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Matthew Chapter 23
Commentary by Matthew Henry
In the foregoing Chapter, we had our
Savior's discourses with the scribes and Pharisees; here we
have his discourse concerning them, or rather against them.
I. He allows their office, verses 2, 3. II. He warns his
disciples not to imitate their hypocrisy and pride, verses
4-12. III. He exhibits a charge against them for divers high
crimes and misdemeanors, corrupting the law, opposing the
gospel, and treacherous dealing both with God and man; and
to each article he prefixes a woe, verses 13-33. IV. He
passes sentence upon Jerusalem, and foretells the ruin of
the city and temple, especially for the sin of persecution,
verses 34-39.
The Scribes and Pharisees Condemned;
Cautions against Pride.
Matthew 23:1-12 --
1 Then spoke Jesus to the multitude,
and to his disciples, 2 Saying,
The scribes and the Pharisees sit in
Moses' seat: 3 All therefore whatsoever they bid you
observe, that observe and do; but do not ye after their
works: for they say, and do not. 4 For they bind heavy
burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay them on men's
shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with one
of their fingers. 5 But all their works they do for to be
seen of men: they make broad their phylacteries, and enlarge
the borders of their garments, 6 And love the uppermost
rooms at feasts, and the chief seats in the synagogues, 7
And greetings in the markets, and to be called of men,
Rabbi, Rabbi. 8 But be not ye called Rabbi: for one is your
Master, even Christ; and all ye are brethren. 9 And call no
man your father upon the earth: for one is your Father,
which is in heaven. 10 Neither be ye called masters: for one
is your Master, even Christ. 11 But he that is greatest
among you shall be your servant. 12 And whosoever shall
exalt himself shall be abased; and he that shall humble
himself shall be exalted.
We find not Christ, in all his
preaching, so severe upon any sort of people as upon these
scribes and Pharisees; for the truth is, nothing is more
directly opposite to the spirit of the gospel than the
temper and practice of that generation of men, who were made
up of pride, worldliness, and tyranny, under a cloak and
pretence of religion; yet these were the idols and darlings
of the people, who thought, if but two men went to heaven,
one would be a Pharisee. Now Christ directs his discourse
here to the multitude, and to his disciples (verse 1) to
rectify their mistakes concerning these scribes and
Pharisees, by painting them out in their true colors, and so
to take off the prejudice which some of the multitude had
conceived against Christ and his doctrine, because it was
opposed by those men of their church, that called themselves
the people's guides. Note, It is good to know the true
characters of men, that we may not be imposed upon by great
and mighty names, titles, and pretensions to power. People
must be told of the wolves (Acts 20:29, 30), the dogs
(Philippians 3:2), the deceitful workers (2 Corinthians
11:13), that they may know here to stand upon their guard.
And not only the mixed multitude, but even the disciples,
need these cautions; for good men are apt to have their eyes
dazzled with worldly pomp.
Now, in this discourse,
I. Christ allows their office as
expositors of the law; The scribes and Pharisees (that is,
the whole Sanhedrim, who sat at the helm of church
government, who were all called scribes, and were some of
them Pharisees), they sit in Moses' seat (verse 2), as
public teachers and interpreters of the law; and, the law of
Moses being the municipal law of their state, they were as
judges, or a bench of justices; teaching and judging seem to
be equivalent, comparing 2 Chronicles 17:7, 9, with 2
Chronicles 19:5, 6, 8. They were not the itinerant judges
that rode the circuit, but the standing bench, that
determined on appeals, special verdicts, or writs of error
by the law; they sat in Moses' seat, not as he was Mediator
between God and Israel, but only as he was chief justice,
Exodus 18:26. Or, we may apply it, not to the Sanhedrim, but
to the other Pharisees and scribes, that expounded the law,
and taught the people how to apply it to particular cases.
The pulpit of wood, such as was made for Ezra, that ready
scribe in the law of God (Nehemiah 8:4), is here called
Moses’ seat, because Moses had those in every city (so the
expression is, Acts 15:21), who in those pulpits preached
him; this was their office, and it was just and honorable;
it was requisite that there should be some at whose mouth
the people might enquire the law, Malachi 2:7. Note, 1. Many
a good place is filled with bad men; it is no new thing for
the vilest men to be exalted even to Moses’ seat (Psalm
12:8); and, when it is so, the men are not so much honored
by the seat as the seat is dishonored by the men. Now they
that sat in Moses’ seat were so wretchedly degenerated, that
it was time for the great Prophet to arise, like unto Moses,
to erect another seat. 2. Good and useful offices and powers
are not therefore to be condemned and abolished, because
they fall sometimes into the hands of bad men, who abuse
them. We must not therefore pull down Moses’ seat, because
scribes and Pharisees have got possession of it; rather than
so, let both grow together until the harvest, Chapter 13:30.
Hence he infers (verse 3),
"Whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do As far
as they sit in Moses’ seat, that is, read and preach the law
that was given by Moses" (which, as yet, continued in full
force, power, and virtue), "and judge according to that law,
so far you must hearken to them, as remembrances to you of
the written word." The scribes and Pharisees made it their
business to study the scripture, and were well acquainted
with the language, history, and customs of it, and its style
and phraseology. Now Christ would have the people to make
use of the helps they gave them for the understanding of the
scripture, and do accordingly. As long as their comments did
illustrate the text and not pervert it; did make plain, and
not make void, the commandment of God; so far they must be
observed and obeyed, but with caution and a judgment of
discretion. Note, We must not think the worse of good truths
for their being preached by bad ministers; nor of good laws
for their being executed by bad magistrates. Though it is
most desirable to have our food brought by angels, yet, if
God send it to us by ravens, if it be good and wholesome, we
must take it, and thank God for it. Our Lord Jesus promised
this, to prevent the cavil which some would be apt to make
at this following discourse; as if, by condemning the
scribes and Pharisees, he designed to bring the law of Moses
into contempt, and to draw people off from it; whereas he
came not to destroy, but to fulfill. Note, It is wisdom to
obviate the exceptions which may be taken at just reproofs,
especially when there is occasion to distinguish between
officers and their offices, that the ministry be not blamed
when the ministers are.
II. He condemns the men. He had
ordered the multitude to do as they taught; but here he
annexes a caution not to do as they did, to beware of their
leaven; Do not ye after their works. Their traditions were
their works, were their idols, the works of their fancy. Or,
"Do not according to their example." Doctrines and practices
are spirits that must be tried, and where there is occasion,
must be carefully separated and distinguished; and as we
must not swallow corrupt doctrines for the sake of any
laudable practices of those that teach them, so we must not
imitate any bad examples for the sake of the plausible
doctrines of those that set them. The scribes and Pharisees
boasted as much of the goodness of their works as of the
orthodoxy of their teaching, and hoped to be justified by
them; it was the plea they put in (Luke 18:11, 12); and yet
these things, which they valued themselves so much upon,
were an abomination in the sight of God.
Our Savior here, and in the
following verses, specifies divers particulars of their
works, wherein we must not imitate them. In general, they
are charged with hypocrisy, dissimulation, or double-dealing
in religion; a crime which cannot be enquired of at men's
bar, because we can only judge according to outward
appearance; but God, who searches the heart, can convict of
hypocrisy; and nothing is more displeasing to him, for he
desires truth.
Four things are in these verses
charged upon them.
1. Their saying and doing were two
things.
Their practice was no way agreeable
either to their preaching or to their profession; for they
say, and do not; they teach out of the law that which is
good, but their conversation gives them the lie; and they
seem to have found another way to heaven for themselves than
what they show to others. See this illustrated and charged
home upon them, Romans 2:17-24. Those are of all sinners
most inexcusable that allow themselves in the sins they
condemn in others, or in worse. This doth especially touch
wicked ministers, who will be sure to have their portion
appointed them with hypocrites (Chapter 24:51); for what
greater hypocrisy can there be, than to press that upon
others, to be believed and done, which they themselves
disbelieve and disobey; pulling down in their practice what
they build up in their preaching; when in the pulpit,
preaching so well that it is a pity they should ever come
out; but, when out of the pulpit, living so ill that it is a
pity they should ever come in; like bells, that call others
to church, but hang out of it themselves; or Mercurial
posts, that point the way to others, but stand still
themselves? Such will be judged out of their own mouths. It
is applicable to all others that say, and do not; that make
a plausible profession of religion, but do not live up to
that profession; that make fair promises, but do not perform
their promises; are full of good discourse, and can lay down
the law to all about them, but are empty of good works;
great talkers, but little doers; the voice is Jacob's voice,
but the hands are the hands of Esau. Vox et præterea nihil--mere
sound. They speak fair, I go, sir; but there is no trusting
them, for there are seven abominations in their heart.
2. They were very severe in imposing
upon others those things which they were not themselves
willing to submit to the burthen of (verse 4); They bind
heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne; not only insisting
upon the minute circumstances of the law, which is called a
yoke (Acts 15:10), and pressing the observation of them with
more strictness and severity than God himself did (whereas
the maxim of the lawyers, is Apices juris son sunt jura--Mere
points of law are not law), but by adding to his words, and
imposing their own inventions and traditions, under the
highest penalties. They loved to show their authority and to
exercise their domineering faculty, lording it over God's
heritage, and saying to men's souls, Bow down, that we may
go over; witness their many additions to the law of the
fourth commandment, by which they made the Sabbath a burthen
on men's shoulders, which was designed to be the joy of
their hearts. Thus with force and cruelty did those
shepherds rule the flock, as of old, Ezekiel 34:4.
But see their hypocrisy; They
themselves will not move them with one of their fingers.
