1093 lines
76 KiB
XML
1093 lines
76 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Luke.v" n="v" next="Luke.vi" prev="Luke.iv" progress="50.14%" title="Chapter IV">
|
||
<h2 id="Luke.v-p0.1">L U K E.</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="Luke.v-p0.2">CHAP. IV.</h3>
|
||
<p class="intro" id="Luke.v-p1">We left Christ newly baptized, and owned by a
|
||
voice from heaven and the descent of the Holy Ghost upon him. Now,
|
||
in this chapter, we have, I. A further preparation of him for his
|
||
public ministry by his being tempted in the wilderness, of which we
|
||
had the same account before in Matthew as we have here, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.1-Luke.4.13" parsed="|Luke|4|1|4|13" passage="Lu 4:1-13">ver. 1-13</scripRef>. II. His entrance upon his
|
||
public work in Galilee (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.14-Luke.4.15" parsed="|Luke|4|14|4|15" passage="Lu 4:14,15">ver. 14,
|
||
15</scripRef>), particularly, 1. At Nazareth, the city where he had
|
||
been bred up (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.16-Luke.4.30" parsed="|Luke|4|16|4|30" passage="Lu 4:16-30">ver.
|
||
16-30</scripRef>), which we had no account of before in <scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.2" parsed="|Matt|2|0|0|0" passage="Matthew. 2">Matthew. 2</scripRef>.
|
||
At Capernaum, where, having preached to admiration (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.31-Luke.4.32" parsed="|Luke|4|31|4|32" passage="Lu 4:31-32">ver. 31-32</scripRef>), he cast the devil out
|
||
of a man that was possessed (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.33-Luke.4.37" parsed="|Luke|4|33|4|37" passage="Lu 4:33-37">ver.
|
||
33-37</scripRef>), cured Peter's mother-in-law of a fever
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.38-Luke.4.39" parsed="|Luke|4|38|4|39" passage="Lu 4:38,39">ver. 38, 39</scripRef>), and many
|
||
others that were sick and possessed (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.40-Luke.4.41" parsed="|Luke|4|40|4|41" passage="Lu 4:40,41">ver. 40, 41</scripRef>), and then went and did the
|
||
same in other cities of Galilee, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.42-Luke.4.44" parsed="|Luke|4|42|4|44" passage="Lu 4:42-44">ver. 42-44</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<scripCom id="Luke.v-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4" parsed="|Luke|4|0|0|0" passage="Lu 4" type="Commentary"/>
|
||
<scripCom id="Luke.v-p1.11" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.1-Luke.4.13" parsed="|Luke|4|1|4|13" passage="Lu 4:1-13" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.4.1-Luke.4.13">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.v-p1.12">The Temptation in the
|
||
Wilderness.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.v-p2">1 And Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost
|
||
returned from Jordan, and was led by the Spirit into the
|
||
wilderness, 2 Being forty days tempted of the devil. And in
|
||
those days he did eat nothing: and when they were ended, he
|
||
afterward hungered. 3 And the devil said unto him, If thou
|
||
be the Son of God, command this stone that it be made bread.
|
||
4 And Jesus answered him, saying, It is written, That man shall not
|
||
live by bread alone, but by every word of God. 5 And the
|
||
devil, taking him up into a high mountain, showed unto him all the
|
||
kingdoms of the world in a moment of time. 6 And the devil
|
||
said unto him, All this power will I give thee, and the glory of
|
||
them: for that is delivered unto me; and to whomsoever I will I
|
||
give it. 7 If thou therefore wilt worship me, all shall be
|
||
thine. 8 And Jesus answered and said unto him, Get thee
|
||
behind me, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord
|
||
thy God, and him only shalt thou serve. 9 And he brought him
|
||
to Jerusalem, and set him on a pinnacle of the temple, and said
|
||
unto him, If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down from hence:
|
||
10 For it is written, He shall give his angels charge over
|
||
thee, to keep thee: 11 And in <i>their</i> hands they shall
|
||
bear thee up, lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone.
|
||
12 And Jesus answering said unto him, It is said, Thou shalt
|
||
not tempt the Lord thy God. 13 And when the devil had ended
|
||
all the temptation, he departed from him for a season.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p3">The last words of the foregoing chapter,
|
||
that Jesus was the <i>Son of Adam,</i> bespeak him to be the
|
||
<i>seed of the woman;</i> being so, we have here, according to the
|
||
promise, <i>breaking the serpent's head,</i> baffling and foiling
|
||
the devil in all his temptations, who by one temptation had baffled
|
||
and foiled our first parents. Thus, in the beginning of the war, he
|
||
made reprisals upon him, and conquered the conqueror.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p4">In this story of Christ's temptation,
|
||
observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p5">I. How he was <i>prepared</i> and
|
||
<i>fitted</i> for it. He that designed him the trial furnished him
|
||
accordingly; for though we know not what exercises may be before
|
||
us, nor what encounters we may be reserved for, Christ did, and was
|
||
provided accordingly; and God doth for us, and we hope will provide
|
||
accordingly.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p6">1. He was <i>full of the Holy Ghost,</i>
|
||
who had <i>descended on him like a dove.</i> He had now greater
|
||
measures of the gifts, graces, and comforts, of the Holy Ghost than
|
||
ever before. Note, Those are well armed against the strongest
|
||
temptations that are <i>full of the Holy Ghost.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p7">2. He was newly <i>returned from
|
||
Jordan,</i> where he was baptized, and owned by a voice from heaven
|
||
to be the beloved Son of God; and thus he was <i>prepared</i> for
|
||
this combat. Note, When we have had the most comfortable communion
|
||
with God, and the clearest discoveries of his favour to us, we may
|
||
expect that Satan will set upon us (the richest ship is the
|
||
pirate's prize), and that God will suffer him to do so, that the
|
||
power of his grace may be manifested and magnified.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p8">3. He was <i>led by the Spirit into the
|
||
wilderness,</i> by the good Spirit, who led him as a champion into
|
||
the field, to fight the enemy that he was sure to conquer. His
|
||
being <i>led into the wilderness,</i> (1.) <i>Gave</i> some
|
||
advantage to the tempter; for there he had him alone, no friend
|
||
with him, by whose prayers and advice he might be assisted in the
|
||
hour of temptation. <i>Woe to him that is alone! He might</i> give
|
||
Satan advantage, who knew his own strength; <i>we may not,</i> who
|
||
know our own weakness. (2.) He <i>gained</i> some advantage to
|
||
himself, during his forty days' fasting in the wilderness. We may
|
||
suppose that he was wholly taken up in proper meditation, and in
|
||
consideration of his own undertaking, and the work he had before
|
||
him; that he spent all his time in immediate, intimate, converse
|
||
with his Father, as Moses in the mount, without any diversion,
|
||
distraction, or interruption. Of all the days of Christ's life in
|
||
the flesh, these seem to come nearest to the angelic perfection and
|
||
the heavenly life, and this prepared him for Satan's assaults, and
|
||
hereby he was fortified against them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p9">4. He continued fasting (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.2" parsed="|Luke|4|2|0|0" passage="Lu 4:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>): <i>In those days he did eat
|
||
nothing.</i> This fast was altogether miraculous, like those of
|
||
Moses and Elijah, and shows him to be, like them, a prophet <i>sent
|
||
of God.</i> It is probable that it was in the wilderness of Horeb,
|
||
the same wilderness in which Moses and Elijah fasted. As by
|
||
retiring into the <i>wilderness</i> he showed himself perfectly
|
||
indifferent to the <i>world,</i> so by his <i>fasting</i> he showed
|
||
himself perfectly indifferent to the <i>body;</i> and Satan cannot
|
||
easily take hold of those who are thus loosened from, and dead to,
|
||
the <i>world</i> and the <i>flesh.</i> The more we <i>keep under
|
||
the body,</i> and bring it into subjection, the less advantage
|
||
Satan has against us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p10">II. How he was assaulted by one temptation
|
||
after another, and how he defeated the design of the tempter in
|
||
every assault, and became more than a conqueror. During the
|
||
<i>forty days,</i> he was <i>tempted of the devil</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.2" parsed="|Luke|4|2|0|0" passage="Lu 4:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>), not by an inward
|
||
suggestion, for the prince of this world had nothing in Christ by
|
||
which to inject any such, but by outward solicitations, perhaps in
|
||
the likeness of a serpent, as he tempted our first parents. But at
|
||
the end of the forty days he came nearer to him, and did as it were
|
||
close with him, when he perceived <i>that he was hungry,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.2" parsed="|Luke|4|2|0|0" passage="Lu 4:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>. Probably, our
|
||
Lord Jesus then began to look about among the trees, to see if he
|
||
could find any thing that was eatable, whence the devil took
|
||
occasion to make the following proposal to him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p11">1. He tempted him to <i>distrust his
|
||
Father's</i> care of him, and to <i>set up for himself,</i> and
|
||
shift for provision for himself in such a way as his Father had not
|
||
appointed for him (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.3" parsed="|Luke|4|3|0|0" passage="Lu 4:3"><i>v.</i>
|
||
3</scripRef>): <i>If thou be the Son of God,</i> as the voice from
|
||
heaven declared, <i>command this stone to be made bread.</i> (1.)
