THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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[15] INTRODUCTION THE author of this Gospel was a publican or tax gatherer, residing at Capernaum, on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee. As to his identity with the "Levi" of the second and third Gospels, and other particulars, see on Mt 9:9. Hardly anything is known of his apostolic labors. That, after preaching to his countrymen in Palestine, he went to the East, is the general testimony of antiquity; but the precise scene or scenes of his ministry cannot be determined. That he died a natural death may be concluded from the belief of the best-informed of the Fathers--that of the apostles only three, James the Greater, Peter, and Paul, suffered martyrdom. That the first Gospel was written by this apostle is the testimony of all antiquity. For the date of this Gospel we have only internal evidence, and that far from decisive. Accordingly, opinion is much divided. That it was the first issued of all the Gospels was universally believed. Hence, although in the order of the Gospels, those by the two apostles were placed first in the oldest manuscripts of the Old Latin version, while in all the Greek manuscripts, with scarcely an exception, the order is the same as in our Bibles, the Gospel according to Matthew is in every case placed first. And as this Gospel is of all the four the one which bears the most evident marks of having been prepared and constructed with a special view to the Jews--who certainly first required a written Gospel, and would be the first to make use of it--there can be no doubt that it was issued before any of the others. That it was written before the destruction of Jerusalem is equally certain; for as HUG observes [Introduction to the New Testament, p. 316, FOSDICK'S translation], when he reports our Lord's prophecy of that awful event, on coming to the warning about "the abomination of desolation" which they should "see standing in the holy place," he interposes (contrary to his invariable practice, which is to relate without remark) a call to his readers to read intelligently--"Whoso readeth, let him understand" (Mt 24:15) --a call to attend to the divine signal for flight which could be intended only for those who lived before the event. But how long before that event this Gospel was written is not so clear. Some internal evidences seem to imply a very early date. Since the Jewish Christians were, for five or six years, exposed to persecution from their own countrymen--until the Jews, being persecuted by the Romans, had to look to themselves--it is not likely (it is argued) that they should be left so long without some written Gospel to reassure and sustain them, and Matthew's Gospel was eminently fitted for that purpose. But the digests to which Luke refers in his Introduction (see on Lu 1:1) would be sufficient for a time, especially as the living voice of the "eye-witnesses and ministers of the Word" was yet sounding abroad. Other considerations in favor of a very early date--such as the tender way in which the author seems studiously to speak of Herod Antipas, as if still reigning, and his writing of Pilate apparently as if still in power--seem to have no foundation in fact, and cannot therefore be made the ground of reasoning as to the date of this Gospel. Its Hebraic structure and hue, though they prove, as we think, that this Gospel must have been published at a period considerably anterior to the destruction of Jerusalem, are no evidence in favor of so early a date as A.D. 37 or 38--according to some of the Fathers, and, of the moderns, TILLEMONT, TOWNSON, OWEN, BIRKS, TREGELLES. On the other hand, the date suggested by the statement of IRENÆUS [Against Heresies, 3.1], that Matthew put forth his Gospel while Peter and Paul were at Rome preaching and founding the Church--or after A.D. 60--though probably the majority of critics are in favor of it, would seem rather too late, especially as the second and third Gospels, which were doubtless published, as well as this one, before the destruction of Jerusalem, had still to be issued. Certainly, such statements as the following, "Wherefore that field is called the field of blood unto this day" (Mt 27:8); "And this saying is commonly reported among the Jews until this day" (Mt 28:15), bespeak a date considerably later than the events recorded. We incline, therefore, to a date intermediate between the earlier and the later dates assigned to this Gospel, without pretending to greater precision. We have adverted to the strikingly Jewish character and coloring of this Gospel. The facts which it selects, the points to which it gives prominence, the cast of thought and phraseology, all bespeak the Jewish point of view from which it was written and to which it was directed. This has been noticed from the beginning, and is universally acknowledged. It is of the greatest consequence to the right interpretation of it; but the tendency among some even of the best of the Germans to infer, from this special design of the first Gospel, a certain laxity on the part of the Evangelist in the treatment of his facts, must be guarded against. But by far the most interesting and important point connected with this Gospel is the language in which it was written. It is believed by a formidable number of critics that this Gospel was originally written in what is loosely called Hebrew, but more correctly Aramaic, or Syro-Chaldaic, the native tongue of the country at the time of our Lord; and that the Greek Matthew which we now possess is a translation of that work, either by the Evangelist himself or some unknown hand. The evidence on which this opinion is grounded is wholly external, but it has been deemed conclusive by GROTIUS, MICHAELIS (and his translator), MARSH, TOWNSON, CAMPBELL, OLSHAUSEN, CRESWELL, MEYER, EBRARD, LANGE, DAVIDSON, CURETON, TREGELLES, WEBSTER and WILKINSON, &c. The evidence referred to cannot be given here, but will be found, with remarks on its unsatisfactory character, in the Introduction to the Gospels prefixed to our larger Commentary, pp. 28-31. But how stand the facts as to our Greek Gospel? We have not a tittle of historical evidence that it is a translation, either by Matthew himself or anyone else. All antiquity refers to it as the work of Matthew the publican and apostle, just as the other Gospels are ascribed to their respective authors. This Greek Gospel was from the first received by the Church as an integral part of the one quadriform Gospel. And while the Fathers often advert to the two Gospels which we have from apostles, and the two which we have from men not apostles--in order to show that as that of Mark leans so entirely on Peter, and that of Luke on Paul, these are really no less apostolical than the other two--though we attach less weight to this circumstance than they did, we cannot but think it striking that, in thus speaking, they never drop a hint that the full apostolic authority of the Greek Matthew had ever been questioned on the ground of its not being the original. Further, not a trace can be discovered in this Gospel itself of its being a translation. MICHAELIS tried to detect, and fancied that he had succeeded in detecting, one or two such. Other Germans since, and DAVIDSON and CURETON among ourselves, have made the same attempt. But the entire failure of all such attempts is now generally admitted, and candid advocates of a Hebrew original are quite ready to own that none such are to be found, and that but for external testimony no one would have imagined that the Greek was not the original. This they regard as showing how perfectly the translation has been executed; but those who know best what translating from one language into another is will be the readiest to own that this is tantamount to giving up the question. This Gospel proclaims its own originality in a number of striking points; such as its manner of quoting from the Old Testament, and its phraseology in some peculiar cases. But the close verbal coincidences of our Greek Matthew with the next two Gospels must not be quite passed over. There are but two possible ways of explaining this. Either the translator, sacrificing verbal fidelity in his version, intentionally conformed certain parts of his author's work to the second and third Gospels--in which case it can hardly be called Matthew's Gospel at all--or our Greek Matthew is itself the original. Moved by these considerations, some advocates of a Hebrew original have adopted the theory of a double original; the external testimony, they think, requiring us to believe in a Hebrew original, while internal evidence is decisive in favor of the originality of the Greek. This theory is espoused by GUERICKS, OLSHAUSEN, THIERSCH, TOWNSON, TREGELLES, &c. But, besides that this looks too like an artificial theory, invented to solve a difficulty, it is utterly void of historical support. There is not a vestige of testimony to support it in Christian antiquity. This ought to be decisive against it. It remains, then, that our Greek Matthew is the original of that Gospel, and that no other original ever existed. It is greatly to the credit of Dean ALFORD, that after maintaining, in the first edition of his Greek Testament the theory of a Hebrew original, he thus expresses himself in the second and subsequent editions: "On the whole, then, I find myself constrained to abandon the view maintained in my first edition, and to adopt that of a Greek original." One argument has been adduced on the other side, on which not a little reliance has been placed; but the determination of the main question does not, in our opinion, depend upon the point which it raises. It has been very confidently affirmed that the Greek language was not sufficiently understood by the Jews of Palestine when Matthew published his Gospel to make it at all probable that he would write a Gospel, for their benefit in the first instance, in that language. Now, as this merely alleges the improbability of a Greek original, it is enough to place against it the evidence already adduced, which is positive, in favor of the sole originality of our Greek Matthew. It is indeed a question how far the Greek language was understood in Palestine at the time referred to. But we advise the reader not to be drawn into that question as essential to the settlement of the other one. It is an element in it, no doubt, but not an essential element. There are extremes on both sides of it. The old idea, that our Lord hardly ever spoke anything but Syro-Chaldaic, is now pretty nearly exploded. Many, however, will not go the length, on the other side, of HUG (in his Introduction to the New Testament, pp. 326, &c.) and ROBERTS ("Discussions of the Gospels," &c., pp. 25, &c.). For ourselves, though we believe that our Lord, in all the more public scenes of His ministry, spoke in Greek, all we think it necessary here to say is that there is no ground to believe that Greek was so little understood in Palestine as to make it improbable that Matthew would write his Gospel exclusively in that language--so improbable as to outweigh the evidence that he did so. And when we think of the number of digests or short narratives of the principal facts of our Lord's history which we know from Luke (Lu 1:1-4) were floating about for some time before he wrote his Gospel, of which he speaks by no means disrespectfully, and nearly all of which would be in the mother tongue, we can have no doubt that the Jewish Christians and the Jews of Palestine generally would have from the first reliable written matter sufficient to supply every necessary requirement until the publican-apostle should leisurely draw up the first of the four Gospels in a language to them not a strange tongue, while to the rest of the world it was the language in which the entire quadriform Gospel was to be for all time enshrined. The following among others hold to this view of the sole originality of the Greek Matthew: ERASMUS, CALVIN, BEZA, LIGHTFOOT, WETSTEIN, LARDNER, HUG, FRITZSCHE, CREDNER, DE WETTE, STUART, DA COSTA, FAIRBAIRN, ROBERTS. On two other questions regarding this Gospel it would have been desirable to say something, had not our available space been already exhausted: The characteristics, both in language and matter, by which it is distinguished from the other three, and its relation to the second and third Gospels. On the latter of these topics--whether one or more of the Evangelists made use of the materials of the other Gospels, and, if so, which of the Evangelists drew from which--the opinions are just as numerous as the possibilities of the case, every conceivable way of it having one or more who plead for it. The most popular opinion until recently--and perhaps the most popular still--is that the second Evangelist availed himself more or less of the materials of the first Gospel, and the third of the materials of both the first and second Gospels. Here we can but state our own belief, that each of the first three Evangelists wrote independently of both the others; while the fourth, familiar with the first three, wrote to supplement them, and, even where he travels along the same line, wrote quite independently of them. This judgment we express, with all deference for those who think otherwise, as the result of a close study of each of the Gospels in immediate juxtaposition and comparison with the others. On the former of the two topics noticed, the linguistic peculiarities of each of the Gospels have been handled most closely and ably by CREDNER [Einleitung (Introduction to the New Testament)], of whose results a good summary will be found in DAVIDSON'S Introduction to the New Testament. The other peculiarities of the Gospels have been most felicitously and beautifully brought out by DA COSTA in his Four Witnesses, to which we must simply refer the reader, though it contains a few things in which we cannot concur. CHAPTER 1 Mt 1:1-17. GENEALOGY OF CHRIST. ( = Lu 3:23-38).
1. The book of the generation--an expression purely Jewish; meaning,
"table of the genealogy." In
Ge 5:1
the same expression occurs in this sense. We have here, then, the
title, not of this whole Gospel of Matthew, but only of the first
seventeen verses.
2. Abraham begat Isaac; and Isaac begat Jacob; and Jacob begat Judas and his brethren--Only the fourth son of Jacob is here named, as it was from his loins that Messiah was to spring (Ge 49:10). 3-6. And Judas begat Phares and Zara of Thamar; and Phares begat Esrom; and Esrom begat Aram; 4. And Aram begat Aminadab; and Aminadab begat Naasson; and Naasson begat Salmon; 5. And Salmon begat Booz of Rachab; and Booz begat Obed of Ruth; and Obed begat Jesse; 6. And Jesse begat David the king; and David the king begat Solomon of her of Urias--Four women are here introduced; two of them Gentiles by birth--Rachab and Ruth; and three of them with a blot at their names in the Old Testament--Thamar, Rachab, and Bath-sheba. This feature in the present genealogy--herein differing from that given by Luke--comes well from him who styles himself in his list of the Twelve, what none of the other lists do, "Matthew the publican"; as if thereby to hold forth, at the very outset, the unsearchable riches of that grace which could not only fetch in "them that are afar off," but teach down even to "publicans and harlots," and raise them to "sit with the princes of his people." David is here twice emphatically styled "David the king," as not only the first of that royal line from which Messiah was to descend, but the one king of all that line from which the throne that Messiah was to occupy took its name--"the throne of David." The angel Gabriel, in announcing Him to His virgin-mother, calls it "the throne of David His father," sinking all the intermediate kings of that line, as having no importance save as links to connect the first and the last king of Israel as father and son. It will be observed that Rachab is here represented as the great-grandmother of David (see Ru 4:20-22; 1Ch 2:11-15) --a thing not beyond possibility indeed, but extremely improbable, there being about four centuries between them. There can hardly be a doubt that one or two intermediate links are omitted. 7-8. And Solomon begat Roboam; and Roboam begat Abia; and Abia begat Asa; 8. And Asa begat Josaphat; and Josaphat begat Joram; and Joram begat Ozias--or Uzziah. Three kings are here omitted--Ahaziah, Joash, and Amaziah (1Ch 3:11, 12). Some omissions behooved to be made, to compress the whole into three fourteens (Mt 1:17). The reason why these, rather than other names, are omitted, must be sought in religious considerations--either in the connection of those kings with the house of Ahab (as LIGHTFOOT, EBRARD, and ALFORD view it); in their slender right to be regarded as true links in the theocratic chain (as LANGE takes it); or in some similar disqualification.
11. And Josias begat Jechonias and his brethren--Jeconiah was Josiah's
grandson, being the son of Jehoiakim, Josiah's second son
(1Ch 3:15);
but Jehoiakim might well be sunk in such a catalogue, being a mere
puppet in the hands of the king of Egypt
(2Ch 36:4).
The "brethren" of Jechonias here evidently mean his uncles--the chief
of whom, Mattaniah or Zedekiah, who came to the throne
(2Ki 24:17),
is, in
2Ch 36:10,
as well as here, called "his brother."
12. And after they were brought to Babylon--after the migration of
Babylon.
13-15. And Zorobabel begat Abiud, &c.--None of these names are found in the Old Testament; but they were doubtless taken from the public or family registers, which the Jews carefully kept, and their accuracy was never challenged.
16. And Jacob begat Joseph, the husband of Mary, of whom was born
Jesus--From this it is clear that the genealogy here given is not
that of Mary, but of Joseph; nor has this ever been questioned. And yet
it is here studiously proclaimed that Joseph was not the natural, but
only the legal father of our Lord. His birth of a virgin was known only
to a few; but the acknowledged descent of his legal father from David
secured that the descent of Jesus Himself from David should never be
questioned. See on
Mt 1:20.
17. So all the generations from Abraham to David are fourteen
generations; and from David until the carrying away--or migration.
Mt 1:18-25. BIRTH OF CHRIST.
18. Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this wise--or, "thus."
19. Then Joseph her husband--Compare
Mt 1:20,
"Mary, thy wife." Betrothal was, in Jewish law, valid marriage. In
giving Mary up, therefore, Joseph had to take legal steps to effect the
separation.
20. But while he thought on these things--Who would not feel for him
after receiving such intelligence, and before receiving any light from
above? As he brooded over the matter alone, in the stillness of the
night, his domestic prospects darkened and his happiness blasted for
life, his mind slowly making itself up to the painful step, yet planning
how to do it in the way least offensive--at the last extremity the Lord
Himself interposes.
21. And she shall bring forth a son--Observe, it is not said, "she
shall bear thee a son," as was said to Zacharias of his wife Elizabeth
(Lu 1:13).
22. Now all this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken
of the Lord by the prophet--
(Isa 7:14).
23. Behold, a virgin--It should be "the virgin" meaning that
particular virgin destined to this unparalleled distinction.
24. Then Joseph, being raised from sleep--and all his difficulties now
removed.
25. And knew her not till she had brought forth her first-born son: and he called his name JESUS--The word "till" does not necessarily imply that they lived on a different footing afterwards (as will be evident from the use of the same word in 1Sa 15:35; 2Sa 6:23; Mt 12:20); nor does the word "first-born" decide the much-disputed question, whether Mary had any children to Joseph after the birth of Christ; for, as LIGHTFOOT says, "The law, in speaking of the first-born, regarded not whether any were born after or no, but only that none were born before." (See on Mt 13:55, 56). CHAPTER 2 Mt 2:1-12. VISIT OF THE MAGI TO JERUSALEM AND BETHLEHEM. The Wise Men Reach Jerusalem--The Sanhedrim, on Herod's Demand, Pronounce Bethlehem to Be Messiah's Predicted Birthplace (Mt 2:1-6).
1. Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea--so called to
distinguish it from another Bethlehem in the tribe of Zebulun, near the
Sea of Galilee
(Jos 19:15);
called also Beth-lehem-judah, as being in that tribe
(Jud 17:7);
and Ephrath
(Ge 35:16);
and combining both, Beth-lehem Ephratah
(Mic 5:2).
It lay about six miles southwest of Jerusalem. But how came Joseph and
Mary to remove thither from Nazareth, the place of their residence? Not
of their own accord, and certainly not with the view of fulfilling the
prophecy regarding Messiah's birthplace; nay, they stayed at Nazareth
till it was almost too late for Mary to travel with safety; nor would
they have stirred from it at all, had not an order which left them no
choice forced them to the appointed place. A high hand was in all these
movements. (See on
Lu 2:1-6).
2. Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews?--From this it
would seem they were not themselves Jews. (Compare the language of the
Roman governor,
Joh 18:33,
and of the Roman soldiers,
Mt 27:29,
with the very different language of the Jews themselves,
Mt 27:42,
&c.). The Roman historians, SUETONIUS and TACITUS, bear witness to an expectation, prevalent in the
East, that out of Judea should arise a sovereign of the world.
3. When Herod the king had heard these things, he was troubled--viewing
this as a danger to his own throne: perhaps his guilty conscience also
suggested other grounds of fear.
4. And when he had gathered all the chief priests and scribes of the
people together--The class of the "chief priests" included the high
priest for the time being, together with all who had previously filled
this office; for though the then head of the Aaronic family was the only
rightful high priest, the Romans removed them at pleasure, to make way
for creatures of their own. In this class probably were included also
the heads of the four and twenty courses of the priests. The "scribes"
were at first merely transcribers of the law and synagogue readers;
afterwards interpreters of the law, both civil and religious, and so
both lawyers and divines. The first of these classes, a proportion of
the second, and "the elders"--that is, as
LIGHTFOOT thinks, "those
elders of the laity that were not of the Levitical tribe"--constituted
the supreme council of the nation, called the Sanhedrim, the members
of which, at their full complement, numbered seventy-two. That this was
the council which Herod now convened is most probable, from the
solemnity of the occasion; for though the elders are not mentioned, we
find a similar omission where all three were certainly meant (compare
Mt 26:59; 27:1).
As MEYER says, it was all the theologians of the
nation whom Herod convened, because it was a theological response that
he wanted.
5. And they said unto him, In Bethlehem of Judea--a prompt and
involuntary testimony from the highest tribunal; which yet at length
condemned Him to die.
6. And thou, Bethlehem, in the land of Juda--the "in" being
familiarly left out, as we say, "London, Middlesex."
The Wise Men Despatched to Bethlehem by Herod to See the Babe, and Bring Him Word, Make a Religious Offering to the Infant King, but Divinely Warned, Return Home by Another Way (Mt 2:7-12).
7. Then Herod, when he had privily called the wise men--Herod has so
far succeeded in his murderous design: he has tracked the spot where
lies his victim, an unconscious babe. But he has another point to
fix--the date of His birth--without which he might still miss his mark.
The one he had got from the Sanhedrim; the other he will have from the
sages; but secretly, lest his object should be suspected and defeated.
So he
8. And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said, Go and search diligently--"Search out carefully."
9. When they had heard the king, they departed--But where were ye, O
Jewish ecclesiastics, ye chief priests and scribes of the people? Ye
could tell Herod where Christ should be born, and could hear of these
strangers from the far East that the Desire of all nations had actually
come; but I do not see you trooping to Bethlehem--I find these devout
strangers journeying thither all alone. Yet God ordered this too, lest
the news should be blabbed, and reach the tyrant's ears, before the Babe
could be placed beyond his reach. Thus are the very errors and crimes
and cold indifferences of men all overruled.
10. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy--The language is very strong, expressing exuberant transport.
11. And when they were come into the house--not the stable; for as soon
as Bethlehem was emptied of its strangers, they would have no difficulty
in finding a dwelling-house.
12. And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to
Herod, they departed--or, "withdrew."
Mt 2:13-23. THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT--THE MASSACRE AT BETHLEHEM--THE RETURN OF JOSEPH AND MARY WITH THE BABE, AFTER HEROD'S DEATH, AND THEIR SETTLEMENT AT NAZARETH. ( = Lu 2:39). The Flight into Egypt (Mt 2:13-15).
13. And when they were departed, behold, the angel of the Lord
appeareth to Joseph in a dream, saying, Arise, and take the young child
and his mother--Observe this form of expression, repeated in
Mt 2:14
--another indirect hint that Joseph was no more than the Child's
guardian. Indeed, personally considered, Joseph has no spiritual
significance, and very little place at all, in the Gospel history.
14. When he arose, he took the young child and his mother by night, and departed into Egypt--doubtless the same night.
15. And was there until the death of Herod--which took place not very
long after this of a horrible disease; the details of which will be
found in JOSEPHUS [Antiquities, 17.6.1,5,7,8].
16. Then Herod, &c.--As Deborah sang of the mother of Sisera: "She
looked out at a window, and cried through the lattice, Why is his
chariot so long in coming? why tarry the wheels of his chariots? Have
they not sped?" so Herod wonders that his messengers, with pious zeal,
are not hastening with the news that all is ready to receive him as a
worshipper. What can be keeping them? Have they missed their way? Has
any disaster befallen them? At length his patience is exhausted. He
makes his inquiries and finds they are already far beyond his reach on
their way home.
17. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the prophet, saying-- (Jer 31:15, from which the quotation differs but verbally). 18. In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not--These words, as they stand in Jeremiah, undoubtedly relate to the Babylonish captivity. Rachel, the mother of Joseph and Benjamin, was buried in the neighborhood of Bethlehem (Ge 35:19), where her sepulchre is still shown. She is figuratively represented as rising from the tomb and uttering a double lament for the loss of her children--first, by a bitter captivity, and now by a bloody death. And a foul deed it was. O ye mothers of Bethlehem! methinks I hear you asking why your innocent babes should be the ram caught in the thicket, while Isaac escapes. I cannot tell you, but one thing I know, that ye shall, some of you, live to see a day when that Babe of Bethlehem shall be Himself the Ram, caught in another sort of thicket, in order that your babes may escape a worse doom than they now endure. And if these babes of yours be now in glory, through the dear might of that blessed Babe, will they not deem it their honor that the tyrant's rage was exhausted upon themselves instead of their infant Lord?
19. But when Herod was dead--Miserable Herod! Thou thoughtest
thyself safe from a dreaded Rival; but it was He only that was safe
from thee; and thou hast not long enjoyed even this fancied security.
See on
Mt 2:15.
20. Saying, Arise, and take the young child and his mother, and go into
the land of Israel--not to the land of Judea, for he was afterward
expressly warned not to settle there, nor to Galilee, for he only went
thither when he found it unsafe to settle in Judea but to "the land of
Israel," in its most general sense; meaning the Holy Land at large--the
particular province being not as yet indicated. So Joseph and the Virgin
had, like Abraham, to "go out, not knowing whither they went," till they
should receive further direction.
21. And he arose, and took the young child and his mother, and came into the land of Israel--intending, as is plain from what follows, to return to Bethlehem of Judea, there, no doubt, to rear the Infant King, as at His own royal city, until the time should come when they would expect Him to occupy Jerusalem, "the city of the Great King."
22. But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judea in the room of
his father Herod--Archelaus succeeded to Judea, Samaria, and Idumea;
but Augustus refused him the title of king till it should be seen
how he conducted himself; giving him only the title of ethnarch
[JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 17.11,4]. Above this,
however, he never rose.
The people, indeed, recognized him as his father's successor; and so it
is here said that he "reigned in the room of his father Herod." But,
after ten years' defiance of the Jewish law and cruel tyranny, the
people lodged heavy complaints against him, and the emperor banished him
to Vienne in Gaul, reducing Judea again to a Roman province. Then the
"scepter" clean "departed from Judah."
23. And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth--a small
town in Lower Galilee, lying in the territory of the tribe of Zebulun,
and about equally distant from the Mediterranean Sea on the west and
the Sea of Galilee on the east. Note--If, from
Lu 2:39,
one would conclude that the parents of Jesus brought Him straight back
to Nazareth after His presentation in the temple--as if there had been
no visit of the Magi, no flight to Egypt, no stay there, and no purpose
on returning to settle again at Bethlehem--one might, from our
Evangelist's way of speaking here, equally conclude that the parents of
our Lord had never been at Nazareth until now. Did we know exactly the
sources from which the matter of each of the Gospels was drawn up, or
the mode in which these were used, this apparent discrepancy would
probably disappear at once. In neither case is there any inaccuracy. At
the same time it is difficult, with these facts before us, to conceive
that either of these two Evangelists wrote his Gospel with that of the
other before him--though many think this a precarious inference.
CHAPTER 3 Mt 3:1-12. PREACHING AND MINISTRY OF JOHN. ( = Mr 1:1-8; Lu 3:1-18). For the proper introduction to this section, we must go to Lu 3:1, 2. Here, as BENGEL well observes, 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 is determined by it (Lu 3:23). 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 traced down all things with precision from the very first" (Mt 1:3). Here evidently commences his proper narrative.
1. In those days--of Christ's secluded life at Nazareth, where the last
chapter left Him.
2. And saying, Repent ye--Though the word strictly denotes a
change of mind, it has respect here (and wherever it is used in
connection with salvation) primarily to that sense of sin which
leads the sinner to flee from the wrath to come, to look for relief only
from above, and eagerly to fall in with the provided remedy.
3. For this is he that was spoken of by the prophet Esaias, saying--
(Mt 11:3).
4. And the same John had his raiment of camel's hair--woven of it.
5. Then went out to him Jerusalem, and all Judea, and all the region round about Jordan--From the metropolitan center to the extremities of the Judean province the cry of this great preacher of repentance and herald of the approaching Messiah brought trooping penitents and eager expectants. 6. And were baptized of him in Jordan, confessing their sins--probably confessing aloud. This baptism was at once a public seal of their felt need of deliverance from sin, of their expectation of the coming Deliverer, and of their readiness to welcome Him when He appeared. The baptism itself startled, and was intended to startle, them. They were familiar enough with the baptism of proselytes from heathenism; but this baptism of Jews themselves was quite new and strange to them.
7. But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees come to his
baptism, he said unto them--astonished at such a spectacle.
8. Bring forth therefore fruits--the true reading clearly is "fruit";
9. And think not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our
father--that pillow on which the nation so fatally reposed, that
rock on which at length it split.