(1.) They would not exercise themselves in those things
which they imposed upon others; they pressed upon the people
a strictness in religion which they themselves would not be
bound by; but secretly transgressed their own traditions,
which they publicly enforced. They indulged their pride in
giving law to others; but consulted their ease in their own
practice. Thus it has been said, to the reproach of the
popish priests, that they fast with wine and sweetmeats,
while they force the people to fast with bread and water;
and decline the penances they enjoin the laity. (2.) They
would not ease the people in these things, nor put a finger
to lighten their burthen, when they saw it pinched them.
They could find out loose constructions to put upon God's
law, and could dispense with that, but would not bate an ace
of their own impositions, nor dispense with a failure in the
least punctilio of them. They allowed no chancery to relieve
the extremity of their common law. How contrary to this was
the practice of Christ's apostles, who would allow to others
that use of Christian liberty which, for the peace and
edification of the church, they would deny themselves in!
They would lay no other burthen than necessary things, and
those easy, Acts 15:28. How carefully doth Paul spare those
to whom he writes! 1 Corinthians 7:28; 9:12.
3. They were all for show, and
nothing for substance, in religion (verse 5); All their
works they do, to be seen of men. We must do such good
works, that they who see them may glorify God; but we must
not proclaim our good works, with design that others may see
them, and glorify us; which our Savior here charges upon the
Pharisees in general, as he had done before in the
particular instances of prayer and giving of alms. All their
end was to be praised of men, and therefore all their
endeavor was to be seen of men, to make a fair show in the
flesh. In those duties of religion which fall under the eye
of men, none ere so constant and abundant as they; but in
what lies between God and their souls, in the retirement of
their closets, and the recesses of their hearts, they desire
to be excused. The form of godliness will get them a name to
live, which is all they aim at, and therefore they trouble
not themselves with the power of it, which is essential to a
life indeed. He that does all to be seen does nothing to the
purpose.
He specifies two things which they
did to be seen of men.
(1.) They made broad their
phylacteries. Those were little scrolls of paper or
parchment, wherein were written, with great niceness, these
four paragraphs of the law, Exodus 13:2-11; 13:11-16;
Deuteronomy 6:4-9; 11:13-21. These were sewn up in leather,
and worn upon their foreheads and left arms. It was a
tradition of the elders, which had reference to Exodus 13:9,
and Proverbs 7:3, where the expressions seem to be
figurative, intimating no more than that we should bear the
things of God in our minds as carefully as if we had them
bound between our eyes. Now the Pharisees made broad these
phylacteries, that they might be thought more holy, and
strict, and zealous for the law, than others. It is a
gracious ambition to covet to be really more holy than
others, but it is a proud ambition to covet to appear so. It
is good to excel in real piety, but not to exceed in outward
shows; for overdoing is justly suspected of design, Proverbs
27:14. It is the guise of hypocrisy to make more ado than
needs in external service, more than is needful either to
prove, or to improve, the good affections and dispositions
of the soul.
(2.) They enlarged the borders of
their garments. God appointed the Jews to make borders or
fringes upon their garments (Numbers 15:38), to distinguish
them from other nations, and to be a memorandum to them of
their being a peculiar people; but the Pharisees were not
content to have these borders like other people's, which
might serve God's design in appointing them; but they must
be larger than ordinary, to answer their design of making
themselves to be taken notice of; as if they were more
religious than others. But those who thus enlarge their
phylacteries, and the borders of their garments, while their
hearts are straitened, and destitute of the love of God and
their neighbor, though they may now deceive others, will in
the end deceive themselves.
4. They much affected pre-eminence
and superiority, and prided themselves extremely in it.
Pride was the darling reigning sin of the Pharisees, the sin
that did most easily beset them and which our Lord Jesus
takes all occasions to witness against.
(1.) He describes their pride,
verses 6, 7. They courted, and coveted,
[1.] Places of honor and respect. In
all public appearances, as at feasts, and in the synagogues,
they expected, and had, to their hearts' delight, the
uppermost rooms, and the chief seats. They took place of all
others, and precedence was adjudged to them, as persons of
the greatest note and merit; and it is easy to imagine what
a complacency they took in it; they loved to have the
preeminence, 3 John 9. It is not possessing the uppermost
rooms, nor sitting in the chief seats, that is condemned
(somebody must sit uppermost), but loving them; for men to
value such a little piece of ceremony as sitting highest,
going first, taking the wall, or the better hand, and to
value themselves upon it, to seek it, and to feel resentment
if they have it not; what is that but making an idol of
ourselves, and then falling down and worshipping it--the
worst kind of idolatry! It is bad any where, but especially
in the synagogues. There to seek honor to ourselves, where
we appear in order to give glory to God, and to humble
ourselves before him, is indeed to mock God instead of
serving him. David would willingly lie at the threshold in
God's house; so far was he from coveting the chief seat
there, Psalm 84:10. It savors much of pride and hypocrisy,
when people do not care for going to church, unless they can
look fine and make a figure there.
[2.] Titles of honor and respect.
They loved greetings in the markets, loved to have people
put off their hats to them, and show them respect when they
met them in the streets. O how it pleased them, and fed
their vain humor, digito monstrari et dicier, Hic est--to be
pointed out, and to have it said, This be he, to have way
made for them in the crowd of market people; "Stand off,
here is a Pharisee coming!" and to be complimented with the
high and pompous title of Rabbi, Rabbi! This was meat and
drink and dainties to them; and they took as great a
satisfaction in it as Nebuchadnezzar did in his palace, when
he said, Is not this great Babylon that I have built? The
greetings would not have done them half so much good, if
they had not been in the markets, where every body might see
how much they were respected, and how high they stood in the
opinion of the people. It was but a little before Christ's
time, that the Jewish teachers, the masters of Israel, had
assumed the title of Rabbi, Rab, or Rabban, which signifies
great or much; and was construed as Doctor, or My lord. And
they laid such a stress upon it, that they gave it for a
maxim that "he who salutes his teacher, and does not call
him Rabbi, provokes the divine Majesty to depart from
Israel;" so much religion did they place in that which was
but a piece of good manners! For him that is taught in the
word to give respect to him that teaches is commendable
enough in him that gives it; but for him that teaches to
love it, and demand it, and affect it, to be puffed up with
it, and to be displeased if it be omitted, is sinful and
abominable; and, instead of teaching, he has need to learn
the first lesson in the school of Christ, which is humility.
(2.) He cautions his disciples
against being herein like them; herein they must not do
after their works; "But be not ye called so, for ye shall
not be of such a spirit," verse 8 & context.
Here is, [1.] A prohibition of
pride. They are here forbidden,
First, To challenge titles of honor
and dominion to themselves, verses 8-10. It is repeated
twice; Be not called Rabbi, neither be ye called Master or
Guide: not that it is unlawful to give civil respect to
those that are over us in the Lord, nay, it is an instance
of the honor and esteem which it is our duty to show them;
but, 1. Christ's ministers must not affect the name of Rabbi
or Master, by way of distinction from other people; it is
not agreeable to the simplicity of the gospel, for them to
covet or accept the honor which they have that are in kings'
palaces. 2. They must not assume the authority and dominion
implied in those names; they must not be magisterial, nor
domineer over their brethren, or over God's heritage, as if
they had dominion over the faith of Christians: what they
received of the Lord, all must receive from them; but in
other things they must not make their opinions and wills a
rule and standard to all other people, to be admitted with
an implicit obedience. The reasons for this prohibition are,
(1.) One is your Master, even
Christ, verse 8, and again, verse 10. Note, [1.] Christ is
our Master, our Teacher, our Guide. Mr. George Herbert, when
he named the name of Christ, usually added, My Master. [2.]
Christ only is our Master, ministers are but ushers in the
school. Christ only is the Master, the great Prophet, whom
we must hear, and be ruled and overruled by; whose word must
be an oracle and a law to us; Verily I say unto you, must be
enough to us. And if he only be our Master, then for his
ministers to set up for dictators, and to pretend to a
supremacy and an infallibility, is a daring usurpation of
that honor of Christ which he will not give to another.
(2.) All ye are brethren. Ministers
are brethren not only to one another, but to the people; and
therefore it ill becomes them to be masters, when there are
none for them to master it over but their brethren; yea, and
we are all younger brethren, otherwise the eldest might
claim an excellence of dignity and power, Genesis 49:3. But,
to preclude that, Christ himself is the first-born among
many brethren, Romans 8:29. Ye are brethren, as ye are all
disciples of the same Master. School-fellows are brethren,
and, as such, should help one another in getting their
lesson; but it will by no means be allowed that one of the
scholars step into the master's seat, and give law to the
school. If we are all brethren, we must not be many masters.
James 3:1.
Secondly, They are forbidden to
ascribe such titles to others (verse 9); "Call no man your
father upon the earth; constitute no man the father of your
religion, that is, the founder, author, director, and
governor, of it." The fathers of our flesh must be called
fathers, and as such we must give them reverence; but God
only must be allowed as the Father of our spirits, Hebrews
12:9. Our religion must not be derived from, or made to
depend upon, any man. We are born again to the spiritual and
divine life, not of corruptible seed, but by the word of
God; not of the will of the flesh, or the will of man, but
of God. Now the will of man, not being the rise of our
religion, must not be the rule of it. We must not jurare in
verba magistri--swear to the dictates of any creature, not
the wisest or best, nor pin our faith on any man's sleeve,
because we know not whither he will carry it. St. Paul calls
himself a Father to those whose conversion he had been an
instrument of (1 Corinthians 4:15; Philippians 10); but he
pretends to no dominion over them, and uses that title to
denote, not authority, but affection: therefore he calls
them not his obliged, but his beloved, sons, 1 Corinthians
4:14.
The reason given is, One is your
Father, who is in heaven. God is our Father, and is All in
all in our religion. He is the Fountain of it, and its
Founder; the Life of it, and its Lord; from whom alone, as
the Original, our spiritual life is derived, and on whom it
depends. He is the Father of all lights (James 1:17), that
one Father, from whom are all things, and we in him,
Ephesians 4:6. Christ having taught us to say, Our Father,
who art in heaven; let us call no man Father upon earth; no
man, because man is a worm, and the son of man is a worm,
hewn out of the same rock with us; especially not upon
earth, for man upon earth is a sinful worm; there is not a
just man upon earth, that doeth good, and sins not, and
therefore no one is fit to be called Father.
[2.] Here is a precept of humility
and mutual subjection (verse 11); He that is greatest among
you shall be your servant; not only call himself so (we know
of one who styles himself Servus servorum Dei--Servant of
the servants of God, but acts as Rabbi, and father, and
master, and Dominus Deus noster--The Lord our God, and what
not), but he shall be so. Take it as a promise; "He shall be
accounted greatest, and stand highest in the favor of God,
that is most submissive and serviceable;" or as a precept;
"He that is advanced to any place of dignity, trust, and
honor, in the church, let him be your servant" (some copies
read esto for estai), "let him not think that his patent of
honor is a writ of ease; no; he that is greatest is not a
lord, but a minister." St. Paul, who knew his privilege as
well as duty, though free from all, yet made himself servant
unto all (1 Corinthians 9:19); and our Master frequently
pressed it upon his disciples to be humble and self-denying,
mild and condescending, and to abound in all offices of
Christian love, though mean, and to the meanest; and of this
he hath set us an example.
[3.] Here is a good reason for all
this, verse 12. Consider,
First, The punishment intended for
the proud; Whosoever shall exalt himself shall be abased. If
God give them repentance, they will be abased in their own
eyes, and will abhor themselves for it; if they repent not,
sooner or later they will be abased before the world.
Nebuchadnezzar, in the height of his pride, was turned to be
a fellow-commoner with the beasts; Herod, to be a feast for
the worms; and Babylon, that sat as a queen, to be the scorn
of nations. God made the proud and aspiring priests
contemptible and base (Malachi 2:9), and the lying prophet
to be the tail, Isaiah 9:15. But if proud men have not marks
of humiliation set upon them in this world, there is a day
coming, when they shall rise to everlasting shame and
contempt (Daniel 12:2); so plentifully will he reward the
proud doer! Psalm 31:23.
Secondly, The preferment intended
for the humble; He that shall humble himself shall be
exalted. Humility is that ornament which is in the sight of
God of great price. In this world the humble have the honor
of being accepted with the holy God, and respected by all
wise and good men; of being qualified for, and often called
out to, the most honorable services; for honor is like the
shadow, which flees from those that pursue it, and grasp at
it, but follows those that flee from it. However, in the
other world, they that have humbled themselves in contrition
for their sin, in compliance with their God, and in
condescension to their brethren, shall be exalted to inherit
the throne of glory; shall be not only owned, but crowned,
before angels and men.
The Crimes of the Pharisees.
Matthew 23:13-33 --
13 But woe unto you, scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven
against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer
ye them that are entering to go in. 14 Woe unto you, scribes
and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye devour widows' houses, and
for a pretence make long prayer: therefore ye shall receive
the greater damnation. 15 Woe unto you, scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye compass sea and land to make
one proselyte, and when he is made, ye make him twofold more
the child of hell than yourselves. 16 Woe unto you, ye blind
guides, which say, Whosoever shall swear by the temple, it
is nothing; but whosoever shall swear by the gold of the
temple, he is a debtor! 17 Ye fools and blind: for whether
is greater, the gold, or the temple that sanctifieth the
gold? 18 And, Whosoever shall swear by the altar, it is
nothing; but whosoever sweareth by the gift that is upon it,
he is guilty. 19 Ye fools and blind: for whether is greater,
the gift, or the altar that sanctifieth the gift? 20 Whoso
therefore shall swear by the altar, sweareth by it, and by
all things thereon. 21 And whoso shall swear by the temple,
sweareth by it, and by him that dwelleth therein. 22 And he
that shall swear by heaven, sweareth by the throne of God,
and by him that sitteth thereon. 23 Woe unto you, scribes
and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of mint and
anise and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of
the law, judgment, mercy, and faith: these ought ye to have
done, and not to leave the other undone. 24 Ye blind guides,
which strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel. 25 Woe unto
you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye make clean
the outside of the cup and of the platter, but within they
are full of extortion and excess. 26 Thou blind Pharisee,
cleanse first that which is within the cup and platter, that
the outside of them may be clean also. 27 Woe unto you,
scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like unto
whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward,
but are within full of dead men's bones, and of all
uncleanness. 28 Even so ye also outwardly appear righteous
unto men, but within ye are full of hypocrisy and iniquity.
29 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! because
ye build the tombs of the prophets, and garnish the
sepulchres of the righteous, 30 And say, If we had been in
the days of our fathers, we would not have been partakers
with them in the blood of the prophets. 31 Wherefore ye be
witnesses unto yourselves, that ye are the children of them
which killed the prophets. 32 Fill ye up then the measure of
your fathers. 33 Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how
can ye escape the damnation of hell?
In these verses we have eight woes
leveled directly against the scribes and Pharisees by our
Lord Jesus Christ, like so many claps of thunder, or flashes
of lightning, from mount Sinai. Three woes are made to look
very dreadful (Revelation 8:13; 9:12); but here are eight
woes, in opposition to the eight beatitudes, Matthew 5:3.
The gospel has its woes as well as the law, and gospel
curses are of all curses the heaviest. These woes are the
more remarkable, not only because of the authority, but
because of the meekness and gentleness, of him that
denounced them. He came to bless, and loved to bless; but,
if his wrath be kindled, there is surely cause for it: and
who shall entreat for him that the great Intercessor pleads
against? A woe from Christ is a remediless woe.
This is here the burden of the song,
and it is a heavy burden; Woe unto you, scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites. Note, 1. The scribes and Pharisees
were hypocrites; that is it in which all the rest of their
bad characters are summed up; it was the leaven which gave
the relish to all they said and did. A hypocrite is a
stage-player in religion (that is the primary signification
of the word); he personates or acts the part of one that he
neither is nor may be, or perhaps the he neither is nor
would be. 2. That hypocrites are in a woeful state and
condition. Woe to hypocrites; so he said whose saying that
their case is miserable makes it so: while they live, their
religion is vain; when they die, their ruin is great.
Now each of these woes against the
scribes and Pharisees has a reason annexed to it containing
a separate crime charged upon them, proving their hypocrisy,
and justifying the judgment of Christ upon them; for his
woes, his curses, are never causeless.
I. They were sworn enemies to the
gospel of Christ, and consequently to the salvation of the
souls of men (verse 13); They shut up the kingdom of heaven
against men, that is, they did all they could to keep people
from believing in Christ, and so entering into his kingdom.
Christ came to open the kingdom of heaven, that is, to lay
open for us a new and living way into it, to bring men to be
subjects of that kingdom. Now the scribes and Pharisees, who
sat in Moses’ seat, and pretended to the key of knowledge,
ought to have contributed their assistance herein, by
opening those scriptures of the Old Testament which pointed
at the Messiah and his kingdom, in their true and proper
sense; they that undertook to expound Moses and the prophets
should have showed the people how they testified of Christ;
that Daniel's weeks were expiring, the scepter was departed
from Judah, and therefore now was the time for the Messiah's
appearing. Thus they might have facilitated that great work,
and have helped thousands to heaven; but, instead of this,
they shut up the kingdom of heaven; they made it their
business to press the ceremonial law, which was now in the
vanishing, to suppress the prophecies, which were now in the
accomplishing, and to beget and nourish up in the minds of
the people prejudices against Christ and his doctrine.
1. They would not go in themselves;
Have any of the rulers, or of the Pharisees, believed on
him? John 7:48. No; they were to proud to stoop to his
meanness, too formal to be reconciled to his plainness; they
did not like a religion which insisted so much on humility,
self-denial, contempt of the world, and spiritual worship.
Repentance was the door of admission into this kingdom, and
nothing could be more disagreeable to the Pharisees, who
justified and admired themselves, than to repent, that is,
to accuse and abase and abhor themselves; therefore they
went not in themselves; but that was not all.
2. They would not suffer them that
were entering to go in. It is bad to keep away from Christ
ourselves, but it is worse to keep others from him; yet that
is commonly the way of hypocrites; they do not love that any
should go beyond them in religion, or be better than they.
Their not going in themselves was a hindrance to many; for,
they having so great an interest in the people, multitudes
rejected the gospel only because their leaders did; but,
besides that, they opposed both Christ's entertaining of
sinners (Luke 7:39), and sinners' entertaining of Christ;
they perverted his doctrine, confronted his miracles,
quarreled with his disciples, and represented him, and his
institutes and economy, to the people in the most
disingenuous, disadvantageous manner imaginable; they
thundered out their excommunications against those that
confessed him, and used all their wit and power to serve
their malice against him; and thus they shut up the kingdom
of heaven, so that they who would enter into it must suffer
violence (Chapter 11:12), and press into it (Luke 16:16),
through a crowd of scribes and Pharisees, and all the
obstructions and difficulties they could contrive to lay in
their way. How well is it for us that our salvation is not
entrusted in the hands of any man or company of men in the
world! If it were, we should be undone. They that shut out
of the church would shut out of heaven if they could; but
the malice of men cannot make the promise of God to his
chosen of no effect; blessed be God, it cannot.
