In this chapter we have, I. Christ's parabolical
discourse concerning himself as the door of the sheepfold, and the
shepherd of the sheep,
1 Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that entereth not by the door into the sheepfold, but climbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber. 2 But he that entereth in by the door is the shepherd of the sheep. 3 To him the porter openeth; and the sheep hear his voice: and he calleth his own sheep by name, and leadeth them out. 4 And when he putteth forth his own sheep, he goeth before them, and the sheep follow him: for they know his voice. 5 And a stranger will they not follow, but will flee from him: for they know not the voice of strangers. 6 This parable spake Jesus unto them: but they understood not what things they were which he spake unto them. 7 Then said Jesus unto them again, Verily, verily, I say unto you, I am the door of the sheep. 8 All that ever came before me are thieves and robbers: but the sheep did not hear them. 9 I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture. 10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly. 11 I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. 12 But he that is a hireling, and not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep, and fleeth: and the wolf catcheth them, and scattereth the sheep. 13 The hireling fleeth, because he is a hireling, and careth not for the sheep. 14 I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine. 15 As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father: and I lay down my life for the sheep. 16 And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd. 17 Therefore doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life, that I might take it again. 18 No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This commandment have I received of my Father.
It is not certain whether this discourse
was at the feast of dedication in the winter (spoken of
I. Here is the parable or similitude
proposed (
1. In the parable we have, (1.) The
evidence of a thief and robber, that comes to do mischief to the
flock, and damage to the owner,
2. Let us observe from this parable, (1.)
That good men are fitly compared to sheep. Men, as creatures
depending on their Creator, are called the sheep of his
pasture. Good men, as new creatures, have the good qualities of
sheep, harmless and inoffensive as sheep; meek and
quiet, without noise; patient as sheep under the hand both
of the shearer and of the butcher; useful and profitable,
tame and tractable, to the shepherd, and sociable one with
another, and much used in sacrifices. (2.) The church of God in the
world is a sheepfold, into which the children of God
that were scattered abroad are gathered together (
II. The Jew's ignorance of the drift and
meaning of this discourse (
III. Christ's explication of this parable, opening the particulars of it fully. Whatever difficulties there may be in the sayings of the Lord Jesus, we shall find him ready to explain himself, if we be but willing to understand him. We shall find one scripture expounding another, and the blessed Spirit interpreter to the blessed Jesus. Christ, in the parable, had distinguished the shepherd from the robber by this, that he enters in by the door. Now, in the explication of the parable, he makes himself to be both the door by which the shepherd enters and the shepherd that enters in by the door. Though it may be a solecism in rhetoric to make the same person to be both the door and the shepherd, it is no solecism in divinity to make Christ to have his authority from himself, as he has life in himself; and himself to enter by his own blood, as the door, into the holy place.
1. Christ is the door. This he saith to those who pretended to seek for righteousness, but, like the Sodomites, wearied themselves to find the door, where it was not to be found. He saith it to the Jews, who would be thought God's only sheep, and to the Pharisees, who would be thought their only shepherds: I am the door of the sheepfold; the door of the church.
(1.) In general, [1.] He is as a door
shut, to keep out thieves and robbers, and such as are not fit
to be admitted. The shutting of the door is the securing of the
house; and what greater security has the church of God than the
interposal of the Lord Jesus, and his wisdom, power, and goodness,
betwixt it and all its enemies? [2.] He is as a door open
for passage and communication. First, By Christ, as the
door, we have our first admission into the flock of God,
(2.) More particularly,
[1.] Christ is the door of the
shepherds, so that none who come not in by him are to be
accounted pastors, but (according to the rule laid down,
[2.] Christ is the door of the sheep
(
2. Christ is the shepherd,
(1.) Christ is a shepherd, and not as the thief, not as those that came not in by the door. Observe,
[1.] The mischievous design of the thief
(
[2.] The gracious design of the shepherd; he is come,
First, To give life to the
sheep. In opposition to the design of the thief, which is to
kill and destroy (which was the design of the scribes
and Pharisees) Christ saith, I am come among men, 1.
That they might have life. He came to put life into the
flock, the church in general, which had seemed rather like a valley
full of dry bones than like a pasture covered over with flocks.
Christ came to vindicate divine truths, to purify divine
ordinances, to redress grievances, and to revive dying zeal, to
seek those of his flock that were lost, to bind up
that which was broken (
Secondly, To give his life for
the sheep, and this that he might give life to them
(
(2.) Christ is a good shepherd, and
not as a hireling. There were many that were not thieves, aiming to
kill and destroy the sheep, but passed for shepherds, yet were very
careless in the discharge of their duty, and through their neglect
the flock was greatly damaged; foolish shepherds, idle
shepherds,
[1.] Christ here calls himself the good
shepherd (
[2.] He proves himself so, in
opposition to all hirelings,
First, The carelessness of the
unfaithful shepherd described (
a. Their bad principles, the
root of their bad practices. What makes those that have the charge
of souls in trying times to betray their trust, and in quiet times
not to mind it? What makes them false, and trifling, and
self-seeking? It is because they are hirelings, and care
not for the sheep. That is, (a.) The wealth of the world
is the chief of their good; it is because they are
hirelings. They undertook the shepherds' office, as a trade
to live and grow rich by, not as an opportunity of serving Christ
and doing good. It is the love of money, and of their own bellies,
that carries them on in it. Not that those are hirelings who, while
they serve at the altar, live, and live comfortably, upon
the altar. The labourer is worthy of his meat; and a scandalous
maintenance will soon make a scandalous ministry. But those are
hirelings that love the wages more than the work, and set
their hearts upon that, as the hireling is said to do,
b. Their bad practices, the
effect of these bad principles,
Secondly, See here the grace and
tenderness of the good Shepherd set over against the former, as it
was in the prophecy (
a. His acquainting himself with his flock, with all that belong or in any wise appertain to his flock, which are of two sorts, both known to him:—
(a.) He is acquainted with all that
are now of his flock (
[a.] Christ knows his sheep.
He knows with a distinguishing eye who are his sheep, and
who are not; he knows the sheep under their many infirmities, and
the goats under their most plausible disguises. He knows with a
favourable eye those that in truth are his own sheep; he
takes cognizance of their state, concerns himself for them, has a
tender and affectionate regard to them, and is continually mindful
of them in the intercession he ever lives to make within the veil;
he visits them graciously by his Spirit, and has communion with
them; he knows them, that is, he approves and accepts of
them, as
[b.] He is known of them. He
observes them with an eye of favour, and they observe him with an
eye of faith. Christ's knowing his sheep is put before their
knowing him, for he knew and loved us first (
(b.) He is acquainted with those
that are hereafter to be of this flock (
[a.] The eye that Christ had to the
poor Gentiles. He had sometimes intimated his special concern for
the lost sheep of the house of Israel; to them indeed his
personal ministry was confined; but, saith he, I have other
sheep. Those who in process of time should believe in Christ,
and be brought into obedience to him from among the Gentiles, are
here called sheep, and he is said to have them, though as
yet they were uncalled, and many of them unborn,
because they were chosen of God, and given to Christ in the
counsels of divine love from eternity. Christ has a right, by
virtue of the Father's donation and his own purchase, to many a
soul of which he has not yet the possession; thus he had much
people in Corinth, when as yet it lay in wickedness,
[b.] The purposes and resolves of
his grace concerning them: "Them also I must bring, bring
home to God, bring into the church, and, in order to this, bring
off from their vain conversation, bring them back from their
wanderings, as that lost sheep,"
[c.] The happy effect and
consequence of this, in two things:—First, "They shall hear
my voice. Not only my voice shall be heard among them
(whereas they have not heard, and therefore could not believe, now
the sound of the gospel shall go to the ends of the
earth), but it shall be heard by them; I will speak, and
give to them to hear." Faith comes by hearing, and our diligent
observance of the voice of Christ is both a means and an evidence
of our being brought to Christ, and to God by him. Secondly,
There shall be one fold and one shepherd. As there is one
shepherd, so there shall be one fold. Both Jews and Gentiles, upon
their turning to the faith of Christ, shall be incorporated in one
church, be joint and equal sharers in the privileges of it, without
distinction. Being united to Christ, they shall unite in him; two
sticks shall become one in the hand of the Lord. Note, One shepherd
makes one fold; one Christ makes one church. As the church is one
in its constitution, subject to one head, animated by one Spirit,
and guided by one rule, so the members of it ought to be one in
love and affection,
b. Christ's offering up himself
for his sheep is another proof of his being a good
shepherd, and in this he yet more commended his love,
(a.) He declares his purpose of
dying for his flock (
(b.) He takes off the offence of the cross, which to many is a stone of stumbling, by four considerations:—
[a.] That his laying down his
life for the sheep was the condition, the performance of which
entitled him to the honours and powers of his exalted state
(
[b.] That his laying down his life
was in order to his resuming it: I lay down my life, that I may
receive it again. First, This was the effect of his Father's
love, and the first step of his exaltation, the fruit of that love.
Because he was God's holy one, he must not see
corruption,
[c.] That he was perfectly voluntary
in his sufferings and death (
1st, See here the power of Christ, as the Lord of life, particularly of his own life, which he had in himself. 1. He had power to keep his life against all the world, so that it could not be wrested from him without his own consent. Though Christ's life seemed to be taken by storm, yet really it was surrendered, otherwise it had been impregnable, and never taken. The Lord Jesus did not fall into the hands of his persecutors because he could not avoid it, but threw himself into their hands because his hour was come. No man taketh my life from me. This was such a challenge as was never given by the most daring hero. 2. He had power to lay down his life. (1.) He had ability to do it. He could, when he pleased, slip the knot of union between soul and body, and, without any act of violence done to himself, could disengage them from each other: having voluntarily taken up a body, he could voluntarily lay it down again, which appeared when he cried with a loud voice, and gave up the ghost. (2.) He had authority to do it, exousian. Though we could find instruments of cruelty, wherewith to make an end of our own lives, yet Id possumus quod jure possumus—we can do that, and that only, which we can do lawfully. We are not at liberty to do it; but Christ had a sovereign authority to dispose of his own life as he pleased. He was no debtor (as we are) either to life or death, but perfectly sui juris. 3. He had power to take it again; we have not. Our life, once laid down, is as water spilt upon the ground; but Christ, when he laid down his life, still had it within reach, within call, and could resume it. Parting with it by a voluntary conveyance, he might limit the surrender at pleasure, and he did it with a power of revocation, which was necessary to preserve the intentions of the surrender.
2ndly, See here the grace of Christ;
since none could demand his life of him by law, or extort it by
force, he laid it down of himself, for our redemption. He
offered himself to be the Saviour: Lo, I come; and then, the
necessity of our case calling for it, he offered himself to be a
sacrifice: Here am I, let these go their way; by which will we
are sanctified,
19 There was a division therefore again among the Jews for these sayings. 20 And many of them said, He hath a devil, and is mad; why hear ye him? 21 Others said, These are not the words of him that hath a devil. Can a devil open the eyes of the blind?
We have here an account of the people's
different sentiments concerning Christ, on occasion of the
foregoing discourse; there was a division, a schism, among
them; they differed in their opinions, which threw them into heats
and parties. Such a ferment as this they had been in before
(
I. Some upon this occasion spoke ill of Christ and of his sayings, either openly in the face of the assembly, for his enemies were very impudent, or privately among themselves. They said, He has a devil, and is mad, why do you hear him? 1. They reproach him as a demoniac. The worst of characters is put upon the best of men. He is a distracted man, he raves and is delirious, and no more to be heard than the rambles of a man in bedlam. Thus still, if a man preaches seriously and pressingly of another world, he shall be said to talk like an enthusiast; and his conduct shall be imputed to fancy, a heated brain, and a crazed imagination. 2. They ridicule his hearers: "Why hear you him? Why do you so far encourage him as to take notice of what he says?" Note, Satan ruins many by putting them out of conceit with the word and ordinances, and representing it as a weak and silly thing to attend upon them. Men would not thus be laughed out of their necessary food, and yet suffer themselves to be laughed out of what is more necessary. Those that hear Christ, and mix faith with what they hear, will soon be able to give a good account why they hear him.
II. Others stood up in defence of him and his discourse, and, though the stream ran strong, dared to swim against it; and, though perhaps they did not believe on him as the Messiah, they could not bear to hear him thus abused. If they could say no more of him, this they would maintain, that he was a man in his wits, that he had not a devil, that he was neither senseless nor graceless. The absurd and most unreasonable reproaches, that have sometimes been cast upon Christ and his gospel, have excited those to appear for him and it who otherwise had no great affection to either. Two things they plead:—1. The excellency of his doctrine: "These are not the words of him that hath a devil; they are not idle words; distracted men are not used to talk at this rate. These are not the words of one that is either violently possessed with a devil or voluntarily in league with the devil." Christianity, if it be not the true religion, is certainly the greatest cheat that ever was put upon the world; and, if so, it must be of the devil, who is the father of all lies: but it is certain that the doctrine of Christ is no doctrine of devils, for it is levelled directly against the devil's kingdom, and Satan is too subtle to be divided against himself. So much of holiness there is in the words of Christ that we may conclude they are not the words of one that has a devil, and therefore are the words of one that was sent of God; are not from hell, and therefore must be from heaven. 2. The power of his miracles: Can a devil, that is, a man that has a devil, open the eyes of the blind? Neither mad men nor bad men can work miracles. Devils are not such lords of the power of nature as to be able to work such miracles; nor are they such friends to mankind as to be willing to work them if they were able. The devil will sooner put out men's eyes than open them. Therefore Jesus had not a devil.
22 And it was at Jerusalem the feast of the dedication, and it was winter. 23 And Jesus walked in the temple in Solomon's porch. 24 Then came the Jews round about him, and said unto him, How long dost thou make us to doubt? If thou be the Christ, tell us plainly. 25 Jesus answered them, I told you, and ye believed not: the works that I do in my Father's name, they bear witness of me. 26 But ye believe not, because ye are not of my sheep, as I said unto you. 27 My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me: 28 And I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand. 29 My Father, which gave them me, is greater than all; and no man is able to pluck them out of my Father's hand. 30 I and my Father are one. 31 Then the Jews took up stones again to stone him. 32 Jesus answered them, Many good works have I showed you from my Father; for which of those works do ye stone me? 33 The Jews answered him, saying, For a good work we stone thee not; but for blasphemy; and because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God. 34 Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods? 35 If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken; 36 Say ye of him, whom the Father hath sanctified, and sent into the world, Thou blasphemest; because I said, I am the Son of God? 37 If I do not the works of my Father, believe me not. 38 But if I do, though ye believe not me, believe the works: that ye may know, and believe, that the Father is in me, and I in him.
We have here another rencounter between Christ and the Jews in the temple, in which it is hard to say which is more strange, the gracious words that came out of his mouth or the spiteful ones that came out of theirs.
I. We have here the time when this
conference was: It was at the feast of dedication, and it was
winter, a feast that was annually observed by consent, in
remembrance of the dedication of a new altar and the purging of the
temple, by Judas Maccabæus, after the temple had been profaned and
the altar defiled; we have the story of it at large in the history
of the Maccabees (lib. 1, cap. 4); we have the prophecy of it,
II. The place where it was (
III. The conference itself, in which observe,
1. A weighty question put to him by the
Jews,
(1.) They quarrel with him, as if he had
unfairly held them in suspense hitherto. Ten psychen hemon
aireis—How long dost thou steal away our hearts?
Or, take away our souls? So some read it; basely intimating
that what share he had of the people's love and respect he did not
obtain fairly, but by indirect methods, as Absalom stole the hearts
of the men of Israel; and as seducers deceive the hearts of the
simple, and so draw away disciples after them,
(2.) They challenge him to give a direct
and categorical answer whether he was the Messiah or no: "If
thou be the Christ, as many believe thou art, tell us
plainly, not by parables, as, I am the light of the
world, and the good Shepherd, and the like, but
totidem verbis—in so many words, either that thou art the
Christ, or, as John Baptist, that thou art not,"
2. Christ's answer to this question, in which,
(1.) He justifies himself as not at all accessary to their infidelity and skepticism, referring them, [1.] To what he had said: I have told you. He had told them that he was the Son of God, the Son of man, that he had life in himself, that he had authority to execute judgment, &c. And is not this the Christ then? These things he had told them, and they believed not; why then should they be told them again, merely to gratify their curiosity? You believed not. They pretended that they only doubted, but Christ tells them that they did not believe. Skepticism in religion is no better than downright infidelity. It is now for us to teach God how he should teach us, nor prescribe to him how plainly he should tell us his mind, but to be thankful for divine revelation as we have it. If we do not believe this, neither should we be persuaded if it were ever so much adapted to our humour. [2.] He refers them to his works, to the example of his life, which was not only perfectly pure, but highly beneficent, and of a piece with his doctrine; and especially to his miracles, which he wrought for the confirmation of his doctrine. It was certain that no man could do those miracles except God were with him, and God would not be with him to attest a forgery.
(2.) He condemns them for their obstinate
unbelief, notwithstanding all the most plain and powerful arguments
used to convince them: "You believed not; and again, You
believed not. You still are what you always were, obstinate in
your unbelief." But the reason he gives is very surprising: "You
believed not, because you are not of my sheep: you believe not
in me, because you belong not to me." [1.] "You are not disposed to
be my followers, are not of a tractable teachable temper, have no
inclination to receive the doctrine and law of the Messiah; you
will not herd yourselves with my sheep, will not come and see, come
and hear my voice." Rooted antipathies to the gospel of Christ are
the bonds of iniquity and infidelity. [2.] "You are not
designed to be my followers; you are not of those that were
given me by my Father, to be brought to grace and glory. You are
not of the number of the elect; and your unbelief, if you persist
in it, will be a certain evidence that you are not." Note, Those to
whom God never gives the grace of faith were never designed for
heaven and happiness. What Solomon saith of immorality is true of
infidelity, It is a deep ditch, and he that is abhorred of the
Lord shall fall therein,
(3.) He takes this occasion to describe both the gracious disposition and the happy state of those that are his sheep; for such there are, though they be not.
[1.] To convince them that they were not
his sheep, he tells them what were the characters of his sheep.
First, They hear his voice (
[2.] To convince them that it was their great unhappiness and misery not to be of Christ's sheep, he here describes the blessed state and case of those that are, which would likewise serve for the support and comfort of his poor despised followers, and keep them from envying the power and grandeur of those that were not of his sheep.
First, Our Lord Jesus takes
cognizance of his sheep: They hear my voice, and I
know them. He distinguishes them from others (
Secondly, He has provided a
happiness for them, suited to them: I give unto them eternal
life,
Thirdly, He has undertaken for their security and preservation to this happiness.
a. They shall be saved from everlasting perdition. They shall by no means perish for ever; so the words are. As there is an eternal life, so there is an eternal destruction; the soul not annihilated, but ruined; its being continued, but its comfort and happiness irrecoverably lost. All believers are saved from this; whatever cross they may come under, they shall not come into condemnation. A man is never undone till he is in hell, and they shall not go down to that. Shepherds that have large flocks often lose some of the sheep and suffer them to perish; but Christ has engaged that none of his sheep shall perish, not one.
b. They cannot be kept from their
everlasting happiness; it is in reserve, but he that gives
it to them will preserve them to it. (a.) His own power is
engaged for them: Neither shall any man pluck them out of my
hand. A mighty contest is here supposed about these sheep. The
Shepherd is so careful of their welfare that he has them not only
within his fold, and under his eye, but in his hand,
interested in his special love and taken under his special
protection (all his saints are in thy hand,
IV. The rage, the outrage, of the Jews
against him for this discourse: The Jews took up stones
again,
V. Christ's tender expostulation with them
upon occasion of this outrage (
1. The divine power of his works convicted
them of the most obstinate infidelity. They were works from his
Father, so far above the reach and course of nature as to prove
him who did them sent of God, and acting by commission from
him. These works he showed them; he did them openly before
the people, and not in a corner. His works would bear the test, and
refer themselves to the testimony of the most inquisitive and
impartial spectators. He did not show his works by candle-light, as
those that are concerned only for show, but he showed them
at noon-day before the world,
2. The divine grace of his works convicted
them of the most base ingratitude. The works he did among them were
not only miracles, but mercies; not only works of wonder to amaze
them, but works of love and kindness to do them good, and so make
them good, and endear himself to them. He healed the sick, cleansed
the lepers, cast out devils, which were favours, not only to the
persons concerned, but to the public; these he had repeated, and
multiplied: "Now for which of these do you stone me? You
cannot say that I have done you any harm, or given you any just
provocation; if therefore you will pick a quarrel with me, it must
be for some good work, some good turn done you; tell me for which."
Note, (1.) The horrid ingratitude that there is in our sins against
God and Jesus Christ is a great aggravation of them, and makes them
appear exceedingly sinful. See how God argues to this purpose,
VI. Their vindication of the attempt they
made upon Christ, and the cause upon which they grounded their
prosecution,
1. They would not be thought such enemies
to their country as to persecute him for a good work: For a good
work we stone thee not. For indeed they would scarcely allow
any of his works to be so. His curing the impotent man (
2. They would be thought such friends to God and his glory as to prosecute him for blasphemy: Because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God. Here is,
(1.) A pretended zeal for the law. They
seem mightily concerned for the honour of the divine majesty, and
to be seized with a religious horror at that which they imagined to
be a reproach to it. A blasphemer was to be stoned,
(2.) A real enmity to the gospel, on which they could not put a greater affront than by representing Christ as a blasphemer. It is no new thing for the worst of characters to be put upon the best of men, by those that resolve to give them the worst of treatment. [1.] The crime laid to his charge is blasphemy, speaking reproachfully and despitefully of God. God himself is out of the sinner's reach, and not capable of receiving any real injury; and therefore enmity to God spits its venom at his name, and so shows its ill-will. [2.] The proof of the crime: Thou, being a man, makest thyself God. As it is God's glory that he is God, which we rob him of when we make him altogether such a one as ourselves, so it is his glory that besides him there is no other, which we rob him of when we make ourselves, or any creature, altogether like him. Now, First, Thus far they were in the right, that what Christ said of himself amounted to this—that he was God, for he had said that he was one with the Father and that he would give eternal life; and Christ does not deny it, which he would have done if it had been a mistaken inference from his words. But, secondly, They were much mistaken when they looked upon him as a mere man, and that the Godhead he claimed was a usurpation, and of his own making. They thought it absurd and impious that such a one as he, who appeared in the fashion of a poor, mean, despicable man, should profess himself the Messiah, and entitle himself to the honours confessedly due to the Son of God. Note, 1. Those who say that Jesus is a mere man, and only a made God, as the Socinians say, do in effect charge him with blasphemy, but do effectually prove it upon themselves. 2. He who, being a man, a sinful man, makes himself a god as the Pope does, who claims divine powers and prerogatives, is unquestionably a blasphemer, and that antichrist.
VII. Christ's reply to their accusation of
him (for such their vindication of themselves was), and his making
good those claims which they imputed to him as blasphemous
(
1. By an argument taken from God's
word. He appeals to what was written in their law, that
is, in the Old Testament; whoever opposes Christ, he is sure to
have the scripture on his side. It is written (
(1.) How he explains the text (
(2.) How he applies it. Thus much in
general is easily inferred, that those were very rash and
unreasonable who condemned Christ as a blasphemer, only for calling
himself the Son of God, when yet they themselves called their
rulers so, and therein the scripture warranted them. But the
argument goes further (
2. By an argument taken from his own
works,
(1.) From what he argues—from his
works, which he had often vouched as his credentials, and the
proofs of his mission. As he proved himself sent of God by the
divinity of his works, so we must prove ourselves allied to
Christ by the Christianity of ours. [1.] The argument is
very cogent; for the works he did were the works of his
Father, which the Father only could do, and which could not be
done in the ordinary course of nature, but only by the sovereign
over-ruling power of the God of nature. Opera Deo propria—works
peculiar to God, and Opera Deo Digna—works worthy of
God—the works of a divine power. He that can dispense with the
laws of nature, repeal, altar, and overrule them at his pleasure,
by his own power, is certainly the sovereign prince who first
instituted and enacted those laws. The miracles which the apostles
wrought in his name, by his power, and for the confirmation of his
doctrine, corroborated this argument, and continued the evidence of
it when he was gone. [2.] It is proposed as fairly as can be
desired, and put to a short issue. First, If I do not the works
of my Father, believe me not. He does not demand a blind and
implicit faith, nor an assent to his divine mission further than he
gave proof of it. He did not wind himself into the affections of
the people, nor wheedle them by sly insinuations, nor impose upon
their credulity by bold assertions, but with the greatest fairness
imaginable quitted all demands of their faith, further than he
produced warrants for these demands. Christ is no hard master, who
expects to reap in assents where he has not sown in arguments. None
shall perish for the disbelief of that which was not proposed to
them with sufficient motives of credibility, Infinite Wisdom itself
being judge. Secondly, "But if I do the works of my
Father, if I work undeniable miracles for the confirmation of a
holy doctrine, though you believe not me, though you are so
scrupulous as not to take my word, yet believe the works:
believe your own eyes, your own reason; the thing speaks itself
plainly enough." As the invisible things of the Creator are clearly
seen by his works of creation and common providence (
(2.) For what he argues—that you
may know and believe, may believe it intelligently, and with an
entire satisfaction, that the Father is in me and I in him;
which is the same with what he had said (
39 Therefore they sought again to take him: but he escaped out of their hand, 40 And went away again beyond Jordan into the place where John at first baptized; and there he abode. 41 And many resorted unto him, and said, John did no miracle: but all things that John spake of this man were true. 42 And many believed on him there.
We have here the issue of the conference with the Jews. One would have thought it would have convinced and melted them, but their hearts were hardened. Here we are told,
I. How they attacked him by force.
Therefore they sought again to take him,
II. How he avoided them by flight; not an
inglorious retreat, in which there was any thing of human
infirmity, but a glorious retirement, in which there was much of a
divine power. He escaped out of their hands, not by the
interposal of any friend that helped him, but by his own wisdom he
got clear of them; he drew a veil over himself, or cast a
mist before their eyes, or tied the hands of those whose hearts he
did not turn. Note, No weapon formed against our Lord Jesus shall
prosper,
III. How he disposed of himself in his
retirement: He went away again beyond Jordan,
1. What shelter he found there. He
went into a private part of the country, and there he abode;
there he found some rest and quietness, when in Jerusalem he could
find none. Note, Though persecutors may drive Christ and his gospel
out of their own city or country, they cannot drive him or it out
of the world. Though Jerusalem was not gathered, nor would be, yet
Christ was glorious, and would be. Christ's going now beyond Jordan
was a figure of the taking of the kingdom of God from the Jews, and
bringing it to the Gentiles. Christ and his gospel have often found
better entertainment among the plain country-people than among
the wise, the mighty, the noble,
2. What success he found there. He
did not go thither merely for his own security, but to do good
there; and he chose to go thither, where John at first baptized
(
(1.) That they flocked after him (
(2.) That they reasoned in his favour, and
sought arguments to induce them to close with him as much as those
at Jerusalem sought objections against him. They said very
judiciously, John did no miracle, but all things that John spoke
of this man were true. Two things they considered, upon
recollecting what they had seen and heard from John, and comparing
it with Christ's ministry. [1.] That Christ far exceeded John
Baptist's power, for John did no miracle, but Jesus does
many; whence it is easy to infer that Jesus is greater than John.
And, if John was so great a prophet, how great then is this Jesus!
Christ is best known and acknowledged by such a comparison with
others as sets him superlatively above others. Though John came in
the spirit and power of Elias, yet he did not work miracles, as
Elias did, lest the minds of people should be made to hesitate
between him and Jesus; therefore the honour of working miracles was
reserved for Jesus as a flower of his crown, that there might be a
sensible demonstration, and undeniable one, that though he
came after John, yet he was preferred far before him. [2.]
That Christ exactly answered John Baptist's testimony. John not
only did no miracle to divert people from Christ, but
he said a great deal to direct them to Christ, and to turn them
over as apprentices to him, and this came to their minds
now: all things that John said of this man were true,
that he should be the Lamb of God, should baptize with
Holy Ghost and with fire. Great things John had said of him,
which raised their expectations; so that though they had not zeal
enough to carry them into his country to enquire after him, yet,
when he came into theirs, and brought his gospel to their doors,
they acknowledged him as great as John had said he would be. When
we get acquainted with Christ, and come to know him experimentally,
we find all things that the scripture saith of him to be true; nay,
and that the reality exceeds the report,
(3.) That many believed on him there.
Believing that he who wrought such miracles, and in whom John's
predictions were fulfilled, was what he declared himself to be, the
Son of God, they gave up themselves to him as his disciples,