answering, &c.--Christ, as Intercessor, loath to see it cut
down so long as there was any hope (see
Lu 13:34).
dig, &c.--loosen the earth about it and enrich it with manure;
pointing to changes of method in the divine treatment of the impenitent,
in order to freshen spiritual culture.
9. if . . . fruit, well--Genuine repentance,
however late, avails to save
(Lu 23:42, 43).
after that, &c.--The final perdition of such as, after the utmost
limits of reasonable forbearance, are found fruitless, will be
pre-eminently and confessedly just
(Pr 1:24-31;
Eze 24:13).
Lu 13:10-17.
WOMAN OF
EIGHTEEN
YEAR'S
INFIRMITY
HEALED ON THE
SABBATH.
11. spirit of infirmity--Compare
Lu 13:17,
"whom Satan hath bound." From this it is probable, though not
certain, that her protracted infirmity was the effect of some milder
form of possession; yet she was "a daughter of Abraham," in the
same gracious sense, no doubt, as Zaccheus, after his conversion, was
"a son of Abraham"
(Lu 19:9).
12, 13. said . . . Woman . . . and laid--both at once.
14. with indignation--not so much at the sabbath violation as at the
glorification of Christ. (Compare
Mt 21:15)
[TRENCH].
said to the people--"Not daring directly to find fault with the Lord,
he seeks circuitously to reach Him through the people, who were more
under his influence, and whom he feared less" [TRENCH].
15. the Lord--(See on
Lu 10:1).
hypocrite!--How "the faithful and true Witness" tears off the masks
which men wear!
his ox, &c.--(See on
Mt 12:9-13;
and
Lu 6:9).
16. ought not, &c.--How gloriously the Lord vindicates the superior
claims of this woman, in consideration of the sadness and long duration
of her suffering, and of her dignity notwithstanding, as an heir of the
promise!
Lu 13:18-30.
MISCELLANEOUS
TEACHINGS.
18-21. mustard seed . . . leaven--(See on
Mr 4:30-32).
The parable of "the Leaven" sets forth, perhaps, rather the
inward growth of the kingdom, while "the Mustard Seed" seems to
point chiefly to the outward. It being a woman's work to knead,
it seems a refinement to say that "the woman" here represents the
Church, as the instrument of depositing the leaven. Nor does it
yield much satisfaction to understand the "three measures of meal" of
that threefold division of our nature into "spirit, soul, and body,"
(alluded to in
1Th 5:23)
or of the threefold partition of the world among the three sons of Noah
(Ge 10:32),
as some do. It yields more real satisfaction to see in this brief
parable just the all-penetrating and assimilating quality
of the Gospel, by virtue of which it will yet mould all institutions
and tribes of men, and exhibit over the whole earth one "Kingdom of our
Lord and of His Christ." (See on
Re 11:15).
23. Lord, &c.--one of those curious questions by talking of which
some flatter themselves they are religious.
said unto them--the multitude; taking no notice of the man or his
question, save as furnishing the occasion of a solemn warning not to
trifle with so momentous a matter as "salvation."
24. Strive--The word signifies to "contend" as for the mastery, to
"struggle," expressive of the difficulty of being saved, as if one
would have to force his way in.
strait gate--another figure of the same. (See on
Mt 7:13, 14).
for many . . . will seek--"desire," that is, with a mere wish or
slothful endeavor.
and shall not be able--because it must be made a
life-and-death struggle.
25. master of the house is risen up and hath shut to the door--awfully
sublime and vivid picture! At present he is represented as in a
sitting posture, as if calmly looking on to see who will "strive,"
while entrance is practicable, and who will merely "seek" to enter in.
But this is to have an end, by the great Master of the house Himself
rising and shutting the door, after which there will be no admittance.
Lord, Lord--emphatic reduplication, expressive of the
earnestness now felt, but too late. (See on
Mt 7:21, 22).
26, 27. See on the similar passage
(Mt 7:22, 23).
eaten and drunk, &c.--We have sat with Thee at the same table.
(See on
Mt 7:22).
taught in our streets--Do we not remember listening in our own streets
to Thy teaching? Surely we are not to be denied admittance?
27. But he shall say, &c.--(See on
Mt 7:23).
No nearness of external communion with Christ will avail at the
great day, in place of that holiness without which no man shall see the
Lord. Observe the style which Christ intimates that He will
then assume, that of absolute Disposer of men's eternal destinies, and
contrast it with His "despised and rejected" condition at that
time.
28, 29. (See
Mt 8:11, 12).
Also see on
Mt 13:42.
Lu 13:31-35.
MESSAGE TO
HEROD.
31. and depart hence--and "go forward," push on. He was on His
way out of Perea, east of Jordan, and in Herod's dominions, "journeying
towards Jerusalem"
(Lu 13:22).
Haunted by guilty fears, probably, Herod wanted to get rid of Him (see
on
Mr 6:14),
and seems, from our Lord's answer, to have sent these Pharisees, under
pretense of a friendly hint, to persuade Him that the sooner He got
beyond Herod's jurisdiction the better it would be for His own safety.
Our Lord saw through both of them, and sends the cunning ruler a
message couched in dignified and befitting irony.
32. that fox--that crafty, cruel enemy of God's innocent servants.
Behold, I cast out devils and I do cures--that is, "Plot on and ply
thy wiles; I also have My plans; My works of mercy are nearing
completion, but some yet remain; I have work for to-day and to-morrow
too, and the third day; by that time I shall be where his jurisdiction
reaches not; the guilt of My blood shall not lie at his door; that dark
deed is reserved for others." He does not say, I preach the Gospel--that
would have made little impression upon Herod--in the light of the
merciful character of Christ's actions the malice of Herod's
snares is laid bare [BENGEL].
to-day, to-morrow, the third day--remarkable language expressive of
successive steps of His work yet remaining, the calm
deliberateness with which He meant to go through with them,
one after another, to the
last, unmoved by Herod's threat, yet the rapid march with which they
were now hastening to completion. (Compare
Lu 22:37).
I shall be perfected--I finish my course, I attain completion.
33. it cannot be that a prophet, &c.--"It would never do that,"
&c.--awful severity of satire this upon "the bloody city!" "He seeks to
kill me, does he? Ah! I must be out of Herod's jurisdiction for that.
Go tell him I neither fly from him nor fear him, but Jerusalem is the
prophets' slaughter-house."
34, 35. O Jerusalem, &c.--(See on
Mt 23:37;
Mt 23:39).
CHAPTER 14
Lu 14:1-24.
HEALING OF A
DROPSICAL
MAN, AND
MANIFOLD
TEACHINGS AT A
SABBATH
FEAST.
2. man before him--not one of the company, since this was apparently
before the guests sat down, and probably the man came in hope of a
cure, though not expressly soliciting it [DE
WETTE].
3-6. (See on
Mt 12:11, 12).
7-11. a parable--showing that His design was not so much to inculcate
mere politeness or good manners, as underneath this to teach
something deeper
(Lu 14:11).
chief rooms--principal seats, in the middle part of the couch on which
they reclined at meals, esteemed the most honorable.
8. wedding--and seating thyself at the wedding feast. Our Lord
avoids the appearance of personality by this delicate allusion to a
different kind of entertainment than this of his host [BENGEL].
9. the lowest--not a lower merely [BENGEL].
with shame--"To be lowest is only ignominious to him who affects the
highest" [BENGEL].
10. Friend--said to the modest guest only, not the proud one
(Lu 14:9)
[BENGEL].
worship--honor. The whole of this is but a reproduction of
Pr 25:6, 7.
But it was reserved for the matchless Teacher to utter
articulately, and apply to the regulation of the minutest
features of social life, such great laws of the Kingdom of
God, as that of
Lu 14:11.
11. whosoever, &c.--couching them in a chaste simplicity and
proverbial terseness of style which makes them "apples of gold in a
setting of silver." (See on
Lu 18:14).
12-14. call not thy friends--Jesus certainly did not mean us to
dispense with the duties of ordinary fellowship, but, remitting these to
their proper place, inculcates what is better [BENGEL].
lest . . . a recompense be given thee--a fear the world is not
afflicted with [BENGEL]. The meaning, however, is that no
exercise of principle is involved in it, as selfishness itself will
suffice to prompt to it
(Mt 5:46, 47).
13. call the poor--"Such God Himself calls"
(Lu 14:21)
[BENGEL].
14. blessed--acting from disinterested, god-like compassion for the
wretched.
15-24. when one . . . heard . . . he said,
Blessed, &c.--As our Lord's words seemed to hold forth the future
"recompense" under the idea of a great Feast, the thought passes
through this man's mind, how blessed they would be who should be
honored to sit down to it. Our Lord's reply is in substance this: "The
great Feast is prepared already; the invitations are issued, but
declined; the feast, notwithstanding, shall not want abundance of
guests; but not one of its present contemners--who shall yet come to
sue for admission--shall be allowed to taste of it." This shows what
was lacking in the seemingly pious exclamation of this man. It was
Balaam's, "Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my
last end be like his"
(Nu 23:10),
without any anxiety about living his life; fondly wishing that all
were right with him at last, while all heedless of the precious
present.
16. a great supper--(Compare
Isa 25:6).
bade many--historically, the Jews (see on
Mt 22:3);
generally, those within the pale of professed discipleship.
17. supper-time . . . all now ready--pointing
undoubtedly to the now ripening preparations for the great Gospel call.
(See on
Mt 22:4.)
18. all began to make excuse--(Compare
Mt 22:5).
Three excuses, given as specimens of the rest, answer to "the care
of this world"
(Lu 14:18),
"the deceitfulness of riches"
(Lu 14:19),
and "the pleasures of this life"
(Lu 14:20),
which "choke the word"
(Mt 13:22
and Lu 8:14).
Each differs from the other, and each
has its own plausibility, but all come to the same result: "We have
other things to attend to, more pressing just now." Nobody is
represented as saying, I will not come; nay, all the answers imply
that but for certain things they would come, and when these are
out of the way they will come. So it certainly is in the case
intended, for the last words clearly imply that the refusers will
one day become petitioners.
21. came, and showed, &c.--saying as in
Isa 53:1.
"It is the part of ministers to report to the Lord in their prayers the
compliance or refusal of their hearers" [BENGEL].
angry--in one sense a gracious word, showing how sincere he was
in issuing his invitations
(Eze 33:11).
But it is the slight put upon him, the sense of which is
intended to be marked by this word.
streets and lanes--historically, those within the same pale of
"the city" of God as the former class, but the despised and outcasts of
the nation, the "publicans and sinners" [TRENCH];
generally, all similar
classes, usually overlooked in the first provision for supplying the
means of grace to a community, half heathen in the midst of revealed
light, and in every sense miserable.
22. yet there is room--implying that these classes had embraced
the invitation
(Mt 21:32;
Mr 12:37,
last clause;
Joh 7:48, 49);
and beautifully expressing the longing that should fill the hearts of
ministers to see their Master's table filled.
23. highways and hedges--outside the city altogether;
historically, the heathen, sunk in the lowest depths of
spiritual wretchedness, as being beyond the pale of all that is
revealed and saving, "without Christ, strangers from the covenant of
promise, having no hope, and without God in the world"
(Eph 2:12);
generally, all such still. Thus, this parable prophetically
contemplates the extension of the kingdom of God to the whole world;
and spiritually, directs the Gospel invitations to be carried to
the lowest strata, and be brought in contact with the outermost
circles, of human society.
compel them to come in--not as if they would make the "excuses" of
the first class, but because it would be hard to get them over two
difficulties: (1) "We are not fit company for such a feast." (2) "We
have no proper dress, and are ill in order for such a presence." How
fitly does this represent the difficulties and fears of the sincere! How is this met? "Take no excuse--make them come as
they are--bring them
along with you." What a directory for ministers of Christ!
that my house may be filled--"Grace no more than nature will endure
a vacuum" [BENGEL].
24. I say unto you, That none--Our Lord here appears to throw off the
veil of the parable, and proclaim the Supper His own, intimating
that when transferred and transformed into its final glorious form, and
the refusers themselves would give all for another opportunity, He will
not allow one of them to taste it. (Note. This parable must not be
confounded with that of
Pr 1:24-33;
The Marriage Supper,
Mt 22:2-14).
Lu 14:25-35.
ADDRESS TO
GREAT
MULTITUDES
TRAVELLING WITH
HIM.
25. great multitudes with him--on His final journey to Jerusalem. The
"great multitudes" were doubtless people going to the passover, who
moved along in clusters
(Lu 2:44),
and who on this occasion falling in with our Lord had formed themselves
into one mass about Him.
26, 27. If any man, &c.--(See on
Mt 10:34-36,
and
Mr 8:34, 35).
