1247 lines
86 KiB
XML
1247 lines
86 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Luke.xi" n="xi" next="Luke.xii" prev="Luke.x" progress="54.93%" title="Chapter X">
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<h2 id="Luke.xi-p0.1">L U K E.</h2>
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<h3 id="Luke.xi-p0.2">CHAP. X.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Luke.xi-p1">In this chapter we have, I. The ample commission
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which Christ gave to the seventy disciples to preach the gospel,
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and to confirm it by miracles; and the full instructions he gave
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them how to manage themselves in the execution of their
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commissions, and great encouragements therein, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.1-Luke.10.16" parsed="|Luke|10|1|10|16" passage="Lu 10:1-16">ver. 1-16</scripRef>. II. The report which the seventy
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disciples made to their Master of the success of their negotiation,
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and his discourse thereupon, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.17-Luke.10.24" parsed="|Luke|10|17|10|24" passage="Lu 10:17-24">ver.
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17-24</scripRef>. III. Christ's discourse with a lawyer concerning
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the way to heaven, and the instructions Christ gave him by a
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parable to look upon every one as his neighbour whom he had
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occasion to show kindness to, or receive kindness from, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.25-Luke.10.37" parsed="|Luke|10|25|10|37" passage="Lu 10:25-37">ver. 25-37</scripRef>. IV. Christ's
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entertainment at Martha's house, the reproof he gave to her for her
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care about the world, and his commendation of Mary for her care
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about her soul, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.38-Luke.10.42" parsed="|Luke|10|38|10|42" passage="Lu 10:38-42">ver.
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38-42</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Luke.xi-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10" parsed="|Luke|10|0|0|0" passage="Lu 10" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Luke.xi-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.1-Luke.10.16" parsed="|Luke|10|1|10|16" passage="Lu 10:1-16" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.10.1-Luke.10.16">
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<h4 id="Luke.xi-p1.7">The Mission of the Seventy.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Luke.xi-p2">1 After these things the Lord appointed other
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seventy also, and sent them two and two before his face into every
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city and place, whither he himself would come. 2 Therefore
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said he unto them, The harvest truly <i>is</i> great, but the
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labourers <i>are</i> few: pray ye therefore the Lord of the
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harvest, that he would send forth labourers into his harvest.
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3 Go your ways: behold, I send you forth as lambs among
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wolves. 4 Carry neither purse, nor scrip, nor shoes: and
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salute no man by the way. 5 And into whatsoever house ye
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enter, first say, Peace <i>be</i> to this house. 6 And if
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the son of peace be there, your peace shall rest upon it: if not,
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it shall turn to you again. 7 And in the same house remain,
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eating and drinking such things as they give: for the labourer is
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worthy of his hire. Go not from house to house. 8 And into
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whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you, eat such things as
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are set before you: 9 And heal the sick that are therein,
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and say unto them, The kingdom of God is come nigh unto you.
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10 But into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you not, go
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your ways out into the streets of the same, and say, 11 Even
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the very dust of your city, which cleaveth on us, we do wipe off
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against you: notwithstanding be ye sure of this, that the kingdom
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of God is come nigh unto you. 12 But I say unto you, that it
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shall be more tolerable in that day for Sodom, than for that city.
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13 Woe unto thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee, Bethsaida! for if
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the mighty works had been done in Tyre and Sidon, which have been
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done in you, they had a great while ago repented, sitting in
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sackcloth and ashes. 14 But it shall be more tolerable for
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Tyre and Sidon at the judgment, than for you. 15 And thou,
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Capernaum, which art exalted to heaven, shalt be thrust down to
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hell. 16 He that heareth you heareth me; and he that
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despiseth you despiseth me; and he that despiseth me despiseth him
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that sent me.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p3">We have here the sending forth of seventy
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disciples, two and two, into divers parts of the country, to preach
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the gospel, and to work miracles in those places which Christ
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himself designed to visit, to make way for his entertainment. This
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is not taken notice of by the other evangelists: but the
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instructions here given them are much the same with those given to
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the twelve. Observe,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p4">I. Their number: they were seventy. As in
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the choice of twelve apostles Christ had an eye to the twelve
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patriarchs, the twelve tribes, and the twelve princes of those
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tribes, so here he seems to have an eye to the <i>seventy</i>
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elders of Israel. So many went up with Moses and Aaron to the
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mount, and <i>saw the glory of the God of Israel</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.24.1 Bible:Exod.24.9" parsed="|Exod|24|1|0|0;|Exod|24|9|0|0" passage="Ex 24:1,9">Exod. xxiv. 1, 9</scripRef>), and so many were
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afterwards chosen to assist Moses in the government, in order to
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which the Spirit of prophecy came unto them, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Num.11.24-Num.11.25" parsed="|Num|11|24|11|25" passage="Nu 11:24,25">Num. xi. 24, 25</scripRef>. The <i>twelve wells of
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water</i> and the <i>seventy palm-trees</i> that were at Elim were
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a figure of the <i>twelve apostles</i> and the <i>seventy
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disciples,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.15.27" parsed="|Exod|15|27|0|0" passage="Ex 15:27">Exod. xv.
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27</scripRef>. They were seventy elders of the Jews that were
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employed by Ptolemy king of Egypt in turning the Old Testament into
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Greek, whose translation is thence called the <i>Septuagint.</i>
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The great sanhedrim consisted of this number. Now,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p5">1. We are glad to find that Christ had so
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many followers fit to be sent forth; his labour was not altogether
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in vain, though he met with much opposition. Note, Christ's
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interest is a <i>growing</i> interest, and his followers, like
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Israel in Egypt, though <i>afflicted</i> shall <i>multiply.</i>
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These <i>seventy,</i> though they did not attend him so closely and
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constantly as the <i>twelve</i> did, were nevertheless the constant
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hearers of his doctrine, and witnesses of his miracles, and
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believed in him. Those three mentioned in the close of the
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foregoing chapter might have been of these seventy, if they would
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have applied themselves in good earnest to their business. These
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seventy are those of whom Peter speaks as "<i>the men who companied
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with us all the time that the Lord Jesus went in and out among
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us,</i>" and were part of the one hundred and twenty there spoken
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of, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.1.15 Bible:Acts.1.21" parsed="|Acts|1|15|0|0;|Acts|1|21|0|0" passage="Ac 1:15,21">Acts i. 15, 21</scripRef>. Many
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of those that were the companions of the apostles, whom we read of
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in the Acts and the Epistles, we may suppose, were of these seventy
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disciples.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p6">2. We are glad to find there was work for
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so many ministers, hearers for so many preachers: thus the grain of
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mustard-seed began to <i>grow,</i> and the savour of the leaven to
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diffuse itself in the meal, in order to the leavening of the
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whole.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p7">II. Their work and business: He sent them
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<i>two and two,</i> that they might strengthen and encourage one
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another. <i>If one fall, the other will help to raise him up.</i>
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He sent them, not to all the cities of Israel, as he did the
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<i>twelve,</i> but only <i>to every city and place whither he
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himself would come</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.1" parsed="|Luke|10|1|0|0" passage="Lu 10:1"><i>v.</i>
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1</scripRef>), as his harbingers; and we must suppose, though it is
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not recorded, that Christ soon after went to all those places
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whither he now sent them, though he could stay but a little while
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in a place. Two things they were ordered to do, the same that
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Christ did wherever he came:—1. They must <i>heal the sick</i>
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(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.9" parsed="|Luke|10|9|0|0" passage="Lu 10:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>), heal them
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<i>in the name of Jesus,</i> which would make people long to see
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this Jesus, and ready to entertain him whose name was so powerful.
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2. They must publish the approach of the kingdom of God, its
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approach <i>to them:</i> "Tell them this, <i>The kingdom of God is
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come nigh to you,</i> and you now stand fair for an admission into
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it, if you will but look about you. Now is the <i>day of your
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visitation,</i> know and understand it." It is good to be made
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sensible of our advantages and opportunities, that we may lay hold
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of them. When the <i>kingdom of God comes nigh us,</i> it concerns
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us to go forth to meet it.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p8">III. The instructions he gives them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p9">1. They must set out with prayer (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.2" parsed="|Luke|10|2|0|0" passage="Lu 10:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>); and, in prayer, (1.)
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They must be duly affected with the necessities of the souls of
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men, which called for their help. They must <i>look about,</i> and
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see how <i>great the harvest was,</i> what abundance of people
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there were that wanted to have the gospel preached to them and were
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willing to receive it, nay, that had at this time their
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expectations raised of the coming of the Messiah and of his
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kingdom. There was corn ready to shed and be lost for want of hands
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to gather it in. Note, Ministers should apply themselves to their
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work under a deep concern for <i>precious souls,</i> looking upon
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them as the riches of this world, which ought to be secured for
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Christ. They must likewise be concerned that the <i>labourers were
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so few.</i> The Jewish teachers were indeed many, but they were not
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labourers; they did not gather in souls to God's kingdom, but to
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their own interest and party. Note, Those that are good ministers
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themselves wish that there were more good ministers, for there is
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work for more. It is common for tradesmen not to care how few there
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are of their own trade; but Christ would have the labourers in his
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vineyard reckon it a matter of complaint when the <i>labourers are
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few.</i> (2.) They must earnestly desire to receive their mission
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from God, that <i>he</i> would send them forth as <i>labourers into
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his harvest</i> who is the <i>Lord of the harvest,</i> and that he
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would send others forth; for, if God send them forth, they may hope
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he will go along with them and give them success. Let them
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therefore say, as the prophet (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.6.8" parsed="|Isa|6|8|0|0" passage="Isa 6:8">Isa. vi.
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8</scripRef>), <i>Here I am, send me.</i> It is desirable to
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receive our commission from God, and then we may go on boldly.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p10">2. They must set out with an expectation of
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trouble and persecution: "<i>Behold, I send you forth as lambs
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among wolves;</i> but <i>go your ways,</i> and resolve to make the
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best of it. Your enemies will be as <i>wolves,</i> bloody and
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cruel, and ready to pull you to pieces; in their threatenings and
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revilings, they will be as <i>howling</i> wolves to <i>terrify</i>
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you; in their persecutions of you, they will be as <i>ravening</i>
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wolves to <i>tear</i> you. But you must be as <i>lambs,</i>
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peaceable and patient, though made an easy prey of." It would have
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been very hard thus to be sent forth as <i>sheep among wolves,</i>
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if he had not endued them with his spirit and courage.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p11">3. They must not encumber themselves with a
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load of provisions, as if they were going a long voyage, but depend
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upon God and their friends to provide what was convenient for them:
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"Carry neither a <i>purse</i> for money, nor a <i>scrip</i> or
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knapsack for clothes or victuals, nor new <i>shoes</i> (as before
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to the twelve, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.9.3" parsed="|Luke|9|3|0|0" passage="Lu 9:3"><i>ch.</i> ix.
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3</scripRef>); and <i>salute no man by the way.</i>" This command
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Elisha gave to his servant, when he sent him to see the Shunamite's
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dead child, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.4.29" parsed="|2Kgs|4|29|0|0" passage="2Ki 4:29">2 Kings iv. 29</scripRef>.
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Not that Christ would have his ministers to be rude, morose, and
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unmannerly; but, (1.) They must go as men <i>in haste,</i> that had
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their particular places assigned them, where they must deliver
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their message, and in their way directly to those places must not
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hinder or retard themselves with needless ceremonies or
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compliments. (2.) They must go as <i>men of business,</i> business
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that relates to another world, which they must be intent in, and
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intent upon, and therefore must not entangle themselves with
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conversation about secular affairs. <i>Minister verbi est; hoc
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age—You are a minister of the word; attend to your office.</i>
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(3.) They must go as <i>serious</i> men, and <i>men in sorrow.</i>
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It was the custom of mourners, during the first seven days of their
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mourning, not to <i>salute any,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p11.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.2.13" parsed="|Job|2|13|0|0" passage="Job 2:13">Job ii. 13</scripRef>. Christ was a man of sorrows and
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acquainted with grief; and it was fit that by this and other signs
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his messengers should resemble him, and likewise show themselves
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affected with the calamities of mankind which they came to relieve,
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and touched with a feeling of them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p12">4. They must show, not only <i>their
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goodwill,</i> but <i>God's good-will,</i> to all to whom they came,
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and leave the issue and success to him that knows the heart,
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<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.5-Luke.10.6" parsed="|Luke|10|5|10|6" passage="Lu 10:5,6"><i>v.</i> 5, 6</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p13">(1.) The charge given them was, Whatsoever
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<i>house</i> they <i>entered into,</i> they must say, <i>Peace be
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to this house.</i> Here, [1.] They are supposed to enter into
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<i>private houses;</i> for, being not admitted into the synagogues,
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they were forced to preach where they could have liberty. And, as
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their public preaching was driven into houses, so thither they
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carried it. Like their Master, wherever they <i>visited,</i> they
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<i>preached from house to house,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.5.42 Bible:Acts.20.20" parsed="|Acts|5|42|0|0;|Acts|20|20|0|0" passage="Ac 5:42,20:20">Acts v. 42; xx. 20</scripRef>. Christ's church was
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at first very much <i>a church in the house.</i> [2.] They are
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instructed to say, "<i>Peace be to this house,</i> to all under
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this roof, to this family, and to all that belong to it." <i>Peace
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be to you</i> was the common form of salutation among the Jews.
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They must not use it in <i>formality,</i> according to custom, to
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those they met on the way, because they must use it with
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<i>solemnity</i> to those whose houses they entered into:
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"<i>Salute no man by the way</i> in compliment, but to those into
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whose house ye enter, say, <i>Peace be to you,</i> with seriousness
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and in reality; for this is intended to be more than a compliment."
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Christ's ministers go into all the world, to say, in Christ's name,
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<i>Peace be to you.</i> <i>First,</i> We are to <i>propose</i>
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peace to all, to <i>preach peace by Jesus Christ,</i> to proclaim
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the gospel of peace, the covenant of peace, <i>peace on earth,</i>
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and to invite the children of men to come and take the benefit of
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it. <i>Secondly,</i> We are to <i>pray</i> for peace to all. We
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must earnestly desire the salvation of the souls of those we preach
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to, and offer up those desires to God in prayer; and it may be well
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to let them know that we do thus pray for them, and bless them in
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the name of the Lord.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p14">(2.) The success was to be different,
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according to the different dispositions of those whom they preached
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to and prayed for. According as the inhabitants were sons of peace
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or not, so their peace should or should not <i>rest upon the house.
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Recipitur ad modum recipientis—The quality of the receiver
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determines the nature of the reception.</i> [1.] "You will meet
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with some that are the <i>sons of peace,</i> that by the operations
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of divine grace, pursuant to the designations of the divine
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counsel, are ready to admit the word of the gospel in the light and
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love of it, and have their hearts made as soft wax to receive the
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impressions of it. Those are qualified to receive the comforts of
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the gospel in whom there is a good work of grace wrought. And, as
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to those, <i>your peace</i> shall find them out and <i>rest upon
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them;</i> your prayers for them shall be heard, the promises of the
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gospel shall be <i>confirmed</i> to them, the privileges of it
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<i>conferred</i> on them, and the fruit of both shall remain and
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continue with them—a good part that shall not be <i>taken
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away.</i>" [2.] "You will meet with others that are no ways
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disposed to hear or heed your message, whole houses that have not
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one <i>son of peace</i> in them." Now it is certain that our peace
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shall <i>not come</i> upon <i>them,</i> they have no part nor lot
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in the matter; the blessing that rests upon the <i>sons of
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peace</i> shall never come upon the sons of Belial, nor can any
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expect the blessings of the covenant that will not come under the
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bonds of it. But it shall <i>return to us again;</i> that is, we
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shall have the comfort of having done our duty to God and
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discharged our trust. Our prayers like David's shall return <i>into
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our own bosom</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.35.13" parsed="|Ps|35|13|0|0" passage="Ps 35:13">Ps. xxxv.
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13</scripRef>) and we shall have commission to go on in the work.
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Our peace shall return to us again, not only to be enjoyed by
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ourselves, but to be communicated to others, to the next we meet
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with, them that are <i>sons of peace.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p15">5. They must <i>receive</i> the kindnesses
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of those that should <i>entertain</i> them and <i>bid them
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welcome,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.7-Luke.10.8" parsed="|Luke|10|7|10|8" passage="Lu 10:7,8"><i>v.</i> 7,
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8</scripRef>. "Those that receive the gospel will receive you that
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preach it, and give you entertainment; you must not think to raise
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estates, but you may depend upon a subsistence; and," (1.) "Be not
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<i>shy;</i> do not suspect our welcome, nor be afraid of being
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troublesome, but <i>eat and drink</i> heartily <i>such things as
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they give;</i> for, whatever kindness they show you, it is but a
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small return for the kindness you do them in bringing the glad
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tidings of <i>peace.</i> You will deserve it, for <i>the labourer
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is worthy of his hire,</i> the labourer in the work of the ministry
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is so, if he be indeed a <i>labourer;</i> and it is not an act of
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charity, but of justice, in those who are <i>taught in the word to
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communicate to those that teach them</i>" (2.) "Be not <i>nice</i>
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and <i>curious</i> in your diet: <i>Eat and drink such things as
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they give</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.7" parsed="|Luke|10|7|0|0" passage="Lu 10:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>),
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<i>such things as are set before you,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p15.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.8" parsed="|Luke|10|8|0|0" passage="Lu 10:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>. Be thankful for plain food, and
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do not find fault, though it be not dressed according to art." It
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ill becomes Christ's disciples to be <i>desirous of dainties.</i>
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As he has not tied them up to the Pharisees' superstitious fasts,
|
||
so he has not allowed the luxurious feasts of the Epicureans.
|
||
Probably, Christ here refers to the traditions of the elders about
|
||
their meat which were so many that those who observed them were
|
||
extremely critical, you could hardly set a dish of meat before
|
||
them, but there was some scruple or other concerning it; but Christ
|
||
would not have them to regard those things, but eat what was given
|
||
them, <i>asking no question for conscience' sake.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p16">6. They must <i>denounce</i> the judgments
|
||
of God against those who should <i>reject</i> them and their
|
||
<i>message:</i> "If you <i>enter into a city,</i> and they <i>do
|
||
not receive you,</i> if there be none there disposed to hearken to
|
||
your doctrine, leave them, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.10" parsed="|Luke|10|10|0|0" passage="Lu 10:10"><i>v.</i>
|
||
10</scripRef>. If they will not <i>give you welcome</i> into their
|
||
houses, do you <i>give them warning</i> in their streets." He
|
||
orders them to (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.9.5" parsed="|Luke|9|5|0|0" passage="Lu 9:5"><i>ch.</i> ix.
|
||
5</scripRef>) do as he had ordered the apostles to do: "Say to
|
||
them, not with rage, or scorn, or resentment, but with compassion
|
||
to their poor perishing souls, and a holy dread of the ruin which
|
||
they are bringing upon themselves, <i>Even the dust of your city,
|
||
which cleaveth on us, we do wipe off against you,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.11" parsed="|Luke|10|11|0|0" passage="Lu 10:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>. From them do not
|
||
receive any kindnesses at all, be not beholden to them. It cost
|
||
that prophet of the Lord dear who accepted a meal's meat with a
|
||
prophet in Bethel, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p16.4" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.13.21-1Kgs.13.22" parsed="|1Kgs|13|21|13|22" passage="1Ki 13:21,22">1 Kings xiii.
|
||
21, 22</scripRef>. Tell them that you will not carry with you the
|
||
dust of their city; let them take it to themselves, for <i>dust
|
||
they are.</i>" It shall be a witness for Christ's messengers that
|
||
they had been there according to their Master's order;
|
||
<i>tender</i> and <i>refusal</i> were a discharge of their trust.
|
||
But it shall be a witness against the recusants that they would not
|
||
give Christ's messengers any entertainment, no, not so much as
|
||
water to wash their feet with, but they were forced to wipe off the
|
||
dust. "But tell them plainly, and bid them <i>be sure</i> of it,
|
||
<i>The kingdom of God is come nigh to you.</i> Here is a fair offer
|
||
made you; if you have not the benefit of it, it is your own fault.
|
||
The gospel is brought to your doors; if you shut your doors against
|
||
it, your blood is upon your own head. Now that the <i>kingdom of
|
||
God is come nigh to you,</i> if you will not come up to it, and
|
||
come into it, your sin will be inexcusable, and your condemnation
|
||
intolerable." Note, The fairer offers we have of grace and life by
|
||
Christ, the more we shall have to answer for another day, if we
|
||
slight these offers: <i>It shall be more tolerable for Sodom than
|
||
for that city,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p16.5" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.12" parsed="|Luke|10|12|0|0" passage="Lu 10:12"><i>v.</i>
|
||
12</scripRef>. The Sodomites indeed rejected the warning given them
|
||
by Lot; but rejecting the gospel is a more heinous crime, and will
|
||
be punished accordingly <i>in that day.</i> He means the day of
|
||
judgment (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p16.6" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.14" parsed="|Luke|10|14|0|0" passage="Lu 10:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>),
|
||
but calls it, by way of emphasis, <i>that day,</i> because it is
|
||
the last and great day, the day when we must account for all the
|
||
<i>days of time,</i> and have our state determined for the <i>days
|
||
of eternity.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p17">Upon this occasion, the evangelist
|
||
repeats,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p18">(1.) The particular doom of those cities
|
||
wherein most of Christ's mighty works were done, which we had,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11.20" parsed="|Matt|11|20|0|0" passage="Mt 11:20">Matt. xi. 20</scripRef>, &c.
|
||
Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum, all bordering upon the sea of
|
||
Galilee, where Christ was most conversant, are the places here
|
||
mentioned. [1.] They enjoyed greater privileges. Christ's <i>mighty
|
||
works were done in them,</i> and they were all gracious works,
|
||
works of mercy. They were hereby <i>exalted to heaven,</i> not only
|
||
dignified and honoured, but put into a fair way of being happy;
|
||
they were brought as near heaven as external means could bring
|
||
them. [2.] God's design in favouring them thus was to bring them to
|
||
<i>repentance</i> and <i>reformation</i> of life, <i>to sit in
|
||
sackcloth and ashes,</i> both in humiliation for the sins they had
|
||
committed, and in humility and a meek subjection to God's
|
||
government. [3.] Their frustrating this design, and their receiving
|
||
the grace of God therein in vain. It is implied that they
|
||
<i>repented not;</i> they were not wrought upon by all the miracles
|
||
of Christ to think the better of him, or the worse of sin; they did
|
||
not bring forth fruits agreeable to the advantages they enjoyed.
|
||
[4.] There was reason to think, morally speaking, that, if Christ
|
||
had gone to Tyre and Sidon, Gentile cities, and had preached the
|
||
same doctrine to them and wrought the same miracles among them that
|
||
he did in these cities of Israel, they would have repented <i>long
|
||
ago,</i> so speedy would their repentance have been, and that in
|
||
<i>sackcloth and ashes,</i> so deep would it have been. Now to
|
||
understand the wisdom of God, in <i>giving</i> the means of grace
|
||
to those who would not improve them, and <i>denying</i> them to
|
||
those that would, we must wait for the great day of discovery. [5.]
|
||
The doom of those who thus receive the grace of God in vain will be
|
||
very fearful. They that were <i>thus exalted,</i> not making use of
|
||
their elevation, will be <i>thrust down to hell,</i> thrust down
|
||
with disgrace and dishonour. They will thrust in to get into
|
||
heaven, in the crowd of professors, but in vain; they shall be
|
||
<i>thrust down,</i> to their everlasting grief and disappointment,
|
||
into the lowest hell, and hell will be hell indeed to them. [6.] In
|
||
the day of judgment Tyre and Sidon will fare better, and it will be
|
||
more tolerable for them than for these cities.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p19">(2.) The general rule which Christ would go
|
||
by, as to those to whom he sent his ministers: He will reckon
|
||
himself treated according as they treated his ministers, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.16" parsed="|Luke|10|16|0|0" passage="Lu 10:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. What is done to the
|
||
ambassador is done, as it were, to the prince that sends him. [1.]
|
||
"<i>He that hearest you,</i> and regardeth what you say, <i>heareth
|
||
me,</i> and herein doeth me honour. But," [2.] "He that
|
||
<i>despiseth you</i> doth in effect <i>despise me,</i> and shall be
|
||
reckoned with as having put an affront upon me; nay, he
|
||
<i>despiseth him that sent me.</i>" Note, Those who contemn the
|
||
Christian religion do in effect put a slight upon natural religion,
|
||
which it is perfective of. And they who <i>despise</i> the faithful
|
||
ministers of Christ, who, though they do not hate and persecute
|
||
them, yet think meanly of them, look scornfully upon them, and turn
|
||
their backs upon their ministry, will be reckoned with as despisers
|
||
of God and Christ.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.xi-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.17-Luke.10.24" parsed="|Luke|10|17|10|24" passage="Lu 10:17-24" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.10.17-Luke.10.24">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.xi-p19.3">The Success of the Seventy.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.xi-p20">17 And the seventy returned again with joy,
|
||
saying, Lord, even the devils are subject unto us through thy name.
|
||
18 And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall
|
||
from heaven. 19 Behold, I give unto you power to tread on
|
||
serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy: and
|
||
nothing shall by any means hurt you. 20 Notwithstanding in
|
||
this rejoice not, that the spirits are subject unto you; but rather
|
||
rejoice, because your names are written in heaven. 21 In
|
||
that hour Jesus rejoiced in spirit, and said, I thank thee, O
|
||
Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou hast hid these things
|
||
from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes: even
|
||
so, Father; for so it seemed good in thy sight. 22 All
|
||
things are delivered to me of my Father: and no man knoweth who the
|
||
Son is, but the Father; and who the Father is, but the Son, and
|
||
<i>he</i> to whom the Son will reveal <i>him.</i> 23 And he
|
||
turned him unto <i>his</i> disciples, and said privately, Blessed
|
||
<i>are</i> the eyes which see the things that ye see: 24 For
|
||
I tell you, that many prophets and kings have desired to see those
|
||
things which ye see, and have not seen <i>them;</i> and to hear
|
||
those things which ye hear, and have not heard <i>them.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p21">Christ sent forth the seventy disciples as
|
||
he was going up to Jerusalem to the <i>feast of tabernacles,</i>
|
||
when he <i>went up, not openly,</i> but <i>as it were in secret</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:John.7.10" parsed="|John|7|10|0|0" passage="Joh 7:10">John vii. 10</scripRef>), having sent
|
||
abroad so great a part of his ordinary retinue; and Dr. Lightfoot
|
||
thinks it was before his return from that feast, and while he was
|
||
yet at Jerusalem, or Bethany, which was hard by (for there he was,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.38" parsed="|Luke|10|38|0|0" passage="Lu 10:38"><i>v.</i> 38</scripRef>), that they,
|
||
or at least some of them, returned to him. Now here we are
|
||
told,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p22">1. What account they gave him of the
|
||
success of their expedition: <i>They returned again with joy</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.17" parsed="|Luke|10|17|0|0" passage="Lu 10:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>); not
|
||
complaining of the fatigue of their journeys, nor of the opposition
|
||
and discouragement they met with, but rejoicing in their success,
|
||
especially in casting out unclean spirits: <i>Lord, even the devils
|
||
are subject unto us through thy name.</i> Though only the
|
||
<i>healing of the sick</i> was mentioned in their commission
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.19" parsed="|Luke|10|19|0|0" passage="Lu 10:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>), yet no
|
||
doubt the <i>casting out</i> of devils was included, and in this
|
||
they had wonderful success. 1. They give Christ the glory of this:
|
||
It is <i>through thy name.</i> Note, all our victories over Satan
|
||
are obtained by power derived from Jesus Christ. We must <i>in his
|
||
name</i> enter the lists with our spiritual enemies, and, whatever
|
||
advantages we gain, he must have all the praise; if the work be
|
||
done <i>in</i> his name, the honour is due <i>to</i> his name. 2.
|
||
They entertain themselves with the comfort of it; they speak of it
|
||
with an air of exultation: <i>Even the devils,</i> those potent
|
||
enemies, are <i>subject to us.</i> Note, the saints have no greater
|
||
joy or satisfaction in any of their triumphs than in those over
|
||
Satan. If devils are <i>subject to us,</i> what can stand before
|
||
us?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p23">II. What acceptance they found with him,
|
||
and how he received this account.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p24">1. He confirmed what they said, as agreeing
|
||
with his own observation (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.18" parsed="|Luke|10|18|0|0" passage="Lu 10:18"><i>v.</i>
|
||
18</scripRef>): "My heart and eye went along with you; I took
|
||
notice of the success you had, and I <i>saw Satan fall as lightning
|
||
from heaven.</i>" Note, Satan and his kingdom fell before the
|
||
preaching of the gospel. "I see how it is," saith Christ, "as you
|
||
get ground the devil loseth ground." He falls <i>as lightning falls
|
||
from heaven,</i> so suddenly, so irrecoverably, so visibly, that
|
||
all may perceive it, and say, "See how Satan's kingdom totters, see
|
||
how it tumbles." They triumphed in casting devils out of the bodies
|
||
of people; but Christ sees and rejoices in the fall of the devil
|
||
from the interest he has in the souls of men, which is called his
|
||
power <i>in high places,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.6.12" parsed="|Eph|6|12|0|0" passage="Eph 6:12">Eph. vi.
|
||
12</scripRef>. He foresees this to be but an earnest of what should
|
||
now be shortly done and was already begun—the destroying of
|
||
Satan's kingdom in the world by the extirpating of idolatry and the
|
||
turning of the nations to the faith of Christ. Satan <i>falls from
|
||
heaven</i> when he falls from the throne in men's hearts, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p24.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.26.18" parsed="|Acts|26|18|0|0" passage="Ac 26:18">Acts xxvi. 18</scripRef>. And Christ foresaw
|
||
that the preaching of the gospel, which would <i>fly like
|
||
lightning</i> through the world, would wherever it went pull down
|
||
Satan's kingdom. <i>Now is the prince of this world cast out.</i>
|
||
Some have given another sense of this, as looking back to the fall
|
||
of the angels, and designed for a caution to these disciples, lest
|
||
their success should puff them up with pride: "I saw angels turned
|
||
into devils by <i>pride:</i> that was the sin for which Satan was
|
||
<i>cast down from heaven,</i> where he had been an angel of light I
|
||
saw it, and give you an intimation of it lest you, being <i>lifted
|
||
up with pride should fall into that condemnation of the devil,</i>
|
||
who fell by pride," <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p24.4" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.3.6" parsed="|1Tim|3|6|0|0" passage="1Ti 3:6">1 Tim. iii.
|
||
6</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p25">2. He repeated, ratified, and enlarged
|
||
their commission: <i>Behold I give you power to tread on
|
||
serpents,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.19" parsed="|Luke|10|19|0|0" passage="Lu 10:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>.
|
||
Note, To him that hath, and useth well what he hath, more shall be
|
||
given. They had employed their power vigorously against Satan, and
|
||
now Christ entrusts them with greater power. (1.) An
|
||
<i>offensive</i> power, power to <i>tread on serpents and
|
||
scorpions,</i> devils and malignant spirits, the old serpent: "You
|
||
shall <i>bruise their heads</i> in my name," according to the first
|
||
promise, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.3.15" parsed="|Gen|3|15|0|0" passage="Ge 3:15">Gen. iii. 15</scripRef>. Come,
|
||
<i>set your feet</i> on <i>the necks</i> of these enemies; you
|
||
shall tread upon these <i>lions</i> and <i>adders</i> wherever you
|
||
meet with them; you shall <i>trample them under foot,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p25.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.91.13" parsed="|Ps|91|13|0|0" passage="Ps 91:13">Ps. xci. 13</scripRef>. You shall <i>tread upon
|
||
all the power of the enemy,</i> and the kingdom of the Messiah
|
||
shall be every where set up upon the ruins of the devil's kingdom.
|
||
As the devils have now been <i>subject to you,</i> so they shall
|
||
still be. (2.) A <i>defensive</i> power: "<i>Nothing shall by any
|
||
means hurt you;</i> not <i>serpents</i> nor <i>scorpions,</i> if
|
||
you should be chastised with them or thrown into prisons and
|
||
dungeons among them; you shall be unhurt by the most venomous
|
||
creatures," as St. Paul was (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p25.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.5" parsed="|Acts|28|5|0|0" passage="Ac 28:5">Acts
|
||
xxviii. 5</scripRef>), and as is promised in <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p25.5" osisRef="Bible:Mark.16.18" parsed="|Mark|16|18|0|0" passage="Mk 16:18">Mark xvi. 18</scripRef>. "If wicked men be as
|
||
<i>serpents</i> to you, and you <i>dwell</i> among those
|
||
<i>scorpions</i> (as <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p25.6" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.2.6" parsed="|Ezek|2|6|0|0" passage="Eze 2:6">Ezek. ii.
|
||
6</scripRef>), you may despise their rage, and <i>tread</i> upon
|
||
it; <i>it</i> need not disturb you, for they have no power against
|
||
you but what is <i>given them from above;</i> they may <i>hiss,</i>
|
||
but they cannot <i>hurt.</i>" You may play upon the hole of the
|
||
asp, for <i>death itself shall not hurt nor destroy,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p25.7" osisRef="Bible:Isa.11.8 Bible:Isa.11.19 Bible:Isa.25.8" parsed="|Isa|11|8|0|0;|Isa|11|19|0|0;|Isa|25|8|0|0" passage="Isa 11:8,19,25:8">Isa. xi. 8, 19; xxv. 8</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p26">3. He directed them to turn their joy into
|
||
the right channel (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.20" parsed="|Luke|10|20|0|0" passage="Lu 10:20"><i>v.</i>
|
||
20</scripRef>): "<i>Notwithstanding in this rejoice not, that the
|
||
spirits are subject unto you,</i> that they have been so, and shall
|
||
be still so. Do not rejoice in this merely as it is your honour,
|
||
and a confirmation of your mission, and as it sets you a degree
|
||
above other good people; do not rejoice in this <i>only,</i> or in
|
||
this <i>chiefly,</i> but <i>rather rejoice because your names are
|
||
written in heaven,</i> because you are chosen of God to eternal
|
||
life, and are the children of God through faith." Christ, who knew
|
||
the counsels of God, could tell them that their <i>names were
|
||
written in heaven,</i> for it is the <i>Lamb's book of life</i>
|
||
that they are written in. All believers are through grace, entitled
|
||
to the inheritance of sons, and have received the adoption of sons,
|
||
and the Spirit of adoption, which is the earnest of that
|
||
inheritance and so are enrolled among his family; now this is
|
||
matter of joy, greater joy than casting out devils. Note, Power to
|
||
become the children of God is to be valued more than a power to
|
||
work miracles; for we read of those who did <i>in Christ's name
|
||
cast out devils,</i> as Judas did, and yet will be disowned by
|
||
Christ in the great day. But they whose <i>names are written in
|
||
heaven</i> shall never perish; they are <i>Christ's sheep,</i> to
|
||
whom he will <i>give eternal life.</i> Saving graces are more to be
|
||
rejoiced in than spiritual gifts; holy love is <i>a more excellent
|
||
way</i> than speaking with tongues.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p27">4. He offered up a solemn thanksgiving to
|
||
his Father, for employing such mean people as his disciples were in
|
||
such high and honourable service, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.21-Luke.10.22" parsed="|Luke|10|21|10|22" passage="Lu 10:21,22"><i>v.</i> 21, 22</scripRef>. This we had before
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11.25-Matt.11.27" parsed="|Matt|11|25|11|27" passage="Mt 11:25-27">Matt. xi. 25-27</scripRef>), only
|
||
here it is prefixed that <i>in that hour Jesus rejoiced.</i> It was
|
||
fit that particular notice should be taken of <i>that</i> hour,
|
||
because there were so few such, for he was a <i>man of sorrows.</i>
|
||
In <i>that hour</i> in which he saw Satan fall, and heard of the
|
||
good success of his ministers, <i>in that hour he rejoiced.</i>
|
||
Note, Nothing rejoices the heart of the Lord Jesus so much as the
|
||
progress of the gospel, and its getting ground of Satan, by the
|
||
conversion of souls to Christ. Christ's joy was a solid substantial
|
||
joy, an inward joy: <i>he rejoiced in spirit;</i> but his joy, like
|
||
deep waters, made no noise; it was a joy that a stranger did not
|
||
intermeddle with. Before he applied himself to <i>thank his
|
||
Father,</i> he stirred up himself to <i>rejoice;</i> for, as
|
||
<i>thankful praise</i> is the genuine language of <i>holy joy,</i>
|
||
so <i>holy joy</i> is the root and spring of <i>thankful
|
||
praise.</i> Two things he gives thanks for:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p28">(1.) For what was <i>revealed</i> by the
|
||
<i>Father</i> through the <i>Son: I thank thee, O Father, Lord of
|
||
heaven and earth,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.21" parsed="|Luke|10|21|0|0" passage="Lu 10:21"><i>v.</i>
|
||
21</scripRef>. In all our adorations of God, we must have an eye to
|
||
him, both as the Maker of heaven and earth and as the Father of our
|
||
Lord Jesus Christ, and in him our Father. Now that which he gives
|
||
thanks for is, [1.] That the counsels of God concerning man's
|
||
reconciliation to himself were <i>revealed</i> to some of the
|
||
children of men, who might be fit also to <i>teach others,</i> and
|
||
it is God that <i>by his Son</i> has spoken these things <i>to
|
||
us</i> and by his Spirit has revealed them <i>in us; he</i> has
|
||
<i>revealed</i> that which had been <i>kept secret</i> from the
|
||
beginning of the world. [2.] That they were revealed to
|
||
<i>babes,</i> to those who were of mean parts and capacities, whose
|
||
extraction and education had nothing in them promising, who were
|
||
but <i>children in understanding,</i> till God by his Spirit
|
||
elevated their faculties, and furnished them with this knowledge,
|
||
and an ability to communicate it. We have reason to thank God, not
|
||
so much for the honour he has hereby put upon babes, as for the
|
||
honour he has hereby done himself in perfecting strength <i>out of
|
||
weakness.</i> [3.] That, at the same time when he revealed them
|
||
unto babes, he <i>hid them from the wise and prudent,</i> the
|
||
Gentile philosophers, the Jewish rabbin. He <i>did not reveal</i>
|
||
the things of the gospel to them, nor employ them in preaching up
|
||
his kingdom. Thanks be to God that the apostles were not fetched
|
||
from their schools; for, <i>First,</i> they would have been apt to
|
||
mingle their notions with the doctrine of Christ, which would have
|
||
corrupted it, as afterwards it proved. For Christianity was much
|
||
corrupted by the Platonic philosophy in the first ages of it, by
|
||
the Peripatetic in its latter ages, and by the Judaizing teachers
|
||
at the first planting of it. <i>Secondly,</i> If rabbin and
|
||
philosophers had been made apostles, the success of the gospel
|
||
would have been ascribed to their learning and wit and the force of
|
||
their reasonings and eloquence; and therefore they must not be
|
||
employed, lest they should have taken too much to themselves, and
|
||
others should have attributed too much to them. They were passed by
|
||
for the same reason that Gideon's army was reduced: <i>The people
|
||
are yet too many,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p28.2" osisRef="Bible:Judg.7.4" parsed="|Judg|7|4|0|0" passage="Jdg 7:4">Judges vii.
|
||
4</scripRef>. Paul indeed was bred a scholar among the wise and
|
||
prudent; but he became a <i>babe</i> when he became an apostle, and
|
||
laid aside the <i>enticing words of man's wisdom,</i> forgot them
|
||
all, and made neither show nor use of any other knowledge than that
|
||
of <i>Christ and him crucified,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p28.3" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.2.2 Bible:1Cor.2.4" parsed="|1Cor|2|2|0|0;|1Cor|2|4|0|0" passage="1Co 2:2,4">1
|
||
Cor. ii. 2, 4</scripRef>. [4.] That God herein acted by way of
|
||
sovereignty: <i>Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in thy
|
||
sight.</i> If God gives his grace and the knowledge of his son to
|
||
some that are less likely, and does not give it to others whom we
|
||
should think better able to deliver it with advantage, this must
|
||
satisfy: so it pleases God, whose thoughts are infinitely above
|
||
ours. He chooses to entrust the dispensing of his gospel in the
|
||
hands of those who with a <i>divine energy</i> will give it the
|
||
<i>setting on,</i> rather than in theirs who with <i>human art</i>
|
||
will give it the <i>setting off.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p29">(2.) For what was <i>secret</i> between the
|
||
<i>Father</i> and <i>the Son,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.22" parsed="|Luke|10|22|0|0" passage="Lu 10:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>. [1.] The vast <i>confidence</i>
|
||
that the Father <i>puts</i> in the Son: <i>All things are delivered
|
||
to me of my Father,</i> all wisdom and knowledge, all power and
|
||
authority, all the grace and comfort which are intended for the
|
||
chosen remnant; it is all delivered into the hands of the Lord
|
||
Jesus; in him all fulness must <i>dwell,</i> and from him it must
|
||
be <i>derived:</i> he is the great <i>trustee</i> that manages all
|
||
the concerns of God's kingdom. [2.] The good understanding that
|
||
there is between the Father and the Son, and their <i>mutual
|
||
consciousness,</i> such as no creature can be admitted to: <i>No
|
||
man knows who the Son is,</i> nor what his mind is, <i>but the
|
||
Father,</i> who <i>possessed him in the beginning of his ways,
|
||
before his works of old</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.8.22" parsed="|Prov|8|22|0|0" passage="Pr 8:22">Prov.
|
||
viii. 22</scripRef>), nor <i>who the Father is,</i> and what his
|
||
counsels are, <i>but the Son,</i> who lay in his bosom from
|
||
eternity, was <i>by him as one brought up with him, and was daily
|
||
his delight</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.8.30" parsed="|Prov|8|30|0|0" passage="Pr 8:30">Prov. viii.
|
||
30</scripRef>), <i>and he to whom the Son</i> by the Spirit <i>will
|
||
reveal him.</i> The gospel is the revelation of Jesus Christ, to
|
||
him we owe all the discoveries made to us of the will of God for
|
||
our salvation; and here he speaks of being entrusted with it as
|
||
that which was a great pleasure to himself and for which he was
|
||
very thankful to his Father.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p30">5. He told his disciples how well it was
|
||
for them that they had these things revealed to them, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.23-Luke.10.24" parsed="|Luke|10|23|10|24" passage="Lu 10:23,24"><i>v.</i> 23, 24</scripRef>. Having addressed
|
||
himself to his Father, he <i>turned to his disciples,</i> designing
|
||
to make them sensible how much it was for their happiness, as well
|
||
as for the glory and honour of God, that they knew the mysteries of
|
||
the kingdom and were employed to lead others into the knowledge of
|
||
them, considering, (1.) What a step it is <i>towards</i> something
|
||
better. Though the bare knowledge of these things is not saving,
|
||
yet it puts us in the way of salvation: <i>Blessed are the eyes
|
||
which see the things which we see.</i> God therein blesseth them,
|
||
and, if it be not their own fault it will be an eternal blessedness
|
||
to them. (2.) What a step it is <i>above</i> those that went before
|
||
them, even the greatest saints, and those that were most the
|
||
favourites of Heaven: "<i>Many prophets and righteous men</i>" (so
|
||
it is in <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p30.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.13.17" parsed="|Matt|13|17|0|0" passage="Mt 13:17">Matt. xiii. 17</scripRef>),
|
||
<i>many prophets and kings</i> (so it is here), "have
|
||
<i>desired</i> to see and hear those things which you are daily and
|
||
intimately conversant with, and <i>have not seen</i> and
|
||
<i>heard</i> them." The honour and happiness of the New-Testament
|
||
saints far exceed those even of the <i>prophets</i> and
|
||
<i>kings</i> of the Old Testament, though they also were <i>highly
|
||
favoured.</i> The general ideas which the Old-Testament saints had,
|
||
according to the intimations given them, of the graces and glories
|
||
of the Messiah's kingdom, made them wish a thousand times that
|
||
their lot had been reserved for those blessed days, and that they
|
||
might see the substance of those things of which they had faint
|
||
shadows. Note, The consideration of the great advantages which we
|
||
have in the New-Testament light, above what they had who lived in
|
||
Old-Testament times, should awaken our diligence in the improvement
|
||
of it; for, if it do not, it will aggravate our condemnation for
|
||
the non-improvement of it.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.xi-p30.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.25-Luke.10.37" parsed="|Luke|10|25|10|37" passage="Lu 10:25-37" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.10.25-Luke.10.37">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.xi-p30.4">Who Is Our Neighbour.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.xi-p31">25 And, behold, a certain lawyer stood up, and
|
||
tempted him, saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal
|
||
life? 26 He said unto him, What is written in the law? how
|
||
readest thou? 27 And he answering said, Thou shalt love the
|
||
Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
|
||
all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbour as
|
||
thyself. 28 And he said unto him, Thou hast answered right:
|
||
this do, and thou shalt live. 29 But he, willing to justify
|
||
himself, said unto Jesus, And who is my neighbour? 30 And
|
||
Jesus answering said, A certain <i>man</i> went down from Jerusalem
|
||
to Jericho, and fell among thieves, which stripped him of his
|
||
raiment, and wounded <i>him,</i> and departed, leaving <i>him</i>
|
||
half dead. 31 And by chance there came down a certain priest
|
||
that way: and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side.
|
||
32 And likewise a Levite, when he was at the place, came and
|
||
looked <i>on him,</i> and passed by on the other side. 33
|
||
But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was: and
|
||
when he saw him, he had compassion <i>on him,</i> 34 And
|
||
went to <i>him,</i> and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and
|
||
wine, and set him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn, and
|
||
took care of him. 35 And on the morrow when he departed, he
|
||
took out two pence, and gave <i>them</i> to the host, and said unto
|
||
him, Take care of him; and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I
|
||
come again, I will repay thee. 36 Which now of these three,
|
||
thinkest thou, was neighbour unto him that fell among the thieves?
|
||
37 And he said, He that showed mercy on him. Then said Jesus
|
||
unto him, Go, and do thou likewise.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p32">We have here Christ's discourse with a
|
||
lawyer about some points of conscience, which we are all concerned
|
||
to be rightly informed in and are so here from Christ though the
|
||
questions were proposed with no good intention.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p33">I. We are concerned to know what that good
|
||
is which we should do in <i>this</i> life, in order to our
|
||
attaining <i>eternal life.</i> A question to this purport was
|
||
proposed to our Saviour by a <i>certain lawyer,</i> or
|
||
<i>scribe,</i> only with a design to <i>try</i> him, not with a
|
||
desire to be instructed by him, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.25" parsed="|Luke|10|25|0|0" passage="Lu 10:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>. The lawyer <i>stood up,</i> and
|
||
<i>asked him, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?</i>
|
||
If Christ had any thing peculiar to prescribe, by this question he
|
||
would get it out of him, and perhaps expose him for it; if not, he
|
||
would expose his doctrine as needless, since it would give no other
|
||
direction for obtaining happiness than what they had already
|
||
received; or, perhaps, he had no malicious design against Christ,
|
||
as some of the scribes had, only he was willing to have a little
|
||
talk with him, just as people go to church to hear what the
|
||
minister will say. This was a good question: <i>What shall I do to
|
||
inherit eternal life?</i> But it lost all its goodness when it was
|
||
proposed with an ill design, or a very mean one. Note, It is not
|
||
enough to speak of the things of God, and to enquire about them,
|
||
but we must do it with a suitable concern. If we speak of
|
||
<i>eternal life,</i> and <i>the way</i> to it, in a careless
|
||
manner, merely as matter of discourse, especially as matter of
|
||
dispute, we do but take the name of God in vain, as the lawyer here
|
||
did. Now this question being started, observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p34">1. How Christ turned him over to the divine
|
||
law, and bade him follow the direction of that. Though he knew the
|
||
thoughts and intents of his heart, he did not answer him according
|
||
to the folly of that, but according to the wisdom and goodness of
|
||
the question he asked. He answered him with a question: <i>What is
|
||
written in the law? How readest thou?</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.26" parsed="|Luke|10|26|0|0" passage="Lu 10:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>. He came to catechize Christ,
|
||
and to know him; but Christ will catechize him, and make him know
|
||
himself. He talks to him as a lawyer, as one conversant in the law:
|
||
the studies of his profession would inform him; let him practise
|
||
according to his knowledge, and he should not come short of
|
||
<i>eternal life.</i> Note, It will be of great use to us, in our
|
||
way to heaven, to consider <i>what is written in the law,</i> and
|
||
<i>what we read</i> there. We must have recourse to our bibles, to
|
||
the law, as it is now in the hand of Christ and walk in the way
|
||
that is shown us there. It is a great mercy that we have the law
|
||
<i>written,</i> that we have it thereby reduced to certainty, and
|
||
that thereby it is capable of spreading the <i>further,</i> and
|
||
lasting the <i>longer.</i> Having it <i>written,</i> it is our duty
|
||
to read it, to read it with understanding, and to treasure up what
|
||
we read, so that when there is occasion, we may be able to tell
|
||
<i>what is written in the law,</i> and <i>how we read.</i> To this
|
||
we must appeal; by this we must try doctrines and end disputes;
|
||
this must be our oracle, our touchstone, our rule, our guide. What
|
||
is written in the law? How do we read? if there be light in us, it
|
||
will have regard to this light.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p35">2. What a good account he gave of the law,
|
||
of the principal commandments of the law, to the observance of
|
||
which we must bind ourselves if we would inherit eternal life. He
|
||
did not, like a Pharisee, refer himself to the tradition of the
|
||
elders, but, like a good textuary, fastened upon the two first and
|
||
great commandments of the law, as those which he thought must be
|
||
most strictly observed in order to the obtaining of <i>eternal
|
||
life,</i> and which included all the rest, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p35.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.27" parsed="|Luke|10|27|0|0" passage="Lu 10:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>. (1.) We must <i>love God with
|
||
all our hearts,</i> must look upon him as the best of beings, in
|
||
himself most amiable, and infinitely perfect and excellent; as one
|
||
whom we lie under the greatest obligations to, both in gratitude
|
||
and interest. We must prize him, and value ourselves by our elation
|
||
to him; must please ourselves in him, and devote ourselves entirely
|
||
to him. Our love to him must be sincere, hearty, and fervent; it
|
||
must be a superlative love, a love that is as strong as death, but
|
||
an intelligent love, and such as we can give a good account of the
|
||
grounds and reasons of. It must be an <i>entire</i> love; he must
|
||
have our <i>whole</i> souls, and must be served with <i>all that is
|
||
within us.</i> We must love nothing <i>besides him,</i> but what we
|
||
love <i>for him</i> and in subordination to him. (2.) We must love
|
||
our neighbours as <i>ourselves,</i> which we shall easily do, if
|
||
we, as we ought to do, love God <i>better than ourselves.</i> We
|
||
must wish well to all and ill to none; must do all the good we can
|
||
in the world and no hurt, and must fix it as a rule to ourselves to
|
||
do to others as we would they should do to us; and this is to love
|
||
our neighbour <i>as ourselves.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p36">3. Christ's approbation of what he said,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.28" parsed="|Luke|10|28|0|0" passage="Lu 10:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>. Though he
|
||
came to tempt him, yet what he said that was good Christ commended:
|
||
<i>Thou hast answered right.</i> Christ himself fastened upon these
|
||
as the two great commandments of the law (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p36.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.22.37" parsed="|Matt|22|37|0|0" passage="Mt 22:37">Matt. xxii. 37</scripRef>): both sides agreed in this.
|
||
Those who do well shall have praise of the same, and so should
|
||
those have that speak well. So far is right; but he hardest part of
|
||
this work yet remains: "<i>This do, and thou shalt live;</i> thou
|
||
shalt <i>inherit eternal life.</i>"</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p37">4. His care to avoid the conviction which
|
||
was now ready to fasten upon him. When Christ said, <i>This do, and
|
||
thou shalt live,</i> he began to be aware that Christ intended to
|
||
draw from him an acknowledgment that he <i>had not done this,</i>
|
||
and therefore an enquiry what he should do, which way he should
|
||
look, to get his sins pardoned; an acknowledgment also that he
|
||
<i>could not do this</i> perfectly for the future by any strength
|
||
of his own, and therefore an enquiry which way he might fetch in
|
||
strength to enable him to do it: but he was <i>willing to justify
|
||
himself,</i> and therefore cared not for carrying on that
|
||
discourse, but saith, in effect, as another did (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.19.20" parsed="|Matt|19|20|0|0" passage="Mt 19:20">Matt. xix. 20</scripRef>), <i>All these things have I
|
||
kept from my youth up.</i> Note, Many ask good questions with a
|
||
design rather to <i>justify themselves</i> than to <i>inform
|
||
themselves,</i> rather proudly to show what is good in them than
|
||
humbly to see what is bad in them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p38">II. We are concerned to know who is our
|
||
neighbour, whom by the second great commandment we are obliged to
|
||
love. This is another of this lawyer's queries, which he started
|
||
only that he might <i>drop</i> the former, lest Christ should have
|
||
forced him, in the prosecution of it, to <i>condemn himself,</i>
|
||
when he was resolved to <i>justify</i> himself. As to loving God,
|
||
he was willing to say no more of it; but, as to his
|
||
<i>neighbour,</i> he was sure that there he had come up to the
|
||
rule, for he had always been very kind and respectful to all about
|
||
him. Now observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p39">1. What was the corrupt notion of the
|
||
Jewish teachers in this matter. Dr. Lightfoot quotes their own
|
||
words to this purport: "Where he saith, <i>Thou shalt love thy
|
||
neighbour, he excepts all Gentiles,</i> for they are not <i>our
|
||
neighbours,</i> but those only that are of our own nation and
|
||
religion." They would not put an Israelite to death for killing a
|
||
Gentile, for he was not his <i>neighbour:</i> they indeed say that
|
||
they ought not to kill a Gentile whom they were not at war with;
|
||
but, if they saw a Gentile in <i>danger of death,</i> they thought
|
||
themselves under no obligation to help to <i>save his life.</i>
|
||
Such wicked inferences did they draw from that holy covenant of
|
||
peculiarity by which God had distinguished them, and by abusing it
|
||
thus they had forfeited it; God justly took the forfeiture, and
|
||
transferred covenant-favours to the Gentile world, to whom they
|
||
brutishly denied common favours.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p40">2. How Christ corrected this inhuman
|
||
notion, and showed, by a parable, that whomsoever we <i>have
|
||
need</i> to receive kindness <i>from,</i> and <i>find ready</i> to
|
||
show us the kindness <i>we need,</i> we cannot but look upon as
|
||
<i>our neighbour;</i> and therefore ought to look upon all those as
|
||
such who need our kindness, and to show them kindness accordingly,
|
||
though they be not of our own nation and religion. Now observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p41">(1.) The parable itself, which represents
|
||
to us a poor Jew in distressed circumstances, succoured and
|
||
relieved by a good Samaritan. Let us see here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p42">[1.] How he was <i>abused</i> by his
|
||
<i>enemies.</i> The honest man was traveling peaceably upon his
|
||
lawful business in the road, and it was a great road that led from
|
||
Jerusalem to Jericho, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.30" parsed="|Luke|10|30|0|0" passage="Lu 10:30"><i>v.</i>
|
||
30</scripRef>. The mentioning of those places intimates that it was
|
||
matter of fact, and not a parable; probably it happened lately,
|
||
just as it is here related. The occurrences of Providence would
|
||
yield us many good instructions, if we would carefully observe and
|
||
improve them, and would be equivalent to parables framed on purpose
|
||
for instruction, and be more <i>affecting.</i> This poor man
|
||
<i>fell among thieves.</i> Whether they were Arabians, plunderers,
|
||
that lived by spoil, or some profligate wretches of his own nation,
|
||
or some of the Roman soldiers, who, notwithstanding the strict
|
||
discipline of their army, did this villany, does not appear; but
|
||
they were very <i>barbarous;</i> they not only took his money, but
|
||
stripped him of his clothes, and, that he might not be able to
|
||
pursue them, or only to gratify a cruel disposition (for otherwise
|
||
<i>what profit was there in his blood?</i>) they <i>wounded
|
||
him,</i> and left him <i>half dead,</i> ready to die of his wounds.
|
||
We may here conceive a just indignation at <i>highwaymen,</i> that
|
||
have divested themselves of all humanity, and are as natural brute
|
||
beasts, beasts of prey, made to be <i>taken and destroyed;</i> and
|
||
at the same time we cannot but think with compassion on those that
|
||
fall into the hands of such wicked and unreasonable men, and be
|
||
ready, when it is in our power, to help them. What reason have we
|
||
to thank God for our preservation from perils by robbers!</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p43">[2.] How he was <i>slighted</i> by those
|
||
who should have been his friends, who were not only men of his own
|
||
nation and religion, but one a priest and the other a Levite, men
|
||
of a public character and station; nay, they were men of professed
|
||
sanctity, whose offices obliged them to tenderness and compassion
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p43.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.5.2" parsed="|Heb|5|2|0|0" passage="Heb 5:2">Heb. v. 2</scripRef>), who ought to
|
||
have taught others their duty in such a case as this, which was to
|
||
<i>deliver them that were drawn unto death;</i> yet they would not
|
||
themselves do it. Dr. Lightfoot tells us that many of the courses
|
||
of the priests had their residence in Jericho, and thence came up
|
||
to Jerusalem, when it was their turn to officiate there, and so
|
||
back again, which occasioned abundance of <i>passing</i> and
|
||
<i>repassing</i> of priests that way, and Levites their attendants.
|
||
They came <i>this way,</i> and saw the poor wounded man. It is
|
||
probable that they heard his groans, and could not but perceive
|
||
that if he were not helped he must quickly perish. The Levite not
|
||
only saw him, but <i>came and looked on him</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p43.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.32" parsed="|Luke|10|32|0|0" passage="Lu 10:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>. But they <i>passed by on the
|
||
other side;</i> when they saw his case, they got as far off him as
|
||
ever they could, as if they would have had a pretence to say,
|
||
<i>Behold, we knew it not.</i> It is sad when those who should be
|
||
examples of charity are prodigies of cruelty, and when those who
|
||
should by displaying the mercies of God, open the bowels of
|
||
compassion in others, shut up their own.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p44">[3.] How he was <i>succoured</i> and
|
||
<i>relieved</i> by a <i>stranger,</i> a <i>certain Samaritan,</i>
|
||
of that nation which of all others the Jews most despised and
|
||
detested and would have no dealings with. This man had some
|
||
humanity in him, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.33" parsed="|Luke|10|33|0|0" passage="Lu 10:33"><i>v.</i>
|
||
33</scripRef>. The priest had his heart hardened against one of
|
||
<i>his own people,</i> but the Samaritan had his opened towards one
|
||
of <i>another</i> people. <i>When he saw him he had compassion on
|
||
him,</i> and never took into consideration what country he was of.
|
||
Though he was a Jew, he was a man, and a man in <i>misery,</i> and
|
||
the Samaritan has learned to honour all men; he knows not how soon
|
||
this poor man's case may be his own, and therefore pities him, as
|
||
he himself would desire and expect to be pitied in the like case.
|
||
That such great love should be found in a Samaritan was perhaps
|
||
thought as wonderful as that great faith which Christ admired in a
|
||
Roman, and in a woman of Canaan; but really it was not so, for pity
|
||
is the work of a man, but faith is the work of divine <i>grace.</i>
|
||
The <i>compassion</i> of this Samaritan was not an idle compassion;
|
||
he did not think it enough to say, "Be healed, be helped"
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p44.2" osisRef="Bible:Jas.2.16" parsed="|Jas|2|16|0|0" passage="Jam 2:16">Jam. ii. 16</scripRef>); but, when he
|
||
<i>drew out his soul,</i> he <i>reached forth his hand</i> also to
|
||
this poor <i>needy</i> creature, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p44.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.58.7 Bible:Prov.31.20" parsed="|Isa|58|7|0|0;|Prov|31|20|0|0" passage="Isa 58:7,Pr 31:20">Isa. lviii. 7, 10; Prov. xxxi. 20</scripRef>.
|
||
See how friendly this good Samaritan was. <i>First,</i> He <i>went
|
||
to</i> the poor man, whom the priest and Levite kept at a distance
|
||
from; he enquired, no doubt, how he came into this deplorable
|
||
condition, and condoled with him. <i>Secondly,</i> He did the
|
||
surgeon's part, for want of a better. He <i>bound up his
|
||
wounds,</i> making use of his own linen, it is likely, for that
|
||
purpose; and poured <i>in oil and wine,</i> which perhaps he had
|
||
with him; wine to wash the wound, and oil to mollify it, and close
|
||
it up. He did all he could to ease the pain, and prevent the peril,
|
||
of his wounds, as one whose heart bled with him. <i>Thirdly,</i> He
|
||
<i>set him on his own beast,</i> and went on foot himself, and
|
||
<i>brought him to an inn.</i> A great mercy it is to have inns upon
|
||
the road, where we may be furnished for our money with all the
|
||
conveniences for food and rest. Perhaps the Samaritan, if he had
|
||
not met with this hindrance, would have got that night to his
|
||
journey's end; but, in compassion to that poor man, he takes up
|
||
short at an inn. Some think that the priest and Levite pretended
|
||
they could not stay to help the poor man, because they were in
|
||
haste to go and attend the temple-service at Jerusalem. We suppose
|
||
the Samaritan went upon business; but he understood that both his
|
||
own business and God's sacrifice too must give place to such an act
|
||
of mercy as this. <i>Fourthly,</i> He <i>took care of him</i> in
|
||
the inn, got him to bed, had food for him that was proper, and due
|
||
attendance, and, it may be, prayed with him. Nay, <i>Fifthly,</i>
|
||
As if he had been his own child, or one he was obliged to look
|
||
after, when he left him next morning, he left money with the
|
||
landlord, to be laid out for his use, and passed his word for what
|
||
he should spend more. <i>Twopence</i> of their money was about
|
||
fifteen pence of ours, which, according to the rate of things then,
|
||
would go a great way; however, here it was an earnest of
|
||
satisfaction to the full of all demands. All this was kind and
|
||
generous, and as much as one could have expected from a friend or a
|
||
brother; and yet here it is done by a stranger and foreigner.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p45">Now this parable is applicable to another
|
||
purpose than that for which it was intended; and does excellently
|
||
set forth the kindness and love of God our Saviour towards sinful
|
||
miserable man. We were like this poor distressed traveller. Satan,
|
||
our enemy, had <i>robbed</i> us, <i>stripped</i> us, <i>wounded</i>
|
||
us; such is the mischief that sin had done us. We were by nature
|
||
more than <i>half dead,</i> twice dead, in trespasses and sins;
|
||
utterly unable to help ourselves, for we were without strength. The
|
||
law of Moses, like the priest and Levite, the ministers of the law,
|
||
<i>looks upon us,</i> but has no compassion on us, gives us no
|
||
relief, <i>passes by on the other side,</i> as having neither pity
|
||
nor power to help us; but then comes the blessed Jesus, that good
|
||
Samaritan (and they said of him, by way of reproach, <i>he is a
|
||
Samaritan</i>), he has compassion on us, he binds up our bleeding
|
||
wounds (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p45.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.147.3 Bible:Isa.61.1" parsed="|Ps|147|3|0|0;|Isa|61|1|0|0" passage="Ps 147:3,Isa 61:1">Ps. cxlvii. 3; Isa.
|
||
lxi. 1</scripRef>), pours in, not <i>oil and wine,</i> but that
|
||
which is infinitely more precious, <i>his own blood.</i> He takes
|
||
care of us, and bids us put all the expenses of our cure upon his
|
||
account; and all this though he was none of us, till he was pleased
|
||
by his voluntary condescension to make himself so, but infinitely
|
||
above us. This magnifies the riches of his love, and obliges us all
|
||
to say, "How much are we indebted, and what shall we render?"</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p46">(2.) The application of the parable. [1.]
|
||
The truth contained in it is extorted from the lawyer's own mouth.
|
||
"Now tell me," saith Christ, "<i>which of these three was neighbour
|
||
to him that fell among thieves</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.36" parsed="|Luke|10|36|0|0" passage="Lu 10:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>), the priest, the Levite, or the
|
||
Samaritan? Which of these did the neighbour's part?" To this the
|
||
lawyer would not answer, as he ought to have done, "Doubtless, the
|
||
Samaritan was;" but, "<i>He that showed mercy on him;</i>
|
||
doubtless, he was a good neighbour to him, and very neighbourly,
|
||
and I cannot but say that it was a good work thus to save an honest
|
||
Jew from perishing." [2.] The duty inferred from it is pressed home
|
||
upon the lawyer's own conscience: <i>Go, and do thou likewise.</i>
|
||
The duty of relations is mutual and reciprocal; the titles of
|
||
friends, brethren, neighbours, are, as Grotius here speaks
|
||
<b><i>ton pros ti</i></b>—<i>equally binding on both sides:</i> if
|
||
one side be bound, the other cannot be loose, as is agreed in all
|
||
contracts. If a Samaritan does well that helps a distressed Jew,
|
||
certainly a Jew does not well if he refuses in like manner to help
|
||
a distressed Samaritan. <i>Petimusque damusque vicissim—These kind
|
||
offices are to be reciprocated.</i> "And therefore <i>go thou</i>
|
||
and do as the Samaritan did, whenever occasion offers: show mercy
|
||
to those that need thy help, and do it freely, and with concern and
|
||
compassion, though they be not of thy own nation and thy own
|
||
profession, or of thy own opinion and communion in religion. Let
|
||
thy charity be thus extensive, before thou boastest of having
|
||
conformed thyself to that great commandment of <i>loving thy
|
||
neighbour.</i>" This lawyer valued himself much upon his learning
|
||
and his knowledge of the laws, and in that he thought to have
|
||
puzzled Christ himself; but Christ sends him to school to a
|
||
Samaritan, to learn his duty: "Go, and do like him." Note, It is
|
||
the duty of every one of us, in our places, and according to our
|
||
ability, to succour, help, and relieve all that are in distress and
|
||
necessity, and of lawyers particularly; and herein we must study to
|
||
excel many that are proud of their being priests and Levites.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.xi-p46.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.38-Luke.10.42" parsed="|Luke|10|38|10|42" passage="Lu 10:38-42" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.10.38-Luke.10.42">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.xi-p46.3">Martha and Mary.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.xi-p47">38 Now it came to pass, as they went, that he
|
||
entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha
|
||
received him into her house. 39 And she had a sister called
|
||
Mary, which also sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word. 40
|
||
But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and
|
||
said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve
|
||
alone? bid her therefore that she help me. 41 And Jesus
|
||
answered and said unto her, Martha, Martha, thou art careful and
|
||
troubled about many things: 42 But one thing is needful: and
|
||
Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from
|
||
her.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p48">We may observe in this story,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p49">I. The entertainment which Martha gave to
|
||
Christ and his disciples at her house, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p49.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.38" parsed="|Luke|10|38|0|0" passage="Lu 10:38"><i>v.</i> 38</scripRef>. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p50">1. Christ's coming to the village where
|
||
Martha lived: <i>As they went</i> (Christ and his disciples
|
||
together), he and they with him <i>entered into a certain
|
||
village.</i> This village was <i>Bethany,</i> nigh to Jerusalem,
|
||
whither Christ was now going up, and he took this in his way. Note
|
||
(1.) Our Lord Jesus went about doing good (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p50.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.10.38" parsed="|Acts|10|38|0|0" passage="Ac 10:38">Acts x. 38</scripRef>), scattering his benign beams and
|
||
influences as the true light of the world. (2.) Wherever Christ
|
||
went his disciples went along with him. (3.) Christ honoured the
|
||
country-villages with his presence and favour, and not the great
|
||
and populous cities only; for, as he <i>chose privacy,</i> so he
|
||
<i>countenanced poverty.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p51">2. His reception at Martha's house: <i>A
|
||
certain woman, named Martha, received him into her house,</i> and
|
||
made him welcome, for she was the housekeeper. Note, (1.) Our Lord
|
||
Jesus, when he was here upon earth, was so poor that he was
|
||
necessitated to be beholden to his friends for a subsistence.
|
||
Though he was Zion's King, he had no house of his own either in
|
||
Jerusalem or near it. (2.) There were some who were Christ's
|
||
particular friends, whom he loved more than his other friends, and
|
||
them he visited most frequently. He <i>loved</i> this family
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p51.1" osisRef="Bible:John.11.5" parsed="|John|11|5|0|0" passage="Joh 11:5">John xi. 5</scripRef>), and often
|
||
invited himself to them. Christ's visits are the tokens of his
|
||
love, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p51.2" osisRef="Bible:John.14.23" parsed="|John|14|23|0|0" passage="Joh 14:23">John xiv. 23</scripRef>. (3.)
|
||
There were those who kindly received Christ into their houses when
|
||
he was here upon earth. It is called Martha's house, for, probably,
|
||
she was a widow, and was the housekeeper. Though it was expensive
|
||
to entertain Christ for he did not come alone, but brought his
|
||
disciples with him, yet she would not regard the cost of it. (How
|
||
can we spend what we have better than in Christ's service!) Nay,
|
||
though at this time it was grown dangerous to entertain him
|
||
especially so near Jerusalem, yet she cared not what hazard she ran
|
||
for his name's sake. Though there were many that rejected him, and
|
||
would not entertain him, yet there was one that would bid him
|
||
welcome. Though Christ is every where spoken against, yet there is
|
||
a remnant to whom he is dear, and who are dear to him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p52">II. The attendance which Mary, the sister
|
||
of Martha, gave upon the word of Christ, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p52.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.20" parsed="|Luke|10|20|0|0" passage="Lu 10:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. 1. She <i>heard his word.</i>
|
||
It seems, our Lord Jesus, as soon as he came into Martha's house,
|
||
even before entertainment was made for him, addressed himself to
|
||
his great work of preaching the gospel. He presently took the chair
|
||
with solemnity; for Mary sat to hear him, which intimates that it
|
||
was a continued discourse. Note, A good sermon is never the worse
|
||
for being preached in a house; and the visits of our friends should
|
||
be so managed as to make them turn to a spiritual advantage. Mary,
|
||
having this price put into her hands, sat herself to improve it,
|
||
not knowing when she should have such another. Since Christ is
|
||
forward to speak, we should be <i>swift to hear.</i> 2. She
|
||
<i>sat</i> to hear, which denotes a close attention. Her mind was
|
||
composed, and she resolved to abide by it: not to catch a word now
|
||
and then, but to receive all that Christ delivered. She <i>sat at
|
||
his feet,</i> as scholars at the feet of their tutors when they
|
||
read their lectures; hence Paul is said to be <i>brought up at the
|
||
feet of Gamaliel.</i> Our sitting at Christ's feet, when we hear
|
||
his word, signifies a readiness to receive it, and a submission and
|
||
entire resignation of ourselves to the guidance of it. We must
|
||
either sit at Christ's feet or be made his footstool; but, if we
|
||
sit with him at his feet now, we shall sit with him on his throne
|
||
shortly.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p53">III. The care of Martha about her domestic
|
||
affairs: But Martha <i>was cumbered about much serving</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.40" parsed="|Luke|10|40|0|0" passage="Lu 10:40"><i>v.</i> 40</scripRef>), and that
|
||
was the reason why she was not where Mary was—sitting at Christ's
|
||
feet, to hear his word. She was providing for the entertainment of
|
||
Christ and those that came with him. Perhaps she had no notice
|
||
before of his coming, and she was unprovided, but was in care to
|
||
have every thing handsome upon this occasion; she had not such
|
||
guests every day. Housekeepers know what care and bustle there must
|
||
be when a great entertainment is to be made. Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p54">1. Something <i>commendable,</i> which must
|
||
not be overlooked. (1.) Here was a commendable <i>respect to our
|
||
Lord Jesus;</i> for we have reason to think it was not for
|
||
ostentation, but purely to testify her good-will to him, that she
|
||
made this entertainment. Note, Those who truly love Christ will
|
||
think that well bestowed that is laid out for his honour. (2.) Here
|
||
was a commendable <i>care of her household affairs.</i> It appears,
|
||
from the respect shown to this family among the Jews (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:John.11.19" parsed="|John|11|19|0|0" passage="Joh 11:19">John xi. 19</scripRef>), that they were persons
|
||
of some quality and distinction; and yet Martha herself did not
|
||
think it a disparagement to her to lay her hand even to the
|
||
<i>service</i> of the family, when there was occasion for it. Note,
|
||
It is the duty of those who have the charge of families to <i>look
|
||
well to the ways of their household.</i> The affectation of state
|
||
and the love of ease make many families neglected.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p55">2. Here was something <i>culpable,</i>
|
||
which we must take notice of too. (1.) She was for <i>much
|
||
serving.</i> Her heart was upon it, to have a very sumptuous and
|
||
splendid entertainment; great plenty, great variety, and great
|
||
exactness, according to the fashion of the place. She was in care,
|
||
<b><i>peri pollen diakonian</i></b>—<i>concerning much
|
||
attendance.</i> Note, It does not become the disciples of Christ to
|
||
affect <i>much serving,</i> to affect varieties, dainties, and
|
||
superfluities in eating and drinking; what need is there of <i>much
|
||
serving,</i> when much less will serve? (2.) She was
|
||
<i>cumbered</i> about it; <b><i>periespato</i></b>—she was just
|
||
<i>distracted</i> with it. Note, Whatever cares the providence of
|
||
God casts upon us we must not be <i>cumbered</i> with them, nor be
|
||
disquieted and perplexed by them. <i>Care</i> is good and duty; but
|
||
<i>cumber</i> is sin and folly. (2.) She was <i>then cumbered about
|
||
much serving</i> when she should have been with her sister, sitting
|
||
at Christ's feet to hear his word. Note, Worldly business is
|
||
<i>then</i> a snare to us when it hinders us from serving God and
|
||
getting good to our souls.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p56">IV. The <i>complaint</i> which Martha made
|
||
to Christ against her sister Mary, for not <i>assisting</i> her,
|
||
upon this occasion, in the <i>business of the house</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.40" parsed="|Luke|10|40|0|0" passage="Lu 10:40"><i>v.</i> 40</scripRef>): "<i>Lord, dost thou
|
||
not care that my sister,</i> who is concerned as well as I in
|
||
having things done well, <i>has left me to serve alone?</i>
|
||
Therefore dismiss her from attending thee, and bid her come and
|
||
help me." Now,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p57">1. This complaint of Martha's may be
|
||
considered as a <i>discovery</i> of her <i>worldliness:</i> it was
|
||
the language of her inordinate care and cumber. She speaks as one
|
||
in a mighty passion with her sister, else she would not have
|
||
troubled Christ with the matter. Note, The inordinacy of worldly
|
||
cares and pursuits is often the occasion of disturbance in families
|
||
and of strife and contention among relations. Moreover, those that
|
||
are eager upon the world themselves are apt to blame and censure
|
||
those that are not so too; and while they justify themselves in
|
||
their worldliness, and judge of others by their serviceableness to
|
||
them in their worldly pursuits, they are ready to condemn those
|
||
that addict themselves to the exercises of religion, as if they
|
||
neglected the <i>main chance,</i> as they call it. Martha, being
|
||
angry at her sister, appealed to Christ, and would have him say
|
||
that she <i>did well to be angry. Lord, doest not thou care that my
|
||
sister has let me to serve alone?</i> It should seem as if Christ
|
||
had sometimes expressed himself tenderly concerned for her, and her
|
||
ease and comfort, and would not have her go through so much toil
|
||
and trouble, and she expected that he should now bid her sister
|
||
take her share in it. When Martha was caring, she must have Mary,
|
||
and Christ and all, to <i>care</i> too, or else she is not pleased.
|
||
Note, Those are not always in the right that are most forward to
|
||
appeal to God; we must therefore take heed, lest at any time we
|
||
expect that Christ should espouse our unjust and groundless
|
||
quarrels. The cares which he cast upon us we may cheerfully cast
|
||
upon him, but not those which we foolishly draw upon ourselves. He
|
||
will be the patron of the poor and injured, but not of the
|
||
turbulent and injurious.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p58">2. It may be considered as a discouragement
|
||
of Mary's piety and devotion. Her sister should have
|
||
<i>commended</i> her for it, should have told her that she was in
|
||
the right; but, instead of this, she <i>condemns</i> her as wanting
|
||
in her duty. Note, It is no strange thing for those that are
|
||
zealous in religion to meet with hindrances and discouragements
|
||
from those that are about them; not only with opposition from
|
||
enemies, but with blame and censure from their friends. David's
|
||
<i>fasting,</i> and his dancing <i>before the ark,</i> were turned
|
||
<i>to his reproach.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p59">V. The reproof which Christ gave to Martha
|
||
for her inordinate care, <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p59.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.41" parsed="|Luke|10|41|0|0" passage="Lu 10:41"><i>v.</i>
|
||
41</scripRef>. She appealed to him, and he gives judgment against
|
||
her: <i>Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many
|
||
things,</i> whereas but <i>one thing is needful.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p60">1. He reproved her, though he was at this
|
||
time her guest. Her fault was her over-solicitude to entertain him,
|
||
and she expected he should justify her in it, yet he publicly
|
||
checked her for it. Note, <i>As many as Christ loves he rebukes and
|
||
chastens.</i> Even those that are dear to Christ, if any thing be
|
||
amiss in them, shall be sure to hear of it. <i>Nevertheless I have
|
||
something against thee.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p61">2. When he reproved her, he called her by
|
||
her name, <i>Martha;</i> for reproofs are <i>then</i> most likely
|
||
to do good when they are <i>particular,</i> applied to particular
|
||
persons and cases, as Nathan's to David, <i>Thou art the man.</i>
|
||
He repeated her name, <i>Martha, Martha;</i> he speaks as one in
|
||
earnest, and deeply concerned for her welfare. Those that are
|
||
<i>entangled</i> in the cares of this life are not easily
|
||
<i>disentangled.</i> To them we must call again and again, <i>O
|
||
earth, earth, earth, hear the word of the Lord.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p62">3. That which he reproved her for was her
|
||
being <i>careful and troubled about many things.</i> He was not
|
||
<i>pleased</i> that she should think to <i>please him</i> with a
|
||
rich and splendid entertainment, and with perplexing herself to
|
||
prepare it for him; whereas he would teach us, as not to be
|
||
<i>sensual</i> in using such things, so not to be <i>selfish</i> in
|
||
being willing that others should be <i>troubled,</i> no matter who
|
||
or how many, so we may be gratified. Christ reproves her, both for
|
||
the <i>intenseness</i> of her care ("Thou art <i>careful and
|
||
troubled, divided</i> and <i>disturbed</i> by thy care"), and for
|
||
the <i>extensiveness of it,</i> "about <i>many things;</i> thou
|
||
dost <i>grasp</i> at many <i>enjoyments,</i> and so art troubled at
|
||
many <i>disappointments.</i> Poor Martha, thou hast many things to
|
||
fret at, and this puts thee out of humour, whereas less ado would
|
||
serve." Note, Inordinate care or trouble about many things in this
|
||
world is a common fault among Christ's disciples; it is very
|
||
displeasing to Christ, and that for which they often come under the
|
||
rebukes of Providence. If they fret for no just cause, it is just
|
||
with him to order them something to fret at.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p63">4. That which aggravated the sin and folly
|
||
of her care was that <i>but one thing is needful.</i> It is a
|
||
<i>low</i> construction which some put upon this, that, whereas
|
||
Martha was in care to provide <i>many</i> dishes of meat, there was
|
||
occasion but for one, one would be enough. <i>There is need but of
|
||
one thing</i>—<b><i>henos de esti chreia</i></b>. If we take it
|
||
so, it furnishes us with a rule of <i>temperance,</i> not to affect
|
||
varieties and dainties, but to be content to sit down to <i>one</i>
|
||
dish of meat, to <i>half on one,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p63.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.23.1-Prov.23.3" parsed="|Prov|23|1|23|3" passage="Pr 23:1-3">Prov. xxiii. 1-3</scripRef>. It is a <i>forced</i>
|
||
construction which some of the ancients put upon it: <i>But oneness
|
||
is needful,</i> in opposition to distractions. There is need of
|
||
<i>one heart</i> to attend upon the word, not divided and hurried
|
||
to and fro, as Martha's was at this time. <i>The one thing
|
||
needful</i> is certainly meant of that which Mary made her
|
||
choice—<i>sitting at</i> Christ's feet, to hear his word. She was
|
||
troubled about <i>many things,</i> when she should have applied
|
||
herself to one; godliness <i>unites</i> the heart, which the world
|
||
had <i>divided.</i> The <i>many things</i> she was troubled about
|
||
were <i>needless,</i> while the <i>one thing</i> she neglected was
|
||
<i>needful.</i> Martha's care and work were good in their proper
|
||
season and place; but now she had something else to do, which was
|
||
unspeakably more needful, and therefore should be done first, and
|
||
most minded. She expected Christ to have blamed Mary for not doing
|
||
as she did, but he blamed her for not doing as Mary did; and we are
|
||
sure the <i>judgment of Christ</i> is <i>according to truth.</i>
|
||
The day will come when Martha will wish she had set where Mary
|
||
did.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p64">VI. Christ's approbation and commendation
|
||
of Mary for her serious piety: <i>Mary hath chosen the good
|
||
part.</i> Mary said nothing in her own defence; but, since Martha
|
||
has appealed to the Master, to him she is willing to refer it, and
|
||
will abide by his award; and here we have it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p65">1. She had justly given the preference to
|
||
that which best deserved it; for <i>one thing is needful,</i> this
|
||
one thing that she has done, to give up herself to the guidance of
|
||
Christ, and <i>receive the law</i> from his mouth. Note, Serious
|
||
godliness is a <i>needful</i> thing, it is the <i>one thing
|
||
needful;</i> for nothing without this will do us any real good in
|
||
this world, and nothing but this will go with us into another
|
||
world.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.xi-p66">2. She had herein wisely done well for
|
||
herself. Christ <i>justified Mary</i> against her sister's
|
||
clamours. However we may be censured and condemned by men for our
|
||
piety and zeal, our Lord Jesus will take our part: <i>But thou
|
||
shalt answer, Lord, for me.</i> Let us not then condemn the pious
|
||
zeal of any, lest we set Christ <i>against us;</i> and let us never
|
||
be discouraged if we be censured for our pious zeal, for we have
|
||
Christ for us. Note, Sooner or later, Mary's choice will be
|
||
justified, and all those who make that choice, and abide by it. But
|
||
this was not all; he <i>applauded</i> her for her wisdom: <i>She
|
||
hath chosen the good part;</i> for she chose to be with Christ, to
|
||
take her part with him; she chose the better business, and the
|
||
better happiness, and took a better way of <i>honouring</i> Christ
|
||
and of <i>pleasing</i> him, by receiving his word into her heart,
|
||
than Martha did by providing for his entertainment in her house.
|
||
Note, (1.) A <i>part with Christ</i> is a <i>good part;</i> it is a
|
||
part for the soul and eternity, the part Christ gives to his
|
||
favourites (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p66.1" osisRef="Bible:John.13.38" parsed="|John|13|38|0|0" passage="Joh 13:38">John xiii. 8</scripRef>),
|
||
who are partakers <i>of Christ</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.xi-p66.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.3.14" parsed="|Heb|3|14|0|0" passage="Heb 3:14">Heb. iii. 14</scripRef>), and partakers <i>with
|
||
Christ,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.xi-p66.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.17" parsed="|Rom|8|17|0|0" passage="Ro 8:17">Rom. viii. 17</scripRef>.
|
||
(2.) It is a part that shall <i>never be taken away from those that
|
||
have it.</i> A portion in this life will certainly be <i>taken
|
||
away</i> from us, at the furthest, when we shall be taken away from
|
||
it; but <i>nothing shall separate us from the love of Christ,</i>
|
||
and our part in that love. Men and devils <i>cannot</i> take it
|
||
away from us, and God and Christ <i>will not.</i> (3.) It is the
|
||
wisdom and duty of every one of us to choose this <i>good part,</i>
|
||
to choose the service of God for our business, and the favour of
|
||
God for our happiness, and an interest in Christ, in order to both.
|
||
In particular cases we must choose that which has a tendency to
|
||
religion, and reckon that best for us that is best for our souls.
|
||
Mary was at her choice whether she would partake with Martha in her
|
||
care, and get the reputation of a fine <i>housekeeper,</i> or sit
|
||
at the feet of Christ and approve herself a <i>zealous
|
||
disciple;</i> and, by her choice in this particular, Christ judges
|
||
of her general choice. (4.) Those who <i>choose this good part</i>
|
||
shall not only have what they choose, but shall have their choice
|
||
commended in the great day.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |