2655 lines
187 KiB
XML
2655 lines
187 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Matt.xxviii" n="xxviii" next="Matt.xxix" prev="Matt.xxvii" progress="33.60%" title="Chapter XXVII">
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<h2 id="Matt.xxviii-p0.1">M A T T H E W.</h2>
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<h3 id="Matt.xxviii-p0.2">CHAP. XXVII.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Matt.xxviii-p1">It is a very affecting story which is recorded in
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this chapter concerning the sufferings and death of our Lord Jesus.
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Considering the thing itself, there cannot be a more tragical story
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told us; common humanity would melt the heart, to find an innocent
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and excellent person thus misused. But considering the design and
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fruit of Christ's sufferings, it is gospel, it is good news, that
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Jesus Christ was thus delivered for our offences; and there is
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nothing we have more reason to glory in than the cross of Christ.
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In this chapter, observe, I. How he was prosecuted. 1. The
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delivering of him to Pilate, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.1-Matt.27.2" parsed="|Matt|27|1|27|2" passage="Mt 27:1,2">ver. 1,
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2</scripRef>. 2. The despair of Judas, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.3-Matt.27.10" parsed="|Matt|27|3|27|10" passage="Mt 27:3-10">ver. 3-10</scripRef>. 3. The arraignment and trial of
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Christ before Pilate, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.11-Matt.27.14" parsed="|Matt|27|11|27|14" passage="Mt 27:11-14">ver.
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11-14</scripRef>. 4. The clamours of the people against him,
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<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.15-Matt.27.25" parsed="|Matt|27|15|27|25" passage="Mt 27:15-25">ver. 15-25</scripRef>. 5. Sentence
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passed, and the warrant signed for his execution, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.26" parsed="|Matt|27|26|0|0" passage="Mt 27:26">ver. 26</scripRef>. II. How he was executed. 1.
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He was barbarously used, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.27-Matt.27.30" parsed="|Matt|27|27|27|30" passage="Mt 27:27-30">ver.
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27-30</scripRef>. 2. Led to the place of execution, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.31-Matt.27.33" parsed="|Matt|27|31|27|33" passage="Mt 27:31-33">ver. 31-33</scripRef>. 3. There he had all
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possible indignities done him, and reproaches cast upon him,
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<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.34-Matt.27.44" parsed="|Matt|27|34|27|44" passage="Mt 27:34-44">ver. 34-44</scripRef>. 4. Heaven
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frowned upon him, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.45-Matt.27.49" parsed="|Matt|27|45|27|49" passage="Mt 27:45-49">ver.
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45-49</scripRef>. 5. Many remarkable things attended his death,
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<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.50-Matt.27.56" parsed="|Matt|27|50|27|56" passage="Mt 27:50-56">ver. 50-56</scripRef>. He was
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buried and a watch set on his grave, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p1.11" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.57-Matt.27.66" parsed="|Matt|27|57|27|66" passage="Mt 27:57-66">ver. 57-66</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Matt.xxviii-p1.12" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27" parsed="|Matt|27|0|0|0" passage="Mt 27" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Matt.xxviii-p1.13" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.1-Matt.27.10" parsed="|Matt|27|1|27|10" passage="Mt 27:1-10" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.27.1-Matt.27.10">
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<h4 id="Matt.xxviii-p1.14">The Repentance of Judas; The Confession of
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Judas; The Death of Judas; Disposal of the Thirty Pieces of
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Silver.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxviii-p2">1 When the morning was come, all the chief
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priests and elders of the people took counsel against Jesus to put
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him to death: 2 And when they had bound him, they led
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<i>him</i> away, and delivered him to Pontius Pilate the governor.
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3 Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he
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was condemned, repented himself, and brought again the thirty
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pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, 4 Saying,
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I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood. And they
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said, What <i>is that</i> to us? see thou <i>to that.</i> 5
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And he cast down the pieces of silver in the temple, and departed,
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and went and hanged himself. 6 And the chief priests took
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the silver pieces, and said, It is not lawful for to put them into
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the treasury, because it is the price of blood. 7 And they
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took counsel, and bought with them the potter's field, to bury
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strangers in. 8 Wherefore that field was called, The field
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of blood, unto this day. 9 Then was fulfilled that which was
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spoken by Jeremy the prophet, saying, And they took the thirty
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pieces of silver, the price of him that was valued, whom they of
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the children of Israel did value; 10 And gave them for the
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potter's field, as the Lord appointed me.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p3">We left Christ in the hands of the chief
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priests and elders, condemned to die, but they could only show
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their teeth; about two years before this the Romans had taken from
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the Jews the power of capital punishment; they could put no man to
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death, and therefore early in the morning another council is held,
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to consider what is to be done. And here we are told what was done
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in that morning-council, after they had been for two or three hours
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consulting with their pillows.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p4">I. Christ is delivered up to Pilate, that
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he might execute the sentence they had passed upon him. Judea
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having been almost one hundred years before this conquered by
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Pompey, had ever since been tributary to Rome, and was lately made
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part of the province of Syria, and subject to the government of the
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president of Syria, under whom there were several
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<i>procurators,</i> who chiefly attended the business of the
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<i>revenues,</i> but sometimes, as Pilate particularly, had the
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whole power of the president lodged in them. This was a plain
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evidence that <i>the sceptre was departed from Judah,</i> and that
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therefore now <i>the Shiloh must come,</i> according to Jacob's
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prophecy, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.49.10" parsed="|Gen|49|10|0|0" passage="Ge 49:10">Gen. xlix. 10</scripRef>.
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Pilate is characterized by the Roman writers of that time, as a man
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of a rough and haughty spirit, wilful and implacable, and extremely
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covetous and oppressive; the Jews had a great enmity to his person,
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and were weary of his government, and yet they made use of him as
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the tool of their malice against Christ.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p5">1. They <i>bound</i> Jesus. He was bound
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when he was first seized; but either they took off these bonds when
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he was before the council, or now they added to them. Having found
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him guilty, they tied his hands behind him, as they usually do with
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convicted criminals. He was already bound with the bonds of love to
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man, and of his own undertaking, else he had soon broken these
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bonds, as Samson did his. We were fettered with the <i>bond of
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iniquity,</i> held in the cords of our sins (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.10.22" parsed="|Prov|10|22|0|0" passage="Pr 10:22">Prov. x. 22</scripRef>); but God had bound the <i>yoke
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of our transgressions</i> upon the neck of the Lord Jesus
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(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.50.14" parsed="|Isa|50|14|0|0" passage="Isa 50:14">Isa. l. 14</scripRef>), that we
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might be loosed by his bonds, as we are <i>healed by his
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stripes.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p6">2. <i>They led him away</i> in a sort of
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triumph, led him <i>as a lamb to the slaughter;</i> so <i>was he
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taken from prison and from judgment,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.53.7-Isa.53.8" parsed="|Isa|53|7|53|8" passage="Isa 53:7,8">Isa. liii. 7, 8</scripRef>. It was nearly a mile from
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Caiaphas's house to Pilate's. All that way they led him through the
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streets of Jerusalem, when in the morning they began to fill, to
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make him a spectacle to the world.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p7">3. They <i>delivered him to Pontius
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Pilate;</i> according to that which Christ had often said, that he
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should be <i>delivered to the Gentiles.</i> Both Jews and Gentiles
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were obnoxious to the judgment of God, and <i>concluded under
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sin,</i> and Christ was to be the Saviour both of Jews and
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Gentiles; and therefore Christ was brought into the judgment both
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of Jews and Gentiles, and both had a hand in his death. See how
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these corrupt church-rulers abused the civil magistrate, making use
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of him to execute their unrighteous decrees, and <i>inflict the
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grievance which they had prescribed,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.10.1" parsed="|Isa|10|1|0|0" passage="Isa 10:1">Isa. x. 1</scripRef>. Thus have the kings of the earth
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been wretchedly imposed upon by the papal powers, and condemned to
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the drudgery of extirpating with the sword of war, as well as that
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of justice, those whom they have marked for heretics, right or
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wrong, to the great prejudice of their own interests.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p8">II. The money which they had paid to Judas
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for betraying Christ, is by him delivered back to them, and Judas,
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in despair, hangs himself. The chief priests and elders supported
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themselves with <i>this,</i> in prosecuting Christ, that his own
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disciple betrayed him to them; but now, in the midst of the
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prosecution, that string failed them, and even <i>he</i> is made to
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them a <i>witness</i> of Christ's innocency and a monument of God's
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justice; which served, 1. For glory to Christ in the midst of his
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sufferings, and a specimen of his victory over Satan who had
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entered into Judas. 2. For warning to his persecutors, and to leave
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them the more inexcusable. If their heart had not been fully set in
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them to do this evil, what Judas said and did, one would think,
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should have stopped the prosecution.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p9">(1.) See here how Judas <i>repented:</i>
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not like Peter, who repented, believed, and was pardoned: no, he
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repented, despaired, and was ruined. Now observe here,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p10">[1.] What induced him to repent. It was
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<i>when he saw that he was condemned.</i> Judas, it is probable,
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expected that either Christ would have made his escape out of their
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hands, or would so have pleaded his own cause at their bar as to
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have come off, and then Christ would have had the honour, the Jews
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the shame, and he the money, and no harm done. This he had no
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reason to expect, because he had so often heard his Master say that
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he must be <i>crucified;</i> yet it is probable that he did expect
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it, and when the event did not answer his vain fancy, then he fell
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into this horror, when he saw the stream strong against Christ, and
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him yielding to it. Note, Those who measure actions by the
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consequences of them rather than by the divine law, will find
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themselves mistaken in their measures. The way of sin is down-hill;
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and if we cannot easily stop ourselves, much less can we stop
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others whom we have set a going in a sinful way. He <i>repented
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himself;</i> that is, he was filled with grief, anguish, and
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indignation, at himself, when reflecting upon what he had done.
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When he was tempted to betray his Master, the thirty pieces of
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silver looked very fine and glittering, like the <i>wine, when it
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is red, and gives its colour in the cup.</i> But when the thing was
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done, and the money paid, the silver was become dross, it <i>bit
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like a serpent, and stung like an adder.</i> Now his conscience
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flew in his face; "What have I done! What a fool, what a wretch, am
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I, to sell my Master, and all my comfort and happiness in him, for
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such a trifle! All these abuses and indignities done him are
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chargeable upon me; it is owing to me, that he is bound and
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condemned, spit upon and buffeted. I little thought it would have
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come to this, when I made that wicked bargain; so foolish was I,
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and ignorant, and so like a beast." Now he curses the bag he
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carried, the money he coveted, the priests he dealt with, and the
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day that he was born. The remembrance of his Master's goodness to
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him, which he had so basely requited, the bowels of mercy he had
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spurned at, and the fair warnings he had slighted, steeled his
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convictions, and made them the more piercing. Now he found his
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Master's words true; <i>It were better for that man, that he had
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never been born.</i> Note, Sin will soon change its taste. Though
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it be <i>rolled under the tongue</i> as a <i>sweet morsel,</i> in
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the bowels it will be turned into the <i>gall of asps</i>
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(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.20.12-Job.20.14" parsed="|Job|20|12|20|14" passage="Job 20:12-14">Job xx. 12-14</scripRef>), like
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John's book, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.10.9" parsed="|Rev|10|9|0|0" passage="Re 10:9">Rev. x. 9</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p11">[2.] What were the indications of his
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repentance.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p12"><i>First,</i> He made restitution; <i>He
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brought again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests,</i>
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when they were all together publicly. Now the money burned in his
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conscience, and he was as sick of it as ever he had been fond of
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it. Note, That which is ill gotten, will never do good to those
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that get it, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.13.10 Bible:Job.20.15" parsed="|Jer|13|10|0|0;|Job|20|15|0|0" passage="Jer 13:10,Job 20:15">Jer. xiii. 10;
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Job xx. 15</scripRef>. If he had repented, and brought the money
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back before he had betrayed Christ, he might have done it with
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comfort, then he had <i>agreed while yet in the way;</i> but now it
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was too late, now he cannot do it without horror, wishing ten
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thousand times he had never meddled with it. See <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Jas.5.3" parsed="|Jas|5|3|0|0" passage="Jam 5:3">Jam. v. 3</scripRef>. He brought it again. Note, what is
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unjustly gotten, must not be kept; for that is a continuance in the
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sin by which it was got, and such an avowing of it as is not
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consistent with repentance. He brought it to those from whom he had
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it, to let them know that he repented his bargain. Note, Those who
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have served and hardened others in their sin, when God gives them
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repentance, should let them know it whose sins they have been
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partakers in, that it may be a means to bring them to
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repentance.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p13"><i>Secondly,</i> He made confession
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(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.4" parsed="|Matt|27|4|0|0" passage="Mt 27:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>); <i>I have
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sinner, in that I have betrayed innocent blood.</i> 1. To the
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<i>honour of Christ,</i> he pronounces his blood <i>innocent.</i>
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If he had been guilty of any sinful practices, Judas, as his
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disciple, would certainly have know it, and, as his betrayer, would
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certainly have discovered it; but he, freely and without being
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urged to it, pronounces him innocent, to the face of those who had
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pronounced him <i>guilty.</i> 2. To <i>his own shame,</i> he
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confesses that he had sinned, in betraying this blood. He does not
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lay the blame on any one else; does not say, "You have sinned, in
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hiring me to do it;" but takes it all to himself; "I have sinned,
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in doing it." Thus far Judas went toward his repentance, yet it was
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<i>not to salvation.</i> He confessed, but not to God, did not go
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to him, and say, <i>I have sinned, Father, against heaven.</i> He
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confessed the betraying of innocent blood, but did not confess that
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wicked love of money, which was the root of this evil. There are
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those who betray Christ, and yet justify themselves in it, and so
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come short of Judas.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p14">(2.) See here how the chief priests and
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elders entertained Judas's penitential confession; they said,
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<i>What is that to us? See thou to that.</i> He made them his
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confessors, and that was the <i>absolution</i> they gave him; more
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like the priests of devils than like the priests of the holy living
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God.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p15">[1.] See here how carelessly they speak of
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the betraying of Christ. Judas had told them that the blood of
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Christ was innocent blood; and they said, <i>What is that to
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us?</i> Was it nothing to them that they had thirsted after this
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blood, and hired Judas to betray it, and had now condemned it to be
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shed unjustly? Is this nothing to them? Does it give no check to
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the violence of their prosecution, no warning to take need what
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they do to this just man? Thus do fools make a mock at sin, as if
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no harm were done, no hazard run, by the commission of the greatest
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wickedness. Thus light do many make of Christ crucified; what is it
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to them, that he suffered such things?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p16">[2.] See here how carelessly they speak of
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the sin of Judas; he said, <i>I have sinned,</i> and they said,
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"<i>What is that to us?</i> What are we concerned in thy sin, that
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thou tellest us of it?" Note, It is folly for us to think that the
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sins of others are nothing to us, especially those sins that we are
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any way accessary to, or partakers in. Is it nothing to us, that
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God is dishonoured, souls wounded, Satan gratified and his
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interests served, and that we have aided and abetted it? If the
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elders of Jezreel, to please Jezebel, murder Naboth, is that
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nothing to Ahab? Yes, <i>he has killed,</i> for he has <i>taken
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possession,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.21.19" parsed="|1Kgs|21|19|0|0" passage="1Ki 21:19">1 Kings xxi.
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19</scripRef>. The guilt of sin is not so easily transferred as
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some people think it is. If there were guilt in the matter, they
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tell Judas that he must <i>look to it,</i> he must <i>bear it.
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First,</i> Because he had betrayed him to them. His was indeed
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<i>the greater sin</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:John.19.11" parsed="|John|19|11|0|0" passage="Joh 19:11">John xix.
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11</scripRef>); but it did not therefore follow, that theirs was no
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sin. It is a common instance of the deceitfulness of our hearts, to
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extenuate our own sin by the aggravation of other people's sins.
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But the judgment of God is according to truth, not according to
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comparison. <i>Secondly,</i> Because he knew and believed him to be
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innocent. "If he be innocent, see thou to it, that is more than we
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know; we have adjudged him <i>guilty,</i> and therefore may justly
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prosecute him as such," Wicked practices are buoyed up by wicked
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principles, and particularly by this, That sin is sin only to those
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that think it to be so; that it is no harm to persecute a good man,
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if we take him to be a bad man; but those who thus think to mock
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God, will but deceive and destroy themselves.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p17">[3.] See how carelessly they speak of the
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conviction, terror, and remorse, that Judas was under. They were
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glad to make use of him in the sin, and were then very fond of him;
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none more welcome to them than Judas, when he said, <i>What will ye
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give me, and I will betray him to you?</i> They did not say,
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<i>What is that to us?</i> But now that his sin had put him into a
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fright, now they slighted him, had nothing to say to him, but
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turned him over to his own terrors; why did he come to trouble them
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with his melancholy fancies? They had something else to do than to
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heed him. But why so shy? <i>First,</i> Perhaps they were in some
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fear lest the sparks of his conviction, brought too near, should
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kindle a fire in their own consciences, and lest his moans,
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listened to, should give an alarm to their own convictions. Note,
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Obstinate sinners stand upon their guard against convictions; and
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those that are resolvedly impenitent, look with disdain upon the
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penitent. <i>Secondly,</i> However, they were in no concern to
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succour Judas; when they had brought him into the snare, they not
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only left him, but laughed at him. Note, Sinners, under
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convictions, will find their old companions in sin but miserable
|
||
comforters. It is usual for those that love the treason, to hate
|
||
the traitor.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p18">(3.) Here is the utter despair that Judas
|
||
was hereby driven into. If the chief priests had promised him to
|
||
stay the prosecution, it would have been some comfort to him; but,
|
||
seeing no hopes of that, he grew desperate, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.5" parsed="|Matt|27|5|0|0" passage="Mt 27:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p19">[1.] <i>He cast down the pieces of silver
|
||
in the temple.</i> The chief priests would not take the money, for
|
||
fear of taking thereby the whole guilt to themselves, which they
|
||
were willing that Judas should bear the load of; Judas would not
|
||
keep it, it was too hot for him to hold, he therefore threw it down
|
||
in the temple, that, whether they would or no, it might fall into
|
||
the hands of the chief priests. See what a <i>drug</i> money was,
|
||
when the guilt of <i>sin</i> was tacked to it, or was thought to be
|
||
so.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p20">[2.] <i>He went, and hanged himself. First,
|
||
He retired</i>—<b><i>anechorese</i></b>; he withdrew into some
|
||
solitary place, like the possessed man that was drawn by the devil
|
||
into the wilderness, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.8.29" parsed="|Luke|8|29|0|0" passage="Lu 8:29">Luke viii.
|
||
29</scripRef>. Woe to him that is in despair, and is alone. If
|
||
Judas had gone to Christ, or to some of the disciples, perhaps he
|
||
might have had relief, bad as the case was; but, missing of it with
|
||
the chief priests, he abandoned himself to despair: and the same
|
||
devil that with the help of the priests drew him to the sin, with
|
||
their help drove him to despair. <i>Secondly,</i> He became his own
|
||
executioner; <i>He hanged himself;</i> he was <i>suffocated</i>
|
||
with grief, so Dr. Hammond: but Dr. Whitby is clear that our
|
||
translation is right. Judas had a <i>sight</i> and <i>sense</i> of
|
||
sin, but no apprehension of the mercy of God in Christ, and so
|
||
<i>he pined away in his iniquity.</i> His sin, we may suppose, was
|
||
not in its own nature unpardonable: there were some of those saved,
|
||
that had been Christ's betrayers and murderers; but he concluded,
|
||
as Cain, that his iniquity was greater than could be forgiven, and
|
||
would rather throw himself on the devil's mercy than God's. And
|
||
some have said, that Judas sinned more in <i>despairing</i> of the
|
||
mercy of God, than in <i>betraying</i> his Master's blood. Now the
|
||
terrors of the Almighty set themselves in array against him. All
|
||
the curses written in God's book now <i>came into his bowels like
|
||
water, and like oil into his bones,</i> as was foretold concerning
|
||
him (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.109.18-Ps.109.19" parsed="|Ps|109|18|109|19" passage="Ps 109:18,19">Ps. cix. 18, 19</scripRef>),
|
||
and drove him to this desperate shift, for the escaping of a
|
||
<i>hell</i> within him, to leap into <i>that</i> before him, which
|
||
was but the perfection and perpetuity of this horror and despair.
|
||
He throws himself into the fire, to avoid the flame; but miserable
|
||
is the case when a man must go to hell for ease.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p21">Now, in this story, 1. We have an instance
|
||
of the wretched end of those into whom Satan enters, and
|
||
particularly those that are given up to the love of money. This is
|
||
the destruction in which many are drowned by it, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.6.9-1Tim.6.10" parsed="|1Tim|6|9|6|10" passage="1Ti 6:9,10">1 Tim. vi. 9, 10</scripRef>. Remember what became of
|
||
the swine into which, and of the traitor into whom, <i>the devil
|
||
enters;</i> and <i>give not place to the devil.</i> 2. We have an
|
||
instance of the wrath of God revealed from heaven against the
|
||
ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.18" parsed="|Rom|1|18|0|0" passage="Ro 1:18">Rom. i. 18</scripRef>. As in the story of Peter we behold
|
||
the goodness of God, and the triumphs of Christ's grace in the
|
||
conversion of some sinners; so in the story of Judas we behold the
|
||
severity of God, and the triumphs of Christ's power and justice in
|
||
the confusion of other sinners. When Judas, into whom Satan
|
||
entered, was thus <i>hung up,</i> Christ made an open show of the
|
||
principalities and powers he undertook the <i>spoiling of,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p21.3" osisRef="Bible:Col.2.15" parsed="|Col|2|15|0|0" passage="Col 2:15">Col. ii. 15</scripRef>. 3. We have an
|
||
instance of the direful effects of despair; it often ends in
|
||
self-murder. <i>Sorrow,</i> even that for sin, if not <i>according
|
||
to God, worketh death</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p21.4" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.7.10" parsed="|2Cor|7|10|0|0" passage="2Co 7:10">2 Cor. vii.
|
||
10</scripRef>), the worst kind of death; for <i>a wounded spirit,
|
||
who can bear?</i> Let us think as bad as we can of sin, provided we
|
||
do not think it unpardonable; let us despair of help in ourselves,
|
||
but not of help in God. He that thinks to ease his conscience by
|
||
destroying his life, doth, in effect, dare God Almighty to do his
|
||
worst. And self-murder, though prescribed by some of the heathen
|
||
moralists, is certainly a remedy worse than the disease, how bad
|
||
soever the disease may be. Let us watch against the beginnings of
|
||
melancholy, and pray, Lord, <i>lead us not into temptation.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p22">(4.) The disposal of the money which Judas
|
||
brought back, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.6-Matt.27.10" parsed="|Matt|27|6|27|10" passage="Mt 27:6-10"><i>v.</i>
|
||
6-10</scripRef>. It was laid out in the purchase of a field, called
|
||
<i>the potter's field;</i> because some potter had owned it, or
|
||
occupied it, or lived near it, or because broken potters' vessels
|
||
were thrown into it. And this field was to be a burying-place for
|
||
strangers, that is, proselytes to the Jewish religion, who were of
|
||
other nations, and, coming to Jerusalem to worship, happened to die
|
||
there. [1.] It looks like an instance of their humanity, that they
|
||
took care for the <i>burying of strangers;</i> and it intimates
|
||
that they themselves allowed (as St. Paul saith, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.15" parsed="|Acts|24|15|0|0" passage="Ac 24:15">Acts xxiv. 15</scripRef>), <i>that there shall be a
|
||
resurrection of the dead, both of the just and of the unjust;</i>
|
||
for we <i>therefore</i> take care of the dead body, not only
|
||
because it has been the habitation of a rational soul, but because
|
||
it must be so again. But, [2.] It was no instance of their humility
|
||
that they would bury strangers in a place by themselves, as if they
|
||
were not worthy to be laid in their burying-places; strangers must
|
||
keep their distance, alive and dead, and that principle must go
|
||
down to the grace, <i>Stand by thyself, come not near me, I am
|
||
holier than thou,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p22.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.65.5" parsed="|Isa|65|5|0|0" passage="Isa 65:5">Isa. lxv.