|
||
"I counsel thee to do it; for God, if he be thy Father, has
|
||
forgotten thee, and it will be long enough ere he sends either
|
||
ravens or angels to feed thee." If we begin to think of being our
|
||
own carvers, and of living by our own forecast, without depending
|
||
upon divine providence, of getting wealth <i>by our might and the
|
||
power of our hands,</i> we must look upon it as a temptation of
|
||
Satan's, and reject it accordingly; it is Satan's counsel to think
|
||
of an independence upon God. (2.) "I <i>challenge</i> thee to do
|
||
it, if thou canst; if thou dost not do it, I will say thou art
|
||
<i>not the Son of God;</i> for John Baptist said lately, <i>God is
|
||
able of stones to raise up children to Abraham,</i> which is the
|
||
greater; thou therefore hast not the power of the <i>Son of
|
||
God,</i> if thou dost not <i>of stones make bread</i> for thyself,
|
||
when thou needest it, which is the less." Thus was God himself
|
||
tempted in the wilderness: <i>Can he furnish a table? Can he give
|
||
bread?</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.78.19-Ps.78.20" parsed="|Ps|78|19|78|20" passage="Ps 78:19,20">Ps. lxxxviii. 19,
|
||
20</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p12">Now, [1.] Christ yielded not to the
|
||
temptation; he would not <i>turn</i> that <i>stone</i> into
|
||
<i>bread;</i> no, though he was hungry; <i>First,</i> Because he
|
||
would not do what Satan bade him do, for that would have looked as
|
||
if there had been indeed a compact between him and the prince of
|
||
the devils. Note, We must not do any thing that looks like
|
||
<i>giving place to the devil.</i> Miracles were wrought for the
|
||
confirming of faith, and the devil had no faith to be confirmed,
|
||
and therefore he would not do it <i>for him.</i> He did his signs
|
||
<i>in the presence of his disciples</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:John.20.30" parsed="|John|20|30|0|0" passage="Joh 20:30">John xx. 30</scripRef>), and particularly the
|
||
<i>beginning of his miracles,</i> turning water into wine, which he
|
||
did, that his disciples might believe on him (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:John.2.11" parsed="|John|2|11|0|0" passage="Joh 2:11">John ii. 11</scripRef>); but here in the wilderness he
|
||
had no disciples with him. <i>Secondly,</i> He wrought miracles for
|
||
the ratification of his doctrine, and therefore till he began to
|
||
<i>preach</i> he would not begin to work miracles. <i>Thirdly,</i>
|
||
He would not work miracles <i>for himself</i> and his own supply,
|
||
lest he should seem impatient of <i>hunger,</i> whereas he came not
|
||
to <i>please himself,</i> but to <i>suffer grief,</i> and that
|
||
grief among others; and because he would show that he <i>pleased
|
||
not himself,</i> he would rather turn <i>water into wine,</i> for
|
||
the credit and convenience of his friends, than <i>stones into
|
||
bread,</i> for his own <i>necessary supply. Fourthly,</i> He would
|
||
reserve the proof of his being the Son of God for hereafter, and
|
||
would rather be upbraided by Satan with being weak, and not able to
|
||
do it, than be persuaded by Satan to do that which it was fit for
|
||
him to do; thus he was upbraided by his enemies as if he could not
|
||
<i>save himself,</i> and <i>come down from the cross,</i> when he
|
||
could have come down, but would not, because it was not fit that he
|
||
should. <i>Fifthly,</i> He would not do any thing that looked like
|
||
distrust of his Father, or <i>acting separately</i> from him, or
|
||
any thing disagreeable to his present state. Being in all things
|
||
<i>made like unto his brethren,</i> he would, like the other
|
||
children of God, live in a dependence upon the divine Providence
|
||
and promise, and trust him either to send him a supply into the
|
||
wilderness or to <i>lead him to a city of habitation</i> where
|
||
there was a supply, as he used to do (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.107.5-Ps.107.7" parsed="|Ps|107|5|107|7" passage="Ps 107:5-7">Ps. cvii. 5-7</scripRef>), and in the mean time would
|
||
<i>support</i> him, though he was hungry, as he had done these
|
||
forty days past.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p13">[2.] He returned a scripture-answer to it
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.v-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.4" parsed="|Luke|4|4|0|0" passage="Lu 4:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>): <i>It is
|
||
written.</i> This is the first word recorded as spoken by Christ
|
||
after his instalment in his prophetical office; and it is a
|
||
quotation out of the Old Testament, to show that he came to assert
|
||
and maintain the authority of the scripture as uncontrollable, even
|
||
by Satan himself. And though he had the Spirit without measure, and
|
||
had a doctrine of his own to preach and a religion to found, yet it
|
||
agreed with Moses and the prophets, whose writings he therefore
|
||
lays down as a rule to himself, and recommends to us as a reply to
|
||
Satan and his temptations. The word of God is our <i>sword,</i> and
|
||
faith in that word is our <i>shield;</i> we should therefore be
|
||
<i>mighty in the scriptures,</i> and <i>go in that might,</i> go
|
||
forth, and go on, in our spiritual warfare, know <i>what is
|
||
written,</i> for it is <i>for our learning,</i> for <i>our use.</i>
|
||
The text of scripture he makes use of is quoted from <scripRef id="Luke.v-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.8.3" parsed="|Deut|8|3|0|0" passage="De 8:3">Deut. viii. 3</scripRef>: "<i>Man shall not live
|
||
by bread alone.</i> I need not turn the stone into bread, for God
|
||
can send <i>manna</i> for my nourishment, as he did for Israel; man
|
||
can live <i>by every word of God,</i> by whatever God will appoint
|
||
that he shall live by." How had Christ lived, lived comfortably,
|
||
these last forty days? Not <i>by bread,</i> but by the <i>word of
|
||
God,</i> by meditation upon that word, and communion with it, and
|
||
with God in and by it; and in like manner he could <i>live yet,</i>
|
||
though now he began to be <i>hungry.</i> God has many ways of
|
||
providing for his people, without the ordinary means of
|
||
subsistence; and therefore he is not at any time to be distrusted,
|
||
but at all times to be depended upon, in the way of duty. If meat
|
||
be wanting, God can take away the appetite, or give such degrees of
|
||
patience as will enable a man even to <i>laugh at destruction and
|
||
famine</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p13.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.5.22" parsed="|Job|5|22|0|0" passage="Job 5:22">Job v. 22</scripRef>), or
|
||
make <i>pulse and water</i> more nourishing than <i>all the portion
|
||
of the king's meat</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p13.4" osisRef="Bible:Dan.1.12-Dan.1.13" parsed="|Dan|1|12|1|13" passage="Da 1:12,13">Dan. i. 12,
|
||
13</scripRef>), and enable his people to <i>rejoice in the
|
||
Lord,</i> when the <i>fig-tree doth not blossom,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p13.5" osisRef="Bible:Hab.3.17" parsed="|Hab|3|17|0|0" passage="Hab 3:17">Hab. iii. 17</scripRef>. She was an active
|
||
believer who said that she had made many a meal's meat of the
|
||
promises when she wanted bread.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p14">2. He tempted him to <i>accept from him</i>
|
||
the kingdom, which, as the <i>Son of God,</i> he expected to
|
||
receive from <i>his Father,</i> and to <i>do him homage</i> for,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.5-Luke.4.7" parsed="|Luke|4|5|4|7" passage="Lu 4:5-7"><i>v.</i> 5-7</scripRef>. This
|
||
evangelist puts this temptation second, which Matthew had put last,
|
||
and which, it should seem, was really the last; but Luke was full
|
||
of it, as the blackest and most violent, and therefore hastened to
|
||
it. In the devil's tempting of our first parents, he presented to
|
||
them the forbidden fruit, first as <i>good for food,</i> and then
|
||
as <i>pleasant to the eyes;</i> and they were overpowered by both
|
||
these charms. Satan here first tempted Christ to turn the stones
|
||
into bread, which would be good for food, and then showed him the
|
||
kingdoms of the world and the glory of them, which were <i>pleasant
|
||
to the eyes;</i> but in both these he overpowered Satan, and
|
||
perhaps with an eye to that, Luke changes the order. Now
|
||
observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p15">(1.) How Satan <i>managed</i> this
|
||
temptation, to prevail with Christ to become a tributary to him,
|
||
and to receive his kingdom by delegation from him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p16">[1.] He gave him a prospect of <i>all the
|
||
kingdoms of the world in a moment of time,</i> an airy
|
||
representation of them, such as he thought most likely to strike
|
||
the fancy, and seem a <i>real</i> prospect. To succeed the better,
|
||
he <i>took him up</i> for this purpose <i>into a high mountain;</i>
|
||
and, because we next after the temptation find Christ on the other
|
||
side Jordan, some think it probable that it was to the top of
|
||
Pisgah that the devil took him, whence Moses has a sight of Canaan.
|
||
That it was but a phantasm that the devil here presented our
|
||
Saviour with, as the prince of the power of the air, is confirmed
|
||
by that circumstance which Luke here takes notice of, that it was
|
||
done <i>in a moment of time;</i> whereas, if a man take a prospect
|
||
of but one country, he must do it successively, must turn himself
|
||
round, and take a view first of one part and then of another. Thus
|
||
the devil thought to impose upon our Saviour with a fallacy—<i>a
|
||
deceptio visus;</i> and, by making him believe that he could
|
||
<i>show him all the kingdoms of</i> the world, would draw him into
|
||
an opinion that he could <i>give him</i> all those kingdoms.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p17">[2.] He boldly alleged that these kingdoms
|
||
were <i>all delivered to him</i> that he had power to dispose of
|
||
them and all their <i>glory,</i> and to give them to <i>whomsoever
|
||
he would,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.6" parsed="|Luke|4|6|0|0" passage="Lu 4:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>.