II. They made religion and the form
of godliness a cloak and stalking-horse to their covetous
practices and desires, verse 14. Observe here,
1. What their wicked practices were;
they devoured widows' houses, either by quartering
themselves and their attendants upon them for entertainment,
which must be of the best for men of their figure; or by
insinuating themselves into their affections, and so getting
to be the trustees of their estates, which they could make
an easy prey of; for who could presume to call such as they
were to an account? The thing they aimed at was to enrich
themselves; and, this being their chief and highest end, all
considerations of justice and equity were laid aside, and
even widows' houses were sacrificed to this. Widows are of
the weaker sex in its weakest state, easily imposed upon;
and therefore they fastened on them, to make a prey of. They
devoured those whom, by the law of God, they were
particularly obliged to protect, patronize, and relieve.
There is a woe in the Old Testament to those that made
widows their prey (Isaiah 10:1, 2); and Christ here seconded
it with his woe. God is the judge of the widows; they are
his peculiar care, he establishes their border (Proverbs
15:25), and espouses their cause (Exodus 22:22, 23); yet
these were they whose houses the Pharisees devoured by
wholesale; so greedy were they to get their bellies filled
with the treasures of wickedness! Their devouring denotes
not only covetousness, but cruelty in their oppression,
described Micah 3:3, They eat the flesh, and flay off the
skin. And doubtless they did all this under color of law;
for they did it so artfully that it passed uncensored, and
did not at all lessen the people's veneration for them.
2. What was the cloak with which
they covered this wicked practice; For a pretence they made
long prayers; very long indeed, if it be true which some of
the Jewish writers tell us, that they spent three hours at a
time in the formalities of meditation and prayer, and did it
thrice every day, which is more than an upright soul, that
makes a conscience of being inward with God in the duty,
dares pretend ordinarily to do; but to the Pharisees it was
easy enough, who never made a business of the duty, and
always made a trade of the outside of it. By this craft they
got their wealth, and maintained their grandeur. It is not
probable that these long prayers were extemporary, for then
(as Mr. Baxter observes) the Pharisees had much more the
gift of prayer than Christ's disciples had; but rather that
they were stated forms of words in use among them, which
they said over by tale, as the papists drop their beads.
Christ doth not here condemn long prayers, as in themselves
hypocritical; nay if there were not a great appearance of
good in them, they would not have been used for a pretence;
and the cloak must be very thick which was used to cover
such wicked practices. Christ himself continued all night in
prayer to God, and we are commanded to pray without ceasing
too soon; where there are many sins to be confessed, and
many wants to pray for the supply of, and many mercies to
give thanks for, there is occasion for long prayers. But the
Pharisees' long prayers were made up of vain repetitions,
and (which was the end of them) they were for a pretence; by
them they got the reputation of pious devout men, that loved
prayer, and were the favorites of Heaven; and by this means
people were made to believe it was not possible that such
men as they should cheat them;, and, therefore, happy the
widow that could get a Pharisee for her trustee, and
guardian to her children! Thus, while they seemed to soar
heaven-ward, upon the wings of prayer, their eye, like the
kite's, was all the while upon their prey on the earth, some
widow's house or other that lay convenient for them. Thus
circumcision was the cloak of the Shechemites' covetousness
(Genesis 34:22, 23), the payment of a vow in Hebron the
cover of Absalom's rebellion (2 Samuel 15:7), a fast in
Jezreel must patronise Naboth's murder, and the extirpation
of Baal is the footstool of Jehu's ambition. Popish priests,
under pretence of long prayers for the dead, masses and
dirges, and I know not what, enrich themselves by devouring
the house of the widows and fatherless. Note, It is no new
thing for the show and form of godliness to be made a cloak
to the greatest enormities. But dissembled piety, however it
passes now, will be reckoned for as double iniquity, in the
day when God shall judge the secrets of men.
3. The doom passed upon them for
this; Therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation.
Note, (1.) There are degrees of damnation; there are some
whose sin is more inexcusable, and whose ruin will therefore
be more intolerable. (2.) The pretences of religion, with
which hypocrites disguise or excuse their sin now, will
aggravate their condemnation shortly. Such is the
deceitfulness of sin, that the very thing by which sinners
hope to expiate and atone for their sins will come against
them, and make their sins more exceedingly sinful. But it is
sad for the criminal, when his defense proves his offence,
and his pleas (We have prophesied in thy name, and in thy
name made long prayers) heightens the charge against him.
III. While they were such enemies to
the conversion of souls to Christianity, they were very
industrious in the perversion of them to their faction. They
shut up the kingdom of heaven against those that would turn
to Christ, but at the same time compassed sea and land to
make proselytes to themselves, verse 15. Observe here,
1. Their commendable industry in
making proselytes to the Jewish religion, not only
proselytes of the gate, who obliged themselves to no more
than the observance of the seven precepts of the sons of
Noah, but proselytes of righteousness, who addicted
themselves wholly to all the rites of the Jewish religion,
for that was the game they flew at; for this, for one such,
though but one, they compass sea and land, had many a
cunning reach, and laid many a plot, rode and run, and sent
and wrote, and labored unwearied. And what did they aim at?
Not the glory of God, and the good of souls; but that they
might have the credit of making them proselytes, and the
advantage of making a prey of them when they were made.
Note, (1.) The making of proselytes, if it be to the truth
and serious godliness, and be done with a good design, is a
good work, well worthy of the utmost care and pains. Such is
the value of souls, that nothing must be thought too much to
do, to save a soul from death. The industry of the Pharisees
herein may show the negligence of many who would be thought
to act from better principles, but will be at no pains or
cost to propagate the gospel. (2.) To make a proselyte, sea
and land must be compassed; all ways and means must be
tried; first one way, and then another, must be tried, all
little enough; but all well paid, if the point be gained.
(3.) Carnal hearts seldom shrink from the pains necessary to
carry on their carnal purposes; when a proselyte is to be
made to serve a turn for themselves, they will compass sea
and land to make him, rather than be disappointed.
2. Their cursed impiety in abusing
their proselytes when they were made; "Ye make him the
disciple of a Pharisee presently, and he sucks in all a
Pharisee's notions; and so ye make him twofold more the
child of hell than yourselves." Note, (1.) Hypocrites, while
they fancy themselves heirs of heaven, are, in the judgment
of Christ, the children of hell. The rise of their hypocrisy
is from hell, for the devil is the father of lies; and the
tendency of their hypocrisy is toward hell, that is the
country they belong to, the inheritance they are heirs to;
they are called children of hell, because of their rooted
enmity to the kingdom of heaven, which was the principle and
genius of Pharisaism. (2.) Though all that maliciously
oppose the gospel are children of hell, yet some are twofold
more so than others, more furious and bigoted and malignant.
(3.) Perverted proselytes are commonly the greatest bigots;
the scholars outdid their masters, [1.] In fondness of
ceremony; the Pharisees themselves saw the folly of their
own impositions, and in their hearts smiled at the
obsequiousness of those that conformed to them; but their
proselytes were eager for them. Note, Weak heads commonly
admire those shows and ceremonies which wise men (however
for public ends they countenance them) cannot but think
meanly of. [2.] In fury against Christianity; the proselytes
readily imbibed the principles which their crafty leaders
were not wanting to possess them with, and so became
extremely hot against the truth. The most bitter enemies the
apostles met with in all places were the Hellenist Jews, who
were mostly proselytes, Acts 13:45; 14:2-19; 17:5; 18:6.
Paul, a disciple of the Pharisees, was exceedingly mad
against the Christians (Acts 26:11), when his master,
Gamaliel, seems to have been more moderate.
IV. Their seeking their own worldly
gain and honor more than God's glory put them upon coining
false and unwarrantable distinction, with which they led the
people into dangerous mistakes, particularly in the matter
of oaths; which, as an evidence of a universal sense of
religion, have been by all nations accounted sacred (verse
16); Ye blind guides. Note, 1. It is sad to think how many
are under the guidance of such as are themselves blind, who
undertake to show others that way which they are themselves
willingly ignorant of. His watchmen are blind (Isaiah
56:10); and too often the people love to have it so, and say
to the seers, See not. But the case is bad, when the leaders
of the people cause them to err, Isaiah 9:16. 2. Though the
condition of those whose guides are blind is very sad, yet
that of the blind guides themselves is yet more woeful.
Christ denounces a woe to the blind guides that have the
blood of so many souls to answer for.
Now, to prove their blindness, he
specifies the matter of swearing, and shows what corrupt
casuists they were.
(1.) He lays down the doctrine they
taught.
[1.] They allowed swearing by
creatures, provided they were consecrated to the service of
God, and stood in any special relation to him. They allowed
swearing by the temple and the altar, though they were the
work of men's hands, intended to be the servants of God's
honor, not sharers in it. An oath is an appeal to God, to
his omniscience and justice; and to make this appeal to any
creature is to put that creature in the place of God. See
Deuteronomy 6:13.
[2.] They distinguished between an
oath by the temple and an oath by the gold of the temple; an
oath by the altar and an oath by the gift upon the altar;
making the latter binding, but not the former. Here was a
double wickedness; First, That there were some oaths which
they dispensed with, and made light of, and reckoned a man
was not bound by to assert the truth, or perform a promise.
They ought not to have sworn by the temple or the altar;
but, when they had so sworn, they were taken in the words of
their mouth. That doctrine cannot be of the God of truth
which gives countenance to the breach of faith in any case
whatsoever. Oaths are edge-tools and are not to be jested
with. Secondly, That they preferred the gold before the
temple, and the gift before the altar, to encourage people
to bring gifts to the altar, and gold to the treasures of
the temple, which they hoped to be gainers by. Those who had
made gold their hope, and whose eyes were blinded by gifts
in secret, were great friends to the Corban; and, gain being
their godliness, by a thousand artifices they made religion
truckle to their worldly interests. Corrupt church-guides
make things to be sin or not sin as it serves their
purposes, and lay a much greater stress on that which
concerns their own gain than on that which is for God's
glory and the good of souls.
