1876 lines
132 KiB
XML
1876 lines
132 KiB
XML
<div2 id="John.vi" n="vi" next="John.vii" prev="John.v" progress="74.16%" title="Chapter V">
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<h2 id="John.vi-p0.1">J O H N.</h2>
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<h3 id="John.vi-p0.2">CHAP. V.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="John.vi-p1">We have in the gospels a faithful record of all
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that Jesus began both to do and to teach, <scripRef id="John.vi-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.1.1" parsed="|Acts|1|1|0|0" passage="Ac 1:1">Acts i. 1</scripRef>. These two are interwoven, because
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what he taught explained what he did, and what he did confirmed
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what he taught. Accordingly, we have in this chapter a miracle and
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a sermon. I. The miracle was the cure of an impotent man that had
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been diseased thirty-eight years, with the circumstances of that
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cure, <scripRef id="John.vi-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.1-John.5.16" parsed="|John|5|1|5|16" passage="Joh 5:1-16">ver. 1-16</scripRef>. II. The
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sermon was Christ's vindication of himself before the sanhedrim,
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when he was prosecuted as a criminal for healing the man on the
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sabbath day, in which, 1. He asserts his authority as Messiah, and
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Mediator between God and man, <scripRef id="John.vi-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:John.5.17-John.5.29" parsed="|John|5|17|5|29" passage="Joh 5:17-29">ver.
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17-29</scripRef>. 2. He proves it by the testimony of his Father,
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of John Baptist, of his miracles, and of the scriptures of the Old
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Testament, and condemns the Jews for their unbelief, <scripRef id="John.vi-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:John.5.30-John.5.47" parsed="|John|5|30|5|47" passage="Joh 5:30-47">ver. 30-47</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="John.vi-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:John.5" parsed="|John|5|0|0|0" passage="Joh 5" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="John.vi-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:John.5.1-John.5.16" parsed="|John|5|1|5|16" passage="Joh 5:1-16" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:John.5.1-John.5.16">
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<h4 id="John.vi-p1.7">The Cure at the Pool of
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Bethesda.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="John.vi-p2">1 After this there was a feast of the Jews; and
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Jesus went up to Jerusalem. 2 Now there is at Jerusalem by
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the sheep <i>market</i> a pool, which is called in the Hebrew
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tongue Bethesda, having five porches. 3 In these lay a great
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multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered, waiting for
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the moving of the water. 4 For an angel went down at a
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certain season into the pool, and troubled the water: whosoever
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then first after the troubling of the water stepped in was made
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whole of whatsoever disease he had. 5 And a certain man was
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there, which had an infirmity thirty and eight years. 6 When
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Jesus saw him lie, and knew that he had been now a long time <i>in
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that case,</i> he saith unto him, Wilt thou be made whole? 7
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The impotent man answered him, Sir, I have no man, when the water
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is troubled, to put me into the pool: but while I am coming,
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another steppeth down before me. 8 Jesus saith unto him,
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Rise, take up thy bed, and walk. 9 And immediately the man
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was made whole, and took up his bed, and walked: and on the same
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day was the sabbath. 10 The Jews therefore said unto him
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that was cured, It is the sabbath day: it is not lawful for thee to
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carry <i>thy</i> bed. 11 He answered them, He that made me
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whole, the same said unto me, Take up thy bed, and walk. 12
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Then asked they him, What man is that which said unto thee, Take up
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thy bed, and walk? 13 And he that was healed wist not who it
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was: for Jesus had conveyed himself away, a multitude being in
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<i>that</i> place. 14 Afterward Jesus findeth him in the
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temple, and said unto him, Behold, thou art made whole: sin no
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more, lest a worse thing come unto thee. 15 The man
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departed, and told the Jews that it was Jesus, which had made him
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whole. 16 And therefore did the Jews persecute Jesus, and
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sought to slay him, because he had done these things on the sabbath
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day.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p3">This miraculous cure is not recorded by any
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other of the evangelists, who confine themselves mostly to the
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miracles wrought in Galilee, but John relates those wrought at
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Jerusalem. Concerning this observe,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p4">I. <i>The time when</i> this cure was
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wrought: it was at a <i>feast of the Jews,</i> that is, the
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passover, for that was the most celebrated feast. Christ, though
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residing in Galilee, yet <i>went up to Jerusalem</i> at the feast,
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<scripRef id="John.vi-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.1" parsed="|John|5|1|0|0" passage="Joh 5:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>. 1. Because it
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was an <i>ordinance of God,</i> which, as a <i>subject,</i> he
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would observe, being made under the law; though as a <i>Son</i> he
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might have pleaded an exemption. Thus he would teach us to attend
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religious assemblies. <scripRef id="John.vi-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.10.25" parsed="|Heb|10|25|0|0" passage="Heb 10:25">Heb. x.
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25</scripRef>. 2. Because it was an <i>opportunity of good;</i>
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for, (1.) there were great numbers gathered together there at that
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time; it was a general rendezvous, at least of all serious thinking
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people, from all parts of the country, besides proselytes from
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other nations: and Wisdom must <i>cry in the places of
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concourse,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.1.21" parsed="|Prov|1|21|0|0" passage="Pr 1:21">Prov. i. 21</scripRef>.
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(2.) It was to be hoped that they were in a <i>good frame,</i> for
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they came together to <i>worship God</i> and to spend their time in
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religious exercises. Now a mind <i>inclined to devotion,</i> and
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sequestering itself to the exercises of piety, <i>lies very
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open</i> to the further discoveries of divine light and love, and
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to it Christ will be acceptable.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p5">II. The <i>place where</i> this cure was
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wrought: at the <i>pool of Bethesda,</i> which had a miraculous
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healing virtue in it, and is here particularly described, <scripRef id="John.vi-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.2-John.5.4" parsed="|John|5|2|5|4" passage="Joh 5:2-4"><i>v.</i> 2-4</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p6">1. Where it was situated: <i>At Jerusalem,
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by the sheep-market;</i> <b><i>epi te probatike</i></b>. It might
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as well be rendered the <i>sheep-cote,</i> where the sheep were
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kept, or the <i>sheep-gate,</i> which we read of, <scripRef id="John.vi-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Neh.3.1" parsed="|Neh|3|1|0|0" passage="Ne 3:1">Neh. iii. 1</scripRef>, through which the sheep
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were <i>brought,</i> as the <i>sheep-market,</i> where they were
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<i>sold.</i> Some think it was near the temple, and, if so, it
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yielded a melancholy but profitable spectacle to those that went up
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to the temple to pray.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p7">2. How it was called: It was a <i>pool</i>
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(a pond or bath), <i>which is called in Hebrew, Bethesda—the house
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of mercy;</i> for therein appeared much of the <i>mercy of God</i>
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to the sick and diseased. In a world of so much misery as this is,
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it is well that there are some <i>Bethesdas—houses of mercy</i>
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(remedies against those maladies), that the scene is not all
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melancholy. An <i>alms-house,</i> so Dr. Hammond. Dr. Lightfoot's
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conjecture is that this was the <i>upper pool</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.7.3" parsed="|Isa|7|3|0|0" passage="Isa 7:3">Isa. vii. 3</scripRef>), and the <i>old pool,</i>
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<scripRef id="John.vi-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.22.11" parsed="|Isa|22|11|0|0" passage="Isa 22:11">Isa. xxii. 11</scripRef>; that it had
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been used for <i>washing</i> from ceremonial pollutions, for
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convenience of which the porches were built to dress and undress
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in, but it was lately become medicinal.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p8">3. How it was fitted up: It had <i>five
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porches, cloisters, piazzas,</i> or <i>roofed walks,</i> in which
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the sick lay. Thus the charity of men concurred with the mercy of
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God for the relief of the distressed. Nature has provided
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<i>remedies,</i> but men must provide <i>hospitals.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p9">4. How it was frequented with sick and
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cripples (<scripRef id="John.vi-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.3" parsed="|John|5|3|0|0" passage="Joh 5:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>):
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<i>In these lay a great multitude of impotent folks.</i> How many
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are the afflictions of the afflicted in this world! How full of
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complaints are all places, and what multitudes of impotent folks!
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It may do us good to visit the hospitals sometimes, that we may
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take occasion, from the calamities of others, to thank God for our
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comforts. The evangelist specifies three sorts of diseased people
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that lay here, <i>blind, halt,</i> and <i>withered</i> or
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<i>sinew—shrunk,</i> either in one particular part, as the man
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with the <i>withered hand,</i> or all over paralytic. These are
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mentioned because, being least able to help themselves into the
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water, they lay longest waiting in the <i>porches.</i> Those that
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were sick of these bodily diseases took the pains to come
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<i>far</i> and had the patience to wait <i>long</i> for a cure; any
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of us would have done the same, and we ought to do so: but O that
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men were as wise for their souls, and as solicitous to get their
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spiritual diseases healed! We are all by nature <i>impotent
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folks</i> in spiritual things, <i>blind, halt,</i> and
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<i>withered;</i> but effectual provision is made for our cure if we
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will but observe orders.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p10">5. What virtue it had for the cure of these
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impotent folks (<scripRef id="John.vi-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.4" parsed="|John|5|4|0|0" passage="Joh 5:4"><i>v.</i>
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4</scripRef>). <i>An angel went down,</i> and <i>troubled the
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water;</i> and <i>whoso first stepped in was made whole.</i> That
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this strange virtue in the pool was <i>natural,</i> or
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<i>artificial</i> rather, and was the effect of the washing of the
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sacrifices, which impregnated the water with I know not what
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healing virtue even for <i>blind</i> people, and that the angel was
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a <i>messenger,</i> a common person, sent down to stir the water,
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is altogether groundless; there was a room in the temple on purpose
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to wash the sacrifices in. Expositors generally agree that the
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virtue this pool had was supernatural. It is true the Jewish
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writers, who are not sparing in recounting the praises of
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Jerusalem, do none of them make the least mention of this
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<i>healing pool,</i> of which silence in this matter perhaps this
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is the reason, that it was taken for a presage of the near approach
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of the Messiah, and therefore those who denied him to be come
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industriously concealed such an indication of his coming; so that
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this is all the account we have of it. Observe,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p11">(1.) The <i>preparation</i> of the medicine
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by an angel, who <i>went down into the pool,</i> and <i>stirred the
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water.</i> Angels are God's servants, and friends to mankind; and
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perhaps are more active in the removing of diseases (as evil angels
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in the inflicting of them) than we are aware of. Raphael, the
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apocryphal name of an angel, signifies <i>medicina Dei—God's
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physic,</i> or <i>physician</i> rather. See what mean offices the
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holy angels condescend to, for the good of men. If we would do the
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will of God as the angels do it, we must think nothing below us but
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sin. The <i>troubling of the water</i> was the signal given of the
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descent of the angel, as the <i>going upon the tops of the mulberry
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trees</i> was to David, and then they must <i>bestir
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themselves.</i> The waters of the sanctuary are then <i>healing</i>
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when they are put in <i>motion.</i> Ministers must <i>stir up the
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gift</i> that is in them. When they are cold and dull in their
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ministrations, the waters <i>settle,</i> and are not apt to
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<i>heal.</i> The angel descended, to <i>stir the water,</i> not
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daily, perhaps not frequently, but <i>at a certain season;</i> some
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think, at the three solemn feasts, to grace those solemnities; or,
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<i>now and then,</i> as Infinite Wisdom saw fit. God is a free
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agent in dispensing his favours.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p12">(2.) The <i>operation</i> of the medicine:
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<i>Whoever first stepped in was made whole.</i> here is, [1.]
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miraculous extent of the virtue as to the <i>diseases</i> cured;
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what disease soever it was, this water cured it. Natural and
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artificial baths are as <i>hurtful</i> in some cases as they are
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useful in others, but this was a remedy for every malady, even for
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those that came from contrary causes. The power of miracles
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<i>succeeds</i> where the power of nature <i>succumbs.</i> [2.] A
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miraculous limitation of the virtue as to the <i>persons</i> cured:
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He that first stepped in had the benefit; that is, he or they that
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stepped in immediately were cured, not those that lingered and came
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in afterwards. This teaches us to observe and improve our
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opportunities, and to <i>look about us,</i> that we slip not a
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season which may never return. The angel <i>stirred</i> the waters,
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but left the diseased to themselves to <i>get in.</i> God has put
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virtue into the scriptures and ordinances, for he would have healed
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us; but, if we do not make a due improvement of them, it is our own
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fault, we <i>would not be healed.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p13">Now this is all the account we have of this
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<i>standing</i> miracle; it is uncertain when it began and when it
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ceased. Some conjecture it began when Eliashib the high priest
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began the building of the wall about Jerusalem, and sanctified it
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with prayer; and that God testified his acceptance by putting this
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virtue into the adjoining pool. Some think it began now lately at
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Christ's birth; nay, others at his baptism. Dr. Lightfoot, finding
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in <i>Josephus, Antiq.</i> 15. 121-122, mention of a great
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earthquake in the seventh year of Herod, thirty years before
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Christ's birth, supposed, since there used to be earthquakes at the
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descent of angels, that then the angel first descended to stir this
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water. Some think it ceased with this miracle, others at Christ's
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death; however, it is certain it had a gracious signification.
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<i>First,</i> it was a <i>token</i> of God's good will to that
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people, and an indication that, though they had been long without
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prophets and miracles, yet God had not <i>cast them off;</i> though
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they were now an oppressed despised people, and many were ready to
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say, <i>Where are all the wonders that our fathers told us of?</i>
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God did hereby let them know that he had still a kindness for the
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<i>city of their solemnities.</i> We may hence take occasion to
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acknowledge with thankfulness God's power and goodness in the
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mineral waters, that contribute so much to the health of mankind;
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for God <i>made the fountains of water,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.14.7" parsed="|Rev|14|7|0|0" passage="Re 14:7">Rev. xiv. 7</scripRef>. <i>Secondly,</i> It was a type of
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the Messiah, who is the <i>fountain opened;</i> and was intended to
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raise people's expectations of him who is the <i>Sun of
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righteousness,</i> that arises <i>with healing under his wings.</i>
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These waters had formerly been used for purifying, now for healing,
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to signify both the <i>cleansing</i> and <i>curing</i> virtue of
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the blood of Christ, that incomparable bath, which <i>heals all our
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diseases.</i> The waters of Siloam, which filled this pool,
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signified the kingdom of David, and of Christ the Son of David
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(<scripRef id="John.vi-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.8.6" parsed="|Isa|8|6|0|0" passage="Isa 8:6">Isa. viii. 6</scripRef>); fitly
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therefore have they now this <i>sovereign</i> virtue put into them.
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The laver of regeneration is to us as Bethesda's pool, healing our
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spiritual diseases; not at certain seasons, but at all times.
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<i>Whoever will, let him come.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p14">III. The patient on whom this cure was
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wrought (<scripRef id="John.vi-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.5" parsed="|John|5|5|0|0" passage="Joh 5:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>): one
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that <i>had been infirm thirty-eight years.</i> 1. His
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<i>disease</i> was <i>grievous:</i> He had an <i>infirmity,</i> a
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weakness; he had lost the use of his limbs, at least on one side,
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as is usual in palsies. It is sad to have the body so disabled
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that, instead of being the soul's instrument, it is become, even in
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the affairs of this life, its burden. What reason have we to thank
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God for bodily strength, to use it for him, and to pity those who
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are <i>his prisoners!</i> 2. The duration of it was <i>tedious:
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Thirty-eight years.</i> He was lame longer than most live. Many are
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so long disabled for the offices of life that, as the psalmist
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complains, they seem to be <i>made in vain;</i> for suffering, not
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for service; born to be always dying. Shall we complain of one
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wearisome night, or one fit of illness, who perhaps for many years
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have scarcely known what it has been to be a day sick, when many
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others, better than we, have scarcely known what it has been to be
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a day well? Mr. Baxter's note on this passage is very affecting:
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"How great a mercy was it to live thirty-eight years under God's
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wholesome discipline! O my God," saith he, "I thank thee for the
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like discipline of fifty-eight years; how safe a life is this, in
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comparison of full prosperity and pleasure!"</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p15">IV. The cure and the circumstances of it
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briefly related, <scripRef id="John.vi-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.6-John.5.9" parsed="|John|5|6|5|9" passage="Joh 5:6-9"><i>v.</i>
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6-9</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p16">1. <i>Jesus saw him lie.</i> Observe, When
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Christ came up to Jerusalem he visited not the palaces, but the
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hospitals, which is an instance of his humility, and condescension,
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and tender compassion, and an <i>indication</i> of his great design
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in coming into the world, which was to seek and save the sick and
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wounded. There was a great multitude of poor cripples here at
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Bethesda, but Christ fastened his eye upon this one, and singled
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him out from the rest, because he was <i>senior</i> of the house,
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and in a more deplorable condition than any of the rest; and Christ
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delights to help the helpless, and hath mercy <i>on whom he will
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have mercy.</i> Perhaps his companions in tribulation insulted over
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him, because he had often been disappointed of a cure; therefore
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Christ took him for his patient: it is his honour to side with the
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weakest, and bear up those whom he sees <i>run down.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p17">2. He knew and considered <i>how long he
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had lain</i> in this condition. Those that have been long in
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affliction may comfort themselves with this, that God keeps account
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<i>how long,</i> and knows our frame.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p18">3. He asked him, <i>Wilt thou be made
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whole?</i> A strange question to be asked one that had been so long
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ill. Some indeed would not be made whole, because their sores serve
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them to beg by and serve them for an excuse for idleness; but this
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poor man was as unable to <i>go a begging</i> as to <i>work,</i>
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yet Christ put it to him, (1.) To <i>express</i> his own pity and
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concern for him. Christ is tenderly inquisitive concerning the
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desires of those that are in affliction, and is willing to know
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<i>what is their petition:</i> "What shall I do for you?" (2.) To
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try him whether he would be beholden for a cure to him against whom
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the great people were so prejudiced and sought to prejudice others.