|
||
Some think that herein he pretended to be an angel of light, and
|
||
that, as one of the angels that was set over the kingdoms, he had
|
||
out-bought, or out-fought, all the rest, and so was
|
||
<i>entrusted</i> with the disposal of them all, and, in God's name,
|
||
would give them to him, knowing they were designed for him; but
|
||
clogged with this condition, that he should <i>fall down and
|
||
worship him,</i> which a good angel would have been so far from
|
||
demanding that he would not have admitted it, no, not upon showing
|
||
much greater things than these, as appears, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.19.10 Bible:Rev.22.9" parsed="|Rev|19|10|0|0;|Rev|22|9|0|0" passage="Re 19:10,22:9">Rev. xix. 10; xxii. 9</scripRef>. But I rather take
|
||
it that he claimed this power as Satan, and as <i>delivered to
|
||
him</i> not by <i>the Lord,</i> but by the kings and people of
|
||
these kingdoms, who gave their power and honour to the devil,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p17.3" osisRef="Bible:Eph.2.2" parsed="|Eph|2|2|0|0" passage="Eph 2:2">Eph. ii. 2</scripRef>. Hence he is
|
||
called the <i>god of this world,</i> and the <i>prince of this
|
||
world.</i> It was promised to the Son of God that he should have
|
||
<i>the heathen for his inheritance,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p17.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.2.8" parsed="|Ps|2|8|0|0" passage="Ps 2:8">Ps. ii. 8</scripRef>. "Why," saith the devil, "the heathen
|
||
are <i>mine,</i> are my subjects and votaries; but, however, they
|
||
shall be thine, I will give them <i>thee,</i> upon condition that
|
||
thou <i>worship me</i> for them, and say that they are the
|
||
<i>rewards which I have given thee,</i> as others have done before
|
||
<i>thee</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p17.5" osisRef="Bible:Hos.2.12" parsed="|Hos|2|12|0|0" passage="Hos 2:12">Hos. ii. 12</scripRef>),
|
||
and consent to have and <i>hold them by, from, and under,
|
||
me.</i>"</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p18">[3.] He demanded of him homage and
|
||
adoration: <i>If thou wilt worship me, all shall be thine,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.7" parsed="|Luke|4|7|0|0" passage="Lu 4:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. <i>First,</i> He
|
||
would have him worship him himself. Perhaps he does not mean so as
|
||
never to worship God, but let him worship him in conjunction with
|
||
God; for the devil knows, if he can but once come in a partner, he
|
||
shall soon be sole proprietor. <i>Secondly,</i> He would indent
|
||
with him, that when, according to the promise made to him, he had
|
||
got possession of the kingdoms of this world, he should make no
|
||
alteration of religions in them, but permit and suffer the nations,
|
||
as they had done hitherto, to <i>sacrifice to devils</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10.20" parsed="|1Cor|10|20|0|0" passage="1Co 10:20">1 Cor. x. 20</scripRef>); that he should still
|
||
keep up <i>demon-worship</i> in the world, and then let him take
|
||
all the power and glory of the kingdoms if he pleased. Let who will
|
||
take the wealth and grandeur of this earth, Satan has all he would
|
||
have if he can but have men's hearts, and affections, and
|
||
adorations, can but <i>work in the children of</i> disobedience;
|
||
for then he effectually <i>devours them.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p19">(2.) How our Lord Jesus <i>triumphed</i>
|
||
over this temptation. He gave it a peremptory repulse, rejected it
|
||
with abhorrence (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.8" parsed="|Luke|4|8|0|0" passage="Lu 4:8"><i>v.</i>
|
||
8</scripRef>): "<i>Get thee behind me, Satan,</i> I cannot bear the
|
||
mention of it. What! worship the enemy of God whom I came to serve?
|
||
and of man whom I came to save? No, I will never do it." Such a
|
||
temptation as this was not to be <i>reasoned with,</i> but
|
||
immediately refused; it was presently knocked on the head with one
|
||
word, <i>It is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God;</i>
|
||
and not only so, but <i>him only,</i> him and <i>no other.</i> And
|
||
therefore Christ will not worship Satan, nor, when he has the
|
||
<i>kingdoms of the world delivered</i> to him by his Father, as he
|
||
expects shortly to have, will he suffer any remains of the worship
|
||
of the devil to continue in them. No, it shall be perfectly rooted
|
||
out and abolished, wherever his gospel comes. He will make no
|
||
composition with him. <i>Polytheism</i> and <i>idolatry</i> must go
|
||
down, as Christ's kingdom gets up. Men must be <i>turned from the
|
||
power of Satan unto God,</i> from the worship of devils to the
|
||
worship of the only living and true God. This is the great divine
|
||
law that Christ will re-establish among men, and by his holy
|
||
religion reduce men to the obedience of, <i>That God only is to be
|
||
served and worshipped;</i> and therefore whoever set up any
|
||
creature as the object of religious worship, though it were a saint
|
||
or an angel, or the virgin Mary herself, they directly thwart
|
||
Christ's design, and relapse into heathenism.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p20">3. He tempted him to be his own murderer,
|
||
in a presumptuous confidence of his Father's protection, such as he
|
||
had no warrant for. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p21">(1.) What he designed in this temptation:
|
||
<i>If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.9" parsed="|Luke|4|9|0|0" passage="Lu 4:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>. [1.] He would have him
|
||
seek for a new proof of his being the <i>Son of God,</i> as if that
|
||
which his Father had given him by the voice from heaven, and the
|
||
descent of the Spirit upon him, were not sufficient, which would
|
||
have been a dishonour to God, as if he had not chosen the most
|
||
proper way of giving him the assurance of it; and it would have
|
||
argued a distrust of the Spirit's dwelling in him, which was the
|
||
great and most convincing proof to himself of his being the <i>Son
|
||
of God,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.1.8-Heb.1.9" parsed="|Heb|1|8|1|9" passage="Heb 1:8,9">Heb. i. 8, 9</scripRef>.
|
||
[2.] He would have him seek a new method of proclaiming and
|
||
publishing this to the world. The devil, in effect, suggests that
|
||
it was in an <i>obscure corner</i> that he was attested to be the
|
||
Son of God, among a company of ordinary people, who attended John's
|
||
baptism, that his honours were proclaimed; but if he would now
|
||
declare from <i>the pinnacle of the temple,</i> among all the great
|
||
people who attend the temple-service, that he was the Son of God,
|
||
and then, for proof of it, throw himself down unhurt, he would
|
||
presently be received by every body as a messenger sent from
|
||
heaven. Thus Satan would have him seek honours of his devising (in
|
||
contempt of those which God had put on him), and manifest himself
|
||
in the temple at Jerusalem; whereas God designed he should be more
|
||
manifest among John's penitents, to whom his doctrine would be more
|
||
welcome than to the priests. [3.] It is probable he had some hopes
|
||
that, though he could not throw him down, to do him the least
|
||
mischief, yet, if he would but throw himself down, the fall might
|
||
be his death, and then he should have got him finely out of the
|
||
way.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p22">(2.) How he backed and enforced this
|
||
temptation. He suggested, <i>It is written,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.10" parsed="|Luke|4|10|0|0" passage="Lu 4:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. Christ had quoted scripture
|
||
against him; and he thought he would be quits with him, and would
|
||
show that he could quote scripture as well as he. It has been usual
|
||
with heretics and seducers to pervert scripture, and to press the
|
||
sacred writings into the service of the worst of wickednesses.
|
||
<i>He shall give his angels charge over thee,</i> if thou be his
|
||
Son, and <i>in their hands they shall bear thee up.</i> And now
|
||
that he was upon the pinnacle of the temple he might especially
|
||
expect this ministration of angels; for, if he was the Son of God,
|
||
the <i>temple</i> was the proper place for him to be in (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.2.46" parsed="|Luke|2|46|0|0" passage="Lu 2:46"><i>ch.</i> ii. 46</scripRef>); and, if any place
|
||
under the sun had a guard of angels constantly, it must needs be
|
||
that, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p22.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.68.17" parsed="|Ps|68|17|0|0" passage="Ps 68:17">Ps. lxviii. 17</scripRef>. It is
|
||
true, God has promised the protection of angels, to encourage us to
|
||
trust him, not to tempt him; as far as the promise of God's
|
||
presence with us, so far the promise of the angels' ministration
|
||
goes, but no further: "They shall keep thee when thou goest on the
|
||
ground, where thy way lies, but not if thou wilt presume to fly in
|
||
the air."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p23">(3.) How he was baffled and defeated in the
|
||
temptation, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.12" parsed="|Luke|4|12|0|0" passage="Lu 4:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>.
