Chapter 1:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Luke Acts
John 1
Complete Concise
Verses 1-5
Austin says (
de Civitate Dei, lib. 10, cap. 29) that his
friend Simplicius told him he had heard a Platonic philosopher say that these
first verses of St. John's gospel were
worthy to be written in letters of
gold. The learned Francis Junius, in the account he gives of his own life,
tells how he was in his youth infected with loose notions in religion, and by
the grace of God was wonderfully recovered by reading accidentally these verses
in a bible which his father had designedly laid in his way. He says that he
observed such a divinity in the argument, such an authority and majesty in the
style, that his flesh trembled, and he was struck with such amazement that for a
whole day he scarcely knew where he was or what he did; and thence he dates the
beginning of his being religious. Let us enquire what there is in those strong
lines. The evangelist here lays down the great truth he is to prove, that Jesus
Christ is God, one with the Father. Observe,
I. Of whom he speaks
The Word
ho
logos. This is an idiom peculiar to John's writings. See 1 Jn. 1:1;
5:7; Rev. 19:13. Yet some think that Christ is meant by
the Word in Acts
20:32; Heb. 4:12; Lu. 1:2. The Chaldee paraphrase very frequently calls the
Messiah
Memrathe Word of Jehovah, and speaks of many things in the Old
Testament, said to be done by
the Lord, as done by that
Word of the
Lord. Even the vulgar Jews were taught that the
Word of God was the
same with God. The evangelist, in the close of his discourse (v. 18), plainly
tells us why he calls Christ
the Wordbecause he is the only begotten Son,
who is in the bosom of the Father, and has declared him. Word is two-fold:
logos
endiathetos
word conceived; and
logos
prophorikos
word uttered. The
logos
ho esoµ and
ho exoµ,
ratio
and
oratiointelligence and
utterance. 1. There is the
word
conceived, that is,
thought, which is the first and only immediate
product and conception of the soul (all the operations of which are performed by
thought), and it is one with the soul. And thus the second person in the
Trinity is fitly called
the Word; for he is the
first-begotten of the
Father, that eternal essential Wisdom which
the Lord possessed, as
the soul does its thought,
in the beginning of his way, Prov. 8:22. There
is nothing we are more sure of than
that we think, yet nothing we are
more in the dark about than
how we think; who can declare the generation
of
thought in the soul? Surely then the generations and births of the
eternal mind may well be allowed to be great mysteries of godliness, the bottom
of which we cannot fathom, while yet we adore the depth. 2. There is the
word
uttered, and this is
speech, the chief and most natural indication of
the mind. And thus Christ is
the Word, for
by him God has in
these
last days spoken to us (Heb. 1:2), and has directed us to
hear him,
Mt. 17:5. He has made known God's mind to us, as a man's word or speech
makes known his thoughts, as far as he pleases, and no further. Christ is called
that
wonderful speaker (see notes on Dan. 8:13), the
speaker of things
hidden and
strange. He is
the Word speaking
from God to
us, and
to God for us. John Baptist was
the voice, but Christ
the
Word: being
the Word, he is
the Truth, the
Amen, the
faithful
Witness of the mind of God.
II. What he saith of him, enough to prove beyond contradiction
that
he is God. He asserts,
1. His existence in the beginning:
In the beginning was the
Word. This bespeaks his existence, not only before his incarnation, but
before all time. The beginning of time, in which all creatures were produced and
brought into being, found this eternal Word in being. The world was
from
the beginning, but the Word was
in the beginning. Eternity is usually
expressed by being
before the foundation of the world. The eternity of
God is so described (Ps. 90:2),
Before the mountains were brought forth.
So Prov. 8:23. The Word had a being before the world had a beginning. He that
was
in the beginning
never began, and therefore was
ever, achronos
without
beginning of time. So Nonnus.
2. His co-existence with the Father:
The Word was with God,
and the Word was God. Let none say that when we invite them to Christ we
would draw them from God, for Christ is
with God and
is God; it is
repeated in v. 2:
the same, the very same that we believe in and preach,
was
in the beginning with God, that is, he was so from eternity. In the
beginning the world was
from God, as it was created by him; but the Word
was
with God, as ever with him. The Word was with God, (1.) In respect of
essence and
substance; for
the Word was God: a distinct
person or substance, for he was
with God; and yet the same in substance,
for he
was God, Heb. 1:3. (2.) In respect of
complacency and
felicity.
There was a glory and happiness which Christ had
with God before the
world was (ch. 17:5), the Son infinitely happy in the enjoyment of his Father's
bosom, and no less the Father's delight, the Son of his love, Prov. 8:30. (3.)
In respect of
counsel and
design. The mystery of man's
redemption by this Word incarnate was
hid in God before all worlds, Eph.
3:9. He that undertook to
bring us to God (1 Pt. 3:18) was himself from
eternity
with God; so that this grand affair of man's reconciliation to
God was concerted between the Father and Son from eternity, and they understand
one another perfectly well in it, Zec. 6:13; Mt. 11:27. He was
by him as one
brought up with him for this service, Prov. 8:30. He was
with God,
and therefore is said to
come forth from the Father.
3. His agency in making the world, v. 3. This is here, (1.)
Expressly asserted:
All things were made by him. He was
with God,
not only so as to be
acquainted with the divine counsels from eternity,
but to be
active in the divine operations in the beginning of time.
Then
was I by him, Prov. 8:30. God made the world
by a word (Ps. 33:6) and
Christ was
the Word. By him, not as a subordinate instrument, but as a
co-ordinate agent, God
made the world (Heb. 1:2), not as the workman cuts
by his axe, but as the body sees by the eye. (2.) The contrary is denied:
Without
him was not any thing made that was made, from the highest angel to the
meanest worm. God the Father did nothing without him in that work. Now, [1.]
This proves that
he is God; for he that
built all things is God,
Heb. 3:4. The God of Israel often proved himself to be God with this, that he
made
all things: Isa. 40:12, 28; 41:4; and see Jer. 10:11, 12. [2.] This proves
the excellency of the Christian religion, that the author and founder of it is
the same that was the author and founder of the world. How excellent must that
constitution needs be which derives its institution from him who is the fountain
of all excellency! When we worship Christ, we worship him to whom the patriarchs
gave honour as the Creator of the world, and on whom all creatures depend. [3.]
This shows how well qualified he was for the work of our redemption and
salvation. Help was laid upon one that was mighty indeed; for it was laid upon
him that made all things; and he is appointed the author of our bliss who was
the author of our being.
4. The original of life and light that is in him:
In him was
life, v. 4. This further proves that he is God, and every way qualified for
his undertaking; for, (1.) He has
life in himself; not only the
true
God, but the
living God. God is life; he swears by himself when he
saith,
As I live. (2.) All living creatures have their life in him; not
only all the
matter of the creation was
made by him, but all the
life
too that is in the creation is derived from him and supported by him. It was the
Word of God that produced the
moving creatures that had life, Gen. 1:20;
Acts 17:25. He is that Word by which man lives more than by bread, Mt. 4:4. (3.)
Reasonable creatures have their
light from him; that
life which is
the light of men comes from him. Life in man is something greater and
nobler than it is in other creatures; it is
rational, and not merely
animal.
When man became a
living soul, his life was
light, his capacities
such as distinguished him from, and dignified him above, the beasts that perish.
The
spirit of a man is the candle of the Lord, and it was the eternal
Word that lighted this candle. The light of reason, as well as the life of
sense, is derived from him, and depends upon him. This proves him fit to
undertake our salvation; for life and light, spiritual and eternal life and
light, are the two great things that fallen man, who lies so much under the
power of
death and
darkness, has need of. From whom may we better
expect the light of divine revelation than from him who gave us the light of
human reason? And if, when God gave us natural life, that life was in his Son,
how readily should we receive the gospel-record, that he hath given us
eternal
life, and
that life too
is in his Son!
5. The manifestation of him to the children of men. It might be
objected, If this eternal Word was all in all thus in the creation of the world,
whence is it that he has been so little taken notice of and regarded? To this he
answers (v. 5),
The light shines, but the darkness comprehends it not.
Observe,
(1.) The discovery of the eternal Word to the lapsed world, even
before he was manifested in the flesh:
The light shineth in darkness.
Light is self-evidencing, and will make itself known; this light, whence the
light of men comes, hath shone, and doth shine. [1.] The eternal Word,
as
God, shines in
the darkness of
natural conscience. Though men
by the fall are become
darkness, yet that which may be known of God is
manifested in them; see Rom. 1:19, 20. The light of nature is this light shining
in darkness. Something of the power of the divine Word, both as
creating
and as
commanding, all mankind have an innate sense of; were it not for
this, earth would be a hell, a place of
utter darkness; blessed be God,
it is not so yet. [2.] The eternal Word, as Mediator, shone in the darkness of
the Old-Testament types and figures, and the prophecies and promises which were
of the Messiah from the beginning. He that had commanded the light of this world
to shine out of darkness was himself long a light
shining in darkness;
there was a
veil upon this
light, 2 Co. 3:13.
(2.) The disability of the degenerate world to receive this
discovery:
The darkness comprehended it not; the most of men received the
grace of God in these discoveries in vain. [1.] The world of mankind
comprehended
not the natural light that was in their understandings, but became
vain
in their imaginations concerning the eternal God and the eternal Word, Rom.
1:21, 28. The darkness of error and sin overpowered and quite eclipsed this
light. God
spoke once, yea twice, but
man perceived it not, Job
33:14. [2.] The Jews, who had the light of the Old Testament, yet comprehended
not Christ in it. As there was a veil upon Moses's face, so there was upon the
people's hearts. In the
darkness of the types and shadows the light
shone; but such as the
darkness of their understandings that they could
not
see it. It was therefore requisite that Christ should come, both to
rectify the errors of the Gentile world and to improve the truths of the Jewish
church.
Verses 6-14
The evangelist designs to bring in John Baptist bearing an
honourable testimony to Jesus Christ, Now in these verses, before he does this,
I. He gives us some account of the witness he is about to
produce. His name was
John, which signifies
gracious; his
conversation was austere, but he was not the less
gracious. Now,
1. We are here told concerning him, in general, that he was a
man
sent of God. The evangelist had said concerning Jesus Christ that he was
with
God and that he
was God; but here concerning John that he was a
man,
a mere man. God is pleased to speak to us by men like ourselves. John was a
great
man, but he was a man, a son of man; he was
sent from God, he was God's
messenger, so he is called, Mal. 3:1. God gave him both his mission and
his message, both his credentials and his instructions. John wrought no miracle,
nor do we find that he had visions and revelations; but the strictness and
purity of his life and doctrine, and the direct tendency of both to reform the
world, and to revive the interests of God's kingdom among men, were plain
indications that he was
sent of God.
2. We are here told what his office and business were (v. 7):
The
same came for a witness, an eye-witness, a leading witness. He came
eis
martyrian
for a testimony. The legal institutions had been
long a testimony for God in the Jewish church. By them revealed religion was
kept up; hence we read of the
tabernacle of the testimony, the ark of the
testimony, the law and the testimony: but now divine revelation is to be
turned into another channel; now the testimony of Christ is the testimony of
God, 1 Co. 1:6; 2:1. Among the Gentiles, God indeed had not left himself without
witness (Acts 14:17), but the Redeemer had no testimonies borne him among them.