(2.) He shows the folly and
absurdity of this distinction (verses 17-19); Ye fools, and
blind. It was in the way of a necessary reproof, not an
angry reproach, that Christ called them fools. Let it
suffice us from the word of wisdom to show the folly of
sinful opinions and practices: but, for the fastening of the
character upon particular persons, leave that to Christ, who
knows what is in man, and has forbidden us to say, Thou
fool.
To convict them of folly, he appeals
to themselves, Whether is greater, the gold (the golden
vessels and ornaments, or the gold in the treasury) or the
temple that sanctifies the gold; the gift, or the altar that
sanctifies the gift? Any one will own, Propter quod aliquid
est tale, id est magis tale--That, on account of which any
thing is qualified in a particular way, must itself be much
more qualified in the same way. They that swore by the gold
of the temple had an eye to it as holy; but what was it that
made it holy but the holiness of the temple, to the service
of which it was appropriated? And therefore the temple
cannot be less holy than the gold, but must be more so; for
the less is blessed and sanctified of the better, Hebrews
7:7. The temple and altar were dedicated to God fixedly, the
gold and gift but secondarily. Christ is our altar (Hebrews
13:10), our temple (John 2:21); for it is he that sanctifies
all our gifts, and puts an acceptableness in them, 1 Peter
2:5. Those that put their own works into the place of
Christ's righteousness in justification are guilty of the
Pharisees' absurdity, who preferred the gift before the
altar. Every true Christian is a living temple; and by
virtue thereof common things are sanctified to him; unto the
pure all things are pure (Titus 1:15), and the unbelieving
husband is sanctified by the believing wife, 1 Corinthians
7:14.
(3.) He rectifies the mistake
(verses 20-22), by reducing all the oaths they had invented
to the true intent of an oath, which is, By the name of the
Lord: so that though an oath by the temple, or the altar, or
heaven, be formally bad, yet it is binding. Quod fieri non
debuit, factum valet--Engagements which ought not to have
been made, are yet, when made, binding. A man shall never
take advantage of his own fault.
[1.] He that swears by the altar,
let him not think to shake off the obligation of it by
saying, "The altar is but wood, and stone, and brass;" for
his oath shall be construed most strongly against himself;
because he was culpable, and so as that the obligation of it
may be preserved, ut res potius valeat quam pereat--the
obligation being hereby strengthened rather than destroyed.
And therefore an oath by the altar shall be interpreted by
it and by all things thereon; for the appurtenances pass
with the principal. And, the things thereon being offered up
to God, to swear by it and them was, in effect, to call God
himself to witness: for it was the altar of God; and he that
went to that, went to God, Psalm 43:4; 26:6.
[2.] He that swears by the temple,
if he understand what he does, cannot but apprehend that the
ground of such a respect to it, is, not because it is a fine
house, but because it is the house of God, dedicated to his
service, the place which he has chosen to put his name
there; and therefore he swears by it, and by him that dwells
therein; there he was pleased in a peculiar manner to
manifest himself, and give tokens of his presence; so that
whoso swears by it, swears by him who had said, This is my
rest, here will I dwell. Good Christians are God's temples,
and the Spirit of God dwells in them (1 Corinthians 3:16;
6:19), and God takes what is done to them as done to
himself; he that grieves a gracious soul, grieves it and the
Spirit that dwells in it. Ephesians 4:30.
[3.] If a man swears by heaven, he
sins (Chapter 5:34); yet he shall not therefore be
discharged from the obligation of his oath; no, God will
make him know that the heaven he swears by, is his throne
(Isaiah 66:1); and he that swears by the throne, appeals to
him that sits upon it; who, as he resents the affront done
to him in the form of the oath, so he will certainly revenge
the greater affront done to him by the violation of it.
Christ will not countenance the evasion of a solemn oath,
though ever so plausible.
V. They were very strict and precise
in the smaller matters of the law, but as careless and loose
in the weightier matters, verses 23, 24. They were partial
in the law (Malachi 2:9), would pick and choose their duty,
according as they were interested or stood affected. Sincere
obedience is universal, and he that from a right principle
obeys any of God's precepts, will have respect to them all,
Psalm 119:6. But hypocrites, who act in religion for
themselves, and not for God, will do no more in religion
than they can serve a turn by for themselves. The partiality
of the scribes and Pharisees appears here, in two instances.
1. They observed smaller duties, but
omitted greater; they were very exact in paying tithes, till
it came to mint, anise, and cumin, their exactness in
tithing of which would not cost them much, but would be
cried up, and they should buy reputation cheap. The Pharisee
boasted of this, I give tithes of all that I possess, Luke
18:12. But it is probable that they had ends of their own to
serve, and would find their own account in it; for the
priests and Levites, to whom the tithes were paid, were in
their interests, and knew how to return their kindness.
Paying tithes was their duty, and what the law required;
Christ tells them they ought not to leave it undone. Note,
All ought in their places to contribute to the support and
maintenance of a standing ministry: withholding tithes is
called robbing God, Malachi 2:8-10. They that are taught in
the word, and do not communicate to them that teach them
that love a cheap gospel, come short of the Pharisee.
But that which Christ here condemns
them for, is, that they omitted the weightier matters of the
law, judgment, mercy, and faith; and their niceness in
paying tithes, was, if not to atone before God, yet at least
to excuse end palliate to men the omission of those. All the
things of God's law are weighty, but those are most weighty,
which are most expressive of inward holiness in the heart;
the instances of self-denial, contempt of the world, and
resignation to God, in which lies the life of religion.
Judgment and mercy toward men, and faith toward God, are the
weightier matters of the law, the good things which the Lord
our God requires (Micah 6:8); to do justly, and love mercy,
and humble ourselves by faith to walk with God. This is the
obedience which is better than sacrifice or tithe; judgment
is preferred before sacrifice, Isaiah 1:11. To be just to
the priests in their tithe, and yet to cheat and defraud
every body else, is but to mock God, and deceive ourselves.
Mercy also is preferred before sacrifice, Hosea 6:6. To feed
those who made themselves fat with the offering of the Lord,
and at the same time to shut up the bowels of compassion
from a brother or a sister that is naked, and destitute of
daily food, to pay tithe-mint to the priest, and to deny a
crumb to Lazarus, is to lie open to that judgment without
mercy, which is awarded to those who pretended to judgment,
and showed no mercy; nor will judgment and mercy serve
without faith in divine revelation; for God will be honored
in his truths as well as in his laws.
2. They avoided lesser sins, but
committed greater (verse 24); Ye blind guides; so he had
called them before (verse 16), for their corrupt teaching;
here he calls them so for their corrupt living, for their
example was leading as well as their doctrine; and in this
also they were blind and partial; they strained at a gnat,
and swallowed a camel. In their doctrine they strained at
gnats, warned people against every the least violation of
the tradition of the elders. In their practice they strained
at gnats, heaved at them, with a seeming dread, as if they
had a great abhorrence of sin, and were afraid of it in the
least instance; but they made no difficulty of those sins
which, in comparison with them, were as a camel to a gnat;
when they devoured widows' houses, they did indeed swallow a
camel; when they gave Judas the price of innocent blood, and
yet scrupled to put the returned money into the treasury
(Chapter 27:6); when they would not go into the
judgment-hall, for fear of being defiled, and yet would
stand at the door, and cry out against the holy Jesus (John
18:28); when they quarreled with the disciples for eating
with unwashed hands, and yet, for the filling of the Corban,
taught people to break the fifth commandment, they strained
at gnats, or lesser things, and yet swallowed camels. It is
not the scrupling of a little sin that Christ here reproves;
if it be a sin, though but a gnat, it must be strained at,
but the doing of that, and then swallowing a camel. In the
smaller matters of the law to be superstitious, and to be
profane in the greater, is the hypocrisy here condemned.
VI. They were all for the outside,
and not at all for the inside, of religion. They were more
desirous and solicitous to appear pious to men than to
approve themselves so toward God. This is illustrated by two
similitudes.
1. They are compared to a vessel
that is clean washed on the outside, but all dirt within,
verse 25, 26. The Pharisees placed religion in that which at
best was but a point of decency--the washing of cups, Mark
7:4. They were in care to eat their meat in clean cups and
platters, but made no conscience of getting their meat by
extortion, and using it to excess. Now what a foolish thing
would it be for a man to wash only the outside of a cup,
which is to be looked at, and to leave the inside dirty,
which is to be used; so they do who only avoid scandalous
sins, that would spoil their reputation with men, but allow
themselves in heart-wickedness, which renders them odious to
the pure and holy God. In reference to his, observe,
(1.) The practice of the Pharisees;
they made clean the outside. In those things which fell
under the observation of their neighbors, they seemed very
exact, and carried on their wicked intrigues with so much
artifice, that their wickedness was not suspected; people
generally took them for very good men. But within, in the
recesses of their hearts and the close retirements of their
lives, they were full of extortion and excess; of violence
and incontinence (so Dr. Hammond); that is, of injustice and
intemperance. While they would seem to be godly, they were
neither sober nor righteous. Their inward part was very
wickedness (Psalm 5:9); and that we are really, which we are
inwardly.
(2.) The rule Christ gives, in
opposition to this practice, verse 26. It is addressed to
the blind Pharisees. They thought themselves the seers of
the land, but (John ix. 39) Christ calls them blind. Note,
those are blind, in Christ's account who (how quick-sighted
they are in other things) are strangers, and no enemies, to
the wickedness of their own hearts; who see not, and hate
not, the secret sin that lodges there. Self-ignorance is the
most shameful and hurtful ignorance, Revelation 3:17. The
rule is, Cleanse first that which is within. Note, the
principal care of every one of us should be to wash our
hearts from wickedness, Jeremiah 4:14. The main business of
a Christian lies within, to get cleansed from the filthiness
of the spirit. Corrupt affections and inclinations, the
secret lusts that lurk in the soul, unseen and unobserved,
these must first be mortified and subdued. Those sins must
be conscientiously abstained from, which the eye of God only
is a witness to, who searches the heart.