|
||
Christ quoted <scripRef id="Luke.v-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.6.16" parsed="|Deut|6|16|0|0" passage="De 6:16">Deut. vi. 16</scripRef>,
|
||
where it is said, <i>Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God,</i> by
|
||
desiring a sign for the proof of divine revelation, when he has
|
||
already given that which is sufficient; for so Israel did, when
|
||
they <i>tempted God in the wilderness,</i> saying, He <i>gave us
|
||
water out of the rock; but can he give flesh also?</i> This Christ
|
||
would be guilty of if he should say, "He did indeed prove me to be
|
||
the Son of God, by sending the Spirit upon me, which is the
|
||
<i>greater;</i> but can he also give his angels a charge concerning
|
||
me, which is the <i>less?</i>"</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p24">III. What was the result and issue of this
|
||
combat, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.13" parsed="|Luke|4|13|0|0" passage="Lu 4:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>. Our
|
||
victorious Redeemer kept his ground, and came off a conqueror, not
|
||
for himself only, but for us also.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p25">1. The devil emptied his quiver: <i>He
|
||
ended all the temptation.</i> Christ gave him opportunity to say
|
||
and do all he could against him; he let him try all his force, and
|
||
yet defeated him. Did Christ suffer, being tempted, till all the
|
||
temptation was ended? And must not we expect also to pass all our
|
||
trials, to go through the <i>hour of temptation</i> assigned
|
||
us?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p26">2. He then quitted the field: He
|
||
<i>departed from him.</i> He saw it was to no purpose to attack
|
||
him; he had <i>nothing in him</i> for his fiery darts to fasten
|
||
upon; he had no blind side, no weak or unguarded part in his wall,
|
||
and therefore Satan gave up the cause. Note, If we resist the
|
||
devil, he will flee from us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p27">3. Yet he continued his malice against him,
|
||
and departed with a resolution to attack him again; he departed but
|
||
<i>for a season,</i> <b><i>achri kairou</i></b>—<i>till a
|
||
season,</i> or till the season when he was again to be let loose
|
||
upon him, not as a <i>tempter,</i> to draw him to <i>sin,</i> and
|
||
so to strike at <i>his head,</i> which was what he now aimed at and
|
||
was wholly defeated in; but as a <i>persecutor,</i> to bring him to
|
||
<i>suffer</i> by Judas and the other wicked instruments whom he
|
||
employed, and so to <i>bruise his heel,</i> which it was told him
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.v-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.3.15" parsed="|Gen|3|15|0|0" passage="Ge 3:15">Gen. iii. 15</scripRef>) he should
|
||
have to do, and would do, though it would be the breaking of <i>his
|
||
own head.</i> He <i>departed now</i> till that season came which
|
||
Christ calls the <i>power of darkness</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.22.53" parsed="|Luke|22|53|0|0" passage="Lu 22:53"><i>ch.</i> xxii. 53</scripRef>), and when the prince of
|
||
this world would again <i>come,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:John.14.30" parsed="|John|14|30|0|0" passage="Joh 14:30">John xiv. 30</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.v-p27.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.14-Luke.4.30" parsed="|Luke|4|14|4|30" passage="Lu 4:14-30" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.4.14-Luke.4.30">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.v-p27.5">Christ in the Synagogue of Nazareth; Christ
|
||
Driven from Nazareth.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.v-p28">14 And Jesus returned in the power of the Spirit
|
||
into Galilee: and there went out a fame of him through all the
|
||
region round about. 15 And he taught in their synagogues,
|
||
being glorified of all. 16 And he came to Nazareth, where he
|
||
had been brought up: and, as his custom was, he went into the
|
||
synagogue on the sabbath day, and stood up for to read. 17
|
||
And there was delivered unto him the book of the prophet Esaias.
|
||
And when he had opened the book, he found the place where it was
|
||
written, 18 The Spirit of the Lord <i>is</i> upon me,
|
||
because he hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; he
|
||
hath sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to
|
||
the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at
|
||
liberty them that are bruised, 19 To preach the acceptable
|
||
year of the Lord. 20 And he closed the book, and he gave
|
||
<i>it</i> again to the minister, and sat down. And the eyes of all
|
||
them that were in the synagogue were fastened on him. 21 And
|
||
he began to say unto them, This day is this scripture fulfilled in
|
||
your ears. 22 And all bare him witness, and wondered at the
|
||
gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth. And they said, Is
|
||
not this Joseph's son? 23 And he said unto them, Ye will
|
||
surely say unto me this proverb, Physician, heal thyself:
|
||
whatsoever we have heard done in Capernaum, do also here in thy
|
||
country. 24 And he said, Verily I say unto you, No prophet
|
||
is accepted in his own country. 25 But I tell you of a
|
||
truth, many widows were in Israel in the days of Elias, when the
|
||
heaven was shut up three years and six months, when great famine
|
||
was throughout all the land; 26 But unto none of them was
|
||
Elias sent, save unto Sarepta, <i>a city</i> of Sidon, unto a woman
|
||
<i>that was</i> a widow. 27 And many lepers were in Israel
|
||
in the time of Eliseus the prophet; and none of them was cleansed,
|
||
saving Naaman the Syrian. 28 And all they in the synagogue,
|
||
when they heard these things, were filled with wrath, 29 And
|
||
rose up, and thrust him out of the city, and led him unto the brow
|
||
of the hill whereon their city was built, that they might cast him
|
||
down headlong. 30 But he passing through the midst of them
|
||
went his way,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p29">After Christ had vanquished the evil
|
||
spirit, he made it appear how much he was under the influence of
|
||
the good Spirit; and, having defended himself against the devil's
|
||
assaults, he now begins to act <i>offensively,</i> and to make
|
||
those attacks upon him, by his preaching and miracles, which he
|
||
could not resist or repel. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p30">I. What is here said in general of his
|
||
preaching, and the entertainment it met with <i>in Galilee,</i> a
|
||
remote part of the country, distant from Jerusalem; it was a part
|
||
of Christ's humiliation that he began his ministry there.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p31">But, 1. Thither he came <i>in the power of
|
||
the Spirit.</i> The same Spirit that qualified him for the exercise
|
||
of his prophetical office strongly inclined him to it. He was not
|
||
to wait for a call from men, for he had light and life in himself.
|
||
2. There he <i>taught in their synagogues,</i> their places of
|
||
public worship, where they met, not, as in the temple, for
|
||
ceremonial services, but for the moral acts of devotion, to read,
|
||
expound, and apply, the word, to pray and praise, and for
|
||
church-discipline; these came to be more frequent since the
|
||
captivity, when the ceremonial worship was near expiring. 3. This
|
||
he did so as that he gained a great reputation. <i>A fame of him
|
||
went through all that region</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.14" parsed="|Luke|4|14|0|0" passage="Lu 4:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>), and it was a good fame; for
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.v-p31.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.15" parsed="|Luke|4|15|0|0" passage="Lu 4:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>) he <i>was
|
||
glorified of all.</i> Every body admired him, and cried him up;
|
||
they never heard such preaching in all their lives. Now, at first,
|
||
he met with no contempt or contradiction; all <i>glorified</i> him,
|
||
and there were none as yet that vilified him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p32">II. Of his preaching at Nazareth, the city
|
||
where he was brought up; and the entertainment it met with there.
|
||
And here we are told how he <i>preached</i> there, and how he was
|
||
<i>persecuted.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p33">1. How he preached there. In that
|
||
observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p34">(1.) The opportunity he had for it: <i>He
|
||
came to Nazareth</i> when he had gained a reputation in other
|
||
places, in hopes that thereby something at least of the contempt
|
||
and prejudice with which his countrymen would look upon him might
|
||
be worn off. There he took occasion to preach, [1.] In the
|
||
<i>synagogue,</i> the proper place, where it had been <i>his
|
||
custom</i> to attend when he was a private person, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.16" parsed="|Luke|4|16|0|0" passage="Lu 4:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. We ought to attend on
|
||
the public worship of God, as we have opportunity. But, now that he
|
||
was entered upon his public ministry, there he preached. Where the
|
||
multitudes of fish were, there this wise Fisherman would cast his
|
||
net. [2.] On the sabbath day, the proper time which the pious Jews
|
||
spent, not in a mere ceremonial rest from worldly labour, but in
|
||
the duties of God's worship, as of old they frequented the schools
|
||
of the prophets on the <i>new moons</i> and the <i>sabbaths.</i>
|
||
Note, It is good to keep sabbaths in solemn assemblies.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p35">(2.) The call he had to it. [1.] He
|
||
<i>stood up to read.</i> They had in their synagogues seven readers
|
||
every sabbath, the first a priest, the second a Levite, and the
|
||
other five Israelites of that synagogue. We often find Christ
|
||
<i>preaching</i> in other synagogues, but never <i>reading,</i>
|
||
except in this synagogue at Nazareth, of which he had been many
|
||
years a member. Now he offered his service as he had perhaps often
|
||
done; he read one of the lessons out of the prophets, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p35.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.15" parsed="|Acts|13|15|0|0" passage="Ac 13:15">Acts xiii. 15</scripRef>. Note, The reading of
|
||
the scripture is very proper work to be done in religious
|
||
assemblies; and Christ himself did not think it any disparagement
|
||
to him to be employed in it. [2.] The <i>book of the prophet
|
||
Esaias</i> was <i>delivered to him,</i> either by the ruler of the
|
||
synagogue or by the minister mentioned (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p35.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.20" parsed="|Luke|4|20|0|0" passage="Lu 4:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>), so that he was no intruder, but
|
||
duly authorized <i>pro hac vice—on this occasion.</i> The second
|
||
lesson for <i>that</i> day being in the prophecy of Esaias, they
|
||
gave him that volume to read in.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p36">(3.) The text he preached upon. He <i>stood
|
||
up to read,</i> to teach us reverence in <i>reading</i> and
|
||
<i>hearing</i> the word of God. When Ezra opened the book of the
|
||
law, <i>all the people stood up</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Neh.8.5" parsed="|Neh|8|5|0|0" passage="Ne 8:5">Neh. viii. 5</scripRef>); so did Christ here, when he read
|
||
in the book of the prophets. Now the book being <i>delivered to
|
||
him,</i> [1.] He <i>opened</i> it. The books of the Old Testament
|
||
were in a manner <i>shut up</i> till Christ opened them, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p36.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.29.11" parsed="|Isa|29|11|0|0" passage="Isa 29:11">Isa. xxix. 11</scripRef>. Worthy <i>is the Lamb
|
||
that was slain to take the book, and open the seals;</i> for he can
|
||
open, not the book only, but the understanding. [2.] He
|
||
<i>found</i> the place which was appointed to be read <i>that
|
||
day</i> in course, which he needed not to be directed to; he soon
|
||
found it, and read it, and took it for his text. Now his text was
|
||
taken out of <scripRef id="Luke.v-p36.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.61.1-Isa.61.2" parsed="|Isa|61|1|61|2" passage="Isa 61:1,2">Isa. lxi. 1,
|
||
2</scripRef>, which is here quoted at large, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p36.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.18-Luke.4.19" parsed="|Luke|4|18|4|19" passage="Lu 4:18,19"><i>v.</i> 18, 19</scripRef>. There was a providence in
|
||
it that that portion of scripture should be read that day, which
|
||
speaks so very plainly of the Messiah, that they might be left
|
||
inexcusable who <i>knew him not,</i> though they heard <i>the
|
||
voices of the prophets</i> read <i>every sabbath day,</i> which
|
||
bore witness of him, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p36.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.27" parsed="|Acts|13|27|0|0" passage="Ac 13:27">Acts xiii.
