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Matthew Chapter 5
Commentary by Matthew Henry
This chapter, and the two that follow
it, are a sermon; a famous sermon; the sermon upon the
mount. It is the longest and fullest continued discourse of
our Savior that we have upon record in all the gospels. It
is a practical discourse; there is not much of the credenda
of Christianity in it--the things to be believed, but it is
wholly taken up with the agenda--the things to be done;
these Christ began with in his preaching; for if any man
will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it
be of God. The circumstances of the sermon being accounted
for (verses 1, 2), the sermon itself follows, the scope of
which is, not to fill our heads with notions, but to guide
and regulate our practice. I. He proposes blessedness as the
end, and gives us the character of those who are entitled to
blessedness (very different from the sentiments of a vain
world), in eight beatitudes, which may justly be called
paradoxes, verses 3-12. II. He prescribes duty as the way,
and gives us standing rules of that duty. He directs his
disciples, 1. To understand what they are--the salt of the
earth, and the lights of the world, verses 13-16. 2. To
understand what they have to do--they are to be governed by
the moral law. Here is, (1.) A general ratification of the
law, and a recommendation of it to us, as our rule, verses
17-20. (2.) A particular rectification of divers mistakes;
or, rather, a reformation of divers willful, gross
corruptions, which the scribes and Pharisees had introduced
in their exposition of the law; and an authentic explication
of divers branches which most needed to be explained and
vindicated, verse 20. Particularly, here is an explication,
[1.] Of the sixth commandment, which forbids murder, verses
21-26. [2.] Of the seventh commandment, against adultery,
verses 27-32. [3.] Of the third commandment, verses 33-37.
[4.] Of the law of retaliation, verses 38-42. [5.] Of the
law of brotherly love, verses 43-48. And the scope of the
whole is, to show that the law is spiritual.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 5:1-2 –- 1 And seeing the
multitudes, he went up into a mountain: and when he was set,
his disciples came unto him: 2 And he opened his mouth, and
taught them, saying,
We have here a general account of
this sermon.
I. The Preacher was our Lord Jesus,
the Prince of preachers, the great Prophet of his church,
who came into the world, to be the Light of the world. The
prophets and John had done virtuously in preaching, but
Christ excelled them all. He is the eternal Wisdom, that lay
in the bosom of the Father, before all worlds, and perfectly
knew his will (John 1:18); and he is the eternal Word, by
whom he has in these last days spoken to us. The many
miraculous cures wrought by Christ in Galilee, which we read
of in the close of the foregoing chapter, were intended to
make way for this sermon, and to dispose people to receive
instructions from one in whom there appeared so much of a
divine power and goodness; and, probably, this sermon was
the summary, or rehearsal, of what he had preached up and
down in the synagogues of Galilee. His text was, Repent, for
the kingdom of heaven is at hand. This is a sermon on the
former part of that text, showing what it is to repent; it
is to reform, both in judgment and practice; and here he
tells us wherein, in answer to that question (Malachi 3:7),
Wherein shall we return? He afterward preached upon the
latter part of the text, when, in divers parables, he showed
what the kingdom of heaven is like, Chapter 13.
II. The place was a mountain in
Galilee. As in other things, so in this, our Lord Jesus was
but ill accommodated; he had no convenient place to preach
in, any more than to lay his head on. While the scribes and
Pharisees had Moses' chair to sit in, with all possible
ease, honor, and state, and there corrupted the law; our
Lord Jesus, the great Teacher of truth, is driven out to the
desert, and finds no better a pulpit than a mountain can
afford; and not one of the holy mountains neither, not one
of the mountains of Zion, but a common mountain; by which
Christ would intimate that there is no such distinguishing
holiness of places now, under the gospel, as there was under
the law; but that it is the will of God that men should pray
and preach every where, any where, provided it be decent and
convenient. Christ preached this sermon, which was an
exposition of the law, upon a mountain, because upon a
mountain the law was given; and this was also a solemn
promulgation of the Christian law. But observe the
difference: when the law was given, the Lord came down upon
the mountain; now the Lord went up: then, he spoke in
thunder and lightning; now, in a still small voice: then the
people were ordered to keep their distance; now they are
invited to draw near: a blessed change! If God's grace and
goodness are (as they certainly are) his glory, then the
glory of the gospel is the glory that excels, for grace and
truth came by Jesus Christ, 2 Corinthians 3:7; Hebrews
12:18, & context. It was foretold of Zebulun and Issachar,
two of the tribes of Galilee (Deuteronomy 33:19), that they
shall call the people to the mountain; to this mountain we
are called, to learn to offer the sacrifices of
righteousness. Now was this the mountain of the Lord, where
he taught us his ways, Isaiah 2:2, 3; Micah 4:1, 2.
III. The auditors were his
disciples, who came unto him; came at his call, as appears
by comparing Mark 3:13, Luke 6:13. To them he directed his
speech, because they followed him for love and learning,
while others attended him only for cures. He taught them,
because they were willing to be taught (the meek will he
teach his way); because they would understand what he
taught, which to others was foolishness; and because they
were to teach others; and it was therefore requisite that
they should have a clear and distinct knowledge of these
things themselves. The duties prescribed in this sermon were
to be conscientiously performed by all those that would
enter into that kingdom of heaven which they were sent to
set up, with hope to have the benefit of it. But though this
discourse was directed to the disciples, it was in the
hearing of the multitude; for it is said (Chapter 7:28), The
people were astonished. No bounds were set about this
mountain, to keep the people off, as were about mount Sinai
(Exodus 19:12); for, through Christ, we have access to God,
not only to speak to him, but to hear from him. Nay, he had
an eye to the multitude, in preaching this sermon. When the
fame of his miracles had brought a vast crowd together, he
took the opportunity of so great a confluence of people, to
instruct them. Note, It is an encouragement to a faithful
minister to cast the net of the gospel where there are a
great many fishes, in hope that some will be caught. The
sight of a multitude puts life into a preacher, which yet
must arise from a desire of their profit, not his own
praise.
IV. The solemnity of his sermon is
intimated in that word, when he was set. Christ preached
many times occasionally, and by interlocutory discourses;
but this was a set sermon, kathisantos autou, when he had
placed himself so as to be best heard. He sat down as a
Judge or Lawgiver. It intimates with what sedateness and
composure of mind the things of God should be spoken and
heard. He sat, that the scriptures might be fulfilled
(Malachi 3:3), He shall sit as a refiner, to purge away the
dross, the corrupt doctrines of the sons of Levi. He sat as
in the throne, judging right (Psalm 9:4); for the word he
spoke shall judge us. That phrase, He opened his mouth, is
only a Hebrew periphrasis of speaking, as Job iii. 1. Yet
some think it intimates the solemnity of this discourse; the
congregation being large, he raised his voice, and spoke
louder than usual. He had spoken long by his servants the
prophets, and opened their mouths (Ezekiel 3:27; 24:27;
33:22); but now he opened his own, and spoke with freedom,
as one having authority. One of the ancients has this remark
upon it; Christ taught much without opening his mouth, that
is, by his holy and exemplary life; nay, he taught, when,
being led as a lamb to the slaughter, he opened not his
mouth, but now he opened his mouth, and taught, that the
scriptures might be fulfilled, Proverbs 8:1, 2, 6. Doth not
wisdom cry--cry on the top of high places? And the opening
of her lips shall be right things. He taught them, according
to the promise (Isaiah 54:13), All thy children shall be
taught of the Lord; for this purpose he had the tongue of
the learned (Isaiah l. 4), and the Spirit of the Lord,
Isaiah 61:1. He taught them, what was the evil they should
abhor, and what was the good they should abide and abound
in; for Christianity is not a matter of speculation, but is
designed to regulate the temper of our minds and the tenor
of our conversations; gospel-time is a time of reformation
(Hebrews 9:10); and by the gospel we must be reformed, must
be made good, must be made better. The truth, as it is in
Jesus, is the truth which is according to godliness, Titus
1:1.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:3-12 ––
3 Blessed are the
poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4
Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted. 5
Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth. 6
Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after
righteousness: for they shall be filled. 7 Blessed are the
merciful: for they shall obtain mercy. 8 Blessed are the
pure in heart: for they shall see God. 9 Blessed are the
peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.
10 Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness'
sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 11 Blessed are
ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall
say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake. 12
Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in
heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were
before you.
Christ begins his sermon with
blessings, for he came into the world to bless us (Acts
3:26), as the great High Priest of our profession; as the
blessed Melchizedek; as He in whom all the families of the
earth should be blessed, Genesis 12:3. He came not only to
purchase blessings for us, but to pour out and pronounce
blessings on us; and here he does it as one having
authority, as one that can command the blessing, even life
for evermore, and that is the blessing here again and again
promised to the good; his pronouncing them happy makes them
so; for those whom he blesses, are blessed indeed. The Old
Testament ended with a curse (Malachi 4:6), the gospel
begins with a blessing; for hereunto are we called, that we
should inherit the blessing. Each of the blessings Christ
here pronounces has a double intention: 1. To show who they
are that are to be accounted truly happy, and what their
characters are. 2. What that is wherein true happiness
consists, in the promises made to persons of certain
characters, the performance of which will make them happy.
Now,
1. This is designed to rectify the
ruinous mistakes of a blind and carnal world. Blessedness is
the thing which men pretend to pursue; Who will make us to
see good? Psalm 4:6. But most mistake the end, and form a
wrong notion of happiness; and then no wonder that they miss
the way; they choose their own delusions, and court a
shadow. The general opinion is, Blessed are they that are
rich, and great, and honorable in the world; they spend
their days in mirth, and their years in pleasure; they eat
the fat, and drink the sweet, and carry all before them with
a high hand, and have every sheaf bowing to their sheaf;
happy the people that is in such a case; and their designs,
aims, and purposes are accordingly; they bless the covetous
(Psalm 10:3); they will be rich. Now our Lord Jesus comes to
correct this fundamental error, to advance a new hypothesis,
and to give us quite another notion of blessedness and
blessed people, which, however paradoxical it may appear to
those who are prejudiced, yet is in itself, and appears to
be to all who are savingly enlightened, a rule and doctrine
of eternal truth and certainty, by which we must shortly be
judged. If this, therefore, be the beginning of Christ's
doctrine, the beginning of a Christian's practice must be to
take his measures of happiness from those maxims, and to
direct his pursuits accordingly.
2. It is designed to remove the
discouragements of the weak and poor who receive the gospel,
by assuring them that his gospel did not make those only
happy that were eminent in gifts, graces, comforts, and
usefulness; but that even the least in the kingdom of
heaven, whose heart was upright with God, was happy in the
honors and privileges of that kingdom.
3. It is designed to invite souls to
Christ, and to make way for his law into their hearts.
Christ's pronouncing these blessings, not at the end of his
sermon, to dismiss the people, but at the beginning of it,
to prepare them for what he had further to say to them, may
remind us of mount Gerizim and mount Ebal, on which the
blessings and cursings of the law were read, Deuteronomy
27:12, & context. There the curses are expressed, and the
blessings only implied; here the blessings are expressed,
and the curses implied: in both, life and death are set
before us; but the law appeared more as a ministration of
death, to deter us from sin; the gospel as a dispensation of
life, to allure us to Christ, in whom alone all good is to
be had. And those who had seen the gracious cures wrought by
his hand (Chapter 4:23, 24), and now heard the gracious
words proceeding out of his mouth, would say that he was all
of a piece, made up of love and sweetness.
4. It is designed to settle and sum
up the articles of agreement between God and man. The scope
of the divine revelation is to let us know what God expects
from us, and what we may then expect from him; and no where
is this more fully set forth in a few words than here, nor
with a more exact reference to each other; and this is that
gospel which we are required to believe; for what is faith
but a conformity to these characters, and a dependence upon
these promises? The way to happiness is here opened, and
made a highway (Isaiah 35:8); and this coming from the mouth
of Jesus Christ, it is intimated that from him, and by him,
we are to receive both the seed and the fruit, both the
grace required, and the glory promised. Nothing passes
between God and fallen man, but through his hand. Some of
the wiser heathen had notions of blessedness different from
the rest of mankind, and looking toward this of our Savior.
Seneca, undertaking to describe a blessed man, makes it out,
that it is only an honest, good man that is to be so called:
De vita beata. cap. 4. Cui nullum bonum malumque sit, nisi
bonus malusque animus--Quem nec extollant fortuita, nec
frangant--Cui vera voluptas erit voluptatum comtemplio--Cui
unum bonum honestas, unum malum turpitudo.--In whose
estimation nothing is good or evil, but a good or evil
heart--Whom no occurrences elate or deject--Whose true
pleasure consists in a contempt of pleasure--To whom the
only good is virtue, and the only evil vice.
Our Savior here gives us eight
characters of blessed people; which represent to us the
principal graces of a Christian. On each of them a present
blessing is pronounced; Blessed are they; and to each a
future blessing is promised, which is variously expressed,
so as to suit the nature of the grace or duty recommended.