There was a profound silence concerning him, till John Baptist came for a
witness to him. Now observe, (1.) The matter of his testimony:
He came to
bear witness to the light. Light is a thing which witnesses for itself, and
carries its own evidence along with it; but to those who shut their eyes against
the light it is necessary there should be those that bear witness to it. Christ's
light needs not man's testimony, but the world's darkness does. John was
like the night watchman that goes round the town, proclaiming the approach of
the morning light to those that have closed their eyes, and are not willing
themselves to observe it; or like that watchman that was set to tell those who
asked him what of the night that
the morning comes, and,
if you will
enquire, enquire ye, Isa. 21:11, 12. He was sent of God to tell the world
that the long-looked-for Messiah was now come, who should be
a light to
enlighten the Gentiles and the glory of his people Israel; and to proclaim
that dispensation at hand which would bring life and immortality to light. (2.)
The design of his testimony:
That all men through him might believe; not
in him, but in Christ, whose way he was sent to prepare. He taught men to look
through him, and pass through him, to Christ; through the doctrine of repentance
for sin to that of faith in Christ. He prepared men for the reception and
entertainment of Christ and his gospel, by awakening them to a sight and sense
of sin; and that, their eyes being thereby opened, they might be ready to admit
those beams of divine light which, in the person and doctrine of the Messiah,
were now ready to shine in their faces. If they would but receive this witness
of man, they would soon find that the witness of God was greater, 1 Jn. 5:9. See
ch. 10:41. Observe, it was designed that all men through him might believe,
excluding none from the kind and beneficial influences of his ministry that did
not exclude themselves, as multitudes did, who rejected the counsel of God
against themselves, and so received the grace of God in vain.
3. We are here cautioned not to mistake him for the light who
only came to bear witness to it (v. 8):
He was not that light that was
expected and promised, but only was sent to bear witness of that great and
ruling light. He was a star, like that which guided the wise men to Christ, a
morning star; but he was not the Sun; not the Bridegroom, but a friend of the
Bridegroom; not the Prince, but his harbinger. There were those who rested in
John's baptism, and looked no further, as those Ephesians, Acts 19:3. To
rectify this mistake, the evangelist here, when he speaks very honourably of
him, yet shows that he must give place to Christ. He was great as the prophet of
the Highest, but not the Highest himself. Note, We must take heed of
over-valuing ministers, as well as of under-valuing them; they are not our
lords, nor have they dominion over our faith, but ministers by whom we believe,
stewards of our Lord's house. We must not give up ourselves by an implicit
faith to their conduct, for they are not that light; but we must attend to, and
receive, their testimony; for they are sent to bear witness of that light; so
then let us esteem them, and not otherwise. Had John pretended to be that light
he had not been so much as a faithful witness of that light. Those who usurp the
honour of Christ forfeit the honour of being the servants of Christ; yet John
was very serviceable as a witness to the light, though he was not that light.
Those may be of great use to us who yet shine with a borrowed light.
II. Before he goes on with John's testimony, he returns to
give us a further account of this Jesus to whom John bore record. Having shown
in the beginning of the chapter the glories of his Godhead, he here comes to
show the graces of his incarnation, and his favours to man as Mediator.
1. Christ was the
true Light (v. 9); not as if John
Baptist were a false light, but, in comparison with Christ, he was a very small
light. Christ is the great light that deserves to be called so. Other lights are
but figuratively and equivocally called so: Christ is the true light. The
fountain of all knowledge and of all comfort must needs be the true light. He is
the true light, for proof of which we are not referred to the emanations of his
glory in the invisible world (the beams with which he enlightens that), but to
those rays of his light which are darted downwards, and with which this dark
world of ours is enlightened. But how does Christ enlighten every man that comes
into the world? (1.) By his creating power he enlightens every man with the
light of reason; that life which is the light of men is from him; all the
discoveries and directions of reason, all the comfort it gives us, and all the
beauty it puts upon us, are from Christ. (2.) By the publication of his gospel
to all nations he does in effect enlighten every man. John Baptist was a light,
but he enlightened only Jerusalem and Judea, and the region round about Jordan,
like a candle that enlightens one room; but Christ is the true light, for he is
a light to enlighten the Gentiles. His everlasting gospel is to be preached to
every nation and language, Rev. 14:6. Like the sun which enlightens every man
that will open his eyes, and receive its light (Ps. 19:6), to which the
preaching of the gospel is compared. See Rom. 10:18. Divine revelation is not
now to be confined, as it had been, to one people, but to be diffused to all
people, Mt. 5:15. (3.) By the operation of his Spirit and grace he enlightens
all those that are enlightened to salvation; and those that are not enlightened
by him perish in darkness.
The light of the knowledge of the glory of God
is said to be
in the face of Jesus Christ, and is compared with that
light which was at the beginning commanded to shine out of darkness, and which
enlightens every man that comes into the world. Whatever light any man has, he
is indebted to Christ for it, whether it be natural or supernatural.
2. Christ
was in the world, v. 10. He was in the world,
as the essential Word, before his incarnation, upholding all things; but this
speaks of his being in the world when he took our nature upon him, and dwelt
among us; see ch. 16:28.
I am come into the world. The Son of the Highest
was here in this
lower world; that
light in this
dark
world; that
holy thing in this sinful polluted world. He left a world of
bliss and glory, and was here in this melancholy miserable world. He undertook
to reconcile the world to God, and therefore was
in the world, to treat
about it, and settle that affair; to satisfy God's justice for the world, and
discover God's favour to the world. He was in the world, but not of it, and
speaks with an air of triumph when he can say,
Now I am no more in it, ch.
17:11. The greatest honour that ever was put upon this world, which is so mean
and inconsiderable a part of the universe, was that the Son of God was once
in
the world; and, as it should engage our affections to things above that
there Christ is, so it should reconcile us to our present abode in
this
world that once Christ was
here. He
was in the world for awhile,
but it is spoken of as a thing past; and so it will be said of us shortly, We
were in the world. O that when we are here no more we may be where Christ is!
Now observe here, (1.) What reason Christ had to expect the most affectionate
and respectful welcome possible in this world; for
the world was made by him.
Therefore he came to save a lost world because it was a world of his own
making. Why should he not concern himself to revive the light that was of his
own kindling, to restore a life of his own infusing, and to renew the image that
was originally of his own impressing? The world was
made by him, and
therefore ought to do him homage. (2.) What cold entertainment he met with,
notwithstanding:
The world knew him not. The great Maker, Ruler, and
Redeemer of the world was in it, and few or none of the inhabitants of the world
were aware of it. The
ox knows his owner, but the more brutish world did
not. They did not own him, did not bid him welcome, because they did not
know
him; and they did not know him because he did not make himself known in the
way that they expectedin external glory and majesty. His kingdom came not
with
observation, because it was to be a kingdom of trail and probation. When he
shall come as a Judge the world shall
know him.
3. He
came to his own (v. 11); not only to the world,
which was
his own, but to the people of Israel, that were peculiarly
his
own above all people; of them he came, among them he lived, and to them he
was
first sent. The Jews were at this time a mean despicable people;
the
crown was fallen from their head; yet, in remembrance of the ancient
covenant, bad as they were, and poor as they were, Christ was not ashamed to
look upon them as his own.
Ta idiahis
own
things; not
tous idioushis
own
persons, as
true believers are called, ch. 13:1. The Jews were
his, as a man's house, and lands, and goods are
his, which he
uses and possesses; but believers are his as a man's wife and children are his
own, which he loves and enjoys. He came to his own, to seek and save them,
because they were
his own. He was sent to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel, for it was he whose own the sheep were. Now observe,
(1.) That the generality
rejected him:
His own
received him not. He had reason to expect that those who were his own should
have bidden him welcome, considering how great the
obligations were which
they
lay under to him, and how fair the
opportunities were which
they had of coming to the knowledge of him. They had the oracles of God, which
told them beforehand
when and
where to expect him, and of what
tribe and family he should arise. He came among them himself, introduced with
signs and wonders, and himself the greatest; and therefore it is not said of
them, as it was of the world (v. 10), that they
knew him not; but
his
own, though they could not but know him, yet
received him not; did
not receive his doctrine, did not welcome him as the Messiah, but fortified
themselves against him. The
chief priests, that were in a particular
manner
his own (for the Levites were God's tribe), were ring-leaders in
this contempt put upon him. Now this was very
unjust, because they were
his
own, and therefore he might
command their respect; and it was very
unkind
and
ungrateful, because he came to them, to seek and save them, and so to
court their respect. Note, Many who in profession are
Christ's own,
yet do not
receive him, because they will not part with their sins, nor
have him to
reign over them.
(2.) That yet there was a remnant who
owned him, and were
faithful to him. Though his own received him not, yet there were those that
received
him (v. 12):
But as many as received him. Though Israel were not gathered,
yet Christ was
glorious. Though the body of that nation persisted and
perished in unbelief, yet there were many of
them that were wrought upon
to submit to Christ, and many more that
were not of that fold. Observe
here,
[1.] The true Christian's
description and
property;
and that is, that he
receives Christ, and
believes on his name;
the latter explains the former. Note,
First, To be a Christian indeed is
to
believe on Christ's name; it is to
assent to the gospel
discovery, and
consent to the gospel proposal, concerning him. His name
is
the Word of God; the King of kings, the Lord our righteousness; Jesus a
Saviour. Now to
believe on his name is to
acknowledge that he
is what these great names bespeak him to be, and to
acquiesce in it, that
he may be so
to us. Secondly, Believing in Christ's name is
receiving
him as a gift from God. We must receive his doctrine as true and good; receive
his law as just and holy; receive his offers as kind and advantageous; and we
must receive the image of his grace, and impressions of his love, as the
governing principle of our affections and actions.
[2.] The true Christian's dignity and privilege are twofold:
First, The
privilege of adoption, which takes them
into the number of God's children:
To them gave he power to become the sons
of God. Hitherto, the adoption pertained to the Jews only
(Israel is my
son, my first-born); but now, by faith in Christ, Gentiles are the
children
of God, Gal. 3:26. They have
power, exousian
authority;
for no man taketh this power to himself, but he who is
authorized by the
gospel charter. To them gave he a
right; to them gave he this
pre-eminence.
This power have all the saints. Note, 1. It is the
unspeakable privilege of all good Christians, that they are become the
children
of God. They were by nature children of wrath, children of this world. If
they be the
children of God, they
become so, are
made so
Fiunt,
non nascuntur ChristianiPersons are not born Christians, but made such.Tertullian.
Behold what manner of love is this, 1 Jn. 3:1. God calls them
his
children, they call him
Father, and are entitled to all the
privileges of children, those of their way and those of their home. 2. The
privilege of adoption is entirely owing to
Jesus Christ; he
gave
this power to them that believe on his name. God is his Father, and so ours; and
it is by virtue of our espousals to him, and union with him, that we stand
related to God as a Father. It was in Christ that we were
predestinated to
the adoption; from him we receive both the character and the Spirit of
adoption, and he is the
first-born among many brethren. The Son of God
became a Son of man, that the sons and daughters of men might become the sons
and daughters of God Almighty.
Secondly, The
privilege of regeneration (v. 13):
Which
were born. Note, All the children of God are born again; all that are
adopted are regenerated. This
real change evermore attends that
relative
one. Wherever God confers the dignity of children, he creates the nature and
disposition of children. Men cannot do so when they adopt. Now here we have an
account of the original of this new birth. 1. Negatively. (1.) It is not
propagated
by natural generation from our parents. It is
not of blood, nor of the will
of the flesh, nor of
corruptible seed, 1 Pt. 1:23. Man is called
flesh
and blood, because thence he has his original: but we do not become the
children of God as we become the children of our natural parents. Note, Grace
does not run in the blood, as corruption does. Man polluted
begat a son in
his own likeness (Gen. 5:3); but man sanctified and renewed does not beget a
son in
that likeness. The Jews gloried much in their parentage, and the
noble blood that ran in their veins:
We are Abraham's seed; and
therefore
to them
pertained the adoption because they were born of that blood; but
this New-Testament adoption is not founded in any such natural relation. (2.) It
is not
produced by the natural power of our own will. As it is not of
blood,
nor of
the will of the flesh, so neither is it of the
will of man,
which labours under a moral impotency of determining itself to that which is
good; so that the principles of the divine life are not of our own planting, it
is the grace of God that makes us willing to be
his. Nor can human laws
or writings prevail to sanctify and regenerate a soul; if they could, the new
birth would be by the will of man. But, 2. Positively: it is of
God. This
new birth is owing to the word of God as the means (1 Pt. 1:23), and to the
Spirit of God as the great and sole author. True believers are
born of God,
1 Jn. 3:9; 5:1. And this is necessary to their adoption; for we cannot expect
the
love of God if we have not something of his
likeness, nor
claim the privileges of adoption if we be not under the power of regeneration.
4. The
word was made flesh, v. 14. This expresses Christ's
incarnation more clearly than what went before. By his divine presence he always
was in the world, and by his prophets he
came to his own. But now
that the fulness of time was come he was sent forth after another manner,
made
of a woman (Gal. 4:4); God manifested in the flesh, according to the faith
and hope of holy Job;
Yet shall I see God in my flesh, Job 19:26. Observe
here,
(1.) The
human nature of Christ with which he was veiled;
and that expressed two ways.
[1.]
The word was made flesh. Forasmuch as the children,
who were to become the sons of God,
were partakers of flesh and blood, he
also himself likewise took part of the same, Heb. 2:14. The Socinians agree
that Christ is both God and man, but they say that he
was man, and was
made
a God, as Moses (Ex. 7:1), directly contrary to John here, who saith,
Theos
eµn
He was God, but
sarxegeneto
He
was made flesh. Compare v. 1 with this. This intimates not only that he was
really and truly man, but that he subjected himself to the miseries and
calamities of the human nature. He was made
flesh, the meanest part of
man. Flesh bespeaks man
weak, and he was crucified through
weakness,
2 Co. 13:4.
Flesh bespeaks man
mortal and
dying (Ps.
78:39), and Christ was
put to death in the flesh 1 Pt. 3:18. Nay,
flesh
bespeaks
man tainted with sin (Gen. 6:3), and Christ, though he was
perfectly holy and harmless, yet appeared
in the likeness of sinful flesh
(Rom. 8:3), and was made
sin for us, 2 Co. 5:21. When Adam had sinned,
God said to him,
Dust thou art; not only because made out of the dust,
but because by sin he was sunk into dust. His fall did,
soµmatoun
teµn psycheµn,
turn him as it were
all into body,
made him earthly; therefore he that was made a curse for us was made
flesh,
and
condemned sin in the flesh, Rom. 8:3. Wonder at this, that the
eternal Word should be made flesh, when flesh was come into such an ill name;
that he who made
all things should himself be made flesh, one of the
meanest things, and submit to that from which he was at the greatest distance.
The voice that ushered in the gospel cried,
All flesh is grass (Isa.
40:6), to make the Redeemer's love the more wonderful, who, to
redeem
and
save us, was made flesh, and withered as grass; but the
Word of
the Lord, who was made flesh,
endures for ever; when made flesh, he
ceased not to be the Word of God.
[2.] He
dwelt among us, here in this lower world. Having
taken upon him the nature of man, he put himself into the place and condition of
other men. The Word might have been made flesh, and dwelt among the angels; but,
having taken a
body of the same mould with ours, in it he came, and
resided in the same world with us. He
dwelt among us, us worms of the
earth, us that he had no need of, us that he got nothing by, us that were
corrupt
and
depraved, and revolted from God. The Lord God came and dwelt even
among
the rebellious, Ps. 68:18. He that had dwelt among angels, those noble and
excellent beings, came and dwelt
among us that are a
generation of
vipers, us
sinners, which was worse to him than David's swelling in
Mesech and Kedar, or Ezekiel's dwelling
among scorpions, or the church
of Pergamus dwelling
where Satan's seat is. When we look upon the upper
world, the world of spirits, how mean and contemptible does this flesh, this
body, appear, which we carry about with us, and this world in which our lot is
cast, and how hard is it to a contemplative mind to be reconciled to them! But
that the eternal Word was
made flesh, was clothed with a body as we are,
and dwelt in this world as we do, this has put an honour upon them both, and
should make us willing to abide in the flesh while God has any work for us to
do; for Christ dwelt in this lower world, bad as it is, till he had finished
what he had to do here, ch. 17:4. He dwelt
among the Jews, that the
scripture might be fulfilled,
He shall dwell in the tents of Shem, Gen.
9:27. And see Zec. 2:10. Though the Jews were unkind to him, yet he continued to
dwell among them; though (as some of the ancient writers tell us) he was invited
to better treatment by Abgarus king of Edessa, yet he removed not to any other
nation. He
dwelt among us. He was in the world, not as a wayfaring man
that tarries but for a night, but he
dwelt among us, made a long
residence, the original word is observable,
eskeµnoµsen
en heµmin
he dwelt among us, he dwelt
as in a
tabernacle, which intimates,
First, That he dwelt here in very
mean
circumstances, as shepherds that dwell in tents. He did not dwell among us
as
in a palace, but as in a
tent; for he had not where to lay his head,
and was always upon the remove.
Secondly, That his state here was a
military
state. Soldiers
dwell in tents; he had long since proclaimed war with the
seed of the serpent, and now he takes
the field in person, sets up
his standard, and pitches his tent, to prosecute this war.
Thirdly, That
his stay among us was not to be perpetual. He dwelt here as
in a tent,
not as at
home. The patriarchs, by dwelling in tabernacles,
confessed
that they were strangers and pilgrims on earth, and sought the better
country, and so did Christ, leaving us an example, Heb. 13:13, 14.
Fourthly,
That as of old God dwelt in the tabernacle of Moses, by the shechinah between
the cherubim, so now he dwells in the human nature of Christ; that is now the
true shechinah, the symbol of God's peculiar presence. And we are to make all
our addresses to God through Christ, and from him to receive divine oracles.
(2.) The
beams of his divine glory that
darted
through this
veil of flesh: We beheld his glory, the glory as of the only
begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth. The sun is still the
fountain of light, though eclipsed or clouded; so Christ was still the
brightness of his Father's glory, even when he
dwelt among us in this
lower world. And how slightly soever the Jews thought of him there were those
that saw through the veil. Observe,
[1.] Who were the witnesses of this glory:
we, his
disciples and followers, that conversed most freely and familiarly with him; we
among whom he
dwelt. Other men discover their weaknesses to those that
are most familiar with them, but it was not so with Christ; those that were most
intimate with him saw most of his glory. As it was with his
doctrine, the
disciples knew the mysteries of it, while others had it
under the veil of
parables; so it was with his
person, they saw the glory of his
divinity, while others saw only the veil of his human nature. He manifested
himself
to them, and not unto the world. These witnesses were a competent
number, twelve of them, a whole jury of witnesses; men of plainness and
integrity, and far from any thing of design or intrigue.
[2.] What evidence they had of it:
We saw it. They had
not their evidence by report, at second hand, but were themselves eye-witnesses
of those proofs on which they built their testimony that he was the
Son of
the living God: We saw it. The word signifies a fixed abiding sight, such as
gave them an opportunity of making their observations. This apostle himself
explains this:
What we declare unto you of the Word of life is what we
have
seen with our eyes, and what
we have looked upon, 1 Jn. 1:1.
[3.] What the glory was:
The glory as of the only begotten of
the Father. The glory of the
Word made flesh was such a glory as
became the only
begotten Son of God, and could not be the glory of any
other. Note,
First, Jesus Christ is the only begotten of the Father.
Believers are the children of God by the special favour of adoption and the
special grace of regeneration. They are in a sense
homoiousioi
of
a like nature (2 Pt. 1:4), and have the image of his perfections; but Christ
is
homousios
of the same nature,
and is the express image of his person, and the Son of God by an eternal
generation. Angels are sons of God, but he never said to any of them,
This
day have I begotten thee, Heb. 1:5.
Secondly, He was evidently
declared to be the only begotten of the Father, by that which was seen of his
glory when he dwelt among us. Though he was in the
form of a servant, in
respect of outward circumstances, yet, in respect of graces, his form was as
that of the
fourth in the fiery furnace,
like the Son of God. His
divine glory appeared in the holiness and heavenliness of his doctrine; in his
miracles, which extorted from many this acknowledgment, that he was the
Son
of God; it appeared in the purity, goodness, and beneficence, of his whole
conversation. God's goodness is his glory, and he went about doing good; he
spoke and acted in every thing as an incarnate Deity. Perhaps the evangelist had
a particular regard to the glory of his
transfiguration, of which he was
an eye-witness; see 2 Pt. 1:16-18. God's calling him his
beloved Son, in
whom he was well pleased, intimated that he was the
only begotten of the
Father; but the full proof of this was at his resurrection.
[4.] What advantage those he dwelt among had from this. He dwelt
among them,
full of grace and truth. In the old tabernacle wherein God
dwelt was the
law, in
this was grace; in that were
types,
in this was
truth. The incarnate Word was every way qualified for his
undertaking as Mediator; for he was
full of grace and truth, the two
great things that fallen man stands in need of; and this proved him to be the
Son
of God as much as the divine power and majesty that appeared in him.
First,
He has a fulness of grace and truth
for himself; he had the Spirit
without measure. He was full
of grace, fully acceptable to his Father,
and therefore qualified to intercede for us; and full
of truth, fully
apprized of the things he was to reveal, and therefore fit to instruct us. He
had a fulness of knowledge and a fulness of compassion.
Secondly, He has
a fulness of grace and truth
for us. He
received, that he might
give,
and God was well pleased in him, that he might be well pleased with us in him;
and this was the
truth of the legal
types.
Verses 15-18
In these verses,
I. The evangelist begins again to give us John Baptist's
testimony concerning Christ, v. 15. He had said (v. 8) that he
came for a
witness; now here he tells us that he did accordingly
bear witness.
Here, Observe,
1.
How he expressed his testimony: He
cried,
according to the prediction that he should be
the voice of one crying.
The Old-Testament prophets cried aloud, to show people their
sins; this
New-Testament prophet cried aloud, to show people their
Saviour. This
intimates, (1.) That it was an open
public testimony, proclaimed, that
all manner of persons might take notice of it, for all are concerned in it.
False teachers
entice secretly, but wisdom publishes her dictates in the
chief places of concourse. (2.) That he was free and hearty in bearing this
testimony. He
cried as one that was both
well assured of the truth
to which he witnessed and
well affected to it. He that had leaped in his
mother's
womb for joy of Christ's approach, when newly conceived, does now with a
like exultation of spirit
welcome his public appearance.
2. What his
testimony was. He appeals to what he had said
at the beginning of his ministry, when he had directed them to expect one that
should
come after him, whose forerunner he was, and never intended any
other than to lead them to him, and to prepare his way. This he had given them
notice of from the first. Note, It is very comfortable to a minister to have the
testimony of his conscience for him that he set out in his ministry with honest
principles and sincere intentions, with a single eye to the glory and honour of
Christ. Now what he had then said he applies to this Jesus whom he had lately
baptized, and who was so remarkably owned from heaven:
This was he of whom I
spoke. John did not tell them that there would shortly appear such a one
among them, and then leave them to find him out; but in
this he went
beyond all the Old-Testament prophets that he particularly specified the person:
"This was he, the very man I told you of, and to him all I said is
to be accommodated." Now what was it he said?
(1.) He had given the preference to this Jesus:
He that comes
after me, in the time of his birth and public appearance, is preferred
before me; he that
succeeds me in preaching and making disciples is a
more excellent person, upon all accounts; as the prince or peer that
comes
after is preferred before the harbinger or gentleman-usher that makes way
for him. Note, Jesus Christ, who was to be called the
Son of the Highest
(Lu. 1:32), was preferred before John Baptist, who was to be called only the
prophet
of the Highest, Lu. 1:76. John was a minister of the New Testament, but
Christ was the Mediator of the New Testament. And observe, though John was a
great man, and had a great name and interest, yet he was forward to give the
preference to him to whom it belonged. Note, All the ministers of Christ must
prefer him and his interest before themselves and their own interests; they will
make an ill account
that seek their own things, not the things of Christ,
Phil. 2:21. He comes
after me, and yet is
preferred before me.
Note, God dispenses his gifts according to his good pleasure, and many times
crosses hands, as Jacob did, preferring the
younger before the
elder.
Paul far outstripped those that were in Christ before him.
(2.) He here gives a good reason for it:
For he was before
me, proµtos mou eµn
He was my
first, or
first to me; he was my first Cause, my original. The
First
is one of
God's names, Isa. 44:6. He is
before me, is
my
first, [1.] In respect of
seniority: he was
before me, for he
was before Abraham, ch. 8:58. Nay, he was
before all things, Col. 1:17. I
am but of yesterday, he from eternity. It was but in
those days that John
Baptist came (Mt. 3:1), but the goings forth of our Lord Jesus
were of old,
from everlasting, Mic. 5:2. This proves two natures in Christ. Christ, as
man,
came after John as to his public appearance; Christ, as God, was
before
him; and how could he otherwise be before him but by an eternal existence?
[2.] In respect of supremacy; for he was
my prince; so some princes are
called the
first; proµton,
"It is he for whose sake and service I am sent: he is my Master, I am his
minister and messenger."
II. He presently returns again to speak of Jesus Christ, and
cannot go on with John Baptist's testimony till v. 19. The 16th verse has a
manifest connection with v. 14, where the incarnate Word was said to be
full
of grace and truth. Now here he makes this the matter, not only of our
adoration, but of our thankfulness, because
from that fulness of his
we
all have received. He received gifts for men (Ps. 68:18), that he might
give
gifts to men, Eph. 4:8. He was filled, that he might
fill all in all
(Eph. 1:23), might
fill our treasures, Prov. 8:21. He has a fountain of
fulness overflowing:
We all have received. All we apostles; so some. We
have received the favour of this apostleship, that is
grace; and a
fitness for it, that is
truth. Or, rather,
All we believers; as
many as received him (v. 16), received from him. Note, All true believers
receive from Christ's fulness; the best and greatest saints cannot live
without him, the meanest and weakest may live by him. This excludes proud
boasting, that we have nothing but
we have received it; and silences
perplexing fears, that we want nothing but
we may receive it. Let us see
what it is that we have received.
1. We have received
grace for grace. Our receivings by
Christ are all summed up in this one word,
grace; we have received
kai
charin
even grace, so great a gift, so rich, so invaluable;
we have received
no less than grace; this is a gift to be spoken of with
an emphasis. It is repeated,
grace for grace; for to every stone in this
building, as well as
to the top-stone, we must cry,
Grace, grace.
Observe,
(1.) The blessing received. It is
grace; the good will of
God towards us, and the good work of God in us. God's good will works the good
work, and then the good work qualifies us for further tokens of his good will.
As the cistern receives water from the fulness of the fountain, the branches sap
from the fulness of the root, and the air light from the fulness of the sun, so
we receive grace from the fulness of Christ.
(2.) The manner of its reception:
Grace for grace-
charin
anti charitos. The phrase is singular, and interpreters put different
senses upon it, each of which will be of use to illustrate the unsearchable
riches of the grace of Christ.
Grace for grace bespeaks, [1.] The
freeness
of this grace. It is grace for grace' sake; so
Grotius. We receive
grace, not for
our sakes (be it known to us), but even so, Father,
because
it seemed good in thy sight. It is a
gift according to grace, Rom.
12:6. It is grace
to us for the sake of grace to Jesus Christ. God was
well pleased in him, and is therefore well pleased with us in him, Eph. 1:6.
[2.] The
fulness of this grace.
Grace for grace is abundance of
grace, grace upon grace (so
Camero), one grace heaped upon another; as
skin
for skin is skin after skin, even all that a man has, Job 2:4. It is a
blessing poured out, that there shall not be room to receive it,
plenteous
redemption: one grace a pledge of more grace.
Joseph-He will add. It
is such a fulness as is called
the fulness of God which we are filled
with. We are not straitened in the grace of Christ, if we be not straitened in
our own bosoms. [3.] The
serviceableness of this grace.
Grace for
grace is grace for the promoting and advancing of grace. Grace to be
exercised
by ourselves; gracious habits for gracious acts. Grace to be
ministered
to others; gracious vouchsafements for gracious performances: grace is a talent
to be traded with. The apostles received grace (Rom. 1:5; Eph. 3:8), that they
might communicate it, 1 Pt. 4:10. [4.] The
substitution of New-Testament
grace
in the room and stead of Old-Testament grace: so
Beza. And
this sense is confirmed by what follows (v. 17); for the Old Testament had grace
in type, the New Testament has grace in truth. There was a grace under the Old
Testament, the gospel was preached then (Gal. 3:8); but that grace is
superseded, and we have gospel grace instead of it, a
glory which excelleth,
2 Co. 3:10. Discoveries of grace are now more clear, distributions of grace far
more plentiful; this is grace instead of grace. [5.] It bespeaks the
augmentation
and
continuance of grace. Grace for grace is one grace to improve,
confirm, and perfect another grace. We are changed into the divine image,
from
glory to glory, from one degree of glorious grace to another, 2 Co. 3:18.
Those that have
true grace have that for
more grace, Jam. 4:6.
When God gives grace he saith, Take this
in part; for he who hath
promised will perform. [6.] It bespeaks the
agreeableness and
conformity
of grace in the saints to the grace that is in Jesus Christ; so Mr.
Clark.
Grace for grace is grace in us answering to grace in him, as the impression
upon the wax answers the seal line for line. The grace we receive from Christ
changes
us into the same image (2 Co. 3:18), the
image of the Son (Rom.
8:29), the
image of the heavenly, 1 Co. 15:49.
2. We have received
grace and truth, v. 17. He had said
(v. 14) that Christ was
full of grace and truth; now here he says that by
him
grace and truth came to us. From Christ we
receive grace; this
is a string he delights to harp upon, he cannot go off from it. Two things he
further observes in this verse concerning this grace:(1.) Its
preference
above the law of Moses:
The law was given by Moses, and it was a glorious
discovery, both of God's
will concerning man and his
good will to
man; but the gospel of Christ is a much clearer discovery both of duty and
happiness. That which was given by Moses was purely terrifying and threatening,
and bound with penalties, a law which could not
give life, which was
given with abundance of terror (Heb. 12:18); but that which is given by Jesus
Christ is of another nature; it has all the beneficial uses of the law, but not
the terror, for it is
grace: grace
teaching (Tit. 2:11), grace
reigning,
Rom. 5:21. It is a law, but a remedial law. The endearments of love are the
genius of the gospel, not the affrightments of law and the curse. (2.) Its
connection
with truth:
grace and truth. In the gospel we have the discovery of the
greatest
truths to be embraced by the understanding, as well as of the
richest
grace to be embraced by the will and affections. It is a
faithful
saying, and
worthy of all acceptation; that is, it is
grace and
truth. The offers of
grace are
sincere, and what we may
venture our souls upon; they are made
in earnest, for it is
grace and
truth. It is
grace and truth with reference to the
law that
was
given by Moses. For it is, [1.] The performance of all the
Old-Testament promises. In the Old Testament we often find
mercy and
truth
put together, that is, mercy according to promise; so here
grace and truth
denote grace according to promise. See Lu. 1:72; 1 Ki. 8:56. [2.] It is the
substance of all the Old-Testament types and shadows. Something of grace there
was both in the ordinances that were instituted for Israel and the providences
that occurred concerning Israel; but they were only shadows of good things to
come, even of the grace that is to be
brought to us by the revelation of
Jesus Christ. He is the
true paschal lamb, the
true scape-goat,
the true
manna. They had grace in the picture; we have grace in the
person, that is,
grace and truth. Grace and truth came, egeneto
was
made; the same word that was used (v. 3) concerning Christ's
making all
things. The law was only
made known by Moses, but the
being of
this grace and truth, as well as the discovery of them, is owing to Jesus
Christ; this was
made by him, as the world at first was; and by him this
grace
and truth do
consist.
3. Another thing we receive from Christ is a clear revelation of
God to us (v. 18): He hath
declared God to us, whom
no man hath seen
at any time. This was the grace and truth which came by Christ, the
knowledge of God and an acquaintance with him. Observe,
(1.) The insufficiency of all other discoveries:
No man hath
seen God at any time. This intimates, [1.] That the nature of God being
spiritual,
he is invisible to bodily eyes, he is a being
whom no man hath seen, nor can
see, 1 Tim. 6:16. We have therefore need to
live by faith, by which
we
see him that is invisible, Heb. 11:27. [2.] That the revelation which
God made of himself in the Old Testament was very short and imperfect, in
comparison with that which he has made by Christ:
No man hath seen God at any
time; that is, what was seen and known of God before the incarnation of
Christ was nothing to that which is now seen and known; life and immortality are
now brought to a much clearer light than they were then. [3.] That none of the
Old-Testament prophets were so well qualified to make known the mind and will of
God to the children of men as our Lord Jesus was, for none of them had
seen
God at any time. Moses beheld the similitude of the Lord (Num. 12:8), but
was told that he could not
see his face, Ex. 33:20. But
this
recommends Christ's holy religion to us that it was founded by one that had
seen God, and knew more of his mind than any one else ever did.
