1624 lines
118 KiB
XML
1624 lines
118 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Matt.xxiv" n="xxiv" next="Matt.xxv" prev="Matt.xxiii" progress="26.91%" title="Chapter XXIII">
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<h2 id="Matt.xxiv-p0.1">M A T T H E W.</h2>
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<h3 id="Matt.xxiv-p0.2">CHAP. XXIII.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Matt.xxiv-p1">In the foregoing chapter, we had our Saviour's
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discourses with the scribes and Pharisees; here we have his
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discourse concerning them, or rather against them. I. He allows
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their office, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.2-Matt.23.3" parsed="|Matt|23|2|23|3" passage="Mt 23:2,3">ver. 2, 3</scripRef>.
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II. He warns his disciples not to imitate their hypocrisy and
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pride, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.4-Matt.23.12" parsed="|Matt|23|4|23|12" passage="Mt 23:4-12">ver. 4-12</scripRef>. III. He
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exhibits a charge against them for divers high crimes and
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misdemeanors, corrupting the law, opposing the gospel, and
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treacherous dealing both with God and man; and to each article he
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prefixes a woe, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.13-Matt.23.33" parsed="|Matt|23|13|23|33" passage="Mt 23:13-33">ver.
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13-33</scripRef>. IV. He passes sentence upon Jerusalem, and
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foretels the ruin of the city and temple, especially for the sin of
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persecution, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.34-Matt.23.39" parsed="|Matt|23|34|23|39" passage="Mt 23:34-39">ver.
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34-39</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Matt.xxiv-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23" parsed="|Matt|23|0|0|0" passage="Mt 23" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Matt.xxiv-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.1-Matt.23.12" parsed="|Matt|23|1|23|12" passage="Mt 23:1-12" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.23.1-Matt.23.12">
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<h4 id="Matt.xxiv-p1.7">The Scribes and Pharisees Condemned;
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Cautions against Pride.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxiv-p2">1 Then spake Jesus to the multitude, and to his
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disciples, 2 Saying, The scribes and the Pharisees sit in
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Moses' seat: 3 All therefore whatsoever they bid you
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observe, <i>that</i> observe and do; but do not ye after their
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works: for they say, and do not. 4 For they bind heavy
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burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay <i>them</i> on men's
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shoulders; but they <i>themselves</i> will not move them with one
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of their fingers. 5 But all their works they do for to be
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seen of men: they make broad their phylacteries, and enlarge the
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borders of their garments, 6 And love the uppermost rooms at
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feasts, and the chief seats in the synagogues, 7 And
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greetings in the markets, and to be called of men, Rabbi, Rabbi.
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8 But be not ye called Rabbi: for one is your Master,
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<i>even</i> Christ; and all ye are brethren. 9 And call no
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<i>man</i> your father upon the earth: for one is your Father,
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which is in heaven. 10 Neither be ye called masters: for one
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is your Master, <i>even</i> Christ. 11 But he that is
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greatest among you shall be your servant. 12 And whosoever
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shall exalt himself shall be abased; and he that shall humble
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himself shall be exalted.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p3">We find not Christ, in all his preaching,
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so severe upon any sort of people as upon these <i>scribes and
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Pharisees;</i> for the truth is, nothing is more directly opposite
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to the spirit of the gospel than the temper and practice of that
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generation of men, who were made up of pride, worldliness, and
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tyranny, under a cloak and pretence of religion; yet these were the
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idols and darlings of the people, who thought, if but two men went
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to heaven, one would be a Pharisee. Now Christ directs his
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discourse here <i>to the multitude, and to his disciples</i>
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(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.1" parsed="|Matt|23|1|0|0" passage="Mt 23:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>) to rectify
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their mistakes concerning these scribes and Pharisees, by painting
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them out in their true colours, and so to take off the prejudice
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which some of the multitude had conceived against Christ and his
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doctrine, because it was opposed by those men of their church, that
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called themselves the people's guides. Note, It is good to know the
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true characters of men, that we may not be imposed upon by great
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and mighty names, titles, and pretensions to power. People must be
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told of <i>the wolves</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p3.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.20.29-Acts.20.30" parsed="|Acts|20|29|20|30" passage="Ac 20:29,30">Acts xx.
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29, 30</scripRef>), <i>the dogs</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p3.3" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.2" parsed="|Phil|3|2|0|0" passage="Php 3:2">Phil. iii. 2</scripRef>), <i>the deceitful workers</i>
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(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p3.4" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.11.13" parsed="|2Cor|11|13|0|0" passage="2Co 11:13">2 Cor. xi. 13</scripRef>), that they
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may know here to stand upon their guard. And not only the mixed
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multitude, but even the disciples, need these cautions; for good
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men are apt to have their eyes dazzled with worldly pomp.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p4">Now, in this discourse,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p5">I. Christ allows their office as expositors
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of the law; <i>The scribes and Pharisees</i> (that is, the whole
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Sanhedrim, who sat at the helm of church government, who were all
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called <i>scribes,</i> and were some of them Pharisees), they
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<i>sit in Moses' seat</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.2" parsed="|Matt|23|2|0|0" passage="Mt 23:2"><i>v.</i>
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2</scripRef>), as public teachers and interpreters of the law; and,
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the law of Moses being the municipal law of their state, they were
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as judges, or a bench of justices; teaching and judging seem to be
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equivalent, comparing <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.17.7 Bible:2Chr.17.9 Bible:2Chr.19.5-2Chr.19.6 Bible:2Chr.19.8" parsed="|2Chr|17|7|0|0;|2Chr|17|9|0|0;|2Chr|19|5|19|6;|2Chr|19|8|0|0" passage="2Ch 17:7,9,19:5,6,8">2
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Chron. xvii. 7, 9, with 2 Chron. xix. 5, 6, 8</scripRef>. They were
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not the itinerant judges that rode the circuit, but the standing
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bench, that determined on appeals, special verdicts, or writs of
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error by the law; they sat in Moses's seat, not as he was Mediator
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between God and Israel, but only as he was chief justice, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.18.26" parsed="|Exod|18|26|0|0" passage="Ex 18:26">Exod. xviii. 26</scripRef>. Or, we may apply it,
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not to the Sanhedrim, but to the other Pharisees and scribes, that
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expounded the law, and taught the people how to apply it to
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particular cases. <i>The pulpit of wood,</i> such as was made for
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Ezra, <i>that ready scribe in the law of God</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.4" osisRef="Bible:Neh.8.4" parsed="|Neh|8|4|0|0" passage="Ne 8:4">Neh. viii. 4</scripRef>), is here called
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<i>Moses's seat,</i> because Moses had those in every city (so the
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expression is, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.15.21" parsed="|Acts|15|21|0|0" passage="Ac 15:21">Acts xv.
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21</scripRef>), who in those pulpits preached him; this was their
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office, and it was just and honourable; it was requisite that there
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should be some at whose mouth the people might <i>enquire the
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law,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.6" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.7" parsed="|Mal|2|7|0|0" passage="Mal 2:7">Mal. ii. 7</scripRef>. Note,
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1. Many a good place is filled with bad men; it is no new thing for
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the vilest men to be exalted even to <i>Moses's seat</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.7" osisRef="Bible:Ps.12.8" parsed="|Ps|12|8|0|0" passage="Ps 12:8">Ps. xii. 8</scripRef>); and, when it is so, the
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men are not so much honoured by the seat as the seat is dishonoured
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by the men. Now they that sat in Moses's seat were so wretchedly
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degenerated, that it was time for the great Prophet to arise, like
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unto Moses, to erect another seat. 2. Good and useful offices and
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powers are not <i>therefore</i> to be condemned and abolished,
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because they fall sometimes into the hands of bad men, who abuse
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them. We must not <i>therefore</i> pull down Moses's seat, because
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scribes and Pharisees have got possession of it; rather than so,
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<i>let both grow together until the harvest,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p5.8" osisRef="Bible:Matt.13.30" parsed="|Matt|13|30|0|0" passage="Mt 13:30"><i>ch.</i> xiii. 30</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p6">Hence he infers (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.3" parsed="|Matt|23|3|0|0" passage="Mt 23:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>), "<i>Whatsoever they bid you
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observe, that observe and do</i> As far as they <i>sit in Moses's
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seat,</i> that is, read and preach the law that was given by Moses"
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(which, as yet, continued in full force, power, and virtue), "and
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judge according to that law, so far you must hearken to them, as
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remembrances to you of the written word." The scribes and Pharisees
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made it their business to study the scripture, and were well
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acquainted with the language, history, and customs of it, and its
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style and phraseology. Now Christ would have the people to make use
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of the helps they gave them for the understanding of the scripture,
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and do accordingly. As long as their comments did illustrate the
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text and not pervert it; did make plain, and not <i>make void, the
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commandment of God;</i> so far they must be observed and obeyed,
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but with caution and a judgment of discretion. Note, We must not
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think the worse of good truths for their being preached by bad
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ministers; nor of good laws for their being executed by bad
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magistrates. Though it is most desirable to have our food brought
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by angels, yet, if God send it to us by ravens, if it be good and
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wholesome, we must take it, and thank God for it. Our Lord Jesus
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promiseth this, to prevent the cavil which some would be apt to
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make at this following discourse; as if, by condemning the scribes
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and Pharisees, he designed to bring the law of Moses into contempt,
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and to draw people off from it; whereas he <i>came not to destroy,
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but to fulfil.</i> Note, It is wisdom to obviate the exceptions
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which may be taken at just reproofs, especially when there is
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occasion to distinguish between officers and their offices, <i>that
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the ministry be not blamed</i> when the ministers are.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p7">II. He condemns the men. He had ordered the
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multitude to do as they taught; but here he annexeth a caution not
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to do as they did, to beware of their leaven; <i>Do not ye after
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their works.</i> Their traditions were their works, were their
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idols, the works of their fancy. Or, "Do not according to their
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example." Doctrines and practices are spirits that must be tried,
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and where there is occasion, must be carefully separated and
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distinguished; and as we must not swallow corrupt doctrines for the
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sake of any laudable practices of those that teach them, so we must
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not imitate any bad examples for the sake of the plausible
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doctrines of those that set them. The scribes and Pharisees boasted
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as much of the goodness of their works as of the orthodoxy of their
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teaching, and hoped to be justified by them; it was the plea they
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put in (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18.11-Luke.18.12" parsed="|Luke|18|11|18|12" passage="Lu 18:11,12">Luke xviii. 11,
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12</scripRef>); and yet these things, which they valued themselves
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so much upon, were an abomination in the sight of God.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p8">Our Saviour <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.3-Matt.23.32" parsed="|Matt|23|3|23|32" passage="Mt 23:3-32">here, and in the following verses</scripRef>,
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specifies divers particulars of their works, wherein we must not
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imitate them. In general, they are charged with hypocrisy,
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dissimulation, or double-dealing in religion; a crime which cannot
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be enquired of at men's bar, because we can only judge according to
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outward appearance; but God, who searcheth the heart, can convict
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of hypocrisy; and nothing is more displeasing to him, for he
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desireth truth.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p9">Four things are in <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.4-Matt.23.7" parsed="|Matt|23|4|23|7" passage="Mt 23:4-7">these verses</scripRef> charged upon them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p10">1. Their saying and doing were two
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things.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p11">Their practice was no way agreeable either
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to their preaching or to their profession; for <i>they say, and do
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not;</i> they teach out of the law that which is good, but their
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conversation gives them the lie; and they seem to have found
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another way to heaven for themselves than what they show to others.
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See this illustrated and charged home upon them, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.2.17-Rom.2.24" parsed="|Rom|2|17|2|24" passage="Ro 2:17-24">Rom. ii. 17-24</scripRef>. Those are of all sinners
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most inexcusable that allow themselves in the sins they condemn in
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others, or in worse. This doth especially touch wicked ministers,
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who will be sure to have their portion appointed them with
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hypocrites (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.51" parsed="|Matt|24|51|0|0" passage="Mt 24:51"><i>ch.</i> xxiv.
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51</scripRef>); for what greater hypocrisy can there be, than to
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press that upon others, to be believed and done, which they
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themselves disbelieve and disobey; pulling down in their practice
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what they build up in their preaching; when in the pulpit,
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preaching so well that it is a pity they should ever come out; but,
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when out of the pulpit, living so ill that it is a pity they should
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ever come in; like bells, that call others to church, but hang out
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of it themselves; or Mercurial posts, that point the way to others,
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but stand still themselves? Such will <i>be judged out of their own
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mouths.</i> It is applicable to all others that say, and do not;
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that make a plausible profession of religion, but do not live up to
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that profession; that make fair promises, but do not perform their
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promises; are full of good discourse, and can lay down the law to
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all about them, but are empty of good works; great talkers, but
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little doers; <i>the voice is Jacob's voice, but the hands are the
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hands of Esau. Vox et præterea nihil—mere sound.</i> They speak
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fair, <i>I go, sir;</i> but there is no trusting them, for <i>there
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are seven abominations in their heart.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p12">2. They were very severe in imposing upon
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others those things which they were not themselves willing to
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submit to the burthen of (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.4" parsed="|Matt|23|4|0|0" passage="Mt 23:4"><i>v.</i>
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4</scripRef>); <i>They bind heavy burthens, and grievous to be
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borne;</i> not only insisting upon the minute circumstances of the
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law, which is called <i>a yoke</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.15.10" parsed="|Acts|15|10|0|0" passage="Ac 15:10">Acts xv. 10</scripRef>), and pressing the observation of
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them with more strictness and severity than God himself did
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(whereas the maxim of the lawyers, is <i>Apices juris son sunt
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jura—Mere points of law are not law</i>), but by adding to his
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words, and imposing their own inventions and traditions, under the
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highest penalties. They loved to show their authority and to
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exercise their domineering faculty, lording it over God's heritage,
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and saying to men's souls, <i>Bow down, that we may go over;</i>
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witness their many additions to the law of the fourth commandment,
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by which they made the sabbath a burthen on men's shoulders, which
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was designed to be the joy of their hearts. Thus with force and
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cruelty did those shepherds <i>rule the flock,</i> as of old,
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<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.34.4" parsed="|Ezek|34|4|0|0" passage="Eze 34:4">Ezek. xxxiv. 4</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p13">But see their hypocrisy; <i>They themselves
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will not move them with one of their fingers.</i> (1.) They would
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not exercise themselves in those things which they imposed upon
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others; they pressed upon the people a strictness in religion which
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they themselves would not be bound by; but secretly transgressed
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their own traditions, which they publicly enforced. They indulged
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their pride in giving law to others; but consulted their ease in
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their own practice. Thus it has been said, to the reproach of the
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popish priests, that they fast with wine and sweetmeats, while they
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force the people to fast with bread and water; and decline the
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penances they enjoin the laity. (2.) They would not ease the people
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in these things, nor put a finger to lighten their burthen, when
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they saw it pinched them. They could find out loose constructions
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to put upon God's law, and could dispense with that, but would not
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bate an ace of their own impositions, nor dispense with a failure
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in the least punctilio of them. They allowed no chancery to relieve
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the extremity of their common law. How contrary to this was the
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practice of Christ's apostles, who would allow to others that use
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of Christian liberty which, for the peace and edification of the
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church, they would deny themselves in! They would lay no other
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burthen than necessary things, and those easy, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.15.28" parsed="|Acts|15|28|0|0" passage="Ac 15:28">Acts xv. 28</scripRef>. How carefully doth Paul spare
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those to whom he writes! <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.7.28 Bible:1Cor.9.12" parsed="|1Cor|7|28|0|0;|1Cor|9|12|0|0" passage="1Co 7:28,9:12">1 Cor.