Do we ask then who are happy? It is
answered,
I. The poor in spirit are happy,
verse 3. There is a poor-spiritedness that is so far from
making men blessed that it is a sin and a snare--cowardice
and base fear, and a willing subjection to the lusts of men.
But this poverty of spirit is a gracious disposition of
soul, by which we are emptied of self, in order to our being
filled with Jesus Christ. To be poor in spirit is, 1. To be
contentedly poor, willing to be emptied of worldly wealth,
if God orders that to be our lot; to bring our mind to our
condition, when it is a low condition. Many are poor in the
world, but high in spirit, poor and proud, murmuring and
complaining, and blaming their lot, but we must accommodate
ourselves to our poverty, must know how to be abased,
Philippians 4:12. Acknowledging the wisdom of God in
appointing us to poverty, we must be easy in it, patiently
bear the inconveniences of it, be thankful for what we have,
and make the best of that which is. It is to sit loose to
all worldly wealth, and not set our hearts upon it, but
cheerfully to bear losses and disappointments which may
befall us in the most prosperous state. It is not, in pride
or pretence, to make ourselves poor, by throwing away what
God has given us, especially as those in the church of Rome,
who vow poverty, and yet engross the wealth of the nations;
but if we be rich in the world we must be poor in spirit,
that is, we must condescend to the poor and sympathize with
them, as being touched with the feeling of their
infirmities; we must expect and prepare for poverty; must
not inordinately fear or shun it, but must bid it welcome,
especially when it comes upon us for keeping a good
conscience, Hebrews 10:34. Job was poor in spirit, when he
blessed God in taking away, as well as giving. 2. It is to
be humble and lowly in our own eyes. To be poor in spirit,
is to think meanly of ourselves, of what we are, and have,
and do; the poor are often taken in the Old Testament for
the humble and self-denying, as opposed to those that are at
ease, and the proud; it is to be as little children in our
opinion of ourselves, weak, foolish, and insignificant,
Chapter 18:4; 19:14. Laodicea was poor in spirituals,
wretchedly and miserably poor, and yet rich in spirit, so
well increased with goods, as to have need of nothing,
Revelation 3:17. On the other hand, Paul was rich in
spirituals, excelling most in gifts and graces, and yet poor
in spirit, the least of the apostles, less than the least of
all saints, and nothing in his own account. It is to look
with a holy contempt upon ourselves, to value others and
undervalue ourselves in comparison of them. It is to be
willing to make ourselves cheap, and mean, and little, to do
good; to become all things to all men. It is to acknowledge
that God is great, and we are mean; that he is holy and we
are sinful; that he is all and we are nothing, less than
nothing, worse than nothing; and to humble ourselves before
him, and under his mighty hand. 3. It is to come off from
all confidence in our own righteousness and strength, that
we may depend only upon the merit of Christ for our
justification, and the spirit and grace of Christ for our
sanctification. That broken and contrite spirit with which
the publican cried for mercy to a poor sinner, is that
poverty of spirit. We must call ourselves poor, because
always in want of God's grace, always begging at God's door,
always hanging on in his house.
Now, (1.) This poverty in spirit is
put first among the Christian graces. The philosophers did
not reckon humility among their moral virtues, but Christ
puts it first. Self-denial is the first lesson to be learned
in his school, and poverty of spirit entitled to the first
beatitude. The foundation of all other graces is laid in
humility. Those who would build high must begin low; and it
is an excellent preparative for the entrance of gospel-grace
into the soul; it fits the soil to receive the seed. Those
who are weary and heavy laden, are the poor in spirit, and
they shall find rest with Christ.
(2.) They are blessed. Now they are
so, in this world. God looks graciously upon them. They are
his little ones, and have their angels. To them he gives
more grace; they live the most comfortable lives, and are
easy to themselves and all about them, and nothing comes
amiss to them; while high spirits are always uneasy.
(3.) Theirs is the kingdom of
heaven. The kingdom of grace is composed of such; they only
are fit to be members of Christ's church, which is called
the congregation of the poor (Psalm 74:19); the kingdom of
glory is prepared for them. Those who thus humble
themselves, and comply with God when he humbles them, shall
be thus exalted. The great, high spirits go away with the
glory of the kingdoms of the earth; but the humble, mild,
and yielding souls obtain the glory of the kingdom of
heaven. We are ready to think concerning those who are rich,
and do good with their riches, that, no doubt, theirs is the
kingdom of heaven; for they can thus lay up in store a good
security for the time to come; but what shall the poor do,
who have not wherewithal to do good? Why, the same happiness
is promised to those who are contentedly poor, as to those
who are usefully rich. If I am not able to spend cheerfully
for his sake, if I can but want cheerfully for his sake,
even that shall be recompensed. And do not we serve a good
master then?
II. They that mourn are happy (verse
4); Blessed are they that mourn. This is another strange
blessing, and fitly follows the former. The poor are
accustomed to mourn, the graciously poor mourn graciously.
We are apt to think, Blessed are the merry; but Christ, who
was himself a great mourner, says, Blessed are the mourners.
There is a sinful mourning, which is an enemy to
blessedness--the sorrow of the world; despairing melancholy
upon a spiritual account, and disconsolate grief upon a
temporal account. There is a natural mourning, which may
prove a friend to blessedness, by the grace of God working
with it, and sanctifying the afflictions to us, for which we
mourn. But there is a gracious mourning, which qualifies for
blessedness, an habitual seriousness, the mind mortified to
mirth, and an actual sorrow. 1. A penitential mourning for
our own sins; this is godly sorrow, a sorrow according to
God; sorrow for sin, with an eye to Christ, Zechariah 12:10.
Those are God's mourners, who live a life of repentance, who
lament the corruption of their nature, and their many actual
transgressions, and God's withdrawing from them; and who,
out of regard to God's honor, mourn also for the sins of
others, and sigh and cry for their abominations, Ezekiel
9:4. 2. A sympathizing mourning for the afflictions of
others; the mourning of those who weep with them that weep,
are sorrowful for the solemn assemblies, for the desolations
of Zion (Zephaniah 3:18; Psalm 137:1), especially who look
with compassion on perishing souls, and weep over them, as
Christ over Jerusalem.
Now these gracious mourners, (1.)
Are blessed. As in vain and sinful laughter the heart is
sorrowful, so in gracious mourning the heart has a serious
joy, a secret satisfaction, which a stranger does not
intermeddle with. They are blessed, for they are like the
Lord Jesus, who was a man of sorrows, and of whom we never
read that he laughed, but often that he wept. They are armed
against the many temptations that attend vain mirth, and are
prepared for the comforts of a sealed pardon and a settled
peace. (2.) They shall be comforted. Though perhaps they are
not immediately comforted, yet plentiful provision is made
for their comfort; light is sown for them; and in heaven, it
is certain, they shall be comforted, as Lazarus, Luke 16:25.
Note, The happiness of heaven consists in being perfectly
and eternally comforted, and in the wiping away of all tears
from their eyes. It is the joy of our Lord; a fullness of
joy and pleasures for evermore; which will be doubly sweet
to those who have been prepared for them by this godly
sorrow. Heaven will be a heaven indeed to those who go
mourning thither; it will be a harvest of joy, the return of
a seed-time of tears (Psalm 126:5, 6); a mountain of joy, to
which our way lies through a vale of tears. See Isaiah
66:10.
III. The meek are happy (verse 5);
blessed are the meek. The meek are those who quietly submit
themselves to God, to his word and to his rod, who follow
his directions, and comply with his designs, and are gentle
towards all men (Titus 3:2); who can bear provocation
without being inflamed by it; are either silent, or return a
soft answer; and who can show their displeasure when there
is occasion for it, without being transported into any
indecencies; who can be cool when others are hot; and in
their patience keep possession of their own souls, when they
can scarcely keep possession of any thing else. They are the
meek, who are rarely and hardly provoked, but quickly and
easily pacified; and who would rather forgive twenty
injuries than revenge one, having the rule of their own
spirits.
These meek ones are here represented
as happy, even in this world. 1. They are blessed, for they
are like the blessed Jesus, in that wherein particularly
they are to learn of him, Chapter 11:29. They are like the
blessed God himself, who is Lord of his anger, and in whom
fury is not. They are blessed, for they have the most
comfortable, undisturbed enjoyment of themselves, their
friends, their God; they are fit for any relation, and
condition, any company; fit to live, and fit to die. 2. They
shall inherit the earth; it is quoted from Psalm 37:11, and
it is almost the only express temporal promise in all the
New Testament. Not that they shall always have much of the
earth, much less that they shall be put off with that only;
but this branch of godliness has, in a special manner, the
promise of life that now is. Meekness, however ridiculed and
run down, has a real tendency to promote our health, wealth,
comfort, and safety, even in this world. The meek and quiet
are observed to live the most easy lives, compared with the
forward and turbulent. Or, They shall inherit the land (so
it may be read), the land of Canaan, a type of heaven. So
that all the blessedness of heaven above, and all the
blessings of earth beneath, are the portion of the meek.
IV. They that hunger and thirst
after righteousness are happy, verse 6. Some understand this
as a further instance of our outward poverty, and a low
condition in this world, which not only exposes men to
injury and wrong, but makes it in vain for them to seek to
have justice done to them; they hunger and thirst after it,
but such is the power on the side of their oppressors, that
they cannot have it; they desire only that which is just and
equal, but it is denied them by those that neither fear God
nor regard men. This is a melancholy case! Yet, blessed are
they, if they suffer these hardships for and with a good
conscience; let them hope in God, who will see justice done,
right take place, and will deliver the poor from their
oppressors, Psalm 103:6. Those who contentedly bear
oppression, and quietly refer themselves to God to plead
their cause, shall in due time be satisfied, abundantly
satisfied, in the wisdom and kindness which shall be
manifested in his appearances for them. But it is certainly
to be understood spiritually, of such a desire as, being
terminated on such an object, is gracious, and the work of
God's grace in the soul, and qualifies for the gifts of the
divine favor. 1. Righteousness is here put for all spiritual
blessings. See Psalm 24:5; Chapter 6:33. They are purchased
for us by the righteousness of Christ; conveyed and secured
by the imputation of that righteousness to us; and confirmed
by the faithfulness of God. To have Christ made of God to us
righteousness, and to be made the righteousness of God in
him; to have the whole man renewed in righteousness, so as
to become a new man, and to bear the image of God; to have
an interest in Christ and the promises--this is
righteousness. 2. These we must hunger and thirst after. We
must truly and really desire them, as one who is hungry and
thirsty desires meat and drink, who cannot be satisfied with
any thing but meat and drink, and will be satisfied with
them, though other things be wanting. Our desires of
spiritual blessings must be earnest and importunate; "Give
me these, or else I die; every thing else is dross and
chaff, unsatisfying; give me these, and I have enough,
though I had nothing else." Hunger and thirst are appetites
that return frequently, and call for fresh satisfactions; so
these holy desires rest not in any thing attained, but are
carried out toward renewed pardons, and daily fresh supplies
of grace. The quickened soul calls for constant meals of
righteousness, grace to do the work of every day in its day,
as duly as the living body calls for food. Those who hunger
and thirst will labor for supplies; so we must not only
desire spiritual blessings, but take pains for them in the
use of the appointed means. Dr. Hammond, in his practical
Catechism, distinguishes between hunger and thirst. Hunger
is a desire of food to sustain, such as sanctifying
righteousness. Thirst is the desire of drink to refresh,
such as justifying righteousness, and the sense of our
pardon.
Those who hunger and thirst after
spiritual blessings, are blessed in those desires, and shall
be filled with those blessings. (1.) They are blessed in
those desires. Though all desires of grace are not grace
(feigned, faint desires are not), yet such a desire as this
is; it is an evidence of something good, and an earnest of
something better. It is a desire of God's own raising, and
he will not forsake the work of his own hands. Something or
other the soul will be hungering and thirsting after;
therefore they are blessed who fasten upon the right object,
which is satisfying, and not deceiving; and do not pant
after the dust of the earth, Amos 2:7; Isaiah 55:2. (2.)
They shall be filled with those blessings. God will give
them what they desire to complete their satisfaction. It is
God only who can fill a soul, whose grace and favor are
adequate to its just desires; and he will fill those with
grace for grace, who, in a sense of their own emptiness,
have recourse to his fullness. He fills the hungry (Luke
1:53), satiates them, Jeremiah 31:25. The happiness of
heaven will certainly fill the soul; their righteousness
shall be complete, the favor of God and his image, both in
their full perfection.