Observe the method prescribed;
Cleanse first that which is within not that only, but that
first; because, if due care be taken concerning that, the
outside will be clean also. External motives and inducements
may keep the outside clean, while the inside is filthy; but
if renewing, sanctifying grace make clean the inside, that
will have an influence upon the outside, for the commanding
principle is within. If the heart be well kept, all is well,
for out of it are the issues of life; the eruptions will
vanish of course. If the heart and spirit be made new, there
will be a newness of life; here therefore we must begin with
ourselves; first cleanse that which is within; we then make
sure work, when this is our first work.
2. They are compared to whitened
sepulchers, verse 27, 28.
(1.) They were fair without, like
sepulchers, which appear beautiful outward. Some make it to
refer to the custom of the Jews to whiten graves, only for
the notifying of them, especially if they were in unusual
places, that people might avoid them, because of the
ceremonial pollution contracted by the touch of a grave,
Numbers 19:16. And it was part of the charge of the
overseers of the highways, to repair that whitening when it
was decayed. Sepulchers were thus made remarkable, 2 Kings
23:16, 17. The formality of hypocrites, by which they study
to recommend themselves to the world, doth but make all wise
and good men the more careful to avoid them, for fear of
being defiled by them. Beware of the scribes, Luke 20:46. It
rather alludes to the custom of whitening the sepulchers of
eminent persons, for the beautifying of them. It is said
here (verse 29), that they garnished the sepulchers of the
righteous; as it is usual with us to erect monuments upon
the graves of great persons, and to strew flowers on the
graves of dear friends. Now the righteousness of the scribes
and Pharisees was like the ornaments of a grave, or the
dressing up of a dead body, only for show. The top of their
ambition was to appear righteous before men, and to be
applauded and had in admiration by them. But,
(2.) They were foul within, like
sepulchers, full of dead men's bones, and all uncleanness:
so vile are our bodies, when the soul has deserted them!
Thus were they full of hypocrisy and iniquity. Hypocrisy is
the worst iniquity of all other. Note, It is possible for
those that have their hearts full of sin, to have their
lives free from blame, and to appear very good. But what
will it avail us, to have the good word of our
fellow-servants, if our Master doth not say, Well done? When
all other graves are opened, these whitened sepulchers will
be looked into, and the dead men's bones, and all the
uncleanness, shall be brought out, and be spread before all
the host of heaven, Jeremiah 8:1, 2. For it is the day when
God shall judge, not the shows, but the secrets, of men. And
it will then be small comfort to them who shall have their
portion with hypocrites, to remember how creditably and
plausibly they went to hell, applauded by all their
neighbors.
VII. They pretended a deal of
kindness for the memory of the prophets that were dead and
gone, while they hated and persecuted those that were
present with them. This is put last, because it was the
blackest part of their character. God is jealous for his
honor in his laws and ordinances, and resents it if they be
profaned and abused; but he has often expressed an equal
jealousy for his honor in his prophets and ministers, and
resents it worse if they be wronged and persecuted: and
therefore, when our Lord Jesus comes to this head, he speaks
more fully than upon any of the other (verses 29-37); for
that touches his ministers, touches his Anointed, and
touches the apple of his eye. Observe here,
1. The respect which the scribes and
Pharisees pretend for the prophets that were gone, verses
29, 30. This was the varnish, and that in which they
outwardly appeared righteous.
(1.) They honored the relics of the
prophets, they built their tombs, and garnished their
sepulchers. It seems, the places of their burial were known,
David's sepulchers was with them, Acts 2:29. There was a
title upon the sepulcher of the man of God (2 Kings 23:17),
and Josiah thought it respect enough not to move his bones,
verse 18. But they would do more, rebuild and beautify them.
Now consider this, [1.] As an instance of honor done to
deceased prophets, who, while they lived, were counted as
the off-scouring of all things, and had all manner of evil
spoken against them falsely. Note, God can extort, even from
bad men, an acknowledgment of the honor of piety and
holiness. Them that honor God he will honor, and sometimes
with those from whom contempt is expected, 2 Samuel 6:22.
The memory of the just is blessed, when the names of those
that hated and persecuted them shall be covered with shame.
The honor of constancy and resolution in the way of duty
will be a lasting honor; and those that are manifest to God,
will be manifest in the consciences of those about them.
[2.] As an instance of the hypocrisy of the scribes and
Pharisees, who paid their respect to them. Note, Carnal
people can easily honor the memories of faithful ministers
that are dead and gone, because they do not reprove them,
nor disturb them, in their sins. Dead prophets are seers
that see not, and those they can bear well enough; they do
not torment them, as the living witnesses do, that bear
their testimony viva voce--with a living voice, Revelation
11:10. They can pay respect to the writings of the dead
prophets, which tell them what they should be; but not the
reproofs of the living prophets, which tell them what they
are. Sit divus, modo non sit vivus--Let there be saints; but
let them not be living here. The extravagant respect which
the church of Rome pays to the memory of saints departed,
especially the martyrs, dedicating days and places to their
names, enshrining their relics, praying to them, and
offering to their images, while they make themselves drunk
with the blood of the saints of their own day, is a manifest
proof that they not only succeed, but exceed, the scribes
and Pharisees in a counterfeit hypocritical religion, which
builds the prophets' tombs, but hates the prophets'
doctrine.
(2.) They protested against the
murder of them (verse 30); If we had been in the days of our
fathers, we would not have been partakers with them. They
would never have consented to the silencing of Amos, and the
imprisonment of Micaiah, to the putting of Hanani in the
stocks, and Jeremiah in the dungeon, to the stoning of
Zechariah, the mocking of all the messengers of the Lord,
and the abuses put upon his prophets; no, not they, they
would sooner have lost their right hands than have done any
such thing. What, is thy servant a dog? And yet they were at
this time plotting to murder Christ, to whom all the
prophets bore witness. They think, if they had lived in the
days of the prophets, they would have heard them gladly and
obeyed; and yet they rebelled against the light that Christ
brought into the world. But it is certain, a Herod and an
Herodias to John the Baptist, would have been an Ahab and a
Jezebel to Elijah. Note, The deceitfulness of sinners'
hearts appears very much in this, that, while they go down
the stream of the sins of their own day, they fancy they
should have swum against the stream of the sins of the
former days; that, if they had had other people's
opportunities, they should have improved them more
faithfully; if they had been in other people's temptations,
they should have resisted them more vigorously; when yet
they improve not the opportunities they have, nor resist the
temptations they are in. We are sometimes thinking, if we
had lived when Christ was upon earth, how constantly we
would have followed him; we would not have despised and
rejected him, as they then did; and yet Christ in his
Spirit, in his word, in his ministers, is still no better
treated.
2. Their enmity and opposition to
Christ and his gospel, notwithstanding, and the ruin they
were bringing upon themselves and upon that generation
thereby, verses 31-33. Observe here,
(1.) The indictment proved; Ye are
witnesses against yourselves. Note, Sinners cannot hope to
escape the judgment of Christ for want of proof against
them, when it is easy to find them witnesses against
themselves; and their very pleas will not only be overruled,
but turned to their conviction, and their own tongues shall
be made to fall upon them, Psalm 64:8.
[1.] By their own confession, it was
the great wickedness of their forefathers, to kill the
prophets; so that they knew the fault of it, and yet were
themselves guilty of the same fact. Note, They who condemn
sin in others, and yet allow the same or worse in
themselves, are of all others most inexcusable, Romans
1:32-2:1. They knew they ought not to have been partakers
with persecutors, and yet were the followers of them. Such
self-contradictions now will amount to self-condemnations in
the great day. Christ puts another construction upon their
building of the tombs of the prophets than what they
intended; as if by beautifying their graves they justified
their murderers (Luke 11:48), for they persisted in the sin.
[2.] By their own confession, these
notorious persecutors were their ancestors; Ye are the
children of them. They meant no more than that they were
their children by blood and nature; but Christ turns it upon
them;, that they were so by spirit and disposition; You are
of those fathers, and their lusts you will do. They are, as
you say, your fathers, and you patrizare--take after your
fathers; it is the sin that runs in the blood among you. As
your fathers did, so do ye, Acts 7:51. They came of a
persecuting race, were a seed of evil doers (Isaiah 1:4),
risen up in their fathers' stead, Numbers 32:14. Malice,
envy, and cruelty, were bred in the bone with them, and they
had formerly espoused it for a principle, to do as their
fathers did, Jeremiah 44:17. And it is observable here
(verse 30) how careful they are to mention the relation;
"They were our fathers, that killed the prophets, and they
were men in honor and power, whose sons and successors we
are." If they had detested the wickedness of their
ancestors, as they ought to have done, they would not have
been so fond to call them their fathers; for it is no credit
to be akin to persecutors, though they have ever so much
dignity and dominion.
(2.) The sentence passed upon them.
Christ here proceeds,
[1.] To give them up to sin as
irreclaimable (verse 32); Fill ye up then the measure of
your fathers. If Ephraim be joined to idols, and hate to be
reformed, let him alone. He that is filthy, let him be
filthy still. Christ knew they were now contriving his
death, and in a few days would accomplish it; "Well," says
he, "go on with your plot, take your curse, walk in the way
of your heart and in the sight of your eyes, and see what
will come of it. What thou doest, do quickly. You will but
fill up the measure of guilt, which will then overflow in a
deluge of wrath." Note, First, There is a measure of sin to
be filled up, before utter ruin comes upon persons and
families, churches and nations. God will bear long, but the
time will come when he can no longer forbear, Jeremiah
44:22. We read of the measure of the Amorites that was to be
filled (Genesis 15:16), of the harvest of the earth being
ripe for the sickle (Revelation 14:15-19), and of sinners
making an end to deal treacherously, arriving at a full
stature in treachery, Isaiah 33:1. Secondly, Children fill
up the measure of their fathers' sins whey they are gone, if
they persist in the same or the like. That national guilt
which brings national ruin is made up of the sin of many in
several ages, and in the successions of societies there is a
score going on; for God justly visits the iniquity of the
fathers upon the children that tread in the steps of it.