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(3.) To teach him to value the mercy, and to excite in him desires
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after it. In spiritual cases, people are not willing to be cured of
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their sins, are loth to part with them. If this point therefore
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were but gained, if people were willing to be <i>made whole,</i>
|
||
the work were half done, for Christ is willing to heal, if we be
|
||
but willing to be healed, <scripRef id="John.vi-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.8.3" parsed="|Matt|8|3|0|0" passage="Mt 8:3">Matt. viii.
|
||
3</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p19">4. The poor impotent man takes this
|
||
opportunity to renew his complaint, and to set forth the misery of
|
||
his case, which makes his cure the more illustrious: <i>Sir, I have
|
||
no man to put me into the pool,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.7" parsed="|John|5|7|0|0" passage="Joh 5:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. He seems to take Christ's
|
||
question as an imputation of carelessness and neglect: "If thou
|
||
hadst had a mind to be healed, thou wouldest have looked better to
|
||
thy hits, and have got into the healing waters long before now."
|
||
"No, Master," saith the poor man, "It is not for want of a <i>good
|
||
will,</i> but of a <i>good friend,</i> that I am unhealed. I have
|
||
done what I could to help myself, but in vain, for no one else will
|
||
help me." (1.) He does not think of any other way of being cured
|
||
than by these waters, and desires no other friendship than to be
|
||
helped into <i>them;</i> therefore, when Christ cured him, his
|
||
imagination or expectation could not contribute to it, for he
|
||
thought of no such thing. (2.) He complains for want of friends to
|
||
help him in: "<i>I have no man,</i> no friend to do me that
|
||
kindness." One would think that some of those who had been
|
||
themselves healed should have lent him a hand; but it is common for
|
||
the poor to be destitute of friends; <i>no man careth for their
|
||
soul.</i> To the sick and impotent it is as true a piece of charity
|
||
to work for them as to relieve them; and thus the poor are capable
|
||
of being charitable to one another, and ought to be so, though we
|
||
seldom find that they are so; I speak it to their shame. (3.) He
|
||
bewails his infelicity, that very often when <i>he</i> was coming
|
||
<i>another stepped in before him.</i> But a step between him and a
|
||
cure, and yet he continues impotent. None had the charity to say,
|
||
"Your case is worse than mine, do you go in now, and I will stay
|
||
till the next time;" for there is no getting over the old maxim,
|
||
<i>Every one for himself.</i> Having been so often disappointed, he
|
||
begins to despair, and now is Christ's time to come to his relief;
|
||
he delights to help in desperate cases. Observe, How mildly this
|
||
man speaks of the unkindness of those about him, without any
|
||
peevish reflections. As we should be thankful for the least
|
||
kindness, so we should be patient under the greatest contempts;
|
||
and, let our resentments be ever so <i>just,</i> yet our
|
||
expressions should ever be <i>calm.</i> And observe further, to his
|
||
praise, that, though he had waited so long in vain, yet still he
|
||
continued lying by the pool side, hoping that some time or other
|
||
help would come, <scripRef id="John.vi-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Hab.2.3" parsed="|Hab|2|3|0|0" passage="Hab 2:3">Hab. ii.
|
||
3</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p20">5. Our Lord Jesus hereupon cures him with a
|
||
word speaking, though he neither asked it nor thought of it. Here
|
||
is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p21">(1.) The word he said: <i>Rise, take up thy
|
||
bed,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.8" parsed="|John|5|8|0|0" passage="Joh 5:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>. [1.]
|
||
He is bidden to <i>rise and walk;</i> a strange command to be given
|
||
to an <i>impotent</i> man, that had been long disabled; but this
|
||
divine word was to be the vehicle of a divine power; it was a
|
||
command to the disease to <i>be gone,</i> to nature to <i>be
|
||
strong,</i> but it is expressed as a command to him to <i>bestir
|
||
himself.</i> He must <i>rise and walk,</i> that is, attempt to do
|
||
it, and in the <i>essay</i> he should receive strength to do it.
|
||
The conversion of a sinner is the cure of a chronic disease; this
|
||
is ordinarily done by the word, a word of command: Arise, and walk;
|
||
<i>turn, and live; make ye a new heart;</i> which no more supposes
|
||
a power in us to do it, without the grace of God,
|
||
<i>distinguishing</i> grace, than this supposed such a power in the
|
||
impotent man. But, if he had not attempted to help himself, he had
|
||
not been cured, and he must have <i>borne the blame;</i> yet it
|
||
does not therefore follow that, when he did rise and walk, it was
|
||
by his own strength; no, it was by the power of Christ, and he must
|
||
have all the glory. Observe, Christ did not bid him rise and go
|
||
into the waters, but <i>rise and walk.</i> Christ did that for us
|
||
which the law could not do, and set that aside. [2.] He is bidden
|
||
to <i>take up his bed. First,</i> To make it to appear that it was
|
||
a <i>perfect cure,</i> and purely miraculous; for he did not
|
||
recover strength by degrees, but from the extremity of weakness and
|
||
impotency he suddenly stepped into the highest degree of bodily
|
||
strength; so that he was able to carry as great a load as any
|
||
porter that had been as long <i>used</i> to it as he had been
|
||
<i>disused.</i> He, who this minute was not able to turn himself in
|
||
his bed, the next minute was able to carry his bed. The man sick of
|
||
the palsy (<scripRef id="John.vi-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.9.6" parsed="|Matt|9|6|0|0" passage="Mt 9:6">Matt. ix. 6</scripRef>) was
|
||
bidden to <i>go to his house,</i> but probably this man had no
|
||
house to go to, the hospital was his home; therefore he is bidden
|
||
to <i>rise and walk. Secondly,</i> It was to <i>proclaim</i> the
|
||
cure, and make it public; for, being the sabbath day, whoever
|
||
carried a burden through the streets made himself very remarkable,
|
||
and every one would enquire what was the meaning of it; thereby
|
||
notice of the miracle would spread, to the honour of God.
|
||
<i>Thirdly,</i> Christ would thus witness against the tradition of
|
||
the elders, which had stretched the law of the sabbath beyond its
|
||
intention; and would likewise show that he was <i>Lord of the
|
||
sabbath,</i> and had power to make what alterations he pleased
|
||
about it, and to over-rule the law. Joshua, and the host of Israel,
|
||
marched about Jericho on the sabbath day, when God commanded them,
|
||
so did this man carry his bed, in obedience to a command. The case
|
||
may be such that it may become a work of <i>necessity,</i> or
|
||
<i>mercy,</i> to carry a bed on the sabbath day; but here it was
|
||
more, it was a work of <i>piety,</i> being designed purely for the
|
||
glory of God. <i>Fourthly,</i> He would hereby try the faith and
|
||
obedience of his patient. By carrying his bed publicly, he exposed
|
||
himself to the censure of the ecclesiastical court, and was liable,
|
||
at least, to be <i>scourged in the synagogue.</i> Now, will he run
|
||
the hazard of this, in obedience to Christ? Yes, he will. Those
|
||
that have been <i>healed by Christ's word</i> should be <i>ruled by
|
||
his word,</i> whatever it cost them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p22">(2.) The efficacy of this word (<scripRef id="John.vi-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.9" parsed="|John|5|9|0|0" passage="Joh 5:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>): a divine power went
|
||
alone with it, and immediately he was <i>made whole, took up his
|
||
bed, and walked.</i> [1.] He felt the power of Christ's word
|
||
healing him: <i>Immediately he was made whole.</i> What a joyful
|
||
surprise was this to the poor cripple, to find himself all of a
|
||
sudden so easy, so strong, so able to help himself! What a new
|
||
world was he in, in an instant! Nothing is too hard for Christ to
|
||
do. [2.] He obeyed the power of Christ's word commanding him. He
|
||
<i>took up his bed and walked,</i> and did not care who blamed him
|
||
or threatened him for it. The proof of our spiritual cure is our
|
||
rising and walking. Hath Christ healed our spiritual diseases? Let
|
||
us go whithersoever he sends us, and <i>take up</i> whatever he is
|
||
pleased to lay upon us, and <i>walk before him.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p23">V. What became of the poor man after he was
|
||
cured. We are here told,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p24">1. What passed between him and the Jews who
|
||
saw him carry his bed on the sabbath day; for on that day this cure
|
||
was wrought, and it was the sabbath that fell within the passover
|
||
week, and therefore a <i>high day,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:John.19.31" parsed="|John|19|31|0|0" passage="Joh 19:31"><i>ch.</i> xix. 31</scripRef>. Christ's work was such
|
||
that he needed not make any difference between sabbath days and
|
||
other days, for he was always about his Father's business; but he
|
||
wrought many remarkable cures on that day, perhaps to encourage his
|
||
church to expect those spiritual favours from him, in their
|
||
observance of the Christian sabbath, which were typified by his
|
||
miraculous cures. Now here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p25">(1.) The Jews quarrelled with the man for
|
||
carrying his bed on the sabbath day, telling him that <i>it was not
|
||
lawful,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.10" parsed="|John|5|10|0|0" passage="Joh 5:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>.
|
||
It does not appear whether they were magistrates, who had power to
|
||
<i>punish</i> him, or common people, who could only <i>inform</i>
|
||
against him; but thus far was commendable, that, while they knew
|
||
not by <i>what authority</i> he did it, they were jealous for the
|
||
honour of the sabbath, and could not unconcernedly see it
|
||
<i>profaned;</i> like Nehemiah. <scripRef id="John.vi-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Neh.13.17" parsed="|Neh|13|17|0|0" passage="Ne 13:17">Neh.
|
||
xiii. 17</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p26">(2.) The man justified himself in what he
|
||
did by a warrant that would bear him out, <scripRef id="John.vi-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.11" parsed="|John|5|11|0|0" passage="Joh 5:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>. "I do not do it in contempt of
|
||
the law and the sabbath, but in obedience to one who, by <i>making
|
||
me whole,</i> has given me an undeniable proof that he is greater
|
||
than either. He that could work such a miracle as to <i>make me
|
||
whole</i> no doubt might give me such a command as to carry <i>my
|
||
bed;</i> he that could overrule the powers of nature no doubt might
|
||
overrule a positive law, especially in an instance not of the
|
||
essence of the law. He that was so kind as to make me whole would
|
||
not be so unkind as to bid me do what is sinful." Christ, by curing
|
||
another paralytic, proved his power to <i>forgive sin,</i> here to
|
||
<i>give law;</i> if his pardons are valid, his edicts are so, and
|
||
his miracles prove both.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p27">(3.) The Jews enquired further who it was
|
||
that gave him this warrant (<scripRef id="John.vi-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.12" parsed="|John|5|12|0|0" passage="Joh 5:12"><i>v.</i>
|
||
12</scripRef>): <i>What man is that?</i> Observe, How industriously
|
||
they <i>overlooked</i> that which might be a ground of their
|
||
<i>faith in Christ.</i> They enquire not, no, not for curiosity,
|
||
"Who is it that <i>made thee whole?</i>" While they industriously
|
||
caught at that which might be a ground of reflection upon Christ
|
||
(<i>What man is</i> it who said unto thee, <i>Take up thy bed?</i>)
|
||
they would fain <i>subpoena</i> the patient to be witness against
|
||
his physician, and to be his betrayer. In their question, observe,
|
||
[1.] They resolve to look upon Christ as a <i>mere man: What man is
|
||
that?</i> For, though he gave ever such convincing proofs of it,
|
||
they were resolved that they would never own him to be the <i>Son
|
||
of God.</i> [2.] They resolve to look upon him as a bad <i>man,</i>
|
||
and take it for granted that he who bade this man carry his bed,
|
||
whatever divine commission he might <i>produce,</i> was certainly a
|
||
delinquent, and as such they resolve to prosecute him. <i>What man
|
||
is that</i> who durst give such orders?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p28">(4.) The poor man was unable to give them
|
||
any account of him: <i>He wist not who he was,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.13" parsed="|John|5|13|0|0" passage="Joh 5:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p29">[1.] Christ was <i>unknown</i> to him when
|
||
he healed him. Probably he had heard of the name of Jesus, but had
|
||
never seen him, and therefore could not tell that this was he.
|
||
Note, Christ does many a good turn for those that know him not,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.45.4-Isa.45.5" parsed="|Isa|45|4|45|5" passage="Isa 45:4,5">Isa. xlv. 4, 5</scripRef>. He
|
||
enlightens, strengthens, quickens, comforts us, and we <i>wist not
|
||
who he is;</i> nor are aware how much we receive daily by his
|
||
mediation. This man, being unacquainted with Christ, could not
|
||
actually believe in him for a cure; but Christ knew the
|
||
dispositions of his soul, and suited his favours to them, as to the
|
||
blind man in a like case, <scripRef id="John.vi-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:John.9.36" parsed="|John|9|36|0|0" passage="Joh 9:36"><i>ch.</i>
|
||
ix. 36</scripRef>. Our covenant and communion with God take rise,
|
||
not so much from our knowledge of him, as from his knowledge of us.
|
||
We <i>know God,</i> or, rather, are <i>known of him,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Gal.4.9" parsed="|Gal|4|9|0|0" passage="Ga 4:9">Gal. iv. 9</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p30">[2.] For the present he <i>kept himself
|
||
unknown;</i> for as soon as he had wrought the cure he <i>conveyed
|
||
himself away,</i> he <i>made himself unknown</i> (so some read it),
|
||
<i>a multitude being in that place.</i> This is mentioned to show,
|
||
either, <i>First,</i> How Christ conveyed himself away—by retiring
|
||
into the crowd, so as not to be distinguished from a common person.
|
||
He that was the chief of ten thousand often made himself one of the
|
||
throng. It is sometimes the lot of those who have by their services
|
||
signalized themselves to be levelled with the multitude, and
|
||
overlooked. Or <i>Secondly, Why</i> he conveyed himself away,
|
||
because there was <i>a multitude</i> there, and he industriously
|
||
avoided both the <i>applause</i> of those who would admire the
|
||
miracle and <i>cry that up,</i> and the censure of those who would
|
||
censure him as a sabbath-breaker, and <i>run him down.</i> Those
|
||
that are active for God in their generation must expect to pass
|
||
through <i>evil report</i> and <i>good report;</i> and it is wisdom
|
||
as much as may be to keep out of the hearing of both; lest by the
|
||
one we be <i>exalted,</i> and by the other <i>depressed,</i> above
|
||
measure. Christ left the miracle to commend itself, and the man on
|
||
whom it was wrought to justify it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p31">2. What passed between him and our Lord
|
||
Jesus at their next interview, <scripRef id="John.vi-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.14" parsed="|John|5|14|0|0" passage="Joh 5:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>. Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p32">(1.) Where Christ found him: <i>in the
|
||
temple,</i> the place of public worship. In our attendance on
|
||
public worship we may expect to meet with Christ, and improve our
|
||
acquaintance with him. Observe, [1.] Christ <i>went to the
|
||
temple.</i> Though he had many enemies, yet he appeared in public,
|
||
because there he bore his testimony to divine institutions, and had
|
||
opportunity of doing good. [2.] The man that was cured <i>went to
|
||
the temple.</i> There Christ found him the same day, as it should
|
||
seem, that he was healed; thither he straightway went,
|
||
<i>First,</i> Because he had, <i>by his infirmity,</i> been so long
|
||
<i>detained</i> thence. Perhaps he had not been there for
|
||
thirty-eight years, and therefore, as soon as ever the embargo is
|
||
taken off, his first visit shall be to the temple, as Hezekiah
|
||
intimates his shall be (<scripRef id="John.vi-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.38.22" parsed="|Isa|38|22|0|0" passage="Isa 38:22">Isa. xxxviii.
|
||
22</scripRef>): <i>What is the sign that I shall go up to the house
|
||
of the Lord? Secondly,</i> Because he had <i>by his recovery</i> a
|
||
good errand thither; he went up to the temple to return thanks to
|
||
God for his recovery. When God has at any time restored us our
|
||
health we ought to attend him with solemn praises (<scripRef id="John.vi-p32.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.116.18-Ps.116.19" parsed="|Ps|116|18|116|19" passage="Ps 116:18,19">Ps. cxvi. 18, 19</scripRef>), and the sooner
|
||
the better, while the sense of the mercy is fresh. <i>Thirdly,</i>
|
||
Because he had, by <i>carrying his bed,</i> seemed to put a
|
||
contempt on the sabbath, he would thus show that he had an honour
|
||
for it, and made conscience of sabbath-sanctification, in that on
|
||
which the chief stress of it is laid, which is the <i>public
|
||
worship</i> of God. Works of necessity and mercy are allowed; but
|
||
when they are over we must <i>go to the temple.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p33">(2.) What he said to him. When Christ has
|
||
cured us, he has not done with us; he now applies himself to the
|
||
healing of his soul, and this <i>by the word</i> too. [1.] He gives
|
||
him a <i>memento</i> of his cure: <i>Behold thou art made
|
||
whole.</i> He found himself made whole, yet Christ calls his
|
||
attention to it. <i>Behold, consider</i> it seriously, how sudden,
|
||
how strange, how cheap, how easy, the cure was: <i>admire it;</i>
|
||
behold, and wonder: <i>Remember it;</i> let the impressions of it
|
||
abide, and never be lost, <scripRef id="John.vi-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.38.9" parsed="|Isa|38|9|0|0" passage="Isa 38:9">Isa.
|
||
xxxviii. 9</scripRef>. [2.] He gives him a caution against sin, in
|
||
consideration hereof, <i>Being made whole, sin no more.</i> This
|
||
implies that his disease was the punishment of sin; whether of some
|
||
remarkably flagrant sin, or only of sin in general, we cannot tell,
|
||
but we know that sin is the procuring cause of sickness, <scripRef id="John.vi-p33.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.107.17-Ps.107.18" parsed="|Ps|107|17|107|18" passage="Ps 107:17,18">Ps. cvii. 17, 18</scripRef>. Some observe
|
||
that Christ did not make mention of sin to any of his patients,
|
||
except to this <i>impotent</i> man, and another who was in like
|
||
manner diseased, <scripRef id="John.vi-p33.3" osisRef="Bible:Mark.2.5" parsed="|Mark|2|5|0|0" passage="Mk 2:5">Mark ii. 5</scripRef>.
|
||
While those chronical diseases lasted, they prevented the outward
|
||
acts of many sins, and therefore watchfulness was the more
|
||
necessary when the disability was removed. Christ intimates that
|
||
those who are <i>made whole,</i> who are eased of the present
|
||
sensible punishment of sin, are in danger of <i>returning</i> to
|
||
sin when the terror and restraint are over, unless divine grace dry
|
||
up the fountain. When the trouble which only dammed up the current
|
||
is over, the waters will return to their old course; and therefore
|
||
there is great need of watchfulness, lest after healing mercy we
|
||
return again to folly. The <i>misery</i> we were <i>made whole
|
||
from</i> warns us to sin no more, having felt the smart of sin; the
|
||
<i>mercy</i> we were <i>made whole by</i> is an engagement upon us
|
||
not to offend him who healed us. This is the voice of every
|
||
providence, <i>Go and sin no more.</i> This man began his new life
|
||
very hopefully <i>in the temple,</i> yet Christ saw it necessary to
|
||
give him this caution; for it is common for people, when they are
|
||
sick, to <i>promise much,</i> when newly recovered to <i>perform
|
||
something,</i> but after awhile to <i>forget all.</i> [3.] He gives
|
||
him warning of his danger, in case he should return to his former
|
||
sinful course: <i>Lest a worse thing come to thee.</i> Christ, who
|
||
knows all men's hearts, knew that he was one of those that must be
|
||
<i>frightened</i> from sin. Thirty-eight years' lameness, one would
|
||
think, was a thing bad enough; yet there is something <i>worse</i>
|
||
that will come to him if he relapse into sin after God has <i>given
|
||
him such a deliverance</i> as this, <scripRef id="John.vi-p33.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezra.9.13-Ezra.9.14" parsed="|Ezra|9|13|9|14" passage="Ezr 9:13,14">Ezra ix. 13, 14</scripRef>. The hospital where he lay
|
||
was a melancholy place, but hell is much more so: the doom of
|
||
apostates is a worse thing than thirty-eight years' lameness.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p34">VI. Now, after this interview between
|
||
Christ and his patient, observe in the <scripRef id="John.vi-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.15-John.5.16" parsed="|John|5|15|5|16" passage="Joh 5:15,16">two following verses</scripRef>, 1. The notice which
|
||
the poor simple man gave to the Jews concerning Christ, <scripRef id="John.vi-p34.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.15" parsed="|John|5|15|0|0" passage="Joh 5:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>. He told them it was
|
||
Jesus that had <i>made him whole.</i> We have reason to think that
|
||
he intended this for the honour of Christ and the benefit of the
|
||
Jews, little thinking that he who had so much power and goodness
|
||
could have <i>any</i> enemies; but those who wish well to Christ's
|
||
kingdom must have the <i>wisdom of the serpent,</i> lest they do
|
||
more hurt than good with their zeal, and must not cast pearls
|
||
before swine. 2. The rage and enmity of the Jews against him:
|
||
<i>Therefore did the</i> rulers of the Jews <i>persecute Jesus.</i>
|
||
See, (1.) How absurd and unreasonable their enmity to Christ was.
|
||
<i>Therefore,</i> because he had made a poor sick man well, and so
|
||
eased the public charge, upon which, it is likely, he had
|
||
subsisted; <i>therefore</i> they persecuted him, because he did
|
||
good in Israel. (2.) How bloody and cruel it was: <i>They sought to
|
||
slay him;</i> nothing less than his blood, his life, would satisfy
|
||
them. (3.) How it was varnished over with a colour of zeal for the
|
||
honour of the sabbath; for this was the pretended crime, <i>Because
|
||
he had done these things on the sabbath day,</i> as if that
|
||
circumstance were enough to vitiate the best and most divine
|
||
actions, and to render <i>him</i> obnoxious whose deeds were
|
||
otherwise most meritorious. Thus hypocrites often cover their real
|
||
enmity against the <i>power</i> of godliness with a pretended zeal
|
||
for the <i>form</i> of it.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="John.vi-p34.3" osisRef="Bible:John.5.17-John.5.30" parsed="|John|5|17|5|30" passage="Joh 5:17-30" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:John.5.17-John.5.30">
|
||
<h4 id="John.vi-p34.4">Christ's Discourse with the Jews; All
|
||
Judgment Committed to Christ; The Christian
|
||
Charter.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="John.vi-p35">17 But Jesus answered them, My Father worketh
|
||
hitherto, and I work. 18 Therefore the Jews sought the more
|
||
to kill him, because he not only had broken the sabbath, but said
|
||
also that God was his Father, making himself equal with God.
|
||
19 Then answered Jesus and said unto them, Verily, verily, I say
|
||
unto you, The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the
|
||
Father do: for what things soever he doeth, these also doeth the
|
||
Son likewise. 20 For the Father loveth the Son, and showeth
|
||
him all things that himself doeth: and he will show him greater
|
||
works than these, that ye may marvel. 21 For as the Father
|
||
raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth <i>them;</i> even so the Son
|
||
quickeneth whom he will. 22 For the Father judgeth no man,
|
||
but hath committed all judgment unto the Son: 23 That all
|
||
<i>men</i> should honour the Son, even as they honour the Father.
|
||
He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father which hath
|
||
sent him. 24 Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth
|
||
my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life,
|
||
and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto
|
||
life. 25 Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming,
|
||
and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God:
|
||
and they that hear shall live. 26 For as the Father hath
|
||
life in himself; so hath he given to the Son to have life in
|
||
himself; 27 And hath given him authority to execute judgment
|
||
also, because he is the Son of man. 28 Marvel not at this:
|
||
for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves
|
||
shall hear his voice, 29 And shall come forth; they that
|
||
have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have
|
||
done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation. 30 I can of
|
||
mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is
|
||
just; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father
|
||
which hath sent me.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p36">We have here Christ's discourse upon
|
||
occasion of his being accused as a sabbath-breaker, and it seems to
|
||
be his vindication of himself before the sanhedrim, when he was
|
||
arraigned before them: whether on the same day, or two or three
|
||
days after, does not appear; probably the same day. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p37">I. The doctrine laid down, by which he
|
||
justified what he did on the sabbath day (<scripRef id="John.vi-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.17" parsed="|John|5|17|0|0" passage="Joh 5:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>): <i>He answered them.</i> This
|
||
supposes that he had something laid to his charge: or what they
|
||
suggested one to another, when they sought to slay him (<scripRef id="John.vi-p37.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.16" parsed="|John|5|16|0|0" passage="Joh 5:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>), he <i>knew,</i> and
|
||
gave this reply to, <i>My Father worketh hitherto, and I work.</i>
|
||
At other times, in answer to the like charge, he had pleaded the
|
||
example of David's eating the show-bread, of the priests' slaying
|
||
the sacrifices, and of the people's watering their cattle on the
|
||
sabbath day; but here he goes higher and alleges the example of his
|
||
Father and his divine authority; waiving all other pleas, he
|
||
insists upon that which was <i>instar omnium—equivalent to the
|
||
whole,</i> and abides by it, which he had mentioned, <scripRef id="John.vi-p37.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.8" parsed="|Matt|12|8|0|0" passage="Mt 12:8">Matt. xii. 8</scripRef>. <i>The Son of man is
|
||
Lord even of the sabbath day;</i> but he here enlarges on it. 1. He
|
||
pleads that he was the Son of God, <i>plainly intimated in his
|
||
calling God his Father;</i> and, if so, his holiness was
|
||
<i>unquestionable</i> and his sovereignty <i>incontestable;</i> and
|
||
he might make what alterations he pleased of the divine law.
|
||
<i>Surely they will reverence the Son,</i> the heir of all things.
|
||
2. That he was a worker together with God. (1.) <i>My Father
|
||
worketh hitherto.</i> The example of God's resting on the seventh
|
||
day from all his work is, in the fourth commandment, made the
|
||
ground of our observing it as a <i>sabbath</i> or <i>day of
|
||
rest.</i> Now God rested only from such work as he had done the six
|
||
days before; otherwise he <i>worketh hitherto,</i> he is every day
|
||
working, sabbath days and week-days, upholding and governing all
|
||
the creatures, and concurring by his common providence to all the
|
||
motions and operations of nature, <i>to his own glory;</i>
|
||
therefore, when we are appointed to rest on the sabbath day, yet we
|
||
are not restrained from doing that which has a direct tendency
|
||
<i>to the glory of God,</i> as the man's carrying his bed had. (2.)
|
||
<i>I work;</i> not only therefore I <i>may</i> work, <i>like
|
||
him,</i> in doing good on sabbath days as well as other days, but I
|
||
also <i>work with him.</i> As God created all things by Christ, so
|
||
he supports and governs all by him, <scripRef id="John.vi-p37.4" osisRef="Bible:Heb.1.3" parsed="|Heb|1|3|0|0" passage="Heb 1:3">Heb. i. 3</scripRef>. This sets what he does above all
|
||
exception; he that is so great a worker must needs be an
|
||
uncontrollable governor; he that does all is Lord of all, and
|
||
therefore <i>Lord of the sabbath,</i> which particular branch of
|
||
his authority he would now assert, because he was shortly to show
|
||
it further, in the change of the day from the seventh to the
|
||
first.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p38">II. The offence that was taken at his
|
||
doctrine (<scripRef id="John.vi-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.18" parsed="|John|5|18|0|0" passage="Joh 5:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>The Jews sought the more to kill him.</i> His defence was made
|
||
his offence, as if by justifying himself he had made bad worse.
|
||
Note, Those that will not be enlightened by the word of Christ will
|
||
be enraged and exasperated by it, and nothing more vexes the
|
||
enemies of Christ than his asserting his authority; see <scripRef id="John.vi-p38.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.2.3-Ps.2.5" parsed="|Ps|2|3|2|5" passage="Ps 2:3-5">Ps. ii. 3-5</scripRef>. They sought to kill
|
||
him,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p39">1. Because he had broken the sabbath; for,
|
||
let him say what he would in his own justification, they are
|
||
resolved, right or wrong, to <i>find him guilty</i> of sabbath
|
||
breaking. When malice and envy sit upon the bench, reason and
|
||
justice may even be silent at the bar, for whatever they can say
|
||
will undoubtedly be over-ruled.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p40">2. Not only so, but he had said also
|
||
<i>that God was his Father.</i> Now they pretend a jealousy for
|
||
<i>God's honour,</i> as before for the sabbath day, and charge
|
||
Christ with it as a heinous crime that he made himself equal with
|
||
God; and a heinous crime it had been if he had not really been so.
|
||
It was the sin of Lucifer, <i>I will be like the Most High.</i>
|
||
Now, (1.) This was justly inferred from what he said, that he was
|
||
the <i>Son of God,</i> and that God was <i>his Father,</i>
|
||
<b><i>patera idion</i></b>—<i>his own Father;</i> his, so as he
|
||
was no one's else. He had said that he worked with his Father, by
|
||
the same authority and power, and hereby he made himself equal with
|
||
God. <i>Ecce intelligunt Judæi, quod non intelligunt
|
||
Ariani—Behold, the Jews understand what the Arians do not.</i>
|
||
(2.) Yet it was unjustly imputed to him as an offence that he
|
||
equalled himself with God, for he was and is God, equal with the
|
||
Father (<scripRef id="John.vi-p40.1" osisRef="Bible:Phil.2.6" parsed="|Phil|2|6|0|0" passage="Php 2:6">Phil. ii. 6</scripRef>); and
|
||
therefore Christ, in answer to this charge, does not except against
|
||
the innuendo as strained or forced, makes out his claim and proves
|
||
that he is equal with God in power and glory.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p41">III. Christ's discourse upon this occasion,
|
||
which continues without interruption to the end of the chapter. In
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p41.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.19-John.5.47" parsed="|John|5|19|5|47" passage="Joh 5:19-47">these verses</scripRef> he
|
||
explains, and afterwards confirms, his commission, as Mediator and
|
||
plenipotentiary in the treaty between God and man. And, as the
|
||
honours he is hereby <i>entitled to</i> are such as it is not fit
|
||
for any creature to receive, so the work he is hereby entrusted
|
||
with is such as it is not possible for any creature to go through
|
||
with, and therefore he is God, equal with the Father.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p42">1. <i>In general.</i> He is one with the
|
||
Father in all he does as Mediator, and there was a perfectly good
|
||
understanding between them in the whole matter. It is ushered in
|
||
with a solemn preface (<scripRef id="John.vi-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.19" parsed="|John|5|19|0|0" passage="Joh 5:19"><i>v.</i>
|
||
19</scripRef>): <i>Verily, verily, I say unto you;</i> I the Amen,
|
||
the Amen, say it. This intimates that the things declared are, (1.)
|
||
Very awful and great, and such as should command the most serious
|
||
attention. (2.) Very sure, and such as should command an unfeigned
|
||
assent. (3.) That they are matters purely of divine revelation;
|
||
things which Christ has told us, and which we could not otherwise
|
||
have come to the knowledge of. Two things he saith in general
|
||
concerning the Son's oneness with the Father in working:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p43">[1.] That the Son <i>conforms to the
|
||
Father</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p43.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.19" parsed="|John|5|19|0|0" passage="Joh 5:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>The Son can do nothing of himself but what he sees the Father
|
||
do;</i> for <i>these things does the Son.</i> The Lord Jesus, as
|
||
Mediator, is <i>First, Obedient to his Father's will;</i> so
|
||
entirely obedient that he <i>can do nothing of himself,</i> in the
|
||
same sense as it is said, <i>God cannot</i> lie, <i>cannot deny</i>
|
||
himself, which expresses the perfection of his truth, not any
|
||
imperfection in his strength; so here, Christ was so entirely
|
||
devoted to his Father's will that it was impossible for him in any
|
||
thing to act separately. <i>Secondly,</i> He is <i>observant of his
|
||
Father's counsel;</i> he can, he will, do nothing <i>but what he
|
||
sees the Father do.</i> No man can <i>find out the work of God,</i>
|
||
but the only-begotten Son, who lay in his bosom, sees what he does,
|
||
is intimately acquainted with his purposes, and has the plan of
|
||
them ever before him. What he did as Mediator, throughout his whole
|
||
undertaking, was the exact transcript or counterpart of what the
|
||
Father did; that is, what he designed, when he formed the plan of
|
||
our redemption in his eternal counsels, and settled those measures
|
||
in every thing which never could be <i>broken,</i> nor ever needed
|
||
to be <i>altered.</i> It was the copy of that <i>great
|
||
original;</i> it was Christ's faithfulness, as it was Moses's, that
|
||
he did all <i>according to the pattern shown him in the mount.</i>
|
||
This is expressed in the present tense, what he <i>sees the Father
|
||
do,</i> for the same reason that, when he was here upon earth, it
|
||
was said, He <i>is</i> in heaven (<scripRef id="John.vi-p43.2" osisRef="Bible:John.3.13" parsed="|John|3|13|0|0" passage="Joh 3:13"><i>ch.</i> iii. 13</scripRef>), and <i>is</i> in the
|
||
bosom of the Father (<scripRef id="John.vi-p43.3" osisRef="Bible:John.1.18" parsed="|John|1|18|0|0" passage="Joh 1:18"><i>ch.</i> i.
|
||
18</scripRef>); as he was even then by his divine nature present in
|
||
heaven, so the things done in heaven were <i>present</i> to his
|
||
knowledge. What the Father did in his counsels, the Son had ever in
|
||
his view, and still he had his eye upon it, as David in spirit
|
||
spoke of him, <i>I have set the Lord always before me,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p43.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.16.8" parsed="|Ps|16|8|0|0" passage="Ps 16:8">Ps. xvi. 8</scripRef>. <i>Thirdly,</i>
|
||
Yet he is <i>equal</i> with the Father in <i>working;</i> for
|
||
<i>what things soever</i> the Father does <i>these also does the
|
||
Son likewise;</i> he did the <i>same</i> things, not <i>such</i>
|
||
things, but <b><i>tauta</i></b>, the <i>same</i> things; and he did
|
||
them in the <i>same manner,</i> <b><i>homoios</i></b>,
|
||
<i>likewise,</i> with the same authority, and liberty, and wisdom,
|
||
the same energy and efficacy. Does the Father enact, repeal, and
|
||
alter, positive laws? Does he over-rule the course of nature, know
|
||
men's hearts? So does the Son. The power of the Mediator is a
|
||
divine power.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p44">[2.] That the Father <i>communicates</i> to
|
||
the Son, <scripRef id="John.vi-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.20" parsed="|John|5|20|0|0" passage="Joh 5:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>.