V. The merciful are happy, verse 7.
This, like the rest, is a paradox; for the merciful are not
taken to be the wisest, nor are likely to be the richest;
yet Christ pronounces them blessed. Those are the merciful,
who are piously and charitably inclined to pity, help, and
succor persons in misery. A man may be truly merciful, who
has not wherewithal to be bountiful or liberal; and then God
accepts the willing mind. We must not only bear our own
afflictions patiently, but we must, by Christian sympathy,
partake of the afflictions of our brethren; pity must be
shown (Job 6:14), and bowels of mercy put on (Colossians
3:12); and, being put on, they must put forth themselves in
contributing all we can for the assistance of those who are
any way in misery. We must have compassion on the souls of
others, and help them; pity the ignorant, and instruct them;
the careless, and warn them; those who are in a state of
sin, and snatch them as brands out of the burning. We must
have compassion on those who are melancholy and in sorrow,
and comfort them (Job 16:5); on those whom we have advantage
against, and not be rigorous and severe with them; on those
who are in want, and supply them; which if we refuse to do,
whatever we pretend, we shut up the bowels of our
compassion, James 2:15, 16; 1 John 3:17. Draw out they soul
by dealing thy bread to the hungry, Isaiah 58:7, 10. Nay, a
good man is merciful to his beast.
Now as to the merciful. 1. They are
blessed; so it was said in the Old Testament; Blessed is he
that considers the poor, Psalm 41:1. Herein they resemble
God, whose goodness is his glory; in being merciful as he is
merciful, we are, in our measure, perfect as he is perfect.
It is an evidence of love to God; it will be a satisfaction
to ourselves, to be any way instrumental for the benefit of
others. One of the purest and most refined delights in this
world, is that of doing good. In this word, Blessed are the
merciful, is included that saying of Christ, which otherwise
we find not in the gospels, It is more blessed to give than
to receive, Acts 20:35. 2. They shall obtain mercy; mercy
with men, when they need it; he that waters, shall be
watered also himself (we know not how soon we may stand in
need of kindness, and therefore should be kind); but
especially mercy with God, for with the merciful he will
show himself merciful, Psalm 18:25. The most merciful and
charitable cannot pretend to merit, but must fly to mercy.
The merciful shall find with God sparing mercy (Chapter
6:14), supplying mercy (Proverbs 19:17), sustaining mercy
(Psalm 41:2), mercy in that day (2 Timothy 1:18); may, they
shall inherit the kingdom prepared for them (Chapter 25:34,
35); whereas they shall have judgment without mercy (which
can be nothing short of hell-fire) who have shown no mercy.
VI. The pure in heart are happy
(verse 8); Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God. This is the most comprehensive of all the beatitudes;
here holiness and happiness are fully described and put
together.
1. Here is the most comprehensive
character of the blessed: they are pure in heart. Note, True
religion consists in heart-purity. Those who are inwardly
pure, show themselves to be under the power of pure and
undefiled religion. True Christianity lies in the heart, in
the purity of heart; the washing of that from wickedness,
Jeremiah 4:14. We must lift up to God, not only clean hands,
but a pure heart, Psalm 24:4, 5; 1 Timothy 1:5. The heart
must be pure, in opposition to mixture--an honest heart that
aims well; and pure, in opposition to pollution and
defilement; as wine unmixed, as water un-muddied. The heart
must be kept pure from fleshly lusts, all unchaste thoughts
and desires; and from worldly lusts; covetousness is called
filthy lucre; from all filthiness of flesh and spirit, all
that which come out of the heart, and defiles the man. The
heart must be purified by faith, and entire for God; must be
presented and preserved a chaste virgin to Christ. Create in
me such a clean heart, O God!
2. Here is the most comprehensive
comfort of the blessed; They shall see God. Note, (1.) It is
the perfection of the soul's happiness to see God; seeing
him, as we may by faith in our present state, is a heaven
upon earth; and seeing him as we shall in the future state,
in the heaven of heaven. To see him as he is, face to face,
and no longer through a glass darkly; to see him as ours,
and to see him and enjoy him; to see him and be like him,
and be satisfied with that likeness (Psalm 17:15); and to
see him for ever, and never lose the sight of him; this is
heaven's happiness. (2.) The happiness of seeing God is
promised to those, and those only, who are pure in heart.
None but the pure are capable of seeing God, nor would it be
a felicity to the impure. What pleasure could an
unsanctified soul take in the vision of a holy God? As he
cannot endure to look upon their iniquity, so they cannot
endure to look upon his purity; nor shall any unclean thing
enter into the new Jerusalem; but all that are pure in
heart, all that are truly sanctified, have desires wrought
in them, which nothing but the sight of God will sanctify;
and divine grace will not leave those desires unsatisfied.
VII. The peace-makers are happy,
verse 9. The wisdom that is from above is first pure, and
then peaceable; the blessed ones are pure toward God, and
peaceable toward men; for with reference to both, conscience
must be kept void of offence. The peace-makers are those who
have, 1. A peaceable disposition: as, to make a lie, is to
be given and addicted to lying, so, to make peace, is to
have a strong and hearty affection to peace. I am for peace,
Psalm 120:7. It is to love, and desire, and delight in
peace; to be put in it as in our element, and to study to be
quiet. 2. A peaceable conversation; industriously, as far as
we can, to preserve the peace that it be not broken, and to
recover it when it is broken; to hearken to proposals of
peace ourselves, and to be ready to make them to others;
where distance is among brethren and neighbors, to do all we
can to accommodate it, and to be repairers of the breaches.
The making of peace is sometimes a thankless office, and it
is the lot of him who parts a fray, to have blows on both
sides; yet it is a good office, and we must be forward to
it. Some think that this is intended especially as a lesson
for ministers, who should do all they can to reconcile those
who are at variance, and to promote Christian love among
those under their charge.
Now, (1.) Such persons are blessed;
for they have the satisfaction of enjoying themselves, by
keeping the peace, and of being truly serviceable to others,
by disposing them to peace. They are working together with
Christ, who came into the world to slay all enmities, and to
proclaim peace on earth. (2.) They shall be called the
children of God; it will be an evidence to themselves that
they are so; God will own them as such, and herein they will
resemble him. He is the God of peace; the Son of God is the
Prince of peace; the Spirit of adoption is a Spirit of
peace. Since God has declared himself reconcilable to us
all, he will not own those for his children who are
implacable in their enmity to one another; for if the
peacemakers are blessed, woe to the peace-breakers! Now by
this it appears, that Christ never intended to have his
religion propagated by fire and sword, or penal laws, or to
acknowledge bigotry, or intemperate zeal, as the mark of his
disciples. The children of this world love to fish in
troubled waters, but the children of God are the
peace-makers, the quiet in the land.
VIII. Those who are persecuted for
righteousness' sake, are happy. This is the greatest paradox
of all, and peculiar to Christianity; and therefore it is
put last, and more largely insisted upon than any of the
rest, verses 10-12. This beatitude, like Pharaoh's dream, is
doubled, because hardly credited, and yet the thing is
certain; and in the latter part there is change of the
person, "Blessed are ye--ye my disciples, and immediate
followers. This is that which you, who excel in virtue, are
more immediately concerned in; for you must reckon upon
hardships and troubles more than other men." Observe here,
1. The case of suffering saints
described; and it is a hard case, and a very piteous one.
(1.) They are persecuted, hunted,
pursued, run down, as noxious beasts are, that are sought
for to be destroyed; as if a Christian did caput gerere
lupinum--bear a wolf's head, as an outlaw is said to do--any
one that finds him may slay him; they are abandoned as the
off-scouring of all things; fined, imprisoned, banished,
stripped of their estates, excluded from all places of
profit and trust, scourged, racked, tortured, always
delivered to death, and accounted as sheep for the
slaughter. This has been the effect of the enmity of the
serpent's seed against the holy seed, ever since the time of
righteous Abel. It was so in Old-Testament times, as we
find, Hebrews 11:35, & context. Christ has told us that it
would much more be so with the Christian church, and we are
not to think it strange, 1 John 3:13. He has left us an
example.
(2.) They are reviled, and have all
manner of evil said against them falsely. Nicknames, and
names of reproach, are fastened upon them, upon particular
persons, and upon the generation of the righteous in the
gross, to render them odious; sometimes to make them
formidable, that they may be powerfully assailed; things are
laid to their charge that they knew not, Psalm 35:11;
Jeremiah 20:18; Acts 17:6, 7. Those who have had no power in
their hands to do them any other mischief, could yet do
this; and those who have had power to persecute, had found
it necessary to do this too, to justify themselves in their
barbarous usage of them; they could not have baited them, if
they had not dressed them in bear-skins; nor have given them
the worst of treatment, if they had not first represented
them as the worst of men. They will revile you, and
persecute you. Note, Reviling the saints is persecuting
them, and will be found so shortly, when hard speeches must
be accounted for (Jude 15), and cruel mocking, Hebrews
11:36. They will say all manner of evil of you falsely;
sometimes before the seat of judgment, as witnesses;
sometimes in the seat of the scornful, with hypocritical
mockers at feasts; they are the song of the drunkards;
sometimes to face their faces, as Shimei cursed David;
sometimes behind their backs, as the enemies of Jeremiah
did. Note, There is no evil so black and horrid, which, at
one time or other, has not been said, falsely, of Christ's
disciples and followers.
(3.) All this is for righteousness'
sake (verse 10); for my sake, verse 11. If for
righteousness' sake, then for Christ's sake, for he is
nearly interested in the work of righteousness. Enemies to
righteousness are enemies to Christ. This precludes those
from the blessedness who suffer justly, and are evil spoken
of truly for their real crimes; let such be ashamed and
confounded, it is part of their punishment; it is not the
suffering, but the cause, that makes the martyr. Those
suffer for righteousness' sake, who suffer because they will
not sin against their consciences, and who suffer for doing
that which is good. Whatever pretence persecutors have, it
is the power of godliness that they have an enmity to; it is
really Christ and his righteousness that are maligned,
hated, and persecuted; For thy sake I have borne reproach,
Psalm 69:9; Romans 8:36.
2. The comforts of suffering saints
laid down.
(1.) They are blessed; for they now,
in their life-time, receive their evil things (Luke 16:25),
and receive them upon a good account. They are blessed; for
it is an honor to them (Acts 5:41); it is an opportunity of
glorifying Christ, of doing good, and of experiencing
special comforts and visits of grace and tokens of his
presence, 2 Corinthians 1:5; Daniel 3:25; Romans 8:29.
(2.) They shall be recompensed;
Theirs is the kingdom of heaven. They have at present a sure
title to it, and sweet foretastes of it; and shall ere long
be in possession of it. Though there be nothing in those
sufferings than can, in strictness, merit of God (for the
sins of the best deserve the worst), yet this is here
promised as a reward (verse 12); Great is your reward in
heaven: so great, as far to transcend the service. It is in
heaven, future, and out of sight; but well secured, out of
the reach of chance, fraud, and violence. Note, God will
provide that those who lose for him, though it be life
itself, shall not lose by him in the end. Heaven, at last,
will be an abundant recompense for all the difficulties we
meet with in our way. This is that which has borne up the
suffering saints in all ages--this joy set before them.
(3.) "So persecuted they the
prophets that were before you, verse 12. They were before
you in excellence, above what you are yet arrived at; they
were before you in time, that they might be examples to you
of suffering affliction and of patience, James 5:10. They
were in like manner persecuted and abused; and can you
expect to go to heaven in a way by yourself? Was not Isaiah
mocked for his line upon line? Elisha for his bald head?
Were not all the prophets thus treated? Therefore marvel not
at it as a strange thing, murmur not at it as a hard thing;
it is a comfort to see the way of suffering a beaten road,
and an honor to follow such leaders. That grace which was
sufficient for them, to carry them through their sufferings,
shall not be deficient to you. Those who are your enemies
are the seed and successors of them who of old mocked the
messengers of the Lord," 2 Chronicles 36:16; Chapter 23:31;
Acts 7:52.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:13-16 ––
13 Ye are the
salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savor,
wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for
nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of
men. 14 Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on
a hill cannot be hid. 15 Neither do men light a candle, and
put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth
light unto all that are in the house. 16 Let your light so
shine before men, that they may see your good works, and
glorify your Father which is in heaven.
Christ had lately called his
disciples, and told them that they should be fishers of men;
here he tells them further what he designed them to be--the
salt of the earth, and lights of the world, that they might
be indeed what it was expected they should be.
I. Ye are the salt of the earth.
This would encourage and support them under their
sufferings, that, though they should be treated with
contempt, yet they should really be blessings to the world,
and the more so for their suffering thus. The prophets, who
went before them, were the salt of the land of Canaan; but
the apostles were the salt of the whole earth, for they must
go into all the world to preach the gospel. It was a
discouragement to them that they were so few and so weak.
What could they do in so large a province as the whole
earth? Nothing, if they were to work by force of arms and
dint of sword; but, being to work silent as salt, one
handful of that salt would diffuse its savor far and wide;
would go a great way, and work insensibly and irresistibly
as leaven, Chapter 13:33. The doctrine of the gospel is as
salt; it is penetrating, quick, and powerful (Hebrews 4:12);
it reaches the heart Acts 2:37. It is cleansing, it is
relishing, and preserves from putrefaction. We read of the
savor of the knowledge of Christ (2 Corinthians 2:14); for
all other learning is insipid without that. An everlasting
covenant is called a covenant of salt (Numbers 28:19); and
the gospel is an everlasting gospel. Salt was required in
all the sacrifices (Leviticus 2:13), in Ezekiel's mystical
temple, Ezekiel 43:24. Now Christ's disciples having
themselves learned the doctrine of the gospel, and being
employed to teach it to others, were as salt. Note,
Christians, and especially ministers, are the salt of the
earth.
1. If they be as they should be they
are as good salt, white, and small, and broken into many
grains, but very useful and necessary. Pliny says, Sine
sale, vita humana non potest degere--Without salt human life
cannot be sustained. See in this, (1.) What they are to be
in themselves--seasoned with the gospel, with the salt of
grace; thoughts and affections, words and actions, all
seasoned with grace, Colossians 4:6. Have salt in
yourselves, else you cannot diffuse it among others, Mark
9:50. (2.) What they are to be to others; they must not only
be good but do good, must insinuate themselves into the
minds of the people, not to serve any secular interest of
their own, but that they might transform them into the taste
and relish of the gospel. (3.) What great blessings they are
to the world. Mankind, lying in ignorance and wickedness,
were a vast heap of unsavory stuff, ready to putrefy; but
Christ sent forth his disciples, by their lives and
doctrines, to season it with knowledge and grace, and so to
render it acceptable to God, to the angels, and to all that
relish divine things. (4.) How they must expect to be
disposed of. They must not be laid on a heap, must not
continue always together at Jerusalem, but must be scattered
as salt upon the meat, here a grain and there a grain; as
the Levites were dispersed in Israel, that, wherever they
live, they may communicate their savor. Some have observed,
that whereas it is foolishly called an ill omen to have the
salt fall towards us, it is really an ill omen to have the
salt fall from us.
2. If they be not, they are as salt
that has lost its savor. If you, who should season others,
are yourselves unsavory, void of spiritual life, relish, and
vigor; if a Christian be so, especially if a minister be so,
his condition is very sad; for, (1.) He is irrecoverable:
Wherewith shall it be salted? Salt is a remedy for unsavory
meat, but there is no remedy for unsavory salt. Christianity
will give a man a relish; but if a man can take up and
continue the profession of it, and yet remain flat and
foolish, and graceless and insipid, no other doctrine, no
other means, can be applied, to make him savory. If
Christianity do not do it, nothing will. (2.) He is
unprofitable: It is thenceforth good for nothing; what use
can it be put to, in which it will not do more hurt than
good? As a man without reason, so is a Christian without
grace. A wicked man is the worst of creatures; a wicked
Christian is the worst of men; and a wicked minister is the
worst of Christians. (3.) He is doomed to ruin and
rejection; He shall be cast out--expelled the church and the
communion of the faithful, to which he is a blot and a
burden; and he shall be trodden under foot of men. Let God
be glorified in the shame and rejection of those by whom he
has been reproached, and who have made themselves fit for
nothing but to be trampled upon.
II. Ye are the light of the world,
verse 14. This also bespeaks them useful, as the former
(Sole et sale nihil utilius--Nothing more useful than the
sun and salt), but more glorious. All Christians are light
in the Lord (Ephesians 5:8), and must shine as lights
(Philippians 2:15), but ministers in a special manner.
Christ calls himself the Light of the world (John 8:12),
and they are workers together with him, and have some of his
honor put upon them. Truly the light is sweet, it is
welcome; the light of the first day of the world was so,
when it shone out of darkness; so is the morning light of
every day; so is the gospel, and those that spread it, to
all sensible people. The world sat in darkness, Christ
raised up his disciples to shine in it; and, that they may
do so, from him they borrow and derive their light.
This similitude is here explained in
two things:
1. As the lights of the world, they
are illustrious and conspicuous, and have many eyes upon
them. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hid. The
disciples of Christ, especially those who are forward and
zealous in his service, become remarkable, and are taken
notice of as beacons. They are for signs (Isaiah 7:18), men
wondered at (Zechariah 3:8); all their Neighbors have an eye
upon them. Some admire them, commend them, rejoice in them,
and study to imitate them; others envy them, hate them,
censure them, and study to blast them. They are concerned
therefore to walk circumspectly, because of their observers;
they are as spectacles to the world, and must take heed of
every thing that looks ill, because they are so much looked
at. The disciples of Christ were obscure men before he
called them, but the character he put upon them dignified
them, and as preachers of the gospel they made a figure; and
though they were reproached for it by some, they were
respected for it by others, advanced to thrones, and made
judges (Luke 22:30); for Christ will honor those that honor
him.
2. As the lights of the world, they
are intended to illuminate and give light to others (verse
15), and therefore, (1.) They shall be set up as lights.
Christ has lighted these candles, they shall not be put
under a bushel, not confined always, as they are now, to the
cities of Galilee, or the lost sheep of the house of Israel,
but they shall be sent into all the world. The churches are
the candlesticks, the golden candlesticks, in which these
lights are placed, that their light may be diffused; and the
gospel is so strong a light, and carries with it so much of
its own evidence, that, like a city on a hill, it cannot be
hid, it cannot but appear to be from God, to all those who
do not willfully shut their eyes against it. It will give
light to all that are in the house, to all that will draw
near to it, and come where it is. Those to whom it does not
give light, must thank themselves; they will not be in the
house with it; will not make a diligent and impartial
enquiry into it, but are prejudiced against it. (2.) They
must shine as lights, [1.] By their good preaching. The
knowledge they have, they must communicate for the good of
others; not put it under a bushel, but spread it. The talent
must not be buried in a napkin, but traded with. The
disciples of Christ must not muffle themselves up in privacy
and obscurity, under pretence of contemplation, modesty, or
self-preservation, but, as they have received the gift, must
minister the same, Luke 12:3. [2.] By their good living.
They must be burning and shining lights (John 5:35); must
evidence, in their whole conversation, that they are indeed
followers of Christ, James 3:13. They must be to others for
instruction, direction, quickening, and comfort, Job 29:11.
See here, First, How our light must
shine--by doing such good works as men may see, and may
approve of; such works as are of good report among them that
are without, and as will therefore give them cause to think
well of Christianity. We must do good works that may be seen
to the edification of others, but not that they may be seen
to our own ostentation; we are bid to pray in secret, and
what lies between God and our souls, must be kept to
ourselves; but that which is of itself open and obvious to
the sight of men, we must study to make congruous to our
profession, and praiseworthy, Philippians 4:8. Those about
us must not only hear our good words, but see our good
works; that they may be convinced that religion is more than
a bare name, and that we do not only make a profession of
it, but abide under the power of it.
Secondly, For what end our light
must shine--"That those who see your good works may be
brought, not to glorify you (which was the things the
Pharisees aimed at, and it spoiled all their performances),
but to glorify your Father which is in heaven." Note, The
glory of God is the great thing we must aim at in every
thing we do in religion, 1 Peter 4:11. In this centre the
lines of all our actions must meet. We must not only
endeavor to glorify God ourselves, but we must do all we can
to bring others to glorify him. The sight of our good works
will do this, by furnishing them, 1. With matter for praise.
"Let them see your good works, that they may see the power
of God's grace in you, and may thank him for it, and give
him the glory of it, who has given such power unto men." 2.
With motives of piety. "Let them see your good works, that
they may be convinced of the truth and excellence of the
Christian religion, may be provoked by a holy emulation to
imitate your good works, and so may glorify God." Note, The
holy, regular, and exemplary conversation of the saints, may
do much towards the conversion of sinners; those who are
unacquainted with religion, may hereby be brought to know
what it is. Examples teach. And those who are prejudiced
against it, may hereby be brought in love with it, and thus
there is a winning virtue in a godly conversation.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:17-20 ––
17 Think not that
I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come
to destroy, but to fulfill. 18 For verily I say unto you,
Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in
no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. 19
Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least
commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the
least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and
teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of
heaven. 20 For I say unto you, That except your
righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes
and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of
heaven.
Those to whom Christ preached, and
for whose use he gave these instructions to his disciples,
were such as in their religion had an eye, 1. To the
scriptures of the Old Testament as their rule, and therein
Christ here shows them they were in the right: 2. To the
scribes and the Pharisees as their example, and therein
Christ here shows them they were in the wrong; for,
I. The rule which Christ came to
establish exactly agreed with the scriptures of the Old
Testament, here called the law and the prophets. The
prophets were commentators upon the law, and both together
made up that rule of faith and practice which Christ found
upon the throne in the Jewish church, and here he keeps it
on the throne.
1. He protests against the thought
of canceling and weakening the Old Testament; Think not that
I am come to destroy the law and the prophets. (1.) "Let not
the pious Jews, who have an affection for the law and the
prophets, fear that I come to destroy them." Let them be not
prejudiced against Christ and his doctrine, from a jealousy
that this kingdom he came to set up, would derogate from the
honor of the scriptures, which they had embraced as coming
from God, and of which they had experienced the power and
purity; no, let them be satisfied that Christ has no ill
design upon the law and the prophets. "Let not the profane
Jews, who have a disaffection to the law and the prophets,
and are weary of that yoke, hope that I am come to destroy
them." Let not carnal libertines imagine that the Messiah is
come to discharge them from the obligation of divine
precepts and yet to secure to them divine promises, to make
the happy and yet to give them leave to live as they list.
Christ commands nothing now which was forbidden either by
the law of nature or the moral law, nor forbids any thing
which those laws had enjoined; it is a great mistake to
think he does, and he here takes care to rectify the
mistake; I am not come to destroy. The Savior of souls is
the destroyer of nothing but the works of the devil, of
nothing that comes from God, much less of those excellent
dictates which we have from Moses and the prophets. No, he
came to fulfill them. That is, [1.] To obey the commands of
the law, for he was made under the law, Galatians 4:4. He in
all respects yielded obedience to the law, honored his
parents, sanctified the Sabbath, prayed, gave alms, and did
that which never any one else did, obeyed perfectly, and
never broke the law in any thing. [2.] To make good the
promises of the law, and the predictions of the prophets,
which did all bear witness to him. The covenant of grace is,
for substance, the same now that it was then, and Christ the
Mediator of it. [3.] To answer the types of the law; thus
(as bishop Tillotson expresses it), he did not make void,
but make good, the ceremonial law, and manifested himself to
be the Substance of all those shadows. [4.] To fill up the
defects of it, and so to complete and perfect it. Thus the
word plerosai properly signifies. If we consider the law as
a vessel that had some water in it before, he did not come
to pour out the water, but to fill the vessel up to the
brim; or, as a picture that is first rough-drawn, displays
some outlines only of the piece intended, which are
afterwards filled up; so Christ made an improvement of the
law and the prophets by his additions and explications. [5.]
To carry on the same design; the Christian institutes are so
far from thwarting and contradicting that which was the main
design of the Jewish religion, that they promote it to the
highest degree. The gospel is the time of reformation
(Hebrews 9:10), not the repeal of the law, but the amendment
of it, and, consequently, its establishment.
2. He asserts the perpetuity of it;
that not only he designed not the abrogation of it, but that
it never should be abrogated (verse 18); "Verily I say unto
you, I, the Amen, the faithful Witness, solemnly declare it,
that till heaven and earth pass, when time shall be no more,
and the unchangeable state of recompense shall supersede all
laws, one jot, or one tittle, the least and most minute
circumstance, shall in no wise pass from the law till all be
fulfilled;" for what is it that God is doing in all the
operations both of providence and grace, but fulfilling the
scripture? Heaven and earth shall come together, and all the
fullness thereof be wrapped up in ruin and confusion, rather
than any word of God shall fall to the ground, or be in
vain. The word of the Lord endures for ever, both that of
the law, and that of the gospel. Observe, The care of God
concerning his law extends itself even to those things that
seem to be of least account in it, the iotas and the
tittles; for whatever belongs to God, and bears his stamp,
be it ever so little, shall be preserved. The laws of men
are conscious to themselves of so much imperfection, that
they allow it for a maxim, Apices juris non sunt jura--The
extreme points of the law are not the law, but God will
stand by and maintain every iota and every tittle of his
law.
3. He gives it in charge to his
disciples, carefully to preserve the law, and shows them the
danger of the neglect and contempt of it (verse 19);
Whosoever therefore shall break one of the least
commandments of the law of Moses, much more any of the
greater, as the Pharisees did, who neglected the weightier
matters of the law, and shall teach men so as they did, who
made void the commandment of God with their traditions
(Chapter 15:3), he shall be called the least in the kingdom
of heaven. Though the Pharisees be cried up for such
teachers as should be, they shall not be employed as
teachers in Christ's kingdom; but whosoever shall do and
teach them, as Christ's disciples would, and thereby prove
themselves better friends to the Old Testament than the
Pharisees were, they, though despised by men, shall be
called great in the kingdom of heaven. Note, (1.) Among the
commands of God there are some less than others; none
absolutely little, but comparatively so. The Jews reckon the
least of the commandments of the law to be that of the
bird's nest (Deuteronomy 22:6, 7); yet even that had a
significance and an intention very great and considerable.