28-33. which of you, &c.--Common sense teaches men not to begin
any costly work without first seeing that they have wherewithal to
finish. And he who does otherwise exposes himself to general
ridicule. Nor will any wise potentate enter on a war with any hostile
power without first seeing to it that, despite formidable odds (two to
one), he be able to stand his ground; and if he has no hope of this, he
will feel that nothing remains for him but to make the best terms he
can. Even so, says our Lord, "in the warfare you will each have to
wage as My disciples, despise not your enemy's strength, for the odds
are all against you; and you had better see to it that, despite every
disadvantage, you still have wherewithal to hold out and win the day, or
else not begin at all, and make the best you can in such awful
circumstances." In this simple sense of the parable (STIER,
ALFORD,
&c., go wide of the mark here in making the enemy to be God,
because of the "conditions of peace,"
Lu 14:32),
two things are taught: (1) Better not begin
(Re 3:15),
than begin and not finish. (2) Though the contest for salvation be on
our part an awfully unequal one, the human will, in the exercise
of that "faith which overcometh the world"
(1Jo 5:4),
and nerved by power from above, which "out of weakness makes it
strong"
(Heb 11:34;
1Pe 1:5),
becomes heroical and will come off "more than conqueror." But without
absolute surrender of self the contest is hopeless
(Lu 14:33).
34, 35. Salt, &c.--(See on
Mt 5:13-16;
and
Mr 9:50).
CHAPTER 15
Lu 15:1-32.
PUBLICANS AND
SINNERS
WELCOMED BY
CHRIST--THREE
PARABLES TO
EXPLAIN
THIS.
1. drew near . . . all the publicans and sinners, &c.--drawn around
Him by the extraordinary adaptation of His teaching to their case, who,
till He appeared--at least His forerunner--might well say, "No man
careth for my soul."
2. murmured, saying, &c.--took it ill, were scandalized at Him, and
insinuated (on the principle that a man is known by the company he
keeps) that He must have some secret sympathy with their character.
But oh, what a truth of unspeakable preciousness do their lips, as on
other occasions, unconsciously utter., Now follow three parables
representing the sinner: (1) in his stupidity; (2) as
all-unconscious of his lost condition; (3)
knowingly and willingly estranged from God
[BENGEL]. The first two
set forth the seeking love of God; the last, His receiving love
[TRENCH].
Lu 15:3-7.
I.
THE
LOST
SHEEP.
3-7. Occurring again
(Mt 18:12-14);
but there to show how precious one of His sheep is to the Good
Shepherd; here, to show that the shepherd, though the sheep stray never
so widely, will seek it out, and when he hath found, will rejoice over
it.
4. leave the ninety and nine--bend all His attention and care, as it
were, to the one object of recovering the lost sheep; not saying. "It is
but one; let it go; enough remain."
go after . . . until, &c.--pointing to all the diversified means
which God sets in operation for recovering sinners.
6. Rejoice with me, &c.--The principle here is, that one feels
exuberant joy to be almost too much for himself to bear alone,
and is positively relieved by having others to share it with
him. (See on
Lu 15:10).
7. ninety-nine just . . . needing no repentance--not
angels, whose place in these parables is very different from
this; but those represented by the prodigal's well-behaved
brother, who have "served their Father" many years and not at any
time transgressed His commandment (in the outrageous sense of the
prodigal). (See on
Lu 15:29;
Lu 15:31).
In other words, such as have grown up from childhood in the fear
of God and as the sheep of His pasture. Our Lord does not say
"the Pharisees and scribes" were such; but as there was undoubtedly
such a class, while "the publicans and sinners" were confessedly the
strayed sheep and the prodigal children, He leaves them to fill up the
place of the other class, if they could.
Lu 15:8-10.
II.
THE
LOST
COIN.
8. sweep the house--"not done without dust on man's part"
[BENGEL].
10. Likewise--on the same principle.
joy, &c.--Note carefully the language here--not "joy on the
part," but "joy in the presence of the angels of God." True
to the idea of the parables. The Great Shepherd. The Great Owner
Himself, is He whose the joy properly is over His own recovered
property; but so vast and exuberant is it
(Zec 8:17),
that as if He could not keep it to Himself, He "calleth His friends and
neighbors together"--His whole celestial family--saying, "Rejoice WITH ME, for I have found My
sheep-My-piece," &c. In this sublime sense it is "joy," before
"or in the presence of the angels"; they only "catch the flying
joy," sharing it with Him! The application of this to the
reception of those publicans and sinners that stood around our Lord is
grand in the extreme: "Ye turn from these lost ones with disdain, and
because I do not the same, ye murmur at it: but a very different
feeling is cherished in heaven. There, the recovery of even one such
outcast is watched with interest and hailed with joy; nor are they left
to come home of themselves or perish; for lo! even now the great
Shepherd is going after His lost sheep, and the Owner is making
diligent search for the lost property; and He is finding it, too, and
bringing it back with joy, and all heaven is full of it." (Let the
reader mark what sublime claims Himself our Lord covertly puts in
here--as if in Him they beheld, all unknown to themselves, nothing less
than heaven in the habiliments of earth, the Great Shepherd above,
clothed in a garment of flesh, come "to seek and to save that which was
lost")!
Lu 15:11-32.
III.
THE
PRODIGAL
SON.
12. the younger--as the more thoughtless.
said, &c.--weary of restraint, panting for independence, unable longer
to abide the check of a father's eye. This is man impatient of
divine control, desiring to be independent of God, seeking to be his own
master; that "sin of sins, in which all subsequent sins are included as
in their germ, for they are but the unfolding of this one" [TRENCH].
he divided, &c.--Thus "God, when His service no longer appears a
perfect freedom, and man promises himself something far better
elsewhere, allows him to make the trial; and he shall discover, if need
be by saddest proof, that to depart from Him is not to throw off the
yoke, but to exchange a light yoke for a heavy one, and one gracious
Master for a thousand imperious tyrants and lords" [TRENCH].
13. not many days--intoxicated with his new--found resources, and
eager for the luxury of using them at Will.
a far country--beyond all danger of interference from home.
wasted, &c.--So long as it lasted, the inward monitor
(Isa 55:2)
would be silenced
(Isa 9:10; 57:10;
Am 4:6-10).
riotous living--
(Lu 15:30),
"with harlots." Ah! but this reaches farther than the sensualist; for
"in the deep symbolical language of Scripture fornication is the
standing image of idolatry; they are in fact ever spoken of as one and
the same sin, considered now in its fleshly, now in its spiritual
aspect"
(Jer 3:1-15;
Eze 16:1-17:24)
[TRENCH].
14. when he had spent all . . . a mighty famine--a mysterious
providence holding back the famine till he was in circumstances to feel
it in all its rigor. Thus, like Jonah, whom the storm did not overtake
till on the mighty deep at the mercy of the waves, does the sinner feel
as if "the stars in their courses were fighting against" him
(Jud 5:20).
in want--the first stage of his bitter experience, and preparation
for a change.
15. joined himself, &c.--his pride not yet humbled, unable to brook
the shame of a return.
to feed swine--glad to keep life anyhow, behold the son sank into a
swineherd--among the Jews, on account of the prohibition of swine's
flesh, emphatically vile! "He who begins by using the world as a
servant, to minister to his pleasure, ends by reversing the
relationship" [TRENCH].
16. would fain have filled--rather, "was fain to fill," ate greedily
of the only food he could get.
the husks--"the hulls of a leguminous plant which in the East is the
food of cattle and swine, and often the nourishment of the poorest in
times of distress" [STIER].
no man gave . . . him--not this food, for that he had, but
anything better
(Jer 30:14).
This was his lowest depth--perishing unpitied, alone in the
world, and ready to disappear from it unmissed! But this is
just the blessed turning-point; midnight before dawn of day
(2Ch 12:8; 33:11-13;
Jer 2:19).
17. came to himself--Before, he had been "beside himself"
(Ec 9:3),
in what sense will presently appear.
How many hired, &c.--What a testimony to the nature of the home
he had left! But did he not know all this ere he departed and every day
of his voluntary exile? He did, and he did not. His heart being wholly
estranged from home and steeped in selfish gratification, his father's
house never came within the range of his vision, or but as another name
for bondage and gloom. Now empty, desolate, withered, perishing,
home, with all its peace, plenty, freedom, dignity, starts into
view, fills all his visions as a warm and living reality, and breaks his
heart.
18. I will arise and go to my FATHER--The change has come at last,
and what a change!--couched in terms of such exquisite simplicity and
power as if expressly framed for all heart-broken penitents.
Father, &c.--Mark the term. Though "no more worthy to be called
his son," the prodigal sinner is taught to claim the defiled, but
still existing relationship, asking not to be made a servant, but
remaining a son to be made "as a servant," willing to take the
lowest place and do the meanest work. Ah! and is it come to this? Once
it was, "Any place rather than home." Now, "Oh, that home! Could I but
dare to hope that the door of it would not be closed against me, how
gladly would I take any place and do any worK, happy only to be there at
all." Well, that is conversion--nothing absolutely new, yet all new;
old familiar things seen in a new light and for the first time as
realities of overwhelming magnitude and power.
How this is brought about the parable says not. (We have that
abundantly elsewhere,
Php 2:13,
&c.). Its one object is to paint
the welcome home of the greatest sinners, when (no matter for the
present how) they "arise and go to their Father."
20. a great way off--Oh yes, when but the face is turned homeward,
though as yet far, far away, our Father recognizes His own child in us,
and bounds to meet us--not saying, Let him come to Me and sue for pardon
first, but Himself taking the first step.
fell on his neck and kissed him--What! In all his filth? Yes. In
all his rags? Yes. In all his haggard, shattered wretchedness? Yes.
"Our Father who art in heaven," is this Thy portraiture? It is even so
(Jer 31:20).
And because it is so, I wonder not that such incomparable teaching hath
made the world new.
21. Father, I have sinned, &c.--"This confession is uttered
after the kiss of reconciliation"
(Eze 16:63)
[TRENCH].
22. But the Father said, &c.--The son has not said all he
purposed, not so much, because the father's demonstrations had
rekindled the filial, and swallowed up all servile feeling [TRENCH] (on the word "Father," see on
Lu 15:18),
but because the father's heart is made to appear too full to listen, at
that moment, to more in this strain.
the best robe--Compare
Zec 3:4, 5,
"Take away the filthy garments from him; behold I have clothed thee
with change of raiment; and they clothed him with garments"
(Isa 61:10;
Re 3:18).
a ring--(Compare
Ge 41:42;
Jas 2:2).
shoes--Slaves went barefoot. Thus, we have here a threefold symbol of
freedom and honor, restored, as the fruit of
perfect reconciliation.
23. the fatted calf--kept for festive occasions.
24. my son--now twice his son.
dead . . . lost--to me; to himself--to my service, my
satisfaction; to his own dignity, peace, profit.
alive again . . . found--to all these.
merry--(See on
Lu 15:10).
25. in the field--engaged in his father's business: compare
Lu 15:29,
"These many years do I serve thee."
28. came his father out, and entreated him--"Like as a father pitieth
his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear Him"
(Ps 103:13).
As it is the elder brother who now errs, so it is the same paternal
compassion which had fallen on the neck of the younger that comes
forth and pleads with the elder.
29. these many years . . . neither transgressed I at any time thy
commandment--The words are not to be pressed too far. He is merely
contrasting his constancy of love and service with the conduct of
his brother; just as Job, resenting the charge of hypocrisy by his
friends, speaks as if nothing could be laid to his charge
(Job 23:10-12),
and David too
(Ps 18:20-24).
The father attests the truth of all he says.
never . . . a kid--I say not a calf, but not even a kid.
that I might make merry with my friends--Here lay his misapprehension.
It was no entertainment for the gratification of the prodigal: it was a
father's expression of the joy he felt at his recovery.
thy son . . . thy living--How unworthy a reflection on the common
father of both, for the one not only to disown the other, but fling him
over upon his father, as if he should say, Take him, and have joy of
him!
31. Son, &c.--The father resents not the insult--how could he,
after the largeness of heart which had kissed the returning prodigal? He
calmly expostulates with him, "Son, listen to reason. What need for
special, exuberant joy over thee? Didst thou say, 'Lo, these many years
do I serve thee?' In that saidst thou truly; but just for that reason
do I not set the whole household a-rejoicing over thee. For thee is
reserved what is higher still--a tranquil lifelong satisfaction in
thee, as a true-hearted faithful son in thy father's house, nor of the
inheritance reserved for thee is aught alienated by this festive and
fitting joy over the once foolish but now wise and newly recovered
one."
32. It was meet--Was it possible he should simply take his long vacant
place in the family without one special sign of wonder and delight at
the change? Would that have been nature? But this being the
meaning of the festivity, it would for that very reason be temporary.
In time, the dutifulness of even the younger son would become the
law and not the exception; he too at length might venture to
say, "Lo, these many years do I serve thee"; and of him the father would
say, "Son, thou art ever with me." In that case, therefore, it would
not be "meet that they should make merry and be glad." The lessons
are obvious, but how beautiful! (1) The deeper sunk and the longer
estranged any sinner is, the more exuberant is the joy which his
recovery occasions. (2) Such joy is not the portion of those whose
whole lives have been spent in the service of their Father in heaven.
(3) Instead of grudging the want of this, they should deem it the
highest testimony to their lifelong fidelity, that something better is
reserved for them--the deep, abiding complacency of their Father in
heaven.
CHAPTER 16
Lu 16:1-31.
