In this chapter we have, I. The constant and
unwearied diligence of our Lord Jesus in his great work of
preaching the gospel,
1 And it came to pass, when Jesus had made an end of commanding his twelve disciples, he departed thence to teach and to preach in their cities. 2 Now when John had heard in the prison the works of Christ, he sent two of his disciples, 3 And said unto him, Art thou he that should come, or do we look for another? 4 Jesus answered and said unto them, Go and show John again those things which ye do hear and see: 5 The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them. 6 And blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended in me.
The first verse of this chapter some join to the foregoing chapter, and make it (not unfitly) the close of that.
1. The ordination sermon which Christ
preached to his disciples in the foregoing chapter is here called
his commanding them. Note, Christ's commissions imply commands.
Their preaching of the gospel was not only permitted them, but it
was enjoined them. It was not a thing respecting which they were
left at their liberty, but necessity was laid upon them,
2. When Christ had said what he had to say
to his disciples, he departed thence. It should seem they
were very loth to leave their Master, till he departed and
separated himself from them; as the nurse withdraws the hand, that
the child may learn to go by itself. Christ would now teach them
how to live, and how to work, without his bodily presence. It was
expedient for them, that Christ should thus go away for
awhile, that they might be prepared for his long departure, and
that, by the help of the Spirit, their own hands might be
sufficient for them (
3. Christ departed, to teach and
preach in the cities whither he sent his disciples before him
to work miracles (
What he preached we are not told, but it
was probably to the same purpose with his sermon on the mount. But
here is next recorded a message which John Baptist sent to Christ,
and his return to it,
Now John Baptist, hearing of Christ's works, sent two of his disciples to him; and what passed between them and him we have here an account of. Here is,
I. The question they had to propose to him:
Art thou he that should come, or do we look for another?
This was a serious and important question; Art thou the Messiah
promised, or not? Art thou the Christ? Tell us. 1. It is taken
for granted that the Messiah should come. It was one of the names
by which he was known to the Old-Testament saints, he that
cometh or shall come,
II. Here is Christ's answer to this
question,
1. He points them to what they heard and saw, which they must tell John, that he might from thence take occasion the more fully to instruct and convince them out of their own mouths. Go and tell him what you hear and see. Note, Our senses may and ought to be appealed to in those things that are their proper objects. Therefore the popish doctrine of the real presence agrees not with the truth as it is in Jesus; for Christ refers us to the things we hear and see. Go and tell John,
(1.) What you see of the power of
Christ's miracles; you see how, by the word of Jesus, the
blind receive their sight, the lame walk, &c.
Christ's miracles were done openly, and in the view of all; for
they feared not the strongest and most impartial scrutiny.
Veritas no quærit angulos—Truth seeks not concealment. They
are to be considered, [1.] As the acts of a divine power.
None but the God of nature could thus overrule and outdo the power
of nature. It is particularly spoken of as God's prerogative to
open the eyes of the blind,
(2.) Tell him what you hear of the
preaching of his gospel, which accompanies his miracles.
Faith, though confirmed by seeing, comes by hearing. Tell him, [1.]
That the poor preach the gospel; so some read it. It proves
Christ's divine mission, that those whom he employed in founding
his kingdom were poor men, destitute of all secular advantages,
who, therefore, could never have carried their point, if they had
not been carried on by a divine power. [2.] That the poor have
the gospel preached to them. Christ's auditory is made up of
such as the scribes and Pharisees despised, and looked upon with
contempt, and the rabbies would not instruct, because they
were notable to pay them. The Old-Testament prophets were
sent mostly to kings and princes, but Christ preached to the
congregations of the poor. It was foretold that the poor
of the flock should wait upon him,
2. He pronounces a blessing on those
that were not offended in him,
7 And as they departed, Jesus began to say unto
the multitudes concerning John, What went ye out into the
wilderness to see? A reed shaken with the wind? 8 But what
went ye out for to see? A man clothed in soft raiment? behold, they
that wear soft clothing are in kings' houses. 9 But
what went ye out for to see? A prophet? yea, I say unto you, and
more than a prophet. 10 For this is he, of whom it is
written, Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which shall
prepare thy way before thee. 11 Verily I say unto you, Among
them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than
John the Baptist: notwithstanding he that is least in the kingdom
of heaven is greater than he. 12 And from the days of John
the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and
the violent take it by force. 13 For all the prophets and
the law prophesied until
We have here the high encomium which our
Lord Jesus gave of John the Baptist; not only to revive his honour,
but to revive his work. Some of Christ's disciples might perhaps
take occasion from the question John sent, to reflect upon him, as
weak and wavering, and inconsistent with himself, to prevent which
Christ gives him this character. Note, It is our duty to consult
the reputation of our brethren, and not only to remove, but to
obviate and prevent, jealousies and ill thoughts of them; and we
must take all occasions, especially such as discover any thing of
infirmity, to speak well of those who are praiseworthy, and to give
them that fruit of their hands. John the Baptist, when he
was upon the stage, and Christ in privacy and retirement, bore
testimony to Christ; and now that Christ appeared publicly, and
John was under a cloud, he bore testimony to John. Note, They who
have a confirmed interest themselves, should improve it for the
helping of the credit and reputation of others, whose character
claims it, but whose temper or present circumstances put them out
of the way of it. This is giving honour to whom honour is due. John
had abased himself to honour Christ (
Now concerning this commendation of John, observe,
I. That Christ spoke thus honourably of
John, not in the hearing of John's disciples, but as they
departed, just after they were gone,
II. That what Christ said concerning John,
was intended not only for his praise, but for the people's profit,
to revive the remembrance of John's ministry, which had been well
attended, but which was now (as other such things used to be)
strangely forgotten: they did for a season, and but for a
season, rejoice in his light,
III. Let us see what the commendation of John was. They know not what answer to make to Christ's question; well, says Christ, "I will tell you what a man John the Baptist was."
1. "He was a firm, resolute man, and not
a reed shaken with the wind; you have been so in your
thoughts of him, but he was not so. He was not wavering in
his principles, nor uneven in his conversation; but was remarkable
for his steadiness and constant consistency with himself." They who
are weak as reeds will be shaken as reeds; but John
was strong in spirit,
2. He was a self-denying man, and mortified to this world. "Was he a man clothed in soft raiment? If so, you would not have gone into the wilderness to see him, but to the court. You went to see one that had his raiment of camel's hair, and a leathern girdle about his loins; his mien and habit showed that he was dead to all the pomps of the world and the pleasures of sense; his clothing agreed with the wilderness he lived in, and the doctrine he preached there, that of repentance. Now you cannot think that he who was such a stranger to the pleasures of a court, should be brought to change his mind by the terrors of a prison, and now to question whether Jesus be the Messiah or not!" Note, they who have lived a life of mortification, are least likely to be driven off from their religion by persecution. He was not a man clothed in soft raiment; such there are, but they are in kings' houses. Note, It becomes people in all their appearances to be consistent with their character and their situation. They who are preachers must not affect to look like courtiers; nor must they whose lot is cast in common dwellings, be ambitious of the soft clothing which they wear who are in kings' houses. Prudence teaches us to be of a piece. John appeared rough and unpleasant, yet they flocked after him. Note, The remembrance of our former zeal in attending on the word of God, should quicken us to, and in, our present work: let it not be said that we have done and suffered so many things in vain, have run in vain and laboured in vain.
3. His greatest commendation of all was his office and ministry, which was more his honour than any personal endowments or qualifications could be; and therefore this is most enlarged upon in a full encomium.
(1.) He was a prophet, yea, and
more than a prophet (
(2.) He was the same that was predicted to
be Christ's forerunner (
(3.) There was not a greater born of
women than John the Baptist,
Yet this high encomium of John has a
surprising limitation, notwithstanding, he that is least in the
kingdom of heaven is greater than he. [1.] In the kingdom of
glory. John was a great and good man, but he
was yet in a state of infirmity and imperfection, and therefore
came short of glorified saints, and the spirits of just men made
perfect. Note, First, There are degrees of glory in
heaven, some that are less than others there; though every vessel
is alike full, all are not alike large and capacious.
Secondly, The least saint in heaven is greater, and
knows more, and loves more, and does more in praising God, and
receives more from him, than the greatest in this world. The saints
on earth are excellent ones (
(4.) The great commendation of John the
Baptist was, that God owned his ministry, and made it wonderfully
successful for the breaking of the ice, and the preparing of people
for the kingdom of heaven. From the days of the first
appearing of John the Baptist, until now (which was not much
above two years), a great deal of good was done; so quick was the
motion when it came near to Christ the Centre; The kingdom of
heaven suffereth violence—biazetai-vim
patitur, like the violence of an army taking a city by storm,
or of a crowd bursting into a house, so the violent take it by
force. The meaning of this we have in the parallel place,
[1.] An improbable multitude. Those
strove for a place in this kingdom, that one would think had no
right nor title to it, and so seemed to be intruders, and to make a
tortuous entry, as our law calls it, a wrongful and forcible
one. When the children of the kingdom are excluded out of
it, and many come into it from the east and the west, then
it suffers violence. Compare this with
[2.] An importunate multitude. This
violence denotes a strength, and vigour, and earnestness of desire
and endeavour, in those who followed John's ministry, else they
would not have come so far to attend upon it. It shows us also,
what fervency and zeal are required of all those who design to make
heaven of their religion. Note, They who would enter into the
kingdom of heaven must strive to enter; that kingdom
suffers a holy violence; self must be denied, the bent and bias,
the frame and temper, of the mind must be altered; there are hard
sufferings to be undergone, a force to be put upon the corrupt
nature; we must run, and wrestle, and fight, and be in an
agony, and all little enough to win such a prize, and to get
over such opposition from without and from within. The violent
take it by force. They who will have an interest in the great
salvation are carried out towards it with a strong desire, will
have it upon any terms, and not think them hard, nor quit
their hold without a blessing,
(5.) The ministry of John was the
beginning of the gospel, as it is reckoned,
[1.] In John the Old Testament dispensation
began to die,
[2.] In him the New-Testament day began to
dawn; for (
Lastly, Our Lord Jesus closes this
discourse with a solemn demand of attention (
16 But whereunto shall I liken this generation? It is like unto children sitting in the markets, and calling unto their fellows, 17 And saying, We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced; we have mourned unto you, and ye have not lamented. 18 For John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, He hath a devil. 19 The Son of man came eating and drinking, and they say, Behold a man gluttonous, and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners. But wisdom is justified of her children. 20 Then began he to upbraid the cities wherein most of his mighty works were done, because they repented not: 21 Woe unto thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee, Bethsaida! for if the mighty works, which were done in you, had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. 22 But I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgment, than for you. 23 And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven, shalt be brought down to hell: for if the mighty works, which have been done in thee, had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day. 24 But I say unto you, That it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for thee.
Christ was going on in the praise of John
the Baptist and his ministry, but here stops on a sudden, and turns
that to the reproach of those who enjoyed both that, and the
ministry of Christ and his apostles too, in vain. As to that
generation, we may observe to whom he compares them
(
I. As to that generation, the body of the Jewish people at that time. There were many indeed that pressed into the kingdom of heaven; but the generality continued in unbelief and obstinacy. John was a great and good man, but the generation in which his lot was cast was as barren and unprofitable as could be, and unworthy of him. Note, The badness of the places where good ministers live serves for a foil to their beauty. It was Noah's praise that he was righteous in his generation. Having commended John, he condemns those who had him among them, and did not profit by his ministry. Note, The more praise-worthy the people are, if they slight him, and so it will be found in the day of account.
This our Lord Jesus here sets forth in a parable, yet speaks as if he were at a loss to find out a similitude proper to represent this, Whereunto shall I liken this generation? Note, There is not a greater absurdity than that which they are guilty of who have good preaching among them, and are never the better for it. It is hard to say what they are like. The similitude is taken from some common custom among the Jewish children at their play, who, as is usual with children, imitated the fashions of grown people at their marriages and funerals, rejoicing and lamenting; but being all a jest, it made no impression; no more did the ministry either of John the Baptist or of Christ upon that generation. He especially reflects on the scribes and Pharisees, who had a proud conceit of themselves; therefore to humble them he compares them to children, and their behaviour to children's play.
The parable will be best explained by opening it and the illustration of it together in these five observations.
Note, 1. The God of heaven uses a variety
of proper means and methods for the conversion and salvation of
poor souls; he would have all men to be saved, and therefore
leaves no stone unturned in order to it. The great thing he aims
at, is the melting of our wills into a compliance
with the will of God, and in order to this the affecting of us with
the discoveries he has made of himself. Having various affections
to be wrought upon, he uses various ways of working upon them,
which though differing one from another, all tend to the same
thing, and God is in them all carrying on the same design. In the
parable, this is called his piping to us, and his
mourning to us; he hath piped to us in the precious
promises of the gospel, proper to work upon hope, and mourned to us
in the dreadful threatenings of the law, proper to work upon fear,
that he might frighten us out of our sins and allure us to himself.
He had piped to us in gracious and merciful providences,
mourned to us in calamitous, afflicting providences, and has
set the one over against the other. He has taught his ministers to
change their voice (
In the explanation of the parable is set forth the different temper of John's ministry and of Christ's, who were the two great lights of that generation.
(1.) On the one hand, John came mourning to them, neither eating nor drinking; not conversing familiarly with people, nor ordinarily eating in company, but alone, in his cell in the wilderness, where his meat was locusts and wild honey. Now this, one would think, should work upon them; for such an austere, mortified life as this, was very agreeable to the doctrine he preached: and that minister is most likely to do good, whose conversation is according to his doctrine; and yet the preaching even of such a minister is not always effectual.
(2.) On the other hand, the Son of man
came eating and drinking, and so he piped unto them.
Christ conversed familiarly with all sorts of people, not affecting
any peculiar strictness or austerity; he was affable and easy of
access, not shy of any company, was often at feasts, both with
Pharisees and publicans, to try if this would win upon those who
were not wrought upon by John's reservedness: those who were not
awed by John's frowns, would be allured by Christ's smiles; from
whom St. Paul learned to be come all things to all men,
Note, 2. The various methods which God
takes for the conversion of sinners, are with many fruitless and
ineffectual: "Ye have not danced, ye have not lamented; you
have not been suitably affected either with the one or with the
other." Particular means have, as in medicine, their particular
intentions, which must be answered, particular impressions, which
must be submitted to, in order to the success of the great and
general design; now if people will be neither bound by laws, nor
invited by promises, nor frightened by threatenings, will neither
be awakened by the greatest things, nor allured by the
sweetest things, nor startled by the most terrible
things, nor be made sensible by the plainest things; if they
will hearken to the voice neither of scripture, nor reason, nor
experience, nor providence, nor conscience, nor interest, what more
can be done? The bellows are burned, the lead is consumed, the
founder melteth in vain; reprobate silver shall men call them,
Note, 3. That commonly those persons who do
not profit by the means of grace, are perverse, and reflect upon
the ministers by whom they enjoy those means; and because they do
not get good themselves, they do all the hurt they can to others,
by raising and propagating prejudices against the word, and the
faithful preachers of it. Those who will not comply with God, and
walk after him, confront him, and walk contrary to him. So this
generation did; because they were resolved not to believe
Christ and John, and to own them, as they ought to have done, for
the best of men, they set themselves to abuse them, and to
represent them as the worst. (1.) As for John the Baptist, they
say, He has a devil. They imputed his strictness and
reservedness to melancholy, and some kind or degree of a possession
of Satan. "Why should we heed him? he is a poor hypochondriacal
man, full of fancies, and under the power of a crazed imagination."
(2.) As for Jesus Christ, they imputed his free and obliging
conversation to the more vicious habit of luxury and
flesh-pleasing: Behold a gluttonous man and a wine-bibber.
No reflection could be more foul and invidious; it is the charge
against the rebellious son (
Note, 4. That the cause of this great
unfruitfulness and perverseness of people under the means of grace,
is that they are like children sitting in the markets; they
are foolish as children, froward as children, mindless and playful
as children; would they but show themselves men in
understanding, there would be some hopes of them. The
market-place they sit in is to some a place of idleness
(
Note, 5. Though the means of grace be thus
slighted and abused by many, by the most, yet there is a remnant
that through grace do improve them, and answer the designs of them,
to the glory of God, and the good of their own souls. But wisdom
is justified of her children. Christ is Wisdom; in him
are hid treasures of wisdom; the saints are the children
God has given him,
Well, this is the account Christ gives of
that generation, and that generation is not passed
away, but remains in a succession of the like; for as it was
then, it has been since and is still; some believe the things
which are spoken, and some believe not,
II. As to the particular places in
which Christ was most conversant. What he said in general of that
generation, he applied in particular to those places,
to affect them. Then began he to upbraid them,
1. The sin charged upon them; not any against the moral law, then an appeal would have lain to the gospel, which would have relieved, but a sin against the gospel, the remedial law, and that is impenitency: this was it he upbraided them with, or reproached them for, as the most shameful, ungrateful thing that could be, that they repented not. Note, Wilful impenitency is the great damning sin of multitudes that enjoy the gospel, and which (more than any other) sinners will be upbraided with to eternity. The great doctrine that both John the Baptist, and Christ, and the apostles preached, was repentance; the great thing designed, both in the piping and in the mourning, was to prevail with people to change their minds and ways, to leave their sins and turn to God; and this they would not be brought to. He does not say, because they believed not (for some kind of faith many of them had) that Christ was a Teacher come from God; but because they repented not: their faith did not prevail to the transforming of their hearts, and the reforming of their lives. Christ reproved them for their other sins, that he might lead them to repentance; but when they repented not, He upbraided them with that, as their refusal to be healed: He upbraided them with it, that they might upbraid themselves, and might at length see the folly of it, as that which alone makes the sad case a desperate one, and the wound incurable.
2. The aggravation of the sin; they were
the cities in which most of his mighty works were done; for
thereabouts his principal residence had been for some time. Note,
Some places enjoy the means of grace in greater plenty, power, and
purity, than other places. God is a free agent, and acts so in all
his disposals, both as the God of nature and as the God of grace,
common and distinguishing grace. By Christ's mighty works
they should have been prevailed with, not only to receive his
doctrine, but to obey his law; the curing of bodily diseases should
have been the healing of their souls, but it had not that effect.
Note, The stronger inducements we have to repent, the more heinous
is the impenitency and the severer will the reckoning be, for
Christ keeps account of the mighty works done among us, and
of the gracious works done for us too, by which also we should be
led to repentance,
(1.) Chorazin and Bethsaida are here
instanced (
Now Chorazin and Bethsaida are here
compared with Tyre and Sidon, two maritime cities we read much of
in the Old Testament, that had been brought to ruin, but began to
flourish again; these cities bordered upon Galilee, but were in a
very ill name among the Jews for idolatry and other wickedness.
Christ sometimes went into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon
(
[1.] That Tyre and Sidon would not have
been so bad as Chorazin and Bethsaida. If they had had the same
word preached, and the same miracles wrought among them, they
would have repented, and that long ago, as Nineveh did,
in sackcloth and ashes. Christ, who knows the hearts of all,
knew that if he had gone and lived among them, and preached among
them, he should have done more good there than where he was; yet he
continued where he was for some time, to encourage his ministers to
do so, though they see not the success they desire. Note, Among the
children of disobedience, some are more easily wrought upon than
others; and it is a great aggravation of the impenitency of those
who plentifully enjoy the means of grace, not only that there are
many who sit under the same means that are wrought upon, but that
there are many more that would have been wrought upon, if they had
enjoyed the same means. See
[2.] That therefore Tyre and Sidon shall
not be so miserable as Chorazin and Bethsaida, but it shall be
more tolerable for them in the day of judgment,
(2.) Capernaum is here condemned with an
emphasis (
We have here Capernaum's doom,
[1.] Put absolutely; Thou which art
exalted to heaven shalt be brought down to hell Note,
First, Those who enjoy the gospel in power and purity, are
thereby exalted to heaven; they have therein a great honour
for the present, and a great advantage for eternity; they are
lifted up toward heaven; but if, notwithstanding, they still
cleave to the earth, they may thank themselves that they are
not lifted up into heaven. Secondly, Gospel advantages and
advancements abused will sink sinners so much lower into hell. Our
external privileges will be so far from saving us, that if our
hearts and lives be not agreeable to them, they will but inflame
the reckoning: the higher the precipice is, the more fatal is the
fall from it: Let us not therefore be high-minded, but fear;
not slothful, but diligent. See
[2.] We have it here put in comparison with the doom of Sodom—a place more remarkable, both for sin and ruin, than perhaps any other; and yet Christ here tells us,
First, That Capernaum's means would
have saved Sodom. If these miracles had been done among the
Sodomites, as bad as they were, they would have repented, and
their city would have remained unto this day a monument of
sparing mercy, as now it is of destroying justice,
Secondly, That Sodom's ruin will
therefore be less at the great day than Capernaum's. Sodom will
have many things to answer for, but not the sin of neglecting
Christ, as Capernaum will. If the gospel prove a savour of
death, a killing savour, it is doubly so; it is of death
unto death, so great a death (
25 At that time Jesus answered and said, I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. 26 Even so, Father: for so it seemed good in thy sight. 27 All things are delivered unto me of my Father: and no man knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him. 28 Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.
In these verses we have Christ looking up to heaven, with thanksgiving to his Father for the sovereignty and security of the covenant of redemption; and looking around him upon this earth, with an offer to all the children of men, to whom these presents shall come, of the privileges and benefits of the covenant of grace.
I. Christ here returns thanks to God for
his favour to those babes who had the mysteries of the
gospel revealed to them (
Now in this thanksgiving of Christ, we may observe,
1. The titles he gives to God; O Father,
Lord of heaven and earth. Note, (1.) In all our approaches to
God, by praise as well as by prayer, it is good for us to eye him
as a Father, and to fasten on that relation, not only when we ask
for the mercies we want, but when we give thanks for the mercies we
have received. Mercies are then doubly sweet, and powerful to
enlarge the heart in praise, when they are received as tokens of a
Father's love, and gifts of a Father's hand; Giving thanks to
the Father,
2. The thing he gives thanks for:
Because thou has hid these things from the wise and prudent,
and yet revealed them to babes. These things; he does
not say what things, but means the great things of the gospel,
the things that belong to our peace,
Note (1.) The great things of the
everlasting gospel have been and are hid from many that were
wise and prudent, that were eminent for learning and worldly
policy; some of the greatest scholars and the greatest statesmen
have been the greatest strangers to gospel mysteries. The world
by wisdom knew not God,
(2.) While the wise and prudent men
of the world are in the dark about gospel mysteries, even the
babes in Christ have the sanctifying saving knowledge of
them: Thou hast revealed them unto babes. Such the disciples
of Christ were; men of mean birth and education; no scholars, no
artists, no politicians, unlearned and ignorant men,
(3.) This difference between the
prudent and the babes is of God's own making. [1.] It is
he that has hid these things from the wise and prudent; he
gave them parts, and learning, and much of human understanding
above others, and they were proud of that, and rested in it, and
looked no further; and therefore God justly denies them the Spirit
of wisdom and revelation, and then, though they hear the sound of
the gospel tidings, they are to them as a strange thing. God
is not the Author of their ignorance and error, but he leaves them
to themselves, and their sin becomes their punishment, and the Lord
is righteous in it. See
(4.) This dispensation must be resolved into the divine sovereignty. Christ himself referred it to that; Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in thy sight. Christ here subscribes to the will of his Father in this matter; Even so. Let God take what ways he pleases to glorify himself, and make us of what instruments he pleases for the carrying on of his own work; his grace is his own, and he may give or withhold it as he pleases. We can give no reason why Peter, a fisherman, should be made an apostle, and not Nicodemus, a Pharisee, and a ruler of the Jews, though he also believed in Christ; but so it seemed good in God's sight. Christ said this in the hearing of his disciples, to show them that it was not for any merit of their own that they were thus dignified and distinguished, but purely from God's good pleasure; he made them to differ.
(5.) This way of dispensing divine grace is
to be acknowledged by us, as it was by our Lord Jesus, with all
thankfulness. We must thank God, [1.] That these things are
revealed; the mystery hid from ages and generations is
manifested; that they are revealed, not to a few, but to be
published to all the world. [2.] That they are revealed to
babes; that the meek and humble are beautified with this
salvation; and this honour put upon those whom the world pours
contempt upon. [3.] It magnifies the mercy to them, that these
things are hid from the wise and prudent: distinguishing
favours are the most obliging. As Job adored the name of the
Lord in taking away as well as in giving, so may
we in hiding these things from the wise and prudent, as well
as in revealing them unto babes; not as it is their misery,
but as it is a method by which self is abased, proud thoughts
brought down, all flesh silenced, and divine power and wisdom made
to shine the more bright. See
II. Christ here makes a gracious offer of
the benefits of the gospel to all, and these are the things which
are revealed to babes,
1. The solemn preface which ushers in this call or invitation, both to command our attention to it, and to encourage our compliance with it. That we might have strong consolation, in flying for refuge to this hope set before us, Christ prefixes his authority, produces his credentials; we shall see he is empowered to make this offer.
Two things he here lays before us,
(1.) His commission from the Father: All
things are delivered unto me of my Father. Christ, as God, is
equal in power and glory with the Father; but as Mediator he
receives his power and glory from the Father; has all judgment
committed to him. He is authorized to settle a new covenant
between God and man, and to offer peace and happiness to the
apostate world, upon such terms as he should think fit: he was
sanctified and sealed to be the sole Plenipotentiary, to concert
and establish this great affair. In order to this, he has all
power both in heaven and in earth, (
(2.) His intimacy with the Father: No
man knoweth the Son but the Father, Neither knoweth any man the
Father save the Son. This gives us a further satisfaction, and
an abundant one. Ambassadors use to have not only their
commissions, which they produce, but their instructions, which they
reserve to themselves, to be made use of as there is occasion in
their negotiations; our Lord Jesus had both, not only authority,
but ability, for his undertaking. In transacting the great business
of our redemption, the Father and the Son are the parties
principally concerned; the counsel of peace is between them,
2. Here is the offer itself that is made to us, and an invitation to accept of it. After so solemn a preface, we may well expect something very great; and it is a faithful saying, and well worthy of all acceptation; words whereby we may be saved. We are here invited to Christ as our Priest, Prince, and Prophet, to be saved, and, in order to that, to be ruled and taught by him.
(1.) We must come to Jesus Christ as our
Rest, and repose ourselves in him (
[3.] The blessing promised to those that do
come: I will give you rest. Christ is our Noah, whose name
signifies rest, for this same shall give us rest.
(2.) We must come to Jesus Christ as our
Ruler, and submit ourselves to him (
Now this is the hardest part of our lesson,
and therefore it is qualified (
[1.] The yoke of Christ's commands
is an easy yoke; it is chrestos, not only
easy, but gracious, so the word signifies; it is sweet and
pleasant; there is nothing in it to gall the yielding neck, nothing
to hurt us, but, on the contrary, must to refresh us. It is a
yoke that is lined with love. Such is the nature of all
Christ's commands, so reasonable in themselves, so profitable to
us, and all summed up in one word, and that a sweet word, love. So
powerful are the assistances he gives us, so suitable the
encouragements, and so strong the consolations, that are to be
found in the way of duty, that we may truly say, it is a
yoke of pleasantness. It is easy to the new nature, very
easy to him that understandeth,
[2.] The burden of Christ's cross is
a light burden, very light: afflictions from Christ,
which befal us as men; afflictions for Christ, which befal us as
Christians; the latter are especially meant. This burden in
itself is not joyous, but grievous; yet as it is Christ's,
it is light. Paul knew as much of it as any man, and he
calls it a light affliction,
(3.) We must come to Jesus Christ as our
Teacher, and set ourselves to learn of him,
Two reasons are given why we must learn of Christ.
[1.] I am meek and lowly in heart, and therefore fit to teach you.
First, He is meek, and can
have compassion on the ignorant, whom others would be in a
passion with. Many able teachers are hot and hasty, which is a
great discouragement to those who are dull and slow; but Christ
knows how to bear with such, and to open their understandings. His
carriage towards his twelve disciples was a specimen of this; he
was mild and gentle with them, and made the best of them; though
they were heedless and forgetful, he was not extreme to mark their
follies. Secondly, He is lowly in heart. He condescends to
teach poor scholars, to teach novices; he chose disciples, not from
the court, nor the schools, but from the seaside. He teaches the
first principles, such things as are milk for babes; he stoops to
the meanest capacities; he taught Ephraim to go,
[2.] You shall find rest to your
souls. This promise is borrowed from
Well, this is the sum and substance of the gospel call and offer: we are here told, in a few words, what the Lord Jesus requires of us, and it agrees with what God said of him once and again. This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased, hear ye him.