(2.) It is a dangerous thing, in doctrine or practice, to
disannul the least of God's commands; to break them, that
is, to go about either to contract the extent, or weaken the
obligation of them; whoever does so, will find it is at his
peril. Thus to vacate any of the ten commandments, is too
bold a stroke for the jealous God to pass by. It is
something more than transgressing the law, it is making void
the law, Psalm 119:126. (3.) That the further such
corruptions as they spread, the worse they are. It is
impudence enough to break the command, but is a greater
degree of it to teach men so. This plainly refers to those
who at this time sat in Moses' seat, and by their comments
corrupted and perverted the text. Opinions that tend to the
destruction of serious godliness and the vitals of religion,
by corrupt glosses on the scripture, are bad when they are
held, but worse when they are propagated and taught, as the
word of God. He that does so, shall be called least in the
kingdom of heaven, in the kingdom of glory; he shall never
come thither, but be eternally excluded; or, rather, in the
kingdom of the gospel-church. He is so far from deserving
the dignity of a teacher in it, that he shall not so much as
be accounted a member of it. The prophet that teaches these
lies shall be the tail in that kingdom (Isaiah 9:15); when
truth shall appear in its own evidence, such corrupt
teachers, though cried up as the Pharisees, shall be of no
account with the wise and good. Nothing makes ministers more
contemptible and base than corrupting the law, Malachi 2:8,
11. Those who extenuate and encourage sin, and
discountenance and put contempt upon strictness in religion
and serious devotion, are the dregs of the church. But, on
the other hand, Those are truly honorable, and of great
account in the church of Christ, who lay out themselves by
their life and doctrine to promote the purity and strictness
of practical religion; who both do and teach that which is
good; for those who do not as they teach, pull down with one
hand what they build up with the other, and give themselves
the lie, and tempt men to think that all religion is a
delusion; but those who speak from experience, who live up
to what they preach, are truly great; they honor God, and
God will honor them (1 Samuel 2:30), and hereafter they
shall shine as the stars in the kingdom of our Father.
II. The righteousness which Christ
came to establish by this rule, must exceed that of the
scribes and Pharisees, verse 20. This was strange doctrine
to those who looked upon the scribes and Pharisees as having
arrived at the highest pitch of religion. The scribes were
the most noted teachers of the law, and the Pharisees the
most celebrated professors of it, and they both sat in
Moses' chair (Chapter 23:2), and had such a reputation among
the people, that they were looked upon as super-conformable
to the law, and people did not think themselves obliged to
be as good as they; it was therefore a great surprise to
them, to hear that they must be better than they, or they
should not go to heaven; and therefore Christ here avers it
with solemnity; I say unto you, It is so. The scribes and
Pharisees were enemies to Christ and his doctrine, and were
great oppressors; and yet it must be owned, that there was
something commendable in them. They were much in fasting and
prayer, and giving of alms; they were punctual in observing
the ceremonial appointments, and made it their business to
teach others; they had such an interest in the people that
they ought, if but two men went to heaven, one would be a
Pharisee; and yet our Lord Jesus here tells his disciples,
that the religion he came to establish, did not only exclude
the badness, but excel the goodness, of the scribes and
Pharisees. We must do more than they, and better than they,
or we shall come short of heaven. They were partial in the
law, and laid most stress upon the ritual part of it; but we
must be universal, and not think it enough to give the
priest his tithe, but must give God our hearts. They minded
only the outside, but we must make conscience of inside
godliness. They aimed at the praise and applause of men, but
we must aim at acceptance with God: they were proud of what
they did in religion, and trusted to it as a righteousness;
but we, when we have done all, must deny ourselves, and say,
We are unprofitable servants, and trust only to the
righteousness of Christ; and thus we may go beyond the
scribes and Pharisees.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:21-26 ––
21 Ye have heard
that it was said by them of old time, Thou shalt not kill;
and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment:
22 But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his
brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment:
and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be in
danger of the council: but whosoever shall say, Thou fool,
shall be in danger of hell fire. 23 Therefore if thou bring
thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy
brother hath ought against thee; 24 Leave there thy gift
before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy
brother, and then come and offer thy gift. 25 Agree with
thine adversary quickly, whiles thou art in the way with
him; lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the
judge, and the judge deliver thee to the officer, and thou
be cast into prison. 26 Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt
by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the
uttermost farthing.
Christ having laid down these
principles, that Moses and the prophets were still to be
their rulers, but that the scribes and Pharisees were to be
no longer their rulers, proceeds to expound the law in some
particular instances, and to vindicate it from the corrupt
glosses which those expositors had put upon it. He adds not
any thing new, only limits and restrains some permissions
which had been abused: and as to the precepts, shows the
breadth, strictness, and spiritual nature of them, adding
such explanatory statutes as made them more clear, and
tended much toward the perfecting of our obedience to them.
In these verses, he explains the law of the sixth
commandment, according to the true intent and full extent of
it.
I. Here is the command itself laid
down (verse 12); We have heard it, and remember it; he
speaks to them who know the law, who had Moses read to them
in their synagogues every Sabbath-day; you have heard that
it was said by them, or rather as it is in the margin, to
them of old time, to your forefathers the Jews, You shall
not kill. Note, The laws of God are not novel, upstart laws,
but were delivered to them of old time; they are ancient
laws, but of that nature as never to be antiquated nor grow
obsolete. The moral law agrees with the law of nature, and
the eternal rules and reasons of good and evil, that is, the
rectitude of the eternal Mind. Killing is here forbidden,
killing ourselves, killing any other, directly or
indirectly, or being any way accessory to it. The law of
God, the God of life, is a hedge of protection about our
lives. It was one of the precepts of Noah, Genesis 9:5, 6.
II. The exposition of this command
which the Jewish teachers contended themselves with; their
comment upon it was, Whosoever shall kill, shall be in
danger of the judgment. This was all they had to say upon
it, that willful murderers were liable to the sword of
justice, and casual ones to the judgment of the city of
refuge. The courts of judgment sat in the gate of their
principal cities; the judges, ordinarily, were in number
twenty-three; these tried, condemned, and executed
murderers; so that whoever killed, was in danger of their
judgment. Now this gloss of theirs upon this commandment was
faulty, for it intimated, 1. That the law of the sixth
commandment was only external, and forbade no more than the
act of murder, and laid to restraint upon the inward lusts,
from which wars and fightings come. This was indeed the
proton pseudos--the fundamental error of the Jewish
teachers, that the divine law prohibited only the sinful
act, not the sinful thought; they were disposed hærere in
cortice--to rest in the letter of the law, and they never
enquired into the spiritual meaning of it. Paul, while a
Pharisee, did not, till, by the key of the tenth
commandment, divine grace let him into the knowledge of the
spiritual nature of all the rest, Romans 7:7, 14. 2. Another
mistake of theirs was, that this law was merely political
and municipal, given for them, and intended as a directory
for their courts, and no more; as if they only were the
people, and the wisdom of the law must die with them.
III. The exposition which Christ
gave of this commandment; and we are sure that according to
his exposition of it we must be judged hereafter, and
therefore ought to be ruled now. The commandment is
exceeding broad, and not to be limited by the will of the
flesh, or the will of men.
1. Christ tells them that rash anger
is heart-murder (verse 22); Whosoever is angry with his
brother without a cause, breaks the sixth commandment. By
our brother here, we are to understand any person, though
ever so much our inferior, as a child, a servant, for we are
all made of one blood. Anger is a natural passion; there are
cases in which it is lawful and laudable; but it is then
sinful, when we are angry without cause. The word is eike,
which signifies, sine causâ, sine effectu, et sine modo--without
cause, without any good effect, without moderation; so that
the anger is then sinful, (1.) When it is without any just
provocation given; either for no cause, or no good cause, or
no great and proportionate cause; when we are angry at
children or servants for that which could not be helped,
which was only a piece of forgetfulness or mistake, that we
ourselves might easily have been guilty of, and for which we
should not have been angry at ourselves; when we are angry
upon groundless surmises, or for trivial affronts not worth
speaking of. (2.) When it is without any good end aimed at,
merely to show our authority, to gratify a brutish passion,
to let people know our resentments, and excite ourselves to
revenge, then it is in vain, it is to do hurt; whereas if we
are at any time angry, it should be to awaken the offender
to repentance, and prevent his doing so again; to clear
ourselves (2 Corinthians 7:11), and to give warning to
others. (3.) When it exceeds due bounds; when we are hardy
and headstrong in our anger, violent and vehement,
outrageous and mischievous, and when we seek the hurt of
those we are displeased at. This is a breach of the sixth
commandment, for he that is thus angry, would kill if he
could and durst; he has taken the first step toward it;
Cain's killing his brother began in anger; he is a murderer
in the account of God, who knows his heart, whence murder
proceeds, Chapter 15:19.
2. He tells them, that given
opprobrious language to our brother is tongue-murder,
calling him, Raca, and, Thou fool. When this is done with
mildness and for a good end, to convince others of their
vanity and folly, it is not sinful. Thus James says, O vain
man; and Paul, Thou fool; and Christ himself, O fools, and
slow of heart. But when it proceeds from anger and malice
within, it is the smoke of that fire which is kindled from
hell, and falls under the same character. (1.) Raca is a
scornful word, and comes from pride, "Thou empty fellow;" it
is the language of that which Solomon calls proud wrath
(Proverbs 21:24), which tramples upon our brother-disdains
to set him even with the dogs of our flock. This people who
knows not the law, is cursed, is such language, John 7:49.
(2.) Thou fool, is a spiteful word, and comes from hatred;
looking upon him, not only as mean and not to be honored,
but as vile and not to be loved; "Thou wicked man, thou
reprobate." The former speaks a man without sense, this (in
scripture language) speaks a man without grace; the more the
reproach touches his spiritual condition, the worse it is;
the former is a haughty taunting of our brother, this is a
malicious censuring and condemning of him, as abandoned of
God. Now this is a breach of the sixth commandment;
malicious slanders and censures are poison under the tongue,
that kills secretly and slowly; bitter words are as arrows
that would suddenly (Psalm 64:3), or as a sword in the
bones. The good name of our neighbor, which is better than
life, is thereby stabbed and murdered; and it is an evidence
of such an ill-will to our neighbor as would strike at his
life, if it were in our power.
3. He tells them, that how light
soever they made of these sins, they would certainly be
reckoned for; he that is angry with is brother shall be in
danger of the judgment and anger of God; he that calls him
Raca, shall be in danger of the council, of being punished
by the Sanhedrim for reviling an Israelite; but whosoever
saith, Thou fool, thou profane person, thou child of hell,
shall be in danger of hell-fire, to which he condemns his
brother; so the learned Dr. Whitby. Some think, in allusion
to the penalties used in the several courts of judgment
among the Jews, Christ shows that the sin of rash anger
exposes men to lower or higher punishments, according to the
degrees of its proceeding. The Jews had three capital
punishments, each worse than the other; beheading, which was
inflicted by the judgment; stoning, by the council or chief
Sanhedrim; and burning in the valley of the son of Hinnom,
which was used only in extraordinary cases: it signifies,
therefore, that rash anger and reproachful language are
damning sins; but some are more sinful than others, and
accordingly there is a greater damnation, and a sorer
punishment reserved for them: Christ would thus show which
sin was most sinful, by showing which it was the punishment
whereof was most dreadful.
IV. From all this it is here
inferred, that we ought carefully to preserve Christian love
and peace with our brethren, and that if at any time a
breach happens, we should labor for a reconciliation, by
confessing our fault, humbling ourselves to our brother,
begging his pardon, and making restitution, or offering
satisfaction for wrong done in word or deed, according as
the nature of the thing is; and that we should do this
quickly for two reasons:
1. Because, till this be done, we
are utterly unfit for communion with God in holy ordinances,
verse 23, 24. The case supposed is, "That thy brother have
somewhat against thee," that thou has injured and offended
him, either really or in his apprehension; if thou are the
party offended, there needs not this delay; if thou have
aught against thy brother, make short work of it; no more is
to be done but to forgive him (Mark 11:25), and forgive the
injury; but if the quarrel began on thy side, and the fault
was either at first or afterwards yours, so that thy brother
has a controversy with thee, go and be reconciled to him
before thou offer thy gift at the altar, before thou
approach solemnly to God in the gospel-services of prayer
and praise, hearing the word or the sacraments. Note, (1.)
When we are addressing ourselves to any religious exercises,
it is good for us to take that occasion of serious
reflection and self-examination: there are many things to be
remembered, when we bring our gift to the altar, and this
among the rest, whether our brother hath aught against us;
then, if ever, we are disposed to be serious, and therefore
should then call ourselves to an account. (2.) Religious
exercises are not acceptable to God, if they are performed
when we are in wrath; envy, malice, and lack of charity, are
sins so displeasing to God, that nothing pleases him which
comes from a heart wherein they are predominant, 1 Timothy
2:8. Prayers made in wrath are written in gall, Isaiah 1:15;
63:4. (3.) Love or charity is so much better than all
burnt-offerings and sacrifice, that God will have
reconciliation made with an offended brother before the gift
be offered; he is content to stay for the gift, rather than
have it offered while we are under guilt and engaged in a
quarrel. (4.) Though we are unfitted for communion with God,
by a continual quarrel with a brother, yet that can be no
excuse for the omission or neglect of our duty: "Leave there
thy gift before the altar, lest otherwise, when thou has
gone away, thou be tempted not to come again." Many give
this as a reason why they do not come to church or to the
communion, because they are at variance with some neighbor;
and whose fault is that? One sin will never excuse another,
but will rather double the guilt. Want of charity cannot
justify the want of piety. The difficulty is easily got
over; those who have wronged us, we must forgive; and those
whom we have wronged, we must make satisfaction to, or at
least make a tender of it, and desire a renewal of the
friendship, so that if reconciliation be not made, it may
not be our fault; and then come, come and welcome, come and
offer thy gift, and it shall be accepted. Therefore we must
not let the sun go down upon our wrath any day, because we
must go to prayer before we go to sleep; much less let the
sun rise upon our wrath on a Sabbath-day, because it is a
day of prayer.
2. Because, till this be done, we
lie exposed to much danger, verses 25, 26. It is at our peril
if we do not labor after an agreement, and that quickly,
upon two accounts:
(1.) Upon a temporal account. If the
offence we have done to our brother, in his body, goods, or
reputation, be such as will bear action, in which he may
recover considerable damages, it is our wisdom, and it is
our duty to our family, to prevent that by a humble
submission and a just and peaceable satisfaction; lest
otherwise he recover it by law, and put us to the extremity
of a prison. In such a case it is better to compound and
make the best terms we can, than to stand it out; for it is
in vain to contend with the law, and there is danger of our
being crushed by it. Many ruin their estates by an obstinate
persisting in the offences they have given, which would soon
have been pacified by a little yielding at first. Solomon's
advice in case of surety is, Go, humble thyself, and so
secure and deliver thyself, Proverbs 6:1-5. It is good to
agree, for the law is costly. Though we must be merciful to
those we have advantage against, yet we must be just to
those that have advantage against us, as far as we are able.
"Agree, and compound with your adversary quickly, lest he
be exasperated by thy stubbornness, and provoked to insist
upon the utmost demand, and will not make thee the abatement
which at first he would have made." A prison is an
uncomfortable place to those who are brought to it by their
own pride and prodigality, their own willfulness and folly.
(2.) Upon a spiritual account. "Go,
and be reconciled to thy brother, be just to him, be
friendly with him, because while the quarrel continues, as
thou art unfit to bring thy gift to the altar, unfit to come
to the table of the Lord, so thou art unfit to die: if thou
persist in this sin, there is danger lest thou be suddenly
snatched away by the wrath of God, whose judgment thou canst
not escape nor except against; and if that iniquity be laid
to thy charge, thou art undone for ever." Hell is a prison
for all that live and die in malice and un-charitableness,
for all that are contentious (Romans 2:8), and out of that
prison there is no rescue, no redemption, no escape, to
eternity.
This is very applicable to the great
business of our reconciliation to God through Christ; Agree
with him quickly, whilst thou art in the way. Note, [1.] The
great God is an Adversary to all sinners, Antidikos--a
law-adversary; he has a controversy with them, an action
against them. [2.] It is our concern to agree with him, to
acquaint ourselves with him, that we may be at peace, Job
22:21; 2 Corinthians 5:20. [3.] It is our wisdom to do this
quickly, while we are in the way. While we are alive, we are
in the way; after death, it will be too late to do it;
therefore give not sleep to thine eyes till it be done. [4.]
They who continue in a state of enmity to God, are
continually exposed to the arrests of his justice, and the
most dreadful instances of his wrath. Christ is the Judge,
to whom impenitent sinners will be delivered; for all
judgment is committed to the Son; he that was rejected as a
Savior, cannot be escaped as a Judge, Revelation 6:16, 17.
It is a fearful thing to be thus turned over to the Lord
Jesus, when the Lamb shall become the Lion. Angels are the
officers to whom Christ will deliver them (Chapter 13:41,
42); devils are so too, having the power of death as
executioners to all unbelievers, Hebrews 2:14. Hell is the
prison, into which those will be cast that continue in a
state of enmity to God, 2 Peter 2:4. [5.] Damned sinners
must remain in it to eternity; they shall not depart till
they have paid the uttermost farthing, and that will not be
to the utmost ages of eternity: divine justice will be for
ever in the satisfying, but never satisfied.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:27-32 ––
27 Ye have heard
that it was said by them of old time, Thou shalt not commit
adultery: 28 But I say unto you, That whosoever looketh on a
woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her
already in his heart. 29 And if thy right eye offend thee,
pluck it out, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable
for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not that
thy whole body should be cast into hell. 30 And if thy right
hand offend thee, cut it off, and cast it from thee: for it
is profitable for thee that one of thy members should
perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into
hell. 31 It hath been said, Whosoever shall put away his
wife, let him give her a writing of divorcement: 32 But I
say unto you, That whosoever shall put away his wife, saving
for the cause of fornication, causes her to commit adultery:
and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced commits
adultery.
We have here an exposition of the
seventh commandment, given us by the same hand that made the
law, and therefore was fittest to be the interpreter of it:
it is the law against uncleanness, which fitly follows upon
the former; that laid a restraint upon sinful passions, this
upon sinful appetites, both which ought always to be under
the government of reason and conscience, and if indulged,
are equally pernicious.
I. The command is here laid down (verse 27),
You shall not
commit adultery; which includes a prohibition of all other
acts of uncleanness, and the desire of them: but the
Pharisees, in their expositions of this command, made it to
extend no further than the act of adultery, suggesting, that
if the iniquity was only regarded in the heart, and went no
further, God could not hear it, would not regard it (Psalm
64:18), and therefore they thought it enough to be able to
say that they were no adulterers, Luke 18:11.
II. It is here explained in the
strictness of it, in three things, which would seem new and
strange to those who had been always governed by the
tradition of the elders, and took all for oracular that they
taught.
1. We are here taught, that there is
such a thing as heart-adultery, adulterous thoughts and
dispositions, which never proceed to the act of adultery or
fornication; and perhaps the defilement which these give to
the soul, that is here so clearly asserted, was not only
included in the seventh commandment, but was signified and
intended in many of those ceremonial pollutions under the
law, for which they were to wash their clothes, and bathe
their flesh in water. Whosoever looks on a woman (not only
another man's wife, as some would have it, but any woman),
to lust after her, has committed adultery with her in his
heart, verse 28. This command forbids not only the acts of
fornication and adultery, but, (1.) All appetites to them,
all lusting after the forbidden object; this is the
beginning of the sin, lust conceiving (James 1:15); it is a
bad step towards the sin; and where the lust is dwelt upon
and approved, and the wanton desire is rolled under the
tongue as a sweet morsel, it is the commission of sin, as
far as the heart can do it; there wants nothing but
convenient opportunity for the sin itself. Adultera mens est--The
mind is debauched. Ovid. Lust is conscience baffled or
biased: biased, if it say nothing against the sin; baffled,
if it prevail not in what is says. (2.) All approaches
toward them; feeding the eye with the sight of the forbidden
fruit; not only looking for that end, that I may lust; but
looking till I do lust, or looking to gratify the lust,
where further satisfaction cannot be obtained. The eye is
both the inlet and outlet of a great deal of wickedness of
this kind, witness Joseph's mistress (Genesis 39:7), Samson
(Judges 16:1), David, 2 Samuel 11:2. We read the eyes full
of adultery, that cannot cease from sin, 2 Peter 2:14. What
need have we, therefore, with holy Job, to make a covenant
with our eyes, to make this bargain with them that they
should have the pleasure of beholding the light of the sun
and the works of God, provided they would never fasten or
dwell upon any thing that might occasion impure imaginations
or desires; and under this penalty, that if they did, they
must smart for it in penitential tears! Job 31:1. What have
we the covering of the eyes for, but to restrain corrupt
glances, and to keep out of their defiling impressions? This
forbids also the using of any other of our senses to stir up
lust. If ensnaring looks are forbidden fruit, much more
unclean discourses, and wanton dalliances, the fuel and
bellows of this hellish fire. These precepts are hedges
about the law of heart-purity, verse 8. And if looking be
lust, they who dress and deck, and expose themselves, with
design to be looked at and lusted after (like Jezebel, that
painted her face and tired her head, and looked out at the
window) are no less guilty. Men sin, but devils tempt to
sin.
2. That such looks and such
dalliances are so very dangerous and destructive to the
soul, that it is better to lose the eye and the hand that
thus offend then to give way to the sin, and perish
eternally in it. This lesson is here taught us, verses 29,
30. Corrupt nature would soon object against the prohibition
of heart-adultery, that it is impossible to governed by it;
"It is a hard saying, who can bear it? Flesh and blood
cannot but look with pleasure upon a beautiful woman; and it
is impossible to forbear lusting after and dallying with
such an object." Such pretences as these will scarcely be
overcome by reason, and therefore must be argued against
with the terrors of the Lord, and so they are here argued
against.
(1.) It is a severe operation that
is here prescribed for the preventing of these fleshly
lusts. If thy right eye offend thee, or cause thee to
offend, by wanton glances, or wanton gazing upon forbidden
objects; if thy right hand off end thee, or cause thee to
offend, by wanton dalliances; and if it were indeed
impossible, as is pretended, to govern the eye and the hand,
and they have been so accustomed to these wicked practices,
that they will not be withheld from them; if there be no
other way to restrain them (which, blessed be God, through
his grace, there is), it were better for us to pluck out the
eye, and cut off the hand, though the right eye, and right
hand, the more honorable and useful, than to indulge them in
sin to the ruin of the soul. And if this must be submitted
to, at the thought of which nature startles, much more must
we resolve to keep under the body, and to bring it into
subjection; to live a life of mortification and self-denial;
to keep a constant watch over our own hearts, and to
suppress the first rising of lust and corruption there; to
avoid the occasions of sin, to resist the beginnings of it,
and to decline the company of those who will be a snare to
us, though ever so pleasing; to keep out of harm's way, and
abridge ourselves in the use of lawful things, when we find
them temptations to us; and to seek unto God for his grace,
and depend upon that grace daily, and so to walk in the
Spirit, as that we may not fulfill the lusts of the flesh;
and this will be as effectual as cutting off a right hand or
pulling out a right eye; and perhaps as much against the
grain to flesh and blood; it is the destruction of the old
man.
(2.) It is a startling argument that
is made use of to enforce this prescription (verse 29), and
it is repeated in the same words (verse 30), because we are
loath to hear such rough things; Isaiah 30:10. It is
profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish,
though it be an eye or a hand, which can be worse spared,
and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell. Note,
[1.] It is not unbecoming a minister of the gospel to preach
of hell and damnation; nay, he must do it, for Christ
himself did it; and we are unfaithful to our trust, if we
give not warning of the wrath to come. [2.] There are some
sins from which we need to be saved with fear, particularly
fleshly lusts, which are such natural brute beasts as cannot
be checked, but by being frightened; cannot be kept from a
forbidden tree, but by cherubim, with a flaming sword. [3.]
When we are tempted to think it hard to deny ourselves, and
to crucify fleshly lusts, we ought to consider how much
harder it will be to lie for ever in the lake that burns
with fire and brimstone; those do not know or do not believe
what hell is, that will rather venture their eternal ruin in
those flames, than deny themselves the gratification of a
base and brutish lust. [4.] In hell there will be torments
for the body; the whole body will be cast into hell, and
there will be torment in every part of it; so that if we
have a care of our own bodies, we shall possess them in
sanctification and honor, and not in the lusts of
uncleanness. [5.] Even those duties that are most unpleasant
to flesh and blood, are profitable for us; and our Master
requires nothing from us but what he knows to be for our
advantage.
3. That men's divorcing of their
wives upon dislike, or for any other cause except adultery,
however tolerated and practiced among the Jews, was a
violation of the seventh commandment, as it opened a door to
adultery, verses 31, 32. Here observe,
(1.) How the matter now stood with
reference to divorce. It hath been said (he does not say as
before, It hath been said by them of old time, because this
was not a precept, as those were, though the Pharisees were
willing so to understand it, Chapter 19:7, but only a
permission), "Whosoever shall put away his wife, let him
give her a bill of divorce; let him not think to do it by
word of mouth, when he is in a passion; but let him do it
deliberately, by a legal instrument in writing, attested by
witnesses; if he will dissolve the matrimonial bond, let him
do it solemnly." Thus the law had prevented rash and hasty
divorces; and perhaps at first, when writing was not so
common among the Jews, that made divorces rare things; but
in process of time it became very common, and this direction
of how to do it, when there was just cause for it, was
construed into a permission of it for any cause, Chapter
19:3.