(2.) The all-sufficiency of the gospel discovery proved from its
author:
The only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he has
declared him. Observe here,
[1.] How
fit he was to make this discovery, and every way
qualified for it. He and he alone was
worthy to take the book, and to open
the seals, Rev. 5:9. For,
First, He is
the only-begotten Son;
and who so likely to know the Father as the Son? or in whom is the Father better
known than in the Son? Mt. 11:27. He is of the same nature with the Father, so
that he who hath
seen him hath seen
the Father, ch. 14:9. The
servant is not supposed to know so well
what his Lord does as the Son, ch.
15:15. Moses was
faithful as a servant, but Christ
as a Son. Secondly,
He is
in the bosom of the Father. He had lain in his bosom from eternity.
When he was here upon earth, yet still, as God, he was in the bosom of the
Father, and thither he returned when he
ascended. In the bosom of the Father;
that is, 1. In the bosom of his
special love, dear to him, in
whom he
was well pleased, always his delight. All God's saints are
in his hand,
but his Son was
in his bosom, one in nature and essence, and therefore in
the highest degree one
in love. 2. In the bosom of his
secret
counsels. As there was a mutual
complacency, so there was a mutual
consciousness,
between the Father and Son (Mt. 11:27); none so fit as he to make known God, for
none knew his mind as he did. Our most secret counsels we are said to hide
in
our bosom (in pectore); Christ was privy to the
bosom-counsels of the
Father. The prophets
sat down at his feet as scholars; Christ lay in his
bosom as a friend. See Eph. 3:11.
[2.] How
free he was in making this discovery:
He hath
declared. Him is not in the original. He has declared that of God which no
man had at any time seen or known; not only that which was hid
of God,
but that which was hid
in God (Eph. 3:9),
exeµgeµsatoit
signifies a plain, clear, and full discovery, not by general and doubtful hints,
but by particular explications. He that runs may now read the will of God and
the way of salvation. This is the
grace, this the
truth, that came
by Jesus Christ.
Verses 19-28
We have here the testimony of John, which he delivered to the
messengers who were sent from Jerusalem to examine him. Observe here,
I. Who they were that sent to him, and who they were that were
sent. 1. They that sent to him were
the Jews at Jerusalem, the great
sanhedrim or high-commission court, which sat at Jerusalem, and was the
representative of the Jewish church, who took cognizance of all matters relating
to religion. One would think that they who were the fountains of learning, and
the guides of the church, should have, by books, understood the times so well as
to know that the Messiah was at hand, and therefore should presently have known
him that was his forerunner, and readily embraced him; but, instead of this,
they sent messengers to
cross questions with him. Secular learning,
honour, and power, seldom dispose men's minds to the reception of divine
light. 2. They that were sent were, (1.)
Priests and Levites, probably
members of the council, men of learning, gravity, and authority. John Baptist
was himself a priest of the seed of Aaron, and therefore it was not fit that he
should be examined by any but priests. It was prophesied concerning John's
ministry that it should
purify the Sons of Levi (Mal. 3:3), and therefore
they were jealous of him and his reformation. (2.) They were
of the
Pharisees, proud, self-justiciaries, that thought they needed no repentance,
and therefore could not bear one that made it his business to preach repentance.
II. On what errand they were sent; it was to enquire concerning
John and
his baptism. They did not send for John to them, probably
because they
feared the people, lest the people where John was should be
provoked to rise, or lest the people where they were should be brought
acquainted with him; they thought it was good to keep him at a distance. They
enquire concerning him, 1. To satisfy their curiosity; as the Athenians enquired
concerning Paul's doctrine, for the novelty of it, Acts 17:19, 20. Such a
proud conceit they had of themselves that the doctrine of repentance was to them
strange doctrine. 2. It was to show their authority. They thought they
looked
great when they called him to account whom all men counted as a prophet, and
arraigned him at their bar. 3. It was with a design to
suppress him and
silence him if they could find any colour for it; for they were jealous of his
growing interest, and his ministry agreed neither with the Mosaic dispensation
which they had been long under, nor with the notions they had formed of the
Messiah's kingdom.
III. What was the answer he gave them, and his account, both
concerning himself and concerning his baptism, in both which he witnessed to
Christ.
1. Concerning himself, and what he professed himself to be. They
asked him,
Sy tis ei
Thou, who art
thou? John's appearing in the world was surprising. He was in the
wilderness till the day of his showing unto Israel. His spirit, his converse, he
doctrine, had something in them which commanded and gained respect; but he did
not, as seducers do, give out himself to be
some great one. He was more
industrious to
do good than to
appear great; and therefore waived
saying any thing of himself till he was legally interrogated. Those speak best
for Christ that say least of themselves, whose
own works praise them, not
their own lips. He answers their interrogatory,
(1.)
Negatively. He was not that great one whom some took
him to be. God's faithful witnesses stand more upon their guard
against
undue respect than against
unjust contempt. Paul writes as warmly
against those that overvalued him, and said,
I am of Paul, as against
those that undervalued him, and said that his bodily presence was weak; and he
rent his clothes when he was called a god. [1.] John disowns himself to be
the
Christ (v. 20):
He said, I am not the Christ, who was now expected
and waited for. Note, The ministers of Christ must remember that
they are not
Christ, and therefore must not usurp his powers and prerogatives, nor assume
the praises due to him only. They are not Christ, and therefore must not lord it
over God's heritage, nor pretend to a dominion over the faith of Christians.
They cannot created grace and peace; they cannot enlighten, convert, quicken,
comfort; for they are not Christ. Observe how emphatically this is here
expressed concerning John: He
confessed, and denied not, but confessed;
it denotes his vehemence and constancy in making this protestation. Note,
Temptations to pride, and assuming that honour to ourselves which does not
belong to us, ought to be resisted with a great deal of vigour and earnestness.
When John was taken to be the Messiah, he did not connive at it with a
Si
populus vult decipi, decipiaturIf the people will be deceived, let them;
but openly and solemnly, without any ambiguities, confessed,
I am not the
Christ; hoti ouk eimi egoµ ho Christos
I
am not the Christ, not I; another is at hand, who is he, but I am not. His
disowning himself to be the Christ is called his
confessing and not
denying
Christ. Note, Those that humble and abase themselves thereby confess Christ, and
give honour to him; but those that will not deny themselves do in effect deny
Christ, [2.] He disowns himself to be Elias, v. 21. The Jews expected the person
of Elias to return from heaven, and to live among them, and promised themselves
great things from it. Hearing of John's character, doctrine, and baptism, and
observing that he appeared as one dropped from heaven, in the same part of the
country from which Elijah was carried to heaven, it is no wonder that they were
ready to take him for this Elijah; but he disowned this honour too. He was
indeed prophesied of under the name of Elijah (Mal. 4:5), and he came in the
spirit
and power of Elias (Lu. 1:17), and was the Elias that was to come (Mt.
11:14); but he was not the person of Elias, not that Elias that went to heaven
in the fiery chariot, as he was that met Christ in his transfiguration. He was
the Elias that God had promised, not the Elias that they foolishly dreamed of.
Elias did come, and
they knew him not (Mt. 17:12); nor did he make
himself known to them as the Elias, because they had promised themselves such an
Elias as God never promised them. [3.] He disowns himself to be that
prophet,
or the prophet.
First, He was not
that prophet which Moses said
the
Lord would
raise up to them of their brethren, like unto him. If they
meant this, they needed not ask that question, for that prophet was no other
than the Messiah, and he had said already,
I am not the Christ. Secondly,
He was not such a prophet as they expected and wished for, who, like Samuel and
Elijah, and some other of the prophets, would interpose in public affairs, and
rescue them from under the Roman yoke.
Thirdly, He was not one of the old
prophets raised from the dead, as they expected one to come before Elias, as
Elias before the Messiah.
Fourthly, Though John was a prophet, yea, more
than a prophet, yet he had his revelation, not by dreams and visions, as the
Old-Testament prophets had theirs; his commission and work were of another
nature, and belonged to another dispensation. If John had said that he was
Elias, and was a prophet, he might have made his words good; but ministers must,
upon all occasions, express themselves with the utmost caution, both that they
may not confirm people in any mistakes, and particularly that they may not give
occasion to any to think of them
above what is meet.
(2.)
Affirmatively. The committee that was sent to
examine him pressed for a positive answer (v. 22), urging the authority of
those
that sent them, which they expected he should pay a deference to:
"Tell
us, What art thou? not that we may believe thee, and be baptized by three,
but that we may
give an answer to those that sent us, and that it may not
be said we were sent on a fool's errand." John was looked upon as a man
of sincerity, and therefore they believed he would not give an evasive ambiguous
answer; but would be fair and above-board, and give a plain answer to a plain
question:
What sayest thou of thyself? And he did so,
I am the voice
of one crying in the wilderness. Observe,
[1.] He gives his answer in the words of scripture, to show that
the scripture was fulfilled in him, and that his office was supported by a
divine authority. What the scripture saith of the office of the ministry should
be often thought of by those of that high calling, who must look upon themselves
as that, and that only, which the word of God makes them.
[2.] He gives in his answer in very humble, modest, self-denying
expressions. He chooses to apply that scripture to himself which denotes not his
dignity, but his duty and dependence, which bespeaks him little:
I am the
voice, as if he were
vox et praeterea nihil
mere voice.
[3.] He gives such an account of himself as might be profitable
to them, and might excite and awaken them to hearken to him; for he
was the
voice (see Isa. 40:3), a voice to alarm, an articulate voice to instruct.
Ministers are but the
voice, the vehicle, by which God is pleased to
communicate his mind. What are Paul and Apollos but messengers? Observe,
First,
He was a
human voice. The people were prepared to receive the law by the
voice of thunders, and a trumpet exceedingly loud, such as made them tremble;
but they were prepared for the gospel by the voice of a man like ourselves,
a
still small voice, such as that in which God came to Elijah, 1 Ki. 19:12.
Secondly,
He was the voice of
one crying, which denotes, 1. His
earnestness
and
importunity in calling people to repentance; he
cried aloud, and
did not spare. Ministers must preach as those that are in earnest, and are
themselves affected with those things with which they desire to affect others.
Those words are not likely to
thaw the hearers' hearts that
freeze
between the speaker's lips. 2. His
open publication of the doctrine he
preached; he was the voice of one
crying, that all manner of persons
might hear and take notice.
Doth not wisdom cry? Prov. 8:1.
Thirdly,
It was in the
wilderness that this voice was crying; in a place of
silence and solitude, out of the noise of the world and the hurry of its
business; the more retired we are from the tumult of secular affairs the better
prepared we are to hear from God.
