In this chapter we have, I. Christ's evading the
snare which the Jews laid for him, in bringing to him a woman taken
in adultery,
1 Jesus went unto the mount of Olives. 2 And early in the morning he came again into the temple, and all the people came unto him; and he sat down, and taught them. 3 And the scribes and Pharisees brought unto him a woman taken in adultery; and when they had set her in the midst, 4 They say unto him, Master, this woman was taken in adultery, in the very act. 5 Now Moses in the law commanded us, that such should be stoned: but what sayest thou? 6 This they said, tempting him, that they might have to accuse him. But Jesus stooped down, and with his finger wrote on the ground, as though he heard them not. 7 So when they continued asking him, he lifted up himself, and said unto them, He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her. 8 And again he stooped down, and wrote on the ground. 9 And they which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one, beginning at the eldest, even unto the last: and Jesus was left alone, and the woman standing in the midst. 10 When Jesus had lifted up himself, and saw none but the woman, he said unto her, Woman, where are those thine accusers? hath no man condemned thee? 11 She said, No man, Lord. And Jesus said unto her, Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more.
Though Christ was basely abused in the foregoing chapter, both by the rulers and by the people, yet here we have him still at Jerusalem, still in the temple. How often would he have gathered them! Observe,
I. His retirement in the evening out of the
town (
II. His return in the morning to the
temple, and to his work there,
1. What a diligent preacher Christ was: Early in the morning he came again, and taught. Though he had been teaching the day before, he taught again to-day. Christ was a constant preacher, in season and out of season. Three things were taken notice of here concerning Christ's preaching. (1.) The time: Early in the morning. Though he lodged out of town, and perhaps had spent much of the night in secret prayer, yet he came early. When a day's work is to be done for God and souls it is good to begin betimes, and take the day before us. (2.) The place: In the temple; not so much because it was a consecrated place (for then he would have chosen it at other times) as because it was now a place of concourse; and he would hereby countenance solemn assemblies for religious worship, and encourage people to come up to the temple, for he had not yet left it desolate. (3.) His posture: He sat down, and taught, as one having authority, and as one that intended to abide by it for some time.
2. How diligently his preaching was attended upon: All the people came unto him; and perhaps many of them were the country-people, who were this day to return home from the feast, and were desirous to hear one sermon more from the mouth of Christ before they returned. They came to him, though he came early. They that seek him early shall find him. Though the rulers were displeased at those that came to hear him, yet they would come; and he taught them, though they were angry at him too. Though there were few or none among them that were persons of any figure, yet Christ bade them welcome, and taught them.
III. His dealing with those that brought to him the woman taken in adultery, tempting him. The scribes and Pharisees would not only not hear Christ patiently themselves, but they disturbed him when the people were attending on him. Observe here,
1. The case proposed to him by the scribes
and Pharisees, who herein contrived to pick a quarrel with him, and
bring him into a snare,
(1.) They set the prisoner to the bar
(
(2.) They prefer an indictment against her:
Master, this woman was taken in adultery,
[1.] The crime for which the prisoner
stands indicted is no less than adultery, which even in the
patriarchal age, before the law of Moses, was looked upon as an
iniquity to be punished by the judges,
[2.] The proof of the crime was from the notorious evidence of the fact, an incontestable proof; she was taken in the act, so that there was no room left to plead not guilty. Had she not been taken in this act, she might have gone on to another, till her heart had been perfectly hardened; but sometimes it proves a mercy to sinners to have their sin brought to light, that they may do no more presumptuously. Better our sin should shame us than damn us, and be set in order before us for our conviction than for our condemnation.
(3.) They produce the statute in this case
made and provided, and upon which she was indicted,
(4.) They pray his judgment in the case:
"But what sayest thou, who pretendest to be a teacher come
from God to repeal old laws and enact new ones? What hast thou to
say in this case?" If they had asked this question in sincerity,
with a humble desire to know his mind, it had been very
commendable. Those that are entrusted with the administration of
justice should look up to Christ for direction; but this they
said tempting him, that they might have to accuse him,
2. The method he took to resolve this case, and so to break this snare.
(1.) He seemed to slight it, and turned a
deaf ear to it: He stooped down, and wrote on the ground. It
is impossible to tell, and therefore needless to ask, what he
wrote; but this is the only mention made in the gospels of Christ's
writing. Eusebius indeed speaks of his writing to Abgarus, king of
Edessa. Some think they have a liberty of conjecture as to what he
wrote here. Grotius says, It was some grave weighty saying, and
that it was usual for wise men, when they were very thoughtful
concerning any thing, to do so. Jerome and Ambrose suppose he
wrote, Let the names of these wicked men be written in the
dust. Others this, The earth accuses the earth, but the
judgment is mine. Christ by this teaches us to be slow to speak
when difficult cases are proposed to us, not quickly to shoot our
bolt; and when provocations are given us, or we are bantered, to
pause and consider before we reply; think twice before we speak
once: The heart of the wise studies to answer. Our
translation from some Greek copies, which add, me
prospoioumenos (though most copies have it not), give this
account of the reason of his writing on the ground, as though he
heard them not. He did as it were look another way, to show
that he was not willing to take notice of their address, saying, in
effect, Who made me a judge or a divider? It is safe in many
cases to be deaf to that which it is not safe to answer,
(2.) When they importunately, or rather
impertinently, pressed him for an answer, he turned the conviction
of the prisoner upon the prosecutors,
[1.] They continued asking him, and his seeming not to take notice of them made them the more vehement; for now they thought sure enough that they had run him aground, and that he could not avoid the imputation of contradicting either the law of Moses, if he should acquit the prisoner, or his own doctrine of mercy and pardon, if he should condemn her; and therefore they pushed on their appeal to him with vigour; whereas they should have construed his disregard of them as a check to their design, and an intimation to them to desist, as they tendered their own reputation.
[2.] At last he put them all to shame and
silence with one word: He lifted up himself, awaking as one
out of sleep (
First, Here Christ avoided the snare which they had laid for him, and effectually saved his own reputation. He neither reflected upon the law nor excused the prisoner's guilt, nor did he on the other hand encourage the prosecution or countenance their heat; see the good effect of consideration. When we cannot make our point by steering a direct course, it is good to fetch a compass.
Secondly, In the net which they spread is their own foot taken. They came with design to accuse him, but they were forced to accuse themselves. Christ owns it was fit the prisoner should be prosecuted, but appeals to their consciences whether they were fit to be the prosecutors.
a. He here refers to that rule which
the law of Moses prescribed in the execution of criminals, that the
hand of the witnesses must be first upon them (
b. He builds upon an uncontested
maxim in morality, that it is very absurd for men to be zealous in
punishing the offences of others, while they are every whit as
guilty themselves, and they are not better than self-condemned who
judge others, and yet themselves do the same thing: "If there be
any of you who is without sin, without sin of this nature,
that has not some time or other been guilty of fornication or
adultery, let him cast the first stone at her." Not that
magistrates, who are conscious of guilt themselves, should
therefore connive at others' guilt. But therefore, (a.)
Whenever we find fault with others, we ought to reflect upon
ourselves, and to be more severe against sin in ourselves than in
others. (b.) We ought to be favourable, though not to the
sins, yet to the persons, of those that offend, and to restore them
with a spirit of meekness, considering ourselves and our own
corrupt nature. Aut sumus, aut fuimus, vel possumus esse quod
hic est—We either are, or have been, or may be, what he is.
Let this restrain us from throwing stones at our brethren,
and proclaiming their faults. Let him that is without sin
begin such discourse as this, and then those that are truly humbled
for their own sins will blush at it, and be glad to let it
drop. (c.) Those that are any way obliged to animadvert
upon the faults of others are concerned to look well to themselves,
and keep themselves pure (
c. Perhaps he refers to the trial of
the suspected wife by the jealous husband with the waters of
jealousy. The man was to bring her to the priest (
d. In this he attended to the great work which he came into the world about, and that was to bring sinners to repentance; not to destroy, but to save. He aimed to bring, not only the prisoner to repentance, by showing her his mercy, but the prosecutors too, by showing them their sins. They sought to ensnare him; he sought to convince and convert them. Thus the blood-thirsty hate the upright, but the just seek his soul.
[3.] Having given them this startling word,
he left them to consider of it, and again stooped down, and
wrote on the ground,
[4.] The scribes and Pharisees were so
strangely thunderstruck with the words of Christ that they let fall
their persecution of Christ, whom they durst no further tempt, and
their prosecution of the woman, whom they durst no longer accuse
(
First, Perhaps his writing on the ground frightened them, as the hand-writing on the wall frightened Belshazzar. They concluded he was writing bitter things against them, writing their doom. Happy they who have no reason to be afraid of Christ's writing!
Secondly, What he said frightened
them by sending them to their own consciences; he had shown them
to themselves, and they were afraid if they should stay till he
lifted up himself again his next word would show them to the world,
and shame them before men, and therefore they thought it best to
withdraw. They went out one by one, that they might go out
softly, and not by a noisy flight disturb Christ; they went
away by stealth, as people being ashamed steal away when
they flee in battle,
[5.] When the self-conceited
prosecutors quitted the field, and fled for the same, the
self-condemned prisoner stood her ground, with a resolution
to abide by the judgment of our Lord Jesus: Jesus was left
alone from the company of the scribes and Pharisees, free from
their molestations, and the woman standing in the midst of
the assembly that were attending on Christ's preaching, where they
set her,
[6.] Here is the conclusion of the trial,
and the issue it was brought to: Jesus lifted up himself, and he
saw none but the woman,
First, The prosecutors are called: Where are those thine accusers? Hath no man condemned thee? Not but that Christ knew where they were; but he asked, that he might shame them, who declined his judgment, and encourage her who resolved to abide by it. St. Paul's challenge is like this, Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect? Where are those their accusers? The accuser of the brethren shall be fairly cast out, and all indictments legally and regularly quashed.
Secondly, They do not appear when the question is asked: Hath no man condemned thee? She said, No man, Lord. She speaks respectfully to Christ, calls him Lord, but is silent concerning her prosecutors, says nothing in answer to that question which concerned them, Where are those thine accusers? She does not triumph in their retreat nor insult over them as witnesses against themselves, not against her. If we hope to be forgiven by our Judge, we must forgive our accusers; and if their accusations, how invidious soever, were the happy occasion of awakening our consciences, we may easily forgive them this wrong. But she answered the question which concerned herself, Has no man condemned thee? True penitents find it enough to give an account of themselves to God, and will not undertake to give an account of other people.
Thirdly, The prisoner is therefore discharged: Neither do I condemn thee; go, and sin no more. Consider this,
(a.) As her discharge from the
temporal punishment: "If they do not condemn thee to be stoned
to death, neither do I." Not that Christ came to disarm
the magistrate of his sword of justice, nor that it is his will
that capital punishments should not be inflicted on malefactors; so
far from this, the administration of public justice is established
by the gospel, and made subservient to Christ's kingdom: By me
kings reign. But Christ would not condemn this woman,
(a.) Because it was none of his business; he was no
judge nor divider, and therefore would not intermeddle in secular
affairs. His kingdom was not of this world. Tractent
fabrilia fabri—Let every one act in his own province.
(b.) Because she was prosecuted by those that were more
guilty than she and could not for shame insist upon their demand of
justice against her. The law appointed the hands of the witnesses
to be first upon the criminal, and afterwards the hands of all the
people, so that if they fly off, and do not condemn her, the
prosecution drops. The justice of God, in inflicting temporal
judgments, sometimes takes notice of a comparative
righteousness, and spares those who are otherwise obnoxious
when the punishing of them would gratify those that are worse than
they,
(b.) As her discharge from the
eternal punishment. For Christ to say, I do not condemn thee
is, in effect, to say, I do forgive thee; and the Son of
man had power on earth to forgive sins, and could upon good
grounds give this absolution; for as he knew the hardness and
impenitent hearts of the prosecutors, and therefore said that which
would confound them, so he knew the tenderness and sincere
repentance of the prisoner, and therefore said that which would
comfort her, as he did to that woman who was a sinner, such a
sinner as this, who was likewise looked upon with disdain by a
Pharisee (
12 Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life. 13 The Pharisees therefore said unto him, Thou bearest record of thyself; thy record is not true. 14 Jesus answered and said unto them, Though I bear record of myself, yet my record is true: for I know whence I came, and whither I go; but ye cannot tell whence I come, and whither I go. 15 Ye judge after the flesh; I judge no man. 16 And yet if I judge, my judgment is true: for I am not alone, but I and the Father that sent me. 17 It is also written in your law, that the testimony of two men is true. 18 I am one that bear witness of myself, and the Father that sent me beareth witness of me. 19 Then said they unto him, Where is thy Father? Jesus answered, Ye neither know me, nor my Father: if ye had known me, ye should have known my Father also. 20 These words spake Jesus in the treasury, as he taught in the temple: and no man laid hands on him; for his hour was not yet come.
The rest of the chapter is taken up with
debates between Christ and contradicting sinners, who cavilled at
the most gracious words that proceeded out of his mouth. It is not
certain whether these disputes were the same day that the
adulteress was discharged; it is probable they were, for the
evangelist mentions no other day, and takes notice (
I. A great doctrine laid down, with the application of it.
1. The doctrine is, That Christ is the
light of the world (
2. The inference from this doctrine is, He that followeth me, as a traveller follows the light in a dark night, shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life. If Christ be the light, then, (1.) It is our duty to follow him, to submit ourselves to his guidance, and in every thing take directions from him, in the way that leads to happiness. Many follow false lights—ignes fatui, that lead them to destruction; but Christ is the true light. It is not enough to look at this light, and to gaze upon it, but we must follow it, believe in it, and walk in it, for it is a light to our feet, not our eyes only. (2.) It is the happiness of those who follow Christ that they shall not walk in darkness. They shall not be left destitute of those instructions in the way of truth which are necessary to keep them from destroying error, and those directions in the way of duty which are necessary to keep them from damning sin. They shall have the light of life, that knowledge and enjoyment of God which will be to them the light of spiritual life in this world and of everlasting life in the other world, where there will be no death nor darkness. Follow Christ, and we shall undoubtedly be happy in both worlds. Follow Christ, and we shall follow him to heaven.
II. The objection which the Pharisees made
against this doctrine, and it was very trifling and frivolous:
Thou bearest record of thyself; thy record is not true,
III. Christ's reply to this objection,
1. That he was conscious to himself of his
own authority, and abundantly satisfied in himself concerning it.
He did not speak as one at uncertainty, nor propose a disputable
notion, about which he himself hesitated, but declared a
decree, and gave such an account of himself as he would
abide by: I know whence I came, and whither I go. He was
fully apprised of his own undertaking from first to last; knew
whose errand he went upon, and what his success would be. He knew
what he was before his manifestation to the world, and what
he should be after; that he came from the Father, and
was going to him (
2. That they are very incompetent judges of
him, and of his doctrine, and not to be regarded. (1.) Because they
were ignorant, willingly and resolvedly ignorant: You
cannot tell whence I came, and whither I go. To what purpose is
it to talk with those who know nothing of the matter, nor desire to
know? He had told them of his coming from heaven and returning to
heaven, but it was foolishness to them, they received it
not; it was what the brutish man knows not,
3. That his testimony of himself was
sufficiently supported and corroborated by the testimony of his
Father with him and for him (
(1.) As a judge, and his own judgment was
valid: "If I judge, I who have authority to execute
judgments, I to whom all things are delivered, I who am the Son of
God, and have the Spirit of God, if I judge, my judgment is
true, of incontestable rectitude and uncontrollable authority,
(2.) Look upon him as a witness, and
now he appeared no otherwise (having not as yet taken the throne of
judgment), and as such his testimony was true and unexceptionable;
this he shows,
[1.] He quotes a maxim of the Jewish law,
[2.] He applies this to the case in hand
(
This was the sum of the first conference between Christ and these carnal Jews, in the conclusion of which we are told how their tongues were let loose, and their hands tied.
First, How their tongues were let
loose (such was the malice of hell) to cavil at his discourse,
a. How they evaded the
conviction with a cavil: Then said they unto him, Where
is thy Father? They might easily have understood, by the tenour
of this and his other discourses, that when he spoke of his
Father he meant no other than God himself; yet they pretend
to understand him of a common person, and, since he appeals to his
testimony, they bid him call his witness, and challenge him,
if he can, to produce him: Where is thy Father? Thus, as
Christ said of them (
b. How he evaded the cavil
with a further conviction; he did not tell them where his
Father was, but charged them with wilful ignorance: "You neither
know me nor my Father. It is to no purpose to discourse to you
about divine things, who talk of them as blind men do of colours.
Poor creatures! you know nothing of the matter." (a.) He
charges them with ignorance of God: "You know not my
Father." In Judah was God known (
Secondly, See how their hands were
tied, though their tongues were thus let loose; such was the power
of Heaven to restrain the malice of hell. These words spoke
Jesus, these bold words, these words of conviction and reproof,
in the treasury, an apartment of the temple, where, to be
sure, the chief priests, whose gain was their godliness, were
mostly resident, attending the business of the revenue. Christ
taught in the temple, sometimes in one part, sometimes in
another, as he saw occasion. Now the priests who had so great a
concern in the temple, and looked upon it as their demesne,
might easily, with the assistance of the janizaries that were at
their beck, either have seized him and exposed him to the rage of
the mob, and that punishment which they called the beating of
the rebels; or, at least, have silenced him, and stopped
his mouth there, as Amos, though tolerated in the land of Judah,
was forbidden to prophesy in the king's chapel,
21 Then said Jesus again unto them, I go my way, and ye shall seek me, and shall die in your sins: whither I go, ye cannot come. 22 Then said the Jews, Will he kill himself? because he saith, Whither I go, ye cannot come. 23 And he said unto them, Ye are from beneath; I am from above: ye are of this world; I am not of this world. 24 I said therefore unto you, that ye shall die in your sins: for if ye believe not that I am he, ye shall die in your sins. 25 Then said they unto him, Who art thou? And Jesus saith unto them, Even the same that I said unto you from the beginning. 26 I have many things to say and to judge of you: but he that sent me is true; and I speak to the world those things which I have heard of him. 27 They understood not that he spake to them of the Father. 28 Then said Jesus unto them, When ye have lifted up the Son of man, then shall ye know that I am he, and that I do nothing of myself; but as my Father hath taught me, I speak these things. 29 And he that sent me is with me: the Father hath not left me alone; for I do always those things that please him. 30 As he spake these words, many believed on him.
Christ here gives fair warning to the careless unbelieving Jews to consider what would be the consequence of their infidelity, that they might prevent it before it was too late; for he spoke words of terror as well as words of grace. Observe here,
I. The wrath threatened (
1. Christ's departure from them: I go my way, that is, "It shall not be long before I go; you need not take so much pains to drive me from you, I shall go of myself." They said to him, Depart from us, we desire not the knowledge of thy ways; and he takes them at their word; but woe to those from whom Christ departs. Ichabod, the glory is gone, our defence is departed, when Christ goes. Christ frequently warned them of his departure before he left them: he bade often farewell, as one loth to depart, and willing to be invited, and that would have them stir up themselves to take hold on him.
2. Their enmity to the true Messiah, and
their fruitless and infatuated enquiries after another Messiah when
he was gone away, which were both their sin and their punishment:
You shall seek me, which intimates either, (1.) Their
enmity to the true Christ: "You shall seek to ruin my
interest, by persecuting my doctrine and followers, with a
fruitless design to root them out." This was a continual vexation
and torment to themselves, made them incurably ill-natured,
and brought wrath upon them (God's and their own) to the
uttermost. Or, (2.) Their enquiries after false
Christs: "You shall continue your expectations of the Messiah,
and be the self-perplexing seekers of a Christ to come, when he is
already come;" like the Sodomites, who, being struck with
blindness, wearied themselves to find the door. See
3. Their final impenitency: You shall
die in your sins. Here is an error in all our English Bibles,
even the old bishops' translation, and that of Geneva (the Rhemists
only excepted), for all the Greek copies have it in the singular
number, en te hamartia hymon—in your sin, so
all the Latin versions; and Calvin has a note upon the difference
between this and
4. Their eternal separation from Christ and
all happiness in him: Whither I go you cannot come. When
Christ left the world, he went to a state of perfect happiness; he
went to paradise. Thither he took the penitent thief with him, that
did not die in his sins; but the impenitent not only shall
not come to him, but they cannot; it is morally
impossible, for heaven would not be heaven to those that die
unsanctified and unmeet for it. You cannot come, because you have
no right to enter into that Jerusalem,
II. The jest they made of this threatening.
Instead of trembling at this word, they bantered it, and turned it
into ridicule (
III. The confirmation of what he had said.
1. He had said, Whither I go you cannot
come, and here he gives the reason for this (
2. He had said, You shall die in your
sins, and here he stand to it: "Therefore I said, You shall die
in your sins, because you are from beneath;" and he gives
this further reason for it, If you believe not that I am he, you
shall die in your sins,
IV. Here is a further discourse concerning
himself, occasioned by his requiring faith in himself as the
condition of salvation,
1. The question which the Jews put to him
(
2. His answer to this question, wherein he directs them three ways for information:—
(1.) He refers them to what he had
said all along: "Do you ask who I am? Even the same that I
said unto you from the beginning." The original here is a
little intricate, ten archen ho ti kai lalo hymin
which some read thus: I am the beginning, which also I speak
unto you. So Austin takes it. Christ is called
Arche—the beginning (
(2.) He refers them to his Father's
judgment, and the instructions he had from him (
[1.] He suppresses his accusation of them.
He had many things to charge them with, and many evidences
to produce against them; but for the present he had said enough.
Note, Whatever discoveries of sin are made to us, he that searches
the heart has still more to judge of us,
[2.] He enters his appeal against them to
his Father: He that sent me. Here two things comfort
him:—First, That he had been true to his Father, and
to the trust reposed in him: I speak to the world (for his
gospel was to be preached to every creature) those things which
I have heard of him. Being given for a witness to the
people (
(3.) He refers them to their own
convictions hereafter,
[1.] What they should ere long be convinced of: "You shall know that I am he, that Jesus is the true Messiah. Whether you will own it or no before men, you shall be made to know it in your own consciences, the convictions of which, though you may stifle, yet you cannot baffle: that I am he, not that you represent me to be, but he that I preach myself to be, he that should come!" Two things they should be convinced of, in order to this:—First, That he did nothing of himself, not of himself as man, of himself alone, of himself without the Father, with whom he was one. He does not hereby derogate from his own inherent power, but only denies their charge against him as a false prophet; for of false prophets it is said that they prophesied out of their own hearts, and followed their own spirits. Secondly, That as his Father taught him so he spoke these things, that he was not autodidaktos—self-taught, but Theodidaktos—taught of God. The doctrine he preached was the counterpart of the counsels of God, with which he was intimately acquainted; kathos edidaxe, tauta lalo—I speak those things, not only which he taught me, but as he taught me, with the same divine power and authority.
[2.] When they should be convinced
of this: When you have lifted up the Son of man, lifted him
up upon the cross, as the brazen serpent upon the pole (
[3.] What supported our Lord Jesus in the
mean time (
First, The assurance which Christ
had of his Father's presence with him, which includes both a
divine power going along with him to enable him for
his work, and a divine favour manifested to him to
encourage him in it. He that sent me is with me,
Secondly, The ground of this
assurance: For I do always those things that please him.
That is, 1. That great affair in which our Lord Jesus was
continually engaged was an affair which the Father that
sent him was highly well pleased with. His whole
undertaking is called the pleasure of the Lord (
V. Here is the good effect which this
discourse of Christ's had upon some of his hearers (
31 Then said Jesus to those Jews which believed on him, If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; 32 And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. 33 They answered him, We be Abraham's seed, and were never in bondage to any man: how sayest thou, Ye shall be made free? 34 Jesus answered them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin. 35 And the servant abideth not in the house for ever: but the Son abideth ever. 36 If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed. 37 I know that ye are Abraham's seed; but ye seek to kill me, because my word hath no place in you.
We have in these verses,
I. A comfortable doctrine laid down concerning the spiritual liberty of Christ's disciples, intended for the encouragement of those Jews that believed. Christ, knowing that his doctrine began to work upon some of his hearers, and perceiving that virtue had gone out of him, turned his discourse from the proud Pharisees, and addressed himself to those weak believers. When he had denounced wrath against those that were hardened in unbelief, then he spoke comfort to those few feeble Jews that believed in him. See here,
1. How graciously the Lord Jesus looks to those that tremble at his word, and are ready to receive it; he has something to say to those who have hearing ears, and will not pass by those who set themselves in his way, without speaking to them.
2. How carefully he cherishes the beginnings of grace, and meets those that are coming towards him. These Jews that believed were yet but weak; but Christ did not therefore cast them off, for he gathers the lambs in his arms. When faith is in its infancy, he has knees to prevent it, breasts for it to suck, that it may not die from the womb. In what he said to them, we have two things, which he saith to all that should at any time believe:—
(1.) The character of a true disciple of Christ: If you continue in my word, then are you my disciples indeed. When they believed on him, as the great prophet, they gave up themselves to be his disciples. Now, at their entrance into his school, he lays down this for a settled rule, that he would own none for his disciples but those that continued in his word. [1.] It is implied that there are many who profess themselves Christ's disciples who are not his disciples indeed, but only in show and name. [2.] It highly concerns those that are not strong in faith to see to it that they be sound in the faith, that, though not disciples of the highest form, they are nevertheless disciples indeed. [3.] Those who seem willing to be Christ's disciples ought to be told that they had as good never come to him, unless they come with a resolution by his grace to abide by him. Let those who have thoughts of covenanting with Christ have no thoughts of reserving a power of revocation. Children are sent to school, and bound apprentices, only for a few years; but those only are Christ's who are willing to be bound to him for the term of life. [4.] Those only that continue in Christ's word shall be accepted as his disciples indeed, that adhere to his word in every instance without partiality, and abide by it to the end without apostasy. It is menein—to dwell in Christ's word, as a man does at home, which is his centre, and rest, and refuge. Our converse with the word and conformity to it must be constant. If we continue disciples to the last, then, and not otherwise, we approve ourselves disciples indeed.
(2.) The privilege of a true disciple of
Christ. Here are two precious promises made to those who thus
approve themselves disciples indeed,
[1.] "You shall know the truth, shall know all that truth which it is needful and profitable for you to know, and shall be more confirmed in the belief of it, shall know the certainty of it." Note, First, Even those who are true believers, and disciples indeed, yet may be, and are, much in the dark concerning many things which they should know. God's children are but children, and understand and speak as children. Did we not need to be taught, we should not need to be disciples. Secondly, It is a very great privilege to know the truth, to know the particular truths which we are to believe, in their mutual dependences and connections, and the grounds and reasons of our belief,—to know what is truth and what proves it to be so. Thirdly, It is a gracious promise of Christ, to all who continue in his word, that they shall know the truth as far as is needful and profitable for them. Christ's scholars are sure to be well taught.
[2.] The truth shall make you free;
that is, First, The truth which Christ teaches tends to make
men free,
II. The offence which the carnal Jews took
at this doctrine, and their objection against it. Though it was a
doctrine that brought glad tidings of liberty to the captives, yet
they cavilled at it,
1. What it was that they were grieved at;
it was an innuendo in those words, You shall be made
free, as if the Jewish church and nation were in some sort of
bondage, which reflected on the Jews in general, and as if all that
did not believe in Christ continued in that bondage, which
reflected on the Pharisees in particular. Note, The privileges of
the faithful are the envy and vexation of unbelievers,
2. What it was that they alleged against
it; whereas Christ intimated that they needed to be made free, they
urge, (1.) "We are Abraham's seed, and Abraham was a prince and
a great man; though we live in Canaan, we are not descended
from Canaan, nor under his doom, a servant of servants shall he
be; we hold in frank-almoign—free alms, and not in
villenage—by a servile tenure." It is common for a sinking
decaying family to boast of the glory and dignity of its ancestors,
and to borrow honour from that name to which they repay disgrace;
so the Jews here did. But this was not all. Abraham was in covenant
with God, and his children by his right,
III. Our Saviour's vindication of his
doctrine from these objections, and the further explication of it,
1. He shows that, notwithstanding their
civil liberties and their visible church-membership, yet it was
possible that they might be in a state of bondage (
(1.) The preface is very solemn: Verily, verily, I say unto you; an awful asseveration, which our Saviour often used, to command a reverent attention and a ready assent. The style of the prophets was, Thus saith the Lord, for they were faithful as servants; but Christ, being a Son, speaks in his own name: I say unto you, I the Amen, the faithful witness; he pawns his veracity upon it. "I say it to you, who boast of your relation to Abraham, as if that would save you."
(2.) The truth is of universal concern,
though here delivered upon a particular occasion: Whosoever
commits sin is the servant of sin, and sadly needs to be made
free. A state of sin is a state of bondage. [1.] See who it is on
whom this brand is fastened—on him that commits sin,
pas ho poion hamartian—every one that makes
sin. There is not a just man upon earth, that lives,
and sins not; yet every one that sins is not a servant of sin,
for then God would have no servants; but he that makes sin,
that makes choice of sin, prefers the way of wickedness
before the way of holiness (
2. He shows them that, being in a state of
bondage, their having a place in the house of God would not entitle
them to the inheritance of sons; for (
3. He shows them the way of deliverance out
of the state of bondage into the glorious liberty of the
children of God,
(1.) Jesus Christ in the gospel offers us our freedom; he has authority and power to make free. [1.] To discharge prisoners; this he does in justification, by making satisfaction for our guilt (on which the gospel offer is grounded, which is to all a conditional act of indemnity, and to all true believers, upon their believing, an absolute charter of pardon), and for our debts, for which we were by the law arrested and in execution. Christ, as our surety, or rather our bail (for he was not originally bound with us, but upon our insolvency bound for us), compounds with the creditor, answers the demands of injured justice with more than an equivalent, takes the bond and judgment into his own hands, and gives them up cancelled to all that by faith and repentance give him (if I may so say) a counter-security to save his honour harmless, and so they are made free; and from the debt, and every part thereof, they are for ever acquitted, exonerated, and discharged, and a general release is sealed of all actions and claims; while against those who refuse to come up to these terms the securities lie still in the Redeemer's hands, in full force. [2.] He has a power to rescue bond-slaves, and this he does in sanctification; by the powerful arguments of his gospel, and the powerful operations of his Spirit, he breaks the power of corruption in the soul, rallies the scattered forces of reason and virtue, and fortifies God's interest against sin and Satan, and so the soul is made free. [3.] He has a power to naturalize strangers and foreigners, and this he does in adoption. This is a further act of grace; we are not only forgiven and healed, but preferred; there is a charter of privileges as well as pardon; and thus the Son makes us free denizens of the kingdom of priests, the holy nation, the new Jerusalem.
(2.) Those whom Christ makes free are
free indeed. It is not alethos, the word used
(
4. He applies this to these unbelieving
cavilling Jews, in answer to their boasts of relation to Abraham
(
(1.) The dignity of their extraction admitted: "I know that you are Abraham's seed, every one knows it, and it is your honour." He grants them what was true, and in what they said that was false (that they were never in bondage to any) he does not contradict them, for he studied to profit them, and not to provoke them, and therefore said that which would please them: I know that you are Abraham's seed. They boasted of their descent from Abraham, as that which aggrandized their names, and made them exceedingly honourable; whereas really it did but aggravate their crimes, and make them exceedingly sinful. Out of their own mouths will he judge vain-glorious hypocrites, who boast of their parentage and education: "Are you Abraham's seed? Why then did you not tread in the steps of his faith and obedience?"
(2.) The inconsistency of their practice
with this dignity: But you seek to kill me. They had
attempted it several times, and were now designing it, which
quickly appeared (
(3.) The reason of this inconsistency. Why were they that were Abraham's seed so very inveterate against Abraham's promised seed, in whom they and all the families of the earth should be blessed? Our Saviour here tells them, It is because my word hath no place in you, ou chorei en hymin, Non capit in vobis, so the Vulgate. "My word does not take with you, you have no inclination to it, no relish of it, other things are more taking, more pleasing." Or, "It does not take hold of you, it has no power over you, makes no impression upon you." Some of the critics read it, My word does not penetrate into you; it descended as the rain, but it came upon them as the rain upon the rock, which it runs off, and did not soak into their hearts, as the rain upon the ploughed ground. The Syriac reads it, "Because you do not acquiesce in my word; you are not persuaded of the truth of it, nor pleased with the goodness of it." Our translation is very significant: It has no place in you. They sought to kill him, and so effectually to silence him, not because he had done they any harm, but because they could not bear the convincing, commanding power of his word. Note, [1.] The words of Christ ought to have a place in us, the innermost and uppermost place,—a dwelling place, as a man at home, and not as a stranger or sojourner,—a working place; it must have room to operate, to work sin out of us, and to work grace in us; it must have a ruling place, its place must be upon the throne, it must dwell in us richly. [2.] There are many that make a profession of religion in whom the word of Christ has no place; they will not allow it a place, for they do not like it; Satan does all he can to displace it; and other things possess the place it should have in us. [3.] Where the word of God has no place no good is to be expected, for room is left there for all wickedness. If the unclean spirit find the heart empty of Christ's word, he enters in, and dwells there.
38 I speak that which I have seen with my Father: and ye do that which ye have seen with your father. 39 They answered and said unto him, Abraham is our father. Jesus saith unto them, If ye were Abraham's children, ye would do the works of Abraham. 40 But now ye seek to kill me, a man that hath told you the truth, which I have heard of God: this did not Abraham. 41 Ye do the deeds of your father. Then said they to him, We be not born of fornication; we have one Father, even God. 42 Jesus said unto them, If God were your Father, ye would love me: for I proceeded forth and came from God; neither came I of myself, but he sent me. 43 Why do ye not understand my speech? even because ye cannot hear my word. 44 Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it. 45 And because I tell you the truth, ye believe me not. 46 Which of you convinceth me of sin? And if I say the truth, why do ye not believe me? 47 He that is of God heareth God's words: ye therefore hear them not, because ye are not of God.
Here Christ and the Jews are still at issue; he sets himself to convince and convert them, while they still set themselves to contradict and oppose him.
I. He here traces the difference between
his sentiments and theirs to a different rise and origin (
1. Christ's doctrine was from heaven; it was copied out of the counsels of infinite wisdom, and the kind intentions of eternal love. (1.) I speak that which I have seen. The discoveries Christ has made to us of God and another world are not grounded upon guess and hearsay, but upon ocular inspection; so that he was thoroughly apprized of the nature, and assured of the truth, of all he said. He that is given to be a witness to the people is an eye-witness, and therefore unexceptionable. (2.) It is what I have seen with my Father. The doctrine of Christ is not a plausible hypothesis, supported by probable arguments, but it is an exact counterpart of the incontestable truths lodged in the eternal mind. It was not only what he had heard from his Father, but what he had seen with him when the counsel of peace was between them both. Moses spoke what he heard from God, but he might not see the face of God; Paul had been in the third heaven, but what he had seen there he could not, he must not, utter; for it was Christ's prerogative to have seen what he spoke, and to speak what he had seen.
2. Their doings were from hell: "You do that which you have seen with your father. You do, by your own works, father yourselves, for it is evident whom you resemble, and therefore easy to find out your origin." As a child that is trained up with his father learns his father's words and fashions, and grows like him by an affected imitation as well as by a natural image, so these Jews, by their malicious opposition to Christ and the gospel, made themselves as like the devil as if they had industriously set him before them for their pattern.
II. He takes off and answers their vain-glorious boasts of relation to Abraham and to God as their fathers, and shows the vanity and falsehood of their pretensions.
1. They pleaded relation to Abraham, and he
replies to this plea. They said, Abraham is our father,
[1.] The proposition is plain: "If you
were Abraham's children, such children of Abraham as could
claim an interest in the covenant made with him and his seed, which
would indeed put an honour upon you, then you would do the works
of Abraham, for to those only of Abraham's house who kept
the way of the Lord, as Abraham did, would God perform what
he had spoken,"
[2.] The assumption is evident likewise:
But you do not do the works of Abraham, for you seek to
kill me, a man that has told you the truth, which I have heard of
God; this did not Abraham,
First, He shows them what their work
was, their present work, which they were now about; they sought
to kill him; and three things are intimated as an aggravation
of their intention:—1. They were so unnatural as to seek
the life of a man, a man like themselves, bone of their
bone, and flesh of their flesh, who had done them no harm, nor
given them any provocation. You imagine mischief against a
man,
Secondly, He shows them that this
did not become the children of Abraham; for this did not
Abraham. 1. "He did nothing like this." He was famous for his
humanity, witness his rescue of the captives; and for his piety,
witness his obedience to the heavenly vision in many instances, and
some tender ones. Abraham believed God; they were obstinate in
unbelief: Abraham followed God; they fought against him; so that he
would be ignorant of them, and would not acknowledge them,
they were so unlike him,
[3.] The conclusion follows of course
(
2. So far were they from owning their unworthiness of relation to Abraham that they pleaded relation to God himself as their Father: "We are not born of fornication, we are not bastards, but legitimate sons; we have one Father, even God."
(1.) Some understand this literally. They
were not the sons of the bondwoman, as the Ishmaelites were; nor
begotten in incest, as the Moabites and Ammonites were (
(2.) Others take it figuratively. They begin to be aware now that Christ spoke of a spiritual not a carnal father, of the father of their religion; and so,
[1.] They deny themselves to be a
generation of idolaters: "We are not born of fornication,
are not the children of idolatrous parents, nor have been bred up
in idolatrous worships." Idolatry is often spoken of as spiritual
whoredom, and idolaters as children of whoredoms,
[2.] They boast themselves to be true
worshippers of the true God. We have not many fathers, as the
heathens had, gods many and lords many, and yet were without
God, as filius populi—a son of the people, has many fathers
and yet none certain; no, the Lord our God is one Lord and
one Father, and therefore it is well with us. Note, Those
flatter themselves, and put a damning cheat upon their own souls,
who imagine that their professing the true religion and worshipping
the true God will save them, though they worship not God in spirit
and in truth, nor are true to their profession. Now our Saviour
gives a full answer to this fallacious plea (
First, They did not love Christ:
If God were your Father, you would love me. He had disproved
their relation to Abraham by their going about to kill him
(
Secondly, They did not understand
him. It was a sign they did not belong to God's family that they
did not understand the language and dialect of the family: You
do not understand my speech (
III. Having thus disproved their relation
both to Abraham and to God, he comes next to tell them plainly
whose children they were: You are of your father the devil,
This is a high charge, and sounds very harsh and horrid, that any of the children of men, especially the church's children, should be called children of the devil, and therefore our Saviour fully proves it.
1. By a general argument: The lusts of your father you will do, thelete poiein. (1.) "You do the devil's lusts, the lusts which he would have you to fulfil; you gratify and please him, and comply with his temptation, and are led captive by him at his will: nay, you do those lusts which the devil himself fulfils." Fleshly lusts and worldly lusts the devil tempts men to; but, being a spirit, he cannot fulfil them himself. The peculiar lusts of the devil are spiritual wickedness; the lusts of the intellectual powers, and their corrupt reasonings; pride and envy, and wrath and malice; enmity to that which is good, and enticing others to that which is evil; these are lusts which the devil fulfils, and those who are under the dominion of these lusts resemble the devil, as the child does the parent. The more there is of contemplation, and contrivance, and secret complacency, in sin, the more it resembles the lusts of the devil. (2.) You will do the devil's lusts. The more there is of the will in these lusts, the more there is of the devil in them. When sin is committed of choice and not by surprise, with pleasure and not with reluctancy, when it is persisted in with a daring presumption and a desperate resolution, like theirs that said, We have loved strangers and after them we will go, then the sinner will do the devil's lusts. "The lusts of your father you delight to do;" so Dr. Hammond; they are rolled under the tongue as a sweet morsel.
2. By two particular instances, wherein they manifestly resembled the devil—murder and lying. The devil is an enemy to life, because God is the God of life and life is the happiness of man; and an enemy to truth, because God is the God of truth and truth is the bond of human society.
(1.) He was a murderer from the
beginning, not from his own beginning, for he was created an
angel of light, and had a first estate which was pure and good, but
from the beginning of his apostasy, which was soon after the
creation of man. He was anthropoktonos—homicida,
a man-slayer. [1.] He was a hater of man, and so in
affection an disposition a murderer of him. He has his name,
Satan, from sitnah—hatred. He maligned God's image
upon man, envied his happiness, and earnestly desired his ruin, was
an avowed enemy to the whole race. [2.] He was man's tempter to
that sin which brought death into the world, and so he was
effectually the murderer of all mankind, which in Adam had but
one neck. He was a murderer of souls, deceived them
into sin, and by it slew them (
(2.) He was a liar. A lie is opposed
to truth (
[1.] An enemy to truth, and therefore to
Christ. First, He is a deserter, from the truth; he
abode not in the truth, did not continue in the purity and
rectitude of his nature wherein he was created, but left his first
state; when he degenerated from goodness, he departed from truth,
for his apostasy was founded in a lie. The angels were the hosts
of the Lord; those that fell were not true to their
commander and sovereign, they were not to be trusted, being
charged with folly and defection,
[2.] He is a friend and patron of lying:
When he speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own. Three things
are here said of the devil with reference to the sin of
lying:—First, That he is a liar; his oracles were
lying oracles, his prophets lying prophets, and the images in which
he was worshipped teachers of lies. He tempted our first
parents with a downright lie. All his temptations are carried on by
lies, calling evil good and good evil, and promising
impunity in sin; he knows them to be lies, and suggests them with
an intention to deceive, and so to destroy. When he now
contradicted the gospel, in the scribes and Pharisees, it
was by lies; and when afterwards he corrupted it, in the
man of sin, it was by strong delusions, and a great
complicated lie. Secondly, That when he speaks a lie
he speaks of his own, ek ton idion. It is the
proper idiom of his language; of his own, not of God;
his Creator never put it into him. When men speak a lie they borrow
it from the devil, Satan fills their hearts to lie
(
IV. Christ, having thus proved all
murderers and all liars to be the devil's children, leaves it to
the consciences of his hearers to say, Thou art the man. But
he comes in the
1. That they would not believe the word
of truth (
(1.) Two ways it may be taken;—[1.]
"Though I tell you the truth, yet you will not believe me
(hoti), that I do so." Though he gave abundant
proof of his commission from God, and his affection to the children
of men, yet they would not believe that he told them the truth. Now
was truth fallen in the street,
(2.) Now, to show them the unreasonableness
of their infidelity, he condescends to put the matter to this fair
issue,
[1.] If he were in an error, why did
they not convince him? The falsehood of pretended prophets
was discovered either by the ill tendency of their doctrines
(
[2.] If they were in an error, why were they not convinced by him? "If I say the truth, why do you not believe me? If you cannot convince me of error, you must own that I say the truth, and why do you not then give me credit? Why will you not deal with me upon trust?" Note, If men would but enquire into the reason of their infidelity, and examine why they do not believe that which they cannot gainsay, they would find themselves reduced to such absurdities as they could not but be ashamed of; for it will be found that the reason why we believe not in Jesus Christ is because we are not willing to part with our sins, and deny ourselves, and serve God faithfully; that we are not of the Christian religion, because we would not indeed be of any, and unbelief of our Redeemer resolves itself into a downright rebellion against our Creator.
2. Another thing charged upon them is that
they would not hear the words of God (
(1.) A doctrine laid down: He that is of
God heareth God's words; that is, [1.] He is willing and
ready to hear them, is sincerely desirous to know what the
mind of God is, and cheerfully embraces whatever he knows to be so.
God's words have such an authority over, and such an agreeableness
with all that are born of God, that they meet them, as the child
Samuel did, with, Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth. Let
the word of the Lord come. [2.] He apprehends and
discerns them, he so hears them as to perceive the voice
of God in them, which the natural man does not,
(2.) The application of this doctrine, for
the conviction of these unbelieving Jews: You therefore hear
them not; that is, "You heed not, you understand not, you
believe not, the words of God, nor care to hear them, because
you are not of God. Your being thus deaf and dead to the words
of God is a plain evidence that you are not of God." It is
in his word that God manifests himself and is present among us; we
are therefore reckoned to be well or ill affected to his word; see
48 Then answered the Jews, and said unto him, Say we not well that thou art a Samaritan, and hast a devil? 49 Jesus answered, I have not a devil; but I honour my Father, and ye do dishonour me. 50 And I seek not mine own glory: there is one that seeketh and judgeth.
Here is, I. The malice of hell breaking out
in the base language which the unbelieving Jews gave to our Lord
Jesus. Hitherto they had cavilled at his doctrine, and had made
invidious remarks upon it; but, having shown themselves uneasy when
he complained (
1. What was the blasphemous character
commonly given of our Lord Jesus among the wicked Jews, to which
they refer. (1.) That he was a Samaritan, that is, that he was an
enemy to their church and nation, one that they hated and could not
endure. Thus they exposed him to the ill will of the people, with
whom you could not put a man into a worse name than to call him
a Samaritan. If he had been a Samaritan, he had been
punishable, by the beating of the rebels (as they called
it), for coming into the temple. They had often enough called him
a Galilean—a mean man; but as if that were not enough,
though it contradicted the other, they will have him a
Samaritan—a bad man. The Jews to this day call the
Christians, in reproach, Cuthæi-Samaritans. Note, Great
endeavours have in all ages been used to make good people odious by
putting them under black characters, and it is easy to run that
down with a crowd and a cry which is once put into an ill name.
Perhaps because Christ justly inveighed against the pride and
tyranny of the priests and elders, they hereby suggest that he
aimed at the ruin of their church, in aiming at its reformation,
and was falling away to the Samaritans. (2.) That he had
a devil. Either, [1.] That he was in league with the
devil. Having reproached his doctrine as tending to
Samaritanism, here they reflect upon his miracles as done in
combination with Beelzebub. Or, rather [2.] That he was possessed
with a devil, that he was a melancholy man, whose brain was
clouded, or a mad man, whose brain was heated, and
that which he said was no more to be believed than the extravagant
rambles of a distracted man, or one in a delirium. Thus the divine
revelation of those things which are above the discovery of reason
have been often branded with the charge of enthusiasm, and the
prophet was called a mad fellow,
2. How they undertook to justify this character, and applied it to the present occasion: Say we not well that thou art so? One would think that his excellent discourses should have altered their opinion of him, and have made them recant; but, instead of this, their hearts were more hardened and their prejudices confirmed. They value themselves on their enmity to Christ, as if they had never spoken better than when they spoke the worst they could of Jesus Christ. Those have arrived at the highest pitch of wickedness who avow their impiety, repeat what they should retract, and justify themselves in that for which they ought to condemn themselves. It is bad to say and do ill, but it is worse to stand to it; I do well to be angry. When Christ spoke with so much boldness against the sins of the great men, and thereby incensed them against him, those who were sensible of no interest but what is secular and sensual concluded him beside himself, for they thought none but a madman would lose his preferment, and hazard his life, for his religion and conscience.
II. The meekness and mercifulness of Heaven
shining in Christ's reply to this vile calumny,
1. He denies their charge against him: I
have not a devil; as Paul (
2. He asserts the sincerity of his own intentions: But I honour my Father. They suggested that he took undue honours to himself, and derogated from the honour due to God only, both which he denies here, in saying that he made it his business to honour his Father, and him only. It also proves that he had not a devil; for, if he had, he would not honour God. Note, Those who can truly way that they make it their constant care to honour God are sufficiently armed against the censures and reproaches of men.
3. He complains of the wrong they did him by their calumnies: You do dishonour me. By this it appears that, as man, he had a tender sense of the disgrace and indignity done him; reproach was a sword in his bones, and yet he underwent it for our salvation. It is the will of God that all men should honour the Son, yet there are many that dishonour him; such a contradiction is there in the carnal mind to the will of God. Christ honoured his Father so as never man did, and yet was himself dishonoured so as never man was; for, though God has promised that those who honour him he will honour, he never promised that men should honour them.
4. He clears himself from the imputation of
vain glory, in saying this concerning himself,
51 Verily, verily, I say unto you, If a man keep my saying, he shall never see death. 52 Then said the Jews unto him, Now we know that thou hast a devil. Abraham is dead, and the prophets; and thou sayest, If a man keep my saying, he shall never taste of death. 53 Art thou greater than our father Abraham, which is dead? and the prophets are dead: whom makest thou thyself? 54 Jesus answered, If I honour myself, my honour is nothing: it is my Father that honoureth me; of whom ye say, that he is your God: 55 Yet ye have not known him; but I know him: and if I should say, I know him not, I shall be a liar like unto you: but I know him, and keep his saying. 56 Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day: and he saw it, and was glad. 57 Then said the Jews unto him, Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham? 58 Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I am. 59 Then took they up stones to cast at him: but Jesus hid himself, and went out of the temple, going through the midst of them, and so passed by.
In these verses we have,
I. The doctrine of the immortality of
believers laid down,
II. The Jews cavil at this doctrine. Instead of laying hold of this precious promise of immortality, which the nature of man has an ambition of (who is there that does not love life, and dread the sight of death?) they lay hold of this occasion to reproach him that makes them so kind an offer: Now we know that thou hast a devil. Abraham is dead. Observe here,
1. Their railing: "Now we know that thou
hast a devil, that thou art a madman; thou ravest, and sayest
thou knowest not what." See how these swine trample underfoot the
precious pearls of gospel promises. If now at last they had
evidence to prove him mad, why did they say (
2. Their reasoning, and the colour
they had to run him down thus. In short, they look upon him
as guilty of an insufferable piece of arrogance, in making himself
greater than Abraham and the prophets: Abraham is dead, and
the prophets, they are dead too; very true, by the same
token that these Jews were the genuine offspring of those that
killed them. Now, (1.) It is true that Abraham and the prophets
were great men, great in the favour of God, and great in the esteem
of all good men. (2.) It is true that they kept God's
sayings, and were obedient to them; and yet, (3.) It is true
that they died; they never pretended to have, much
less to give, immortality, but every one in his own order
was gathered to his people. It was their honour that they
died in faith, but die they must. Why should a good man be
afraid to die, when Abraham is dead, and the prophets are dead?
They have tracked the way through that darksome valley,
which should reconcile us to death and help to take off the terror
of it. Now they think Christ talks madly, when he saith, If a
man keep my sayings, he shall never taste death. Tasting death
means the same thing with seeing it; and well may death be
represented as grievous to several of the senses, which is
the destruction of them all. Now their arguing goes upon two
mistakes:—[1.] They understood Christ of an immortality in this
world, and this was a mistake. In the sense that Christ spoke, it
was not true that Abraham and the prophets were dead, for
God is still the God of Abraham and the God of the holy
prophets (
III. Christ's reply to this cavil; still he vouchsafes to reason with them, that every mouth may be stopped. No doubt he could have struck them dumb or dead upon the spot, but this was the day of his patience.
1. In his answer he insists not upon his
own testimony concerning himself, but waives it as not sufficient
nor conclusive (
2. He refers himself to his Father, God; and to their father, Abraham.
(1.) To his Father, God: It is my Father
that honoureth me. By this he means, [1.] That he
derived from his Father all the honour he now claimed; he
had commanded them to believe in him, to follow him, and to keep
his word, all which put an honour upon him; but it was the Father
that laid help upon him, that lodged all
fulness in him, that sanctified him, and sealed him, and
sent him into the world to receive all the honours due to the
Messiah, and this justified him in all these demands of respect.
[2.] That he depended upon his Father for all the honour he
further looked for. He courted not the applauses of the age,
but despised them; for his eye and heart were upon the glory which
the Father had promised him, and which he had with the Father
before the world was. He aimed at an advancement with which the
Father was to exalt him, a name he was to give him,
First, He here takes occasion to show the reason of their incredulity, notwithstanding this testimony—and this was their unacquaintedness with God; as if he had said, "But why should I talk to you of my Father's honouring me, when he is one you know nothing of? You say of him that he is your God, yet you have not known him." Here observe,
a. The profession they made of
relation to God: "You say that he is your God, the God you
have chosen, and are in covenant with; you say that you are Israel;
but all are not so indeed that are of Israel,"
b. Their ignorance of him, and
estrangement from him, notwithstanding this profession: Yet you
have not known him. (a.) You know him not at all.
These Pharisees were so taken up with the study of their traditions
concerning things foreign and trifling that they never minded the
most needful and useful knowledge; like the false prophets of old,
who caused people to forget God's name by their dreams,
Secondly, He gives them the reason
of his assurance that his Father would honour him and
own him: But I know him; and again, I know him; which
bespeaks, not only his acquaintance with him, having lain in
his bosom, but his confidence in him, to stand by him, and
bear him out in his whole undertaking; as was prophesied concerning
him (
(2.) Christ refers them to their father, whom they boasted so much of a relation to, and that was Abraham, and this closes the discourse.
[1.] Christ asserts Abraham's prospect of
him, and respect to him: Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my
day, and he saw it, and was glad,
First, The ambition he had to see
his day: He rejoiced, egalliasto—he leaped at
it. The word, though it commonly signifies rejoicing,
must here signify a transport of desire rather than of
joy, for otherwise the latter part of
Secondly, The satisfaction he had in what he did see of it: He saw it, and was glad. Observe here,
a. How God gratified the pious
desire of Abraham; he longed to see Christ's day, and he saw
it. Though he saw it not so plainly, and fully, and distinctly
as we now see it under the gospel, yet he saw something of it, more
afterwards than he did at first. Note, To him that has, and
to him that asks, shall be given; to him that uses and improves
what he has, and that desires and prays for more of the knowledge
of Christ, God will give more. But how did Abraham see Christ's
day? (a.) Some understand it of the sight he had of it in
the other world. The separate soul of Abraham, when the veil of
flesh was rent, saw the mysteries of the kingdom of God in heaven.
Calvin mentions this sense of it, and does not much disallow it.
Note, The longings of gracious souls after Jesus Christ will be
fully satisfied when they come to heaven, and not till then. But,
(b.) It is more commonly understood of some sight he had of
Christ's day in this world. They that received not the
promises, yet saw them afar off,
b. How Abraham entertained
these discoveries of Christ's day, and bade them welcome: He
saw, and was glad. He was glad of what he saw of God's
favour to himself, and glad of what he foresaw of the mercy
God had in store for the world. Perhaps this refers to Abraham's
laughing when God assured him of a son by Sarah (
[2.] The Jews cavil at this, and reproach
him for it (
[3.] Our Saviour gives an effectual answer
to this cavil, by a solemn assertion of his own seniority even to
Abraham himself (
[4.] This great word ended the dispute
abruptly, and put a period to it: they could bear to hear no
more from him, and he needed to say no more to them, having
witnessed this good confession, which was sufficient to support all
his claims. One would think that Christ's discourse, in which shone
so much both of grace and glory, should have captivated them all;
but their inveterate prejudice against the holy spiritual doctrine
and law of Christ, which were so contrary to their pride and
worldliness, baffled all the methods of conviction. Now was
fulfilled that prophecy (
First, How they were enraged
at Christ for what he said: They took up stones to cast at
him,
Secondly, How he made his
escape out of their hands. 1. He absconded; Jesus
hid himself; ekrybe—he was hid, either
by the crowd of those that wished well to him, to shelter him (he
that ought to have been upon a throne, high and lifted up, is
content to be lost in a crowd); or perhaps he concealed
himself behind some of the walls or pillars of the temple (in
the secret of his tabernacle he shall hide me,