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<p>These verses agree with <a class="bibleref" title="Matt.5.38" href="/passage/?search=Matt.5.38">Matt. 5:38</a>; to the end of that chapter: <i>I say unto you that hear</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.27" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.27">Luke 6:27</a>), to all you that hear, and not to disciples only, for these are lessons of universal concern. <i>He that has an ear, let him hear</i>. Those that diligently hearken to Christ shall find he has something to say to them well worth their hearing. Now the lessons Christ here teacheth us are,</p>
<p class="tab-1">I. That we must render to all their due, and be honest and just in all our dealings (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.31" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.31">Luke 6:31</a>): <i>As ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise</i>; for this is <i>loving your neighbour as yourselves</i>. What we should expect, in reason, to be done to us, either in justice or charity, by others, if they were in our condition and we in theirs, that, as the matter stands, we must do to them. We must <i>put our souls into their souls stead</i>, and then pity and succour them, as we should desire and justly expect to be ourselves pitied and succoured.</p>
<p class="tab-1">II. That we must be free in <i>giving</i> to them that <i>need</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.30" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.30">Luke 6:30</a>): “<i>Give to every man that asketh of thee</i>, to every one that is a proper object of charity, that wants necessaries, which thou hast wherewithal to supply out of thy superfluities. Give to those that are not able to help themselves, to those that have not relations in a capacity to help them.” Christ would have his disciples ready to distribute, and willing to communicate, <i>to their power</i> in ordinary cases, and beyond their power in extraordinary.</p>
<p class="tab-1">III. That we must be generous in <i>forgiving</i> those that have been any way injurious to us.</p>
<p class="tab-1">1. We must not be <i>extreme</i> in <i>demanding</i> our right, when it is denied us: “<i>Him that taketh away thy cloak</i>, either forcibly or fraudulently, <i>forbid him not</i> by any violent means to <i>take thy coat also</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.29" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.29">Luke 6:29</a>. Let him have that too, rather than fight for it. And (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.30" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.30">Luke 6:30</a>) <i>of him that taketh thy goods</i>” (so Dr. Hammond thinks it should be read), “that borrows them, or that <i>takes them up</i> from thee upon trust, of such do not <i>exact them</i>; if Providence have made such insolvent, do not take the advantage of the law against them, but rather lose it than <i>take them by the throat</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Matt.18.28" href="/passage/?search=Matt.18.28">Matt. 18:28</a>. If a man run away in thy debt, and <i>take away thy goods</i> with him, do not perplex thyself, nor be incensed against him.”</p>
<p class="tab-1">2. We must not be rigorous in revenging a wrong when it is done us: “<i>Unto him that smiteth thee on the one cheek</i>, instead of bringing an action against him, or sending for a writ for him, or bringing him before a justice, <i>offer also the other</i>;” that is, “pass it by, though thereby thou shouldest be in danger of bringing upon thyself another like in dignity, which is commonly pretended in excuse of taking the advantage of the law in such a case. If any one <i>smite thee on the cheek</i>, rather than give another blow to him, be ready to receive another from him;” that is, “leave it to God to plead thy cause, and do thou sit down silent under the affront.” When we do thus, God will <i>smite our enemies</i>, as far as they are his, <i>upon the cheek bone</i>, so as to <i>break the teeth of the ungodly</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Ps.3.7" href="/passage/?search=Ps.3.7">Ps. 3:7</a>); for he hath said, <i>Vengeance is mine</i>, and he will make it appear that it is so when we leave it to him to take vengeance.</p>
<p class="tab-1">3. Nay, we must <i>do good to them that do evil to us</i>. This is that which our Saviour, in <a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.27-Luke.6.36" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.27-Luke.6.36">Luke 6:27-36</a>, chiefly designs to teach us, as a law peculiar to his religion, and a branch of the perfection of it.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(1.) We must be kind to those from whom we have <i>received injuries</i>. We must not only <i>love our enemies</i>, and bear a good will to them, but we must <i>do good</i> to them, be as ready to do any good office to them as to any other person, if their case call for it, and it be in the power of our hands to do it. We must study to make it appear, by positive acts, if there be an opportunity for them, that we bear them no malice, nor see revenge. Do they <i>curse</i> us, speak ill of us, and wish ill to us? Do they <i>despitefully use us</i>, in word or deed? Do they endeavour to make us contemptible or odious? Let us <i>bless them</i>, and <i>pray for them</i>, speak well of them, the best we can, wish well to them, especially to their souls, and be intercessors with God for them. This is repeated, <a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.35" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.35">Luke 6:35</a>: <i>love your enemies</i>, and <i>do them good</i>. To recommend this difficult duty to us, it is represented as a generous thing, and an attainment few arrive at. <i>To love those that love us</i> has nothing <i>uncommon</i> in it, nothing peculiar to Christs disciples, for <i>sinners</i> will <i>love those that love them</i>. There is nothing self-denying in that; it is but following nature, even in its corrupt state, and puts no force at all upon it (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.32" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.32">Luke 6:32</a>): it is no thanks to us to love those that say and do just as we would have them. “And (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.33" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.33">Luke 6:33</a>) <i>if you do good to them that do good to you</i>, and return their kindnesses, it is from a common principle of custom, honour, and gratitude; and therefore <i>what thanks have you</i>? What credit are you to the name of Christ, or what reputation do you bring to it? for <i>sinners also</i>, that know nothing of Christ and his doctrine, <i>do even the same</i>. But it becomes you to do something more excellent and eminent, herein to out-do your neighbours, to do that which sinners will not do, and which no principle of theirs can pretend to reach to: you must <i>render good for evil</i>;” not that any thanks are due to us, but <i>then</i> we are to our God <i>for a name and a praise</i> and he will have the thanks.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(2.) We must be kind to those from whom we expect no manner of advantage (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.35" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.35">Luke 6:35</a>): <i>Lend, hoping for nothing again</i>. It is meant of the rich lending to the poor a little money for their necessity, to buy daily bread for themselves and their families, or to keep them out of prison. In such a case, we must <i>lend</i>, with a resolution not to demand interest for what we lend, as we may most justly from those that borrow money to make purchases withal, or to trade with. But that is not all; we must <i>lend</i> though we have reason to suspect that what we <i>lend</i> we <i>lose</i>, lend to those who are so poor that it is not probable they will be able to pay us again. This precept will be best illustrated by that law of Moses (<a class="bibleref" title="Deut.15.7-Deut.15.10" href="/passage/?search=Deut.15.7-Deut.15.10">Deut. 15:7-10</a>), which obliges them to lend to a <i>poor brother</i> as much as he <i>needed</i>, though the <i>year of release</i> was at hand. Here are two motives to this generous charity.</p>
<p class="tab-1">[1.] It will redound to our profit; for our <i>reward shall be great</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.35" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.35">Luke 6:35</a>. What is given, or laid out, or lent and lost on earth, from a true principle of charity, will be made up to us in the other world, unspeakably to our advantage. “You shall not only be <i>repaid</i>, but <i>rewarded</i>, greatly rewarded; it will be said to you, <i>Come, ye blessed, inherit the kingdom</i>.”</p>
<p class="tab-1">[2.] It will redound to our honour; for herein we shall resemble God in his goodness, which is the greatest glory: “<i>Ye shall be the children of the Highest</i>, shall be owned by him as his children, being like him.” It is the glory of God that he is <i>kind to the unthankful and to the evil</i>, bestows the gifts of common providence even upon the worst of men, who are every day provoking him, and rebelling against him, and using those very gifts to his dishonour. Hence he infers (<a class="bibleref" title="Luke.6.36" href="/passage/?search=Luke.6.36">Luke 6:36</a>), <i>Be merciful, as your Father is merciful</i>; this explains <a class="bibleref" title="Matt.5.48" href="/passage/?search=Matt.5.48">Matt. 5:48</a>; “<i>Be perfect, as our Father is perfect</i>. Imitate your Father in those things that are his brightest perfections.” Those that are <i>merciful</i> as God is <i>merciful</i>, even <i>to the evil and the unthankful</i>, are <i>perfect</i> as God is <i>perfect</i>; so he is pleased graciously to accept it, though infinitely falling short. Charity is called the <i>bond of perfectness</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Col.3.14" href="/passage/?search=Col.3.14">Col. 3:14</a>. This should strongly engage us to be merciful to our brethren, even such as have been injurious to us, not only that God is so to others, but that he is so to us, though we have been, and are, evil and unthankful; it is of his mercies that <i>we</i> are not consumed.</p>