Thirdly, Persecuting Christ, and his people and ministers,
is a sin that fills the measure of a nation's guilt sooner
than any other. This was it that brought wrath without
remedy upon the fathers (2 Chronicles 36:16), and wrath to
the utmost upon the children too, 1 Thessalonians 2:16. This
was that fourth transgression, of which, when added to the
other three, the Lord would not turn away the punishment,
Amos 1:3, 6, 9, 11, 13. Fourthly, It is just with God to
give those up to their own heart's lusts, who obstinately
persist in the gratification of them. Those who will run
headlong to ruin, let the reins be laid on their neck, and
it is the saddest condition a man can be in on this side
hell.
[2.] He proceeds to give them up to
ruin as irrecoverable, to a personal ruin in the other world
(verse 33); Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye
escape the damnation of hell? These are strange words to
come from the mouth of Christ, into whose lips grace was
poured. But he can and will speak terror, and in these words
he explains and sums up the eight woes he had denounced
against the scribes and Pharisees.
Here is, First, Their description;
Ye serpents. Doth Christ call names? Yes, but this doth not
warrant us to do so. He infallibly knew what was in man, and
knew them to be subtle as serpents, cleaving to the earth,
feeding on dust; they had a specious outside, but were
within malignant, had poison under their tongues, the seed
of the old serpent. They were a generation of vipers; they
and those that went before them, they and those that joined
with them, were a generation of envenomed, enraged, spiteful
adversaries to Christ and his gospel. They loved to be
called of men, Rabbi, rabbi, but Christ calls them serpents
and vipers; for he gives men their true characters, and
delights to put contempt upon the proud.
Secondly, Their doom. He represents
their condition as very sad, and in a manner desperate; How
can ye escape the damnation of hell? Christ himself preached
hell and damnation, for which his ministers have often been
reproached by those that care not to hear of it. Note, 1.
The damnation of hell will be the fearful end of all
impenitent sinners. This doom coming from Christ, was more
terrible than coming from all the prophets and ministers
that ever were, for he is the Judge, into whose hands the
keys of hell and death are put, and his saying they were
damned, made them so. 2. There is a way of escaping this
damnation, this is implied here; some are delivered from the
wrath to come. 3. Of all sinners, those who are of the
spirit of the scribes and Pharisees, are least likely to
escape this damnation; for repentance and faith are
necessary to that escape; and how will they be brought to
these, who are so conceited of themselves, and so prejudiced
against Christ and his gospel, as they were? How could they
be healed and saved, who could not bear to have their wound
searched, nor the balm of Gilead applied to it? Publicans
and harlots, who were sensible of their disease and applied
themselves to the Physician, were more likely to escape the
damnation of hell than those who, though they were in the
high road to it, were confident they were in the way to
heaven.
The Doom of the Pharisees; The Guilt
and Doom of Jerusalem.
Matthew 23:34-39 --
34 Wherefore, behold, I send unto you
prophets, and wise men, and scribes: and some of them ye
shall kill and crucify; and some of them shall ye scourge in
your synagogues, and persecute them from city to city: 35
That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the
earth, from the blood of righteous Abel unto the blood of
Zacharias son of Barachias, whom ye slew between the temple
and the altar. 36 Verily I say unto you, All these things
shall come upon this generation. 37 O Jerusalem, Jerusalem,
thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are
sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children
together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her
wings, and ye would not! 38 Behold, your house is left unto
you desolate. 39 For I say unto you, Ye shall not see me
henceforth, till ye shall say, Blessed is he that cometh in
the name of the Lord.
We have left the blind leaders
fallen into the ditch, under Christ's sentence, into the
damnation of hell; let us see what will become of the blind
followers, of the body of the Jewish church, and
particularly Jerusalem.
I. Jesus Christ designs yet to try
them with the means of grace; I send unto you prophets, and
wise men, and scribes. The connection is strange; "You are a
generation of vipers, not likely to escape the damnation of
hell;" one would think it should follow, "Therefore you
shall never have a prophet sent to you any more;" but no,
"Therefore I will send unto you prophets, to see if you will
yet at length be wrought upon, or else to leave you
inexcusable, and to justify God in your ruin." It is
therefore ushered in with a note of admiration, behold!
Observe,
1. It is Christ that sends them; I
send. By this he avows himself to be God, having power to
gift and commission prophets. It is an act of kingly office;
he sends them as ambassadors to treat with us about the
concerns of our souls. After his resurrection, he made this
word good, when he said, So send I you, John 20:21. Though
now he appeared mean, yet he was entrusted with this great
authority.
2. He sends them to the Jews first;
"I send them to you." They began at Jerusalem; and, wherever
they went, they observed this rule, to make the first tender
of gospel grace to the Jews, Acts 13:46.
3. Those he sends are called
prophets, wise men, and scribes, Old-Testament names for
New-Testament officers; to show that the ministers sent to
them now should not be inferior to the prophets of the Old
Testament, to Solomon the wise, or Ezra the scribe. The
extraordinary ministers, who in the first ages were divinely
inspired, were as the prophets commissioned immediately from
heaven; the ordinary settled ministers, who were then, and
continue in the church still, and will do to the end of
time, are as the wise men and scribes, to guide and instruct
the people in the things of God. Or, we may take the
apostles and evangelists for the prophets and wise men, and
the pastors and teachers for the scribes, instructed to the
kingdom of heaven (Chapter 13:52); for the office of a
scribe was honorable till the men dishonored it.
II. He foresees and foretells the
ill usage that his messengers would meet with among them;
"Some of them ye shall kill and crucify, and yet I will send
them." Christ knows beforehand how ill his servants will be
treated, and yet sends them, and appoints them their measure
of sufferings; yet he loves them never the less for his thus
exposing them, for he designs to glorify himself by their
sufferings, and them after them; he will counter-balance
them, though not prevent them. Observe,
1. The cruelty of these persecutors;
Ye shall kill and crucify them. It is no less than the
blood, the life-blood, that they thirst after; their lust is
not satisfied with any thing short of their destruction,
Exodus 15:9. They killed the two James's, crucified Simon
the son of Cleophas, and scourged Peter and John; thus did
the members partake of the sufferings of the Head, he was
killed and crucified, and so were they. Christians must
expect to resist unto blood.
2. Their unwearied industry; Ye
shall persecute them from city to city. As the apostles went
from city to city, to preach the gospel, the Jews dodged
them, and haunted them, and stirred up persecution against
them, Acts 14:19; 17:13. They that did not believe in Judea
were more bitter enemies to the gospel than any other
unbelievers, Romans 15:31.
3. The pretence of religion in this;
they scourged them in their synagogues, their place of
worship, where they kept their ecclesiastical courts; so
that they did it as a piece of service to the church; cast
them out, and said, Let the Lord be glorified, Isaiah 66:5;
John 16:2.
III. He imputes the sin of their
fathers to them, because they imitated it; That upon you may
come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth, verses 35,
36. Though God bear long with a persecuting generation, he
will not bear always; and patience abused, turns into the
greatest wrath. The longer sinners have been heaping up
treasures of wickedness, the deeper and fuller will the
treasures of wrath be; and the breaking of them up will be
like breaking up the fountains of the great deep.
Observe, 1. The extent of this
imputation; it takes in all the righteous blood shed upon
the earth, that is, the blood shed for righteousness' sake,
which has all been laid up in God's treasury, and not a drop
of it lost, for it is precious. Psalm 72:14. He dates the
account from the blood of righteous Abel, thence this æra
martyrum--age of martyrs--commences; he is called righteous
Abel, for he obtained witness from heaven, that he was
righteous, God testifying of his gifts. How early did
martyrdom come into the world! The first that died, died for
his religion, and, being dead, he yet speaks. His blood not
only cried against Cain, but continues to cry against all
that walk in the way of Cain, and hate and persecute their
brother, because their works are righteous. He extends it to
the blood of Zacharias, the son of Barachias (verse 36), not
Zecharias the prophet (as some would have it), though he was
the son of Barachias (ZeChapter i. 1.) nor Zecharias the
father of John Baptist, as others say; but, as is most
probable, Zechariah the son of Jehoiada, who was slain in
the court of the Lord's house, 2 Chronicles 24:20, 21. His
father is called Barachias, which signifies much the same
with Jehoiada; and it was usual among the Jews for the same
person to have two names; whom ye slew, ye of this nation,
though not of this generation. This is specified, because
the requiring of that is particularly spoken of (2
Chronicles 24:22), as that of Abel's is. The Jews imagined
that the captivity had sufficiently atoned for the guilt;
but Christ lets them know that it was not yet fully
accounted for, but remained upon the score. And some think
that this is mentioned with a prophetical hint, for there
was one Zecharias, the son of Baruch, whom Josephus speaks
of (War 4. 335), who was a just and good man, who was killed
in the temple a little before it was destroyed by the
Romans. Archbishop Tillotson thinks that Christ both alludes
to the history of the former Zecharias in Chronicles, and
foretells the death of this latter in Josephus. Though the
latter was not yet slain, yet, before this destruction
comes, it would be true that they had slain him; so that all
shall be put together from first to last.
2. The effect of it; All these
things shall come; all the guilt of this blood, all the
punishment of it, it shall all come upon this generation.