|
||
27</scripRef>. This text gives a full account of Christ's
|
||
undertaking, and the work he came into the world to do.
|
||
Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p37"><i>First,</i> How he was qualified for the
|
||
work: <i>The Spirit of the Lord is upon me.</i> All the gifts and
|
||
graces of the Spirit were conferred upon him, not by measure, as
|
||
upon other prophets, but without measure, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:John.3.34" parsed="|John|3|34|0|0" passage="Joh 3:34">John iii. 34</scripRef>. He now came <i>in the power of
|
||
the Spirit,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p37.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.14" parsed="|Luke|4|14|0|0" passage="Lu 4:14"><i>v.</i>
|
||
14</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p38"><i>Secondly,</i> How he was commissioned:
|
||
<i>Because he had anointed me,</i> and <i>sent me.</i> His
|
||
extraordinary qualification amounted to a commission; his being
|
||
<i>anointed</i> signifies both his being fitted for the undertaking
|
||
and called to it. Those whom God <i>appoints</i> to any service he
|
||
<i>anoints</i> for it: "Because he hath sent me, he hath sent his
|
||
Spirit along with me."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p39"><i>Thirdly,</i> What his work was. He was
|
||
qualified and commissioned,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p40">1. To be a great <i>prophet.</i> He was
|
||
<i>anointed to preach;</i> that is three times mentioned here, for
|
||
that was the work he was now entering upon. Observe, (1.) To
|
||
<i>whom</i> he was to preach: to the <i>poor;</i> to those that
|
||
were <i>poor in the world,</i> whom the Jewish doctors disdained to
|
||
undertake the teaching of and spoke of with contempt; to those that
|
||
were <i>poor in spirit,</i> to the meek and humble, and to those
|
||
that were truly sorrowful for sin: to them the gospel and the grace
|
||
of it will be welcome, and they shall have it, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p40.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11.5" parsed="|Matt|11|5|0|0" passage="Mt 11:5">Matt. xi. 5</scripRef>. (2.) <i>What</i> he was to
|
||
<i>preach.</i> In general, he must preach <i>the gospel.</i> He is
|
||
sent <b><i>euangelizesthai</i></b>—to <i>evangelize</i> them; not
|
||
only to preach to them, but to make that preaching effectual; to
|
||
bring it, not only to their ears, but to their hearts, and deliver
|
||
them into the mould of it. Three things he is to preach:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p41">[1.] <i>Deliverance to the captives,</i>
|
||
The gospel is a proclamation of liberty, like that to Israel in
|
||
Egypt and in Babylon. By the merit of Christ sinners may be loosed
|
||
from the bonds of guilt, and by his Spirit and grace from the
|
||
bondage of corruption. It is a deliverance from the worst of
|
||
thraldoms, which all those shall have the benefit of that are
|
||
willing to make Christ their Head, and are willing to be ruled by
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p42">[2.] <i>Recovering of sight to the
|
||
blind.</i> He came not only by the word of his gospel to bring
|
||
<i>light</i> to them that sat <i>in the dark,</i> but by the power
|
||
of his grace to give sight to them that were <i>blind;</i> not only
|
||
the Gentile world, but every unregenerate soul, that is not only in
|
||
<i>bondage,</i> but in <i>blindness,</i> like Samson and Zedekiah.
|
||
Christ came to tell us that he has <i>eye-salve</i> for us, which
|
||
we may have for the asking; that, if our prayer be, <i>Lord, that
|
||
our eyes may be opened,</i> his answer shall be, <i>Receive your
|
||
sight.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p43">[3.] <i>The acceptable year of the
|
||
Lord,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p43.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.19" parsed="|Luke|4|19|0|0" passage="Lu 4:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>. He
|
||
came to let the world know that the God whom they had offended was
|
||
willing to be reconciled to them, and to <i>accept</i> of them upon
|
||
new terms; that there was yet a way of making their services
|
||
acceptable to him; that there is now a time of <i>good will toward
|
||
men.</i> It alludes to the year of <i>release,</i> or that of
|
||
<i>jubilee,</i> which was an <i>acceptable year</i> to servants,
|
||
who were then set at liberty; to debtors, against whom all actions
|
||
then dropped; and to those who had mortgaged their lands, for then
|
||
they returned to them again. Christ came to sound the
|
||
<i>jubilee</i>-trumpet; and blessed were they that heard <i>the
|
||
joyful sound,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p43.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.89.15" parsed="|Ps|89|15|0|0" passage="Ps 89:15">Ps. lxxxix.
|
||
15</scripRef>. It was an acceptable time, for it was a day of
|
||
salvation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p44">2. Christ came to be a great
|
||
<i>Physician;</i> for he was sent to <i>heal the
|
||
broken-hearted,</i> to comfort and cure afflicted consciences, to
|
||
give peace to those that were troubled and humbled for sins, and
|
||
under a dread of God's wrath against them for them, and to bring
|
||
them to rest who were weary and heavy-laden, under the burden of
|
||
guilt and corruption.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p45">3. To be a great <i>Redeemer.</i> He not
|
||
only proclaims liberty to the captives, as Cyrus did to the Jews in
|
||
Babylon (<i>Whoever will, may go up</i>), but he sets at liberty
|
||
them that are bruised; he doth by his Spirit <i>incline</i> and
|
||
<i>enable</i> them to make use of the liberty granted, as then none
|
||
did but those <i>whose spirit God stirred up,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p45.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezra.1.5" parsed="|Ezra|1|5|0|0" passage="Ezr 1:5">Ezra i. 5</scripRef>. He came in God's name to
|
||
discharge poor sinners that were debtors and prisoners to divine
|
||
justice. The prophets could but <i>proclaim liberty,</i> but
|
||
Christ, as one having authority, as one that had <i>power on earth
|
||
to forgive sins,</i> came to <i>set at liberty;</i> and therefore
|
||
this clause is added here. Dr. Lightfoot thinks that, according to
|
||
a liberty the Jew allowed their readers, to compare scripture with
|
||
scripture, in their reading, for the explication of the text,
|
||
Christ added it from <scripRef id="Luke.v-p45.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.58.6" parsed="|Isa|58|6|0|0" passage="Isa 58:6">Isa. lviii.
|
||
6</scripRef>, where it is made the duty of the acceptable year to
|
||
let <i>the oppressed go free,</i> where the phrase the LXX. uses is
|
||
the same with this here.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p46">(4.) Here is Christ's <i>application</i> of
|
||
this text to himself (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.21" parsed="|Luke|4|21|0|0" passage="Lu 4:21"><i>v.</i>
|
||
21</scripRef>): When he had read it, he <i>rolled up the book,</i>
|
||
and gave it again <i>to the minister,</i> or <i>clerk,</i> that
|
||
attended, and <i>sat down,</i> according to the custom of the
|
||
Jewish teachers; he <i>sat daily in the temple, teaching,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p46.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.55" parsed="|Matt|26|55|0|0" passage="Mt 26:55">Matt. xxvi. 55</scripRef>. Now he
|
||
<i>began</i> his discourse thus, "<i>This day is this scripture
|
||
fulfilled in your ears.</i> This, which Isaiah wrote by way of
|
||
prophecy, I have now read to you by way of history." It now began
|
||
to be fulfilled in Christ's entrance upon his public ministry;
|
||
<i>now,</i> in the report they heard of his preaching and miracles
|
||
in other places; <i>now,</i> in his preaching to them in their own
|
||
synagogue. It is most probable that Christ went on, and showed
|
||
particularly how this scripture was fulfilled in the doctrine he
|
||
preached concerning <i>the kingdom of heaven at hand;</i> that it
|
||
was preaching liberty, and sight, and healing, and all the
|
||
blessings of <i>the acceptable year of the Lord.</i> Many other
|
||
gracious words proceeded out of his mouth, which these were but the
|
||
<i>beginning</i> of; for Christ often preached long sermons, which
|
||
we have but a short account of. This was enough to introduce a
|
||
great deal: <i>This day is this scripture fulfilled.</i> Note, [1.]
|
||
All the scriptures of the Old Testament that were to be fulfilled
|
||
in the Messiah had their full accomplishment in the Lord Jesus,
|
||
which abundantly proves that this was <i>he that should come.</i>
|
||
[2.] In the providences of God, it is fit to observe the
|
||
<i>fulfilling of the scriptures.</i> The works of God are the
|
||
accomplishment not only of his secret word, but of his word
|
||
revealed; and it will help us to understand both the scriptures and
|
||
the providences of God to compare them one with another.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p47">(5.) Here is the <i>attention</i> and
|
||
<i>admiration</i> of the auditors.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p48">[1.] Their <i>attention</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p48.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.20" parsed="|Luke|4|20|0|0" passage="Lu 4:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>): <i>The eyes of all them
|
||
that were in the synagogue</i> (and, probably, there were a great
|
||
many) <i>were fastened on him,</i> big with expectation what he
|
||
would say, having heard so much of late concerning him. Note, It is
|
||
good, in hearing the word, to keep the eye fixed upon the minister
|
||
by whom God is speaking to us; for, as the eye effects the heart,
|
||
so, usually, the heart follows the eye, and is wandering, or fixed,
|
||
as that is. Or, rather, let us learn hence to keep the eye fixed
|
||
upon Christ speaking to us in and by the minister. <i>What saith my
|
||
Lord unto his servants?</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p49">[2.] Their <i>admiration</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p49.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.22" parsed="|Luke|4|22|0|0" passage="Lu 4:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>): <i>They all bore him
|
||
witness</i> that he spoke admirably well, and to the purpose. They
|
||
all commended him, and <i>wondered at the gracious words that
|
||
proceeded out of his mouth;</i> and yet, as appears by what
|
||
follows, they did not <i>believe in him.</i> Note, It is possible
|
||
that those who are admirers of good ministers and good preaching
|
||
may yet be themselves not true Christians. Observe, <i>First,</i>
|
||
What it was they admired: The <i>gracious words which proceedeth
|
||
out of his mouth.</i> The <i>words of grace;</i> good words, and
|
||
spoken in a winning melting way. Note, Christ's words are <i>words
|
||
of grace,</i> for, grace being <i>poured into his lips</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.v-p49.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.45.2" parsed="|Ps|45|2|0|0" passage="Ps 45:2">Ps. xlv. 2</scripRef>), words of grace
|
||
poured from them. And these words of grace are to be <i>wondered
|
||
at;</i> Christ's name was Wonderful, and in nothing was he more so
|
||
than in his grace, in the words of his grace, and the power that
|
||
went along with those words. We may well wonder that he should
|
||
speak such <i>words of grace</i> to such graceless wretches as we
|
||
are. <i>Secondly,</i> What it was that increased their wonder and
|
||
that was the consideration of his original: <i>They said, Is not
|
||
this Joseph's son,</i> and therefore his extraction mean and his
|
||
education mean? Some from this suggestion took occasion perhaps so
|
||
much the more to admire his <i>gracious words,</i> concluding he
|
||
must needs be <i>taught of God,</i> for they knew no one else had
|
||
taught him; while others perhaps with this consideration corrected
|
||
their wonder at his gracious words, and concluded there could be
|
||
nothing <i>really</i> admirable in them, whatever appeared, because
|
||
he was the <i>Son of Joseph.</i> Can any thing great, or worthy our
|
||
regard, come from one so mean?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p50">(6.) Christ's anticipating an objection
|
||
which he knew to be in the minds of many of his hearers.