(2.) How this matter was rectified
and amended by our Savior. He reduced the ordinance of
marriage to its primitive institution: They two shall be one
flesh, not to be easily separated, and therefore divorce is
not to be allowed, except in case of adultery, which breaks
the marriage covenant; but he that puts away his wife upon
any other pretence, causes her to commit adultery, and him
also that shall marry her when she is thus divorced. Note,
Those who lead others into temptation to sin, or leave them
in it, or expose them to it, make themselves guilty of their
sin, and will be accountable for it. This is one way of
being partaker with adulterers Psalm 50:18.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:33-37 ––
33 Again, ye have
heard that it hath been said by them of old time, Thou shalt
not forswear thyself, but shalt perform unto the Lord thine
oaths: 34 But I say unto you, Swear not at all; neither by
heaven; for it is God's throne: 35 Nor by the earth; for it
is his footstool: neither by Jerusalem; for it is the city
of the great King. 36 Neither shalt thou swear by thy head,
because thou canst not make one hair white or black. 37 But
let your communication be, Yea, yea; Nay, nay: for
whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil.
We have here an exposition of the
third commandment, which we are the more concerned right to
understand, because it is particularly said, that God will
not hold him guiltless, however he may hold himself, who
breaks this commandment, by taking the name of the Lord in
vain. Now as to this command,
I. It is agreed on all hands that it
forbids perjury, forswearing, and the violation of oaths and
vows, verse 33. This was said to them of old time, and is
the true intent and meaning of the third commandment. You shall not use, or take up, the name of God (as we do by an
oath) in vain, or unto vanity, or a lie. He hath not lift up
his soul unto vanity, is expounded in the next words, nor
sworn deceitfully, Psalm 24:4. Perjury is a sin condemned by
the light of nature, as a complication of impiety toward God
and injustice toward man, and as rendering a man highly
obnoxious to the divine wrath, which was always judged to
follow so infallibly upon that sin, that the forms of
swearing were commonly turned into execrations or
imprecations; as that, God do so to me, and more also; and
with us, So help me God; wishing I may never have any help
from God, if I swear falsely. Thus, by the consent of
nations, have men cursed themselves, not doubting but that
God would curse them, if they lied against the truth then,
when they solemnly called God to witness to it.
It is added, from some other
scriptures, but shall perform unto the Lord your oaths
(Numbers 30:2); which may be meant, either, 1. Of those
promises to which God is a party, vows made to God; these
must be punctually paid (Ecclesiastes verses 4, 5): or, 2. Of
those promises made to our brethren, to which God was a
Witness, he being appealed to concerning our sincerity;
these must be performed to the Lord, with an eye to him, and
for his sake: for to him, by ratifying the promises with an
oath, we have made ourselves debtors; and if we break a
promise so ratified, we have not lied unto men only, but
unto God.
II. It is here added, that the
commandment does not only forbid false swearing, but all
rash, unnecessary swearing: Swear not at all, verse 34;
Compare James 5:12. Not that all swearing is sinful; so far
from that, if rightly done, it is a part of religious
worship, and we in it give unto God the glory due to his
name. See Deuteronomy 6:13; 10:20; Isaiah 45:23; Jeremiah
4:2. We find Paul confirming what he said by such
solemnities (2 Corinthians 1:23), when there was a necessity
for it. In swearing, we pawn the truth of something known,
to confirm the truth of something doubtful or unknown; we
appeal to a greater knowledge, to a higher court, and
imprecate the vengeance of a righteous Judge, if we swear
deceitfully.
Now the mind of Christ in this
matter is,
1. That we must not swear at all,
but when we are duly called to it, and justice or charity to
our brother, or respect to the commonwealth, make it
necessary for the end of strife (Hebrews 6:16), of which
necessity the civil magistrate is ordinarily to be the
judge. We may be sworn, but we must now swear; we may be
adjured, and so obliged to it, but we must not thrust
ourselves upon it for our own worldly advantage.
2. That we must not swear lightly
and irreverently, in common discourse: it is a very great
sin to make a ludicrous appeal to the glorious Majesty of
heaven, which, being a sacred thing, ought always to be very
serious: it is a gross profanation of God's holy name, and
of one of the holy things which the children of Israel
sanctify to the Lord: it is a sin that has no cloak, no
excuse for it, and therefore a sign of a graceless heart, in
which enmity to God reigns: Your enemies take your name in
vain.
3. That we must in a special manner
avoid promissory oaths, of which Christ more particularly
speaks here, for they are oaths that are to be performed.
The influence of an affirmative oath immediately ceases,
when we have faithfully discovered the truth, and the whole
truth; but a promissory oath binds so long, and may be so
many ways broken, by the surprise as well as strength of a
temptation, that it is not to be used but upon great
necessity: the frequent requiring and using of oaths, is a
reflection upon Christians, who should be of such
acknowledged fidelity, as that their sober words should be
as sacred as their solemn oaths.
4. That we must not swear by any
other creature. It should seem there were some, who, in
civility (as they thought) to the name of God, would not
make use of that in swearing, but would swear by heaven or
earth, & context. This Christ forbids here (verse 34) and
shows that there is nothing we can swear by, but it is some
way or other related to God, who is the Fountain of all
beings, and therefore that it is as dangerous to swear by
them, as it is to swear by God himself: it is the verity of
the creature that is laid at stake; now that cannot be an
instrument of testimony, but as it has regard to God, who is
the summum verum--the chief Truth. As for instance,
(1.) Swear not by the heaven; "As
sure as there is a heaven, this is true;" for it is God's
throne, where he resides, and in a particular manner
manifests his glory, as a Prince upon his throne: this being
the inseparable dignity of the upper world, you cannot swear
by heaven, but you swear by God himself.
(2.) Nor by the earth, for it is his
footstool. He governs the motions of this lower world; as he
rules in heaven, so he rules over the earth; and though
under his feet, yet it is also under his eye and care, and
stands in relation to him as his, Psalm 24:1. The earth is
the Lord's; so that in swearing by it, you swear by its
Owner.
(3.) Neither by Jerusalem, a place
for which the Jews had such a veneration, that they could
not speak of any thing more sacred to swear by; but beside
the common reference Jerusalem has to God, as part of the
earth, it is in special relation to him, for it is the city
of the great King (Psalm 48:2), the city of God (Psalm 46:4), he is therefore interested in it, and in every oath
taken by it.
(4.) "Neither shalt thou swear by
the head; though it be near thee, and an essential part of
thee, yet it is more God's than thine; for he made it, and
formed all the springs and powers of it; whereas thou
thyself canst not, from any natural intrinsic influence,
change the color of one hair, so as to make it white or
black; so that thou canst not swear by thy head, but thou
swear by him who is the Life of thy head, and the Lifter up
of it." Psalm 3:3.
5. That therefore in all our
communications we must content ourselves with, Yea, yea, and
nay, nay, verse 37. In ordinary discourse, if we affirm a
thing, let us only say, Yea, it is so; and, if need be, to
evidence our assurance of a thing, we may double it, and
say, Yea, yea, indeed it is so: Verily, verily, was our
Savior's yea, yea. So if we deny a thing, let is suffice to
say, No; or if it be requisite, to repeat the denial, and
say, No, no; and if our fidelity be known, that will suffice
to gain us credit; and if it be questioned, to back what we
say with swearing and cursing, is but to render it more
suspicious. They who can swallow a profane oath, will not
strain at a lie. It is a pity that this, which Christ puts
in the mouths of all his disciples, should be fastened, as a
name of reproach, upon a sect faulty enough other ways, when
(as Dr. Hammond says) we are not forbidden any more than yea
and nay, but are in a manner directed to the use of that.
The reason is observable; For
whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil, though it do
not amount to the iniquity of an oath. It comes ek tou
Diabolou; so an ancient copy has it: it comes from the
Devil, the evil one; it comes from the corruption of men's
nature, from passion and vehemence; from a reigning vanity
in the mind, and a contempt of sacred things: it comes from
that deceitfulness which is in men, All men are liars;
therefore men use these protestations, because they are
distrustful one of another, and think they cannot be
believed without them. Note, Christians should, for the
credit of their religion, avoid not only that which is in
itself evil, but that which cometh of evil, and has the
appearance of it. That may be suspected as a bad thing,
which comes from a bad cause. An oath is physic, which
supposes a disease.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:38-42 ––
38 Ye have heard
that it hath been said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
tooth: 39 But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but
whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him
the other also. 40 And if any man will sue thee at the law,
and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also. 41 And
whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain.
42 Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would
borrow of thee turn not thou away.
In these verses the law of
retaliation is expounded, and in a manner repealed. Observe,
I. What the Old-Testament permission
was, in case of injury; and here the expression is only, Ye
have heard that is has been said; not, as before, concerning
the commands of the decalogue, that it has been said by, or
to, them of old time. It was a command, that every one
should of necessity require such satisfaction; but they
might lawfully insist upon it, if they pleased; an eye for
an eye, and a tooth for a tooth. This we find, Exodus 21:24;
Leviticus 24:20; Deuteronomy 19:21; in all which places it
is appointed to be done by the magistrate, who bears not the
sword in vain, but is the minister of God, an avenger to
execute wrath, Romans 8:4. It was a direction to the judges
of the Jewish nation what punishment to inflict in case of
maims, for terror to such as would do mischief on the one
hand, and for a restraint to such as have mischief done to
them on the other hand, that they may not insist on a
greater punishment than is proper: it is not a life for an
eye, nor a limb for a tooth, but observe a proportion; and
it is intimated (Numbers 35:31), that the forfeiture in this
case might be redeemed with money; for when it is provided
that no ransom shall be taken for the life of a murderer, it
is supposed that for maims a pecuniary satisfaction was
allowed.
But some of the Jewish teachers, who
were not the most compassionate men in the world, insisted
upon it as necessary that such revenge should be taken, even
by private persons themselves, and that there was no room
left for remission, or the acceptance of satisfaction. Even
now, when they were under the government of the Roman
magistrates, and consequently the judicial law fell to the
ground of course, yet they were still zealous for any thing
that looked harsh and severe.
Now, so far this is in force with
us, as a direction to magistrates, to use the sword of
justice according to the good and wholesome laws of the
land, for the terror of evil-doers, and the vindication of
the oppressed. That judge neither feared God nor regarded
man, who would not avenge the poor widow of her adversary,
Luke 18:2, 3. And it is in force as a rule to lawgivers, to
provide accordingly, and wisely to apportion punishments to
crimes, for the restraint of rapine and violence, and the
protection of innocence.
II. What the New-Testament precept
is, as to the complainant himself, his duty is, to forgive
the injury as done to himself, and no further to insist upon
the punishment of it than is necessary to the public good:
and this precept is consonant to the meekness of Christ, and
the gentleness of his yoke.
Two things Christ teaches us here:
1. We must not be revengeful (verse
39); I say unto you, that ye resist not evil;--the evil
person that is injurious to you. The resisting of any ill
attempt upon us, is here as generally and expressly
forbidden, as the resisting of the higher powers is (Romans
13:2); and yet this does not repeal the law of
self-preservation, and the care we are to take of our
families; we may avoid evil, and may resist it, so far as is
necessary to our own security; but we must not render evil
for evil, must not bear a grudge, nor avenge ourselves, nor
study to be even with those that have treated us unkindly,
but we must go beyond them by forgiving them, Proverbs
20:22; 24:29; 25:21, 22; Romans 12:7. The law of retaliation
must be made consistent with the law of love: nor, if any
have injured us, is our recompense in our own hands, but in
the hands of God, to whose wrath we must give place; and
sometimes in the hands of his vice regents, where it is
necessary for the preservation of the public peace; but it
will not justify us in hurting our brother to say that he
began, for it is the second blow that makes the quarrel; and
when we were injured, we had an opportunity not to justify
our injuring him, but to show ourselves the true disciples
of Christ, by forgiving him.
Three things our Savior specifies,
to show that Christians must patiently yield to those who
bear hard upon them, rather than contend; and these include
others.
(1.) A blow on the cheek, which is
an injury to me in my body; "Whosoever shall smite thee on
thy right cheek," which is not only a hurt, but an affront
and indignity (2 Corinthians 11:20), if a man in anger or
scorn thus abuse thee, "turn to him the other cheek;" that
is, "instead of avenging that injury, prepare for another,
and bear it patiently: give not the rude man as good as he
brings; do not challenge him, nor enter an action against
him; if it be necessary to the public peace that he be bound
to his good behavior, leave that to the magistrate; but for
your own part, it will ordinarily be the wisest course to
pass it by, and take no further notice of it: there are no
bones broken, no great harm done, forgive it and forget it;
and if proud fools think the worse of thee, and laugh at
thee for it, all wise men will value and honor thee for it,
as a follower of the blessed Jesus, who, though he was the
Judge of Israel, did not smite those who smote him on the
cheek," Micah v. 1. Though this may perhaps, with some base
spirits, expose us to the like affront another time, and so
it is, in effect, to turn the other cheek, yet let not that
disturb us, but let us trust God and his providence to
protect us in the way of our duty. Perhaps, the forgiving of
one injury may prevent another, when the avenging of it
would but draw on another; some will be overcome by
submission, who by resistance would but be the more
exasperated, Proverbs 25:22. However, our recompense is in
Christ's hands, who will reward us with eternal glory for
the shame we thus patiently endure; and though it be not
directly inflicted, it if be quietly borne for conscience'
sake, and in conformity to Christ's example, it shall be put
upon the score of suffering for Christ.
(2.) The loss of a coat, which is a
wrong to me in my estate (verse 40); If any man will sue
thee at the law, and take away thy coat. It is a hard case.
Note, It is common for legal processes to be made use of for
the doing of greatest injuries. Though judges be just and
circumspect, yet it is possible for bad men who make no
conscience of oaths and forgeries, by course of law to force
off the coat from a man's back. Marvel not at the matter
(Ecclesiastes 5:8), but, in such a case, rather than go to
the law by way of revenge, rather than exhibit a cross bill,
or stand out to the utmost, in defense of that which is thy
undoubted right, let him even take thy cloak also. If the
matter be small, which we may lose without an considerable
damage to our families, it is good to submit to it for
peace' sake. "It will not cost thee so much to buy another
cloak, as it will cost thee by course of law to recover
that; and therefore unless thou canst get it again by fair
means, it is better to let him take it."
(3.) The going a mile by constraint,
which is a wrong to me in my liberty (verse 41); "Whosoever
shall compel thee to go a mile, to run an errand for him, or
to wait upon him, grudge not at it, but go with him two
miles rather than fall out with him:" say not, "I would do
it, if I were not compelled to it, but I hate to be forced;"
rather say, "Therefore I will do it, for otherwise there
will be a quarrel;" and it is better to serve him, than to
serve thy own lusts of pride and revenge. Some give this
sense of it: The Jews taught that the disciples of the wise,
and the students of the law, were not to be pressed, as
others might, by the king's officers, to travel upon the
public service; but Christ will not have his disciples to
insist upon this privilege, but to comply rather than offend
the government. The sum of all is, that Christians must not
be litigious; small injuries must be submitted to, and no
notice taken of them; and if the injury be such as requires
us to seek reparation, it must be for a good end, and
without thought of revenge: though we must not invite
injuries, yet we must meet them cheerfully in the way of
duty, and make the best of them. If any say, Flesh and blood
cannot pass by such an affront, let them remember, that
flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdom of God.
2. We must be charitable and
beneficent (verse 42); must not only do no hurt to our
Neighbors, but labor to do them all the good we can. (1.) We
must be ready to give; "Give to him that asks thee. If thou
has an ability, look upon the request of the poor as giving
thee an opportunity for the duty of almsgiving." When a real
object of charity presents itself, we should give at the
first word: Give a portion to seven, and also to eight; yet
the affairs of our charity must be guided with discretion
(Psalm 112:5), lest we give that to the idle and unworthy,
which should be given to those that are necessitous, and
deserve well. What God says to us, we should be ready to say
to our poor brethren, Ask, and it shall be given you. (2.)
We must be ready to lend. This is sometimes as great a piece
of charity as giving; as it not only relieves the present
exigency, but obliges the borrower to providence, industry,
and honesty; and therefore, "From him that would borrow of
thee something to live on, or something to trade on, turn
not thou away: shun not those that thou knowest have such a
request to make of thee, nor contrive excuses to shake them
off." Be easy of access to him that would borrow: though he
be bashful, and have not confidence to make known his case
and beg the favor, yet thou knowest both his need and his
desire, and therefore offer him the kindness. Exorabor
antequam rogor; honestis precibus occuram--I will be
prevailed on before I am entreated; I will anticipate the
becoming petition. Seneca, De Vitâ Beatâ. It becomes us to
be thus forward in acts of kindness, for before we call, God
hears us, and prevents us with the blessings of his
goodness.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 4:43-48 ––
43 Ye have heard
that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbor, and
hate thine enemy. 44 But I say unto you, Love your enemies,
bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you,
and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute
you; 45 That ye may be the children of your Father which is
in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on
the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. 46
For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? do
not even the publicans the same? 47 And if ye salute your
brethren only, what do ye more than others? do not even the
publicans so? 48 Be ye therefore perfect, even as your
Father which is in heaven is perfect.
We have here, lastly, an exposition
of that great fundamental law of the second table, Thou
shall love thy neighbor, which was the fulfilling of the
law.
I. See here how this law was
corrupted by the comments of the Jewish teachers, verse 43.
God said, Thou shall love thy neighbor; and by neighbor they
understood those only of their own country, nation, and
religion; and those only that they were pleased to look upon
as their friends: yet this was not the worst; from this
command, Thou shall love thy neighbor, they were willing to
infer what God never designed; You shall hate your enemy;
and they looked upon whom they pleased as their enemies,
thus making void the great command of God by their
traditions, though there were express laws to the contrary,
Exodus 23:4, 5; Deuteronomy 23:7. Thou shalt not abhor an
Edomite, nor an Egyptian, though these nations had been as
much enemies to Israel as any whatsoever. It was true, God
appointed them to destroy the seven devoted nations of
Canaan, and not to make leagues with them; but there was a
particular reason for it--to make room for Israel, and that
they might not be snares to them; but it was very
ill-natured from hence to infer, that they must hate all
their enemies; yet the moral philosophy of the heathen then
allowed this. It is Cicero's rule, Nemini nocere nisi prius
lacessitum injuriâ--To injure no one, unless previously
injured. De Offic. See how willing corrupt passions are to
fetch countenance from the word of God, and to take occasion
by the commandment to justify themselves.
II. See how it is cleared by the
command of the Lord Jesus, who teaches us another lesson:
"But I say unto you, I, who come to be the great
Peace-Maker, the general Reconciler, who loved you when you
were strangers and enemies, I say, Love your enemies," verse
44. Though men are ever so bad themselves, and carry it ever
so basely towards us, yet that does not discharge us from
the great debt we owe them, of love to our kind, love to our
kin. We cannot but find ourselves very prone to wish the
hurt, or at least very coldly to desire the good, of those
that hate us, and have been abusive to us; but that which is
at the bottom hereof is a root of bitterness, which must be
plucked up, and a remnant of corrupt nature which grace must
conquer. Note, it is the great duty of Christians to love
their enemies; we cannot have complacency in one that is
openly wicked and profane, nor put a confidence in one that
we know to be deceitful; nor are we to love all alike; but
we must pay respect to the human nature, and so far honor
all men: we must take notice, with pleasure, of that even in
our enemies which is amiable and commendable; ingenuousness,
good temper, learning, and moral virtue, kindness to others,
profession of religion, & context., and love that, though
they are our enemies. We must have a compassion for them,
and a good will toward them. We are here told,
1. That we must speak well of them:
Bless them that curse you. When we speak to them, we must
answer their reviling with courteous and friendly words, and
not render railing for railing; behind their backs we must
commend that in them which is commendable, and when we have
said all the good we can of them, not be forward to say any
thing more. See 1 Peter 3:9. They, in whose tongues is the
law of kindness, can give good words to those who give bad
words to them.
2. That we must do well to them: "Do
good to them that hate you, and that will be a better proof
of love than good words. Be ready to do them all the real
kindness that you can, and glad of an opportunity to do it,
in their bodies, estates, names, families; and especially to
do good to their souls." It was said of Archbishop Cranmer,
that the way to make him a friend was to do him an ill turn;
so many did he serve who had disobliged him.
3. We must pray for them: Pray for
them that despitefully use you, and persecute you. Note,
(1.) It is no new thing for the most excellent saints to be
hated, and cursed, and persecuted, and despitefully used, by
wicked people; Christ himself was so treated. (2.) That when
at any time we meet with such usage, we have an opportunity
of showing our conformity both to the precept and to the
example of Christ, by praying for them who thus abuse us. If
we cannot otherwise testify our love to them, yet this way
we may without ostentation, and it is such a way as surely
we durst not dissemble in. We must pray that God will
forgive them, that they may never fare the worse for any
thing they have done against us, and that he would make them
to be at peace with us; and this is one way of making them
so. Plutarch, in his Laconic Apophthegms, has this of Aristo;
when one commended Cleomenes's saying, who, being asked what
a good king should do, replied, Tous men philous euergetein,
tous de echthrous kakos poiein--Good turns to his friends,
and evil to his enemies; he said, How much better is it tous
men philous euergetein, tous de echthrous philous poiein--to
do good to our friends, and make friends of our enemies.
This is heaping coals of fire on their heads.
Two reasons are here given to
enforce this command (which sounds so harsh) of loving our
enemies. We must do it,
[1.] That we may be like God our
Father; "that ye may be, may approve yourselves to be, the
children of your Father which is in heaven." Can we write a
better copy? It is a copy in which love to the worst of
enemies is reconciled to, and consistent with, infinite
purity and holiness. God makes his sun to rise, and sends
rain, on the just and the unjust, verse 45. Note, First,
Sunshine and rain are great blessings to the world, and they
come from God. It is his sun that shines, and the rain is
sent by him. They do not come of course, or by chance, but
from God. Secondly, Common mercies must be valued as
instances and proofs of the goodness of God, who in them
shows himself a bountiful Benefactor to the world of
mankind, who would be very miserable without these favors,
and are utterly unworthy of the least of them. Thirdly,
These gifts of common providence are dispensed indifferently
to good and evil, just and unjust; so that we cannot know
love and hatred by what is before us, but by what is within
us; not by the shining of the sun on our heads, but by the
rising of the Sun of Righteousness in our hearts. Fourthly,
The worst of men partake of the comforts of this life in
common with others, though they abuse them, and fight
against God with his own weapons; which is an amazing
instance of God's patience and bounty. It was but once that
God forbade his sun to shine on the Egyptians, when the
Israelites had light in their dwellings; God could make such
a distinction every day. Fifthly, The gifts of God's bounty
to wicked men that are in rebellion against him, teach us to
do good to those that hate us; especially considering, that
though there is in us a carnal mind which is enmity to God,
yet we share in his bounty. Sixthly, Those only will be
accepted as the children of God, who study to resemble him,
particularly in his goodness.
[2.] That we may herein do more than
others, verse 46, 47. First, Publicans love their friends.
Nature inclines them to it; interest directs them to it. To
do good to them who do good to us, is a common piece of
humanity, which even those whom the Jews hated and despised
could give as good proofs as of the best of them. The
publicans were men of no good fame, yet they were grateful
to such as had helped them to their places, and courteous to
those they had a dependence upon; and shall we be no better
than they? In doing this we serve ourselves and consult our
own advantage; and what reward can we expect for that,
unless a regard to God, and a sense of duty, carrying us
further than our natural inclination and worldly interest?
Secondly, We must therefore love our enemies, that we may
exceed them. If we must go beyond scribes and Pharisees,
much more beyond publicans. Note, Christianity is something
more than humanity. It is a serious question, and which we
should frequently put to ourselves, "What do we more than
others? What excelling thing do we do? We know more than
others; we talk more of the things of God than others; we
profess, and have promised, more than others; God has done
more for us, and therefore justly expects more from us than
from others; the glory of God is more concerned in us than
in others; but what do we more than others? Wherein do we
live above the rate of the children of this world? Are we
not carnal, and do we not walk as men, below the character
of Christians? In this especially we must do more than
others, that while every one will render good for good, we
must render good for evil; and this will speak a nobler
principle, and is consonant to a higher rule, than the most
of men act by. Others salute their brethren, they embrace
those of their own party, and way, and opinion; but we must
not so confine our respect, but love our enemies, otherwise
what reward have we? We cannot expect the reward of
Christians, if we rise no higher than the virtue of
publicans." Note, Those who promise themselves a reward
above others must study to do more than others.
Lastly, Our Savior concludes this
subject with this exhortation (verse 48), Be ye therefore
perfect, as your Father which is in heaven is perfect. Which
may be understood, 1. In general, including all those things
wherein we must be followers of God as dear children. Note,
It is the duty of Christians to desire, and aim at, and
press toward a perfection in grace and holiness, Philippians
3:12-14. And therein we must study to conform ourselves to
the example of our heavenly Father, 1 Peter 1:15, 16. Or, 2.
In this particular before mentioned, of doing good to our
enemies; see Luke 6:36. It is God's perfection to forgive
injuries and to entertain strangers, and to do good to the
evil and unthankful, and it will be ours to be like him. We
that owe so much, that owe our all, to the divine bounty,
ought to copy it out as well as we can.
Friday Study Ministries
www.FridayStudy.org
Ron@FridayStudy.org
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