The misery and ruin that are coming upon them, shall be so
very great, that, though, considering the evil of their own
sins, it was less that even those deserved; yet, comparing
it with other judgments, it will seem to be a general
reckoning for all the wickedness of their ancestors,
especially their persecutions, to all which God declared
this ruin to have special reference and relation. The
destruction shall be so dreadful, as if God had once for all
arraigned them for all the righteous blood shed in the
world. It shall come upon this generation; which intimates,
that it shall come quickly; some here shall live to see it.
Note, The sorer and nearer the punishment of sin is, the
louder is the call to repentance and reformation.
IV. He laments the wickedness of
Jerusalem, and justly upbraids them with the many kind
offers he had made them, verse 37. See with what concern he
speaks of that city; O Jerusalem, Jerusalem! The repetition
is emphatic, and bespeaks abundance of commiseration. A day
or two before Christ had wept over Jerusalem, now he sighed
and groaned over it. Jerusalem, the vision of peace (so it
signifies), must now be the seat of war and confusion.
Jerusalem, that had been the joy of the whole earth, must
now be a hissing, and an astonishment, and a by-word;
Jerusalem, that has been a city compact together, shall now
be shattered and ruined by its own intestine broils.
Jerusalem, the place that God has chosen to put his name
there, shall now be abandoned to the spoil and the robbers,
Lamentations 1:1, 4:1. But wherefore will the Lord do all
this to Jerusalem? Why? Jerusalem hath grievously sinned,
Lamentations 1:8.
1. She persecuted God's messengers;
Thou that kills the prophets, and stones them that are sent
unto thee. This sin is especially charged upon Jerusalem;
because there the Sanhedrim, or great council, sat, who took
cognizance of church matters, and therefore a prophet could
not perish but in Jerusalem, Luke 13:33. It is true, they
had not now a power to put any man to death, but they killed
the prophets in popular tumults, mobbed them, as Stephen,
and put the Roman powers on to kill them. At Jerusalem,
where the gospel was first preached, it was first persecuted
(Acts 8:1), and that place was the head-quarters of the
persecutors; thence warrants were issued out to other
cities, and thither the saints were brought bound, Acts 9:2.
Thou stone them: that was a capital punishment, in use only
among the Jews. By the law, false prophets and seducers were
to be stoned (Deuteronomy 13:10), under color of which law,
they put the true prophets to death. Note, It has often been
the artifice of Satan, to turn that artillery against the
church, which was originally planted in the defense of it.
Brand the true prophets as seducers, and the true professors
of religion as heretics and schismatics, and then it will be
easy to persecute them. There was abundance of other
wickedness in Jerusalem; but this was the sin that made the
loudest cry, and which God had an eye to more than any
other, in bringing that ruin upon them, as 2 Kings 24:4; 2
Chronicles 36:16. Observe, Christ speaks in the present
tense; Thou kill, and stone; for all they had done, and all
they would do, was present to Christ's notice.
2. She refused and rejected Christ,
and gospel offers. The former was a sin without remedy, this
against the remedy. Here is, (1.) The wonderful grace and
favor of Jesus Christ toward them; How often would I have
gathered thy children together, as a hen gathers her
chickens under her wings! Thus kind and condescending are
the offers of gospel grace, even to Jerusalem's children,
bad as she is, the inhabitants, the little ones not
excepted. [1.] The favor proposed was the gathering of them.
Christ's design is to gather poor souls, gather them in from
their wanderings, gather them home to himself, as the Centre
of unity; for to him must the gathering of the people be. He
would have taken the whole body of the Jewish nation into
the church, and so gathered them all (as the Jews used to
speak of proselytes) under the wings of the Divine Majesty.
It is here illustrated by a humble similitude; as a hen
clucks her chickens together. Christ would have gathered
them, First, With such a tenderness of affection as the hen
does, which has, by instinct, a peculiar concern for her
young ones. Christ's gathering of souls, comes from his
love, Jeremiah 31:3. Secondly, For the same end. The hen
gathered her chickens under her wings, for protection and
safety, and for warmth and comfort; poor souls have in
Christ both refuge and refreshment. The chickens naturally
run to the hen for shelter, when they are threatened by the
birds of prey; perhaps Christ refers to that promise (Psalm
91:4), He shall cover thee with his feathers. There is
healing under Christ's wings (Malachi 4:2); that is more
than the hen has for her chickens.
[2.] The forwardness of Christ to
confer this favor. His offers are, First, Very free; I would
have done it. Jesus Christ is truly willing to receive and
save poor souls that come to him. He desires not their ruin,
he delights in their repentance. Secondly, Very frequent;
How often! Christ often came up to Jerusalem, preached, and
wrought miracles there; and the meaning of all this, was, he
would have gathered them. He keeps account how often his
calls have been repeated. As often as we have heard the
sound of the gospel, as often as we have felt the strivings
of the Spirit, so often Christ would have gathered us.
[3.] Their willful refusal of this
grace and favor; Ye would not. How emphatically is their
obstinacy opposed to Christ's mercy! I would, and ye would
not. He was willing to save them, but they were not willing
to be saved by him. Note, It is wholly owing to the wicked
wills of sinners, that they are not gathered under the wings
of the Lord Jesus. They did not like the terms upon which
Christ proposed to gather them; they loved their sins, and
yet trusted to their righteousness; they would not submit
either to the grace of Christ or to his government, and so
the bargain broke off.
V. He reads Jerusalem's doom (verse
38, 39); Therefore behold your house is left unto you
desolate. Both the city and the temple, God's house and
their own, all shall be laid waste. But it is especially
meant of the temple, which they boasted of, and trusted to;
that holy mountain because of which they were so haughty.
Note, they that will not be gathered by the love and grace
of Christ shall be consumed and scattered by his wrath; I
would, and you would not. Israel would none of me, so I gave
them up, Psalm 81:11, 12.
1. Their house shall be deserted; It
is left unto you. Christ was now departing from the temple,
and never came into it again, but by this word abandoned it
to ruin. They doted on it, would have it to themselves;
Christ must have no room or interest there. "Well," says
Christ, "it is left to you; take it, and make your best of
it; I will never have any thing more to do with it." They
had made it a house of merchandise, and a den of thieves,
and so it is left to them. Not long after this, the voice
was heard in the temple, "Let us depart hence." When Christ
went, Ichabod, the glory departed. Their city also was left
to them, destitute of God's presence and grace; he was no
longer a wall of fire about them, nor the glory in the midst
of them.
2. It shall be desolate; It is left
unto you desolate; it is left eremos--a wilderness. (1.) It
was immediately, when Christ left it, in the eyes of all
that understood themselves, a very dismal melancholy place.
Christ's departure makes the best furnished, best
replenished place a wilderness, though it be the temple, the
chief place of concourse; for what comfort can there be
where Christ is not? Though there may be a crowd of other
contentments, yet, if Christ's special spiritual presence be
withdrawn, that soul, that place, is become a wilderness, a
land of darkness, as darkness itself. This comes of men's
rejecting Christ, and driving him away from them. (2.) It
was, not long after, destroyed and ruined, and not one stone
left upon another. The lot of Jerusalem's enemies will now
become Jerusalem's lot, to be made of a city a heap, of a
de-fenced city a ruin (Isaiah 25:2), a lofty city laid low,
even to the ground, Isaiah 26:5. The temple, that holy and
beautiful house, became desolate. When God goes out, all
enemies break in.
Lastly, Here is the final farewell
that Christ took of them and their temple; Ye shall not see
me henceforth, till ye shall say, Blessed is he that cometh.
This bespeaks,
1. His departure from them. The time
was at hand, when he should leave the world, to go to his
Father, and be seen no more. After his resurrection, he was
seen only by a few chosen witnesses, and they saw him not
long, but he soon removed to the invisible world, and there
will be till the time of the restitution of all things, when
his welcome at his first coming will be repeated with loud
acclamations; Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the
Lord. Christ will not be seen again till he come in the
clouds, and every eye shall see him (Revelation 1:7); and
then, even they, who, when time was, rejected and pierced
him, will be glad to come in among his adorers; then every
knee shall bow to him, even those that had bowed to Baal;
and even the workers of iniquity will then cry, Lord, Lord,
and will own, when his wrath is kindled, that blessed are
all they that put their trust in him. Would we have our lot
in that day with those that say, Blessed is he that cometh?
let us be with them now, with them that truly worship, and
truly welcome, Jesus Christ.
2. Their continued blindness and
obstinacy; Ye shall not see me, that is, not see me to be
the Messiah (for otherwise they did see him upon the cross),
not see the light of the truth concerning me, nor the things
that belong to your peace, till ye shall say, Blessed is he
that cometh. They will never be convinced, till Christ's
second coming convince them, when it will be too late to
make an interest in him, and nothing will remain but a
fearful looking for of judgment. Note, (1.) Willful
blindness is often punished with judicial blindness. If they
will not see, they shall not see. With this word he
concludes his public preaching. After his resurrection,
which was the sign of the prophet Jonas, they should have no
other sign given them, till they should see the sign of the
Son of man, Chapter 24:30. (2.) When the Lord comes with ten
thousand of his saints, he will convince all, and will force
acknowledgments from the proudest of his enemies, of his
being the Messiah, and even they shall be found liars to
him. They that would not now come at his call, shall then be
forced to depart with his curse. The chief priests and
scribes were displeased with the children for crying hosanna
to Christ; but the day is coming, when proud persecutors
would gladly be found in the condition of the meanest and
poorest they now trample upon. They who now reproach and
ridicule the hosannas of the saints will be of another mind
shortly; it were therefore better to be of that mind now.
Some make this to refer to the conversion of the Jews to the
faith of Christ; then they shall see him, and own him, and
say, Blessed is he that cometh; but it seems rather to look
further, for the complete manifestation of Christ, and
conviction of sinners, are reserved to be the glory of the
last day.
Friday Study Ministries
www.FridayStudy.org
Ron@FridayStudy.org
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