Among other glorious things God hath spoken of
himself this is one, I wound, and I heal,
1 These things have I spoken unto you, that ye should not be offended. 2 They shall put you out of the synagogues: yea, the time cometh, that whosoever killeth you will think that he doeth God service. 3 And these things will they do unto you, because they have not known the Father, nor me. 4 But these things have I told you, that when the time shall come, ye may remember that I told you of them. And these things I said not unto you at the beginning, because I was with you. 5 But now I go my way to him that sent me; and none of you asketh me, Whither goest thou? 6 But because I have said these things unto you, sorrow hath filled your heart.
Christ dealt faithfully with his disciples when he sent them forth on his errands, for he told them the worst of it, that they might sit down and count the cost. He had told them in the chapter before to expect the world's hatred; now here in these verses,
I. He gives them a reason why he alarmed
them thus with the expectation of trouble: These things have I
spoken unto you, that you should not be offended, or
scandalized,
II. He foretels particularly what they
should suffer (
1. The sword of ecclesiastical censure;
this is drawn against them by the Jews, for they were the only
pretenders to church-power. They shall cast you out of their
synagogues; aposynagogous poiesousin
hymas—they shall make you excommunicates. (1.)
"They shall cast you out of the particular synagogues you were
members of." At first, they scourged them in their synagogues as
contemners of the law (
2. The sword of civil power: "The time
cometh, the hour is come; now things are likely to be worse
with you than hitherto they have been; when you are expelled as
heretics, they will kill you, and think they do God service,
and others will think so too." (1.) You will find them really
cruel: They will kill you. Christ's sheep have been
accounted as sheep for the slaughter; the twelve apostles (we are
told) were all put to death, except John. Christ had said
(
III. He gives them the true reason of the
world's enmity and rage against them (
IV. He tells them why he gave them notice of this now, and why not sooner.
1. Why he told them of it now (
2. Why he did not tell them of it sooner: "I spoke not this to you from the beginning when you and I came to be first acquainted, because I was with you." (1.) While he was with them, he bore the shock of the world's malice, and stood in the front of the battle; against him the powers of darkness levelled all their force, not against small or great, but only against the king of Israel, and therefore he did not need to say so much to them of suffering, because it did not fall much to their share; but we do find that from the beginning he bade them prepare for sufferings; and therefore, (2.) It seems rather to be meant of the promise of another comforter. This he had said little of to them at the beginning, because he was himself with them to instruct, guide, and comfort them, and then they needed not the promise of the Spirit's extraordinary presence. The children of the bride-chamber would not have so much need of a comforter till the bridegroom should be taken away.
V. He expresses a very affectionate concern
for the present sadness of his disciples, upon occasion of what he
had said to them (
1. He had told them that he was about to leave them: Now I go my way. He was not driven away by force, but voluntarily departed; his life was not extorted from him, but deposited by him. He went to him that sent him, to give an account of his negotiation. Thus, when we depart out of this world, we go to him that sent us into it, which should make us all solicitous to live to good purposes, remembering we have a commission to execute, which must be returned at a certain day.
2. He had told them what hard times they
must suffer when he was gone, and that they must not expect such an
easy quiet life as they had had. Now, if these were the legacies he
had to leave to them, who had left all for him, they would
be tempted to think they had made a sorry bargain of it, and were,
for the present, in a consternation about it, in which their master
sympathizes with them, yet blames them, (1.) That they were
careless of the means of comfort, and did not stir up themselves to
seek it: None of you asks me, Whither goest thou? Peter had
started this question (
(2.) That they were too intent, and pored
too much, upon the occasions of their grief: Sorrow has filled
their hearts. Christ had said enough to fill them with joy
(
7 Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you. 8 And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: 9 Of sin, because they believe not on me; 10 Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more; 11 Of judgment, because the prince of this world is judged. 12 I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now. 13 Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak: and he will show you things to come. 14 He shall glorify me: for he shall receive of mine, and shall show it unto you. 15 All things that the Father hath are mine: therefore said I, that he shall take of mine, and shall show it unto you.
As it was usual with the Old Testament
prophets to comfort the church in its calamities with the promise
of the Messiah (
Three things we have here concerning the Comforter's coming:—
I. That Christ's departure was absolutely
necessary to the Comforter's coming,
1. In general, It was expedient for them that he should go away. This was strange doctrine, but if it was true it was comfortable enough, and showed them how absurd their sorrow was. It is expedient, not only for me, but for you also, that I go away; though they did not see it, and are loth to believe it, so it is. Note, (1.) Those things often seem grievous to us that are really expedient for us; and particularly our going away when we have finished our course. (2.) Our Lord Jesus is always for that which is most expedient for us, whether we think so or no. He deals not with us according to the folly of our own choice, but graciously over-rules it, and gives us the physic we are loth to take, because he knows it is good for us.
2. It was therefore expedient because it was in order to the sending of the Spirit. Now observe,
(1.) That Christ's going was in order to the Comforter's coming.
[1.] This is expressed negatively: If I
go not away, the Comforter will not come. And why not?
First, So it was settled in the divine counsels concerning
this affair, and the measure must not be altered; shall the
earth be forsaken for them? He that gives freely may recall one
gift before he bestows another, while we would fondly hold all.
Secondly, It is congruous enough that the ambassador
extraordinary should be recalled, before the envoy come, that is
constantly to reside. Thirdly, The sending of the Spirit was
to be the fruit of Christ's purchase, and that purchase was to be
made by his death, which was his going away. Fourthly, It
was to be an answer to his intercession within the veil. See
[2.] It is expressed positively: If I depart I will send him to you; as though he had said, "Trust me to provide effectually that you shall be no loser by my departure." The glorified Redeemer is not unmindful of his church on earth, nor will ever leave it without its necessary supports. Though he departs, he sends the Comforter, nay, he departs on purpose to send him. Thus still, though one generation of ministers and Christians depart, another is raised up in their room, for Christ will maintain his own cause.
(2.) That the presence of Christ's Spirit in his church is so much better, and more desirable, than his bodily presence, that it was really expedient for us that he should go away, to send the Comforter. His corporal presence could be put in one place at one time, but his Spirit is every where, in all places, at all times, wherever two or three are gathered in his name. Christ's bodily presence draws men's eyes, his Spirit draws their hearts; that was the letter which kills, his Spirit gives life.
II. That the coming of the Spirit
was absolutely necessary to the carrying on of Christ's interests
on earth (
1. See here what the office of the Spirit
is, and on what errand he is sent. (1.) To reprove. The
Spirit, by the word and conscience, is a reprover; ministers are
reprovers by office, and by them the Spirit reproves. (2.) To
convince. It is a law-term, and speaks the office of the
judge in summing up the evidence, and setting a matter that has
been long canvassed in a clear and true light. He shall
convince, that is, "He shall put to silence the adversaries
of Christ and his cause, by discovering and demonstrating the
falsehood and fallacy of that which they have maintained, and the
truth and certainty of that which they have opposed." Note,
Convincing work is the Spirit's work; he can do it effectually, and
none but he; man may open the cause, but it is the Spirit only that
can open the heart. The Spirit is called the Comforter
(
2. See who they are whom he is to reprove
and convince: The world, both Jew and Gentile. (1.) He shall
give the world the most powerful means of conviction, for the
apostles shall go into all the world, backed by the Spirit, to
preach the gospel, fully proved. (2.) He shall sufficiently provide
for the taking off and silencing of the objections and prejudices
of the world against the gospel. Many an infidel was convinced
of all and judged of all,
3. See what the Spirit shall convince the world of.
(1.) Of sin (
(2.) Of righteousness, because I go to
my Father, and you see me no more,
(3.) Of judgment, because the prince of
this world is judged,
III. That the coming of the Spirit would be of unspeakable advantage to the disciples themselves. The Spirit has work to do, not only on the enemies of Christ, to convince and humble them, but upon his servants and agents, to instruct and comfort them; and therefore it was expedient for them that he should go away.
1. He intimates to them the tender sense he
had of their present weakness (
2. He assures them of sufficient assistances, by the pouring out of the Spirit. They were now conscious to themselves of great dulness, and many mistakes; and what shall they do now their master is leaving them? "But when he, the Spirit of Truth, is come, you will be easy, and all will be well." Well indeed; for he shall undertake to guide the apostles, and glorify Christ.
(1.) To guide the apostles. He will take care,
[1.] That they do not miss their way: He
will guide you; as the camp of Israel was guided through the
wilderness by the pillar of cloud and fire. The Spirit
guided their tongues in speaking, and their pens in writing, to
secure them from mistakes. The Spirit is given us to be our guide
(
[2.] That they do not come short of their end: He will guide them into all truth, as the skilful pilot guides the ship into the port it is bound for. To be led into a truth is more than barely to know it; it is to be intimately and experimentally acquainted with it; to be piously and strongly affected with it; not only to have the notion of it in our heads, but the relish and savour and power of it in our hearts; it denotes a gradual discovery of truth shining more and more: "He shall lead you by those truths that are plain and easy to those that are more difficult." But how into all truth? The meaning is,
First, Into the whole truth relating to their embassy; whatever was needful or useful for them to know, in order to the due discharge of their office, they should be fully instructed in it; what truths they were to teach others the Spirit would teach them, would give them the understanding of, and enable them both to explain and to defend.
Secondly, Into nothing but the
truth. All that he shall guide you into shall be
truth (
(2.) The Spirit undertook to glorify
Christ,
16 A little while, and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while, and ye shall see me, because I go to the Father. 17 Then said some of his disciples among themselves, What is this that he saith unto us, A little while, and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while, and ye shall see me: and, Because I go to the Father? 18 They said therefore, What is this that he saith, A little while? we cannot tell what he saith. 19 Now Jesus knew that they were desirous to ask him, and said unto them, Do ye enquire among yourselves of that I said, A little while, and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while, and ye shall see me? 20 Verily, verily, I say unto you, That ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall rejoice: and ye shall be sorrowful, but your sorrow shall be turned into joy. 21 A woman when she is in travail hath sorrow, because her hour is come: but as soon as she is delivered of the child, she remembereth no more the anguish, for joy that a man is born into the world. 22 And ye now therefore have sorrow: but I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice, and your joy no man taketh from you.
Our Lord Jesus, for the comfort of his sorrowful disciples, here promises that he would visit them again.
I. Observe the intimation he gave them of
the comfort he designed them,
1. That they should now shortly lose the
sight of him: A little while, and you that have seen me so
long, and still desire to see me, shall not see me; and
therefore, if they had any good question to ask him, they must ask
quickly, for he was now taking his leave of them. Note, It is good
to consider how near to a period our seasons of grace are, that we
may be quickened to improve them while they are continued. Now our
eyes see our teachers, see the days of the Son of man; but,
perhaps, yet a little while, and we shall not see them. They
lost the sight of Christ, (1.) At his death, when he withdrew from
this world, and never after showed himself openly in it. The most
that death does to our Christian friends is to take them out of our
sight, not out of being, not out of bliss, but out of all relation
to us, only out of sight, and then not out of mind. (2.) At his
ascension, when he withdrew from them (from those who, after his
resurrection, had for some time conversed with him), out of
their sight; a cloud received him, and, though they looked up
steadfastly after him, they saw him no more,
2. That yet they should speedily recover
the sight of him; Again a little while, and you shall see
me, and therefore you ought not to sorrow as those that have
no hope. His farewell was not a final farewell; they should see
him again, (1.) At his resurrection, soon after his death, when
he showed himself alive, by many infallible proofs, and this
in a very little while, not forty hours. See
3. He assigns the reason: "Because I go to the Father; and therefore," (1.) "I must leave you for a time, because my business calls me to the upper world, and you must be content to spare me, for really my business is yours." (2.) "Therefore you shall see me again shortly, for the Father will not detain me to your prejudice. If I go upon your errand, you shall see me again as soon as my business is done, as soon as is convenient."
It should seem, all this refers rather to
his going away at death, and return at his resurrection, than his
going away at the ascension, and his return at the end of time; for
it was his death that was their grief, not his ascension (
II. The perplexity of the disciples upon
the intimation given them; they were at a loss what to make of it
(
III. The further explication of what Christ had said.
1. See here why Christ explained it
(
2. See here how he explained it; not
by a nice and critical descant upon the words, but by bringing the
thing more closely to them; he had told them of not seeing him,
and seeing him, and they did not apprehend the meaning, and
therefore he explains it by their sorrowing and rejoicing, because
we commonly measure things according as they affect us (
(1.) What Christ says here, and in
[1.] Their grief foretold: You shall
weep and lament, and you shall be sorrowful. The sufferings of
Christ could not but be the sorrow of his disciples. They wept for
him because they loved him; the pain of our friend is a pain to
ourselves; when they slept, it was for sorrow,
[2.] The world's rejoicing at the same
time: But the world shall rejoice. That which is the grief
of saints is the joy of sinners. First, Those that are
strangers to Christ will continue in their carnal mirth, and
not at all interest themselves in their sorrows. It is nothing
to them that pass by,
[3.] The return of joy to them in due time:
But your sorrow shall be turned into joy. As the joy of
the hypocrite, so the sorrow of the true Christian, is but
for a moment. The disciples were glad when they saw the Lord.
His resurrection was life from the dead to them, and their
sorrow for Christ's sufferings was turned into a joy of such a
nature as could not be damped and embittered by any sufferings of
their own. They were sorrowful, and yet always rejoicing
(
(2.) It is applicable to all the faithful followers of the Lamb, and describes the common case of Christians.
[1.] Their condition and disposition are both mournful; sorrows are their lot, and seriousness is their temper: those that are acquainted with Christ must, as he was, be acquainted with grief; they weep and lament for that which others make light of, their own sins, and the sins of those about them; they mourn with sufferers that mourn, and mourn for sinners that mourn not for themselves.
[2.] The world, at the same time, goes away with all the mirth; they laugh now, and spend their days so jovially that one would think they neither knew sorrow nor feared it. Carnal mirth and pleasures are surely none of the best things, for then the worst men would not have so large a share of them, and the favourites of heaven be such strangers to them.
[3.] Spiritual mourning will shortly be turned into eternal rejoicing. Gladness is sown for the upright in heart, that sow tears, and without doubt they will shortly reap in joy. Their sorrow will not only be followed with joy, but turned into it; for the most precious comforts take rise from pious griefs. Thus he illustrates by a similitude taken from a woman in travail, to whose sorrows he compares those of his disciples, for their encouragement; for it is the will of Christ that his people should be a comforted people.
First, Here is the similitude or
parable itself (
a. The fruit of the curse, in the
sorrow and pain of a woman in travail, according to the sentence
(
b. The fruit of the blessing, in
the joy there is for a child born into the world. If God had
not preserved the blessing in force after the fall, Be fruitful
and multiply, parents could never have looked upon their
children with any comfort; but what is the fruit of a blessing is
matter of joy; the birth of a living child is, (a.) The
parents' joy; it makes them very glad,
Secondly, The application of the
similitude (
a. Here again he tells them of their sorrow: "You now therefore have sorrow; therefore, because I am leaving you," as is intimated in the antithesis, I will see you again. Note, Christ's withdrawings are just cause of grief to his disciples. If he hide his face, they cannot be troubled. When the sun sets, the sun-flower will hang the head. And Christ takes notice of these griefs, has a bottle for the tears, and a book for the sighs, of all gracious mourners.
b. He, more largely than before,
assures them of a return of joy,
23 And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. 24 Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full. 25 These things have I spoken unto you in proverbs: but the time cometh, when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs, but I shall show you plainly of the Father. 26 At that day ye shall ask in my name: and I say not unto you, that I will pray the Father for you: 27 For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God.
An answer to their askings is here promised, for their further comfort. Now there are two ways of asking: asking by way of enquiry, which is the asking of the ignorant; and asking by way of request, which is the asking of the indigent. Christ here speaks of both.
I. By way of enquiry, they should not need
to ask (
Now for this he gives a reason (
1. The great thing Christ would lead them into was the knowledge of God: "I will show you the Father, and bring you acquainted with him." This is that which Christ designs to give and which all true Christians desire to have. When Christ would express the greatest favour intended for his disciples, he tells them that it would, show them plainly of the Father; for what is the happiness of heaven, but immediately and everlastingly to see God? To know God as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is the greatest mystery for the understanding to please itself with the contemplation of; and to know him as our Father is the greatest happiness for the will and affections to please themselves with the choice and enjoyment of.
2. Of this he had hitherto spoken to them
in proverbs, which are wise and instructive sayings, but
figurative, and resting in generals. Christ had spoken many things
very plainly to them, and expounded his parables privately to the
disciples, but, (1.) Considering their dulness, and unaptness to
receive what he said to them, he might be said to speak in
proverbs; what he said to them was as a book sealed,
3. He would speak to them plainly,
parresia—with freedom, of the Father. When
the Spirit was poured out, the apostles attained to a much greater
knowledge of divine things than they had before, as appears by the
utterance the Spirit gave them,
II. He promises that by way of request they should ask nothing in vain. it is taken for granted that all Christ's disciples give themselves to prayer. He has taught them by his precept and pattern to be much in prayer; this must be their support and comfort when he had left them; their instruction, direction, strength, and success, must be fetched in by prayer. Now,
1. Here is an express promise of a grant,
2. Here is an invitation for them to
petition. It is thought sufficient if great men permit addresses,
but Christ calls upon us to petition,
(1.) He looks back upon their practice hitherto: Hitherto have you asked nothing in my name. This refers either [1.] To the matter of their prayers: "You have asked nothing comparatively, nothing to what you might have asked, and will ask when the Spirit is poured out." See what a generous benefactor our Lord Jesus is, above all benefactors; he gives liberally, and is so far from upbraiding us with the frequency and largeness of his gifts that he rather upbraids us with the seldomness and straitness of our requests: "You have asked nothing in comparison of what you want, and what I have to give, and have promised to give." We are told to open our mouth wide. Or, [2.] To the name in which they prayed. They prayed many a prayer, but never so expressly in the name of Christ as now he was directing them to do; for he had not as yet offered up that great sacrifice in the virtue of which our prayers were to be accepted, nor entered upon his intercession for us, the incense whereof was to perfume all our devotions, and so enable us to pray in his name. Hitherto they had cast out devils, and healed diseases, in the name of Christ, as a king and a prophet, but they could not as yet distinctly pray in his name as a priest.
(2.) He looks forward to their practice for
the future: Ask and you shall receive, that your joy may be
full. Here, [1.] He directs them to ask for all that they
needed and he had promised. [2.] He assures them that they shall
receive. What we ask from a principle of grace God will
graciously give: You shall receive it. There is something
more in this than the promise that he will give it. He will not
only give it, but give you to receive it, give you the comfort and
benefit of it, a heart to eat of it,
3. Here are the grounds upon which they
might hope to speed (
(1.) We have an advocate; as to this, Christ saw cause at present not to insist upon it, only to make the following encouragement shine the brighter: "I say not unto you that I will pray the Father for you. Suppose I should not tell you that I will intercede for you, should not undertake to solicit every particular cause you have depending there, yet it may be a general ground of comfort that I have settled a correspondence between you and God, have erected a throne of grace, and consecrated for you a new and living way into the holiest." He speaks as if they needed not any favours, when he had prevailed for the gift of the Holy Ghost to make intercession within them, as Spirit of adoption, crying Abba, Father; as if they had no further need of him to pray for them now, but we shall find that he does more for us than he says he will. Men's performances often come short of their promises, but Christ's go beyond them.
(2.) We have to do with a Father, which is
so great an encouragement that it does in a manner supersede the
other: "For the Father himself loveth you, philei
hymas, he is a friend to you, and you cannot be better
befriended." Note, The disciples of Christ are the beloved of God
himself. Christ not only turned away God's wrath from us, and
brought us into a covenant of peace and reconciliation, but
purchased his favour for us, and brought us into a covenant of
friendship. Observe what an emphasis is laid upon this "The
Father himself loveth you, who is perfectly happy in the
enjoyment of himself, whose self-love is both his infinite
rectitude and his infinite blessedness; yet he is pleased to love
you." The Father himself, whose favour you have forfeited, and
whose wrath you have incurred, and with whom you need an advocate,
he himself now loves you. Observe, [1.] Why the Father loved the
disciples of Christ: Because you have loved me, and have
believed that I am come from God, that is, because you are my
disciples indeed: not as if the love began on their side, but when
by his grace he has wrought in us a love to him he is well pleased
with the work of his own hands. See here, First, What is the
character of Christ's disciples; they love him, because they
believe he came out from God, is the only-begotten of the
Father, and his high-commissioner to the world. Note, Faith in
Christ works by love to him,
28 I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world: again, I leave the world, and go to the Father. 29 His disciples said unto him, Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no proverb. 30 Now are we sure that thou knowest all things, and needest not that any man should ask thee: by this we believe that thou camest forth from God. 31 Jesus answered them, Do ye now believe? 32 Behold, the hour cometh, yea, is now come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave me alone: and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with me. 33 These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.
Two things Christ here comforts his disciples with:—
I. With an assurance that, though he was
leaving the world, he was returning to his Father, from whom he
came forth
1. A plain declaration of Christ's mission
from the Father, and his return to him (
(1.) These two great truths are here, [1.]
Contracted, and put into a few words. Brief summaries of Christian
doctrine are of great use to young beginners. The principles of the
oracles of God brought into a little compass in creeds and
catechisms have, like the beams of the sun contracted in a burning
glass, conveyed divine light and heat with a wonderful power. Such
we have,
(2.) If we ask concerning the Redeemer whence he came, and whither he went, we are told, [1.] That he came from the Father, who sanctified and sealed him; and he came into this world, this lower world, this world of mankind, among whom by his incarnation he was pleased to incorporate himself. Here his business lay, and hither he came to attend it. He left his home for this strange country; his palace for this cottage; wonderful condescension! [2.] That, when he had done his work on earth, he left the world, and went back to his Father at his ascension. He was not forced away, but made it his own act and deed to leave the world, to return to it no more till he comes to put an end to it; yet still he is spiritually present with his church, and will be to the end.
2. The disciples' satisfaction in this
declaration (
(1.) In knowledge: Lo, now speakest thou
plainly. When they were in the dark concerning what he said,
they did not say, Lo, now speakest thou obscurely, as
blaming him; but now that they apprehend his meaning they give him
glory for condescending to their capacity: Lo, now speakest thou
plainly. Divine truths are most likely to do good when they are
spoken plainly,
(2.) In faith: Now are we sure. Observe,
[1.] What was the matter of their faith:
We believe that thou camest forth from God. He had said
(
[2.] What was the motive of their
faith—his omniscience. This proved him a teacher come from God,
and more than a prophet, that he knew all things, which they were
convinced of by this that he resolved those doubts which were hid
in their hearts, and answered the scruples they had not confessed.
Note, Those know Christ best that know him by experience, that can
say of his power, It works in me; of his love, He loved me. And
this proves Christ not only to have a divine mission, but to be a
divine person, that he is a discerner of the thoughts and intents
of the heart, therefore the essential, eternal Word,
These words, and needest not that any
man should ask thee, may bespeak either, First, Christ's
aptness to teach. He prevents us with his instructions, and is
communicative of the treasures of wisdom and knowledge that
are hid in him, and needs not to be importuned. Or,
Secondly, His ability to teach: "Thou needest not, as other
teachers, to have the learners' doubts told thee, for thou knowest,
without being told, what they stumble at." The best of teachers can
only answer what is spoken, but Christ can answer what is thought,
what we are afraid to ask, as the disciples were,
3. The gentle rebuke Christ gave the
disciples for their confidence that they now understood him,
(1.) A question, designed to put them upon consideration: Do you now believe? [1.] "If now, why not sooner? Have you not heard the same things many a time before?" Those who after many instructions and invitations are at last persuaded to believe have reason to be ashamed that they stood it out so long. [2.] "If now, why not ever? When an hour of temptation comes, where will your faith be then?" As far as there is inconstancy in our faith there is cause to question the sincerity of it, and to ask, "Do we indeed believe?"
(2.) A prediction of their fall, that, how
confident soever they were now of their own stability, in a little
time they would all desert him, which was fulfilled that very
night, when, upon his being seized by a party of the guards, all
his disciples forsook him and fled,
(3.) An assurance of his own comfort
notwithstanding: Yet I am not alone. He would not be thought
to complain of their deserting him, as if it were any real damage
to him; for in their absence he should be sure of his Father's
presence, which was instar omnium—every thing: The Father is
with me. We may consider this, [1.] As a privilege peculiar to
the Lord Jesus; the Father was so with him in his sufferings as he
never was with any, for still he was in the bosom of the
Father. The divine nature did not desert the human nature, but
supported it, and put an invincible comfort and an inestimable
value into his sufferings. The Father had engaged to be with him in
his whole undertaking (
II. He comforts them with a promise of
peace in him, by virtue of his victory over the world, whatever
troubles they might meet with in it (
1. The end Christ aimed at in preaching
this farewell sermon to his disciples: That in him they might
have peace. He did not hereby intend to give them a full view
of that doctrine which they were shortly to be made masters of by
the pouring out of the Spirit, but only to satisfy them for the
present that his departure from them was really for the best. Or,
we may take it more generally: Christ had said all this to them
that by enjoying him they might have the best enjoyment of
themselves. Note, (1.) It is the will of Christ that his disciples
should have peace within, whatever their troubles may be without.
(2.) Peace in Christ is the only true peace, and in him alone
believers have it, for this man shall be the peace,
2. The entertainment they were likely to meet with in the world: "You shall not have outward peace, never expect it." Though they were sent to proclaim peace on earth, and good-will towards men, they must expect trouble on earth, and ill-will from men. Note, It has been the lot of Christ's disciples to have more or less tribulation in this world. Men persecute them because they are so good, and God corrects them because they are no better. Men design to cut them off from the earth, and God designs by affliction to make them meet for heaven; and so between both they shall have tribulation.
3. The encouragement Christ gives them with
reference hereto: But be of good cheer,
tharseite. "Not only be of good comfort, but be of
good courage; have a good heart on it, all shall be well." Note, In
the midst of the tribulations of this world it is the duty and
interest of Christ's disciples to be of good cheer, to keep up
their delight in God whatever is pressing, and their hope in God
whatever is threatening; as sorrowful indeed, in compliance with
the temper of the climate, and yet always rejoicing, always
cheerful (
4. The ground of that encouragement: I
have overcome the world. Christ's victory is a Christian
triumph. Christ overcame the prince of this world, disarmed him,
and cast him out; and still treads Satan under our feet. He
overcame the children of this world, by the conversion of many to
the faith and obedience of his gospel, making them the children of
his kingdom. When he sends his disciples to preach the gospel to
all the world, "Be of good cheer," says he, "I have
overcome the world as far as I have gone, and so shall you;
though you have tribulation in the world, yet you shall gain your
point, and captivate the world,"