|
||
5</scripRef>. The sons of Seth were better affected towards
|
||
Abraham, though a stranger among them, when they offered him the
|
||
choicest of their own sepulchres, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p22.4" osisRef="Bible:Gen.23.6" parsed="|Gen|23|6|0|0" passage="Ge 23:6">Gen.
|
||
xxiii. 6</scripRef>. But <i>the sons of the stranger, that have
|
||
joined themselves to the Lord,</i> though buried by themselves,
|
||
shall rise with all that are <i>dead in Christ.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p23">This buying of the potter's field did not
|
||
take place on the day that Christ died (they were then too busy to
|
||
mind any thing else but hunting him down); but it took place not
|
||
long after; for Peter speaks of it soon after Christ's ascension;
|
||
yet it is here recorded.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p24"><i>First,</i> To show the hypocrisy of the
|
||
chief priests and elders. They were maliciously persecuting the
|
||
blessed Jesus, and now,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p25">1. They scruple to put that money into the
|
||
treasury, or <i>corban,</i> of the temple, with which they had
|
||
hired the traitor. Though perhaps they had taken it out of the
|
||
treasury, pretending it was for the public good, and though they
|
||
were great sticklers for the <i>corban,</i> and laboured to draw
|
||
all the wealth of the nation into it, yet they would not put that
|
||
money into it, which was the price of blood. The hire of a traitor
|
||
they thought parallel to the hire of a whore, and the price of a
|
||
malefactor (such a one they made Christ to be) equivalent to the
|
||
price of a dog, neither of which was to be <i>brought into the
|
||
house of the Lord,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Deut.23.18" parsed="|Deut|23|18|0|0" passage="De 23:18">Deut. xxiii.
|
||
18</scripRef>. They would thus save their credit with the people,
|
||
by possessing them with an opinion of their great reverence for the
|
||
temple. Thus they that <i>swallowed a camel, strained at a
|
||
gnat.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p26">2. They think to <i>atone</i> for what they
|
||
had done, by this public good act of providing a burying-place for
|
||
strangers, though not at their own charge. Thus in times of
|
||
ignorance people were made to believe that building churches and
|
||
endowing monasteries would make amends for immoralities.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p27"><i>Secondly,</i> To signify the favour
|
||
intended by the blood of Christ to <i>strangers,</i> and sinners of
|
||
the Gentiles. Through the price of his blood, a resting place is
|
||
provided for them after death. Thus many of the ancients apply this
|
||
passage. The <i>grave</i> is the potter's field, where the bodies
|
||
are thrown as despised broken vessels; but Christ by his blood
|
||
<i>purchased</i> it for those who by confessing themselves
|
||
<i>strangers</i> on earth seek the better country; he has altered
|
||
the property of it (as a purchaser doth), so that now death is
|
||
ours, the grave is ours, a bed of rest for us. The Germans, in
|
||
their language, call burying-places <i>God's fields;</i> for in
|
||
them God <i>sows</i> his people as a <i>corn of wheat,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:John.12.24" parsed="|John|12|24|0|0" passage="Joh 12:24">John xii. 24</scripRef>. See
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Hos.2.23 Bible:Isa.26.19" parsed="|Hos|2|23|0|0;|Isa|26|19|0|0" passage="Ho 2:23,Isa 26:19">Hos. ii. 23; Isa. xxvi.
|
||
19</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p28"><i>Thirdly,</i> To perpetuate the infamy of
|
||
those that bought and sold the blood of Christ. This field was
|
||
commonly called <i>Aceldama—the field of blood;</i> not by the
|
||
chief priests, they hoped in this burying-place to bury the
|
||
remembrance of their own crime; but by the people; who took notice
|
||
of Judas's acknowledgment that he had betrayed the innocent blood,
|
||
though the chief priests made nothing of it. They fastened this
|
||
name upon the field <i>in perpetuam rei memoriam—for a perpetual
|
||
memorial.</i> Note, Divine Providence has many ways of entailing
|
||
disgrace upon the wicked practices even of great men, who, though
|
||
they seek to cover their shame, are <i>put to a perpetual
|
||
reproach.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p29"><i>Fourthly,</i> That we may see how the
|
||
scripture was fulfilled (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.9-Matt.27.10" parsed="|Matt|27|9|27|10" passage="Mt 27:9,10"><i>v.</i>
|
||
9, 10</scripRef>); <i>Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by
|
||
Jeremy the prophet.</i> The words quoted are found in the prophecy
|
||
of Zechariah, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11.12" parsed="|Matt|11|12|0|0" passage="Mt 11:12"><i>ch.</i> xi.
|
||
12</scripRef>. How they are here said to be spoken by Jeremy is a
|
||
difficult question; but the credit of Christ's doctrine does not
|
||
depend upon it; for that proves itself perfectly divine, though
|
||
there should appear something human as to small circumstances in
|
||
the penmen of it. The Syriac version, which is ancient, reads only,
|
||
<i>It was spoken by the prophet,</i> not naming any, whence some
|
||
have thought that <i>Jeremy</i> was added by some scribe; some
|
||
think that the whole volume of the prophets, being in one book, and
|
||
the prophecy of Jeremiah put first, it might not be improper,
|
||
<i>currente calamo—for a transcriber</i> to quote any passage out
|
||
of that volume, under his name. The Jews used to say, <i>The spirit
|
||
of Jeremiah was in Zechariah,</i> and so they were as one prophet.
|
||
Some suggest that it was <i>spoken</i> by Jeremiah, but written by
|
||
Zechariah; or that Jeremiah wrote the ninth, tenth, and eleventh
|
||
chapters of Zechariah. Now this passage in the prophet is a
|
||
representation of the great contempt of God, that was found among
|
||
the Jews, and the poor returns they made to him for rich receivings
|
||
from him. But here that is really acted, which was there but
|
||
figuratively expressed. The sum of money is the same—<i>thirty
|
||
pieces of silver;</i> this they <i>weighed for his price,</i> at
|
||
this rate they valued him; a goodly price; and this was <i>cast to
|
||
the potter in the house of the Lord;</i> which was here literally
|
||
accomplished. Note, We should better understand the events of
|
||
Providence, if we were better acquainted even with the language and
|
||
expressions of scripture; for even those also are sometimes written
|
||
upon the dispensations of Providence so plainly, that <i>he who
|
||
runs may read them.</i> What David spoke figuratively (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.42.7" parsed="|Ps|42|7|0|0" passage="Ps 42:7">Ps. xlii. 7</scripRef>), Jonah made a literal
|
||
application of; <i>All thy waves and thy billows are gone over
|
||
me,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p29.4" osisRef="Bible:Jonah.3.3" parsed="|Jonah|3|3|0|0" passage="Jon 3:3">Jonah iii. 3</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p30">The giving of the price of him that was
|
||
valued, not for him, but for the <i>potter's field,</i> bespeaks,
|
||
1. The high value that ought to be put upon Christ. The price was
|
||
given, not for him; no, when it was given for him, it was soon
|
||
brought back again with disdain, as infinitely below his worth; he
|
||
cannot be <i>valued with the gold of Ophir,</i> nor this
|
||
unspeakable Gift <i>brought with money.</i> 2. The low value that
|
||
was put upon him. <i>They of the children of Israel</i> did
|
||
strangely undervalue him, when his price did but reach to buy a
|
||
potter's field, a pitiful sorry spot of ground, not worth looking
|
||
upon. It added to the reproach of his being bought and sold, that
|
||
it was at so low a rate. <i>Cast it to the potter,</i> so it is in
|
||
Zechariah; a contemptible petty chapman, not the merchant that
|
||
deals in things of value. And observe, <i>They of the children of
|
||
Israel</i> thus <i>undervalued him;</i> they who were his own
|
||
people, that should have known better what estimate to put upon
|
||
him, they to whom he was first sent, whose glory he was, and whom
|
||
he had valued so highly, and bought so dear. He gave kings' ransoms
|
||
for them, and the richest countries (so <i>precious were they in
|
||
his sight,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.43.3-Isa.43.4" parsed="|Isa|43|3|43|4" passage="Isa 43:3,4">Isa. xliii. 3,
|
||
4</scripRef>), Egypt, and Ethiopia, and Seba; but they gave a
|
||
slave's ransom for him (see <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p30.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.21.32" parsed="|Exod|21|32|0|0" passage="Ex 21:32">Exod. xxi.
|
||
32</scripRef>), and valued him but at the rate of a potter's field;
|
||
so was that blood trodden under foot, which bought the kingdom of
|
||
heaven for us. But all this was <i>as the Lord appointed;</i> so
|
||
the prophetic vision was, which typified this event, and so the
|
||
event itself, as the other instances of Christ's sufferings, was
|
||
<i>by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God.</i></p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xxviii-p30.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.11-Matt.27.25" parsed="|Matt|27|11|27|25" passage="Mt 27:11-25" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.27.11-Matt.27.25">
|
||
<h4 id="Matt.xxviii-p30.4">Christ at the Bar of Pilate.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxviii-p31">11 And Jesus stood before the governor: and the
|
||
governor asked him, saying, Art thou the King of the Jews? And
|
||
Jesus said unto him, Thou sayest. 12 And when he was accused
|
||
of the chief priests and elders, he answered nothing. 13
|
||
Then said Pilate unto him, Hearest thou not how many things they
|
||
witness against thee? 14 And he answered him to never a
|
||
word; insomuch that the governor marvelled greatly. 15 Now
|
||
at <i>that</i> feast the governor was wont to release unto the
|
||
people a prisoner, whom they would. 16 And they had then a
|
||
notable prisoner, called Barabbas. 17 Therefore when they
|
||
were gathered together, Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that I
|
||
release unto you? Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ?
|
||
18 For he knew that for envy they had delivered him. 19 When
|
||
he was set down on the judgment seat, his wife sent unto him,
|
||
saying, Have thou nothing to do with that just man: for I have
|
||
suffered many things this day in a dream because of him. 20
|
||
But the chief priests and elders persuaded the multitude that they
|
||
should ask Barabbas, and destroy Jesus. 21 The governor
|
||
answered and said unto them, Whether of the twain will ye that I
|
||
release unto you? They said, Barabbas. 22 Pilate saith unto
|
||
them, What shall I do then with Jesus which is called Christ?
|
||
<i>They</i> all say unto him, Let him be crucified. 23 And
|
||
the governor said, Why, what evil hath he done? But they cried out
|
||
the more, saying, Let him be crucified. 24 When Pilate saw
|
||
that he could prevail nothing, but <i>that</i> rather a tumult was
|
||
made, he took water, and washed <i>his</i> hands before the
|
||
multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just person:
|
||
see ye <i>to it.</i> 25 Then answered all the people, and
|
||
said, His blood <i>be</i> on us, and on our children.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p32">We have here an account of what passed in
|
||
Pilate's judgment-hall, when the blessed Jesus was brought thither
|
||
betimes in the morning. Though it was no court-day, Pilate
|
||
immediately took his case before him. We have there,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p33">I. The trial Christ had before Pilate.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p34">1. His arraignment; <i>Jesus stood before
|
||
the governor,</i> as the prisoner before the judge. We could not
|
||
stand before God because of our sins, nor lift up our face in his
|
||
presence, if Christ had not been thus made sin for us. He was
|
||
arraigned that we might be discharged. Some think that this
|
||
bespeaks his courage and boldness; he stood <i>undaunted,</i>
|
||
unmoved by all their rage. He thus stood in this judgment, that we
|
||
might stand in God's judgment. He stood for a <i>spectacle,</i> as
|
||
Naboth, when he was arraigned, was <i>set on high among the
|
||
people.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p35">2. His indictment; <i>Art thou the king of
|
||
the Jews?</i> The Jews were now not only under the government, but
|
||
under the very jealous inspection, of the Roman powers, which they
|
||
were themselves to the highest degree disaffected to, and yet now
|
||
pretended a concern for, to serve this turn; accusing Jesus as an
|
||
Enemy to Cæsar (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p35.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23.2" parsed="|Luke|23|2|0|0" passage="Lu 23:2">Luke xxiii.
|
||
2</scripRef>), which they could produce no other proof of, than
|
||
that he himself had newly owned he was <i>the Christ.</i> Now they
|
||
thought that whoever was the Christ, must be the <i>king of the
|
||
Jews,</i> and must deliver them from the Roman power, and restore
|
||
to them a temporal dominion, and enable them to trample upon all
|
||
their neighbours. According to this chimera of their own, they
|
||
accused our Lord Jesus, as making himself king of the Jews, in
|
||
opposition to the Roman yoke; whereas, though he said that he was
|
||
the Christ, he meant not such a Christ as this. Note, Many oppose
|
||
Christ's holy religion, upon a mistake of the nature of it; they
|
||
dress it up in false colours, and then fight against it. They
|
||
assuring the governor that, if he made himself Christ, he made
|
||
himself king of the Jews, the governor takes it for granted, that
|
||
he goes about to pervert the nation, and subvert the government.
|
||
<i>Art thou a king?</i> It was plain that he was not so <i>de
|
||
facto—actually;</i> "But dost thou lay any claim to the
|
||
government, or pretend a right to rule the Jews?" Note, It has
|
||
often been the hard fate of Christ's holy religion, unjustly to
|
||
fall under the suspicions of the civil powers, as if it were
|
||
hurtful to kings and provinces, whereas it tends mightily to the
|
||
benefit of both.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p36">3. His plea; <i>Jesus said unto him, "Thou
|
||
sayest.</i> It is as thou sayest, though not as thou meanest; I am
|
||
a king, but not such a king as thou dost suspect me to be." Thus
|
||
before Pilate he witnessed a good confession, and was not ashamed
|
||
to own himself a king, though it looked ridiculous, nor afraid,
|
||
though at this time it was dangerous.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p37">4. The evidence (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.12" parsed="|Matt|27|12|0|0" passage="Mt 27:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>); He was <i>accused of the chief
|
||
priests.</i> Pilate found <i>no fault in him;</i> whatever was
|
||
said, nothing was proved, and therefore what was wanting in matter
|
||
they made up in noise and violence, and followed him with repeated
|
||
accusations, the same as they had given in before; but by the
|
||
repetition they thought to force a belief from the governor. They
|
||
had learned, not only <i>calumniari—to calumniate,</i> but
|
||
<i>fortiter calumniari—to calumniate stoutly.</i> The best men
|
||
have often been accused of the worst crimes.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p38">5. The prisoner's silence as to the
|
||
prosecutors' accusations; <i>He answered nothing,</i> (1.) Because
|
||
there was no occasion; nothing was alleged but what carried its own
|
||
confutation along with it. (2.) He was now taken up with the great
|
||
concern that lay between him and his Father, to whom he was
|
||
offering up himself a Sacrifice, to answer the demands of his
|
||
justice, which he was so intent upon, that he minded not what they
|
||
said against him. (3.) His hour was come, and he submitted to his
|
||
Father's will; <i>Not as I will, but as thou wilt.</i> He knew what
|
||
his Father's will was, and therefore silently <i>committed himself
|
||
to him that judgeth righteously. We</i> must not thus by our
|
||
silence throw away our lives, because we are not lords of our
|
||
lives, as Christ was of his; nor can we know, as he did, when our
|
||
hour is come. But hence we must learn, <i>not to render railing for
|
||
railing,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.23" parsed="|1Pet|2|23|0|0" passage="1Pe 2:23">1 Pet. ii.
|
||
23</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p39">Now, [1.] Pilate pressed him to make some
|
||
reply (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p39.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.13" parsed="|Matt|27|13|0|0" passage="Mt 27:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>);
|
||
<i>Hearest thou not how many things they witness against thee?</i>
|
||
What these things were, may be gathered from <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p39.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23.3 Bible:Luke.23.5 Bible:John.19.7" parsed="|Luke|23|3|0|0;|Luke|23|5|0|0;|John|19|7|0|0" passage="Lu 23:3,5,Joh 19:7">Luke xxiii. 3, 5, and John xix. 7</scripRef>.
|
||
Pilate, having no malice at all against him, was desirous he should
|
||
clear himself, urges him to it, and believes he could do it;
|
||
<i>Hearest thou not?</i> Yes, he did hear; and still he hears all
|
||
that is witnessed unjustly against his truths and ways; but he
|
||
keeps silence, because it is the day of his patience, and doth not
|
||
answer, as he will shortly, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p39.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.50.3" parsed="|Ps|50|3|0|0" passage="Ps 50:3">Ps. l.
|
||
3</scripRef>. [2.] He wondered at his silence; which was not
|
||
interpreted so much into a contempt of the court, as a contempt of
|
||
himself. And therefore Pilate is not said to be angry at it, but to
|
||
have <i>marvelled greatly</i> at it, as a thing very unusual. He
|
||
believed him to be innocent, and had heard perhaps that <i>never
|
||
man spake like him;</i> and therefore he thought it strange that he
|
||
had not one word to say for himself. We have,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p40">II. The outrage and violence of the people,
|
||
in pressing the governor to crucify Christ. The chief priests had a
|
||
great interest in the people, they called them <i>Rabbi, Rabbi,</i>
|
||
made idols of them, and oracles of all they said; and they made use
|
||
of this to incense them against him, and by the power of the mob
|
||
gained the point which they could not otherwise carry. Now here are
|
||
two instances of their outrage.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p41">1. Their preferring Barabbas before him,
|
||
and choosing to have him released rather than Jesus.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p42">(1.) It seems it was grown into a custom
|
||
with the Roman governors, for the honouring of the Jews, to grace
|
||
the feast of the passover with the release of a prisoner, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.15" parsed="|Matt|27|15|0|0" passage="Mt 27:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>. This, they thought, did
|
||
honour to the feast, and was agreeable to the commemoration of
|
||
their deliverance; but it was an invention of their own, and no
|
||
divine institution; though some think that it was ancient, and kept
|
||
up by the Jewish princes, before they became a province of the
|
||
empire. However, it was a bad custom, an obstruction to justice,
|
||
and an encouragement to wickedness. But our gospel-passover is
|
||
celebrated with the release of prisoners, by him who hath <i>power
|
||
on earth to forgive sins.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p43">(2.) The prisoner put in competition with
|
||
our Lord Jesus was Barabbas; he is here called a <i>notable</i>
|
||
prisoner (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p43.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.16" parsed="|Matt|27|16|0|0" passage="Mt 27:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>);
|
||
either because by birth and breeding he was of some note and
|
||
quality, or because he had signalized himself by something
|
||
remarkable in his crimes; whether he was so <i>notable</i> as to
|
||
recommend himself the more to the favours of the people, and so the
|
||
more likely to be interceded for, or whether so <i>notable</i> as
|
||
to make himself more liable to their age, is uncertain. Some think
|
||
the latter, and therefore Pilate mentioned him, as taking it for
|
||
granted that they would have desired any one's release rather than
|
||
his. <i>Treason, murder,</i> and <i>felony,</i> are the three most
|
||
enormous crimes that are usually punished by the sword of justice;
|
||
and Barabbas was guilty of all three, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p43.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23.19 Bible:John.18.40" parsed="|Luke|23|19|0|0;|John|18|40|0|0" passage="Lu 23:19,Joh 18:40">Luke xxiii. 19; John xviii. 40</scripRef>. A
|
||
<i>notable prisoner</i> indeed, whose crimes were so
|
||
complicated.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p44">(3.) The proposal was made by Pilate the
|
||
governor (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.17" parsed="|Matt|27|17|0|0" passage="Mt 27:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>);
|
||
<i>Whom will ye that I release unto you?</i> It is probable that
|
||
the judge had the nomination of two, one of which the people were
|
||
to <i>choose.</i> Pilate proposed to them to have Jesus
|
||
<i>released;</i> he was convinced of his innocency, and that the
|
||
prosecution was malicious; yet had not the courage to acquit him,
|
||
as he ought to have done, by his own power, but would have him
|
||
released by the people's election, and so he hoped to satisfy both
|
||
his own <i>conscience,</i> and the <i>people</i> too; whereas,
|
||
finding no fault in him, he ought not to have <i>put him upon the
|
||
country,</i> or brought him <i>into peril of his life.</i> But such
|
||
little tricks and artifices as these, to trim the matter, and to
|
||
keep in with conscience and the world too, are the common practice
|
||
of those that seek more to please men than God. <i>What shall I do
|
||
then,</i> saith Pilate, <i>with Jesus, who is called Christ?</i> He
|
||
puts the people in mind of this, that this <i>Jesus,</i> whose
|
||
release he proposed, was looked upon by some among them as the
|
||
Messiah, and had given pregnant proofs of his being so; "Do not
|
||
<i>reject</i> one of whom your nation has professed such an
|
||
expectation."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p45">The reason why Pilate <i>laboured</i> thus
|
||
to get Jesus <i>discharged</i> was because he knew that <i>for envy
|
||
the chief priests had delivered him up</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p45.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.18" parsed="|Matt|27|18|0|0" passage="Mt 27:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>); that it was not his
|
||
<i>guilt,</i> but his goodness, that they were provoked at; and for
|
||
this reason he <i>hoped</i> to bring him off by the people's act,
|
||
and that they would be for his release. When David was
|
||
<i>envied</i> by Saul, he was the <i>darling of the people;</i> and
|
||
any one that heard the <i>hosannas</i> with which Christ was but a
|
||
few days ago brought into Jerusalem, would have thought that he had
|
||
been so, and that Pilate might safely have referred this matter to
|
||
the commonalty, especially when so notorious a rogue was set up as
|
||
a rival with him for their favours. But it proved otherwise.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p46">(4.) While Pilate was thus labouring the
|
||
matter, he was confirmed in his unwillingness to condemn Jesus, by
|
||
a message sent him from his wife (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.19" parsed="|Matt|27|19|0|0" passage="Mt 27:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>), by way of caution; <i>Have
|
||
thou nothing to do with that just man</i> (together with the
|
||
reason), <i>for I have suffered many things this day in a cream
|
||
because of him.</i> Probably, this message was delivered to Pilate
|
||
publicly, in the hearing of all that were present, for it was
|
||
intended to be a warning not to him only, but to the prosecutors.
|
||
Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p47">[1.] The special providence of God, in
|
||
sending this dream to Pilate's wife; it is not likely that she had
|
||
heard any thing, before, concerning Christ, at least not so as to
|
||
occasion her dreaming of him, but it was immediately from God:
|
||
perhaps she was one of the <i>devout and honourable women,</i> and
|
||
had some sense of religion; yet God revealed himself by dreams to
|
||
some that had not, as to Nebuchadnezzar. She <i>suffered many
|
||
things</i> in this dream; whether she dreamed of the cruel usage of
|
||
an innocent person, or of the judgments that would fall upon those
|
||
that had any hand in his death, or both, it seems that it was a
|
||
frightful dream, and her thoughts <i>troubled her,</i> as <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:Dan.2.1 Bible:Dan.4.5" parsed="|Dan|2|1|0|0;|Dan|4|5|0|0" passage="Da 2:1,4:5">Dan. ii. 1; iv. 5</scripRef>. Note, The Father
|
||
of spirits has many ways of access to the spirits of men, and can
|
||
<i>seal their instruction in a dream, or vision of the night,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.33.15-Job.33.16" parsed="|Job|33|15|33|16" passage="Job 33:15,16">Job xxxiii. 15, 16</scripRef>. Yet
|
||
to those who have the written word, God more ordinarily speaks by
|
||
conscience on a waking bed, than by dreams, when <i>deep sleep
|
||
falls upon men.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p48">[2.] The tenderness and care of Pilate's
|
||
wife, in sending this caution, thereupon, to her husband; <i>Have
|
||
nothing to do with that just man. First,</i> This was an honourable
|
||
testimony to our Lord Jesus, witnessing for him that he was a
|
||
<i>just man,</i> even then when he was persecuted as the worst of
|
||
malefactors: when his friends were afraid to appear in defence of
|
||
him, God made even those that were strangers and enemies, to speak
|
||
in his favour; when Peter denied him, Judas confessed him; when the
|
||
chief priests pronounced him guilty of death, Pilate declared he
|
||
<i>found no fault</i> in him; when the women that loved him stood
|
||
afar off, Pilate's wife, who knew little of him, showed a concern
|
||
for him. Note, God will not leave himself without witnesses to the
|
||
truth and equity of his cause, even when it seems to be most
|
||
spitefully run down by its enemies, and most shamefully deserted by
|
||
its friends. <i>Secondly,</i> It was a fair warning to Pilate;
|
||
<i>Have nothing to do with him.</i> Note, God has many ways of
|
||
giving checks to sinners in their sinful pursuits, and it is a
|
||
great mercy to have such checks from Providence, from faithful
|
||
friends, and from our own consciences; it is also our great duty to
|
||
hearken to them. <i>O do not this abominable thing which the Lord
|
||
hates,</i> is what we may hear said to us, when we are entering
|
||
into temptation, if we will but regard it. Pilate's lady sent him
|
||
this warning, out of the love she had to him; she feared not a
|
||
rebuke from him for meddling with that which belonged not to her;
|
||
but, let him take it how he would, she would give him the caution.
|
||
Note, It is an instance of true love to our friends and relations,
|
||
to do what we can to keep them from sin; and the nearer any are to
|
||
us, and the greater affection we have for them, the more solicitous
|
||
we should be not to suffer sin to come or lie upon them, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p48.1" osisRef="Bible:Lev.19.17" parsed="|Lev|19|17|0|0" passage="Le 19:17">Lev. xix. 17</scripRef>. The best friendship is
|
||
friendship to the soul. We are not told how Pilate turned this off,
|
||
probably with a jest; but by his proceeding against the just man it
|
||
appears that he did not regard it. Thus faithful admonitions are
|
||
made light of, when they are given as warnings against sin, but
|
||
will not be so easily made light of, when they shall be reflected
|
||
upon as aggravations of sin.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p49">(5.) The chief priests and the elders were
|
||
busy, all this while, to influence the people in favour of
|
||
Barabbas, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p49.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.20" parsed="|Matt|27|20|0|0" passage="Mt 27:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>.
|
||
They <i>persuaded the multitude,</i> both by themselves and their
|
||
emissaries, whom they sent abroad among them, <i>that they should
|
||
ask Barabbas, and destroy Jesus;</i> suggesting that this Jesus was
|
||
a deceiver, in league with Satan, an enemy to their church and
|
||
temple; that, if he were let alone, the Romans would come, and take
|
||
away their place and nation; that Barabbas, though a bad man, yet,
|
||
having not the interest that Jesus had, could not do so much
|
||
mischief. Thus they managed the mob, who otherwise were well
|
||
affected to Jesus, and, if they had not been so much at the beck of
|
||
their priests, would never have done such a preposterous thing as
|
||
to prefer Barabbas before Jesus. Here, [1.] We cannot but look upon
|
||
these wicked priests with indignation; by the law, in <i>matters of
|
||
controversy between blood and blood,</i> the people were to be
|
||
guided by the priests, and to do as they informed them, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p49.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.17.8-Deut.17.9" parsed="|Deut|17|8|17|9" passage="De 17:8,9">Deut. xvii. 8, 9</scripRef>. This great power
|
||
put into their hands they wretchedly abused, and the leaders of the
|
||
people caused them to err. [2.] We cannot but look upon the deluded
|
||
people with pity; <i>I have compassion on the multitude,</i> to see
|
||
them hurried thus violently to so great wickedness, to see them
|
||
thus priest-ridden, and falling in the ditch with their <i>blind
|
||
leaders.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p50">(6.) Being thus over-ruled by the priests,
|
||
at length they made their choice, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p50.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.21" parsed="|Matt|27|21|0|0" passage="Mt 27:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>. <i>Whether of the twain</i>
|
||
(saith Pilate) <i>will ye that I release unto you?</i> He hoped
|
||
that he had gained his point, to have Jesus released. But, to his
|
||
great surprise, they said <i>Barabbas;</i> as if his <i>crimes</i>
|
||
were <i>less,</i> and therefore he less <i>deserved to die;</i> or
|
||
as if his <i>merits</i> were <i>greater,</i> and therefore he
|
||
better <i>deserved to live.</i> The cry for Barabbas was so
|
||
universal, one and all, that there was no colour to demand a poll
|
||
between the candidates. <i>Be astonished, O heavens, at this, and,
|
||
thou earth, be horribly afraid!</i> Were ever men that pretended to
|
||
reason or religion, guilty of such prodigious madness, such horrid
|
||
wickedness! This was it that Peter charged so home upon them
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p50.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.3.14" parsed="|Acts|3|14|0|0" passage="Ac 3:14">Acts iii. 14</scripRef>); <i>Ye
|
||
desired a murderer to be granted to you;</i> yet multitudes who
|
||
choose the world, rather than God, for their ruler and portion,
|
||
thus <i>choose their own delusions.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p51">2. Their pressing earnestly to have Jesus
|
||
crucified, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p51.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.22-Matt.27.23" parsed="|Matt|27|22|27|23" passage="Mt 27:22,23"><i>v.</i> 22,
|
||
23</scripRef>. Pilate, being amazed at their choice of Barabbas,
|
||
was willing to hope that it was rather from a fondness for him than
|
||
from an enmity to Jesus; and therefore he puts it to them, "<i>What
|
||
shall I do then with Jesus?</i> Shall I release him likewise, for
|
||
the greater honour of your feast, or will you leave it to me?" No,
|
||
<i>they all said, Let him be crucified.</i> That death they desired
|
||
he might die, because it was looked upon as the most scandalous and
|
||
ignominious; and they hoped thereby to make his followers ashamed
|
||
to own him, and their relation to him. It was absurd for them to
|
||
prescribe to the judge what sentence he should pass; but their
|
||
malice and rage made them forget all rules of order and decency,
|
||
and turned a court of justice into a <i>riotous, tumultuous,</i>
|
||
and <i>seditious assembly.</i> Now was truth fallen in the street,
|
||
and equity could not enter; where one <i>looked for judgment,
|
||
behold, oppression,</i> the worst kind of oppression; for
|
||
righteousness, behold, a cry, the worse cry that ever was,
|
||
<i>Crucify, crucify</i> the Lord of glory. Though they that cried
|
||
thus, perhaps, were not the same persons that the other day cried
|
||
<i>Hosanna,</i> yet see what a change was made upon the mind of the
|
||
populace in a little time: when he <i>rode in triumph</i> into
|
||
Jerusalem, so <i>general</i> were the <i>acclamations of
|
||
praise,</i> that one would have thought he had <i>no enemies;</i>
|
||
but now when he was <i>led in triumph</i> to Pilate's
|
||
judgment-seat, so <i>general</i> were the <i>outcries</i> of
|
||
enmity, that one would think he had <i>no friends.</i> Such
|
||
revolutions are there in this changeable world, through which our
|
||
way to heaven lies, as our Master's did, <i>by honour and
|
||
dishonour, by evil report, and good report,</i> counter-changed
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p51.2" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.6.8" parsed="|2Cor|6|8|0|0" passage="2Co 6:8">2 Cor. vi. 8</scripRef>); that we may
|
||
not be lifted up by honour, as if, when we were applauded and
|
||
caressed, we had <i>made our nest among the stars,</i> and should
|
||
<i>die in that nest;</i> nor yet be dejected or discouraged by
|
||
dishonour, as if, when we were trodden to the lowest hell, from
|
||
which there is <i>no redemption. Bides tu istos qui te laudant;
|
||
omnes aut sunt hostes, aut (quod in æquo est) esse possunt—You
|
||
observe those who applaud you; either they are all your enemies,
|
||
or, which is equivalent, they may become so.</i> Seneca de Vita
|
||
Beat.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p52">Now, as to this demand, we are further
|
||
told,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p53">(1.) How Pilate objected against it;
|
||
<i>Why, what evil hath he done?</i> A proper question to ask before
|
||
we censure any in common discourse, much more for a judge to ask
|
||
before he pass a sentence of death. Note, It is much for the honour
|
||
of the Lord Jesus, that, though he suffered as an evil-doer, yet
|
||
neither his judge nor his prosecutors could find that he had done
|
||
any evil. Had he done any evil <i>against God?</i> No, he <i>always
|
||
did those things that pleased him.</i> Had he done any evil against
|
||
the <i>civil government?</i> No, as he did himself, so he taught
|
||
others, to <i>render to Cæsar the things that were Cæsar's.</i> Had
|
||
he done any evil against the <i>public peace?</i> No, he did not
|
||
<i>strive or cry,</i> nor did his kingdom <i>come with
|
||
observation.</i> Had he done any evil to particular persons?
|
||
<i>Whose ox had he taken, or whom had he defrauded?</i> No, so far
|
||
from that, that he <i>went about doing good.</i> This repeated
|
||
assertion of his unspotted innocency, plainly intimates that he
|
||
died to satisfy for the sins of others; for if it had not been for
|
||
our transgressions that he was thus wounded, and for our offences
|
||
that he was delivered up, and that upon his own voluntary
|
||
undertaking to atone for them, I see not how these extraordinary
|
||
sufferings of a person that had never thought, said, or done, any
|
||
thing amiss, could be reconciled with the justice and equity of
|
||
that providence that governs the world, and at least
|
||
<i>permitted</i> this to be done in it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p54">(2.) How they <i>insisted</i> upon it;
|
||
<i>They cried out the more, Let him be crucified.</i> They do not
|
||
go about to show any evil he had done, but, right or wrong, he must
|
||
be <i>crucified.</i> Quitting all pretensions to the proof of the
|
||
premises, they resolve to hold the conclusion, and what was wanting
|
||
in evidence to make up in clamour; this unjust judge was wearied by
|
||
importunity into an unjust sentence, as he in the parable into a
|
||
just one (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18.4-Luke.18.5" parsed="|Luke|18|4|18|5" passage="Lu 18:4,5">Luke xviii. 4,
|
||
5</scripRef>), and the cause carried purely by noise.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p55">III. Here is the <i>devolving</i> of the
|
||
<i>guilt</i> of Christ's blood upon the <i>people</i> and
|
||
<i>priests.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p56">1. Pilate endeavours to transfer it from
|
||
himself, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.24" parsed="|Matt|27|24|0|0" passage="Mt 27:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p57">(1.) He sees it <i>to no purpose to
|
||
contend.</i> What he said, [1.] Would do no good; <i>he could
|
||
prevail nothing;</i> he could not convince them what an unjust
|
||
unreasonable thing it was for him to condemn a man whom he believed
|
||
innocent, and whom they could not prove guilty. See how strong the
|
||
stream of lust and rage sometimes is; neither authority nor reason
|
||
will prevail to give check to it. Nay, [2.] It was more likely to
|
||
<i>do hurt;</i> he saw that rather a <i>tumult was made.</i> This
|
||
rude and brutish people fell to high words, and began to threaten
|
||
Pilate what they would do if he did not gratify them; and how great
|
||
a matter might this fire kindle, especially when the priests, those
|
||
great incendiaries, blew the coals! Now this turbulent tumultuous
|
||
temper of the Jews, by which Pilate was awed to condemn Christ
|
||
against his conscience, contributed more than any thing to the ruin
|
||
of that nation not long after; for their frequent insurrections
|
||
provoked the Romans to destroy them, though they had reduced them,
|
||
and their inveterate quarrels among themselves made them an easy
|
||
prey to the common enemy. Thus their sin was their ruin.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p58">Observe how easily we may be mistaken in
|
||
the inclination of the common people; the priests were apprehensive
|
||
that their endeavours to <i>seize</i> Christ would have caused an
|
||
uproar, especially <i>on the feast day;</i> but it proved that
|
||
Pilate's endeavour to <i>save</i> him, caused an uproar, and that
|
||
on the feast day; so uncertain are the sentiments of the crowd.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p59">(2.) This puts him into a <i>great
|
||
strait,</i> betwixt the peace of his own mind, and the peace of the
|
||
city; he is loth to condemn an innocent man, and yet loth to
|
||
<i>disoblige</i> the people, and raise a devil that would not be
|
||
soon laid. Had he steadily and resolutely adhered to the sacred
|
||
laws of justice, as a judge ought to do, he had not been in any
|
||
perplexity; the matter was plain and past dispute, that a man in
|
||
whom was found <i>no faulty,</i> ought not to be crucified, upon
|
||
any pretence whatsoever, nor must an unjust thing be done, to
|
||
gratify any man or company of men in the world; the cause is soon
|
||
decided; <i>Let justice be done, though heaven and earth come
|
||
together—Fiat justitia, ruat cœlum.</i> If <i>wickedness
|
||
proceed from the wicked,</i> though they be priests, yet <i>my hand
|
||
shall not be upon him.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p60">(3.) Pilate thinks to trim the matter, and
|
||
to pacify both the people and his own conscience too, by <i>doing
|
||
it,</i> and yet <i>disowning</i> it, <i>acting</i> the thing, and
|
||
yet <i>acquitting</i> himself from it at the same time. Such
|
||
absurdities and self-contradictions do <i>they</i> run upon, whose
|
||
convictions are <i>strong,</i> but their corruptions <i>stronger.
|
||
Happy is he</i> (saith the apostle, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p60.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.14.22" parsed="|Rom|14|22|0|0" passage="Ro 14:22">Rom. xiv. 22</scripRef>) <i>that condemneth not himself
|
||
in that thing which he alloweth;</i> or, which is all one, that
|
||
<i>allows</i> not himself in that thing which he
|
||
<i>condemns.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p61">Now Pilate endeavours to clear himself from
|
||
the guilt,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p62">[1.] By a <i>sign;</i> He <i>took water,
|
||
and washed his hands before the multitude;</i> not as if he thought
|
||
thereby to cleanse himself from any guilt contracted before God,
|
||
but to acquit himself before the people, from so much as
|
||
contracting any guilt in this matter; as if he had said, "If it be
|
||
done, bear witness that it is none of my doing." He <i>borrowed</i>
|
||
the ceremony from that law which appointed it to be used for the
|
||
clearing of the country from the guilt of an undiscovered murder
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p62.1" osisRef="Bible:Deut.21.6-Deut.21.7" parsed="|Deut|21|6|21|7" passage="De 21:6,7">Deut. xxi. 6, 7</scripRef>); and he
|
||
used it the more to affect the people with the conviction he was
|
||
under of the prisoner's innocency; and, probably, such was the
|
||
noise of the rabble, that, if he had not used some such surprising
|
||
sign, in the view of them all, he could not have been heard.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p63">[2.] By a <i>saying;</i> in which,
|
||
<i>First,</i> He <i>clears</i> himself; <i>I am innocent of the
|
||
blood of this just person.</i> What nonsense was this, to condemn
|
||
him, and yet protest that he was innocent of his blood! For men to
|
||
protest against a thing, and yet to practise it, is only to
|
||
proclaim that they sin against their consciences. Though Pilate
|
||
professed his innocency, God charges him with guilt, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p63.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.27" parsed="|Acts|4|27|0|0" passage="Ac 4:27">Acts iv. 27</scripRef>. Some think to justify
|
||
themselves, by pleading that their <i>hands</i> were not in the
|
||
sin; but David kills by the sword of the children of Ammon, and
|
||
Ahab by the elders of Jezreel. Pilate here thinks to justify
|
||
himself, by pleading that his <i>heart</i> was not in the action;
|
||
but this is an averment which will never be admitted.
|
||
<i>Protestatio non valet contra factum—In vain does he protest
|
||
against the deed which at the same time he perpetrates.
|
||
Secondly,</i> He casts it upon the priests and people; "<i>See ye
|
||
to it;</i> if it must be done, I cannot help it, do you answer it
|
||
before God and the world." Note, Sin is a brat that nobody is
|
||
willing to own; and many deceive themselves with this, that they
|
||
shall bear no blame if they can but find any to lay the blame upon;
|
||
but it is not so easy a thing to transfer the guilt of sin as many
|
||
think it is. The condition of him that is infected with the plague
|
||
is not the less dangerous, either for his catching the infection
|
||
from others, or his communicating the infection to others; we may
|
||
be <i>tempted</i> to sin, but cannot be <i>forced.</i> The priests
|
||
threw it upon Judas; <i>See thou to it;</i> and now Pilate throws
|
||
it upon them; <i>See ye to it; for with what measure ye mete, it
|
||
shall be measured to you.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p64">2. The priests and people <i>consented</i>
|
||
to take the guilt <i>upon themselves;</i> they all said, "<i>His
|
||
blood be on us, and one our children;</i> we are so well assured
|
||
that there is neither sin nor danger in putting him to death, that
|
||
we are willing to run the hazard of it;" as if the guilt would do
|
||
no harm to them or theirs. They saw that it was the dread of guilt
|
||
that made Pilate hesitate, and that he was getting over this
|
||
difficulty by a fancy of transferring it; to prevent the return of
|
||
his hesitation, and to confirm him in that fancy, they, in the heat
|
||
of their rage, agreed to it, rather than lose the prey they had in
|
||
their hands, and cried, <i>His blood be upon us.</i> Now,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p65">(1.) By this they designed to indemnify
|
||
Pilate, that is, to make him think himself indemnified, by becoming
|
||
bound to divine justice, to save him harmless. But those that are
|
||
themselves bankrupts and beggars will never be admitted security
|
||
for others, nor taken as a bail for them. None could bear the sin
|
||
of others, except him that had none of his own to answer for; it is
|
||
a bold undertaking, and too big for any creature, to become bound
|
||
for a sinner to Almighty God.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p66">(2.) But they did really imprecate wrath
|
||
and vengeance upon themselves and their posterity. What a desperate
|
||
word was this, and how little did they think what as the direful
|
||
import of it, or to what an abyss of misery it would bring them and
|
||
theirs! Christ had lately told them, that upon them would come
|
||
<i>all the righteous blood shed upon the earth,</i> from that of
|
||
the righteous Abel; but as if that were too little, they here
|
||
imprecate upon themselves the guilt of that blood which was more
|
||
precious than all the rest, and the guilt of which would lie
|
||
heavier. O the daring presumption of wilful sinners, that <i>run
|
||
upon God, upon his neck,</i> and defy his justice! <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p66.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.15.25-Job.15.26" parsed="|Job|15|25|15|26" passage="Job 15:25,26">Job xv. 25, 26</scripRef>. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p67">[1.] How <i>cruel</i> they were in their
|
||
<i>imprecation.</i> They imprecated the punishment of this sin, not
|
||
only upon themselves, but upon <i>their children</i> too, even
|
||
those that were yet unborn, without so much as limiting the entail
|
||
of the curse, as God himself had been pleased to limit it, to the
|
||
<i>third and fourth generation.</i> It was madness to pull it upon
|
||
themselves, but the height of barbarity to entail it on their
|
||
posterity. Surely they were like the ostrich; they were <i>hardened
|
||
against their young ones,</i> as though they were not
|
||
<i>theirs.</i> What a dreadful conveyance was this of guilt and
|
||
wrath to them and their heirs for ever, and this delivered by
|
||
<i>joint consent, nemine contradicents—unanimously,</i> as their
|
||
own <i>act and deed;</i> which certainly amounted to a forfeiture
|
||
and defeasance of that ancient charter, <i>I will be a God to thee,
|
||
and to thy seed.</i> Their entailing the curse of the Messiah's
|
||
blood upon their nation, cut off the entail of the blessings of
|
||
that blood from <i>their</i> families, that, according to another
|
||
promise made to Abraham, in him <i>all the families of the
|
||
earth</i> might be blessed. See what enemies wicked men are to
|
||
their own children and families; those that damn their own souls,
|
||
care not how many they take to hell with them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p68">[2.] How righteous God was, in his
|
||
retribution according to this imprecation; they said, <i>His blood
|
||
be on us, and on our children;</i> and God said <i>Amen</i> to it,
|
||
so shall thy doom be; as they <i>loved cursing,</i> so it came upon
|
||
them. The wretched remains of that abandoned people feel it to this
|
||
day; from the time they imprecated this blood upon them, they were
|
||
followed with one judgment after another, till they were quite laid
|
||
waste, and made an astonishment, a hissing, and a byword; yet on
|
||
some of them, and some of theirs, this blood came, not to
|
||
<i>condemn</i> them, but to <i>save</i> them; divine mercy, upon
|
||
their repenting and believing, cut off this entail, and then <i>the
|
||
promise</i> was again <i>to them, and to their children.</i> God is
|
||
better to us and ours than we are.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xxviii-p68.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.26-Matt.27.32" parsed="|Matt|27|26|27|32" passage="Mt 27:26-32" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.27.26-Matt.27.32">
|
||
<h4 id="Matt.xxviii-p68.2">Christ Scourged and Derided; Christ Mocked
|
||
by the Soldiers.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxviii-p69">26 Then released he Barabbas unto them: and when
|
||
he had scourged Jesus, he delivered <i>him</i> to be crucified.
|
||
27 Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the
|
||
common hall, and gathered unto him the whole band <i>of
|
||
soldiers.</i> 28 And they stripped him, and put on him a
|
||
scarlet robe. 29 And when they had platted a crown of
|
||
thorns, they put <i>it</i> upon his head, and a reed in his right
|
||
hand: and they bowed the knee before him, and mocked him, saying,
|
||
Hail, King of the Jews! 30 And they spit upon him, and took
|
||
the reed, and smote him on the head. 31 And after that they
|
||
had mocked him, they took the robe off from him, and put his own
|
||
raiment on him, and led him away to crucify <i>him.</i> 32
|
||
And as they came out, they found a man of Cyrene, Simon by name:
|
||
him they compelled to bear his cross.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p70">In these verses we have the
|
||
<i>preparatives</i> for, and <i>prefaces</i> to, the crucifixion of
|
||
our Lord Jesus. Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p71">I. The sentence passed, and the warrant
|
||
signed for his execution; and this <i>immediately,</i> the same
|
||
hour.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p72">1. Barabbas was released, that notorious
|
||
criminal: if he had not been put in competition with Christ for the
|
||
favour of the people, it is probable that he had died for his
|
||
crimes; but that proved the means of his escape; to intimate that
|
||
Christ was condemned for this purpose, that sinners, even the chief
|
||
of sinners, might be <i>released;</i> he was <i>delivered up,</i>
|
||
that we might be delivered; whereas the <i>common instance</i> of
|
||
divine Providence, is, that <i>the wicked is a ransom for the
|
||
righteous, and the transgressor for the upright,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p72.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.21.18 Bible:Prov.11.18" parsed="|Prov|21|18|0|0;|Prov|11|18|0|0" passage="Pr 21:18,Pr 11:18">Prov. xxi. 18; xi. 18</scripRef>. In
|
||
this <i>unparalleled instance</i> of divine grace, the
|
||
<i>upright</i> is a <i>ransom for the transgressors,</i> the just
|
||
for the unjust.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p73">2. Jesus was <i>scourged;</i> this was an
|
||
ignominious cruel punishment, especially as is was inflicted by the
|
||
Romans, who were not under the moderation of the Jewish law, which
|
||
forbade scourgings, above forty stripes; this punishment was most
|
||
unreasonably inflicted on one that was sentenced to die: the
|
||
<i>rods</i> were not to introduce the axes, but to supersede them.
|
||
Thus the scripture was fulfilled, <i>The ploughers ploughed upon my
|
||
back</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p73.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.129.3" parsed="|Ps|129|3|0|0" passage="Ps 129:3">Ps. cxxix. 3</scripRef>),
|
||
<i>I gave my back to the smiters</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p73.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.50.6" parsed="|Isa|50|6|0|0" passage="Isa 50:6">Isa. l. 6</scripRef>), and, <i>By his stripes we are
|
||
healed,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p73.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.53.5" parsed="|Isa|53|5|0|0" passage="Isa 53:5">Isa. liii. 5</scripRef>.
|
||
He was <i>chastised with whips,</i> that we might not be for ever
|
||
<i>chastised with scorpions.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p74">3. He was then <i>delivered to be
|
||
crucified;</i> though his chastisement was in order to our peace,
|
||
yet there is no peace made but by the <i>blood of his cross</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p74.1" osisRef="Bible:Col.1.20" parsed="|Col|1|20|0|0" passage="Col 1:20">Col. i. 20</scripRef>); therefore the
|
||
scourging is not enough, he must be <i>crucified;</i> a kind of
|
||
death used only among the Romans; the manner of it is such, that it
|
||
seems to be the result of wit and cruelty in combination, each
|
||
putting forth itself to the utmost, to make death in the highest
|
||
degree terrible and miserable. A cross was set up in the ground, to
|
||
which the hands and feet were nailed, on which nails the weight of
|
||
the body hung, till it died of the pain. This was the death to
|
||
which Christ was condemned, that he might answer the type of the
|
||
brazen serpent lifted up upon a pole. It was a bloody death, a
|
||
painful, shameful, cursed death; it was so miserable a death, that
|
||
merciful princes appointed those who were condemned to it by the
|
||
law, to be strangled first, and then nailed to the cross; so Julius
|
||
Cæsar did by some pirates, <i>Sueton. lib.</i> 1. Constantine, the
|
||
first Christian emperor, by an edict abolished the use of that
|
||
punishment among the Romans, <i>Sozomen, Hist. lib.</i> 1.
|
||
<i>ch.</i> 8. <i>Ne salutare signum subserviret ad perniciem—That
|
||
the symbol of salvation might not be subservient to the victim's
|
||
destruction.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p75">II. The barbarous treatment which the
|
||
soldiers gave him, while things were getting ready for his
|
||
execution. When he was condemned, he ought to have had some time
|
||
allowed him to prepare for death. There was a law made by the Roman
|
||
senate, in Tiberius's time, perhaps upon complaint of this and the
|
||
like precipitation, that the execution of criminals should be
|
||
deferred at least <i>ten days</i> after sentence. <i>Sueton in
|
||
Tiber. cap.</i> 25. But there were scarcely allowed so many minutes
|
||
to our Lord Jesus; nor had he any breathing-time during those
|
||
minutes; it was a <i>crisis,</i> and there were no <i>lucid
|
||
intervals</i> allowed him; <i>deep called unto deep,</i> and the
|
||
storm continued without any intermission.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p76">When he was <i>delivered</i> to be
|
||
<i>crucified,</i> that was enough; they that <i>kill the body,</i>
|
||
yield that there is no more that they <i>can do,</i> but Christ's
|
||
enemies will <i>do more,</i> and, if it be possible, wrap up a
|
||
thousand deaths in one. Though Pilate pronounced him innocent, yet
|
||
his soldiers, his guards, set themselves to abuse him, being swayed
|
||
more by the fury of the people <i>against him,</i> than by their
|
||
master's testimony <i>for him;</i> the Jewish <i>rabble</i>
|
||
infected the Roman soldiery, or perhaps it was not so much in spite
|
||
to him, as to make <i>sport</i> for themselves, that they thus
|
||
abused him. They understood that he <i>pretended to a crown; to
|
||
taunt</i> him with that gave them some diversion, and an
|
||
opportunity to make themselves and one another merry. Note, It is
|
||
an argument of a base, servile, sordid spirit, to insult over those
|
||
that are in misery, and to make the calamities of any matter of
|
||
sport and merriment.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p77">Observe, 1. <i>Where</i> this was done—in
|
||
the <i>common hall.</i> The <i>governor's house,</i> which should
|
||
have been a shelter to the wronged and abused, is made the theatre
|
||
of this barbarity. I wonder that the governor, who was so desirous
|
||
to acquit himself from the blood of this just person, would suffer
|
||
this to be done in <i>his</i> house. Perhaps he did not order it to
|
||
be done, but he <i>connived</i> at it; and those in authority will
|
||
be accountable, not only for the wickedness which they <i>do,</i>
|
||
or <i>appoint,</i> but for that which they do not restrain, when it
|
||
is in the power of their hands. Masters of families should not
|
||
suffer their houses to be places of abuse to any, nor their
|
||
servants to make sport with the sins, or miseries, or religion, of
|
||
others.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p78">2. <i>Who</i> were concerned in it. They
|
||
gathered the <i>whole band,</i> the soldiers that were to attend
|
||
the execution, would have the whole regiment (at least five
|
||
hundred, some think twelve or thirteen hundred) to share in the
|
||
diversion. If Christ was thus made a <i>spectacle,</i> let none of
|
||
his followers think it strange to be so used, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p78.1" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.9 Bible:Heb.10.33" parsed="|1Cor|4|9|0|0;|Heb|10|33|0|0" passage="1Co 4:9,Heb 10:33">1 Cor. iv. 9; Heb. x. 33</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p79">3. What particular indignities were done
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p80">(1.) They <i>stripped him,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p80.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.28" parsed="|Matt|27|28|0|0" passage="Mt 27:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>. The shame of nakedness
|
||
came in with sin (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p80.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.3.7" parsed="|Gen|3|7|0|0" passage="Ge 3:7">Gen. iii.
|
||
7</scripRef>); and therefore Christ, when he came to satisfy for
|
||
sin, and take it away, was <i>made naked,</i> and submitted to
|
||
<i>that shame,</i> that he might prepare for us <i>white raiment,
|
||
to cover us,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p80.3" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.18" parsed="|Rev|3|18|0|0" passage="Re 3:18">Rev. iii.
|
||
18</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p81">(2.) They <i>put on him a scarlet robe,</i>
|
||
some old red cloak, such as the Roman soldiers wore, in imitation
|
||
of the <i>scarlet robes</i> which kings and emperors wore; thus
|
||
upbraiding him with his being called <i>a King.</i> This
|
||
<i>sham</i> of majesty they put upon him in his dress, when nothing
|
||
but meanness and misery appeared in his countenance, only to expose
|
||
him to the spectators, as the more <i>ridiculous;</i> yet there was
|
||
something of <i>mystery</i> in it; this was he that was <i>red in
|
||
his apparel</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p81.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.63.1-Isa.63.2" parsed="|Isa|63|1|63|2" passage="Isa 63:1,2">Isa. lxiii. 1,
|
||
2</scripRef>), that <i>washed his garments in wine</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p81.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.49.11" parsed="|Gen|49|11|0|0" passage="Ge 49:11">Gen. xlix. 11</scripRef>); therefore he was
|
||
dressed in a <i>scarlet robe.</i> Our sins were as <i>scarlet and
|
||
crimson.</i> Christ being clad in a <i>scarlet robe,</i> signified
|
||
his bearing our sins, to his shame, in his own body upon the tree;
|
||
that we might wash our robes, and make them white, in the blood of
|
||
the Lamb.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p82">(3.) They <i>platted a crown of thorns, and
|
||
put it upon his head,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p82.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.29" parsed="|Matt|27|29|0|0" passage="Mt 27:29"><i>v.</i>
|
||
29</scripRef>. This was to carry on the humour of making him a
|
||
<i>mock-king;</i> yet, had they intended it only for a
|
||
<i>reproach,</i> they might have <i>platted a crown of straw,</i>
|
||
or <i>rushes,</i> but they designed it to be painful to him, and to
|
||
be <i>literally,</i> what crowns are said to be figuratively, lined
|
||
with thorns; he that invented this abuse, it is likely, valued
|
||
himself upon the wit of it; but there was a mystery in it. [1.]
|
||
Thorns came in with sin, and were part of the curse that was the
|
||
product of sin, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p82.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.3.18" parsed="|Gen|3|18|0|0" passage="Ge 3:18">Gen. iii.
|
||
18</scripRef>. Therefore Christ, being made a <i>curse for us,</i>
|
||
and dying to remove the curse from us, felt the pain and smart of
|
||
those thorns, nay, and <i>binds them as a crown</i> to him
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p82.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.31.36" parsed="|Job|31|36|0|0" passage="Job 31:36">Job xxxi. 36</scripRef>); for his
|
||
sufferings for us were <i>his glory.</i> [2.] Now he answered to
|
||
the type of Abraham's ram that was <i>caught in the thicket,</i>
|
||
and so offered up instead of Isaac, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p82.4" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22.13" parsed="|Gen|22|13|0|0" passage="Ge 22:13">Gen. xxii. 13</scripRef>. [3.] Thorns signify
|
||
afflictions, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p82.5" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.33.11" parsed="|2Chr|33|11|0|0" passage="2Ch 33:11">2 Chron. xxxiii.
|
||
11</scripRef>. These Christ put into a <i>crown;</i> so much did he
|
||
alter the property of them to them that are his, giving them cause
|
||
to <i>glory in tribulation,</i> and making it to work for them a
|
||
weight of glory. [4.] Christ was crowned with thorns, to show that
|
||
<i>his kingdom was not of this world,</i> nor the glory of it
|
||
worldly glory, but is attended here with bonds and afflictions,
|
||
while the glory of it is <i>to be revealed.</i> [5.] It was the
|
||
custom of some heathen nations, to bring their sacrifices to the
|
||
altars, crowned with garlands; these thorns were the garlands with
|
||
which this great Sacrifice was crowned. [6.] these thorns, it is
|
||
likely, fetched blood from his blessed head, which trickled down
|
||
his face, <i>like the previous ointment</i> (typifying the blood of
|
||
Christ with which he consecrated himself) <i>upon the head, which
|
||
ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's beard,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p82.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.133.2" parsed="|Ps|133|2|0|0" passage="Ps 133:2">Ps. cxxxiii. 2</scripRef>. Thus, when he came to espouse
|
||
to himself his love, his dove, his undefiled church, his <i>head
|
||
was filled with dew,</i> and his <i>locks with the drops of the
|
||
night,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p82.7" osisRef="Bible:Song.5.2" parsed="|Song|5|2|0|0" passage="So 5:2">Cant. v. 2</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p83">(4.) They <i>put a reed in his right
|
||
hand;</i> this was intended for a <i>mock-sceptre,</i> another of
|
||
the <i>insignia</i> of the majesty they jeered him with; as if this
|
||
were a sceptre good enough for such a King, as was like <i>a reed
|
||
shaken with the wind</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p83.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11.7" parsed="|Matt|11|7|0|0" passage="Mt 11:7"><i>ch.</i>
|
||
xi. 7</scripRef>); like sceptre, like kingdom, both weak and
|
||
wavering, and withering and worthless; but they were quite
|
||
mistaken, for his throne is <i>for ever and ever,</i> and the
|
||
<i>sceptre of his kingdom is a right sceptre,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p83.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.45.6" parsed="|Ps|45|6|0|0" passage="Ps 45:6">Ps. xlv. 6</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p84">(5.) <i>They bowed the knee before him, and
|
||
mocked him, saying, Hail, King of the Jews!</i> Having made him a
|
||
sham King, they thus make a jest of doing homage to him, thus
|
||
ridiculing his pretensions to sovereignty, as Joseph's brethren
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p84.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.37.8" parsed="|Gen|37|8|0|0" passage="Ge 37:8">Gen. xxxvii. 8</scripRef>); <i>Shalt
|
||
thou indeed reign over us?</i> But as they were afterward compelled
|
||
to do obeisance to him, and enrich his dreams, so these here bowed
|
||
the knee, in scorn to him who was, soon after this, exalted to the
|
||
right hand of God, that <i>at his name every knee might bow,</i> or
|
||
break before him; it is ill jesting with that which, sooner or
|
||
later, will come in earnest.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p85">(6.) They <i>spit upon him;</i> thus he had
|
||
been abused in the High Priest's hall, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p85.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.67" parsed="|Matt|26|67|0|0" passage="Mt 26:67"><i>ch.</i> xxvi. 67</scripRef>. In doing homage, the
|
||
subject kissed the sovereign, in token of his allegiance; thus
|
||
Samuel kissed Saul, and we are bid to <i>kiss the Son:</i> but
|
||
they, in this mock-homage, instead of kissing him, spit in his
|
||
face; that blessed face which outshines the sun, and before which
|
||
the angels cover theirs, was thus polluted. It is strange that the
|
||
sons of men should ever do such a piece of <i>villany,</i> and that
|
||
the Son of God should ever <i>suffer</i> such a piece of
|
||
<i>ignominy.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p86">(7.) They <i>took the reed, and smote him
|
||
on the head.</i> That which they had made the <i>mock-ensign</i> of
|
||
his royalty, they now make the real instrument of <i>their</i>
|
||
cruelty, and <i>his pain.</i> They smote him, it is probable, upon
|
||
the <i>crown of thorns,</i> and so struck them into his head, that
|
||
they might wound it the deeper, which made the more sport for them,
|
||
to whom his pain was the greatest pleasure. Thus was he <i>despised
|
||
and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with
|
||
grief.</i> All this misery and shame he underwent, that he might
|
||
purchase for us everlasting life, and joy, and glory.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p87">III. The conveying of him to the place of
|
||
execution. After they had mocked and abused him, as long as they
|
||
thought fit, they then <i>took the robe off from him;</i> to
|
||
signify their divesting him of all the kingly authority they had
|
||
invested him with, by putting it on him; and they put his own
|
||
raiment on him, because that was to fall to the soldiers' share,
|
||
that were employed in the execution. They took off the robe, but no
|
||
mention is made of their taking off the <i>crown of thorns,</i>
|
||
whence it is commonly supposed (though there is no certainty of it)
|
||
that he was crucified with that on his head; for as he is a Priest
|
||
upon his throne, so he was a King upon his cross. Christ was led to
|
||
be crucified in <i>his own raiment,</i> because he himself was to
|
||
<i>bear our sins in his own body upon the tree.</i> And here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p88">1. They <i>led him away</i> to be
|
||
<i>crucified;</i> he was led <i>as a lamb to the slaughter,</i> as
|
||
a sacrifice to the altar. We may well imagine how they hurried him
|
||
on, and dragged him along, with all the speed possible, lest any
|
||
thing should intervene to prevent the glutting of their cruel rage
|
||
with his precious blood. It is probable that they now loaded him
|
||
with taunts and reproaches, and treated him as the off-scouring of
|
||
all things. They led him away <i>out of the city;</i> for Christ,
|
||
that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, <i>suffered
|
||
without the gate</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p88.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.12" parsed="|Heb|13|12|0|0" passage="Heb 13:12">Heb. xiii.
|
||
12</scripRef>), as if he that was the glory of them that <i>waited
|
||
for redemption</i> in Jerusalem was not worthy to live among them.
|
||
To this he himself had an eye, when in the parable he speaks of his
|
||
being <i>cast out of the vineyard,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p88.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.21.39" parsed="|Matt|21|39|0|0" passage="Mt 21:39"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 39</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p89">2. They compelled Simon of Cyrene <i>to
|
||
bear his cross,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p89.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.32" parsed="|Matt|27|32|0|0" passage="Mt 27:32"><i>v.</i>
|
||
32</scripRef>. It seems, at first he <i>carried the cross</i>
|
||
himself, as Isaac carried the wood for the burnt-offering, which
|
||
was to burn him. And this was intended, as other things, both for
|
||
pain and shame to him. But after a while they <i>took the cross</i>
|
||
off from him, either, (1.) In compassion to him, because they saw
|
||
it was too great a load for him. We can hardly think that they had
|
||
any consideration of that, yet it teaches us that God <i>considers
|
||
the frame</i> of his people, and will not <i>suffer them to be
|
||
tempted above what they are able;</i> he gives them some
|
||
breathing-time, but they must expect that the cross will return,
|
||
and the lucid intervals only give them space to prepare for the
|
||
next fit. But, (2.) Perhaps it was because he could not, with the
|
||
cross on his back, go forward so fast as they would have him. Or,
|
||
(3.) They were afraid, lest he should faint away under the load of
|
||
his cross, and die, and so prevent what their malice further
|
||
intended to do against him: thus even the <i>tender mercies of the
|
||
wicked</i> (which seem to be so) <i>are</i> really <i>cruel.</i>
|
||
Taking the cross off from him, they <i>compelled</i> one Simon of
|
||
Cyrene to bear it, pressing him to the service by the authority of
|
||
the governor or the priests. It was a reproach, and none would do
|
||
it but by compulsion. Some think that this Simon was a disciple of
|
||
Christ, at least a well-wisher to him, and that they knew it, and
|
||
therefore put this upon him. Note, All that will approve themselves
|
||
disciples indeed, must follow Christ, <i>bearing his cross</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p89.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.16.24" parsed="|Matt|16|24|0|0" passage="Mt 16:24"><i>ch.</i> xvi. 24</scripRef>),
|
||
<i>bearing his reproach,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p89.3" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.13" parsed="|Heb|13|13|0|0" passage="Heb 13:13">Heb.
|
||
xiii. 13</scripRef>. We must know the <i>fellowship of his
|
||
sufferings for us,</i> and patiently submit to all the sufferings
|
||
for him we are called out to; for those only shall <i>reign with
|
||
him,</i> that <i>suffer with him;</i> shall sit with him in his
|
||
kingdom, that drink of <i>his cup,</i> and are baptized with <i>his
|
||
baptism.</i></p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xxviii-p89.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.33-Matt.27.49" parsed="|Matt|27|33|27|49" passage="Mt 27:33-49" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.27.33-Matt.27.49">
|
||
<h4 id="Matt.xxviii-p89.5">The Crucifixion.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxviii-p90">33 And when they were come unto a place called
|
||
Golgotha, that is to say, a place of a skull, 34 They gave
|
||
him vinegar to drink mingled with gall: and when he had tasted
|
||
<i>thereof,</i> he would not drink. 35 And they crucified
|
||
him, and parted his garments, casting lots: that it might be
|
||
fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, They parted my garments
|
||
among them, and upon my vesture did they cast lots. 36 And
|
||
sitting down they watched him there; 37 And set up over his
|
||
head his accusation written, THIS IS JESUS THE KING OF THE JEWS.
|
||
38 Then were there two thieves crucified with him, one on
|
||
the right hand, and another on the left. 39 And they that
|
||
passed by reviled him, wagging their heads, 40 And saying,
|
||
Thou that destroyest the temple, and buildest <i>it</i> in three
|
||
days, save thyself. If thou be the Son of God, come down from the
|
||
cross. 41 Likewise also the chief priests mocking
|
||
<i>him,</i> with the scribes and elders, said, 42 He saved
|
||
others; himself he cannot save. If he be the King of Israel, let
|
||
him now come down from the cross, and we will believe him.
|
||
43 He trusted in God; let him deliver him now, if he will have him:
|
||
for he said, I am the Son of God. 44 The thieves also, which
|
||
were crucified with him, cast the same in his teeth. 45 Now
|
||
from the sixth hour there was darkness over all the land unto the
|
||
ninth hour. 46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a
|
||
loud voice, saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is to say, My
|
||
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? 47 Some of them that
|
||
stood there, when they heard <i>that,</i> said, This <i>man</i>
|
||
calleth for Elias. 48 And straightway one of them ran, and
|
||
took a sponge, and filled <i>it</i> with vinegar, and put <i>it</i>
|
||
on a reed, and gave him to drink. 49 The rest said, Let be,
|
||
let us see whether Elias will come to save him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p91">We have here the crucifixion of our Lord
|
||
Jesus.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p92">I. The place where our Lord Jesus was put
|
||
to death.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p93">1. They came to a place called
|
||
<i>Golgotha,</i> near adjoining to Jerusalem, probably the common
|
||
place of execution. If he had had a house of his own in Jerusalem,
|
||
probably, for his greater disgrace, they would have crucified him
|
||
before his own door. But now in the same place where criminals were
|
||
sacrificed to the justice of the government, was our Lord Jesus
|
||
sacrificed to the justice of God. Some think that it was called
|
||
<i>the place of a skull,</i> because it was the common
|
||
charnel-house, where the bones and skulls of dead men were laid
|
||
together out of the way, lest people should touch them, and be
|
||
defiled thereby. Here lay the trophies of death's victory over
|
||
multitudes of the children of men; and when by dying Christ would
|
||
destroy death, he added this circumstance of honour to his victory,
|
||
that he triumphed over death upon his own dunghill.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p94">2. There they <i>crucified</i> him
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p94.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.35" parsed="|Matt|27|35|0|0" passage="Mt 27:35"><i>v.</i> 35</scripRef>), nailed his
|
||
hands and feet to the cross, and then reared it up, and him hanging
|
||
on it; for so the manner of the Romans was to crucify. Let our
|
||
hearts be touched with the feeling of that exquisite pain which our
|
||
blessed Saviour now endured, and let us look upon him who was thus
|
||
pierced, and mourn. Was ever sorrow like unto his sorrow? And when
|
||
we behold what manner of death he died, let us in that behold with
|
||
<i>what manner of love</i> he <i>loved us.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p95">II. The barbarous and abusive treatment
|
||
they gave him, in which their wit and malice vied which should
|
||
excel. As if death, so great a death, were not bad enough, they
|
||
contrived to add to the bitterness and terror of it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p96">1. By the drink they provided for him
|
||
before he was nailed to the cross, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p96.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.34" parsed="|Matt|27|34|0|0" passage="Mt 27:34"><i>v.</i> 34</scripRef>. It was usual to have a cup of
|
||
spiced wine for those to drink of, that were to be put to death,
|
||
according to Solomon's direction (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p96.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.31.6-Prov.31.7" parsed="|Prov|31|6|31|7" passage="Pr 31:6,7">Prov. xxxi. 6, 7</scripRef>), <i>Give strong drink to
|
||
him that is ready to perish;</i> but with that cup which Christ was
|
||
to drink of, they mingled <i>vinegar and gall,</i> to make it sour
|
||
and bitter. This signified, (1.) The <i>sin of man,</i> which is a
|
||
<i>root of bitterness, bearing gall and wormwood,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p96.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.29.18" parsed="|Deut|29|18|0|0" passage="De 29:18">Deut. xxix. 18</scripRef>. The sinner perhaps
|
||
rolls it under his tongue as a sweet morsel, but to God it is
|
||
<i>grapes of gall,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p96.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.32.32" parsed="|Deut|32|32|0|0" passage="De 32:32">Deut. xxxii.
|
||
32</scripRef>. It was so to the Lord Jesus, when he bare our sins,
|
||
and sooner or later it will be so to the sinner himself,
|
||
<i>bitterness at the latter end, more bitter than death,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p96.5" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.7.26" parsed="|Eccl|7|26|0|0" passage="Ec 7:26">Eccl. vii. 26</scripRef>. (2.) It
|
||
signified the <i>wrath of God,</i> that cup which is Father <i>put
|
||
into his hand,</i> a bitter cup indeed, like the <i>bitter water
|
||
which caused the curse,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p96.6" osisRef="Bible:Num.5.18" parsed="|Num|5|18|0|0" passage="Nu 5:18">Num. v.
|
||
18</scripRef>. This drink they offered him, as was literally
|
||
foretold, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p96.7" osisRef="Bible:Ps.69.21" parsed="|Ps|69|21|0|0" passage="Ps 69:21">Ps. lxix. 21</scripRef>.
|
||
And, [1.] He <i>tasted thereof,</i> and so had the <i>worst</i> of
|
||
it, took the bitter taste into his mouth; he let no bitter cup go
|
||
by him untasted, when he was making atonement for all our sinful
|
||
tasting of forbidden fruit; now he was <i>tasting</i> death in its
|
||
full bitterness. [2.] He <i>would not drink it,</i> because he
|
||
would not have the <i>best of it;</i> would have nothing like an
|
||
opiate to lessen his sense of pain, for he would die so as to
|
||
<i>feel himself die,</i> because he had so much <i>work</i> to
|
||
<i>do,</i> as our High Priest, in his suffering work.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p97">2. By the dividing of his garments,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p97.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.35" parsed="|Matt|27|35|0|0" passage="Mt 27:35"><i>v.</i> 35</scripRef>. When they
|
||
nailed him to the cross, they <i>stripped</i> him of his garments,
|
||
at least his <i>upper garments;</i> for by sin we were made naked,
|
||
to our shame, and thus he purchased for us white raiment to cover
|
||
us. If we be at any time stripped of our comforts for Christ, let
|
||
us bear it patiently; he was stripped for us. Enemies may strip us
|
||
of our <i>clothes,</i> but cannot strip us of our <i>best
|
||
comforts;</i> cannot take from us the <i>garments of praise.</i>
|
||
The clothes of those that are executed are the executioner's fee:
|
||
four soldiers were employed in crucifying Christ, and they must
|
||
each of them have a share: his upper garment, if it were divided,
|
||
would be of no use to any of them, and therefore they agreed to
|
||
<i>cast lots</i> for it. (1.) Some think that the garment was so
|
||
fine and rich, that it was worth contending for; but that agreed
|
||
not with the poverty Christ appeared in. (2.) Perhaps they had
|
||
heard of those that had been cured by touching the hem of his
|
||
garment, and they thought it valuable for some magic virtue in it.
|
||
Or, (3.) They hoped to get money of his friends for such a sacred
|
||
relic. Or, (4.) Because, in derision, they would seem to put a
|
||
value upon it, as royal clothing. Or, (5.) It was for diversion; to
|
||
pass away the time while they waited for his death, they would play
|
||
a game at dice for the clothes; but, whatever they designed, the
|
||
word of God is herein accomplished. In that famous <i>psalm,</i>
|
||
the first words of which Christ made use of upon the cross, it was
|
||
said, <i>They parted my garments among them, and cast lots upon my
|
||
vesture,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p97.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.22.18" parsed="|Ps|22|18|0|0" passage="Ps 22:18">Ps. xxii. 18</scripRef>.
|
||
This was never true of David, but looks <i>primarily</i> at Christ,
|
||
of whom David, in spirit, spoke. Then is the offence of this part
|
||
of the cross ceased; for it appears to have been by the
|
||
<i>determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God.</i> Christ
|
||
stripped himself of his glories, to divide them among us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p98">They now <i>sat down, and watched him,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p98.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.36" parsed="|Matt|27|36|0|0" passage="Mt 27:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>. The chief
|
||
priests were careful, no doubt, in setting this guard, lest the
|
||
people, whom they still stood in awe of, should rise, and rescue
|
||
him. But Providence so ordered it, that those who were appointed to
|
||
<i>watch</i> him, thereby became unexceptionable witnesses for him;
|
||
having the opportunity to see and hear that which extorted from
|
||
them that noble confession (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p98.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.54" parsed="|Matt|27|54|0|0" passage="Mt 27:54"><i>v.</i>
|
||
54</scripRef>), <i>Truly this was the Son of God.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p99">3. By the <i>title</i> set up over his
|
||
head, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p99.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.37" parsed="|Matt|27|37|0|0" passage="Mt 27:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>. It was
|
||
usual for the vindicating of public justice, and putting the
|
||
greater shame upon malefactors that were executed, not only by a
|
||
crier to proclaim before them, but by a writing also over their
|
||
heads to notify what was the crime for which they suffered; so they
|
||
set up over Christ's head his accusation written, to give public
|
||
notice of the charge against him; <i>This is Jesus the King of the
|
||
Jews.</i> This they designed for his reproach, but God so overruled
|
||
it, that even his accusation redounded to his honour. For, (1.)
|
||
Here was no crime alleged against him. It is not said that he was a
|
||
pretended Saviour, or a usurping King, though they would have it
|
||
thought so (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p99.2" osisRef="Bible:John.19.21" parsed="|John|19|21|0|0" passage="Joh 19:21">John xix. 21</scripRef>);
|
||
but, <i>This is Jesus, a Saviour;</i> surely that was no crime;
|
||
and, <i>This is the King of the Jews;</i> nor was that a crime; for
|
||
they expected that the Messiah should be so: so that, his enemies
|
||
themselves being judges, he <i>did no evil.</i> Nay, (2.) Here was
|
||
a very glorious truth asserted concerning him—that he is <i>Jesus
|
||
the King of the Jews,</i> that King whom the Jews expected and
|
||
ought to have submitted to; so that his accusation amounts to this,
|
||
That he was the true Messiah and Saviour of the world; as Balaam,
|
||
when he was sent for to curse Israel, blessed them all together,
|
||
and that three times (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p99.3" osisRef="Bible:Num.24.10" parsed="|Num|24|10|0|0" passage="Nu 24:10">Num. xxiv.
|
||
10</scripRef>), so Pilate, instead of accusing Christ as a
|
||
Criminal, proclaimed him a <i>King,</i> and that <i>three
|
||
times,</i> in three inscriptions. Thus God makes men to serve
|
||
<i>his</i> purposes, quite beyond <i>their own.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p100">4. By his companions with him in suffering,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p100.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.38" parsed="|Matt|27|38|0|0" passage="Mt 27:38"><i>v.</i> 38</scripRef>. There were
|
||
<i>two thieves crucified with him</i> at the same time, in the same
|
||
place, under the same guard; two highway-men, or robbers upon the
|
||
road, as the word properly signifies. It is probable that this was
|
||
appointed to be <i>execution-day;</i> and therefore they hurried
|
||
the prosecution of Christ in the morning, that they might have him
|
||
ready to be executed with the other criminals. Some think that
|
||
Pilate ordered it thus, that this piece of necessary justice, in
|
||
executing these thieves, might atone for his injustice in
|
||
condemning Christ; others, that the Jews contrived it, to add to
|
||
the ignominy of the sufferings of our Lord Jesus; however it was,
|
||
the scripture was fulfilled in it (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p100.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.53.12" parsed="|Isa|53|12|0|0" passage="Isa 53:12">Isa. liii. 12</scripRef>), <i>He was numbered with the
|
||
transgressors.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p101">(1.) It was a reproach to him, that he was
|
||
<i>crucified with them.</i> Though, while he lived, he was
|
||
<i>separate from sinners,</i> yet <i>in their deaths they were not
|
||
divided,</i> but he was made to partake with the vilest malefactors
|
||
in their plagues, as if he had been a partaker with them in their
|
||
sins; for he was made sin for us, and took upon him the <i>likeness
|
||
of sinful flesh.</i> He was, at his death, numbered among the
|
||
transgressors, and had his lot with the wicked, that we, at our
|
||
death, might be <i>numbered among the saints,</i> and have our
|
||
<i>lot among the chosen.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p102">(2.) It was an additional reproach, that he
|
||
was crucified <i>in the midst, between them,</i> as if he had been
|
||
the worst of the three, the principal malefactor; for among
|
||
<i>three</i> the <i>middle</i> is the place for the chief. Every
|
||
circumstance was contrived to his dishonour, as if the great
|
||
Saviour were of all others the <i>greatest sinner.</i> It was also
|
||
intended to ruffle and discompose him, in his last moments, with
|
||
the shrieks, and groans, and blasphemies, of these malefactors,
|
||
who, it is likely, made a hideous outcry when they were nailed to
|
||
the cross; but thus would Christ affect himself with the miseries
|
||
of sinners, when he was suffering for their salvation. Some of
|
||
Christ's apostles were afterwards crucified, as Peter, and Andrew,
|
||
but none of them were crucified <i>with him,</i> lest it should
|
||
have looked as if they had been joint undertakers with him, in
|
||
satisfying for man's sin, and joint purchasers of life and glory;
|
||
therefore he was crucified between two malefactors, who could not
|
||
be supposed to contribute any thing to the merit of his death; for
|
||
he himself bare our sins <i>in his own body.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p103">5. By the blasphemies and revilings with
|
||
which they loaded him when he was hanging upon the cross; though we
|
||
read not that they cast any reflections on the thieves that were
|
||
crucified with him. One would have thought that, when they had
|
||
nailed him to the cross, they had done their worst, and malice
|
||
itself had been exhausted: indeed if a criminal be put into the
|
||
pillory, or carted, because it is a punishment less than death, it
|
||
is usually attended with such expressions of abuse; but a dying
|
||
man, though an infamous man, should be treated with compassion. It
|
||
is an insatiable revenge indeed which will not be satisfied with
|
||
death, <i>so great a death.</i> But, to complete the humiliation of
|
||
the Lord Jesus, and to show that, when he was dying, he was
|
||
<i>bearing iniquity,</i> he was then <i>loaded with reproach,</i>
|
||
and, for aught that appears, not one of his friends, who the other
|
||
day cried <i>Hosanna</i> to him, durst be seen to show him any
|
||
respect.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p104">(1.) The common <i>people, that passed by,
|
||
reviled him.</i> His extreme misery and exemplary patience under
|
||
it, did not mollify them, or make them to relent; but they who by
|
||
their outcries brought him to this, now think to justify themselves
|
||
in it by their reproaches, as if they <i>did well to condemn</i>
|
||
him. They <i>reviled</i> him: <b><i>eblasphemoun</i></b>—<i>they
|
||
blasphemed</i> him; and <i>blasphemy</i> it was, in the strictest
|
||
sense, speaking evil of him who <i>thought it not robbery to be
|
||
equal with God.</i> Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p105">[1.] The persons that reviled him; <i>they
|
||
that passed by,</i> the travellers that went along the road, and it
|
||
was a great <i>road,</i> leading from Jerusalem to Gibeon; they
|
||
were possessed with prejudices against him by the reports and
|
||
clamours of the High Priest's creatures. It is a hard thing, and
|
||
requires more application and resolution than is ordinarily met
|
||
with, to keep up a good opinion of persons and things that are
|
||
<i>every where</i> run down, and spoken against. Every one is apt
|
||
to say as the most say, and to throw a stone at that which is put
|
||
into an ill name. <i>Turba Remi sequitur fortunam semper et odit
|
||
damnatos—The Roman rabble fluctuate with a man's fluctuating
|
||
fortunes, and fail not to depress those that are sinking.</i>
|
||
Juvenal.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p106">[2.] The gesture they used, in contempt of
|
||
him—<i>wagging their heads;</i> which signifies their triumph in
|
||
his fall, and their insulting over him, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p106.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.37.22 Bible:Jer.18.16 Bible:Lam.2.15" parsed="|Isa|37|22|0|0;|Jer|18|16|0|0;|Lam|2|15|0|0" passage="Isa 37:22,Jer 18:16,La 2:15">Isa. xxxvii. 22; Jer. xviii. 16; Lam.
|
||
ii. 15</scripRef>. The language of it was, <i>Aha, so would we have
|
||
it,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p106.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.35.25" parsed="|Ps|35|25|0|0" passage="Ps 35:25">Ps. xxxv. 25</scripRef>. Thus
|
||
they insulted over him that was the Saviour of their country, as
|
||
the Philistines did over Samson the destroyer of their country.
|
||
This very gesture was prophesied of (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p106.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.22.7" parsed="|Ps|22|7|0|0" passage="Ps 22:7">Ps. xxii. 7</scripRef>); <i>They shake the head at
|
||
me.</i> And <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p106.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.109.25" parsed="|Ps|109|25|0|0" passage="Ps 109:25">Ps. cix.
|
||
25</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p107">[3.] The taunts and jeers they uttered.
|
||
These are here recorded.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p108"><i>First,</i> They upbraided him with his
|
||
<i>destroying of the temple.</i> Though the judges themselves were
|
||
sensible that what he had said of that was misrepresented (as
|
||
appears <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p108.1" osisRef="Bible:Mark.14.59" parsed="|Mark|14|59|0|0" passage="Mk 14:59">Mark xiv. 59</scripRef>), yet
|
||
they industriously spread it among the people, to bring an
|
||
<i>odium</i> upon him, that he had a design to destroy the temple;
|
||
than which nothing would more <i>incense</i> the people against
|
||
him. And this was not the only time that the enemies of Christ had
|
||
laboured to <i>make others believe</i> that of religion and the
|
||
people of God, which they themselves have known to be <i>false,</i>
|
||
and the charge <i>unjust "Thou that destroyest the temple,</i> that
|
||
vast and strong fabric, try thy strength now in plucking up that
|
||
<i>cross,</i> and drawing those <i>nails,</i> and so <i>save
|
||
thyself;</i> if thou hast the power thou hast boasted of, this is a
|
||
proper time to exert it, and give proof of it; for it is supposed
|
||
that every man will do his utmost to <i>save himself.</i>" This
|
||
made the cross of Christ such a <i>stumbling-block</i> to the Jews,
|
||
that they looked upon it to be inconsistent with the <i>power</i>
|
||
of the Messiah; he was <i>crucified in weakness</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p108.2" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.13.4" parsed="|2Cor|13|4|0|0" passage="2Co 13:4">2 Cor. xiii. 4</scripRef>), so it seemed to
|
||
them; but indeed Christ crucified is the <i>Power of God.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p109"><i>Secondly,</i> They upbraided him with
|
||
his saying that he was <i>the Son of God;</i> If thou be so, say
|
||
they, <i>come down from the cross.</i> Now they take the devil's
|
||
words out of his mouth, with which he tempted him in the wilderness
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p109.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.4.3 Bible:Matt.4.6" parsed="|Matt|4|3|0|0;|Matt|4|6|0|0" passage="Mt 4:3,6"><i>ch.</i> iv. 3, 6</scripRef>), and
|
||
renew the same assault; <i>If thou be the Son of God.</i> They
|
||
think that now, or never, he must prove himself to be the <i>Son of
|
||
God;</i> forgetting that he had proved it by the miracles he
|
||
wrought, particularly his raising of the dead; and unwilling to
|
||
wait for the complete proof of it by his own resurrection, to which
|
||
he had so often referred himself and them; which, if they had
|
||
observed it, would have anticipated the offence of the cross. This
|
||
comes of judging things by the present aspect of them, without a
|
||
due remembrance of what is <i>past,</i> and a patient expectation
|
||
of <i>what may further be produced.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p110">(2.) The <i>chief priests and scribes,</i>
|
||
the church rulers, and the <i>elders,</i> the state rulers, they
|
||
mocked him, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p110.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.41" parsed="|Matt|27|41|0|0" passage="Mt 27:41"><i>v.</i> 41</scripRef>.
|
||
They did not think it enough to invite the rabble to do it, but
|
||
gave Christ the dishonour, and themselves the diversion, or
|
||
reproaching him in their own proper persons. They should have been
|
||
in the temple at their devotion, for it was the first day of the
|
||
feast of unleavened bread, when there was to be a <i>holy
|
||
convocation</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p110.2" osisRef="Bible:Lev.23.7" parsed="|Lev|23|7|0|0" passage="Le 23:7">Lev. xxiii.
|
||
7</scripRef>); but they were here at the place of execution,
|
||
spitting their venom at the Lord Jesus. How much below the grandeur
|
||
and gravity of their character was this! Could any thing tend more
|
||
to make them <i>contemptible and base before the people?</i> One
|
||
would have thought, that, though they neither feared God nor
|
||
regarded man, yet common prudence should have taught them who had
|
||
so great a hand in Christ's death, to keep as much as might be
|
||
behind the curtain, and to play least in sight; but nothing is so
|
||
mean as that malice may stick at it. Did they disparage themselves
|
||
thus, to do despite to Christ, and shall we be afraid of
|
||
disparaging ourselves, by joining with the multitude to <i>do him
|
||
honour,</i> and not rather say, <i>If this be to be vile, I will be
|
||
yet more vile?</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p111">Two things the priests and elders upbraided
|
||
him with.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p112">[1.] That he could not <i>save himself,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p112.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.42" parsed="|Matt|27|42|0|0" passage="Mt 27:42"><i>v.</i> 42</scripRef>. He had been
|
||
before abused in his prophetical and kingly office, and now in his
|
||
priestly office as a Saviour. <i>First,</i> They take it for
|
||
granted that he <i>could not</i> save himself, and therefore had
|
||
not the power he pretended to, when really he <i>would not</i> save
|
||
himself, because he would die to <i>save us.</i> They should have
|
||
argued, "He <i>saved others,</i> therefore he <i>could</i> save
|
||
himself, and if he do not, it is for some good reason." But,
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> They would insinuate, that, because he did not now
|
||
save himself, therefore all his pretence to save others was but
|
||
sham and delusion, and was never really done; though the truth of
|
||
his miracles was demonstrated beyond contradiction. <i>Thirdly,</i>
|
||
They upbraid him with being <i>the King of Israel.</i> They dreamed
|
||
of the external pomp and power of the Messiah, and therefore
|
||
thought <i>the cross</i> altogether disagreeable to the King of
|
||
Israel, and inconsistent with that character. Many people would
|
||
like the <i>King of Israel</i> well enough, if he would but <i>come
|
||
down from the cross,</i> if they could have his kingdom without the
|
||
tribulation through which they must <i>enter into</i> it. But the
|
||
matter is settled; if no cross, then no Christ, no crown. Those
|
||
that would reign with him, must be willing to suffer with him, for
|
||
Christ and his cross are <i>nailed together</i> in this world.
|
||
<i>Fourthly,</i> They challenged him to <i>come down from the
|
||
cross.</i> And what had become of us then, and the work of our
|
||
redemption and salvation? If he had been provoked by these scoffs
|
||
to <i>come down from the cross,</i> and so to have left his
|
||
undertaking <i>unfinished,</i> we had been for ever <i>undone.</i>
|
||
But his unchangeable love and resolution set him above, and
|
||
fortified him against, this temptation, so that he did not
|
||
<i>fail,</i> nor was <i>discouraged. Fifthly,</i> They promised
|
||
that, if he would <i>come down from the cross, they would believe
|
||
him.</i> Let him give them that proof of his being the Messiah, and
|
||
they will own him to be so. When they had formerly demanded a sign,
|
||
he told them that the sign he would give them, should be not his
|
||
<i>coming down from the cross,</i> but, which was a greater
|
||
instance of his power, his <i>coming up from the grave,</i> which
|
||
they had not patience to wait two or three days for. If he had
|
||
<i>come down from the cross,</i> they might with as much reason
|
||
have said that the soldiers had juggled in nailing him to it, as
|
||
they said, when he was raised from the dead, that the <i>disciples
|
||
came by night, and stole him away.</i> But to promise ourselves
|
||
that we would believe, if we had such and such means and motives of
|
||
faith as we ourselves would prescribe, when we do not improve what
|
||
God has appointed, is not only a gross instance of the
|
||
deceitfulness of our hearts, but the sorry <i>refuge,</i> or
|
||
<i>subterfuge</i> rather, of an obstinate destroying
|
||
infidelity.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p113">[2.] That God, <i>his Father,</i> would
|
||
<i>not save him</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p113.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.43" parsed="|Matt|27|43|0|0" passage="Mt 27:43"><i>v.</i>
|
||
43</scripRef>); <i>He trusted in God,</i> that is, he pretended to
|
||
do so; for he said, <i>I am the Son of God.</i> Those who call God
|
||
<i>Father,</i> and themselves <i>his children,</i> thereby profess
|
||
to put a confidence in him, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p113.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.9.10" parsed="|Ps|9|10|0|0" passage="Ps 9:10">Ps. ix.
|
||
10</scripRef>. Now they suggest, that he did but deceive himself
|
||
and others, when he made himself so much the <i>darling of
|
||
heaven;</i> for, if he had been the Son of God (as <i>Job's</i>
|
||
friends argued concerning him), he would not have been <i>abandoned
|
||
to</i> all this misery, much less <i>abandoned in</i> it. This was
|
||
a <i>sword in his bones,</i> as David complains of the like
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p113.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.42.10" parsed="|Ps|42|10|0|0" passage="Ps 42:10">Ps. xlii. 10</scripRef>); and it was
|
||
a <i>two-edged</i> sword, for it was intended, <i>First,</i> To
|
||
<i>vilify</i> him, and to make the standers-by think him a deceiver
|
||
and an impostor; as if his saying, that he was the <i>Son of
|
||
God,</i> were now effectually <i>disproved. Secondly,</i> To
|
||
<i>terrify</i> him, and drive him to distrust and despair of his
|
||
Father's power and love; which some think, was the thing <i>he
|
||
feared, religiously feared,</i> prayed against, and was
|
||
<i>delivered from,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p113.4" osisRef="Bible:Heb.5.7" parsed="|Heb|5|7|0|0" passage="Heb 5:7">Heb. v.
|
||
7</scripRef>. David complained more of the endeavours of his
|
||
persecutors to <i>shake his faith,</i> and drive him from his hope
|
||
in God, than of their attempts to <i>shake his throne,</i> and
|
||
drive him from his kingdom; their saying, There is <i>no help for
|
||
him in God</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p113.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.3.2" parsed="|Ps|3|2|0|0" passage="Ps 3:2">Ps. iii. 2</scripRef>),
|
||
and, <i>God has forsaken him,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p113.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.71.11" parsed="|Ps|71|11|0|0" passage="Ps 71:11">Ps.
|
||
lxxi. 11</scripRef>. In this, as in other things, he was a type of
|
||
Christ. Nay, these very words David, in that famous prophecy of
|
||
Christ, mentions, as spoken by <i>his enemies</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p113.7" osisRef="Bible:Ps.22.8" parsed="|Ps|22|8|0|0" passage="Ps 22:8">Ps. xxii. 8</scripRef>); He <i>trusted on the
|
||
Lord that he would deliver him.</i> Surely these priests and
|
||
scribes had forgotten their psalter, or they would not have used
|
||
the same words, so exactly to answer the type and prophecy: but the
|
||
<i>scriptures must be fulfilled.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p114">(3.) To complete the reproach, the
|
||
<i>thieves also that were crucified with him</i> were not only not
|
||
reviled as he was, as if they had been saints compared with him,
|
||
but, though fellow-sufferers with him, joined in with his
|
||
prosecutors, and <i>cast the same in his teeth;</i> that is, one of
|
||
them did, who said, <i>If thou be the Christ, save thyself and
|
||
us,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p114.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23.39" parsed="|Luke|23|39|0|0" passage="Lu 23:39">Luke xxiii. 39</scripRef>. One
|
||
would think that of all people this thief had <i>least cause,</i>
|
||
and should have had <i>least mind,</i> to banter Christ. Partners
|
||
in suffering, though for different causes, usually commiserate one
|
||
another; and few, whatever they have done before, will breathe
|
||
their last in revilings. But, it seems, the greatest mortifications
|
||
of the body, and the most humbling rebukes of Providence, will not
|
||
of themselves mortify the corruptions of the soul, nor suppress the
|
||
wickedness of the wicked, without the grace of God.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p115">Well, thus our Lord Jesus having undertaken
|
||
to satisfy the justice of God for the wrong done him in his honour
|
||
by sin, he did it by suffering <i>in his honour;</i> not only by
|
||
divesting himself of that which was due to him as the Son of God,
|
||
but by submitting to the utmost indignity that could be done to the
|
||
worst of men; because he was made sin for us, he was thus made a
|
||
curse for us, to make reproach easy to us, if at any time we suffer
|
||
it, and have all manner of evil said against us falsely, for
|
||
righteousness' sake.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p116">III. We have here the frowns of heaven,
|
||
which our Lord Jesus was under, in the midst of all these injuries
|
||
and indignities from men. Concerning which, observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p117">1. How this was signified—by an
|
||
extraordinary and miraculous eclipse of the sun, which continued
|
||
for <i>three hours,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p117.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.45" parsed="|Matt|27|45|0|0" passage="Mt 27:45"><i>v.</i>
|
||
45</scripRef>. There was darkness <b><i>epi pasan ten
|
||
gen</i></b>—<i>over all the earth;</i> so most interpreters
|
||
understand it, though our translation confines it to <i>that
|
||
land.</i> Some of the ancients appealed to the annals of the nation
|
||
concerning this extraordinary eclipse at the death of Christ, as a
|
||
thing well known, and which gave notice to those parts of the world
|
||
of something great then in doing; as the sun's going back in
|
||
Hezekiah's time did. It is reported that Dionysius, at Heliopolis
|
||
in Egypt, took notice of this darkness, and said, <i>Aut Deus
|
||
naturæ patitur, aut mundi machina dissolvitur—Either the God of
|
||
nature is suffering, or the machine of the world is tumbling into
|
||
ruin.</i> An extraordinary light gave intelligence of the birth of
|
||
Christ (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p117.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.2.2" parsed="|Matt|2|2|0|0" passage="Mt 2:2"><i>ch.</i> ii. 2</scripRef>),
|
||
and therefore it was proper that an extraordinary darkness should
|
||
notify his death, for he is the <i>Light of the world.</i> The
|
||
indignities done to our Lord Jesus, made the <i>heavens
|
||
astonished,</i> and <i>horribly afraid,</i> and even put them into
|
||
disorder and confusion; such wickedness as this the sun never saw
|
||
before, and therefore withdrew, and would not see this. This
|
||
surprising, amazing, darkness was designed to stop the mouths of
|
||
those blasphemers, who were reviling Christ as he hung on the
|
||
cross; and it should seem that, for the present, it struck such a
|
||
terror upon them, that though their hearts were not changed, yet
|
||
they were silent, and stood doubting what this should mean, till
|
||
after <i>three hours</i> the darkness <i>scattered,</i> and then
|
||
(as appears by <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p117.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.47" parsed="|Matt|27|47|0|0" passage="Mt 27:47"><i>v.</i>
|
||
47</scripRef>), like Pharaoh when the plague was over, they
|
||
hardened their hearts. But that which was principally intended in
|
||
this darkness, was, (1.) Christ's present <i>conflict</i> with the
|
||
<i>powers of darkness.</i> Now the prince of this world, and his
|
||
forces, the <i>rulers of the darkness of this world,</i> were to be
|
||
cast out, to be spoiled and vanquished; and to make his victory the
|
||
more illustrious, he fights them on their own ground; gives them
|
||
all the advantage they could have against him by this darkness,
|
||
lets them take the <i>wind</i> and <i>sun,</i> and yet baffles
|
||
them, and so becomes more than a conqueror. (2.) His present want
|
||
of heavenly comforts. This darkness signified that dark cloud which
|
||
the human soul of our Lord Jesus was now under. God makes his sun
|
||
to shine upon the just and upon the unjust; but even the light of
|
||
the sun was withheld from our Saviour, when he was <i>made sin for
|
||
us. A pleasant thing it is for the eyes to behold the sun;</i> but
|
||
because now his soul was exceeding sorrowful, and the cup of divine
|
||
displeasure was filled to him without mixture, even the light of
|
||
the sun was suspended. When earth denied him a drop of cold water,
|
||
heaven denied him a beam of light; having to deliver us from
|
||
<i>utter darkness,</i> he did himself, in the depth of his
|
||
sufferings, walk in darkness, and had no light, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p117.4" osisRef="Bible:Isa.50.10" parsed="|Isa|50|10|0|0" passage="Isa 50:10">Isa. l. 10</scripRef>. During the <i>three hours</i>
|
||
that this darkness continued, we do not find that he said <i>one
|
||
word,</i> but passed this time in a silent retirement into his own
|
||
soul, which was now in agony, wrestling with the powers of
|
||
darkness, and taking in the impressions of his Father's
|
||
displeasure, not against himself, but the sin of man, which he was
|
||
now <i>making his soul an offering for.</i> Never were there three
|
||
such hours since the day that God created man upon the earth, never
|
||
such a dark and awful scene; the <i>crisis</i> of that great affair
|
||
of man's redemption and salvation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p118">2. How he complained of it (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p118.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.46" parsed="|Matt|27|46|0|0" passage="Mt 27:46"><i>v.</i> 46</scripRef>); <i>About the ninth
|
||
hour,</i> when it began to clear up, after a long and silent
|
||
conflict. <i>Jesus cried, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?</i> The words
|
||
are related in the Syriac tongue, in which they were spoken,
|
||
because worthy of double remark, and for the sake of the perverse
|
||
construction which his enemies put upon them, in putting
|
||
<i>Elias</i> for <i>Eli.</i> Now observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p119">(1.) Whence he borrowed this
|
||
complaint—from <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p119.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.22.1" parsed="|Ps|22|1|0|0" passage="Ps 22:1">Ps. xxii. 1</scripRef>.
|
||
It is not probable (as some have thought) that he repeated the
|
||
whole psalm; yet hereby he intimated that the whole was to be
|
||
applied to him, and that David, in spirit, there spoke of his
|
||
humiliation and exaltation. This, and that other word, <i>Into thy
|
||
hands I commit my spirit,</i> he fetched from David's psalms
|
||
(though he could have expressed himself in his own words), to teach
|
||
us of what use the word of God is to us, to direct us in prayer,
|
||
and to recommend to us the use of scripture-expressions in prayer,
|
||
which will <i>help our infirmities.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p120">(2.) How he uttered it—<i>with a loud
|
||
voice;</i> which bespeaks the extremity of his pain and anguish,
|
||
the strength of nature remaining in him, and the great earnestness
|
||
of his spirit in this expostulation. Now the scripture was
|
||
fulfilled (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p120.1" osisRef="Bible:Joel.3.15-Joel.3.16" parsed="|Joel|3|15|3|16" passage="Joe 3:15,16">Joel iii. 15,
|
||
16</scripRef>); <i>The sun and the moon shall be darkened. The Lord
|
||
shall also roar out of Zion, and utter his voice form
|
||
Jerusalem.</i> David often speaks of his <i>crying aloud</i> in
|
||
prayer, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p120.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.55.17" parsed="|Ps|55|17|0|0" passage="Ps 55:17">Ps. lv. 17</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p121">(3.) What the complaint was—<i>My God, My
|
||
God, why hast thou forsaken me?</i> A strange complaint to come
|
||
from the mouth of our Lord Jesus, who, we are sure, was <i>God's
|
||
elect, in whom his soul delighted</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p121.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.42.1" parsed="|Isa|42|1|0|0" passage="Isa 42:1">Isa. xlii. 1</scripRef>), and one in whom he was always
|
||
<i>well pleased.</i> The Father now loved him, nay, he knew that
|
||
<i>therefore he loved him, because he laid down his life for the
|
||
sheep;</i> what, and yet forsaken of him, and in the midst of his
|
||
sufferings too! Surely never sorrow was like unto that sorrow which
|
||
extorted such a complaint as this from one who, being perfectly
|
||
free from sin, could never be a terror to himself; but the heart
|
||
knows its own bitterness. No wonder that such a complaint as this
|
||
made the earth to quake, and rent the rocks; for it is enough to
|
||
make both the <i>ears of every one that hears it to tingle,</i> and
|
||
ought to be spoken of with great reverence.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p122">Note, [1.] That our Lord Jesus was, in his
|
||
sufferings, for a time, <i>forsaken by his Father.</i> So he saith
|
||
himself, who we are sure was under no mistake concerning his own
|
||
case. Not that the union between the divine and human nature was in
|
||
the least weakened or shocked; no, he was <i>now by the eternal
|
||
Spirit offering himself:</i> nor as if there were any abatement of
|
||
his Father's love to him, or his to his Father; we are sure that
|
||
there was upon his mind no horror of God, or despair of his favour,
|
||
nor any thing of the torments of hell; but his Father forsook him;
|
||
that is, <i>First,</i> He delivered him up into the hands of his
|
||
enemies, and did not appear to deliver him out of their hands. He
|
||
let loose the powers of darkness against him, and suffered them to
|
||
do their worst, worse than against Job. Now was that scripture
|
||
fulfilled (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p122.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.16.11" parsed="|Job|16|11|0|0" passage="Job 16:11">Job xvi. 11</scripRef>),
|
||
<i>God hath turned me over into the hands of the wicked;</i> and no
|
||
angel is sent from heaven to deliver him, no friend on earth raised
|
||
up to appear for him. <i>Secondly,</i> He withdrew from him the
|
||
present comfortable sense of his complacency in him. When <i>his
|
||
soul</i> was first <i>troubled,</i> he had a <i>voice from
|
||
heaven</i> to comfort him (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p122.2" osisRef="Bible:John.12.27" parsed="|John|12|27|0|0" passage="Joh 12:27">John xii.
|
||
27, 28</scripRef>); when he was in his agony in the garden, there
|
||
appeared an angel from heaven strengthening him; but now he had
|
||
neither the one nor the other. God hid his face from him, and for
|
||
awhile withdrew his rod and staff in the darksome valley. God
|
||
<i>forsook</i> him, not as he forsook Saul, leaving him to an
|
||
endless despair, but as sometimes he forsook David, leaving him to
|
||
a present despondency. <i>Thirdly,</i> He let out upon his soul an
|
||
afflicting sense of his wrath against man for sin. Christ was made
|
||
<i>Sin</i> for us, a <i>Curse</i> for us; and therefore, though God
|
||
loved him as a Son, he frowned upon him as a Surety. These
|
||
impressions he was pleased to <i>admit,</i> and to <i>waive</i>
|
||
that <i>resistance</i> of them which he <i>could have made;</i>
|
||
because he would accommodate himself to this part of his
|
||
undertaking, as he had done to all the rest, when it was in his
|
||
power to have avoided it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p123">[2.] That Christ's being <i>forsaken</i> of
|
||
his Father was the most grievous of his sufferings, and that which
|
||
he complained most of. Here he laid the most doleful accents; he
|
||
did not say, "Why am I scourged? And why spit upon? And why nailed
|
||
to the cross?" Nor did he say to his disciples, when they turned
|
||
their back upon him, <i>Why have ye forsaken me?</i> But when his
|
||
Father stood at a distance, he cried out thus; for this as it that
|
||
<i>put wormwood and gall</i> into the affliction and misery. This
|
||
brought the <i>waters into the soul,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p123.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.69.1-Ps.69.3" parsed="|Ps|69|1|69|3" passage="Ps 69:1-3">Ps. lxix. 1-3</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p124">[3.] That our Lord Jesus, even when he was
|
||
thus forsaken of his Father, kept hold of him as his God,
|
||
notwithstanding; <i>My God, my God;</i> though forsaking me, yet
|
||
<i>mine.</i> Christ was God's <i>servant</i> in carrying on the
|
||
work of redemption, to him he was to make satisfaction, and by him
|
||
to be carried through and crowned, and upon that account he calls
|
||
him <i>his God;</i> for he was now <i>doing his will.</i> See
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p124.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.49.5-Isa.49.9" parsed="|Isa|49|5|49|9" passage="Isa 49:5-9">Isa. xlix. 5-9</scripRef>. This
|
||
supported him, and bore him up, that even in the depth of his
|
||
sufferings God was his God, and this he resolves to keep fast hold
|
||
of.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p125">(4.) See how his enemies impiously bantered
|
||
and ridiculed this complaint (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p125.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.47" parsed="|Matt|27|47|0|0" passage="Mt 27:47"><i>v.</i> 47</scripRef>); <i>They said, This man calleth
|
||
for Elias.</i> Some think that this was the ignorant mistake of the
|
||
Roman soldiers, who had heard talk of Elias, and of the Jews'
|
||
expectation of the coming of Elias, but knew not the signification
|
||
of <i>Eli, Eli,</i> and so made this blundering comment upon these
|
||
words of Christ, perhaps not hearing the latter part of what he
|
||
said, for the noise of the people. Note, Many of the reproaches
|
||
cast upon the word of God and the people of God, take rise from
|
||
gross mistakes. Divine truths are often corrupted by ignorance of
|
||
the language and style of the scripture. Those that hear by the
|
||
halves, pervert what they hear. But others think that it was the
|
||
wilful mistake of some of the Jews, who knew very well what he
|
||
said, but were disposed to abuse him, and make themselves and their
|
||
companions merry, and to misrepresent him as one who, being
|
||
forsaken of God, was driven to trust in creatures; perhaps hinting
|
||
also, that he who had pretended to be himself the Messiah, would
|
||
now be glad to be beholden to Elias, who was expected to be only
|
||
the harbinger and forerunner of the Messiah. Note, It is no new
|
||
thing for the most pious devotions of the best men to be ridiculed
|
||
and abused by profane scoffers; nor are we to think it strange if
|
||
what is well said in praying and preaching be misconstrued, and
|
||
turned to our reproach; Christ's words were so, though he spoke as
|
||
never man spoke.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p126">IV. The cold comfort which his enemies
|
||
ministered to him in this agony, which was like all the rest.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p127">1. Some <i>gave him vinegar to drink</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p127.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.48" parsed="|Matt|27|48|0|0" passage="Mt 27:48"><i>v.</i> 48</scripRef>); instead of
|
||
some cordial-water to revive and refresh him under this heavy
|
||
burthen, they tantalized him with that which did not only add to
|
||
the reproach they were loading him with, but did too sensibly
|
||
represent that cup of trembling which his Father had <i>put into
|
||
his hand. One of them ran</i> to fetch it, seeming to be officious
|
||
to him, but really glad of an opportunity to abuse and affront him,
|
||
and afraid lest any one should take it out of his hands.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p128">2. Others, which the same purpose of
|
||
disturbing and abusing him, refer him to Elias (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p128.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.49" parsed="|Matt|27|49|0|0" passage="Mt 27:49"><i>v.</i> 49</scripRef>); "<i>Let be, let us see whether
|
||
Elias will come to save him.</i> Come, let him alone, his case is
|
||
desperate, neither heaven nor earth can help him; let us do nothing
|
||
either to hasten his death, or to retard it; he has appealed to
|
||
Elias, and <i>to Elias let him go.</i>"</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xxviii-p128.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.50-Matt.27.56" parsed="|Matt|27|50|27|56" passage="Mt 27:50-56" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.27.50-Matt.27.56">
|
||
<h4 id="Matt.xxviii-p128.3">The Crucifixion; The Death of
|
||
Christ.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxviii-p129">50 Jesus, when he had cried again with a loud
|
||
voice, yielded up the ghost. 51 And, behold, the veil of the
|
||
temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom; and the earth
|
||
did quake, and the rocks rent; 52 And the graves were
|
||
opened; and many bodies of the saints which slept arose, 53
|
||
And came out of the graves after his resurrection, and went into
|
||
the holy city, and appeared unto many. 54 Now when the
|
||
centurion, and they that were with him, watching Jesus, saw the
|
||
earthquake, and those things that were done, they feared greatly,
|
||
saying, Truly this was the Son of God. 55 And many women
|
||
were there beholding afar off, which followed Jesus from Galilee,
|
||
ministering unto him: 56 Among which was Mary Magdalene, and
|
||
Mary the mother of James and Joses, and the mother of Zebedee's
|
||
children.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p130">We have here, at length, an account of the
|
||
death of Christ, and several remarkable passages that attended
|
||
it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p131">I. The <i>manner</i> how he breathed his
|
||
last (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p131.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.50" parsed="|Matt|27|50|0|0" passage="Mt 27:50"><i>v.</i> 50</scripRef>);
|
||
between the third and the sixth hour, that is, between nine and
|
||
twelve o'clock, as we reckon, he was nailed to the cross, and soon
|
||
after the ninth hour, that is, between three and four o'clock in
|
||
the afternoon, he <i>died.</i> That was the time of the offering of
|
||
the evening sacrifice, and the time when the paschal lamb was
|
||
killed; and Christ our Passover was sacrificed for us and offered
|
||
himself in the evening of the world a sacrifice to God of a
|
||
sweet-smelling savour. It was at that time of the day, that the
|
||
angel Gabriel delivered to Daniel that glorious prediction of the
|
||
Messiah, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p131.2" osisRef="Bible:Dan.9.21 Bible:Dan.9.24" parsed="|Dan|9|21|0|0;|Dan|9|24|0|0" passage="Da 9:21,24">Dan. ix. 21, 24</scripRef>,
|
||
&c. And some think that from that very time when the angel
|
||
spoke it, to this time when Christ died, was just seventy weeks,
|
||
that is, four hundred and ninety years to a day, to an hour; as the
|
||
departure of <i>Israel</i> out of Egypt was at the end of the four
|
||
hundred and thirty years, <i>even the self-same day,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p131.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.12.41" parsed="|Exod|12|41|0|0" passage="Ex 12:41">Exod. xii. 41</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p132">Two things are here noted concerning the
|
||
manner of Christ's dying.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p133">1. That he <i>cried with a loud voice,</i>
|
||
as before, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p133.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.46" parsed="|Matt|27|46|0|0" passage="Mt 27:46"><i>v.</i> 46</scripRef>.
|
||
Now,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p134">(1.) This was a sign, that, after all his
|
||
pains and fatigues, his life was <i>whole</i> in him, and nature
|
||
<i>strong.</i> The voice of dying men is one of the first things
|
||
that fails; with a panting breath and a faltering tongue, a few
|
||
broken words are hardly spoken, and more hardly heard. But Christ,
|
||
just before he expired, spoke like a man <i>in his full
|
||
strength,</i> to show that his life was not forced from him, but
|
||
was freely <i>delivered</i> by him into his Father's hands, as
|
||
<i>his own act and deed.</i> He that had strength to cry thus when
|
||
he died, could have got loose from the arrest he was under, and
|
||
have bid defiance to the powers of death; but to show that <i>by
|
||
the eternal Spirit he offered himself,</i> being the Priest as well
|
||
as the Sacrifice, he <i>cried with a loud voice.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p135">(2.) It was significant. This <i>loud
|
||
voice</i> shows that he attacked our spiritual enemies with an
|
||
undaunted courage, and such a bravery of resolution as bespeaks him
|
||
hearty in the cause and daring in the encounter. He was now
|
||
<i>spoiling principalities and powers,</i> and in this loud voice
|
||
he did, as it were, <i>shout for mastery,</i> as one <i>mighty to
|
||
save,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p135.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.63.1" parsed="|Isa|63|1|0|0" passage="Isa 63:1">Isa. lxiii. 1</scripRef>.
|
||
Compare with this, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p135.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.62.13-Isa.62.14" parsed="|Isa|62|13|62|14" passage="Isa 62:13,14">Isa. lxxii. 13,
|
||
14</scripRef>. He now bowed himself with all his might, as Samson
|
||
did, when he said, <i>Let me die with the Philistines,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p135.3" osisRef="Bible:Judg.16.30" parsed="|Judg|16|30|0|0" passage="Jdg 16:30">Judg. xvi. 30</scripRef>.
|
||
<i>Animamque in vulnere ponit—And lays down his life.</i> His
|
||
crying with a loud voice when he died, signified that his death
|
||
should be published and proclaimed to all the world; all mankind
|
||
being concerned in it, and obliged to take notice of it. Christ's
|
||
loud cry was like a trumpet blown over the sacrifices.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p136">2. That then he <i>yielded up the
|
||
ghost.</i> This is the usual periphrasis of dying; to show that the
|
||
Son of God upon the cross did truly and properly die by the
|
||
violence of the pain he was put to. His <i>soul</i> was separated
|
||
from his <i>body,</i> and so his body was left really and truly
|
||
dead. It was certain that he <i>did die,</i> for it was requisite
|
||
that he should die; <i>thus it was written,</i> both in the
|
||
<i>close rolls</i> of the <i>divine counsels,</i> and in the
|
||
<i>letters patent of</i> the <i>divine predictions,</i> and
|
||
therefore thus <i>it behoved him to suffer.</i> Death being the
|
||
penalty for the breach of the first covenant (<i>Thou shalt surely
|
||
die</i>), the Mediator of the new covenant must make atonement
|
||
<i>by means of death,</i> otherwise no remission, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p136.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.9.15" parsed="|Heb|9|15|0|0" passage="Heb 9:15">Heb. ix. 15</scripRef>. He had undertaken to
|
||
make his soul an <i>offering for sin;</i> and he did it, when he
|
||
<i>yielded up the ghost,</i> and voluntarily resigned it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p137">II. The miracles that attended his death.
|
||
So many miracles being wrought <i>by him</i> in his life, we might
|
||
well expect some to be wrought concerning him at his death, for his
|
||
name was called <i>Wonderful.</i> Had he been fetched away as
|
||
Elijah in a <i>fiery chariot,</i> that had itself been miracle
|
||
enough; but, being sent for away by an ignominious cross, it was
|
||
requisite that his humiliation should be attended with some signal
|
||
emanations of the divine glory.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p138">1. <i>Behold, the veil of the temple was
|
||
rent in twain.</i> This relation is ushered in with <i>Behold;</i>
|
||
"Turn aside, and see this great sight, and be astonished at it."
|
||
Just as our Lord Jesus expired, at the time of the offering of the
|
||
evening-sacrifice, and upon a solemn day, when the priests were
|
||
officiating in the temple, and might themselves be eyewitnesses of
|
||
it, <i>the veil of the temple was rent</i> by an invisible power;
|
||
that veil which parted between the <i>holy place</i> and the
|
||
<i>most holy.</i> They had condemned him for saying, <i>I will
|
||
destroy this temple,</i> understanding it literally; now by this
|
||
specimen of his power he let them know that, if he had pleased, he
|
||
could have made his words good. In this, as in others of Christ's
|
||
miracles, there was a mystery.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p139">(1.) It was in correspondence with the
|
||
temple of Christ's body, which was now in the dissolving. This was
|
||
the true temple, in which dwelt <i>the fulness of the Godhead;</i>
|
||
when Christ <i>cried with a loud voice, and gave up the ghost,</i>
|
||
and so dissolved that temple, the literal temple did, as it were,
|
||
echo to that cry, and answer the stroke, by <i>rending its
|
||
veil.</i> Note, Death is the rending of the veil of flesh which
|
||
interposes between us and the holy of holies; the death of Christ
|
||
was so, the death of true Christians is so.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p140">(2.) It signified the revealing and
|
||
unfolding of the mysteries of the Old Testament. The veil of the
|
||
temple was for concealment, as was that on the face of Moses,
|
||
therefore it was called the <i>veil of the covering;</i> for it was
|
||
highly penal for any person to see the furniture of the most holy
|
||
place, except the High-Priest, and he but once a year, with great
|
||
ceremony and through a cloud of smoke; all which signified the
|
||
darkness of that dispensation; <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p140.1" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.3.13" parsed="|2Cor|3|13|0|0" passage="2Co 3:13">2 Cor.
|
||
iii. 13</scripRef>. But now, at the death of Christ, all was laid
|
||
open, the mysteries were unveiled, so that now he that runs may
|
||
read the meaning of them. Now we see that the mercy-seat signified
|
||
<i>Christ</i> the great <i>Propitiation;</i> the pot of
|
||
<i>manna</i> signified Christ the Bread of life. Thus <i>we all
|
||
with open face behold, as in a glass</i> (which helps the sight, as
|
||
the veil hindered it), <i>the glory of the Lord. Our eyes see the
|
||
salvation.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p141">(3.) It signified the uniting of Jew and
|
||
Gentile, by the removing of the partition wall between them, which
|
||
was the ceremonial law, by which the Jews were distinguished from
|
||
all other people (as a <i>garden enclosed</i>), were brought near
|
||
to God, while others were made to <i>keep their distance.</i>
|
||
Christ, in his death, repealed the ceremonial law, cancelled that
|
||
<i>hand-writing of ordinances,</i> took it out of the way, nailed
|
||
it to his cross, and so <i>broke down the middle wall of
|
||
partition;</i> and by abolishing those institutions <i>abolished
|
||
the enmity,</i> and <i>made in himself of twain one new man</i> (as
|
||
two rooms are made one, and that large and lightsome, by taking
|
||
down the partition), so <i>making peace,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p141.1" osisRef="Bible:Eph.2.14-Eph.2.16" parsed="|Eph|2|14|2|16" passage="Eph 2:14-16">Eph. ii. 14-16</scripRef>. Christ died, to rend all
|
||
dividing veils, and to make all his one, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p141.2" osisRef="Bible:John.17.21" parsed="|John|17|21|0|0" passage="Joh 17:21">John xvii. 21</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p142">(4.) It signified the consecrating and
|
||
laying open of <i>a new and living way</i> to God. The veil kept
|
||
people off from drawing near to the most holy place, where the
|
||
<i>Shechinah</i> was. But the rending of it signified that Christ
|
||
by his death opened a way to God, [1.] <i>For himself.</i> This was
|
||
the great <i>day of atonement,</i> when our Lord Jesus, as the
|
||
great <i>High-Priest,</i> not <i>by the blood of goats and calves,
|
||
but by his own blood, entered once for all into the holy place;</i>
|
||
in token of which the veil was rent, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p142.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.9.7" parsed="|Heb|9|7|0|0" passage="Heb 9:7">Heb. ix. 7</scripRef>, &c. Having offered his
|
||
sacrifice in the outer court, the blood of it was now to be
|
||
sprinkled upon the mercy-seat within the veil; wherefore <i>lift up
|
||
your heads, O ye gates,</i> and <i>be ye lift up, ye everlasting
|
||
doors; for the King of glory,</i> the Priest of glory, <i>shall
|
||
come in.</i> Now was he caused to draw near, and made to approach,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p142.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.30.21" parsed="|Jer|30|21|0|0" passage="Jer 30:21">Jer. xxx. 21</scripRef>. Though he
|
||
did not personally ascend into the holy place not made with hands
|
||
till above forty days after, yet he immediately acquired a right to
|
||
enter, and had a virtual admission. [2.] <i>For us in him:</i> so
|
||
the apostle applies it, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p142.3" osisRef="Bible:Heb.10.19-Heb.10.20" parsed="|Heb|10|19|10|20" passage="Heb 10:19,20">Heb. x.
|
||
19, 20</scripRef>. We have <i>boldness to enter into the holiest,
|
||
by that new and living way which he has consecrated for us through
|
||
the veil.</i> He died, to <i>bring us to God,</i> and, in order
|
||
thereunto, to rend that veil of guilt and wrath which interposed
|
||
between us and him, to take away the <i>cherubim</i> and <i>flaming
|
||
sword,</i> and to open the way to <i>the tree of life.</i> We have
|
||
free access through Christ to the throne of grace, or mercy-seat,
|
||
now, and to the throne of glory hereafter, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p142.4" osisRef="Bible:Heb.4.16 Bible:Heb.6.20" parsed="|Heb|4|16|0|0;|Heb|6|20|0|0" passage="Heb 4:16,6:20">Heb. iv. 16; vi. 20</scripRef>. The rending of the
|
||
veil signified (as that ancient hymn excellently expresses it),
|
||
that, <i>when Christ had overcome the sharpness of death, he opened
|
||
the kingdom of heaven to all believers.</i> Nothing can obstruct or
|
||
discourage our access to heaven, for the veil is rent; <i>a door is
|
||
opened in heaven,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p142.5" osisRef="Bible:Rev.4.1" parsed="|Rev|4|1|0|0" passage="Re 4:1">Rev. iv.
|
||
1</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p143">2. The <i>earth did quake;</i> not only
|
||
mount Calvary, where Christ was crucified, but the <i>whole
|
||
land,</i> and the adjacent countries. This earthquake signified two
|
||
things.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p144">(1.) The <i>horrible</i> wickedness of
|
||
<i>Christ's crucifiers.</i> The earth, by trembling under such a
|
||
load, bore its testimony to the innocency of him that was
|
||
persecuted, and against the impiety of those that persecuted him.
|
||
Never did the whole creation, before, groan under such a burthen as
|
||
the Son of God crucified, and the guilty wretches that crucified
|
||
him. The earth <i>quaked,</i> as if it <i>feared to open its
|
||
mouth</i> to <i>receive</i> the blood of Christ, so much more
|
||
precious than that of Abel, which it had received, and was
|
||
<i>cursed</i> for it (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p144.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.4.11-Gen.4.12" parsed="|Gen|4|11|4|12" passage="Ge 4:11,12">Gen. iv. 11,
|
||
12</scripRef>); and as if it <i>fain would open its mouth,</i> to
|
||
swallow up those rebels that put him to death, as it had swallowed
|
||
up Dathan and Abiram for a much less crime. When the prophet would
|
||
express God's great displeasure against the wickedness of the
|
||
wicked, he asks, <i>Shall not the land tremble for this?</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p144.2" osisRef="Bible:Amos.8.8" parsed="|Amos|8|8|0|0" passage="Am 8:8">Amos viii. 8</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p145">(2.) The <i>glorious</i> achievements of
|
||
<i>Christ's cross.</i> This <i>earthquake</i> signified the mighty
|
||
shock, nay, the fatal blow, now given to the devil's kingdom. So
|
||
vigorous was the assault Christ now made upon the infernal powers,
|
||
that (as of old, <i>when he went out of Seir, when he marched
|
||
through the field of Edom</i>) the <i>earth trembled,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p145.1" osisRef="Bible:Judg.5.4 Bible:Ps.68.7-Ps.68.8" parsed="|Judg|5|4|0|0;|Ps|68|7|68|8" passage="Jdg 5:4,Ps 68:7,8">Judg. v. 4; Ps. lxviii. 7,
|
||
8</scripRef>. God shakes all nations, when the Desire of all
|
||
nations is to come; and there is a <i>yet once more,</i> which
|
||
perhaps refers to this shaking, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p145.2" osisRef="Bible:Hag.2.6 Bible:Hag.2.21" parsed="|Hag|2|6|0|0;|Hag|2|21|0|0" passage="Hag 2:6,21">Hag.
|
||
ii. 6, 21</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p146">3. The <i>rocks rent;</i> the hardest and
|
||
firmest part of the earth was made to feel this mighty shock.
|
||
Christ had said, that if the children should cease to cry
|
||
<i>Hosanna, the stones would immediately cry out;</i> and now, in
|
||
effect, they did so, proclaiming the glory of the suffering Jesus,
|
||
and themselves more sensible of the wrong done him than the
|
||
hard-hearted Jews were, who yet will shortly be glad to find a
|
||
<i>hole in the rocks, and a cleft in the ragged rocks,</i> to hide
|
||
them from the face of him that sitteth on the throne. See <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p146.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.6.16 Bible:Isa.2.21" parsed="|Rev|6|16|0|0;|Isa|2|21|0|0" passage="Re 6:16,Isa 2:21">Rev. vi. 16; Isa. ii. 21</scripRef>. But
|
||
when God's <i>fury is poured out like fire, the rocks are thrown
|
||
down by him,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p146.2" osisRef="Bible:Nah.1.6" parsed="|Nah|1|6|0|0" passage="Na 1:6">Nah. i. 6</scripRef>.
|
||
Jesus Christ is <i>the Rock;</i> and the rending of <i>these</i>
|
||
rocks, signified the rending of <i>that</i> rock, (1.) That in the
|
||
clefts of it was may be <i>hid,</i> as Moses in the cleft of the
|
||
rock at Horeb, that there we may <i>behold the glory of the
|
||
Lord,</i> as he did, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p146.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.33.22" parsed="|Exod|33|22|0|0" passage="Ex 33:22">Exod. xxxiii.
|
||
22</scripRef>. Christ's dove is said to be <i>hid in the clefts of
|
||
the rock</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p146.4" osisRef="Bible:Song.2.14" parsed="|Song|2|14|0|0" passage="So 2:14">Cant. ii. 14</scripRef>),
|
||
that is, as some make the allusion, sheltered in the wounds of our
|
||
Lord Jesus, the Rock rent. (2.) That from the cleft of it rivers of
|
||
living water may flow, and follow us in this wilderness, as from
|
||
the rock which Moses <i>smote</i> (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p146.5" osisRef="Bible:Exod.17.6" parsed="|Exod|17|6|0|0" passage="Ex 17:6">Exod. xvii. 6</scripRef>), and which God clave (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p146.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.78.15" parsed="|Ps|78|15|0|0" passage="Ps 78:15">Ps. lxxviii. 15</scripRef>); and <i>that rock
|
||
was Christ,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p146.7" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10.4" parsed="|1Cor|10|4|0|0" passage="1Co 10:4">1 Cor. x.
|
||
4</scripRef>. When we celebrate the memorial of Christ's death, our
|
||
hard and rocky hearts must be <i>rent</i>—the heart, and not the
|
||
garments. That heart is harder than a rock, that will not
|
||
<i>yield,</i> that will not <i>melt,</i> where Jesus Christ is
|
||
<i>evidently set forth crucified.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p147">4. The <i>graves were opened.</i> This
|
||
matter is not related so fully as our curiosity would wish; for the
|
||
scripture was not intended to gratify that; it should seem, that
|
||
same earthquake that rent the rocks, <i>opened the graves,</i> and
|
||
many bodies of <i>saints which slept, arose.</i> Death to the
|
||
saints is but the <i>sleep</i> of the body, and the <i>grave</i>
|
||
the bed it <i>sleeps in;</i> they awoke by the power of the Lord
|
||
Jesus, and (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p147.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.53" parsed="|Matt|27|53|0|0" passage="Mt 27:53"><i>v.</i> 53</scripRef>)
|
||
came <i>out of the graves after his resurrection, and went into
|
||
Jerusalem, the holy city, and appeared unto many.</i> Now here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p148">(1.) We may raise many enquiries concerning
|
||
it, which we cannot resolve: as, [1.] <i>Who</i> these
|
||
<i>saints</i> were, that <i>did arise.</i> Some think, the
|
||
<i>ancient patriarchs,</i> that were in such care to be buried in
|
||
the land of Canaan, perhaps in the believing foresight of the
|
||
advantage of this early resurrection. Christ had lately proved the
|
||
doctrine of the resurrection from the instance of the patriarchs
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p148.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.22.32" parsed="|Matt|22|32|0|0" passage="Mt 22:32"><i>ch.</i> xxii. 32</scripRef>), and
|
||
here was a speedy confirmation of his argument. Others think, these
|
||
that arose were <i>modern saints,</i> such as had been Christ in
|
||
the flesh, but died before him; as his father Joseph, Zecharias,
|
||
Simeon, John Baptist, and others, that had been known to the
|
||
disciples, while they lived, and therefore were the fitter to be
|
||
witnesses to them in an <i>apparition</i> after. What if we should
|
||
suppose that they were the <i>martyrs,</i> who in the Old-Testament
|
||
times had sealed the truths of God with their blood, that were thus
|
||
<i>dignified</i> and <i>distinguished?</i> Christ particularly
|
||
points at them as his forerunners, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p148.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.35" parsed="|Matt|23|35|0|0" passage="Mt 23:35"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 35</scripRef>. And we find (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p148.3" osisRef="Bible:Rev.20.4-Rev.20.5" parsed="|Rev|20|4|20|5" passage="Re 20:4,5">Rev. xx. 4, 5</scripRef>), that those who were
|
||
<i>beheaded for the testimony of Jesus,</i> arose <i>before the
|
||
rest of the dead.</i> Sufferers with Christ shall <i>first</i>
|
||
reign with him. [2.] It is uncertain whether (as some think) they
|
||
arose to life, now at the death of Christ, and disposed of
|
||
themselves elsewhere, but did not <i>go into the city</i> till
|
||
after his resurrection; or whether (as others think), though
|
||
<i>their sepulchres</i> (which the <i>Pharisees</i> had
|
||
<i>built</i> and <i>varnished,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p148.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.29" parsed="|Matt|23|29|0|0" passage="Mt 23:29"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 29</scripRef>), and so made
|
||
remarkable, were shattered now by the earthquake (so little did God
|
||
regard that hypocritical respect), yet they did not <i>revive</i>
|
||
and <i>rise</i> till after the resurrection; only, for
|
||
brevity-sake, it is mentioned here, upon the mention of the
|
||
<i>opening of the graves,</i> which seems more probable. [3.] Some
|
||
think that they arose only to bear witness of Christ's resurrection
|
||
to those to whom they appeared, and, having finished their
|
||
testimony, retired to their graves again. But it is more agreeable,
|
||
both to Christ's honour and theirs, to <i>suppose,</i> though we
|
||
cannot <i>prove,</i> that they arose as Christ did, to <i>die no
|
||
more,</i> and therefore ascended with him to glory. Surely on them
|
||
who did partake of his first resurrection, a <i>second</i> death
|
||
had no power. [4.] To whom they appeared (not <i>to all the
|
||
people</i> it is certain, but to <i>many</i>), whether enemies or
|
||
friends, in what manner they appeared, how often, what they said
|
||
and did, and how they disappeared, are secret things which belong
|
||
not to us; we must not covet to be <i>wise above what is
|
||
written.</i> The relating of this matter so briefly, is a plain
|
||
intimation to us, that we must not look that way for a confirmation
|
||
of our faith; we have a more sure word of prophecy. See <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p148.5" osisRef="Bible:Luke.16.31" parsed="|Luke|16|31|0|0" passage="Lu 16:31">Luke xvi. 31</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p149">(2.) Yet we may learn many good lessons
|
||
from it. [1.] That even those who lived and died before the death
|
||
and resurrection of Christ, had saving benefit thereby, as well as
|
||
those who have lived since; for he <i>was</i> the same
|
||
<i>yesterday</i> that he is <i>to-day,</i> and will be <i>for
|
||
ever,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p149.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.8" parsed="|Heb|13|8|0|0" passage="Heb 13:8">Heb. xiii. 8</scripRef>.
|
||
[2.] That Jesus Christ, by dying, conquered, disarmed, and
|
||
disabled, death. These saints that arose, were the present trophies
|
||
of the victory of Christ's cross over the powers of <i>death,</i>
|
||
which he thus <i>made a show of openly.</i> Having by death
|
||
destroyed him that had the power of death, he thus <i>led captivity
|
||
captive,</i> and gloried in these <i>re-taken prizes,</i> in them
|
||
fulfilling that scripture, <i>I will ransom them from the power of
|
||
the grave.</i> [3.] That, in virtue of Christ's resurrection, the
|
||
bodies of all the saints shall, in the fulness of time, <i>rise
|
||
again.</i> This was an earnest of the general resurrection at the
|
||
last day, when <i>all that are in the graves shall hear the voice
|
||
of the Son of God.</i> And perhaps Jerusalem is <i>therefore</i>
|
||
called here the <i>holy city,</i> because the saints, at the
|
||
general resurrection, shall enter into the <i>new Jerusalem;</i>
|
||
which will be indeed what the other was in name and type only, the
|
||
<i>holy city,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p149.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.21.2" parsed="|Rev|21|2|0|0" passage="Re 21:2">Rev. xxi.
|
||
2</scripRef>. [4.] That all the saints do, by the influence of
|
||
Christ's death, and in conformity to it, rise from the <i>death of
|
||
sin</i> to the <i>life of righteousness.</i> They are <i>raised up
|
||
with him</i> to a divine and spiritual life; they go <i>into the
|
||
holy city,</i> become <i>citizens</i> of it, have their
|
||
conversation in it, and <i>appear to many,</i> as persons not of
|
||
this world.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p150">III. The conviction of his enemies that
|
||
were employed in the execution (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p150.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.54" parsed="|Matt|27|54|0|0" passage="Mt 27:54"><i>v.</i> 54</scripRef>), which some make no less than
|
||
another miracle, all things considered. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p151">1. The persons convinced; <i>the centurion,
|
||
and they that were with him watching Jesus;</i> a captain and his
|
||
company, that were set on the guard on this occasion. (1.) They
|
||
were <i>soldiers,</i> whose profession is commonly hardening, and
|
||
whose breasts are commonly not so susceptible as some others of the
|
||
impressions either of fear or pity. But there is no spirit too big,
|
||
too bold, for the power of Christ to break and humble. (2.) They
|
||
ware <i>Romans, Gentiles,</i> who knew not the scriptures which
|
||
were now fulfilled; yet they only were convinced. A sad presage of
|
||
the <i>blindness</i> that should <i>happen to Israel,</i> when the
|
||
gospel should be sent to the Gentiles, to open their eyes. Here
|
||
were the Gentiles <i>softened,</i> and the Jews <i>hardened.</i>
|
||
(3.) They were the persecutors of Christ, and those that but just
|
||
before had reviled him, as appears <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p151.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23.36" parsed="|Luke|23|36|0|0" passage="Lu 23:36">Luke xxiii. 36</scripRef>. How soon can God, by the
|
||
power he has over men's consciences, alter their language, and
|
||
fetch confessions of his truths, to his own glory, out of the
|
||
mouths of those that have <i>breathed</i> nothing but
|
||
<i>threatenings, and slaughter,</i> and blasphemies!</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p152">2. The means of their conviction; they
|
||
perceived <i>the earthquake,</i> which frightened them, and saw the
|
||
other <i>things that were done.</i> These were designed to assert
|
||
the honour of Christ in his sufferings, and had their end on these
|
||
soldiers, whatever they had on others. Note, The dreadful
|
||
appearances of God in his providence sometimes work strangely for
|
||
the conviction and awakening of sinners.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p153">3. The expressions of this conviction, in
|
||
two things.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p154">(1.) The <i>terror</i> that was
|
||
<i>struck</i> upon them; they <i>feared greatly;</i> feared lest
|
||
they should have been buried in the darkness, or swallowed up in
|
||
the earthquake. Note, God can easily frighten the most daring of
|
||
his adversaries, and make them know themselves to be but men. Guilt
|
||
puts men into fear. He that, when iniquity abounds, doth not
|
||
<i>fear always,</i> with a fear of <i>caution,</i> when judgments
|
||
are abroad, cannot but <i>fear greatly,</i> with a fear of
|
||
<i>amazement;</i> whereas there are those who will not fear,
|
||
<i>though the earth be removed,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p154.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.46.1-Ps.46.2" parsed="|Ps|46|1|46|2" passage="Ps 46:1,2">Ps. xlvi. 1, 2</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p155">(2.) The <i>testimony</i> that was
|
||
<i>extorted</i> from them; they said, <i>Truly this was the Son of
|
||
God;</i> a noble confession; Peter was blessed for it, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p155.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.16.16-Matt.16.17" parsed="|Matt|16|16|16|17" passage="Mt 16:16,17"><i>ch.</i> xvi. 16, 17</scripRef>. It was the
|
||
great matter now in dispute, the point upon which he and his
|
||
enemies had <i>joined issue,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p155.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.63-Matt.26.64" parsed="|Matt|26|63|26|64" passage="Mt 26:63,64"><i>ch.</i> xxvi. 63, 64</scripRef>. His disciples
|
||
believed it, but at this time durst not confess it; our Saviour
|
||
himself was tempted to question it, when he said, <i>Why hast thou
|
||
forsaken me?</i> The Jews, now that he was dying upon the cross,
|
||
looked upon it as plainly determined against him, that he was not
|
||
the Son of God, because he did not come down from the cross. And
|
||
yet now this centurion and the soldiers make this voluntary
|
||
confession of the Christian faith, <i>Truly this was the Son of
|
||
God.</i> The best of his disciples could not have said more at any
|
||
time, and at this time they had not faith and courage enough to say
|
||
thus much. Note, God can maintain and assert the honour of a truth
|
||
then when it seems to be crushed, and run down; for <i>great is the
|
||
truth, and will prevail.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p156">IV. The attendance of his friends, that
|
||
were witnesses of his death, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p156.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.55-Matt.27.56" parsed="|Matt|27|55|27|56" passage="Mt 27:55,56"><i>v.</i> 55, 56</scripRef>. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p157">1. Who they were; <i>many women who
|
||
followed him from Galilee.</i> Not his apostles (only elsewhere we
|
||
find John by the cross, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p157.1" osisRef="Bible:John.19.26" parsed="|John|19|26|0|0" passage="Joh 19:26">John xix.
|
||
26</scripRef>), their hearts failed them, they durst not appear,
|
||
for fear of coming under the same condemnation. But here were a
|
||
company of women, some would have called them <i>silly</i> women,
|
||
that <i>boldly</i> stuck to Christ, when the rest of his disciples
|
||
had basely deserted him. Note, Even those of the weaker sex are
|
||
often, by the grace of God, made strong in faith, that Christ's
|
||
strength may be made perfect in weakness. There have been women
|
||
martyrs, famous for courage and resolution in Christ's cause. Now
|
||
of these women it is said, (1.) That they had <i>followed Jesus
|
||
from Galilee,</i> out of the great love they had to him, and a
|
||
desire to hear him preach; otherwise, the males only were obliged
|
||
to come up, to worship at the feast. Now having followed him such a
|
||
long journey as from Galilee to Jerusalem, eighty or a hundred
|
||
miles, they resolved not to forsake him now. Note, Our former
|
||
services and sufferings for Christ should be an argument with us,
|
||
faithfully to persevere to the end in our attendance on him. Have
|
||
we followed him <i>so far</i> and so long, done so much, and laid
|
||
out so much for him, and shall we forsake him now? <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p157.2" osisRef="Bible:Gal.3.3-Gal.3.4" parsed="|Gal|3|3|3|4" passage="Ga 3:3,4">Gal. iii. 3, 4</scripRef>. (2.) That they
|
||
<i>ministered to him</i> of their substance, for his necessary
|
||
subsistence. How gladly would they have ministered to him now, if
|
||
they might have been admitted! But, being forbidden that, they
|
||
resolved to <i>follow him.</i> Note, When we are restrained from
|
||
doing what we <i>would,</i> we must do what we can, in the service
|
||
of Christ. Now that he is <i>in heaven,</i> though he is out of the
|
||
reach of our <i>ministration,</i> he is not out of the reach of our
|
||
<i>believing views.</i> (3.) Some of them are particularly named;
|
||
for God will <i>honour</i> those that <i>honour</i> Christ. They
|
||
were such as we have several times met with <i>before,</i> and it
|
||
was their praise, that we meet with them <i>to the last.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p158">2. What they did; they were <i>beholding
|
||
afar off.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p159">(1.) They stood <i>afar off.</i> Whether
|
||
their own fear or their enemies' fury kept them at a distance, is
|
||
not certain; however, it was an aggravation of the sufferings of
|
||
Christ, that his <i>lovers and friends stood aloof from his
|
||
sore,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p159.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.38.11 Bible:Job.19.13" parsed="|Ps|38|11|0|0;|Job|19|13|0|0" passage="Ps 38:11,Job 19:13">Ps. xxxviii. 11;
|
||
Job xix. 13</scripRef>. Perhaps they might have come nearer, if
|
||
they would; but good people, when they are in sufferings, must not
|
||
think it strange, if some of their best friends be shy of them.
|
||
When Paul's danger was imminent, <i>no man stood by him,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p159.2" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.4.16" parsed="|2Tim|4|16|0|0" passage="2Ti 4:16">2 Tim. iv. 16</scripRef>. If we be
|
||
thus looked strangely upon, remember, our Master was so before
|
||
us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p160">(2.) They were there <i>beholding,</i> in
|
||
which they showed a concern and kindness for Christ; when they were
|
||
debarred from doing any other office of love to him, they looked a
|
||
look of love toward him. [1.] It was a <i>sorrowful</i> look; they
|
||
looked unto him who was now pierced, and <i>mourned;</i> and no
|
||
doubt, were <i>in bitterness</i> for him. We may well imagine how
|
||
it cut them to the heart, to see him in this torment; and what
|
||
floods of tears it fetched from their eyes. Let us with an eye of
|
||
faith behold Christ and him crucified, and be affected with that
|
||
great love wherewith he loved us. But, [2.] It was no more than a
|
||
look; they beheld him, but they could not <i>help him.</i> Note,
|
||
When Christ was in his sufferings, the best of his friends were but
|
||
spectators and lookers on, even the <i>angelic guards stood
|
||
trembling by,</i> saith Mr. Norris, for he <i>trod the wine-press
|
||
alone,</i> and of the people there was none with him; so <i>his own
|
||
arm wrought salvation.</i></p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Matt.xxviii-p160.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.57-Matt.27.66" parsed="|Matt|27|57|27|66" passage="Mt 27:57-66" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Matt.27.57-Matt.27.66">
|
||
<h4 id="Matt.xxviii-p160.2">The Burial of Christ.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Matt.xxviii-p161">57 When the even was come, there came a rich man
|
||
of Arimathæa, named Joseph, who also himself was Jesus' disciple:
|
||
58 He went to Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus. Then
|
||
Pilate commanded the body to be delivered. 59 And when
|
||
Joseph had taken the body, he wrapped it in a clean linen cloth,
|
||
60 And laid it in his own new tomb, which he had hewn out in
|
||
the rock: and he rolled a great stone to the door of the sepulchre,
|
||
and departed. 61 And there was Mary Magdalene, and the other
|
||
Mary, sitting over against the sepulchre. 62 Now the next
|
||
day, that followed the day of the preparation, the chief priests
|
||
and Pharisees came together unto Pilate, 63 Saying, Sir, we
|
||
remember that that deceiver said, while he was yet alive, After
|
||
three days I will rise again. 64 Command therefore that the
|
||
sepulchre be made sure until the third day, lest his disciples come
|
||
by night, and steal him away, and say unto the people, He is risen
|
||
from the dead: so the last error shall be worse than the first.
|
||
65 Pilate said unto them, Ye have a watch: go your way, make
|
||
<i>it</i> as sure as ye can. 66 So they went, and made the
|
||
sepulchre sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p162">We have here an account of Christ's
|
||
<i>burial,</i> and the manner and circumstances of it, concerning
|
||
which observe, 1. The <i>kindness</i> and <i>good will</i> of his
|
||
friends that <i>laid him in the grave.</i> 2. The <i>malice</i> and
|
||
<i>ill will</i> of his enemies that were very solicitous to keep
|
||
him there.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p163">I. His friends gave him a <i>decent
|
||
burial.</i> Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p164">1. In general, that Jesus Christ was
|
||
<i>buried;</i> when his precious soul was gone to paradise, his
|
||
blessed body was deposited in the chambers of the grave, that he
|
||
might answer the type of Jonas, and fulfil the prophecy of Isaias;
|
||
he <i>made his grave with the wicked.</i> Thus in all things he
|
||
must be made <i>like unto his brethren,</i> sin only excepted, and,
|
||
like us, unto dust <i>he must return.</i> He was buried, to make
|
||
his death the more certain, and his resurrection the more
|
||
illustrious. Pilate would not deliver his body to be buried, till
|
||
he was well assured that he was really dead; while the witnesses
|
||
lay <i>unburied,</i> there were some hopes concerning them,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p164.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.11.8" parsed="|Rev|11|8|0|0" passage="Re 11:8">Rev. xi. 8</scripRef>. But Christ, the
|
||
great Witness, is as one <i>free among the dead, like the slain
|
||
that lie in the grave.</i> He was <i>buried,</i> that he might take
|
||
off the terror of the grave, and make it easy to us, might warm and
|
||
perfume that cold noisome bed for us, and that we might be
|
||
<i>buried with him.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p165">2. The particular circumstances of his
|
||
burial here related.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p166">(1.) The time <i>when</i> he was buried;
|
||
<i>when the evening was come;</i> the same evening that he died,
|
||
before sun-set, as is usual in burying malefactors. It was not
|
||
deferred till the next day, because it was <i>the sabbath;</i> for
|
||
burying the dead is not proper work either for a day of rest or for
|
||
a day of rejoicing, as the sabbath is.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p167">(2.) The person that took care of the
|
||
funeral was Joseph of Arimathea. The apostles had all fled, and
|
||
none of them appeared to show this respect to their Master, which
|
||
the disciples of John <i>showed</i> to him after he was beheaded,
|
||
who <i>took up his body, and buried it,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p167.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.14.12" parsed="|Matt|14|12|0|0" passage="Mt 14:12"><i>ch.</i> xiv. 12</scripRef>. The women that followed
|
||
him durst not move in it; then did God stir up this good man to do
|
||
it; for what work God has to do, he will find out instruments to do
|
||
it. Joseph was a fit man, for, [1.] He had wherewithal to do it,
|
||
being a <i>rich man.</i> Most of Christ's disciples were poor men,
|
||
such were most fit to go about the country to preach the gospel;
|
||
but here was one that was a <i>rich man,</i> ready to be employed
|
||
in a piece of service which required <i>a man of estate.</i> Note,
|
||
Worldly wealth, though it is to many an objection in religion's
|
||
way, yet, in some services to be done for Christ, it is an
|
||
advantage and an opportunity, and it is well for those who have it,
|
||
if withal they have a heart to use it for God's glory. [2.] He was
|
||
well affected to our Lord Jesus, for he was himself <i>his
|
||
disciple,</i> believed in him, though he did not openly profess it.
|
||
Note, Christ has more secret disciples than we are aware of; seven
|
||
thousand in Israel, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p167.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.4" parsed="|Rom|11|4|0|0" passage="Ro 11:4">Rom. xi.
|
||
4</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p168">(3.) The grant of the dead body procured
|
||
from Pilate, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p168.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.58" parsed="|Matt|27|58|0|0" passage="Mt 27:58"><i>v.</i> 58</scripRef>.
|
||
Joseph <i>went to</i> Pilate, the proper person to be applied to on
|
||
this occasion, who had the disposal of the body; for in things
|
||
wherein the power of the magistrate is concerned, due regard must
|
||
be had to that power, and nothing done to break in upon it. What we
|
||
do that is good, must be done peaceably, and not tumultuously.
|
||
Pilate was willing to give the body to one that would inter it
|
||
decently, that he might do something towards atoning for the guilt
|
||
his conscience charged him with in condemning an innocent person.
|
||
In Joseph's petition, and Pilate's ready grant of it, <i>honour</i>
|
||
was done to Christ, and a testimony borne to his
|
||
<i>integrity.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p169">(4.) The dressing of the body in its
|
||
grave-clothes (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p169.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.59" parsed="|Matt|27|59|0|0" passage="Mt 27:59"><i>v.</i>
|
||
59</scripRef>); though he was an honourable counsellor, yet he
|
||
himself <i>took the body,</i> as it should seem, into his own arms,
|
||
from the infamous and accursed tree (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p169.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.29" parsed="|Acts|13|29|0|0" passage="Ac 13:29">Acts xiii. 29</scripRef>); for where there is true love
|
||
to Christ, no service will be thought too mean to stoop to for him.
|
||
Having taken it, he wrapped it in a <i>clean linen cloth;</i> for
|
||
burying in linen was then the common usage, which Joseph complied
|
||
with. Note, Care is to be taken of the dead bodies of good men, for
|
||
there is a glory intended for them at the resurrection, which we
|
||
must hereby testify our belief of, and wind up the dead body as
|
||
designed for a better place. This common act of humanity, if done
|
||
after a <i>godly sort,</i> may be made an acceptable piece of
|
||
Christianity.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p170">(5.) The depositing of it in the sepulchre,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p170.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.60" parsed="|Matt|27|60|0|0" passage="Mt 27:60"><i>v.</i> 60</scripRef>. Here there
|
||
was nothing of that pomp and solemnity with which the grandees of
|
||
the world are <i>brought to the grave, and laid in the tomb,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p170.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.21.32" parsed="|Job|21|32|0|0" passage="Job 21:32">Job xxi. 32</scripRef>. A private
|
||
funeral did best befit him whose kingdom came not with
|
||
observation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p171">[1.] He was laid in a <i>borrowed</i> tomb,
|
||
in Joseph's burying place; as he had not a house of his own,
|
||
wherein to <i>lay his head</i> while he lived, so he had not a
|
||
grave of his own, wherein to <i>lay his body</i> when he was dead,
|
||
which was an instance of his poverty; yet in this there might be
|
||
somewhat of a mystery. The grave is the peculiar heritage of a
|
||
<i>sinner,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p171.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.24.19" parsed="|Job|24|19|0|0" passage="Job 24:19">Job xxiv.
|
||
19</scripRef>. There is nothing we can truly call our own but our
|
||
sins and our graves; he <i>returneth to his earth,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p171.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.146.4" parsed="|Ps|146|4|0|0" passage="Ps 146:4">Psalm cxlvi. 4</scripRef>. When we go to the
|
||
grave, we go to our own place; but our Lord Jesus, who had no sin
|
||
of his own, had no grave of his own; dying under imputed sin, it
|
||
was fit that he should be buried in a <i>borrowed</i> grave; the
|
||
Jews designed that he should have <i>made his grave with the
|
||
wicked,</i> should have been buried with the thieves with whom he
|
||
was crucified, but God over-ruled it, so as that he should make it
|
||
<i>with the rich in his death,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p171.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.53.9" parsed="|Isa|53|9|0|0" passage="Isa 53:9">Isa. liii. 9</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p172">[2.] He was laid in a <i>new tomb,</i>
|
||
which Joseph, it is likely, designed <i>for himself;</i> it would,
|
||
however, be <i>never the worse</i> for <i>his</i> lying in it, who
|
||
was to rise so quickly, but a <i>great deal the better</i> for
|
||
<i>his</i> lying in it, who has altered the property of the grave,
|
||
and made it <i>anew</i> indeed, by turning it into a <i>bed of
|
||
rest,</i> nay into a <i>bed of spices,</i> for all the saints.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p173">[3.] In a tomb that was <i>hewn out of a
|
||
rock;</i> the ground about Jerusalem was generally rocky. Shebna
|
||
had his sepulchre hewn out thereabouts <i>in a rock,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p173.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.22.16" parsed="|Isa|22|16|0|0" passage="Isa 22:16">Isa. xxii. 16</scripRef>. Providence ordered it
|
||
that Christ's sepulchre should be in a solid entire rock, that no
|
||
room might be left to suspect his disciples had access to it by
|
||
some underground passage, or broke through the back wall of it, to
|
||
steal the body; for there was no access to it but by the door,
|
||
which was watched.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p174">[4.] A <i>great stone was rolled to the
|
||
door of his sepulchre;</i> this also was according to the custom of
|
||
the Jews in burying their dead, as appears by the description of
|
||
the grave of Lazarus (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p174.1" osisRef="Bible:John.11.38" parsed="|John|11|38|0|0" passage="Joh 11:38">John xi.
|
||
38</scripRef>), signifying that those who are dead, are
|
||
<i>separated</i> and <i>cut off from all the living;</i> if the
|
||
grave were his prison, now was the prison-door locked and bolted.
|
||
The rolling of the stone to the grave's mouth, was with them as
|
||
filling up the grave is with us, it completed the funeral. Having
|
||
thus in silence and sorrow deposited the previous body of our Lord
|
||
Jesus in the grave, the house <i>appointed for all living,</i> they
|
||
<i>departed</i> without any further ceremony. It is the most
|
||
melancholy circumstance in the funerals of our Christian friends,
|
||
when we have laid their bodies in the dark and silent grave, to go
|
||
home, and leave them behind; but alas, it is not we that <i>go
|
||
home,</i> and <i>leave them behind,</i> no, it is they that are
|
||
gone to the better home, and have left us behind.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p175">(6.) The company that attended the funeral;
|
||
and that was very <i>small</i> and <i>mean.</i> Here were none of
|
||
the relations in mourning, to follow the corpse, no formalities to
|
||
grace the solemnity, but some good women that were true
|
||
mourners—<i>Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p175.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.56" parsed="|Matt|27|56|0|0" passage="Mt 27:56"><i>v.</i> 56</scripRef>. These, as they had
|
||
attended him <i>to the cross,</i> so they followed him to <i>the
|
||
grave;</i> as if they composed themselves to sorrow, they <i>sat
|
||
over against the sepulchre,</i> not so much to fill their eyes with
|
||
the sight of what was done, as to empty them in rivers of tears.
|
||
Note, True love to Christ will carry us through, to the utmost, in
|
||
following him. Death itself cannot quench that divine fire,
|
||
<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p175.2" osisRef="Bible:Song.8.6-Song.8.7" parsed="|Song|8|6|8|7" passage="So 8:6,7">Cant. viii. 6, 7</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p176">II. His enemies did what they could to
|
||
prevent his resurrection; what they did herein was <i>the next day
|
||
that followed the day of the preparation,</i> <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p176.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.62" parsed="|Matt|27|62|0|0" passage="Mt 27:62"><i>v.</i> 62</scripRef>. That was the seventh day of the
|
||
week, the Jewish <i>sabbath,</i> yet not expressly called so, but
|
||
described by this periphrasis, because it was now shortly to give
|
||
way to the Christian sabbath, which began the day after. Now, 1.
|
||
All that day, Christ lay dead in the grave; having for six days
|
||
laboured and done all his work, on the seventh day he
|
||
<i>rested,</i> and was <i>refreshed.</i> 2. On that day, the
|
||
<i>chief priests and Pharisees,</i> when they should have been at
|
||
their devotions, asking pardon for the sins of the week past, were
|
||
dealing with Pilate about securing the sepulchre, and so <i>adding
|
||
rebellion to their sin.</i> They that had so often quarrelled with
|
||
Christ for works of the greatest mercy on that day, were themselves
|
||
busied in a work of the greatest malice. Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p177">(1.) Their address to <i>Pilate;</i> they
|
||
were vexed that the body was given to one that would bury it
|
||
decently; but, since it must be so, they desire a guard may be set
|
||
on the sepulchre.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p178">[1.] Their petition sets forth, that
|
||
<i>that deceiver</i> (so they call him who is truth itself) <i>had
|
||
said, After three days I will rise again.</i> He had said so, and
|
||
his disciples <i>remembered</i> those very words for the
|
||
confirmation of their faith, but his persecutors remember them for
|
||
the provocation of their rage and malice. Thus the same word of
|
||
Christ to the one was a savour of life unto life, to the other of
|
||
death unto death. See how they compliment Pilate with the title of
|
||
<i>Sir,</i> while they reproach Christ with the title of
|
||
<i>Deceiver.</i> Thus the most malicious slanderers of <i>good
|
||
men</i> are commonly the most sordid flatterers of <i>great
|
||
men.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p179">[2.] It further sets forth their jealousy;
|
||
<i>lest his disciples come by night, and steal him away, and say,
|
||
He is risen.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p180"><i>First,</i> That which <i>really</i> they
|
||
were afraid of, was, his <i>resurrection;</i> that which is most
|
||
Christ's honour and his people's joy, is most the terror of his
|
||
enemies. That which exasperated Joseph's brethren against him, was
|
||
the presage of his rise, and of his having dominion over them
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p180.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.37.8" parsed="|Gen|37|8|0|0" passage="Ge 37:8">Gen. xxxvii. 8</scripRef>); and all
|
||
they aimed at, in what they did against him, was, to prevent that.
|
||
Come, say they, let us <i>slay him,</i> and see <i>what will become
|
||
of his dreams.</i> So the chief priests and Pharisees laboured to
|
||
defeat the predictions of Christ's resurrection, saying, as David's
|
||
enemies of him (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p180.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.41.8" parsed="|Ps|41|8|0|0" passage="Ps 41:8">Ps. xli. 8</scripRef>),
|
||
<i>Now that he lieth, he shall rise up no more;</i> if he should
|
||
rise, that would break all their measures. Note, Christ's enemies,
|
||
even when they have gained their point, are still in fear of losing
|
||
it again. Perhaps the priests were surprised at the respect shown
|
||
to Christ's dead body by Joseph and Nicodemus, two honourable
|
||
counsellors, and looked upon it as an ill presage; nor can they
|
||
forget his raising Lazarus from <i>the dead,</i> which so
|
||
confounded them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p181"><i>Secondly,</i> That which they took on
|
||
them to be afraid of, was, lest <i>his disciples should come by
|
||
night, and steal him away,</i> which was a very improbable thing;
|
||
for, 1. They had not the courage to own him while he lived, when
|
||
they might have done him and themselves real service; and it was
|
||
not likely that his death should put courage into such cowards. 2.
|
||
What could they promise themselves by stealing away his body, and
|
||
making people believe he was risen; when, if he should not rise,
|
||
and so prove himself a deceiver, his disciples, who had left all
|
||
for him in this world, in dependence upon a recompence in the other
|
||
world, would of all others suffer most by the imposture, and would
|
||
have had reason to throw the first stone at his name? What good
|
||
would it do them, to carry on a cheat upon themselves, to steal
|
||
away his body, and say, <i>He is risen;</i> when, if he were not
|
||
risen, their faith was vain, and they were <i>of all men the most
|
||
miserable?</i> The chief priests apprehend that if the doctrine of
|
||
Christ's resurrection be once preached and believed, the <i>last
|
||
error will be worse than the first;</i> a proverbial expression,
|
||
intimating no more than this, that we shall all be routed, all
|
||
undone. They think it was <i>their error,</i> that they had so long
|
||
connived at his preaching and miracles, which <i>error</i> they
|
||
thought they had <i>rectified</i> by putting him to death; but if
|
||
people should be persuaded of his resurrection, that would <i>spoil
|
||
all</i> again, his interest would revive with him, and theirs must
|
||
needs sink, who had so barbarously murdered him. Note, Those that
|
||
opposed Christ and his kingdom, will see not only their attempts
|
||
baffled, but themselves miserably <i>plunged</i> and
|
||
<i>embarrassed,</i> their errors each worse than other, and the
|
||
last worst of all, <scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p181.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.2.4-Ps.2.5" parsed="|Ps|2|4|2|5" passage="Ps 2:4,5">Ps. ii. 4,
|
||
5</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p182">[3.] In consideration hereof, they humbly
|
||
move to have a guard set upon the sepulchre till the third day;
|
||
<i>Command that the sepulchre be made sure.</i> Pilate must still
|
||
be their drudge, his civil and military power must both be engaged
|
||
to serve their malice; one would think that death's prisoners
|
||
needed no other guard, and that the grave were <i>security</i>
|
||
enough to itself; but what will not those fear, who are conscious
|
||
to themselves both of <i>guilt</i> and <i>impotency,</i> in
|
||
opposing the Lord and his anointed?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p183">(2.) Pilate's answer to this address
|
||
(<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p183.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.65" parsed="|Matt|27|65|0|0" passage="Mt 27:65"><i>v.</i> 65</scripRef>); <i>He have
|
||
a watch, make it sure, as sure as you can.</i> He was ready to
|
||
gratify Christ's friends, in allowing them the body, and his
|
||
enemies, in setting a guard upon it, being desirous to please all
|
||
sides, while perhaps he laughed in his sleeve at both for making
|
||
such ado, <i>pro</i> and <i>con,</i> about the dead body of a man,
|
||
looking upon the hopes of one side and the fears of the other to be
|
||
alike ridiculous. <i>Ye have a watch;</i> he means the constant
|
||
guard that was kept in the tower of Antonia, out of which the
|
||
allows them to detach as many as they pleased for that purpose,
|
||
but, as if ashamed to be himself seen in such a thing, he leaves
|
||
the management of it wholly to them. Methinks that word, <i>Make it
|
||
as sure as you can,</i> looks like a banter, either, [1.] Of their
|
||
<i>fears;</i> "Be sure to set a strong guard upon the dead man;" or
|
||
rather, [2.] Of their <i>hopes;</i> "Do your worst, try your wit
|
||
and strength to the utmost; but if he be of God, he will rise, in
|
||
spite of you and all your guards." I am apt to think, that by this
|
||
time Pilate had had some talk with the centurion, his own officer,
|
||
of whom he would be apt to enquire how that <i>just man</i> died,
|
||
whom he had condemned with such reluctance; and that he gave him
|
||
such an account of those things as made him conclude that <i>truly
|
||
he was the Son of God;</i> and Pilate would give more credit to him
|
||
than to a thousand of those spiteful priests that called him a
|
||
<i>Deceiver;</i> and if so, no marvel that he tacitly derides their
|
||
project, in thinking to secure the sepulchre upon him who had so
|
||
lately rent the rocks, and made the earth to quake. Tertullion,
|
||
speaking of Pilate, saith, <i>Ipse jam pro suâ conscientiâ
|
||
Christianus—In his conscience he was a Christian;</i> and it is
|
||
possible that he might be under such convictions at this time, upon
|
||
the centurion's report, and yet never be thoroughly persuaded, any
|
||
more than Agrippa or Felix was, to be a Christian.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Matt.xxviii-p184">(3.) The wonderful care they took,
|
||
hereupon, to secure the sepulchre (<scripRef id="Matt.xxviii-p184.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.66" parsed="|Matt|27|66|0|0" passage="Mt 27:66"><i>v.</i> 66</scripRef>); <i>They sealed the stone;</i>
|
||
probably with the great seal of their <i>sanhedrim,</i> whereby
|
||
they interposed their authority, for who durst break the public
|
||
seal? But not trusting too much to that, withal they <i>set a
|
||
watch,</i> to keep <i>his disciples</i> from coming to <i>steal him
|
||
away,</i> and, if possible, to hinder <i>him</i> from coming out of
|
||
the grave. So they intended, but God brought this good out of it,
|
||
that they who were set to <i>oppose</i> his resurrection, thereby
|
||
had an opportunity to observe it, and did so, and told the chief
|
||
priests what they observed, who were thereby rendered the more
|
||
inexcusable. Here was all the power of earth and hell combined to
|
||
keep Christ a prisoner, but all in vain, when his hour was come;
|
||
death, and all those sons and heirs of death, could then no longer
|
||
hold him, no longer have dominion over him. To guard the sepulchre
|
||
against the poor weak disciples, was folly, because
|
||
<i>needless;</i> but to think to guard it against the power of God
|
||
was folly, because <i>fruitless</i> and to no purpose; and yet they
|
||
thought they had <i>dealt wisely.</i></p>
|
||
</div></div2> |