PARABLES OF THE
UNJUST
STEWARD AND OF THE
RICH
MAN AND
LAZARUS, OR, THE
RIGHT
USE OF
MONEY.
1. steward--manager of his estate.
accused--informed upon.
had wasted--rather, "was wasting."
3. cannot dig . . . to beg, ashamed--therefore, when dismissed, shall
be in utter want.
4. may receive me, &c.--Observe his one object--when cast out of
one home to secure another. This is the key to the
parable, on which there have been many differing views.
5-7. fifty . . . fourscore--deducting a half from the debt of the
one, and a fifth from that of the other.
8. the lord--evidently the steward's lord, so called in
Lu 16:3, 5.
commended, &c.--not for his "injustice," but "because he had done
wisely," or prudently; with commendable foresight and
skilful adaptation of means to end.
children of this world--so
Lu 20:34;
compare
Ps 17:14
("their portion in this life");
Php 3:19
("mind earthly things");
Ps 4:6, 7.
their generation--or "for their generation"--that is, for the purposes
of the "world" they are "of." The greater wisdom (or shrewdness) of the
one, in adaptation of means to ends, and in energetic, determined
prosecution of them, is none of it for God and eternity--a
region they were never in, an atmosphere they never breathed, an
undiscovered world, an unborn existence to them--but all for the
purposes of their own grovelling and fleeting generation.
children of light--(so
Joh 12:36;
Eph 5:8;
1Th 5:5).
Yet this is only "as night-birds see better in the dark than those of
the day owls than eagles" [CAJETAN and TRENCH]. But we may learn lessons from them, as our Lord
now shows, and "be wise as serpents."
9. Make . . . friends of--Turn to your advantage; that
is, as the steward did, "by showing mercy to the poor"
(Da 4:27;
compare
Lu 12:33; 14:13, 14).
mammon of unrighteousness--treacherous, precarious. (See on
Mt 6:24).
ye fail--in respect of life.
they may receive you--not generally, "ye may be received" (as
Lu 6:38,
"shall men give"), but "those ye have relieved may rise up as
witnesses for you" at the great day. Then, like the steward, when
turned out of one home shall ye secure another; but better than he, a
heavenly for an earthly, an everlasting for a temporary habitation.
Money is not here made the key to heaven, more than "the deeds done in
the body" in general, according to which, as a test of character--but
not by the merit of which--men are to be judged
(2Co 5:10,
and see
Mt 25:34-40).
10. He, &c.--a maxim of great pregnancy and value; rising from the
prudence which the steward had to the fidelity which he had not,
the "harmlessness of the dove, to which the serpent" with all his
"wisdom" is a total stranger. Fidelity depends not on the
amount entrusted, but on the sense of responsibility. He that
feels this in little will feel it in much, and conversely.
11, 12. unrighteous mammon--To the whole of this He applies the
disparaging term "what is least," in contrast with "the true riches."
12. another man's . . . your own--an important turn to the subject.
Here all we have is on trust as stewards, who have an account to
render. Hereafter, what the faithful have will be their own property,
being no longer on probation, but in secure, undisturbed, rightful,
everlasting possession and enjoyment of all that is graciously bestowed
on us. Thus money is neither to be idolized nor despised: we
must sit loose to it and use it for God's glory.
13. can serve--be entirely at the command of; and this is true even
where the services are not opposed.
hate . . . love--showing that the two here intended are in
uncompromising hostility to each other: an awfully searching principle!
14-18. covetous . . . derided him--sneered at Him; their master sin
being too plainly struck at for them to relish. But it was easier to
run down than to refute such teaching.
15. justify yourselves--make a show of righteousness.
highly esteemed among men--generally carried away by plausible
appearances. (See
1Sa 16:7;
and Lu 14:11).
16. The law, &c.--(See
Mt 11:13).
and every man presseth, &c.--Publicans and sinners, all
indiscriminately, are eagerly pressing into it; and ye, interested
adherents of the mere forms of an economy which is passing away,
"discerning not the signs of this time," will allow the tide to go past
you and be found a stranded monument of blindness and obstinacy.
17. it is easier, &c.--(See on
Mt 5:17, 18)
18. putteth away his wife, &c.--(See on
Mt 19:3-9).
Far from intending to weaken the force of the law, in these allusions
to a new economy, our Lord, in this unexpected way, sends home its high
requirements with a pungency which the Pharisees would not fail to
feel.
19. purple and fine linen, &c.--(Compare
Es 8:15;
Re 18:12);
wanting nothing which taste and appetite craved and money could
procure.
20, 21. laid--having to be carried and put down.
full of sores--open, running, "not closed, nor bound up, nor
mollified with ointment"
(Isa 1:6).
21. desiring to be fed with--but was not
[GROTIUS,
BENGEL,
MEYER,
TRENCH, &c.]. The words may mean indeed "was
fain to feed on," or "gladly fed on," as in
Lu 15:16
[ALFORD,
WEBSTER and
WILKINSON, &c.]. But the context rather favors the
former.
licked, &c.--a touching act of brute pity, in the absence of human
relief. It is a case of heartless indifference, amidst luxuries of every
kind, to one of God's poorest and most afflicted ones, presented daily
before the eye.
22. died--His burial was too unimportant to mention; while "the rich
man died and was buried"--his carcass carried in pomp to its earthly
resting-place.
in to Abraham's bosom--as if seen reclining next to Him at the heavenly
feast
(Mt 8:11).
23. in hell--not the final place of the lost (for which another word
is used), but as we say "the unseen world." But as the object here is
certainly to depict the whole torment of the one and the
perfect bliss of the other, it comes in this case to much the same.
seeth Abraham--not God, to whom therefore he cannot cry
[BENGEL].
24. Father Abraham--a well-founded, but unavailing, claim of natural
descent
(Lu 3:8;
Joh 8:37).
mercy on me--who never showed any
(Jas 2:3).
send Lazarus--the pining victim of his merciless neglect.
that he may--take me hence? No; that he dares not to ask.
dip . . . tongue--that is the least conceivable and the
most momentary abatement of his torment; that is all. But even this
he is told is (1) unreasonable.
25, 26. Son--stinging acknowledgment of the claimed relationship.
thou . . . Lazarus, &c.--As it is a great law of God's
kingdom, that the nature of our present desires shall rule that of
our future bliss, so by that law, he whose "good things," craved
and enjoyed, were all bounded by time, could look for none after his
connection with time had come to an end
(Lu 6:24).
But by this law, he whose "evil things," all crowded into the present
life, drove him to seek, and find, consolation in a life beyond the
grave, is by death released from all evil and ushered into unmixed and
uninterrupted good
(Lu 6:21).
(2) It is impossible.
26. besides all this--independently of this consideration.
a great gulf fixed--By an irrevocable decree there has been placed
a vast impassable abyss between the two states, and the occupants of
each.
27-31. Then he said--now abandoning all hope for himself.
send him to my father's house, &c.--no waking up of good in the heart
of the lost, but bitter reproach against God and the old economy, as not
warning him sufficiently [TRENCH].
The answer of Abraham is, They are sufficiently warned.
30. Nay--giving the lie to Abraham.
but if one went unto them from the dead, they will repent--a principle
of awful magnitude and importance. The greatest miracle will have no
effect on those who are determined not to believe. A real Lazarus
soon "rose from the dead," but the sight of him by crowds of people,
inclined thereby to Christ, only crowned the unbelief and hastened the
murderous plots of the Pharisees against the Lord of glory; nor has His
own resurrection, far more overpowering, yet won over that "crooked and
perverse nation."
CHAPTER 17
Lu 17:1-10.
OFFENSES--FAITH--HUMILITY.
1, 2. (See
Mt 18:6, 7).
3, 4. (See on
Mt 18:15-17;
Mt 18:21, 22).
4. seven times--not a lower measure of the forgiving spirit than
the "seventy times seven" enjoined on Peter, which was occasioned by his
asking if he was to stop at seven times. "No," is the virtual
answer, "though it come to seventy times that number, if only he ask
forgiveness in sincerity."
5. Lord--(See on
Lu 10:1).
increase our faith--moved by the difficulty of avoiding and
forgiving "offenses." This is the only instance in which a spiritual
operation upon their souls was solicited of Christ by the Twelve;
but a kindred and higher prayer had been offered before, by one with
far fewer opportunities. (See on
Mr 9:24.)
6. sycamine--mulberry. (See on
Mr 11:22-24.)
7-10. say unto him by and by--The "by and by" (or rather "directly")
should be joined not to the saying but the going: "Go directly."
The connection here is: "But when your faith has been so increased
as both to avoid and forgive offenses, and do things impossible to all
but faith, be not puffed up as though you had laid the Lord under any
obligations to you."
9. I trow not--or, as we say, when much more is meant, "I should
think not."
10. unprofitable--a word which, though usually denoting the
opposite of profit, is here used simply in its negative sense.
"We have not, as his servants, profited or benefited God at all."
(Compare
Job 22:2, 3;
Ro 11:35.)
Lu 17:11-19.
TEN
LEPERS
CLEANSED.
11-13. through the midst of Samaria and Galilee--probably on the
confines of both.
12. stood afar off--(Compare
Le 13:45, 46).
13. they lifted up--their common misery drawing these poor outcasts
together
(2Ki 7:3),
nay, making them forget the fierce national antipathy of Jew and
Samaritan [TRENCH].
Jesus, &c.--(Compare
Mt 20:30-33).
How quick a teacher is felt misery, even though as here the teaching
may be soon forgotten!
14. show yourselves--as cleansed persons. (See on
Mt 8:4.)
Thus too would the Samaritan be taught that "salvation is of the Jews"
(Joh 4:22).
as they went, were cleansed--In how many different ways were our
Lord's cures wrought, and this different from all the rest.
17, 18. Were there not ten cleansed--rather, were not the ten
cleansed? that is, the whole of them--an example (by the way) of
Christ's omniscience [BENGEL].
18. this stranger--"this alien" (literally, "of another race"). The
language is that of wonder and admiration, as is expressly said of
another exhibition of Gentile faith
(Mt 8:10).
19. Arise--for he had "fallen down on his face at His feet"
(Lu 17:16)
and there lain prostrate.
faith made thee whole--not as the others, merely in body, but in
that higher spiritual sense with which His constant language has so
familiarized us.
Lu 17:20-37.
COMING OF THE
KINGDOM OF
GOD AND OF THE
SON OF
MAN.
20-25. when, &c.--To meet the erroneous views not only of the
Pharisees, but of the disciples themselves, our Lord addresses both,
announcing the coming of the kingdom under different aspects.
It cometh not with observation--with watching or lying in wait, as for
something outwardly imposing and at once revealing itself.
21. Lo here! . . . lo there!--shut up within this
or that sharply defined and visible geographical or
ecclesiastical limit.
within you--is of an internal and spiritual character (as
contrasted with their outside views of it). But it has its external
side too.
22. The days--rather "Days."
will come--as in
Lu 19:43,
when, amidst calamities, &c., you will anxiously look for a deliverer,
and deceivers will put themselves forward in this character.
one of the days of the Son of man--Himself again among them but for
one day; as we say when all seems to be going wrong and the one person
who could keep them right is removed [NEANDER in
STIER, &c.]. "This is
said to guard against the mistake of supposing that His visible presence
would accompany the manifestation and establishment of His kingdom"
[WEBSTER and
WILKINSON].
23. they shall say, See here . . . go not, &c.--a warning to all
so-called expositors of prophecy and their followers, who cry, Lo there
and see here, every time that war breaks out or revolutions occur.
24. as lightning . . . so . . . the Son of man--that is it will be
as manifest. The Lord speaks here of His coming and manifestation in a
prophetically indefinite manner, and in these preparatory words
blends into one the distinctive epochs
[STIER]. When the whole
polity of the Jews, civil and ecclesiastical alike, was broken up at
once, and its continuance rendered impossible by the destruction of
Jerusalem, it became as manifest to all as the lightning of heaven that
the kingdom of God had ceased to exist in its old, and had entered on a
new and perfectly different form. So it may be again, ere its final and
greatest change at the personal coming of Christ, and of which the words
in their highest sense are alone true.
25. But first . . . suffer, &c.--This shows that the
more immediate reference of
Lu 17:23
is to an event soon to follow the death of Christ. It was
designed to withdraw the attention of "His disciples" from the
glare in which His foregoing words had invested the approaching
establishment of His kingdom.
26-30. eat . . . married . . . planted--all the ordinary occupations
and enjoyments of life. Though the antediluvian world and the cities of
the plain were awfully wicked, it is not their wickedness, but their
worldliness, their unbelief and indifference to the future, their
unpreparedness, that is here held up as a warning. Note.--These
recorded events of Old Testament history--denied or explained away
nowadays by not a few--are referred to here as facts.
31-33. to take it away . . . Remember, &c.--a warning against that
lingering reluctance to part with present treasures which induces
some to remain in a burning house, in hopes of saving this and that
precious article till consumed and buried in its ruins. The cases here
supposed, though different, are similar.
32. Lot's wife--her "look back," for that is all that is said of
her, and her recorded doom. Her heart was in Sodom still, and the
"look" just said, "And must I bid it adieu?"
33. Whosoever, &c.--(See on
Lu 9:23-27).
34. two in one bed--the prepared and unprepared mingled in closest
intercourse together in the ordinary walks and fellowships of life, when
the moment of severance arrives. Awful truth! realized before the
destruction of Jerusalem, when the Christians found themselves forced by
their Lord's directions
(Lu 21:21)
at once and for ever away from their old associates; but most of all
when the second coming of Christ shall burst upon a heedless world.
37. Where--shall this occur?
Wheresoever, &c.--"As birds of prey scent out the carrion, so wherever
is found a mass of incurable moral and spiritual corruption, there will
be seen alighting the ministers of divine judgment," a proverbial saying
terrifically verified at the destruction of Jerusalem, and many times
since, though its most tremendous illustration will be at the world's
final day.
CHAPTER 18
Lu 18:1-8.
PARABLE OF THE
IMPORTUNATE
WIDOW.
1-5. always--Compare
Lu 18:7,
"night and day."
faint--lose heart, or slacken.
2. feared not . . . neither regarded--defying the
vengeance of God and despising the opinion of men.
widow--weak, desolate, defenseless
(1Ti 5:5,
which is taken from this).
3. came--kept coming. See
Lu 18:5,
"her continual coming."
Avenge me--that is, rid me of the oppression of.
5. continual coming--coming for ever.
6-8. the Lord--a name expressive of the authoritative style in
which He interprets His own parable.
7. shall not God--not unjust, but the infinitely righteous Judge.
avenge--redeem from oppression.
his own elect--not like this widow, the object of indifference and
contempt, but dear to Him as the apple of the eye
(Zec 2:8).
cry day and night--whose every cry enters into the ears of the Lord
of Sabaoth
(Jas 5:4),
and how much more their incessant and persevering cries!
bear long with them--rather, "in their case," or "on their account"
(as)
Jas 5:7,
"for it"), [GROTIUS, DE
WETTE, &c.].
8. speedily--as if pained at the long delay, impatient for the
destined moment to interpose. (Compare
Pr 29:1.)
Nevertheless, &c.--that is, Yet ere the Son of man comes to redress
the wrongs of His Church, so low will the hope of relief sink, through
the length of the delay, that one will be fain to ask, Will He find any
faith of a coming avenger left on the earth? From this we learn: (1)
That the primary and historical reference of this parable is to
the Church in its widowed, desolate, oppressed, defenseless
condition during the present absence of her Lord in the heavens; (2)
That in these circumstances importunate, persevering prayer for
deliverance is the Church's fitting exercise; (3) That notwithstanding
every encouragement to this, so long will the answer be delayed, while
the need of relief continues the same, and all hope of deliverance will
have nearly died out, and "faith" of Christ's coming scarcely to be
found. But the application of the parable to prayer in general is so
obvious as to have nearly hidden its more direct reference, and so
precious that one cannot allow it to disappear in any public and
historical interpretation.
Lu 18:9-14.
PARABLE OF THE
PHARISEE AND THE
PUBLICAN.
11, 12. stood--as the Jews in prayer
(Mr 11:25).
God, &c.--To have been kept from gross iniquities was undoubtedly a
just cause of thankfulness to God; but instead of the devoutly humble,
admiring frame which this should inspire, the Pharisee arrogantly severs
himself from the rest of mankind, as quite above them, and, with a
contemptuous look at the poor publican, thanks God that he has not to
stand afar off like him, to hang down his head like a bulrush and beat
his breast like him. But these are only his moral excellencies. His
religious merits complete his grounds for congratulation. Not
confining himself to the one divinely prescribed annual fast
(Le 16:29),
he was not behind the most rigid, who fasted on the second and fifth
days of every week [LIGHTFOOT], and gave the tenth
not only of what the law laid under tithing, but of "all his gains."
Thus, besides doing all his duty, he did works of
supererogation; while sins to confess and spiritual wants to be
supplied he seems to have felt none. What a picture of the Pharisaic
character and religion!
13. standing afar off--as unworthy to draw near; but that was the
way to get near
(Ps 34:18;
Isa 57:15).
would not lift up--blushing and ashamed to do so
(Ezr 9:6).
smote, &c.--kept smiting; for anguish
(Lu 23:48),
and self-reproach
(Jer 31:19).
be merciful--"be propitiated," a very unusual word in such a sense,
only once else used in the New Testament, in the sense of "making
reconciliation" by sacrifice
(Heb 2:17).
There may therefore, be some allusion to this here, though not
likely.
a sinner--literally, "the sinner"; that is, "If ever there was
one, I am he."
14. rather than the other--The meaning is, "and not the other"; for
the Pharisee was not seeking justification, and felt no need of it. This
great law of the Kingdom of God is, in the teaching of Christ,
inscribed, as in letters of gold, over its entrance gate. And in how
many different forms is it repeated
(Ps 138:6; 147:6;
Lu 1:53).
To be self-emptied, or, "poor in spirit," is the fundamental and
indispensable preparation for the reception of the "grace which
bringeth salvation": wherever this exists, the "mourning" for it which
precedes "comfort" and the earnest "hungerings and thirstings after
righteousness" which are rewarded by the "fulness" of it, will, as we
see here, be surely found. Such, therefore, and such only, are the
justified ones
(Job 33:27, 28;
Ps 34:18;
Isa 57:15).
Lu 18:15-17.
LITTLE
CHILDREN
BROUGHT TO
CHRIST.
15. infants--showing that some, at least, of those called in Matthew
(Mt 19:13)
and Mark
(Mr 10:13)
simply "little" or "young children," were literally "babes."
touch them--or, as more fully in Matthew
(Mt 19:13),
"put His hands on them and pray," or invoke a "blessing" on them
(Mr 10:16),
according to venerable custom
(Ge 48:14, 15).
rebuked them--Repeatedly the disciples thus interposed to save
annoyance and interruption to their Master; but, as the result showed,
always against the mind of Christ
(Mt 15:23;
Lu 18:39, 40).
Here, it is plain from our Lord's reply, that they thought the
intrusion a useless one, as infants were not capable of
receiving anything from Him. His ministrations were for grown
people.
16. But Jesus--"much displeased," says Mark
(Mr 10:14);
and invaluable addition.
said--"SUFFER THE LITTLE CHILDREN TO COME UNTO
ME"--"AND FORBID THEM NOT,"
is the important addition of Matthew
(Mt 19:14)
and Mark
(Mr 10:14).
What words are these from the lips of Christ! The price of them is
above rubies. But the reason assigned, "FOR OF
SUCH IS THE KINGDOM OF GOD," or "of heaven," as in
Mt 19:14,
completes the previous information here conveyed; especially as
interpreted by what immediately follows: "AND
HE TOOK THEM UP IN HIS ARMS,
PUT HIS HANDS UPON THEM, AND BLESSED THEM"
(Mr 10:16).
It is surely not to be conceived that all our Lord meant was to inform
us, that seeing grown people must become childlike in order to
be capable of the Kingdom of God, therefore they should not hinder
infants from coming to Him, and therefore He took up and blessed
the infants themselves. Was it not just the grave mistake of the
disciples that infants should not be brought to Christ, because only
grown people could profit by Him, which "much displeased" our Lord? And
though He took the irresistible opportunity of lowering their pride of
reason, by informing them that, in order to enter the Kingdom,
"instead of the children first becoming like them, they must
themselves become like the children" [RICHTER
in STIER], this was but by the way; and, returning
to the children themselves, He took them up in His gracious
arms, put His hands upon them and blessed them, for no conceivable
reason but to show that they were thereby made capable, AS INFANTS, of the Kingdom of God. And if so,
then "Can any man forbid water that these should not be baptized
which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we?"
(Ac 10:47).
But such application of the baptismal water can have no warrant here,
save where the infants have been previously brought to Christ
Himself for His benediction, and only as the sign and seal
of that benediction.
Lu 18:18-30.
THE
RICH
YOUNG
RULER AND
DISCOURSE
THEREON.
This case presents some remarkable points. (1) The man was of
irreproachable moral character; and this amidst all the temptations of
youth, for he was a "young man"
(Mt 19:22),
and wealth, for "he was very rich"
(Lu 18:23;
Mr 10:22).
(2) But restless notwithstanding, his heart craves eternal life. (3)
Unlike the "rulers," to whose class he belonged
(Lu 18:18),
he so far believed in Jesus as to be persuaded He could authoritatively
direct him on this vital point. (4) So earnest is he that he comes
"running" and even "kneeling before Him," and that when He was gone
forth into the war
(Mr 10:17)
--the high-road, by this time crowded with travellers to the passover;
undeterred by the virulent opposition of the class he belonged to as a
"ruler" and by the shame he might be expected to feel at broaching such
a question in the hearing of a crowd and on the open road.
19. Why, &c.--Did our Lord mean then to teach that God only ought
to be called "good?" Impossible, for that had been to contradict all
Scripture teaching, and His own, too
(Ps 112:5;
Mt 25:21;
Tit 1:8).
Unless therefore we are to ascribe captiousness to our Lord, He could
have had but one object--to raise the youth's ideas of Himself,
as not to be classed merely with other "good masters," and declining to
receive this title apart from the "One" who is essentially and
only "good." This indeed is but distantly hinted; but unless this is
seen in the background of our Lord's words, nothing worthy of
Him can be made out of them. (Hence, Socinianism, instead of
having any support here, is only baffled by it).
20. Thou knowest, &c.--Matthew
(Mt 19:17)
is more complete here: "but if thou wilt enter into life, keep the
commandments. He saith unto him, Which--as if he had said, Point me out
one of them which I have not kept?--"Jesus said, Thou shalt," &c.
(Mt 19:17, 18).
Our Lord purposely confines Himself to the second table, which
He would consider easy to keep, enumerating them all--for in Mark
(Mr 10:19),
"Defraud not" stands for the tenth (else the eighth is twice
repeated). In Matthew
(Mt 19:19)
the sum of this second table of the law is added, "Thou shalt
love thy neighbor as thyself," as if to see if he would venture to say
he had kept that.
21. All these, &c.--"what lack I yet?" adds Matthew
(Mt 19:20).
Ah! this gives us a glimpse of his heart. Doubtless he was perfectly
sincere; but something within whispered to him that his keeping of
the commandments was too easy a way of getting to heaven. He felt
something beyond this to be necessary; after keeping all the
commandments he was at a loss to know what that could be; and he came to
Jesus just upon that point. "Then," says Mark
(Mr 10:21),
"Jesus beholding him loved him," or "looked lovingly upon him." His
sincerity, frankness, and nearness to the kingdom of God, in themselves
most winning qualities, won our Lord's regard even though he turned his
back upon Him--a lesson to those who can see nothing lovable save in
the regenerate.
22. lackest . . . one thing--Ah! but that a fundamental, fatal lack.
sell, &c.--As riches were his idol, our Lord, who knew if from the
first, lays His great authoritative grasp at once upon it, saying, "Now
give Me up that, and all is right." No general direction about the
disposal of riches, then, is here given, save that we are to sit loose
to them and lay them at the feet of Him who gave them. He who does this
with all he has, whether rich or poor, is a true heir of the kingdom of
heaven.
23-25. was very sorrowful--Matthew
(Mt 19:22)
more fully, "went away sorrowful"; Mark still more, "was sad" or
"sullen" at that saying, and "went away grieved." Sorry he was, very
sorry, to part with Christ; but to part with his riches would have cost
him a pang more. When Riches or Heaven, on Christ's terms, were the
alternative, the result showed to which side the balance inclined. Thus
was he shown to lack the one all-comprehensive requirement of the
law--the absolute subjection of the heart to God, and this want
vitiated all his other obediences.
24. when Jesus saw--Mark says
(Mr 3:34),
He "looked round about"--as if first following the departing youth with
His eye--"and saith unto His disciples."
How hardly, &c.--with what difficulty. In Mark
(Mr 10:24)
an explanation is added, "How hard is it for them that trust in
riches," &c.--that is, with what difficulty is this idolatrous trust
conquered, without which they cannot enter; and this is introduced by
the word "children"--sweet diminutive of affection and pity
(Joh 21:5).
25. easier for a camel, &c.--a proverbial expression denoting
literally a thing impossible, but figuratively, very difficult.
26, 27. For, &c.--"At that rate none can be saved": "Well, it does
pass human power, but not divine."
28-30. Lo, &c.--in the simplicity of his heart (as is evident from
the reply), conscious that the required surrender had been made, and
generously taking in his brethren with him--"we"; not in the spirit
of the young ruler. "All these have I kept,"
left all--"The workmen's little is as much his "all" as the prince's
much" [BENGEL]. In Matthew
(Mt 19:27)
he adds, "What shall we have therefore?" How shall it fare with us?
29. There is no man, &c.--graciously acknowledging at once the
completeness and the acceptableness of the surrender as a thing already
made.
house, &c.--The specification is still more minute in Matthew and
Mark,
(Mt 19:27;
Mr 10:29)
to take in every form of self-sacrifice.
for the kingdom of God's sake--in Mark
(Mr 10:29),
"for MY sake and the Gospel's." See on
Lu 6:22.
30. manifold more in this present time--in Matthew
(Mt 19:29)
"an hundredfold," to which Mark
(Mr 10:30)
gives this most interesting addition, "Now in this present time,
houses, and brethren, and sisters, and mothers, and children, and
lands, with persecutions." We have here the blessed promise of a
reconstruction of all human relationships and affections on a
Christian basis and in a Christian state, after being sacrificed, in
their natural form, on the altar of love to Christ. This He calls
"manifold more"--"an hundredfold more"--than what they sacrificed. Our
Lord was Himself the first to exemplify this new adjustment of His
own relationships. (See on
Mt 12:49, 50;
and
2Co 6:14-18.)
But this "with persecutions"; for how could such a transfer take place
without the most cruel wrenches to flesh and blood? but the persecution
would haply follow them into their new and higher circle, breaking that
up too! But best of all, "in the world to come life everlasting."
And
When the shore is won at last
Who will count the billows past?
KEBLE
|
These promises are for every one who forsakes his all for
Christ. But in Matthew
(Mt 19:28)
this is prefaced by a special promise to the Twelve: "Verily I
say unto you, That ye which have followed Me in the Regeneration, when
the Son of man shall sit in the throne of His glory, ye also shall sit
on twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel." Ye who have now
adhered to Me shall, in the new kingdom, rule, or give law to, the
great Christian world, here set forth in Jewish dress as the twelve
tribes, presided over by the twelve apostles on so many judicial
thrones. In this sense certainly the promise has been illustriously
fulfilled [CALVIN, GROTIUS,
LIGHTFOOT, &c.]. But if the promise refers to the
yet future glory (as may be thought from
Lu 22:28-30,
and as most take it), it points to the highest personal distinction of
the first founders of the Christian Church.
Lu 18:31-34.
FULLER
ANNOUNCEMENT OF
HIS
APPROACHING
DEATH AND
RESURRECTION.
(See on
Mr 10:32-34.)
31. all written by the prophets concerning the Son of man . . . be
accomplished--showing how Christ Himself read, and would have us to
read, the Old Testament, in which some otherwise evangelical
interpreters find no prophecies, or virtually none, of the
sufferings of the Son of man.
34. understood none, &c.--The Evangelist seems unable to say strongly
enough how entirely hidden from them at that time was the sense of
these exceeding plain statements: no doubt to add weight to their
subsequent testimony, which from this very circumstance was prodigious,
and with all the simple-hearted irresistible.
Lu 18:35-43.
BLIND
MAN
HEALED.
In
Mt 20:29-34,
they are two, as in the case of the Demoniac of Gadara. In
Matthew and Mark
(Mr 10:46-52)
the occurrence is connected with Christ's departure from
Jericho; in Luke with His approach to it. Many ways of
accounting for these slight divergences of detail have been proposed.
Perhaps, if we knew all the facts, we should see no difficulty;
but that we have been left so far in the dark shows that the thing is
of no moment any way. One thing is plain, there could have been no
collusion among the authors of these Gospels, else they would have
taken care to remove these "spots on the sun."
38. son of David, &c.--(See on
Mt 12:23).
39. rebuked, &c.--(See on
Lu 18:15).
so much the more--that importunity so commended in the
Syrophenician woman, and so often enjoined
(Lu 11:5-13; 18:1-8).
40. commanded, &c.--Mark
(Mr 10:49)
has this interesting addition: "And they call the blind man, saying
unto him, Be of good comfort, rise, He calleth thee"--just as one
earnestly desiring an interview with some exalted person, but told by
one official after another that it is vain to wait, as he will not
succeed (they know it), yet persists in waiting for some answer to his
suit, and at length the door opens, and a servant appears, saying, "You
will be admitted--he has called you." And are there no other suitors
to Jesus who sometimes fare thus? "And he, casting away his
garment"--how lively is this touch, evidently of an eye-witness,
expressive of his earnestness and joy--"came to Jesus"
(Mr 10:49, 50).
41-43. What wilt thou, &c.--to try them; to deepen their present
consciousness of need; and to draw out their faith in Him. Lord
"Rabboni"
(Mr 10:51);
an emphatic and confiding exclamation. (See on
Joh 20:16.)
CHAPTER 19
Lu 19:1-10.
ZACCHEUS THE
PUBLICAN.
The name is Jewish.
2-4. chief among the publicans--farming a considerable district,
with others under him.
rich--Ill-gotten riches some of it certainly was. (See on
Lu 19:8.)
3. who he was--what sort of person. Curiosity then was his only
motive, though his determination not to be baulked was overruled for
more than he sought.
4. sycamore--the Egyptian fig, with leaves like the mulberry.
5, 6. looked up,--in the full knowledge of who was in the tree, and
preparatory to addressing him.
Zaccheus--whom he had never seen in the flesh, nor probably heard
of. "He calleth His own sheep by name and leadeth them out"
(Joh 10:3).
make haste, and come down--to which he literally responded--"he
made haste and came down."
for to-day, &c.--Our Lord invites Himself, and in "royal" style,
which waits not for invitations, but as the honor is done to the
subject, not the sovereign, announces the purpose of royalty to partake
of the subject's hospitalities. Manifestly our Lord speaks as knowing
how the privilege would be appreciated.
to-day . . . abide--(Compare
Joh 1:39),
probably over night.
6. joyfully--Whence this so sudden "joy" in the cold bosom of an
avaricious publican? The internal revolution was as perfect as
instantaneous. "He spake and it was done." "Then shall the lame man leap
as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing"
(Isa 35:6).
7. to be guest--or lodge: something more than "eating with" such
(Lu 15:2).
a sinner--that was one but a minute ago, but now is not. This mighty
change, however, was all unknown to them. But they shall know it
presently. "Sinner" would refer both to his office, vile in the eyes of
a Jew, and to his character, which it is evident was not good.
8-10. stood--before all.
said unto the Lord, Behold, Lord--Mark how frequently Luke uses this
title, and always where lordly authority, dignity, or power is
intended.
if I have--that is, "so far as I have," for evidently the "if" is so
used (as in
Php 4:8).
taken by false accusation--defrauded, overcharged
(Lu 3:12, 13).
fourfold--The Roman law required this; the Jewish law, but the
principal and a fifth more
(Nu 5:7).
There was no demand made for either; but, as if to revenge
himself on his hitherto reigning sin (see on
Joh 20:28),
and to testify the change he had experienced, besides surrendering the
half of his fair gains to the poor, he voluntarily determines to
give up all that was ill-gotten, quadrupled. He gratefully addressed
this to the "Lord," to whom he owed the wonderful change.
9. Jesus said unto him--but also before all.
This day, &c.--memorable saying! Salvation already come, but not a
day old.
to this house--so expressed probably to meet the taunt, "He is gone
to be guest," &c. The house is no longer polluted; it is now fit to
receive Me. But salvation to a house is an exceedingly precious
idea, expressing the new air that would henceforth breathe in it, and
the new impulses from its head which would reach its members
(Ps 118:15;
Ac 16:15, 16, 31).
son of Abraham--He was that by birth, but here it means a partaker
of his faith, being mentioned as the sufficient explanation of
salvation having come to him.
10. lost--and such "lost" ones as this Zaccheus. (See on
Lu 15:32.)
What encouragement is there in this narrative to hope for unexpected
conversions?
Lu 19:11-27.
PARABLE OF THE
POUNDS.
A different parable from that of the Talents
(Mt 25:14-30).
For, (1) This parable was spoken "when He was nigh to Jerusalem"
(Lu 19:11);
that one, some days after entering it, and from the Mount of Olives.
(2) This parable was spoken to the promiscuous crowd; that, to the
Twelve alone. Accordingly, (3) Besides the "servants" in this parable,
who profess subjection to Him, there is a class of "citizens" who
refuse to own Him, and who are treated differently, whereas in the
parable of the talents, spoken to the former class alone, this
latter class is omitted. (4) In the Talents, each servant receives a
different number of them (five, two, one); in the Pounds all receive
the same one pound, which is but about the sixtieth part of a talent;
also, in the talents, each shows the same fidelity by doubling what he
received (the five are made ten; the two, four); in the Pounds, each
receiving the same, render a different return (one making his
pound ten, another five). Plainly, therefore, the intended lesson is
different; the one illustrating equal fidelity with different
degrees of advantage; the other, different degrees of
improvement of the same opportunities; yet with all this
difference, the parables are remarkably similar.
12. a far country--said to put down the notion that He was just on
His way to set up His kingdom, and to inaugurate it by His personal
presence.
to receive . . . a kingdom--be invested with royalty; as when Herod
went to Rome and was there made king; a striking expression of what our
Lord went away for and received, "sitting down at the right hand of the
Majesty on high."
to return--at His second coming.
13. Occupy--"negotiate," "do business," with the resources entrusted.
14. his citizens--His proper subjects; meaning the Jews, who expressly
repudiating our Lord's claims said, "We have no king but Cæsar"
(Joh 19:15).
In Christendom, these correspond to infidel rejecters of Christianity,
as distinguished from professed Christians.
15-26. (See on
Mt 25:19-29.)
ten . . . five cities--different degrees of future
gracious reward, proportioned to the measure of present fidelity.
27. bring hither, &c.--(Compare
1Sa 15:32, 33).
Referring to the awful destruction of Jerusalem, but pointing to the
final destruction of all that are found in open rebellion against
Christ.
Lu 19:28-44.
CHRIST'S
TRIUMPHANT
ENTRY INTO
JERUSALEM AND
TEARS OVER
IT.
(See on
Mt 21:1-11.)
29-38. Bethphage--"house of figs," a village which with Bethany lay
along the further side of Mount Olivet, east of Jerusalem.
30. whereon, &c.--(See on
Joh 19:41).
31. the Lord hath need, &c.--He both knew all and had the key of
the human heart. (See on
Lu 19:5.)
Perhaps the owner was a disciple.
35. set Jesus on--He allowing this, as befitting the state He was
for the first and only time assuming.
37. whole multitude, &c.--The language here is very grand, intended
to express a burst of admiration far wider and deeper than ever had been
witnessed before.
38. Blessed be the King, &c.--Mark
(Mr 11:9, 10)
more fully, "Hosanna," that is, "Save now," the words of
Ps 118:25,
which were understood to refer to Messiah; and so they add, "to the Son
of David, blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord
(Ps 118:26),
Hosanna in the highest." This was the very loftiest style in which He
could be saluted as the promised Deliverer.
peace, &c.--(See on
Lu 2:13, 14).
40. the stones, &c.--Hitherto the Lord had discouraged all
demonstrations in His favor; latterly He had begun an opposite
course; on this one occasion He seems to yield His whole soul to the
wide and deep acclaim with a mysterious satisfaction, regarding it as
so necessary a part of the regal dignity in which as Messiah He for
this last time entered the city, that if not offered by the vast
multitude, it would have been wrung out of the stones rather than be
withheld
(Hab 2:11).
41-44. when beheld . . . wept--Compare
La 3:51,
"Mine eye affecteth mine heart"; the heart again affecting the eye.
Under this sympathetic law of the relation of mind and body, Jesus, in
His beautiful, tender humanity, was constituted even as we. What a
contrast to the immediately preceding profound joy! He yielded Himself
alike freely to both. (See on
Mt 23:37.)
42. at least in this, &c.--even at this moving moment. (See on
Lu 13:9.)
thy peace--thinking perhaps of the name of the city.
(Heb 7:2)
[WEBSTER and
WILKINSON]. How much is included in this word!
now . . . hid--It was His among His last open efforts to "gather
them," but their eyes were judicially closed.
43. a trench--a rampart; first of wood, and when this was burnt, a
built wall, four miles in circuit, built in three days--so determined
were they. This "cut off all hope of escape," and consigned the city to
unparalleled horrors. (See JOSEPHUS,
Wars of the Jews, 6.2; 12.3,4.)
All here predicted was with dreadful literally fulfilled.
Lu 19:45-48.
SECOND
CLEANSING OF THE
TEMPLE AND
SUBSEQUENT
TEACHING.
45, 46. As the first cleansing was on His first visit to Jerusalem
(Joh 2:13-22),
so this second cleansing was on His last.
den of thieves--banded together for plunder, reckless of principle. The
mild term "house of merchandise," used on the former occasion, was now
unsuitable.
47. sought--continued seeking, that is, daily, as He taught.
48. were very attentive to hear him--hung upon His words.
CHAPTER 20
Lu 20:1-19.
THE
AUTHORITY OF
JESUS
QUESTIONED, AND
HIS
REPLY--PARABLE OF THE
WICKED
HUSBANDMEN.
(See on
Mt 21:23.)
2. these things--particularly the clearing of the temple.
4. baptism of John--his whole ministry and mission, of which baptism
was the seal.
5. Why then believed ye him not?--that is, in his testimony to Jesus,
the sum of his whole witness.
7. could not tell--crooked, cringing hypocrites! No wonder Jesus gave
you no answer
(Mt 7:6).
But what dignity and composure does our Lord display as He turns their
question upon themselves!
9-13. vineyard--(See on
Lu 13:6).
In
Mt 21:33
additional points are given, taken literally from
Isa 5:2,
to fix down the application and sustain it by Old Testament authority.
husbandmen--the ordinary spiritual guides of the people, under whose
care and culture the fruits of righteousness might be yielded.
went, &c.--leaving it to the laws of the spiritual husbandry
during the whole length of the Jewish economy. (See on
Mr 4:26.)
10. beat, &c.--
(Mt 21:35);
that is, the prophets, extraordinary messengers raised up from time to
time. (See on
Mt 23:37.)
13. my beloved son--Mark
(Mr 12:6)
still more affectingly, "Having yet therefore one son, his
well-beloved"; our Lord thus severing Himself from all merely
human messengers, and claiming Sonship in its loftiest
sense. (Compare
Heb 3:3-6.)
it may be--"surely"; implying the almost unimaginable guilt of
not doing so.
14. reasoned among themselves--(Compare
Ge 37:18-20;
Joh 11:47-53).
the heir--sublime expression of the great truth, that God's inheritance
was destined for, and in due time to come into the possession of, His
Son in our nature
(Heb 1:2).
inheritance . . . ours--and so from mere servants we may become
lords; the deep aim of the depraved heart, and literally
"the root of all evil."
15. cast him out of the vineyard--(Compare
Heb 13:11-13;
1Ki 21:13;
Joh 19:17).
16. He shall come, &c.--This answer was given by the Pharisees
themselves
(Mt 21:41),
thus pronouncing their own righteous doom. Matthew alone
(Mt 21:43)
gives the naked application, that "the kingdom of God should be taken
from them, and given to a nation bringing forth the fruits
thereof"--the great evangelical community of the faithful, chiefly
Gentiles.
God forbid--His whole meaning now bursting upon them.
17-19. written--(in
Ps 118:22, 23.
See on
Lu 19:38).
The Kingdom of God is here a Temple, in the erection of which a
certain stone, rejected as unsuitable by the spiritual builders,
is, by the great Lord of the House, made the keystone of the whole. On
that Stone the builders were now "falling" and being "broken"
(Isa 8:15),
"sustaining great spiritual hurt; but soon that Stone should fall upon
them and grind them to powder"
(Da 2:34, 35;
Zec 12:3)
--in their corporate capacity in the tremendous destruction of
Jerusalem, but personally, as unbelievers, in a more awful sense
still.
19. the same hour--hardly able to restrain their rage.
Lu 20:20-40.
ENTANGLING
QUESTIONS ABOUT
TRIBUTE AND THE
RESURRECTION--THE
REPLIES.
20-26. sent forth--after consulting
(Mt 22:15)
on the best plan.
spies--"of the Pharisees and Herodians"
(Mr 12:13).
See
Mr 3:6.
21. we know, &c.--hoping by flattery to throw Him off His guard.
22. tribute--(See on
Mt 17:24).
25. things which be Cæsar's--Putting it in this general form, it
was impossible for sedition itself to dispute it, and yet it dissolved
the snare.
and unto God--How much there is in this profound but to them startling
addition to the maxim, and how incomparable is the whole for fulness,
brevity, clearness, weight!
27-34. no resurrection--"nor angel nor spirit"
(Ac 23:8);
the materialists of the day.
34. said unto them--In
Mt 22:29,
the reply begins with this important statement:--"Ye do err, not
knowing the Scriptures," regarding the future state, "nor the power of
God," before which a thousand such difficulties vanish (also
Mr 12:24).
36. neither . . . die any more--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.
equal--or "like."
unto the angels--that is, in the immortality of their nature.
children of God--not in respect of character but nature;
"being the children of the resurrection" to an undecaying existence
(Ro 8:21, 23).
And thus the children of their Father's immortality
(1Ti 6:16).
37, 38. even Moses--whom they had just quoted to entangle Him.
38. not . . . of the dead, . . . for all,
&c.--To God, no human being is dead, or ever will be; but all sustain
an abiding conscious relation to Him. But the "all" here meant "those
who shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world." These sustain a
gracious covenant relation to God, which cannot be dissolved. 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).
How precious are these glimpses of the resurrection state!
39. scribes . . . well said--enjoying His victory over the Sadducees.
they durst not--neither party, both for the time utterly foiled.
Lu 20:41-47.
CHRIST
BAFFLES THE
PHARISEES BY A
QUESTION ABOUT
DAVID AND
MESSIAH, AND
DENOUNCES THE
SCRIBES.
41. said, &c.--"What think ye of Christ [the promised and expected
Messiah]? Whose son is He
[to be]? They say unto Him, The son of David.
He saith unto them, How then doth David in spirit [by the Holy Ghost,
Mr 12:36]
call Him Lord?"
(Mt 22:42, 43).
The difficulty can only be solved by the higher and
lower--the divine and human natures of our Lord
(Mt 1:23).
Mark the testimony here given to the inspiration of the Old
Testament (compare
Lu 24:44).
46, 47. Beware, &c.--(See on
Mt 23:5;
and
Lu 14:7).
47. devour, &c.--taking 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" awaits them. What a
lifelike description of the Romish clergy, the true successors of "the
scribes!"
CHAPTER 21
Lu 21:1-4.
THE
WIDOW'S
TWO
MITES.
1. looked up--He had "sat down over against the treasury"
(Mr 12:41),
probably to rest, for He had continued long standing as he taught in
the temple court
(Mr 11:27),
and "looking up He saw"--as in Zaccheus' case, not quite casually.
the rich, &c.--"the people," says
Mr 12:41
"cast money into the treasury, and many rich east in much"; that is,
into chests deposited in one of the courts of the temple to receive the
offerings of the people towards its maintenance
(2Ki 12:9;
Joh 8:20).
2. two mites--"which make a farthing"
(Mr 12:42),
the smallest Jewish coin. "She might have kept one" [BENGEL].
3. And he said--"to His disciples," whom He "called to Him"
(Mr 12:43),
to teach from it a great future lesson.
more than . . . all--in proportion to her means, which is God's
standard
(2Co 8:12).
4. of their abundance--their superfluity; what they had to spare,"
or beyond what they needed.
of her penury--or "want"
(Mr 12:44)
--her deficiency, of what was less than her own wants
required, "all the living she had." Mark
(Mr 12:44)
still more emphatically, "all that she had--her whole subsistence."
Note: (1) As temple offerings are needed still for the
service of Christ at home and abroad, so "looking down" now, as then
"up," Me "sees" who "cast in," and how much. (2) Christ's
standard of commendable offering is not our superfluity, but our
deficiency--not what will never be missed, but what costs us some
real sacrifice, and just in proportion to the relative amount of that
sacrifice. (See
2Co 8:1-3.)
Lu 21:5-38.
CHRIST'S
PROPHECY OF THE
DESTRUCTION OF
JERUSALEM AND
WARNINGS TO
PREPARE FOR
HIS
SECOND
COMING,
SUGGESTED BY
IT--HIS
DAYS AND
NIGHTS DURING
HIS
LAST
WEEK.
5-7. (See on
Mt 24:1-3.)
8. the time--of the Kingdom, in its full glory.
go . . . not . . . after them--"I come not
so very soon"
(2Th 2:1, 2)
[STIER].
9-11. not terrified--(See
Lu 21:19;
Isa 8:11-14).
end not by and by--or immediately, not yet
(Mt 24:6;
Mr 13:7):
that is, "Worse must come before all is over."
10. Nation, &c.--Matthew and Mark
(Mt 24:8;
Mr 13:8)
add, "All these are the beginning of sorrows," or travail pangs, to
which heavy calamities are compared
(Jer 4:31,
&c.).
12. brought before, &c.--The book of Acts verifies all this.
13. for a testimony--an opportunity of bearing testimony.
18. not a hair . . . perish--He had just said
(Lu 21:16)
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 the ninety-first Psalm, and such like.
Matthew adds the following
(Mt 24:12):
"And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many," the many or, the
most--the generality of professed disciples--"shall wax cold." But he
that endureth to the end shall be saved. Sad illustrations of the
effect of abounding iniquity in cooling the love of faithful disciples
we have in the Epistle of James, written about this period
referred to, and too frequently ever since
(Heb 10:38, 39;
Re 2:10).
"And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world 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.
20, 21. by armies--encamped armies, that is, besieged: "the abomination
of desolation" (meaning the Roman ensigns, as the symbols of an
idolatrous, pagan, unclean power) "spoken of by Daniel the prophet"
(Da 9:27)
"standing where it ought not"
(Mr 13:14).
"Whoso readeth [that prophecy] let him understand"
(Mt 24:15).
Then . . . flee, &c.--EUSEBIUS
says the Christians fled to Pella, at the north extremity of Perea,
being "prophetically directed"; perhaps
by some prophetic intimation still more explicit than this, which still
would be their chart.
23. woe unto--"alas for."
with child, &c.--from the greater suffering it would involve; as
also "flight in winter, and on the sabbath," which they were to "pray"
against
(Mt 24:20),
the one as more trying to the body, the other to the soul. "For then
shall be tribulation such as was not since the beginning of the world,
nor ever shall be"--language not unusual in the Old Testament for
tremendous calamities, though of this it may perhaps be literally said,
"And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be
saved, but for the elect's sake those days shall be shortened"
(Mt 24:21, 22).
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. Here in
Matthew and Mark
(Mt 24:24;
Mr 13:22)
are some particulars about "false Christs," who should, "if
possible"--a precious clause--"deceive the very elect." (Compare
2Th 2:9-11;
Re 13:13.)
24. Jerusalem . . . trodden down . . .
until, &c.--Implying (1) that one day Jerusalem shall cease to be
"trodden down by the Gentiles"
(Re 11:2),
as then by pagan so now by Mohammedan unbelievers; (2) that this shall
be at the "completion" of "the times of the Gentiles," which from
Ro 11:25
(taken from this) we conclude to mean till the Gentiles have had their
full time of that place in the Church which the Jews in their
time had before them--after which, the Jews being again "grafted
into their own olive tree," one Church of Jew and Gentile together
shall fill the earth
(Ro 11:1-36).
What a vista this opens up!
25-28. signs, &c.--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, &c.; and from
Lu 21:28, 32,
it seems undeniable that its immediate reference was to the
destruction of Jerusalem, though its ultimate reference beyond
doubt is to Christ's final coming.
28. redemption--from the oppression of ecclesiastical despotism and
legal bondage by the total subversion of the Jewish state and the firm
establishment of the evangelical kingdom
(Lu 21:31).
But the words are of far wider and more precious import. Matthew
(Mt 24:30)
says, "And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in
heaven," evidently something distinct from Himself, mentioned
immediately after. What this was intended to mean, 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 is vain to conjecture.
32. This generation--not "this nation," as some interpret it, which,
though admissible in itself, seems very unnatural here. It is rather as
in
Lu 9:27.
34-37. surfeiting, and drunkenness--All animal excesses, quenching
spirituality.
cares of this life--(See on
Mr 4:7;
Mr 4:19).
36. Watch . . . pray, &c.--the two great duties which in prospect of
trial are constantly enjoined. These warnings, suggested by the need of
preparedness for the tremendous calamities approaching, and the total
wreck of the existing state of things, are the general improvement of
the whole discourse, carrying the mind forward to Judgment and Vengeance
of another kind and on a grander and more awful scale--not
ecclesiastical or political but personal, not temporal but eternal--when
all safety and blessedness will be found to lie in being able to
"STAND BEFORE THE
SON OF
MAN" in the glory of His personal appearing.
37, 38. in the daytime--of this His last week.
abode in the mount--that is, at Bethany
(Mt 21:17).
CHAPTER 22
Lu 22:1-6.
CONSPIRACY OF THE
JEWISH
AUTHORITIES TO
PUT
JESUS TO
DEATH--COMPACT WITH
JUDAS.
1, 2. (See on
Mt 26:1-5.)
3. Then entered Satan, &c.--but not yet in the full sense. The
awful stages of it were these: (1) Covetousness being his
master--passion, the Lord let it reveal itself and gather strength by
entrusting him with "the bag"
(Joh 12:6),
as treasurer to Himself and the Twelve. (2) In the discharge of that
most sacred trust he became "a thief," appropriating its contents from
time to time to his own use. Satan, seeing this door into his heart
standing wide open, determines to enter by it, but cautiously
(2Co 2:11);
first merely "putting it into his heart to betray Him"
(Joh 13:2),
suggesting the thought to him that by this means he might enrich
himself. (3) This thought was probably converted into a settled purpose
by what took place in Simon's house at Bethany. (See
Mt 26:6,
and see on
Joh 12:4-8.)
(4) Starting back, perhaps, or mercifully held back, for some time, the
determination to carry it into immediate effect was not consummated
till, sitting at the paschal supper, "Satan entered into him"
(see on
Joh 13:27),
and conscience, effectually stifled, only rose again to be his
tormentor. What lessons in all this for every one
(Eph 4:27;
Jas 4:7;
1Pe 5:8, 9)!
5. money--"thirty pieces of silver"
(Mt 26:15);
thirty shekels, the fine payable for man- or maid-servant accidentally
killed
(Ex 21:32),
and equal to between four and five pounds of our money--"a goodly
price that I was priced at of them"
(Zec 11:13).
(See on
Joh 19:16.)
6. in the absence, &c.--(See
Mt 26:5).
Lu 22:7-38.
LAST
PASSOVER--INSTITUTION OF THE
SUPPER--DISCOURSE AT THE
TABLE.
7. the day of unleavened bread--strictly the fifteenth Nisan (part of
our March and April) after the paschal lamb was killed; but here, the
fourteenth (Thursday). Into the difficult questions raised on this we
cannot here enter.
10-13. when ye are entered the city--He Himself probably stayed at
Bethany during the day.
there shall a man, &c.--(See on
Lu 19:29-32).
14-18. the hour--about six P.M. Between
three and this hour the lamb was killed
(Ex 12:6,
Margin)
15. With desire . . . desired--"earnestly have I longed" (as
Ge 31:30,
"sore longedst"). Why? It was to be His last "before He suffered"--and
so became "Christ our Passover sacrificed for us"
(1Co 5:7),
when it was "fulfilled in the Kingdom of God," the typical
ordinance thenceforth disappearing.
17. took the cup--the first of several partaken of in this service.
divide it among, &c.--that is, It is to be your
last as well as Mine, "until the Kingdom of God come," or as it is
beautifully given in
Mt 26:29,
"until that day when I shall drink it new with you in my Father's
kingdom." It was the point of transition between two economies and
their two great festivals, the one about to close for ever, the
other immediately to open and run its majestic career until from earth
it be transferred to heaven.
21, 22. (See on
Joh 13:21,
&c.).
24-30. there was--or "had been," referring probably to some
symptoms of the former strife which had reappeared, perhaps on seeing
the whole paschal arrangements committed to two of the Twelve. (See on
Mr 10:42-45.)
25. benefactors--a title which the vanity of princes eagerly coveted.
26. But ye . . . not--Of how little avail has this condemnation of
"lordship" and vain titles been against the vanity of Christian
ecclesiastics?
28. continued, &c.--affecting evidence of Christ's tender
susceptibility to human sympathy and support! (See on
Joh 6:66, 67;
see
Joh 16:32.)
29. I appoint, &c.--Who is this that dispenses kingdoms, nay, the
Kingdom of kingdoms, within an hour or two of His apprehension, and less
than a day of His shameful death? These sublime contrasts, however,
perpetually meet and entrance us in this matchless history.
30. eat and drink, &c.--(See
Lu 22:16
and see on
Lu 18:28,
&c.).
31-34. Simon, Simon--(See on
Lu 10:41).
desired to have--rather, "hath obtained you," properly
"asked and obtained"; alluding to Job
(Job 1:6-12; 2:1-6),
whom he solicited and obtained that he might sift him as wheat,
insinuating as "the accuser of the brethren"
(Re 12:10),
that he would find chaff enough in his religion, if indeed there was
any wheat at all.
you--not Peter only, but them all.
32. But I have prayed--have been doing it already.
for thee--as most in danger. (See on
Lu 22:61, 62.)
fail not--that is, entirely; for partially it did fail.
converted--brought back afresh as a penitent disciple.
strengthen, &c.--that is, make use of thy bitter experience for the
fortifying of thy tempted brethren.
33. I am ready, &c.--honest-hearted, warmly-attached disciple,
thinking thy present feelings immovable as a rock, thou shalt find them
in the hour of temptation unstable as water: "I have been praying for
thee," therefore thy faith shall not perish; but thinking this
superfluous, thou shalt find that "he that trusteth in his own heart is
a fool"
(Pr 28:26).
34. cock . . . crow--"twice"
(Mr 14:30).
35-38. But now--that you are going forth not as before on a temporary
mission, provided for without purse or scrip, but into scenes of
continued and severe trial, your methods must be different; for
purse and scrip will now be needed for support, and the usual means of
defense.
37. the things concerning me--decreed and written.
have an end--are rapidly drawing to a close.
38. two swords . . . enough--they thinking He referred to present
defense, while His answer showed He meant something else.
Lu 22:39-46.
AGONY IN THE
GARDEN.
39. as . . . wont--(See
Joh 18:2).
40. the place--the Garden of Gethsemane, on the west or city side of
the mount. Comparing all the accounts of this mysterious scene, the
facts appear to be these: (1) He bade nine of the Twelve remain "here"
while He went and prayed "yonder." (2) He "took the other three, Peter,
James, and John, and began to be sore amazed [appalled], sorrowful, and
very heavy [oppressed], and said, My soul is exceeding sorrowful even
unto death"--"I feel as if nature would sink under this load, as if life
were ebbing out, and death coming before its time"--"tarry ye here, and
watch with Me"; not, "Witness for Me," but, "Bear Me company." It did
Him good, it seems, to have them beside Him. (3) But soon even they were
too much for Him: He must be alone. "He was withdrawn from them about a
stone's-cast"--though near enough for them to be competent witnesses and
kneeled down, uttering that most affecting prayer
(Mr 14:36),
that if possible "the cup," of His approaching death, "might
pass from Him, but if not, His Father's will be done": implying that
in itself it was so purely revolting that only its being the
Father's will would induce Him to taste it, but that in that
view of it He was perfectly prepared to drink it. It is no struggle
between a reluctant and a compliant will, but between two views of one
event--an abstract and a relative view of it, in the one
of which it was revolting, in the other welcome. By
signifying how it felt in the one view, He shows His beautiful
oneness with ourselves in nature and feeling; by expressing how He
regarded it in the other light, He reveals His absolute obediential
subjection to His Father. (4) On this, having a momentary relief, for
it came upon Him, we imagine, by surges, He returns to the three, and
finding them sleeping, He addresses them affectingly, particularly
Peter, as in
Mr 14:37, 38.
He then (5) goes back, not now to kneel, but fell on His face on the
ground, saying the same words, but with this turn, "If this cup may
not pass," &c.
(Mt 26:42)
--that is, 'Yes, I understand this mysterious silence
(Ps 22:1-6);
it may not pass; I am to drink it, and I will'--"Thy will be done!" (6)
Again, for a moment relieved, He returns and finds them "sleeping for
sorrow," warns them as before, but puts a loving construction upon it,
separating between the "willing spirit" and the "weak flesh." (7) Once
more, returning to His solitary spot, the surges rise higher, beat more
tempestuously, and seem ready to overwhelm Him. To fortify Him for
this, "there appeared an angel unto Him from heaven strengthening
Him"--not to minister light or comfort (He was to have none of that,
and they were not needed nor fitted to convey it), but purely to
sustain and brace up sinking nature for a yet hotter and fiercer
struggle. And now, He is "in an agony, and prays more earnestly"--even
Christ's prayer, it seems, admitted of and now demanded such
increase--"and His sweat was as it were great drops [literally,
'clots'] of blood falling down to the ground." What was this? Not
His proper sacrificial offering, though essential to it. It was
just the internal struggle, apparently hushing itself before, but now
swelling up again, convulsing His whole inner man, and this so
affecting His animal nature that the sweat oozed out from every pore in
thick drops of blood, falling to the ground. It was just shuddering
nature and indomitable will struggling together. But again
the cry, If it must be, Thy will be done, issues from His lips,
and all is over. "The bitterness of death is past." He has anticipated
and rehearsed His final conflict, and won the victory--now on the
theater of an invincible will, as then on the arena of the
Cross. "I will suffer," is the grand result of Gethsemane: "It
is finished" is the shout that bursts from the Cross. The Will without
the Deed had been all in vain; but His work was consummated when He
carried the now manifested Will into the palpable Deed, "by the
which WILL we are sanctified THROUGH THE OFFERING OF THE BODY OF JESUS CHRIST ONCE FOR ALL"
(Heb 10:10).
(8) At the close of the whole scene, finding them still sleeping (worn
out with continued sorrow and racking anxiety), He bids them, with an
irony of deep emotion, "sleep on now and take their rest, the hour is
come, the Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners, rise, let
us be going, the traitor is at hand." And while He spoke, Judas
approached with his armed band. Thus they proved "miserable
comforters," broken reeds; and thus in His whole work He was
alone, and "of the people there was none with Him."
Lu 22:47-54.
BETRAYAL AND
APPREHENSION OF
JESUS--FLIGHT OF
HIS
DISCIPLES.
Lu 22:55-62.
JESUS BEFORE
CAIAPHAS--FALL OF
PETER.
The particulars of these two sections require a combination of all the
narratives, for which see on
Joh 18:1-27.
61. And the Lord turned, and looked upon Peter--(Also see on
Mr 14:72.)
62. And Peter went out, and wept bitterly--(Also see on
Mr 14:72.)
Lu 22:63-71.
JESUS
CONDEMNED TO
DIE AND
SHAMEFULLY
ENTREATED.
(See on
Mr 14:53-63;
Joh 18:19,
&c.; and
Lu 22:55-62.)
CHAPTER 23
Lu 23:1-5.
JESUS BEFORE
PILATE.
(See on
Mr 15:1-5;
and
Joh 18:28-19:22.)
Lu 23:6-12.
JESUS BEFORE
HEROD.
(See
Mr 15:6.)
7. sent him to Herod--hoping thus to escape the dilemma of an unjust
condemnation or an unpopular release.
at Jerusalem . . . at that time--to keep the passover.
8. some miracle--Fine sport thou expectedst, as the Philistines with
Samson
(Jud 16:25),
O coarse, crafty, cruel tyrant! But thou hast been baulked before
(see on
Lu 13:31-33),
and shalt be again.
9. answered . . . nothing--(See
Mt 7:6).
10. stood and vehemently accused him--no doubt both of
treason before the king, and of blasphemy, for the
king was a Jew.
11. his men of war--his bodyguard.
set him at naught, &c.--stung with disappointment at His refusal to
amuse him with miracles or answer any of his questions.
gorgeous robe--bright robe. If this mean (as sometimes) of shining
white, this being the royal color among the Jews, it may have been in
derision of His claim to be "King of the Jews." But if so, "He in
reality honored Him, as did Pilate with His true title blazoned on the
cross" [BENGEL].
sent him again to Pilate--instead of releasing him as he ought,
having established nothing against Him
(Lu 23:14, 15).
"Thus he implicated himself with Pilate in all the guilt of His
condemnation, and with him accordingly he is classed"
(Ac 4:27)
[BENGEL].
at enmity--perhaps about some point of disputed jurisdiction, which
this exchange of the Prisoner might tend to heal.
Lu 23:13-38.
JESUS
AGAIN BEFORE
PILATE--DELIVERED
UP--LED
AWAY TO
BE
CRUCIFIED.
(See on
Mr 15:6-15;
and
Joh 19:2-17).
26. Cyrenian--of Cyrene, in Libya, on the north coast of Africa,
where were many Jews who had a synagogue at Jerusalem
(Ac 6:9,
and see
Ac 2:10).
He was "the father of Alexander and Rufus"
(Mr 15:21),
probably better known afterwards than himself, as disciples. (See
Ro 16:13).
out of the country--and casually drawn into that part of the crowd.
laid the cross--"Him they compel to bear His cross,"
(Mt 27:32)
--sweet compulsion, if it issued in him or his sons voluntarily
"taking up their cross!" It would appear that our Lord had first
to bear His own cross
(Joh 19:17),
but being from exhaustion unable to proceed, it was laid on another to
bear it "after Him."
27-31. women--not the precious Galilean women
(Lu 23:49),
but part of the crowd.
28. not for me, &c.--noble spirit of compassion, rising above
His own dread endurances, in tender commiseration of sufferings yet in
the distance and far lighter, but without His supports and
consolations!
30. mountains . . . hills, &c.--
(Ho 10:8),
flying hither and thither as they did in despair for shelter, during
the siege; a very slight premonition of cries of another and more awful
kind
(Isa 2:10, 19, 21;
Re 6:16, 17).
31. green tree--that naturally resists the fire.
the dry--that attracts the fire, being its proper fuel. The proverb
here plainly means: "If such sufferings alight upon the innocent One,
the very Lamb of God, what must be in store for those who are provoking
the flames?"
Lu 23:32-38, 44-46.
CRUCIFIXION AND
DEATH OF THE
LORD
JESUS.
(See on
Joh 19:17-30).
Lu 23:39-43.
THE
TWO
THIEVES.
39. railed on him--catching up the universal derision, but with a
turn of his own. Jesus, "reviled, reviles not again"; but another voice
from the cross shall nobly wipe out this dishonor and turn it to the
unspeakable glory of the dying Redeemer.
40. Dost not thou--"thou" is emphatic: "Let others jeer, but dost
thou?"
fear God--Hast thou no fear of meeting Him so soon as thy righteous
Judge? Thou art within an hour or two of eternity, and dost thou spend
it in reckless disregard of coming judgment?
in the same condemnation--He has been condemned to die, but is it
better with thee? Doth even a common lot kindle no sympathy in thy
breast?