10. And now also--And even already.
The third Gospel here adds the following important particulars in Lu 3:10-16.
(We now return to the first Gospel.)
11. I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance--(See on
Mt 3:6);
12. Whose fan--winnowing fan.
Luke adds the following important particulars (Lu 3:18-20):
Mt 3:13-17. BAPTISM OF CHRIST AND DESCENT OF THE SPIRIT UPON HIM IMMEDIATELY THEREAFTER. ( = Mr 1:9-11; Lu 3:21, 22; Joh 1:31-34). Baptism of Christ (Mt 3:13-15). 13. Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John, to be baptized of him--Moses rashly anticipated the divine call to deliver his people, and for this was fain to flee the house of bondage, and wait in obscurity for forty years more (Ex 2:11, &c.). Not so this greater than Moses. All but thirty years had He now spent in privacy at Nazareth, gradually ripening for His public work, and calmly awaiting the time appointed of the Father. Now it had arrived; and this movement from Galilee to Jordan is the step, doubtless, of deepest interest to all heaven since that first one which brought Him into the world. Luke (Lu 3:21) has this important addition--"Now when all the people were baptized, it came to pass, that Jesus being baptized," &c.--implying that Jesus waited till all other applicants for baptism that day had been disposed of, ere He stepped forward, 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, too. He would be "separate from sinners."
14. But John forbade him--rather, "was (in the act of) hindering
him," or "attempting to hinder him."
15. And Jesus answering said unto him, Suffer it to be so now--"Let
it pass for the present"; that is, "Thou recoilest, and no wonder, for
the seeming incongruity is startling; but in the present case do as thou
art bidden."
Descent of the Spirit upon the Baptized Redeemer (Mt 3:16, 17).
16. And Jesus when he was baptized, went up straightway out of the
water--rather, "from the water." Mark has "out of the water"
(Mr 1:10).
"and"--adds Luke
(Lu 3:21),
"while He was praying"; a grand piece of information. Can there be a
doubt about the burden of that prayer; a prayer sent up, probably,
while yet in the water--His blessed head suffused with the baptismal
element; a prayer continued likely as He stepped out of the stream, and
again stood upon the dry ground; the work before Him, the needed and
expected Spirit to rest upon Him for it, and the glory He would then
put upon the Father that sent Him--would not these fill His breast, and
find silent vent in such form as this?--"Lo, I come; I delight to do
Thy will, O God. Father, glorify Thy name. Show Me a token for good.
Let the Spirit of the Lord God come upon Me, and I will preach the
Gospel to the poor, and heal the broken-hearted, and send forth
judgment unto victory." While He was yet speaking--
17. And lo a voice from heaven, saying, This is--Mark and Luke give
it in the direct form, "Thou art."
(Mr 1:11;
Lu 3:22).
CHAPTER 4 Mt 4:1-11. TEMPTATION OF CHRIST. ( = Mr 1:12, 13; Lu 4:1-13).
1. Then--an indefinite note of sequence. But Mark's word
(Mr 1:12)
fixes what we should have presumed was meant, that it was "immediately"
after His baptism; and with this agrees the statement of Luke
(Lu 4:1).
FIRST
STAGE:
3. And when the tempter came to him--Evidently we have here a new
scene.
4. But he answered and said, It is written--
(De 8:3).
5. Then the devil taketh him up--rather, "conducteth Him."
6. And saith unto him, If thou be the Son of God--As this temptation
starts with the same point as the first--our Lord's determination not to
be disputed out of His Sonship--it seems to us clear that the one came
directly after the other; and as the remaining temptation shows that the
hope of carrying that point was abandoned, and all was staked upon a
desperate venture, we think that remaining temptation is thus shown to
be the last; as will appear still more when we come to it.
7. Jesus said unto him, It is written again--
(De 6:16),
as if he should say, "True, it is so written, and on that promise I
implicitly rely; but in using it there is another Scripture which must
not be forgotten."
8. Again, the devil taketh him up--"conducteth him," as before.
9. And saith unto him, All these things will I give thee--"and the
glory of them," adds Luke
(Lu 4:6).
But Matthew having already said that this was "showed Him," did not
need to repeat it here. Luke
(Lu 4:6)
adds these other very important clauses, here omitted--"for that is,"
or "has been," "delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will I give it."
Was this wholly false? That were not like Satan's unusual policy, which
is to insinuate his lies under cover of some truth. What truth, then,
is there here? We answer, Is not Satan thrice called by our Lord
Himself, "the prince of this world"
(Joh 12:31; 14:30; 16:11)?
Does not the apostle call him "the god of this world"
(2Co 4:4)?
And still further, is it not said that Christ came to destroy by His
death "him that hath the power of death, that is, the devil"
(Heb 2:14)?
No doubt these passages only express men's voluntary subjection to the
rule of the wicked one while they live, and his power to surround death
to them, when it comes, with all the terrors of the wages of sin. But
as this is a real and terrible sway, so all Scripture represents men as
righteously sold under it. In this sense he speaks what is not devoid of
truth, when he says, "All this is delivered unto me." But how does he
deliver this "to whomsoever he will?" As employing whomsoever he pleases
of his willing subjects in keeping men under his power. In this case his
offer to our Lord was that of a deputed supremacy commensurate with
his own, though as his gift and for his ends.
10. Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan--Since the tempter
has now thrown off the mask, and stands forth in his true character, our
Lord no longer deals with him as a pretended friend and pious
counsellor, but calls him by his right name--His knowledge of which from
the outset He had carefully concealed till now--and orders him off. This
is the final and conclusive evidence, as we think, that Matthew's must
be the right order of the temptations. For who can well conceive of the
tempter's returning to the assault after this, in the pious character
again, and hoping still to dislodge the consciousness of His Sonship,
while our Lord must in that case be supposed to quote Scripture to one
He had called the devil to his face--thus throwing His pearls before
worse than swine?
11. Then the devil leaveth him--Luke says, "And when the devil had
exhausted"--or "quite ended," as in
Lu 4:2
--"every (mode of) temptation, he departed from him till a season." The
definite "season" here indicated is expressly referred to by our Lord
in
Joh 14:30
and Lu 22:52, 53.
Mt 4:12-25. CHRIST BEGINS HIS GALILEAN MINISTRY--CALLING OF PETER AND ANDREW, JAMES AND JOHN--HIS FIRST GALILEAN CIRCUIT. ( = Mr 1:14-20, 35-39; Lu 4:14, 15). There is here a notable gap in the history, which but for the fourth Gospel we should never have discovered. From the former Gospels we should have been apt to draw three inferences, which from the fourth one we know to be erroneous: First, that our Lord awaited the close of John's ministry, by his arrest and imprisonment, before beginning His own; next, that there was but a brief interval between the baptism of our Lord and the imprisonment of John; and further, that our Lord not only opened His work in Galilee, but never ministered out of it, and never visited Jerusalem at all nor kept a passover till He went thither to become "our Passover, sacrificed for us." The fourth Gospel alone gives the true succession of events; not only recording those important openings of our Lord's public work which preceded the Baptist's imprisonment--extending to the end of the third chapter--but so specifying the passover which occurred during our Lord's ministry as to enable us to line off, with a large measure of certainty, the events of the first three Gospels according to the successive passovers which they embraced. EUSEBIUS, the ecclesiastical historian, who, early in the fourth century, gave much attention to this subject, in noticing these features of the Evangelical Records, says [Ecclesiastical History, 3.24] that John wrote his Gospel at the entreaty of those who knew the important materials he possessed, and filled up what is wanting in the first three Gospels. Why it was reserved for the fourth Gospel, published at so late a period, to supply such important particulars in the life of Christ, it is not easy to conjecture with any probability. It may be, that though not unacquainted with the general facts, they were not furnished with reliable details. But one thing may be affirmed with tolerable certainty, that as our Lord's teaching at Jerusalem was of a depth and grandeur scarcely so well adapted to the prevailing character of the first three Gospels, but altogether congenial to the fourth; and as the bare mention of the successive passovers, without any account of the transactions and discourses they gave rise to, would have served little purpose in the first three Gospels, there may have been no way of preserving the unity and consistency of each Gospel, so as to furnish by means of them all the precious information we get from them, save by the plan on which they are actually constructed. Entry into Galilee (Mt 4:12-17).
12. Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into prison--more
simply, "was delivered up," as recorded in
Mt 14:3-5;
Mr 6:17-20;
Lu 3:19, 20.
13. And leaving Nazareth--The prevalent opinion is that this refers
to a first visit to Nazareth after His baptism, whose details are
given by Luke
(Lu 4:16,
&c.); a second visit being that detailed by our Evangelist
(Mt 13:54-58),
and by Mark
(Mr 6:1-6).
But to us there seem all but insuperable difficulties in the
supposition of two visits to Nazareth after His baptism; and on the
grounds stated in
Lu 4:16,
&c., we think that the one only visit to Nazareth is that
recorded by Matthew
(Mt 13:53-58),
Mark
(Mr 6:1-6),
and Luke
(Lu 4:14-30).
But how, in that case, are we to take the word
"leaving Nazareth" here? We answer, just as the same word is used in
Ac 21:3,
"Now when we had sighted Cyprus, and left it on the left, we
sailed into Syria,"--that is, without entering Cyprus at all, but
merely "sighting" it, as the nautical phrase is, they steered southeast
of it, leaving it on the northwest. So here, what we understand the
Evangelist to say is, that Jesus, on His return to Galilee, did not, as
might have been expected, make Nazareth the place of His stated
residence, but, "leaving [or passing by] Nazareth,"
14. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the
prophet--
(Isa 9:1, 2
or, as in Hebrew, Isaiah 8:23, and 9:1).
15. The land of Zabulon, and the land of Nephthalim, by the way of
the sea--the coast skirting the Sea of Galilee westward--beyond
Jordan--a phrase commonly meaning eastward of Jordan; but here and in
several places it means westward of the Jordan. The word seems to have
got the general meaning of "the other side"; the nature of the case
determining which side that was.
16. The people which sat in darkness saw great light; and to them which sat in the region and shadow of death light is sprung up--The prophetic strain to which these words belong commences with the seventh chapter of Isaiah, to which the sixth chapter is introductory, and goes down to the end of the twelfth chapter, which hymns the spirit of that whole strain of prophecy. It belongs to the reign of Ahaz and turns upon the combined efforts of the two neighboring kingdoms of Syria and Israel to crush Judah. In these critical circumstances Judah and her king were, by their ungodliness, provoking the Lord to sell them into the hands of their enemies. What, then, is the burden of this prophetic strain, on to the passage here quoted? First, Judah shall not, cannot perish, because IMMANUEL, the Virgin's Son, is to come forth from his loins. Next, one of the invaders shall soon perish, and the kingdoms of neither be enlarged. Further, while the Lord will be the Sanctuary of such as confide in these promises and await their fulfilment, He will drive to confusion, darkness, and despair the vast multitude of the nation who despised His oracles, and, in their anxiety and distress, betook themselves to the lying oracles of the heathen. This carries us down to the end of the eighth chapter. At the opening of the ninth chapter a sudden light is seen breaking in upon one particular part of the country, the part which was to suffer most in these wars and devastations--"the land of Zebulun, and the land of Naphtali, the way of the sea, beyond Jordan, Galilee and the Gentiles." The rest of the prophecy stretches over both the Assyrian and the Chaldean captivities and terminates in the glorious Messianic prophecy of the eleventh chapter and the choral hymn of the twelfth chapter. Well, this is the point seized on by our Evangelist. By Messiah's taking up His abode in those very regions of Galilee, and shedding His glorious light upon them, this prediction, He says, of the Evangelical prophet was now fulfilled; and if it was not thus fulfilled, we may confidently affirm it was not fulfilled in any age of the Jewish ceremony, and has received no fulfilment at all. Even the most rationalistic critics have difficulty in explaining it in any other way. 17. From that time Jesus began to preach, and to say, Repent; for the kingdom of heaven is at hand--Thus did our Lord not only take up the strain, but give forth the identical summons of His honored forerunner. Our Lord sometimes speaks of the new kingdom as already come--in His own Person and ministry; but the economy of it was only "at hand" until the blood of the cross was shed, and the Spirit on the day of Pentecost opened the fountain for sin and for uncleanness to the world at large. Calling of Peter and Andrew James and John (Mt 4:18-22).
18. And Jesus, walking--The word "Jesus" here appears not to belong
to the text, but to have been introduced from those portions of it which
were transcribed to be used as church lessons; where it was naturally
introduced as a connecting word at the commencement of a lesson.
19. And he saith unto them, Follow me--rather, as the same expression
is rendered in Mark, "Come ye after Me"
(Mr 1:17).
20. And they straightway left their nets, and followed him.
21. And going on from thence, he saw other two brethren, James the son
of Zebedee, and John his brother, in a ship--rather, "in the ship,"
their fishing boat.
22. And they immediately left the ship and their father--Mark adds
an important clause: "They left their father Zebedee in the ship with
the hired servants"
(Mr 1:20);
showing that the family were in easy circumstances.
First Galilean Circuit (Mt 4:23-25).
23. And Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues--These
were houses of local worship. It cannot be proved that they
existed before the Babylonish captivity; but as they began to be erected
soon after it, probably the idea was suggested by the religious
inconveniences to which the captives had been subjected. In our Lord's
time, the rule was to have one wherever ten learned men or professed
students of the law resided; and they extended to Syria, Asia Minor,
Greece, and most places of the dispersion. The larger towns had
several, and in Jerusalem the number approached five hundred. In point
of officers and mode of worship, the Christian congregations are
modelled after the synagogue.
24. And his fame went throughout all Syria--reaching first to the part
of it adjacent to Galilee, called Syro-Phœnicia
(Mr 7:26),
and thence extending far and wide.
25. And there followed him great multitudes of people from Galilee, and
from Decapolis--a region lying to the east of the Jordan, so called as
containing ten cities, founded and chiefly inhabited by Greek settlers.
CHAPTERS 5-8 SERMON ON THE MOUNT. That this is the same Discourse as that in Lu 6:17-49 --only reported more fully by Matthew, and less fully, as well as with considerable variation, by Luke--is the opinion of many very able critics (of the Greek commentators; of CALVIN, GROTIUS, MALDONATUS--Who stands almost alone among Romish commentators; and of most moderns, as THOLUCK, MEYER, DE WETTE, TISCHENDORF, STIER, WIESELER, ROBINSON). The prevailing opinion of these critics is that Luke's is the original form of the discourse, to which Matthew has added a number of sayings, uttered on other occasions, in order to give at one view the great outlines of our Lord's ethical teaching. But that they are two distinct discourses--the one delivered about the close of His first missionary tour, and the other after a second such tour and the solemn choice of the Twelve--is the judgment of others who have given much attention to such matters (of most Romish commentators, including ERASMUS; and among the moderns, of LANGE, GRESWELL, BIRKS, WEBSTER and WILKINSON. The question is left undecided by ALFORD). AUGUSTINE'S opinion--that they were both delivered on one occasion, Matthew's on the mountain, and to the disciples; Luke's in the plain, and to the promiscuous multitude--is so clumsy and artificial as hardly to deserve notice. To us the weight of argument appears to lie with those who think them two separate discourses. It seems hard to conceive that Matthew should have put this discourse before his own calling, if it was not uttered till long after, and was spoken in his own hearing as one of the newly chosen Twelve. Add to this, that Matthew introduces his discourse amidst very definite markings of time, which fix it to our Lord's first preaching tour; while that of Luke, which is expressly said to have been delivered immediately after the choice of the Twelve, could not have been spoken till long after the time noted by Matthew. It is hard, too, to see how either discourse can well be regarded as the expansion or contraction of the other. And as it is beyond dispute that our Lord repeated some of His weightier sayings in different forms, and with varied applications, it ought not to surprise us that, after the lapse of perhaps a year--when, having spent a whole night on the hill in prayer to God, and set the Twelve apart, He found Himself surrounded by crowds of people, few of whom probably had heard the Sermon on the Mount, and fewer still remembered much of it--He should go over its principal points again, with just as much sameness as to show their enduring gravity, but at the same time with that difference which shows His exhaustless fertility as the great Prophet of the Church. CHAPTER 5 Mt 5:1-16. THE BEATITUDES, AND THEIR BEARING UPON THE WORLD.
1. And seeing the multitudes--those mentioned in
Mt 4:25.
2. And he opened his mouth--a solemn way of arousing the reader's
attention, and preparing him for something weighty.
(Job 9:1;
Ac 8:35; 10:34).
3. Blessed--Of the two words which our translators render "blessed," the one here used points more to what is inward, and so might be rendered "happy," in a lofty sense; while the other denotes rather what comes to us from without (as Mt 25:34). But the distinction is not always clearly carried out. One Hebrew word expresses both. On these precious Beatitudes, observe that though eight in number, there are here but seven distinct features of character. The eighth one--the "persecuted for righteousness' sake"--denotes merely the possessors of the seven preceding features, on account of which it is that they are persecuted (2Ti 3:12). Accordingly, instead of any distinct promise to this class, we have merely a repetition of the first promise. This has been noticed by several critics, who by the sevenfold character thus set forth have rightly observed that a complete character is meant to be depicted, and by the sevenfold blessedness attached to it, a perfect blessedness is intended. Observe, again, that the language in which these Beatitudes are couched is purposely fetched from the Old Testament, to show that the new kingdom is but the old in a new form; while the characters described are but the varied forms of that spirituality which was the essence of real religion all along, but had well-nigh disappeared under corrupt teaching. Further, the things here promised, far from being mere arbitrary rewards, will be found in each case to grow out of the characters to which they are attached, and in their completed form are but the appropriate coronation of them. Once more, as "the kingdom of heaven," which is the first and the last thing here promised, has two stages--a present and a future, an initial and a consummate stage--so the fulfilment of each of these promises has two stages--a present and a future, a partial and a perfect stage.
3. Blessed are the poor in spirit--All familiar with Old Testament
phraseology know how frequently God's true people are styled "the poor"
(the "oppressed," "afflicted," "miserable") or "the needy"--or both
together (as in
Ps 40:17;
Isa 41:17).
The explanation of this lies in the fact that it is generally "the poor
of this world" who are "rich in faith"
(Jas 2:5;
compare
2Co 6:10;
Re 2:9);
while it is often "the ungodly" who "prosper in the world"
(Ps 73:12).
Accordingly, in
Lu 6:20, 21,
it seems to be this class--the literally "poor" and "hungry"--that are
specially addressed. But since God's people are in so many places
styled "the poor" and "the needy," with no evident reference to their
temporal circumstances (as in
Ps 68:10; 69:29-33; 132:15;
Isa 61:1; 66:2),
it is plainly a frame of mind which those terms are meant to
express. Accordingly, our translators sometimes render such words "the
humble"
(Ps 10:12, 17),
"the meek"
(Ps 22:26),
"the lowly"
(Pr 3:34),
as having no reference to outward circumstances. But here the
explanatory words, "in spirit," fix the sense to "those who in their
deepest consciousness realize their entire need" (compare the
Greek of
Lu 10:21;
Joh 11:33; 13:21;
Ac 20:22;
Ro 12:11;
1Co 5:3;
Php 3:3).
This self-emptying conviction, that "before God we are void of
everything," lies at the foundation of all spiritual excellence,
according to the teaching of Scripture. Without it we are inaccessible
to the riches of Christ; with it we are in the fitting state for
receiving all spiritual supplies
(Re 3:17, 18;
Mt 9:12, 13).
4. Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted--This "mourning" must not be taken loosely for that feeling which is wrung from men under pressure of the ills of life, nor yet strictly for sorrow on account of committed sins. Evidently it is that entire feeling which the sense of our spiritual poverty begets; and so the second beatitude is but the complement of the first. The one is the intellectual, the other the emotional aspect of the same thing. It is poverty of spirit that says, "I am undone"; and it is the mourning which this causes that makes it break forth in the form of a lamentation--"Woe is me! for I am undone." Hence this class are termed "mourners in Zion," or, as we might express it, religious mourners, in sharp contrast with all other sorts (Isa 61:1-3; 66:2). Religion, according to the Bible, is neither a set of intellectual convictions nor a bundle of emotional feelings, but a compound of both, the former giving birth to the latter. Thus closely do the first two beatitudes cohere. The mourners shall be "comforted." Even now they get beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness. Sowing in tears, they reap even here in joy. Still, all present comfort, even the best, is partial, interrupted, short-lived. But the days of our mourning shall soon be ended, and then God shall wipe away all tears from our eyes. Then, in the fullest sense, shall the mourners be "comforted." 5. Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth--This promise to the meek is but a repetition of Ps 37:11; only the word which our Evangelist renders "the meek," after the Septuagint, is the same which we have found so often translated "the poor," showing how closely allied these two features of character are. It is impossible, indeed, that "the poor in spirit" and "the mourners" in Zion should not at the same time be "meek"; that is to say, persons of a lowly and gentle carriage. How fitting, at least, it is that they should be so, may be seen by the following touching appeal: "Put them in mind to be subject to principalities and powers, to obey magistrates, to be ready to every good work, to speak evil of no man, to be no brawlers, but gentle, showing all meekness unto all men: FOR WE OURSELVES WERE ONCE FOOLISH, disobedient, deceived, serving divers lusts and pleasures . . . But after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour toward man appeared: . . . according to His mercy He saved us," &c. (Tit 3:1-7). But He who had no such affecting reasons for manifesting this beautiful carriage, said, nevertheless, of Himself, "Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls" (Mt 11:29); and the apostle besought one of the churches by "the meekness and gentleness of Christ" (2Co 10:1). In what esteem this is held by Him who seeth not as man seeth, we may learn from 1Pe 3:4, where the true adorning is said to be that of "a meek and quiet spirit, which in the sight of God is of great price." Towards men this disposition is the opposite of high-mindedness, and a quarrelsome and revengeful spirit; it "rather takes wrong, and suffers itself to be defrauded" (1Co 6:7); it "avenges not itself, but rather gives place unto wrath" (Ro 12:19); like the meek One, "when reviled, it reviles not again; when it suffers, it threatens not: but commits itself to Him that judgeth righteously" (1Pe 2:19-22). "The earth" which the meek are to inherit might be rendered "the land"--bringing out the more immediate reference to Canaan as the promised land, the secure possession of which was to the Old Testament saints the evidence and manifestation of God's favor resting on them, and the ideal of all true and abiding blessedness. Even in the Psalm from which these words are taken the promise to the meek is not held forth as an arbitrary reward, but as having a kind of natural fulfilment. When they delight themselves in the Lord, He gives them the desires of their heart: when they commit their way to Him, He brings it to pass; bringing forth their righteousness as the light, and their judgment as the noonday: the little that they have, even when despoiled of their rights, is better than the riches of many wicked (Ps 37:1-24). All things, in short, are theirs--in the possession of that favor which is life, and of those rights which belong to them as the children of God--whether the world, or life, or death, or things present, or things to come; all are theirs (1Co 3:21, 22); and at length, overcoming, they "inherit all things" (Re 21:7). Thus are the meek the only rightful occupants of a foot of ground or a crust of bread here, and heirs of all coming things. 6. Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled--"shall be saturated." "From this verse," says THOLUCK, "the reference to the Old Testament background ceases." Surprising! On the contrary, none of these beatitudes is more manifestly dug out of the rich mine of the Old Testament. Indeed, how could any one who found in the Old Testament "the poor in spirit," and "the mourners in Zion," doubt that he would also find those same characters also craving that righteousness which they feel and mourn their want of? But what is the precise meaning of "righteousness" here? Lutheran expositors, and some of our own, seem to have a hankering after that more restricted sense of the term in which it is used with reference to the sinner's justification before God. (See Jer 23:6; Isa 45:24; Ro 4:6; 2Co 5:21). But, in so comprehensive a saying as this, it is clearly to be taken--as in Mt 5:10 also--in a much wider sense, as denoting that spiritual and entire conformity to the law of God, under the want of which the saints groan, and the possession of which constitutes the only true saintship. The Old Testament dwells much on this righteousness, as that which alone God regards with approbation (Ps 11:7; 23:3; 106:3; Pr 12:28; 16:31; Isa 64:5, &c.). As hunger and thirst are the keenest of our appetites, our Lord, by employing this figure here, plainly means "those whose deepest cravings are after spiritual blessings." And in the Old Testament we find this craving variously expressed: "Hearken unto Me, ye that follow after righteousness, ye that seek the Lord" (Isa 51:1); "I have waited for Thy salvation, O Lord," exclaimed dying Jacob (Ge 49:18); "My soul," says the sweet Psalmist, "breaketh for the longing that it hath unto Thy judgments at all times" (Ps 119:20): and in similar breathings does he give vent to his deepest longings in that and other Psalms. Well, our Lord just takes up here--this blessed frame of mind, representing it as--the surest pledge of the coveted supplies, as it is the best preparative, and indeed itself the beginning of them. "They shall be saturated," He says; they shall not only have what they so highly value and long to possess, but they shall have their fill of it. Not here, however. Even in the Old Testament this was well understood. "Deliver me," says the Psalmist, in language which, beyond all doubt, stretches beyond the present scene, "from men of the world, which have their portion in this life: as for me, I shall behold Thy face in righteousness: I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with Thy likeness" (Ps 17:13-15). The foregoing beatitudes--the first four--represent the saints rather as conscious of their need of salvation, and acting suitably to that character, than as possessed of it. The next three are of a different kind--representing the saints as having now found salvation, and conducting themselves accordingly. 7. Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy--Beautiful is the connection between this and the preceding beatitude. The one has a natural tendency to beget the other. As for the words, they seem directly fetched from Ps 18:25, "With the merciful Thou wilt show Thyself merciful." Not that our mercifulness comes absolutely first. On the contrary, our Lord Himself expressly teaches us that God's method is to awaken in us compassion towards our fellow men by His own exercise of it, in so stupendous a way and measure, towards ourselves. In the parable of the unmerciful debtor, the servant to whom his lord forgave ten thousand talents was naturally expected to exercise the small measure of the same compassion required for forgiving his fellow servant's debt of a hundred pence; and it is only when, instead of this, he relentlessly imprisoned him till he should pay it up, that his lord's indignation was roused, and he who was designed for a vessel of mercy is treated as a vessel of wrath (Mt 18:23-35; and see Mt 5:23, 24; 6:15; Jas 2:13). "According to the view given in Scripture," says TRENCH most justly, "the Christian stands in a middle point, between a mercy received and a mercy yet needed. Sometimes the first is urged upon him as an argument for showing mercy--'forgiving one another, as Christ forgave you' (Col 3:13; Eph 4:32): sometimes the last--'Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy'; 'Forgive, and ye shall be forgiven' (Lu 6:37; Jas 5:9). And thus, while he is ever to look back on the mercy received as the source and motive of the mercy which he shows, he also looks forward to the mercy which he yet needs, and which he is assured that the merciful--according to what BENGEL beautifully calls the benigna talio ('the gracious requital') of the kingdom of God--shall receive, as a new provocation to its abundant exercise." The foretastes and beginnings of this judicial recompense are richly experienced here below: its perfection is reserved for that day when, from His great white throne, the King shall say, "Come, ye blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; for I was an hungered, and thirsty, and a stranger, and naked, and sick, and in prison, and ye ministered unto Me." Yes, thus He acted towards us while on earth, even laying down His life for us; and He will not, He cannot disown, in the merciful, the image of Himself. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God--Here, too, we are on Old Testament ground. There the difference between outward and inward purity, and the acceptableness of the latter only in the sight of God, are everywhere taught. Nor is the "vision of God" strange to the Old Testament; and though it was an understood thing that this was not possible in the present life (Ex 33:20; and compare Job 19:26, 27; Isa 6:5), yet spiritually it was known and felt to be the privilege of the saints even here (Ge 5:24; 6:9; 17:1; 48:15; Ps 27:4; 36:9; 63:2; Isa 38:3, 11, &c.). But oh, with what grand simplicity, brevity, and power is this great fundamental truth here expressed! And in what striking contrast would such teaching appear to that which was then current, in which exclusive attention was paid to ceremonial purification and external morality! This heart purity begins in a "heart sprinkled from an evil conscience," or a "conscience purged from dead works" (Heb 10:22; 9:14; and see Ac 15:9); and this also is taught in the Old Testament (Ps 32:1, 2; compare Ro 4:5-8; Isa 6:5-8). The conscience thus purged--the heart thus sprinkled--there is light within wherewith to see God. "If we say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the truth: but if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with the other"--He with us and we with Him--"and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us"--us who have this fellowship, and who, without such continual cleansing, would soon lose it again--"from all sin" (1Jo 1:6, 7). "Whosoever sinneth hath not seen Him, neither known Him" (1Jo 3:6); "He that doeth evil hath not seen God" (3Jo 11). The inward vision thus clarified, and the whole inner man in sympathy with God, each looks upon the other with complacency and joy, and we are "changed into the same image from glory to glory." But the full and beatific vision of God is reserved for that time to which the Psalmist stretches his views--"As for me, I shall behold Thy face in righteousness: I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with Thy likeness" (Ps 17:15). Then shall His servants serve Him: and they shall see His face; and His name shall be in their foreheads (Re 22:3, 4). They shall see Him as He is (1Jo 3:2). But, says the apostle, expressing the converse of this beatitude--"Follow holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord" (Heb 12:14).
9. Blessed are the peacemakers--who not only study peace, but diffuse
it.
10. Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake,
&c.--How entirely this final beatitude has its ground in the Old
Testament, is evident from the concluding words, where the encouragement
held out to endure such persecutions consists in its being but a
continuation of what was experienced by the Old Testament servants of
God. But how, it may be asked, could such beautiful features of
character provoke persecution? To this the following answers should
suffice: "Every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to
the light, lest his deeds should be reproved." "The world cannot hate
you; but Me it hateth, because I testify of it, that the works thereof
are evil." "If ye were of the world, the world would love his own: but
because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world,
therefore the world hateth you." "There is yet one man (said wicked Ahab
to good Jehoshaphat) by whom we may inquire of the Lord: but I hate him;
for he never prophesied good unto me, but always evil"
(Joh 3:20; 7:7; 15:19;
2Ch 18:7).
But more particularly, the seven characters here described are all in
the teeth of the spirit of the world, insomuch that such hearers of
this discourse as breathed that spirit must have been startled, and had
their whole system of thought and action rudely dashed. Poverty of
spirit runs counter to the pride of men's heart; a pensive disposition,
in the view of one's universal deficiencies before God, is ill relished
by the callous, indifferent, laughing, self-satisfied world; a meek and
quiet spirit, taking wrong, is regarded as pusillanimous, and rasps
against the proud, resentful spirit of the world; that craving after
spiritual blessings rebukes but too unpleasantly the lust of the flesh,
the lust of the eye, and the pride of life; so does a merciful spirit
the hard-heartedness of the world; purity of heart contrasts painfully
with painted hypocrisy; and the peacemaker cannot easily be endured by
the contentious, quarrelsome world. Thus does "righteousness" come to
be "persecuted." But blessed are they who, in spite of this, dare to be
righteous.
11. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you--or abuse you to your
face, in opposition to backbiting. (See
Mr 15:32).
12. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad--"exult." In the corresponding
passage of Luke
(Lu 6:22, 23),
where every indignity trying to flesh and blood is held forth as the
probable lot of such as were faithful to Him, the word is even stronger
than here: "leap," as if He would have their inward transport to
overpower and absorb the sense of all these affronts and sufferings;
nor will anything else do it.
13-16. We have here the practical application of the foregoing
principles to those disciples who sat listening to them, and to their
successors in all time. Our Lord, though He began by pronouncing certain
characters to be blessed--without express reference to any of His
hearers--does not close the beatitudes without intimating that such
characters were in existence, and that already they were before Him.
Accordingly, from characters He comes to persons possessing them,
saying, "Blessed are ye when men shall revile you," &c.
(Mt 5:11).
And now, continuing this mode of direct personal address, He startles
those humble, unknown men by pronouncing them the exalted benefactors of
their whole species.
14. Ye are the light of the world--This being the distinctive title
which our Lord appropriates to Himself
(Joh 8:12; 9:5;
and see
Joh 1:4, 9; 3:19; 12:35, 36)
--a title expressly said to be unsuitable even to the highest of all
the prophets
(Joh 1:8)
--it must be applied here by our Lord to His disciples only as they
shine with His light upon the world, in virtue of His Spirit dwelling
in them, and the same mind being in them which was also in Christ
Jesus. Nor are Christians anywhere else so called. Nay, as if to avoid
the august title which the Master has appropriated to Himself,
Christians are said to "shine"--not as "lights," as our translators
render it, but--"as luminaries in the world"
(Php 2:15);
and the Baptist is said to have been "the burning and shining"--not
"light," as in our translation, but "lamp" of his day
(Joh 5:35).
Let it be observed, too, that while the two figures of salt and
sunlight both express the same function of Christians--their blessed
influence on their fellow men--they each set this forth under a
different aspect. Salt operates internally, in the mass with
which it comes in contact; the sunlight operates externally,
irradiating all that it reaches. Hence Christians are warily styled
"the salt of the earth"--with reference to the masses of mankind
with whom they are expected to mix; but "the light of the
world"--with reference to the vast and variegated surface which
feels its fructifying and gladdening radiance. The same distinction is
observable in the second pair of those seven parables which our Lord
spoke from the Galilean Lake--that of the "mustard seed," which grew to
be a great overshadowing tree, answering to the sunlight which invests
the world, and that of the "leaven," which a woman took and, like the
salt, hid in three measures of meal, till the whole was leavened
(Mt 13:31-33).
15. Neither do men light a candle--or, lamp.
16. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven--As nobody lights a lamp only to cover it up, but places it so conspicuously as to give light to all who need light, so Christians, being the light of the world, instead of hiding their light, are so to hold it forth before men that they may see what a life the disciples of Christ lead, and seeing this, may glorify their Father for so redeeming, transforming, and ennobling earth's sinful children, and opening to themselves the way to like redemption and transformation. Mt 5:17-48. IDENTITY OF THESE PRINCIPLES WITH THOSE OF THE ANCIENT ECONOMY; IN CONTRAST WITH THE REIGNING TRADITIONAL TEACHING. Exposition of Principles (Mt 5:17-20).
17. Think not that I am come--that I came.
18. For verily I say unto you--Here, for the first time, does that
august expression occur in our Lord's recorded teaching, with which we
have grown so familiar as hardly to reflect on its full import. It is
the expression manifestly, of supreme legislative authority; and as
the subject in connection with which it is uttered is the Moral Law, no
higher claim to an authority strictly divine could be advanced. For
when we observe how jealously Jehovah asserts it as His exclusive
prerogative to give law to men
(Le 18:1-5; 19:37; 26:1-4, 13-16,
&c.), such language as this of our Lord will appear totally unsuitable,
and indeed abhorrent, from any creature lips. When the Baptist's
words--"I say unto you"
(Mt 3:9)
--are compared with those of his Master here, the difference of the two
cases will be at once apparent.
19. Whosoever therefore shall break--rather, "dissolve,"
"annul," or "make invalid."
20. For I say unto you, That except your righteousness shall exceed the
righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees--The superiority to the
Pharisaic righteousness here required is plainly in kind, not
degree; for all Scripture teaches that entrance into God's kingdom,
whether in its present or future stage, depends, not on the degree of
our excellence in anything, but solely on our having the character
itself which God demands. Our righteousness, then--if it is to contrast
with the outward and formal righteousness of the scribes and
Pharisees--must be inward, vital, spiritual. Some, indeed, of the
scribes and Pharisees themselves might have the very righteousness here
demanded; but our Lord is speaking, not of persons, but of the
system they represented and taught.
The Spirituality of the True Righteousness in Contrast with That of the Scribes and Pharisees, Illustrated from the Sixth Commandment. (Mt 5:21-26).
21. Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time--or, as in
the Margin, "to them of old time." Which of these translations is
the right one has been much controverted. Either of them is
grammatically defensible, though the latter--"to the ancients"--is
more consistent with New Testament usage (see the Greek of
Ro 9:12, 26;
Re 6:11; 9:4);
and most critics decide in favor of it. But it is not a question of
Greek only. Nearly all who would translate "to the ancients"
take the speaker of the words quoted to be Moses in the law;
"the ancients" to be the people to whom Moses gave the law; and
the intention of our Lord here to be to contrast His own teaching, more
or less, with that of Moses; either as opposed to it--as some go the
length of affirming--or at least as modifying, enlarging, elevating it.
But who can reasonably imagine such a thing, just after the most solemn
and emphatic proclamation of the perpetuity of the law, and the honor
and glory in which it was to be held under the new economy? To us it
seems as plain as possible that our Lord's one object is to contrast
the traditional perversions of the law with the true sense of it as
expounded by Himself. A few of those who assent to this still think
that "to the ancients" is the only legitimate translation of the words;
understanding that our Lord is reporting what had been said to the
ancients, not by Moses, but by the perverters of his law. We do not
object to this; but we incline to think (with BEZA, and after him with FRITZSCHE,
OLSHAUSEN, STIER, and BLOOMFIELD) that "by the ancients" must have been what
our Lord meant here, referring to the corrupt teachers rather than the
perverted people.
22. But I say unto you--Mark the authoritative tone in which--as
Himself the Lawgiver and Judge--Christ now gives the true sense, and
explains the deep reach, of the commandment.
23. Therefore--to apply the foregoing, and show its paramount
importance.
24. Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be
reconciled to thy brother--The meaning evidently is--not, "dismiss
from thine own breast all ill feeling," but "get thy brother to dismiss
from his mind all grudge against thee."
25. Agree with thine adversary--thine opponent in a matter cognizable
by law.
26. Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing--a fractional Roman coin, to which our "farthing" answers sufficiently well. That our Lord meant here merely to give a piece of prudential advice to his hearers, to keep out of the hands of the law and its officials by settling all disputes with one another privately, is not for a moment to be supposed, though there are critics of a school low enough to suggest this. The concluding words--"Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out," &c.--manifestly show that though the language is drawn from human disputes and legal procedure, He is dealing with a higher than any human quarrel, a higher than any human tribunal, a higher than any human and temporal sentence. In this view of the words--in which nearly all critics worthy of the name agree--the spirit of them may be thus expressed: "In expounding the sixth commandment, I have spoken of offenses between man and man; reminding you that the offender has another party to deal with besides him whom he has wronged on earth, and assuring you that all worship offered to the Searcher of hearts by one who knows that a brother has just cause of complaint against him, and yet takes no steps to remove it, is vain: But I cannot pass from this subject without reminding you of One whose cause of complaint against you is far more deadly than any that man can have against man: and since with that Adversary you are already on the way to judgment, it will be your wisdom to make up the quarrel without delay, lest sentence of condemnation be pronounced upon you, and then will execution straightway follow, from the effects of which you shall never escape as long as any remnant of the offense remains unexpiated." It will be observed that as the principle on which we are to "agree" with this "Adversary" is not here specified, and the precise nature of the retribution that is to light upon the despisers of this warning is not to be gathered from the mere use of the word "prison"; so, the remedilessness of the punishment is not in so many words expressed, and still less is its actual cessation taught. The language on all these points is designedly general; but it may safely be said that the unending duration of future punishment--elsewhere so clearly and awfully expressed by our Lord Himself, as in Mt 5:29, 30, and Mr 9:43, 48 --is the only doctrine with which His language here quite naturally and fully accords. (Compare Mt 18:30, 34). The Same Subject Illustrated from the Seventh Commandment (Mt 5:27-32).
27. Ye have heard that it was said--The words "by," or "to them of old
time," in this verse are insufficiently supported, and probably were not
in the original text.
28. But I say unto you, That whosoever looketh on a woman to lust
after her--with the intent to do so, as the same expression is used
in
Mt 6:1;
or, with the full consent of his will, to feed thereby his unholy
desires.
29. And if thy right eye--the readier and the dearer of the two.
30. And if thy right hand--the organ of action, to which the eye
excites.
31. It hath been said--This shortened form was perhaps intentional,
to mark a transition from the commandments of the Decalogue to a civil
enactment on the subject of divorce, quoted from
De 24:1.
The law of divorce--according to its strictness or laxity--has so
intimate a bearing upon purity in the married life, that nothing could
be more natural than to pass from the seventh commandment to the loose
views on that subject then current.
32. But I say unto you, That whosoever shall put away his wife, saving
for the cause of fornication, causeth her to commit adultery--that is,
drives her into it in case she marries again.
Same Subject Illustrated from the Third Commandment (Mt 5:33-37).
33. Again, ye have heard that it hath been said by them of old time,
Thou shalt not forswear thyself--These are not the precise words of
Ex 20:7;
but they express all that it was currently understood to condemn,
namely, false swearing
(Le 19:12,
&c.). This is plain from what follows.
35. Nor by the earth; for it is his footstool--(quoting
Isa 66:1);
36. Neither shalt thou swear by thy head, because thou canst not make one hair white or black--In the other oaths specified, God's name was profaned quite as really as if His name had been uttered, because it was instantly suggested by the mention of His "throne," His "footstool," His "city." But in swearing by our own head and the like, the objection lies in their being "beyond our control," and therefore profanely assumed to have a stability which they have not.
37. But let your communication--"your word," in ordinary intercourse,
be,
Same Subject--Retaliation (Mt 5:38-42). We have here the converse of the preceding lessons. They were negative: these are positive.
38. Ye have heard that it hath been said--
(Ex 21:23-25;
Le 24:19, 20;
De 19:21).
39. But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil; but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right check, turn to him the other also--Our Lord's own meek, yet dignified bearing, when smitten rudely on the cheek (Joh 18:22, 23), and not literally presenting the other, is the best comment on these words. It is the preparedness, after one indignity, not to invite but to submit meekly to another, without retaliation, which this strong language is meant to convey.
40. And if any man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy
coat--the inner garment; in pledge for a debt
(Ex 22:26, 27).
41. And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain--an allusion, probably, to the practice of the Romans and some Eastern nations, who, when government despatches had to be forwarded, obliged the people not only to furnish horses and carriages, but to give personal attendance, often at great inconvenience, when required. But the thing here demanded is a readiness to submit to unreasonable demands of whatever kind, rather than raise quarrels, with all the evils resulting from them. What follows is a beautiful extension of this precept.
42. Give to him that asketh thee--The sense of unreasonable asking
is here implied (compare
Lu 6:30).
Same Subject--Love to Enemies (Mt 5:43-48).
43. Ye have heard that it hath been said--
(Le 19:18).
44. But I say unto you, Love your enemies--The word here used denotes
moral love, as distinguished from the other word, which expresses
personal affection. Usually, the former denotes "complacency in the
character" of the person loved; but here it denotes the benignant,
compassionate outgoings of desire for another's good.
45. That ye may be the children--sons.
46. For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? do not even the publicans the same?--The publicans, as collectors of taxes due to the Roman government, were ever on this account obnoxious to the Jews, who sat uneasy under a foreign yoke, and disliked whatever brought this unpleasantly before them. But the extortion practiced by this class made them hateful to the community, who in their current speech ranked them with "harlots." Nor does our Lord scruple to speak of them as others did, which we may be sure He never would have done if it had been calumnious. The meaning, then, is, "In loving those who love you, there is no evidence of superior principle; the worst of men will do this: even a publican will go that length."
47. And if ye salute your brethren only--of the same nation and
religion with yourselves.
48. Be ye therefore--rather, "Ye shall therefore be," or "Ye are
therefore to be," as My disciples and in My kingdom.
CHAPTER 6 SERMON ON THE MOUNT--continued. Mt 6:1-18. FURTHER ILLUSTRATION OF THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE KINGDOM--ITS UNOSTENTATIOUSNESS. General Caution against Ostentation in Religious Duties (Mt 6:1).
1. Take heed that ye do not your alms--But the true reading seems
clearly to be "your righteousness." The external authority for both
readings is pretty nearly equal; but internal evidence is decidedly in
favor of "righteousness." The subject of the second verse being
"almsgiving" that word--so like the other in Greek--might easily be
substituted for it by the copyist: whereas the opposite would not be so
likely. But it is still more in favor of "righteousness," that if we so
read the first verse, it then becomes a general heading for this whole
section of the discourse, inculcating unostentatiousness in all
deeds of righteousness--Almsgiving, Prayer, and Fasting being, in that
case, but selected examples of this righteousness; whereas, if we read,
"Do not your alms," &c., this first verse will have no reference
but to that one point. By "righteousness," in this case, we are to
understand that same righteousness of the kingdom of heaven, whose
leading features--in opposition to traditional perversions of it--it is
the great object of this discourse to open up: that righteousness of
which the Lord says, "Except your righteousness shall exceed the
righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter
into the kingdom of heaven"
(Mt 5:20).
To "do" this righteousness, was an old and well-understood
expression. Thus, "Blessed is he that doeth righteousness at all times"
(Ps 106:3).
It refers to the actings of righteousness in the life--the
outgoings of the gracious nature--of which our Lord afterwards said to
His disciples, "Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit;
so shall ye be My disciples"
(Joh 15:8).
Almsgiving (Mt 6:2-4).
2. Therefore, when thou doest thine alms, do not sound a trumpet before
thee--The expression is to be taken figuratively for blazoning it.
Hence our expression to "trumpet."
3. But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth--So far from making a display of it, dwell not on it even in thine own thoughts, lest it minister to spiritual pride. 4. That thine alms may be in secret, and thy Father which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee openly--The word "Himself" appears to be an unauthorized addition to the text, which the sense no doubt suggested. (See 1Ti 5:25; Ro 2:16; 1Co 4:5). Prayer (Mt 6:5, 6).
5. And when thou prayest, thou shalt--or, preferably, "when ye pray
ye shall."
6. But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet--a place of
retirement.
Supplementary Directions and Model Prayer (Mt 6:7-15).
7. But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions--"Babble not" would be
a better rendering, both for the form of the word--which in both
languages is intended to imitate the sound--and for the sense, which
expresses not so much the repetition of the same words as a senseless
multiplication of them; as appears from what follows.
8. Be not ye therefore like unto them: for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him--and so needs not to be informed of our wants, any more than to be roused to attend to them by our incessant speaking. What a view of God is here given, in sharp contrast with the gods of the heathen! But let it be carefully noted that it is not as the general Father of mankind that our Lord says, "Your Father" knoweth what ye need before ye ask it; for it is not men, as such, that He is addressing in this discourse, but His own disciples--the poor in spirit, the mourners, the meek, hungry and thirsty souls, the merciful, the pure in heart, the peacemakers, who allow themselves to have all manner of evil said against them for the Son of man's sake--in short, the new-born children of God, who, making their Father's interests their own, are here assured that their Father, in return, makes their interests His, and needs neither to be told nor to be reminded of their wants. Yet He will have His children pray to Him, and links all His promised supplies to their petitions for them; thus encouraging us to draw near and keep near to Him, to talk and walk with Him, to open our every case to Him, and assure ourselves that thus asking we shall receive--thus seeking we shall find--thus knocking it shall be opened to us.
9. After this manner--more simply "Thus."
Model Prayer (Mt 6:9-13). According to the Latin fathers and the Lutheran Church, the petitions of the Lord's Prayer are seven in number; according to the Greek fathers, the Reformed Church and the Westminster divines, they are only six; the two last being regarded--we think, less correctly--as one. The first three petitions have to do exclusively with God: "Thy name be hallowed"--"Thy kingdom come"--"Thy will be done." And they occur in a descending scale--from Himself down to the manifestation of Himself in His kingdom; and from His kingdom to the entire subjection of its subjects, or the complete doing of His will. The remaining four petitions have to do with OURSELVES: "Give us our daily bread"--"Forgive us our debts"--"Lead us not into temptation"--"Deliver us from evil." But these latter petitions occur in an ascending scale--from the bodily wants of every day up to our final deliverance from all evil.
Invocation:
First Petition:
Second Petition:
Third Petition:
Fourth Petition:
Fifth Petition:
Sixth Petition:
Seventh Petition:
14. For if ye forgive men, &c.--See on Mt 6:12. 15. But if ye forgive not, &c.--See on Mt 6:12. Fasting (Mt 6:16-18). Having concluded His supplementary directions on the subject of prayer with this Divine Pattern, our Lord now returns to the subject of Unostentatiousness in our deeds of righteousness, in order to give one more illustration of it, in the matter of fasting.
16. Moreover, when ye fast--referring, probably, to private and
voluntary fasting, which was to be regulated by each individual for
himself; though in spirit it would apply to any fast.
17. But thou, when thou fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy face--as the Jews did, except when mourning (Da 10:3); so that the meaning is, "Appear as usual"--appear so as to attract no notice. 18. That thou appear not unto men to fast, but unto thy Father which is in secret: and thy Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly--The "openly" seems evidently a later addition to the text of this verse from Mt 6:4, 7, though of course the idea is implied. Mt 6:19-34. CONCLUDING ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE KINGDOM--HEAVENLY-MINDEDNESS AND FILIAL CONFIDENCE.
19. Lay not up for ourselves treasures upon earth--hoard not.
20. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven--The language
in Luke
(Lu 12:33)
is very bold--"Sell that ye have, and give alms; provide yourselves
bags which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens that faileth
not," &c.
21. For where your treasure is--that which ye value most.
22. The light--rather, "the lamp."
23. But if thine eye be evil--distempered, or, as we should say, If we
have got a bad eye.
24. No man can serve--The word means to "belong wholly and be entirely
under command to."
25. Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought--"Be not
solicitous." The English word "thought," when our version was made,
expressed this idea of "solicitude," "anxious concern"--as may be seen
in any old English classic; and in the same sense it is used in
1Sa 9:5,
&c. But this sense of the word has now nearly gone out, and so the mere
English reader is apt to be perplexed. Thought or forethought,
for temporal things--in the sense of reflection, consideration--is
required alike by Scripture and common sense. It is that anxious
solicitude, that oppressive care, which springs from unbelieving doubts
and misgivings, which alone is here condemned. (See
Php 4:6).
26. Behold the fowls of the air--in
Mt 6:28,
"observe well," and in
Lu 12:24,
"consider"--so as to learn wisdom from them.
27. Which of you, by taking thought--anxious solicitude.
28. And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider--observe well.
29. And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these--What incomparable teaching!--best left in its own transparent clearness and rich simplicity.
30. Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass--the "herbage."
31. Therefore take no thought--solicitude.
32. (For after all these things do the Gentiles seek)--rather,
"pursue." Knowing nothing definitely beyond the present life to kindle
their aspirations and engage their supreme attention, the heathen
naturally pursue present objects as their chief, their only good. To
what an elevation above these does Jesus here lift His disciples!
33. But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you--This is the great summing up. Strictly speaking, it has to do only with the subject of the present section--the right state of the heart with reference to heavenly and earthly things; but being couched in the form of a brief general directory, it is so comprehensive in its grasp as to embrace the whole subject of this discourse. And, as if to make this the more evident, the two keynotes of this great sermon seem purposely struck in it--"the KINGDOM" and "the RIGHTEOUSNESS" of the kingdom--as the grand objects, in the supreme pursuit of which all things needful for the present life will be added to us. The precise sense of every word in this golden verse should be carefully weighed. "The kingdom of God" is the primary subject of the Sermon on the Mount--that kingdom which the God of heaven is erecting in this fallen world, within which are all the spiritually recovered and inwardly subject portion of the family of Adam, under Messiah as its Divine Head and King. "The righteousness thereof" is the character of all such, so amply described and variously illustrated in the foregoing portions of this discourse. The "seeking" of these is the making them the object of supreme choice and pursuit; and the seeking of them "first" is the seeking of them before and above all else. The "all these things" which shall in that case be added to us are just the "all these things" which the last words of Mt 6:32 assured us "our heavenly Father knoweth that we have need of"; that is, all we require for the present life. And when our Lord says they shall be "added," it is implied, as a matter of course, that the seekers of the kingdom and its righteousness shall have these as their proper and primary portion: the rest being their gracious reward for not seeking them. (See an illustration of the principle of this in 2Ch 1:11, 12). What follows is but a reduction of this great general direction into a practical and ready form for daily use.
34. Take therefore no thought--anxious care.
CHAPTER 7 SERMON ON THE MOUNT--concluded. Mt 7:1-12. MISCELLANEOUS SUPPLEMENTARY COUNSELS. That these verses are entirely supplementary is the simplest and most natural view of them. All attempts to make out any evident connection with the immediately preceding context are, in our judgment, forced. But, though supplementary, these counsels are far from being of subordinate importance. On the contrary, they involve some of the most delicate and vital duties of the Christian life. In the vivid form in which they are here presented, perhaps they could not have been introduced with the same effect under any of the foregoing heads; but they spring out of the same great principles, and are but other forms and manifestations of the same evangelical "righteousness." Censorious Judgment (Mt 7:1-5). 1. Judge not, that ye be not judged--To "judge" here does not exactly mean to pronounce condemnatory judgment, nor does it refer to simple judging at all, whether favorable or the reverse. The context makes it clear that the thing here condemned is that disposition to look unfavorably on the character and actions of others, which leads invariably to the pronouncing of rash, unjust, and unlovely judgments upon them. No doubt it is the judgments so pronounced which are here spoken of; but what our Lord aims at is the spirit out of which they spring. Provided we eschew this unlovely spirit, we are not only warranted to sit in judgment upon a brother's character and actions, but in the exercise of a necessary discrimination are often constrained to do so for our own guidance. It is the violation of the law of love involved in the exercise of a censorious disposition which alone is here condemned. And the argument against it--"that ye be not judged"--confirms this: "that your own character and actions be not pronounced upon with the like severity"; that is, at the great day.
2. For with what judgments ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what
measure ye mete--whatever standard of judgment ye apply to others.
3. And why beholdest thou the mote--"splinter," here very well rendered
"mote," denoting any small fault.
4. Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye?
5. Thou hypocrite--"Hypocrite."
Prostitution of Holy Things (Mt 7:6). The opposite extreme to that of censoriousness is here condemned--want of discrimination of character.
6. Give not that which is holy unto the dogs--savage or snarling
haters of truth and righteousness.
Prayer (Mt 7:7-11). Enough, one might think, had been said on this subject in Mt 6:5-15. But the difficulty of the foregoing duties seems to have recalled the subject, and this gives it quite a new turn. "How shall we ever be able to carry out such precepts as these, of tender, holy, yet discriminating love?" might the humble disciple inquire. "Go to God with it," is our Lord's reply; but He expresses this with a fulness which leaves nothing to be desired, urging now not only confidence, but importunity in prayer. 7. Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you--Though there seems evidently a climax here, expressive of more and more importunity, yet each of these terms used presents what we desire of God in a different light. We ask for what we wish; we seek for what we miss; we knock for that from which we feel ourselves shut out. Answering to this threefold representation is the triple assurance of success to our believing efforts. "But ah!" might some humble disciple say, "I cannot persuade myself that I have any interest with God." To meet this, our Lord repeats the triple assurance He had just given, but in such a form as to silence every such complaint. 8. For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened--Of course, it is presumed that he asks aright--that is, in faith--and with an honest purpose to make use of what he receives. "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God. But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering (undecided whether to be altogether on the Lord's side). For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord" (Jas 1:5-7). Hence, "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts" (Jas 4:3).
9. Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread--a loaf.
10. Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent?--like it, indeed, but only to sting him. 11. If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask him!--Bad as our fallen nature is, the father in us is not extinguished. What a heart, then, must the Father of all fathers have towards His pleading children! In the corresponding passage in Luke (see on Lu 11:13), instead of "good things," our Lord asks whether He will not much more give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him. At this early stage of His ministry, and before such an audience, He seems to avoid such sharp doctrinal teaching as was more accordant with His plan at the riper stage indicated in Luke, and in addressing His own disciples exclusively. Golden Rule (Mt 7:12).
12. Therefore--to say all in one word.
Mt 7:13-29. CONCLUSION AND EFFECT OF THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT. We have here the application of the whole preceding discourse. Conclusion of the Sermon on the Mount (Mt 7:13-27). "The righteousness of the kingdom," so amply described, both in principle and in detail, would be seen to involve self-sacrifice at every step. Multitudes would never face this. But it must be faced, else the consequences will be fatal. This would divide all within the sound of these truths into two classes: the many, who will follow the path of ease and self-indulgence--end where it might; and the few, who, bent on eternal safety above everything else, take the way that leads to it--at whatever cost. This gives occasion to the two opening verses of this application.
13. Enter ye in at the strait gate--as if hardly wide enough to admit
one at all. This expresses the difficulty of the first right step in
religion, involving, as it does, a triumph over all our natural
inclinations. Hence the still stronger expression in Luke
(Lu 13:24),
"Strive to enter in at the strait gate."
14. Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth
unto life--In other words, the whole course is as difficult as the
first step; and (so it comes to pass that).
15. Beware--But beware.
16. Ye shall know them by their fruits--not their doctrines--as many
of the elder interpreters and some later ones explain it--for that
corresponds to the tree itself; but the practical effect of their
teaching, which is the proper fruit of the tree.
17. Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit: but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit. 18. A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit--Obvious as is the truth here expressed in different forms--that the heart determines and is the only proper interpreter of the actions of our life--no one who knows how the Church of Rome makes a merit of actions, quite apart from the motives that prompt them, and how the same tendency manifests itself from time to time even among Protestant Christians, can think it too obvious to be insisted on by the teachers of divine truth. Here follows a wholesome digression. 19. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire--(See on Mt 3:10). 20. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them--that is, But the point I now press is not so much the end of such, as the means of detecting them; and this, as already said, is their fruits. The hypocrisy of teachers now leads to a solemn warning against religious hypocrisy in general.
21. Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord--the reduplication
of the title "Lord" denoting zeal in according it to Christ (see
Mr 14:45).
Yet our Lord claims and expects this of all His disciples, as when He
washed their feet: "Ye call me Master and Lord: and ye say well; for so
I am"
(Joh 13:13).
22. Many will say to me in that day--What day? It is emphatically
unnamed. But it is the day to which He had just referred, when men shall
"enter" or not enter "into the kingdom of heaven." (See a similar way of
speaking of "that day" in
2Ti 1:12; 4:8).
23. And then will I profess unto them--or, openly proclaim--tearing
off the mask.
24. Therefore--to bring this discourse to a close.
25. And the rain descended--from above.
26. And every one that heareth these sayings of mine--in the attitude
of discipleship.
27. And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew,
and beat upon that house--struck against that house;
Effect of the Sermon on the Mount (Mt 7:28, 29). 28. And it came to pass, when Jesus had ended these sayings, the people were astonished at his doctrine--rather, "His teaching," for the reference is to the manner of it quite as much as the matter, or rather more so.
29. For he taught them as one having authority--The word "one,"
which our translators have here inserted, only weakens the statement.
CHAPTER 8 Mt 8:1-4. HEALING OF A LEPER. ( = Mr 1:40-45; Lu 5:12-16). The time of this miracle seems too definitely fixed here to admit of our placing it where it stands in Mark and Luke, in whose Gospels no such precise note of time is given. 1. When he was come down from the mountain, great multitudes followed him.
2. And, behold, there came a leper--"a man full of leprosy," says
Lu 5:12.
Much has been written on this disease of leprosy, but certain points
remain still doubtful. All that needs be said here is that it was a
cutaneous disease, of a loathsome, diffusive, and, there is reason to
believe, when thoroughly pronounced, incurable character; that though
in its distinctive features it is still found in several countries--as
Arabia, Egypt, and South Africa--it prevailed, in the form of what is
called white leprosy, to an unusual extent, and from a very early
period, among the Hebrews; and that it thus furnished to the whole
nation a familiar and affecting symbol of SIN,
considered as (1) loathsome, (2) spreading, (3)
incurable. And while the ceremonial ordinances for detection and
cleansing prescribed in this case by the law of Moses
(Le 13:1-14:57)
held forth a coming remedy "for sin and for uncleanness"
(Ps 51:7;
2Ki 5:1, 7, 10, 13, 14),
the numerous cases of leprosy with which our Lord came in contact, and
the glorious cures of them which He wrought, were a fitting
manifestation of the work which He came to accomplish. In this view, it
deserves to be noticed that the first of our Lord's miracles of healing
recorded by Matthew is this cure of a leper.
3. And Jesus--or "He," according to another reading,--"moved with
compassion," says Mark
(Mr 1:41);
a precious addition.
4. And Jesus--"straitly charged him, and forthwith sent him away"
(Mr 1:43),
and
Mt 8:5-13. HEALING OF THE CENTURION'S SERVANT. ( = Lu 7:1-10). This incident belongs to a later stage. For the exposition, see on Lu 7:1-10. Mt 8:14-17. HEALING OF PETER'S MOTHER-IN-LAW AND MANY OTHERS. ( = Mr 1:29-34; Lu 4:38-41). For the exposition, see on Mr 1:29-34. Mt 8:18-22. INCIDENTS ILLUSTRATIVE OF DISCIPLESHIP. ( = Lu 9:57-62). The incidents here are two: in the corresponding passage of Luke they are three. Here they are introduced before the mission of the Twelve: in Luke, when our Lord was making preparation for His final journey to Jerusalem. But to conclude from this, as some good critics do (as BENGEL, ELLICOTT, &c.) that one of these incidents at least occurred twice--which led to the mention of the others at the two different times--is too artificial. Taking them, then, as one set of occurrences, the question arises. Are they recorded by Matthew or by Luke in their proper place? NEANDER, SCHLEIERMACHER, and OLSHAUSEN adhere to Luke's order; while MEYER, DE WETTE, and LANGE prefer that of Matthew. Probably the first incident is here in its right place. But as the command, in the second incident, to preach the kingdom of God, would scarcely have been given at so early a period, it is likely that it and the third incident have their true place in Luke. Taking these three incidents up here then we have, I. The Rash or Precipitate Disciple (Mt 8:19, 20). 19. And a certain scribe came, and said unto him, Master, I will follow thee whithersoever thou goest. 20. And Jesus saith unto him, The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head--Few as there were of the scribes who attached themselves to Jesus, it would appear, from his calling Him Teacher, that this one was a "disciple" in that looser sense of the word in which it is applied to the crowds who flocked after Him, with more or less conviction that His claims were well founded. But from the answer which he received we are led to infer that there was more of transient emotion--of temporary impulse--than of intelligent principle in the speech. The preaching of Christ had riveted and charmed him; his heart had swelled; his enthusiasm had been kindled; and in this state of mind he will go anywhere with Him, and feels impelled to tell Him so. "Wilt thou?" replies the Lord Jesus. "Knowest thou whom thou art pledging thyself to follow, and whither haply He may lead thee? No warm home, no downy pillow has He for thee: He has them not for Himself. The foxes are not without their holes, nor do the birds of the air lack their nests; but the Son of man has to depend on the hospitality of others, and borrow the pillow whereon He lays His head." How affecting is this reply! And yet He rejects not this man's offer, nor refuses him the liberty to follow Him. Only He will have him know what he is doing, and "count the cost." He will have him weigh well the real nature and the strength of his attachment, whether it be such as will abide in the day of trial. If so, he will be right welcome, for Christ puts none away. But it seems too plain that in this case that had not been done. And so we have called this the Rash or Precipitate Disciple. II. The Procrastinating or Entangled Disciple (Mt 8:21, 22).
As this is more fully given in Luke
(Lu 9:59),
we must take both together. "And He said unto another of His disciples,
Follow Me. But he said,"
The next case is recorded only by Luke: III. The Irresolute or Wavering Disciple (Lu 9:61, 62).
Mt 8:23-27. JESUS CROSSING THE SEA OF GALILEE, MIRACULOUSLY STILLS A TEMPEST. ( = Mr 4:35-41; Lu 8:22-25). For the exposition, see on Mr 4:35-41. Mt 8:28-34. JESUS HEALS THE GERGESENE DEMONIACS. ( = Mr 5:1-20; Lu 8:26-39). For the exposition, see on Mr 5:1-20. CHAPTER 9 Mt 9:1-8. HEALING OF A PARALYTIC. ( = Mr 2:1-12; Lu 5:17-26). This incident appears to follow next in order of time to the cure of the leper (Mt 8:1-4). For the exposition, see on Mr 2:1-12. Mt 9:9-13. MATTHEW'S CALL AND FEAST. ( = Mr 2:14-17; Lu 5:27-32). The Call of Matthew (Mt 9:9).
9. And as Jesus passed forth from thence--that is, from the scene of
the paralytic's cure in Capernaum, towards the shore of the Sea of
Galilee, on which that town lay. Mark, as usual, pictures the scene more
in detail, thus
(Mr 2:13):
"And He went forth again by the seaside; and all the multitude resorted
unto Him, and He taught them"--or, "kept teaching them." "And as He
passed by"
The Feast (Mt 9:10-13).
10. And it came to pass, as Jesus sat at meat in the house--The
modesty of our Evangelist signally appears here. Luke says
(Lu 5:29)
that "Levi made Him a great feast," or "reception," while
Matthew merely says, "He sat at meat"; and Mark and Luke say that it
was in Levi's "own house," while Matthew merely says, "He sat at meat
in the house." Whether this feast was made now, or not till
afterwards, is a point of some importance in the order of events, and
not agreed among harmonists. The probability is that it did not take
place till a considerable time afterwards. For Matthew, who ought
surely to know what took place while his Lord was speaking at his own
table, tells us that the visit of Jairus, the ruler of the synagogue,
occurred at that moment
(Mt 9:18).
But we know from Mark and Luke that this visit of Jairus did not take
place till after our Lord's return, at a later period from the country
of the Gadarenes. (See
Mr 5:21,
&c., and Lu 8:40,
&c.). We conclude, therefore, that the feast was not made in the
novelty of his discipleship, but after Matthew had had time to be
somewhat established in the faith; when returning to Capernaum, his
compassion for old friends, of his own calling and character, led him
to gather them together that they might have an opportunity of hearing
the gracious words which proceeded out of His Master's mouth, if haply
they might experience a like change.
11. And when the Pharisees--"and scribes," add Mark and Luke
(Mr 2:6;
Lu 5:21).
12. But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them--to the Pharisees
and scribes; addressing Himself to them, though they had shrunk from
addressing Him.
13. But go ye and learn what that meaneth--
(Ho 6:6),
Mt 9:14-17. DISCOURSE ON FASTING. See on Lu 5:33-39. Mt 9:18-26. THE WOMAN WITH THE ISSUE OF BLOOD HEALED.--THE DAUGHTER OF JAIRUS RAISED TO LIFE. ( = Lu 8:40-56; Mr 5:21-43). For the exposition, see on Mr 5:21-43. Mt 9:27-34. TWO BLIND MEN AND A DUMB DEMONIAC HEALED. These two miracles are recorded by Matthew alone. Two Blind Men Healed (Mt 9:27-31).
27. And when Jesus departed thence, two blind men followed
him--hearing, doubtless, as in a later case is expressed, "that
Jesus passed by"
(Mt 20:30).
28. And when he was come into the house--To try their faith and
patience, He seems to have made them no answer. But
29. Then touched he their eyes, saying, According to your faith be it unto you--not, Receive a cure proportioned to your faith, but, Receive this cure as granted to your faith. Thus would they carry about with them, in their restored vision, a gracious seal of the faith which drew it from their compassionate Lord. 30. And their eyes were opened: and Jesus straitly charged them--The expression is very strong, denoting great earnestness. 31. But they, when they were departed, spread abroad his fame in all that country--(See on Mt 8:4). A Dumb Demoniac Healed (Mt 9:32-34). 32. As they went out, behold, they brought to him a dumb man possessed with a devil--"demonized." The dumbness was not natural, but was the effect of the possession.
33. And when the devil--demon.
34. But the Pharisees said, He casteth out devils through the prince of the devils--"the demons through the prince of the demons." This seems to be the first muttering of a theory of such miracles which soon became a fixed mode of calumniating them--a theory which would be ridiculous if it were not melancholy as an outburst of the darkest malignity. (See on Mt 12:24, &c.). Mt 9:35-10:5. THIRD GALILEAN CIRCUIT--MISSION OF THE TWELVE APOSTLES. As the Mission of the Twelve supposes the previous choice of them--of which our Evangelist gives no account, and which did not take place till a later stage of our Lord's public life--it is introduced here out of its proper place, which is after what is recorded in Lu 6:12-19. Third Galilean Circuit (Mt 9:35) --and probably the last. 35. And Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among the people--The italicized words are of more than doubtful authority here, and were probably introduced here from Mt 4:23. The language here is so identical with that used in describing the first circuit (Mt 4:23), that we may presume the work done on both occasions was much the same. It was just a further preparation of the soil, and a fresh sowing of the precious seed. (See on Mt 4:23). To these fruitful journeyings of the Redeemer, "with healing in His wings," Peter no doubt alludes, when, in his address to the household of Cornelius, he spoke of "How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power: who went about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed of the devil: for God was with Him" (Ac 10:38). Jesus Compassionating the Multitudes, Asks Prayer for Help (Mt 9:36-38). He had now returned from His preaching and healing circuit, and the result, as at the close of the first one, was the gathering of a vast and motley multitude around Him. After a whole night spent in prayer, He had called His more immediate disciples, and from them had solemnly chosen the twelve; then, coming down from the mountain, on which this was transacted, to the multitudes that waited for Him below, He had addressed to them--as we take it--that discourse which bears so strong a resemblance to the Sermon on the Mount that many critics take it to be the same. (See on Lu 6:12-49; and Mt 5:1, Introductory Remarks). Soon after this, it should seem, the multitudes still hanging on Him, Jesus is touched with their wretched and helpless condition, and acts as is now to be described.
36. But when he saw the multitudes, he was moved with compassion on
them, because they fainted--This reading, however, has hardly any
authority at all. The true reading doubtless is, "were harassed."
37. Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is
plenteous--His eye doubtless rested immediately on the Jewish
field, but this he saw widening into the vast field of "the world"
(Mt 13:38),
teeming with souls having to be gathered to Him.
38. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest--the great Lord and
Proprietor of all. Compare
Joh 15:1,
"I am the true vine, and My Father is the husbandman."
CHAPTER 10 Mt 10:1-5. MISSION OF THE TWELVE APOSTLES. ( = Mr 6:7-13; Lu 9:1-6). The last three verses of the ninth chapter form the proper introduction to the Mission of the Twelve, as is evident from the remarkable fact that the Mission of the Seventy was prefaced by the very same words. (See on Lu 10:2).
1. And when he had called unto him his twelve disciples, he gave them
power--The word signifies both "power," and "authority" or "right."
Even if it were not evident that here both ideas are included, we find
both words expressly used in the parallel passage of Luke
(Lu 9:1)
--"He gave them power and authority"--in other words, He both
qualified and authorized them.
2. Now the names of the twelve apostles are these--The other
Evangelists enumerate the twelve in immediate connection with their
appointment
(Mr 3:13-19;
Lu 6:13-16).
But our Evangelist, not intending to record the appointment, but only
the Mission of the Twelve, gives their names here. And as in the Acts
(Ac 1:13)
we have a list of the Eleven who met daily in the upper room with the
other disciples after their Master's ascension until the day of
Pentecost, we have four catalogues in all for comparison.
3. Philip and Bartholomew--That this person is the same with "Nathanael
of Cana in Galilee" is justly concluded for the three following reasons:
First, because Bartholomew is not so properly an individual's name as a
family surname; next, because not only in this list, but in Mark's and
Luke's
(Mr 3:18;
Lu 6:14),
he follows the name of "Philip," who was the instrument of bringing
Nathanael first to Jesus
(Joh 1:45);
and again, when our Lord, after His resurrection, appeared at the Sea
of Tiberias, "Nathanael of Cana in Galilee" is mentioned along with six
others, all of them apostles, as being present
(Joh 21:2).
4. Simon the Canaanite--rather "Kananite," but better still, "the
Zealot," as he is called in
Lu 6:15,
where the original term should not have been retained as in our version
("Simon, called Zelotes"), but rendered "Simon, called the Zealot." The
word "Kananite" is just the Aramaic, or Syro-Chaldaic,
term for "Zealot." Probably before his acquaintance with Jesus, he
belonged to the sect of the Zealots, who bound themselves, as a sort of
voluntary ecclesiastical police, to see that the law was not broken
with impunity.
Mt 10:5-42. THE TWELVE RECEIVE THEIR INSTRUCTIONS. This directory divides itself into three distinct parts. The first part (Mt 10:5-15) contains directions for the brief and temporary mission on which they were now going forth, with respect to the places they were to go to, the works they were to do, the message they were to bear, and the manner in which they were to conduct themselves. The second part (Mt 10:16-23) contains directions of no such limited and temporary nature, but opens out into the permanent exercise of the Gospel ministry. The third part (Mt 10:24-42) is of wider application still, reaching not only to the ministry of the Gospel in every age, but to the service of Christ in the widest sense. It is a strong confirmation of this threefold division, that each part closes with the words, "VERILY I SAY UNTO YOU" (Mt 10:15, 23, 42). Directions for the Present Mission (Mt 10:5-15). 5. These twelve Jesus sent forth, and commanded them, saying, Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not--The Samaritans were Gentiles by blood; but being the descendants of those whom the king of Assyria had transported from the East to supply the place of the ten tribes carried captive, they had adopted the religion of the Jews, though with admixtures of their own: and, as the nearest neighbors of the Jews, they occupied a place intermediate between them and the Gentiles. Accordingly, when this prohibition was to be taken off, on the effusion of the Spirit at Pentecost, the apostles were told that they should be Christ's witnesses first "in Jerusalem, and in all Judea," then "in Samaria," and lastly, "unto the uttermost part of the earth" (Ac 1:8). 6. But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel--Until Christ's death, which broke down the middle wall of partition (Eph 2:14), the Gospel commission was to the Jews only, who, though the visible people of God, were "lost sheep," not merely in the sense which all sinners are (Isa 53:6; 1Pe 2:25; compare with Lu 19:10), but as abandoned and left to wander from the right way by faithless shepherds (Jer 50:6, 17; Eze 34:2-6, &c.). 7. And as ye go, preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand--(See on Mt 3:2).
8. Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out
devils--(The italicized clause--"raise the dead"--is wanting in
many manuscripts). Here we have the first communication of supernatural
power by Christ Himself to His followers--thus anticipating the gifts
of Pentecost. And right royally does He dispense it.
9. Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses--"for" your purses; literally, "your belts," in which they kept their money.
10. Nor scrip for your journey--the bag used by travellers for holding
provisions.
11. And into whatsoever city or town--town or village.
12. And when ye come into an house--or "the house," but it means not
the worthy house, but the house ye first enter, to try if it be worthy.
13. And if the house be worthy--showing this by giving you a welcome.
14. And whosoever shall not receive you, nor hear your words, when ye
depart out of that house or city--for possibly a whole town might not
furnish one "worthy."
15. Verily I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable--more bearable.
Directions for the Future and Permanent Exercise of the Christian Ministry (Mt 10:16-23).
16. Behold, I send you forth--The "I" here is emphatic, holding up
Himself as the Fountain of the Gospel ministry, as He is also the Great
Burden of it.
17. But beware of men; for they will deliver you up to the
councils--the local courts, used here for civil magistrates in
general.
18. And ye shall be brought before governors--provincial rulers.
19. But when they deliver you up, take no thought--be not
solicitous or anxious. (See on
Mt 6:25).
20. For it is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you--How remarkably this has been verified, the whole history of persecution thrillingly proclaims--from the Acts of the Apostles to the latest martyrology. 21. And the brother shall deliver up the brother to death, and the father the child: and the children shall rise up against their parents, and cause them to be put to death--for example, by lodging information against them with the authorities. The deep and virulent hostility of the old nature and life to the new--as of Belial to Christ--was to issue in awful wrenches of the dearest ties; and the disciples, in the prospect of their cause and themselves being launched upon society, are here prepared for the worst.
22. And ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake--The
universality of this hatred would make it evident to them, that since it
would not be owing to any temporary excitement, local virulence, or
personal prejudice, on the part of their enemies, so no amount of
discretion on their part, consistent with entire fidelity to the truth,
would avail to stifle that enmity--though it might soften its violence,
and in some cases avert the outward manifestations of it.
23. But when they persecute you in this city, flee ye into another--"into
the other." This, though applicable to all time, and exemplified
by our Lord Himself once and again, had special reference to the brief
opportunities which Israel was to have of "knowing the time of His
visitations."
Directions for the Service of Christ in Its Widest Sense (Mt 10:24-42).
24. The disciple is not above his master--teacher.
25. It is enough for the disciple that he be as his master, and the
servant as his lord. If they have called the master of the house
Beelzebub--All the Greek manuscripts, write "Beelzebul," which
undoubtedly is the right form of this word. The other reading came in no
doubt from the Old Testament "Baalzebub," the god of Ekron
(2Ki 1:2),
which it was designed to express. As all idolatry was regarded as devil
worship
(Le 17:7;
De 32:17;
Ps 106:37;
1Co 10:20),
so there seems to have been something peculiarly satanic about the
worship of this hateful god, which caused his name to be a synonym of
Satan. Though we nowhere read that our Lord was actually called
"Beelzebul," He was charged with being in league with Satan under that
hateful name
(Mt 12:24, 26),
and more than once Himself was charged with "having a devil" or "demon"
(Mr 3:30;
Joh 7:20; 8:48).
Here it is used to denote the most opprobrious language which could be
applied by one to another.
26. Fear them not therefore: for there is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed; and hid, that shall not be known--that is, There is no use, and no need, of concealing anything; right and wrong, truth and error, are about to come into open and deadly collision; and the day is coming when all hidden things shall be disclosed, everything seen as it is, and every one have his due (1Co 4:5).
27. What I tell you in darkness--in the privacy of a teaching for
which men are not yet ripe.
28. And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill
the soul--In
Lu 12:4,
"and after that have no more that they can do."
29. Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing?--In Luke
(Lu 12:6)
it is "five sparrows for two farthings"; so that, if the purchaser took
two farthings' worth, he got one in addition--of such small value were
they.
30. But the very hairs of your head are all numbered--See Lu 21:18 (and compare for the language 1Sa 14:45; Ac 27:34). 31. Fear ye not therefore, ye are of more value than many sparrows--Was ever language of such simplicity felt to carry such weight as this does? But here lies much of the charm and power of our Lord's teaching.
32. Whosoever therefore shall confess me before men--despising the
shame.
33. But whosoever shall deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven--before that same assembly: "He shall have from Me his own treatment of Me on the earth." (But see on Mt 16:27). 34. Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword--strife, discord, conflict; deadly opposition between eternally hostile principles, penetrating into and rending asunder the dearest ties. 35. For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law--(See on Lu 12:51-53). 36. And a man's foes shall be they of his own household--This saying, which is quoted, as is the whole verse, from Mic 7:6, is but an extension of the Psalmist's complaint (Ps 41:9; 55:12-14), which had its most affecting illustration in the treason of Judas against our Lord Himself (Joh 13:18; Mt 26:48-50). Hence would arise the necessity of a choice between Christ and the nearest relations, which would put them to the severest test. 37. He that loveth father or mother more than me, is not worthy of me; and he that loveth son or daughter more than me, is not worthy of me--(Compare De 33:9). As the preference of the one would, in the case supposed, necessitate the abandonment of the other, our Lord here, with a sublime, yet awful self-respect, asserts His own claims to supreme affection. 38. And he that taketh not his cross, and followeth after me, is not worthy of me--a saying which our Lord once and again emphatically reiterates (Mt 16:24; Lu 9:23; 14:27). We have become so accustomed to this expression--"taking up one's cross"--in the sense of "being prepared for trials in general for Christ's sake," that we are apt to lose sight of its primary and proper sense here--"a preparedness to go forth even to crucifixion," as when our Lord had to bear His own cross on His way to Calvary--a saying the more remarkable as our Lord had not as yet given a hint that He would die this death, nor was crucifixion a Jewish mode of capital punishment. 39. He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth his life for my sake shall find it--another of those pregnant sayings which our Lord so often reiterates (Mt 16:25; Lu 17:33; Joh 12:25). The pith of such paradoxical maxims depends on the double sense attached to the word "life"--a lower and a higher, the natural and the spiritual, the temporal and eternal. An entire sacrifice of the lower, with all its relationships and interests--or, a willingness to make it which is the same thing--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.
40. He that receiveth you--entertaineth you,
41. He that receiveth a prophet--one divinely commissioned to deliver
a message from heaven. Predicting future events was no necessary part of
a prophet's office, especially as the word is used in the New Testament.
42. And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little
ones--Beautiful epithet! Originally taken from
Zec 13:7.
The reference is to their lowliness in spirit, their littleness in the
eyes of an undiscerning world, while high in Heaven's esteem.
CHAPTER 11 Mt 11:1-19. THE IMPRISONED BAPTIST'S MESSAGE TO HIS MASTER--THE REPLY, AND DISCOURSE, ON THE DEPARTURE OF THE MESSENGERS, REGARDING JOHN AND HIS MISSION. ( = Lu 7:18-35).
1. And it came to pass, when Jesus had made an end of commanding his
twelve disciple--rather, "the twelve disciples,"
2. Now when John had heard in the prison--For the account of
this imprisonment, see on
Mr 6:17-20.
Mt 11:20-30. OUTBURST OF FEELING SUGGESTED TO THE MIND OF JESUS BY THE RESULT OF HIS LABORS IN GALILEE. The connection of this with what goes before it and the similarity of its tone make it evident, we think, that it was delivered on the same occasion, and that it is but a new and more comprehensive series of reflections in the same strain. 20. Then began he to upbraid the cities wherein most of his mighty works were done, because they repented not.
21. Woe unto thee, Chorazin!--not elsewhere mentioned, but it must
have lain near Capernaum.
22. But I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgment, than for you--more endurable.
23. And thou, Capernaum--(See on
Mt 4:13).
24. But I say unto you, That it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for thee--"It has been indeed," says Dr. STANLEY, "more tolerable, in one sense, in the day of its earthly judgment, for the land of Sodom than for Capernaum; for the name, and perhaps even the remains of Sodom are still to be found on the shores of the Dead Sea; while that of Capernaum has, on the Lake of Gennesareth, been utterly lost." But the judgment of which our Lord here speaks is still future; a judgment not on material cities, but their responsible inhabitants--a judgment final and irretrievable.
25. At that time Jesus answered and said--We are not to understand
by this, that the previous discourse had been concluded, and that this
is a record only of something said about the same period. For the
connection is most close, and the word "answered"--which, when there is
no one to answer, refers to something just before said, or rising in the
mind of the speaker in consequence of something said--confirms this.
What Jesus here "answered" evidently was the melancholy results of His
ministry, lamented over in the foregoing verses. It is as if He had
said, "Yes; but there is a brighter side to the picture; even in those
who have rejected the message of eternal life, it is the pride of their
own hearts only which has blinded them, and the glory of the truth does
but the more appear in their inability to receive it. Nor have all
rejected it even here; souls thirsting for salvation have drawn water
with joy from the wells of salvation; the weary have found rest; the
hungry have been filled with good things, while the rich have been sent
empty away."
26. Even so, Father; for so it seemed good--the emphatic and
chosen term for expressing any object of divine complacency; whether
Christ Himself (see on
Mt 3:17),
or God's gracious eternal arrangements (see on
Php 2:13).
27. All things are delivered unto me of my Father--He does not say,
They are revealed--as to one who knew them not, and was an entire
stranger to them save as they were discovered to Him--but, They are
"delivered over," or "committed," to Me of My Father; meaning the whole
administration of the kingdom of grace. So in
Joh 3:35,
"The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into His hand"
(see on
Joh 3:35).
But though the "all things" in both these passages refer properly to
the kingdom of grace, they of course include all things necessary to
the full execution of that trust--that is, unlimited power. (So
Mt 28:18;
Joh 17:2;
Eph 1:22).
28. Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest--Incomparable, ravishing sounds these--if ever such were heard in this weary, groaning world! What gentleness, what sweetness is there in the very style of the invitation--"Hither to Me"; and in the words, "All ye that toil and are burdened," the universal wretchedness of man is depicted, on both its sides--the active and the passive forms of it.
29. Take my yoke upon you--the yoke of subjection to Jesus.
30. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light--Matchless paradox, even among the paradoxically couched maxims in which our Lord delights! That rest which the soul experiences when once safe under Christ's wing makes all yokes easy, all burdens light. CHAPTER 12 Mt 12:1-8. PLUCKING CORN EARS ON THE SABBATH DAY. ( = Mr 2:23-28; Lu 6:1-5). The season of the year when this occurred is determined by the event itself. Ripe corn ears are found in the fields only just before harvest. The barley harvest seems clearly intended here, at the close of our March and beginning of our April. It coincided with the Passover season, as the wheat harvest with Pentecost. But in Luke (Lu 6:1) we have a still more definite note of time, if we could be certain of the meaning of the peculiar term which he employs to express it. "It came to pass (he says) on the sabbath, which was the first-second," for that is the proper rendering of the word, and not "the second sabbath after the first," as in our version. Of the various conjectures what this may mean, that of SCALIGER is the most approved, and, as we think, the freest from difficulty, namely, the first sabbath after the second day of the Passover; that is, the first of the seven sabbaths which were to be reckoned from the second day of the Passover, which was itself a sabbath, until the next feast, the feast of Pentecost (Le 23:15, 16; De 16:9, 10) In this case, the day meant by the Evangelist is the first of those seven sabbaths intervening between Passover and Pentecost. And if we are right in regarding the "feast" mentioned in Joh 5:1 as a Passover, and consequently the second during our Lord's public ministry (see on Joh 5:1), this plucking of the ears of corn must have occurred immediately after the scene and the discourse recorded in Joh 5:19-47, which, doubtless, would induce our Lord to hasten His departure for the north, to avoid the wrath of the Pharisees, which He had kindled at Jerusalem. Here, accordingly, we find Him in the fields--on His way probably to Galilee.
1. At that time Jesus went on the sabbath day through the corn--"the
cornfields"
(Mr 2:23;
Lu 6:1).
2. But when the Pharisees saw it, they said unto him, Behold, thy disciples do that which is not lawful to do upon the sabbath day--The act itself was expressly permitted (De 23:25). But as being "servile work," which was prohibited on the sabbath day, it was regarded as sinful.
3. But he said unto them, Have ye not read--or, as Mark
(Mr 2:25)
has it, "Have ye never read."
4. How he entered into the house of God, and did eat the showbread, which was not lawful for him to eat, neither for them which were with him, but only for the priests?--No example could be more apposite than this. The man after God's own heart, of whom the Jews ever boasted, when suffering in God's cause and straitened for provisions, asked and obtained from the high priest what, according to the law, it was illegal for anyone save the priests to touch. Mark (Mr 2:26) says this occurred "in the days of Abiathar the high priest." But this means not during his high priesthood--for it was under that of his father Ahimelech--but simply, in his time. Ahimelech was soon succeeded by Abiathar, whose connection with David, and prominence during his reign, may account for his name, rather than his father's, being here introduced. Yet there is not a little confusion in what is said of these priests in different parts of the Old Testament. Thus he is called both the son of the father of Ahimelech (1Sa 22:20; 2Sa 8:17); and Ahimelech is called Ahiah (1Sa 14:3), and Abimelech (1Ch 18:16).
5. Or have ye not read in the law, how that on the sabbath days the
priests in the temple profane the sabbath--by doing "servile work."
6. But I say unto you, That in this place is one greater than the temple--or rather, according to the reading which is best supported, "something greater." The argument stands thus: "The ordinary rules for the observance of the sabbath give way before the requirements of the temple; but there are rights here before which the temple itself must give way." Thus indirectly, but not the less decidedly, does our Lord put in His own claims to consideration in this question--claims to be presently put in even more nakedly.
7. But if ye had known what this meaneth, I will have mercy, and not
sacrifice--
(Ho 6:6;
Mic 6:6-8,
&c.). See on
Mt 9:13.
8. For the Son of man is Lord even of the sabbath day--In what sense now is the Son of man Lord of the sabbath day? Not surely to abolish it--that surely were a strange lordship, especially just after saying that it was made or instituted for MAN--but to own it, to interpret it, to preside over it, and to ennoble it, by merging it in the "Lord's Day" (Re 1:10), breathing into it an air of liberty and love necessarily unknown before, and thus making it the nearest resemblance to the eternal sabbatism. Mt 12:9-21. THE HEALING OF A WITHERED HAND ON THE SABBATH DAY AND RETIREMENT OF JESUS TO AVOID DANGER. ( = Mr 3:1-12; Lu 6:6-11). Healing of a Withered Hand (Mt 12:9-14).
9. And when he was departed thence--but "on another sabbath"
(Lu 6:6).
11. And he said unto them, What man shall there be among you that shall have one sheep, and if it fall into a pit on the sabbath day, will he not lay hold on it, and lift it out? 12. How much then is a man better than a sheep?--Resistless appeal! "A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast" (Pr 12:10), and would instinctively rescue it from death or suffering on the sabbath day; how much more his nobler fellow man! But the reasoning, as given in the other two Gospels, is singularly striking: "But He knew their thoughts, and said to the man which had the withered hand, Rise up, and stand forth in the midst. And he arose and stood forth. Then said Jesus unto them, I will ask you one thing: Is it lawful on the sabbath days to do good, or to do evil? to save life or to destroy it?" (Lu 6:8, 9), or as in Mark (Mr 3:4), "to kill?" He thus shuts them up to this startling alternative: "Not to do good, when it is in the power of our hand to do it, is to do evil; not to save life, when we can, is to kill"--and must the letter of the sabbath rest be kept at this expense? This unexpected thrust shut their mouths. By this great ethical principle our Lord, we see, held Himself bound, as man. But here we must turn to Mark, whose graphic details make the second Gospel so exceedingly precious. "When He had looked round about on them with anger, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts, He saith unto the man" (Mr 3:5). This is one of the very few passages in the Gospel history which reveal our Lord's feelings. How holy this anger was appears from the "grief" which mingled with it at "the hardness of their hearts."
13. Then saith he to the man, Stretch forth thine hand. And he
stretched it forth--the power to obey going forth with the word of
command.
14. Then the Pharisees went out, and held a council against him, how they might destroy him--This is the first explicit mention of their murderous designs against our Lord. Luke (Lu 6:11) says, "they were filled with madness, and communed one with another what they might do to Jesus." But their doubt was not, whether to get rid of Him, but how to compass it. Mark (Mr 3:6), as usual, is more definite: "The Pharisees went forth, and straightway took counsel with the Herodians against Him, how they might destroy Him." These Herodians were supporters of Herod's dynasty, created by Cæsar--a political rather than religious party. The Pharisees regarded them as untrue to their religion and country. But here we see them combining together against Christ as a common enemy. So on a subsequent occasion (Mt 22:15, 16). Jesus Retires to Avoid Danger (Mt 12:15-21).
15. But when Jesus knew it, he withdrew himself from thence--whither,
our Evangelist says not; but Mark
(Mr 3:7)
says "it was to the sea"--to some distance, no doubt, from the
scene of the miracle, the madness, and the plotting just recorded.
16. And charged them--the healed.
17. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying-- (Isa 42:1). 18. Behold my servant, whom I have chosen; my beloved, in whom my soul is well pleased: I will put my Spirit upon him, and he shall show judgment to the Gentiles. 19. He shall not strive nor cry; neither shall any man hear his voice in the streets. 20. A bruised reed shall he not break, and smoking flax shall he not quench, till he send forth judgment unto victory--"unto truth," says the Hebrew original, and the Septuagint also. But our Evangelist merely seizes the spirit, instead of the letter of the prediction in this point. The grandeur and completeness of Messiah's victories would prove, it seems, not more wonderful than the unobtrusive noiselessness with which they were to be achieved. And whereas one rough touch will break a bruised reed, and quench the flickering, smoking flax, His it should be, with matchless tenderness, love, and skill, to lift up the meek, to strengthen the weak hands and confirm the feeble knees, to comfort all that mourn, to say to them that are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not. 21. And in his name shall the Gentiles trust--Part of His present audience were Gentiles--from Tyre and Sidon--first-fruits of the great Gentile harvest contemplated in the prophecy. Mt 12:22-37. A BLIND AND DUMB DEMONIAC HEALED AND REPLY TO THE MALIGNANT EXPLANATION PUT UPON IT. ( = Mr 3:20-30; Lu 11:14-23). The precise time of this section is uncertain. Judging from the statements with which Mark introduces it, we should conclude that it was when our Lord's popularity was approaching its zenith, and so before the feeding of the five thousand. But, on the other hand, the advanced state of the charges brought against our Lord, and the plainness of His warnings and denunciations in reply, seem to favor the later period at which Luke introduces it. "And the multitude," says Mark (Mr 3:20, 21), "cometh together again," referring back to the immense gathering which Mark had before recorded (Mr 2:2) --"so that they could not so much as eat bread. And when His friends"--or rather, "relatives," as appears from Mt 12:31, and see on Mt 12:46 --"heard of it, they went out to lay hold on Him; for they said, He is beside Himself." Compare 2Co 5:13, "For whether we be beside ourselves, it is to God."
22. Then was brought unto him one possessed with a devil--"a demonized
person."
23. And all the people were amazed, and said, Is not this the son of David?--The form of the interrogative requires this to be rendered, "Is this the Son of David?" And as questions put in this form (in Greek) suppose doubt, and expect rather a negative answer, the meaning is, "Can it possibly be?"--the people thus indicating their secret impression that this must be He; yet saving themselves from the wrath of the ecclesiastics, which a direct assertion of it would have brought upon them. (On a similar question, see on Joh 4:29; and on the phrase, "Son of David," see on Mt 9:27).
24. But when the Pharisees heard it--Mark
(Mr 3:22)
says, "the scribes which came down from Jerusalem"; so that this had
been a hostile party of the ecclesiastics, who had come all the way
from Jerusalem to collect materials for a charge against Him. (See on
Mt 12:14).
25. And Jesus knew their thoughts--"called them"
(Mr 3:23).
26. And if Satan cast out Satan, he is divided against himself; how shall then his kingdom stand?--The argument here is irresistible. "No organized society can stand--whether kingdom, city, or household--when turned against itself; such intestine war is suicidal: But the works I do are destructive of Satan's kingdom: That I should be in league with Satan, therefore, is incredible and absurd." 27. And if I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your children--"your sons," meaning here the "disciples" or pupils of the Pharisees, who were so termed after the familiar language of the Old Testament in speaking of the sons of the prophets (1Ki 20:35; 2Ki 2:3, &c.). Our Lord here seems to admit that such works were wrought by them; in which case the Pharisees stood self-condemned, as expressed in Luke (Lu 11:19), "Therefore shall they be your judges."
28. But if I cast out devils by the Spirit of God--In Luke
(Lu 11:20)
it is, "with (or 'by') the finger of God." This latter expression is
just a figurative way of representing the power of God, while
the former tells us the living Personal Agent was made use of by
the Lord Jesus in every exercise of that power.
29. Or else how can one enter into a strong man's house--or rather,
"the strong man's house."
30. He that is not with me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad--On this important parable, in connection with the corresponding one (Mt 12:43-45), see on Lu 11:21-26.
31. Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be
forgiven unto men--The word "blasphemy" properly signifies
"detraction," or "slander." In the New Testament it is applied, as it is
here, to vituperation directed against God as well as against men; and
in this sense it is to be understood as an aggravated form of sin. Well,
says our Lord, all sin--whether in its ordinary or its more aggravated
forms--shall find forgiveness with God. Accordingly, in Mark
(Mr 3:28)
the language is still stronger: "All sin shall be forgiven unto the
sons of men, and blasphemies wherewith soever they shall blaspheme."
There is no sin whatever, it seems, of which it may be said, "That is
not a pardonable sin." This glorious assurance is not to be limited by
what follows; but, on the contrary, what follows is to be explained by
this.
32. And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man, it shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come--In Mark the language is awfully strong, "hath never forgiveness, but is in danger of eternal damnation" (Mr 3:20)--or rather, according to what appears to be the preferable though very unusual reading, "in danger of eternal guilt"--a guilt which he will underlie for ever. Mark has the important addition (Mr 3:30), "Because they said, He hath an unclean spirit." (See on Mt 10:25). What, then, is this sin against the Holy Ghost--the unpardonable sin? One thing is clear: Its unpardonableness cannot arise from anything in the nature of sin itself; for that would be a naked contradiction to the emphatic declaration of Mt 12:31, that all manner of sin is pardonable. And what is this but the fundamental truth of the Gospel? (See Ac 13:38, 39; Ro 3:22, 24; 1Jo 1:7, &c.). Then, again when it is said (Mt 12:32), that to speak against or blaspheme the Son of man is pardonable, but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost is not pardonable, it is not to be conceived that this arises from any greater sanctity in the one blessed Person than the other. These remarks so narrow the question that the true sense of our Lord's words seem to disclose themselves at once. It is a contrast between slandering "the Son of man" in His veiled condition and unfinished work--which might be done "ignorantly, in unbelief" (1Ti 1:13), and slandering the same blessed Person after the blaze of glory which the Holy Ghost was soon to throw around His claims, and in the full knowledge of all that. This would be to slander Him with eyes open, or to do it "presumptuously." To blaspheme Christ in the former condition--when even the apostles stumbled at many things--left them still open to conviction on fuller light: but to blaspheme Him in the latter condition would be to hate the light the clearer it became, and resolutely to shut it out; which, of course, precludes salvation. (See on Heb 10:26-29). The Pharisees had not as yet done this; but in charging Jesus with being in league with hell they were displaying beforehand a malignant determination to shut their eyes to all evidence, and so, bordering upon, and in spirit committing, the unpardonable sin. 33. Either make the tree good, &c.
34. O generation of vipers--(See on
Mt 3:7).
35. A good man, out of the good treasure of the heart, bringeth forth
good things--or, "putteth forth good things":
36. But I say unto you, That every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment--They might say, "It was nothing: we meant no evil; we merely threw out a supposition, as one way of accounting for the miracle we witnessed; if it will not stand, let it go; why make so much of it, and bear down with such severity for it?" Jesus replies, "It was not nothing, and at the great day will not be treated as nothing: Words, as the index of the heart, however idle they may seem, will be taken account of, whether good or bad, in estimating character in the day of judgment." Mt 12:38-50. A SIGN DEMANDED AND THE REPLY--HIS MOTHER AND BRETHREN SEEK TO SPEAK WITH HIM, AND THE ANSWER. ( = Lu 11:16, 24-36; Mr 3:31-35; Lu 8:19-21). A Sign Demanded, and the Reply (Mt 12:38-45). The occasion of this section was manifestly the same with that of the preceding.
38. Then certain of the scribes and of the Pharisees answered, saying,
Master--"Teacher," equivalent to "Rabbi."
39. But he answered and said unto them--"when the people were gathered
thick together"
(Lu 11:29).
40. For as Jonas was--"a sign unto the Ninevites, so shall also the
Son of man be to this generation"
(Lu 11:30).
For as Jonas was
41. The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment with this generation, &c.--The Ninevites, though heathens, repented at a man's preaching; while they, God's covenant-people, repented not at the preaching of the Son of God--whose supreme dignity is rather implied here than expressed. 42. The queen of the south shall rise up in the judgment with this generation, &c.--The queen of Sheba (a tract in Arabia, near the shores of the Red Sea) came from a remote country, "south" of Judea, to hear the wisdom of a mere man, though a gifted one, and was transported with wonder at what she saw and heard (1Ki 10:1-9). They, when a Greater than Solomon had come to them, despised and rejected, slighted and slandered Him. 43-45. When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, &c.--On this important parable, in connection with the corresponding one (Mt 12:29) see on Lu 11:21-26. A charming little incident, given only in Lu 11:27, 28, seems to have its proper place here.
His Mother and Brethren Seek to Speak with Him and the Answer (Mt 12:46-50).
46. While he yet talked to the people, behold, his mother and his
brethren--(See on
Mt 13:55, 56).
47. Then one said unto him, Behold, thy mother and thy brethren stand without, desiring to speak with thee, &c.--Absorbed in the awful warnings He was pouring forth, He felt this to be an unseasonable interruption, fitted to dissipate the impression made upon the large audience--such an interruption as duty to the nearest relatives did not require Him to give way to. But instead of a direct rebuke, He seizes on the incident to convey a sublime lesson, expressed in a style of inimitable condescension.
49. And he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples--How graphic
is this! It is the language evidently of an eye-witness.
50. For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother--that is, "There stand here the members of a family transcending and surviving this of earth: Filial subjection to the will of My Father in heaven is the indissoluble bond of union between Me and all its members; and whosoever enters this hallowed circle becomes to Me brother, and sister, and mother!" CHAPTER 13 Mt 13:1-52. JESUS TEACHES BY PARABLES. ( = Mr 4:1-34; Lu 8:4-18; 13:18-20). Introduction (Mt 13:1-3). 1. The same day went Jesus out of the house, and sat by the seaside.
2. And great multitudes were gathered together unto him, so that he
went into a ship--the article in the received text lacks authority
3. And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying, &c.--These parables are SEVEN in number; and it is not a little remarkable that while this is the sacred number, the first FOUR of them were spoken to the mixed multitude, while the remaining THREE were spoken to the Twelve in private--these divisions, four and three, being themselves notable in the symbolical arithmetic of Scripture. Another thing remarkable in the structure of these parables is, that while the first of the Seven--that of the Sower--is of the nature of an Introduction to the whole, the remaining Six consist of three pairs--the Second and Seventh, the Third and Fourth, and the Fifth and Sixth, corresponding to each other; each pair setting forth the same general truths, but with a certain diversity of aspect. All this can hardly be accidental. First Parable: THE SOWER (Mt 13:3-9, 18-23). This parable may be entitled, THE EFFECT OF THE WORD DEPENDENT ON THE STATE OF THE HEART. For the exposition of this parable, see on Mr 4:1-9, 14-20. Reason for Teaching in Parables (Mt 13:10-17).
10. And the disciples came, and said unto him--"they that were with
Him, when they were alone"
(Mr 4:10).
11. He answered and said unto them, Because it is given unto you to
know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven--The word "mysteries" in
Scripture is not used in its classical sense--of religious secrets, nor
yet of things incomprehensible, or in their own nature difficult to be
understood--but in the sense of things of purely divine revelation, and,
usually, things darkly announced under the ancient economy, and during
all that period darkly understood, but fully published under the Gospel
(1Co 2:6-10;
Eph 3:3-6, 8, 9).
"The mysteries of the kingdom of heaven," then, mean those glorious
Gospel truths which at that time only the more advanced disciples could
appreciate, and they but partially.
12. For whosoever hath--that is, keeps; as a thing which he values.
13. Therefore speak I to them in parables--which our Lord, be it
observed, did not begin to do till His miracles were malignantly
ascribed to Satan.
14. And in them is fulfilled--rather, "is fulfilling," or "is receiving
its fulfilment."
16. But blessed are your eyes, for they see; and your cars, for they hear--that is, "Happy ye, whose eyes and ears, voluntarily and gladly opened, are drinking in the light divine."
17. For verily I say unto you, That many prophets and righteous men
have desired--rather, "coveted."
Second and Seventh Parables or First Pair: THE WHEAT AND THE TARES, and THE GOOD AND BAD FISH (Mt 13:24-30, 36-43, 47-50). The subject of both these parables--which teach the same truth, with a slight diversity of aspect--is: THE MIXED CHARACTER OF THE KINGDOM IN ITS PRESENT STATE, AND THE FINAL ABSOLUTE SEPARATION OF THE TWO CLASSES. The Tares and the Wheat (Mt 13:24-30, 36-43). 24, 36-38. Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in his field--Happily for us, these exquisite parables are, with like charming simplicity and clearness, expounded to us by the Great Preacher Himself. Accordingly, we pass to: Mt 13:36-38. See on Mt 13:36; Mt 13:38 25, 38, 39. But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat, and went his way--(See on Mt 13:38, 39). 26. But when the blade was sprung up, and brought forth fruit, then appeared the tares also--the growth in both cases running parallel, as antagonistic principles are seen to do.
27. So the servants of the householder came--that is, Christ's
ministers.
28. He said unto them, An enemy hath done this--Kind words these from
a good Husbandman, honorably clearing His faithful servants of the wrong
done to his field.
29. But he said, Nay--"It will be done in due time, but not now, nor
is it your business."
30, 39. Let both grow together--that is, in the visible Church.
Third and Fourth Parables or Second Pair: THE MUSTARD SEED and THE LEAVEN (Mt 13:31-33). The subject of both these parables, as of the first pair, is the same, but under a slight diversity of aspect, namely-- THE GROWTH OF THE KINGDOM FROM THE SMALLEST BEGINNINGS TO ULTIMATE UNIVERSALITY. The Mustard Seed (Mt 13:31, 32). 31. Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a man took, and sowed in his field;
32. Which indeed is the least of all seeds--not absolutely, but
popularly and proverbially, as in
Lu 17:6,
"If ye had faith as a grain of mustard seed," that is, "never so little
faith."
The Leaven (Mt 13:33). 33. Another parable spake he unto them; The kingdom of heaven is like unto leaven, which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal, till the whole was leavened--This parable, while it teaches the same general truth as the foregoing one, holds 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." 34. All these things spake Jesus unto the multitude in parables; and without a parable spake he not unto them--that is, on this occasion; refraining not only from all naked discourse, but even from all interpretation of these parables to the mixed multitude.
35. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet,
saying--
(Ps 78:2,
nearly as in the Septuagint).
36-38. Then Jesus sent the multitude away, and went into the house: and his disciples came unto him, saying, Declare unto us the parable of the tares of the field, &c.--In the parable of the Sower, "the seed is the word of God" (Lu 8:11). But here that word has been received into the heart, and has converted him that received it into a new creature, a "child of the kingdom," according to that saying of James (Jas 1:18), "Of His own will begat He us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of first-fruits of His creatures." It is worthy of notice that this vast field of the world is here said to be Christ's own--"His field," says the parable. (See Ps 2:8). 38. The tares are the children of the wicked one--As this sowing could only be "while men slept," no blame seems intended, and certainly none is charged upon "the servants"; it is probably just the dress of the parable.
39. The enemy that sowed them is the devil--emphatically
"His enemy"
(Mt 13:25).
(See
Ge 3:15;
1Jo 3:8).
By "tares" is meant, not what in our husbandry is so called, but some
noxious plant, probably darnel. "The tares are the children of
the wicked one"; and by their being sown "among the wheat" is meant
their being deposited within the territory of the visible Church. As
they resemble the children of the kingdom, so they are produced, it
seems, by a similar process of "sowing"--the seeds of evil being
scattered and lodging in the soil of those hearts upon which falls the
seed of the world. The enemy, after sowing his "tares," "went his
way"--his dark work soon done, but taking time to develop its true
character.
41. The Son of man shall send forth his angels, and they shall gather
out of his kingdom--to which they never really belonged. They usurped
their place and name and outward privileges; but "the ungodly shall not
stand in the judgment, nor sinners [abide] in the congregation of the
righteous"
(Ps 1:5).
42. And shall cast them into a furnace of fire--rather, "the furnace
of fire":
43. Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of
their Father--as if they had been under a cloud during the present
association with ungodly pretenders to their character, and claimants of
their privileges, and obstructors of their course.
Fifth and Sixth Parables or Third Pair: THE HIDDEN TREASURE and THE PEARL OF GREAT PRICE (Mt 13:44-46). The subject of this last pair, as of the two former, is the same, but also under a slight diversity of aspect: namely-- THE PRICELESS VALUE OF THE BLESSINGS OF THE KINGDOM. And while the one parable represents the Kingdom as "found without seeking," the other holds forth the Kingdom as "sought and found." The Hidden Treasure (Mt 13:44).
44. Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto treasure hid in a field--no uncommon thing in unsettled and half-civilized
countries, even now as
well as in ancient times, when there was no other way of securing it
from the rapacity of neighbors or marauders.
(Jer 41:8;
Job 3:21;
Pr 2:4).
The Pearl of Great Price (Mt 13:45, 46). 45. Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchantman, seeking goodly pearls. 46. Who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all that he had, and bought it--The one pearl of great price, instead of being found by accident, as in the former case, is found by one whose business it is to seek for such, and who finds it just in the way of searching for such treasures. But in both cases the surpassing value of the treasure is alike recognized, and in both all is parted with for it. The Good and Bad Fish (Mt 13:47-50). The object of this brief parable is the same as that of the Tares and Wheat. But as its details are fewer, so its teaching is less rich and varied. 47. Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a net, that was cast into the sea, and gathered of every kind--The word here rendered "net" signifies a large drag-net, which draws everything after it, suffering nothing to escape, as distinguished from a casting-net (Mr 1:16, 18). The far-reaching efficacy of the Gospel is thus denoted. This Gospel net "gathered of every kind," meaning every variety of character.
48. Which, when it was full, they drew to shore--for the separation
will not be made till the number of the elect is accomplished.
49. So shall it be at the end of the world, &c.--(See on Mt 13:42). We have said that each of these two parables holds forth the same truth under a slight diversity of aspect. What is that diversity? First, the bad, in the former parable, are represented as vile seed sown among the wheat by the enemy of souls; in the latter, as foul fish drawn forth out of the great sea of human beings by the Gospel net itself. Both are important truths--that the Gospel draws within its pale, and into the communion of the visible Church, multitudes who are Christians only in name; and that the injury thus done to the Church on earth is to be traced to the wicked one. But further, while the former parable gives chief prominence to the present mixture of good and bad, in the latter, the prominence is given to the future separation of the two classes.
51. Jesus saith unto them--that is, to the Twelve. He had spoken
the first four in the hearing of the mixed multitude: the last
three He reserved till, on the dismissal of the mixed audience,
He and the Twelve were alone
(Mt 13:36,
&c.).
52. Then said he unto them, Therefore--or as we should say, "Well,
then."
Mt 13:53-58. HOW JESUS WAS REGARDED BY HIS RELATIVES. ( = Mr 6:1-6; Lu 4:16-30). 53. And it came to pass, that, when Jesus had finished these parables, he departed thence.
54. And when he was come into his own country--that is,
Nazareth; as is plain from
Mr 6:1.
See on
Joh 4:43,
where also the same phrase occurs. This, according to the majority of
Harmonists, was the second of two visits which our Lord
paid to Nazareth during His public ministry; but in our view it was His
first and only visit to it. See on
Mt 4:13;
and for the reasons, see
Lu 4:16-30.
55. Is not this the carpenter's son?--In Mark
(Mr 6:3)
the question is, "Is not this the carpenter?" In all likelihood, our
Lord, during His stay under the roof of His earthly parents, wrought
along with His legal father.
56. And his sisters, are they not all with us? Whence then hath this man all these things? An exceedingly difficult question here arises--What were these "brethren" and "sisters" to Jesus? Were they, First, His full brothers and sisters? or, Secondly, Were they His step-brothers and step-sisters, children of Joseph by a former marriage? or, Thirdly, Were they cousins, according to a common way of speaking among the Jews respecting persons of collateral descent? On this subject an immense deal has been written, nor are opinions yet by any means agreed. For the second opinion there is no ground but a vague tradition, arising probably from the wish for some such explanation. The first opinion undoubtedly suits the text best in all the places where the parties are certainly referred to (Mt 12:46; and its parallels, Mr 3:31; Lu 8:19; our present passage, and its parallels, Mr 6:3; Joh 2:12; 7:3, 5, 10; Ac 1:14). But, in addition to other objections, many of the best interpreters, thinking it in the last degree improbable that our Lord, when hanging on the cross, would have committed His mother to John if He had had full brothers of His own then alive, prefer the third opinion; although, on the other hand, it is not to be doubted that our Lord might have good reasons for entrusting the guardianship of His doubly widowed mother to the beloved disciple in preference even to full brothers of His own. Thus dubiously we prefer to leave this vexed question, encompassed as it is with difficulties. As to the names here mentioned, the first of them, "JAMES," is afterwards called "the Lord's brother" (see on Ga 1:19), but is perhaps not to be confounded with "James the son of Alphæus," one of the Twelve, though many think their identity beyond dispute. This question also is one of considerable difficulty, and not without importance; since the James who occupies so prominent a place in the Church of Jerusalem, in the latter part of the Acts, was apparently the apostle, but is by many regarded as "the Lord's brother," while others think their identity best suits all the statements. The second of those here named, "JOSES" (or Joseph), must not be confounded with "Joseph called Barsabas, who was surnamed Justus" (Ac 1:23); and the third here named, "SIMON," is not to be confounded with Simon the Kananite or Zealot (see on Mt 10:4). These three are nowhere else mentioned in the New Testament. The fourth and last-named, "JUDAS," can hardly be identical with the apostle of that name--though the brothers of both were of the name of "James"--nor (unless the two be identical, was this Judas) with the author of the catholic Epistle so called. 58. And he did not many mighty works there, because of their unbelief--"save that He laid His hands on a few sick folk, and healed them" (Mr 6:5). See on Lu 4:16-30. CHAPTER 14 Mt 14:1-12. HEROD THINKS JESUS A RESURRECTION OF THE MURDERED BAPTIST--ACCOUNT OF HIS IMPRISONMENT AND DEATH. ( = Mr 6:14-29; Lu 9:7-9). The time of this alarm of Herod Antipas appears to have been during the mission of the Twelve, and shortly after the Baptist--who had been in prison for probably more than a year--had been cruelly put to death. Herod's Theory of the Works of Christ (Mt 14:1, 2).
1. At that time Herod the tetrarch--Herod Antipas, one of the three
sons of Herod the Great, and own brother of Archelaus
(Mt 2:22),
who ruled as ethnarch over Galilee and Perea.
2. And said unto his servants--his counsellors or court-ministers.
Account of the Baptist's Imprisonment and Death (Mt 14:3-12). For the exposition of this portion, see on Mr 6:17-29. Mt 14:12-21. HEARING OF THE BAPTIST'S DEATH, JESUS CROSSES THE LAKE WITH TWELVE, AND MIRACULOUSLY FEEDS FIVE THOUSAND. ( = Mr 6:30-44; Lu 9:10-17; Joh 6:1-14). For the exposition of this section--one of the very few where all the four Evangelists run parallel--see on Mr 6:30-44. Mt 14:22-26. JESUS CROSSES TO THE WESTERN SIDE OF THE LAKE WALKING ON THE SEA--INCIDENTS ON LANDING. ( = Mr 6:45; Joh 6:15-24). For the exposition, see on Joh 6:15-24. 28. And Peter answered him and said, Lord, if it is thou, bid me come to thee on the water--(Also see on Mr 6:50.) 29. And he said, Come. And when Peter had come down out of the boat. he walked on the water, to go to Jesus--(Also see on Mr 6:50.) 30. But when he saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me--(Also see on Mr 6:50.) 31. And immediately Jesus stretched forth his hand, and caught him, and said to him, O thou of little faith, why didst thou doubt?--(Also see on Mr 6:50.) 32. And when they had come into the boat, the wind ceased--(Also see on Mr 6:50.) CHAPTER 15 Mt 15:1-20. DISCOURSE ON CEREMONIAL POLLUTION. ( = Mr 7:1, 23). The time of this section was after that Passover which was nigh at hand when our Lord fed the five thousand (Joh 6:4) --the third Passover, as we take it, since His public ministry began, but which He did not keep at Jerusalem for the reason mentioned in Joh 7:1.
1. Then came to Jesus scribes and Pharisees, which were of
Jerusalem--or "from Jerusalem." Mark
(Mr 7:1)
says they "came from" it: a deputation probably sent from the capital
expressly to watch Him. As He had not come to them at the last
Passover, which they had reckoned on, they now come to Him. "And," says
Mark
(Mr 7:2, 3),
"when they saw some of His disciples eat bread with defiled, that is to
say, with unwashen hands"--hands not ceremonially cleansed by
washing--"they found fault. For the Pharisees, and all the Jews, except
they wash their hands oft"--literally, "in" or "with the fist"; that
is, probably washing the one hand by the use of the other--though some
understand it, with our version, in the sense of "diligently,"
"sedulously"--"eat not, holding the tradition of the elders"; acting
religiously according to the custom handed down to them. "And when they
come from the market"
(Mr 7:4)
--"And after market": after any common business, or attending a court
of justice, where the Jews, as WEBSTER and WILKINSON remark, after their subjection to the Romans,
were especially exposed to intercourse and contact with
heathens--"except they wash, they eat not. And many other things there
be, which they have received to hold, as the washing of cups and pots,
brazen vessels and tables"--rather, "couches," such as were used at
meals, which probably were merely sprinkled for ceremonial
purposes. "Then the Pharisees and scribes asked Him,"
2. Why do thy disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? for they wash not their hands when they eat bread. 3. But he answered and said unto them, Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition?--The charge is retorted with startling power: "The tradition they transgress is but man's, and is itself the occasion of heavy transgression, undermining the authority of God's law."
4. For God commanded, saying, Honour thy father and mother--
(De 5:16).
5. But ye say, Whosoever shall say to his father or his mother, It is
a gift--or simply, "A gift!" In Mark
(Mr 7:11),
it is, "Corban!" that is, "An oblation!" meaning, any unbloody
offering or gift dedicated to sacred uses.
6. And honour not his father or his mother, he shall be free--that
is, It is true, father--mother--that by giving to thee this, which I now
present, thou mightest be profited by me; but I have gifted it to pious
uses, and therefore, at whatever cost to thee, I am not now at liberty
to alienate any portion of it. "And," it is added in Mark
(Mr 7:12),
"ye suffer him no more to do aught for his father or his mother." To
dedicate property to God is indeed lawful and laudable, but not at the
expense of filial duty.
7. Ye hypocrites, well did Esaias prophesy of you, saying-- (Isa 29:13). 8. This people draweth nigh unto me with their mouth, &c.--By putting the commandments of men on a level with the divine requirements, their whole worship was rendered vain--a principle of deep moment in the service of God. "For," it is added in Mr 7:8, "laying aside the commandment of God, ye hold the tradition of men, as the washing of pots and cups; and many other such like things ye do." The drivelling nature of their multitudinous observances is here pointedly exposed, in contrast with the manly observance of "the commandment of God"; and when our Lord says, "Many other such like things ye do," it is implied that He had but given a specimen of the hideous treatment which the divine law received, and the grasping disposition which, under the mask of piety, was manifested by the ecclesiastics of that day.
10. And he called the multitude, and said unto them--The foregoing
dialogue, though in the people's hearing, was between Jesus and the
pharisaic cavillers, whose object was to disparage Him with the people.
But Jesus, having put them down, turns to the multitude, who at this
time were prepared to drink in everything He said, and with admirable
plainness, strength, and brevity, lays down the great principle of real
pollution, by which a world of bondage and uneasiness of conscience
would be dissipated in a moment, and the sense of sin be reserved for
deviations from the holy and eternal law of God.
11. Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man--This is expressed even more emphatically in Mark (Mr 7:15, 16), and it is there added, "If any man have ears to hear, let him hear." As in Mt 13:9, this so oft-repeated saying seems designed to call attention to the fundamental and universal character of the truth it refers to. 12. Then came his disciples, and said unto him, Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended, after they heard this saying?--They had given vent to their irritation, and perhaps threats, not to our Lord Himself, from whom they seem to have slunk away, but to some of the disciples, who report it to their Master. 13. But he answered and said, Every plant, which my heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up--They are offended, are they? Heed it not: their corrupt teaching is already doomed: the garden of the Lord upon earth, too long cumbered with their presence, shall yet be purged of them and their accursed system: yea, and whatsoever is not of the planting of My heavenly Father, the great Husbandman (Joh 15:1), shall share the same fate. 14. Let them alone: they be blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch--Striking expression of the ruinous effects of erroneous teaching! 15. Then answered Peter and said unto him, Declare unto us this parable--"when He was entered into the house from the people," says Mark (Mr 7:17). 16. And Jesus said, Are ye also yet without understanding?--Slowness of spiritual apprehension in His genuine disciples grieves the Saviour: from others He expects no better (Mt 13:11). 17, 18. Do not ye yet understand that whatsoever entereth in at the mouth, &c.--Familiar though these sayings have now become, what freedom from bondage to outward things do they proclaim, on the one hand; and on the other, how searching is the truth which they express--that nothing which enters from without can really defile us; and that only the evil that is in the heart, that is allowed to stir there, to rise up in thought and affection, and to flow forth in voluntary action, really defiles a man!
19. For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts--"evil reasonings";
referring here more immediately to those corrupt reasonings which had
stealthily introduced and gradually reared up that hideous fabric of
tradition which at length practically nullified the unchangeable
principles of the moral law. But the statement is far broader than this;
namely that the first shape which the evil that is in the heart takes,
when it begins actively to stir, is that of "considerations" or
"reasonings" on certain suggested actions.
20. These are the things which defile a man: but to eat with unwashen hands defileth not a man--Thus does our Lord sum up this whole searching discourse. Mt 15:21-28. THE WOMAN OF CANAAN AND HER DAUGHTER. For the exposition, see on Mr 7:24-30. 23. But he answered her not a word. And his disciples came and besought him, saying, Send her away; for she crieth after us--(Also see on Mr 7:26.) 24. But he answered and said, I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel--(Also see on Mr 7:26.) 25. Then came she and worshipped him, saying, Lord, help me--(Also see on Mr 7:26.) Mt 15:29-39. MIRACLES OF HEALING--FOUR THOUSAND MIRACULOUSLY FED. For the exposition, see on Mr 7:31; Mr 8:10. CHAPTER 16 Mt 16:1-12. A SIGN FROM HEAVEN SOUGHT AND REFUSED--CAUTION AGAINST THE LEAVEN OF THE PHARISEES AND SADDUCEES. For the exposition, see on Mr 8:11-21. Mt 16:13-28. PETER'S NOBLE CONFESSION OF CHRIST AND THE BENEDICTION PRONOUNCED UPON HIM--CHRIST'S FIRST EXPLICIT ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS APPROACHING SUFFERINGS, DEATH, AND RESURRECTION--HIS REBUKE OF PETER AND WARNING TO ALL THE TWELVE. ( = Mr 8:27; 9:1; Lu 9:18-27). The time of this section--which is beyond doubt, and will presently be mentioned--is of immense importance, and throws a touching interest around the incidents which it records. Peter's Confession, and the Benediction Pronounced upon Him. (Mt 16:13-20).
13. When Jesus came into the coasts--"the parts," that is, the
territory or region. In Mark
(Mr 8:27)
it is "the towns" or "villages."
14. And they said, Some say that thou art John the Baptist--risen
from the dead. So that Herod Antipas was not singular in his surmise
(Mt 14:1, 2).
15. He saith unto them, But whom--rather, "who."
16. And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God--He does not say, "Scribes and Pharisees, rulers and people, are all perplexed; and shall we, unlettered fishermen, presume to decide?" But feeling the light of his Master's glory shining in his soul, he breaks forth--not in a tame, prosaic acknowledgment, "I believe that Thou art," &c.--but in the language of adoration--such as one uses in worship, "THOU ART THE CHRIST, THE SON OF THE LIVING GOD!" He first owns Him the promised Messiah (see on Mt 1:16); then he rises higher, echoing the voice from heaven--"This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased"; and in the important addition--"Son of the LIVING GOD"--he recognizes the essential and eternal life of God as in this His Son--though doubtless without that distinct perception afterwards vouchsafed.
17. And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou--Though
it is not to be doubted that Peter, in this noble testimony to Christ,
only expressed the conviction of all the Twelve, yet since he alone
seems to have had clear enough apprehensions to put that conviction in
proper and suitable words, and courage enough to speak them out, and
readiness enough to do this at the right time--so he only, of all the
Twelve, seems to have met the present want, and communicated to the
saddened soul of the Redeemer at the critical moment that balm which was
needed to cheer and refresh it. Nor is Jesus above giving indication of
the deep satisfaction which this speech yielded Him, and hastening to
respond to it by a signal acknowledgment of Peter in return.
18. And I say also unto thee--that is, "As thou hast borne such
testimony to Me, even so in return do I to thee."
19. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven--the
kingdom of God about to be set up on earth
20. Then charged he his disciples that they should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ--Now that He had been so explicit, they might naturally think the time come for giving it out openly; but here they are told it had not. Announcement of His Approaching Death and Rebuke of Peter (Mt 16:21-28). The occasion here is evidently the same.
21. From that time forth began Jesus to show unto his disciples--that
is, with an explicitness and frequency He had never observed before.
22. Then Peter took him--aside, apart from the rest; presuming on
the distinction just conferred on him; showing how unexpected and
distasteful to them all was the announcement.
23. But he turned, and said--in the hearing of the rest; for Mark
(Mr 8:33)
expressly says, "When He had turned about and looked on His disciples,
He rebuked Peter"; perceiving that he had but boldly uttered what
others felt, and that the check was needed by them also.
24. Then said Jesus unto his disciples--Mark
(Mr 8:34)
says, "When He had called the people unto Him, with His disciples also,
He said unto them"--turning the rebuke of one into a warning to all.
25. For whosoever will save--is minded to save, or bent on saving.
26. For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and
lose his own soul--or forfeit his own soul?
27. For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his
angels--in the splendor of His Father's authority and with all His
angelic ministers, ready to execute His pleasure.
28. Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here--"some of those
standing here."
CHAPTER 17 Mt 17:1-13. JESUS IS TRANSFIGURED--CONVERSATION ABOUT ELIAS. ( = Mr 9:2-13; Lu 9:28-36). For the exposition, see on Lu 9:28-36. Mt 17:14-23. HEALING OF A DEMONIAC BOY--SECOND EXPLICIT ANNOUNCEMENT BY OUR LORD OF HIS APPROACHING DEATH AND RESURRECTION. ( = Mr 9:14-32; Lu 9:37-45). The time of this section is sufficiently denoted by the events which all the narratives show to have immediately preceded it--the first explicit announcement of His death, and the transfiguration--both being between His third and His fourth and last Passover. Healing of the Demoniac and Lunatic Boy (Mt 17:14-21). For the exposition of this portion, see on Mr 9:14-32. Second Announcement of His Death (Mt 17:22, 23).
22. And while they abode in Galilee, Jesus said unto them--Mark
(Mr 9:30),
as usual, is very precise here: "And they departed thence"--that is,
from the scene of the last miracle--"and passed through Galilee; and He
would not that any man should know it." So this was not a preaching,
but a private, journey through Galilee. Indeed, His public ministry in
Galilee was now all but concluded. Though He sent out the Seventy after
this to preach and heal, He Himself was little more in public there,
and He was soon to bid it a final adieu. Till this hour arrived, He was
chiefly occupied with the Twelve, preparing them for the coming events.
Mt 17:24-27. THE TRIBUTE MONEY. The time of this section is evidently in immediate succession to that of the preceding one. The brief but most pregnant incident which it records is given by Matthew alone--for whom, no doubt, it would have a peculiar interest, from its relation to his own town and his own familiar lake.
24. And when they were come to Capernaum, they that received tribute
money--the double drachma; a sum equal to two Attic drachmas, and
corresponding to the Jewish "half-shekel," payable, towards the
maintenance of the temple and its services, by every male Jew of twenty
years old and upward. For the origin of this annual tax, see
Ex 30:13, 14;
2Ch 24:6, 9.
Thus, it will be observed, it was not a civil, but an ecclesiastical
tax. The tax mentioned in
Mt 17:25
was a civil one. The whole teaching of this very remarkable scene
depends upon this distinction.
25. He saith, yes--that is, "To be sure He does"; as if eager to remove
even the suspicion of the contrary. If Peter knew--as surely he
did--that there was at this time no money in the bag, this reply must be
regarded as a great act of faith in his Master.
26. Peter saith unto him, Of strangers--"of those not their children."
27. Notwithstanding, lest we should offend--stumble.
CHAPTER 18 Mt 18:1-9. STRIFE AMONG THE TWELVE WHO SHOULD BE GREATEST IN THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN, WITH RELATIVE TEACHING. ( = Mr 9:33-50; Lu 9:46-50). For the exposition, see on Mr 9:33-50. Mt 18:10-35. FURTHER TEACHING ON THE SAME SUBJECT, INCLUDING THE PARABLE OF THE UNMERCIFUL DEBTOR. Same Subject (Mt 18:10-20).
10. Take heed that ye despise--stumble.
11. For the Son of man is come to save that which was lost--or "is lost." A golden saying, once and again repeated in different forms. Here the connection seems to be, "Since the whole object and errand of the Son of man into the world is to save the lost, take heed lest, by causing offenses, ye lose the saved." That this is the idea intended we may gather from Mt 18:14. 12, 13. How think ye? If a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be gone astray, &c.--This is another of those pregnant sayings which our Lord uttered more than once. See on the delightful parable of the lost sheep in Lu 15:4-7. Only the object there is to show what the good Shepherd will do, when even one of His sheep is lost, to find it; here the object is to show, when found, how reluctant He is to lose it. Accordingly, it is added, 14. Even so it is not the will of your Father which is in heaven that one of these little ones should perish--How, then, can He but visit for those "offenses" which endanger the souls of these little ones? 15. Moreover, if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother, &c.--Probably our Lord had reference still to the late dispute, Who should be the greatest? After the rebuke--so gentle and captivating, yet so dignified and divine--under which they would doubtless be smarting, perhaps each would be saying, It was not I that began it, it was not I that threw out unworthy and irritating insinuations against my brethren. Be it so, says our Lord; but as such things will often arise, I will direct you how to proceed. First, Neither harbor a grudge against your offending brother, nor break forth upon him in presence of the unbelieving; but take him aside, show him his fault, and if he own and make reparation for it, you have done more service to him than even justice to yourself. Next, If this fail, take two or three to witness how just your complaint is, and how brotherly your spirit in dealing with him. Again, If this fail, bring him before the Church or congregation to which both belong. Lastly, If even this fail, regard him as no longer a brother Christian, but as one "without"--as the Jews did Gentiles and publicans. 18. Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven--Here, what had been granted but a short time before to Peter only (see on Mt 16:19) is plainly extended to all the Twelve; so that whatever it means, it means nothing peculiar to Peter, far less to his pretended successors at Rome. It has to do with admission to and rejection from the membership of the Church. But see on Joh 20:23. 19. Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven.
20. For where two or three are gathered together in my name--or "unto
my name."
Parable of the Unmerciful Debtor (Mt 18:21-35).
21. Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother
sin against me, and I forgive him?--In the recent dispute, Peter had
probably been an object of special envy, and his forwardness in
continually answering for all the rest would likely be cast up to
him--and if so, probably by Judas--notwithstanding his Master's
commendations. And as such insinuations were perhaps made once and
again, he wished to know how often and how long he was to stand it.
22. Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times; but, Until seventy times seven--that is, so long as it shall be needed and sought: you are never to come to the point of refusing forgiveness sincerely asked. (See on Lu 17:3, 4).
23. Therefore--"with reference to this matter."
24. And when he had begun to reckon, one was brought unto him, which owed him ten thousand talents--If Attic talents are here meant, 10,000 of them would amount to above a million and a half sterling; if Jewish talents, to a much larger sum. 25. But forasmuch as he had not to pay, his lord commanded him to be sold, and his wife and children, and all that he had, and payment to be made--(See 2Ki 4:1; Ne 5:8; Le 25:39).
26. The servant therefore fell down, and worshipped him--or did humble
obeisance to him.
27. Then the lord of that servant was moved with compassion, and loosed him, and forgave him the debt--Payment being hopeless, the master is first moved with compassion; next, liberates his debtor from prison; and then cancels the debt freely.
28. But the same servant went out, and found one of his fellow
servants--Mark the difference here. The first case is that of master
and servant; in this case, both are on a footing of equality. (See
Mt 18:33,
below.)
29. And his fellow servant fell down at his feet, and besought him, saying, Have patience with me, and I will pay thee all--The same attitude, and the same words which drew compassion from his master, are here employed towards himself by his fellow servant. 30. And he would not; but went and cast him into prison, till he should pay the debt, &c.--Jesus here vividly conveys the intolerable injustice and impudence which even the servants saw in this act on the part of one so recently laid under the heaviest obligation to their common master. 32, 33. Then his lord, after that he had called him, said unto him, O thou wicked servant, &c.--Before bringing down his vengeance upon him, he calmly points out to him how shamefully unreasonable and heartless his conduct was; which would give the punishment inflicted on him a double sting.
34. And his lord was wroth, and delivered him to the tormentors--more
than jailers; denoting the severity of the treatment which he thought
such a case demanded.
35. So likewise--in this spirit, or on this principle.
CHAPTER 19 Mt 19:1-12. FINAL DEPARTURE FROM GALILEE--DIVORCE. ( = Mr 10:1-12; Lu 9:51). Farewell to Galilee (Mt 19:1, 2).
1. And it came to pass, that when Jesus had finished these sayings, he
departed from Galilee--This marks a very solemn period in our Lord's
public ministry. So slightly is it touched here, and in the
corresponding passage of Mark
(Mr 10:1),
that few readers probably note it as the Redeemer's Farewell to
Galilee, which however it was. See on the sublime statement of
Luke
(Lu 9:51),
which relates to the same transition stage in the progress of our
Lord's work.
2. And great multitudes followed him; and he healed them there--Mark says further (Mr 10:1), that "as He was wont, He taught them there." What we now have on the subject of divorce is some of that teaching. Divorce (Mt 19:3-12). 3. Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?--Two rival schools (as we saw on Mt 5:31) were divided on this question--a delicate one, as DE WETTE pertinently remarks, in the dominions of Herod Antipas. 4. And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female--or better, perhaps, "He that made them made them from the beginning a male and a female."
5. And said, For this cause--to follow out this divine appointment.
7. They say unto him, Why did Moses then command to give a writing of divorcement, and to put her away?
8. He saith unto them, Moses--as a civil lawgiver.
9. And I say unto you, Whosoever shall put away his wife, except, &c.--See on Mt 5:32. 10. His disciples say unto him, If the case of the man be so with his wife, it is not good to marry--that is, "In this view of marriage, surely it must prove a snare rather than a blessing, and had better be avoided altogether." 11. But he said unto them, All men cannot receive this saying, save they to whom it is given--that is, "That the unmarried state is better, is a saying not for everyone, and indeed only for such as it is divinely intended for." But who are these? they would naturally ask; and this our Lord proceeds to tell them in three particulars.
12. For there are some eunuchs which were so born from their mother's
womb--persons constitutionally either incapable of or indisposed to
marriage.
Mt 19:13-15. LITTLE CHILDREN BROUGHT TO CHRIST. ( = Mr 10:13-16; Lu 18:15-17). For the exposition, see on Lu 18:15-17. Mt 19:16-30. THE RICH YOUNG RULER. ( = Mr 10:17-31; Lu 18:18-30). For the exposition, see on Lu 18:18-30. CHAPTER 20 Mt 20:1-16. PARABLE OF THE LABORERS IN THE VINEYARD. This parable, recorded only by Matthew, is closely connected with the end of the nineteenth chapter, being spoken with reference to Peter's question as to how it should fare with those who, like himself, had left all for Christ. It is designed to show that while they would be richly rewarded, a certain equity would still be observed towards later converts and workmen in His service. 1. For the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that is an householder, &c.--The figure of a vineyard, to represent the rearing of souls for heaven, the culture required and provided for that purpose, and the care and pains which God takes in that whole matter, is familiar to every reader of the Bible. (Ps 80:8-16; Isa 5:1-7; Jer 2:21; Lu 20:9-16; Joh 15:1-8). At vintage time, as WEBSTER and WILKINSON remark, labor was scarce, and masters were obliged to be early in the market to secure it. Perhaps the pressing nature of the work of the Gospel, and the comparative paucity of laborers, may be incidentally suggested, Mt 9:37, 38. The "laborers," as in Mt 9:38, are first, the official servants of the Church, but after them and along with them all the servants of Christ, whom He has laid under the weightiest obligation to work in His service.
2. And when he had agreed with the labourers for a penny--a usual day's
hire.
3. And he went out about the third hour--about nine o'clock, or after
a fourth of the working day had expired: the day of twelve hours was
reckoned from six to six.
4. And said unto them, Go ye also into the vineyard; and whatsoever is
right--just, equitable, in proportion to their time.
5. Again he went out about the sixth and ninth hour--about noon, and
about three o'clock in the afternoon.
6. And about the eleventh hour--but one hour before the close of the
working day; a most unusual hour both for offering and engaging
8. So when even was come--that is, the reckoning time between
masters and laborers (see
De 24:15);
pointing to the day of final account.
9. And when they came that were hired about the eleventh hour, they received every man a penny--a full day's wages. 10. But when the first came, they supposed that they should have received more--This is that calculating, mercenary spirit which had peeped out--though perhaps very slightly--in Peter's question (Mt 19:27), and which this parable was designed once for all to put down among the servants of Christ. 11. And when they had received it, they murmured against the goodman of the house--rather, "the householder," the word being the same as in Mt 20:1.
12. Saying, These last have wrought but one hour, and thou hast made
them equal unto us, which have borne the burden and heat--the burning
heat.
13. But he answered one of them--doubtless the spokesman of the
complaining party.
15. Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? Is thine eye evil, because I am good?--that is, "You appeal to justice, and by that your mouth is shut; for the sum you agreed for is paid you. Your case being disposed of, with the terms I make with other laborers you have nothing to do; and to grudge the benevolence shown to others, when by your own admission you have been honorably dealt with, is both unworthy envy of your neighbor, and discontent with the goodness that engaged and rewarded you in his service at all."
16. So the last shall be first, and the first last--that is, "Take
heed lest by indulging the spirit of these murmurers at the penny given
to the last hired, ye miss your own penny, though first in the vineyard;
while the consciousness of having come in so late may inspire these last
with such a humble frame, and such admiration of the grace that has
hired and rewarded them at all, as will put them into the foremost place
in the end."
Mt 20:17-28. THIRD EXPLICIT ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS APPROACHING SUFFERINGS, DEATH, AND RESURRECTION--THE AMBITIOUS REQUEST OF JAMES AND JOHN, AND THE REPLY. ( = Mr 10:32-45; Lu 18:31-34). For the exposition, see on Mr 10:32-45. Mt 20:29-34. TWO BLIND MEN HEALED. ( = Mr 10:46-52; Lu 18:35-43). For the exposition, see on Lu 18:35-43. CHAPTER 21 Mt 21:1-9. CHRIST'S TRIUMPHAL ENTRY INTO JERUSALEM ON THE FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK. ( = Mr 11:1-11; Lu 19:29-40; Joh 12:12-19). For the exposition of this majestic scene--recorded, as will be seen, by all the Evangelists--see on Lu 19:29-40. Mt 21:10-22. STIR ABOUT HIM IN THE CITY--SECOND CLEANSING OF THE TEMPLE, AND MIRACLES THERE--GLORIOUS VINDICATION OF THE CHILDREN'S TESTIMONY--THE BARREN FIG TREE CURSED, WITH LESSONS FROM IT. ( = Mr 11:11-26; Lu 19:45-48). For the exposition, see on Lu 19:45-48; and Mr 11:12-26. Mt 21:23-46. THE AUTHORITY OF JESUS QUESTIONED AND THE REPLY--THE PARABLES OF THE TWO SONS, AND OF THE WICKED HUSBANDMAN. ( = Mr 11:27-12:12; Lu 20:1-19). Now commences, as ALFORD remarks, that series of parables and discourses of our Lord with His enemies, in which He develops, more completely than ever before, His hostility to their hypocrisy and iniquity: and so they are stirred up to compass His death. The Authority of Jesus Questioned, and the Reply (Mt 21:23-27).
23. By what authority doest thou these things!--referring particularly
to the expulsion of the buyers and sellers from the temple,
24. And Jesus answered and said unto them, I also will ask you one thing, &c.
25. The baptism of John--meaning his whole mission and ministry, of
which baptism was the proper character.
26. But if we shall say, Of men; we fear the people--rather, "the
multitude." In Luke
(Lu 20:6)
it is, "all the people will stone us"--"stone us to death."
27. And they answered Jesus, and said, We cannot tell--Evidently their
difficulty was, how to answer, so as neither to shake their
determination to reject the claims of Christ nor damage their reputation
with the people. For the truth itself they cared nothing whatever.
Parable of the Two Sons (Mt 21:28-32). 28. But what think ye? A certain man had two sons; and he came to the first and said, Son, go work to-day in my vineyard--for true religion is a practical thing, a "bringing forth fruit unto God." 29. He answered and said, I will not--TRENCH notices the rudeness of this answer, and the total absence of any attempt to excuse such disobedience, both characteristic; representing careless, reckless sinners resisting God to His face.
30. And he came to the second, and said likewise. And he answered and
said, I go, sir--"I, sir." The emphatic "I," here, denotes the
self-righteous complacency which says, "God, I thank thee that I am
not as other men"
(Lu 18:11).
31. Whether of them twain did the will of his Father? They say unto
him, The first--Now comes the application.
32. For John came unto you in the way of righteousness--that is,
calling you to repentance; as Noah is styled "a preacher of
righteousness"
(2Pe 2:5),
when like the Baptist he warned the old world to "flee from the wrath
to come."
Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen (Mt 21:33-46).
33. Hear another parable: There was a certain householder, which
planted a vineyard--(See on
Lu 13:6).
34. And when the time of the fruit drew near, he sent his servants
to the husbandmen--By these "servants" are meant the prophets and
other extraordinary messengers, raised up from time to time. See on
Mt 23:37.
35. And the husbandmen took his servants, and beat one--see
Jer 37:15; 38:6.
36. Again, he sent other servants more than the first; and they did unto them likewise--see 2Ki 17:13; 2Ch 36:16, 18; Ne 9:26. 37. But last of all he sent unto them his son, saying, They will reverence my son--In Mark (Mr 12:6) this is most touchingly expressed: "Having yet therefore one son, His well-beloved, He sent Him also last unto them, saying, They will reverence My Son." Luke's version of it too (Lu 20:13) is striking: "Then said the lord of the vineyard, What shall I do? I will send My beloved Son: it may be they will reverence Him when they see Him." Who does not see that our Lord here severs Himself, by the sharpest line of demarcation, from all merely human messengers, and claims for Himself Sonship in its loftiest sense? (Compare Heb 3:3-6). The expression, "It may be they will reverence My Son," is designed to teach the almost unimaginable guilt of not reverentially welcoming God's Son.
38. But when the husbandmen saw the son, they said among themselves--Compare
Ge 37:18-20;
Joh 11:47-53.
39. And they caught him, and cast him out of the vineyard--compare
Heb 13:11-13
("without the gate--without the camp");
1Ki 21:13;
Joh 19:17.
40. When the lord therefore of the vineyard cometh--This represents
"the settling time," which, in the case of the Jewish ecclesiastics, was
that judicial trial of the nation and its leaders which issued in the
destruction of their whole state.
41. They say unto him, He will miserably destroy those wicked men--an
emphatic alliteration not easily conveyed in English: "He will badly
destroy those bad men," or "miserably destroy those miserable men," is
something like it.
42. Jesus saith unto them. Did ye never read in the scriptures--
(Ps 118:22, 23).
43. Therefore say I unto you, The kingdom of God--God's visible
Kingdom, or Church, upon earth, which up to this time stood in the seed
of Abraham.
44. And whosoever shall fall on this stone shall be broken: but on whomsoever it shall fall, it will grind him to powder--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). They were sustaining great spiritual hurt; but soon that Stone should "fall upon them" and "grind them to powder" (Da 2:34, 35; Zec 12:2) --in their corporate capacity, in the tremendous destruction of Jerusalem, but personally, as unbelievers, in a more awful sense still.
45. And when the chief priests and Pharisees had heard his
parables--referring to that of the Two Sons and this one of the
Wicked Husbandmen.
46. But when they sought to lay hands on him--which Luke
(Lu 20:19)
says they did "the same hour," hardly able to restrain their rage.
CHAPTER 22 Mt 22:1-14. PARABLE OF THE MARRIAGE OF THE KING'S SON. This is a different parable from that of the Great Supper, in Lu 14:15, &c., and is recorded by Matthew alone. 2. The kingdom of heaven is like unto a certain king, which made a marriage for his son--"In this parable," as TRENCH admirably remarks, "we see how the Lord is revealing Himself in ever clearer light as the central Person of the kingdom, giving here a far plainer hint than in the last parable of the nobility of His descent. There He was indeed the Son, the only and beloved one (Mr 12:6), of the Householder; but here His race is royal, and He appears as Himself at once the King and the King's Son (Ps 72:1). The last was a parable of the Old Testament history; and Christ is rather the last and greatest of the line of its prophets and teachers than the founder of a new kingdom. In that, God appears demanding something from men; in this, a parable of grace, God appears more as giving something to them. Thus, as often, the two complete each other: this taking up the matter where the other left it." The "marriage" of Jehovah to His people Israel was familiar to Jewish ears; and in Ps 45:1-17 this marriage is seen consummated in the Person of Messiah "THE KING," Himself addressed as "GOD" and yet as anointed by "HIS GOD" with the oil of gladness above His fellows. These apparent contradictions (see on Lu 20:41-44) are resolved in this parable; and Jesus, in claiming to be this King's Son, serves Himself Heir to all that the prophets and sweet singers of Israel held forth as to Jehovah's ineffably near and endearing union to His people. But observe carefully, that THE BRIDE does not come into view in this parable; its design being to teach certain truths under the figure of guests at a wedding feast, and the want of a wedding garment, which would not have harmonized with the introduction of the Bride.
3. and sent forth his servants--representing all preachers of the
Gospel.
4. my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all things are ready; come unto the marriage--This points to those Gospel calls after Christ's death, resurrection, ascension, and effusion of the Spirit, to which the parable could not directly allude, but when only it could be said, with strict propriety, "that all things were ready." Compare 1Co 5:7, 8, "Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us; therefore, let us keep the feast"; also Joh 6:51, "I am the living bread which came down from heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and the bread which I will give is My flesh, which I will give for the life of the world." 5. But they made light of it, and went their ways, one to his farm, another to his merchandise:
6. And the remnant took his servants, and entreated them spitefully--insulted them.
7. But when the king--the Great God, who is the Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
8. The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy--for how should those be deemed worthy to sit down at His table who had affronted Him by their treatment of His gracious invitation?
9. Go ye therefore into the highways--the great outlets and
thoroughfares, whether of town or country, where human beings are to be
found.
10. So those servants went out into the highways, and gathered together all as many as they found, both bad and good--that is, without making any distinction between open sinners and the morally correct. The Gospel call fetched in Jews, Samaritans, and outlying heathen alike. Thus far the parable answers to that of "the Great Supper" (Lu 14:16, &c.). But the distinguishing feature of our parable is what follows:
11. And when the king came in to see the guests--Solemn
expression this, of that omniscient inspection of every professed
disciple of the Lord Jesus from age to age, in virtue of which his
true character will hereafter be judicially proclaimed!
12. Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment? And he was speechless--being self-condemned.
13. Then said the king to the servants--the angelic ministers of
divine vengeance (as in
Mt 13:41).
14. For many are called, but few are chosen--So Mt 19:30. See on Mt 20:16. Mt 22:15-40. ENTANGLING QUESTIONS ABOUT TRIBUTE, THE RESURRECTION, AND THE GREAT COMMANDMENT, WITH THE REPLIES. ( = Mr 12:13-34; Lu 20:20-40). For the exposition, see on Mr 12:13-34. Mt 22:41-46. CHRIST BAFFLES THE PHARISEES BY A QUESTION ABOUT DAVID AND MESSIAH. ( = Mr 12:35-37; Lu 20:41-44). For the exposition, see on Mr 12:35-37. CHAPTER 23 Mt 23:1-39. DENUNCIATION OF THE SCRIBES AND PHARISEES--LAMENTATION OVER JERUSALEM, AND FAREWELL TO THE TEMPLE. ( = Mr 12:38-40; Lu 20:45-47). For this long and terrible discourse we are indebted, with the exception of a few verses in Mark and Luke, to Matthew alone. But as it is only an extended repetition of denunciations uttered not long before at the table of a Pharisee, and recorded by Luke (Lu 11:37-54), we may take both together in the exposition. Denunciation of the Scribes and Pharisees (Mt 23:1-36). The first twelve verses were addressed more immediately to the disciples, the rest to the scribes and Pharisees. 1. Then spake Jesus to the multitude--to the multitudes, "and to his disciples."
2. Saying, The scribes and the Pharisees sit--The Jewish teachers
stood to read, but sat to expound the Scriptures, as will be seen
by comparing
Lu 4:16
with Lu 4:20.
3. All therefore--that is, all which, as sitting in that seat and
teaching out of that law.
4. For they bind heavy burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay them
on men's shoulders; but they themselves will not move them--"touch
them not"
(Lu 11:46).
5. But all their works they do for to be seen of men--Whatever good
they do, or zeal they show, has but one motive--human applause.
6. And love the uppermost rooms at feasts--The word "room" is now
obsolete in the sense here intended. It should be "the uppermost place,"
that is, the place of highest honor.
7. And greetings in the markets, and to be called of men, Rabbi, Rabbi--It is the spirit rather than the letter of this that must be pressed; though the violation of the letter, springing from spiritual pride, has done incalculable evil in the Church of Christ. The reiteration of the word "Rabbi" shows how it tickled the ear and fed the spiritual pride of those ecclesiastics. 8. But be not ye called Rabbi; for one is your Master--your Guide, your Teacher. 9. And call no man your father upon the earth: for one is your Father, which is in heaven, &c.--To construe these injunctions into a condemnation of every title by which Church rulers may be distinguished from the flock which they rule, is virtually to condemn that rule itself; and accordingly the same persons do both--but against the whole strain of the New Testament and sound Christian judgment. But when we have guarded ourselves against these extremes, let us see to it that we retain the full spirit of this warning against that itch for ecclesiastical superiority which has been the bane and the scandal of Christ's ministers in every age. (On the use of the word "Christ" here, see on Mt 1:1). 11. But he that is greatest among you shall be your servant--This plainly means, "shall show that he is so by becoming your servant"; as in Mt 20:27, compared with Mr 10:44. 12. And whosoever shall exalt himself shall be abased--See on Lu 18:14. What follows was addressed more immediately to the scribes and Pharisees. 13. But woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men--Here they are charged with shutting heaven against men: in Lu 11:52 they are charged with what was worse, taking away the key--"the key of knowledge"--which means, not the key to open knowledge, but knowledge as the only key to open heaven. A right knowledge of God's revealed word is eternal life, as our Lord says (Joh 17:3; 5:39); but this they took away from the people, substituting for it their wretched traditions. 14. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye devour widows' houses, &c.--Taking advantage of the helpless condition and confiding character of "widows," they contrived 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 those scribes!
15. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye compass
sea and land to make one proselyte--from heathenism. We have evidence
of this in JOSEPHUS.
16. Woe unto you, ye blind guides--Striking expression this of the
ruinous effects of erroneous teaching. Our Lord, here and in some
following verses, condemns the subtle distinctions they made as to the
sanctity of oaths--distinctions invented only to promote their own
avaricious purposes.
19. Ye fools, and blind! for whether is greater, the gift, or the altar that sanctifieth the gift?--(See Ex 29:37). 20-22. Whoso therefore shall swear by the altar, &c.--See on Mt 5:33-37.
23. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe
of mint and anise--rather, "dill," as in Margin.
24. Ye blind guides, which strain at a gnat--The proper rendering--as
in the older English translations, and perhaps our own as it came from
the translators' hands--evidently is, "strain out." It was the custom,
says TRENCH, of the stricter Jews to strain
their wine, vinegar, and
other potables through linen or gauze, lest unawares they should drink
down some little unclean insect therein and thus transgress
(Le 11:20, 23, 41, 42)
--just as the Buddhists do now in Ceylon and Hindustan--and to this
custom of theirs our Lord here refers.
25. within they are full of extortion--In Luke (Lu 11:39) the same word is rendered "ravening," that is, "rapacity." 26. Thou blind Pharisee, cleanse first that which is within the cup and platter, that the outside of them may be clean also--In Luke (Lu 11:40) it is, "Ye fools, did not He that made that which is without make that which is within also?"--"He to whom belongs the outer life, and of right demands its subjection to Himself, is the inner man less His?" A remarkable example this of our Lord's power of drawing the most striking illustrations of great truths from the most familiar objects and incidents in life. To these words, recorded by Luke, He adds the following, involving a principle of immense value: "But rather give alms of such things as ye have, and behold, all things are clean unto you" (Lu 11:41). As the greed of these hypocrites was one of the most prominent features of their character (Lu 16:14), 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 much fouled with the business of this everyday world. (See Ec 9:7).
27. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like
whited sepulchres--or, whitewashed sepulchres. (Compare
Ac 23:3).
The process of whitewashing the sepulchres, as LIGHTFOOT says, was performed on a certain day every
year, not for ceremonial cleansing, but, as the following words seem
rather to imply, to beautify them.
33. Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?--In thus, at the end of His ministry, recalling the words of the Baptist at the outset of his, our Lord would seem to intimate that the only difference between their condemnation now and then was, that now they were ripe for their doom, which they were not then.
34. Wherefore, behold, I send unto you prophets, and wise men, and
scribes--The I here is emphatic: "I am sending," that is,
"am about to send." In
Lu 11:49
the variation is remarkable: "Therefore also, said the wisdom of God, I
will send them," &c. What precisely is meant by "the wisdom of God"
here, is somewhat difficult to determine. To us it appears to be simply
an announcement of a purpose of the Divine Wisdom, in the high style of
ancient prophecy, to send a last set of messengers whom the people
would reject, and rejecting, would fill up the cup of their iniquity.
But, whereas in Luke it is "I, the Wisdom of God, will send them," in
Matthew it is "I, Jesus, am sending them"; language only befitting the
one sender of all the prophets, the Lord God of Israel now in the
flesh. They are evidently evangelical messengers, but called by the
familiar Jewish names of "prophets, wise men, and scribes," whose
counterparts were the inspired and gifted servants of the Lord Jesus;
for in Luke
(Lu 11:49)
it is "prophets and apostles."
36. Verily I say unto you, All these things shall come upon 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. Lamentation over Jerusalem, and Farewell to the Temple (Mt 23:37-39). 37. O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, &c.--How ineffably grand and melting is this apostrophe! It is the very heart of God pouring itself forth through human flesh and speech. It is this incarnation of the innermost life and love of Deity, pleading with men, bleeding for them, and ascending only to open His arms to them and win them back by the power of this story of matchless love, that has conquered the world, that will yet "draw all men unto Him," and beautify and ennoble Humanity itself! "Jerusalem" here does not mean the mere city or its inhabitants; nor is it to be viewed merely as the metropolis of the nation, but as the center of their religious life--"the city of their solemnities, whither the tribes went up, to give thanks unto the name of the Lord"; and at this moment it was full of them. It is the whole family of God, then, which is here apostrophized by a name dear to every Jew, recalling to him all that was distinctive and precious in his religion. The intense feeling that sought vent in this utterance comes out first in the redoubling of the opening word--"Jerusalem, Jerusalem!" but, next, in the picture of it which He draws--"that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee!"--not content with spurning God's messages of mercy, that canst not suffer even the messengers to live! When He adds, "How often would I have gathered thee!" He refers surely to something beyond the six or seven times that He visited and taught in Jerusalem while on earth. No doubt it points to "the prophets," whom they "killed," to "them that were sent unto her," whom they "stoned." But whom would He have gathered so often? "Thee," truth-hating, mercy-spurning, prophet-killing Jerusalem--how often would I have gathered thee! Compare with this that affecting clause in the great ministerial commission, "that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem!" (Lu 24:47). What encouragement to the heartbroken at their own long-continued and obstinate rebellion! But we have not yet got at the whole heart of this outburst. I would have gathered thee, He says, "even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings." Was ever imagery so homely invested with such grace and such sublimity as this, at our Lord's touch? And yet how exquisite the figure itself--of protection, rest, warmth, and all manner of conscious well-being in those poor, defenseless, dependent little creatures, as they creep under and feel themselves overshadowed by the capacious and kindly wing of the mother bird! If, wandering beyond hearing of her peculiar call, they are overtaken by a storm or attacked by an enemy, what can they do but in the one case droop and die, and in the other submit to be torn in pieces? But if they can reach in time their place of safety, under the mother's wing, in vain will any enemy try to drag them thence. For rising into strength, kindling into fury, and forgetting herself entirely in her young, she will let the last drop of her blood be shed out and perish in defense of her precious charge, rather than yield them to an enemy's talons. How significant all this of what Jesus is and does for men! Under His great Mediatorial wing would He have "gathered" Israel. For the figure, see De 32:10-12; Ru 2:12; Ps 17:8; 36:7; 61:4; 63:7; 91:4; Isa 31:5; Mal 4:2. The ancient rabbins had a beautiful expression for proselytes from the heathen--that they had "come under the wings of the Shekinah." For this last word, see on Mt 23:38. But what was the result of all this tender and mighty love? The answer is, "And ye would not." O mysterious word! mysterious the resistance of such patient Love--mysterious the liberty of self-undoing! The awful dignity of the will, as here expressed, might make the ears to tingle.
38. Behold, your house--the temple, beyond all doubt; but
their house now, not the Lord's. See on
Mt 22:7.
39. For I say unto you--and these were His last words to
the impenitent nation, see on
Mr 13:1,
opening remarks.
CHAPTER 24 Mt 24:1-51. CHRIST'S PROPHECY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM, AND WARNINGS SUGGESTED BY IT TO PREPARE FOR HIS SECOND COMING. ( = Mr 13:1-37; Lu 21:5-36). For the exposition, see on Mr 13:1-37. CHAPTER 25 Mt 25:1-13. PARABLE OF THE TEN VIRGINS. This and the following parable are in Matthew alone.
1. Then--at the time referred to at the close of the preceding chapter,
the time of the Lord's Second Coming to reward His faithful servants and
take vengeance on the faithless. Then
2. And five of them were wise, and five were foolish--They are not distinguished into good and bad, as TRENCH observes, but into "wise" and "foolish"--just as in Mt 7:25-27 those who reared their house for eternity are distinguished into "wise" and "foolish builders"; because in both cases a certain degree of goodwill towards the truth is assumed. To make anything of the equal number of both classes would, we think, be precarious, save to warn us how large a portion of those who, up to the last, so nearly resemble those that love Christ's appearing will be disowned by Him when He comes. 3. They that were foolish took their lamps, and took no oil with them: 4. But the wise took oil in their vessels with their lamps--What are these "lamps" and this "oil"? Many answers have been given. But since the foolish as well as the wise took their lamps and went forth with them to meet the Bridegroom, these lighted lamps and this advance a certain way in company with the wise, must denote that Christian profession which is common to all who bear the Christian name; while the insufficiency of this without something else, of which they never possessed themselves, shows that "the foolish" mean those who, with all that is common to them with real Christians, lack the essential preparation for meeting Christ. Then, since the wisdom of "the wise" consisted in their taking with their lamps a supply of oil in their vessels, keeping their lamps burning till the Bridegroom came, and so fitting them to go in with Him to the marriage, this supply of oil must mean that inward reality of grace which alone will stand when He appears whose eyes are as a flame of fire. But this is too general; for it cannot be for nothing that this inward grace is here set forth by the familiar symbol of oil, by which the Spirit of all grace is so constantly represented in Scripture. Beyond all doubt, this was what was symbolized by that precious anointing oil with which Aaron and his sons were consecrated to the priestly office (Ex 30:23-25, 30); by "the oil of gladness above His fellows" with which Messiah was to be anointed (Ps 45:7; Heb 1:9), even as it is expressly said, that "God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto Him" (Joh 3:34); and by the bowl full of golden oil, in Zechariah's vision, which, receiving its supplies from the two olive trees on either side of it, poured it through seven golden pipes into the golden lamp-stand to keep it continually burning bright (Zec 4:1-14) --for the prophet is expressly told that it was to proclaim the great truth, "Not by might, nor by power, but by MY SPIRIT, saith the Lord of hosts [shall this temple be built]. Who art thou, O great mountain [of opposition to this issue]? Before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain [or, be swept out of the way], and he shall bring forth the head stone [of the temple], with shoutings [crying], GRACE, GRACE unto it." This supply of oil, then, representing that inward grace which distinguishes the wise, must denote, more particularly, that "supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ," which, as it is the source of the new spiritual life at the first, is the secret of its enduring character. Everything short of this may be possessed by "the foolish"; while it is the possession of this that makes "the wise" to be "ready" when the Bridegroom appears, and fit to "go in with Him to the marriage." Just so in the parable of the Sower, the stony-ground hearers, "having no deepness of earth" and "no root in themselves" Mt 13:5; Mr 4:17), though they spring up and get even into ear, never ripen, while they in the good ground bear the precious grain.
5. While the bridegroom tarried--So in
Mt 24:48,
"My Lord delayeth His coming"; and so Peter says sublimely of the
ascended Saviour, "Whom the heaven must receive until the times of
restitution of all things"
(Ac 3:21,
and compare
Lu 19:11, 12).
Christ "tarries," among other reasons, to try the faith and patience of
His people.
6. And at midnight--that is, the time when the Bridegroom will be least
expected; for "the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night"
(1Th 5:2).
7. Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed their lamps--the foolish virgins as well as the wise. How very long do both parties seem the same--almost to the moment of decision! Looking at the mere form of the parable, it is evident that the folly of "the foolish" consisted not in having no oil at all; for they must have had oil enough in their lamps to keep them burning up to this moment: their folly consisted in not making provision against its exhaustion, by taking with their lamp an oil-vessel wherewith to replenish their lamp from time to time, and so have it burning until the Bridegroom should come. Are we, then--with some even superior expositors--to conclude that the foolish virgins must represent true Christians as well as do the wise, since only true Christians have the Spirit, and that the difference between the two classes consists only in the one having the necessary watchfulness which the other wants? Certainly not. Since the parable was designed to hold forth the prepared and the unprepared to meet Christ at His coming, and how the unprepared might, up to the very last, be confounded with the prepared--the structure of the parable behooved to accommodate itself to this, by making the lamps of the foolish to burn, as well as those of the wise, up to a certain point of time, and only then to discover their inability to burn on for want of a fresh supply of oil. But this is evidently just a structural device; and the real difference between the two classes who profess to love the Lord's appearing is a radical one--the possession by the one class of an enduring principle of spiritual life, and the want of it by the other. 8. And the foolish said unto the wise, Give us of your oil; for our lamps are gone out--rather, as in the Margin, "are going out"; for oil will not light an extinguished lamp, though it will keep a burning one from going out. Ah! now at length they have discovered not only their own folly, but the wisdom of the other class, and they do homage to it. They did not perhaps despise them before, but they thought them righteous overmuch; now they are forced, with bitter mortification, to wish they were like them.
9. But the wise answered, Not so; lest there be not enough
for us and you--The words "Not so," it will be seen, are not in the
original, where the reply is very elliptical--"In case there be not
enough for us and you." A truly wise answer this. "And what, then, if
we shall share it with you? Why, both will be undone."
10. And while they went to buy, the Bridegroom came; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door was shut--They are sensible of their past folly; they have taken good advice: they are in the act of getting what alone they lacked: a very little more, and they also are ready. But the Bridegroom comes; the ready are admitted; "the door is shut," and they are undone. How graphic and appalling this picture of one almost saved--but lost! 11. Afterward came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us--In Mt 7:22 this reiteration of the name was an exclamation rather of surprise; here it is a piteous cry of urgency, bordering on despair. Ah! now at length their eyes are wide open, and they realize all the consequences of their past folly. 12. But he answered and said, Verily I say unto you, I know you not--The attempt to establish a difference between "I know you not" here, and "I never knew you" in Mt 7:23 --as if this were gentler, and so implied a milder fate, reserved for "the foolish" of this parable--is to be resisted, though advocated by such critics as OLSHAUSEN, STIER, and ALFORD. Besides being inconsistent with the general tenor of such language, and particularly the solemn moral of the whole (Mt 25:13), it is a kind of criticism which tampers with some of the most awful warnings regarding the future. If it be asked why unworthy guests were admitted to the marriage of the King's Son, in a former parable, and the foolish virgins are excluded in this one, we may answer, in the admirable words of GERHARD, quoted by TRENCH, that those festivities are celebrated in this life, in the Church militant; these at the last day, in the Church triumphant; to those, even they are admitted who are not adorned with the wedding garment; but to these, only they to whom it is granted to be arrayed in fine linen clean and white, which is the righteousness of saints (Re 19:8); to those, men are called by the trumpet of the Gospel; to these by the trumpet of the Archangel; to those, who enters may go out from them, or be cast out; who is once introduced to these never goes out, nor is cast out, from them any more: wherefore it is said, "The door is shut." 13. Watch therefore; for ye know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son of man cometh--This, the moral or practical lesson of the whole parable, needs no comment. Mt 25:14-30. PARABLE OF THE TALENTS. This parable, while closely resembling it, is yet a different one from that of THE POUNDS, in Lu 19:11-27; though CALVIN, OLSHAUSEN, MEYER, and others identify them--but not DE WETTE and NEANDER. For the difference between the two parables, see the opening remarks on that of The Pounds. While, as TRENCH observes with his usual felicity, "the virgins were represented as waiting for their Lord, we have the servants working for Him; there the inward spiritual life of the faithful was described; here his external activity. It is not, therefore, without good reason that they appear in their actual order--that of the Virgins first, and of the Talents following--since it is the sole condition of a profitable outward activity for the kingdom of God, that the life of God be diligently maintained within the heart."
14. For the kingdom of heaven is as a man--The ellipsis is better
supplied by our translators in the corresponding passage of Mark
(Mr 13:34),
"[For the Son of man is] as a man," &c.,
15. And unto one he gave five talents, to another two, and to
another one--While the proportion of gifts is different in
each, the same fidelity is required of all, and equally
rewarded. And thus there is perfect equity.
16. Then he that had received the five talents went and traded with
the same--expressive of the activity which he put forth and the labor
he bestowed.
17. And likewise he that had received two he also gained other two--each doubling what he received, and therefore both equally faithful. 18. But he that had received one went and digged in the earth, and hid his lord's money--not misspending, but simply making no use of it. Nay, his action seems that of one anxious that the gift should not be misused or lost, but ready to be returned, just as he got it. 19. After a long time the lord of those servants cometh and reckoneth with them--That any one--within the lifetime of the apostles at least--with such words before them, should think that Jesus had given any reason to expect His Second Appearing within that period, would seem strange, did we not know the tendency of enthusiastic, ill-regulated love of His appearing ever to take this turn. 20. Lord, thou deliveredst unto me five talents; behold, I have gained besides them five talents more--How beautifully does this illustrate what the beloved disciple says of "boldness in the day of judgment," and his desire that "when He shall appear we may have confidence, and not be ashamed before Him at His coming!" (1Jo 4:17; 2:28).
21. His lord said unto him, Well done--a single word, not of bare
satisfaction, but of warm and delighted commendation. And from what
Lips!
22. He also that had received two talents came . . . good
and faithful servant: thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will
make thee ruler over many things--Both are commended in the same
terms, and the reward of both is precisely the same. (See on
Mt 25:15).
Observe also the contrasts: "Thou hast been faithful as a
servant; now be a ruler--thou hast been entrusted
with a few things; now have dominion over many
things."
24. Then he which had received the one talent came and said, Lord, I
knew thee that thou art an hard man--harsh. The word in Luke
(Lu 19:21)
is "austere."
25. And I was afraid--of making matters worse by meddling with it at
all.
27. thou oughtest therefore to have put my money to the
exchangers--the bankers.
29. For unto every one that hath shall be given, &c.--See on Mt 13:12.
30. And cast ye--cast ye out.
Mt 25:31-46. THE LAST JUDGMENT. The close connection between this sublime scene--peculiar to Matthew--and the two preceding parables is too obvious to need pointing out.
31. When the Son of man shall come in his glory--His personal glory.
32. And before him shall be gathered all nations--or, "all the
nations." That this should be understood to mean the heathen nations,
or all except believers in Christ, will seem amazing to any simple
reader. Yet this is the exposition of OLSHAUSEN,
STIER,
KEIL,
ALFORD
(though latterly with some diffidence), and of a number, though not
all, of those who hold that Christ will come the second time before the
millennium, and that the saints will be caught up to meet Him in the
air before His appearing. Their chief argument is, the impossibility of
any that ever knew the Lord Jesus wondering, at the Judgment Day, that
they should be thought to have done--or left undone--anything "unto
Christ." To that we shall advert when we come to it. But here we may
just say, that if this scene does not describe a personal, public,
final judgment on men, according to the treatment they have given to
Christ--and consequently men within the Christian pale--we shall have
to consider again whether our Lord's teaching on the greatest themes of
human interest does indeed possess that incomparable simplicity and
transparency of meaning which, by universal consent, has been ascribed
to it. If it be said, But how can this be the general judgment, if only
those within the Christian pale be embraced by it?--we answer, What is
here described, as it certainly does not meet the case of all the
family of Adam, is of course so far not general. But we have no
right to conclude that the whole "judgment of the great day" will be
limited to the point of view here presented. Other explanations will
come up in the course of our exposition.
33. And he shall set the sheep on his right hand--the side of honor
(1Ki 2:19;
Ps 45:9; 110:1,
&c.).
34. Then shall the King--Magnificent title, here for the first and
only time, save in parabolical language, given to Himself by the Lord
Jesus, and that on the eve of His deepest humiliation! It is to intimate
that in then addressing the heirs of the kingdom,
He will put on all His regal majesty.
35. For I was an hungered . . . thirsty . . . a stranger, &c. 36. Naked . . . sick . . . prison, and ye came unto me. 37-39. Then shall the righteous answer him, &c. 40. And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, &c.--Astonishing dialogue this between the King, from the Throne of His glory, and His wondering people! "I was an hungered, and ye gave Me meat," &c.--"Not we," they reply. "We never did that, Lord: We were born out of due time, and enjoyed not the privilege of ministering unto Thee." "But ye did it to these My brethren, now beside you, when cast upon your love." "Truth, Lord, but was that doing it to Thee? Thy name was indeed dear to us, and we thought it a great honor to suffer shame for it. When among the destitute and distressed we discerned any of the household of faith, we will not deny that our hearts leapt within us at the discovery, and when their knock came to our dwelling, 'our bowels were moved,' as though 'our Beloved Himself had put in His hand by the hole of the door.' Sweet was the fellowship we had with them, as if we had 'entertained angels unawares'; all difference between giver and receiver somehow melted away under the beams of that love of Thine which knit us together; nay, rather, as they left us with gratitude for our poor givings, we seemed the debtors--not they. But, Lord, were we all that time in company with Thee? . . . Yes, that scene was all with Me," replies the King--"Me in the disguise of My poor ones. The door shut against Me by others was opened by you--'Ye took Me in.' Apprehended and imprisoned by the enemies of the truth, ye whom the truth had made free sought Me out diligently and found Me; visiting Me in My lonely cell at the risk of your own lives, and cheering My solitude; ye gave Me a coat, for I shivered; and then I felt warm. With cups of cold water ye moistened My parched lips; when famished with hunger ye supplied Me with crusts, and my spirit revived--/YE DID IT UNTO ME.'" What thoughts crowd upon us as we listen to such a description of the scenes of the Last Judgment! And in the light of this view of the heavenly dialogue, how bald and wretched, not to say unscriptural, is that view of it to which we referred at the outset, which makes it a dialogue between Christ and heathens who never heard of His name, and of course never felt any stirrings of His love in their hearts! To us it seems a poor, superficial objection to the Christian view of this scene, that Christians could never be supposed to ask such questions as the "blessed of Christ's Father" are made to ask here. If there were any difficulty in explaining this, the difficulty of the other view is such as to make it, at least, insufferable. But there is no real difficulty. The surprise expressed is not at their being told that they acted from love to Christ, but that Christ Himself was the Personal Object of all their deeds: that they found Him hungry, and supplied Him with food: that they brought water to Him, and slaked His thirst; that seeing Him naked and shivering, they put warm clothing upon Him, paid Him visits when lying in prison for the truth, and sat by His bedside when laid down with sickness. This is the astonishing interpretation which Jesus says "the King" will give to them of their own actions here below. And will any Christian reply, "How could this astonish them? Does not every Christian know that He does these very things, when He does them at all, just as they are here represented?" Nay, rather, is it conceivable that they should not be astonished, and almost doubt their own ears, to hear such an account of their own actions upon earth from the lips of the Judge? And remember, that Judge has come in His glory, and now sits upon the throne of His glory, and all the holy angels are with Him; and that it is from those glorified Lips that the words come forth, "Ye did all this unto ME." Oh, can we imagine such a word addressed to ourselves, and then fancy ourselves replying, "Of course we did--To whom else did we anything? It must be others than we that are addressed, who never knew, in all their good deeds, what they were about?" Rather, can we imagine ourselves not overpowered with astonishment, and scarcely able to credit the testimony borne to us by the King? 41.Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye cursed, &c.--As for you on the left hand, ye did nothing for Me. I came to you also, but ye knew Me not: ye had neither warm affections nor kind deeds to bestow upon Me: I was as one despised in your eyes." "In our eyes, Lord? We never saw Thee before, and never, sure, behaved we so to Thee." "But thus ye treated these little ones that believe in Me and now stand on My right hand. In the disguise of these poor members of Mine I came soliciting your pity, but ye shut up your bowels of compassion from Me: I asked relief, but ye had none to give Me. Take back therefore your own coldness, your own contemptuous distance: Ye bid Me away from your presence, and now I bid you from Mine--Depart from Me, ye cursed!"
46. And these shall go away--these "cursed" ones. Sentence, it should
seem, was first pronounced--in the hearing of the wicked--upon the
righteous, who thereupon sit as assessors in the judgment upon the
wicked
(1Co 6:2);
but sentence is first executed, it should seem, upon the
wicked, in the sight of the righteous--whose glory will thus not
be beheld by the wicked, while their descent into "their own
place" will be witnessed by the righteous, as BENGEL notes.
CHAPTER 26 Mt 26:1-16. CHRIST'S FINAL ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS DEATH, AS NOW WITHIN TWO DAYS, AND THE SIMULTANEOUS CONSPIRACY OF THE JEWISH AUTHORITIES TO COMPASS IT--THE ANOINTING AT BETHANY--JUDAS AGREES WITH THE CHIEF PRIESTS TO BETRAY HIS LORD. ( = Mr 14:1-11; Lu 22:1-6; Joh 12:1-11). For the exposition, see on Mr 14:1-11. Mt 26:17-30. PREPARATION FOR AND LAST CELEBRATION OF THE PASSOVER ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE TRAITOR, AND INSTITUTION OF THE SUPPER. ( = Mr 14:12-26; Lu 22:7-23; Joh 13:1-3, 10, 11, 18-30). For the exposition, see on Lu 22:7-23. Mt 26:31-35. THE DESERTION OF JESUS BY HIS DISCIPLES, AND THE DENIAL OF PETER FORETOLD. ( = Mr 14:27-31; Lu 22:31-38; Joh 13:36-38). For the exposition, see on Lu 22:31-38. Mt 26:36-46. THE AGONY IN THE GARDEN. ( = Mr 14:32-42; Lu 22:39-46). For the exposition, see on Lu 22:39-46. Mt 26:47-56. BETRAYAL AND APPREHENSION OF JESUS--FLIGHT OF HIS DISCIPLES. ( = Mr 14:43-52; Lu 22:47-54; Joh 18:1-12). For the exposition, see on Joh 18:1-12. Mt 26:57-75. JESUS ARRAIGNED BEFORE THE SANHEDRIM CONDEMNED TO DIE, AND SHAMEFULLY ENTREATED--THE DENIAL OF PETER. ( = Mr 14:53-72; Lu 22:54-71; Joh 18:13-18, 24-27). For the exposition, see on Mr 14:53-72. CHAPTER 27 Mt 27:1-10. JESUS LED AWAY TO PILATE--REMORSE AND SUICIDE OF JUDAS. ( = Mr 15:1; Lu 23:1; Joh 18:28). Jesus Led Away to Pilate (Mt 27:1, 2). For the exposition of this portion, see on Joh 18:28, &c. Remorse and Suicide of Judas (Mt 27:3-10). This portion is peculiar to Matthew. On the progress of guilt in the traitor, see on Mr 14:1-11; Joh 13:21-30.
3. Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was
condemned--The condemnation, even though not unexpected, might well
fill him with horror. But perhaps this unhappy man expected, that, while
he got the bribe, the Lord would miraculously escape, as He had once and
again done before, out of His enemies' power: and if so, his remorse
would come upon him with all the greater keenness.
4. Saying, I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent
blood--What a testimony this to Jesus! Judas had been with Him in
all circumstances for three years; his post, as treasurer to Him and
the Twelve
(Joh 12:6),
gave him peculiar opportunity of watching the spirit, disposition, and
habits of his Master; while his covetous nature and thievish practices
would incline him to dark and suspicious, rather than frank and
generous, interpretations of all that He said and did. If, then, he
could have fastened on one questionable feature in all that he had so
long witnessed, we may be sure that no such speech as this would ever
have escaped his lips, nor would he have been so stung with remorse as
not to be able to keep the money and survive his crime.
5. And he cast down the pieces of silver--The sarcastic, diabolical
reply which he had got, in place of the sympathy which perhaps he
expected, would deepen his remorse into an agony.
6. And the chief priests took the silver pieces, and said, It is not
lawful for to put them into the treasury--"the Corban," or
chest containing the money dedicated to sacred purposes (see on
Mt 15:5).
9. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the prophet, saying-- (Zec 11:12, 13). Never was a complicated prophecy, otherwise hopelessly dark, more marvellously fulfilled. Various conjectures have been formed to account for Matthew's ascribing to Jeremiah a prophecy found in the book of Zechariah. But since with this book he was plainly familiar, having quoted one of its most remarkable prophecies of Christ but a few chapters before (Mt 21:4, 5), the question is one more of critical interest than real importance. Perhaps the true explanation is the following, from LIGHTFOOT: "Jeremiah of old had the first place among the prophets, and hereby he comes to be mentioned above all the rest in Mt 16:14; because he stood first in the volume of the prophets (as he proves from the learned DAVID KIMCHI) therefore he is first named. When, therefore, Matthew produceth a text of Zechariah under the name of Jeremy, he only cites the words of the volume of the prophets under his name who stood first in the volume of the prophets. Of which sort is that also of our Saviour (Lu 24:41), 'All things must be fulfilled which are written of Me in the Law, and the Prophets, and the Psalms,' or the Book of Hagiographa, in which the Psalms were placed first." Mt 27:11-26. JESUS AGAIN BEFORE PILATE--HE SEEKS TO RELEASE HIM BUT AT LENGTH DELIVERS HIM TO BE CRUCIFIED. ( = Mr 15:1-15; Lu 23:1-25; Joh 18:28-40). For the exposition, see on Lu 23:1-25; Joh 18:28-40. Mt 27:27-33. JESUS SCORNFULLY AND CRUELLY ENTREATED OF THE SOLDIERS, IS LED AWAY TO BE CRUCIFIED. ( = Mr 15:16-22; Lu 23:26-31; Joh 19:2, 17). For the exposition, see on Mr 15:16-22. Mt 27:34-50. CRUCIFIXION AND DEATH OF THE LORD JESUS. ( = Mr 15:25-37; Lu 23:33-46; Joh 19:18-30). For the exposition, see on Joh 19:18-30. Mt 27:51-66. SIGNS AND CIRCUMSTANCES FOLLOWING THE DEATH OF THE LORD JESUS--HE IS TAKEN DOWN FROM THE CROSS, AND BURIED--THE SEPULCHRE IS GUARDED. ( = Mr 15:38-47; Lu 23:47-56; Joh 19:31-42). The Veil Rent (Mt 27:51). 51. And, behold, the veil of the temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom--This was the thick and gorgeously wrought veil which was hung between the "holy place" and the "holiest of all," shutting out all access to the presence of God as manifested "from above the mercy seat and from between the cherubim"--"the Holy Ghost this signifying, that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest" (Heb 9:8). Into this holiest of all none might enter, not even the high priest, save once a year, on the great day of atonement, and then only with the blood of atonement in his hands, which he sprinkled "upon and before the mercy seat seven times" (Le 16:14) --to signify that access for sinners to a holy God is only through atoning blood. But as they had only the blood of bulls and of goats, which could not take away sins (Heb 10:4), during all the long ages that preceded the death of Christ the thick veil remained; the blood of bulls and of goats continued to be shed and sprinkled; and once a year access to God through an atoning sacrifice was vouchsafed--in a picture, or rather, was dramatically represented, in those symbolical actions--nothing more. But now, the one atoning Sacrifice being provided in the precious blood of Christ, access to this holy God could no longer be denied; and so the moment the Victim expired on the altar, that thick veil which for so many ages had been the dread symbol of separation between God and guilty men was, without a hand touching it, mysteriously "rent in twain from top to bottom"--"the Holy Ghost this signifying, that the way into the holiest of all was NOW made manifest!" How emphatic the statement, from top to bottom; as if to say, Come boldly now to the Throne of Grace; the veil is clean gone; the mercy seat stands open to the gaze of sinners, and the way to it is sprinkled with the blood of Him--"who through the eternal Spirit hath offered Himself without spot to God!" Before, it was death to go in, now it is death to stay out. See more on this glorious subject on Heb 10. 19-22. An Earthquake--The Rocks Rent--The Graves Opened, that the Saints Which Slept in Them Might Come Forth after Their Lord's Resurrection (Mt 27:51-53).
51. and the earth did quake--From what follows it would seem that
this earthquake was local, having for its object the rending of the
rocks and the opening of the graves.
52. And the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which
slept arose--These sleeping saints (see on
1Th 4:14)
were Old Testament believers, who--according to the usual punctuation
in our version--were quickened into resurrection life at the moment of
their Lord's death, but lay in their graves till His resurrection, when
they came forth. But it is far more natural, as we think, and consonant
with other Scriptures, to understand that only the graves were opened,
probably by the earthquake, at our Lord's death, and this only in
preparation for the subsequent exit of those who slept in them, when
the Spirit of life should enter into them from their risen Lord, and
along with Him they should come forth, trophies of His victory over the
grave. Thus, in the opening of the graves at the moment of the
Redeemer's expiring, there was a glorious symbolical proclamation that
the death which had just taken place had "swallowed up death in
victory"; and whereas the saints that slept in them were awakened only
by their risen Lord, to accompany Him out of the tomb, it was fitting
that "the Prince of Life . . . should be the First
that should rise from the dead"
(Ac 26:23;
1Co 15:20, 23;
Col 1:18;
Re 1:5).
The Centurion's Testimony (Mt 27:54).
54. Now when the centurion--the military superintendent of the
execution.
The Galilean Women (Mt 27:55, 56).
55. And many women were there beholding afar off, which followed
Jesus--The sense here would be better brought out by the use of the
pluperfect, "which had followed Jesus."
56. Among which was Mary Magdalene--(See on
Lu 8:2).
The Taking Down from the Cross and the Burial (Mt 27:57-60). For the exposition of this portion, see on Joh 19:38-42. The Women Mark the Sacred Spot that They Might Recognize It on Coming Thither to Anoint the Body (Mt 27:61).
61. And there was Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary--"the mother of
James and Joses," mentioned before
(Mt 27:56).
The Sepulchre Guarded (Mt 27:62-66). 62. Now the next day, that followed the day of the preparation--that is, after six o'clock of our Saturday evening. The crucifixion took place on the Friday and all was not over till shortly before sunset, when the Jewish sabbath commenced; and "that sabbath day was an high day" (Joh 19:31), being the first day of the feast of unleavened bread. That day being over at six on Saturday evening, they hastened to take their measures.
63. Saying, Sir, we remember that that deceiver--Never, remarks
BENGEL,
will you find the heads of the people calling Jesus by His own name. And
yet here there is betrayed a certain uneasiness, which one almost
fancies they only tried to stifle in their own minds, as well as crush
in Pilate's, in case he should have any lurking suspicion that he had
done wrong in yielding to them.
64. Command therefore that the sepulchre be made sure--by a Roman
guard.
65. Pilate said unto them, Ye have a watch--The guards had already
acted under orders of the Sanhedrim, with Pilate's consent; but probably
they were not clear about employing them as a night watch without
Pilate's express authority.
66. So they went, and made the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone--which
Mark
(Mr 16:4)
says was "very great."
CHAPTER 28 Mt 28:1-15. GLORIOUS ANGELIC ANNOUNCEMENT ON THE FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK, THAT CHRIST IS RISEN--HIS APPEARANCE TO THE WOMEN--THE GUARDS BRIBED TO GIVE A FALSE ACCOUNT OF THE RESURRECTION. ( = Mr 16:1-8; Lu 24:1-8; Joh 20:1). The Resurrection Announced to the Women (Mt 28:1-8).
1. In the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn--after the Sabbath,
as it grew toward daylight.
3. His countenance--appearance.
4. And for fear of him the keepers did shake, and became as dead men--Is the sepulchre "sure" now, O ye chief priests? He that sitteth in the heavens doth laugh at you.
5. And the angel answered and said unto the women, Fear not
ye--The "ye" here is emphatic, to contrast their case with that of
the guards. "Let those puny creatures, sent to keep the Living One
among the dead, for fear of Me shake and become as dead men
(Mt 28:4);
but ye that have come hither on another errand, fear not ye."
6. He is not here; for he is risen, as he said--See on
Lu 24:5-7.
7. And go quickly, and tell his disciples--For a precious
addition to this, see on
Mr 16:7.
8. And they departed quickly--Mark
(Mr 16:8)
says "they fled."
Appearance to the Women (Mt 28:9, 10). This appearance is recorded only by Matthew.
9. And as they went to tell his disciples, behold, Jesus met them,
saying, All hail!--the usual salute, but from the lips of Jesus
bearing a higher signification.
10. Then said Jesus unto them, Be not afraid--What dear associations
would these familiar words--now uttered in a higher style, but by the
same Lips--bring rushing back to their recollection!
The Guards Bribed (Mt 28:11-15). The whole of this important portion is peculiar to Matthew.
11. Now when they were going--while the women were on their way to
deliver to His brethren the message of their risen Lord.
12. And when they were assembled with the elders--But Joseph at least
was absent: Gamaliel probably also; and perhaps others.
13. Saying, Say ye, His disciples came by night, and stole him away while we slept--which, as we have observed, was a capital offense for soldiers on guard.
14. And if this come to the governor's ears--rather, "If this come
before the governor"; that is, not in the way of mere report, but for
judicial investigation.
15. So they took the money, and did as they were taught--thus
consenting to brand themselves with infamy.
Mt 28:16-20. JESUS MEETS WITH THE DISCIPLES ON A MOUNTAIN IN GALILEE AND GIVES FORTH THE GREAT COMMISSION.
16. Then the eleven disciples went away into Galilee--but certainly
not before the second week after the resurrection, and probably somewhat
later.
17. And when they saw him, they worshipped him; but some doubted--certainly none of "the Eleven," after what took place at previous interviews in Jerusalem. But if the five hundred were now present, we may well believe this of some of them.
19. Go ye therefore, and teach all nations--rather, "make disciples
of all nations"; for "teaching," in the more usual sense of that word,
comes in afterwards, and is expressed by a different term.
20. Teaching them--This is teaching in the more usual sense of the
term; or instructing the converted and baptized disciples.
First, The MISSIONARY department (Mt 28:18): "Go, make disciples of all nations." In the corresponding passage of Mark (Mr 16:15) it is, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature." The only difference is, that in this passage the sphere, in its world-wide compass and its universality of objects, is more fully and definitely expressed; while in the former the great aim and certain result is delightfully expressed in the command to "make disciples of all nations." "Go, conquer the world for Me; carry the glad tidings into all lands and to every ear, and deem not this work at an end till all nations shall have embraced the Gospel and enrolled themselves My disciples." Now, Was all this meant to be done by the Eleven men nearest to Him of the multitude then crowding around the risen Redeemer? Impossible. Was it to be done even in their lifetime? Surely not. In that little band Jesus virtually addressed Himself to all who, in every age, should take up from them the same work. Before the eyes of the Church's risen Head were spread out, in those Eleven men, all His servants of every age; and one and all of them received His commission at that moment. Well, what next? Set the seal of visible discipleship upon the converts, by "baptizing them into the name," that is, into the whole fulness of the grace "of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost," as belonging to them who believe. (See on 2Co 13:14). This done, the Missionary department of your work, which in its own nature is temporary, must merge in another, which is permanent. This is
Second, The PASTORAL department
(Mt 28:20):
"Teach them"--teach these baptized members of the Church visible--"to
observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you," My apostles,
during the three years ye have been with Me.
Third, The ENCOURAGEMENTS to undertake and go through with this work. These are two; one in the van, the other in the rear of the Commission itself. First Encouragement: "All power in heaven"--the whole power of Heaven's love and wisdom and strength, "and all power in earth"--power over all persons, all passions, all principles, all movements--to bend them to this one high object, the evangelization of the world: All this "is given unto Me." as the risen Lord of all, to be by Me placed at your command--"Go ye therefore." But there remains a Second Encouragement: "And lo! I am with you all the days"--not only to perpetuity, but without one day's interruption, "even to the end of the world," The "Amen" is of doubtful genuineness in this place. If, however, it belongs to the text, it is the Evangelist's own closing word.
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