1534 lines
110 KiB
XML
1534 lines
110 KiB
XML
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<div2 id="Matt.xvi" n="xvi" next="Matt.xvii" prev="Matt.xv" progress="17.37%" title="Chapter XV">
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<h2 id="Matt.xvi-p0.1">M A T T H E W.</h2>
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<h3 id="Matt.xvi-p0.2">CHAP. XV.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Matt.xvi-p1">In this chapter, we have our Lord Jesus, as the
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great Prophet teaching, as the great Physician healing, and as the
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great Shepherd of the sheep feeding; as the Father of spirits
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instructing them; as the Conqueror of Satan dispossessing him; and
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as concerned for the bodies of his people, providing for them. Here
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is, I. Christ's discourse with the scribes and Pharisees about
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human traditions and injunctions, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.1-Matt.15.9" parsed="|Matt|15|1|15|9" passage="Mt 15:1-9">ver. 1-9</scripRef>. II. His discourse with the
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multitude, and with his disciples, concerning the things that
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defile a man, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.10-Matt.15.20" parsed="|Matt|15|10|15|20" passage="Mt 15:10-20">ver.
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10-20</scripRef>. III. His casting of the devil out of the woman of
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Canaan's daughter, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.21-Matt.15.28" parsed="|Matt|15|21|15|28" passage="Mt 15:21-28">ver.
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21-28</scripRef>. IV. His healing of all that were brought to him,
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<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.29-Matt.15.31" parsed="|Matt|15|29|15|31" passage="Mt 15:29-31">ver. 29-31</scripRef>. V. His
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feeding of four thousand men, with seven loaves and a few little
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fishes, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.32-Matt.15.39" parsed="|Matt|15|32|15|39" passage="Mt 15:32-39">ver. 32-39</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Matt.xvi-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15" parsed="|Matt|15|0|0|0" passage="Mt 15" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Matt.xvi-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.1-Matt.15.9" parsed="|Matt|15|1|15|9" passage="Mt 15:1-9" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.15.1-Matt.15.9">
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<h4 id="Matt.xvi-p1.8">Jesus Reproves the Scribes and
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Pharisees.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Matt.xvi-p2">1 Then came to Jesus scribes and Pharisees,
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which were of Jerusalem, saying, 2 Why do thy disciples
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transgress the tradition of the elders? for they wash not their
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hands when they eat bread. 3 But he answered and said unto
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them, Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your
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tradition? 4 For God commanded, saying, Honour thy father
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and mother: and, He that curseth father or mother, let him die the
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death. 5 But ye say, Whosoever shall say to <i>his</i>
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father or <i>his</i> mother, <i>It is</i> a gift, by whatsoever
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thou mightest be profited by me; 6 And honour not his father
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or his mother, <i>he shall be free.</i> Thus have ye made the
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commandment of God of none effect by your tradition. 7
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<i>Ye</i> hypocrites, well did Esaias prophesy of you, saying,
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8 This people draweth nigh unto me with their mouth, and
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honoureth me with <i>their</i> lips; but their heart is far from
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me. 9 But in vain they do worship me, teaching <i>for</i>
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doctrines the commandments of men.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p3">Evil manners, we say, beget good laws. The
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intemperate heat of the Jewish teachers for the support of their
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hierarchy, occasioned many excellent discourses of our Saviour's
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for the settling of the truth, as here.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p4">I. Here, is the cavil of the scribes and
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Pharisees at Christ's disciples, for <i>eating with unwashen
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hands.</i> The scribes and Pharisees were the great men of the
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Jewish church, men whose gain was godliness, great enemies to the
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gospel of Christ, but colouring their opposition with a pretence of
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zeal for the law of Moses, when really nothing was intended but the
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support of their own tyranny over the consciences of men. They were
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men of learning and men of business. These scribes and Pharisees
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here introduced were of Jerusalem, the holy city, the head city,
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whither <i>the tribes went up,</i> and where <i>were set the
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thrones of judgment;</i> they should therefore have been better
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than others, but they were worse. Note, External privileges, if
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they be not duly improved, commonly swell men up the more with
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pride and malignity. Jerusalem, which should have been a pure
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spring, was now become a poisoned sink. <i>How is the faithful city
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become a harlot!</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p5">Now if these great men be the accusers,
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pray what is the accusation? What articles do they exhibit against
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the disciples of Christ? Why, truly, the thing laid to their
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charge, is, nonconformity to the canons of their church (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.2" parsed="|Matt|15|2|0|0" passage="Mt 15:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>); <i>Why do thy disciples
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transgress the tradition of the elders?</i> This charge they make
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good in a particular instance; <i>They wash not their hands when
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they eat bread.</i> A very high misdemeanor! It was a sign that
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Christ's disciples conducted themselves inoffensively, when this
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was the worst thing they could charge them with.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p6">Observe, 1. What was the <i>tradition of
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the elders</i>—That people should often wash their hands, and
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always at meat. This they placed a great deal of religion in,
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supposing that the meat they touched with unwashen hands would be
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defiling to them. The Pharisees practiced this themselves, and with
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a great deal of strictness imposed it upon others, not under civil
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penalties, but as matter of conscience, and making it a sin against
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God if they did not do it. Rabbi Joses determined, "that to eat
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with unwashen hands is as great a sin as adultery." And Rabbi Akiba
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being kept a close prisoner, having water sent him both to wash his
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hands with, and to drink with his meat, the greatest part being
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accidentally shed, he washed his hands with the remainder, though
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he left himself none to drink, saying he would rather die than
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transgress the tradition of the elders. Nay, they would not eat
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meat with one that did not wash before meat. This mighty zeal in so
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small a matter would appear very strange, if we did not still see
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it incident to church-oppressors, not only to be fond of practising
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their own inventions, but to be furious in pressing their own
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impositions.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p7">2. What was the transgression of this
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tradition or injunction by the disciples; it seems, they did not
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wash their hands when they ate bread, which was the more offensive
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to the Pharisees, because they were men who in other things were
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strict and conscientious. The custom was innocent enough, and had a
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decency in its civil use. We read of the water for purifying at the
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marriage where Christ was present (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:John.2.6" parsed="|John|2|6|0|0" passage="Joh 2:6">John
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ii. 6</scripRef>), though Christ turned it into wine, and so put an
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end to that use of it. But when it came to be practised and imposed
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as a religious rite and ceremony, and such a stress laid upon it,
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the disciples, though weak in knowledge, yet were so well taught as
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not to comply with it, or observe it; no not when the scribes and
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Pharisees had their eye upon them. They had already learned St.
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Paul's lesson, <i>All things are lawful for me;</i> no doubt, it is
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lawful to wash before meat; but I will not be brought under the
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power of any; especially not those who <i>said to their souls, Bow
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down, that we may go over.</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.6.12" parsed="|1Cor|6|12|0|0" passage="1Co 6:12">1 Cor.
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vi. 12</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p8">3. What was the complaint of the scribes
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and Pharisees against them. They quarrel with Christ about it,
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supposing that he allowed them in it, as he did, no doubt, by his
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own example; "<i>Why do thy disciples transgress</i> the canons of
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the church? And why dost thou suffer them to do it?" It was well
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that the complaint was made to Christ; for the disciples
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themselves, though they knew their duty in this case, were perhaps
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not so well able to give a reason for what they did as were to be
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wished.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p9">II. Here is Christ's answer to this cavil,
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and his justification of the disciples in that which was charged
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upon them as a transgression. Note, While we stand fast in the
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liberty wherewith Christ has made us free, he will be sure to bear
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us out in it.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p10">Two ways Christ replies upon them;</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p11">1. By way of recrimination, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.3-Matt.15.6" parsed="|Matt|15|3|15|6" passage="Mt 15:3-6"><i>v.</i> 3-6</scripRef>. They were spying
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motes in the eyes of his disciples, but Christ shows them a beam in
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their own. But that which he charges upon them is not barely a
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recrimination, for it will be no vindication of ourselves to
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condemn our reprovers; but it is such a censure of their tradition
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(and the authority of that was what they built their charge upon)
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as makes not only a non-compliance lawful, but an opposition a
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duty. That human authority must never be submitted to, which sets
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up in competition with divine authority.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p12">(1.) The charge in general is, <i>You
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transgress the commandment of God by your tradition.</i> They
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called it the <i>tradition of the elders,</i> laying stress upon
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the antiquity of the usage, and the authority of them that imposed
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it, as the church of Rome does upon fathers and councils; but
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Christ calls it <i>their</i> tradition. Note, Illegal impositions
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will be laid to the charge of those who support and maintain them,
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and keep them up, as well of those who first invented and enjoined
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them; <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Mic.4.16" parsed="|Mic|4|16|0|0" passage="Mic 4:16">Mic. iv. 16</scripRef>. <i>You
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transgress the commandment of God.</i> Note, Those who are most
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zealous of their own impositions, are commonly most careless of
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God's commands; which is a good reason why Christ's disciples
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should stand upon their guard against such impositions, lest,
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though at first they seem only to infringe the liberty of
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Christians, they come at length to confront the authority of
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Christ. Though the Pharisees, in this command of washing before
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meat, did not entrench upon any command of God; yet, because in
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other instances they did, he justifies his disciples' disobedience
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to this.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p13">(2.) The proof of this charge is in
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particular instance, that of their transgressing the fifth
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commandment.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p14">[1.] Let us see what the command of God is
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(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.4" parsed="|Matt|15|4|0|0" passage="Mt 15:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>), what the
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precept, and what the sanction of the law is.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p15">The precept is, <i>Honour thy father and
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thy mother;</i> this is enjoined by the common Father of mankind,
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and by paying respect to them whom Providence has made the
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instruments of our being, we give honour to him who is the Author
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of it, who has thereby, as to us, put some of his image upon them.
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The whole of children's duty to their parents is included in this
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of honouring them, which is the spring and foundation of all the
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rest, <i>If I be a father, where is my honour?</i> Our Saviour here
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supposes it to mean the duty of children's maintaining their
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parents, and ministering to their wants, if there be occasion, and
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being every way serviceable to their comfort. <i>Honour widows,</i>
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that is, maintain them, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.5.3" parsed="|1Tim|5|3|0|0" passage="1Ti 5:3">1 Tim. v.
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3</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p16">The sanction of this law in the fifth
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commandment, is, a promise, <i>that thy days may be long;</i> but
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our Saviour waives that, lest any should thence infer it to be only
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a thing commendable and profitable, and insists upon the penalty
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annexed to the breach of this commandment in another scripture,
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which denotes the duty to be highly and indispensably necessary;
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<i>He that curseth father or mother, let him die the death:</i>
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this law we have, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.21.17" parsed="|Exod|21|17|0|0" passage="Ex 21:17">Exod. xxi.
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17</scripRef>. The sin of cursing parents is here opposed to the
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duty of honouring them. Those who speak ill of their parents, or
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wish ill to them, who mock at them, or give them taunting and
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opprobrious language, break this law. If to call a brother
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<i>Raca</i> be so penal, what is it to call a father so? By our
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Saviour's application of this law, it appears, that denying service
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or relief to parents is included in cursing them. Though the
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language be respectful enough, and nothing abusive in it, yet what
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will that avail, if the deeds be not agreeable? it is but like him
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that said, <i>I go, Sir, and went not,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.21.30" parsed="|Matt|21|30|0|0" passage="Mt 21:30"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 30</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p17">[2.] Let us see what was the contradiction
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which the tradition of the elders gave to this command. It was not
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direct and downright, but implicit; their casuists gave them such
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rules as furnished them with an easy evasion from the obligation of
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this command, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.5-Matt.15.6" parsed="|Matt|15|5|15|6" passage="Mt 15:5,6"><i>v.</i> 5,
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6</scripRef>. You hear what God saith, <i>but ye say</i> so and so.
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Note, That which men say, even great men, and learned men, and men
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in authority, must be examined by that which God saith; and if it
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be found either contrary or inconsistent, it may and must be
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rejected, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.19" parsed="|Acts|4|19|0|0" passage="Ac 4:19">Acts iv. 19</scripRef>.
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Observe,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p18"><i>First,</i> What their tradition was;
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That a man could not in any case bestow his worldly estate better
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than to give it to the priests, and devote it to the service of the
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temple: and that when any thing was so devoted, it was not only
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unlawful to alienate it, but all other obligations, though ever so
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just and sacred, were thereby superseded, and a man was thereby
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discharged from them. And this proceeded partly from their
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ceremoniousness, and the superstitious regard they had to the
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temple, and partly from their covetousness, and love of money: for
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what was given to the temple they were gainers by. The former was,
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in pretence, the latter was, in truth, at the bottom of this
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tradition.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p19"><i>Secondly,</i> How they allowed the
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application of this to the case of children. When their parents'
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necessities called for their assistance, they pleaded, that all
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they could spare from themselves and their children, they had
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devoted to the treasury of the temple; <i>It is a gift, by
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whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me,</i> and therefore their
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parents must expect nothing from them; suggesting withal, that the
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spiritual advantage of what was so devoted, would redound to the
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parents, who must live upon that air. This, they taught, was a good
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and valid plea, and many undutiful, unnatural children made use of
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it, and they justified them in it, and said, <i>He shall be
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free;</i> so we supply the sense. Some go further, and supply it
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thus, "<i>He doth well, his days shall be long in the land,</i> and
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he shall be looked upon as having duly observed the fifth
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commandment." The pretence of religion would make his refusal to
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provide for his parents not only passable but plausible. But the
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absurdity and impiety of this tradition were very evident: for
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revealed religion was intended to improve, not to overthrow,
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natural religion; one of the fundamental laws of which is this of
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honouring our parents; and had they known what that meant, <i>I
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will have justice, and mercy, and not sacrifice,</i> they had not
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thus made the most arbitrary rituals destructive of the most
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necessary morals. This was <i>making the command of God of no
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effect.</i> Note, Whatever leads to, or countenances, disobedience,
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does, in effect, make void the command; and they that take upon
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them to dispense with God's law, do, in Christ's account, repeal
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and disannul it. To break the law is bad, but to <i>teach men
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so,</i> as the scribes and Pharisees did, is much worse, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.19" parsed="|Matt|5|19|0|0" passage="Mt 5:19"><i>ch.</i> v. 19</scripRef>. To what purpose is
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the command given, if it be not obeyed? The rule is, as to us, of
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none effect, if we be not ruled by it. <i>It is time for thee,
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Lord, to work;</i> high time for the great Reformer, the great
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Refiner, to appear; for they have <i>made void thy law</i>
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(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.119.126" parsed="|Ps|119|126|0|0" passage="Ps 119:126">Ps. cxix. 126</scripRef>); not only
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sinned <i>against</i> the commandment, but, as far as in them lay,
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sinned <i>away</i> the commandment. But, thanks be to God, in spite
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of them and all their traditions, the command stands in full force,
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power, and virtue.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p20">2. The other part of Christ's answer is by
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way of reprehension; and that which he here charges them with, is
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|
hypocrisy; <i>Ye hypocrites,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.7" parsed="|Matt|15|7|0|0" passage="Mt 15:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. Note, It is the prerogative of
|
|||
|
him who searcheth the heart, and knows what is in man, to pronounce
|
|||
|
who are hypocrites. The eye of man can perceive open profaneness,
|
|||
|
but it is only the eye of Christ that can discern hypocrisy,
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.16.15" parsed="|Luke|16|15|0|0" passage="Lu 16:15">Luke xvi. 15</scripRef>. And as it is
|
|||
|
a sin which his eye discovers, so it is a sin which of all others
|
|||
|
his soul hates.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p21">Now Christ fetches his reproof from
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.29.13" parsed="|Isa|29|13|0|0" passage="Isa 29:13">Isa. xxix. 13</scripRef>. <i>Well did
|
|||
|
Esaias prophesy of you.</i> Isaiah spoke it of the men of that
|
|||
|
generation to which he prophesied, yet Christ applies it to these
|
|||
|
scribes and Pharisees. Note, The reproofs of sin and sinners, which
|
|||
|
we find in scripture, were designed to reach the like persons and
|
|||
|
practices to the end of the world; for they are not of private
|
|||
|
interpretation, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.1.20" parsed="|2Pet|1|20|0|0" passage="2Pe 1:20">2 Pet. i.
|
|||
|
20</scripRef>. The sinners of the latter days are prophesied of,
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p21.3" passage="1Ti 4:1,2Ti 3:1,2,3:3">1 Tim. iv. 1; 2 Tim. iii.
|
|||
|
1; 2 Pet. iii. 3</scripRef>. Threatenings directed against others,
|
|||
|
belong to us, if we be guilty of the same sins. Isaiah prophesied
|
|||
|
not of them only, but of all other hypocrites, against whom that
|
|||
|
word of his is still levelled, and stands in force. The prophecies
|
|||
|
of scripture are every day in the fulfilling.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p22">This prophecy exactly deciphers a
|
|||
|
hypocritical nation, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.9.17 Bible:Isa.10.6" parsed="|Isa|9|17|0|0;|Isa|10|6|0|0" passage="Isa 9:17,10:6">Isa. ix. 17;
|
|||
|
x. 6</scripRef>. Here is,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p23">(1.) The description of hypocrites, in two
|
|||
|
things.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p24">[1.] In their own performances of religious
|
|||
|
worship, v. 8, when they <i>draw nigh to God with their mouth, and
|
|||
|
honour him with their lips, their heart is far from him.</i>
|
|||
|
Observe,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p25"><i>First,</i> How far a hypocrite goes; he
|
|||
|
draws nigh to God, and honours him; he is, in profession, a
|
|||
|
worshipper of God. The <i>Pharisee went up to the temple, to
|
|||
|
pray;</i> he does not stand at that distance which those are at,
|
|||
|
who <i>live without God in the world,</i> but has a name among the
|
|||
|
people near unto him. They honour him; that is, they take on them
|
|||
|
to honour God, they join with those that do so. Some honour God has
|
|||
|
even from the services of hypocrites, as they help to keep up the
|
|||
|
face and form of godliness in the world, whence God fetches honour
|
|||
|
to himself, though they intend it not to him. When God's enemies
|
|||
|
submit themselves but feignedly, when <i>they lie unto him,</i> so
|
|||
|
the word is (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.66.3" parsed="|Ps|66|3|0|0" passage="Ps 66:3">Ps. lxvi. 3</scripRef>),
|
|||
|
it redounds to his honour, and he <i>gets himself a name.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p26"><i>Secondly,</i> Where he rests and takes
|
|||
|
up; this is done but with his mouth and with his lips. It is piety
|
|||
|
but from the teeth outwards; he shows much love, and that is all,
|
|||
|
there is in his heart no true love; <i>they make their voices to be
|
|||
|
heard</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.58.4" parsed="|Isa|58|4|0|0" passage="Isa 58:4">Isa. lviii. 4</scripRef>),
|
|||
|
mention the name of the Lord, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.48.1" parsed="|Isa|48|1|0|0" passage="Isa 48:1">Isa.
|
|||
|
xlviii. 1</scripRef>. Hypocrites are those that only make a
|
|||
|
lip-labour of religion and religious worship. In word and tongue,
|
|||
|
the worst hypocrites may do as well as the best saints, and speak
|
|||
|
as fair with Jacob's voice.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p27"><i>Thirdly,</i> What that is wherein he
|
|||
|
comes short; it is in the main matter; <i>Their heart is far from
|
|||
|
me,</i> habitually alienated and estranged (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Eph.4.18" parsed="|Eph|4|18|0|0" passage="Eph 4:18">Eph. iv. 18</scripRef>), actually wandering and dwelling
|
|||
|
upon something else; no serious thoughts of God, no pious
|
|||
|
affections toward him, no concern about the soul and eternity, no
|
|||
|
thoughts agreeable to the service. God is <i>near in their mouth,
|
|||
|
but far from their reins,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.12.2 Bible:Ezek.33.31" parsed="|Jer|12|2|0|0;|Ezek|33|31|0|0" passage="Jer 12:2,Eze 33:31">Jer. xii. 2; Ezek. xxxiii. 31</scripRef>. The
|
|||
|
heart, with the <i>fool's eyes, is in the ends of the earth.</i> It
|
|||
|
is a silly dove that is without a heart, and so it is a <i>silly
|
|||
|
duty,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:Hos.7.11" parsed="|Hos|7|11|0|0" passage="Ho 7:11">Hos. vii. 11</scripRef>. A
|
|||
|
hypocrite says one thing, but thinks another. The great thing that
|
|||
|
God looks at and requires is the heart (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p27.4" osisRef="Bible:Prov.23.26" parsed="|Prov|23|26|0|0" passage="Pr 23:26">Prov. xxiii. 26</scripRef>); if that be far from him, it
|
|||
|
is not a reasonable service and therefore not an acceptable one; it
|
|||
|
is the sacrifice of fools, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p27.5" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.5.1" parsed="|Eccl|5|1|0|0" passage="Ec 5:1">Eccl. v.
|
|||
|
1</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p28">[2.] In their prescriptions to others. This
|
|||
|
is an instance of their hypocrisy, that <i>they teach for doctrines
|
|||
|
the commandments of men.</i> The Jews then, as the papists since,
|
|||
|
paid the same respect to oral tradition that they did to the word
|
|||
|
of God, receiving it <i>pari pietatis affectu ac reverentiâ—with
|
|||
|
the same pious affection and reverence.</i> Conc. Trident.
|
|||
|
<i>Sess.</i> 4. <i>Decr.</i> 1. When men's inventions are tacked to
|
|||
|
God's institutions, and imposed accordingly, this is hypocrisy, a
|
|||
|
mere human religion. The commandments of men are properly
|
|||
|
conversant about the things of men, but God will have his own work
|
|||
|
done by his own rules, and accepts not that which he did not
|
|||
|
himself appoint. That only cones <i>to</i> him, that comes
|
|||
|
<i>from</i> him.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p29">(2.) The doom of hypocrites; it is put in a
|
|||
|
little compass; <i>In vain do they worship me.</i> Their worship
|
|||
|
does not attain the end for which it was appointed; it will neither
|
|||
|
please God, nor profit themselves. If it be not <i>in spirit,</i>
|
|||
|
it is not <i>in truth,</i> and so it is all nothing. That man who
|
|||
|
only <i>seems</i> to be religious, but is not so, his <i>religion
|
|||
|
is vain</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.26" parsed="|Jas|1|26|0|0" passage="Jam 1:26">James i. 26</scripRef>);
|
|||
|
and if our religion be a vain oblation, a vain religion, <i>how
|
|||
|
great is that vanity!</i> How sad is it to live in an age of
|
|||
|
prayers and sermons, and sabbaths and sacraments, <i>in vain,</i>
|
|||
|
to <i>beat the air in</i> all these; it is so, if the heart be not
|
|||
|
with God in them. Lip-labour is lost labour, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.1.11" parsed="|Isa|1|11|0|0" passage="Isa 1:11">Isa. i. 11</scripRef>. Hypocrites sow the wind and reap
|
|||
|
the whirlwind; they trust in vanity, and vanity will be their
|
|||
|
recompence.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p30">Thus Christ justified his disciples in
|
|||
|
their disobedience to the traditions of the elders; and this the
|
|||
|
scribes and Pharisees got by their cavilling. We read not of any
|
|||
|
reply they made; if they were not satisfied, yet they were
|
|||
|
silenced, and could not resist the power wherewith Christ
|
|||
|
spake.</p>
|
|||
|
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xvi-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.10-Matt.15.20" parsed="|Matt|15|10|15|20" passage="Mt 15:10-20" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.15.10-Matt.15.20">
|
|||
|
<h4 id="Matt.xvi-p30.2">What Defileth a Man.</h4>
|
|||
|
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xvi-p31">10 And he called the multitude, and said unto
|
|||
|
them, Hear, and understand: 11 Not that which goeth into the
|
|||
|
mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this
|
|||
|
defileth a man. 12 Then came his disciples, and said unto
|
|||
|
him, Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended, after they
|
|||
|
heard this saying? 13 But he answered and said, Every plant,
|
|||
|
which my heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up.
|
|||
|
14 Let them alone: they be blind leaders of the blind. And
|
|||
|
if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch.
|
|||
|
15 Then answered Peter and said unto him, Declare unto us this
|
|||
|
parable. 16 And Jesus said, Are ye also yet without
|
|||
|
understanding? 17 Do not ye yet understand, that whatsoever
|
|||
|
entereth in at the mouth goeth into the belly, and is cast out into
|
|||
|
the draught? 18 But those things which proceed out of the
|
|||
|
mouth come forth from the heart; and they defile the man. 19
|
|||
|
For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries,
|
|||
|
fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies: 20 These
|
|||
|
are <i>the things</i> which defile a man: but to eat with unwashen
|
|||
|
hands defileth not a man.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p32">Christ having proved that the disciples, in
|
|||
|
eating with unwashen hands, were not to be blamed, as transgressing
|
|||
|
the traditions and injunctions of the elders, comes here to show
|
|||
|
that they were not to be blamed, as having done any thing that was
|
|||
|
in itself evil. In the former part of his discourse he overturned
|
|||
|
the authority of the law, and in this the reason of it.
|
|||
|
Observe,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p33">I. The solemn introduction to this
|
|||
|
discourse (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.10" parsed="|Matt|15|10|0|0" passage="Mt 15:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>);
|
|||
|
<i>He called the multitude.</i> They were withdrawn while Christ
|
|||
|
discoursed with the scribes and Pharisees; probably those proud men
|
|||
|
ordered them to withdraw, as not willing to talk with Christ in
|
|||
|
their hearing; Christ must favour them at their pleasure with a
|
|||
|
discourse in private. But Christ had a regard to the multitude; he
|
|||
|
soon despatched the scribes and Pharisees, and then turned them
|
|||
|
off, invited the mob, the multitude, to be his hearers: thus the
|
|||
|
poor are evangelized; and the foolish things of the world, and
|
|||
|
things that are despised hath Christ chosen. The humble Jesus
|
|||
|
embraced those whom the proud Pharisees looked upon with disdain,
|
|||
|
and to them he designed it for a mortification. He turns from them
|
|||
|
as wilful and unteachable, and turns to the multitude, who, though
|
|||
|
weak, were humble, and willing to be taught. To them he said,
|
|||
|
<i>Hear and understand.</i> Note, What we hear from the mouth of
|
|||
|
Christ, we must give all diligence to understand. Not only
|
|||
|
scholars, but even the multitude, the ordinary people, must apply
|
|||
|
their minds to understand the words of Christ. He <i>therefore</i>
|
|||
|
calls upon them to understand, because the lesson he was now about
|
|||
|
to teach them, was contrary to the notions which they had sucked in
|
|||
|
with their milk from their teachers; and overturned many of the
|
|||
|
customs and usages which they were wedded to, and laid stress upon.
|
|||
|
Note, There is need of a great attention of mind and clearness of
|
|||
|
understanding to free men from those corrupt principles and
|
|||
|
practices which they have been bred up in and long accustomed to;
|
|||
|
for in that case the understanding is commonly bribed and biassed
|
|||
|
by prejudice.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p34">II. The truth itself laid down (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.11" parsed="|Matt|15|11|0|0" passage="Mt 15:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>), in two propositions,
|
|||
|
which were opposite to the vulgar errors of that time, and were
|
|||
|
therefore surprising.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p35">1. <i>Not that which goes into the mouth
|
|||
|
defileth the man.</i> It is not the kind or quality of our food,
|
|||
|
nor the condition of our hands, that affects the soul with any
|
|||
|
moral pollution or defilement. <i>The kingdom of God is not meat
|
|||
|
and drink,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p35.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.14.17" parsed="|Rom|14|17|0|0" passage="Ro 14:17">Rom. xiv.
|
|||
|
17</scripRef>. That defiles the man, by which guilt is contracted
|
|||
|
before God, and the man is rendered offensive to him, and disfitted
|
|||
|
for communion with him; now what we eat, if we do not eat
|
|||
|
unreasonably and immoderately, does not this; for <i>to the pure
|
|||
|
all things are pure,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p35.2" osisRef="Bible:Titus.1.15" parsed="|Titus|1|15|0|0" passage="Tit 1:15">Tit. i.
|
|||
|
15</scripRef>. The Pharisees carried the ceremonial pollutions, by
|
|||
|
eating such and such meats, much further than the law intended, and
|
|||
|
burdened it with additions of their own, which our Saviour
|
|||
|
witnesses against; intending hereby to pave the way to a repeal of
|
|||
|
the ceremonial law in that matter. He was now beginning to teach
|
|||
|
his followers to <i>call nothing common or unclean;</i> and if
|
|||
|
Peter, when he was bid to <i>kill and eat,</i> had remembered this
|
|||
|
word, he would not have said, <i>Not so, Lord,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p35.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.10.13-Acts.10.15 Bible:Acts.10.28" parsed="|Acts|10|13|10|15;|Acts|10|28|0|0" passage="Ac 10:13-15,28">Acts x. 13-15, 28</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p36">2. <i>But that which comes out of the
|
|||
|
mouth, this defiles a man.</i> We are polluted, not by the meat we
|
|||
|
eat with unwashen hands, but by the words we speak from an
|
|||
|
unsanctified heart; thus it is that <i>the mouth causeth the flesh
|
|||
|
to sin,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.5.6" parsed="|Eccl|5|6|0|0" passage="Ec 5:6">Eccl. v. 6</scripRef>.
|
|||
|
Christ, in a former discourse, had laid a great stress upon our
|
|||
|
<i>words</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p36.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.36-Matt.12.37" parsed="|Matt|12|36|12|37" passage="Mt 12:36,37"><i>ch.</i> xii. 36,
|
|||
|
37</scripRef>); and that was intended for reproof and warning to
|
|||
|
those that cavilled at him; this here is intended for reproof and
|
|||
|
warning to those that cavilled at the disciples, and censured them.
|
|||
|
It is not the disciples that defile themselves with what they eat,
|
|||
|
but the Pharisees that defile themselves with what they speak
|
|||
|
spitefully and censoriously of them. Note, Those who charge guilt
|
|||
|
upon others for transgressing the commandments of men, many times
|
|||
|
bring greater guilt upon themselves, by transgressing the law of
|
|||
|
God against rash judging. Those most defile themselves, who are
|
|||
|
most forward to censure the defilements of others.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p37">III. The offence that was taken at this
|
|||
|
truth and the account brought to Christ of that offence (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.12" parsed="|Matt|15|12|0|0" passage="Mt 15:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>); "<i>The disciples said
|
|||
|
unto him, Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended,</i> and
|
|||
|
didst thou not foresee that they would be so, <i>at this
|
|||
|
saying,</i> and would think the worse of thee and of thy doctrine
|
|||
|
for it, and be the more enraged at thee?"</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p38">1. It was not strange that the Pharisees
|
|||
|
should be offended at this plain truth, for they were men made up
|
|||
|
of error and enmity, mistakes and malice. Sore eyes cannot bear
|
|||
|
clear light; and nothing is more provoking to proud imposers than
|
|||
|
the undeceiving of those whom they have first blindfolded, and then
|
|||
|
enslaved. It should seem that the Pharisees, who were strict
|
|||
|
observers of the traditions, were more offended than the scribes,
|
|||
|
who were the teachers of them; and perhaps they were as much galled
|
|||
|
with the latter part of Christ's doctrine, which taught a
|
|||
|
strictness in the government of our tongue, as with the former
|
|||
|
part, which taught an indifference about washing our hands; great
|
|||
|
contenders for the formalities of religion, being commonly as great
|
|||
|
contemners of the substantials of it.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p39">2. The disciples thought it strange that
|
|||
|
their Master should say that which he knew would give so much
|
|||
|
offence; he did not use to do so: surely, they think, if he had
|
|||
|
considered how provoking it would be, he would not have said it.
|
|||
|
But he knew what he said, and to whom he said it, and what would be
|
|||
|
the effect of it; and would teach us, that though in indifferent
|
|||
|
things we must be tender of giving offence, yet we must not, for
|
|||
|
fear of that, evade any truth or duty. Truth must be owned, and
|
|||
|
duty done; and if any be offended, it is his own fault; it is
|
|||
|
scandal, not given, but taken.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p40">Perhaps the disciples themselves stumbled
|
|||
|
at the word Christ said, which they thought bold, and scarcely
|
|||
|
reconcileable with the difference that was put by the law of God
|
|||
|
between <i>clean</i> and <i>unclean</i> meats; and therefore
|
|||
|
objected this to Christ, that they might themselves be better
|
|||
|
informed. They seem likewise to have a concern upon them for the
|
|||
|
Pharisees, though they had quarrelled with them; which teaches us
|
|||
|
to forgive, and seek the good, especially the spiritual good, of
|
|||
|
our enemies, persecutors, and slanderers. They would not have the
|
|||
|
Pharisees go away displeased at any thing Christ had said; and
|
|||
|
therefore, though they do not desire him to retract it, they hope
|
|||
|
he will explain, correct, and modify it. Weak hearers are sometimes
|
|||
|
more solicitous than they should be not to have wicked hearers
|
|||
|
offended. But if we please men with the concealment of truth, and
|
|||
|
the indulgence of their errors and corruptions, we are not the
|
|||
|
servants of Christ.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p41">IV. The doom passed upon the Pharisees and
|
|||
|
their corrupt traditions; which comes in as a reason why Christ
|
|||
|
cared not though he offended them, and therefore why the disciples
|
|||
|
should not care; because they were a generation of men that hated
|
|||
|
to be reformed, and were marked out for destruction. Two things
|
|||
|
Christ here foretels concerning them.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p42">1. The rooting out of them and their
|
|||
|
traditions (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.13" parsed="|Matt|15|13|0|0" passage="Mt 15:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>);
|
|||
|
<i>Every plant which my heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be
|
|||
|
rooted up.</i> Not only the corrupt opinions and superstitious
|
|||
|
practices of the Pharisees, but their sect, and way, and
|
|||
|
constitution, were plants not of God's planting. The rules of their
|
|||
|
profession were no institutions of his, but owed their origin to
|
|||
|
pride and formality. The people of the Jews were planted <i>a noble
|
|||
|
vine;</i> but now that they are become the degenerate plant of a
|
|||
|
strange vine, God disowned them, as not of his planting. Note, (1.)
|
|||
|
In the visible church, it is no strange thing to find plants that
|
|||
|
our heavenly Father has not planted. It is implied, that whatever
|
|||
|
is good in the church is of God's planting, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p42.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.41.19" parsed="|Isa|41|19|0|0" passage="Isa 41:19">Isa. xli. 19</scripRef>. But let the husbandman be ever
|
|||
|
so careful, his ground will cast forth weeds of itself, more or
|
|||
|
less, and there is an enemy busy sowing tares. What is corrupt,
|
|||
|
though of God's permitting, is not of his planting; he sows nothing
|
|||
|
but <i>good seed in his field.</i> Let us not therefore be
|
|||
|
deceived, as if all must needs be right that we find in the church,
|
|||
|
and all those persons and things our Father's plants that we find
|
|||
|
in our Father's garden. <i>Believe not every spirit, but try the
|
|||
|
spirits;</i> see <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p42.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.19.5 Bible:Jer.23.31-Jer.23.32" parsed="|Jer|19|5|0|0;|Jer|23|31|23|32" passage="Jer 19:5,23:31,32">Jer. xix. 5;
|
|||
|
xxiii. 31, 32</scripRef>. (2.) Those that are of the spirit of the
|
|||
|
Pharisees, proud, formal, and imposing, what figure soever they
|
|||
|
make, and of what denomination soever they be, God will not own
|
|||
|
them as of his planting. <i>By their fruit you shall know them.</i>
|
|||
|
(3.) Those plants that are not of God's planting, shall not be of
|
|||
|
his protecting, but shall undoubtedly be rooted up. What is not of
|
|||
|
God shall not stand, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p42.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.5.38" parsed="|Acts|5|38|0|0" passage="Ac 5:38">Acts v.
|
|||
|
38</scripRef>. What things are unscriptural, will wither and die of
|
|||
|
themselves, or be justly exploded by the churches; however in the
|
|||
|
great day these tares that offend will be bundled for the fire.
|
|||
|
What is become of the Pharisees and their traditions? They are long
|
|||
|
since abandoned; but the gospel of truth is great, and will remain.
|
|||
|
It cannot be rooted up.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p43">2. The ruin of them; and their followers,
|
|||
|
who had their persons and principles in admiration, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p43.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.14" parsed="|Matt|15|14|0|0" passage="Mt 15:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>. Where,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p44">(1.) Christ bids his disciples <i>let them
|
|||
|
alone.</i> "Have no converse with them or concern for them; neither
|
|||
|
court their favour, nor dread their displeasure; care not though
|
|||
|
they be offended, they will take their course, and let them take
|
|||
|
the issue of it. They are wedded to their own fancies, and will
|
|||
|
have every thing their own way; let them alone. Seek not to please
|
|||
|
a generation of men that please not God (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:1Thess.2.15" parsed="|1Thess|2|15|0|0" passage="1Th 2:15">1 Thess. ii. 15</scripRef>), and will be pleased with
|
|||
|
nothing less than absolute dominion over your consciences. They are
|
|||
|
<i>joined to idols,</i> as Ephraim (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p44.2" osisRef="Bible:Hos.4.17" parsed="|Hos|4|17|0|0" passage="Ho 4:17">Hos. iv. 17</scripRef>), the idols of their own fancy;
|
|||
|
<i>let them alone, let them be filthy still,</i>" <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p44.3" osisRef="Bible:Rev.22.11" parsed="|Rev|22|11|0|0" passage="Re 22:11">Rev. xxii. 11</scripRef>. The case of those
|
|||
|
sinners is sad indeed, whom Christ orders his ministers to let
|
|||
|
alone.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p45">(2.) He gives them two reasons for it.
|
|||
|
<i>Let them alone;</i> for,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p46">[1.] They are proud and ignorant; two bad
|
|||
|
qualities that often meet, and render a man incurable in his folly,
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.26.12" parsed="|Prov|26|12|0|0" passage="Pr 26:12">Prov. xxvi. 12</scripRef>. <i>They are
|
|||
|
blind leaders of the blind.</i> They are grossly ignorant in the
|
|||
|
things of God, and strangers to the spiritual nature of the divine
|
|||
|
law; and yet so proud, that they think they see better and further
|
|||
|
than any, and therefore undertake to be leaders of others, to show
|
|||
|
others the way to heaven, when they themselves know not one step of
|
|||
|
the way; and, accordingly, they prescribe to all, and proscribe
|
|||
|
those who will not follow them. Though they were blind, if they had
|
|||
|
owned it, and come to Christ for eye-salve, they might have seen,
|
|||
|
but they disdained the intimation of such a thing (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p46.2" osisRef="Bible:John.9.40" parsed="|John|9|40|0|0" passage="Joh 9:40">John ix. 40</scripRef>); <i>Are we blind
|
|||
|
also?</i> They were confident that <i>they themselves were guides
|
|||
|
of the blind</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p46.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.2.19-Rom.2.20" parsed="|Rom|2|19|2|20" passage="Ro 2:19,20">Rom. ii. 19,
|
|||
|
20</scripRef>), were appointed to be so, and fit to be so; that
|
|||
|
every thing they said was an oracle and a law; "Therefore <i>let
|
|||
|
them alone,</i> their case is desperate; do not meddle with them;
|
|||
|
you may soon provoke them, but never convince them." How miserable
|
|||
|
was the case of the Jewish Church now when their leaders were
|
|||
|
blind, so self-conceitedly foolish, as to be peremptory in their
|
|||
|
conduct, while the people were so sottishly foolish as to follow
|
|||
|
them with an implicit faith and obedience, and <i>willingly walk
|
|||
|
after the commandment,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p46.4" osisRef="Bible:Hos.5.11" parsed="|Hos|5|11|0|0" passage="Ho 5:11">Hos. v.
|
|||
|
11</scripRef>. Now the prophecy was fulfilled, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p46.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.29.10 Bible:Isa.29.14" parsed="|Isa|29|10|0|0;|Isa|29|14|0|0" passage="Isa 29:10,14">Isa. xxix. 10, 14</scripRef>. And it is easy to
|
|||
|
imagine <i>what will be in the end hereof,</i> when <i>the prophets
|
|||
|
prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule by their means, and the
|
|||
|
people love to have it so,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p46.6" osisRef="Bible:Jer.5.31" parsed="|Jer|5|31|0|0" passage="Jer 5:31">Jer. v.
|
|||
|
31</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p47">[2.] They are posting to destruction, and
|
|||
|
will shortly be plunged into it; <i>Both shall fall into the
|
|||
|
ditch.</i> This must needs be the end of it, if both be so blind,
|
|||
|
and yet both so bold, venturing forward, and yet not aware of
|
|||
|
danger. Both will be involved in the general desolation coming upon
|
|||
|
the Jews, and both drowned in eternal destruction and perdition.
|
|||
|
The blind leaders and the blind followers will perish together. We
|
|||
|
find (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.22.15" parsed="|Rev|22|15|0|0" passage="Re 22:15">Rev. xxii. 15</scripRef>), that
|
|||
|
hell is the portion of those that <i>make a lie,</i> and of those
|
|||
|
that <i>love</i> it when it is made. <i>The deceived and the
|
|||
|
deceiver</i> are obnoxious to the judgment of God, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.12.16" parsed="|Job|12|16|0|0" passage="Job 12:16">Job xii. 16</scripRef>. Note, <i>First,</i>
|
|||
|
Those that by their cunning craftiness draw others to sin and
|
|||
|
error, shall not, with all their craft and cunning, escape ruin
|
|||
|
themselves. If <i>both fall together into the ditch,</i> the blind
|
|||
|
leaders will fall undermost, and have the worst of it; see
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p47.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.14.15-Jer.14.16" parsed="|Jer|14|15|14|16" passage="Jer 14:15,16">Jer. xiv. 15, 16</scripRef>.
|
|||
|
<i>The prophets shall be consumed first,</i> and then the <i>people
|
|||
|
to whom they prophesy,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p47.4" osisRef="Bible:Jer.20.6 Bible:Jer.27.15-Jer.27.16" parsed="|Jer|20|6|0|0;|Jer|27|15|27|16" passage="Jer 20:6,27:15,16">Jer. xx. 6; xxvii. 15, 16</scripRef>.
|
|||
|
<i>Secondly,</i> The sin and ruin of the deceivers will be no
|
|||
|
security to those that are deceived by them. Though the leaders of
|
|||
|
this people <i>cause them to err,</i> yet they that are <i>led of
|
|||
|
them are destroyed</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p47.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.9.16" parsed="|Isa|9|16|0|0" passage="Isa 9:16">Isa. ix.
|
|||
|
16</scripRef>), because they shut their eyes against the light
|
|||
|
which would have rectified their mistake. Seneca, complaining of
|
|||
|
most people's being led by common opinion and practice
|
|||
|
(<i>Unusquisque mavult credere quam judicare—Things are taken upon
|
|||
|
trust, and never examined</i>), concludes, <i>Indeista tanta
|
|||
|
coacervatio aliorum super alios ruentium—Hence crowds fall upon
|
|||
|
crowds, in vast confusion.</i> De Vitâ Beatâ. The falling of both
|
|||
|
together will aggravate the fall of both; for they that have thus
|
|||
|
mutually increased each other's sin, will mutually exasperate each
|
|||
|
other's ruin.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p48">V. Instruction given to the disciples
|
|||
|
concerning the truth Christ had laid down, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p48.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.10" parsed="|Matt|15|10|0|0" passage="Mt 15:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. Though Christ rejects the
|
|||
|
wilfully ignorant who care not to be taught, he can have compassion
|
|||
|
on the ignorant who are willing to learn, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p48.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.5.2" parsed="|Heb|5|2|0|0" passage="Heb 5:2">Heb. v. 2</scripRef>. If the Pharisees, who made void the
|
|||
|
law, be offended, let them be offended: but this <i>great peace
|
|||
|
have they who love the law,</i> that <i>nothing shall offend
|
|||
|
them,</i> but, some way or other, the offence shall be taken off,
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p48.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.119.165" parsed="|Ps|119|165|0|0" passage="Ps 119:165">Ps. cxix. 165</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p49">Here is, 1. Their desire to be better
|
|||
|
instructed in this matter (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p49.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.15" parsed="|Matt|15|15|0|0" passage="Mt 15:15"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
15</scripRef>); in this request as in many others, Peter was their
|
|||
|
speaker; the rest, it is probable, putting him on to speak, or
|
|||
|
intimating their concurrence; <i>Declare unto us this parable.</i>
|
|||
|
What Christ said was plain, but, because it agreed not with the
|
|||
|
notions they had imbibed, though they would not contradict it, yet
|
|||
|
they call it a parable, and cannot understand it. Note, (1.) Weak
|
|||
|
understandings are apt to turn plain truths into parables, and to
|
|||
|
seek for a knot in a bulrush. The disciples often did so, as
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p49.2" osisRef="Bible:John.16.17" parsed="|John|16|17|0|0" passage="Joh 16:17">John xvi. 17</scripRef>. Even the
|
|||
|
grasshopper is a burthen to a weak stomach, and babes in
|
|||
|
understanding cannot bear and digest strong meat. (2.) Where a weak
|
|||
|
head doubts concerning any word of Christ, an upright heart and a
|
|||
|
willing mind will seek for instruction. The Pharisees were
|
|||
|
offended, but kept it to themselves; hating to be reformed, they
|
|||
|
hated to be informed; but the disciples, though offended, sought
|
|||
|
for satisfaction, imputing the offence, not to the doctrine
|
|||
|
delivered, but to the shallowness of their own capacity.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p50">2. The reproof Christ gave them for their
|
|||
|
weakness and ignorance (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p50.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.16" parsed="|Matt|15|16|0|0" passage="Mt 15:16"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
16</scripRef>); <i>Are ye also yet without understanding?</i> As
|
|||
|
many as Christ loves and teaches, he thus rebukes. Note, They are
|
|||
|
very ignorant indeed, who understand not that moral pollutions are
|
|||
|
abundantly worse and more dangerous than ceremonial ones. Two
|
|||
|
things aggravate their dulness and darkness.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p51">(1.) That they were the disciples of
|
|||
|
Christ; "Are <i>ye</i> also without understanding? Ye whom I have
|
|||
|
admitted into so great a degree of familiarity with me, are ye so
|
|||
|
unskilful in the word of righteousness?" Note, The ignorance and
|
|||
|
mistakes of those that profess religion, and enjoy the privileges
|
|||
|
of church-membership, are justly a grief to the Lord Jesus. "No
|
|||
|
wonder that the Pharisees understand not this doctrine, who know
|
|||
|
nothing of the Messiah's kingdom: but ye that have heard of it, and
|
|||
|
embraced it yourselves, and preached it to others, are ye also such
|
|||
|
strangers to the spirit and genius of it?"</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p52">(2.) That they had been a great while
|
|||
|
Christ's scholars; "Are ye <i>yet</i> so, after ye have been so
|
|||
|
long under my teaching?" Had they been but of yesterday in Christ's
|
|||
|
school, it had been another matter, but to have been for so many
|
|||
|
months Christ's constant hearers, and yet to be without
|
|||
|
understanding, was a great reproach to them. Note, Christ expects
|
|||
|
from us some proportion of knowledge, and grace, and wisdom,
|
|||
|
according to the time and means we have had. See <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p52.1" osisRef="Bible:John.14.9 Bible:Heb.5.12 Bible:2Tim.3.7-2Tim.3.8" parsed="|John|14|9|0|0;|Heb|5|12|0|0;|2Tim|3|7|3|8" passage="Joh 14:9,Heb 5:12,2Ti 3:7,8">John xiv. 9; Heb. v. 12; 2 Tim. iii.
|
|||
|
7, 8</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p53">3. The explication Christ gave them of this
|
|||
|
doctrine of pollutions. Though he chid them for their dulness, he
|
|||
|
did not cast them off, but pitied them, and taught them, as
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.24.25-Luke.24.27" parsed="|Luke|24|25|24|27" passage="Lu 24:25-27">Luke xxiv. 25-27</scripRef>. He
|
|||
|
here shows us,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p54">(1.) What little danger we are in of
|
|||
|
pollution from that which <i>entereth in at the mouth,</i>
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.17" parsed="|Matt|15|17|0|0" passage="Mt 15:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. An inordinate
|
|||
|
appetite, intemperance, and excess in eating, come out of the
|
|||
|
heart, and are defiling; but meat in itself is not so, as the
|
|||
|
Pharisees supposed. What there is of dregs and defilement in our
|
|||
|
meat, nature (or rather God of nature) has provided a way to clear
|
|||
|
us of it; <i>it goes in at the belly, and is cast out into the
|
|||
|
draught,</i> and nothing remains to us but pure nourishment. So
|
|||
|
<i>fearfully</i> and <i>wonderfully are we made</i> and preserved,
|
|||
|
and our souls held in life. The expulsive faculty is as necessary
|
|||
|
in the body as any other, for the discharge of that which is
|
|||
|
superfluous, or noxious; so happily is nature enabled to help
|
|||
|
itself, and shift for its own good: by this means nothing defiles;
|
|||
|
if we eat with unwashen hands, and so any thing unclean mix with
|
|||
|
our food, nature will separate it, and cast it out, and it will be
|
|||
|
no defilement to us. It may be a piece of cleanliness, but it is
|
|||
|
not point of conscience, to wash before meat; and we go upon a
|
|||
|
great mistake if we place religion in it. It is not the practice
|
|||
|
itself, but the opinion it is built upon, that Christ condemns, as
|
|||
|
if meat commended us to God (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p54.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.8.8" parsed="|1Cor|8|8|0|0" passage="1Co 8:8">1 Cor.
|
|||
|
viii. 8</scripRef>); whereas Christianity stands not in such
|
|||
|
observances.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p55">(2.) What great danger we are in of
|
|||
|
pollution from that which <i>proceeds out of the mouth</i>
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p55.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.18" parsed="|Matt|15|18|0|0" passage="Mt 15:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>), out of the
|
|||
|
abundance of the heart: compare <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p55.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.34" parsed="|Matt|12|34|0|0" passage="Mt 12:34"><i>ch.</i> xii. 34</scripRef>. There is no defilement in
|
|||
|
the products of God's bounty; the defilement arises from the
|
|||
|
products of our corruption. Now here we have,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p56">[1.] The corrupt fountain of that which
|
|||
|
proceeds out of the mouth; it comes from the heart; that is the
|
|||
|
spring and source of all sin, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.8.7" parsed="|Jer|8|7|0|0" passage="Jer 8:7">Jer.
|
|||
|
viii. 7</scripRef>. It is the heart that is so desperately wicked
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p56.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.17.9" parsed="|Jer|17|9|0|0" passage="Jer 17:9">Jer. xvii. 9</scripRef>); for there
|
|||
|
is no sin in a word or deed, which was not first in the heart.
|
|||
|
There is the root of bitterness, which <i>bears gall and
|
|||
|
wormwood.</i> It is the inward part of a sinner, that is very
|
|||
|
wickedness, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p56.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.5.9" parsed="|Ps|5|9|0|0" passage="Ps 5:9">Ps. v. 9</scripRef>. All
|
|||
|
evil speakings come forth from the heart, and are defiling; from
|
|||
|
the corrupt heart comes the corrupt communication.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p57">[2.] Some of the corrupt streams which flow
|
|||
|
from this fountain, specified; though they do not all <i>come out
|
|||
|
of the mouth,</i> yet they all come out of the man, and are the
|
|||
|
fruits of that wickedness which is in the heart, and is wrought
|
|||
|
there, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p57.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.58.2" parsed="|Ps|58|2|0|0" passage="Ps 58:2">Ps. lviii. 2</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p58"><i>First, Evil thoughts,</i> sins against
|
|||
|
all the commandments. Therefore David puts vain thoughts in
|
|||
|
opposition to the whole law, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p58.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.119.113" parsed="|Ps|119|113|0|0" passage="Ps 119:113">Ps.
|
|||
|
cxix. 113</scripRef>. These are the first-born of the corrupt
|
|||
|
nature, the beginning of its strength, and do most resemble it.
|
|||
|
These, as the son and heir, <i>abide in the house, and lodge within
|
|||
|
us.</i> There is a great deal of sin that begins and ends in the
|
|||
|
heart, and goes no further. Carnal fancies and imaginations are
|
|||
|
evil thoughts, wickedness in the contrivance (<b><i>Dialogismoi
|
|||
|
poneroi</i></b>), wicked plots, purposes, and devices of mischief
|
|||
|
to others, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p58.2" osisRef="Bible:Mic.2.1" parsed="|Mic|2|1|0|0" passage="Mic 2:1">Mic. ii. 1</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p59"><i>Secondly, Murders,</i> sins against the
|
|||
|
sixth commandment; these come from a malice in the heart against
|
|||
|
our brother's life, or a contempt of it. Hence he <i>that hates his
|
|||
|
brother,</i> is said to be a <i>murderer;</i> he is so at God's
|
|||
|
bar, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p59.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.3.15" parsed="|1John|3|15|0|0" passage="1Jo 3:15">1 John iii. 15</scripRef>. <i>War
|
|||
|
is in the heart,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p59.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.4.21 Bible:Jas.4.1" parsed="|Ps|4|21|0|0;|Jas|4|1|0|0" passage="Ps 4:21,Jam 4:1">Ps. iv.
|
|||
|
21; James iv. 1</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p60"><i>Thirdly, Adulteries and
|
|||
|
fornications,</i> sins against the seventh commandment; these come
|
|||
|
from the wanton, unclean, carnal heart; and the lust that reigns
|
|||
|
there, is conceived there, and brings forth these sins, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p60.1" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.15" parsed="|Jas|1|15|0|0" passage="Jam 1:15">James i. 15</scripRef>. There is adultery in the
|
|||
|
heart first, and then in the act, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p60.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.28" parsed="|Matt|5|28|0|0" passage="Mt 5:28"><i>ch.</i> v. 28</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p61"><i>Fourthly, Thefts,</i> sins against the
|
|||
|
eighth commandment; cheats, wrongs, rapines, and all injurious
|
|||
|
contracts; the fountain of all these is in the heart, that is it
|
|||
|
that is <i>exercised in these covetous practices</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p61.1" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.2.14" parsed="|2Pet|2|14|0|0" passage="2Pe 2:14">2 Pet. ii. 14</scripRef>), that is set upon
|
|||
|
riches, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p61.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.62.10" parsed="|Ps|62|10|0|0" passage="Ps 62:10">Ps. lxii. 10</scripRef>.
|
|||
|
<i>Achan coveted, and then took,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p61.3" osisRef="Bible:Josh.7.20-Josh.7.21" parsed="|Josh|7|20|7|21" passage="Jos 7:20,21">Joshua vii. 20, 21</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p62"><i>Fifthly, False witness,</i> against the
|
|||
|
ninth commandment; this comes from a complication of falsehood and
|
|||
|
covetousness, or falsehood and covetousness, or falsehood and
|
|||
|
malice in the heart. If truth, holiness, and love, which God
|
|||
|
<i>requires in the inward parts,</i> reigned as they ought, there
|
|||
|
would be no false witness bearing, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p62.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.64.6 Bible:Jer.9.8" parsed="|Ps|64|6|0|0;|Jer|9|8|0|0" passage="Ps 64:6,Jer 9:8">Ps. lxiv. 6; Jer. ix. 8</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p63"><i>Sixthly, Blasphemies,</i> speaking evil
|
|||
|
of God, against the third commandment; speaking evil of our
|
|||
|
neighbour, against the ninth commandment; these come from a
|
|||
|
contempt and disesteem of both in the heart; thence <i>the
|
|||
|
blasphemy against the Holy Ghost</i> proceeds (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p63.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.31-Matt.12.32" parsed="|Matt|12|31|12|32" passage="Mt 12:31,32"><i>ch.</i> xii. 31, 32</scripRef>); these are the
|
|||
|
overflowing of the gall within.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p64">Now <i>these are the things which defile a
|
|||
|
man,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p64.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.20" parsed="|Matt|15|20|0|0" passage="Mt 15:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>.
|
|||
|
Note, Sin is defiling to the soul, renders it unlovely and
|
|||
|
abominable in the eyes of a pure and holy God; unfit for communion
|
|||
|
with him, and for the enjoyment of him in the new Jerusalem, into
|
|||
|
which nothing shall enter that defileth or worketh iniquity. The
|
|||
|
mind and conscience are defiled by sin, and that makes every thing
|
|||
|
else so, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p64.2" osisRef="Bible:Titus.1.15" parsed="|Titus|1|15|0|0" passage="Tit 1:15">Tit. i. 15</scripRef>. This
|
|||
|
defilement by sin was signified by the ceremonial pollutions which
|
|||
|
the Jewish doctors added to, but understood not. See <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p64.3" osisRef="Bible:Heb.9.13-Heb.9.14 Bible:1John.1.7" parsed="|Heb|9|13|9|14;|1John|1|7|0|0" passage="Heb 9:13,14,1Jo 1:7">Heb. ix. 13, 14; 1 John i.
|
|||
|
7</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p65">These therefore are the things we must
|
|||
|
carefully avoid, and all approaches toward them, and not lay stress
|
|||
|
upon the washing of the hands. Christ doth not yet repeal the law
|
|||
|
of the distinction of meats (that was not done till <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p65.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.10.9-Acts.10.16" parsed="|Acts|10|9|10|16" passage="Ac 10:9-16">Acts x.</scripRef>), but the tradition of the
|
|||
|
elders, which was tacked to that law; and therefore he concludes,
|
|||
|
<i>To eat with unwashen hands</i> (which was the matter now in
|
|||
|
question), <i>this defileth not a man.</i> If he wash, he is not
|
|||
|
the better before God; if he wash not, he is not the worse.</p>
|
|||
|
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xvi-p65.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.21-Matt.15.28" parsed="|Matt|15|21|15|28" passage="Mt 15:21-28" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.15.21-Matt.15.28">
|
|||
|
<h4 id="Matt.xvi-p65.3">The Canaanite's Daughter
|
|||
|
Healed.</h4>
|
|||
|
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xvi-p66">21 Then Jesus went thence, and departed into the
|
|||
|
coasts of Tyre and Sidon. 22 And, behold, a woman of Canaan
|
|||
|
came out of the same coasts, and cried unto him, saying, Have mercy
|
|||
|
on me, O Lord, <i>thou</i> Son of David; my daughter is grievously
|
|||
|
vexed with a devil. 23 But he answered her not a word. And
|
|||
|
his disciples came and besought him, saying, Send her away; for she
|
|||
|
crieth after us. 24 But he answered and said, I am not sent
|
|||
|
but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel. 25 Then came
|
|||
|
she and worshipped him, saying, Lord, help me. 26 But he
|
|||
|
answered and said, It is not meet to take the children's bread, and
|
|||
|
to cast <i>it</i> to dogs. 27 And she said, Truth, Lord: yet
|
|||
|
the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters' table.
|
|||
|
28 Then Jesus answered and said unto her, O woman, great
|
|||
|
<i>is</i> thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt. And her
|
|||
|
daughter was made whole from that very hour.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p67">We have here that famous story of Christ's
|
|||
|
<i>casting the devil out of the woman of Canaan's daughter;</i> it
|
|||
|
has something in it singular and very surprising, and which looks
|
|||
|
favourably upon the poor Gentiles, and is an earnest of the mercy
|
|||
|
which Christ had in store for them. Here is a gleam of that
|
|||
|
<i>light</i> which was <i>to lighten the Gentiles,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p67.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.2.32" parsed="|Luke|2|32|0|0" passage="Lu 2:32">Luke ii. 32</scripRef>. Christ <i>came to his
|
|||
|
own, and his own received him not;</i> but many of them quarrelled
|
|||
|
with him, and were offended in him; and observe what follows,
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p67.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.21" parsed="|Matt|15|21|0|0" passage="Mt 15:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p68">I. <i>Jesus went thence.</i> Note, Justly
|
|||
|
is the light taken from those that either play by it, or rebel
|
|||
|
against it. When Christ and his disciples could not be quiet among
|
|||
|
them, he left them, and so left an example to his own rule
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p68.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.10.14" parsed="|Matt|10|14|0|0" passage="Mt 10:14"><i>ch.</i> x. 14</scripRef>),
|
|||
|
<i>Shake off the dust of your feet.</i> Though Christ endure long,
|
|||
|
he will not always <i>endure, the contradiction of sinners against
|
|||
|
himself.</i> He had said (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p68.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.14" parsed="|Matt|15|14|0|0" passage="Mt 15:14"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
14</scripRef>), <i>Let them alone,</i> and he did so. Note, Wilful
|
|||
|
prejudices against the gospel, and cavils at it, often provoke
|
|||
|
Christ to withdraw, and <i>to remove the candlestick out of its
|
|||
|
place.</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p68.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.46 Bible:Acts.13.51" parsed="|Acts|13|46|0|0;|Acts|13|51|0|0" passage="Ac 13:46,51">Acts xiii. 46,
|
|||
|
51</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p69">II. When he went thence, he <i>departed
|
|||
|
into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon;</i> not to those cities (they
|
|||
|
were excluded from any share in <i>Christ's mighty works,</i>
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p69.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11.21-Matt.11.22" parsed="|Matt|11|21|11|22" passage="Mt 11:21,22"><i>ch.</i> xi. 21, 22</scripRef>),
|
|||
|
but into that part of the land of Israel which lay that way:
|
|||
|
thither he went, as Elias <i>to Sarepta, a city of Sidon</i>
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p69.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.26" parsed="|Luke|4|26|0|0" passage="Lu 4:26">Luke iv. 26</scripRef>); thither he
|
|||
|
went to look after this poor woman, whom he had mercy in reserve
|
|||
|
for. While he went about doing good, he was never out of his way.
|
|||
|
The dark corners of the country, which lay most remote, shall have
|
|||
|
their share of his benign influences; and as now <i>the ends of the
|
|||
|
land,</i> so afterward <i>the ends of the earth, shall see his
|
|||
|
salvation,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p69.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.49.6" parsed="|Isa|49|6|0|0" passage="Isa 49:6">Isa. xlix.
|
|||
|
6</scripRef>. Here it was, that this miracle was wrought, in the
|
|||
|
story of which we may observe,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p70">1. The address of the woman of Canaan to
|
|||
|
Christ, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p70.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.22" parsed="|Matt|15|22|0|0" passage="Mt 15:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>. She
|
|||
|
was a Gentile, <i>a stranger to the commonwealth of Israel;</i>
|
|||
|
probably one of the posterity of those accursed nations that were
|
|||
|
devoted by that word, <i>Cursed be Canaan.</i> Note, The doom of
|
|||
|
political bodies doth not always reach every individual member of
|
|||
|
them. God will have his remnant out of all nations, chosen vessels
|
|||
|
in all coasts, even the most unlikely: she came out of the same
|
|||
|
coasts. If Christ had not now made a visit to these coasts, though
|
|||
|
the mercy was worth travelling far for, it is probable that she had
|
|||
|
never come to him. Note, It is often an excitement to a dormant
|
|||
|
faith and zeal, to have opportunities of acquaintance with Christ
|
|||
|
brought to our doors, to have the word nigh us.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p71">Her address was very importunate, she
|
|||
|
<i>cried</i> to Christ, as one in earnest; cried, as being at some
|
|||
|
distance from him, not daring to approach too near, being a
|
|||
|
Canaanite, lest she should give offence. In her address,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p72">(1.) She relates her misery; <i>My daughter
|
|||
|
is grievously vexed with a devil,</i> <b><i>kakos
|
|||
|
daimonizetai</i></b>—<i>She is ill-bewitched,</i> or
|
|||
|
<i>possessed.</i> There were degrees of that misery, and this was
|
|||
|
the worst sort. It was common case at that time, and very
|
|||
|
calamitous. Note, The vexations of children are the trouble of
|
|||
|
parents, and nothing should be more so than their being under the
|
|||
|
power of Satan. Tender parents very sensibly feel the miseries of
|
|||
|
those that are pieces of themselves. "Though vexed with the devil,
|
|||
|
yet she is my daughter still." The greatest afflictions of our
|
|||
|
relations do not dissolve our obligations to them, and therefore
|
|||
|
ought not to alienate our affections from them. It was the distress
|
|||
|
and trouble of her family, that now brought her to Christ; she came
|
|||
|
to him, not for teaching, but for healing; yet, because she came in
|
|||
|
faith, he did not reject her. Though it is need that drives us to
|
|||
|
Christ, yet we shall not therefore be driven from him. It was the
|
|||
|
affliction of her daughter, that gave her this occasion of applying
|
|||
|
to Christ. It is good to make the afflictions of others our own, in
|
|||
|
sense and sympathy, that we may make them our own, in improvement
|
|||
|
and advantage.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p73">(2.) She requests for mercy; <i>Have mercy
|
|||
|
on me, O Lord, thou Son of David,</i> she owns him to be the
|
|||
|
Messiah: that is the great thing which faith should fasten upon,
|
|||
|
and fetch comfort from. From the Lord we may expect acts of power:
|
|||
|
he can command deliverances; from the Son of David we may expect
|
|||
|
all the mercy and grace which were foretold concerning him. Though
|
|||
|
a Gentile, she owns <i>the promise made to the fathers</i> of the
|
|||
|
Jews, and the honour of the house of David. The Gentiles must
|
|||
|
receive Christianity, not only as an improvement of natural
|
|||
|
religion, but as the perfection of the Jewish religion, with an eye
|
|||
|
to the Old Testament.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p74">Her petition is, <i>Have mercy on me.</i>
|
|||
|
She does not limit Christ to this or that particular instance of
|
|||
|
mercy, but mercy, mercy is the thing she begs: she pleads not
|
|||
|
merit, but depends upon mercy; <i>Have mercy upon me.</i> Mercies
|
|||
|
to the children are mercies to the parents; favours to ours are
|
|||
|
favours to us, and are so to be accounted. Note, It is the duty of
|
|||
|
parents to pray for their children, and to be earnest in prayer for
|
|||
|
them, especially for their souls; "I have a son, a daughter,
|
|||
|
grievously vexed with a proud will, an unclean devil, a malicious
|
|||
|
devil, led captive by him at his will; <i>Lord, help them.</i>"
|
|||
|
This is a case more deplorable than that of a bodily possession.
|
|||
|
Bring them to Christ by faith and prayer, who alone is able to heal
|
|||
|
them. Parents should look upon it as a great mercy to themselves,
|
|||
|
to have Satan's power broken in the souls of their children.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p75">2. The discouragement she met with in this
|
|||
|
address; in all the story of Christ's ministry we do not meet with
|
|||
|
the like. He was wont to countenance and encourage all that came to
|
|||
|
him, and either <i>to answer before they called,</i> or <i>to hear
|
|||
|
while they were yet speaking;</i> but here was one otherwise
|
|||
|
treated: and what could be the reason of it? (1.) Some think that
|
|||
|
Christ showed himself backward to gratify this poor woman, because
|
|||
|
he would not give offence to the Jews, by being as free and forward
|
|||
|
in his favour to the Gentiles as to them. He had bid his disciples
|
|||
|
<i>not go into the way of the Gentiles</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p75.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.10.5" parsed="|Matt|10|5|0|0" passage="Mt 10:5"><i>ch.</i> x. 5</scripRef>), and therefore would not
|
|||
|
himself seem so inclinable to them as to others, but rather more
|
|||
|
shy. Or rather, (2.) Christ treated her thus, to try her; he knows
|
|||
|
what is in the heart, knew the strength of her faith, and how well
|
|||
|
able she was, by his grace, to break through such discouragements;
|
|||
|
he <i>therefore</i> met her with them, <i>that the trial of her
|
|||
|
faith might be found unto praise, and honour, and glory,</i>
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p75.2" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.6-1Pet.1.7" parsed="|1Pet|1|6|1|7" passage="1Pe 1:6,7">1 Pet. i. 6, 7</scripRef>. This was
|
|||
|
like God's tempting Abraham (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p75.3" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22.1" parsed="|Gen|22|1|0|0" passage="Ge 22:1">Gen. xxii.
|
|||
|
1</scripRef>), like the angel's wrestling with Jacob, only to put
|
|||
|
him upon wrestling, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p75.4" osisRef="Bible:Gen.32.24" parsed="|Gen|32|24|0|0" passage="Ge 32:24">Gen. xxxii.
|
|||
|
24</scripRef>. Many of the methods of Christ's providence, and
|
|||
|
especially of his grace, in dealing with his people, which are dark
|
|||
|
and perplexing, may be explained with the key of this story, which
|
|||
|
is for that end left upon record, to teach us that there may be
|
|||
|
love in his face, and to encourage us, therefore, <i>though he slay
|
|||
|
us, yet to trust in him.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p76">Observe the particular discouragements
|
|||
|
given her:</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p77">[1.] When she cried after him, <i>he
|
|||
|
answered her not a word,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p77.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.23" parsed="|Matt|15|23|0|0" passage="Mt 15:23"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
23</scripRef>. His ear was wont to be always open and attentive to
|
|||
|
the cries of poor supplicants, and his lips, which dropped as the
|
|||
|
honeycomb, always ready to give an answer of peace; but to this
|
|||
|
poor woman he turned a deaf ear, and she could get neither an alms
|
|||
|
nor an answer. It was a wonder that she did not fly off in a fret,
|
|||
|
and say, "Is this he that is so famed for clemency and tenderness?
|
|||
|
Have so many been heard and answered by him, as they talk, and must
|
|||
|
I be the first rejected suitor? Why so distant to me, if it be true
|
|||
|
that he hath stooped to so many?" But Christ knew what he did, and
|
|||
|
<i>therefore</i> did not answer, that she might be the more earnest
|
|||
|
in prayer. He heard her, and was pleased with her, and
|
|||
|
<i>strengthened her with strength in her soul</i> to prosecute her
|
|||
|
request (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p77.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.138.3 Bible:Job.23.6" parsed="|Ps|138|3|0|0;|Job|23|6|0|0" passage="Ps 138:3,Job 23:6">Ps. cxxxviii. 3; Job
|
|||
|
xxiii. 6</scripRef>), though he did not immediately give her the
|
|||
|
answer she expected. By seeming to draw away the desired mercy from
|
|||
|
her, he drew her on to be so much the more importunate for it.
|
|||
|
Note, Every accepted prayer is not immediately an answered prayer.
|
|||
|
Sometimes God seems not to regard his people's prayers, like a man
|
|||
|
asleep or astonished (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p77.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.44.23 Bible:Jer.14.9 Bible:Ps.22.1-Ps.22.2" parsed="|Ps|44|23|0|0;|Jer|14|9|0|0;|Ps|22|1|22|2" passage="Ps 44:23,Jer 14:9,Ps 22:1,2">Ps. xliv. 23; Jer. xiv. 9; Ps. xxii.
|
|||
|
1, 2</scripRef>); nay, to be angry at them (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p77.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.80.4 Bible:Lam.3.8 Bible:Lam.3.44" parsed="|Ps|80|4|0|0;|Lam|3|8|0|0;|Lam|3|44|0|0" passage="Ps 80:4,La 3:8,44">Ps. lxxx. 4; Lam. iii. 8, 44</scripRef>); but
|
|||
|
it is to prove, and so to <i>improve,</i> their faith, and to make
|
|||
|
his after-appearances for them the more glorious to himself, and
|
|||
|
the more welcome to them; for <i>the vision, at the end, shall
|
|||
|
speak, and shall not lie,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p77.5" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.3" parsed="|Heb|2|3|0|0" passage="Heb 2:3">Heb. ii.
|
|||
|
3</scripRef>. See <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p77.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.35.14" parsed="|Job|35|14|0|0" passage="Job 35:14">Job xxxv.
|
|||
|
14</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p78">[2.] When the disciples spake a good word
|
|||
|
for her, he gave a reason why he refused her, which was yet more
|
|||
|
discouraging.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p79"><i>First,</i> It was some little relief,
|
|||
|
that the disciples interposed on her behalf; they said, <i>Send her
|
|||
|
away, for she crieth after us.</i> It is desirable to have an
|
|||
|
interest in the prayers of good people, and we should be desirous
|
|||
|
of it. But the disciples, though wishing she might have what she
|
|||
|
came for, yet therein consulted rather their own ease than the poor
|
|||
|
woman's satisfaction; "<i>Send her away</i> with a cure, <i>for she
|
|||
|
cries,</i> and is in good earnest; <i>she cries after us,</i> and
|
|||
|
is troublesome to us, and shames us." Continued importunity may be
|
|||
|
uneasy to men, even to good men; but Christ loves to be cried
|
|||
|
after.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p80"><i>Secondly,</i> Christ's answer to the
|
|||
|
disciples quite dashed her expectations; "<i>I am not sent, but to
|
|||
|
the lost sheep of the house of Israel;</i> you know I am not, she
|
|||
|
is none of them, and would you have me go beyond my commission?"
|
|||
|
Importunity seldom conquers the settled reason of a wise man; and
|
|||
|
those refusals are most silencing, which are so backed. He doth not
|
|||
|
only not answer her, but he argues against her, and stops her mouth
|
|||
|
with a reason. It is true, she is a <i>lost sheep,</i> and hath as
|
|||
|
much need of his care as any, but she is not <i>of the house of
|
|||
|
Israel,</i> to whom he was first sent (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p80.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.3.26" parsed="|Acts|3|26|0|0" passage="Ac 3:26">Acts iii. 26</scripRef>), and therefore not immediately
|
|||
|
interested in it, and entitled to it. Christ was <i>a Minister of
|
|||
|
the circumcision</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p80.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.15.8" parsed="|Rom|15|8|0|0" passage="Ro 15:8">Rom. xv.
|
|||
|
8</scripRef>); and though he was intended for <i>a Light to the
|
|||
|
Gentiles, yet the fulness of time</i> for that <i>was</i> not now
|
|||
|
<i>come, the veil was</i> not yet <i>rent,</i> nor <i>the
|
|||
|
partition-wall taken down.</i> Christ's personal ministry was <i>to
|
|||
|
be the glory of his people Israel;</i> "If I am sent to them, what
|
|||
|
have I to do with those that are none of them." Note, It is a great
|
|||
|
trial, when we have occasion given us to question whether we be of
|
|||
|
those to whom Christ was sent. But, blessed be God, no room is left
|
|||
|
for that doubt; the distinction between Jew and Gentile is taken
|
|||
|
away; we are sure that he <i>gave his life a ransom for many,</i>
|
|||
|
and if for many, why not for me?</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p81"><i>Thirdly,</i> When she continued her
|
|||
|
importunity, he insisted upon the unfitness of the thing, and gave
|
|||
|
her not only a repulse, but a seeming reproach too (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p81.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.26" parsed="|Matt|15|26|0|0" passage="Mt 15:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>); <i>It is not meet to
|
|||
|
take the children's bread and to cast it to dogs.</i> This seems to
|
|||
|
cut her off from all hope, and might have driven her to despair, if
|
|||
|
she had not had a very strong faith indeed. Gospel grace and
|
|||
|
miraculous cures (the appurtenances of it), were children's bread;
|
|||
|
they belonged to them <i>to whom pertained the adoption</i>
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p81.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.9.4" parsed="|Rom|9|4|0|0" passage="Ro 9:4">Rom. ix. 4</scripRef>), and lay not
|
|||
|
upon the same level with that rain from heaven, and those fruitful
|
|||
|
seasons, which God gave to the nations whom he suffered <i>to walk
|
|||
|
in their own ways</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p81.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.14.16-Acts.14.17" parsed="|Acts|14|16|14|17" passage="Ac 14:16,17">Acts xiv.
|
|||
|
16, 17</scripRef>); no, these were peculiar favours, appropriated
|
|||
|
to the peculiar people, the garden enclosed. Christ preached to the
|
|||
|
Samaritans (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p81.4" osisRef="Bible:John.4.41" parsed="|John|4|41|0|0" passage="Joh 4:41">John iv. 41</scripRef>),
|
|||
|
but we read not of any cures he wrought among them; <i>that
|
|||
|
salvation was of the Jews:</i> it is not meet therefore to alienate
|
|||
|
these. The Gentiles were looked upon by the Jews with great
|
|||
|
contempt, were called and counted <i>dogs;</i> and, in comparison
|
|||
|
with the house of Israel, who were so dignified and privileged,
|
|||
|
Christ here seems to allow it, and therefore thinks it not meet
|
|||
|
that the Gentiles should share in the favours bestowed on the Jews.
|
|||
|
But see how the tables are turned; after the bringing of the
|
|||
|
Gentiles into the church, the Jewish zealots for the law are called
|
|||
|
<i>dogs,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p81.5" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.2" parsed="|Phil|3|2|0|0" passage="Php 3:2">Phil. iii.
|
|||
|
2</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p82">Now this Christ urgeth against this woman
|
|||
|
of Canaan; "How can she expect to eat of the children's bread, who
|
|||
|
is not of the family?" Note, 1. Those whom Christ intends most
|
|||
|
signally to honour, he first humbles and lays low in a sense of
|
|||
|
their own meanness and unworthiness. We must first see ourselves to
|
|||
|
be as dogs, <i>less than the least of all God's mercies,</i> before
|
|||
|
we are fit to be dignified and privileged with them. 2. Christ
|
|||
|
delights to exercise great faith with great trials, and sometimes
|
|||
|
reserves the sharpest for the last, that, <i>being tried, we may
|
|||
|
come forth like gold.</i> This general rule is applicable to other
|
|||
|
cases for direction, though here used only for trial. Special
|
|||
|
ordinances and church-privileges are children's bread, and must not
|
|||
|
be prostituted to the grossly ignorant and profane. Common charity
|
|||
|
must be extended to all, but spiritual dignities are appropriated
|
|||
|
to the household of faith; and therefore promiscuous admission to
|
|||
|
them, without distinction, wastes the children's bread, and is the
|
|||
|
<i>giving of that which is holy to the dogs,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p82.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.7.6" parsed="|Matt|7|6|0|0" passage="Mt 7:6"><i>ch.</i> vii. 6</scripRef>. <i>Procul hinc, procul inde,
|
|||
|
profani—Off, ye profane.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p83">3. Here is the strength of her faith and
|
|||
|
resolution, in breaking through all these discouragements. Many a
|
|||
|
one, thus tried, would either have sunk into silence, or broken out
|
|||
|
into passion. "Here is cold comfort," might she have said, "for a
|
|||
|
poor distressed creature; as good for me to have staid at home, as
|
|||
|
come hither to be taunted at and abused at this rate; not only to
|
|||
|
have a piteous case slighted, but to be called a <i>dog!</i>" A
|
|||
|
proud, unhumbled heart would not have borne it. The reputation of
|
|||
|
the house of Israel was not now so great in the world, but that
|
|||
|
this slight put upon the Gentiles was capable of being retorted,
|
|||
|
had the poor woman been so minded. It might have occasioned a
|
|||
|
reflection upon Christ, and might have been a blemish upon his
|
|||
|
reputation, as well as a shock to the good opinion, she had
|
|||
|
entertained of him; for we are apt to judge of persons as we
|
|||
|
ourselves find them; and think that they are what they are to us.
|
|||
|
"<i>Is this the Son of David?</i>" (might she have said): "Is this
|
|||
|
he that has such a reputation for kindness, tenderness, and
|
|||
|
compassion? I am sure I have no reason to give him that character,
|
|||
|
for I was never treated so roughly in my life; he might have done
|
|||
|
as much for me as for others; or, if not, he needed not to have
|
|||
|
<i>set me with the dogs of his flock.</i> I am not a dog, I am a
|
|||
|
woman, and an honest woman, and a woman in misery; and I am sure it
|
|||
|
is not meet to call me a <i>dog.</i>" No, here is not a word of
|
|||
|
this. Note, A humble, believing soul, that truly loves Christ,
|
|||
|
takes every thing in good part that he saith and doeth, and puts
|
|||
|
the best construction upon it.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p84">She breaks through all these
|
|||
|
discouragements,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p85">(1.) With a holy earnestness of desire in
|
|||
|
prosecuting her petition. This appeared upon the former repulse
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p85.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.25" parsed="|Matt|15|25|0|0" passage="Mt 15:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>); <i>Then
|
|||
|
came she, and worshipped him, saying, Lord, help me.</i> [1.] She
|
|||
|
continued to pray. What Christ said, silenced the disciples; you
|
|||
|
hear no more of them; they took the answer, but the woman did not.
|
|||
|
Note, The more sensibly we feel the burthen, the more resolutely we
|
|||
|
should pray for the removal of it. <i>And it is the will of God
|
|||
|
that we should continue instant in prayer, should always pray, and
|
|||
|
not faint.</i> [2.] She improved in prayer. Instead of blaming
|
|||
|
Christ, or charging him with unkindness, she seems rather to
|
|||
|
suspect herself, and lay the fault upon herself. She fears lest, in
|
|||
|
her first address, she had not been humble and reverent enough, and
|
|||
|
therefore now <i>she came, and worshipped him,</i> and paid him
|
|||
|
more respect than she had done; or she fears that she had not been
|
|||
|
earnest enough, and therefore now she cries, <i>Lord, help me.</i>
|
|||
|
Note, When the answers of prayer are deferred, God is thereby
|
|||
|
teaching us to pray more, and pray better. It is then time to
|
|||
|
enquire wherein we have come short in our former prayers, that what
|
|||
|
has been amiss may be amended for the future. Disappointments in
|
|||
|
the success of prayer, must be excitements to the duty of prayer.
|
|||
|
Christ, in his agony, <i>prayed more earnestly.</i> [3.] She waives
|
|||
|
the question, whether she was of those to whom Christ was sent or
|
|||
|
no; she will not argue that with him, though perhaps she might have
|
|||
|
claimed some kindred to the house of Israel; but, "Whether an
|
|||
|
Israelite or no, I come to the Son of David for mercy, and <i>I
|
|||
|
will not let him go, except he bless me.</i>" Many weak Christians
|
|||
|
perplex themselves with questions and doubts about their election,
|
|||
|
whether they are of the house of Israel or no; such had better mind
|
|||
|
their errand to God, and continue instant in prayer for mercy and
|
|||
|
grace; throw themselves by faith at the feet of Christ, and say,
|
|||
|
<i>If I perish, I will perish here;</i> and then that matter will
|
|||
|
by degrees clear itself. If we cannot <i>reason</i> down our
|
|||
|
unbelief, let us <i>pray</i> it down. A fervent, affectionate
|
|||
|
<i>Lord, help me,</i> will help us over many of the discouragements
|
|||
|
which are sometimes ready to bear us down and overwhelm us. [4.]
|
|||
|
Her prayer is very short, but comprehensive and fervent, <i>Lord,
|
|||
|
help me.</i> Take this, <i>First,</i> As lamenting her case; "If
|
|||
|
the Messiah be sent only to the house of Israel, the <i>Lord help
|
|||
|
me,</i> what will become of me and mine," Note, It is not in vain
|
|||
|
for broken hearts to bemoan themselves; God looks upon them then,
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p85.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.31.18" parsed="|Jer|31|18|0|0" passage="Jer 31:18">Jer. xxxi. 18</scripRef>. Or,
|
|||
|
<i>Secondly,</i> As begging grace to assist her in this hour of
|
|||
|
temptation. She found it hard to keep up her faith when it was thus
|
|||
|
frowned upon, and therefore prays, "<i>Lord, help me;</i> Lord,
|
|||
|
strengthen my faith now; <i>Lord, let thy right hand uphold me,</i>
|
|||
|
while my soul is <i>following hard after thee,</i>" <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p85.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.63.8" parsed="|Ps|63|8|0|0" passage="Ps 63:8">Ps. lxiii. 8</scripRef>. Or, <i>Thirdly,</i> As
|
|||
|
enforcing her original request, "<i>Lord, help me;</i> Lord, give
|
|||
|
me what I come for." She believed that Christ could and would help
|
|||
|
her, though she was not of the house of Israel; else she would have
|
|||
|
dropt her petition. Still she keeps up good thoughts of Christ, and
|
|||
|
will not quit her hold. <i>Lord, help me,</i> is a good prayer, if
|
|||
|
well put up; and it is pity that it should be turned into a byword,
|
|||
|
and that we should take God's name in vain in it.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p86">(2.) With a holy skilfulness of faith,
|
|||
|
suggesting a very surprising plea. Christ had placed the Jews with
|
|||
|
the children, <i>as olive-plants round about</i> God's
|
|||
|
<i>table,</i> and had put the Gentiles with the dogs, under the
|
|||
|
table; and she doth not deny the aptness of the similitude. Note,
|
|||
|
There is nothing got by contradicting any word of Christ, though it
|
|||
|
bear ever so hard upon us. But this poor woman, since she cannot
|
|||
|
object against it, resolves to make the best of it (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p86.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.27" parsed="|Matt|15|27|0|0" passage="Mt 15:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>); <i>Truth, Lord, yet
|
|||
|
the dogs eat of the crumbs.</i> Now, here,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p87">[1.] Her acknowledgment was very humble:
|
|||
|
<i>Truth, Lord.</i> Note, You cannot speak so meanly and slightly
|
|||
|
of a humble believer, but he is ready to speak as meanly and
|
|||
|
slightly of himself. Some that seem to dispraise and disparage
|
|||
|
themselves, will yet take it as an affront if others do so too; but
|
|||
|
one that is humbled aright, will subscribe to the most abasing
|
|||
|
challenges, and not call them abusing ones. "<i>Truth, Lord;</i> I
|
|||
|
cannot deny it; I am a dog, and have no right to the children's
|
|||
|
bread." David, <i>Thou hast done foolishly, very foolishly; Truth,
|
|||
|
Lord.</i> Asaph, Thou <i>hast been as a beast before God; Truth,
|
|||
|
Lord.</i> Agur, Thou art <i>more brutish than any man; Truth,
|
|||
|
Lord.</i> Paul, Thou hast been <i>the chief of sinners, art less
|
|||
|
than the least of saints, not meet to be called an apostle; Truth,
|
|||
|
Lord.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p88">[2.] Her improvement of this into a plea
|
|||
|
was very ingenious; <i>Yet the dogs eat of the crumbs.</i> It was
|
|||
|
by a singular acumen, and spiritual quickness and sagacity, that
|
|||
|
she discerned matter of argument in that which looked like a
|
|||
|
slight. Note, A lively, active faith will make that to be for us,
|
|||
|
which seems to be against us; will fetch <i>meat out of the eater,
|
|||
|
and sweetness out of the strong.</i> Unbelief is apt to mistake
|
|||
|
recruits for enemies, and to draw dismal conclusions even from
|
|||
|
comfortable premises (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p88.1" osisRef="Bible:Judg.13.22-Judg.13.23" parsed="|Judg|13|22|13|23" passage="Jdg 13:22,23">Judges xiii.
|
|||
|
22, 23</scripRef>); but faith can find encouragement even in that
|
|||
|
which is discouraging, and get nearer to God by taking hold on that
|
|||
|
hand which is stretched out to push it away. So good a thing it is
|
|||
|
to be of <i>quick understanding in the fear of the Lord,</i>
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p88.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.11.3" parsed="|Isa|11|3|0|0" passage="Isa 11:3">Isa. xi. 3</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p89">Her plea is, <i>Yet the dogs eat of the
|
|||
|
crumbs.</i> It is true, the full and regular provision is intended
|
|||
|
for the children only, but the small, casual, neglected crumbs are
|
|||
|
allowed to the dogs, and are not grudged them; that is to the dogs
|
|||
|
under the table, that attend there expecting them. We poor Gentiles
|
|||
|
cannot expect the stated ministry and miracles of the Son of David,
|
|||
|
that belongs to the Jews; but they begin now to be weary of their
|
|||
|
meat, and to play with it, they find fault with it, and crumble it
|
|||
|
away; surely then some of the broken meat may fall to a poor
|
|||
|
Gentile; "I beg a cure by the by, which is but a crumb, though of
|
|||
|
the same precious bread, yet but a small inconsiderable piece,
|
|||
|
compared with the loaves which they have." Note, When we are ready
|
|||
|
to surfeit on the children's bread, we should remember how many
|
|||
|
there are, that would be glad of the crumbs. Our broken meat in
|
|||
|
spiritual privileges, would be a feast to many a soul; <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p89.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.42" parsed="|Acts|13|42|0|0" passage="Ac 13:42">Acts xiii. 42</scripRef>. Observe here,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p90"><i>First,</i> Her humility and necessity
|
|||
|
made her glad of crumbs. Those who are conscious to themselves that
|
|||
|
they deserve nothing, will be thankful for any thing; and
|
|||
|
<i>then</i> we are prepared for the greatest of God's mercies, when
|
|||
|
we see ourselves less than the least of them. The least of Christ
|
|||
|
is precious to a believer, and the very crumbs of the bread of
|
|||
|
life.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p91"><i>Secondly,</i> Her faith encouraged her
|
|||
|
to expect these crumbs. Why should it not be at Christ's table as
|
|||
|
at a great man's, where the dogs are fed as sure as the children?
|
|||
|
Observe, She calls it their <i>master's</i> table; if she were a
|
|||
|
dog, she was <i>his</i> dog, and it cannot be ill with us, if we
|
|||
|
stand but in the meanest relation to Christ; "Though unworthy to be
|
|||
|
called children, yet <i>make me as one of thy hired servants:</i>
|
|||
|
nay, rather let me be set with the dogs than turned out of the
|
|||
|
house; for <i>in my Father's house there is not only bread enough,
|
|||
|
but to spare,</i>" <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p91.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.15.17-Luke.15.19" parsed="|Luke|15|17|15|19" passage="Lu 15:17-19">Luke xv.
|
|||
|
17-19</scripRef>. It is good lying in God's house, though we lie at
|
|||
|
the threshold there.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p92">4. The happy issue and success of all this.
|
|||
|
She came off with credit and comfort from this struggle; and,
|
|||
|
though a Canaanite, approved herself a true daughter of Israel,
|
|||
|
who, <i>like a prince, had power with God, and prevailed.</i>
|
|||
|
Hitherto Christ hid his face from her, but now <i>gathers her with
|
|||
|
everlasting kindness,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p92.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.28" parsed="|Matt|15|28|0|0" passage="Mt 15:28"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
28</scripRef>. <i>Then Jesus said, O woman, great is thy faith.</i>
|
|||
|
This was like Joseph's making himself know to his brethren, <i>I am
|
|||
|
Joseph;</i> so here, in effect, <i>I am Jesus.</i> Now he begins to
|
|||
|
speak like himself, and to put on his own countenance. <i>He will
|
|||
|
not contend for ever.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p93">(1.) He commended her faith. <i>O woman,
|
|||
|
great is thy faith.</i> Observe, [1.] It is her faith that he
|
|||
|
commends. There were several other graces that shone bright in her
|
|||
|
conduct of this affair-wisdom, humility, meekness, patience,
|
|||
|
perseverance in prayer; but these were the product of her faith,
|
|||
|
and therefore Christ fastens upon that as most commendable; because
|
|||
|
of all graces faith honours Christ most, therefore of all graces
|
|||
|
Christ honours faith most. [2.] It is the greatness of her faith.
|
|||
|
Note, <i>First,</i> Though the faith of all the saints is alike
|
|||
|
precious, yet it is not in all alike strong; all believers are not
|
|||
|
of the same size and stature. <i>Secondly,</i> The greatness of
|
|||
|
faith consists much in a resolute adherence to Jesus Christ as an
|
|||
|
all-sufficient Saviour, even in the face of discouragements; to
|
|||
|
love him, and trust him, as a Friend, even then when he seems to
|
|||
|
come forth against us as an Enemy. This is <i>great faith!
|
|||
|
Thirdly,</i> Though weak faith, if true, shall not be rejected, yet
|
|||
|
great faith shall be commended, and shall appear greatly
|
|||
|
well-pleasing to Christ; for in them that thus believe he is most
|
|||
|
admired. Thus Christ commended the faith of the centurion, and he
|
|||
|
was a Gentile too, he had a strong faith in the power of Christ,
|
|||
|
this woman in the good-will of Christ; both were acceptable.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p94">(2.) He cured her daughter; "<i>Be it unto
|
|||
|
thee even as thou wilt:</i> I can deny thee nothing, take what thou
|
|||
|
camest for." Note, Great believers may have what they will for the
|
|||
|
asking. When our will conforms to the will of Christ's precept, his
|
|||
|
will concurs with the will of our desire. Those that will deny
|
|||
|
Christ nothing, shall find that he will deny them nothing at last,
|
|||
|
though for a time he seems to hide his face from them. "Thou
|
|||
|
wouldst have thy sins pardoned, thy corruptions mortified, thy
|
|||
|
nature sanctified; <i>be it unto thee even as thou wilt.</i> And
|
|||
|
what canst thou desire more?" When we come, as this poor woman did,
|
|||
|
to pray against Satan and his kingdom, we concur with the
|
|||
|
intercession of Christ, and it shall be accordingly. Though Satan
|
|||
|
may <i>sift</i> Peter, and <i>buffet</i> Paul, yet, through
|
|||
|
Christ's prayer and the sufficiency of his grace, <i>we shall be
|
|||
|
more than conquerors,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p94.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.22.31-Luke.22.32 Bible:2Cor.12.7-2Cor.12.9 Bible:Rom.16.20" parsed="|Luke|22|31|22|32;|2Cor|12|7|12|9;|Rom|16|20|0|0" passage="Lu 22:31,32,2Co 12:7-9,Ro 16:20">Luke xxii. 31, 32; 2 Cor. xii.
|
|||
|
7-9; Rom. xvi. 20</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p95">The event was answerable to the word of
|
|||
|
Christ; <i>Her daughter was made whole from that very hour;</i>
|
|||
|
from thenceforward was never vexed with the devil any more; the
|
|||
|
mother's faith prevailed for the daughter's cure. Though the
|
|||
|
patient was at a distance, that was no hindrance to the efficacy of
|
|||
|
Christ's word. <i>He spake, and it was done.</i></p>
|
|||
|
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xvi-p95.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.29-Matt.15.39" parsed="|Matt|15|29|15|39" passage="Mt 15:29-39" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.15.29-Matt.15.39">
|
|||
|
<h4 id="Matt.xvi-p95.2">Four Thousand Men Fed.</h4>
|
|||
|
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xvi-p96">29 And Jesus departed from thence, and came nigh
|
|||
|
unto the sea of Galilee; and went up into a mountain, and sat down
|
|||
|
there. 30 And great multitudes came unto him, having with
|
|||
|
them <i>those that were</i> lame, blind, dumb, maimed, and many
|
|||
|
others, and cast them down at Jesus' feet; and he healed them:
|
|||
|
31 Insomuch that the multitude wondered, when they saw the
|
|||
|
dumb to speak, the maimed to be whole, the lame to walk, and the
|
|||
|
blind to see: and they glorified the God of Israel. 32 Then
|
|||
|
Jesus called his disciples <i>unto him,</i> and said, I have
|
|||
|
compassion on the multitude, because they continue with me now
|
|||
|
three days, and have nothing to eat: and I will not send them away
|
|||
|
fasting, lest they faint in the way. 33 And his disciples
|
|||
|
say unto him, Whence should we have so much bread in the
|
|||
|
wilderness, as to fill so great a multitude? 34 And Jesus
|
|||
|
saith unto them, How many loaves have ye? And they said, Seven, and
|
|||
|
a few little fishes. 35 And he commanded the multitude to
|
|||
|
sit down on the ground. 36 And he took the seven loaves and
|
|||
|
the fishes, and gave thanks, and brake <i>them,</i> and gave to his
|
|||
|
disciples, and the disciples to the multitude. 37 And they
|
|||
|
did all eat, and were filled: and they took up of the broken
|
|||
|
<i>meat</i> that was left seven baskets full. 38 And they
|
|||
|
that did eat were four thousand men, beside women and children.
|
|||
|
39 And he sent away the multitude, and took ship, and came
|
|||
|
into the coasts of Magdala.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p97">Here is, I. A general account of Christ's
|
|||
|
cures, his curing by wholesale. The tokens of Christ's power and
|
|||
|
goodness are neither scarce nor scanty; for there is in him an
|
|||
|
overflowing fulness. Now observe,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p98">1. The place where these cures were
|
|||
|
wrought; it was <i>near the sea of Galilee,</i> a part of the
|
|||
|
country Christ was much conversant with. We read not of any thing
|
|||
|
he did in the coasts of Tyre and Sidon, but the casting of the
|
|||
|
devil out of the woman of Canaan's daughter, as if he took that
|
|||
|
journey on purpose, with that in prospect. Let not ministers grudge
|
|||
|
their pains to do good, though but to few. He that knows the worth
|
|||
|
of souls, would go a great way to help to save one from death and
|
|||
|
Satan's power.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p99">But <i>Jesus departed thence.</i> Having
|
|||
|
let fall that crumb under table, he here returns to make a full
|
|||
|
feast for the children. We may do that occasionally for one, which
|
|||
|
we may not make a constant practice of. Christ steps into the coast
|
|||
|
of Tyre and Sidon, but he <i>sits down by the sea of Galilee</i>
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p99.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.29" parsed="|Matt|15|29|0|0" passage="Mt 15:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>), sits down
|
|||
|
not on a stately throne, or tribunal of judgment, but on a
|
|||
|
mountain: so mean and homely were his most solemn appearances in
|
|||
|
the days of his flesh! He <i>sat down on a mountain,</i> that all
|
|||
|
might see him, and have free access to him; for he is an open
|
|||
|
Saviour. He sat down there, as one tired with his journey, and
|
|||
|
willing to have a little rest; or rather, as one waiting to be
|
|||
|
gracious. He sat, expecting patients, as Abraham at his tent-door,
|
|||
|
ready to entertain strangers. He settled himself to this good
|
|||
|
work.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p100">2. The multitudes and maladies that were
|
|||
|
healed by him (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p100.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.30" parsed="|Matt|15|30|0|0" passage="Mt 15:30"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
30</scripRef>); <i>Great multitudes came to him;</i> that the
|
|||
|
scripture might be fulfilled, <i>Unto him shall the gathering of
|
|||
|
the people be,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p100.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.49.10" parsed="|Gen|49|10|0|0" passage="Ge 49:10">Gen. xlix.
|
|||
|
10</scripRef>. If Christ's ministers could cure bodily diseases as
|
|||
|
Christ did, there would be more flocking to them than there is; we
|
|||
|
are soon sensible of bodily pain and sickness, but few are
|
|||
|
concerned about their souls and their spiritual diseases.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p101">Now, (1.) Such was the goodness of Christ,
|
|||
|
that he admitted all sorts of people; the poor as well as the rich
|
|||
|
are welcome to Christ, and with him there is room enough for all
|
|||
|
comers. He never complained of crowds or throngs of seekers, or
|
|||
|
looked with contempt upon the vulgar, the <i>herd,</i> as they are
|
|||
|
called; for the souls of peasants are as precious with him as the
|
|||
|
souls of princes.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p102">(2.) Such was the power of Christ, that he
|
|||
|
healed all sorts of diseases; those that came to him, brought their
|
|||
|
sick relations and friends along with them, and <i>cast them down
|
|||
|
at Jesus' feet,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p102.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.30" parsed="|Matt|15|30|0|0" passage="Mt 15:30"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
30</scripRef>. We read not of any thing they said to him, but they
|
|||
|
laid them down before him as objects of pity, to be looked upon by
|
|||
|
him. Their calamities spake more for them than the tongue of the
|
|||
|
most eloquent orator could. <i>David showed before God his
|
|||
|
trouble,</i> that was enough, he then left it with him, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p102.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.142.2" parsed="|Ps|142|2|0|0" passage="Ps 142:2">Ps. cxlii. 2</scripRef>. Whatever our case is,
|
|||
|
the only way to find ease and relief, is, to lay it at Christ's
|
|||
|
feet, to spread it before him, and refer it to his cognizance, and
|
|||
|
then submit it to him, and refer it to his disposal. Those that
|
|||
|
would have spiritual healing from Christ, must lay themselves at
|
|||
|
his feet, to be ruled and ordered as he pleaseth.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p103">Here were <i>lame, blind, dumb, maimed, and
|
|||
|
many others,</i> brought to Christ. See what work sin has made! It
|
|||
|
has turned the world into a hospital: what various diseases are
|
|||
|
human bodies subject to! See what work the Saviour makes! He
|
|||
|
conquers those hosts of enemies to mankind. Here were such diseases
|
|||
|
as a flame of fancy could contribute neither to the cause of nor to
|
|||
|
the cure of; as lying not in the humours, but in the members of the
|
|||
|
body; and yet these were subject to the commands of Christ. <i>He
|
|||
|
sent his word, and healed them.</i> Note, All diseases are at the
|
|||
|
command of Christ, to go and come as he bids them. This is an
|
|||
|
instance of Christ's power, which may comfort us in all our
|
|||
|
weaknesses; and of his pity, which may comfort us in all our
|
|||
|
miseries.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p104">3. The influence that this had upon the
|
|||
|
people, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p104.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.31" parsed="|Matt|15|31|0|0" passage="Mt 15:31"><i>v.</i> 31</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p105">(1.) They <i>wondered,</i> and well they
|
|||
|
might. Christ's works should be our wonder. <i>It is the Lord's
|
|||
|
doing, and it is marvellous,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p105.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.118.23" parsed="|Ps|118|23|0|0" passage="Ps 118:23">Ps.
|
|||
|
cxviii. 23</scripRef>. The spiritual cures that Christ works are
|
|||
|
wonderful. When blind souls are made to see by faith, <i>the dumb
|
|||
|
to speak</i> in prayer, <i>the lame to walk</i> in holy obedience,
|
|||
|
it is to be wondered at. <i>Sing unto the Lord a new song, for</i>
|
|||
|
thus <i>he has done marvellous things.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p106">(2.) <i>They glorified the God of
|
|||
|
Israel,</i> whom the Pharisees, when they saw these things,
|
|||
|
blasphemed. Miracles, which are the matter of our wonder, must be
|
|||
|
the matter of our praise; and mercies, which are the matter of our
|
|||
|
rejoicing, must be the matter of our thanksgiving. Those that were
|
|||
|
healed, glorified God; if he heal our diseases, all that is within
|
|||
|
us must bless his holy name; and if we have been graciously
|
|||
|
preserved from blindness, and lameness, and dumbness, we have as
|
|||
|
much reason to bless God as if we had been cured of them; nay, and
|
|||
|
the standers-by glorified God. Note, God must be acknowledged with
|
|||
|
praise and thankfulness in the mercies of others as in our own.
|
|||
|
<i>They glorified</i> him as <i>the God of Israel,</i> his church's
|
|||
|
God, a God in covenant with his people, who hath sent the Messiah
|
|||
|
promised; and this is he. See <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p106.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.1.68" parsed="|Luke|1|68|0|0" passage="Lu 1:68">Luke i.
|
|||
|
68</scripRef>. <i>Blessed be the Lord God of Israel.</i> This was
|
|||
|
done by the power of the God of Israel, and no other could do
|
|||
|
it.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p107">II. Here is a particular account of his
|
|||
|
feeding <i>four thousand men</i> with <i>seven loaves, and a few
|
|||
|
little fishes,</i> as he had lately fed <i>five thousand with five
|
|||
|
loaves.</i> The guests indeed were now not quite so many as then,
|
|||
|
and the provision a little more; which does not intimate that
|
|||
|
Christ's arm was shortened, but that he wrought his miracles as the
|
|||
|
occasion required, and not for ostentation, and therefore he suited
|
|||
|
them to the occasion: both then and now he took as many as were to
|
|||
|
be fed, and made use of all that was at hand to feed them with.
|
|||
|
When once the utmost powers of nature are exceeded, we must say,
|
|||
|
<i>This is the finger of God;</i> and it is neither here nor there
|
|||
|
how far they are outdone; so that this is no less a miracle than
|
|||
|
the former.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p108">Here is, 1. Christ's pity (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p108.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.32" parsed="|Matt|15|32|0|0" passage="Mt 15:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>); <i>I have compassion
|
|||
|
on the multitude.</i> He tells his disciples this, both to try and
|
|||
|
to excite their compassion. When he was about to work this miracle,
|
|||
|
he called them to him, and made them acquainted with his purpose,
|
|||
|
and discoursed with them about it; not because he needed their
|
|||
|
advice, but because he would give an instance of his condescending
|
|||
|
love to them. He called them not <i>servants,</i> for <i>the
|
|||
|
servant knows not what his Lord doeth,</i> but treated them as his
|
|||
|
friends and counsellors. <i>Shall I hide from Abraham the thing
|
|||
|
that I do?</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p108.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.18.17" parsed="|Gen|18|17|0|0" passage="Ge 18:17">Gen. xviii.
|
|||
|
17</scripRef>. In what he said to them, Observe,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p109">(1.) The case of the multitude; <i>They
|
|||
|
continue with me now three days, and have nothing to eat.</i> This
|
|||
|
is an instance of their zeal, and the strength of their affection
|
|||
|
to Christ and his word, that they not only left their callings, to
|
|||
|
attend upon him on week-days, but underwent a deal of hardship, to
|
|||
|
continue with him; they wanted their natural rest, and, for aught
|
|||
|
that appeared, lay like soldiers in the field; they wanted
|
|||
|
necessary food, and had scarcely enough to keep life and soul
|
|||
|
together. In those hotter countries they could better bear long
|
|||
|
fasting than we can in these colder climates: but though it could
|
|||
|
not but be grievous to the body, and might endanger their health,
|
|||
|
yet <i>the zeal of God's house thus ate them up,</i> and they
|
|||
|
esteemed the words of Christ more than their necessary food. We
|
|||
|
think three hours too much to attend upon public ordinances; but
|
|||
|
these people staid together three days, and yet snuffed not at it,
|
|||
|
nor said, <i>Behold, what a weariness is it!</i> Observe, With what
|
|||
|
tenderness Christ spoke of it; <i>I have compassion on them.</i> It
|
|||
|
had become them to have compassion on him, who took so much pains
|
|||
|
with them for three days together, and was so indefatigable in
|
|||
|
teaching and healing; so much virtue had gone out of him, and yet
|
|||
|
for aught that appears he was fasting too: but he prevented them
|
|||
|
with his compassion. Note, Our Lord Jesus keeps an account how long
|
|||
|
his followers continue their attendance on him, and takes notice of
|
|||
|
the difficulty they sustain in it (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p109.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.2.2" parsed="|Rev|2|2|0|0" passage="Re 2:2">Rev.
|
|||
|
ii. 2</scripRef>); <i>I know thy works, and thy labour, and thy
|
|||
|
patience:</i> and it shall <i>in no wise lose its reward.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p110">Now the exigence the people were reduced to
|
|||
|
serves to magnify. [1.] The mercy of their supply: he fed them when
|
|||
|
they were hungry; and then food was doubly welcome. He treated them
|
|||
|
as he did Israel of old; <i>he suffered them to hunger, and then
|
|||
|
fed them</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p110.1" osisRef="Bible:Deut.8.3" parsed="|Deut|8|3|0|0" passage="De 8:3">Deut. viii. 3</scripRef>);
|
|||
|
for that is <i>sweet to the hungry soul,</i> which <i>the full soul
|
|||
|
loathes.</i> [2.] The miracle of their supply: having been so long
|
|||
|
fasting, their appetites were the more craving. If two hungry meals
|
|||
|
make the third a glutton, what would three hungry days do? And yet
|
|||
|
<i>they did all eat and were filled.</i> Note, There are mercy and
|
|||
|
grace enough with Christ, to give the most earnest and enlarged
|
|||
|
desire an abundant satisfaction; <i>Open thy mouth wide, and I will
|
|||
|
fill it. He replenisheth even the hungry soul.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p111">(2.) The care of our master concerning
|
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|
them; <i>I will not send them away fasting, lest they should faint
|
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|
by the way;</i> which would be a discredit to Christ and his
|
|||
|
family, and a discouragement both to them and to others. Note, It
|
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|
is the unhappiness of our present state, that when our souls are in
|
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|
some measure elevated and enlarged, our bodies cannot keep pace
|
|||
|
with them in good duties. The weakness of the flesh is a great
|
|||
|
grievance to the willingness of the spirit. It will not be so in
|
|||
|
heaven, where the body shall be made spiritual, where <i>they rest
|
|||
|
not, day and night, from praising God,</i> and yet faint not; where
|
|||
|
<i>they hunger no more, nor thirst any more,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p111.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.7.16" parsed="|Rev|7|16|0|0" passage="Re 7:16">Rev. vii. 16</scripRef>.</p>
|
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|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p112">Here is, 2. Christ's power. His pity of
|
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|
their wants sets his power on work for their supply. Now
|
|||
|
observe,</p>
|
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|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p113">(1.) How his power was distrusted by his
|
|||
|
disciples (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p113.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.23" parsed="|Matt|15|23|0|0" passage="Mt 15:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>);
|
|||
|
<i>whence should we have so much bread in the wilderness?</i> A
|
|||
|
proper question, one would think, like that of Moses (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p113.2" osisRef="Bible:Num.11.22" parsed="|Num|11|22|0|0" passage="Nu 11:22">Num. xi. 22</scripRef>). <i>Shall the flocks and
|
|||
|
the herds be slain to suffice them?</i> But it was here an improper
|
|||
|
question, considering not only the general assurance the disciples
|
|||
|
had of the power of Christ, but the particular experience they
|
|||
|
lately had of a seasonable and sufficient provision by miracle in a
|
|||
|
like case; they had been not only the witnesses, but the ministers,
|
|||
|
of the former miracle; the multiplied bread went through their
|
|||
|
hands; so that it was an instance of great weakness for them to
|
|||
|
ask, <i>Whence shall we have bread?</i> Could they be at a loss,
|
|||
|
while they had their Master with them? Note, Forgetting former
|
|||
|
experiences leaves us under present doubts.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p114">Christ knew how slender the provision was,
|
|||
|
but he would know it from them (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p114.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.34" parsed="|Matt|15|34|0|0" passage="Mt 15:34"><i>v.</i> 34</scripRef>); <i>How many loaves have
|
|||
|
ye?</i> Before he would work, he would have it seen how little he
|
|||
|
had to work on, that his power might shine the brighter. What they
|
|||
|
had, they had for themselves, and it was little enough for their
|
|||
|
own family; but Christ would have them bestow it all upon the
|
|||
|
multitude, and trust Providence for more. Note, it becomes Christ's
|
|||
|
disciples to be generous, their Master was so: what we have, we
|
|||
|
should be free of, as there is occasion; <i>given to
|
|||
|
hospitality;</i> not like Nabal (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p114.2" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.25.11" parsed="|1Sam|25|11|0|0" passage="1Sa 25:11">1
|
|||
|
Sam. xxv. 11</scripRef>), but like Elisha, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p114.3" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.4.42" parsed="|2Kgs|4|42|0|0" passage="2Ki 4:42">2 Kings iv. 42</scripRef>. Niggardliness to-day, out of
|
|||
|
thoughtfulness for to-morrow, is a complication of corrupt
|
|||
|
affection that ought to be mortified. If we be prudently kind and
|
|||
|
charitable with what we have, we may piously hope that God will
|
|||
|
send more. <i>Jehovah-jireh, The Lord will provide.</i> The
|
|||
|
disciples asked, <i>Whence should we have bread?</i> Christ asked,
|
|||
|
<i>How many loaves have ye?</i> Note, When we cannot have what we
|
|||
|
would, we must make the best of what we have, and do good with it
|
|||
|
as far as it will go; we must not think so much of our wants as of
|
|||
|
our havings. Christ herein went according to the rule he gave to
|
|||
|
Martha, not to be <i>troubled about many things, nor cumbered about
|
|||
|
much serving.</i> Nature is content with little, grace with less,
|
|||
|
but lust with nothing.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p115">(2.) How his power was discovered to the
|
|||
|
multitude, in the plentiful provision he made for them; the manner
|
|||
|
of which is much the same as before, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p115.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.14.18" parsed="|Matt|14|18|0|0" passage="Mt 14:18"><i>ch.</i> xiv. 18</scripRef>, &c. Observe here,</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p116">[1.] The provision that was at hand;
|
|||
|
<i>seven loaves, and a few fishes:</i> the fish not proportionable
|
|||
|
to the bread, for bread is the staff of life. It is probable that
|
|||
|
the fish was such as they had themselves taken; for they were
|
|||
|
fishers, and were now near the sea. Note, It is comfortable to
|
|||
|
<i>eat the labour of our hands</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p116.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.128.2" parsed="|Ps|128|2|0|0" passage="Ps 128:2">Ps. cxxviii. 2</scripRef>), and to enjoy that which is
|
|||
|
any way the product of our own industry, <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p116.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.12.27" parsed="|Prov|12|27|0|0" passage="Pr 12:27">Prov. xii. 27</scripRef>. And what we have got by God's
|
|||
|
blessing on our labour we should be free of; for <i>therefore</i>
|
|||
|
we must labour, <i>that we may have to give,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p116.3" osisRef="Bible:Eph.4.28" parsed="|Eph|4|28|0|0" passage="Eph 4:28">Eph. iv. 28</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p117">[2.] The putting of the people in a posture
|
|||
|
to receive it (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p117.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.35" parsed="|Matt|15|35|0|0" passage="Mt 15:35"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
35</scripRef>); <i>He commanded the multitude to sit down on the
|
|||
|
ground.</i> They saw but very little provision, yet they must sit
|
|||
|
down, in faith that they should have a meal's meat out of it. They
|
|||
|
who would have spiritual food from Christ, must sit down at his
|
|||
|
feet, to hear his word, and expect it to come in an unseen way.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p118">[3.] The distributing of the provision
|
|||
|
among them. He first <i>gave
|
|||
|
thanks</i>—<b><i>eucharistesas</i></b>. The word used in the
|
|||
|
former miracle was <b><i>eulogese</i></b>—<i>he blessed.</i> It
|
|||
|
comes all to one; giving thanks to God is a proper way of craving a
|
|||
|
blessing from God. And when we come to ask and receive further
|
|||
|
mercy, we ought to give thanks for the mercies we have received. He
|
|||
|
then <i>broke the loaves</i> (for it was in the breaking that the
|
|||
|
bread multiplied) <i>and gave to his disciples, and they to the
|
|||
|
multitude.</i> Though the disciples had distrusted Christ's power,
|
|||
|
yet he made use of them now as before; he is not provoked, as he
|
|||
|
might be, by the weakness and infirmities of his ministers, to lay
|
|||
|
them aside; but still he gives to them, and they to his people, of
|
|||
|
the word of life.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p119">[4.] The plenty there was among them
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p119.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.37" parsed="|Matt|15|37|0|0" passage="Mt 15:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>). <i>They did
|
|||
|
all eat, and were filled.</i> Note, Those whom Christ feeds, he
|
|||
|
fills. While we labour for the world, we labour for that which
|
|||
|
satisfieth not (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p119.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.55.2" parsed="|Isa|55|2|0|0" passage="Isa 55:2">Isa. lv.
|
|||
|
2</scripRef>); but those that duly wait on Christ shall be
|
|||
|
<i>abundantly satisfied with the goodness of his house,</i>
|
|||
|
<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p119.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.65.4" parsed="|Ps|65|4|0|0" passage="Ps 65:4">Ps. lxv. 4</scripRef>. Christ thus fed
|
|||
|
people once and again, to intimate that though he was called Jesus
|
|||
|
of Nazareth, yet he was <i>of Bethlehem, the house of bread;</i> or
|
|||
|
rather, that he was himself <i>the Bread of Life.</i></p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p120">To show that they had all enough, there was
|
|||
|
a great deal left—<i>seven baskets full of broken meat;</i> not so
|
|||
|
much as there was before, because they did not gather after so many
|
|||
|
eaters, but enough to show that with Christ <i>there is bread
|
|||
|
enough, and to spare;</i> supplies of grace for more than seek it,
|
|||
|
and for those that seek more.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p121">[5.] The account taken of the guests; not
|
|||
|
that they might pay their share (here was no reckoning to be
|
|||
|
discharged, they were fed gratis), but that they might be witnesses
|
|||
|
to the power and goodness of Christ, and that this might be some
|
|||
|
resemblance of that universal providence that <i>gives food to all
|
|||
|
flesh,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p121.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.136.25" parsed="|Ps|136|25|0|0" passage="Ps 136:25">Ps. cxxxvi. 25</scripRef>.
|
|||
|
Here were four thousand men fed; but what were they to that great
|
|||
|
family which is provided for by the divine care every day? God is a
|
|||
|
great Housekeeper, on whom <i>the eyes of all the creatures wait,
|
|||
|
and he giveth them their food in due season,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p121.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.104.27 Bible:Ps.145.15" parsed="|Ps|104|27|0|0;|Ps|145|15|0|0" passage="Ps 104:27,145:15">Ps. civ. 27; cxlv. 15</scripRef>.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xvi-p122">[6.] The dismission of the multitude, and
|
|||
|
Christ's departure to another place (<scripRef id="Matt.xvi-p122.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.39" parsed="|Matt|15|39|0|0" passage="Mt 15:39"><i>v.</i> 39</scripRef>). He <i>sent away</i> the
|
|||
|
people. Though he had fed them twice, they must not expect miracles
|
|||
|
to be their daily bread. Let them now go home to their callings,
|
|||
|
and to their own tables. And he himself departed by ship to another
|
|||
|
place; for, being the <i>Light of the world,</i> he must be still
|
|||
|
<i>in motion, and go about to do good.</i></p>
|
|||
|
</div></div2>
|