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vii. 28; ix. 12</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p14">3. They were all for show, and nothing for
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substance, in religion (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.5" parsed="|Matt|23|5|0|0" passage="Mt 23:5"><i>v.</i>
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5</scripRef>); <i>All their works they do, to be seen of men.</i>
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We must do such good works, that they who see them may glorify God;
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but we must not proclaim our good works, with design that others
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may see them, and glorify us; which our Saviour here chargeth upon
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the Pharisees in general, as he had done before in the particular
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instances of prayer and giving of alms. All their end was to be
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praised of men, and therefore all their endeavour was to be seen of
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men, to <i>make a fair show in the flesh.</i> In those duties of
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religion which fall under the eye of men, none ere so constant and
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abundant as they; but in what lies between God and their souls, in
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the retirement of their closets, and the recesses of their hearts,
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they desire to be excused. The <i>form</i> of godliness will get
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them a name to live, which is all they aim at, and therefore they
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trouble not themselves with the <i>power</i> of it, which is
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essential to a life indeed. He that does all to be seen does
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nothing to the purpose.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p15">He specifies two things which they did to
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be seen of men.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p16">(1.) <i>They made broad their
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phylacteries.</i> Those were little scrolls of paper or parchment,
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wherein were written, with great niceness, these four paragraphs of
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the law, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.13.2-Exod.13.11 Bible:Exod.13.11-Exod.13.16 Bible:Deut.6.4-Deut.6.9 Bible:Deut.11.13-Deut.11.21" parsed="|Exod|13|2|13|11;|Exod|13|11|13|16;|Deut|6|4|6|9;|Deut|11|13|11|21" passage="Ex 13:2-11,13:11-16,De 6:4-9,11:13-21">Exod. xiii. 2-11; xiii.
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11-16; Deut. vi. 4-9; xi. 13-21</scripRef>. These were sewn up in
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leather, and worn upon their foreheads and left arms. It was a
|
||
tradition of the elders, which had reference to <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.13.9" parsed="|Exod|13|9|0|0" passage="Ex 13:9">Exod. xiii. 9</scripRef>, and <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.7.3" parsed="|Prov|7|3|0|0" passage="Pr 7:3">Prov. vii. 3</scripRef>, where the expressions seem to be
|
||
figurative, intimating no more than that we should bear the things
|
||
of God in our minds as carefully as if we had them bound between
|
||
our eyes. Now the Pharisees made broad these phylacteries, that
|
||
they might be thought more holy, and strict, and zealous for the
|
||
law, than others. It is a gracious ambition to covet to be really
|
||
more holy than others, but it is a proud ambition to covet to
|
||
appear so. It is good to excel in real piety, but not to exceed in
|
||
outward shows; for overdoing is justly suspected of design,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p16.4" osisRef="Bible:Prov.27.14" parsed="|Prov|27|14|0|0" passage="Pr 27:14">Prov. xxvii. 14</scripRef>. It is the
|
||
guise of hypocrisy to make more ado than needs in external service,
|
||
more than is needful either to prove, or to <i>im</i>prove, the
|
||
good affections and dispositions of the soul.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p17">(2.) <i>They enlarged the borders of their
|
||
garments.</i> God appointed the Jews to make borders or fringes
|
||
upon their garments (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Num.15.38" parsed="|Num|15|38|0|0" passage="Nu 15:38">Num. xv.
|
||
38</scripRef>), to distinguish them from other nations, and to be a
|
||
memorandum to them of their being a peculiar people; but the
|
||
Pharisees were not content to have these borders like other
|
||
people's, which might serve God's design in appointing them; but
|
||
they must be larger than ordinary, to answer their design of making
|
||
themselves to be taken notice of; as if they were more religious
|
||
than others. But those who thus enlarge their phylacteries, and the
|
||
borders of their garments, while their hearts are straitened, and
|
||
destitute of the love of God and their neighbour, though they may
|
||
now deceive others, will in the end deceive themselves.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p18">4. They much affected pre-eminence and
|
||
superiority, and prided themselves extremely in it. Pride was the
|
||
darling reigning sin of the Pharisees, <i>the sin that did most
|
||
easily beset them</i> and which our Lord Jesus takes all occasions
|
||
to witness against.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p19">(1.) He describes their pride, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.6-Matt.23.7" parsed="|Matt|23|6|23|7" passage="Mt 23:6,7"><i>v.</i> 6, 7</scripRef>. They courted, and
|
||
coveted,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p20">[1.] Places of honour and respect. In all
|
||
public appearances, as <i>at feasts, and in the synagogues,</i>
|
||
they expected, and had, to their hearts' delight, <i>the uppermost
|
||
rooms, and the chief seats.</i> They took place of all others, and
|
||
precedency was adjudged to them, as persons of the greatest note
|
||
and merit; and it is easy to imagine what a complacency they took
|
||
in it; <i>they loved to have the preeminence,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:3John.1.9" parsed="|3John|1|9|0|0" passage="3John 1:9">3 John 9</scripRef>. It is not possessing the
|
||
uppermost rooms, nor sitting in the chief seats, that is condemned
|
||
(somebody must sit uppermost), but <i>loving</i> them; for men to
|
||
value such a little piece of ceremony as sitting highest, going
|
||
first, taking the wall, or the better hand, and to value themselves
|
||
upon it, to seek it, and to feel resentment if they have it not;
|
||
what is that but making an idol of ourselves, and then falling down
|
||
and worshipping it—the worst kind of idolatry! It is bad any
|
||
where, but especially in the synagogues. <i>There</i> to seek
|
||
honour to ourselves, where we appear in order to give glory to God,
|
||
and to humble ourselves before him, is indeed to mock God instead
|
||
of serving him. David would willingly lie at the threshold in God's
|
||
house; so far was he from coveting <i>the chief seat</i> there,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.84.10" parsed="|Ps|84|10|0|0" passage="Ps 84:10">Ps. lxxxiv. 10</scripRef>. It savours
|
||
much of pride and hypocrisy, when people do not care for going to
|
||
church, unless they can look fine and make a figure there.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p21">[2.] Titles of honour and respect. They
|
||
<i>loved greetings in the markets,</i> loved to have people put off
|
||
their hats to them, and show them respect when they met them in the
|
||
streets. O how it pleased them, and fed their vain humour,
|
||
<i>digito monstrari et dicier, Hic est—to be pointed out, and to
|
||
have it said, This be he,</i> to have way made for them in the
|
||
crowd of market people; "Stand off, here is a Pharisee coming!" and
|
||
to be complimented with the high and pompous title of <i>Rabbi,
|
||
Rabbi!</i> This was meat and drink and dainties to them; and they
|
||
took as great a satisfaction in it as Nebuchadnezzar did in his
|
||
palace, when he said, <i>Is not this great Babylon that I have
|
||
built?</i> The <i>greetings</i> would not have done them half so
|
||
much good, if they had not been in the markets, where every body
|
||
might see how much they were respected, and how high they stood in
|
||
the opinion of the people. It was but a little before Christ's
|
||
time, that the Jewish teachers, the masters of Israel, had assumed
|
||
the title of <i>Rabbi, Rab,</i> or <i>Rabban,</i> which signifies
|
||
<i>great or much;</i> and was construed as <i>Doctor,</i> or <i>My
|
||
lord.</i> And they laid such a stress upon it, that they gave it
|
||
for a maxim that "he who salutes his teacher, and does not call him
|
||
Rabbi, provokes the divine Majesty to depart from Israel;" so much
|
||
religion did they place in that which was but a piece of good
|
||
manners! For him that is taught in the word to give respect to him
|
||
that teaches is commendable enough in him that gives it; but for
|
||
him that teaches to love it, and demand it, and affect it, to be
|
||
puffed up with it, and to be displeased if it be omitted, is sinful
|
||
and abominable; and, instead of teaching, he has need to learn the
|
||
first lesson in the school of Christ, which is humility.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p22">(2.) He cautions his disciples against
|
||
being herein like them; herein they must not do after their works;
|
||
"But be not ye called so, for ye shall not be of such a spirit,"
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.8" parsed="|Matt|23|8|0|0" passage="Mt 23:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>, &c.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p23">Here is, [1.] A prohibition of pride. They
|
||
are here forbidden,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p24"><i>First,</i> To challenge titles of honour
|
||
and dominion to themselves, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.8-Matt.23.10" parsed="|Matt|23|8|23|10" passage="Mt 23:8-10"><i>v.</i> 8-10</scripRef>. It is repeated twice; <i>Be
|
||
not called Rabbi, neither be ye called Master or Guide:</i> not
|
||
that it is unlawful to give civil respect to <i>those that are over
|
||
us in the Lord,</i> nay, it is an instance of the honour and esteem
|
||
which it is our duty to show them; but, 1. Christ's ministers must
|
||
not affect the name of <i>Rabbi</i> or <i>Master,</i> by way of
|
||
distinction from other people; it is not agreeable to the
|
||
simplicity of the gospel, for them to covet or accept the honour
|
||
which they have that are in kings' palaces. 2. They must not assume
|
||
the authority and dominion implied in those names; they must not be
|
||
magisterial, nor domineer over their brethren, or over God's
|
||
heritage, as if they had dominion over the faith of Christians:
|
||
what they received of the Lord, all must receive from them; but in
|
||
other things they must not make their opinions and wills a rule and
|
||
standard to all other people, to be admitted with an implicit
|
||
obedience. The reasons for this prohibition are,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p25">(1.) <i>One is your Master, even
|
||
Christ,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.8 Bible:Matt.23.10" parsed="|Matt|23|8|0|0;|Matt|23|10|0|0" passage="Mt 23:8,10"><i>v.</i> 8, and again,
|
||
<i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. Note, [1.] Christ is our Master, our
|
||
Teacher, our Guide. Mr. George Herbert, when he named the name of
|
||
<i>Christ,</i> usually added, <i>My Master.</i> [2.] Christ only is
|
||
our Master, ministers are but ushers in the school. Christ only is
|
||
the Master, the great Prophet, whom we must hear, and be ruled and
|
||
overruled by; whose word must be an oracle and a law to us;
|
||
<i>Verily I say unto you,</i> must be enough to us. And if he only
|
||
be our Master, then for his ministers to set up for dictators, and
|
||
to pretend to a supremacy and an infallibility, is a daring
|
||
usurpation of that honour of Christ which he will not give to
|
||
another.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p26">(2.) <i>All ye are brethren.</i> Ministers
|
||
are brethren not only to one another, but to the people; and
|
||
therefore it ill becomes them to be masters, when there are none
|
||
for them to master it over but their brethren; yea, and we are all
|
||
younger brethren, otherwise the eldest might claim an <i>excellency
|
||
of dignity and power,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.49.3" parsed="|Gen|49|3|0|0" passage="Ge 49:3">Gen. xlix.
|
||
3</scripRef>. But, to preclude that, Christ himself is <i>the
|
||
first-born among many brethren,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.29" parsed="|Rom|8|29|0|0" passage="Ro 8:29">Rom. viii. 29</scripRef>. Ye are brethren, as ye are all
|
||
disciples of the same Master. School-fellows are brethren, and, as
|
||
such, should help one another in getting their lesson; but it will
|
||
by no means be allowed that one of the scholars step into the
|
||
master's seat, and give law to the school. If we are all brethren,
|
||
we must not be <i>many masters.</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Jas.3.1" parsed="|Jas|3|1|0|0" passage="Jam 3:1">Jam. iii. 1</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p27"><i>Secondly,</i> They are forbidden to
|
||
ascribe such titles to others (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.9" parsed="|Matt|23|9|0|0" passage="Mt 23:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>); "<i>Call no man your father upon
|
||
the earth;</i> constitute no man the father of your religion, that
|
||
is, the founder, author, director, and governor, of it." The
|
||
fathers of our flesh must be called <i>fathers,</i> and as such we
|
||
must <i>give them reverence;</i> but God only must be allowed as
|
||
<i>the Father of our spirits,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.12.9" parsed="|Heb|12|9|0|0" passage="Heb 12:9">Heb.
|
||
xii. 9</scripRef>. Our religion must not be derived from, or made
|
||
to depend upon, any man. We are born again to the spiritual and
|
||
divine life, <i>not of corruptible seed, but by the word of God;
|
||
not of the will of the flesh, or the will of man, but of God.</i>
|
||
Now the will of man, not being the rise of our religion, must not
|
||
be the rule of it. We must not <i>jurare in verba magistri—swear
|
||
to the dictates of any creature,</i> not the wisest or best, nor
|
||
pin our faith on any man's sleeve, because we know not whither he
|
||
will carry it. St. Paul calls himself <i>a Father</i> to those
|
||
whose conversion he had been an instrument of (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.15 Bible:Phlm.1.10" parsed="|1Cor|4|15|0|0;|Phlm|1|10|0|0" passage="1Co 4:15,Philem 1:10">1 Cor. iv. 15; Phil. 10</scripRef>); but he
|
||
pretends to no dominion over them, and uses that title to denote,
|
||
not authority, but affection: therefore he calls them not his
|
||
<i>obliged,</i> but his <i>beloved,</i> sons, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p27.4" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.14" parsed="|1Cor|4|14|0|0" passage="1Co 4:14">1 Cor. iv. 14</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p28">The reason given is, <i>One is your Father,
|
||
who is in heaven.</i> God is our Father, and is All in all in our
|
||
religion. He is the Fountain of it, and its Founder; the Life of
|
||
it, and its Lord; from whom alone, as the Original, our spiritual
|
||
life is derived, and on whom it depends. He is <i>the Father of</i>
|
||
all <i>lights</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.17" parsed="|Jas|1|17|0|0" passage="Jam 1:17">Jam. i.
|
||
17</scripRef>), that <i>one Father, from whom are all things, and
|
||
we in him,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p28.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.4.6" parsed="|Eph|4|6|0|0" passage="Eph 4:6">Eph. iv. 6</scripRef>.
|
||
Christ having taught us to say, <i>Our Father, who art in
|
||
heaven;</i> let us <i>call no man Father upon earth;</i> no man,
|
||
because <i>man is a worm, and the son of man is a worm,</i> hewn
|
||
out of the same rock with us; especially not upon earth, for man
|
||
upon earth is a sinful worm; <i>there is not a just man upon earth,
|
||
that doeth good, and sinneth not,</i> and therefore no one is fit
|
||
to be called <i>Father.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p29">[2.] Here is a precept of humility and
|
||
mutual subjection (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.11" parsed="|Matt|23|11|0|0" passage="Mt 23:11"><i>v.</i>
|
||
11</scripRef>); <i>He that is greatest among you shall be your
|
||
servant;</i> not only call himself so (we know of one who styles
|
||
himself <i>Servus servorum Dei—Servant of the servants of God,</i>
|
||
but acts as Rabbi, and father, and master, and <i>Dominus Deus
|
||
noster—The Lord our God,</i> and what not), but he shall be so.
|
||
Take it as a promise; "<i>He</i> shall be accounted greatest, and
|
||
stand highest in the favour of God, that is most submissive and
|
||
serviceable;" or as a precept; "He that is advanced to any place of
|
||
dignity, trust, and honour, in the church, <i>let him be your
|
||
servant</i>" (some copies read <b><i>esto</i></b> for
|
||
<b><i>estai</i></b>), "let him not think that his patent of honour
|
||
is a writ of ease; no; <i>he that is greatest</i> is not a lord,
|
||
but a minister." St. Paul, who knew his privilege as well as duty,
|
||
though <i>free from all, yet made himself servant unto all</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.9.19" parsed="|1Cor|9|19|0|0" passage="1Co 9:19">1 Cor. ix. 19</scripRef>); and our
|
||
Master frequently pressed it upon his disciples to be humble and
|
||
self-denying, mild and condescending, and to abound in all offices
|
||
of Christian love, though mean, and to the meanest; and of this he
|
||
hath set us an example.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p30">[3.] Here is a good reason for all this,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.12" parsed="|Matt|23|12|0|0" passage="Mt 23:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>. Consider,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p31"><i>First,</i> The punishment intended for
|
||
the proud; <i>Whosoever shall exalt himself shall be abased.</i> If
|
||
God give them repentance, they will be abased in their own eyes,
|
||
and will abhor themselves for it; if they repent not, sooner or
|
||
later they will be abased before the world. Nebuchadnezzar, in the
|
||
height of his pride, was turned to be a fellow-commoner with the
|
||
beasts; Herod, to be a feast for the worms; and Babylon, that sat
|
||
as a queen, to be the scorn of nations. God made the proud and
|
||
aspiring priests contemptible and base (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.9" parsed="|Mal|2|9|0|0" passage="Mal 2:9">Mal. ii. 9</scripRef>), and the lying prophet to be
|
||
<i>the tail,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p31.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.9.15" parsed="|Isa|9|15|0|0" passage="Isa 9:15">Isa. ix.
|
||
15</scripRef>. But if proud men have not marks of humiliation set
|
||
upon them in this world, there is a day coming, when they shall
|
||
<i>rise to everlasting shame and contempt</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p31.3" osisRef="Bible:Dan.12.2" parsed="|Dan|12|2|0|0" passage="Da 12:2">Dan. xii. 2</scripRef>); <i>so plentifully will he reward
|
||
the proud doer!</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p31.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.31.23" parsed="|Ps|31|23|0|0" passage="Ps 31:23">Ps. xxxi.
|
||
23</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p32"><i>Secondly,</i> The preferment intended
|
||
for the humble; <i>He that shall humble himself shall be
|
||
exalted.</i> Humility is that <i>ornament which is in the sight of
|
||
God of great price.</i> In this world the humble have the honour of
|
||
being accepted with the holy God, and respected by all wise and
|
||
good men; of being qualified for, and often called out to, the most
|
||
honourable services; for honour is like the shadow, which flees
|
||
from those that pursue it, and grasp at it, but follows those that
|
||
flee from it. However, in the other world, they that have humbled
|
||
themselves in contrition for their sin, in compliance with their
|
||
God, and in condescension to their brethren, shall be exalted to
|
||
inherit the throne of glory; shall be not only owned, but crowned,
|
||
before angels and men.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xxiv-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.13-Matt.23.33" parsed="|Matt|23|13|23|33" passage="Mt 23:13-33" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.23.13-Matt.23.33">
|
||
<h4 id="Matt.xxiv-p32.2">The Crimes of the Pharisees.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxiv-p33">13 But woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees,
|
||
hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for
|
||
ye neither go in <i>yourselves,</i> neither suffer ye them that are
|
||
entering to go in. 14 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees,
|
||
hypocrites! for ye devour widows' houses, and for a pretence make
|
||
long prayer: therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation.
|
||
15 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye
|
||
compass sea and land to make one proselyte, and when he is made, ye
|
||
make him twofold more the child of hell than yourselves. 16
|
||
Woe unto you, <i>ye</i> blind guides, which say, Whosoever shall
|
||
swear by the temple, it is nothing; but whosoever shall swear by
|
||
the gold of the temple, he is a debtor! 17 <i>Ye</i> fools
|
||
and blind: for whether is greater, the gold, or the temple that
|
||
sanctifieth the gold? 18 And, Whosoever shall swear by the
|
||
altar, it is nothing; but whosoever sweareth by the gift that is
|
||
upon it, he is guilty. 19 <i>Ye</i> fools and blind: for
|
||
whether <i>is</i> greater, the gift, or the altar that sanctifieth
|
||
the gift? 20 Whoso therefore shall swear by the altar,
|
||
sweareth by it, and by all things thereon. 21 And whoso
|
||
shall swear by the temple, sweareth by it, and by him that dwelleth
|
||
therein. 22 And he that shall swear by heaven, sweareth by
|
||
the throne of God, and by him that sitteth thereon. 23 Woe
|
||
unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of
|
||
mint and anise and cummin, and have omitted the weightier
|
||
<i>matters</i> of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith: these ought
|
||
ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone. 24
|
||
<i>Ye</i> blind guides, which strain at a gnat, and swallow a
|
||
camel. 25 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
|
||
for ye make clean the outside of the cup and of the platter, but
|
||
within they are full of extortion and excess. 26 <i>Thou</i>
|
||
blind Pharisee, cleanse first that <i>which is</i> within the cup
|
||
and platter, that the outside of them may be clean also. 27
|
||
Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like
|
||
unto whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but
|
||
are within full of dead <i>men's</i> bones, and of all uncleanness.
|
||
28 Even so ye also outwardly appear righteous unto men, but
|
||
within ye are full of hypocrisy and iniquity. 29 Woe unto
|
||
you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! because ye build the tombs
|
||
of the prophets, and garnish the sepulchres of the righteous,
|
||
30 And say, If we had been in the days of our fathers, we
|
||
would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the
|
||
prophets. 31 Wherefore ye be witnesses unto yourselves, that
|
||
ye are the children of them which killed the prophets. 32
|
||
Fill ye up then the measure of your fathers. 33 <i>Ye</i>
|
||
serpents, <i>ye</i> generation of vipers, how can ye escape the
|
||
damnation of hell?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p34">In these verses we have eight woes levelled
|
||
directly against the scribes and Pharisees by our Lord Jesus
|
||
Christ, like so many claps of thunder, or flashes of lightning,
|
||
from mount Sinai. <i>Three</i> woes are made to look very dreadful
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.8.13 Bible:Rev.9.12" parsed="|Rev|8|13|0|0;|Rev|9|12|0|0" passage="Re 8:13,9:12">Rev. viii. 13; ix.
|
||
12</scripRef>); but here are <i>eight</i> woes, in opposition to
|
||
the eight beatitudes, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p34.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.3" parsed="|Matt|5|3|0|0" passage="Mt 5:3">Matt. v.
|
||
3</scripRef>. The gospel has its woes as well as the law, and
|
||
gospel curses are of all curses the heaviest. These woes are the
|
||
more remarkable, not only because of the authority, but because of
|
||
the meekness and gentleness, of him that denounced them. He came to
|
||
bless, and loved to bless; but, if his wrath be kindled, there is
|
||
surely cause for it: and who shall entreat for him that the great
|
||
Intercessor pleads against? A woe from Christ is a remediless
|
||
woe.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p35">This is here the burthen of the song, and
|
||
it is a heavy burthen; <i>Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees,
|
||
hypocrites.</i> Note, 1. The scribes and Pharisees were hypocrites;
|
||
that is it in which all the rest of their bad characters are summed
|
||
up; it was the leaven which gave the relish to all they said and
|
||
did. A hypocrite is a stage-player in religion (that is the primary
|
||
signification of the word); he personates or acts the part of one
|
||
that he neither is nor may be, or perhaps the he neither is nor
|
||
would be. 2. That hypocrites are in a woeful state and condition.
|
||
<i>Woe to hypocrites;</i> so <i>he</i> said whose saying that their
|
||
case is miserable makes it so: while they live, their religion is
|
||
vain; when they die, their ruin is great.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p36">Now each of these woes against the scribes
|
||
and Pharisees has a reason annexed to it containing a separate
|
||
crime charged upon them, proving their hypocrisy, and justifying
|
||
the judgment of Christ upon them; for his woes, his curses, are
|
||
never causeless.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p37">I. They were sworn enemies to the gospel of
|
||
Christ, and consequently to the salvation of the souls of men
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.13" parsed="|Matt|23|13|0|0" passage="Mt 23:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>); <i>They
|
||
shut up the kingdom of heaven against men,</i> that is, they did
|
||
all they could to keep people from believing in Christ, and so
|
||
entering into his kingdom. Christ came to <i>open the kingdom of
|
||
heaven,</i> that is, to lay open for us <i>a new and living way</i>
|
||
into it, to bring men to be subjects of that kingdom. Now the
|
||
scribes and Pharisees, who sat in Moses's seat, and pretended to
|
||
the key of knowledge, ought to have contributed their assistance
|
||
herein, by opening those scriptures of the Old Testament which
|
||
pointed at the Messiah and his kingdom, in their true and proper
|
||
sense; they that undertook to expound Moses and the prophets should
|
||
have showed the people how they testified of Christ; that Daniel's
|
||
weeks were expiring, <i>the sceptre was departed from Judah,</i>
|
||
and therefore now was the time for the Messiah's appearing. Thus
|
||
they might have facilitated that great work, and have helped
|
||
thousands to heaven; but, instead of this, they shut up the kingdom
|
||
of heaven; they made it their business to press the ceremonial law,
|
||
which was now in the vanishing, to suppress the prophecies, which
|
||
were now in the accomplishing, and to beget and nourish up in the
|
||
minds of the people prejudices against Christ and his doctrine.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p38">1. They would not go in themselves; <i>Have
|
||
any of the rulers,</i> or <i>of the Pharisees, believed on him?</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:John.7.48" parsed="|John|7|48|0|0" passage="Joh 7:48">John vii. 48</scripRef>. No; they were
|
||
to proud to stoop to his meanness, too formal to be reconciled to
|
||
his plainness; they did not like a religion which insisted so much
|
||
on humility, self-denial, contempt of the world, and spiritual
|
||
worship. Repentance was the door of admission into this kingdom,
|
||
and nothing could be more disagreeable to the Pharisees, who
|
||
justified and admired themselves, than to repent, that is, to
|
||
accuse and abase and abhor themselves; therefore they <i>went not
|
||
in themselves;</i> but that was not all.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p39">2. They would not <i>suffer them that were
|
||
entering to go in.</i> It is bad to keep away from Christ
|
||
ourselves, but it is worse to keep others from him; yet that is
|
||
commonly the way of hypocrites; they do not love that any should go
|
||
beyond them in religion, or be better than they. Their not going in
|
||
themselves was a hindrance to many; for, they having so great an
|
||
interest in the people, multitudes rejected the gospel only because
|
||
their leaders did; but, besides that, they opposed both Christ's
|
||
entertaining of sinners (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p39.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.7.39" parsed="|Luke|7|39|0|0" passage="Lu 7:39">Luke vii.
|
||
39</scripRef>), and sinners' entertaining of Christ; they perverted
|
||
his doctrine, confronted his miracles, quarrelled with his
|
||
disciples, and represented him, and his institutes and economy, to
|
||
the people in the most disingenuous, disadvantageous manner
|
||
imaginable; they thundered out their excommunications against those
|
||
that confessed him, and used all their wit and power to serve their
|
||
malice against him; and thus they <i>shut up the kingdom of
|
||
heaven,</i> so that <i>they who would enter</i> into it must
|
||
<i>suffer violence</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p39.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11.12" parsed="|Matt|11|12|0|0" passage="Mt 11:12"><i>ch.</i> xi.
|
||
12</scripRef>), and <i>press into it</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p39.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.16.16" parsed="|Luke|16|16|0|0" passage="Lu 16:16">Luke xvi. 16</scripRef>), through a crowd of scribes and
|
||
Pharisees, and all the obstructions and difficulties they could
|
||
contrive to lay in their way. How well is it for us that our
|
||
salvation is not entrusted in the hands of any man or company of
|
||
men in the world! If it were, we should be undone. They that shut
|
||
out of the church would shut out of heaven if they could; but the
|
||
malice of men cannot <i>make the promise of God</i> to his chosen
|
||
<i>of no effect;</i> blessed be God, it cannot.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p40">II. They made religion and the form of
|
||
godliness a cloak and stalking-horse to their covetous practices
|
||
and desires, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p40.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.14" parsed="|Matt|23|14|0|0" passage="Mt 23:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>.
|
||
Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p41">1. What their wicked practices were; they
|
||
<i>devoured widows' houses,</i> either by quartering themselves and
|
||
their attendants upon them for entertainment, which must be of the
|
||
best for men of their figure; or by insinuating themselves into
|
||
their affections, and so getting to be the trustees of their
|
||
estates, which they could make an easy prey of; for who could
|
||
presume to call such as they were to an account? The thing they
|
||
aimed at was to enrich themselves; and, this being their chief and
|
||
highest end, all considerations of justice and equity were laid
|
||
aside, and even widows' houses were sacrificed to this. Widows are
|
||
of the weaker sex in its weakest state, easily imposed upon; and
|
||
therefore they fastened on them, to make a prey of. They devoured
|
||
those whom, by the law of God, they were particularly obliged to
|
||
protect, patronise, and relieve. There is a woe in the Old
|
||
Testament to those that <i>made widows their prey</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p41.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.10.1-Isa.10.2" parsed="|Isa|10|1|10|2" passage="Isa 10:1,2">Isa. x. 1, 2</scripRef>); and Christ here
|
||
seconded it with his woe. God is the judge of the widows; they are
|
||
his peculiar care, he <i>establisheth their border</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p41.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.15.25" parsed="|Prov|15|25|0|0" passage="Pr 15:25">Prov. xv. 25</scripRef>), and <i>espouseth their
|
||
cause</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p41.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.22.22-Exod.22.23" parsed="|Exod|22|22|22|23" passage="Ex 22:22,23">Exod. xxii. 22,
|
||
23</scripRef>); yet these were they whose houses the Pharisees
|
||
devoured by wholesale; so greedy were they to get <i>their bellies
|
||
filled with the treasures of wickedness!</i> Their devouring
|
||
denotes not only covetousness, but cruelty in their oppression,
|
||
described <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p41.4" osisRef="Bible:Mic.3.3" parsed="|Mic|3|3|0|0" passage="Mic 3:3">Mic. iii. 3</scripRef>,
|
||
<i>They eat the flesh, and flay off the skin.</i> And doubtless
|
||
they did all this under colour of law; for they did it so artfully
|
||
that it passed uncensured, and did not at all lessen the people's
|
||
veneration for them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p42">2. What was the cloak with which they
|
||
covered this wicked practice; <i>For a pretence they made long
|
||
prayers;</i> very long indeed, if it be true which some of the
|
||
Jewish writers tell us, that they spent three hours at a time in
|
||
the formalities of meditation and prayer, and did it thrice every
|
||
day, which is more than an upright soul, that makes a conscience of
|
||
being inward with God in the duty, dares pretend ordinarily to do;
|
||
but to the Pharisees it was easy enough, who never made a business
|
||
of the duty, and always made a trade of the outside of it. By this
|
||
craft they got their wealth, and maintained their grandeur. It is
|
||
not probable that these long prayers were extemporary, for then (as
|
||
Mr. Baxter observes) the Pharisees had much more the gift of prayer
|
||
than Christ's disciples had; but rather that they were stated forms
|
||
of words in use among them, which they said over by tale, as the
|
||
papists drop their beads. Christ doth not here condemn long
|
||
prayers, as in themselves hypocritical; nay if there were not a
|
||
great appearance of good in them, they would not have been used for
|
||
a pretence; and the cloak must be very thick which was used to
|
||
cover such wicked practices. Christ himself <i>continued all night
|
||
in prayer to God,</i> and we are commanded to <i>pray without
|
||
ceasing</i> too soon; where there are many sins to be confessed,
|
||
and many wants to pray for the supply of, and many mercies to give
|
||
thanks for, there is occasion for long prayers. But the Pharisees'
|
||
long prayers were made up of vain repetitions, and (which was the
|
||
end of them) they were for a <i>pretence;</i> by them they got the
|
||
reputation of pious devout men, that loved prayer, and were the
|
||
favourites of Heaven; and by this means people were made to believe
|
||
it was not possible that such men as they should cheat them;, and,
|
||
therefore, happy the widow that could get a Pharisee for her
|
||
trustee, and guardian to her children! Thus, while they seemed to
|
||
soar heaven-ward, upon the wings of prayer, their eye, like the
|
||
kite's, was all the while upon their prey on the earth, some
|
||
widow's house or other that lay convenient for them. Thus
|
||
circumcision was the cloak of the Shechemites' covetousness
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.34.22-Gen.34.23" parsed="|Gen|34|22|34|23" passage="Ge 34:22,23">Gen. xxxiv. 22, 23</scripRef>),
|
||
the payment of a vow in Hebron the cover of Absalom's rebellion
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p42.2" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.15.7" parsed="|2Sam|15|7|0|0" passage="2Sa 15:7">2 Sam. xv. 7</scripRef>), a fast in
|
||
Jezreel must patronise Naboth's murder, and the extirpation of Baal
|
||
is the footstool of Jehu's ambition. Popish priests, under pretence
|
||
of long prayers for the dead, masses and dirges, and I know not
|
||
what, enrich themselves by devouring the house of the widows and
|
||
fatherless. Note, It is no new thing for the show and form of
|
||
godliness to be made a cloak to the greatest enormities. But
|
||
dissembled piety, however it passeth now, will be reckoned for as
|
||
double iniquity, <i>in the day when God shall judge the secrets of
|
||
men.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p43">3. The doom passed upon them for this;
|
||
<i>Therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation.</i> Note, (1.)
|
||
There are degrees of damnation; there are some whose sin is more
|
||
inexcusable, <i>and whose ruin will therefore be more
|
||
intolerable.</i> (2.) The pretences of religion, with which
|
||
hypocrites disguise or excuse their sin now, will aggravate their
|
||
condemnation shortly. Such is the deceitfulness of sin, that the
|
||
very thing by which sinners hope to expiate and atone for their
|
||
sins will come against them, and make their sins more exceedingly
|
||
sinful. But it is sad for the criminal, when his <i>de</i>fence
|
||
proves his <i>of</i>fence, and his pleas (<i>We have prophesied in
|
||
thy name, and in thy name</i> made long prayers) heightens the
|
||
charge against him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p44">III. While they were such enemies to the
|
||
conversion of souls to Christianity, they were very industrious in
|
||
the perversion of them to their faction. They shut up the kingdom
|
||
of heaven against those that would turn to Christ, but at the same
|
||
time <i>compassed sea and land to make proselytes</i> to
|
||
themselves, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.15" parsed="|Matt|23|15|0|0" passage="Mt 23:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>.
|
||
Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p45">1. Their commendable industry in making
|
||
proselytes to the Jewish religion, not only proselytes of <i>the
|
||
gate,</i> who obliged themselves to no more than the observance of
|
||
the seven precepts of the sons of Noah, but proselytes of
|
||
<i>righteousness,</i> who addicted themselves wholly to all the
|
||
rites of the Jewish religion, for that was the game they flew at;
|
||
for this, for one such, though but one, they compass sea and land,
|
||
had many a cunning reach, and laid many a plot, rode and run, and
|
||
sent and wrote, and laboured unweariedly. And what did they aim at?
|
||
Not the glory of God, and the good of souls; but that they might
|
||
have the credit of making them proselytes, and the advantage of
|
||
making a prey of them when they were made. Note, (1.) The making of
|
||
proselytes, if it be to the truth and serious godliness, and be
|
||
done with a good design, is a good work, well worthy of the utmost
|
||
care and pains. Such is the value of souls, that nothing must be
|
||
thought too much to do, to save a soul from death. The industry of
|
||
the Pharisees herein may show the negligence of many who would be
|
||
thought to act from better principles, but will be at no pains or
|
||
cost to propagate the gospel. (2.) To make a proselyte, sea and
|
||
land must be compassed; all ways and means must be tried; first one
|
||
way, and then another, must be tried, all little enough; but all
|
||
well paid, if the point be gained. (3.) Carnal hearts seldom shrink
|
||
from the pains necessary to carry on their carnal purposes; when a
|
||
proselyte is to be made to serve a turn for themselves, they will
|
||
compass sea and land to make him, rather than be disappointed.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p46">2. Their cursed impiety in abusing their
|
||
proselytes when they were made; "Ye make him the disciple of a
|
||
Pharisee presently, and he sucks in all a Pharisee's notions; and
|
||
so <i>ye make him twofold more the child of hell than
|
||
yourselves.</i>" Note, (1.) Hypocrites, while they fancy themselves
|
||
heirs of heaven, are, in the judgment of Christ, the children of
|
||
hell. The rise of their hypocrisy is from hell, for the devil is
|
||
the father of lies; and the tendency of their hypocrisy is toward
|
||
hell, that is the country they belong to, the inheritance they are
|
||
heirs to; they are called <i>children of hell,</i> because of their
|
||
rooted enmity to the kingdom of heaven, which was the principle and
|
||
genius of Pharisaism. (2.) Though all that maliciously oppose the
|
||
gospel are children of hell, yet some are twofold more so than
|
||
others, more furious and bigoted and malignant. (3.) Perverted
|
||
proselytes are commonly the greatest bigots; the scholars outdid
|
||
their masters, [1.] In fondness of ceremony; the Pharisees
|
||
themselves saw the folly of their own impositions, and in their
|
||
hearts smiled at the obsequiousness of those that conformed to
|
||
them; but their proselytes were eager for them. Note, Weak heads
|
||
commonly admire those shows and ceremonies which wise men (however
|
||
for public ends they countenance them) cannot but think meanly of.
|
||
[2.] In fury against Christianity; the proselytes readily imbibed
|
||
the principles which their crafty leaders were not wanting to
|
||
possess them with, and so became extremely hot against the truth.
|
||
The most bitter enemies the apostles met with in all places were
|
||
the Hellenist Jews, who were mostly proselytes, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.45 Bible:Acts.14.2-Acts.14.19 Bible:Acts.17.5 Bible:Acts.18.6" parsed="|Acts|13|45|0|0;|Acts|14|2|14|19;|Acts|17|5|0|0;|Acts|18|6|0|0" passage="Ac 13:45,14:2-19,17:5,18:6">Acts xiii. 45; xiv. 2-19; xvii. 5;
|
||
xviii. 6</scripRef>. Paul, a disciple of the Pharisees, was
|
||
<i>exceedingly mad against the Christians</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p46.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.26.11" parsed="|Acts|26|11|0|0" passage="Ac 26:11">Acts xxvi. 11</scripRef>), when his master, Gamaliel,
|
||
seems to have been more moderate.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p47">IV. Their seeking their own worldly gain
|
||
and honour more than God's glory put them upon coining false and
|
||
unwarrantable distinction, with which they led the people into
|
||
dangerous mistakes, particularly in the matter of oaths; which, as
|
||
an evidence of a universal sense of religion, have been by all
|
||
nations accounted sacred (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.16" parsed="|Matt|23|16|0|0" passage="Mt 23:16"><i>v.</i>
|
||
16</scripRef>); <i>Ye blind guides.</i> Note, 1. It is sad to think
|
||
how many are under the guidance of such as are themselves blind,
|
||
who undertake to show others that way which they are themselves
|
||
willingly ignorant of. <i>His watchmen are blind</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.56.10" parsed="|Isa|56|10|0|0" passage="Isa 56:10">Isa. lvi. 10</scripRef>); and too often the
|
||
people love to have it so, and say to the seers, <i>See not.</i>
|
||
But the case is bad, when the leaders of the people <i>cause them
|
||
to err,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p47.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.9.16" parsed="|Isa|9|16|0|0" passage="Isa 9:16">Isa. ix. 16</scripRef>. 2.
|
||
Though the condition of those whose guides are blind is very sad,
|
||
yet that of the blind guides themselves is yet more woeful. Christ
|
||
denounces a woe to the blind guides that have the blood of so many
|
||
souls to answer for.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p48">Now, to prove their blindness, he specifies
|
||
the matter of swearing, and shows what corrupt casuists they
|
||
were.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p49">(1.) He lays down the doctrine they
|
||
taught.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p50">[1.] They allowed swearing by creatures,
|
||
provided they were consecrated to the service of God, and stood in
|
||
any special relation to him. They allowed swearing by the temple
|
||
and the altar, though they were the work of men's hands, intended
|
||
to be the servants of God's honour, not sharers in it. An oath is
|
||
an appeal to God, to his omniscience and justice; and to make this
|
||
appeal to any creature is to put that creature in the place of God.
|
||
See <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p50.1" osisRef="Bible:Deut.6.13" parsed="|Deut|6|13|0|0" passage="De 6:13">Deut. vi. 13</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p51">[2.] They distinguished between an oath by
|
||
<i>the temple</i> and an oath by the <i>gold of the temple;</i> an
|
||
oath by <i>the altar</i> and an oath by <i>the gift upon the
|
||
altar;</i> making the latter binding, but not the former. Here was
|
||
a double wickedness; <i>First,</i> That there were some oaths which
|
||
they dispensed with, and made light of, and reckoned a man was not
|
||
bound by to assert the truth, or perform a promise. They ought not
|
||
to have sworn by the temple or the altar; but, when they had so
|
||
sworn, they were taken in the words of their mouth. That doctrine
|
||
cannot be of the God of truth which gives countenance to the breach
|
||
of faith in any case whatsoever. Oaths are edge-tools and are not
|
||
to be jested with. <i>Secondly,</i> That they preferred the gold
|
||
before the temple, and the gift before the altar, to encourage
|
||
people to bring gifts to the altar, and gold to the treasures of
|
||
the temple, which they hoped to be gainers by. Those who had made
|
||
gold their hope, and whose eyes were blinded by gifts in secret,
|
||
were great friends to the Corban; and, gain being their godliness,
|
||
by a thousand artifices they made religion truckle to their worldly
|
||
interests. Corrupt church-guides make things to be sin or not sin
|
||
as it serves their purposes, and lay a much greater stress on that
|
||
which concerns their own gain than on that which is for God's glory
|
||
and the good of souls.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p52">(2.) He shows the folly and absurdity of
|
||
this distinction (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p52.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.17-Matt.23.19" parsed="|Matt|23|17|23|19" passage="Mt 23:17-19"><i>v.</i>
|
||
17-19</scripRef>); <i>Ye fools, and blind.</i> It was in the way of
|
||
a necessary reproof, not an angry reproach, that Christ called them
|
||
<i>fools.</i> Let it suffice us from the word of wisdom to show the
|
||
folly of sinful opinions and practices: but, for the fastening of
|
||
the character upon particular persons, leave that to Christ, who
|
||
knows what is in man, and has forbidden us to say, <i>Thou
|
||
fool.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p53">To convict them of folly, he appeals to
|
||
themselves, <i>Whether is greater, the gold</i> (the golden vessels
|
||
and ornaments, or the gold in the treasury) <i>or the temple that
|
||
sanctifies the gold; the gift, or the altar that sanctifies the
|
||
gift?</i> Any one will own, <i>Propter quod aliquid est tale, id
|
||
est magis tale—That, on account of which any thing is qualified in
|
||
a particular way, must itself be much more qualified in the same
|
||
way.</i> They that sware by the gold of the temple had an eye to it
|
||
as holy; but what was it that made it holy but the holiness of the
|
||
temple, to the service of which it was appropriated? And therefore
|
||
the temple cannot be less holy than the gold, but must be more so;
|
||
for the less is blessed and sanctified of the better, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.7.7" parsed="|Heb|7|7|0|0" passage="Heb 7:7">Heb. vii. 7</scripRef>. The temple and altar were
|
||
dedicated to God fixedly, the gold and gift but secondarily. Christ
|
||
is our altar (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p53.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.10" parsed="|Heb|13|10|0|0" passage="Heb 13:10">Heb. xiii.
|
||
10</scripRef>), our temple (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p53.3" osisRef="Bible:John.2.21" parsed="|John|2|21|0|0" passage="Joh 2:21">John ii.
|
||
21</scripRef>); for it is he that sanctifies all our gifts, and
|
||
puts an acceptableness in them, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p53.4" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.5" parsed="|1Pet|2|5|0|0" passage="1Pe 2:5">1 Pet.
|
||
ii. 5</scripRef>. Those that put their own works into the place of
|
||
Christ's righteousness in justification are guilty of the
|
||
Pharisees' absurdity, who preferred the gift before the altar.
|
||
Every true Christian is a living temple; and by virtue thereof
|
||
common things are sanctified to him; <i>unto the pure all things
|
||
are pure</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p53.5" osisRef="Bible:Titus.1.15" parsed="|Titus|1|15|0|0" passage="Tit 1:15">Tit. i. 15</scripRef>),
|
||
and <i>the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the</i> believing
|
||
<i>wife,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p53.6" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.7.14" parsed="|1Cor|7|14|0|0" passage="1Co 7:14">1 Cor. vii.
|
||
14</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p54">(3.) He rectifies the mistake (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.20-Matt.23.22" parsed="|Matt|23|20|23|22" passage="Mt 23:20-22"><i>v.</i> 20-22</scripRef>), by reducing all
|
||
the oaths they had invented to the true intent of an oath, which
|
||
is, By the name of the Lord: so that though an oath by the temple,
|
||
or the altar, or heaven, be formally bad, yet it is binding.
|
||
<i>Quod fieri non debuit, factum valet—Engagements which ought not
|
||
to have been made, are yet, when made, binding.</i> A man shall
|
||
never take advantage of his own fault.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p55">[1.] He that swears by the altar, let him
|
||
not think to shake off the obligation of it by saying, "The altar
|
||
is but wood, and stone, and brass;" for his oath shall be construed
|
||
most strongly against himself; because he was culpable, and so as
|
||
that the obligation of it may be preserved, <i>ut res potius valeat
|
||
quam pereat—the obligation being hereby strengthened rather than
|
||
destroyed.</i> And therefore an oath by the altar shall be
|
||
interpreted by it and by all things thereon; for the appurtenances
|
||
pass with the principal. And, the things thereon being offered up
|
||
to God, to swear by it and them was, in effect, to call God himself
|
||
to witness: for it was the altar of God; and he that went to that,
|
||
went to God, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p55.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.43.4 Bible:Ps.26.6" parsed="|Ps|43|4|0|0;|Ps|26|6|0|0" passage="Ps 43:4,Ps 26:6">Ps. xliii. 4;
|
||
xxvi. 6</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p56">[2.] He that swears by the temple, if he
|
||
understand what he does, cannot but apprehend that the ground of
|
||
such a respect to it, is, not because it is a fine house, but
|
||
because it is the house of God, dedicated to his service, the place
|
||
which he has chosen to put his name there; and therefore he swears
|
||
<i>by it, and by him that dwells therein;</i> there he was pleased
|
||
in a peculiar manner to manifest himself, and give tokens of his
|
||
presence; so that whoso swears by it, swears by him who had said,
|
||
<i>This is my rest, here will I dwell.</i> Good Christians are
|
||
God's temples, and the Spirit of God dwells in them (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.3.16 Bible:1Cor.6.19" parsed="|1Cor|3|16|0|0;|1Cor|6|19|0|0" passage="1Co 3:16,6:19">1 Cor. iii. 16; vi. 19</scripRef>), and God
|
||
takes what is done to them as done to himself; he that grieves a
|
||
gracious soul, grieves it and the Spirit that dwells in it.
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p56.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.4.30" parsed="|Eph|4|30|0|0" passage="Eph 4:30">Eph. iv. 30</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p57">[3.] If a man swears by heaven, he sins
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p57.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.34" parsed="|Matt|5|34|0|0" passage="Mt 5:34"><i>ch.</i> v. 34</scripRef>); yet he
|
||
shall not therefore be discharged from the obligation of his oath;
|
||
no, God will make him know that the heaven he swears by, is his
|
||
throne (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p57.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.66.1" parsed="|Isa|66|1|0|0" passage="Isa 66:1">Isa. lxvi. 1</scripRef>); and
|
||
he that swears by the throne, appeals to him that sits upon it;
|
||
who, as he resents the affront done to him in the form of the oath,
|
||
so he will certainly revenge the greater affront done to him by the
|
||
violation of it. Christ will not countenance the evasion of a
|
||
solemn oath, though ever so plausible.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p58">V. They were very strict and precise in the
|
||
smaller matters of the law, but as careless and loose in the
|
||
weightier matters, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p58.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.23-Matt.23.24" parsed="|Matt|23|23|23|24" passage="Mt 23:23,24"><i>v.</i> 23,
|
||
24</scripRef>. They were <i>partial in the law</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p58.2" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.9" parsed="|Mal|2|9|0|0" passage="Mal 2:9">Mal. ii. 9</scripRef>), would pick and choose
|
||
their duty, according as they were interested or stood affected.
|
||
Sincere obedience is universal, and he that from a right principle
|
||
obeys any of God's precepts, will have respect to them all,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p58.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.119.6" parsed="|Ps|119|6|0|0" passage="Ps 119:6">Ps. cxix. 6</scripRef>. But
|
||
hypocrites, who act in religion for themselves, and not for God,
|
||
will do no more in religion than they can serve a turn by for
|
||
themselves. The partiality of the scribes and Pharisees appears
|
||
here, in two instances.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p59">1. They observed smaller duties, but
|
||
omitted greater; they were very exact in paying tithes, till it
|
||
came to <i>mint, anise,</i> and <i>cummin,</i> their exactness in
|
||
tithing of which would not cost them much, but would be cried up,
|
||
and they should buy reputation cheap. The Pharisee boasted of this,
|
||
<i>I give tithes of all that I possess,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p59.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18.12" parsed="|Luke|18|12|0|0" passage="Lu 18:12">Luke xviii. 12</scripRef>. But it is probable that they
|
||
had ends of their own to serve, and would find their own account in
|
||
it; for the priests and Levites, to whom the tithes were paid, were
|
||
in their interests, and knew how to return their kindness. Paying
|
||
tithes was their duty, and what the law required; Christ tells them
|
||
they ought not to leave it undone. Note, All ought in their places
|
||
to contribute to the support and maintenance of a standing
|
||
ministry: withholding tithes is called <i>robbing God,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p59.2" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.8-Mal.2.10" parsed="|Mal|2|8|2|10" passage="Mal 2:8-10">Mal. ii. 8-10</scripRef>. They that
|
||
<i>are taught in the word,</i> and do not <i>communicate to them
|
||
that teach them</i> that love a cheap gospel, come short of the
|
||
Pharisee.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p60">But that which Christ here condemns them
|
||
for, is, that they <i>omitted the weightier matters of the law,
|
||
judgment, mercy, and faith;</i> and their niceness in paying
|
||
tithes, was, if not to atone before God, yet at least to excuse and
|
||
palliate to men the omission of those. All the things of God's law
|
||
are weighty, but those are most weighty, which are most expressive
|
||
of inward holiness in the heart; the instances of self-denial,
|
||
contempt of the world, and resignation to God, in which lies the
|
||
life of religion. Judgment and mercy toward men, and faith toward
|
||
God, are the weightier matters of the law, the <i>good things</i>
|
||
which the <i>Lord our God requires</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p60.1" osisRef="Bible:Mic.6.8" parsed="|Mic|6|8|0|0" passage="Mic 6:8">Mic. vi. 8</scripRef>); to do justly, and love mercy, and
|
||
humble ourselves by faith to walk with God. This is the obedience
|
||
which is better than sacrifice or tithe; judgment is preferred
|
||
before sacrifice, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p60.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.1.11" parsed="|Isa|1|11|0|0" passage="Isa 1:11">Isa. i.
|
||
11</scripRef>. To be just to the priests in their tithe, and yet to
|
||
cheat and defraud every body else, is but to mock God, and deceive
|
||
ourselves. Mercy also is preferred before sacrifice, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p60.3" osisRef="Bible:Hos.6.6" parsed="|Hos|6|6|0|0" passage="Ho 6:6">Hos. vi. 6</scripRef>. To feed those who <i>made
|
||
themselves fat with the offering of the Lord,</i> and at the same
|
||
time to shut up the bowels of compassion from a brother or a sister
|
||
that is naked, and destitute of daily food, to pay tithe-mint to
|
||
the priest, and to deny a crumb to Lazarus, is to lie open to that
|
||
judgment without mercy, which is awarded to those who pretended to
|
||
judgment, and showed no mercy; nor will judgment and mercy serve
|
||
without faith in divine revelation; for God will be honoured in his
|
||
truths as well as in his laws.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p61">2. They avoided lesser sins, but committed
|
||
greater (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p61.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.24" parsed="|Matt|23|24|0|0" passage="Mt 23:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>);
|
||
<i>Ye blind guides;</i> so he had called them before (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p61.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.16" parsed="|Matt|23|16|0|0" passage="Mt 23:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>), for their corrupt
|
||
teaching; here he calls them so for their corrupt living, for their
|
||
example was leading as well as their doctrine; and in this also
|
||
they were blind and partial; they <i>strained at a gnat, and
|
||
swallowed a camel.</i> In their doctrine they strained at gnats,
|
||
warned people against even the least violation of the tradition of
|
||
the elders. In their practice they strained at gnats, heaved at
|
||
them, with a seeming dread, as if they had a great abhorrence of
|
||
sin, and were afraid of it in the least instance; but they made no
|
||
difficulty of those sins which, in comparison with them, were as a
|
||
camel to a gnat; when they devoured widows' houses, they did indeed
|
||
<i>swallow a camel;</i> when they gave Judas the price of innocent
|
||
blood, and yet scrupled to put the returned money into the treasury
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p61.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.6" parsed="|Matt|27|6|0|0" passage="Mt 27:6"><i>ch.</i> xxvii. 6</scripRef>); when
|
||
they would not go into the judgment-hall, for fear of being
|
||
defiled, and yet would stand at the door, and cry out against the
|
||
holy Jesus (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p61.4" osisRef="Bible:John.18.28" parsed="|John|18|28|0|0" passage="Joh 18:28">John xviii.
|
||
28</scripRef>); when they quarrelled with the disciples for eating
|
||
with unwashen hands, and yet, for the filling of the Corban, taught
|
||
people to break the fifth commandment, they strained at gnats, or
|
||
lesser things, and yet swallowed camels. It is not the scrupling of
|
||
a little sin that Christ here reproves; if it be a sin, though but
|
||
a gnat, it must be strained at, but the doing of that, and then
|
||
swallowing a camel. In the smaller matters of the law to be
|
||
superstitious, and to be profane in the greater, is the hypocrisy
|
||
here condemned.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p62">VI. They were all for the outside, and not
|
||
at all for the inside, of religion. They were more desirous and
|
||
solicitous to appear pious to men than to approve themselves so
|
||
toward God. This is illustrated by two similitudes.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p63">1. They are compared to a vessel that is
|
||
clean washed on the outside, but all dirt within, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p63.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.25-Matt.23.26" parsed="|Matt|23|25|23|26" passage="Mt 23:25,26"><i>v.</i> 25, 26</scripRef>. The Pharisees
|
||
placed religion in that which at best was but a point of
|
||
decency—the <i>washing of cups,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p63.2" osisRef="Bible:Mark.7.4" parsed="|Mark|7|4|0|0" passage="Mk 7:4">Mark vii. 4</scripRef>. They were in care to eat their
|
||
meat in clean cups and platters, but made no conscience of getting
|
||
their meat by extortion, and using it to excess. Now what a foolish
|
||
thing would it be for a man to wash only the outside of a cup,
|
||
which is to be looked at, and to leave the inside dirty, which is
|
||
to be used; so they do who only avoid scandalous sins, that would
|
||
spoil their reputation with men, but allow themselves in
|
||
heart-wickedness, which renders them odious to the pure and holy
|
||
God. In reference to this, observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p64">(1.) The practice of the Pharisees; they
|
||
made clean the outside. In those things which fell under the
|
||
observation of their neighbours, they seemed very exact, and
|
||
carried on their wicked intrigues with so much artifice, that their
|
||
wickedness was not suspected; people generally took them for very
|
||
good men. But within, in the recesses of their hearts and the close
|
||
retirements of their lives, they were <i>full of extortion and
|
||
excess;</i> of <i>violence and incontinence</i> (so Dr. Hammond);
|
||
that is, of injustice and intemperance. While they would seem to be
|
||
godly, they were neither sober nor righteous. Their <i>inward part
|
||
was very wickedness</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p64.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.5.9" parsed="|Ps|5|9|0|0" passage="Ps 5:9">Ps. v.
|
||
9</scripRef>); and that we are really, which we are inwardly.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p65">(2.) The rule Christ gives, in opposition
|
||
to this practice, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p65.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.26" parsed="|Matt|23|26|0|0" passage="Mt 23:26"><i>v.</i>
|
||
26</scripRef>. It is addressed to the blind Pharisees. They thought
|
||
themselves the <i>seers of the land,</i> but (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p65.2" osisRef="Bible:John.9.39" parsed="|John|9|39|0|0" passage="Joh 9:39">John ix. 39</scripRef>) Christ calls them <i>blind.</i>
|
||
Note, those are blind, in Christ's account who (how quick-sighted
|
||
soever they are in other things) are strangers, and no enemies, to
|
||
the wickedness of their own hearts; who see not, and hate not, the
|
||
secret sin that lodgeth there. Self-ignorance is the most shameful
|
||
and hurtful ignorance, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p65.3" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.17" parsed="|Rev|3|17|0|0" passage="Re 3:17">Rev. iii.
|
||
17</scripRef>. The rule is, <i>Cleanse first that which is
|
||
within.</i> Note, the principal care of every one of us should be
|
||
to wash our hearts from wickedness, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p65.4" osisRef="Bible:Jer.4.14" parsed="|Jer|4|14|0|0" passage="Jer 4:14">Jer. iv. 14</scripRef>. The main business of a Christian
|
||
lies within, to get cleansed from the <i>filthiness of the
|
||
spirit.</i> Corrupt affections and inclinations, the secret lusts
|
||
that lurk in the soul, unseen and unobserved, these must first be
|
||
mortified and subdued. Those sins must be conscientiously abstained
|
||
from, which the eye of God only is a witness to, who searcheth the
|
||
heart.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p66">Observe the method prescribed; <i>Cleanse
|
||
first that which is within</i> not that <i>only,</i> but that
|
||
<i>first;</i> because, if due care be taken concerning that, the
|
||
outside will be clean also. External motives and inducements may
|
||
keep the outside clean, while the inside is filthy; but if
|
||
renewing, sanctifying grace make clean the inside, that will have
|
||
an influence upon the outside, for the commanding principle is
|
||
within. If the heart be well kept, all is well, for <i>out of it
|
||
are the issues of life;</i> the eruptions will vanish of course. If
|
||
the heart and spirit be made new, there will be a newness of life;
|
||
here therefore we must begin with ourselves; first cleanse that
|
||
which is within; we then make sure work, when this is our first
|
||
work.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p67">2. They are compared to <i>whited
|
||
sepulchres,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p67.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.27-Matt.23.28" parsed="|Matt|23|27|23|28" passage="Mt 23:27,28"><i>v.</i> 27,
|
||
28</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p68">(1.) They were fair without, like
|
||
sepulchres, <i>which appear beautiful outward.</i> Some make it to
|
||
refer to the custom of the Jews to whiten graves, only for the
|
||
notifying of them, especially if they were in unusual places, that
|
||
people might avoid them, because of the ceremonial pollution
|
||
contracted by the touch of a grave, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p68.1" osisRef="Bible:Num.19.16" parsed="|Num|19|16|0|0" passage="Nu 19:16">Num. xix. 16</scripRef>. And it was part of the charge
|
||
of the overseers of the highways, to repair that whitening when it
|
||
was decayed. Sepulchres were thus made remarkable, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p68.2" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.23.16-2Kgs.23.17" parsed="|2Kgs|23|16|23|17" passage="2Ki 23:16,17">2 Kings xxiii. 16, 17</scripRef>. The
|
||
formality of hypocrites, by which they study to recommend
|
||
themselves to the world, doth but make all wise and good men the
|
||
more careful to avoid them, for fear of being defiled by them.
|
||
<i>Beware of the scribes,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p68.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.20.46" parsed="|Luke|20|46|0|0" passage="Lu 20:46">Luke xx.
|
||
46</scripRef>. It rather alludes to the custom of whitening the
|
||
sepulchres of eminent persons, for the beautifying of them. It is
|
||
said here (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p68.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.29" parsed="|Matt|23|29|0|0" passage="Mt 23:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>),
|
||
that they <i>garnished the sepulchres of the righteous;</i> as it
|
||
is usual with us to erect monuments upon the graves of great
|
||
persons, and to strew flowers on the graves of dear friends. Now
|
||
the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees was like the
|
||
ornaments of a grave, or the dressing up of a dead body, only for
|
||
show. The top of their ambition was to <i>appear righteous before
|
||
men,</i> and to be applauded and had in admiration by them.
|
||
But,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p69">(2.) They were <i>foul</i> within, like
|
||
sepulchres, <i>full of dead men's bones, and all uncleanness:</i>
|
||
so vile are our bodies, when the soul has deserted them! Thus were
|
||
they full of hypocrisy and iniquity. Hypocrisy is the worst
|
||
iniquity of all other. Note, It is possible for those that have
|
||
their hearts full of sin, to have their lives free from blame, and
|
||
to appear very good. But what will it avail us, to have the good
|
||
word of our fellow-servants, if our Master doth not say, <i>Well
|
||
done</i>? When all other graves are opened, these whited sepulchres
|
||
will be looked into, and the dead men's bones, and all the
|
||
uncleanness, shall be <i>brought out,</i> and be <i>spread before
|
||
all the host of heaven,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p69.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.8.1-Jer.8.2" parsed="|Jer|8|1|8|2" passage="Jer 8:1,2">Jer.
|
||
viii. 1, 2</scripRef>. For it is the day when God shall judge, not
|
||
the shows, but the secrets, of men. And it will then be small
|
||
comfort to them who shall have their portion with hypocrites, to
|
||
remember how creditably and plausibly they went to hell, applauded
|
||
by all their neighbours.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p70">VII. They pretended a deal of kindness for
|
||
the memory of the prophets that were dead and gone, while they
|
||
hated and persecuted those that were present with them. This is put
|
||
last, because it was the blackest part of their character. God is
|
||
jealous for his honour in his laws and ordinances, and resents it
|
||
if they be profaned and abused; but he has often expressed an equal
|
||
jealousy for his honour in his prophets and ministers, and resents
|
||
it worse if they be wronged and persecuted: and therefore, when our
|
||
Lord Jesus comes to this head, he speaks more fully than upon any
|
||
of the other (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p70.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.29-Matt.23.37" parsed="|Matt|23|29|23|37" passage="Mt 23:29-37"><i>v.</i>
|
||
29-37</scripRef>); for that toucheth his ministers, <i>toucheth his
|
||
Anointed,</i> and toucheth the <i>apple of his eye.</i> Observe
|
||
here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p71">1. The respect which the scribes and
|
||
Pharisees pretend for the prophets that were gone, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p71.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.29-Matt.23.30" parsed="|Matt|23|29|23|30" passage="Mt 23:29,30"><i>v.</i> 29, 30</scripRef>. This was the
|
||
varnish, and that in which they outwardly appeared righteous.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p72">(1.) They honoured the relics of the
|
||
prophets, they built their tombs, and garnished their sepulchres.
|
||
It seems, the places of their burial were known, David's sepulchre
|
||
was with them, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p72.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2.29" parsed="|Acts|2|29|0|0" passage="Ac 2:29">Acts ii. 29</scripRef>.
|
||
There was a title upon the sepulchre of <i>the man of God</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p72.2" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.23.17" parsed="|2Kgs|23|17|0|0" passage="2Ki 23:17">2 Kings xxiii. 17</scripRef>), and
|
||
Josiah thought it respect enough not to <i>move his bones,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p72.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.18" parsed="|Matt|23|18|0|0" passage="Mt 23:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>. But they
|
||
would do more, rebuild and beautify them. Now consider this, [1.]
|
||
As an instance of honour done to deceased prophets, who, while they
|
||
lived, were counted as the off-scouring of all things, and had all
|
||
manner of evil spoken against them falsely. Note, God can extort,
|
||
even from bad men, an acknowledgment of the honour of piety and
|
||
holiness. Them that honour God he will honour, and sometimes with
|
||
those from whom contempt is expected, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p72.4" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.6.22" parsed="|2Sam|6|22|0|0" passage="2Sa 6:22">2 Sam. vi. 22</scripRef>. <i>The memory of the just is
|
||
blessed,</i> when the names of those that hated and persecuted them
|
||
shall be covered with shame. The honour of constancy and resolution
|
||
in the way of duty will be a lasting honour; and those that are
|
||
manifest to God, will be manifest in the consciences of those about
|
||
them. [2.] As an instance of the hypocrisy of the scribes and
|
||
Pharisees, who paid their respect to them. Note, Carnal people can
|
||
easily honour the memories of faithful ministers that are dead and
|
||
gone, because they do not reprove them, nor disturb them, in their
|
||
sins. Dead prophets are <i>seers that see not,</i> and those they
|
||
can bear well enough; they do not torment them, as the living
|
||
witnesses do, that bear their testimony <i>viva voce—with a living
|
||
voice,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p72.5" osisRef="Bible:Rev.11.10" parsed="|Rev|11|10|0|0" passage="Re 11:10">Rev. xi. 10</scripRef>.
|
||
They can pay respect to the writings of the dead prophets, which
|
||
tell them what they <i>should</i> be; but not the reproofs of the
|
||
living prophets, which tell them what they <i>are.</i> <i>Sit
|
||
divus, modo non sit vivus—Let there be saints; but let them not be
|
||
living here.</i> The extravagant respect which the church of Rome
|
||
pays to the memory of saints departed, especially the martyrs,
|
||
dedicating days and places to their names, enshrining their relics,
|
||
praying to them, and offering to their images, while they make
|
||
themselves drunk with the blood of the saints of their own day, is
|
||
a manifest proof that they not only <i>suc</i>ceed, but
|
||
<i>ex</i>ceed, the scribes and Pharisees in a counterfeit
|
||
hypocritical religion, which builds the prophets' tombs, but hates
|
||
the prophets' doctrine.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p73">(2.) They protested against the murder of
|
||
them (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p73.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.30" parsed="|Matt|23|30|0|0" passage="Mt 23:30"><i>v.</i> 30</scripRef>); <i>If
|
||
we had been in the days of our fathers, we would not have been
|
||
partakers with them.</i> They would never have consented to the
|
||
silencing of Amos, and the imprisonment of Micaiah, to the putting
|
||
of Hanani in the stocks, and Jeremiah in the dungeon, to the
|
||
stoning of Zechariah, the mocking of all the messengers of the
|
||
Lord, and the abuses put upon his prophets; no, not they, they
|
||
would sooner have lost their right hands than have done any such
|
||
thing. <i>What, is thy servant a dog?</i> And yet they were at this
|
||
time plotting to murder Christ, <i>to whom all the prophets bore
|
||
witness.</i> They think, if they had lived in the days of the
|
||
prophets, they would have heard them gladly and obeyed; and yet
|
||
they rebelled against the light that Christ brought into the world.
|
||
But it is certain, a Herod and an Herodias to John the Baptist,
|
||
would have been an Ahab and a Jezebel to Elijah. Note, The
|
||
deceitfulness of sinners' hearts appears very much in this, that,
|
||
while they go down the stream of the sins of their own day, they
|
||
fancy they should have swum against the stream of the sins of the
|
||
former days; that, if they had had other people's opportunities,
|
||
they should have improved them more faithfully; if they had been in
|
||
other people's temptations, they should have resisted them more
|
||
vigorously; when yet they improve not the opportunities they have,
|
||
nor resist the temptations they are in. We are sometimes thinking,
|
||
if we had lived when Christ was upon earth, how constantly we would
|
||
have followed him; we would not have despised and rejected him, as
|
||
they then did; and yet Christ in his Spirit, in his word, in his
|
||
ministers, is still no better treated.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p74">2. Their enmity and opposition to Christ
|
||
and his gospel, notwithstanding, and the ruin they were bringing
|
||
upon themselves and upon that generation thereby, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p74.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.31-Matt.23.33" parsed="|Matt|23|31|23|33" passage="Mt 23:31-33"><i>v.</i> 31-33</scripRef>. Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p75">(1.) The indictment proved; <i>Ye are
|
||
witnesses against yourselves.</i> Note, Sinners cannot hope to
|
||
escape the judgment of Christ for want of proof against them, when
|
||
it is easy to find them witnesses against themselves; and their
|
||
very pleas will not only be overruled, but turned to their
|
||
conviction, and <i>their own tongues</i> shall be made to <i>fall
|
||
upon them,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p75.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.64.8" parsed="|Ps|64|8|0|0" passage="Ps 64:8">Ps. lxiv.
|
||
8</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p76">[1.] By their own confession, it was the
|
||
great wickedness of their forefathers, to kill the prophets; so
|
||
that they knew the fault of it, and yet were themselves guilty of
|
||
the same fact. Note, They who condemn sin in others, and yet allow
|
||
the same or worse in themselves, are of all others most
|
||
inexcusable, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p76.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.32-Rom.2.1" parsed="|Rom|1|32|2|1" passage="Ro 1:32-2:1">Rom. i. 32-ii.
|
||
1</scripRef>. They knew they ought not to have been partakers with
|
||
persecutors, and yet were the followers of them. Such
|
||
self-contradictions now will amount to self-condemnations in the
|
||
great day. Christ puts another construction upon their building of
|
||
the tombs of the prophets than what they intended; as if by
|
||
beautifying their graves they justified their murderers (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p76.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.48" parsed="|Luke|11|48|0|0" passage="Lu 11:48">Luke xi. 48</scripRef>), for they persisted in
|
||
the sin.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p77">[2.] By their own confession, these
|
||
notorious persecutors were their ancestors; <i>Ye are the children
|
||
of them.</i> They meant no more than that they were their children
|
||
by blood and nature; but Christ turns it upon them;, that they were
|
||
so by spirit and disposition; <i>You are of those fathers, and
|
||
their lusts you will do.</i> They are, as you say, <i>your</i>
|
||
fathers, and you <i>patrizare—take after your fathers;</i> it is
|
||
the sin that runs in the blood among you. <i>As your fathers did,
|
||
so do ye,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p77.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.7.51" parsed="|Acts|7|51|0|0" passage="Ac 7:51">Acts vii. 51</scripRef>.
|
||
They came of a persecuting race, were <i>a seed of evil doers</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p77.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.1.4" parsed="|Isa|1|4|0|0" passage="Isa 1:4">Isa. i. 4</scripRef>), <i>risen up in
|
||
their fathers' stead,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p77.3" osisRef="Bible:Num.32.14" parsed="|Num|32|14|0|0" passage="Nu 32:14">Num. xxxii.
|
||
14</scripRef>. Malice, envy, and cruelty, were bred in the bone
|
||
with them, and they had formerly espoused it for a principle, to
|
||
<i>do as their fathers did,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p77.4" osisRef="Bible:Jer.44.17" parsed="|Jer|44|17|0|0" passage="Jer 44:17">Jer.
|
||
xliv. 17</scripRef>. And it is observable here (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p77.5" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.30" parsed="|Matt|23|30|0|0" passage="Mt 23:30"><i>v.</i> 30</scripRef>) how careful they are to mention
|
||
the relation; "They were <i>our</i> fathers, that killed the
|
||
prophets, and they were men in honour and power, whose sons and
|
||
successors we are." If they had detested the wickedness of their
|
||
ancestors, as they ought to have done, they would not have been so
|
||
fond to call them <i>their fathers;</i> for it is no credit to be
|
||
akin to persecutors, though they have ever so much dignity and
|
||
dominion.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p78">(2.) The sentence passed upon them. Christ
|
||
here proceeds,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p79">[1.] To give them up to sin as
|
||
irreclaimable (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.32" parsed="|Matt|23|32|0|0" passage="Mt 23:32"><i>v.</i>
|
||
32</scripRef>); <i>Fill ye up then the measure of your fathers.</i>
|
||
If Ephraim be joined to idols, and hate to be reformed, <i>let him
|
||
alone. He that is filthy, let him be filthy still.</i> Christ knew
|
||
they were now contriving his death, and in a few days would
|
||
accomplish it; "Well," saith he, "go on with your plot, take your
|
||
curse, walk in the way of your heart and in the sight of your eyes,
|
||
and see what will come of it. <i>What thou doest, do quickly.</i>
|
||
You will but fill up the measure of guilt, which will then overflow
|
||
in a deluge of wrath." Note, <i>First,</i> There is a measure of
|
||
sin to be filled up, before utter ruin comes upon persons and
|
||
families, churches and nations. God will bear long, but the time
|
||
will come when he can <i>no longer forbear,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.44.22" parsed="|Jer|44|22|0|0" passage="Jer 44:22">Jer. xliv. 22</scripRef>. We read of the measure of the
|
||
Amorites that was to be filled (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.3" osisRef="Bible:Gen.15.16" parsed="|Gen|15|16|0|0" passage="Ge 15:16">Gen.
|
||
xv. 16</scripRef>), of the <i>harvest</i> of the earth <i>being
|
||
ripe for the sickle</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.4" osisRef="Bible:Rev.14.15-Rev.14.19" parsed="|Rev|14|15|14|19" passage="Re 14:15-19">Rev. xiv.
|
||
15-19</scripRef>), and of sinners <i>making an end to deal
|
||
treacherously,</i> arriving at a full stature in treachery,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.33.1" parsed="|Isa|33|1|0|0" passage="Isa 33:1">Isa. xxxiii. 1</scripRef>.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> Children fill up the measure of their fathers'
|
||
sins whey they are gone, if they persist in the same or the like.
|
||
That national guilt which brings national ruin is made up of the
|
||
sin of many in several ages, and in the successions of societies
|
||
there is a score going on; for God justly visits the iniquity of
|
||
the fathers upon the children that tread in the steps of it.
|
||
<i>Thirdly,</i> Persecuting Christ, and his people and ministers,
|
||
is a sin that fills the measure of a nation's guilt sooner than any
|
||
other. This was it that brought wrath without remedy upon the
|
||
fathers (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.6" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.36.16" parsed="|2Chr|36|16|0|0" passage="2Ch 36:16">2 Chron. xxxvi.
|
||
16</scripRef>), and wrath to the utmost upon the children too,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.7" osisRef="Bible:1Thess.2.16" parsed="|1Thess|2|16|0|0" passage="1Th 2:16">1 Thess. ii. 16</scripRef>. This was
|
||
that fourth transgression, of which, when added to the other three,
|
||
the Lord <i>would not turn away the punishment,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p79.8" osisRef="Bible:Amos.1.3 Bible:Amos.1.6 Bible:Amos.1.9 Bible:Amos.1.11 Bible:Amos.1.13" parsed="|Amos|1|3|0|0;|Amos|1|6|0|0;|Amos|1|9|0|0;|Amos|1|11|0|0;|Amos|1|13|0|0" passage="Am 1:3,6,9,11,13">Amos i. 3, 6, 9, 11, 13</scripRef>.
|
||
<i>Fourthly,</i> It is just with God to give those up to their own
|
||
heart's lusts, who obstinately persist in the gratification of
|
||
them. Those who will run headlong to ruin, let the reins be laid on
|
||
their neck, and it is the saddest condition a man can be in on this
|
||
side hell.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p80">[2.] He proceeds to give them up to ruin as
|
||
irrecoverable, to a personal ruin in the other world (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p80.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.33" parsed="|Matt|23|33|0|0" passage="Mt 23:33"><i>v.</i> 33</scripRef>); <i>Ye serpents, ye
|
||
generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?</i>
|
||
These are strange words to come from the mouth of Christ, into
|
||
whose lips grace was poured. But he can and will speak terror, and
|
||
in these words he explains and sums up the <i>eight</i> woes he had
|
||
denounced against the scribes and Pharisees.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p81">Here is, <i>First,</i> Their description;
|
||
<i>Ye serpents.</i> Doth Christ call names? Yes, but this doth not
|
||
warrant us to do so. He infallibly knew what was in man, and knew
|
||
them to be subtle as serpents, cleaving to the earth, feeding on
|
||
dust; they had a specious outside, but were within malignant, had
|
||
poison under their tongues, the seed of the old serpent. They were
|
||
a <i>generation of vipers;</i> they and those that went before
|
||
them, they and those that joined with them, were a generation of
|
||
envenomed, enraged, spiteful adversaries to Christ and his gospel.
|
||
They loved to be called of men, <i>Rabbi, rabbi,</i> but Christ
|
||
calls them <i>serpents</i> and <i>vipers;</i> for he gives men
|
||
their true characters, and delights to put contempt upon the
|
||
proud.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p82"><i>Secondly,</i> Their doom. He represents
|
||
their condition as very sad, and in a manner desperate; <i>How can
|
||
ye escape the damnation of hell?</i> Christ himself preached hell
|
||
and damnation, for which his ministers have often been reproached
|
||
by those that care not to hear of it. Note, 1. The damnation of
|
||
hell will be the fearful end of all impenitent sinners. This doom
|
||
coming from Christ, was more terrible than coming from all the
|
||
prophets and ministers that ever were, for he is the Judge, into
|
||
whose hands the keys of hell and death are put, and his saying they
|
||
were damned, made them so. 2. There is a way of escaping this
|
||
damnation, this is implied here; some are <i>delivered from the
|
||
wrath to come.</i> 3. Of all sinners, those who are of the spirit
|
||
of the scribes and Pharisees, are least likely to escape this
|
||
damnation; for repentance and faith are necessary to that escape;
|
||
and how will <i>they</i> be brought to these, who are so conceited
|
||
of themselves, and so prejudiced against Christ and his gospel, as
|
||
they were? How could they be healed and saved, who could not bear
|
||
to have their wound searched, nor the balm of Gilead applied to it?
|
||
Publicans and harlots, who were sensible of their disease and
|
||
applied themselves to the Physician, were more likely to escape the
|
||
damnation of hell than those who, though they were in the high road
|
||
to it, were confident they were in the way to heaven.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xxiv-p82.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.34-Matt.23.39" parsed="|Matt|23|34|23|39" passage="Mt 23:34-39" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.23.34-Matt.23.39">
|
||
<h4 id="Matt.xxiv-p82.2">The Doom of the Pharisees; The Guilt and
|
||
Doom of Jerusalem.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxiv-p83">34 Wherefore, behold, I send unto you prophets,
|
||
and wise men, and scribes: and <i>some</i> of them ye shall kill
|
||
and crucify; and <i>some</i> of them shall ye scourge in your
|
||
synagogues, and persecute <i>them</i> from city to city: 35
|
||
That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth,
|
||
from the blood of righteous Abel unto the blood of Zacharias son of
|
||
Barachias, whom ye slew between the temple and the altar. 36
|
||
Verily I say unto you, All these things shall come upon this
|
||
generation. 37 O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, <i>thou</i> that
|
||
killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee,
|
||
how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a
|
||
hen gathereth her chickens under <i>her</i> wings, and ye would
|
||
not! 38 Behold, your house is left unto you desolate.
|
||
39 For I say unto you, Ye shall not see me henceforth, till ye
|
||
shall say, Blessed <i>is</i> he that cometh in the name of the
|
||
Lord.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p84">We have left the blind leaders fallen into
|
||
the ditch, under Christ's sentence, into the damnation of hell; let
|
||
us see what will become of the blind followers, of the body of the
|
||
Jewish church, and particularly Jerusalem.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p85">I. Jesus Christ designs yet to try them
|
||
with the means of grace; <i>I send unto you prophets, and wise men,
|
||
and scribes.</i> The connection is strange; "<i>You are a
|
||
generation of vipers,</i> not likely to <i>escape the damnation of
|
||
hell;</i>" one would think it should follow, "Therefore you shall
|
||
never have a prophet sent to you any more;" but no, "<i>Therefore I
|
||
will send unto you prophets,</i> to see if you will yet at length
|
||
be wrought upon, or else to leave you inexcusable, and to justify
|
||
God in your ruin." It is therefore ushered in with a note of
|
||
admiration, behold! Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p86">1. It is Christ that sends them; <i>I
|
||
send.</i> By this he avows himself to be God, having power to gift
|
||
and commission prophets. It is an act of kingly office; he sends
|
||
them as ambassadors to treat with us about the concerns of our
|
||
souls. After his resurrection, he made this word good, when he
|
||
said, <i>So send I you,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p86.1" osisRef="Bible:John.20.21" parsed="|John|20|21|0|0" passage="Joh 20:21">John xx.
|
||
21</scripRef>. Though now he appeared mean, yet he was entrusted
|
||
with this great authority.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p87">2. He sends them to the Jews first; "I send
|
||
them to <i>you.</i>" They began at Jerusalem; and, wherever they
|
||
went, they observed this rule, to make the first tender of gospel
|
||
grace <i>to the Jews,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p87.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.46" parsed="|Acts|13|46|0|0" passage="Ac 13:46">Acts xiii.
|
||
46</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p88">3. Those he sends are called <i>prophets,
|
||
wise men,</i> and <i>scribes,</i> Old-Testament names for
|
||
New-Testament officers; to show that the ministers sent to them now
|
||
should not be inferior to the prophets of the Old Testament, to
|
||
Solomon the wise, or Ezra the scribe. The extraordinary ministers,
|
||
who in the first ages were divinely inspired, were as the prophets
|
||
commissioned immediately from heaven; the ordinary settled
|
||
ministers, who were then, and continue in the church still, and
|
||
will do to the end of time, are as the wise men and scribes, to
|
||
guide and instruct the people in the things of God. Or, we may take
|
||
the apostles and evangelists for the prophets and wise men, and the
|
||
pastors and teachers for the scribes, <i>instructed to the kingdom
|
||
of heaven</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p88.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.13.52" parsed="|Matt|13|52|0|0" passage="Mt 13:52"><i>ch.</i> xiii.
|
||
52</scripRef>); for the office of a scribe was honourable till the
|
||
men dishonoured it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p89">II. He foresees and foretels the ill usage
|
||
that his messengers would meet with among them; "<i>Some of them ye
|
||
shall kill and crucify,</i> and yet I will send them." Christ knows
|
||
beforehand how ill his servants will be treated, and yet sends
|
||
them, and appoints them their measure of sufferings; yet he loves
|
||
them never the less for his thus exposing them, for he designs to
|
||
glorify himself by their sufferings, and them after them; he will
|
||
counter-balance them, though not prevent them. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p90">1. The cruelty of these persecutors; <i>Ye
|
||
shall kill and crucify them.</i> It is no less than the blood, the
|
||
life-blood, that they thirst after; their lust is not satisfied
|
||
with any thing short of their destruction, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p90.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.15.9" parsed="|Exod|15|9|0|0" passage="Ex 15:9">Exod. xv. 9</scripRef>. They killed the two James's,
|
||
crucified Simon the son of Cleophas, and scourged Peter and John;
|
||
thus did the members partake of the sufferings of the Head, he was
|
||
killed and crucified, and so were they. Christians must expect to
|
||
resist unto blood.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p91">2. Their unwearied industry; <i>Ye shall
|
||
persecute them from city to city.</i> As the apostles went from
|
||
city to city, to preach the gospel, the Jews dodged them, and
|
||
haunted them, and stirred up persecution against them, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p91.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.14.19 Bible:Acts.17.13" parsed="|Acts|14|19|0|0;|Acts|17|13|0|0" passage="Ac 14:19,17:13">Acts xiv. 19; xvii. 13</scripRef>. They
|
||
that <i>did not believe in Judea</i> were more bitter enemies to
|
||
the gospel than any other unbelievers, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p91.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.15.31" parsed="|Rom|15|31|0|0" passage="Ro 15:31">Rom. xv. 31</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p92">3. The pretence of religion in this; they
|
||
scourged them in their synagogues, their place of worship, where
|
||
they kept their ecclesiastical courts; so that they did it as a
|
||
piece of service to the church; cast them out, and said, <i>Let the
|
||
Lord be glorified,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p92.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.66.5 Bible:John.16.2" parsed="|Isa|66|5|0|0;|John|16|2|0|0" passage="Isa 66:5,Joh 16:2">Isa.
|
||
lxvi. 5; John xvi. 2</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p93">III. He imputes the sin of their fathers to
|
||
them, because they imitated it; <i>That upon you may come all the
|
||
righteous blood shed upon the earth,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p93.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.35-Matt.23.36" parsed="|Matt|23|35|23|36" passage="Mt 23:35,36"><i>v.</i> 35, 36</scripRef>. Though God bear long
|
||
with a persecuting generation, he will not bear always; and
|
||
patience abused, turns into the greatest wrath. The longer sinners
|
||
have been heaping up treasures of wickedness, the deeper and fuller
|
||
will the treasures of wrath be; and the breaking of them up will be
|
||
like breaking up the fountains of the great deep.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p94">Observe, 1. The extent of this imputation;
|
||
it takes in <i>all the righteous blood shed upon the earth,</i>
|
||
that is, the blood shed for righteousness' sake, which has all been
|
||
laid up in God's treasury, and not a drop of it lost, for <i>it is
|
||
precious.</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p94.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.72.14" parsed="|Ps|72|14|0|0" passage="Ps 72:14">Ps. lxxii.
|
||
14</scripRef>. He dates the account <i>from the blood of righteous
|
||
Abel,</i> thence this <i>æra martyrum—age of
|
||
martyrs</i>—commences; he is called <i>righteous</i> Abel, for he
|
||
obtained witness from heaven, that he was <i>righteous, God
|
||
testifying of his gifts.</i> How early did martyrdom come into the
|
||
world! The first that died, died for his religion, and, <i>being
|
||
dead, he yet speaketh.</i> His blood not only cried against Cain,
|
||
but continues to cry against all that walk in the way of Cain, and
|
||
hate and persecute their brother, <i>because their works are
|
||
righteous.</i> He extends it <i>to the blood of Zacharias, the son
|
||
of Barachias</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p94.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.36" parsed="|Matt|23|36|0|0" passage="Mt 23:36"><i>v.</i>
|
||
36</scripRef>), not Zecharias the prophet (as some would have it),
|
||
though he was <i>the son of Barachias</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p94.3" osisRef="Bible:Zech.1.1" parsed="|Zech|1|1|0|0" passage="Zec 1:1">Zech. i. 1.</scripRef>) nor Zecharias the father of John
|
||
Baptist, as others say; but, as is most probable, <i>Zechariah the
|
||
son of Jehoiada,</i> who was <i>slain in the court of the Lord's
|
||
house,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p94.4" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.24.20-2Chr.24.21" parsed="|2Chr|24|20|24|21" passage="2Ch 24:20,21">2 Chron. xxiv. 20,
|
||
21</scripRef>. His father is called <i>Barachias,</i> which
|
||
signifies much the same with Jehoiada; and it was usual among the
|
||
Jews for the same person to have two names; <i>whom ye slew,</i> ye
|
||
of this nation, though not of this generation. This is specified,
|
||
because the requiring of that is particularly spoken of (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p94.5" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.24.22" parsed="|2Chr|24|22|0|0" passage="2Ch 24:22">2 Chron. xxiv. 22</scripRef>), as that of
|
||
Abel's is. The Jews imagined that the captivity had sufficiently
|
||
atoned for the guilt; but Christ lets them know that it was not yet
|
||
fully accounted for, but remained upon the score. And some think
|
||
that this is mentioned with a prophetical hint, for there was one
|
||
Zecharias, the son of Baruch, whom Josephus speaks of (<i>War</i>
|
||
4. 335), who was a just and good man, who was killed in the temple
|
||
a little before it was destroyed by the Romans. Archbishop
|
||
Tillotson thinks that Christ both alludes to the history of the
|
||
former Zecharias in <i>Chronicles,</i> and foretels the death of
|
||
this latter in Josephus. Though the latter was not yet slain, yet,
|
||
before this destruction comes, it would be true that they had slain
|
||
him; so that all shall be put together from first to last.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p95">2. The effect of it; <i>All these things
|
||
shall come;</i> all the guilt of this blood, all the punishment of
|
||
it, it shall <i>all come upon this generation.</i> The misery and
|
||
ruin that are coming upon them, shall be so very great, that,
|
||
though, considering the evil of their own sins, it was less that
|
||
even those deserved; yet, comparing it with other judgments, it
|
||
will seem to be a general reckoning for all the wickedness of their
|
||
ancestors, especially their persecutions, to all which God declared
|
||
this ruin to have special reference and relation. The destruction
|
||
shall be so dreadful, as if God had once for all arraigned them for
|
||
all the righteous blood shed in the world. It shall <i>come upon
|
||
this generation;</i> which intimates, that it shall come quickly;
|
||
some here shall live to see it. Note, The sorer and nearer the
|
||
punishment of sin is, the louder is the call to repentance and
|
||
reformation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p96">IV. He laments the wickedness of Jerusalem,
|
||
and justly upbraids them with the many kind offers he had made
|
||
them, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p96.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.37" parsed="|Matt|23|37|0|0" passage="Mt 23:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>. See
|
||
with what concern he speaks of that city; <i>O Jerusalem,
|
||
Jerusalem!</i> The repetition is emphatical, and bespeaks abundance
|
||
of commiseration. A day or two before Christ had wept over
|
||
Jerusalem, now he sighed and groaned over it. Jerusalem, <i>the
|
||
vision of peace</i> (so it signifies), must now be the seat of war
|
||
and confusion. Jerusalem, that had been <i>the joy of the whole
|
||
earth,</i> must now be <i>a hissing, and an astonishment, and a
|
||
by-word;</i> Jerusalem, that has been <i>a city compact
|
||
together,</i> shall now be shattered and ruined by its own
|
||
intestine broils. Jerusalem, <i>the place that God has chosen to
|
||
put his name there,</i> shall now be abandoned to the spoil and the
|
||
robbers, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p96.2" osisRef="Bible:Lam.1.1 Bible:Lam.4.1" parsed="|Lam|1|1|0|0;|Lam|4|1|0|0" passage="La 1:1,4:1">Lam. i. 1, iv.
|
||
1</scripRef>. But wherefore will the Lord do all this to Jerusalem?
|
||
Why? <i>Jerusalem hath grievously sinned,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p96.3" osisRef="Bible:Lam.1.8" parsed="|Lam|1|8|0|0" passage="La 1:8">Lam. i. 8</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p97">1. She persecuted God's messengers; <i>Thou
|
||
that killest the prophets, and stonest them that are sent unto
|
||
thee.</i> This sin is especially charged upon Jerusalem; because
|
||
there the Sanhedrim, or great council, sat, who took cognizance of
|
||
church matters, and therefore a prophet could not perish but in
|
||
Jerusalem, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p97.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.13.33" parsed="|Luke|13|33|0|0" passage="Lu 13:33">Luke xiii. 33</scripRef>.
|
||
It is true, they had not now a power to put any man to death, but
|
||
they killed the prophets in popular tumults, mobbed them, as
|
||
Stephen, and put the Roman powers on to kill them. At Jerusalem,
|
||
where the gospel was first preached, it was first persecuted
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p97.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.8.1" parsed="|Acts|8|1|0|0" passage="Ac 8:1">Acts viii. 1</scripRef>), and that
|
||
place was the head-quarters of the persecutors; thence warrants
|
||
were issued out to other cities, and thither the saints were
|
||
brought bound, <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p97.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.2" parsed="|Acts|9|2|0|0" passage="Ac 9:2">Acts ix. 2</scripRef>.
|
||
<i>Thou stonest them:</i> that was a capital punishment, in use
|
||
only among the Jews. By the law, false prophets and seducers were
|
||
to <i>be stoned</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p97.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.13.10" parsed="|Deut|13|10|0|0" passage="De 13:10">Deut. xiii.
|
||
10</scripRef>), under colour of which law, they put the true
|
||
prophets to death. Note, It has often been the artifice of Satan,
|
||
to turn that artillery against the church, which was originally
|
||
planted in the defence of it. Brand the true prophets as seducers,
|
||
and the true professors of religion as heretics and schismatics,
|
||
and then it will be easy to persecute them. There was abundance of
|
||
other wickedness in Jerusalem; but this was the sin that made the
|
||
loudest cry, and which God had an eye to more than any other, in
|
||
bringing that ruin upon them, as <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p97.5" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.24.4 Bible:2Chr.36.16" parsed="|2Kgs|24|4|0|0;|2Chr|36|16|0|0" passage="2Ki 24:4,2Ch 36:16">2 Kings xxiv. 4; 2 Chron. xxxvi.
|
||
16</scripRef>. Observe, Christ speaks in the present tense; <i>Thou
|
||
killest, and stonest;</i> for all they had done, and all they would
|
||
do, was present to Christ's notice.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p98">2. She refused and rejected Christ, and
|
||
gospel offers. The former was a sin <i>without</i> remedy, this
|
||
<i>against</i> the remedy. Here is, (1.) The wonderful grace and
|
||
favour of Jesus Christ toward them; <i>How often would I have
|
||
gathered thy children together, as a hen gathers her chickens under
|
||
her wings!</i> Thus kind and condescending are the offers of gospel
|
||
grace, even to Jerusalem's children, bad as she is, the
|
||
inhabitants, the little ones not excepted. [1.] The favour proposed
|
||
was the gathering of them. Christ's design is to gather poor souls,
|
||
gather them in from their wanderings, gather them home to himself,
|
||
as the Centre of unity; for <i>to him must the gathering of the
|
||
people be.</i> He would have taken the whole body of the Jewish
|
||
nation into the church, and so gathered them all (as the Jews used
|
||
to speak of proselytes) <i>under the wings of the Divine
|
||
Majesty.</i> It is here illustrated by a humble similitude; <i>as a
|
||
hen</i> clucks <i>her chickens together.</i> Christ would have
|
||
gathered them, <i>First,</i> With such a tenderness of affection as
|
||
the hen does, which has, by instinct, a peculiar concern for her
|
||
young ones. Christ's gathering of souls, comes from his love,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p98.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.31.3" parsed="|Jer|31|3|0|0" passage="Jer 31:3">Jer. xxxi. 3</scripRef>.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> For the same end. <i>The hen gathered her chickens
|
||
under her wings,</i> for protection and safety, and for warmth and
|
||
comfort; poor souls have in Christ both refuge and refreshment. The
|
||
chickens naturally run to the hen for shelter, when they are
|
||
threatened by the birds of prey; perhaps Christ refers to that
|
||
promise (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p98.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.91.4" parsed="|Ps|91|4|0|0" passage="Ps 91:4">Ps. xci. 4</scripRef>), <i>He
|
||
shall cover thee with his feathers.</i> There is <i>healing under
|
||
Christ's wings</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p98.3" osisRef="Bible:Mal.4.2" parsed="|Mal|4|2|0|0" passage="Mal 4:2">Mal. iv.
|
||
2</scripRef>); that is more than the hen has for her chickens.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p99">[2.] The forwardness of Christ to confer
|
||
this favour. His offers are, <i>First,</i> Very free; <i>I would
|
||
have done it.</i> Jesus Christ is truly willing to receive and save
|
||
poor souls that come to him. He desires not their ruin, he delights
|
||
in their repentance. <i>Secondly,</i> Very frequent; <i>How
|
||
often!</i> Christ often came up to Jerusalem, preached, and wrought
|
||
miracles there; and the meaning of all this, was, he would have
|
||
gathered them. He keeps account how often his calls have been
|
||
repeated. As often as we have heard the sound of the gospel, as
|
||
often as we have felt the strivings of the Spirit, so often Christ
|
||
would have gathered us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p100">[3.] Their wilful refusal of this grace and
|
||
favour; <i>Ye would not.</i> How emphatically is their obstinacy
|
||
opposed to Christ's mercy! I would, and <i>ye would not.</i> He was
|
||
willing to save them, but they were not willing to be saved by him.
|
||
Note, It is wholly owing to the wicked wills of sinners, that they
|
||
are not gathered under the wings of the Lord Jesus. They did not
|
||
like the terms upon which Christ proposed to gather them; they
|
||
loved their sins, and yet trusted to their righteousness; they
|
||
would not submit either to the grace of Christ or to his
|
||
government, and so the bargain broke off.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p101">V. He reads Jerusalem's doom (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p101.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.38-Matt.23.39" parsed="|Matt|23|38|23|39" passage="Mt 23:38,39"><i>v.</i> 38, 39</scripRef>); <i>Therefore
|
||
behold your house is left unto you desolate.</i> Both the city and
|
||
the temple, God's house and their own, all shall be laid waste. But
|
||
it is especially meant of the temple, which they boasted of, and
|
||
trusted to; that holy mountain because of which they were so
|
||
haughty. Note, they that will not be gathered by the love and grace
|
||
of Christ shall be consumed and scattered by his wrath; <i>I would,
|
||
and you would not. Israel would none of me, so I gave them up,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p101.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.81.11-Ps.81.12" parsed="|Ps|81|11|81|12" passage="Ps 81:11,12">Ps. lxxxi. 11, 12</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p102">1. Their house shall be <i>deserted; It is
|
||
left unto you.</i> Christ was now departing from the temple, and
|
||
never came into it again, but by this word abandoned it to ruin.
|
||
They doated on it, would have it to themselves; Christ must have no
|
||
room or interest there. "Well," saith Christ, "it is left to you;
|
||
take it, and make your best of it; I will never have any thing more
|
||
to do with it." They had made it <i>a house of merchandise, and a
|
||
den of thieves,</i> and so it is left to them. Not long after this,
|
||
the voice was heard in the temple, "Let us depart hence." When
|
||
Christ went, <i>Ichabod, the glory departed.</i> Their city also
|
||
was left to them, destitute of God's presence and grace; he was no
|
||
longer <i>a wall of fire about them,</i> nor <i>the glory in the
|
||
midst of them.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p103">2. It shall be <i>desolate; It is left unto
|
||
you desolate;</i> it is left <b><i>eremos</i></b>—<i>a
|
||
wilderness.</i> (1.) It was immediately, when Christ left it, in
|
||
the eyes of all that understood themselves, a very dismal
|
||
melancholy place. Christ's departure makes the best furnished, best
|
||
replenished place a wilderness, though it be the temple, the chief
|
||
place of concourse; for what comfort can there be where Christ is
|
||
not? Though there may be a crowd of other contentments, yet, if
|
||
Christ's special spiritual presence be withdrawn, that soul, that
|
||
place, is <i>become a wilderness, a land of darkness, as darkness
|
||
itself.</i> This comes of men's rejecting Christ, and driving him
|
||
away from them. (2.) It was, not long after, destroyed and ruined,
|
||
and <i>not one stone left upon another.</i> The lot of Jerusalem's
|
||
enemies will now become Jerusalem's lot, <i>to be made of a city a
|
||
heap, of a defenced city a ruin</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p103.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.25.2" parsed="|Isa|25|2|0|0" passage="Isa 25:2">Isa. xxv. 2</scripRef>), <i>a lofty city laid low, even
|
||
to the ground,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p103.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.26.5" parsed="|Isa|26|5|0|0" passage="Isa 26:5">Isa. xxvi.
|
||
5</scripRef>. The temple, that holy and beautiful house, became
|
||
desolate. When God goes out, all enemies break in.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p104"><i>Lastly,</i> Here is the final farewell
|
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that Christ took of them and their temple; <i>Ye shall not see me
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henceforth, till ye shall say, Blessed is he that cometh.</i> This
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bespeaks,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p105">1. His departure from them. The time was at
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hand, when <i>he should leave the world, to go to his Father,</i>
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and be seen no more. <i>After his resurrection, he was seen only by
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a few chosen witnesses,</i> and they saw him not long, but he soon
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removed to the invisible world, and there will be <i>till the time
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of the restitution of all things,</i> when his welcome at his first
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coming will be repeated with loud acclamations; <i>Blessed is he
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that cometh in the name of the Lord.</i> Christ will not be seen
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again till he <i>come in the clouds, and every eye shall see
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him</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p105.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.1.7" parsed="|Rev|1|7|0|0" passage="Re 1:7">Rev. i. 7</scripRef>); and
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then, even they, who, when time was, rejected and pierced him, will
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be glad to come in among his adorers; then every knee shall bow to
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him, even those that had bowed to Baal; and even the workers of
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iniquity will then cry, <i>Lord, Lord,</i> and will own, when his
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wrath is kindled, that <i>blessed are all they that put their trust
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in him.</i> Would we have our lot in that day with those that say,
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<i>Blessed is he that cometh?</i> let us be with them now, with
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them that truly worship, and truly welcome, Jesus Christ.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxiv-p106">2. Their continued blindness and obstinacy;
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<i>Ye shall not see me,</i> that is, not see me to be the Messiah
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(for otherwise they did see him upon the cross), not see the light
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of the truth concerning me, nor <i>the things that belong to your
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peace, till ye shall say, Blessed is he that cometh.</i> They will
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never be convinced, till Christ's second coming convince them, when
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it will be too late to make an interest in him, and nothing will
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remain <i>but a fearful looking for of judgment.</i> Note, (1.)
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Wilful blindness is often punished with judicial blindness. If they
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<i>will</i> not see, they <i>shall</i> not see. With this word he
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concludes his public preaching. <i>After his resurrection,</i>
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which was <i>the sign of the prophet Jonas,</i> they should have no
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other sign given them, till they should <i>see the sign of the Son
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of man,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxiv-p106.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.30" parsed="|Matt|24|30|0|0" passage="Mt 24:30"><i>ch.</i> xxiv.
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30</scripRef>. (2.) When <i>the Lord comes with ten thousand of his
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saints,</i> he will convince all, and will force acknowledgments
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from the proudest of his enemies, of his being the Messiah, and
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even <i>they shall be found liars to him.</i> They that would not
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now come at his call, shall then be forced to depart with his
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curse. The chief priests and scribes were displeased with the
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children for crying <i>hosanna</i> to Christ; but the day is
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coming, when proud persecutors would gladly be found in the
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condition of the meanest and poorest they now trample upon. They
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who now reproach and ridicule the hosannas of the saints will be of
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another mind shortly; it were therefore better to be of that mind
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now. Some make this to refer to the conversion of the Jews to the
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faith of Christ; then they shall see him, and own him, and <i>say,
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Blessed is he that cometh;</i> but it seems rather to look further,
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for the complete manifestation of Christ, and conviction of
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sinners, are reserved to be the glory of the last day.</p>
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</div></div2> |