John Baptist said concerning Christ, He must
increase, but I must decrease; and so it proved. For, after John
had baptized Christ, and borne his testimony to him, we hear little
more of his ministry; he had done what he came to do, and
thenceforward there is as much talk of Jesus as ever there had been
of John. As the rising Sun advances, the morning star disappears.
Concerning Jesus Christ we have in this chapter, I. The temptation
he underwent, the triple assault the tempter made upon him, and the
repulse he gave to each assault,
1 Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil. 2 And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights, he was afterward an hungred. 3 And when the tempter came to him, he said, If thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread. 4 But he answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God. 5 Then the devil taketh him up into the holy city, and setteth him on a pinnacle of the temple, 6 And saith unto him, If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down: for it is written, He shall give his angels charge concerning thee: and in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone. 7 Jesus said unto him, It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God. 8 Again, the devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and showeth him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them; 9 And saith unto him, All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me. 10 Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve. 11 Then the devil leaveth him, and, behold, angels came and ministered unto him.
We have here the story of a famous duel, fought hand to hand, between Michael and the dragon, the Seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent, nay, the serpent himself; in which the seed of the woman suffers, being tempted, and so has his heel bruised; but the serpent is quite baffled in his temptations, and so has his head broken; and our Lord Jesus comes off a Conqueror, and so secures not only comfort, but conquest at last, to all his faithful followers. Concerning Christ's temptation, observe,
I. The time when it happened: Then; there is an emphasis laid upon that. Immediately after the heavens were opened to him, and the Spirit descended on him, and he was declared to be the Son of God, and the Saviour of the world, the next news we hear of him is, he is tempted; for then he is best able to grapple with the temptation. Note, 1. Great privileges, and special tokens of divine favour, will not secure us from being tempted. Nay, 2. After great honours put upon us, we must expect something that is humbling; as Paul has a messenger of Satan sent to buffer him, after he had been in the third heavens. 3. God usually prepares his people for temptation before he calls them to it; he gives strength according to the day, and, before a sharp trial, gives more than ordinary comfort. 4. The assurance of our sonship is the best preparative for temptation. If the good Spirit witness to our adoption, that will furnish us with an answer to all the suggestions of the evil spirit, designed either to debauch or disquiet us.
Then, when he was newly come from a
solemn ordinance, when he was baptized, then he was
tempted. Note, After we have been admitted into the
communion of God, we must expect to be set upon by Satan. The
enriched soul must double its guard. When thou has eaten and art
full, then beware. Then, when he began to show himself publicly
to Israel, then he was tempted, so as he never had
been while he lived in privacy. Note, The Devil has a particular
spite at useful persons, who are not only good, but given to do
good, especially at their first setting out. It is the advice of
the Son of Sirach (
II. The place where it was; in the
wilderness; probably in the great wilderness of Sinai,
where Moses and Elijah fasted forty days, for no part of
the wilderness of Judea was so abandoned to wild beasts as
this is said to have been,
III. The preparatives for it, which were two.
1. He was directed to the combat; he did not wilfully thrust himself upon it, but he was led up of the Spirit to be tempted of the Devil. The Spirit that descended upon him like a dove made him meek, and yet made him bold. Note, Our care must be, not to enter into temptation; but if God, by his providence, order us into circumstances of temptation for our trial, we must not think it strange, but double our guard. Be strong in the Lord, resist stedfast in the faith, and all shall be well. If we presume upon our own strength, and tempt the devil to tempt us, we provoke God to leave us to ourselves; but, whithersoever God leads us, we may hope he will go along with us, and bring us off more than conquerors.
Christ was led to be tempted of the
Devil, and of him only. Others are tempted, when they are
drawn aside of their own lust and enticed (
Now Christ's temptation is, (1.) An
instance of his own condescension and humiliation. Temptations are
fiery darts, thorns in the flesh, buffetings, siftings,
wrestlings, combats, all which denote hardship and suffering;
therefore Christ submitted to them, because he would humble
himself, in all things to be made like unto his brethren;
thus he gave his back to the smiters. (2.) An occasion of
Satan's confusion. There is no conquest without a combat. Christ
was tempted, that he might overcome the tempter. Satan tempted the
first Adam, and triumphed over him; but he shall not always
triumph, the second Adam shall overcome him and lead captivity
captive. (3.) Matter of comfort to all the saints. In the
temptation of Christ it appears, that our enemy is subtle,
spiteful, and very daring in his temptations; but it appears
withal, that he is not invincible. Though he is a strong man
armed, yet the Captain of our salvation is stronger than
he. It is some comfort to us to think that Christ suffered,
being tempted; for thus it appears that temptations, if not
yielded to, are not sins, they are afflictions only, and such as
may be pleased. And we have a High Priest who knows, by experience,
what it is to be tempted, and who therefore is the more
tenderly touch with the feelings of our infirmities in an
hour of temptation,
2. He was dieted for the combat, as
wrestlers, who are temperate in all things (
IV. The temptations themselves. That which Satan aimed at, in all his temptations, was, to bring him to sin against God, and so to render him for ever incapable of being a Sacrifice for the sins of others. Now, whatever the colours were, that which he aimed at was, to bring him, 1. To despair of his Father's goodness. 2. To presume upon his Father's power. 3. To alienate his Father's honour, by giving it to Satan. In the two former, that which he tempted him to, seemed innocent, and there in appeared the subtlety of the tempter; in the last, that which he tempted him with, seemed desirable. The two former are artful temptations, which there was need of great wisdom to discern; the last was a strong temptation, which there was need of great resolution to resist; yet he was baffled in them all.