|
||
Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p51">[1.] What the objection was (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p51.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.23" parsed="|Luke|4|23|0|0" passage="Lu 4:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>): "<i>You will surely say
|
||
to me, Physician, heal thyself.</i> Because you know that I am the
|
||
Son of Joseph, your neighbour, you will expect that I should work
|
||
miracles among you, as I have done in other places; as one would
|
||
expect that a physician, if he be able, should heal, not only
|
||
himself, but those of his own family and fraternity." Most of
|
||
Christ's miracles were <i>cures;</i>—"Now why should not the sick
|
||
in thine own city be <i>healed</i> as well as those in other
|
||
cities?" They were designed to cure people of their unbelief;—"Now
|
||
why should not the disease of unbelief, if it be indeed a disease,
|
||
be cured in those of thine own city as well as in those of others?
|
||
<i>Whatsoever we have heard done in Capernaum,</i> that has been so
|
||
much talked of, <i>do here also in thine own country.</i>" They
|
||
were pleased with <i>Christ's gracious words,</i> only because they
|
||
hoped they were but the introduction to some <i>wondrous works</i>
|
||
of his. They wanted to have their lame, and blind, and sick, and
|
||
lepers, healed and helped, that the charge of their town might be
|
||
eased; and that was the chief thing they looked at. They thought
|
||
their own town as worthy to be the stage of miracles as any other;
|
||
and why should not he rather draw company to that than to any
|
||
other? And why should not his neighbours and acquaintances have the
|
||
benefit of his preaching and miracles, rather than any other?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p52">[2.] How he answers this objection against
|
||
the course he took.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p53"><i>First,</i> By a plain and positive
|
||
reason why he would not make Nazareth his headquarters (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.24" parsed="|Luke|4|24|0|0" passage="Lu 4:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>), because it generally
|
||
holds true <i>that no prophet is accepted in his own country,</i>
|
||
at least not so well, nor with such probability of doing good, as
|
||
in some other country; experience seals this. When prophets have
|
||
been sent with messages and miracles of mercy, few of their own
|
||
country-men, that have known their extraction and education, have
|
||
been fit to <i>receive them.</i> So Dr. Hammond. Familiarity breeds
|
||
contempt; and we are apt to think meanly of those whose
|
||
conversation we have been accustomed to; and they will scarcely be
|
||
duly honoured as <i>prophets</i> who were well known when they were
|
||
in the rank of <i>private men.</i> That is most esteemed that is
|
||
<i>far-fetched</i> and <i>dear-bought,</i> above what is
|
||
<i>home-bred,</i> though really more excellent. This arises
|
||
likewise from the envy which neighbours commonly have towards one
|
||
another, so that they cannot endure to see him their
|
||
<i>superior</i> whom awhile ago they took to be every way their
|
||
<i>inferior.</i> For this reason, Christ declined working miracles,
|
||
or doing any thing extraordinary, at Nazareth, because of the
|
||
rooted prejudices they had against him there.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p54"><i>Secondly,</i> By pertinent examples of
|
||
two of the most famous prophets of the Old Testament, who chose to
|
||
dispense their favours among foreigners rather than among their own
|
||
countrymen, and that, no doubt, by divine direction. 1. Elijah
|
||
maintained a <i>widow of Sarepta,</i> a <i>city of Sidon,</i> one
|
||
that was a stranger to the commonwealth of Israel, when there was a
|
||
<i>famine in the land,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.25-Luke.4.26" parsed="|Luke|4|25|4|26" passage="Lu 4:25,26"><i>v.</i>
|
||
25, 26</scripRef>. The story we have <scripRef id="Luke.v-p54.2" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.17.9" parsed="|1Kgs|17|9|0|0" passage="1Ki 17:9">1
|
||
Kings xvii. 9</scripRef>, &c. It is said there that the heaven
|
||
was shut up <i>three years and six months;</i> whereas it is said,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p54.3" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.18.1" parsed="|1Kgs|18|1|0|0" passage="1Ki 18:1">1 Kings xviii. 1</scripRef>, that
|
||
<i>in the third year Elijah</i> showed himself to Ahab, and there
|
||
was <i>rain;</i> but that was not the third year of the drought,
|
||
but the third year of Elijah's sojourning with the widow of
|
||
Sarepta. As God would hereby show himself a <i>Father of the
|
||
fatherless,</i> and a <i>Judge of the widows,</i> so he would show
|
||
that he was rich in mercy to all, even to the Gentiles. 2. Elisha
|
||
cleansed Naaman the Syrian of his leprosy, though he was a Syrian,
|
||
and not only a foreigner, but an enemy to Israel (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p54.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.27" parsed="|Luke|4|27|0|0" passage="Lu 4:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>); <i>Many lepers were in
|
||
Israel in the days of Eliseus,</i> four particularly, that brought
|
||
the news of the Syrians' raising the siege of Samaria with
|
||
precipitation, and leaving the plunder of their tents to enrich
|
||
Samaria, when Elisha was himself in the besieged city, and this was
|
||
the accomplishment of his prophecy too; see <scripRef id="Luke.v-p54.5" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.7.1 Bible:2Kgs.7.3" parsed="|2Kgs|7|1|0|0;|2Kgs|7|3|0|0" passage="2Ki 7:1,3">2 Kings vii. 1, 3</scripRef>, &c. And yet we do not
|
||
find that Elisha cleansed them, no not for a reward of their
|
||
service, and the good tidings they brought, but only the Syrian;
|
||
for none besides had faith to apply himself to the prophet for a
|
||
cure. Christ himself often met with greater faith among Gentiles
|
||
than in Israel. And here he mentions both these instances, to show
|
||
that he did not dispense the favour of his miracles by private
|
||
respect, but according to God's wise appointment. And the people of
|
||
Israel might as justly have said to Elijah, or Elisha, as the
|
||
Nazarenes to Christ, <i>Physician, heal thyself.</i> Nay, Christ
|
||
wrought his miracles, though not among his townsmen, yet among
|
||
Israelites, whereas these great prophets wrought theirs among
|
||
Gentiles. The examples of the saints, though they will not make a
|
||
bad action good, yet will help to free a good action from the blame
|
||
of exceptious people.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p55">2. How he was <i>persecuted</i> at
|
||
Nazareth.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p56">(1.) That which provoked them was his
|
||
taking notice of the favour which God by Elijah and Elisha showed
|
||
to the Gentiles: <i>When they heard these things, they were filled
|
||
with wrath</i> (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.28" parsed="|Luke|4|28|0|0" passage="Lu 4:28"><i>v.</i>
|
||
28</scripRef>), they were <i>all so;</i> a great change since
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p56.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.22" parsed="|Luke|4|22|0|0" passage="Lu 4:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>, when they
|
||
<i>wondered at the gracious words that proceeded out of his
|
||
mouth;</i> thus uncertain are the opinions and affections of the
|
||
multitude, and so very fickle. If they had mixed faith with those
|
||
gracious words of Christ which they wondered at, they would have
|
||
been awakened by these latter words of his to take heed of sinning
|
||
away their opportunities; but those only <i>pleased the ear,</i>
|
||
and went no further, and therefore these <i>grated on the ear,</i>
|
||
and irritated their corruptions. They were angry that he should
|
||
compare himself, whom they knew to be the son of Joseph, with those
|
||
great prophets, and compare them with the men of that corrupt age,
|
||
when all had bowed the knee to Baal. But that which especially
|
||
exasperated them was that he intimated some kindness God had in
|
||
reserve for the Gentiles, which the Jews could by no means bear the
|
||
thoughts of, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p56.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.21" parsed="|Acts|22|21|0|0" passage="Ac 22:21">Acts xxii. 21</scripRef>.
|
||
Their pious ancestors pleased themselves with the hopes of adding
|
||
the Gentiles to the church (witness many of David's psalms and
|
||
Isaiah's prophecies); but this degenerate race, when they had
|
||
forfeited the covenant themselves, hated to think that any others
|
||
should be taken in.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p57">(2.) They were provoked to that degree that
|
||
they made an attempt upon his life. This was a severe trial, now at
|
||
his setting out, but a specimen of the usage he met with when he
|
||
<i>came to his own,</i> and they <i>received him not.</i> [1.] They
|
||
<i>rose up</i> in a tumultuous manner against him, interrupted him
|
||
in his discourse, and themselves in their devotions, for they could
|
||
not stay until their synagogue-worship was over. [2.] They
|
||
<i>thrust him out of the city,</i> as one not worthy to have a
|
||
residence among them, though there he had had a settlement so long.
|
||
They thrust from them the Saviour and the salvation, as if he had
|
||
been the offscouring of all things. How justly might he have called
|
||
for fire from heaven upon them! But this was the day of his
|
||
patience. [3.] They <i>led him to the brow of the hill,</i> with a
|
||
purpose to <i>throw him down headlong,</i> as one not fit to live.
|
||
Though they knew how inoffensively he had for so many years lived
|
||
among them, how shining his conversation had been,—though they had
|
||
heard such a fame of him and had but just now themselves <i>admired
|
||
his gracious words,</i>—though in justice he ought to have been
|
||
allowed a fair hearing and liberty to explain himself, yet they
|
||
hurried him away in a popular fury, or frenzy rather, to put him to
|
||
death in a most barbarous manner. Sometimes they were ready to
|
||
stone him for the <i>good works</i> he did (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p57.1" osisRef="Bible:John.10.32" parsed="|John|10|32|0|0" passage="Joh 10:32">John x. 32</scripRef>), here for not doing the good
|
||
works they expected from him. To such a height of wickedness was
|
||
violence sprung up.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p58">(3.) Yet he escaped, because his hour was
|
||
not yet come: He <i>passed through the midst of them</i> unhurt.
|
||
Either he blinded their eyes, as God did those of the Sodomites and
|
||
Syrians, or he bound their hands, or filled them with confusion, so
|
||
that they could not do what they designed; for his work was not
|
||
done, it was but just begun; his hour was not yet come, when it was
|
||
come, he freely surrendered himself. They <i>drove</i> him from
|
||
them, and he <i>went his way.</i> He would have gathered Nazareth,
|
||
but they <i>would not,</i> and therefore their house is <i>left to
|
||
them desolate.</i> This added to the reproach of his being Jesus of
|
||
Nazareth, that not only it was a place whence no good thing was
|
||
expected, but that it was such a wicked, rude place, and so
|
||
<i>unkind</i> to him. Yet there was a providence in it, that he
|
||
should not be much respected by the men of Nazareth, for that would
|
||
have looked like a collusion between him and his old acquaintance;
|
||
but now, though they <i>received him not,</i> there were those that
|
||
did.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Luke.v-p58.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.31-Luke.4.44" parsed="|Luke|4|31|4|44" passage="Lu 4:31-44" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Luke.4.31-Luke.4.44">
|
||
<h4 id="Luke.v-p58.2">The Expulsion of a Demon; Christ's Departure
|
||
from Capernaum.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Luke.v-p59">31 And came down to Capernaum, a city of
|
||
Galilee, and taught them on the sabbath days. 32 And they
|
||
were astonished at his doctrine: for his word was with power.
|
||
33 And in the synagogue there was a man, which had a spirit
|
||
of an unclean devil, and cried out with a loud voice, 34
|
||
Saying, Let <i>us</i> alone; what have we to do with thee,
|
||
<i>thou</i> Jesus of Nazareth? art thou come to destroy us? I know
|
||
thee who thou art; the Holy One of God. 35 And Jesus rebuked
|
||
him, saying, Hold thy peace, and come out of him. And when the
|
||
devil had thrown him in the midst, he came out of him, and hurt him
|
||
not. 36 And they were all amazed, and spake among
|
||
themselves, saying, What a word <i>is</i> this! for with authority
|
||
and power he commandeth the unclean spirits, and they come out.
|
||
37 And the fame of him went out into every place of the
|
||
country round about. 38 And he arose out of the synagogue,
|
||
and entered into Simon's house. And Simon's wife's mother was taken
|
||
with a great fever; and they besought him for her. 39 And he
|
||
stood over her, and rebuked the fever; and it left her: and
|
||
immediately she arose and ministered unto them. 40 Now when
|
||
the sun was setting, all they that had any sick with divers
|
||
diseases brought them unto him; and he laid his hands on every one
|
||
of them, and healed them. 41 And devils also came out of
|
||
many, crying out, and saying, Thou art Christ the Son of God. And
|
||
he rebuking <i>them</i> suffered them not to speak: for they knew
|
||
that he was Christ. 42 And when it was day, he departed and
|
||
went into a desert place: and the people sought him, and came unto
|
||
him, and stayed him, that he should not depart from them. 43
|
||
And he said unto them, I must preach the kingdom of God to other
|
||
cities also: for therefore am I sent. 44 And he preached in
|
||
the synagogues of Galilee.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p60">When Christ was expelled Nazareth, he came
|
||
to Capernaum, another city of Galilee. The account we have in these
|
||
verses of his preaching and miracles there we had before, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p60.1" osisRef="Bible:Mark.1.21" parsed="|Mark|1|21|0|0" passage="Mk 1:21">Mark i. 21</scripRef>, &c. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p61">I. His preaching: <i>He taught them on the
|
||
sabbath days,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p61.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.31" parsed="|Luke|4|31|0|0" passage="Lu 4:31"><i>v.</i>
|
||
31</scripRef>. In hearing the word preached, as an ordinance of
|
||
God, we <i>worship God,</i> and it is a proper work for <i>sabbath
|
||
days.</i> Christ's preaching much affected the people (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p61.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.32" parsed="|Luke|4|32|0|0" passage="Lu 4:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>); they were <i>astonished
|
||
at his doctrine,</i> there was weight in every word he said, and
|
||
admirable discoveries were made to them by it. The doctrine itself
|
||
was astonishing, and not only as it came from one that had not had
|
||
a liberal education. <i>His word was with power;</i> there was a
|
||
commanding force in it, and a working power went along with it to
|
||
the conscience of men. The doctrine Paul preached hereby proved
|
||
itself to be of God, that it came <i>in demonstration of the Spirit
|
||
and of power.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p62">II. His miracles. Of these we have
|
||
here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p63">1. Two particularly specified, showing
|
||
Christ to be,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p64">(1.) A <i>controller</i> and
|
||
<i>conqueror</i> of <i>Satan,</i> in the world of mankind, and in
|
||
the souls of people, by his power to cast him out of the bodies of
|
||
those he had taken possession of; for <i>for this purpose was he
|
||
manifested, that he might destroy the works of the devil.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p65">Observe, [1.] The devil is an <i>unclean
|
||
spirit,</i> his nature directly contrary to that of the pure and
|
||
<i>holy</i> God, and degenerated from what it was at first. [2.]
|
||
This unclean spirit works in the children of men; in the souls of
|
||
many, as then in men's bodies. [3.] It is possible that those who
|
||
are very much under the power and working of Satan may yet be found
|
||
<i>in the synagogue,</i> among the worshippers of God. [4.] Even
|
||
the devils <i>know and believe</i> that <i>Jesus Christ is the Holy
|
||
One of God,</i> is sent of God, and is a <i>Holy One.</i> [5.] They
|
||
believe and <i>tremble.</i> This unclean spirit <i>cried out with a
|
||
loud voice,</i> under a <i>certain fearful looking for of
|
||
judgment,</i> and apprehensive that Christ was now come to destroy
|
||
him. Unclean spirits are subject to continual frights. [6.] The
|
||
devils have <i>nothing to do with Jesus Christ,</i> nor desire to
|
||
have any thing to do with him; for he took not on him the nature of
|
||
angels. [7.] Christ has the devil under check: <i>He rebuked
|
||
him,</i> saying, <i>Hold thy peace;</i> and this word he spoke
|
||
<i>with power;</i> <b><i>phimotheti</i></b>—<i>Be muzzled,</i>
|
||
Christ did not only enjoin him silence, but stopped his mouth, and
|
||
forced him to be silent against his will. [8.] In the breaking of
|
||
Satan's power, both the enemy that is conquered shows his malice,
|
||
and Christ, the conqueror, shows his over-ruling grace. Here,
|
||
<i>First,</i> The devil showed what he would have done, when he
|
||
<i>threw the man in the midst,</i> with force and fury, as if he
|
||
would have dashed him to pieces. But, <i>Secondly,</i> Christ
|
||
showed what a power he had over him, in that he not only forced him
|
||
to leave him, but to leave him without so much as <i>hurting</i>
|
||
him, without giving him a parting blow, a parting gripe. Whom Satan
|
||
cannot <i>destroy,</i> he will do all the <i>hurt</i> he can to;
|
||
but this is a comfort, he can harm them no further than Christ
|
||
permits; nay, he shall not do them any real harm. He <i>came
|
||
out,</i> and <i>hurt him not;</i> that is, the poor man was
|
||
perfectly well in an instant, though the devil left him with so
|
||
much rage that all that were present thought he had torn him to
|
||
pieces. [9.] Christ's power over devils was universally
|
||
acknowledged and adored, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p65.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.36" parsed="|Luke|4|36|0|0" passage="Lu 4:36"><i>v.</i>
|
||
36</scripRef>. No one doubted the truth of the miracle; it was
|
||
evident beyond contradiction, nor was any thing suggested to
|
||
diminish the glory of it, for they were <i>all amazed, saying, What
|
||
a word is this!</i> They that pretended to cast out devils did it
|
||
with abundance of charms and spells, to pacify the devil, and lull
|
||
him asleep, as it were; but Christ commanded them <i>with authority
|
||
and power,</i> which they could not gainsay or resist. Even the
|
||
<i>prince of the power of the air</i> is his vassal, and trembles
|
||
before him. [10.] This, as much as any thing, gained Christ a
|
||
reputation, and spread his fame. This instance of his power, which
|
||
many now-a-days make light of, was then, by them that were
|
||
eye-witnesses of it (and those no fools either, but men of
|
||
