1280 lines
89 KiB
XML
1280 lines
89 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Luke.xii" n="xii" next="Luke.xiii" prev="Luke.xi" progress="55.96%" title="Chapter XI">
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<h2 id="Luke.xii-p0.1">L U K E.</h2>
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<h3 id="Luke.xii-p0.2">CHAP. XI.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Luke.xii-p1">In this chapter, I. Christ teaches his disciples
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to pray, and quickens and encourages them to be frequent, instant,
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and importunate in prayer, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.1-Luke.11.13" parsed="|Luke|11|1|11|13" passage="Lu 11:1-13">ver.
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1-13</scripRef>. II. He fully answers the blasphemous imputation of
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the Pharisees, who charged him with casting out devils by virtue of
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a compact and confederacy with Beelzebub, the prince of the devils,
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and shows the absurdity and wickedness of it, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.14-Luke.11.26" parsed="|Luke|11|14|11|26" passage="Lu 11:14-26">ver. 14-26</scripRef>. III. He shows the honour of
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obedient disciples to be greater than that of his own mother,
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<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.27-Luke.11.28" parsed="|Luke|11|27|11|28" passage="Lu 11:27,28">ver. 27, 28</scripRef>. IV. He
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upbraids the men of that generation for their infidelity and
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obstinacy, notwithstanding all the means of conviction offered to
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them, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.29-Luke.11.36" parsed="|Luke|11|29|11|36" passage="Lu 11:29-36">ver. 29-36</scripRef>. V. He
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severely reproves the Pharisees and consciences of those that
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submitted to them, and their hating and persecuting those that
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witnessed against their wickedness, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.37-Luke.11.54" parsed="|Luke|11|37|11|54" passage="Lu 11:37-54">ver. 37-54</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Luke.xii-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11" parsed="|Luke|11|0|0|0" passage="Lu 11" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Luke.xii-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.1-Luke.11.13" parsed="|Luke|11|1|11|13" passage="Lu 11:1-13" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.11.1-Luke.11.13">
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<h4 id="Luke.xii-p1.8">The Disciples Taught to
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Pray.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Luke.xii-p2">1 And it came to pass, that, as he was praying
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in a certain place, when he ceased, one of his disciples said unto
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him, Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his disciples.
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2 And he said unto them, When ye pray, say, Our Father which
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art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be
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done, as in heaven, so in earth. 3 Give us day by day our
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daily bread. 4 And forgive us our sins; for we also forgive
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every one that is indebted to us. And lead us not into temptation;
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but deliver us from evil. 5 And he said unto them, Which of
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you shall have a friend, and shall go unto him at midnight, and say
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unto him, Friend, lend me three loaves; 6 For a friend of
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mine in his journey is come to me, and I have nothing to set before
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him? 7 And he from within shall answer and say, Trouble me
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not: the door is now shut, and my children are with me in bed; I
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cannot rise and give thee. 8 I say unto you, Though he will
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not rise and give him, because he is his friend, yet because of his
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importunity he will rise and give him as many as he needeth.
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9 And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye
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shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. 10 For
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every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and
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to him that knocketh it shall be opened. 11 If a son shall
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ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give him a stone?
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or if <i>he ask</i> a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?
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12 Or if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion?
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13 If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto
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your children: how much more shall <i>your</i> heavenly Father give
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the Holy Spirit to them that ask him?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p3">Prayer is one of the great laws of natural
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religion. That man is a brute, is a monster, that never prays, that
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never gives glory to his Maker, nor feels his favour, nor owns his
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dependence upon him. One great design therefore of Christianity is
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to <i>assist us in prayer,</i> to enforce the duty upon us, to
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instruct us in it, and encourage us to expect advantage by it. Now
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here,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p4">I. We find Christ himself <i>praying in a
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certain place,</i> probably where he used to pray, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.1" parsed="|Luke|11|1|0|0" passage="Lu 11:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>. As God, he was <i>prayed
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to;</i> as man, he <i>prayed;</i> and, though he was a Son, yet
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learned he this obedience. This evangelist has taken particular
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notice of Christ's <i>praying often,</i> more than any other of the
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evangelists: when he was baptized (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.3.21" parsed="|Luke|3|21|0|0" passage="Lu 3:21"><i>ch.</i> iii. 21</scripRef>), he was <i>praying;</i> he
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<i>withdrew into the wilderness, and prayed</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.5.16" parsed="|Luke|5|16|0|0" passage="Lu 5:16"><i>ch.</i> v. 16</scripRef>); he <i>went out into a
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mountain to pray, and continued all night in prayer</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p4.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.6.12" parsed="|Luke|6|12|0|0" passage="Lu 6:12"><i>ch.</i> vi. 12</scripRef>); he was <i>alone
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praying</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p4.5" osisRef="Bible:Luke.9.18" parsed="|Luke|9|18|0|0" passage="Lu 9:18"><i>ch.</i> ix.
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18</scripRef>); soon after, he <i>went up into a mountain to
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pray,</i> and <i>as he prayed he was transfigured</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p4.6" osisRef="Bible:Luke.9.28-Luke.9.29" parsed="|Luke|9|28|9|29" passage="Lu 9:28,29"><i>ch.</i> ix. 28, 29</scripRef>); and here he
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was <i>praying in a certain place.</i> Thus, like a genuine son of
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David, he <i>gave himself unto prayer,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p4.7" osisRef="Bible:Ps.109.4" parsed="|Ps|109|4|0|0" passage="Ps 109:4">Ps. cix. 4</scripRef>. Whether Christ was now
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<i>alone</i> praying, and the disciples only knew that he was so,
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or whether he prayed with them, is uncertain; it is most probable
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that they were joining with him.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p5">II. His disciples applied themselves to him
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for direction in prayer. When he was praying, they asked, <i>Lord,
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teach us to pray.</i> Note, The gifts and graces of others should
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excite us to covet earnestly the same. Their zeal should provoke us
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to a holy imitation and emulation; why should not we do as well as
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they? Observe, They came to him with this request, <i>when he
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ceased;</i> for they would not disturb him when he was at prayer,
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no, not with this good motion. Every thing is beautiful in its
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season. <i>One of his disciples,</i> in the name of the rest, and
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perhaps by their appointment, said, <i>Lord, teach us.</i> Note,
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Though Christ is <i>apt to teach,</i> yet he will for this be
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enquired of, and his disciples must attend him for instruction.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p6">Now, 1. Their request is, "<i>Lord, teach
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us to pray;</i> give us a rule or model by which to go in praying,
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and put words into our mouths." Note, It becomes the disciples of
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Christ to apply themselves to him for instruction in prayer.
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<i>Lord, teach us to pray,</i> is itself a good prayer, and a very
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needful one, for it is a hard thing to <i>pray well</i> and it is
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Jesus Christ only that can <i>teach us,</i> by his word and Spirit,
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<i>how to pray.</i> "Lord, teach me what it is to pray; Lord,
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excite and quicken me to the duty; Lord, direct me what to pray
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for; Lord, give me praying graces, that I may serve God acceptably
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in prayer; Lord, teach me to pray in proper words; give me a mouth
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and wisdom in prayer, that I may speak as I ought; <i>teach me what
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I shall say.</i>"</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p7">2. Their plea is, "<i>As John also taught
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his disciples.</i> He took care to instruct his disciples in this
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necessary duty, and we would be taught as they were, for we have a
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better Master than they had." Dr. Lightfoot's notion of this is,
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That whereas the Jews' prayers were generally adorations, and
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praises of God, and doxologies, John taught his disciples such
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prayers as were more filled up with petitions and requests; for it
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is said of them that they did <b><i>deeseis
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poiountai</i></b>—<i>make prayers,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.5.33" parsed="|Luke|5|33|0|0" passage="Lu 5:33"><i>ch.</i> v. 33</scripRef>. The word signifies such
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prayers as are properly petitionary. "Now, Lord, teach us this, to
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be added to those benedictions of the name of God which we have
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been accustomed to from our childhood." According to this sense,
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Christ did there teach them a prayer consisting wholly of
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petitions, and even omitting the doxology which had been affixed;
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and the <i>Amen,</i> which was usually said in the <i>giving of
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thanks</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.14.16" parsed="|1Cor|14|16|0|0" passage="1Co 14:16">1 Cor. xiv.
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16</scripRef>), and in the Psalms, is added to doxologies only.
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This disciple needed not to have urged John Baptist's example:
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Christ was more ready to teach than ever John Baptist was, and
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particularly taught to pray better than John did, or could, teach
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his disciples.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p8">III. Christ gave them direction, much the
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same as he had given them before in his sermon upon the mount,
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<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.6.9" parsed="|Matt|6|9|0|0" passage="Mt 6:9">Matt. vi. 9</scripRef>, &c. We
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cannot think that they had forgotten it, but they ought to have had
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further and fuller instructions, and he did not, as yet, think fit
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to give them any; when the Spirit should be poured out upon them
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from on high, they would find all their requests couched in these
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few words, and would be able, in words of their own, to expatiate
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and enlarge upon them. In Matthew he had directed them to pray
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<i>after this manner;</i> here, <i>When ye pray, say;</i> which
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intimates that the Lord's prayer was intended to be used both as a
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form of prayer and a directory.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p9">1. There are some differences between the
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Lord's prayer in Matthew and Luke, by which it appears that it was
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not the design of Christ that we should be <i>tied up</i> to these
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very words, for then there would have been no variation. Here is
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one difference in the translation only, which ought not to have
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been, when there is none in the original, and that is in the third
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petition: <i>As in heaven, so in earth;</i> whereas the words are
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the very same, and in the same order, as in Matthew. But there is a
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difference in the fourth petition. In Matthew we pray, "Give us
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daily bread <i>this</i> day:" here, "Give it us <i>day by
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day</i>"—<b><i>kath hemeran</i></b>. <i>Day by day;</i> that is,
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"Give us <i>each day</i> the bread which our bodies require, as
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they call for it:" not, "Give us <i>this day</i> bread for many
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days to come;" but as the Israelites had manna, "Let us have bread
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<i>to-day</i> for <i>to-day,</i> and to-<i>morrow</i> for
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to-<i>morrow;</i>" for thus we may be kept in a <i>continual
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dependence</i> upon God, as children upon their parents, and may
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have our mercies fresh from his hand daily, and may find ourselves
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under <i>fresh</i> obligations to do the work of every day in the
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day, according as the <i>duty of the day requires,</i> because we
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have from God the supplies of every day in the day, according as
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the <i>necessity of the day requires.</i> Here is likewise some
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difference in the fifth petition. In Matthew it is, <i>Forgive us
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our debts,</i> as we forgive: here it is, <i>Forgive us our
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sins;</i> which proves that our sins are our debts. <i>For we
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forgive;</i> not that our forgiving those that have offended us can
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<i>merit</i> pardon from God, or be an inducement to him to forgive
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us (he forgives for his own name's sake, and his Son's sake); but
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this is a very necessary qualification for forgiveness, and, if God
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have wrought it in us, we may plead that work of his grace for the
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enforcing of our petitions for the pardon of our sins: "Lord,
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forgive us, for thou hast thyself inclined us to forgive others."
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There is another addition here; we plead not only in general, We
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forgive <i>our debtors,</i> but in particular, "We profess <i>to
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forgive every one that is indebted to us,</i> without exception. We
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so <i>forgive our debtors</i> as not to bear malice or ill-will to
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any, but true love to all, without any exception whatsoever." Here
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also the doxology in the close is wholly omitted, and the
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<i>Amen;</i> for Christ would leave them at liberty to use that or
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any other doxology fetched out of David's psalms; or, rather, he
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left a vacuum here, to be filled up by a doxology more peculiar to
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the Christian institutes, ascribing glory to <i>Father, Son, and
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Holy Ghost.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p10">2. Yet it is, for substance, the same; and
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we shall therefore here only gather up some general lessons from
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it.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p11">(1.) That in prayer we ought to come to God
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as children to <i>a Father,</i> a common Father to us and <i>all
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mankind,</i> but in a peculiar manner a Father to all the disciples
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of Jesus Christ. Let us therefore in our requests both for others
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and for ourselves, come to him with a humble boldness, confiding in
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his power and goodness.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p12">(2.) That at the same time, and in the same
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petitions, which we address to God for <i>ourselves,</i> we should
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take in with us <i>all the children of men,</i> as God's creatures
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and our fellow-creatures. A rooted principle of <i>catholic
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charity,</i> and of <i>Christian sanctified humanity,</i> should go
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along with us, and dictate to us throughout this prayer, which is
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so worded as to be accommodated to that noble principle.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p13">(3.) That in order to the confirming of the
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habit of heavenly-mindedness in us, which ought to actuate and
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govern us in the whole course of our conversation, we should, in
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all our devotions, with an eye of faith look <i>heavenward,</i> and
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view the God we pray to as our Father <i>in heaven,</i> that we may
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make the <i>upper world</i> more familiar to us, and may ourselves
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become better prepared for the future state.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p14">(4.) That in prayer, as well as in the
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tenour of our lives, we must <i>seek first the kingdom of God and
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the righteousness thereof,</i> by ascribing honour to his name, his
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<i>holy</i> name, and power to his government, both that of his
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providence in the world and that of his grace in the church. O that
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both the one and the other may be more manifested, and we and
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others more manifestly brought into subjection to both!</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p15">(5.) That the <i>principles</i> and
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<i>practices</i> of the <i>upper</i> world, the <i>unseen</i> world
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(which therefore by <i>faith</i> only we are <i>apprized of</i>),
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are the <i>great original—the</i> <b><i>archetypon</i></b>, to
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which we should desire that the principles and practices of this
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<i>lower</i> world, both in others and in ourselves, may be more
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conformable. Those words, <i>As in heaven, so on earth,</i> refer
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to all the first three petitions: "Father, let <i>thy name be
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sanctified</i> and <i>glorified,</i> and thy kingdom prevail, and
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thy will be done on this earth that is now alienated from thy
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service, as it is in yonder heaven that is entirely devoted to thy
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service."</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p16">(6.) That those who faithfully and
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sincerely mind the kingdom of God, and the righteousness thereof,
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may humbly hope that <i>all other things,</i> as far as to Infinite
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Wisdom seems good, <i>shall be added to them,</i> and they may in
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faith pray for them. If our first chief desire and care be that
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God's name may be sanctified, his kingdom come, and his will be
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done, we may then come boldly to the throne of grace for our
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<i>daily bread,</i> which will <i>then</i> be sanctified to us when
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we are sanctified to God, and God is sanctified by us.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p17">(7.) That in our prayers for temporal
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blessings we must <i>moderate</i> our desires, and confine them to
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a <i>competency.</i> The expression here used of <i>day by day</i>
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is the very same with our <i>daily bread;</i> and therefore some
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think that we must look for another signification of the word
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<b><i>epiousios</i></b> than that of <i>daily,</i> which we give
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it, and that it means our <i>necessary</i> bread, that bread that
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is <i>suited</i> to the craving of our nature, the fruit that is
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brought out of the earth for our bodies that are made of the earth
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and are earthly, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.104.14" parsed="|Ps|104|14|0|0" passage="Ps 104:14">Ps. civ.
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14</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p18">(8.) That sins are debts which we are daily
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contracting, and which therefore we should every day pray for the
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forgiveness of. We are not only going behind with our rent every
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day by <i>omissions</i> of duty and in duty, but are daily
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incurring the penalty of the law, as well as the forfeiture of our
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bond, by our <i>commissions.</i> Every day adds to the score of our
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guilt, and it is a miracle of mercy that we have so much
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encouragement given us to come every day to the throne of grace, to
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pray for the pardon of our sins of daily infirmity. God
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<i>multiplies to pardon</i> beyond seventy times seven.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p19">(9.) That we have no reason to expect, nor
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can with any confidence pray, that God would forgive our sins
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against him, if we do not <i>sincerely,</i> and from a truly
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Christian principle of <i>charity,</i> forgive those that have at
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any time affronted us or been injurious to us. Though the <i>words
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of our mouth</i> be even <i>this</i> prayer to God, if the
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meditation of our heart at the same time be, as often it is, malice
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and revenge to our brethren, we are not accepted, nor can we expect
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an answer of peace.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p20">(10.) That temptations to sin should be as
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much dreaded and deprecated by us as ruin by sin; and it should be
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as much our care and prayer to get the power of sin broken in us as
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to get the guilt of sin removed from us; and though temptation may
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be a charming, fawning, flattering thing, we must be as earnest
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with God that we may not be led into it as that we may not be led
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by that to sin, and by sin to ruin.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p21">(11.) That God is to be depended upon, and
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sought unto, for our deliverance <i>from all evil;</i> and we
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should pray, not only that we may not be left to ourselves to run
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into evil, but that we may not be left to Satan to bring evil upon
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us. Dr. Lightfoot understands it of being delivered <i>from the
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evil one,</i> that is, the devil, and suggests that we should pray
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particularly against the apparitions of the devil and his
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possessions. The disciples were employed to <i>cast out devils,</i>
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and therefore were concerned to pray that they might be guarded
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against the particular spite he would always be sure to have
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against them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p22">IV. He stirs up and encourages importunity,
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fervency, and constancy, in prayer, by showing,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p23">1. That importunity will go far in our
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dealings with men, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.5-Luke.11.8" parsed="|Luke|11|5|11|8" passage="Lu 11:5-8"><i>v.</i>
|
||
5-8</scripRef>. Suppose a man, upon a sudden emergency, goes to
|
||
borrow a loaf or two of bread of a neighbour, at an unseasonable
|
||
time of night, not for himself, but for his friend that came
|
||
unexpectedly to him. His neighbour will be loth to accommodate him,
|
||
for he has wakened him with his knocking, and put him out of
|
||
humour, and he has a great deal to say in his excuse. The door is
|
||
shut and locked, his children are asleep in bed, in the same room
|
||
with him, and, if he make a noise, he shall disturb them. His
|
||
servants are asleep, and he cannot make them hear; and, for his own
|
||
part, he shall catch cold if he rise to give him. But his neighbour
|
||
will have no nay, and therefore he continues <i>knocking</i> still,
|
||
and tells him he will do so till he has what he comes for; so that
|
||
he must give it to him, to be rid of him: <i>He will rise, and give
|
||
him as many as he needs, because of his importunity.</i> He speaks
|
||
this parable with the same intent that he speaks that in <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18.1" parsed="|Luke|18|1|0|0" passage="Lu 18:1"><i>ch.</i> xviii. 1</scripRef>: <i>That men ought
|
||
always to pray, and not to faint.</i> Not that God can be wrought
|
||
upon by importunity; we cannot be troublesome to him, nor by being
|
||
so change his counsels. We prevail with men by importunity because
|
||
they are <i>displeased</i> with it, but with God because he is
|
||
<i>pleased</i> with it. Now this similitude may be of use to
|
||
us,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p24">(1.) To <i>direct</i> us in prayer. [1.] We
|
||
must come to God with <i>boldness</i> and <i>confidence</i> for
|
||
what we need, as a man does to the house of his neighbour or
|
||
friend, who, he knows, loves him, and is inclined to be kind to
|
||
him. [2.] We must come for <i>bread,</i> for that which is
|
||
<i>needful,</i> and which we cannot be without. [3.] We must come
|
||
to him by prayer <i>for others</i> as well as <i>for ourselves.</i>
|
||
This man did not come for bread for himself, but for his friend.
|
||
The Lord <i>accepted Job,</i> when he prayed for his friends,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.42.10" parsed="|Job|42|10|0|0" passage="Job 42:10">Job xlii. 10</scripRef>. We cannot
|
||
come to God upon a more pleasing errand than when we come to him
|
||
for grace to enable us to do good, to <i>feed many</i> with <i>our
|
||
lips,</i> to entertain and edify those that come to us. [4.] We may
|
||
come with the more boldness to God in a strait, if it be a strait
|
||
that we have not brought ourselves into by our own folly and
|
||
carelessness, but Providence has led us into it. This man would not
|
||
have wanted bread if his friend had not come in
|
||
<i>unexpectedly.</i> The care which Providence casts upon us, we
|
||
may with cheerfulness cast back upon Providence. [5.] We ought to
|
||
<i>continue instant</i> in prayer, and watch in the same with all
|
||
perseverance.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p25">(2.) To <i>encourage</i> us in prayer. If
|
||
importunity could prevail thus with <i>a man</i> who was angry at
|
||
it, much more with a God who is infinitely more kind and ready to
|
||
do good <i>to us</i> than we are <i>to one another,</i> and is not
|
||
angry at our importunity, but accepts it, especially when it is for
|
||
spiritual mercies that we are importunate. If he do not answer our
|
||
prayers presently, yet he will in due time, if we continue to
|
||
pray.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p26">2. That God has promised to give us what we
|
||
ask of him. We have not only the goodness of nature to take comfort
|
||
from, but the word which he has spoken (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.9-Luke.11.10" parsed="|Luke|11|9|11|10" passage="Lu 11:9,10"><i>v.</i> 9, 10</scripRef>): "<i>Ask, and it shall be
|
||
given you;</i> either the thing itself you shall ask or that which
|
||
is equivalent; either the thorn in the flesh removed, or grace
|
||
sufficient given in."—We had this before, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.7.7-Matt.7.8" parsed="|Matt|7|7|7|8" passage="Mt 7:7,8">Matt. vii. 7, 8</scripRef>. <i>I say unto you.</i> We
|
||
have it from Christ's own mouth, who knows his Father's mind, and
|
||
in whom all promises are yea and amen. We must not only <i>ask,</i>
|
||
but we must <i>seek,</i> in the use of means, must second our
|
||
prayers with our endeavours; and, in <i>asking</i> and
|
||
<i>seeking,</i> we must continue <i>pressing,</i> still knocking at
|
||
the same door, and we shall at length prevail, not only by our
|
||
prayers in concert, but by our particular prayers: <i>Every one
|
||
that asketh receiveth,</i> even the meanest saint that asks in
|
||
faith. <i>This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.34.6" parsed="|Ps|34|6|0|0" passage="Ps 34:6">Ps. xxxiv. 6</scripRef>. When we ask of
|
||
God those things which Christ has here directed us to ask, that his
|
||
name may be sanctified, that his kingdom may come, and his will be
|
||
done, in these requests we must be importunate, must <i>never hold
|
||
our peace day or night;</i> we must not <i>keep silence,</i> nor
|
||
<i>give God any rest, until he establish, until he make Jerusalem a
|
||
praise in the earth,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p26.4" osisRef="Bible:Isa.62.6-Isa.62.7" parsed="|Isa|62|6|62|7" passage="Isa 62:6,7">Isa. lxii.
|
||
6, 7</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p27">V. He gives us both instruction and
|
||
encouragement in prayer from the consideration of our relation to
|
||
God as a Father. Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p28">1. An <i>appeal</i> to the <i>bowels</i> of
|
||
<i>earthly fathers:</i> "Let any of you that <i>is a father,</i>
|
||
and knows the heart of a father, a father's affection to a child
|
||
and care for a child, tell me, if his son <i>ask bread</i> for his
|
||
breakfast, <i>will he give him a stone</i> to breakfast on? <i>If
|
||
he ask a fish</i> for his dinner (when it may be a fish-day),
|
||
<i>will he for a fish give him a serpent,</i> that will poison and
|
||
sting him? Or, <i>if he shall ask an egg</i> for his supper (an egg
|
||
and to bed), <i>will he offer him a scorpion?</i> You know you
|
||
could not be so unnatural to your own children," <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.11-Luke.11.12" parsed="|Luke|11|11|11|12" passage="Lu 11:11,12"><i>v.</i> 11, 12</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p29">2. An <i>application</i> of this to the
|
||
<i>blessings</i> of our <i>heavenly Father</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.13" parsed="|Luke|11|13|0|0" passage="Lu 11:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>): <i>If ye then, being evil,</i>
|
||
give, and know how to <i>give, good gifts to your children, much
|
||
more shall God give you the Spirit.</i> He shall give <i>good
|
||
things;</i> so it is in Matthew. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p30">(1.) The direction he gives us what to
|
||
<i>pray for.</i> We must ask for the <i>Holy Spirit,</i> not only a
|
||
necessary in order to our <i>praying well,</i> but as inclusive of
|
||
all the good things we are to pray for; we need no more to make us
|
||
happy, for the Spirit is the worker of spiritual life, and the
|
||
earnest of eternal life. Note, The gift of the Holy Ghost is a gift
|
||
we are every one of us concerned earnestly and constantly to pray
|
||
for.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p31">(2.) The <i>encouragement</i> he gives us
|
||
to hope that we shall speed in this prayer: <i>Your heavenly Father
|
||
will give.</i> It is <i>in his power</i> to give the Spirit; he has
|
||
all good things to bestow, wrapped up in that one; but that is not
|
||
all, it is <i>in his promise,</i> the gift of <i>the Holy Ghost</i>
|
||
is in the covenant, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2.33 Bible:Acts.2.38" parsed="|Acts|2|33|0|0;|Acts|2|38|0|0" passage="Ac 2:33,38">Acts ii. 33,
|
||
38</scripRef>, and it is here inferred from parents' readiness to
|
||
<i>supply</i> their children's <i>needs,</i> and <i>gratify</i>
|
||
their <i>desires,</i> when they are natural and proper. If the
|
||
child ask for a <i>serpent,</i> or a <i>scorpion,</i> the father,
|
||
in kindness, will deny him, but not if he ask for what is
|
||
<i>needful,</i> and will be <i>nourishing.</i> When God's children
|
||
ask for the Spirit, they do, in effect, ask for <i>bread;</i> for
|
||
the Spirit is the staff of life; nay, he is the Author of the
|
||
soul's life. If our earthly parents, though <i>evil,</i> be yet so
|
||
kind, if they, though <i>weak,</i> be yet so <i>knowing,</i> that
|
||
they not only give, but give with discretion, give what is best, in
|
||
the best manner and time, much more will our <i>heavenly
|
||
Father,</i> who infinitely excels the fathers of our flesh both in
|
||
wisdom and goodness, give us his <i>Holy Spirit.</i> If earthly
|
||
parents be willing to lay out for the education of their children,
|
||
to whom they design to leave their estates, much more will our
|
||
heavenly Father give the spirit of sons to all those whom he has
|
||
predestinated to the inheritance of sons.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.xii-p31.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.14-Luke.11.26" parsed="|Luke|11|14|11|26" passage="Lu 11:14-26" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.11.14-Luke.11.26">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.xii-p31.3">Christ Accused of Leaguing with Satan;
|
||
Watchfulness Inculcated.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.xii-p32">14 And he was casting out a devil, and it was
|
||
dumb. And it came to pass, when the devil was gone out, the dumb
|
||
spake; and the people wondered. 15 But some of them said, He
|
||
casteth out devils through Beelzebub the chief of the devils.
|
||
16 And others, tempting <i>him,</i> sought of him a sign
|
||
from heaven. 17 But he, knowing their thoughts, said unto
|
||
them, Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to
|
||
desolation; and a house <i>divided</i> against a house falleth.
|
||
18 If Satan also be divided against himself, how shall his
|
||
kingdom stand? because ye say that I cast out devils through
|
||
Beelzebub. 19 And if I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom
|
||
do your sons cast <i>them</i> out? therefore shall they be your
|
||
judges. 20 But if I with the finger of God cast out devils,
|
||
no doubt the kingdom of God is come upon you. 21 When a
|
||
strong man armed keepeth his palace, his goods are in peace:
|
||
22 But when a stronger than he shall come upon him, and overcome
|
||
him, he taketh from him all his armour wherein he trusted, and
|
||
divideth his spoils. 23 He that is not with me is against
|
||
me: and he that gathereth not with me scattereth. 24 When
|
||
the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry
|
||
places, seeking rest; and finding none, he saith, I will return
|
||
unto my house whence I came out. 25 And when he cometh, he
|
||
findeth <i>it</i> swept and garnished. 26 Then goeth he, and
|
||
taketh <i>to him</i> seven other spirits more wicked than himself;
|
||
and they enter in, and dwell there: and the last <i>state</i> of
|
||
that man is worse than the first.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p33">The substance of these verses we had in
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.22" parsed="|Matt|12|22|0|0" passage="Mt 12:22">Matt. xii. 22</scripRef>, &c.
|
||
Christ is here giving a general proof of his divine mission, by a
|
||
particular proof of his power over Satan, his conquest of whom was
|
||
an indication of his great design in coming into the world, which
|
||
was, to <i>destroy the works of the devil.</i> Here too he gives an
|
||
earnest of the success of that undertaking. He is here casting out
|
||
<i>a devil</i> that made the poor possessed man <i>dumb:</i> in
|
||
Matthew we are told that he was <i>blind</i> and <i>dumb.</i> When
|
||
the devil was forced out by the word of Christ, the <i>dumb</i>
|
||
spoke immediately, echoed to Christ's word, and the lips were
|
||
opened to show forth his praise. Now,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p34">I. Some were <i>affected</i> with this
|
||
miracle. The people <i>wondered;</i> they admired the power of God,
|
||
and especially that it should be exerted by the hand of one who
|
||
made so small a figure, that one who did the work of the Messiah
|
||
should have so little of that pomp of the Messiah which they
|
||
expected.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p35">II. Others were <i>offended</i> at it, and,
|
||
to justify their infidelity, suggested that it was by virtue of a
|
||
league with Beelzebub, the prince of the devils, that he did this,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p35.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.15" parsed="|Luke|11|15|0|0" passage="Lu 11:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>. It seems, in
|
||
the devil's kingdom there are chiefs, which supposes that there are
|
||
subalterns. Now they would have it <i>thought,</i> or <i>said</i>
|
||
at least, that there was a correspondence settled between Christ
|
||
and the devil, that the devil should have the advantage in the main
|
||
and be victorious at last, but that in order hereto, in particular
|
||
instances, he should yield Christ the advantage and retire by
|
||
consent. Some, to <i>corroborate</i> this suggestion, and
|
||
<i>confront</i> the evidence of Christ's miraculous power,
|
||
challenged him to <i>give them a sign from heaven</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p35.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.16" parsed="|Luke|11|16|0|0" passage="Lu 11:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>), to confirm his
|
||
doctrine by some appearance in the <i>clouds,</i> such as was upon
|
||
mount Sinai when the law was given; as if a <i>sign from
|
||
heaven,</i> not disprovable by any sagacity of theirs, could not
|
||
have been given them as well by a compact and collusion with <i>the
|
||
prince of the power of the air, who works with power and lying
|
||
wonders,</i> as the <i>casting out of a devil;</i> nay, that would
|
||
not have been any present prejudice to his interest, which this
|
||
manifestly was. Note, Obstinate infidelity will never be at a loss
|
||
for something to say in its own excuse, though ever so frivolous
|
||
and absurd. Now Christ here returns a full and direct answer to
|
||
this cavil of theirs; in which he shows,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p36">1. That it can by no means be imagined that
|
||
such a subtle prince as Satan is should ever agree to measures that
|
||
had such a direct tendency to his own overthrow, and the
|
||
undermining of his own kingdom, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.17-Luke.11.18" parsed="|Luke|11|17|11|18" passage="Lu 11:17,18"><i>v.</i> 17, 18</scripRef>. What they objected they
|
||
kept to themselves, afraid to speak it, lest it should be answered
|
||
and baffled; but Jesus <i>knew their thoughts,</i> even when they
|
||
industriously thought to conceal them, and he said, "You yourselves
|
||
cannot but see the groundlessness, and consequently the
|
||
spitefulness, of this charge; for it is an allowed maxim, confirmed
|
||
by every day's experience, that no interest can stand that is
|
||
divided against itself; not the more <i>public</i> interest of a
|
||
<i>kingdom,</i> nor the <i>private</i> interest of a house or
|
||
family; if either the one or the other be <i>divided against
|
||
itself,</i> it cannot stand. Satan would herein act against
|
||
himself; not only by the miracle which turned him out of possession
|
||
of the bodies of people, but much more in the doctrine for the
|
||
explication and confirmation of which the miracle was wrought,
|
||
which had a direct tendency to the ruin of Satan's interest in the
|
||
minds of men, by mortifying sin, and turning men to the service of
|
||
God. Now, if Satan should thus be <i>divided against himself,</i>
|
||
he would hasten his own overthrow, which you cannot suppose an
|
||
enemy to do that acts so subtlely for his own establishment, and is
|
||
so solicitous to have his kingdom stand."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p37">2. That was a very partial ill-natured
|
||
thing for them to impute that in him to a compact with Satan which
|
||
yet they applauded and admired in others that were of their own
|
||
nation (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.19" parsed="|Luke|11|19|0|0" passage="Lu 11:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>):
|
||
"<i>By whom do your sons cast them out?</i> Some of your own
|
||
<i>kindred,</i> as Jews, nay, and some of your own
|
||
<i>followers,</i> as Pharisees, have undertaken, in the name of the
|
||
God of Israel, to cast out devils, and they were never charged with
|
||
such a hellish combination as I am charged with." Note, It is gross
|
||
hypocrisy to <i>condemn</i> that in those who <i>reprove</i> us
|
||
which yet we <i>allow</i> in those that <i>flatter</i> us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p38">3. That, in opposing the conviction of this
|
||
miracle, they were enemies to themselves, stood in their own light,
|
||
and put a bar in their own door, for they thrust from them the
|
||
kingdom of God (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.2" parsed="|Luke|11|2|0|0" passage="Lu 11:2"><i>v.</i>
|
||
20</scripRef>): "<i>If I with the finger of God cast out
|
||
devils,</i> as you may assure yourselves I do, <i>no doubt the
|
||
kingdom of God is come upon you,</i> the kingdom of the Messiah
|
||
offers itself and all its advantages to you, and, if you receive it
|
||
not, it is at your peril." In Matthew it is <i>by the Spirit of
|
||
God,</i> here <i>by the finger of God;</i> the Spirit is the <i>arm
|
||
of the Lord,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p38.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.53.1" parsed="|Isa|53|1|0|0" passage="Isa 53:1">Isa. liii.
|
||
1</scripRef>. His greatest and most mighty works were wrought by
|
||
<i>his Spirit;</i> but, if the Spirit in this work is said to be
|
||
the <i>finger of the Lord,</i> it perhaps may intimate how
|
||
<i>easily</i> Christ did and could conquer Satan, even with the
|
||
<i>finger of God,</i> the exerting of the divine power in a less
|
||
and lower degree than in many other instances. He needed not make
|
||
bare his <i>everlasting arm;</i> that roaring lion, when <i>he</i>
|
||
pleases, is crushed, like a moth, with a touch of <i>a finger.</i>
|
||
Perhaps here is an allusion to the acknowledgment of Pharaoh's
|
||
magicians, when they were run aground (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p38.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.8.19" parsed="|Exod|8|19|0|0" passage="Ex 8:19">Exod. viii. 19</scripRef>): This is <i>the finger of
|
||
God.</i> "Now if the <i>kingdom of God</i> be herein <i>come to
|
||
you,</i> and you be found by those cavils and blasphemies fighting
|
||
against it, it will come <i>upon you</i> as a victorious force
|
||
which you cannot stand before."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p39">4. That his casting out devils was really
|
||
the destroying of them and their power, for it confirmed a doctrine
|
||
which had a direct tendency to the ruining of his kingdom,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p39.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.21-Luke.11.22" parsed="|Luke|11|21|11|22" passage="Lu 11:21,22"><i>v.</i> 21, 22</scripRef>.
|
||
Perhaps there had been some who had cast out the inferior devils by
|
||
compact with Beelzebub their chief, but that was without any real
|
||
damage or prejudice to Satan and his kingdom, what he lost one way
|
||
he gained another. The devil and such exorcists <i>played
|
||
booty,</i> as we say, and, while the forlorn hope of his army
|
||
<i>gave ground,</i> the main body thereby <i>gained ground;</i> the
|
||
interest of Satan in the souls of men was not weakened by it in the
|
||
least. But, when Christ cast out devils, he needed not do it by any
|
||
compact with them, for he was <i>stronger than they,</i> and could
|
||
do it <i>by force,</i> and did it so as to ruin Satan's power and
|
||
blast his great design by that doctrine and that grace which break
|
||
the power of sin, and so rout Satan's main body, take from him
|
||
<i>all his armour,</i> and <i>divide his spoils,</i> which no one
|
||
devil ever did to another or ever will. Now this is applicable to
|
||
Christ's victories over Satan both in the world and in the hearts
|
||
of particular persons, by that power which went along with the
|
||
preaching of his gospel, and does still. And so we may observe
|
||
here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p40">(1.) The miserable condition of an
|
||
unconverted sinner. In his heart, which was fitted to be a
|
||
habitation of God, the devil has his palace; and all the powers and
|
||
the faculties of the soul, being employed by him in the service of
|
||
sin, are <i>his goods.</i> Note, [1.] The heart of every
|
||
unconverted sinner is the <i>devil's palace,</i> where he
|
||
<i>resides</i> and where he <i>rules;</i> he <i>works</i> in the
|
||
<i>children of disobedience.</i> The heart is a <i>palace,</i> a
|
||
noble dwelling; but the unsanctified heart is the <i>devil's
|
||
palace.</i> His will is obeyed, his interests are served, and the
|
||
militia is in his hands; he <i>usurps</i> the throne in the soul.
|
||
[2.] The devil, as a <i>strong man armed, keeps</i> this palace,
|
||
does all he can to secure it to himself, and to fortify it against
|
||
Christ. All the prejudices with which he hardens men's hearts
|
||
against truth and holiness are the <i>strong-holds</i> which he
|
||
erects for the <i>keeping of his palace;</i> this palace is his
|
||
<i>garrison.</i> [3.] There is a kind of <i>peace</i> in the palace
|
||
of an unconverted soul, while the devil, as a <i>strong man
|
||
armed,</i> keeps it. The sinner has a good opinion of himself, is
|
||
very secure and merry, has no doubt concerning the goodness of his
|
||
state nor any dread of the judgment to come; he flatters himself in
|
||
his own eyes, and cries peace to himself. Before Christ appeared,
|
||
all was quiet, because all <i>went one way;</i> but the preaching
|
||
of the gospel disturbed the peace of the devil's palace.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p41">(2.) The wonderful change that is made in
|
||
conversion, which is Christ's victory over this usurper.
|
||
<i>Satan</i> is a <i>strong man armed;</i> but our Lord Jesus is
|
||
<i>stronger than he,</i> as God, as Mediator. <i>If we speak of
|
||
strength, he is strong:</i> more are <i>with</i> us than <i>against
|
||
us.</i> Observe, [1.] The manner of this victory: <i>He comes upon
|
||
him</i> by surprise, when his <i>goods are in peace</i> and the
|
||
devil thinks it is all <i>his own</i> for ever, and
|
||
<i>overcomes</i> him. Note, The conversion of a soul to God is
|
||
Christ's victory over the devil and his power in that soul,
|
||
restoring the soul to its liberty, and recovering his own interest
|
||
in it and dominion over it. [2.] The evidences of this victory.
|
||
<i>First,</i> He <i>takes from him all his armour wherein he
|
||
trusted.</i> The devil is a <i>confident</i> adversary; he
|
||
<i>trusts</i> to his <i>armour,</i> as Pharaoh to his rivers
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p41.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.29.3" parsed="|Ezek|29|3|0|0" passage="Eze 29:3">Ezek. xxix. 3</scripRef>): but Christ
|
||
disarms him. When the power of sin and corruption in the soul is
|
||
broken, when the mistakes are rectified, the eyes opened, the heart
|
||
humbled and changed, and made serious and spiritual, then Satan's
|
||
<i>armour</i> is <i>taken away. Secondly,</i> He <i>divides the
|
||
spoils;</i> he <i>takes possession</i> of them for himself. All the
|
||
endowments of mind and body, the estate, power, interest, which
|
||
before were made use of in the service of sin and Satan, are now
|
||
converted to Christ's service and employed for him; yet this is not
|
||
all; he <i>makes a distribution</i> of them among his followers,
|
||
and, and having conquered Satan, gives to all believers the benefit
|
||
of that victory. Hence Christ infers that, since the whole drift of
|
||
his doctrine and miracles was to break the power of the devil, that
|
||
great enemy of mankind, it was the duty of all to join with him and
|
||
to follow his guidance, to receive his gospel and come heartily
|
||
into the interests of it; for otherwise they would justly be
|
||
reckoned as siding with the enemy (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p41.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.23" parsed="|Luke|11|23|0|0" passage="Lu 11:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>): <i>He that is not with me is
|
||
against me.</i> Those therefore who rejected the doctrine of
|
||
Christ, and slighted his miracles, were looked upon as adversaries
|
||
to him, and in the devil's interest.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p42">5. That there was a vast difference between
|
||
the devil's <i>going out</i> by compact and his being <i>cast
|
||
out</i> by compulsion. Those out of whom Christ <i>cast him</i> he
|
||
never entered into again, for so was Christ's charge (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Mark.9.25" parsed="|Mark|9|25|0|0" passage="Mk 9:25">Mark ix. 25</scripRef>); whereas, if he had
|
||
<i>gone out,</i> whenever he saw fit he would have made a re-entry,
|
||
for that is the way of the unclean spirit, when he voluntarily and
|
||
with design <i>goes out of a man,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p42.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.24-Luke.11.26" parsed="|Luke|11|24|11|26" passage="Lu 11:24-26"><i>v.</i> 24-26</scripRef>. The prince of the devils
|
||
may <i>give leave,</i> nay, may <i>give order,</i> to his forces to
|
||
retreat, or make a feint, to draw the poor deluded soul into an
|
||
<i>ambush;</i> but Christ, as he gives a <i>total,</i> so he gives
|
||
a <i>final,</i> defeat to the enemy. In this part of the argument
|
||
he has a further intention, which is to represent the state of
|
||
those who have had fair offers made them,—among whom, and in whom,
|
||
God has begun to break the devil's power and overthrow his
|
||
kingdom,—but they reject his counsel against themselves, and
|
||
relapse into a state of subjection to Satan. Here we have,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p43">(1.) The condition of a <i>formal
|
||
hypocrite,</i> his <i>bright side</i> and his <i>dark side.</i> His
|
||
heart still remains the <i>devil's house;</i> he calls it his own,
|
||
and he retains his interest in it; and yet, [1.] The <i>unclean
|
||
spirit is gone out.</i> He was not <i>driven out</i> by the power
|
||
of converting grace; there was none of that <i>violence</i> which
|
||
the kingdom of heaven suffers; but he <i>went out,</i> withdrew for
|
||
a time, so that the man seemed not to be under the power of Satan
|
||
as formerly, nor so followed with his temptations. Satan is
|
||
<i>gone,</i> or has <i>turned himself into an angel of light.</i>
|
||
[2.] The <i>house is swept</i> from common pollutions, by a forced
|
||
confession of sin, as Pharaoh's—a feigned contrition for it, as
|
||
Ahab's,—and a partial reformation, as Herod's. There are those
|
||
that have <i>escaped the pollutions of the world,</i> and yet are
|
||
still under the power of the <i>god of this world,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p43.1" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.2.20" parsed="|2Pet|2|20|0|0" passage="2Pe 2:20">2 Pet. ii. 20</scripRef>. The house is
|
||
<i>swept,</i> but it is not <i>washed;</i> and Christ hath said,
|
||
<i>If I wash thee not, thou hast no part with me;</i> the house
|
||
must be <i>washed,</i> or it is <i>none of his.</i> Sweeping takes
|
||
off only the loose dirt, while the sin that <i>besets</i> the
|
||
sinner, the beloved sin, is untouched. It is swept from the filth
|
||
that lies open to the eye of the world, but it is not searched and
|
||
ransacked for secret filthiness, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p43.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.25" parsed="|Matt|23|25|0|0" passage="Mt 23:25">Matt.
|
||
xxiii. 25</scripRef>. It is <i>swept,</i> but the <i>leprosy is in
|
||
the wall,</i> and will be till something more be done. [3.] The
|
||
house is <i>garnished</i> with common gifts and graces. It is not
|
||
<i>furnished</i> with any true grace, but <i>garnished</i> with the
|
||
pictures of all graces. Simon Magus was <i>garnished</i> with
|
||
faith, Balaam with good desires, Herod with a respect for John, the
|
||
Pharisees with many external performances. It is garnished, but it
|
||
is like a <i>potsherd covered with silver dross,</i> it is all
|
||
paint and varnish, not real, not lasting. The house is
|
||
<i>garnished,</i> but the property is not altered; it was never
|
||
surrendered to Christ, nor inhabited by the Spirit. Let us
|
||
therefore take heed of resting in that which a man may have and yet
|
||
come short.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p44">(2.) Here is the condition of a <i>final
|
||
apostate,</i> into whom the devil returns after he had <i>gone out:
|
||
Then goes he, and takes seven other spirits more wicked than
|
||
himself</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.26" parsed="|Luke|11|26|0|0" passage="Lu 11:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>);
|
||
a certain number for an uncertain, as <i>seven devils</i> are said
|
||
to be cast out of Mary Magdalene. <i>Seven wicked spirits</i> are
|
||
opposed to the <i>seven spirits of God,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p44.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.1" parsed="|Rev|3|1|0|0" passage="Re 3:1">Rev. iii. 1</scripRef>. These are said to be more wicked
|
||
than himself. It seems, even devils are not all alike wicked;
|
||
probably, the degrees of their wickedness, now that they are
|
||
<i>fallen,</i> are as the degrees of their holiness were while they
|
||
stood. When the devil would do mischief most effectually, he
|
||
employs those that are more mischievous than himself. These
|
||
<i>enter in</i> without any difficulty or opposition; they are
|
||
welcomed, and they <i>dwell there;</i> there they <i>work,</i>
|
||
there they <i>rule;</i> and the <i>last state of that man is worse
|
||
than the first.</i> Note, [1.] Hypocrisy is the high road to
|
||
apostasy. If the heart remains in the interest of sin and Satan,
|
||
the shows and shadows will <i>come to nothing;</i> those that have
|
||
not set that right will not long be stedfast. Where secret haunts
|
||
of sin are kept up, under the cloak of a visible profession,
|
||
conscience is debauched, God is provoked to withdraw his
|
||
restraining grace, and the <i>close</i> hypocrite commonly proves
|
||
an <i>open</i> apostate, [2.] The last state of such is <i>worse
|
||
than the first,</i> in respect both of sin and punishment.
|
||
Apostates are usually the worst of men, the most vain and
|
||
profligate, the most bold and daring; their consciences are seared,
|
||
and their sins of all others the most aggravated. God often sets
|
||
marks of his displeasure upon them in <i>this</i> world, and in the
|
||
other world they will <i>receive the greater damnation.</i> Let us
|
||
therefore hear, and fear, and hold fast our integrity.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.xii-p44.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.27-Luke.11.28" parsed="|Luke|11|27|11|28" passage="Lu 11:27-28" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.11.27-Luke.11.28">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.xii-p44.4">Praise and a Blessing.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.xii-p45">27 And it came to pass, as he spake these
|
||
things, a certain woman of the company lifted up her voice, and
|
||
said unto him, Blessed <i>is</i> the womb that bare thee, and the
|
||
paps which thou hast sucked. 28 But he said, Yea rather,
|
||
blessed <i>are</i> they that hear the word of God, and keep it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p46">We had not this passage in the other
|
||
evangelists, nor can we tack it, as Dr. Hammond does, to that of
|
||
Christ's mother and brethren desiring to speak with him (for this
|
||
evangelist also has related that in <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.8.19" parsed="|Luke|8|19|0|0" passage="Lu 8:19"><i>ch.</i> viii. 19</scripRef>), but it contains an
|
||
interruption much like that, and, like that, occasion is taken from
|
||
it for instruction.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p47">1. The applause which an affectionate,
|
||
honest, well-meaning woman gave to our Lord Jesus, upon hearing his
|
||
excellent discourses. While the scribes and Pharisees despised and
|
||
blasphemed them, this good woman (and probably she was a person of
|
||
some quality) admired them, and the wisdom and power with which he
|
||
spoke: <i>As he spoke these things</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.27" parsed="|Luke|11|27|0|0" passage="Lu 11:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>), with a convincing force and
|
||
evidence, a <i>certain woman of the company</i> was so pleased to
|
||
hear how he had confounded the Pharisees, and conquered them, and
|
||
put them to shame, and cleared himself from their vile
|
||
insinuations, that she could not forbear crying out, "<i>Blessed is
|
||
the womb that bore thee.</i> What an admirable, what an excellent
|
||
man is this! Surely never was there a greater or better born of a
|
||
woman: happy the woman that has him for her son. I should have
|
||
thought myself very happy to have been the mother of one that
|
||
<i>speaks as never man spoke,</i> that has so much of the grace of
|
||
heaven in him, and is so great a blessing to this earth." This was
|
||
<i>well said,</i> as it expressed her high esteem of Christ, and
|
||
that for the sake of his doctrine; and it was not amiss that it
|
||
reflected honour upon the virgin Mary his mother, for it agreed
|
||
with what she herself had said (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.1.48" parsed="|Luke|1|48|0|0" passage="Lu 1:48"><i>ch.</i> i. 48</scripRef>), <i>All generations shall
|
||
call me blessed;</i> some even of this generation, bad as it was.
|
||
Note, To all that believe the word of Christ the person of Christ
|
||
is precious, and he is <i>an honour,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p47.3" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.7" parsed="|1Pet|2|7|0|0" passage="1Pe 2:7">1 Pet. ii. 7</scripRef>. Yet we must be careful, lest, as
|
||
this good woman, we too much magnify the honour of his natural
|
||
kindred, and so <i>know him after the flesh,</i> whereas we must
|
||
now henceforth <i>know him so no more.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p48">2. The occasion which Christ took from this
|
||
to pronounce <i>them</i> more happy who are his faithful and
|
||
obedient followers than she was who bore and nursed him. He does
|
||
not deny what this woman said, nor refuse her respect to him and
|
||
his mother; but leads her from this to that which was of higher
|
||
consideration, and which more concerned her: <i>Yea, rather,
|
||
blessed are they that hear the word of God, and keep it,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p48.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.28" parsed="|Luke|11|28|0|0" passage="Lu 11:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>. He thinks
|
||
them so; and his saying that they are so makes them so, and should
|
||
make us of his mind. This is intended partly as a <i>check</i> to
|
||
her, for doting so much upon his bodily presence and his human
|
||
nature, partly as an <i>encouragement</i> to her to hope that she
|
||
might be as happy as his own mother, whose happiness she was ready
|
||
to envy, if she would <i>hear the word of God and keep it.</i>
|
||
Note, Though it is a great privilege to hear the word of God, yet
|
||
those only are truly blessed, that is, blessed of the Lord, that
|
||
hear it and <i>keep</i> it, that keep it in memory, and keep to it
|
||
as their way and rule.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.xii-p48.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.29-Luke.11.36" parsed="|Luke|11|29|11|36" passage="Lu 11:29-36" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.11.29-Luke.11.36">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.xii-p48.3">The Sign of the Prophet
|
||
Jonah.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.xii-p49">29 And when the people were gathered thick
|
||
together, he began to say, This is an evil generation: they seek a
|
||
sign; and there shall no sign be given it, but the sign of Jonas
|
||
the prophet. 30 For as Jonas was a sign unto the Ninevites,
|
||
so shall also the Son of man be to this generation. 31 The
|
||
queen of the south shall rise up in the judgment with the men of
|
||
this generation, and condemn them: for she came from the utmost
|
||
parts of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon; and, behold, a
|
||
greater than Solomon <i>is</i> here. 32 The men of Nineve
|
||
shall rise up in the judgment with this generation, and shall
|
||
condemn it: for they repented at the preaching of Jonas; and,
|
||
behold, a greater than Jonas <i>is</i> here. 33 No man, when
|
||
he hath lighted a candle, putteth <i>it</i> in a secret place,
|
||
neither under a bushel, but on a candlestick, that they which come
|
||
in may see the light. 34 The light of the body is the eye:
|
||
therefore when thine eye is single, thy whole body also is full of
|
||
light; but when <i>thine eye</i> is evil, thy body also <i>is</i>
|
||
full of darkness. 35 Take heed therefore that the light
|
||
which is in thee be not darkness. 36 If thy whole body
|
||
therefore <i>be</i> full of light, having no part dark, the whole
|
||
shall be full of light, as when the bright shining of a candle doth
|
||
give thee light.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p50">Christ's discourse in these verses shows
|
||
two things:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p51">I. What is the <i>sign</i> we may
|
||
<i>expect</i> from God for the <i>confirmation</i> of our
|
||
<i>faith.</i> The great and most convincing proof of Christ's being
|
||
sent of God, and which they were yet to wait for, after the many
|
||
signs that had been given them, was the resurrection of Christ from
|
||
the dead. Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p52">1. A reproof to the people for demanding
|
||
other signs than what had already been given them in great plenty:
|
||
<i>The people were gathered thickly together</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p52.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.29" parsed="|Luke|11|29|0|0" passage="Lu 11:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>), a vast crowd of them,
|
||
expecting not so much to have their consciences informed by the
|
||
doctrine of Christ as to have their curiosity gratified by his
|
||
miracles. Christ knew what brought such a multitude together; they
|
||
came <i>seeking a sign,</i> they came to gaze, to have something to
|
||
talk of when they went home; and it is an <i>evil generation</i>
|
||
which nothing will awaken and convince, no, not the most sensible
|
||
demonstrations of divine power and goodness.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p53">2. A promise that yet there should be
|
||
<i>one sign</i> more given them, different from any that had yet
|
||
been given them, even the <i>sign of Jonas the prophet,</i> which
|
||
in Matthew is explained as meaning the <i>resurrection of
|
||
Christ.</i> As Jonas being cast into the sea, and lying there three
|
||
days, and then coming up alive and preaching repentance to the
|
||
Ninevites, was a sign to them, upon which they turned from their
|
||
evil way, so shall the death and resurrection of Christ, and the
|
||
preaching of his gospel immediately after to the Gentile world, be
|
||
the last warning to the Jewish nation. If they be provoked to a
|
||
<i>holy jealousy</i> by this, well and good; but, if this do not
|
||
work upon them, let them look for nothing but utter ruin: <i>The
|
||
Son of Man shall be a sign to this generation</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.30" parsed="|Luke|11|30|0|0" passage="Lu 11:30"><i>v.</i> 30</scripRef>), a sign speaking to
|
||
them, though a sign spoken against by them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p54">3. A warning to them to improve this sign;
|
||
for it was at their peril if they did not. (1.) The <i>queen of
|
||
Sheba</i> would <i>rise up in judgment against them,</i> and
|
||
condemn <i>their unbelief,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.31" parsed="|Luke|11|31|0|0" passage="Lu 11:31"><i>v.</i> 31</scripRef>. She was a stranger to the
|
||
commonwealth of Israel, and yet so readily gave credit to the
|
||
report she heard of the glories of a king of Israel, that,
|
||
notwithstanding the prejudices we are apt to conceive against
|
||
foreigners, she came from the uttermost parts of the earth to
|
||
<i>hear his wisdom,</i> not only to satisfy her curiosity, but to
|
||
inform her mind, especially in the knowledge of the true God and
|
||
his worship, which is upon record, to her honour; and, behold, a
|
||
<i>greater than Solomon in here,</i> <b><i>pleion
|
||
Solomontos</i></b>—<i>more than a Solomon is here;</i> that is,
|
||
says Dr. Hammond, more of wisdom and more heavenly divine doctrine
|
||
than ever was in all Solomon's words or writings; and yet these
|
||
wretched Jews will give no manner of regard to what Christ says to
|
||
them, though he be in the midst of them. (2.) The Ninevites would
|
||
rise up in judgment against them, and condemn their impenitency
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p54.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.32" parsed="|Luke|11|32|0|0" passage="Lu 11:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>): They
|
||
<i>repented at the preaching of Jonas;</i> but here is preaching
|
||
which far exceeds that of Jonas, is more powerful and awakening,
|
||
and threatens a much sorer ruin than that of Nineveh, and yet none
|
||
are startled by it, to turn <i>from their evil way,</i> as the
|
||
Ninevites did.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p55">II. What is the <i>sign</i> that God
|
||
<i>expects</i> from us for the <i>evidencing</i> of our faith, and
|
||
that is the serious practice of that religion which we profess to
|
||
believe, and a readiness to entertain all divine truths, when
|
||
brought to us in their proper evidence. Now observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p56">1. They had <i>the light</i> with all the
|
||
advantage they could desire. For God, having <i>lighted the
|
||
candle</i> of the gospel, did not put it in a <i>secret place,</i>
|
||
or <i>under a bushel;</i> Christ did not preach in corners. The
|
||
apostles were ordered to preach the gospel to every creature; and
|
||
both Christ and his ministers, Wisdom and her maidens, cry in the
|
||
<i>chief places of concourse,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.33" parsed="|Luke|11|33|0|0" passage="Lu 11:33"><i>v.</i> 33</scripRef>. It is a great privilege that
|
||
the light of the gospel is put on a <i>candlestick,</i> so that all
|
||
that come in may <i>see it,</i> and may <i>see by it</i> where they
|
||
are and whither they are going, and what is the true, and sure, and
|
||
only way to happiness.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p57">2. Having the <i>light,</i> their concern
|
||
was to have the <i>sight,</i> or else to what purpose had they the
|
||
light? Be the <i>object</i> ever so <i>clear,</i> if the
|
||
<i>organ</i> be not <i>right,</i> we are never the better: <i>The
|
||
light of the body is the eye</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p57.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.34" parsed="|Luke|11|34|0|0" passage="Lu 11:34"><i>v.</i> 34</scripRef>), which receives the light of
|
||
the candle when it is brought into the room. So the light of the
|
||
soul is the understanding and judgment, and its power of discerning
|
||
between good and evil, truth and falsehood. Now, according as this
|
||
is, so the light of divine revelation is to us, and our benefit by
|
||
it; it is a savour of life unto life, or of death unto death. (1.)
|
||
If this eye of the soul be <i>single,</i> if it see <i>clear,</i>
|
||
see things as they are, and judge impartially concerning them, if
|
||
it aim at <i>truth</i> only, and seek it for its own sake, and have
|
||
not any sinister by—looks and intentions, the <i>whole body,</i>
|
||
that is, the whole soul, is <i>full of light,</i> it receives and
|
||
entertains the gospel, which will bring along with it into the soul
|
||
both <i>knowledge</i> and <i>joy.</i> This denotes the same thing
|
||
with that of the good ground, <i>receiving the word</i> and
|
||
<i>understanding</i> it. If our understanding admits the gospel in
|
||
its full light, it fills the soul, and it has enough to <i>fill</i>
|
||
it. And if the soul be thus <i>filled</i> with the light of the
|
||
gospel, <i>having no part dark,</i>—if all its powers and
|
||
faculties be subjected to the government and influence of the
|
||
gospel, and none left unsanctified,—then <i>the whole soul shall
|
||
be full of light,</i> full of holiness and comfort. <i>It was
|
||
darkness</i> itself, but now light in the Lord, <i>as when the
|
||
bright shining of a candle doth give thee light,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p57.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.36" parsed="|Luke|11|36|0|0" passage="Lu 11:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>. Note, The gospel will
|
||
come into those souls whose doors and windows are thrown open to
|
||
receive it; and where it comes it will bring light with it. But,
|
||
(2.) If the <i>eye of the</i> soul be <i>evil,</i>—if the judgment
|
||
be <i>bribed</i> and <i>biassed</i> by the corrupt and vicious
|
||
dispositions of the mind, by pride and envy, by the love of the
|
||
world and sensual pleasures,—if the understanding be
|
||
<i>prejudiced</i> against divine truths, and resolved not to admit
|
||
them, though brought with ever so convincing an evidence,—it is no
|
||
wonder that the <i>whole body,</i> the whole soul, should be
|
||
<i>full of darkness,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p57.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.34" parsed="|Luke|11|34|0|0" passage="Lu 11:34"><i>v.</i>
|
||
34</scripRef>. How can they have instruction, information,
|
||
direction, or comfort, from the gospel, that wilfully shut their
|
||
eyes against it? and what hope is there of such? what remedy for
|
||
them? The inference hence therefore is, <i>Take heed that the light
|
||
which is in thee be not darkness,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p57.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.35" parsed="|Luke|11|35|0|0" passage="Lu 11:35"><i>v.</i> 35</scripRef>. Take heed that the eye of the
|
||
mind be not blinded by partiality, and prejudice, and sinful aims.
|
||
Be sincere in your enquiries after truth, and ready to receive it
|
||
in the light, and love, and power of it; and not as the men of
|
||
<i>this generation</i> to whom Christ preached, who never sincerely
|
||
<i>desired</i> to know God's will, nor <i>designed</i> to do it,
|
||
and therefore no wonder that they <i>walked on in darkness,</i>
|
||
wandered <i>endlessly,</i> and perished <i>eternally.</i></p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.xii-p57.5" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.37-Luke.11.54" parsed="|Luke|11|37|11|54" passage="Lu 11:37-54" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.11.37-Luke.11.54">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.xii-p57.6">Woes Denounced on That Generation; The
|
||
Pharisees and Lawyers Reproved.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.xii-p58">37 And as he spake, a certain Pharisee besought
|
||
him to dine with him: and he went in, and sat down to meat.
|
||
38 And when the Pharisee saw <i>it,</i> he marvelled that he had
|
||
not first washed before dinner. 39 And the Lord said unto
|
||
him, Now do ye Pharisees make clean the outside of the cup and the
|
||
platter; but your inward part is full of ravening and wickedness.
|
||
40 <i>Ye</i> fools, did not he that made that which is
|
||
without make that which is within also? 41 But rather give
|
||
alms of such things as ye have; and, behold, all things are clean
|
||
unto you. 42 But woe unto you, Pharisees! for ye tithe mint
|
||
and rue and all manner of herbs, and pass over judgment and the
|
||
love of God: these ought ye to have done, and not to leave the
|
||
other undone. 43 Woe unto you, Pharisees! for ye love the
|
||
uppermost seats in the synagogues, and greetings in the markets.
|
||
44 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye
|
||
are as graves which appear not, and the men that walk over
|
||
<i>them</i> are not aware <i>of them.</i> 45 Then answered
|
||
one of the lawyers, and said unto him, Master, thus saying thou
|
||
reproachest us also. 46 And he said, Woe unto you also,
|
||
<i>ye</i> lawyers! for ye lade men with burdens grievous to be
|
||
borne, and ye yourselves touch not the burdens with one of your
|
||
fingers. 47 Woe unto you! for ye build the sepulchres of the
|
||
prophets, and your fathers killed them. 48 Truly ye bear
|
||
witness that ye allow the deeds of your fathers: for they indeed
|
||
killed them, and ye build their sepulchres. 49 Therefore
|
||
also said the wisdom of God, I will send them prophets and
|
||
apostles, and <i>some</i> of them they shall slay and persecute:
|
||
50 That the blood of all the prophets, which was shed from
|
||
the foundation of the world, may be required of this generation;
|
||
51 From the blood of Abel unto the blood of Zacharias, which
|
||
perished between the altar and the temple: verily I say unto you,
|
||
It shall be required of this generation. 52 Woe unto you,
|
||
lawyers! for ye have taken away the key of knowledge: ye entered
|
||
not in yourselves, and them that were entering in ye hindered.
|
||
53 And as he said these things unto them, the scribes and
|
||
the Pharisees began to urge <i>him</i> vehemently, and to provoke
|
||
him to speak of many things: 54 Laying wait for him, and
|
||
seeking to catch something out of his mouth, that they might accuse
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p59">Christ here says many of those things to a
|
||
Pharisee and his guests, in a <i>private</i> conversation at table,
|
||
which he afterwards said in a <i>public</i> discourse in the temple
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p59.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.1-Matt.23.39" parsed="|Matt|23|1|23|39" passage="Mt 23:1-39">Matt. xxiii.</scripRef>); for what
|
||
he said in public and private was <i>of a piece.</i> He would not
|
||
say that in a corner which he durst not repeat and stand to in the
|
||
great congregation; nor would he give those reproofs to any sort of
|
||
sinners in general which he durst not apply to them in particular
|
||
as he met with them; for he was, and is, the <i>faithful
|
||
Witness.</i> Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p60">I. Christ's going to dine with a Pharisee
|
||
that very civilly invited him to his house (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p60.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.37" parsed="|Luke|11|37|0|0" passage="Lu 11:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>); <i>As he spoke,</i> even while
|
||
he was speaking, a <i>certain Pharisee</i> interrupted him with a
|
||
request to him to come and <i>dine with him,</i> to come
|
||
<i>forthwith,</i> for it was dinner-time. We are willing to hope
|
||
that the Pharisee was so well pleased with his discourse that he
|
||
was willing to show him respect, and desirous to have more of his
|
||
company, and therefore gave him this invitation and bade him truly
|
||
welcome; and yet we have some cause to suspect that it was with an
|
||
<i>ill design,</i> to break off his discourse to the people, and to
|
||
have an opportunity of ensnaring him and getting something out of
|
||
him which might serve for matter of accusation or reproach,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p60.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.53-Luke.11.54" parsed="|Luke|11|53|11|54" passage="Lu 11:53,54"><i>v.</i> 53, 54</scripRef>. We
|
||
know not the mind of this Pharisee; but, whatever it was, Christ
|
||
knew it: if he meant ill, he shall know Christ does not fear him;
|
||
if well, he shall know Christ is willing to do him good: so <i>he
|
||
went in, and sat down to meat.</i> Note, Christ's disciples must
|
||
learn of him to be <i>conversable,</i> and not <i>morose.</i>
|
||
Though we have need to be <i>cautious</i> what company we keep, yet
|
||
we need not be <i>rigid,</i> nor must we therefore <i>go out of the
|
||
world.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p61">II. The offence which the Pharisee took at
|
||
Christ, as those of that sort had sometimes done at the disciples
|
||
of Christ, for not <i>washing before dinner,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p61.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.38" parsed="|Luke|11|38|0|0" passage="Lu 11:38"><i>v.</i> 38</scripRef>. He wondered that a man of his
|
||
sanctity, a prophet, a man of so much devotion, and such a strict
|
||
conversation, should sit down to meat, and not first <i>wash his
|
||
hands,</i> especially being newly come out of a mixed company, and
|
||
there being in the Pharisee's dining-room, no doubt, all
|
||
accommodations set ready for it, so that he need not fear being
|
||
<i>troublesome;</i> and the Pharisee himself and all his guests, no
|
||
doubt, <i>washing,</i> so that he could not be <i>singular;</i>
|
||
what, and yet not wash? What harm had it been if he had washed? Was
|
||
it not strictly commanded by the canons of their church? It was so,
|
||
and <i>therefore</i> Christ would not do it, because he would
|
||
witness against their assuming a power to impose that as a matter
|
||
of religion which <i>God commanded them not.</i> The ceremonial law
|
||
consisted in <i>divers washings,</i> but this was none of them, and
|
||
therefore Christ would not practise it, no not in
|
||
<i>complaisance</i> to the Pharisee who invited him, nor though he
|
||
knew that offence would be taken at his omitting it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p62">III. The sharp reproof which Christ, upon
|
||
this occasion, gave to the Pharisees, without begging pardon even
|
||
of the Pharisee whose guest he now was; for we must not flatter our
|
||
best friends in any evil thing.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p63">1. He reproves them for placing religion so
|
||
much in those instances of it which are only external, and fall
|
||
under the eye of man, while those were not only <i>postponed,</i>
|
||
but quite <i>expunged,</i> which respect the soul, and fall under
|
||
the eye of God, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p63.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.39-Luke.11.40" parsed="|Luke|11|39|11|40" passage="Lu 11:39,40"><i>v.</i> 39,
|
||
40</scripRef>. Now observe here, (1.) The absurdity they were
|
||
guilty of: "<i>You Pharisees make clean the outside</i> only, you
|
||
wash your hands with water, but do not <i>wash your hearts from
|
||
wickedness;</i> these are full of covetousness and malice,
|
||
<i>covetousness</i> of men's goods, and malice against good men."
|
||
Those can never be reckoned <i>cleanly</i> servants that wash only
|
||
the <i>outside of the cup</i> out of which their master drinks, or
|
||
<i>the platter</i> out of which he eats, and take no care to make
|
||
clean the <i>inside,</i> the filth of which immediately
|
||
<i>affects</i> the meat or drink. The frame or temper of the mind
|
||
in every religious service is as the <i>inside</i> of the cup and
|
||
platter; the impurity of this <i>infects</i> the services, and
|
||
therefore to keep ourselves free from scandalous enormities, and
|
||
yet to live under the dominion of spiritual wickedness, is as great
|
||
an affront to God as it would be for a servant to give the cup into
|
||
his master's hand, clean wiped from all the dust on the outside,
|
||
but <i>within</i> full of cobwebs and spiders. <i>Ravening and
|
||
wickedness,</i> that is, <i>reigning worldliness</i> and
|
||
<i>reigning spitefulness,</i> which men think they can find some
|
||
cloak and cover for, are the dangerous damning sins of many who
|
||
have made the <i>outside of the cup</i> clean from the more gross,
|
||
and scandalous, and inexcusable sins of whoredom and drunkenness.
|
||
(2.) A particular instance of the absurdity of it: "<i>Ye fools,
|
||
did not he that made that which is without make that which is
|
||
within also?</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p63.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.40" parsed="|Luke|11|40|0|0" passage="Lu 11:40"><i>v.</i>
|
||
40</scripRef>. Did not that God who in the law of Moses appointed
|
||
divers ceremonial washings, with which you justify yourselves in
|
||
these practices and impositions, appoint also that you should
|
||
cleanse and purify your hearts? He who made laws for that which is
|
||
<i>without,</i> did not he even in those laws further intend
|
||
something within, and by other laws show how little he regarded the
|
||
<i>purifying of the flesh,</i> and the <i>putting away of the
|
||
filth</i> of that, if the heart be not made clean?" Or, it may have
|
||
regard to God not only as a <i>Lawgiver,</i> but (which the words
|
||
seem rather to import) as a Creator. Did not God, who made us these
|
||
bodies (and they <i>are fearfully and wonderfully made</i>), make
|
||
us <i>these souls</i> also, which are more fearfully and
|
||
wonderfully made? Now, if he made both, he justly expects we should
|
||
take care of both; and therefore not only wash the <i>body,</i>
|
||
which he is the <i>former</i> of, and make the hands clean in
|
||
honour of his work, but wash the spirit, which he is the Father of,
|
||
and get the leprosy in the heart cleansed.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p64">To this he subjoins a rule for making our
|
||
creature-comforts clean to us (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p64.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.41" parsed="|Luke|11|41|0|0" passage="Lu 11:41"><i>v.</i> 41</scripRef>): "Instead of <i>washing your
|
||
hands</i> before you go to meat, <i>give alms of such things as you
|
||
have</i>" (<b><i>ta enonta</i></b>—<i>of such things as are set
|
||
before you, and present with you</i>); "let the poor have their
|
||
share out of them, and then <i>all things are clean to you,</i> and
|
||
you may use them comfortably." Here is a plain allusion to the law
|
||
of Moses, by which it was provided that certain portions of the
|
||
increase of their land should be given <i>to the Levite, the
|
||
stranger, the fatherless, and the widow;</i> and, when that was
|
||
done, what was reserved for their own use was <i>clean to them,</i>
|
||
and they could in faith pray for a blessing upon it, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p64.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.26.12-Deut.26.15" parsed="|Deut|26|12|26|15" passage="De 26:12-15">Deut. xxvi. 12-15</scripRef>. <i>Then</i> we
|
||
can with comfort enjoy the gifts of God's bounty ourselves when we
|
||
<i>send portions to them for whom nothing is prepared,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p64.3" osisRef="Bible:Neh.8.10" parsed="|Neh|8|10|0|0" passage="Ne 8:10">Neh. viii. 10</scripRef>. <i>Job ate
|
||
not his morsel alone,</i> but <i>the fatherless ate thereof,</i>
|
||
and so it was <i>clean to him</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p64.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.31.17" parsed="|Job|31|17|0|0" passage="Job 31:17">Job xxxi. 17</scripRef>); <i>clean,</i> that is,
|
||
permitted and allowed to be used, and then only can it be used
|
||
comfortably. Note, What we have is not our own, unless God have his
|
||
dues out of it; and it is by <i>liberality to the poor</i> that we
|
||
clear up to ourselves our <i>liberty</i> to make use of our
|
||
creature-comforts.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p65">2. He reproves them for laying stress upon
|
||
trifles, and neglecting the weighty matters of the law, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p65.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.42" parsed="|Luke|11|42|0|0" passage="Lu 11:42"><i>v.</i> 42</scripRef>. (1.) Those laws which
|
||
related only to the <i>means of religion</i> they were very exact
|
||
in the observance of, as particularly those concerning the
|
||
maintenance of the priests: <i>Ye pay tithe of mint and rue,</i>
|
||
pay it in kind and to the full, and will not put off the priests
|
||
with a <i>modus decimandi</i> or <i>compound</i> for it. By this
|
||
they would gain reputation with the people as strict observers of
|
||
the law, and would make an interest in the priests, in whose power
|
||
it was many a time to do them a kindness; and no wonder if the
|
||
priests and the Pharisees contrived how to strengthen one another's
|
||
hands. Now Christ does not condemn them for being so exact in
|
||
paying tithes (<i>these things ought ye to have done</i>), but to
|
||
think that this would atone for the neglect of their greater
|
||
duties; for, (2.) Those laws which relate to the <i>essentials of
|
||
religion</i> they made nothing of: <i>You pass over judgment and
|
||
the love of God,</i> you make no conscience of giving men their
|
||
<i>dues</i> and God your <i>hearts.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p66">3. He reproves them for their pride and
|
||
vanity, and affectations of precedency and praise of men (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p66.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.43" parsed="|Luke|11|43|0|0" passage="Lu 11:43"><i>v.</i> 43</scripRef>): "<i>Ye love the
|
||
uppermost seats in the synagogues</i>" (or consistories where the
|
||
elders met for government); "if you have not those seats, you are
|
||
ambitious of them; if you have, you are proud of them; and <i>you
|
||
love greetings in the markets,</i> to be complimented by the people
|
||
and to have their cap and knee." It is not sitting uppermost, or
|
||
being greeted, that is reproved, but <i>loving it.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p67">4. He reproves them for their hypocrisy,
|
||
and their colouring over the wickedness of their hearts and lives
|
||
with specious pretences (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p67.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.44" parsed="|Luke|11|44|0|0" passage="Lu 11:44"><i>v.</i>
|
||
44</scripRef>): "<i>You are as graves</i> overgrown with grass,
|
||
which therefore <i>appear not,</i> and <i>the men that walk over
|
||
them are not aware of them,</i> and so they contract the ceremonial
|
||
pollution which by the law arose from the <i>touch of a grave.</i>"
|
||
These Pharisees were <i>within</i> full of <i>abominations,</i> as
|
||
a grave of putrefaction; full of covetousness, envy, and malice;
|
||
and yet they concealed it so artfully with a profession of
|
||
devotion, that it did not appear, so that they who conversed with
|
||
them, and followed their doctrine, were defiled with sin, infected
|
||
with their corruptions and ill morals, and yet, they making a show
|
||
of piety, suspected no danger by them. The contagion
|
||
<i>insinuated</i> itself, and was <i>insensibly</i> caught, and
|
||
those that caught it thought themselves never the worse.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p68">IV. The testimony which he bore also
|
||
against the lawyers or scribes, who made it their business to
|
||
<i>expound</i> the law according to the tradition of the elders, as
|
||
the Pharisees did to <i>observe</i> the law according to that
|
||
tradition.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p69">1. There was one of that profession who
|
||
resented what he said against the Pharisees (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p69.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.45" parsed="|Luke|11|45|0|0" passage="Lu 11:45"><i>v.</i> 45</scripRef>): "<i>Master, thus saying thou
|
||
reproachest us also,</i> for we are scribes; and we are therefore
|
||
hypocrites?" Note, It is a common thing for unhumbled sinners to
|
||
call and count reproofs reproaches. It is the wisdom of those who
|
||
desire to have their sin mortified to make a <i>good use</i> of
|
||
reproaches that come from <i>ill will,</i> and to turn them into
|
||
reproofs. If we can in this way hear of our faults, and amend them,
|
||
it is well: but it is the folly of those who are wedded to their
|
||
sins, and resolved not to part with them, to make an <i>ill use</i>
|
||
of the faithful and friendly admonitions given them, which come
|
||
from love, and to have their passions provoked by them as if they
|
||
were intended for <i>reproaches,</i> and therefore fly in the face
|
||
of their reprovers, and justify themselves in rejecting the
|
||
reproof. Thus the prophet complained (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p69.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.6.10" parsed="|Jer|6|10|0|0" passage="Jer 6:10">Jer. vi. 10</scripRef>): <i>The word of the Lord is to
|
||
them a reproach; they have no delight in it.</i> This lawyer
|
||
espoused the Pharisee's cause, and so made himself partaker of his
|
||
sins.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p70">2. Our Lord Jesus thereupon took them to
|
||
task (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p70.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.46" parsed="|Luke|11|46|0|0" passage="Lu 11:46"><i>v.</i> 46</scripRef>): <i>Woe
|
||
unto you also, ye lawyers;</i> and again (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p70.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.52" parsed="|Luke|11|52|0|0" passage="Lu 11:52"><i>v.</i> 52</scripRef>): <i>Woe unto you lawyers.</i>
|
||
They blessed themselves in the reputation they had among the
|
||
people, who thought them happy men, because they studied the law,
|
||
and were always conversant with that, and had the honour of
|
||
instructing the people in the knowledge of that; but Christ
|
||
denounced <i>woes</i> against them, for he sees not as man sees.
|
||
This was just upon him for taking the Pharisee's part, and
|
||
quarrelling with Christ because he reproved them. Note, Those who
|
||
quarrel with the reproofs of others, and suspect them to be
|
||
reproaches to them, do but get <i>woes of their own</i> by so
|
||
doing.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p71">(1.) The lawyers are reproved for making
|
||
the services of religion more <i>burdensome</i> to others, but more
|
||
<i>easy</i> to themselves, than God had made them (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p71.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.46" parsed="|Luke|11|46|0|0" passage="Lu 11:46"><i>v.</i> 46</scripRef>): "<i>You lade men with
|
||
burdens grievous to be borne,</i> by your traditions, which <i>bind
|
||
them out from</i> many liberties God has allowed them, and <i>bind
|
||
them up</i> to many slaveries which God never enjoined them, to
|
||
show your authority, and to keep people in awe; <i>but you
|
||
yourselves touch them not with one of your fingers;</i>" that is,
|
||
[1.] "You will not <i>burden</i> yourselves with them, nor be
|
||
yourselves bound by those restraints with which you hamper others."
|
||
They would seem, by the hedges they pretended to make about the
|
||
law, to be very strict for the observance of the law; but, if you
|
||
could see their practices, you would find that they not only make
|
||
nothing of those hedges themselves, but make nothing of the law
|
||
itself neither: thus the confessors of the Romish church are said
|
||
to do with their penitents. [2.] "You will not <i>lighten</i> them
|
||
to those you have power over; <i>you will not touch them,</i> that
|
||
is, either to repeal them or to dispense with them when you find
|
||
them to be burdensome and grievous to the people." They would come
|
||
in with <i>both hands</i> to dispense with a command of God, but
|
||
not with a <i>finger</i> to mitigate the rigour of any of the
|
||
traditions of the elders.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p72">(2.) They are reproved for pretending a
|
||
veneration for the memory of the prophets whom their fathers
|
||
killed, when yet they hated and persecuted those in their own day
|
||
who were sent to them on the same errand, to call them to
|
||
repentance, and direct them to Christ, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p72.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.47-Luke.11.49" parsed="|Luke|11|47|11|49" passage="Lu 11:47-49"><i>v.</i> 47-49</scripRef>. [1.] These hypocrites,
|
||
among other pretences of piety, <i>built the sepulchres of the
|
||
prophets;</i> that is, they erected monuments over their graves, in
|
||
honour of them, probably with large inscriptions containing high
|
||
encomiums of them. They were not so superstitious as to enshrine
|
||
their relics, or to think their devotions the more acceptable to
|
||
God for being offered at the <i>tombs of the martyrs;</i> they did
|
||
not burn incense or pray to them, or plead their merits with God;
|
||
they did not add that iniquity to their hypocrisy; but, as if they
|
||
owned themselves the <i>children of the prophets,</i> their heirs
|
||
and executors, they <i>repaired</i> and <i>beautified</i> the
|
||
monuments sacred to their <i>pious memory.</i> [2.] Notwithstanding
|
||
this, they had an inveterate <i>enmity</i> to those in their <i>own
|
||
day</i> that came to them in the <i>spirit</i> and <i>power</i> of
|
||
those prophets; and, though they had not yet had an opportunity of
|
||
carrying it far, yet they would soon do it, for the <i>Wisdom of
|
||
God said,</i> that is, Christ himself would <i>so order</i> it, and
|
||
did <i>now foretel</i> it, that they would <i>slay</i> and
|
||
<i>persecute</i> the prophets and apostles that should be sent
|
||
them. The <i>Wisdom of God</i> would thus make trial of them, and
|
||
discover their odious hypocrisy, by sending them prophets, to
|
||
reprove them for their sins and warn them of the judgments of God.
|
||
Those prophets should prove themselves apostles, or messengers sent
|
||
from heaven, by signs, and wonders, and gifts of the Holy Ghost.
|
||
Or, "<i>I will send them prophets</i> under the style and title of
|
||
apostles, who yet shall produce as good an authority as any of the
|
||
old prophets did; and these they shall not only contradict and
|
||
oppose, but <i>slay</i> and <i>persecute,</i> and put to death."
|
||
Christ foresaw this, and yet did not otherwise than as became the
|
||
<i>Wisdom of God</i> in sending them, for he knew how to bring
|
||
glory to himself in the issue, by the recompences reserved both for
|
||
the <i>persecutors</i> and the <i>persecuted</i> in the future
|
||
state. [3.] That therefore God will justly put another construction
|
||
upon their <i>building</i> the <i>tombs</i> of the prophets than
|
||
what they would be thought to intend, and it shall be interpreted
|
||
their <i>allowing the deeds of their fathers</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p72.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.45" parsed="|Luke|11|45|0|0" passage="Lu 11:45"><i>v.</i> 45</scripRef>); for, since by their
|
||
present actions it appeared that they had no true value for their
|
||
prophets, the <i>building of their sepulchres</i> shall have this
|
||
sense put upon it, that they resolved to keep them in their graves
|
||
whom their fathers had hurried thither. Josiah, who had a real
|
||
value for prophets, thought it enough not to disturb the grave of
|
||
the <i>man of God at Bethel: Let no man move his bones,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xii-p72.3" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.23.17-2Kgs.23.18" parsed="|2Kgs|23|17|23|18" passage="2Ki 23:17,18">2 Kings xxiii. 17, 18</scripRef>.
|
||
If these lawyers will carry the matter further, and will build
|
||
<i>their sepulchres,</i> it is such a piece of <i>over-doing</i> as
|
||
gives cause to suspect an ill design in it, and that it is meant as
|
||
a cover for some design against prophecy itself, like the kiss of a
|
||
traitor, as <i>he that blesseth his friend with a loud voice,
|
||
rising early in the morning, it shall be counted a curse to
|
||
him,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p72.4" osisRef="Bible:Prov.27.14" parsed="|Prov|27|14|0|0" passage="Pr 27:14">Prov. xxvii.
|
||
14</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p73">[4.] That they must expect no other than to
|
||
be reckoned with, as the <i>fillers up</i> of the <i>measure</i> of
|
||
persecution, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p73.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.50-Luke.11.51" parsed="|Luke|11|50|11|51" passage="Lu 11:50,51"><i>v.</i> 50,
|
||
51</scripRef>. They keep up the trade as it were in succession, and
|
||
therefore are responsible for the <i>debts of the company,</i> even
|
||
those it has been <i>contracting</i> all along from <i>the blood of
|
||
Abel,</i> when the world began, to that of Zacharias, and so
|
||
forward to the end of the Jewish state; it shall all be <i>required
|
||
of this generation,</i> this last generation of the Jews, whose sin
|
||
in persecuting Christ's apostles would exceed any of the sins of
|
||
that kind that their fathers were guilty of, and so would bring
|
||
<i>wrath</i> upon them <i>to the uttermost,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p73.2" osisRef="Bible:1Thess.2.15-1Thess.2.16" parsed="|1Thess|2|15|2|16" passage="1Th 2:15,16">1 Thess. ii. 15, 16</scripRef>. Their destruction by
|
||
the Romans was so terrible that it might well be reckoned the
|
||
completing of God's vengeance upon that persecuting nation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p74">(3.) They are reproved for opposing the
|
||
gospel of Christ, and doing all they could to obstruct the progress
|
||
and success of it, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p74.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.52" parsed="|Luke|11|52|0|0" passage="Lu 11:52"><i>v.</i>
|
||
52</scripRef>. [1.] They had not, according to the duty of their
|
||
place, faithfully expounded to the people those scriptures of the
|
||
Old Testament which pointed at the Messiah, which if they had been
|
||
led into the right understanding of by the lawyers, they would
|
||
readily have embraced him and his doctrine: but, instead of that,
|
||
they had perverted those texts, and had cast a mist before the eyes
|
||
of the people, by their corrupt glosses upon them, and this is
|
||
called <i>taking away the key of knowledge;</i> instead of
|
||
<i>using</i> that key for the people, and helping them to use it
|
||
aright, they <i>hid it</i> from them; this is called, in Matthew,
|
||
<i>shutting up the kingdom of heaven against men,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p74.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.13" parsed="|Matt|23|13|0|0" passage="Mt 23:13">Matt. xxiii. 13</scripRef>. Note, those who take
|
||
away the key of knowledge shut up the <i>kingdom of heaven.</i>
|
||
[2.] They themselves did not embrace the gospel of Christ, though
|
||
by their acquaintance with the Old Testament they could not but
|
||
know that the <i>time was fulfilled,</i> and the <i>kingdom of God
|
||
was at hand;</i> they saw the prophecies accomplished in that
|
||
kingdom which our Lord Jesus was about to set up, and yet would not
|
||
themselves <i>enter into it.</i> Nay, [3.] Them that without any
|
||
guidance or assistance of theirs were <i>entering in</i> they did
|
||
all they could to <i>hinder</i> and discourage, by threatening to
|
||
<i>cast them out of the synagogue,</i> and otherwise terrifying
|
||
them. It is bad for people to be averse to revelation, but much
|
||
worse to be adverse to it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xii-p75"><i>Lastly,</i> In the close of the chapter
|
||
we are told how spitefully and maliciously the scribes and
|
||
<i>Pharisees</i> contrived to draw him into a snare, <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p75.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.53-Luke.11.54" parsed="|Luke|11|53|11|54" passage="Lu 11:53,54"><i>v.</i> 53, 54</scripRef>. They could not
|
||
bear those cutting reproofs which they must own to be just; but
|
||
what he had said against them in particular would not <i>bear an
|
||
action,</i> nor could they ground upon it any <i>criminal</i>
|
||
accusation, and therefore, as if, because his reproofs were warm,
|
||
they hoped to stir him up to some intemperate heat and passion, so
|
||
as to put him off his guard, they <i>began to urge him
|
||
vehemently,</i> to be very fierce upon him, and to <i>provoke him
|
||
to speak of many things,</i> to propose dangerous questions to him,
|
||
<i>laying wait</i> for something which might serve the design they
|
||
had of making him either <i>odious</i> to the people, or
|
||
<i>obnoxious</i> to the government, or both. Thus did they seek
|
||
occasion against him, like David's enemies that did <i>every day
|
||
wrest his words,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p75.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.56.5" parsed="|Ps|56|5|0|0" passage="Ps 56:5">Ps. lvi.
|
||
5</scripRef>. <i>Evil men dig up mischief.</i> Note, Faithful
|
||
reprovers of sin must expect to have many enemies, and have need to
|
||
set a watch before the door of their lips, because of <i>their
|
||
observers</i> that watch for their halting. The prophet complains
|
||
of those in his time who <i>make a man an offender for a word, and
|
||
lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xii-p75.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.29.21" parsed="|Isa|29|21|0|0" passage="Isa 29:21">Isa. xxix. 21</scripRef>. That we may bear
|
||
trials of this kind with patience, and get through them with
|
||
prudence, let us <i>consider him who endured such contradiction of
|
||
sinners against himself.</i></p>
|
||
</div></div2> |