Fourthly, That which he cried was,
Make
straight the way of the Lord; that is, 1. He came to
rectify the
mistakes of people concerning the ways of God; it is certain that they are right
ways, but the scribes and Pharisees, with their corrupt glosses upon the law,
had made them crooked. Now John Baptist calls people to return to the original
rule. 2. He came to prepare and dispose people for the reception and
entertainment of Christ and his gospel. It is an allusion to the harbingers of a
prince or great man, that cry,
Make room. Note, When God is coming
towards us, we must prepare to meet him, and let the word of the Lord have
free
course. See Ps. 24:7.
2. Here is his testimony concerning
his baptism.
(1.) The enquiry which the committee made about it:
Why
baptizest thou, if thou be not the Christ, nor Elias, nor that prophet? v.
25. [1.] They readily apprehended baptism to be fitly and properly used as a
sacred rite or ceremony, for the Jewish church had used it with circumcision in
the admission of proselytes, to signify the cleansing of them from the
pollutions of their former state. That sign was made use of in the Christian
church, that it might be the more passable. Christ did not affect novelty, nor
should his ministers. [2.] They expected it would be used in the days of the
Messiah, because it was promised that then there should be a
fountain opened
(Zec. 13:1), and
clean water sprinkled, Eze. 36:25. It is taken for
granted that Christ, and Elias, and
that prophet, would baptize, when
they came to
purify a
polluted world. Divine justice drowned the
old world
in its filth, but divine grace has provided for the cleansing
of this new world
from its filth. [3.] They would therefore know by what
authority John baptized. His denying himself to be Elias, or
that prophet,
subjected him to this further question,
Why baptizest thou? Note, It is
no new thing for a man's modesty to be turned against him, and improved to his
prejudice; but it is better that men should take advantage of our low thoughts
of ourselves, to
trample upon us, than the devil take advantage of our
high thoughts of ourselves, to
tempt us to pride and draw us into his
condemnation.
(2.) The account he gave of it, v. 26, 27.
[1.] He owned himself to be only the minister of the outward
sign:
"I baptize with water, and that is all; I am no more, and do
no more, than what you see; I have no other title than
John the Baptist;
I cannot confer the spiritual grace signified by it." Paul was in care that
none should think of him above what they saw him to be (2 Co. 12:6); so was John
Baptist. Ministers must not set up for masters.
[2.] He directed them to one who was greater than himself, and
would do that for them, if they pleased, which he could not do:
"I
baptize with water, and that is the utmost of my commission; I have nothing
to do but by this to lead you to one that comes after me, and consign you to
him." Note, The great business of Christ's ministers is to direct all
people to him; we preach not ourselves, but
Christ Jesus the Lord. John
gave the same account to this committee that he had given to the people (v. 15):
This as he of whom I spoke. John was constant and uniform in his
testimony, not as a reed shaken with the wind. The sanhedrim were jealous of his
interest in the people, but he is not afraid to tell them that there is one at
the door that will go beyond him.
First, He tells them of Christ's
presence
among them now at this time:
There stands one among you, at this
time,
whom you know not. Christ stood among the common people, and was as
one of them. Note, 1. Much true worth lies hid in this world; obscurity is often
the lot of real excellency. Saints are God's
hidden ones, therefore
the
world knows them not. 2. God himself is often nearer to us than we are aware
of.
The Lord is
in this place, and
I knew it not. They were
gazing, in expectation of the messiah:
Lo he is here, or he is there,
when the kingdom of God was abroad and already
among them, Lu. 17:21.
Secondly,
He tells them of Christ's
preference above himself: He comes
after
me, and yet is
preferred before me. This he had said before; he adds
here, "Whose
shoe-latchet I am not worthy to loose; I am not fit to
be named the same day with him; it is an honour too great for me to pretend to
be in the meanest office about him," 1 Sa. 25:41. Those to whom Christ is
precious reckon his service, even the most despised instances of it, an honour
to them. See Ps. 84:10. If so great a man as John accounted himself unworthy of
the honour of being near Christ, how unworthy then should we account ourselves!
Now, one would think, these chief priests and Pharisees, upon this intimation
given concerning the approach of the Messiah, should presently have asked who,
and where, this excellent person was; and who more likely to tell them than he
who had given them this general notice? No, they did not think this any part of
their business or concern; they came to molest John, not to receive any
instructions from him: so that their ignorance was
wilful; they might
have known Christ, and would not.
Lastly, Notice is taken of the place where all this was
done:
In Bethabara beyond Jordan, v. 28. Bethabara signifies the
house
of passage; some think it was the very place where Israel passed over Jordan
into the land of promise under the conduct of Joshua; there was opened the way
into the gospel state by Jesus Christ. It was at a great
distance from
Jerusalem, beyond Jordan; probably because what he did
there would be
least offensive to the government. Amos must go prophesy in the country, not
near the court; but it was sad that Jerusalem should put so far from her the
things that belonged to
her peace. He made this confession in the same
place where he was
baptizing, that all those who attended his baptism
might be witnesses of it, and none might say that they knew not what to
make
of him.
Verses 29-36
We have in these verses an account of John's testimony
concerning Jesus Christ, which he witnessed to his own disciples that followed
him. As soon as ever Christ was
baptized he was immediately hurried into
the wilderness, to be
tempted; and there he was forty days. During his
absence John had continued to bear testimony to him, and to tell the people of
him; but now at last he
sees Jesus coming to him, returning from the
wilderness of temptation. As soon as that conflict was over Christ immediately
returned to John, who was
preaching and
baptizing. Now Christ was
tempted for example and encouragement to us; and this teaches us, 1. That the
hardships
of a tempted state should engage us to keep close to ordinances; to go into the
sanctuary
of God, Ps. 73:17. Our combats with Satan should oblige us to keep close to
the communion of saints: two are better than one. 2. That the
honours of
a victorious state must not set us
above ordinances. Christ had triumphed
over Satan, and been attended by angels, and yet, after all, he returns to the
place where John was preaching and baptizing. As long as we are on this side
heaven, whatever extraordinary visits of divine grace we may have here at any
time, we must still keep close to the ordinary means of grace and comfort, and
walk with God in them. Now here are
two testimonies borne by John to
Christ, but those two
agree in one.
I. Here is his testimony to Christ on the first day that he saw
him coming from the wilderness; and here four things are witnessed by him
concerning Christ, when he had him before his eyes:
1. That he is
the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of
the world, v. 29. Let us learn here,
(1.) That Jesus Christ is the
Lamb of God, which bespeaks
him the great sacrifice, by which atonement is made for sin, and man reconciled
to God. Of all the legal sacrifices he chooses to allude to the
lambs
that were offered, not only because a lamb is an emblem of meekness, and Christ
must be led as a
lamb to the slaughter (Isa. 53:7), but with a special
reference, [1.] To the
daily sacrifice, which was offered every morning
and evening continually, and that was always a
lamb (Ex. 29:38), which
was a type of Christ, as the everlasting propitiation, whose blood continually
speaks. [2.] To the
paschal lamb, the blood of which, being sprinkled
upon the door-posts, secured the Israelites from the stroke of the destroying
angel. Christ is
our passover, 1 Co. 5:7. He is the Lamb
of God;
he is appointed by
him (Rom. 3:25), he was devoted to him (ch. 17:19),
and he was accepted with him; in him he was well pleased. The lot which fell on
the goat that was to be offered for a sin-offering was called the
Lord's
lot (Lev. 16:8, 9); so Christ, who was to make atonement for sin, is called
the
Lamb of God.
(2.) That Jesus Christ, as the
Lamb of God, takes away the
sin of the world. This was his undertaking; he appeared, to
put away sin
by the sacrifice of himself, Heb. 9:26. John Baptist had called people to
repent of their sins, in order to the remission of them. Now here he shows how
and by whom that remission was to be expected, what ground of hope we have that
our sins shall be pardoned upon our repentance, though our repentance makes no
satisfaction for them. This ground of hope we haveJesus Christ is
the Lamb
of God. [1.] He
takes away sin. He, being Mediator between God and
man, takes away that which is, above any thing, offensive to the
holiness
of God, and destructive to the
happiness of man. He came,
First,
To take away the guilt of sin by the merit of his death, to vacate the judgment,
and reverse the attainder, which mankind lay under, by an act of indemnity, of
which all penitent obedient believers may claim the benefit.
Secondly, To
take away the power of sin by the Spirit of his grace, so that it shall not have
dominion, Rom. 6:14. Christ, as the Lamb of God, washes us from our sins in his
own blood; that is, he both
justifies and
sanctifies us: he
takes
away sin. He is
ho airoµn
he
is taking away the sin of the world, which denotes it not a single but a
continued act; it is his constant work and office to take
away sin, which
is such a
work of time that it will never be completed till time shall be
no more. He is always
taking away sin, by the continual intercession of
his blood in heaven, and the continual influence of his grace on earth. [2.] He
takes away the
sin of the world; purchases pardon for all those that
repent, and believe the gospel, of what country, nation, or language, soever
they be. The legal sacrifices had reference only to the sins of Israel, to make
atonement for them; but the Lamb of God was offered to be a propitiation for the
sin of the whole world; see 1 Jn. 2:2. This is encouraging to our faith;
if Christ takes away the sin of the world, then why not my sin? Christ levelled
his force at the main body of sin's army, struck at the root, and aimed at the
overthrow, of that
wickedness which the
whole world lay in. God
was in him reconciling the world to himself. [3.] He does this by
taking it
upon himself. He is the Lamb of God, that
bears the sin of the world;
so the margin reads it. He bore sin
for us, and so bears it
from us;
he
bore the sin of many, as the scape-goat had the sins of Israel put
upon his head, Lev. 16:21. God could have taken away the sin by taking away the
sinner, as he took away the sin of the old world; but he has found out a way of
abolishing the sin, and yet sparing the sinner, by making his Son
sin for us.
(3.) That it is our duty, with an eye of faith, to
behold
the Lamb of God thus taking away the
sin of the world. See him taking
away sin, and let that increase our hatred of sin, and resolutions against it.
Let not us hold that fast which the Lamb of God came to take away: for Christ
will either take our sins away or take us away. Let it increase our love to
Christ,
who loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood, Rev.
1:5. Whatever God is pleased to take away from us, if withal he take away our
sins, we have reason to be thankful, and no reason to complain.
2. That this was he of whom he had spoken before (v. 30, 31):
This
is he, this person whom I now point at, you see where he stands,
this is
he of whom I said, After me cometh a man. Observe, (1.) This honour John had
above all the prophets, that, whereas they spoke of him as one that should come,
he saw him already come.
This is he. He sees him
now, he sees him
nigh,
Num. 24:17. Such a difference there is between present
faith and future
vision.
Now we love one whom we have not seen; then we shall see him whom our souls
love, shall see him, and say, This is he of whom I said,
my Christ, and
my
all, my beloved, and
my friend. (2.) John calls Christ
a man;
after me comes a man
aneµr, a
strong
man: like
the man, the branch, or the
man of God's right hand.
(3.) He refers to what he had himself said of him before:
This is he of whom
I said. Note, Those who have said the most honourable things of Christ will
never see cause to unsay them; but the more they know him the more they are
confirmed in their esteem of him. John still thinks as meanly of himself, and as
highly of Christ, as ever. Though Christ appeared not in any external pomp or
grandeur, yet John is not ashamed to own,
This is he whom I meant, who is
preferred before me. And it was necessary that John should thus show them
the person, otherwise they could not have believed that one who made so mean a
figure should be he of whom John had spoken such great things. (4.) He protests
against any confederacy or combination with this Jesus:
And I knew him not.
Though there was some relation between them (Elisabeth was cousin to the virgin
Mary), yet there was no acquaintance at all between them; John had no personal
knowledge of Jesus till he saw him come to his baptism. Their manner of life had
been different: John had spent his time in the wilderness, in solitude; Jesus at
Nazareth, in conversation. There was no correspondence, no interview between
them, that the matter might appear to be wholly carried on by the direction and
disposal of Heaven, and not by any design or concert of the persons themselves.
And as he hereby disowns all collusion, so also all partiality and sinister
regard in it; he could not be supposed to favour him as a friend, for there was
no friendship or familiarity between them. Nay, as he could not be biassed to
speak honourably of him because he was a stranger to him, he was not able to say
any thing of him but what he
received from above, to which he appeals, ch.
3:27. Note, They who are taught believe and confess one whom they have not seen,
and blessed are they who
yet have believed. (5.) The great intention of
John's ministry and baptism was to introduce Jesus Christ. That he should be
made
manifest to Israel, therefore am I come baptizing with water. Observe, [1.]
Though John did not know Jesus by face, yet he knew that he should be made
manifest. Note, We may know the certainty of that which yet we do not fully know
the nature and intention of. We know that the happiness of heaven
shall be
made manifest to Israel, but cannot describe it. [2.] The general assurance
John had that Christ
should be made manifest served to carry him with
diligence and resolution through his work, though he was kept in the dark
concerning particulars:
Therefore am I come. Our assurance of the reality
of things, though they are unseen, is enough to quicken us to our duty. [3.] God
reveals himself to his people by degrees. At first, John knew no more concerning
Christ but that he should be made manifest; in confidence of that, he came
baptizing, and now he is favoured with a sight of him. They who, upon God's
word, believe what they do not see, shall shortly see what they now believe.
[4.] The ministry of the word and sacraments is designed for no other end than
to lead people to Christ, and to make him more and more manifest. [5.] Baptism
with water made way for the manifesting of Christ, as it supposed our corruption
and filthiness, and signified our cleansing by him who is the
fountain
opened.
3. That this was he
upon whom the Spirit descended from
heaven like a dove. For the confirming of his testimony concerning Christ,
he here vouches the extraordinary appearance at his baptism, in which God
himself bore witness to him. This was a considerable proof of Christ's
mission. Now, to assure us of the truth of it, we are here told (v. 32-34),
(1.) That John Baptist saw it: He
bore record; did not
relate it as a story, but solemnly attested it, with all the seriousness and
solemnity of
witness-bearing. He made affidavit of it:
I saw the
Spirit descending from heaven. John could not see the
Spirit, but he
saw the dove which was a sign and representation of the Spirit. The Spirit came
now upon Christ, both to
make him fir for his
work and to
make
him known to the
world. Christ was notified, not by the descent of a
crown upon him, or by a transfiguration, but by the descent of the Spirit as a
dove upon him, to qualify him for his undertaking. Thus the first testimony
given to the apostles was by the descent of the Spirit upon them. God's
children are made manifest by their
graces; their glories are reserved
for their future state. Observe, [1.] The spirit descended
from heaven,
for every good and perfect gift is
from above. [2.] He descended
like
a dovean emblem of meekness, and mildness, and gentleness, which makes
him
fit to teach. The dove brought the olive-branch of peace, Gen. 8:11.
[3.] The Spirit that descended upon Christ
abode upon him, as was
foretold, Isa. 11:2. The Spirit did not
move him at times, as Samson (Jdg.
13:25), but
at all times. The Spirit was given to him
without measure;
it was his prerogative to have the Spirit always upon him, so that he could at
no time be found either
unqualified for his work himself or
unfurnished
for the supply of those that seek to him for his grace.
(2.) That he was
told to expect it, which very much
corroborates the proof. It was not John's bare conjecture, that surely he on
whom he saw the Spirit descending was the Son of God; but it was an
instituted
sign given him before, by which he might certainly know it (v. 33):
I knew
him not. He insists much upon this, that he knew no more of him than other
people did, otherwise than by revelation. But
he that sent me to baptize
gave me this sign,
Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, the same
is he. [1.] See here what sure grounds John went upon in his ministry and
baptism, that he might proceed with all imaginable satisfaction.
First,
He did not run
without sending: God
sent him to baptize. He had a
warrant from heaven for what he did. When a minister's call is clear, his
comfort is sure, though his success is not always so.
Secondly, He did
not run
without speeding; for, when he was sent to
baptize with water,
he was directed to one that should
baptize with the Holy Ghost. Under
this notion John Baptist was taught to expect Christ, as one who would give that
repentance and faith which he called people to, and would carry on and complete
that blessed structure of which he was now laying the foundation. Note, It is a
great comfort to Christ's ministers, in their administration of the outward
signs, that he whose ministers they are can confer the grace signified thereby,
and so put life, and soul, and power into their ministrations; can speak to the
heart what they speak to the ear, and
breathe upon the dry bones to which
they
prophesy. [2.] See what sure grounds he went upon in his designation
of the person of the Messiah. God had before given him a sign, as he did to
Samuel concerning Saul: "On whom thou shalt see the Spirit descend,
that
same is he." This not only prevented any mistakes, but gave him
boldness in his testimony. When he had such assurance as this given him, he
could speak with assurance. When John was told this before, his expectations
could not but be very much raised; and, when the event exactly answered the
prediction, his faith could not but be much confirmed: and these things are
written that we may believe.
4. That he is
the Son of God. This is the conclusion of
John's testimony, that in which all the particulars centre, as the
quod
erat demonstrandumthe fact to be demonstrated (v. 34):
I saw, and bore
record, that this is the Son of God. (1.) The truth asserted is,
that
this is the Son of God. The voice from heaven proclaimed, and John
subscribed to it, not only that he should baptize with the Holy Ghost by a
divine authority, but that he has a divine nature. This was the peculiar
Christian creed, that Jesus is the Son of God (Mt. 16:16), and here is the first
framing of it. (2.) John's testimony to it:
"I saw, and bore record.
Not only I now bear record of it, but I did so as soon as I had seen it."
Observe, [1.] What he
saw he was forward to
bear record of, as
they, Acts 4:20:
We cannot but speak the things which we have seen. [2.]
What he
bore record of was what he
saw. Christ's witnesses were
eye-witnesses, and therefore the more to be credited: they did not speak by
hear-say and report, 2 Pt. 1:16.
II. Here is John's testimony to Christ, the next day after, v.
35, 36. Where observe, 1. He took every opportunity that offered itself to lead
people to Christ:
John stood looking upon Jesus as he walked. It should
seem, John was now retired from the multitude, and was in close conversation
with
two of his disciples. Note, Ministers should not only in their
public preaching, but in their private converse, witness to Christ, and serve
his interests. He saw Jesus
walking at some distance, yet did not go to
him himself, because he would shun every thing that might give the least colour
to suspect a combination. He was
looking upon Jesus
emblepsas;
he looked stedfastly, and fixed his eyes upon him. Those that would lead others
to Christ must be diligent and frequent in the
contemplation of him
themselves. John had seen Christ before, but now looked upon him, 1 Jn. 1:1. 2.
He repeated the same testimony which he had given to Christ the day before,
though he could have delivered some other great truth concerning him; but thus
he would show that he was uniform and constant in his testimony, and consistent
with himself. His doctrine was the same in private that it was in public, as
Paul's was, Acts 20:20, 21. It is good to have that repeated which we have
heard, Phil. 3:1. The doctrine of Christ's sacrifice for the taking away of
the sin of the world ought especially to be insisted upon by all good ministers:
Christ, the Lamb of God,
Christ and him crucified. 3. He intended this
especially for his two disciples that stood with him; he was willing to turn
them over to Christ, for to this end he bore witness to Christ in their hearing
that they might leave all to follow him, even that they might leave
him.
He did not reckon that he lost those disciples who went over from him to Christ,
any more than the schoolmaster reckons that scholar lost whom he sends to the
university. John gathered disciples, not for himself, but for Christ to
prepare
them for the Lord, Lu. 1:17. So far was he from being jealous of Christ's
growing interest, that there was nothing he was more desirous of. Humble
generous souls will give others their due praise without fear of diminishing
themselves by it. What we have of reputation, as well as of other things, will
not be the less for our giving every body his own.
Verses 37-42
We have here the turning over of two disciples from John to
Jesus, and one of them fetching in a third, and these are the first-fruits of
Christ's disciples; see how small the church was in its beginnings, and what
the dawning of the day of its great things was.
I. Andrew and another with him were the two that John Baptist
had directed to Christ, v. 37. Who the other was we are not told; some think
that it was Thomas, comparing ch. 21:2; others that it was John himself, the
penman of this gospel, whose manner it is industriously to conceal his name, ch.
13:23, and 20:3.
1. Here is their readiness to go over to Christ: They
heard
John speak of Christ as the
Lamb of God, and they
followed Jesus.
Probably they had heard John say the same thing the day before, and then it had
not the effect upon them which now it had; see the benefit of repetition, and of
private personal converse. They heard him speak of Christ as the
Lamb of God,
that takes away the sin of the world, and this made them
follow him.
The strongest and most prevailing argument with a sensible awakened soul to
follow Christ is that it is he, and he only, that
takes away sin.
2. The kind notice Christ took of them, v. 38. They came behind
him; but, though he had his back towards them, he was soon aware of them, and
turned,
and
saw them following. Note, Christ takes early cognizance of the first
motions of a soul towards him, and the first step taken in the way to heaven;
see Isa. 64:5; Lu. 15:20. He did not stay till they begged leave to speak with
him, but spoke first. What communion there is between a soul and Christ, it is
he that
begins the discourse. He saith unto them,
What seek ye?
This was not a reprimand for their boldness in intruding into his company: he
that came to
seek us never checked any for
seeking him; but, on
the contrary, it is a kind invitation of them into his acquaintance whom he saw
bashful and modest: "Come, what have you to say to me? What is your
petition? What is your request." Note, Those whose business it is to
instruct people in the affairs of their souls should be humble, and mild, and
easy of access, and should encourage those that apply to them. The question
Christ put to them is what we should all put to ourselves when we begin to
follow Christ, and take upon us the profession of his holy religion:
"What
seek ye? What do we design and desire?" Those that
follow
Christ, and yet
seek the world, or themselves, or the praise of men,
deceive themselves.
"What seek we in seeking Christ? Do we seek a
teacher, ruler, and reconciler? In following Christ, do we seek the favour of
God and eternal life?" If our
eye be
single in this, we are
full
of light.