penetration), magnified, and was looked upon as greatly magnifying
|
||
him (<scripRef id="Luke.v-p65.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.37" parsed="|Luke|4|37|0|0" passage="Lu 4:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>); upon the
|
||
account of this, <i>the fame of him went out,</i> more than ever,
|
||
<i>into every place of the country round about.</i> Our Lord Jesus,
|
||
when he set out at first in his public ministry, was greatly talked
|
||
of, more than afterwards, when people's admiration wore off with
|
||
the novelty of the thing.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p66">(2.) Christ showed himself to be <i>a
|
||
healer of diseases.</i> In the former, he struck at the root of
|
||
man's misery, which was Satan's enmity, the origin of all the
|
||
mischief: in this, he strikes at one of the most spreading branches
|
||
of it, one of the most common calamities of human life, and that is
|
||
bodily diseases, which came in with sin, are the most common and
|
||
sensible corrections for it in this life, and contribute as much as
|
||
any thing towards the making of our few days <i>full of
|
||
trouble.</i> These our Lord Jesus came to take away the sting of,
|
||
and, as an indication of that intention, when he was on earth,
|
||
chose to confirm his doctrine by such miracles, mostly, as took
|
||
away the diseases themselves. Of all bodily diseases none are more
|
||
common or fatal to grown people than <i>fevers;</i> these come
|
||
suddenly, and suddenly cut off the number of men's months in the
|
||
midst; they are sometimes <i>epidemical,</i> and <i>slay their
|
||
thousands</i> in a little time. Now here we have Christ's curing a
|
||
fever with a word's speaking; the place was in Simon's house, his
|
||
patient was Simon's wife's mother, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p66.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.38-Luke.4.39" parsed="|Luke|4|38|4|39" passage="Lu 4:38,39"><i>v.</i> 38, 39</scripRef>. Observe, [1.] Christ is a
|
||
guest that will pay well for his entertainment; those that bid him
|
||
welcome into their hearts and houses shall be no losers by him; he
|
||
comes with healing. [2.] Even families that Christ visits may be
|
||
visited with sickness. Houses that are blessed with his
|
||
<i>distinguishing favours</i> are liable to the <i>common
|
||
calamities</i> of this life. Simon's wife's mother was <i>ill</i>
|
||
of a <i>fever.</i> <i>Lord, behold, he whom thou lovest is
|
||
sick.</i> [3.] Even good people may sometimes be exercised with the
|
||
sharpest afflictions, more grievous than others: She was <i>taken
|
||
with a great fever,</i> very acute, and high, and threatening;
|
||
perhaps it seized her head, and made her delirious. The most gentle
|
||
fevers may by degrees prove dangerous; but this was at first <i>a
|
||
great fever.</i> [4.] No age can exempt from diseases. It is
|
||
probable that Peter's mother-in-law was <i>in years,</i> and yet in
|
||
a <i>fever.</i> [5.] When our relations are sick, we ought to apply
|
||
ourselves to Christ, by faith and prayer, on their account: <i>They
|
||
besought him for her;</i> and there is a particular promise that
|
||
the prayer of faith shall benefit the sick. [6.] Christ has a
|
||
tender concern for his people when they are in sickness and
|
||
distress: <i>He stood over her,</i> as one concerned for her, and
|
||
compassionating her case. [7.] Christ had, and still has, a
|
||
sovereign power over bodily diseases: <i>He rebuked the fever,</i>
|
||
and with a word's speaking commanded it away, and <i>it left
|
||
her.</i> He saith to diseases, <i>Go,</i> and they go; <i>Come,</i>
|
||
and they come; and can still <i>rebuke fevers,</i> even great
|
||
fevers. [8.] This proves Christ's cures to be miraculous, that they
|
||
were done in an instant: <i>Immediately she arose.</i> [9.] Where
|
||
Christ gives a new life, in recovery from sickness, he designs and
|
||
expects that it should be a new life indeed, spent more than ever
|
||
in his service, to his glory. If distempers be rebuked, and we
|
||
arise from a bed of sickness, we must set ourselves to minister to
|
||
Jesus Christ. [10.] Those that minister to Christ must be ready to
|
||
minister to all that are his for his sake: She <i>ministered to
|
||
them,</i> not only to <i>him</i> that had cured her, but to them
|
||
that had <i>besought him for her.</i> We must study to be grateful
|
||
to those that have prayed for us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p67">2. A general account given by wholesale of
|
||
many other miracles of the same kind, which Christ did.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p68">(1.) He <i>cured many that were
|
||
diseased,</i> even all without exception that made their
|
||
application to him, and it was <i>when the sun was setting</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Luke.v-p68.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.40" parsed="|Luke|4|40|0|0" passage="Lu 4:40"><i>v.</i> 40</scripRef>); in the
|
||
evening of that sabbath day which he had spent in the synagogue.
|
||
Note, It is good to do a full sabbath day's work, to abound in the
|
||
work of the day, in some good work or other, even till sun-set; as
|
||
those that call the sabbath, and the business of it, <i>a
|
||
delight.</i> Observe, He cured <i>all that were sick,</i> poor as
|
||
well as rich, and though they were sick of <i>divers diseases;</i>
|
||
so that there was no room to suspect that he had only a specific
|
||
for some one disease. He had a remedy for every malady. The sign he
|
||
used in healing was <i>laying his hands</i> on the sick; not
|
||
lifting up his hands for them, for he healed as having authority.
|
||
He healed by his own power. And thus he would put honour upon that
|
||
sign which was afterwards used in conferring the Holy Ghost.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p69">(2.) He cast the devil out of many that
|
||
were possessed, <scripRef id="Luke.v-p69.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.41" parsed="|Luke|4|41|0|0" passage="Lu 4:41"><i>v.</i>
|
||
41</scripRef>. Confessions were extorted from the demoniacs. They
|
||
said, <i>Thou art Christ the Son of God,</i> but they said it
|
||
<i>crying</i> with rage and indignation; it was a confession upon
|
||
the rack, and therefore was not admitted in evidence. Christ
|
||
<i>rebuked them,</i> and did not <i>suffer them to say that they
|
||
knew him to be the Christ,</i> that it might appear, beyond all
|
||
contradiction, that he had obtained a conquest over them, and not
|
||
made a compact with them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p70">3. Here is his removal from Capernaum,
|
||
<scripRef id="Luke.v-p70.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.42-Luke.4.43" parsed="|Luke|4|42|4|43" passage="Lu 4:42,43"><i>v.</i> 42, 43</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p71">(1.) He <i>retired</i> for awhile into a
|
||
place of <i>solitude.</i> It was but a little while that he allowed
|
||
himself for sleep; not only because a <i>little served him,</i> but
|
||
because he was <i>content with a little,</i> and never indulged
|
||
himself in ease; but, <i>when it was day,</i> he <i>went into a
|
||
desert place,</i> not to live constantly like a hermit, but to be
|
||
sometimes <i>alone with God,</i> as even those should be, and
|
||
contrive to be, that are most engaged in public work, or else their
|
||
work will go on but poorly, and they will find themselves never
|
||
<i>less alone</i> than when <i>thus alone.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Luke.v-p72">(2.) He <i>returned</i> again to the places
|
||
of <i>concourse</i> and to the work he had to do there. Though a
|
||
<i>desert place</i> may be a convenient <i>retreat,</i> yet it is
|
||
not a <i>convenient residence,</i> because we were not sent into
|
||
this world to <i>live to ourselves,</i> no, not to the <i>best
|
||
part</i> of ourselves only, but to glorify God and do good in our
|
||
generation. [1.] He was earnestly solicited to stay at Capernaum.
|
||
<i>The people</i> were exceedingly fond of him; I doubt, more
|
||
because he had healed their sick than because he had preached
|
||
repentance to them. <i>They sought him,</i> enquired which way he
|
||
went; and, though it was in a <i>desert place,</i> they <i>came
|
||
unto him.</i> A desert is no desert if we be <i>with Christ</i>
|
||
there. They <i>detained him that he should not depart from
|
||
them,</i> so that if he would go it should not be for want of
|
||
invitation. His old neighbours at Nazareth had driven him from
|
||
them, but his new acquaintances at Capernaum were very importunate
|
||
for his continuance with them. Note, It ought not to discourage the
|
||
ministers of Christ that some reject them, for they will meet with
|
||
others that will welcome them and their message. [2.] He chose
|
||
rather to <i>diffuse</i> the light of his gospel to <i>many</i>
|
||
places than to fix it to <i>one,</i> that no one might pretend to
|
||
be a <i>mother-church</i> to the rest. Though he was welcome at
|
||
Capernaum, and had done abundance of good there, yet he is <i>sent
|
||
to preach the gospel to other cities also;</i> and Capernaum must
|
||
not insist upon his stay there. They that enjoy the benefit of the
|
||
gospel must be willing that others also should share in that
|
||
benefit, and not covet the <i>monopoly</i> of it; and those
|
||
ministers who are not <i>driven</i> from one place may yet be
|
||
<i>drawn</i> to another by a prospect of greater usefulness.
|
||
Christ, though he preached not in vain in the synagogue at
|
||
Capernaum, yet would not be tied to that, but <i>preached in the
|
||
synagogues of Galilee,</i> <scripRef id="Luke.v-p72.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.4.44" parsed="|Luke|4|44|0|0" passage="Lu 4:44"><i>v.</i>
|
||
44</scripRef>. <i>Bonum est sui diffusivum—What is good is
|
||
self-diffusive.</i> It is well for us that our Lord Jesus has not
|
||
tied himself to any one place or people, but, wherever two or three
|
||
are gathered in his name, he will be in the midst of them: and even
|
||
in <i>Galilee of the Gentiles</i> his special presence is in the
|
||
Christian synagogues.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |