This chapter is a continuation of Christ's
discourses in the temple, two or three days before he died. His
discourses then are largely recorded, as being of special weight
and consequence. In this chapter, we have, I. Instruction given, by
the parable of the marriage-supper, concerning the rejection of the
Jews, and the calling of the Gentiles (
1 And Jesus answered and spake unto them again by parables, and said, 2 The kingdom of heaven is like unto a certain king, which made a marriage for his son, 3 And sent forth his servants to call them that were bidden to the wedding: and they would not come. 4 Again, he sent forth other servants, saying, Tell them which are bidden, Behold, I have prepared my dinner: my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all things are ready: come unto the marriage. 5 But they made light of it, and went their ways, one to his farm, another to his merchandise: 6 And the remnant took his servants, and entreated them spitefully, and slew them. 7 But when the king heard thereof, he was wroth: and he sent forth his armies, and destroyed those murderers, and burned up their city. 8 Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy. 9 Go ye therefore into the highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the marriage. 10 So those servants went out into the highways, and gathered together all as many as they found, both bad and good: and the wedding was furnished with guests. 11 And when the king came in to see the guests, he saw there a man which had not on a wedding garment: 12 And he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment? And he was speechless. 13 Then said the king to the servants, Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and cast him into outer darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. 14 For many are called, but few are chosen.
We have here the parable of the guests
invited to the wedding-feast. In this it is said (
I. Gospel preparations are here represented by a feast which a king made at the marriage of his son; such is the kingdom of heaven, such the provision made for precious souls, in and by the new covenant. The King is God, a great King, King of kings. Now,
1. Here is a marriage made for his
son, Christ is the Bridegroom, the church is the bride; the
gospel-day is the day of his espousals,
2. Here is a dinner prepared for this
marriage,
(1.) It is a feast. Gospel
preparations were prophesied of as a feast (
(2.) It is a wedding feast. Wedding
feasts are usually rich, free, and joyful. The first miracle Christ
wrought, was, to make plentiful provision for a wedding feast
(
(3.) It is a royal wedding feast; it
is the feast of a king (
II. Gospel calls and offers are represented
by an invitation to this feast. Those that make a feast will have
guests to grace the feast with. God's guests are the children of
men. Lord, what is man, that he should be thus dignified!
The guests that were first invited were the Jews; wherever
the gospel is preached, this invitation is given; ministers are the
servants that are sent to invite,
Now, 1. The guests are called, bidden to the wedding. All that are within hearing of the joyful sound of the gospel, to them is the word of this invitation sent. The servants that bring the invitation do not set down their names in a paper; there is no occasion for that, since none are excluded but those that exclude themselves. Those that are bidden to the dinner are bidden to the wedding; for all that partake of gospel privileges are to give a due and respectful attendance on the Lord Jesus, as the faithful friends and humble servants of the Bridegroom. They are bidden to the wedding, that they may go forth to meet the bridegroom; for it is the Father's will that all men should honour the Son.
2. The guests are called upon; for in the
gospel there are not only gracious proposals made, but gracious
persuasives. We persuade men, we beseech them in Christ's
stead,
III. The cold treatment which the gospel of Christ often meets with among the children of men, represented by the cold treatment that this message met with and the hot treatment that the messengers met with, in both which the king himself and the royal bridegroom are affronted. This reflects primarily upon the Jews, who rejected the counsel of God against themselves; but it looks further, to the contempt that would, by many in all ages, be put upon, and the opposition that would be given to, the gospel of Christ.
1. The message was basely slighted
(
And the reason why they made light of
the marriage feast was, because they had other things that they
minded more, and had more mind to; they went their ways, one to
his farm, and another to his merchandise. Note, The business
and profit of worldly employments prove to many a great hindrance
in closing with Christ: none turn their back on the feast, but with
some plausible excuse or other,
2. The messengers were basely abused;
The remnant, or the rest of them, that is, those who did not
go the farms, or merchandise, were neither husbandmen
nor tradesmen, but ecclesiastics, the scribes, and Pharisees,
and chief priests; these were the persecutors, these took
the servants, and treated them spitefully, and slew them. This,
in the parable, is unaccountable, never any could be so rude and
barbarous as this, to servants that came to invite them to a feast;
but, in the application of the parable, it was matter of fact; they
whose feet should have been beautiful, because they
brought the glad tidings of the solemn feasts (
IV. The utter ruin that was coming upon the
Jewish church and nation is here represented by the revenge which
the king, in wrath, took on these insolent recusants (
1. What was the crying sin that brought the
ruin; it was their being murderers. He does not say, he
destroyed those despisers of his call, but those
murderers of his servants; as if God were more jealous for the
lives of his ministers than for the honour of his gospel; he that
toucheth them, toucheth the apple of his eye. Note,
Persecution of Christ's faithful ministers fills the measure of
guilt more than any thing. Filling Jerusalem with innocent
blood was that sin of Manasseh which the Lord would not
pardon,
2. What was the ruin itself, that was
coming; He sent forth his armies. The Roman armies were his
armies, of his raising, of his sending against the people of his
wrath; and he gave them a charge to tread them down,
V. The replenishing of the church again, by
the bringing in of the Gentiles, is here represented by the
furnishing of the feast with guests out of the high-ways,
Here is, 1. The complaint of the master of
the feast concerning those that were first bidden (
2. The commission he gave to the servants,
to invite other guests. The inhabitants of the city
(
3. The success of this second invitation;
if some will not come, others will (
Now the guests that were gathered were,
[1.] A multitude, all, as many as they found; so many, that
the guest-chamber was filled. The sealed ones of the Jews were
numbered, but those of other nations were without number, a very
great multitude,
VI. The case of hypocrites, who are in the church, but not of it, who have a name to live, but are not alive indeed, is represented by the guest that had not on a wedding garment; one of the bad that were gathered in. Those come short of salvation by Christ, not only who refuse to take upon them the profession of religion, but who are not sound at heart in that profession. Concerning this hypocrite observe,
1. His discovery, how he was found out,
(1.) The king came in to see the
guests, to bid those welcome who came prepared, and to turn
those out who came otherwise. Note, The God of heaven takes
particular notice of those who profess religion, and have a place
and name in the visible church. Our Lord Jesus walks among the
golden candlesticks and therefore knows their works. See
Observe, This hypocrite was never
discovered to be without a wedding garment, till the king
himself came in to see the guests. Note, It is God's
prerogative to know who are sound at heart in their profession, and
who are not. We may be deceived in men, either one way or other;
but He cannot. The day of judgment will be the great discovering
day, when all the guests will be presented to the King: then he
will separate between the precious and the vile (
(2.) As soon as he came in, he presently
espied the hypocrite; He saw there a man which had not on a
wedding garment; though but one, he soon had his eye upon him;
there is no hope of being hid in a crowd from the arrests of divine
justice; he had not on a wedding garment; he was not dressed as
became a nuptial solemnity; he had not his best clothes on. Note,
Many come to the wedding feast without a wedding garment. If the
gospel be the wedding feast, then the wedding garment is a frame of
heart, and a course of life agreeable to the gospel and our
profession of it, worthy of the vocation wherewith we are
called (
2. His trial (
(1.) How he was arraigned (
(2.) How he was convicted; he was
speechless: ephimothe—he was muzzled (so
the word is used,
3. His sentence (
(1.) He is ordered to be pinioned, as
condemned malefactors are, to be manacled and shackled. Those that
will not work and walk as they should, may expect to be bound hand
and foot. There is a binding in this world by the servants, the
ministers, whose suspending of persons that walk disorderly, to the
scandal of religion, is called binding of them,
(2.) He is ordered to be carried off from
the wedding feast; Take him away. When the wickedness of
hypocrites appears, they are to be taken away from the communion of
the faithful, to be cut of as withered branches. This bespeaks the
punishment of loss in the other world; they shall be taken away
from the king, from the kingdom, from the wedding feast, Depart
from me, ye cursed. It will aggravate their misery, that (like
the unbelieving lord,
(3.) He is ordered into a doleful dungeon;
Cast him into utter darkness. Our Saviour here insensibly
slides out of this parable into that which it intimates—the
damnation of hypocrites in the other world. Hell is utter darkness,
it is darkness out of heaven, the land of light; or it is extreme
darkness, darkness to the last degree, without the least ray or
spark of light, or hope of it, like that of Egypt; darkness
which might be felt; the blackness of darkness, as darkness
itself,
Lastly, The parable is concluded
with that remarkable saying which we had before (
15 Then went the Pharisees, and took counsel how they might entangle him in his talk. 16 And they sent out unto him their disciples with the Herodians, saying, Master, we know that thou art true, and teachest the way of God in truth, neither carest thou for any man: for thou regardest not the person of men. 17 Tell us therefore, What thinkest thou? Is it lawful to give tribute unto Caesar, or not? 18 But Jesus perceived their wickedness, and said, Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites? 19 show me the tribute money. And they brought unto him a penny. 20 And he saith unto them, Whose is this image and superscription? 21 They say unto him, Caesar's. Then saith he unto them, Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's. 22 When they had heard these words, they marvelled, and left him, and went their way.
It was not the least grievous of the sufferings of Christ, that he endured the contradiction of sinners against himself, and had snares laid for him by those that sought how to take him off with some pretence. In these verses, we have him attacked by the Pharisees and Herodians with a question about paying tribute to Cæsar. Observe,
I. What the design was, which they proposed
to themselves; They took counsel to entangle him in his
talk. Hitherto, his encounters had been mostly with the chief
priests and the elders, men in authority, who trusted more to their
power than to their policy, and examined him concerning his
commission (
1. They took counsel. It was
foretold concerning him, that the rulers would take
counsel against him (
2. That which they aimed at was to
entangle him in his talk. They saw him free and bold in
speaking his mind, and hoped by that, if they could bring him to
some nice and tender point, to get an advantage against him. It has
been the old practice of Satan's agents and emissaries, to make a
man an offender for a word, a word misplaced, or mistaken, or
misunderstood; a word, though innocently designed, yet perverted by
strained inuendos: thus they lay a snare for him that reproveth
in the gate (
There are two ways by which the enemies of
Christ might be revenged on him, and be rid of him; either by law
or by force. By law they could not do it, unless they could make
him obnoxious to the civil government; for it was not lawful for
them to put any man to death (
II. The question which they put to him
pursuant to this design,
1. The persons they employed; they did not go themselves, lest the design should be suspected and Christ should stand the more upon his guard; but they sent their disciples, who would look less like tempters, and more like learners. Note, Wicked men will never want wicked instruments to be employed in carrying on their wicked counsels. Pharisees have their disciples at their beck, who will go any errand for them, and say as they say; and they have this in their eyes, when they are so industrious to make proselytes.
With them they sent the Herodians, a party
among the Jews, who were for a cheerful and entire subjection to
the Roman emperor, and to Herod his deputy; and who made it their
business to reconcile people to that government, and pressed all to
pay their tribute. Some think that they were the collectors of the
land tax, as the publicans were of the customs, and that they went
with the Pharisees to Christ, with this blind upon their plot, that
while the Herodians demanded the tax, and the Pharisees denied it,
they were both willing to refer it to Christ, as a proper Judge to
decide the quarrel. Herod being obliged, by the charter of the
sovereignty, to take care of the tribute, these Herodians, by
assisting him in that, helped to endear him to his great friends at
Rome. The Pharisees, on the other hand, were zealous for the
liberty of the Jews, and did what they could to make them impatient
of the Roman yoke. Now, if he should countenance the paying of
tribute, the Pharisees would incense the people against him; if he
should discountenance or disallow it, the Herodians would incense
the government against him. Note, It is common for those that
oppose one another, to continue in an opposition to Christ and his
kingdom. Samson's foxes looked several ways, but met in one
firebrand. See
2. The preface, with which they were
plausibly to introduce the question; it was highly complimentary to
our Saviour (
Now, (1.) What they said of Christ was right, and whether they knew it or no, blessed be God, we know it.
[1.] That Jesus Christ was a faithful
Teacher; Thou art true, and teachest the way of God in
truth. For himself, he is true, the Amen, the faithful
Witness; he is the Truth itself. As for his doctrine, the
matter of his teaching was the way of God, the way that God
requires us to walk in, the way of duty, that leads to happiness;
that is the way of God. The manner of it was in truth; he showed
people the right way, the way in which they should go. He
was a skilful Teacher, and knew the way of God; and a faithful
Teacher, that would be sure to let us know it. See
[2.] That he was a bold Reprover. In
preaching, he cared not for any; he valued no man's frowns
or smiles, he did not court, he did not dread, either the great or
the many, for he regarded not the person of man. In his
evangelical judgment, he did not know faces; that Lion of the
tribe of Judah, turned not away for any (
(2.) Though what they said was true for the
matter of it, yet there was nothing but flattery and treachery in
the intention of it. They called him Master, when they were
contriving to treat him as the worst of malefactors; they pretended
respect for him, when they intended mischief against him; and they
affronted his wisdom as Man, much more his omniscience as God, of
which he had so often given undeniable proofs, when they imagined
that they could impose upon him with these pretences, and that he
could not see through them. It is the grossest atheism, that is the
greatest folly in the world, to think to put a cheat upon Christ,
who searches the heart,
3. The proposal of the case; What
thinkest thou? As if they had said, "Many men are of many minds
in this matter; it is a case which relates to practice, and occurs
daily; let us have thy thought freely in the matter, Is it
lawful to give tribute to Cæsar or not?" This implies a further
question; Has Cæsar a right to demand it? The nation of the Jews
was lately, about a hundred years before this, conquered by the
Roman sword, and so, as other nations, made subject to the Roman
yoke, and became a province of the empire; accordingly, toll,
tribute, and custom, were demanded from them, and sometimes
poll-money. By this it appeared that the sceptre was departed
from Judah (
Now the question was, Whether it was lawful
to pay these taxes voluntarily, or, Whether they should not insist
upon the ancient liberty of their nation, and rather suffer
themselves to be distrained upon? The ground of the doubt was, that
they were Abraham's seed, and should not by consent be in
bondage to any man,
However, by this question they hoped to entangle Christ, and, which way soever he resolved it, to expose him to the fury either of the jealous Jews, or of the jealous Romans; they were ready to triumph, as Pharaoh did over Israel, that the wilderness had shut him in, and his doctrine would be concluded either injurious to the rights of the church, or hurtful to kings and provinces.
III. The breaking of this snare by the wisdom of the Lord Jesus.
1. He discovered it (
2. He evaded it; his convicting them of hypocrisy might have served for an answer (such captious malicious questions deserve a reproof, not a reply): but our Lord Jesus gave a full answer to their question, and introduced it by an argument sufficient to support it, so as to lay down a rule for his church in this matter, and yet to avoid giving offence, and to break the snare.
(1.) He forced them, ere they were aware,
to confess Cæsar's authority over them,
Christ asked them, Whose image is this? They owned it to be Cæsar's, and thereby convicted those of falsehood who said, We were never in bondage to any; and confirmed what afterward they said, We have no king but Cæsar. It is a rule in the Jewish Talmud, that "he is the king of the country whose coin is current in the country." Some think that the superscription upon this coin was a memorandum of the conquest of Judea by the Romans, anno post captam Judæam—the year after that event; and that they admitted that too.
(2.) From thence he inferred the lawfulness
of paying tribute to Cæsar (
[1.] No offence was given. It was much to
the honour of Christ and his doctrine, that he did not interpose as
a Judge or a Divider in matters of this nature, but left them as he
found them, for his kingdom is not of this world; and in
this he hath given an example to his ministers, who deal in sacred
things, not to meddle with disputes about things secular, not to
wade far into controversies relating to them, but to leave that to
those whose proper business it is. Ministers that would mind their
business, and please their master, must not entangle themselves
in the affairs of this life: they forfeit the guidance of God's
Spirit, and the convoy of his providence when they thus go out of
their way. Christ discusses not the emperor's title, but enjoins a
peaceable subjection to the powers that be. The government
therefore had no reason to take offence at his determination, but
to thank him, for it would strengthen Cæsar's interest with the
people, who held him for a Prophet; and yet such was the impudence
of his prosecutors, that, though he had expressly charged them to
render to Cæsar the things that are Cæsar's, they laid the
direct contrary in his indictment, that he forbade to give
tribute to Cæsar,
[2.] His adversaries were reproved. First, Some of them would have had him make it unlawful to give tribute to Cæsar, that they might have a pretence to save their money. Thus many excuse themselves from that which they must do, by arguing whether they may do it or no. Secondly, They all withheld from God his dues, and are reproved for that: while they were vainly contending about their civil liberties, they had lost the life and power of religion, and needed to be put in mind of their duty to God, with that to Cæsar.
[3.] His disciples were instructed, and standing rules left to the church.
First, That the Christian religion is no enemy to civil government, but a friend to it. Christ's kingdom doth not clash or interfere with the kingdoms of the earth, in any thing that pertains to their jurisdiction. By Christ kings reign.
Secondly, It is the duty of subjects
to render to magistrates that which, according to the laws of their
country, is their due. The higher powers, being entrusted with the
public welfare, the protection of the subject, and the conservation
of the peace, are entitled, in consideration thereof, to a just
proportion of the public wealth, and the revenue of the nation.
For this cause pay we tribute, because they attend
continually to this very thing (
Thirdly, When we render to Cæsar the things that are Cæsar's, we must remember withal to render to God the things that are God's. If our purses be Cæsar's, our consciences are God's; he hath said, My son, give me thy heart: he must have the innermost and uppermost place there; we must render to God that which is his due, out of our time and out of our estates; from them he must have his share as well as Cæsar his; and if Cæsar's commands interfere with God's we must obey God rather than men.
Lastly, Observe how they were
nonplussed by this answer; they marvelled, and left him, and
went their way,
23 The same day came to him the Sadducees, which say that there is no resurrection, and asked him, 24 Saying, Master, Moses said, If a man die, having no children, his brother shall marry his wife, and raise up seed unto his brother. 25 Now there were with us seven brethren: and the first, when he had married a wife, deceased, and, having no issue, left his wife unto his brother: 26 Likewise the second also, and the third, unto the seventh. 27 And last of all the woman died also. 28 Therefore in the resurrection whose wife shall she be of the seven? for they all had her. 29 Jesus answered and said unto them, Ye do err, not knowing the scriptures, nor the power of God. 30 For in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven. 31 But as touching the resurrection of the dead, have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God, saying, 32 I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living. 33 And when the multitude heard this, they were astonished at his doctrine.
We have here Christ's dispute with the
Sadducees concerning the resurrection; it was the same day on which
he was attacked by the Pharisees about paying tribute. Satan was
now more busy than ever to ruffle and disturb him; it was an
hour of temptation,
I. The opposition which the Sadducees made
to a very great truth of religion; they say, There is no
resurrection, as there are some fools who say, There is no
God. These heretics were called Sadducees from one
Sadoc, a disciple of Antigonus Sochæus, who flourished about two
hundred and eighty-four years before our Saviour's birth. They lie
under heavy censures among the writers of their own nation, as men
of base and debauched conversations, which their principles led
them to. They were the fewest in number of all the sects among the
Jews, but generally persons of some rank. As the Pharisees and
Essenes seemed to follow Plato and Pythagoras, so the Sadducees
were much of the genius of the Epicureans; they denied the
resurrection, they said, There is no future state, no life after
this; that, when the body dies, the soul is annihilated, and dies
with it; that there is no state of rewards or punishments in the
other world; no judgment to come in heaven or hell. They
maintained, that, except God, there is not spirit (
II. The objection they made against the truth, which was taken from a supposed case of a woman that had seven husbands successively; now they take it for granted, that, if there be a resurrection, it must be a return to such a state as this we are now in, and to the same circumstances, like the imaginary Platonic year; and if so, it is an invincible absurdity for this woman in the future state to have seven husbands, or else an insuperable difficulty which of them should have her, he whom she had first, or he whom she had last, or he whom she loved best, or he whom she lived longest with.
1. They suggest the law of Moses in this
matter (
2. They put a case upon this statute,
which, whether it were a case in fact or only a moot
case, is not at all material; if it had not really occurred,
yet possibly it might. It was of seven brothers, who married the
same woman,
(1.) The desolations that death sometimes
makes in families when it comes with commission; how it often
sweeps away a whole fraternity in a little time;: seldom (as the
case is put) according to seniority (the land of darkness is
without any order,) but heaps upon heaps; it diminishes
families that had multiplied greatly,
(2.) The obedience of these seven brothers
to the law, though they had a power of refusal under the penalty of
a reproach,
But, last of all, the woman died
also. Note, Survivorship is but a reprieve; they that live
long, and bury their relations and neighbours one after another, do
not thereby acquire an immortality; no, their day will come to
fall. Death's bitter cup goes round, and, sooner or later, we must
all pledge in it,
3. They propose a doubt upon this case
(
III. Christ's answer to this objection; by reproving their ignorance, and rectifying their mistake, he shows the objection to be fallacious and unconcluding.
1. He reproves their ignorance (
(1.) They know not the power of God;
which would lead men to infer that there may be a
resurrection and a future state. Note, The ignorance, disbelief, or
weak belief, of God's power, is at the bottom of many errors,
particularly theirs who deny the resurrection. When we are told of
the soul's existence and agency in a state of separation from the
body, and especially that a dead body, which had lain many ages in
the grave, and is turned into common and indistinguished dust, that
this shall be raised the same body that it was, and live, move, and
act, again; we are ready to say, How can these things be?
Nature allows it for a maxim, A privatione ad habitum non datur
regressus—The habits attaching to a state of existence vanish
irrecoverably with the state itself. If a man die, shall he
live again? And vain men, because they cannot comprehend the
way of it, question the truth of it; whereas, if we
firmly believe in God the Father Almighty, that nothing is
impossible with God, all these difficulties vanish. This therefore
we must fasten upon, in the first place, that God is omnipotent,
and can do what he will; and then no room is left for doubting but
that he will do what he has promised; and, if so, why should it
be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the
dead?
(2.) They know not the scriptures,
which decidedly affirm that there shall be a resurrection and a
future state. The power of God, determined and engaged by his
promise, is the foundation for faith to build upon. Now the
scriptures speak plainly, that the soul is immortal, and there is
another life after this; it is the scope both of the law and of the
prophets, that there shall be a resurrection of the dead, both
of the just and of the unjust,
2. He rectifies their mistake, and
(
(1.) It is not like the state we are now in
upon earth; They neither marry, nor are given in marriage.
In our present state marriage is necessary; it was instituted in
innocency; whatever intermission or neglect there has been of other
institutions, this was never laid aside, nor will be till the end
of time. In the old world, they were marrying, and giving in
marriage; the Jews in Babylon, when cut off from other
ordinances, yet were bid to take them wives,
(2.) It is like the state angels are now in
in heaven; They are as the angels of God in heaven; they
are so, that is, undoubtedly they shall be so. They are so
already in Christ their Head, who has made them sit with him in
heavenly places,
IV. Christ's argument to confirm this great truth of the resurrection and a future state; the matters being of great concern, he did not think it enough (as in some other disputes) to discover the fallacy and sophistry of the objection, but backed the truth with a solid argument; for Christ brings forth judgment to truth as well as victory, and enables his followers to give a reason of the hope that is in them. Now observe,
1. Whence he fetched his argument—from the scripture; that is the great magazine or armoury whence we may be furnished with spiritual weapons, offensive and defensive. It is written is Goliath's sword. Have ye not read that which was spoken to you by God? Note, (1.) What the scripture speaks God speaks. (2.) What was spoken to Moses was spoken to us; it was spoken and written for our learning. (3.) It concerns us to read and hear what God hath spoken, because it is spoken to us. It was spoken to you Jews in the first place, for to them were committed the oracles of God. The argument is fetched from the books of Moses, because the Sadducees received them only, as some think, or, at least, them chiefly, for canonical scriptures; Christ therefore fetched his proof from the most indisputable fountain. The latter prophets have more express proofs of a future state than the law of Moses has; for though the law of Moses supposes the immortality of the soul and a future state, as principles of what is called natural religion, yet no express revelation of it is made by the law of Moses; because so much of that law was peculiar to that people, and was therefore guarded as municipal laws used to be with temporal promises and threatenings, and the more express revelation of a future state was reserved for the latter days; but our Saviour finds a very solid argument for the resurrection even in the writings of Moses. Much scripture lies under ground, that must be digged for.
2. What his argument was (
Now the drift of the argument is to prove,
(1.) That there is a future state, another life after this, in which the righteous shall be truly and constantly happy. This is proved from what God said; I am the God of Abraham.
[1.] For God to be any one's God supposes
some very extraordinary privilege and happiness; unless we know
fully what God is, we could not comprehend the riches of that word,
I will be to thee a God, that is, a Benefactor like myself.
The God of Israel is a God to Israel (
[2.] It is manifest that these good men had
no such extraordinary happiness, in this life, as might look
any thing like the accomplishment of so great a word as that. They
were strangers in the land of promise, wandering, pinched with
famine; they had not a foot of ground of their own but a
burying-place, which directed them to look for something beyond
this life. In present enjoyments they came far short of their
neighbours that were strangers to this covenant. What was there in
this world to distinguish them and the heirs of their faith from
other people, any whit proportionable to the dignity and
distinction of this covenant? If no happiness had been reserved for
these great and good men on the other side of death, that
melancholy word of poor Jacob's, when he was old (
[3.] Therefore there must certainly be a
future state, in which, as God will ever live to be eternally
rewarding, so Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, will ever live to be
eternally rewarded. That of the apostle (
(2.) That the soul is immortal, and the body shall rise again, to be united; if the former point be gained, these will follow; but they are likewise proved by considering the time when God spoke this; it was to Moses at the bush, long after Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, were dead and buried; and yet God saith, not, "I was," or "have been," but I am the God of Abraham. Now God is not God of the dead, but of the living. He is a living God, and communicates vital influences to those to whom he is a God. If, when Abraham died, there had been an end of him, there had been an end likewise of God's relation to him as his God; but at that time, when God spoke to Moses, he was the God of Abraham, and therefore Abraham must be then alive; which proves the immortality of the soul in a state of bliss; and that, by consequence, infers the resurrection of the body; for there is such an inclination in the human soul to its body, as would make a final and eternal separation inconsistent with the bliss of those that have God for their God. The Sadducees' notion was, that the union between body and soul is so close, that, when the body dies, the soul dies with it. Now, upon the same hypothesis, if the soul lives, as it certainly does, the body must some time or other live with it. And besides, the Lord is for the body, it is an essential part of the man; there is a covenant with the dust, which will be remembered, otherwise the man would not be happy. The charge which the dying patriarchs gave concerning their bones, and that in faith, was an evidence that they had some expectation of the resurrection of their bodies. But this doctrine was reserved for a more full revelation after the resurrection of Christ, who was the first-fruits of them that slept.
Lastly, We have the issue of this
dispute. The Sadducees were put to silence (
34 But when the Pharisees had heard that he had put the Sadducees to silence, they were gathered together. 35 Then one of them, which was a lawyer, asked him a question, tempting him, and saying, 36 Master, which is the great commandment in the law? 37 Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. 38 This is the first and great commandment. 39 And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. 40 On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.
Here is a discourse which Christ had with a Pharisee-lawyer, about the great commandment of the law. Observe,
I. The combination of the Pharisees against
Christ,
II. The lawyer's question, which he put to
Christ. The lawyers were students in, and teachers of, the law of
Moses, as the scribes were; but some think that in this they
differed, that they dealt more in practical questions than the
scribes; they studied and professed casuistical divinity. This
lawyer asked him a question, tempting him; not with any
design to ensnare him, as appears by St. Mark's relation of the
story, where we find that this was he to whom Christ said, Thou
are not far from the kingdom of God,
1. The question was, Master, which is
the greatest commandment of the law? A needless question, when
all the things of God's law are great things (
2. The design was to try him, or tempt him;
to try, not so much his knowledge as his judgment. It was a
question disputed among the critics in the law. Some would have the
law of circumcision to be the great commandment, others the law of
the sabbath, others the law of sacrifices, according as they
severally stood affected, and spent their zeal; now they would try
what Christ said to this question, hoping to incense the people
against him, if he should not answer according to the vulgar
opinion; and if he should magnify one commandment, they would
reflect on him as vilifying the rest. The question was harmless
enough; and it appears by comparing
III. Christ's answer to this question; it is well for us that such a question was asked him, that we might have his answer. It is no disparagement to great men to answer plain questions. Now Christ recommends to us those as the great commandments, not which are so exclusive of others, but which are therefore great because inclusive of others. Observe,
1. Which these great commandments are
(
(1.) All the law is fulfilled in one word,
and that is, love. See
(2.) The love of God is the first and great commandment of all, and the summary of all the commands of the first table. The proper act of love being complacency, good is the proper object of it. Now God, being good infinitely, originally, and eternally, is to be loved in the first place, and nothing loved beside him, but what is loved for him. Love is the first and great thing that God demands from us, and therefore the first and great thing that we should devote to him.
Now here we are directed,
[1.] To love God as ours; Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God as thine. The first commandment is,
Thou shalt have no other God; which implies that we must
have him for our God, and that will engage our love to him. Those
that made the sun and moon their gods, loved them,
[2.] To love him with all our heart, and
soul, and mind. Some make these to signify one and the same
thing, to love him with all our powers; others distinguish them;
the heart, soul, and mind, are the will, affections, and
understanding; or the vital, sensitive, and intellectual faculties.
Our love of God must be a sincere love, and not in word and tongue
only, as theirs is who say they love him, but their hearts are not
with him. It must be a strong love, we must love him in the most
intense degree; as we must praise him, so we must
love him, with all that is within us,
(3.) To love our neighbour as
ourselves is the second great commandment (
[1.] It is implied, that we do, and should, love ourselves. There is a self-love which is corrupt, and the root of the greatest sins, and it must be put off and mortified: but there is a self-love which is natural, and the rule of the greatest duty, and it must be preserved and sanctified. We must love ourselves, that is, we must have a due regard to the dignity of our own natures, and a due concern for the welfare of our own souls and bodies.
[2.] It is prescribed, that we love our neighbour as ourselves. We must honour and esteem all men, and must wrong and injure none; must have a good will to all, and good wishes for all, and, as we have opportunity, must do good to all. We must love our neighbour as ourselves, as truly and sincerely as we love ourselves, and in the same instances; nay, in many cases we must deny ourselves for the good of our neighbour, and must make ourselves servants to the true welfare of others, and be willing to spend and be spent for them, to lay down our lives for the brethren.
2. Observe what the weight and greatness of
these commandments is (
41 While the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them, 42 Saying, What think ye of Christ? whose son is he? They say unto him, The Son of David. 43 He saith unto them, How then doth David in spirit call him Lord, saying, 44 The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou on my right hand, till I make thine enemies thy footstool? 45 If David then call him Lord, how is he his son? 46 And no man was able to answer him a word, neither durst any man from that day forth ask him any more questions.
Many questions the Pharisees had asked
Christ, by which, though they thought to pose him, they did but
expose themselves; but now let him ask them a question; and
he will do it when they are gathered together,
I. Christ proposes a question to them,
which they could easily answer; it was a question in their own
catechism; "What think ye of Christ? Whose Son is He? Whose
Son do you expect the Messiah to be, who was promised to the
fathers?" This they could easily answer, The Son of David.
It was the common periphrasis of the Messiah; they called him
the Son of David. So the scribes, who expounded the
scripture, had taught them, from
What think ye of Christ? They had put questions to him, one after another, out of the law; but he comes and puts a question to them upon the promise. Many are so full of the law, that they forget Christ, as if their duties would save them without his merit and grace. It concerns each of us seriously to ask ourselves, What think we of Christ? Some think not of him at all, he is not in all, not in any, of their thoughts; some think meanly, and some think hardly, of him; but to them that believe he is precious; and how precious then are the thoughts of him! While the daughters of Jerusalem think no more of Christ than of another beloved; the spouse thinks of him as the Chief of ten thousands.
II. He starts a difficulty upon their
answer, which they could not easily solve,
1. It is easy to see that David calls
Christ Lord, and this in spirit being divinely inspired, and
actuated therein by a spirit of prophecy; for it was the Spirit
of the Lord that spoke by him,
Christ quotes the whole verse, which shows
the Redeemer in his exaltation; (1.) Sitting at the right hand
of God. His sitting denotes both rest and rule; his sitting at
God's right hand denotes superlative honour and sovereign power.
See in what great words this is expressed (
But that which this verse is quoted for is, that David calls the Messiah his Lord; the Lord, Jehovah, said unto my Lord. This intimates to us, that in expounding scripture we must take notice of, and improve, not only that which is the main scope and sense of a verse, but of the words and phrases, by which they Spirit chooses to express that sense, which have often a very useful and instructive significance. Here is a good note from that word, My Lord.
2. It is not so easy for those who believe
not the Godhead of the Messiah, to clear this from an absurdity, if
Christ be David's son. It is incongruous for the father to speak of
his son, the predecessor of his successor, as his Lord. If
David call him Lord, that is laid down (
III. We have here the success of this gentle trial which Christ made of the Pharisees' knowledge, in two things.
1. It puzzled them (
2. It silenced them, and all others that sought occasion against him; Neither durst any man, from that day forth, ask him any more such captious, tempting, ensnaring questions. Note, God will glorify himself in the silencing of many whom he will not glorify himself in the salvation of. Many are convinced, that are not converted, by the word. Had these been converted, they would have asked him more questions, especially that great question, What must we do to be saved? But since they could not gain their point, they would have no more to do with him. But, thus all that strive with their Master shall be convinced, as these Pharisees and lawyers here were, of the inequality of the match.