41. we . . . justly, &c.--He owns the worst of his crimes and
deserts, and would fain shame his fellow into the same.
nothing amiss--literally, "out of place"; hence "unnatural"; a
striking term here. Our Lord was not charged with ordinary crime, but
only with laying claim to office and honors which amounted to
blasphemy. The charge of treason had not even a show of truth, as Pilate
told His enemies. In this defense then there seems more than meets the
eye. "He made Himself the promised Messiah, the Son of God; but in this
He 'did nothing amiss'; He ate with publicans and sinners, and bade all
the weary and heavy laden come and rest under His wing; but in this He
'did nothing amiss': He claimed to be Lord of the Kingdom of God, to
shut it at will, but also to open it at pleasure even to such as we are;
but in this He 'did nothing amiss!'" Does His next speech imply less
than this? Observe: (1) His frank confession and genuine
self-condemnation. (2) His astonishment and horror at the very different
state of his fellow's mind. (3) His anxiety to bring him to a better
mind while yet there was hope. (4) His noble testimony, not only to the
innocence of Jesus, but to all that this implied of the rightfulness of
His claims.
42. said unto Jesus, &c.--Observe here (1) The "kingdom" referred
to was one beyond the grave; for it is inconceivable that he should
have expected Him to come down from the cross to erect any temporal
kingdom. (2) This he calls Christ's own (Thy) kingdom. (3) As such, he
sees in Christ the absolute right to dispose of that kingdom to whom He
pleased. (4) He does not presume to ask a place in that kingdom,
though that is what he means, but with a humility quite affecting, just
says, "Lord, remember me when," &c. Yet was there mighty faith in
that word. If Christ will but "think upon him"
(Ne 5:19),
at that august moment when He "cometh into His kingdom," it will do.
"Only assure me that then Thou wilt not forget such a wretch as I, that
once hung by Thy side, and I am content." Now contrast with this bright
act of faith the darkness even of the apostles' minds, who could hardly
be got to believe that their Master would die at all, who now were
almost despairing of Him, and who when dead had almost buried their
hopes in His grave. Consider, too, the man's previous
disadvantages and bad life. And then mark how his faith
comes out--not in protestations, "Lord, I cannot doubt, I am firmly
persuaded that Thou art Lord of a kingdom, that death cannot disannul
Thy title nor impede the assumption of it in due time," &c.--but as
having no shadow of doubt, and rising above it as a question
altogether, he just says, "Lord, remember me when Thou comest,"
&c. Was ever faith like this exhibited upon earth? It looks as if the
brightest crown had been reserved for the Saviour's head at His darkest
moment!
43. Jesus said, &c.--The dying Redeemer speaks as if He Himself
viewed it in this light. It was a "song in the night." It ministered
cheer to His spirit in the midnight gloom that now enwrapt it.
Verily I say unto thee--"Since thou speakest as to the king, with
kingly authority speak I to thee."
To-day--"Thou art prepared for a long delay before I come into My
kingdom, but not a day's delay shall there be for thee; thou shalt not
be parted from Me even for a moment, but together we shall go, and with
Me, ere this day expire, shalt thou be in Paradise" (future bliss,
2Co 12:4;
Re 2:7).
Learn (1) How "One is taken and another left"; (2) How easily divine
teaching can raise the rudest and worst above the best instructed and
most devoted servants of Christ; (3) How presumption and
despair on a death hour are equally discountenanced here, the
one in the impenitent thief, the other in his penitent fellow.
Lu 23:47-56.
SIGNS AND
CIRCUMSTANCES
FOLLOWING
HIS
DEATH--HIS
BURIAL.
(See on
Mt 27:51-56;
Mt 27:62-66;
and
Joh 19:31-42).
CHAPTER 24
Lu 24:1-12.
ANGELIC
ANNOUNCEMENT TO THE
WOMEN
THAT
CHRIST
IS
RISEN--PETER'S
VISIT TO THE
EMPTY
SEPULCHRE.
(See on
Mr 16:1-8;
and
Mt 28:1-5).
5. Why, &c.--Astonishing question! not "the risen," but
"the Living One" (compare
Re 1:18);
and the surprise expressed in it implies an incongruity in His
being there at all, as if, though He might submit to it, "it was
impossible He should be holden of it"
(Ac 2:24).
6. in Galilee--to which these women themselves belonged
(Lu 23:55).
7. Saying, &c.--How remarkable it is to hear angels quoting a whole
sentence of Christ's to the disciples, mentioning where it was uttered,
and wondering it was not fresh in their memory, as doubtless it was in
theirs!
(1Ti 3:16,
"seen of angels," and
1Pe 1:12).
10. Joanna--(See on
Lu 8:1-3).
12. Peter, &c.--(See on
Joh 20:1-10).
Lu 24:13-35.
CHRIST
APPEARS TO THE
TWO
GOING TO
EMMAUS.
13. two of them--One was Cleopas
(Lu 24:18);
who the other was is mere conjecture.
Emmaus--about seven and a half miles from Jerusalem. They probably
lived there and were going home after the Passover.
14-16. communed and reasoned--exchanged views and feelings, weighing
afresh all the facts, as detailed in
Lu 24:18-24.
drew near--coming up behind them as from Jerusalem.
eyes holden--Partly He was "in another form"
(Mr 16:12),
and partly there seems to have been an operation on their own vision;
though certainly, as they did not believe that He was alive, His
company as a fellow traveller was the last thing they would expect,
17-24. communications, &c.--The words imply the earnest discussion
that had appeared in their manner.
18. knowest not, &c.--If he knew not the events of the last few
days in Jerusalem, he must be a mere sojourner; if he did, how could he
suppose they would be talking of anything else? How artless all this!
19. Concerning Jesus, &c.--As if feeling it a relief to have someone
to unburden his thoughts and feelings to, this disciple goes over the
main facts in his own desponding style, and this was just what our Lord
wished.
21. we trusted, &c.--They expected the promised Deliverance at His
hand, but in the current sense of it, not by His death.
besides all this--not only did His death seem to give the fatal blow
to their hopes, but He had been two days dead already, and this was the
third. It is true, they add, some of our women gave us a surprise,
telling us of a vision of angels they had at the empty grave this
morning that said He was alive, and some of ourselves who went thither
confirmed their statement; but then Himself they saw not. A doleful tale
truly, told out of the deepest despondency.
25-27. fools--senseless, without understanding.
26. Ought not Christ--"the Christ," "the Messiah."
to suffer . . . and enter--that is, through the gate of suffering
(and suffering "these things," or such a death) to enter into
His glory. "Ye believe in the glory; but these very sufferings are the
predicted gate of entrance into it."
27. Moses and all the prophets, &c.--Here our Lord both teaches us
the reverence due to Old Testament Scripture, and the great burden of
it--"Himself."
28-31. made as though, &c.--(Compare
Mr 6:48;
Ge 18:3, 5; 32:24-26).
29. constrained, &c.--But for this, the whole design of the interview
had been lost; but it was not to be lost, for He who only wished to
be constrained had kindled a longing in the hearts of His travelling
companions which was not to be so easily put off. And does not this
still repeat itself in the interviews of the Saviour with His loving,
longing disciples? Else why do they say,
Abide with me from morn to eve,
For without Thee I cannot live;
Abide with me when night is nigh,
For without Thee I cannot die.
KEBLE
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30, 31. he took . . . and blessed . . . and their eyes were opened--The
stranger first startles them by taking the place of master at their own
table, but on proceeding to that act which reproduced the whole scene of
the last Supper, a rush of associations and recollections disclosed
their guest, and He stood confessed before their astonished
gaze--THEIR RISEN
LORD! They were going to gaze on Him, perhaps embrace Him, but
that moment He is gone! It was enough.
32-34. They now tell each to the other how their hearts
burned--were fired--within them at His talk and His expositions of
Scripture. "Ah! this accounts for it: We could not understand the glow
of self-evidencing light, love, glory that ravished our hearts; but now
we do." They cannot rest--how could they?--they must go straight back
and tell the news. They find the eleven, but ere they have time to tell
their tale, their ears are saluted with the thrilling news, "The Lord
is risen indeed, and hath appeared to Simon." Most touching and
precious intelligence this. The only one of the Eleven to whom He
appeared alone was he, it seems, who had so shamefully denied
Him. What passed at that interview we shall never know here. Probably
it was too sacred for disclosure. (See on
Mr 16:7).
The two from Emmaus now relate what had happened to them, and while
thus comparing notes of their Lord's appearances, lo! Christ Himself
stands in the midst of them. What encouragement to doubting, dark,
true-hearted disciples!
Lu 24:36-53.
JESUS
APPEARS TO THE
ASSEMBLED
DISCIPLES--HIS
ASCENSION.
36. Jesus . . . stood--(See on
Joh 20:19).
37, 38. a spirit--the ghost of their dead Lord, but not Himself in
the body
(Ac 12:15;
Mt 14:26).
thoughts--rather, "reasonings"; that is, whether He were risen or no,
and whether this was His very self.
39-43. Behold, &c.--lovingly offering them both ocular and
tangible demonstration of the reality of His resurrection.
a spirit hath not--an important statement regarding "spirits."
flesh and bones--He says not "flesh and blood"; for the
blood is the life of the animal and corruptible body
(Ge 9:4),
which "cannot inherit the kingdom of God"
(1Co 15:50);
but "flesh and bones," implying the identity, but with
diversity of laws, of the resurrection body. (See on
Joh 20:24-28).
41. believed not for joy, &c.--They did believe, else they had
not rejoiced [BENGEL]. But it seemed too
good to be true
(Ps 126:1, 2).
42. honeycomb--common frugal fare, anciently.
43. eat before them--that is, let them see Him doing it: not for His
own necessity, but their conviction.
44-49. These are the words, &c.--that is, "Now you will understand
what seemed so dark to you when I told you about the Son of man being
put to death and rising again"
(Lu 18:31-34).
while . . . yet with you--a striking expression, implying that He
was now, as the dead and risen Saviour, virtually dissevered from this
scene of mortality, and from all ordinary intercourse with His mortal
disciples.
law . . . prophets . . . psalms--the three Jewish divisions of the
Old Testament Scriptures.
45. Then opened he, &c.--a statement of unspeakable value; expressing,
on the one hand, Christ's immediate access to the human spirit and
absolute power over it, to the adjustment of its vision, and
permanent rectification for spiritual discernment (than which it is
impossible to conceive a stronger evidence of His proper divinity); and,
on the other hand, making it certain that the manner of interpreting the \
Old Testament which the apostles afterwards employed (see the Acts
and Epistles), has the direct sanction of Christ Himself.
46. behoved Christ--(See on
Lu 24:26).
47. beginning at Jerusalem--(1) As the metropolis and heart of the
then existing kingdom of God:--"to the Jew first"
(Ro 1:16;
Ac 13:46;
Isa 2:3,
see on
Mt 10:6).
(2) As the great reservoir and laboratory of all the sin and crime of
the nation, thus proclaiming for all time that there is mercy in Christ
for the chief of sinners. (See on
Mt 23:37).
48. witnesses--(Compare
Ac 1:8, 22).
49. I send--the present tense, to intimate its nearness.
promise of my Father--that is, what My Father hath promised; the
Holy Ghost, of which Christ is the authoritative Dispenser
(Joh 14:7;
Re 3:1; 5:6).
endued--invested, or clothed with; implying, as the parallels show
(Ro 13:14;
1Co 15:53;
Ga 3:27;
Col 3:9, 10),
their being so penetrated and acted upon by conscious supernatural
power (in the full sense of that word) as to stamp with divine
authority the whole exercise of their apostolic office, including,
of course, their pen as well as their mouth.
50-53. to Bethany--not to the village itself, but on the "descent"
to it from Mount Olivet.
51. while he blessed . . . parted, &c.--Sweet intimation! Incarnate
Love, Crucified Love, Risen Love, now on the wing for heaven, waiting
only those odorous gales which were to waft Him to the skies, goes away
in benedictions, that in the character of Glorified, Enthroned Love, He
might continue His benedictions, but in yet higher form, until He come
again! And oh, if angels were so transported at His birth into this
scene of tears and death, what must have been their ecstasy as they
welcomed and attended Him "far above all heavens" into the
presence-chamber, and conducted Him to the right hand of the Majesty on
High! Thou hast an everlasting right, O my Saviour, to that august
place. The brightness of the Father's glory, enshrined in our nature,
hath won it well; for He poured out His soul unto death, and led
captivity captive, receiving gifts for men, yea for the rebellious, that
the Lord God might dwell among them. Thou art the King of glory, O
Christ. Lift up your heads, O ye gates, be lifted up, ye everlasting
doors, that the King of glory may come in! Even so wilt Thou change
these vile bodies of ours, that they may be like unto Thine own glorious
body; and then with gladness and rejoicing shall they be brought, they
shall enter into the King's palace!
52. worshipped him--certainly in the strictest sense of adoration.
returned to Jerusalem--as instructed to do: but not till after
gazing, as if entranced, up into the blue vault in which He had
disappeared, they were gently checked by two shining ones, who assured
them He would come again to them in the like manner as He had gone into
heaven. (See on
Ac 1:10, 11).
This made them return, not with disappointment at His removal, but
"with great joy."
53. were continually in the temple--that is, every day at the regular
hours of prayer till the day of Pentecost.
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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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