|
||
Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p45"><i>First,</i> The inducement to it: <i>The
|
||
Father loveth the Son;</i> he declared, <i>This is my beloved
|
||
Son.</i> He had not only a good will to the undertaking, but an
|
||
infinite complacency in the undertaker. Christ was now hated of
|
||
men, one whom the nation abhorred (<scripRef id="John.vi-p45.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.49.7" parsed="|Isa|49|7|0|0" passage="Isa 49:7">Isa. xlix. 7</scripRef>); but he comforted himself with
|
||
this, that his Father loved him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p46"><i>Secondly,</i> The instances of it. He
|
||
shows it, 1. In what he <i>does</i> communicate to him: <i>He shows
|
||
him all things that himself doth.</i> The Father's measures in
|
||
making and ruling the world are shown to the Son, that he may take
|
||
the same measures in framing and governing the church, which work
|
||
was to be a duplicate of the work of creation and providence, and
|
||
it is therefore called <i>the world to come.</i> He shows him all
|
||
things <b><i>ha autos poiei</i></b>—<i>which he does,</i> that is,
|
||
which the <i>Son</i> does, so it might be construed; all that the
|
||
Son does is by direction from the Father; he <i>shows</i> him. 2.
|
||
In what he <i>will</i> communicate; he will <i>show him,</i> that
|
||
is, will appoint and direct him to do <i>greater works than
|
||
these.</i> (1.) Works of greater <i>power</i> than the <i>curing of
|
||
the impotent man;</i> for he should raise the dead, and should
|
||
himself rise from the dead. By the power of nature, with the use of
|
||
means, a disease may possibly in time be cured; but nature can
|
||
never, by the use of any means, in any time raise the dead. (2.)
|
||
Works of greater <i>authority</i> than warranting the man to
|
||
<i>carry his bed on the sabbath day.</i> They thought this a daring
|
||
attempt; but what was this to his abrogating the whole ceremonial
|
||
law, and instituting new ordinances, which he would shortly do,
|
||
"<i>that you may marvel!</i>" Now they looked upon his works with
|
||
contempt and indignation, but he will shortly do that which they
|
||
will look upon with amazement, <scripRef id="John.vi-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.7.16" parsed="|Luke|7|16|0|0" passage="Lu 7:16">Luke
|
||
vii. 16</scripRef>. Many are brought to marvel at Christ's works,
|
||
whereby he has the honour of them, who are not brought to believe,
|
||
by which they would have the benefit of them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p47">2. <i>In particular.</i> He proves his
|
||
equality with the Father, by specifying some of those works which
|
||
he does that are the peculiar works of God. This is enlarged upon,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.21-John.5.30" parsed="|John|5|21|5|30" passage="Joh 5:21-30"><i>v.</i> 21-30</scripRef>. He
|
||
does, and shall do, that which is the peculiar work of God's
|
||
sovereign dominion and jurisdiction—<i>judging</i> and
|
||
<i>executing judgment,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.22-John.5.24 Bible:John.5.27" parsed="|John|5|22|5|24;|John|5|27|0|0" passage="Joh 5:22-24,27"><i>v.</i> 22-24, 27</scripRef>. These two are
|
||
interwoven, as being nearly connected; and what is said once is
|
||
repeated and inculcated; put both together, and they will prove
|
||
that Christ said not amiss when he made himself <i>equal with
|
||
God.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p48">(1.) Observe what is here said concerning
|
||
the Mediator's power to <i>raise the dead</i> and <i>give life.</i>
|
||
See [1.] His <i>authority</i> to do it (<scripRef id="John.vi-p48.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.21" parsed="|John|5|21|0|0" passage="Joh 5:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>): <i>As the Father raiseth up
|
||
the dead,</i> so <i>the Son quickeneth whom he will. First,</i> It
|
||
is God's prerogative to raise the dead, and give life, even his who
|
||
first <i>breathed</i> into man the <i>breath of life,</i> and so
|
||
made him a <i>living soul;</i> see <scripRef id="John.vi-p48.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.32.30 Bible:1Sam.2.6 Bible:Ps.68.20 Bible:Rom.4.17" parsed="|Deut|32|30|0|0;|1Sam|2|6|0|0;|Ps|68|20|0|0;|Rom|4|17|0|0" passage="De 32:30,1Sa 2:6,Ps 68:20,Ro 4:17">Deut. xxxii. 30; 1 Sam. ii. 6;
|
||
Ps. lxviii. 20; Rom. iv. 17</scripRef>. This God had done by the
|
||
prophets Elijah and Elisha, and it was a confirmation of their
|
||
mission. A <i>resurrection from the dead</i> never lay in the
|
||
common road of nature, nor ever fell within the thought of those
|
||
that studied only the compass of nature's power, one of whose
|
||
received axioms was point blank against it: <i>A privatione ad
|
||
habitum non datur regressus—Existence, when once extinguished,
|
||
cannot be rekindled.</i> It was therefore ridiculed at Athens as an
|
||
<i>absurd</i> thing, <scripRef id="John.vi-p48.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.17.32" parsed="|Acts|17|32|0|0" passage="Ac 17:32">Acts xvii.
|
||
32</scripRef>. It is purely the work of a divine power, and the
|
||
knowledge of it purely by divine revelation. This the Jews would
|
||
own. <i>Secondly,</i> The Mediator is invested with this
|
||
prerogative: <i>He quickens whom he will;</i> raises to life whom
|
||
he pleases, and when he pleases. He does not enliven things by
|
||
natural necessity, as the sun does, whose beams revive of course;
|
||
but he acts as a free agent, has the dispensing of his power in his
|
||
own hand, and is never either <i>con</i>strained, or
|
||
<i>re</i>strained, in the use of it. As he has the power, so he has
|
||
the wisdom and sovereignty, of a God; has the <i>key of the grave
|
||
and of death</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p48.4" osisRef="Bible:Rev.1.18" parsed="|Rev|1|18|0|0" passage="Re 1:18">Rev. i.
|
||
18</scripRef>), not as a servant, to open and shut as he is bidden,
|
||
for he has it as the <i>key of David,</i> which he is master of,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p48.5" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.7" parsed="|Rev|3|7|0|0" passage="Re 3:7">Rev. iii. 7</scripRef>. An absolute
|
||
prince is described by this (<scripRef id="John.vi-p48.6" osisRef="Bible:Dan.5.19" parsed="|Dan|5|19|0|0" passage="Da 5:19">Dan. v.
|
||
19</scripRef>): <i>Whom he would he slew or kept alive;</i> it is
|
||
true of Christ without hyperbole.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p49">[2.] His <i>ability</i> to do it.
|
||
<i>Therefore</i> he has power to quicken whom he will as the Father
|
||
does, because <i>he has life in himself, as the Father has,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p49.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.26" parsed="|John|5|26|0|0" passage="Joh 5:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>. <i>First,</i>
|
||
It is certain that the Father <i>has life in himself.</i> Not only
|
||
he is a <i>self-existent</i> Being, who does not derive from, or
|
||
depend upon, any other (<scripRef id="John.vi-p49.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.3.14" parsed="|Exod|3|14|0|0" passage="Ex 3:14">Exod. iii.
|
||
14</scripRef>), but he is a sovereign giver of life; he has the
|
||
disposal of life in himself; and of all good (for so <i>life</i>
|
||
sometimes signifies); it is all derived from him, and dependent on
|
||
him. He is to his creatures the fountain of life, and all good;
|
||
author of their being and well-being; the living God, and the God
|
||
of all living. <i>Secondly,</i> It is as certain that he has
|
||
<i>given to the Son to have life in himself.</i> As the Father is
|
||
the original of all natural life and good, being the great Creator,
|
||
so the Son, as Redeemer, is the original of all spiritual life and
|
||
good; is that to the church which the Father is to the world; see
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p49.3" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.8.6 Bible:Col.1.19" parsed="|1Cor|8|6|0|0;|Col|1|19|0|0" passage="1Co 8:6,Col 1:19">1 Cor. viii. 6; Col. i.
|
||
19</scripRef>. The kingdom of grace, and all the life in that
|
||
kingdom, are as fully and absolutely in the hand of the Redeemer as
|
||
the kingdom of providence is in the hand of the Creator; and as
|
||
God, who gives being to all things, has his being of himself, so
|
||
Christ, who gives life, raised himself to life by his own power,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p49.4" osisRef="Bible:John.10.18" parsed="|John|10|18|0|0" passage="Joh 10:18"><i>ch.</i> x. 18</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p50">[3.] His <i>acting</i> according to this
|
||
authority and ability. Having <i>life in himself,</i> and being
|
||
authorized to <i>quicken whom he will,</i> by virtue hereof there
|
||
are, accordingly, two resurrections performed by his powerful word,
|
||
both which are here spoken of:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p51"><i>First,</i> A resurrection that <i>now
|
||
is</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p51.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.29" parsed="|John|5|29|0|0" passage="Joh 5:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>), a
|
||
resurrection from the death of sin to the life of righteousness, by
|
||
the power of Christ's grace. <i>The hour is coming, and now is.</i>
|
||
It is a resurrection begun already, and further to be carried on,
|
||
<i>when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God.</i> This
|
||
is plainly distinguished from that in <scripRef id="John.vi-p51.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.28" parsed="|John|5|28|0|0" passage="Joh 5:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>, which speaks of the
|
||
resurrection at the end of time. This says nothing, as that does,
|
||
of the dead in their graces, and of all of them, and their coming
|
||
forth. Now, 1. Some think this was fulfilled in those whom he
|
||
miraculously raised to life, Jairus's daughter, the widow's son,
|
||
and Lazarus; and it is observable that all whom Christ raised were
|
||
<i>spoken to,</i> as, <i>Damsel, arise; Young man, arise; Lazarus,
|
||
come forth;</i> whereas those raised under the Old Testament were
|
||
raised, not by a word, but other applications, <scripRef id="John.vi-p51.3" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.17.21 Bible:2Kgs.4.34 Bible:2Kgs.13.21" parsed="|1Kgs|17|21|0|0;|2Kgs|4|34|0|0;|2Kgs|13|21|0|0" passage="1Ki 17:21,2Ki 4:34,13:21">1 Kings xvii. 21; 2 Kings iv. 34; xiii.
|
||
21</scripRef>. Some understand it of those saints that rose with
|
||
Christ; but we do not read of the <i>voice of the Son of God</i>
|
||
calling them. But, 2. I rather understand it of the power of the
|
||
doctrine of Christ, for the recovering and quickening of those that
|
||
were <i>dead in trespasses and sins,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p51.4" osisRef="Bible:Eph.2.1" parsed="|Eph|2|1|0|0" passage="Eph 2:1">Eph. ii. 1</scripRef>. The <i>hour</i> was <i>coming</i>
|
||
when dead souls should be made alive by the <i>preaching</i> of the
|
||
gospel, and a spirit of life from God accompanying it: nay, it
|
||
<i>then was,</i> while Christ was upon earth. It may refer
|
||
especially to the <i>calling of the Gentiles,</i> which is said to
|
||
be as life from the dead, and, some think, was prefigured by
|
||
Ezekiel's vision (<scripRef id="John.vi-p51.5" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.37.1" parsed="|Ezek|37|1|0|0" passage="Eze 37:1"><i>ch.</i> xxxvii.
|
||
1</scripRef>), and foretold, <scripRef id="John.vi-p51.6" osisRef="Bible:Isa.26.19" parsed="|Isa|26|19|0|0" passage="Isa 26:19">Isa.
|
||
xxvi. 19</scripRef>. <i>Thy dead men shall live.</i> But it is to
|
||
be applied to all the wonderful success of the gospel, among both
|
||
Jews and Gentiles; an hour which still <i>is,</i> and is still
|
||
<i>coming,</i> till all the elect be effectually called. Note, (1.)
|
||
Sinners are spiritually <i>dead,</i> destitute of spiritual life,
|
||
sense, strength, and motion, dead to God, miserable, but neither
|
||
sensible of their misery nor able to help themselves out of it.
|
||
(2.) The conversion of a soul to God is its resurrection from death
|
||
to life; then it begins to live when it begins to <i>live to
|
||
God,</i> to breathe after him, and move towards him. (3.) It is by
|
||
the <i>voice of the Son of God</i> that souls are raised to
|
||
spiritual life; it is wrought by his power, and that power conveyed
|
||
and communicated by his word: <i>The dead shall hear,</i> shall be
|
||
made to hear, to understand, receive, and believe, the <i>voice of
|
||
the Son of God,</i> to hear it as his voice; then the Spirit by it
|
||
gives life, otherwise the <i>letter kills.</i> (4.) The voice of
|
||
Christ must be heard by us, that we may live by it. They that hear,
|
||
and attend to what they hear, shall live. <i>Hear and your soul
|
||
shall live,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p51.7" osisRef="Bible:Isa.55.3" parsed="|Isa|55|3|0|0" passage="Isa 55:3">Isa. lv.
|
||
3</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p52"><i>Secondly,</i> A resurrection yet <i>to
|
||
come;</i> this is spoken of, <scripRef id="John.vi-p52.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.28-John.5.29" parsed="|John|5|28|5|29" passage="Joh 5:28,29"><i>v.</i> 28, 29</scripRef>, introduced with,
|
||
"<i>Marvel not at this,</i> which I have said of the <i>first</i>
|
||
resurrection, do not reject it as incredible and absurd, for at the
|
||
end of time you shall all see a more sensible and amazing proof of
|
||
the power and authority of the Son of man." As <i>his own</i>
|
||
resurrection was reserved to be the final and concluding proof of
|
||
his personal commission, so the resurrection of <i>all men</i> is
|
||
reserved to be a like proof of his commission to be executed by his
|
||
spirit. Now observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p53"><i>a.</i> When this resurrection shall be:
|
||
<i>The hour is coming;</i> it is <i>fixed</i> to an hour, so very
|
||
punctual is this great appointment. The judgment is not adjourned
|
||
<i>sine die—to some time not yet pitched upon;</i> no, <i>he hath
|
||
appointed a day. The hour is coming.</i> (<i>a.</i>) It is <i>not
|
||
yet</i> come, it is not the hour spoken of at <scripRef id="John.vi-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.25" parsed="|John|5|25|0|0" passage="Joh 5:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>, that is coming, and <i>now
|
||
is.</i> Those erred dangerously who said that the <i>resurrection
|
||
was past already,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p53.2" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.2.18" parsed="|2Tim|2|18|0|0" passage="2Ti 2:18">2 Tim. ii.
|
||
18</scripRef>, But, (<i>b.</i>) It <i>will certainly</i> come, it
|
||
is coming on, nearer every day than other; it is at the door. How
|
||
far off it is we know not; but we know that it is infallibly
|
||
designed and unalterably determined.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p54"><i>b.</i> Who shall be raised: <i>All that
|
||
are in the graves,</i> all that have died from the beginning of
|
||
time, and all that shall die to the end of time. It was said
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:Dan.12.2" parsed="|Dan|12|2|0|0" passage="Da 12:2">Dan. xii. 2</scripRef>), <i>Many</i>
|
||
shall arise; Christ here tells us that those <i>many</i> shall be
|
||
<i>all; all</i> must appear before the Judge, and therefore
|
||
<i>all</i> must be raised; every person, and the whole of every
|
||
person; every soul shall return to its body, and every <i>bone to
|
||
its bone.</i> The grave is the prison of dead bodies, where they
|
||
are <i>detained;</i> their furnace, where they are <i>consumed</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p54.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.24.19" parsed="|Job|24|19|0|0" passage="Job 24:19">Job xxiv. 19</scripRef>); yet, in
|
||
prospect of their resurrection, we may call it their <i>bed,</i>
|
||
where they sleep to be <i>awaked</i> again; their treasury, where
|
||
they are laid up to be used again. Even those that are not <i>put
|
||
into graves</i> shall arise; but, because most are put into graves,
|
||
Christ uses this expression, <i>all that are in the graves.</i> The
|
||
Jews used the word <i>sheol</i> for the <i>grave,</i> which
|
||
signifies <i>the state of the dead;</i> all that are in that state
|
||
<i>shall hear.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p55"><i>c.</i> How they shall be raised. Two
|
||
things are here told us:—(<i>a.</i>) The efficient of this
|
||
resurrection: <i>They shall hear his voice;</i> that is, he shall
|
||
cause them to hear it, as Lazarus was made to hear that word,
|
||
<i>Come forth;</i> a divine power shall go along with the voice, to
|
||
put life into them, and enable them to obey it. When Christ rose,
|
||
there was no voice heard, not a word spoken, because he rose by his
|
||
own power; but at the resurrection of the children of men we find
|
||
three voices spoken of, <scripRef id="John.vi-p55.1" osisRef="Bible:1Thess.4.16" parsed="|1Thess|4|16|0|0" passage="1Th 4:16">1 Thess. iv.