1. He tempted him to despair of his Father's goodness, and to distrust his Father's care concerning him.
(1.) See how the temptation was managed
(
Observe the subtlety of the tempter, in joining this first temptation with what went before to make it the stronger. [1.] Christ began to be hungry, and therefore the motion seemed very proper, to turn stones into bread for his necessary support. Note, It is one of the wiles of Satan to take advantage of our outward condition, in that to plant the battery of his temptations. He is an adversary no less watchful than spiteful; and the more ingenious he is to take advantage against us, the more industrious we must be to give him none. When he began to be hungry, and that in a wilderness, where there was nothing to be had, then the Devil assaulted him. Note, Want and poverty are a great temptation to discontent and unbelief, and the use of unlawful means for our relief, under pretence that necessity has no law; and it is excused with this that hunger will break through stone walls, which yet is no excuse, for the law of God ought to be stronger to us than stone walls. Agur prays against poverty, not because it is an affliction and reproach, but because it is a temptation; lest I be poor, and steal. Those therefore who are reduced to straits, have need to double their guard; it is better to starve to death, than live and thrive by sin. [2.] Christ was lately declared to be the Son of God, and here the Devil tempts him to doubt of that; If thou be the Son of God. Had not the Devil known that the Son of God was to come into the world, he would not have said this; and had he not suspected that this was he, he would not have said it to him, nor durst he have said it if Christ had not now drawn a veil over his glory, and if the Devil had not now put on an impudent face.
First, "Thou has now an occasion to
question whether thou be the Son of God or no; for can it
be, that the Son of God, who is Heir of all things,
should be reduced to such straits? If God were thy Father, he would
not see thee starve, for all the beasts of the forest are
his,
Secondly, "Thou hast now an
opportunity to show that thou art the son of God. If thou art
the Son of God, prove it by this, command these stones"
(a heap of which, probably, lay now before him) "be made
bread,
(2.) See how this temptation was resisted and overcome.
[1.] Christ refused to comply with it. He would not command these stones to be made bread; not because he could not; his power, which soon after this turned stones into bread; but he would not. And why would he not? At first view, the thing appears justifiable enough, and the truth is, the more plausible a temptation is, and the greater appearance there is of good in it, the more dangerous it is. This matter would bear a dispute, but Christ was soon aware of the snake in the grass, and would not do any thing, First, That looked like questioning the truth of the voice he heard from heaven, or putting that upon a new trial which was already settled. Secondly, That looked like distrusting his Father's care of him, or limiting him to one particular way of providing for him. Thirdly, That looked like setting up for himself, and being his own carver; or, Fourthly, That looked like gratifying Satan, by doing a thing at his motion. Some would have said, To give the Devil his due, this was good counsel; but for those who wait upon God, to consult him, is more than his due; it is like enquiring of the god Ekron, when there is a God in Israel.
[2.] He was ready to reply to it (
This answer, as all the rest, is taken out
of the book of Deuteronomy, which signifies the second
law, and in which there is very little ceremonial; the
Levitical sacrifices and purifications could not drive away Satan,
though of divine institution, much less holy water and the sign of
the cross, which are of human invention; but moral precepts and
evangelical promises, mixed with faith, these are mighty,
through God, for the vanquishing of Satan. This is here quoted
from
2. He tempted him to presume upon his Father's power and protection. See what a restless unwearied adversary the Devil is! If he fail in one assault, he tries another.
Now in this second attempt we may observe,
(1.) What the temptation was, and how it was managed. In general, finding Christ so confident of his Father's care of him, in point of nourishment, he endeavors to draw him to presume upon that care in point of safety. Note, We are in danger of missing our way, both on the right hand and on the left, and therefore must take heed, lest, when we avoid one extreme, we be brought by the artifices of Satan, to run into another; lest, by overcoming our prodigality, we fall into covetousness. Nor are any extremes more dangerous than those of despair and presumption, especially in the affairs of our souls. Some who have obtained a persuasion that Christ is able and willing to save them from their sins, are then tempted to presume that he will save them in their sins. Thus when people begin to be zealous in religion, Satan hurries them into bigotry and intemperate heats.
Now in this temptation we may observe,
[1.] How he made way for it. He took Christ, not by force against his will, but moved him to go, and went along with him, to Jerusalem. Whether Christ went upon the ground, and so went up the stairs to the top of the temple, or whether he went in the air, is uncertain; but so it was, that he was set upon a pinnacle, or spire; upon the fane (so some), upon the battlements (so others), upon the wing (so the word is), of the temple. Now observe, First, How submissive Christ was, in suffering himself to be hurried thus, that he might let Satan do his worst and yet conquer him. The patience of Christ here, as afterward in his sufferings and death, is more wonderful than the power of Satan or his instruments; for neither he nor they could have any power against Christ but what was given them from above. How comfortable is it, that Christ, who let loose this power of Satan against himself, does not in like manner let it loose against us, but restrains it, for he knows our frame! Secondly, How subtle the Devil was, in the choice of the place for his temptations. Intending to solicit Christ to an ostentation of his own power, and a vain-glorious presumption upon God's providence, he fixes him on a public place in Jerusalem, a populous city, and the joy of the whole earth; in the temple, one of the wonders of the world, continually gazed upon with admiration by some one or other. There he might make himself remarkable, and be taken notice of by everybody, and prove himself the Son of God; not, as he was urged in the former temptation, in the obscurities of a wilderness, but before multitudes, upon the most eminent stage of action.
Observe, 1. That Jerusalem is here called the holy city; for so it was in name and profession, and there was in it a holy seed, that was the substance thereof. Note, There is no city on earth so holy as to exempt and secure us from the Devil and his temptations. The first Adam was tempted in the holy garden, the second in the holy city. Let us not, therefore, in any place, be off our watch. Nay, the holy city is the place where he does, with great advantage and success, tempt men to pride and presumption; but, blessed be God, into the Jerusalem above, that holy city, no unclean thing shall enter; there we shall be for ever out of temptation. 2. That he set him upon a pinnacle of the temple, which (as Josephus describes it, Antiq. 15. 412) was so very high, that it would make a man's head giddy to look down to the bottom. Note, Pinnacles of the temple are places of temptation; I mean, (1.) High places are so; they are slippery places; advancement in the world makes a man a fair mark for Satan to shoot his fiery darts at. God casts down, that he may raise up; the Devil raises up, that he may cast down: therefore they who would take heed of falling, must take heed of climbing. (2.) High places in the church are, in a special manner, dangerous. They who excel in gifts, who are in eminent stations, and have gained great reputation, have need to keep humble; for Satan will be sure to aim at them, to puff them up with pride, that they may fall into the condemnation of the Devil. Those that stand high are concerned to stand fast.
[2.] How he moved it; "If thou be the
Son of God, now show thyself to the world, and prove thyself to
be so; cast thyself down, and then," First, "Thou
wilt be admired, as under the special protection of heaven.
When they see thee receive no hurt by a fall from such a precipice,
they will say" (as the barbarous people did of Paul) "that thou art
a God." Tradition says, that Simon Magnus by this very thing
attempted to prove himself a god, but that his pretensions were
disproved, for he fell down, and was miserably bruised. "Nay,"
Secondly, "Thou wilt be received, as coming with a
special commission from heaven. All Jerusalem will see and
acknowledge, not only that thou art more than a man, but that thou
art that Messenger, that Angel of the covenant, that
should suddenly come to the temple (
Observe, The Devil said, Cast thyself
down. The Devil could not cast him down, though a little thing
would have done it, from the top of a spire. Note, The power of
Satan is a limited power; hitherto he shall come, and no
further. Yet, if the Devil had cast him down, he had not
gained his point; that had been his suffering only, not his sin.
Note, Whatever real mischief is done us, it is of our own
doing; the Devil can but persuade, he cannot compel; he can but
say, Cast thyself down; he cannot cast us down. Every man is
tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and not forced, but
enticed. Therefore let us not hurt ourselves, and then,
blessed be God, no one else can hurt us,
[3.] How he backed this motion with a
scripture; For it is written, He shall give his angels charge
concerning thee. But is Saul also among the prophets? Is
Satan so well versed in scripture, as to be able to quote it so
readily? It seems, he is. Note, It is possible for a man to have
his head full of scripture-notions, and his mouth full of
scripture-expressions, while his heart is full of reigning enmity
to God and all goodness. The knowledge which the devils have of the
scripture, increases both their mischievousness and their torment.
Never did the devil speak with more vexation to himself, than when
he said to Christ, I know thee who thou art. The devil would
persuade Christ to throw himself down, hoping that he would
be his own murderer, and that there would be an end of him and his
undertaking, which he looked upon with a jealous eye; to encourage
him to do it, he tells them, that there was no danger, that the
good angels would protect him, for so was the promise (
First, There was something
right. It is true, there is such a promise of the ministration
of the angels, for the protection of the saints. The devil knows it
by experience; for he finds his attempts against them fruitless,
and he frets and rages at it, as he did at the hedge about Job,
which he speaks of so sensibly,
Secondly, There was a great deal
wrong in it; and perhaps the devil had a particular spite
against this promise, and perverted it, because it often stood in
his way, and baffled his mischievous designs against the saints.
See here, 1. How he misquoted it; and that was bad.
The promise is, They shall keep thee; but how? In all thy
ways; not otherwise; if we go out of our way, out of the
way of our duty, we forfeit the promise, and put ourselves out of
God's protection. Now this word made against the tempter, and
therefore he industriously left it out. If Christ had cast
himself down, he had been out of his way, for he had no
call so to expose himself. It is good for us upon all occasions to
consult the scriptures themselves, and not to take things upon
trust, that we may not be imposed upon by those that maim and
mangle the word of God; we must do as the noble Bereans, who
searched the scriptures daily. 2. How he misapplied it; and
that was worse. Scripture is abused when it is pressed to
patronize sin; and when men thus wrest it to their own temptation,
they do it to their own destruction
(2.) How Christ overcame this temptation;
he resisted and overcame it, as he did the former, with, It is
written. The devil's abusing of scripture did not
prevent Christ from using it, but he presently urges,
If Christ should cast himself down, it would be the tempting of God, [1.] As it would be requiring a further confirmation of that which was so well confirmed. Christ was abundantly satisfied that God was already his Father, and took care of him, and gave his angels a charge concerning him; and therefore to put it upon a new experiment, would be to tempt him, as the Pharisees tempted Christ; when they had so many signs on earth, they demanded a sign from heaven. This is limiting the Holy One of Israel. [2.] As it would be requiring a special preservation of him, in doing that which he had no call to. If we expect that because God has promised not to forsake us, therefore he should follow us out of the way of our duty; that because he has promised to supply our wants, therefore he should humour us, and please our fancies; that because he has promised to keep us, we may wilfully thrust ourselves into danger, and may expect the desired end, without using the appointed means; this is presumption, this is tempting God. And it is an aggravation of the sin, that he is the Lord our God; it is an abuse of the privilege we enjoy, in having him for our God; he has thereby encouraged us to trust him, but we are very ungrateful, if therefore we tempt him; it is contrary to our duty to him as our God. This is to affront him whom we ought to honour. Note, We must never promise ourselves any more than God has promised us.
3. He tempted him to the most black and horrid idolatry, with the proffer of the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them. And here we may observe,
(1.) How the devil made this push at our
Saviour,
In this temptation, we may observe,
[1.] What he showed him—all the
kingdoms of the world. In order to do this, he took him to an
exceeding high mountain; in hopes of prevailing, as Balak
with Balaam, he changed his ground. The pinnacle of the temple is
not high enough; the prince of the power of the air must have him
further up into his territories. Some think this high mountain was
on the other side of Jordan, because there we find Christ next
after the temptation,
(2.) What he said to him (
First, How vain the promise was. All these things I will give thee. He seems to take it for granted, that in the former temptations he had in part gained his point, and proved that Christ was not the Son of God, because he had not given him those evidences of it which he demanded; so that here he looks upon him as a mere man. "Come," says he, "it seems that God whose Son thou thinkest thyself to be deserts thee, and starves thee—a sign that he is not thy Father; but if thou wilt be ruled by me, I will provide better for thee than so; own me for thy father, and ask my blessing, and all this will I give thee." Note, Satan makes an easy prey of men, when he can persuade them to think themselves abandoned of God. The fallacy of this promise lies in that, All this will I give thee. And what was all that? It was but a map, a picture, a mere phantasm, that had nothing in it real or solid, and this he would give him; a goodly prize! Yet such are Satan's proffers. Note, Multitudes lose the sight of that which is, by setting their eyes on that which is not. The devil's baits are all a sham; they are shows and shadows with which he deceives them, or rather they deceive themselves. The nations of the earth had been, long before, promised to the Messiah; if he be the Son of God, they belong to him; Satan pretends now to be a good angel, probably one of those that were set over kingdoms, and to have received a commission to deliver possession to him according to promise. Note, We must take heed of receiving even that which God hath promised, out of the devil's hand; we do so when we precipitate the performance, by catching at it in a sinful way.
Secondly, How vile the
condition was; If thou will fall down, and worship
me. All the worship which the heathen performed to their gods,
was directed to the devil (
(2.) See how Christ warded off the thrust, baffled the assault, and came off a conqueror. He rejected the proposal,
[1.] With abhorrence and
detestation; Get thee hence, Satan. The two former
temptations had something of colour, which would admit a
consideration, but this was so gross as not to bear a parley; it
appears abominable at the first sight, and therefore is immediately
rejected. If the best friend we have in the world suggests such a
thing as this to us, Go, serve other gods, he must not be
heard with patience,
[2.] With an argument fetched from
scripture. Note, In order to the strengthening of our resolutions
against sin, it is good to see what a great deal of reason there is
for those resolutions. The argument is very suitable, and exactly
to the purpose, taken from
V. We have here the end and issue of this
combat,
Now the issue was glorious, and much to Christ's honour: for,
1. The devil was baffled, and quitted the field; Then the devil leaveth him, forced to do so by the power that went along with that word of command, Get thee hence, Satan. He made a shameful and inglorious retreat, and came off with disgrace; and the more daring his attempts had been, the more mortifying was the foil that was given him. Magnis tamen excidit ausis—The attempt, however, in which he failed, was daring. Then, when he had done his worst, had tempted him with all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them, and found that he was not influenced by that bait, that he could not prevail with that temptation with which he had overthrown so many thousands of the children of men, then he leaves him; then he gives him over as more than a man. Since this did not move him, he despairs of moving him, and begins to conclude, that he is the Son of God, and that it is in vain to tempt him any further. Note, If we resist the devil, he will flee from us; he will yield, if we keep our ground; as when Naomi saw that Ruth was steadfastly resolved, she left off speaking to her. When the devil left our Saviour, he owned himself fairly beaten; his head was broken by the attempt he made to bruise Christ's heel. He left him because he had nothing in him, nothing to take hold of; he saw it was to no purpose, and so gave over. Note, The devil, though he is an enemy to all saints, is a conquered enemy. The Captain of our salvation has defeated and disarmed him; we have nothing to do but to pursue the victory.
2. The holy angels came and attended upon
our victorious Redeemer; Behold, angels came and ministered unto
him. They came in a visible appearance, as the devil had done
in the temptation. While the devil was making his assaults upon our
Saviour, the angels stood at a distance, and their immediate
attendance and administration were suspended, that it might appear
that he vanquished Satan in his own strength, and that his victory
might be the more illustrious; and that afterward, when
Michael makes use of his angels in fighting with the
dragon and his angels, it might appear, that it is not
because he needs them, or could not do his work without
them, but because he is pleased to honour them so far as to employ
them. One angel might have served to bring him food, but here are
many attending him, to testify their respect to him, and their
readiness to receive his commands. Behold this! It is worth taking
notice of; (1.) That as there is a world of wicked, malicious
spirits that fight against Christ and his church, and all
particular believers, so there is a world of holy, blessed spirits
engaged and employed for them. In reference to our war with
devils, we may take abundance of comfort from our communion
with angels. (2.) That Christ's victories are the angels'
triumphs. The angels came to congratulate Christ on his success, to
rejoice with him, and to give him the glory due to his name; for
that was sung with a loud voice in heaven, when the great dragon
was cast out (
Christ was thus succoured after the temptation, [1.] For his encouragement to go on in his undertaking, that he might see the powers of heaven siding with him, when he saw the powers of hell set against him. [2.] For our encouragement to trust in him; for as he knew, by experience, what it was to suffer, being tempted, and how hard that was, so he knew what it was to be succoured, being tempted, and how comfortable that was; and therefore we may expect, not only that he will sympathize with his tempted people, but that he will come in with seasonable relief to them; as our great Melchizedec, who met Abraham when he returned from the battle, and as the angels here ministered to him.
12 Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into prison, he departed into Galilee; 13 And leaving Nazareth, he came and dwelt in Capernaum, which is upon the sea coast, in the borders of Zabulon and Nephthalim: 14 That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying, 15 The land of Zabulon, and the land of Nephthalim, by the way of the sea, beyond Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles; 16 The people which sat in darkness saw great light; and to them which sat in the region and shadow of death light is sprung up. 17 From that time Jesus began to preach, and to say, Repent: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.
We have here an account of Christ's
preaching in the synagogues of Galilee, for he came into the world
to be a Preacher; the great salvation which he wrought out, he
himself began to publish (
Several passages in the other gospels,
especially in that of St. John, are supposed, in the order of the
story of Christ's life, to intervene between his temptation and his
preaching in Galilee. His first appearance after his temptation,
was when John Baptist pointed to him, saying, Behold the Lamb of
God,
I. The time; When Jesus had heard that
John was cast into prison, then he went into Galilee,
II. The place where he preached; in Galilee, a remote part of the country, that lay furthest from Jerusalem, as was there looked upon with contempt, as rude and boorish. The inhabitants of that country were reckoned stout men, fit for soldiers, but not polite men, or fit for scholars. Thither Christ went, there he set up the standard of his gospel; and in this, as in other things, he humbled himself. Observe,
1. The particular city he chose for his
residence; not Nazareth, where he had been bred up; no, he left
Nazareth; particular notice is taken of that,
But he came and dwelt in Capernaum, which was a city of Galilee, but many miles distant from Nazareth, a great city and of much resort. It is said here to be on the sea coast, not the great sea, but the sea of Tiberias, an inland water, called also the lake of Gennesaret. Close by the falling of Jordan into the sea stood Capernaum, in the tribe of Naphtali, but bordering upon Zebulun; hither Christ came, and here he dwelt. Some think that his father Joseph had a habitation here, others that he took a house or lodgings at least; and some think it more than probable, that he dwelt in the house of Simon Peter; however, here he fixed not constantly, for he went about doing good; but this was for some time his head quarters: what little rest he had, was here; here he had a place, though not a place of his own, to lay his head on. And at Capernaum, it should seem, he was welcome, and met with better entertainment than he had at Nazareth. Note, If some reject Christ, yet others will receive him, and bid him welcome. Capernaum is glad of Nazareth's leavings. If Christ's own countrymen be not gathered, yet he will be glorious. "And thou, Capernaum, has now a day of it; thou art now lifted up to heaven; be wise for thyself, and know the time of thy visitation."
