The narrative which this evangelist gives us (or
rather God by him) of the life of Christ begins earlier than either
Matthew or Mark. We have reason to thank God for them all, as we
have for all the gifts and graces of Christ's ministers, which in
one make up what is wanting in the other, while all put together
make a harmony. In this chapter we have, I. Luke's preface to his
gospel, or his epistle dedicatory to his friend Theophilus,
1 Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to set forth in order a declaration of those things which are most surely believed among us, 2 Even as they delivered them unto us, which from the beginning were eyewitnesses, and ministers of the word; 3 It seemed good to me also, having had perfect understanding of all things from the very first, to write unto thee in order, most excellent Theophilus, 4 That thou mightest know the certainty of those things, wherein thou hast been instructed.
Complimental prefaces and dedications, the
language of flattery and the food and fuel of pride, are justly
condemned by the wise and good; but it doth not therefore follow,
that such as are useful and instructive are to be run down; such is
this, in which St. Luke dedicates his gospel to his friend
Theophilus, not as to his patron, though he was a man of
honour, to protect it, but as to his pupil, to learn it, and
hold it fast. It is not certain who this Theophilus was; the name
signifies a friend of God; some think that it does not mean
any particular person, but every one that is a lover of God;
Dr. Hammond quotes some of the ancients understanding it so: and
then it teaches us, that those who are truly lovers of God, will
heartily welcome the gospel of Christ, the design and tendency of
which are, to bring us to God. But it is rather to be understood of
some particular person, probably a magistrate; because Luke gives
him here the same title of respect which St. Paul gave to Festus
the governor, kratiste (
Now observe here, I. Why St. Luke wrote this gospel. It is certain that he was moved by the Holy Ghost, not only to the writing, but in the writing of it; but in both he was moved as a reasonable creature, and not as a mere machine; and he was made to consider,
1. That the things he wrote of were things that were most surely believed among all Christians, and therefore things which they ought to be instructed in, that they may know what they believe, and things which ought to be transmitted to posterity (who are as much concerned in them as we are); and, in order to that, to be committed to writing, which is the surest way of conveyance to the ages to come. He will not write about things of doubtful disputation, things about which Christians may safely differ from one another and hesitate within themselves; but the things which are, and ought to be, most surely believed, pragmata peplerophoremena—the things which were performed (so some), which Christ and his apostles did, and did with such circumstances as gave a full assurance that they were really done, so that they have gained an established lasting credit. Note, Though it is not the foundation of our faith, yet it is a support to it, that the articles of our creed are things that have been long most surely believed. The doctrine of Christ is what thousands of the wisest and best of men have ventured their souls upon with the greatest assurance and satisfaction.
2. That it was requisite there should be a declaration made in order of those things; that the history of the life of Christ should be methodized, and committed to writing, for the greater certainty of the conveyance. When things are put in order, we know the better where to find them for our own use, and how to keep them for the benefit of others.
3. That there were many who had undertaken to publish narratives of the life of Christ, many well-meaning people, who designed well, and did well, and what they published had done good, though not done by divine inspiration, nor so well done as might be, nor intended for perpetuity. Note, (1.) The labours of others in the gospel of Christ, if faithful and honest, we ought to commend and encourage, and not to despise, though chargeable with many deficiencies. (2.) Others' services to Christ must not be reckoned to supersede ours, but rather to quicken them.
4. That the truth of the things he had to
write was confirmed by the concurring testimony of
those who were competent and unexceptionable witnesses of them;
what had been published in writing already, and what he was now
about to publish, agreed with that which had been delivered by word
of mouth, over and over, by those who from the beginning were
eye-witnesses and ministers of the word,
II. Observe why he sent it to
Theophilus: "I wrote unto thee these things in order,
not that thou mayest give reputation to the work, but that thou
mayest be edified by it (
5 There was in the days of Herod, the king of
Judæa, a certain priest named Zacharias, of the course of Abia: and
his wife was of the daughters of Aaron, and her name
was Elisabeth. 6 And they were both righteous before
God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord
blameless. 7 And they had no child, because that Elisabeth
was barren, and they both were now well stricken in years.
8 And it came to pass, that while he executed the priest's
office before God in the order of his course, 9 According to
the custom of the priest's office, his lot was to burn incense when
he went into the temple of the Lord. 10 And the whole
multitude of the people were praying without at the time of
incense. 11 And there appeared unto him an angel of the Lord
standing on the right side of the altar of incense. 12 And
when Zacharias saw him, he was troubled, and fear fell upon
him. 13 But the angel said unto him, Fear not, Zacharias:
for thy prayer is heard; and thy wife Elisabeth shall bear thee a
son, and thou shalt call his name
The two preceding evangelists had agreed to begin the gospel with the baptism of John and his ministry, which commenced about six months before our Saviour's public ministry (and now, things being near a crisis, six months was a deal of time, which before was but a little), and therefore this evangelist, designing to give a more particular account than had been given of our Saviour's conception and birth, determines to do so of John Baptist, who in both was his harbinger and forerunner, the morning-star to the Sun of righteousness. The evangelist determines thus, not only because it is commonly reckoned a satisfaction and entertainment to know something of the original extraction and early days of those who afterwards prove great men, but because in the beginning of these there were many things miraculous, and presages of what they afterwards proved. In these verses our inspired historian begins as early as the conception of John Baptist. Now observe here,
I. The account given of his parents
(
Now the father of John Baptist was a
priest, a son of Aaron; his name Zacharias. No families in
the world were ever so honoured of God as those of Aaron and David;
with one was made the covenant of priesthood, with the other that
of royalty; they had both forfeited their honour, yet the gospel
again puts honour upon both in their latter days, on that of Aaron
in John Baptist, on that of David in Christ, and then they were
both extinguished and lost. Christ was of David's house, his
forerunner of Aaron's; for his priestly agency and influence opened
the way to his kingly authority and dignity. This Zacharias was
of the course of Abia. When in David's time the family of
Aaron was multiplied, he divided them into twenty-four courses, for
the more regular performances of their office, that it might never
be either neglected for want of hands or engrossed by
a few. The eighth of those was that of Abia (
Now that which is observed concerning Zacharias and Elisabeth is,
1. That they were a very religious couple
(
2. That they had been long
childless,
II. The appearing of an angel to his father
Zacharias, as he was ministering in the temple,
1. How Zacharias was employed in the
service of God (
While Zacharias was burning incense in the
temple, the whole multitude of the people were praying
without,
2. How, when he was thus employed, he was
honoured with a messenger, a special messenger sent from
heaven to him (
3. What impression this made upon Zacharias
(
III. The message which the angel had to
deliver to him,
1. The prayers he has often made
shall now receive an answer of peace: Fear not, Zacharias, for
thy prayer is heard. (1.) If he means his particular prayer
for a son to build up his family, it must be the prayers he
had formerly made for that mercy, when he was likely to have
children; but we may suppose, now that he and his wife were both
well stricken in years, as they had done expecting it, so
they had done praying for it: like Moses, it sufficeth them,
and they speak no more to God of that matter,
2. He shall have a son in his old age, by
Elisabeth his wife, who had been long barren, that by his birth,
which was next to miraculous, people might be prepared to
receive and believe a virgin's bringing forth of a son, which was
perfectly miraculous. He is directed what name to give his
son: Call him John, in Hebrew Johanan, a name we
often meet in the Old Testament: it signifies gracious. The
priests must beseech God that he will be gracious (
3. This son shall be the joy of his family
and of all his relations,
4. This son shall be a distinguished favourite of Heaven, and a distinguished blessing to the earth. The honour of having a son is nothing to the honour of having such a son.
(1.) He shall be great in the sight of
the Lord; those are great indeed that are so in God's sight,
not those that are so in the eye of a vain and carnal world. God
will set him before his face continually, will employ him in
his work and send him on his errands; and that shall make him truly
great and honourable. He shall be a prophet, yea
more than a prophet, and upon that account as great as any
that every were born of women,
(2.) He shall be a Nazarite, set apart to
God from every thing that is polluting; in token of this,
according to the law of Nazariteship, he shall drink neither
wine nor strong drink,—or, rather, neither old wine
nor new; for most think that the word here translated
strong drink signifies some sort of wine, perhaps those that
we call made wines, or any thing that is
intoxicating. He shall be, as Samson was by the divine
precept (
(3.) He shall be abundantly fitted and
qualified for those great and eminent services to which in due time
he shall be called: He shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even
from his mother's womb, and as soon as it is possible he shall
appear to have been so. Observe, [1.] Those that would be filled
with the Holy Ghost must be sober and temperate, and very moderate
in the use of wine and strong drink; for that is it that
fits him for this. Be not drunk with wine, but be
filled with the Spirit, with which that is not consistent,
(4.) He shall be instrumental for the
conversion of many souls to God, and the preparing of them to
receive and entertain the gospel of Christ,
[1.] He shall be sent to the children of Israel, to the nation of the Jews, to whom the Messiah also was first sent, and not to the Gentiles; to the whole nation, and not the family of the priests only, with which, though he was himself of that family, we do not find he had any particular intimacy or influence.
[2.] He shall go before the Lord their God, that is, before the Messiah, whom they must expect to be, not their king, in the sense wherein they commonly take it, a temporal prince to their nation, but their Lord and their God, to rule and defend, and serve them in a spiritual way by his influence on their hearts. Thomas knew this, when he said to Christ, My Lord and my God, better than Nathanael did, when he said, Rabbi, thou are the king of Israel. John shall go before him, a little before him, to give notice of his approach, and to prepare people to receive him.
[3.] He shall go in the spirit and power
of Elias. That is, First, He shall be such a man as
Elias was, and do such work as Elias did,—shall, like him, preach
the necessity of repentance and reformation to a very corrupt and
degenerate age,—shall, like him, be bold and zealous in reproving
sin and witnessing against it even in the greatest, and be hated
and persecuted for it by a Herod and his Herodias, as Elijah was by
an Ahab and his Jezebel. He shall be carried on in his work, as
Elijah was, by a divine spirit and power, which shall
crown his ministry with wonderful success. As Elias went
before the writing prophets of the Old Testament, and
did as it were usher in that signal period of the
Old-Testament dispensation by a little writing of his own
(
[4.] He shall turn many of the children of Israel to the Lord their God, shall incline their hearts to receive the Messiah, and bid him welcome, by awakening them to a sense of sin and a desire of righteousness. Whatever has a tendency to turn us from iniquity, as John's preaching and baptism had, will turn us to Christ as our Lord and our God; for those who through grace are wrought upon to shake off the yoke of sin, that is, the dominion of the world and the flesh, will soon be persuaded to take upon them the yoke of the Lord Jesus.
[5.] Hereby he shall turn the hearts of
the fathers to the children, that is, of the Jews to the
Gentiles; shall help to conquer the rooted prejudices which the
Jews have against the Gentiles, which was done by the gospel, as
far as it prevailed, and was begun to be done by John Baptist, who
came for a witness, that all through him might believe, who
baptized and taught Roman soldiers as well as Jewish Pharisees, and
who cured the pride and confidence of those Jews who gloried in
their having Abraham to their father, and told them that God would
out of stones raise up children unto Abraham (
[6.] Hereby he shall make ready a people prepared for the Lord, shall dispose the minds of people to receive the doctrine of Christ, that thereby they may be prepared for the comforts of his coming. Note, First, All that are to be devoted to the Lord, and made happy in him, must first be prepared and made ready for him. We must be prepared by grace in this world for the glory in the other, by the terrors of the law for the comforts of the gospel, by the spirit of bondage for the Spirit of adoption. Secondly, Nothing has a more direct tendency to prepare people for Christ than the doctrine of repentance received and submitted to. When sin is thereby made grievous, Christ will become very precious.
IV. Zacharias's unbelief of the angel's prediction, and the rebuke he was laid under for that unbelief. He heard all that the angel had to say, and should have bowed his head, and worshipped the Lord, saying, Be it unto thy servant according to the word which thou hast spoken; but it was not so. We are here told,
1. What his unbelief spoke,
2. How his unbelief was silenced, and he silenced for it.
(1.) The angel stops his mouth, by
asserting his authority. Doth he ask, Whereby shall I
know this? Let him know it by this, I am Gabriel,
(2.) The angel stops his mouth
indeed, by exerting his power: "That thou mayest object no
more, behold thou shalt be dumb,
V. The return of Zacharias to the people, and at length to his family, and the conception of this child of promise, the son of his old age.
1. The people staid, expecting Zacharias to
come out of the temple, because he was to pronounce the blessing
upon them in the name of the Lord; and, though he staid beyond the
usual time, yet they did not, as is too common in Christian
congregations, hurry away without the blessing, but waited
for him, marvelling that he tarried so long in the temple,
and afraid let something was amiss,
2. When he came out, he was
speechless,
3. He made a shift to give them to
understand that he had seen a vision, by some awful signs he
made, for he beckoned to them, and remained
speechless,
4. He staid out the days of his ministration; for, his lot being to burn incense, he could do that, though he was dumb and deaf. When we cannot perform the service of God so well as we would, yet, if we perform it as well as we can, God will accept of us in it.
26 And in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a city of Galilee, named Nazareth, 27 To a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David; and the virgin's name was Mary. 28 And the angel came in unto her, and said, Hail, thou that art highly favoured, the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou among women. 29 And when she saw him, she was troubled at his saying, and cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be. 30 And the angel said unto her, Fear not, Mary: for thou hast found favour with God. 31 And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name JESUS. 32 He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David: 33 And he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end. 34 Then said Mary unto the angel, How shall this be, seeing I know not a man? 35 And the angel answered and said unto her, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God. 36 And, behold, thy cousin Elisabeth, she hath also conceived a son in her old age: and this is the sixth month with her, who was called barren. 37 For with God nothing shall be impossible. 38 And Mary said, Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word. And the angel departed from her.
We have here notice given us of all that it was fit we should know concerning the incarnation and conception of our blessed Saviour, six months after the conception of John. The same angel, Gabriel, that was employed in making known to Zacharias God's purpose concerning his son, is employed in this also; for in this, the same glorious work of redemption, which was begun in that, is carried on. As bad angels are none of the redeemed, so good angels are none of the redeemers; yet they are employed by the Redeemer as his messengers, and they go cheerfully on his errands, because they are his Father's humble servants, and his children's hearty friends and well-wishers.
I. We have here an account given of the mother of our Lord, of whom he was to be born, whom, though we are not to pray to, yet we ought to praise God for.
1. Her name was Mary, the same name with Miriam, the sister of Moses and Aaron; the name signifies exalted, and a great elevation it was to her indeed to be thus favoured above all the daughters of the house of David.
2. She was a daughter of the royal family, lineally descended from David, and she herself and all her friends knew it, for she went under the title and character of the house of David, though she was poor and low in the world; and she was enabled by God's providence, and the care of the Jews, to preserve their genealogies, to make it out, and as long as the promise of the Messiah was to be fulfilled it was worth keeping; but for those now, who are brought low in the world, to have descended from persons of honour, is not worth mentioning.
3. She was a virgin, a pure
unspotted one, but espoused to one of the same royal stock,
like her, however, of low estate; so that upon both accounts there
was (as it was fit there should be) an equality between them; his
name was Joseph; he also was of the house of David,
4. She lived in Nazareth, a city of Galilee, a remote corner of the country, and in no reputation for religion or learning, but which bordered upon the heathen, and therefore was called Galilee of the Gentiles. Christ's having his relations resident there intimates favour in reserve for the Gentile world. And Dr. Lightfoot observes that Jonah was by birth a Galilean, and Elijah and Elisha very much conversant in Galilee, who were all famous prophets of the Gentiles. The angel was sent to her from Nazareth. Note, No distance or disadvantage of place shall be a prejudice to those for whom God has favours in store. The angel Gabriel carries his message as cheerfully to Mary and Nazareth in Galilee as to Zacharias in the temple at Jerusalem.
II. The address of the angel to her,
(1.) She is dignified: "Thou art highly favoured. God, in his choice of thee to be the mother of the Messiah, has put an honour upon thee peculiar to thyself, above that of Eve, who was the mother of all living." The vulgar Latin translates this gratiá plena—full of grace, and thence gathers that she had more of the inherent graces of the Spirit than ever any had; whereas it is certain that this bespeaks no other than the singular favour done her in preferring her to conceive and bear our blessed Lord, an honour which, since he was to be the seed of the woman, some woman must have, not for personal merit, but purely for the sake of free grace, and she is pitched upon. Even so, Father, because it seemed good unto thee.
(2.) She has the presence of God with her:
"The Lord is with thee, though poor and mean, and perhaps
now forecasting how to get a livelihood and maintain a family in
the married state." The angel with this word raised the faith of
Gideon (
(3.) She has the blessing of God upon her:
"Blessed art thou among women; not only thou shalt be
accounted so by men, but thou shalt be so. Thou that art so
highly favoured in this instance mayest expect in other
things to be blessed." She explains this herself (
III. The consternation she was in, upon
this address (
IV. The message itself which the angel had
to deliver to her. Some time the angel gives her to pause;
but, observing that this did but increase her perplexity, he went
on with his errand,
1. Though she is a virgin, she shall
have the honour of being a mother: "Thou shalt conceive
in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and thou shalt have the
naming of him; thou shalt call his name Jesus,"
2. Though she lives in poverty and obscurity, yet she shall have the honour to be the mother of the Messiah; her son shall be named Jesus—a Saviour, such a one as the world needs, rather than such one as the Jews expect.
(1.) He will be very nearly allied
to the upper world. He shall be great, truly great,
incontestably great; for he shall be called the Son of the
Highest, the Son of God who is the Highest; of the same
nature, as the son is of the same nature with the father; and very
dear to him, as the son is to the father. He shall be
called, and not miscalled, the Son of the
Highest; for he is himself God over all, blessed for
evermore,
(2.) He will be very highly
preferred in the lower world; for, though born under the
most disadvantageous circumstances possible, and appearing in the
form of a servant, yet the Lord God shall give unto him the
throne of his father David,
V. The further information given her, upon her enquiry concerning the birth of this prince.
1. It is a just enquiry which she makes:
"How shall this be?
2. It is a satisfactory answer that is
given to it,
(2.) She must ask no questions
concerning the way and manner how it shall be wrought; for the Holy
Ghost, as the power of the Highest, shall overshadow
her, as the cloud covered the tabernacle when the glory of
God took possession of it, to conceal it from those that would too
curiously observe the motions of it, and pry into the mystery of
it. The formation of every babe in the womb, and the entrance of
the spirit of life into it, is a mystery in nature; none knows
the way of the spirit, nor how the bones are formed in the womb
of her that is with child,
(3.) The child she shall conceive is a holy thing, and therefore must not be conceived by ordinary generation, because he must not share in the common corruption and pollution of the human nature. He is spoken of emphatically, That Holy Thing, such as never was; and he shall be called the Son of God, as the Son of the Father by eternal generation, as an indication of which he shall now be formed by the Holy Ghost in the present conception. His human nature must be so produced, as it was fit that should be which was to be taken into union with the divine nature.
3. It was a further encouragement to her
faith to be told that her cousin Elisabeth, though stricken
in years, was with child,
VI. Her acquiescence in the will of God
concerning her,
Hereupon, the angel departed from her; having completed the errand he was sent upon, he returned, to give an account of it, and receive new instructions. Converse with angels was always a transient thing, and soon over; it will be constant and permanent in the future state. It is generally supposed that just at this instant the virgin conceived, by the overshadowing power of the Holy Ghost: but, the scripture being decently silent concerning it, it doth not become us to be inquisitive, much less positive.
39 And Mary arose in those days, and went into the hill country with haste, into a city of Juda; 40 And entered into the house of Zacharias, and saluted Elisabeth. 41 And it came to pass, that, when Elisabeth heard the salutation of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb; and Elisabeth was filled with the Holy Ghost: 42 And she spake out with a loud voice, and said, Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb. 43 And whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me? 44 For, lo, as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded in mine ears, the babe leaped in my womb for joy. 45 And blessed is she that believed: for there shall be a performance of those things which were told her from the Lord. 46 And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord, 47 And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour. 48 For he hath regarded the low estate of his handmaiden: for, behold, from henceforth all generations shall call me blessed. 49 For he that is mighty hath done to me great things; and holy is his name. 50 And his mercy is on them that fear him from generation to generation. 51 He hath showed strength with his arm; he hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts. 52 He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree. 53 He hath filled the hungry with good things; and the rich he hath sent empty away. 54 He hath holpen his servant Israel, in remembrance of his mercy; 55 As he spake to our fathers, to Abraham, and to his seed for ever. 56 And Mary abode with her about three months, and returned to her own house.
We have here an interview between the two
happy mothers, Elisabeth and Mary: the angel, by intimating to Mary
the favour bestowed on her cousin Elisabeth (
I. The visit which Mary made to Elisabeth.
Mary was the younger, and younger with child; and therefore,
if they must come together, it was fittest that Mary should take
the journey, not insisting on the preference which the greater
dignity of her conception gave her,
1. Dr. Lightfoot offers a conjecture that
she was to conceive our Saviour there at Hebron, and perhaps
had so much intimated to her by the angel, or some other way; and
therefore she made such haste thither. He thinks it probable that
Shiloh, of the tribe of Judah, and the seed of David, should be
conceived in a city of Judah and of David, as he was to be
born in Bethlehem, another city which belonged to them both. In
Hebron the promise was given to Isaac, circumcision was instituted.
Here (saith he) Abraham had his first land, and David his first
crown: here lay interred the three couples, Abraham and Sarah,
Isaac and Rebecca, Jacob and Leah, and, as antiquity has held, Adam
and Eve. He therefore thinks that it suits singularly with the
harmony and consent which God uses in his works that the promise
should begin to take place by the conception of the Messias, even
among those patriarchs to whom it was given. I see no improbability
in the conjecture, but add this for the support of it, that
Elisabeth said (
2. It is generally supposed that she went thither for the confirming of her faith by the sign which the angel had given her, her cousin's being with child, and to rejoice with her sister-favourite. And, besides, she went thither, perhaps, that she might be more retired from company, or else might have more agreeable company than she could have in Nazareth. We may suppose that she did not acquaint any of her neighbours at Nazareth with the message she had received from heaven, yet longed to talk over a thing she had a thousand time thought over, and knew no person in the world with whom she could freely converse concerning it but her cousin Elisabeth, and therefore she hastened to her. Note, it is very beneficial and comfortable for those that have a good work of grace begun in their souls, and Christ in the forming there, to consult those who are in the same case, that they may communicate experiences one to another; and they will find that, as in water face answers to face, so doth the heart of man to man, of Christian to Christian.
II. The meeting between Mary and Elisabeth.
Mary entered into the house of Zacharias; but he, being dumb
and deaf, kept his chamber, it is probable, and saw no
company; and therefore she saluted Elisabeth (
Now, at their first coming together, for the confirmation of the faith of both of them, there was something very extraordinary. Mary knew that Elisabeth was with child, but it does not appear that Elisabeth had been told any thing of her cousin Mary's being designed for the mother of the Messiah; and therefore what knowledge she appears to have had of it must have come by a revelation, which would be a great encouragement to Mary.
1. The babe leaped in her womb,
2. Elisabeth was herself filled with the Holy Ghost, or a Spirit of prophecy, by which, as well as by the particular suggestions of the Holy Ghost she was filled with, she was given to understand that the Messiah was at hand, in whom prophecy should revive, and by whom the Holy Ghost should be more plentifully poured out than ever, according to the expectations of those who waited for the consolation of Israel. The uncommon motion of the babe in her womb was a token of extraordinary emotion of her spirit under a divine impulse. Note, Those whom Christ graciously visits may know it by their being filled with the Holy Ghost; for, if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.
III. The welcome which Elisabeth, by the Spirit of prophecy, gave to Mary, the mother of our Lord; not as to a common friend making a common visit, but as to one of whom the Messiah was to be born.
1. She congratulates her on her honour,
and, though perhaps she knew not of it till just now, she
acknowledges it with the greatest assurance and satisfaction. She
spoke with a loud voice, which does not at all intimate (as
some think) that there was a floor or a wall between them, but that
she was in a transport or exultation of joy, and said what she
cared not who knew. She said, Blessed art thou among women,
the same word that the angels had said (
2. She acknowledges her condescension, in
making her this visit (
3. She acquaints her with the concurrence
of the babe in her womb, in this welcome to her (
4. She commends her faith, and encourages
it (
IV. Mary's song of praise, upon this occasion. Elisabeth's prophecy was an echo to the virgin Mary's salutation, and this song is yet a stronger echo to that prophecy, and shows her to be no less filled with the Holy Ghost than Elisabeth was. We may suppose the blessed virgin to come in, very much fatigued with her journey; yet she forgets that, and is inspired with new life, and vigour, and joy, upon the confirmation she here meets with of her faith; and since, by the sudden inspiration and transport, she finds that this was designed to be her errand hither, weary as she is, like Abraham's servant, she would neither eat nor drink till she had told her errand.
1. Here are the expressions of joy and
praise, and God alone the object of the praise and centre of the
joy. Some compare this song with that which her name-sake Miriam,
the sister of Moses, sung, upon the triumphant departure of Israel
out of Egypt, and their triumphant passage through the Red Sea;
others think it better compared with the song of Hannah, upon the
birth of Samuel, which, like this, passes from a family mercy to a
public and general one. This begins, like that, My heart
rejoiceth in the Lord,
(1.) With great reverence of him, as the Lord: "My soul doth magnify the Lord; I never saw him so great as now I find him so good." Note, Those, and those only, are advanced in mercy, who are thereby brought to think the more highly and honourably of God; whereas there are those whose prosperity and preferment make them say, What is the Almighty, that we should serve him? The more honour God has any way put upon us, the more honour we must study to give to him; and then only are we accepted in magnifying the Lord, when our souls magnify him, and all that is within us. Praising work must be soul work.
(2.) With great complacency in him as
her Saviour: My spirit rejoiceth in God my Saviour. This
seems to have reference to the Messiah, whom she was to be the
mother of. She calls him God her Saviour; for the angel had
told her that he should be the Son of the Highest, and that
his name should be Jesus, a Saviour; this she fastened upon,
with application to herself: He is God my Saviour. Even the
mother of our Lord had need of an interest in him as her Saviour,
and would have been undone without it: and she glories more in that
happiness which she had in common with all believers than in being
his mother, which was an honour peculiar to herself, and this
agrees with the preference Christ have to obedient believers above
his mother and brethren; see
2. Here are just causes assigned for this joy and praise.
(1.) Upon her own account,
(2.) Upon the account of others. The
virgin Mary, as the mother of the Messiah, is become a kind of
public person, wears a public character, and is therefore
immediately endued with another spirit, a more public spirit than
before she had, and therefore looks abroad, looks about
her, looks before her, and takes notice of God's various
dealings with the children of men (
[1.] It is a certain truth that God has
mercy in store, mercy in reserve, for all that have a
reverence for his majesty, and a due regard to his sovereignty
and authority. But never did this appear so as in sending his Son
into the world to save us (
[2.] It has been a common observation that
God in his providence puts contempt upon the haughty
and honour upon the humble; and this he has done
remarkably in the whole economy of the work of man's redemption. As
God had, with his mercy to her, shown himself mighty
also (
1. In the spiritual honours it
dispenses. When the proud Pharisees were rejected, and Publicans
and sinners went into the kingdom of heaven before
them,—when the Jews, who followed after the law of
righteousness, did not attain it, and the Gentiles, who never
thought of it, attained to righteousness (
2. In the spiritual riches it
dispenses,
[3.] It was always expected that the
Messiah should be, in a special manner, the strength and glory of
his people Israel, and so he is in a peculiar manner (
First, That it is in remembrance
of his mercy, the mercifulness of his nature, the mercy he has
in store for his servant Israel. While this blessing was
deferred, his people, who waited for it, were often ready to ask,
Has God forgotten to be gracious? But now he made it appear
that he had not forgotten, but remembered, his mercy. He
remembered his former mercy, and repeated that to them in
spiritual blessings which he had done formerly to them in
temporal favours. He remembered the days of old. Where is
he that brought them up out of the sea, out of Egypt?
Secondly, That it is in
performance of his promise. It is a mercy not only designed,
but declared (
Lastly, Mary's return to Nazareth
(
57 Now Elisabeth's full time came that she
should be delivered; and she brought forth a son. 58 And her
neighbours and her cousins heard how the Lord had showed great
mercy upon her; and they rejoiced with her. 59 And it came
to pass, that on the eighth day they came to circumcise the child;
and they called him Zacharias, after the name of his father.
60 And his mother answered and said, Not so; but he shall be
called
In these verses, we have,
I. The birth of John Baptist,
II. The great joy that was among all the
relations of the family, upon this extraordinary occasion
(
III. The dispute that was among them
concerning the naming him (
Now it was the custom, when they circumcised their children, to name them, because, when Abram was circumcised God gave him a new name, and called him Abraham; and it is not unfit that they should be left nameless till they are by name given up to God. Now,
1. Some proposed that he should be called by his father's name, Zacharias. We have not any instance in scripture that the child should bear the father's name; but perhaps it was of late come into use among the Jews, at it is with us, and they intended hereby to do honour to the father, who was not likely to have another child.
2. The mother opposed it, and would
have called him John; having learned, either by inspiration
of the Holy Ghost (as is most probable), or by information in
writing from her husband, that God appointed this to be his name
(
3. The relations objected against
that (
4. They appealed to the father, and
would try if they could possibly get to know his mind; for it was
his office to name the child,
5. He thereupon recovered the use of his
speech (
6. These things were told all the country
over, to the great amazement of all that heard them,
Lastly, It is said, The hand of the Lord was with him; that is, he was taken under the special protection of the Almighty, from his birth, as one designed for something great and considerable, and there were many instances of it. It appeared likewise that the Spirit was at work upon his soul very early. As soon as he began to speak or go, you might perceive something in him very extraordinary. Note, God has ways of operating upon children in their infancy, which we cannot account for. God never made a soul but he knew how to sanctify it.
67 And his father Zacharias was filled with the Holy Ghost, and prophesied, saying, 68 Blessed be the Lord God of Israel; for he hath visited and redeemed his people, 69 And hath raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David; 70 As he spake by the mouth of his holy prophets, which have been since the world began: 71 That we should be saved from our enemies, and from the hand of all that hate us; 72 To perform the mercy promised to our fathers, and to remember his holy covenant; 73 The oath which he sware to our father Abraham, 74 That he would grant unto us, that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies might serve him without fear, 75 In holiness and righteousness before him, all the days of our life. 76 And thou, child, shalt be called the prophet of the Highest: for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways; 77 To give knowledge of salvation unto his people by the remission of their sins, 78 Through the tender mercy of our God; whereby the dayspring from on high hath visited us, 79 To give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace. 80 And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, and was in the deserts till the day of his showing unto Israel.
We have here the song wherewith Zacharias
praised God when his mouth was opened; in it
he is said to prophesy (
I. How he was qualified for this: He was filled with the Holy Ghost, was endued with more than ordinary measures and degrees of it, for this purpose; he was divinely inspired. God not only forgave him his unbelief and distrust (which was signified by discharging him from the punishment of it), but, as a specimen of the abounding of grace towards believers, he filled him with the Holy Ghost, and put this honour upon him, to employ him for his honour.
II. What the matter of his song was. Here
is nothing said of the private concerns of his own family, the
rolling away of the reproach from it and putting of a reputation
upon it, by the birth of this child, though, no doubt, he found a
time to give thanks to God for this, with his family; but in this
song he is wholly taken up with the kingdom of the Messiah, and the
public blessings to be introduced by it. He could have little
pleasure in this fruitfulness of his vine, and the
hopefulness of his olive-plant, if herein he had not
foreseen the good of Jerusalem, peace upon Israel, and
blessings on both out of Zion,
Now Zacharias here blesses God,
1. For the work of salvation that
was to be wrought out by the Messiah himself,
(1.) In sending the Messiah, God has
made a gracious visit to his people, whom for many ages he
had seemed to neglect, and to be estranged from; he hath visited
them as a friend, to take cognizance of their case. God is said
to have visited his people in bondage when he
delivered them (
(2.) He has wrought out redemption for them: He has redeemed his people. This was the errand on which Christ came into the world, to redeem those that were sold for sin, and sold under sin; even God's own people, his Israel, his son, his first-born, his free-born, need to be redeemed, and are undone if they be not. Christ redeems them by price out of the hands of God's justice, and redeems them by power out of the hands of Satan's tyranny, as Israel out of Egypt.
(3.) He has fulfilled the covenant of
royalty made with the most famous Old-Testament prince,
that is, David. Glorious things had been said of his family, that
on him, as a mighty one, help should be laid, that
his horn should be exalted, and his seed perpetuated,
(4.) He has fulfilled all the precious
promises made to the church by the most famous Old-Testament
prophets (
Now what is this salvation which was prophesied of?
First, It is a rescue from
the malice of our enemies; it is soterian ex echthron
hemon—a salvation out of our enemies, from among
them, and out of the power of them that hate us (
Secondly, It is a restoration
to the favour of God; it is to perform the mercy promised
to our forefathers,
Thirdly, It is a qualification for,
and an encouragement to, the service of God. Thus was the oath
he sware to our Father Abraham, That he would give us
power and grace to serve him, in an acceptable manner to him
and a comfortable manner to ourselves,
2. He blessed God for the work of
preparation for this salvation, which was to be done by John
Baptist (
(1.) To prepare people for the salvation,
by preaching repentance and reformation as great gospel duties:
Thou shalt go before the face of the Lord, and but a little
before him, to prepare his ways, to call people to make room
for him, and get ready for his entertainment. Let every thing that
may obstruct his progress, or embarrass it, or hinder people from
coming to him, be taken away: see
(2.) To give people a general idea of the salvation, that they might know, not only what to do, but what to expect; for the doctrine he preached was that the kingdom of heaven is at hand. There are two things in which you must know that this salvation consists:—
[1.] The forgiveness of what we have
done amiss. It is salvation by the remission of sins,
those sins which stand in the way of the salvation, and by which we
are all become liable to ruin and condemnation,
[2.] Direction to do better
for the time to come. The gospel salvation not only encourages us
to hope that the works of darkness shall be forgiven us, but sets
up a clear and true light, by which we may order our steps aright.
In it the day-spring hath visited us from on high (
In the
1. Of his eminence as to the inward man: The child grew in the capacities of his mind, much more than other children; so that he waxed strong in the spirit; had a strong judgment and strong resolution. Reason and conscience (both which are the candle of the Lord) were so strong in him that he had the inferior faculties of appetite and passion in complete subjection betimes. By this it appeared that he was betimes filled with the Holy Ghost; for those that are strong in the Lord are strong in spirit.
2. Of his obscurity as to the outward man: He was in the deserts; not that he lived a hermit; cut off from the society of men. No, we have reason to think that he went up to Jerusalem at the feasts, and frequented the synagogues on the sabbath day, but his constant residence was in some of those scattered houses that were in the wilderness of Zuph or Maon, which we read of in the story of David. There he spent most of his time, in contemplation and devotion, and had not his education in the schools, or at the feet of the rabbin. Note, Many a one is qualified for great usefulness, who yet is buried alive; and many are so long buried who are designed, and are thereby in the fitting, for so much greater usefulness at last; as John Baptist, who was in the desert only till the day of his showing to Israel, when he was in the thirtieth year of his age. Note, There is a time fixed for the showing of those favours to Israel which are reserved; the vision of them is for an appointed time, and at the end it shall speak, and shall not lie.