|
||
16</scripRef>. The Lord shall descend with a <i>shout,</i> the
|
||
shout of a king, with <i>the voice of the archangel;</i> either
|
||
Christ himself, the prince of the angels, or the
|
||
commander-in-chief, under him, of the heavenly hosts; and with
|
||
<i>the trumpet of God:</i> the soldier's trumpet sounding the alarm
|
||
of war, the judge's trumpet publishing the summons to the court.
|
||
(<i>b.</i>) The effect of it: <i>They shall come forth</i> out of
|
||
their graves, as prisoners out of their prison-house; they shall
|
||
<i>arise out</i> of the dust, and shake themselves from it; see
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p55.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.52.1-Isa.52.2 Bible:Isa.52.11" parsed="|Isa|52|1|52|2;|Isa|52|11|0|0" passage="Isa 52:1,2,11">Isa. lii. 1, 2, 11</scripRef>.
|
||
But this is not all; they shall <i>appear</i> before Christ's
|
||
tribunal, shall <i>come forth</i> as those that are to be tried,
|
||
<i>come forth</i> to the bar, publicly to receive their doom.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p56"><i>d.</i> To what they shall be raised; to
|
||
a different state of happiness or misery, according to their
|
||
different character; to a state of retribution, according to what
|
||
they did in the state of probation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p57">(<i>a.</i>) <i>They that have done good
|
||
shall come forth to the resurrection of life;</i> they shall live
|
||
again, to live for ever. Note, [<i>a.</i>] Whatever name men are
|
||
called by, or whatever plausible profession they make, it will be
|
||
well in the great day with those only that have <i>done good,</i>
|
||
have done that which is pleasing to God and profitable to others.
|
||
[<i>b.</i>] The resurrection of the body will be a resurrection of
|
||
life to all those, and those only, that have been sincere and
|
||
constant in <i>doing good.</i> They shall not only be publicly
|
||
<i>acquitted,</i> as a pardoned criminal, we say, has <i>his
|
||
life,</i> but they shall be <i>admitted</i> into the presence of
|
||
God, and that is life, it is better than life; they shall be
|
||
<i>attended</i> with comforts in perfection. To live is to be
|
||
<i>happy,</i> and they shall be <i>advanced</i> above the fear of
|
||
death; that is <i>life</i> indeed in which <i>mortality</i> is for
|
||
ever <i>swallowed</i> up.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p58">(<i>b.</i>) <i>They that have done evil to
|
||
the resurrection of damnation;</i> they shall live again, to be for
|
||
ever dying. The Pharisees thought that the resurrection pertained
|
||
only to the just, but Christ here rectifies that mistake. Note,
|
||
[<i>a.</i>] <i>Evil doers,</i> whatever they pretend, will be
|
||
treated in the day of judgment as <i>evil men.</i> [<i>b.</i>] The
|
||
resurrection will be to evil doers, who did not by repentance undo
|
||
what they had done amiss, a <i>resurrection</i> of damnation. They
|
||
shall come forth to be publicly convicted of rebellion against God,
|
||
and publicly <i>condemned</i> to everlasting punishment; to be
|
||
<i>sentenced</i> to it, and immediately <i>sent</i> to it without
|
||
reprieve. Such will the resurrection be.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p59">(2.) Observe what is here said concerning
|
||
the Mediator's <i>authority to execute judgment,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p59.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.22-John.5.24 Bible:John.5.27" parsed="|John|5|22|5|24;|John|5|27|0|0" passage="Joh 5:22-24,27"><i>v.</i> 22-24, 27</scripRef>. As he has
|
||
an almighty power, so he has a sovereign jurisdiction; and who so
|
||
fit to preside in the great affairs of the other life as he who is
|
||
the Father and fountain of life? Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p60">[1.] Christ's commission or delegation to
|
||
the office of a judge, which is twice spoken of here (<scripRef id="John.vi-p60.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.22" parsed="|John|5|22|0|0" passage="Joh 5:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>): <i>He hath committed
|
||
all judgment to the Son;</i> and again (<scripRef id="John.vi-p60.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.27" parsed="|John|5|27|0|0" passage="Joh 5:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>): <i>he hath given him
|
||
authority.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p61"><i>First,</i> The <i>Father judges no
|
||
man;</i> not that the Father hath resigned the government, but he
|
||
is pleased to govern by Jesus Christ; so that man is not under the
|
||
terror of dealing with God immediately, but has the comfort of
|
||
access to him by a Mediator. Having made us, he <i>may</i> do what
|
||
he <i>pleases</i> with us, as the potter with the clay; yet he does
|
||
not take advantage of this, but draws us <i>with the cords of a
|
||
man.</i> 2. He does not determine our everlasting condition by the
|
||
<i>covenant of innocency,</i> nor take the advantage he has against
|
||
us for the violation of that covenant. The Mediator having
|
||
undertaken to make a <i>vicarious</i> satisfaction, the matter is
|
||
referred to him, and God is willing to enter upon a new treaty;
|
||
<i>not under the law</i> of the Creator, <i>but the grace</i> of
|
||
the Redeemer.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p62"><i>Secondly, He has committed all judgment
|
||
to the Son,</i> has constituted him <i>Lord of all</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p62.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.10.36 Bible:Rom.14.9" parsed="|Acts|10|36|0|0;|Rom|14|9|0|0" passage="Ac 10:36,Ro 14:9">Acts x. 36; Rom. xiv. 9</scripRef>), as
|
||
Joseph in Egypt, <scripRef id="John.vi-p62.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.41.40" parsed="|Gen|41|40|0|0" passage="Ge 41:40">Gen. xli.
|
||
40</scripRef>. This was prophesied of, <scripRef id="John.vi-p62.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.72.1 Bible:Isa.11.3-Isa.11.4 Bible:Jer.23.5 Bible:Mic.5.1-Mic.5.4 Bible:Ps.67.4 Bible:Ps.96.13 Bible:Ps.98.9" parsed="|Ps|72|1|0|0;|Isa|11|3|11|4;|Jer|23|5|0|0;|Mic|5|1|5|4;|Ps|67|4|0|0;|Ps|96|13|0|0;|Ps|98|9|0|0" passage="Ps 72:1,Isa 11:3,4,Jer 23:5,Mic 5:1-4,Ps 67:4,96:13,98:9">Ps.
|
||
lxxii. 1; Isa. xii. 3, 4; Jer. xxiii. 5; Mic. v. 1-4; Ps. lxvii. 4;
|
||
xcvi. 13; xcviii. 9</scripRef>. All judgment is committed to our
|
||
Lord Jesus; for 1. He is <i>entrusted</i> with the administration
|
||
of the <i>providential kingdom,</i> is <i>head over all things</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p62.4" osisRef="Bible:Eph.1.11" parsed="|Eph|1|11|0|0" passage="Eph 1:11">Eph. i. 11</scripRef>), head of every
|
||
man, <scripRef id="John.vi-p62.5" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.11.3" parsed="|1Cor|11|3|0|0" passage="1Co 11:3">1 Cor. xii. 3</scripRef>. All
|
||
things consist by him, <scripRef id="John.vi-p62.6" osisRef="Bible:Col.1.17" parsed="|Col|1|17|0|0" passage="Col 1:17">Col. i.
|
||
17</scripRef>. 2. He is empowered to make laws immediately to bind
|
||
conscience. <i>I say unto you</i> is now the form in which the
|
||
statues of the kingdom of heaven run. <i>Be it enacted</i> by the
|
||
Lord Jesus, and by <i>his</i> authority. All the acts now in force
|
||
are touched with his sceptre. 3. He is authorized to appoint and
|
||
settle the terms of the new covenant, and to draw up the articles
|
||
of peace between God and man; it is God in Christ that reconciles
|
||
the world, and to him he has given power to confer eternal life.
|
||
The book of life is the Lamb's book; by his award we must stand or
|
||
fall. 4. He is commissioned to carry on and complete the war with
|
||
the powers of darkness; to cast out and <i>give judgment against
|
||
the prince of this world,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p62.7" osisRef="Bible:John.12.31" parsed="|John|12|31|0|0" passage="Joh 12:31"><i>ch.</i> xii. 31</scripRef>. He is commissioned not
|
||
only to <i>judge,</i> but to <i>make war,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p62.8" osisRef="Bible:Rev.19.11" parsed="|Rev|19|11|0|0" passage="Re 19:11">Rev. xix. 11</scripRef>. All that will fight <i>for God
|
||
against Satan</i> must enlist themselves under <i>his</i> banner.
|
||
5. He is constituted sole manager of the judgment of the great day.
|
||
The ancients generally understood these words of that <i>crowning
|
||
act</i> of his judicial power. The final and universal judgment is
|
||
committed to the Son of man; the tribunal is <i>his,</i> it is the
|
||
judgment-seat of Christ; the retinue is his, <i>his</i> mighty
|
||
angels; he will try the causes, and pass the sentence. <scripRef id="John.vi-p62.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.17.31" parsed="|Acts|17|31|0|0" passage="Ac 17:31">Acts xvii. 31</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p63"><i>Thirdly,</i> He has <i>given him
|
||
authority to execute judgment also,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p63.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.27" parsed="|John|5|27|0|0" passage="Joh 5:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>. Observe, 1. What the authority
|
||
is which our Redeemer is invested with: <i>An authority to execute
|
||
judgment;</i> he has not only a legislative and judicial power, but
|
||
an <i>executive</i> power too. The phrase here is used particularly
|
||
for the judgment of condemnation, <scripRef id="John.vi-p63.2" osisRef="Bible:Jude.1.15" parsed="|Jude|1|15|0|0" passage="Jude 1:15">Jude 15</scripRef>. <b><i>poiesai krisin</i></b>—<i>to
|
||
execute judgment</i> upon all; the same with his <i>taking
|
||
vengeance,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p63.3" osisRef="Bible:2Thess.1.8" parsed="|2Thess|1|8|0|0" passage="2Th 1:8">2 Thess. i.
|
||
8</scripRef>. The ruin of impenitent sinners comes from the hand of
|
||
Christ; he that <i>executes judgment</i> upon them is the same that
|
||
would have <i>wrought salvation</i> for them, which makes the
|
||
sentence unexceptionable; and there is no relief against the
|
||
sentence of the Redeemer; salvation itself cannot save those whom
|
||
the Saviour <i>condemns,</i> which makes the ruin
|
||
<i>remediless.</i> 2. Whence he has that authority: the Father
|
||
<i>gave it to him.</i> Christ's authority as Mediator is delegated
|
||
and derived; he acts as the Father's Viceregent, as the Lord's
|
||
Anointed, the Lord's Christ. Now all this redounds very much to the
|
||
honour of Christ, acquitting him from the guilt of blasphemy, in
|
||
making himself <i>equal with God;</i> and very much to the comfort
|
||
of all believers, who may with the greatest assurance venture their
|
||
all in such hands.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p64">[2.] Here are the reasons (reasons of
|
||
state) for which this commission was given him. He has all judgment
|
||
committed to him for two reasons:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p65"><i>First,</i> Because he is the <i>Son of
|
||
man;</i> which denotes these three things:—1. His humiliation and
|
||
gracious condescension. Man is a worm, the son of man a worm; yet
|
||
this was the nature, this the character, which the Redeemer
|
||
assumed, in pursuance of the counsels of love; to this low estate
|
||
he stooped, and submitted to all the mortifications attending it,
|
||
because it was <i>his Father's will;</i> in recompence therefore of
|
||
this wonderful obedience, God did thus dignify him. Because he
|
||
condescended to be the <i>Son of man,</i> his Father made him
|
||
<i>Lord of all,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p65.1" osisRef="Bible:Phil.2.8-Phil.2.9" parsed="|Phil|2|8|2|9" passage="Php 2:8,9">Phil. ii. 8,
|
||
9</scripRef>. 2. His affinity and alliance to us. The Father has
|
||
committed the government of the children of men to him, because,
|
||
being the <i>Son of man,</i> he is of the same nature with those
|
||
whom he is <i>set over,</i> and therefore the more unexceptionable,
|
||
and the more acceptable, as a Judge. <i>Their governor shall
|
||
proceed from the midst of them,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p65.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.30.21" parsed="|Jer|30|21|0|0" passage="Jer 30:21">Jer. xxx. 21</scripRef>. Of this that law was typical;
|
||
<i>One of thy brethren shalt thou set king over thee,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p65.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.17.15" parsed="|Deut|17|15|0|0" passage="De 17:15">Deut. xvii. 15</scripRef>. 3. His being the
|
||
Messiah promised. In that famous vision of his kingdom and glory,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p65.4" osisRef="Bible:Dan.7.13-Dan.7.14" parsed="|Dan|7|13|7|14" passage="Da 7:13,14">Dan. vii. 13, 14</scripRef>, he is
|
||
called the <i>Son of man;</i> and <scripRef id="John.vi-p65.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.8.4-Ps.8.6" parsed="|Ps|8|4|8|6" passage="Ps 8:4-6">Ps.
|
||
viii. 4-6</scripRef>. Thou has made the Son of man have <i>dominion
|
||
over the works of thy hands.</i> He is the Messiah, and therefore
|
||
is invested with all this power. The Jews usually called the Christ
|
||
the <i>Son of David;</i> but Christ usually called himself the
|
||
<i>Son of man,</i> which was the more humble title, and bespeaks
|
||
him a prince and Saviour, not the Jewish nation only, but to the
|
||
whole race of mankind.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p66"><i>Secondly, That all men should honour the
|
||
Son,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p66.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.23" parsed="|John|5|23|0|0" passage="Joh 5:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>. The
|
||
honouring of Jesus Christ is here spoken of as God's great design
|
||
(the Son intended to glorify the Father, and therefore the Father
|
||
intended to glorify the Son, <scripRef id="John.vi-p66.2" osisRef="Bible:John.12.32" parsed="|John|12|32|0|0" passage="Joh 12:32"><i>ch.</i> xii. 32</scripRef>); and as man's great
|
||
duty, in compliance with that design. If God will have the Son
|
||
honoured, it is the duty of all to whom he is made known to honour
|
||
him. Observe here, 1. The <i>respect</i> that is to be paid to our
|
||
Lord Jesus: We must <i>honour the Son,</i> must look upon him as
|
||
one that is to be <i>honoured,</i> both on account of his
|
||
transcendent excellences and perfections in himself, and of the
|
||
relations he stands in to us, and must study to give him honour
|
||
accordingly; must <i>confess that he is Lord,</i> and worship him;
|
||
must honour him who was dishonoured for us. 2. The degree of it:
|
||
<i>Even as they honour the Father.</i> This <i>supposes</i> it to
|
||
be our duty to <i>honour the Father;</i> for revealed religion is
|
||
founded on natural religion, and <i>directs</i> us to <i>honour the
|
||
Son,</i> to honour him with <i>divine</i> honour; we must honour
|
||
the Redeemer with the same honour with which we honour the Creator.
|
||
So far was it from blasphemy for him to make himself <i>equal with
|
||
God</i> that it is the highest injury that can be for us to make
|
||
him otherwise. The truths and laws of the Christian religion, so
|
||
far as they are revealed, are as sacred and honourable as those of
|
||
natural religion, and to be equally had in estimation; for we lie
|
||
under the same obligations to Christ, the Author of our being; and
|
||
have as necessary a dependence upon the Redeemer's grace as upon
|
||
the Creator's providence, which is a sufficient ground for this
|
||
law—<i>to honour the Son as we honour the Father.</i> To enforce
|
||
this law, it is added, <i>He that honours not the Son honours not
|
||
the Father</i> who has sent him. Some pretend a reverence for the
|
||
Creator, and speak <i>honourably</i> of him, who make light of the
|
||
Redeemer, and speak <i>contemptibly</i> of him; but let such know
|
||
that the honours and interests of the Father and Son are so
|
||
inseparably twisted and interwoven that the Father never reckons
|
||
himself <i>honoured</i> by any that <i>dishonour</i> the Son. Note,
|
||
(1.) Indignities done to the Lord Jesus reflect upon God himself,
|
||
and will so be construed and reckoned for in the court of heaven.
|
||
The Son having so far espoused the Father's honour as to take <i>to
|
||
himself</i> the <i>reproaches cast on him</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p66.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.15.3" parsed="|Rom|15|3|0|0" passage="Ro 15:3">Rom. xv. 3</scripRef>), the Father does no less espouse
|
||
the Son's honour, and counts himself struck at through him. (2.)
|
||
The reason of this is because the Son is sent and commissioned by
|
||
the Father; it is the <i>Father who hath sent him.</i> Affronts to
|
||
an ambassador are justly resented by the prince that sends him. And
|
||
by this rule those who truly <i>honour the Son honour the Father
|
||
also;</i> see <scripRef id="John.vi-p66.4" osisRef="Bible:Phil.2.11" parsed="|Phil|2|11|0|0" passage="Php 2:11">Phil. ii.
|
||
11</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p67">[3.] Here is the rule by which the Son goes
|
||
in executing this commission, so those words seem to come in
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p67.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.24" parsed="|John|5|24|0|0" passage="Joh 5:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>): <i>He that
|
||
heareth and believeth</i> hath <i>everlasting life.</i> Here we
|
||
have the substance of the whole gospel; the preface commands
|
||
<i>attention</i> to a thing most weighty, and <i>assent</i> to a
|
||
thing most certain: "<i>Verily, verily, I say unto you, I,</i> to
|
||
whom you hear <i>all judgment is committed,</i> I, in whose lips is
|
||
a divine sentence; take from <i>me</i> the Christian's
|
||
<i>character</i> and <i>charter.</i>"</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p68"><i>First,</i> The <i>character</i> of a
|
||
Christian: <i>He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that
|
||
sent me.</i> To be a Christian indeed is, 1. To <i>hear the word of
|
||
Christ.</i> It is not enough to be within hearing of it, but we
|
||
must <i>attend on</i> it, as scholars on the instructions of their
|
||
teachers; and <i>attend to</i> it, as servants to the commands of
|
||
their masters; we must hear and obey it, must abide by the gospel
|
||
of Christ as the fixed rule of our faith and practice. 2. To
|
||
<i>believe on him that sent him;</i> for Christ's design is to
|
||
<i>bring us to God;</i> and, as he is the first original of all
|
||
grace, so is he the last object of all faith. Christ is our
|
||
<i>way;</i> God is our rest. We must believe on God as <i>having
|
||
sent</i> Jesus Christ, and recommended himself to our faith and
|
||
love, by manifesting his glory in <i>the face of Jesus Christ</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p68.1" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.4.6" parsed="|2Cor|4|6|0|0" passage="2Co 4:6">2 Cor. iv. 6</scripRef>), as
|
||
<i>his</i> Father and <i>our Father.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p69"><i>Secondly,</i> The <i>charter</i> of a
|
||
Christian, in which all that are Christians indeed are interested.
|
||
See what we get by Christ. 1. A charter of pardon: <i>He shall not
|
||
come into condemnation.</i> The grace of the gospel is a full
|
||
discharge from the curse of the law. A believer shall not only not
|
||
<i>lie under</i> condemnation eternally, but shall not <i>come into
|
||
condemnation</i> now, not come into the danger of it (<scripRef id="John.vi-p69.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.1" parsed="|Rom|8|1|0|0" passage="Ro 8:1">Rom. viii. 1</scripRef>), not <i>come into
|
||
judgment,</i> not be so much as arraigned. 2. A charter of
|
||
privileges: He is <i>passed out of death to life,</i> is invested
|
||
in a present happiness in spiritual life and entitled to a future
|
||
happiness in eternal life. The tenour of the first covenant was,
|
||
<i>Do this and live;</i> the man that doeth them shall live in
|
||
them. Now this proves Christ equal with the Father that he has
|
||
power to propose the <i>same</i> benefit to the <i>hearers of his
|
||
word</i> that had been proposed to the <i>keepers of the old
|
||
law,</i> that is, life: <i>Hear and live, believe and live,</i> is
|
||
what we may venture our souls upon, when we are disabled to <i>do
|
||
and live;</i> see <scripRef id="John.vi-p69.2" osisRef="Bible:John.17.2" parsed="|John|17|2|0|0" passage="Joh 17:2"><i>ch.</i> xvii.
|
||
2</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p70">[4.] Here is the righteousness of his
|
||
proceedings pursuant to this commission, <scripRef id="John.vi-p70.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.30" parsed="|John|5|30|0|0" passage="Joh 5:30"><i>v.</i> 30</scripRef>. All judgment being committed to
|
||
him, we cannot but ask <i>how he manages it.</i> And here he
|
||
answers, <i>My judgment is just.</i> All Christ's acts of
|
||
government, both <i>legislative</i> and <i>judicial,</i> are
|
||
exactly agreeable to the rules of equity; see <scripRef id="John.vi-p70.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.8.8" parsed="|Prov|8|8|0|0" passage="Pr 8:8">Prov. viii. 8</scripRef>. There can lie no exceptions
|
||
against any of the determinations of the Redeemer; and therefore,
|
||
as there shall be no repeal of any of his statutes, so there shall
|
||
be no appeal from any of his sentences. His judgments are certainly
|
||
just, for they are directed,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p71"><i>First,</i> By the Father's <i>wisdom: I
|
||
can of my ownself</i> do nothing, nothing without the Father, but
|
||
<i>as I hear I judge,</i> as he had said before (<scripRef id="John.vi-p71.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.19" parsed="|John|5|19|0|0" passage="Joh 5:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>), The Son <i>can do nothing but
|
||
what he sees the Father do;</i> so here, nothing but what he hears
|
||
the Father <i>say: As I hear,</i> 1. From the secret eternal
|
||
counsels of the Father, <i>so I judge.</i> Would we know what we
|
||
may depend upon in our dealing with God? <i>Hear the word</i> of
|
||
Christ. We need not dive into the divine counsels, those <i>secret
|
||
things</i> which belong not to us, but attend to the revealed
|
||
dictates of Christ's government and judgment, which will furnish us
|
||
with an unerring guide; for what Christ has adjudged is an exact
|
||
copy or counterpart of what the Father has decreed. 2. From the
|
||
published records of the Old Testament. Christ, in all the
|
||
execution of his undertaking, had an eye to the scripture, and made
|
||
it his business to conform to this, and <i>fulfil</i> it: <i>As it
|
||
was written in the volume of the book.</i> Thus he taught us to do
|
||
<i>nothing of ourselves,</i> but, <i>as we hear</i> from the word
|
||
of God, <i>so to judge</i> of things, and act accordingly.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p72"><i>Secondly,</i> By the Father's <i>will:
|
||
My judgment is just,</i> and cannot be otherwise, <i>because I seek
|
||
not my own will,</i> but <i>his who sent me.</i> Not as if the will
|
||
of Christ were contrary to the will of the Father, as the flesh is
|
||
contrary to the spirit in us; but, 1. Christ had, as man, the
|
||
natural and innocent affections of the human nature, <i>sense of
|
||
pain</i> and <i>pleasure,</i> an inclination to life, an aversion
|
||
to death: yet he <i>pleased not himself,</i> did not confer with
|
||
these, nor consult these, when he was to go on his undertaking, but
|
||
acquiesced entirely in the will of his Father. 2. What he did as
|
||
Mediator was not the result of any <i>peculiar</i> or
|
||
<i>particular</i> purpose and design of his own; what he did
|
||
<i>seek</i> to do was not for his own mind's sake, but he was
|
||
therein guided by his Father's will, and the purpose which he had
|
||
<i>purposed to himself.</i> This our Saviour did upon all occasions
|
||
<i>refer himself to</i> and govern himself by.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="John.vi-p72.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.31-John.5.47" parsed="|John|5|31|5|47" passage="Joh 5:31-47" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:John.5.31-John.5.47">
|
||
<h4 id="John.vi-p72.2">Christ Proves His Divine Mission; Infidelity
|
||
of the Jews Reproved.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="John.vi-p73">31 If I bear witness of myself, my witness is
|
||
not true. 32 There is another that beareth witness of me;
|
||
and I know that the witness which he witnesseth of me is true.
|
||
33 Ye sent unto John, and he bare witness unto the truth.
|
||
34 But I receive not testimony from man: but these things I
|
||
say, that ye might be saved. 35 He was a burning and a
|
||
shining light: and ye were willing for a season to rejoice in his
|
||
light. 36 But I have greater witness than <i>that</i> of
|
||
John: for the works which the Father hath given me to finish, the
|
||
same works that I do, bear witness of me, that the Father hath sent
|
||
me. 37 And the Father himself, which hath sent me, hath
|
||
borne witness of me. Ye have neither heard his voice at any time,
|
||
nor seen his shape. 38 And ye have not his word abiding in
|
||
you: for whom he hath sent, him ye believe not. 39 Search
|
||
the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: and they
|
||
are they which testify of me. 40 And ye will not come to me,
|
||
that ye might have life. 41 I receive not honour from men.
|
||
42 But I know you, that ye have not the love of God in you.
|
||
43 I am come in my Father's name, and ye receive me not: if
|
||
another shall come in his own name, him ye will receive. 44
|
||
How can ye believe, which receive honour one of another, and seek
|
||
not the honour that <i>cometh</i> from God only? 45 Do not
|
||
think that I will accuse you to the Father: there is <i>one</i>
|
||
that accuseth you, <i>even</i> Moses, in whom ye trust. 46
|
||
For had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed me: for he wrote
|
||
of me. 47 But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye
|
||
believe my words?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p74">In these verses our Lord Jesus proves and
|
||
confirms the commission he had produced, and makes it out that he
|
||
was sent of God to be the Messiah.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p75">I. He <i>sets aside</i> his own testimony
|
||
of himself (<scripRef id="John.vi-p75.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.31" parsed="|John|5|31|0|0" passage="Joh 5:31"><i>v.</i> 31</scripRef>):
|
||
"<i>If I bear witness of myself,</i> though it is infallibly true
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p75.2" osisRef="Bible:John.8.14" parsed="|John|8|14|0|0" passage="Joh 8:14"><i>ch.</i> viii. 14</scripRef>), yet,
|
||
according to the common rule of judgment among men, you will not
|
||
admit it as <i>legal proof,</i> nor allow it to be <i>given in
|
||
evidence.</i>" Now, 1. This reflects reproach upon the sons of men,
|
||
and their veracity and integrity. Surely we may say deliberately,
|
||
what David said in haste, <i>All men are liars,</i> else it would
|
||
never have been such a received maxim that a man's testimony of
|
||
himself is suspicious, and not to be relied on; it is a sign that
|
||
self-love is stronger than the love of truth. And yet, 2. It
|
||
reflects honour on the Son of God, and bespeaks his wonderful
|
||
condescension, that, though he is the <i>faithful witness,</i> the
|
||
truth itself, who may challenge to be credited <i>upon his
|
||
honour,</i> and his own single testimony, yet he is pleased to
|
||
<i>waive his privilege,</i> and, for the confirmation of our faith,
|
||
refers himself to his <i>vouchers,</i> that we may have full
|
||
satisfaction.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p76">II. He produces other witnesses that bear
|
||
testimony to him that he was sent of God.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p77">1. The Father himself bore testimony to him
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p77.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.32" parsed="|John|5|32|0|0" passage="Joh 5:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>): <i>There is
|
||
another that beareth witness.</i> I take this to be meant of God
|
||
the Father, for Christ mentions <i>his</i> testimony with his own
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p77.2" osisRef="Bible:John.8.18" parsed="|John|8|18|0|0" passage="Joh 8:18"><i>ch.</i> viii. 18</scripRef>): <i>I
|
||
bear witness of myself, and the Father beareth witness of me.</i>
|
||
Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p78">(1.) The seal which the Father put to his
|
||
commission: He <i>beareth witness of me,</i> not only has done so
|
||
by a voice from heaven, but still does so by the tokens of his
|
||
presence with me. See who they are to whom God will bear witness.
|
||
[1.] Those whom he <i>sends</i> and <i>employs;</i> where he gives
|
||
commissions he give credentials. [2.] Those who <i>bear witness</i>
|
||
to him; so Christ did. God will own and honour those that own and
|
||
honour him. [3.] Those who decline <i>bearing witness of
|
||
themselves;</i> so Christ did. God will take care that those who
|
||
humble and abase themselves, and seek not their own glory, shall
|
||
not <i>lose by it.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p79">(2.) The satisfaction Christ had in this
|
||
testimony: "<i>I know that the witness which he witnesseth of me is
|
||
true.</i> I am very well assured that I have a divine mission, and
|
||
do not in the least hesitate concerning it; thus he had the
|
||
<i>witness in himself.</i>" The devil tempted him to question his
|
||
being the Son of God, but he never yielded.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p80">2. John Baptist witnessed to Christ,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p80.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.33" parsed="|John|5|33|0|0" passage="Joh 5:33"><i>v.</i> 33</scripRef>, &c. John
|
||
came to <i>bear witness of the light</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p80.2" osisRef="Bible:John.1.7" parsed="|John|1|7|0|0" passage="Joh 1:7"><i>ch.</i> i. 7</scripRef>); his business was to prepare
|
||
his way, and direct people to him: <i>Behold the Lamb of
|
||
God.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p81">(1.) Now the testimony of John was, [1.] A
|
||
<i>solemn</i> and public testimony: "You sent an embassy of priests
|
||
and Levites to John, which gave him an opportunity of publishing
|
||
what he had to say; it was not a popular, but a judicial
|
||
testimony." [2.] It was a <i>true</i> testimony: <i>He bore witness
|
||
to the truth,</i> as a witness ought to do, the <i>whole truth,</i>
|
||
and <i>nothing but the truth.</i> Christ does not say, <i>He bore
|
||
witness to me</i> (though every one knew he did), but, like an
|
||
honest man, <i>He bore witness to the truth.</i> Now John was
|
||
confessedly such a holy, good man, so mortified to the world, and
|
||
so conversant with divine things, that it could not be imagined he
|
||
should be guilty of such a forgery and imposture as to say what he
|
||
did concerning Christ if it had not been so, and if he had not been
|
||
sure of it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p82">(2.) Two things are added concerning John's
|
||
testimony:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p83">[1.] That it was a testimony <i>ex
|
||
abundanti</i>—<i>more than he needed to vouch</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p83.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.34" parsed="|John|5|34|0|0" passage="Joh 5:34"><i>v.</i> 34</scripRef>): <i>I receive not
|
||
testimony from man.</i> Though Christ saw fit to quote John's
|
||
testimony, it was with a protestation that it shall not be deemed
|
||
or construed so as to prejudice the prerogative of his
|
||
self-sufficiency. Christ needs no letters or commendation, no
|
||
testimonials or certificates, but what his own worth and excellency
|
||
bring with him; why then did Christ here urge the testimony of
|
||
John? Why, <i>these things I say, that you may be saved.</i> This
|
||
he aimed at in all this discourse, to save not his own life, but
|
||
the souls of others; he produced John's testimony because, being
|
||
one <i>of themselves,</i> it was to be hoped that they would
|
||
hearken to it. Note, <i>First,</i> Christ desires and designs the
|
||
salvation even of his enemies and persecutors. <i>Secondly,</i> The
|
||
word of Christ is the ordinary means of salvation. <i>Thirdly,</i>
|
||
Christ in his word considers our infirmities and condescends to our
|
||
capacities, consulting not so much what it befits so great a prince
|
||
to say as what we can bear, and what will be most likely to do us
|
||
good.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p84">[2.] That it was a testimony <i>ad
|
||
hominem</i>—<i>to the man,</i> because John Baptist was one whom
|
||
<i>they</i> had a respect for (<scripRef id="John.vi-p84.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.35" parsed="|John|5|35|0|0" passage="Joh 5:35"><i>v.</i> 35</scripRef>): <i>He was a light</i> among
|
||
you.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p85"><i>First,</i> The character of John
|
||
Baptist: <i>He was a burning and a shining light.</i> Christ often
|
||
spoke honourably of John; he was now in prison under a cloud, yet
|
||
Christ gives him his <i>due praise,</i> which we must be ready to
|
||
do to all that faithfully serve God. 1. He was a <i>light,</i> not
|
||
<b><i>phos</i></b>—<i>lux, light</i> (so Christ was <i>the</i>
|
||
light), but <b><i>lyknos</i></b>—<i>lucerna, a luminary,</i> a
|
||
derived subordinate light. His office was to enlighten a dark world
|
||
with notices of the Messiah's approach, to whom he was as the
|
||
<i>morning star.</i> 2. He was a <i>burning</i> light, which
|
||
denotes <i>sincerity;</i> painted fire may be made to shine, but
|
||
that which burns is true fire. It denotes also his <i>activity,</i>
|
||
zeal, and fervency, burning in love to God and the souls of men;
|
||
fire is always working on itself or something else, so is a good
|
||
minister. 3. He was a <i>shining</i> light, which denotes either
|
||
his <i>exemplary conversation,</i> in which our light should shine
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p85.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.16" parsed="|Matt|5|16|0|0" passage="Mt 5:16">Matt. v. 16</scripRef>), or an
|
||
<i>eminent</i> diffusive influence. He was illustrious in the sight
|
||
of others; though he affected obscurity and retirement, and was
|
||
<i>in the deserts,</i> yet such were his doctrine, his baptism, his
|
||
life, that he became very <i>remarkable,</i> and attracted the eyes
|
||
of the nation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p86"><i>Secondly,</i> The affections of the
|
||
people to him: <i>you were willing for a season to rejoice in his
|
||
light.</i> 1. It was a <i>transport</i> that they were <i>in,</i>
|
||
upon the appearing of John: "<i>You were willing</i>—
|
||
<b><i>ethelesate</i></b>, <i>you delighted to rejoice in his
|
||
light;</i> you were very proud that you had such a man among you,
|
||
who was the honour of your country; you were willing
|
||
<b><i>agalliasthenai</i></b>—willing to <i>dance,</i> and make a
|
||
noise about this light, as boys about a bonfire." 2. It was but
|
||
<i>transient,</i> and soon over: "You were fond of him, <b><i>pros
|
||
horan</i></b>—<i>for an hour,</i> for <i>a season,</i> as little
|
||
children are fond of a new thing, you were pleased with John
|
||
awhile, but soon grew weary of him and his ministry, and said that
|
||
<i>he had a devil,</i> and now you have him in prison." Note, Many,
|
||
that seem to be affected and pleased with the gospel at first,
|
||
afterwards despise and reject it; it is common for forward and
|
||
noisy professors to cool and fall off. These here rejoiced in
|
||
John's light, but never walked in it, and therefore did not keep to
|
||
it; they were like the stony ground. While Herod was a friend to
|
||
John Baptist, the people caressed him; but when he fell under
|
||
Herod's frowns he lost their favours: "<i>You were willing</i> to
|
||
countenance John, <b><i>pros horan</i></b> that is, for <i>temporal
|
||
ends</i>" (so some take it); "you were glad of him, in hopes to
|
||
make a tool of him, by his interest and under the shelter of his
|
||
name to have shaken off the Roman yoke, and recovered the civil
|
||
liberty and honour of your country." Now, (1.) Christ mentions
|
||
their respect to John, to <i>condemn</i> them for their present
|
||
opposition to himself, to whom John bore witness. If they had
|
||
continued their veneration for John, as they ought to have done,
|
||
they would have embraced Christ. (2.) He mentions the passing away
|
||
of their respect, to justify God in depriving them, as he had now
|
||
done, of John's ministry, and putting that light under a
|
||
bushel.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p87">3. Christ's own works witnessed to him
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p87.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.36" parsed="|John|5|36|0|0" passage="Joh 5:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>): <i>I have a
|
||
testimony greater than that of John;</i> for <i>if we believe the
|
||
witness of men</i> sent of God, as John was, the <i>witness of
|
||
God</i> immediately, and not by the ministry of men, <i>is
|
||
greater,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p87.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.5.9" parsed="|1John|5|9|0|0" passage="1Jo 5:9">1 John v. 9</scripRef>.
|
||
Observe, Though the witness of John was a less <i>cogent</i> and
|
||
less <i>considerable</i> witness, yet our Lord was pleased to make
|
||
use of it. We must be glad of all the supports that offer
|
||
themselves for the confirmation of our faith, though they may not
|
||
amount to a demonstration, and we must not <i>invalidate</i> any,
|
||
under pretence that there are others more <i>conclusive;</i> we
|
||
have occasion for them all. Now this greater testimony was that of
|
||
the <i>works</i> which <i>his Father had given him to finish.</i>
|
||
That is, (1.) In general the whole course of his life and
|
||
ministry—his revealing God and his will to us, setting up his
|
||
kingdom among men, reforming the world, destroying Satan's kingdom,
|
||
restoring fallen man to his primitive purity and felicity, and
|
||
shedding abroad in men's hearts the love of God and of one
|
||
another—all that work of which he said when he died, <i>It is
|
||
finished,</i> it was all, from first to last, <i>opus Deo dignum—a
|
||
work worthy of God;</i> all he said and did was <i>holy</i> and
|
||
<i>heavenly,</i> and a divine purity, power, and grace shone in it,
|
||
proving abundantly that he was <i>sent of God.</i> (2.) In
|
||
particular. The miracles he wrought for the proof of his divine
|
||
mission witnessed of him. Now it is here said, [1.] That these
|
||
works were <i>given him by the Father,</i> that is, he was both
|
||
<i>appointed</i> and <i>empowered</i> to work them; for, as
|
||
Mediator, he <i>derived</i> both commission and strength from his
|
||
Father. [2.] They were given to him to <i>finish;</i> he must do
|
||
all those works of wonder which the counsel and foreknowledge of
|
||
God had before determined to be done; and his finishing them proves
|
||
a divine power; for as <i>for God his work is perfect.</i> [3.]
|
||
These works did <i>bear witness of him,</i> did prove that he was
|
||
sent of God, and that what he said concerning himself was true; see
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p87.3" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.4 Bible:Acts.2.22" parsed="|Heb|2|4|0|0;|Acts|2|22|0|0" passage="Heb 2:4,Ac 2:22">Heb. ii. 4; Acts ii.
|
||
22</scripRef>. That the Father had sent him as <i>a Father,</i> not
|
||
as a master sends his servant on an errand, but as a father sends
|
||
his son to take possession for himself; if God had not sent him, he
|
||
would not have <i>seconded</i> him, would not have <i>sealed</i>
|
||
him, as he did by the works he gave him to do; for the world's
|
||
Creator will never be its deceiver.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p88">4. He produces, more fully than before, his
|
||
Father's testimony concerning him (<scripRef id="John.vi-p88.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.37" parsed="|John|5|37|0|0" passage="Joh 5:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>): <i>The Father that sent me
|
||
hath borne witness of me.</i> The prince is not accustomed to
|
||
follow his ambassador himself, to confirm his commission <i>viva
|
||
voce—by speaking;</i> but God was pleased to bear witness of his
|
||
Son himself by a voice from heaven at his baptism (<scripRef id="John.vi-p88.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.3.17" parsed="|Matt|3|17|0|0" passage="Mt 3:17">Matt. iii. 17</scripRef>): This is my ambassador,
|
||
<i>This is my beloved Son.</i> The Jews reckoned <i>Bath-kol;—the
|
||
daughter of a voice,</i> a voice from heaven, one of the ways by
|
||
which God made known his mind; and in that way he had owned Christ
|
||
publicly and solemnly, and repeated it, <scripRef id="John.vi-p88.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.17.5" parsed="|Matt|17|5|0|0" passage="Mt 17:5">Matt. xvii. 5</scripRef>. Note, (1.) Those whom God
|
||
<i>sends</i> he will <i>bear witness</i> of; where he gives a
|
||
commission, he will not fail to seal it; he that never <i>left
|
||
himself without witness</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p88.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.14.17" parsed="|Acts|14|17|0|0" passage="Ac 14:17">Acts xiv.
|
||
17</scripRef>) will never leave any of his servants so, who go upon
|
||
his errand. (2.) Where God demands belief, he will not fail to give
|
||
sufficient <i>evidence,</i> as he has done concerning Christ. That
|
||
which was to be witnessed concerning Christ was chiefly this, that
|
||
the God we had offended was willing to accept of him as a Mediator.
|
||
Now concerning this he has <i>himself</i> given us full
|
||
satisfaction (and he was fittest to do it), declaring himself
|
||
well-pleased in him; if we be so, the work is done. Now, it might
|
||
be suggested, if God himself thus bore witness of Christ, how came
|
||
it to pass that he was not universally received by the Jewish
|
||
nation and their rulers? To this Christ here answers that it was
|
||
not to be thought strange, nor could their infidelity weaken his
|
||
credibility, for two reasons:—[1.] Because they were not
|
||
acquainted with such extraordinary revelations of God and his will:
|
||
<i>You have neither heard his voice at any time, nor seen his
|
||
shape,</i> or <i>appearance.</i> They showed themselves to be as
|
||
ignorant of God, though they professed relation to him, as we are
|
||
of a man we never either saw or heard. "But why do I talk to you of
|
||
God's bearing witness of me? He is one you know nothing of, nor
|
||
have any acquaintance or communion with." Note, Ignorance of God is
|
||
the true reason of men's rejecting the record he has given
|
||
concerning his Son. A right understanding of <i>natural
|
||
religion</i> would discover to us such admirable congruities in the
|
||
<i>Christian</i> religion as would greatly dispose our minds to the
|
||
entertainment of it. Some give this sense of it: "The Father bore
|
||
witness of me by a <i>voice,</i> and the <i>descent of a dove,</i>
|
||
which is such an extraordinary thing that you never saw or heard
|
||
the like; and yet for my sake there was such a voice and
|
||
appearance; yea, and you might have <i>heard that voice,</i> you
|
||
might have <i>seen that appearance,</i> as others did, if you had
|
||
closely attended the ministry of John, but by slighting it you
|
||
missed of that testimony." [2.] Because they were not affected, no,
|
||
not with the ordinary ways by which God had revealed himself to
|
||
them: <i>You have not his word abiding in you,</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p88.5" osisRef="Bible:John.5.38" parsed="|John|5|38|0|0" passage="Joh 5:38"><i>v.</i> 38</scripRef>. They had the scriptures
|
||
of the Old Testament; might they not by them be disposed to receive
|
||
Christ? Yes, if they had had their due influence upon them. But,
|
||
<i>First,</i> The word of God was not in them; it was <i>among
|
||
them,</i> in their country, in their hands, but not <i>in them,</i>
|
||
in their hearts; not ruling in their souls, but only shining in
|
||
their eyes and sounding in their ears. What did it avail them that
|
||
they had the oracles of God <i>committed</i> to them (<scripRef id="John.vi-p88.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.3.2" parsed="|Rom|3|2|0|0" passage="Ro 3:2">Rom. iii. 2</scripRef>), when they had not these
|
||
oracles <i>commanding</i> in them? If they had, they would readily
|
||
have embraced Christ. <i>Secondly,</i> It did not <i>abide.</i>
|
||
Many have the word of God coming into them, and making some
|
||
impressions for awhile, but it does not <i>abide</i> with them; it
|
||
is not constantly in them, as a man at home, but only now and then,
|
||
as a <i>wayfaring man.</i> If the word <i>abide in</i> us, if we
|
||
converse with it by frequent meditation, consult with it upon every
|
||
occasion, and conform to it in our conversation, we shall then
|
||
readily receive the witness of the Father concerning Christ; see
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p88.7" osisRef="Bible:John.7.17" parsed="|John|7|17|0|0" passage="Joh 7:17"><i>ch.</i> vii. 17</scripRef>. But how
|
||
did it appear that they <i>had not the word of God abiding in
|
||
them?</i> It appeared by this, <i>Whom he hath sent, him ye believe
|
||
not.</i> There was so much said in the Old Testament concerning
|
||
Christ, to direct people when and where to look for him, and so to
|
||
facilitate the discovery of him, that, if they had duly considered
|
||
these things, they could not have avoided the conviction of
|
||
Christ's being sent of God; so that their not believing in Christ
|
||
was a certain sign that the word of God did not abide in them.
|
||
Note, The in-dwelling of the word, and Spirit, and grace of God in
|
||
us, is best tried by its effects, particularly by our <i>receiving
|
||
what he sends,</i> the commands, the messengers, the providences he
|
||
sends, especially Christ whom he hath sent.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p89">5. The last witness he calls is the Old
|
||
Testament, which witnessed of him, and to it he appeals (<scripRef id="John.vi-p89.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.39" parsed="|John|5|39|0|0" passage="Joh 5:39"><i>v.</i> 39</scripRef>, &c.): <i>Search the
|
||
scriptures,</i> <b><i>ereunate</i></b>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p90">(1.) This may be read, either, [1.] "<i>You
|
||
search the scriptures,</i> and you do well to do so; you read them
|
||
daily in your synagogues, you have rabbies, and doctors, and
|
||
scribes, that make it their business to study them, and criticize
|
||
upon them." The Jews boasted of the flourishing of
|
||
scripture-learning in the days of Hillel, who died about twelve
|
||
years after Christ's birth, and reckoned some of those who were
|
||
then members of the sanhedrim the <i>beauties of their wisdom</i>
|
||
and the <i>glories of their law;</i> and Christ owns that they did
|
||
indeed search the scriptures, but it was in search of their <i>own
|
||
glory: "You search the scriptures,</i> and therefore, if you were
|
||
not <i>wilfully blind,</i> you would <i>believe in me.</i>" Note,
|
||
It is possible for men to be very studious in the letter of the
|
||
scripture, and yet to be strangers to the power and influence of
|
||
it. Or, [2.] As we read it: <i>Search the scriptures;</i> and so,
|
||
<i>First,</i> It was spoken to <i>them</i> in the nature of an
|
||
<i>appeal:</i> "You profess to receive and believe the scripture;
|
||
here I will <i>join issue</i> with you, let this be the judge,
|
||
provided you will not <i>rest in the letter" (hærere in
|
||
cortice</i>), "but will <i>search</i> into it." Note, when appeals
|
||
are made to the scriptures, they must be searched. Search the whole
|
||
book of scripture <i>throughout,</i> compare one passage with
|
||
another, and explain one by another. We must likewise search
|
||
particular passages <i>to the bottom,</i> and see not what they
|
||
<i>seem</i> to say <i>prima facie—at the first appearance,</i> but
|
||
what they say <i>indeed. Secondly,</i> It is spoken to <i>us</i> in
|
||
the nature of an <i>advice,</i> or a command to all Christians to
|
||
search the scriptures. Note, All those who would <i>find Christ</i>
|
||
must <i>search the scriptures;</i> not only read them, and hear
|
||
them, but search them, which denotes, 1. <i>Diligence</i> in
|
||
seeking, labour, and study, and close application of mind. 2.
|
||
<i>Desire</i> and <i>design</i> of finding. We must aim at some
|
||
spiritual benefit and advantage in reading and studying the
|
||
scripture, and often ask, "What am I now searching for?" We must
|
||
search as for <i>hidden treasures</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p90.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.2.4" parsed="|Prov|2|4|0|0" passage="Pr 2:4">Prov. ii. 4</scripRef>), as those that <i>sink</i> for
|
||
gold or silver, or that <i>dive</i> for pearl, <scripRef id="John.vi-p90.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.28.1-Job.28.11" parsed="|Job|28|1|28|11" passage="Job 28:1-11">Job xxviii. 1-11</scripRef>. This ennobled the
|
||
Bereans, <scripRef id="John.vi-p90.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.17.11" parsed="|Acts|17|11|0|0" passage="Ac 17:11">Acts xvii. 11</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p91">(2.) Now there are two things which we are
|
||
here directed to have in our eye, in our searching the scripture:
|
||
<i>heaven</i> our end, and <i>Christ</i> our way. [1.] We must
|
||
search the scriptures for <i>heaven</i> as our <i>great end: For in
|
||
them you think you have eternal life.</i> The scripture assures us
|
||
of an eternal state set before us, and offers to us an eternal life
|
||
in that state: it contains the <i>chart</i> that <i>describes</i>
|
||
it, the <i>charter</i> that <i>conveys</i> it, the <i>direction</i>
|
||
in the way that leads to it, and the <i>foundation</i> upon which
|
||
the hope of it is built; and this is worth searching for where we
|
||
are sure to find it. But to the Jews Christ saith only, <i>You
|
||
think</i> you have <i>eternal life</i> in the scriptures, because,
|
||
though they did retain the belief and hope of eternal life, and
|
||
grounded their expectations of it upon the scriptures, yet herein
|
||
they missed it, that they looked for it by the bare reading and
|
||
studying of the scripture. It was a common but corrupt saying among
|
||
them, <i>He that has the words of the law has eternal life;</i>
|
||
they thought they were sure of heaven if they could say by
|
||
<i>heart,</i> or rather by <i>rote,</i> such and such passages of
|
||
scripture as they were directed to by the tradition of the elders;
|
||
as they thought all the <i>vulgar</i> cursed because they did not
|
||
thus know the law (<scripRef id="John.vi-p91.1" osisRef="Bible:John.7.49" parsed="|John|7|49|0|0" passage="Joh 7:49"><i>ch.</i> vii.
|
||
49</scripRef>), so they concluded all the <i>learned</i>
|
||
undoubtedly <i>blessed.</i> [2.] We must <i>search the
|
||
scriptures</i> for <i>Christ,</i> as the new and living <i>way</i>
|
||
that leads to this <i>end.</i> These are <i>they,</i> the great and
|
||
principal witnesses, <i>that testify of me.</i> Note, <i>First,</i>
|
||
The scriptures, even those of the Old Testament, <i>testify</i> of
|
||
Christ, and by them God <i>bears witness</i> to him. The Spirit of
|
||
Christ in the prophets testified beforehand of him (<scripRef id="John.vi-p91.2" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.11" parsed="|1Pet|1|11|0|0" passage="1Pe 1:11">1 Pet. i. 11</scripRef>), the purposes and
|
||
promises of God concerning him, and the previous notices of him.
|
||
The Jews knew very well that the Old Testament testified of the
|
||
Messiah, and were critical in their remarks upon the passages that
|
||
looked that way; and yet were careless, and wretchedly overseen, in
|
||
the application of them. <i>Secondly, Therefore</i> we must
|
||
<i>search the scriptures,</i> and may hope to find eternal life in
|
||
that search, because they testify of Christ; for this is <i>life
|
||
eternal, to know him;</i> see <scripRef id="John.vi-p91.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.5.11" parsed="|1John|5|11|0|0" passage="1Jo 5:11">1 John
|
||
v. 11</scripRef>. Christ is the treasure hid in the field of the
|
||
scriptures, the water in those wells, the milk in those
|
||
breasts.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p92">(3.) To this testimony he annexes a reproof
|
||
of their infidelity and wickedness in four instances;
|
||
particularly,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p93">[1.] Their <i>neglect of him</i> and his
|
||
doctrine: "<i>You will not come tome, that you might have life,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p93.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.40" parsed="|John|5|40|0|0" passage="Joh 5:40"><i>v.</i> 40</scripRef>. You search
|
||
the scriptures, you believe the prophets, who you cannot but see
|
||
testify of me; and yet you will not <i>come to me,</i> to whom they
|
||
direct you." Their estrangement from Christ was the fault not so
|
||
much of their <i>understandings</i> as of their <i>wills.</i> This
|
||
is expressed as a complaint; Christ offered life, and it was not
|
||
accepted. Note, <i>First,</i> There is <i>life</i> to be had with
|
||
Jesus Christ for poor souls; we may have life, the life of
|
||
<i>pardon</i> and <i>grace,</i> and <i>comfort</i> and
|
||
<i>glory:</i> life is the perfection of our being, and inclusive of
|
||
all happiness; and Christ is our life. <i>Secondly,</i> Those that
|
||
would have this life must <i>come</i> to Jesus Christ for it; we
|
||
may have it for the coming for. It <i>supposes</i> an assent of the
|
||
understanding to the doctrine of Christ and the record given
|
||
concerning him; it <i>lies in</i> the consent of the will to his
|
||
government and grace, and it <i>produces</i> an answerable
|
||
compliance in the affections and actions. <i>Thirdly,</i> The only
|
||
reason why sinners die is because they <i>will not come</i> to
|
||
Christ for life and happiness; it is not because they
|
||
<i>cannot,</i> but because they <i>will not.</i> They will neither
|
||
<i>accept</i> the life offered, because <i>spiritual</i> and
|
||
<i>divine,</i> nor will they <i>agree</i> to the terms on which it
|
||
is offered, nor <i>apply</i> themselves to the use of the appointed
|
||
means: they will not be cured, for they will not observe the
|
||
methods of cure. <i>Fourthly,</i> The wilfulness and obstinacy of
|
||
sinners in rejecting the tenders of grace are a great grief to the
|
||
Lord Jesus, and what he complains of. Those words (<scripRef id="John.vi-p93.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.41" parsed="|John|5|41|0|0" passage="Joh 5:41"><i>v.</i> 41</scripRef>), <i>I receive not
|
||
honour from men,</i> come in a parenthesis, to obviate an objection
|
||
against him, as if he sought his own glory, and made himself the
|
||
head of a party, in obliging all to come to <i>him,</i> and applaud
|
||
him. Note, 1. He did not <i>covet</i> nor <i>court</i> the applause
|
||
of men, did not in the least affect that worldly pomp and splendour
|
||
in which the carnal Jews expected their Messiah to appear. He
|
||
charged those whom he cured not to make him known, and withdrew
|
||
from those that would have made him king. 2. He <i>had not</i> the
|
||
applause of men. Instead of <i>receiving honour</i> from men, he
|
||
received a great deal of <i>dishonour</i> and disgrace from men,
|
||
for he made himself of no reputation. 3. He <i>needed</i> not the
|
||
applause of men; it was no addition to his glory whom all the
|
||
angels of God worship, nor was he any otherwise pleased with it
|
||
than as it was according to his Father's will, and for the
|
||
happiness of those who, in giving honour <i>to him,</i> received
|
||
much greater honour <i>from him.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p94">[2.] Their <i>want of the love of God</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p94.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.42" parsed="|John|5|42|0|0" passage="Joh 5:42"><i>v.</i> 42</scripRef>): "<i>I know
|
||
you</i> very well, <i>that you have not the love of God in you.</i>
|
||
Why should I wonder that you do not come to me, when you want even
|
||
the first principle of <i>natural religion,</i> which is the
|
||
<i>love of God?</i>" Note, The reason why people <i>slight
|
||
Christ</i> is because they do not <i>love God;</i> for, if we did
|
||
indeed love God, we should love him who is his express image, and
|
||
hasten to him by whom only we may be restored to the favour of God.
|
||
He charged them (<scripRef id="John.vi-p94.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.37" parsed="|John|5|37|0|0" passage="Joh 5:37"><i>v.</i>
|
||
37</scripRef>) with <i>ignorance</i> of God, and here with want of
|
||
love to him; <i>therefore</i> men have not the love of God because
|
||
they desire not the knowledge of him. Observe, <i>First,</i> The
|
||
crime charged upon them: <i>You have not the love of God in
|
||
you.</i> They pretended a great love to God, and thought they
|
||
proved it by their zeal for the law, the temple, and the sabbath;
|
||
and yet they were really without the love of God. Note, There are
|
||
many who make a great profession of religion who yet show they want
|
||
the love of God by their neglect of Christ and their contempt of
|
||
his commandments; they hate his holiness and undervalue his
|
||
goodness. Observe, It is the love of God <i>in</i> us, that love
|
||
seated <i>in the heart,</i> a living active principle there, that
|
||
God will <i>accept;</i> the love <i>shed abroad</i> there,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p94.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.5.5" parsed="|Rom|5|5|0|0" passage="Ro 5:5">Rom. v. 5</scripRef>. <i>Secondly,</i>
|
||
The proof of this charge, by the personal knowledge of Christ, who
|
||
<i>searches the heart</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p94.4" osisRef="Bible:Rev.2.23" parsed="|Rev|2|23|0|0" passage="Re 2:23">Rev. ii.
|
||
23</scripRef>) and knows what is <i>in man: I know you.</i> Christ
|
||
sees through all our disguises, and can say to each of us, <i>I
|
||
know thee.</i> 1. Christ knows men better than <i>their neighbours
|
||
know them.</i> The people thought that the scribes and Pharisees
|
||
were very devout and good men, but Christ knew that they had not
|
||
the love of God in them. 2. Christ knows men better than <i>they
|
||
know themselves.</i> These Jews had a very good opinion of
|
||
themselves, but Christ knew how corrupt their inside was,
|
||
notwithstanding the speciousness of their outside; we may deceive
|
||
ourselves, but we cannot deceive him. 3. Christ knows men who do
|
||
not, and will not, know him; he looks <i>on</i> those who
|
||
industriously look <i>off</i> from him, and calls by their own
|
||
name, their true name, those who have not known him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p95">[3.] Another crime charged upon them is
|
||
their readiness to entertain false Christs and false prophets,
|
||
while they obstinately opposed him who was the true Messias
|
||
(<scripRef id="John.vi-p95.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.43" parsed="|John|5|43|0|0" passage="Joh 5:43"><i>v.</i> 43</scripRef>): <i>I am
|
||
come in my Father's name, and you receive me not. If another shall
|
||
come in his own name, him you will receive. Be astonished, O
|
||
heavens, at this</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p95.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.2.12-Jer.2.13" parsed="|Jer|2|12|2|13" passage="Jer 2:12,13">Jer. ii. 12,
|
||
13</scripRef>); <i>for my people have committed two evils,</i>
|
||
great evils indeed. <i>First,</i> They have <i>forsaken the
|
||
fountain of living waters,</i> for they would not receive Christ,
|
||
who came in his Father's name, had his commission from his Father,
|
||
and did all for his glory. <i>Secondly,</i> They have <i>hewn out
|
||
broken cisterns,</i> they hearken to every one that will set up in
|
||
his own name. They forsake their own mercies, which is bad enough;
|
||
and it is for <i>lying vanities,</i> which is worse. Observe here,
|
||
1. Those are false prophets who come in their own name, who run
|
||
without being sent, and set up for themselves only. 2. It is just
|
||
with God to suffer those to be deceived with false prophets who
|
||
receive not the truth in the love of it. <scripRef id="John.vi-p95.3" osisRef="Bible:2Thess.2.10-2Thess.2.11" parsed="|2Thess|2|10|2|11" passage="2Th 2:10,11">2 Thess. ii. 10, 11</scripRef>. The errors of
|
||
antichrist are the just punishment of those who obey not the
|
||
doctrine of Christ. They that shut their eyes against the true
|
||
light are by the judgment of God given up to wander endlessly after
|
||
<i>false lights,</i> and to be led aside after every <i>ignis
|
||
fatuus.</i> 3. It is the gross folly of many that, while they
|
||
<i>nauseate</i> ancient truths, they are <i>fond</i> of upstart
|
||
errors; they loathe manna, and at the same time <i>feed upon
|
||
ashes.</i> After the Jews had rejected Christ and his gospel, they
|
||
were continually haunted with spectres, with <i>false Christs</i>
|
||
and <i>false prophets</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p95.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.24" parsed="|Matt|24|24|0|0" passage="Mt 24:24">Matt. xxiv.
|
||
24</scripRef>), and their proneness to follow such occasioned those
|
||
distractions and seditions that hastened their ruin.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p96">[4.] They are here charged with pride and
|
||
vain-glory, and unbelief, the effect of them, <scripRef id="John.vi-p96.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.44" parsed="|John|5|44|0|0" passage="Joh 5:44"><i>v.</i> 44</scripRef>. Having sharply reproved their
|
||
unbelief, like a wise physician, he here searches into the cause,
|
||
lays the axe to the root. They <i>therefore</i> slighted and
|
||
undervalued Christ because they <i>admired</i> and
|
||
<i>overvalued</i> themselves. Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p97"><i>First,</i> Their ambition of worldly
|
||
honour. Christ despised it, <scripRef id="John.vi-p97.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.41" parsed="|John|5|41|0|0" passage="Joh 5:41"><i>v.</i>
|
||
41</scripRef>. They set their hearts upon it: <i>You receive honour
|
||
one of another;</i> that is, "You look for a Messiah in outward
|
||
pomp, and promise yourselves worldly honour by him." <i>You receive
|
||
honour:</i>—1. "You desire to receive it, and aim at this in all
|
||
you do." 2. "You give honour to others, and applaud them, only that
|
||
they may return it, and may applaud you." <i>Petimus dabimusque
|
||
vicissim—We ask and we bestow.</i> It is the proud man's art to
|
||
throw honour upon others only that it may rebound upon himself. 3.
|
||
"You are very careful to keep all the honours to yourselves, and
|
||
confine them to your own party, as if you had the monopoly of that
|
||
which is honourable." 4. "What respect is shown to you you
|
||
<i>receive</i> yourselves, and do not transmit to God, as Herod."
|
||
Idolizing men and their sentiments, and affecting to be idolized by
|
||
them and their applauses, are pieces of idolatry as directly
|
||
contrary to Christianity as any other.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p98"><i>Secondly,</i> Their neglect of spiritual
|
||
honour, called here <i>the honour that comes from God only;</i>
|
||
this they sought not, nor minded. Note, 1. True honour is that
|
||
which <i>comes from God only,</i> that is real and lasting honour;
|
||
those are honourable indeed whom he takes into covenant and
|
||
communion with himself. 2. <i>This honour have all the saints.</i>
|
||
All that believe in Christ, through him receive the honour that
|
||
comes from God. He is not partial, but will give glory wherever he
|
||
gives grace. 3. This honour that comes from God we must
|
||
<i>seek,</i> must aim at it, and act for it, and take up with
|
||
nothing short of it (<scripRef id="John.vi-p98.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.2.29" parsed="|Rom|2|29|0|0" passage="Ro 2:29">Rom. ii.
|
||
29</scripRef>); we must account it <i>our reward,</i> as the
|
||
Pharisees accounted the praise of men. 4. Those that will not come
|
||
to Christ, and those that are ambitious of worldly honour, make it
|
||
appear that they seek not the honour that comes from God, and it is
|
||
their folly and ruin.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p99"><i>Thirdly,</i> The influence this had upon
|
||
their infidelity. <i>How can you believe</i> who are thus affected?
|
||
Observe here, 1. The difficulty of believing arises from ourselves
|
||
and our own corruption; we make our work hard to ourselves, and
|
||
then complain it is impracticable. 2. The ambition and affectation
|
||
of worldly honour are a great hindrance to faith in Christ. How can
|
||
they believe who make the praise and applause of men their idol?
|
||
When the profession and practice of serious godliness are
|
||
unfashionable, are <i>every where spoken against,</i>—when Christ
|
||
and his followers are men wondered at, and to be a Christian is to
|
||
be like a <i>speckled bird</i> (and this is the common case),—how
|
||
can they believe the summit of whose ambition is to <i>make a fair
|
||
show in the flesh?</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p100">6. The last witness here called is Moses,
|
||
<scripRef id="John.vi-p100.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.45" parsed="|John|5|45|0|0" passage="Joh 5:45"><i>v.</i> 45</scripRef>, &c. The
|
||
Jews had a great veneration for Moses, and valued themselves upon
|
||
their being the <i>disciples</i> of Moses, and pretended to adhere
|
||
to Moses, in their opposition to Christ; but Christ here shows
|
||
them,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p101">(1.) That Moses was a witness against the
|
||
unbelieving Jews, <i>and accused them to the Father: There is one
|
||
that accuses you, even Moses.</i> This may be understood either,
|
||
[1.] As showing the difference between the law and the gospel.
|
||
Moses, that is, the law, <i>accuses you,</i> for by the law is the
|
||
knowledge of sin; it <i>condemns</i> you, it is to those that trust
|
||
to it a ministration of death and condemnation. But it is not the
|
||
design of Christ's gospel to <i>accuse</i> us: <i>Think not that I
|
||
will accuse you.</i> Christ did not come into the world as a
|
||
<i>Momus,</i> to find fault and pick quarrels with every body, or
|
||
as a <i>spy</i> upon the actions of men, or a <i>promoter,</i> to
|
||
fish for crimes; no, he came to be an advocate, not an accuser; to
|
||
reconcile God and man, and not to set them more at variance. What
|
||
fools were they then that adhered to Moses against Christ, and
|
||
<i>desired to be under the law!</i> <scripRef id="John.vi-p101.1" osisRef="Bible:Gal.4.21" parsed="|Gal|4|21|0|0" passage="Ga 4:21">Gal. iv. 21</scripRef>. Or, [2.] As showing the manifest
|
||
unreasonableness of their infidelity: "Think not that I will appeal
|
||
from your bar to God's and challenge you to answer there for what
|
||
you do against me, as injured innocency usually does; no, I do not
|
||
need; you are already accused, and cast, in the court of heaven;
|
||
Moses himself says enough to convict you of, and condemn you for,
|
||
your unbelief." Let them not mistake <i>concerning Christ;</i>
|
||
though he was a prophet, he did not improve his interest in heaven
|
||
against those that persecuted him, did not, as Elias, <i>make
|
||
intercession against Israel</i> (<scripRef id="John.vi-p101.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.6.2" parsed="|Rom|6|2|0|0" passage="Ro 6:2">Rom.
|
||
vi. 2</scripRef>), nor as Jeremiah desire to <i>see God's vengeance
|
||
on them.</i> Nor let them mistake concerning Moses, as if he would
|
||
stand by them in rejecting Christ; no, <i>There is one that accuses
|
||
you, even Moses in whom you trust.</i> Note, <i>First,</i> External
|
||
privileges and advantages are commonly the vain confidence of those
|
||
who reject Christ and his grace. The Jews <i>trusted</i> in Moses,
|
||
and thought their having his laws and ordinances would save them.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> Those that confide in their privileges, and do not
|
||
improve them, will find not only that their confidence is
|
||
disappointed, but that those very privileges will be witnesses
|
||
against them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="John.vi-p102">(2.) That Moses was a witness for Christ
|
||
and to his doctrine (<scripRef id="John.vi-p102.1" osisRef="Bible:John.5.46-John.5.47" parsed="|John|5|46|5|47" passage="Joh 5:46,47"><i>v.</i> 46,
|
||
47</scripRef>): <i>He wrote of me.</i> Moses did particularly
|
||
prophesy of Christ, as the Seed of the woman, the Seed of Abraham,
|
||
the Shiloh, the great Prophet; the ceremonies of the law of Moses
|
||
were <i>figures of him that was to come.</i> The Jews made Moses
|
||
the patron of their opposition to Christ; but Christ here shows
|
||
them their error, that Moses was so far from writing against Christ
|
||
that he wrote <i>for him,</i> and <i>of him.</i> But, [1.] Christ
|
||
here charges it on the Jews that they <i>did not believe Moses.</i>
|
||
He had said (<scripRef id="John.vi-p102.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.45" parsed="|John|5|45|0|0" passage="Joh 5:45"><i>v.</i> 45</scripRef>)
|
||
that they <i>trusted</i> in Moses, and yet here he undertakes to
|
||
make out that they did not believe Moses; they trusted to his name,
|
||
but they did not receive his doctrine in its true sense and
|
||
meaning; they did not rightly understand, nor give credit to, what
|
||
there was in the writings of Moses concerning the Messiah. [2.] He
|
||
proves this charge from their disbelief of him: <i>Had you believed
|
||
Moses, you would have believed me.</i> Note, <i>First,</i> The
|
||
surest trial of faith is by the effects it produces. Many say that
|
||
they believe whose actions give their words the lie; for had they
|
||
believed the scriptures they would have done otherwise than they
|
||
did. <i>Secondly,</i> Those who rightly believe one part of
|
||
scripture will receive every part. The prophecies of the old
|
||
Testament were so fully accomplished in Christ that those who
|
||
rejected Christ did in effect deny those prophecies, and set them
|
||
aside. [3.] From their disbelief of Moses he infers that it was not
|
||
strange that they rejected him: <i>If you believe not his writings,
|
||
how shall you believe my words?</i> How can it be thought that you
|
||
should? <i>First,</i> "If you do not believe sacred
|
||
<i>writings,</i> those oracles which are in black and white, which
|
||
is the most certain way of conveyance, <i>how shall you believe my
|
||
words,</i> words being usually less regarded?" <i>Secondly,</i> "If
|
||
you do not believe Moses, for whom you have such a profound
|
||
veneration, how is it likely that you should believe me, whom you
|
||
look upon with so much contempt?" See <scripRef id="John.vi-p102.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.6.12" parsed="|Exod|6|12|0|0" passage="Ex 6:12">Exod. vi. 12</scripRef>. <i>Thirdly,</i> "If you believe
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not what Moses spoke and wrote of me, which is a strong and cogent
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testimony for me, how shall you believe me and my mission?" If we
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admit not the premises, how shall we admit the conclusion? The
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truth of the Christian religion, it being a matter purely of divine
|
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revelation, depends upon the divine authority of the scripture; if
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therefore we believe not the divine inspiration of those writings,
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how shall be receive the doctrine of Christ?</p>
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</div></div2> |