2. The prophecy that was fulfilled is this,
The places are spoken of,
Now, concerning the inhabitants of these
places, observe, (1.) The posture they were in before the gospel
came among them (
It is a great light; denoting the clearness and evidence of gospel-revelations; not like the light of a candle, but the light of the sun when he goes forth in his strength. Great in comparison with the light of the law, the shadows of which were now done away. It is a great light, for it discovers great things and of vast consequence; it will last long, and spread far. And it is a growing light, intimated in that word, It is sprung up. It was but spring of day with them; now the day dawned, which afterward shone more and more. The gospel-kingdom, like a grain of mustard-seed or the morning light, was small in its beginnings, gradual in its growth, but great in its perfection.
Observe, the light sprang up to
them; they did not go to seek it, but were prevented with the
blessings of this goodness. It came upon them ere they were aware,
at the time appointed, by the disposal of him who commandeth the
morning, and causes the day-spring to know its place, that
it may take hold of the ends of the earth,
III. The text he preached upon (
The subject which Christ dwelt upon now in
his preaching (and it was indeed the sum and substance of all his
preaching), was the very same John has preached upon (
18 And Jesus, walking by the sea of Galilee, saw two brethren, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea: for they were fishers. 19 And he saith unto them, Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men. 20 And they straightway left their nets, and followed him. 21 And going on from thence, he saw other two brethren, James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother, in a ship with Zebedee their father, mending their nets; and he called them. 22 And they immediately left the ship and their father, and followed him.
When Christ began to preach, he began to gather disciples, who should now be the hearers, and hereafter the preachers, of his doctrine, who should now be witnesses of his miracles, and hereafter concerning them. Now, in these verses, we have an account of the first disciples that he called into fellowship with himself.
And this was an instance, 1. Of effectual calling to Christ. In all his preaching he gave a common call to all the country, but in this he gave a special and particular call to those that were given him by the Father. Let us see and admire the power of Christ's grace, own his word to be the rod of his strength, and wait upon him for those powerful influences which are necessary to the efficacy of the gospel call—those distinguishing influences. All the country was called, but these were called out, were redeemed from among them. Christ was so manifested to them, as he was not manifested unto the world. 2. It was an instance of ordination, and appointment to the work of the ministry. When Christ, as a Teacher, set up his great school, one of his first works was to appoint ushers, or under masters, to be employed in the work of instruction. Now he began to give gifts unto men, to put the treasure into earthen vessels. It was an early instance of his care for the church.
Now we may observe here,
I. Where they were called—by the sea of Galilee, where Jesus was walking, Capernaum being situated near that sea. Concerning this sea of Tiberias, the Jews have a saying, That of all the seven seas that God made, he made choice of none but the sea of Gennesaret; which is very applicable to Christ's choice of it, to honour it, as he often did, with his presence and his miracles. Here, on the banks of the sea, Christ was walking for contemplation, as Isaac in the field; hither he went to call his disciples; not to Herod's court (for few mighty or noble are called), not to Jerusalem, among the chief priests and the elders, but to the sea of Galilee; surely Christ sees not as man sees. Not but that the same power which effectually called Peter and Andrew would have wrought upon Annas and Caiaphas, for with God nothing is impossible; but, as in other things, so in his converse and attendance, he would humble himself, and show that God ha chosen the poor of this world. Galilee was a remote part of the nation, the inhabitants were less cultivated and refined, their very language was broad and uncouth to the curious, their speech betrayed them. They who were picked up at the sea of Galilee, had not the advantages and improvements, no, not of the more polished Galileans; yet thither Christ went, to call his apostles that were to be the prime ministers of state in his kingdom, for he chooses the foolish things of this world, to confound the wise.
II. Who they were. We have an
account of the call of two pair of brothers in these verses—Peter
and Andrew, James and John; the two former, and, probably, the two
latter also, had had acquaintance with Christ before (
1. That they were brothers. Note, It
is a blessed thing, when they who are kinsmen according to the
flesh (as the apostle speaks,
2. That they were fishers. Being fishers, (1.) They were poor men: if they had had estates, or any considerable stock in trade, they would not have made fishing their trade, however, they might have made it their recreation. Note, Christ does not despise the poor, and therefore we must not; the poor are evangelized, and the Fountain of honour sometimes gives more abundant honour to that part which most lacked. (2.) The were unlearned men, not bred up to books or literature as Moses was, who was conversant with all the learning of the Egyptians. Note, Christ sometimes chooses to endow those with the gifts of grace who have least to show of the gifts of nature. Yet this will not justify the bold intrusion of ignorant and unqualified men into the work of the ministry: extraordinary gifts of knowledge and utterance are not now to be expected, but requisite abilities must be obtained in an ordinary way, and without a competent measure of these, none are to be admitted to that service. (3.) They were men of business, who had been bred up to labour. Note, Diligence in an honest calling is pleasing to Christ, and no hindrance to a holy life. Moses was called from keeping sheep, and David from following the ewes, to eminent employments. Idle people lie more open to the temptations of Satan than to the calls of God. (4.) They were men that were accustomed to hardships and hazards; the fisher's trade, more than any other, is laborious and perilous; fishermen must be often wet and cold; they must watch, and wait, and toil, and be often in perils by waters. Note, Those who have learned to bear hardships, and run hazards, are best prepared for the fellowship and discipleship of Jesus Christ. Good soldiers of Christ must endure hardness.
III. What they were doing. Peter and Andrew were then using their nets, they were fishing; and James and John were mending their nets, which was an instance of their industry and good husbandry. They did not go to their father for money to buy new nets, but took pains to mend their old ones. It is commendable to make what we have go as far, and last as long, as may be. James and John were with their father Zebedee, ready to assist him, and make his business easy to him. Note, It is a happy and hopeful presage, to see children careful of their parents, and dutiful to them. Observe, 1. They were all employed, all very busy, and none idle. Note, When Christ comes, it is good to be found doing. "Am I in Christ?" is a very needful question for us to ask ourselves; and, next to that, "Am I in my calling?" 2. They were differently employed; two of them were fishing, and two of them mending their nets. Note, Ministers should be always employed, either in teaching or studying; they may always find themselves something to do, if it be not their own fault; and mending their nets, is, in its season, as necessary work as fishing.
IV. What the call was (
1. What Christ intended them for; I will
make you fishers of men; this alludes to their former calling.
Let them be not proud of the new honour designed them, they are
still but fishers; let them not be afraid of the new work cut out
for them, for they have been used to fishing, and fishers they are
still. It was usual with Christ to speak of spiritual and heavenly
things under such allusions, and in such expressions, as took rise
from common things that offered themselves to his view. David was
called from feeding sheep to feed God's Israel; and when he is a
king, is a shepherd. Note, (1.) Ministers are fishers of
men, not to destroy them, but to save them, by bringing them
into another element. They must fish, not for wrath, wealth,
honour, and preferment, to gain them to themselves, but for souls,
to gain them to Christ. They watch for your souls (
2. What they must do in order to this;
Follow me. They must separate themselves to a diligent
attendance on him, and set themselves to a humble imitation of him;
must follow him as their Leader. Note, (1.) Those whom Christ
employs in any service for him, must first be fitted and qualified
for it. (2.) Those who would preach Christ, must first
learn Christ, and learn of him. How can we expect to bring
others to the knowledge of Christ, if we do not know him well
ourselves? (3.) Those who would get an acquaintance with Christ,
must be diligent and constant in their attendance on him. The
apostles were prepared for their work, by accompanying Christ
all the time that he went in and out among them,
V. What was the success of this
call. Peter and Andrew straightway left their nets
(
1. This instance of the power of the Lord
Jesus gives us good encouragement to depend upon the sufficiency of
his grace. How strong and effectual is his word! He speaks, and
it is done. The same power goes along with this word of Christ,
Follow me, that went along with that word, Lazarus, come
forth; a power to make willing,
2. This instance of the pliableness of the disciples, gives us a good example of obedience to the command of Christ. Note, It is the good property of all Christ's faithful servants to come when they are called, and to follow their Master wherever he leads them. They objected not their present employments, their engagements to their families, the difficulties of the service they were called to, or their own unfitness for it; but, being called, they obeyed, and, like Abraham, went out not knowing whither they went, but knowing very well whom they followed. James and John left their father: it is not said what became of him; their mother Salome was a constant follower of Christ; no doubt, their father Zebedee was a believer, but the call to follow Christ fastened on the young ones. Youth is the learning age, and the labouring age. The priests ministered in the prime of their life.
23 And Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the people. 24 And his fame went throughout all Syria: and they brought unto him all sick people that were taken with divers diseases and torments, and those which were possessed with devils, and those which were lunatic, and those that had the palsy; and he healed them. 25 And there followed him great multitudes of people from Galilee, and from Decapolis, and from Jerusalem, and from Judea, and from beyond Jordan.
See here, I. What an industrious preacher
Christ was; He went about all Galilee, teaching in their
synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom. Observe,
1. What Christ preached—the gospel of the kingdom. The
kingdom of heaven, that is, of grace and glory, is emphatically
the kingdom, the kingdom that was now to come; that kingdom
which shall survive, as it doth surpass, all the kingdoms of the
earth. The gospel is the charter of that kingdom, containing
the King's coronation oath, by which he has graciously obliged
himself to pardon, protect, and save the subjects of that kingdom;
it contains also their oath of allegiance, by which they oblige
themselves to observe his statutes and seek his honour; this is
the gospel of the kingdom; this Christ was himself the
Preacher of, that our faith in it might be confirmed. 2.
Where he preached—in the synagogues; not there only,
but there chiefly, because those were the places of
concourse, where wisdom was to lift up her voice
(
II. What a powerful physician Christ was; he went about not only teaching, but healing, and both with his word, that he might magnify that above all his name. He sent his word, and healed them. Now observe,
1. What diseases he cured—all without exception. He healed all manner of sickness, and all manner of disease. There are diseases which are called the reproach of physicians, being obstinate to all the methods they can prescribe; but even those were the glory of this Physician, for he healed them all, however inveterate. His word was the true panpharmacon—all-heal.
Three general words are here used to intimate this; he healed every sickness, noson, as blindness, lameness, fever, dropsy; every disease, or languishing, malakian, as fluxes and consumptions; and all torments, basanous, as gout, stone, convulsions, and such like torturing distempers; whether the disease was acute or chronical; whether it was a racking or a wasting disease; none was too bad, none too hard, for Christ to heal with a word's speaking.
Three particular diseases are specified; the palsy, which is the greatest weakness of the body; lunacy, which is the greatest malady of the mind, and possession of the Devil, which is the greatest misery and calamity of both, yet Christ healed all: for he is the sovereign Physician both of soul and body, and has command of all diseases.
2. What patients he had. A physician who
was so easy of access, so sure of success, who cured immediately,
without either a painful suspense and expectation, or such painful
remedies as are worse than the disease; who cured gratis, and took
no fees, could not but have abundance of patients. See here, what
flocking there was to him from all parts; great multitudes of
people came, not only from Galilee and the country about,
but even from Jerusalem and from Judea, which lay a
great way off; for his fame went throughout all Syria, not
only among all the people of the Jews, but among the neighbouring
nations, which, by the report that now spread far and near
concerning him, would be prepared to receive his gospel, when
afterwards it should be brought them. This is given as the
reason why such multitudes came to him, because his fame had spread
so widely. Note, What we hear of Christ from others, should invite
us to him. The queen of Sheba was induced, by the fame of Solomon,
to pay him a visit. The voice of fame is "Come, and see." Christ
both taught and healed. They who came for cures, met with
instruction concerning the things that belonged to their
peace. It is well if any thing will bring people to Christ; and
they who come to him will find more in him than they expected.
These Syrians, like Naaman the Syrian, coming to be healed of their
diseases, many of them being converts,
Now concerning the cures which Christ wrought, let us, once for all, observe the miracle, the mercy, and the mystery, of them.
(1.) The miracle of them. They were
wrought in such a manner, as plainly spake them to be the immediate
products of a divine and supernatural power, and they were God's
seal to his commission. Nature could not do these things, it was
the God of nature; the cures were many, of diseases incurable by
the art of the physician, of persons that were strangers, of all
ages and conditions; the cures were wrought openly, before many
witnesses, in mixed companies of persons that would have denied the
matter of fact, if they could have had any colour for so doing; no
cure ever failed, or was afterwards called in question; they were
wrought speedily, and not (as cures by natural causes) gradually;
they were perfect cures, and wrought with a word's speaking; all
which proves him a Teacher come from God, for, otherwise,
none could have done the works that he did,
(2.) The mercy of them. The miracles
that Moses wrought, to prove his mission, were most of them plagues
and judgments, to intimate the terror of that dispensation, though
from God; but the miracles that Christ wrought, were most of them
cures, and all of them (except the cursing of the barren fig tree)
blessings and favours; for the gospel dispensation is founded, and
built up in love, and grace, and sweetness; and the management is
such as tends not to affright but to allure us to obedience. Christ
designed by his cures to win upon people, and to ingratiate himself
and his doctrine into their minds, and so to draw them with the
bands of love,
(3.) The mystery of them. Christ, by
curing bodily diseases, intended to show, that his great
errand into the world was to cure spiritual maladies. He is
the Sun of righteousness, that arises with this
healing under his wings. As the Converter of sinners, he is
the Physician of souls, and has taught us to call him so,