3. Their modest enquiry concerning the place of his abode:
Rabbi,
where dwellest thou? (1.) In calling him
Rabbi, they intimated that
their design in coming to him was to be
taught by him; rabbi signifies a
master,
a teaching master; the Jews called their doctors, or learned men,
rabbies.
The word comes from
rab, multus or
magnus, a
rabbi, a
great
man, and one that, as we say, has
much in him. Never was there such a
rabbi as our Lord Jesus, such a
great one, in whom were
hid all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge. These came to Christ to be his scholars,
so must all those that apply themselves to him. John had told them that he was
the
Lamb of God; now this
Lamb is worthy to
take the book and
open the seals as a rabbi, Rev. 5:9. And, unless we give up ourselves to be
ruled and taught by him, he will not
take away our sins. (2.) In asking
where
he dwelt, they intimate a desire to be better acquainted with him. Christ
was a stranger in this country, so that they meant where was his
inn
where he
lodged; for there they would attend him at some seasonable time,
when he should appoint, to receive instruction from him; they would not press
rudely upon him, when it was not proper. Civility and good manners well become
those who follow Christ. And, besides, they hoped to have more from him than
they could have in a short conference now by the way. They resolved to make a
business, not a by-business of conversing with Christ. Those that have had some
communion with Christ cannot but desire, [1.] A
further communion with
him; they follow on to know more of him. [2.] A
fixed communion with him;
where they may sit down at his feet, and abide by his instructions. It is not
enough to take a turn with Christ now and then, but we must
lodge with him.
4. The courteous invitation Christ gave them to his lodgings:
He
saith unto them, Come and see. Thus should good desires towards Christ and
communion with him be countenanced. (1.) He invites them to come to his
lodgings: the nearer we approach to Christ, the more we see of his beauty and
excellency. Deceivers maintain their interest in their followers by keeping them
at a distance, but that which Christ desired to recommend him to the esteem and
affections of his followers was that they would
come and see: "Come and
see what a mean lodging I have, what poor accommodations I take up with,
that you may not expect any worldly advantage by following me, as they did who
made their court to the scribes and Pharisees, and called them rabbin.
Come
and see what you must count upon if you follow me." See Mt. 8:20. (2.)
He invites them to come
immediately and without delay. They asked where
he lodged, that they might wait upon him at a more convenient season; but Christ
invites them immediately to
come and see; never in better time than now.
Hence learn, [1.] As to others, that it is best taking people when they are in a
good mind; strike while the iron is hot. [2.] As to ourselves, that it is wisdom
to embrace the present opportunities:
Now is the accepted time, 2 Co.
6:2.
5. Their cheerful and (no doubt) thankful acceptance of his
invitation:
They came and saw where he dwelt, and
abode with him that
day. It had been greater modesty and manners than had done them good if they
had refused this offer. (2.) They readily went along with him:
They came and
saw where he dwelt. Gracious souls cheerfully accept Christ's gracious
invitations; as David, Ps. 27:8. They enquired not how they might be
accommodated with him, but would put that to the venture, and make the best of
what they found. It is good being where Christ is, wherever it be. (2.) They
were so well pleased with what they found that they
abode with him that day
("Master, it is good to be here"); and he bade them welcome. It was
about the tenth hour. Some think that John reckons according to the Roman
computation, and that it was about ten o'clock in the morning, and they staid
with him till night; others think that John reckons as the other evangelists
did, according to the Jewish computation, and that it was four o'clock in the
afternoon, and they abode with him that night and the next day. Dr. Lightfoot
conjectures that this next day that they spent with Christ was a sabbath-day,
and, it being late, they could not get home before the sabbath. As it is our
duty, wherever we are, to contrive to spend the sabbath as much as may be to our
spiritual benefit and advantage, so they are blessed who, by the lively
exercises of faith, love, and devotion, spend their sabbaths in communion with
Christ. These are Lord's days indeed,
days of the Son of man.
II. Andrew brought his brother Peter to Christ. If Peter had
been the first-born of Christ's disciples, the papists would have made a noise
with it: he did indeed afterwards come to be more eminent in gifts, but Andrew
had the honour first to be acquainted with Christ, and to be the instrument of
bringing Peter to him. Observe,
1. The
information which Andrew gave to Peter, with an
intimation to come to Christ.
(1.) He
found him: He first finds his own brother Simon;
his finding implies his seeking him. Simon came along with Andrew to attend John's
ministry and baptism, and Andrew knew where to look for him. Perhaps the other
disciple that was with him went out to seek some friend of his at the same time,
but Andrew sped first:
He first findeth Simon, who came only to attend on
John, but has his expectations out-done; he meets with Jesus.
(2.) He told him whom they had found:
We have found the
Messias. Observe, [1.] he speaks
humbly; not, "I have found,"
assuming the honour of the discovery to himself, but
"We have,"
rejoicing that he had shared with others in it. [2.] He speaks
exultingly,
and with triumph:
We have found that pearl of great price, that true
treasure; and, having found it, he proclaims it as those lepers, 2 Ki. 7:9, for
he knows that he shall have never the less in Christ for others sharing. [3.] He
speaks
intelligently: We have found the Messias, which was more than had
yet been said. John had said,
He is the Lamb of God, and the Son of God,
which Andrew compares with the scriptures of the Old Testament, and, comparing
them together, concludes that he is the Messiah promised to the fathers, for it
is now that the fulness of time is come. Thus, by
making God's testimonies
his meditation, he speaks more clearly concerning Christ than ever
his
teacher had done, Ps. 119:99.
(3.) He
brought him to Jesus; would not undertake to
instruct him himself, but brought him to the fountain-head, persuaded him to
come to Christ and introduced him. Now this was, [1.] An instance of true love
to his brother,
his own brother, so he is called here, because he was
very dear to him. Note, We ought with a particular concern and application to
seek the spiritual welfare of those that are related to us; for their relation
to us adds both to the
obligation and to the
opportunity of doing
good to their souls. [2.] It was an effect of his day's conversation with
Christ. Note, the best evidence of our profiting by the means of grace is the
piety and usefulness of our conversation afterwards. Hereby it appeared that
Andrew had
been with Jesus that he was so full of him, that he had been
in
the mount, for his face shone. He knew there was enough in Christ for all;
and, having tasted that he is gracious, he could not rest till those he loved
had tasted it too. Note, True grace hates monopolies, and loves not to eat its
morsels alone.
2. The
entertainment which Jesus Christ gave to Peter,
who was never the less welcome for his being influenced by his brother to come,
v. 42. Observe,
(1.) Christ called him by his name:
When Jesus beheld him, he
said, Thou art Simon, the son of Jona. It should seem that Peter was utterly
a stranger to Christ, and if so, [1.] It was a proof of Christ's omniscience
that upon the first sight, without any enquiry, he could tell the name both of
him and of his father.
The Lord knows them that are his, and their whole
case. However, [2.] It was an instance of his condescending grace and favour,
that he did thus freely and affably call him by his name, though he was of mean
extraction, and
vir mullius nominisa man of no name. It was an
instance of God's favour to Moses that he
knew him by name, Ex. 33:17.
Some observe the signification of these names:
Simon
obedient, Jona
a dove. An obedient dove-like spirit qualifies us to be the disciples of
Christ.
(2.) He gave him a new name:
Cephas. [1.] His giving him
a name intimates
Christ's favour to him. A new name denotes some great
dignity, Rev. 2:17; Isa. 62:2. By this Christ not only wiped off the reproach of
his mean and obscure parentage, but adopted him into his family as one of his
own. [2.] The name which he gave him bespeaks his
fidelity to Christ:
Thou
shalt be called Cephas (that is Hebrew for
a stone), which is by
interpretation Peter; so it should be rendered, as Acts 9:36.
Tabitha,
which by interpretation is called Dorcas; the former Hebrew, the latter
Greek, for a
young roe. Peter's natural temper was stiff, and hardy,
and resolute, which I take to be the principal reason why Christ called him
Cephasa
stone. When Christ afterwards prayed for him, that his faith might not fail,
that so he might be firm to Christ himself, and at the same time bade him
strengthen
his brethren, and lay out himself for the support of others, then he
made
him what he here called him,
Cephasa stone. Those that come to
Christ must come with a fixed resolution to be firm and constant to him,
like
a stone, solid and stedfast; and it is by his grace that they are so. His
saying,
Be thou steady, makes them so. Now this does no more prove that
Peter was the singular or only rock upon which the church is built than the
calling of James and John
Boanerges proves them the only
sons of
thunder, or the calling of Joses
Barnabas proves him the only
son
of consolation.
Verses 43-51
We have here the call of Philip and Nathanael.
I. Philip was called immediately by Christ himself, not as
Andrew, who was directed to Christ by John, or Peter, who was invited by his
brother. God has various methods of bringing his chosen ones home to himself.
But, whatever means he
uses, he is not
tied to any. 1. Philip was
called in a
preventing was:
Jesus findeth Philip. Christ sought
us, and found us, before we made any enquiries after him. The name
Philip
is of Greek origin, and much used among the Gentiles, which some make an
instance of the degeneracy of the Jewish church at this time, and their
conformity to the nations; yet Christ changed not his name. 2. He was called the
day following. See how closely Christ applied himself to his business.
When work is to be done for God, we must not
lose a day. Yet observe,
Christ now called one or two a day; but, after the Spirit was poured out, there
were thousands a day effectually called, in which was fulfilled ch. 14:12. 3.
Jesus
would go forth into Galilee to call him. Christ will find out all
those that are given to him, wherever they are, and none of them shall be lost.
4. Philip was brought to be a disciple by the power of Christ going along with
that word,
Follow me. See the nature of true Christianity; it is
following
Christ, devoting ourselves to his
converse and
conduct,
attending his movements, and treading in his steps. See the efficacy of the
grace of it is the
rod of his strength. 5. We are told that Philip was of
Bethsaida, and Andrew and Peter were so too, v. 44. These eminent disciples
received not honour from the place of their nativity, but reflected honour upon
it.
Bethsaida signifies the
house of nets, because inhabited
mostly by fishermen; thence Christ chose disciples, who were to be furnished
with extraordinary gifts, and therefore needed not the ordinary advantages of
learning. Bethsaida was a wicked place (Mt. 11:21), yet even
there was a
remnant, according to the election of grace.
II. Nathanael was invited to Christ by Philip, and much is said
concerning him. In which we may observe,
1. What passed between Philip and Nathanael, in which appears an
observable mixture of pious zeal with weakness, such as is usually found in
beginners, that are yet but
asking the way to Zion. Here is,
(1.) The joyful news that Philip brought to Nathanael, v. 45. As
Andrew before, so Philip here, having got some knowledge of Christ himself,
rests not till he has
made manifest the savour of that knowledge. Philip,
though newly come to an acquaintance with Christ himself, yet steps aside to
seek Nathanael. Note, When we have the fairest opportunities of getting good to
our own souls, yet ever then we must seek opportunities of doing good to the
souls of others, remembering the words of Christ,
It is more blessed to give
than to receive, Acts 20:35. O, saith Philip,
we have found him of whom
Moses and the prophets did write, Observe here, [1.] What a transport of joy
Philip was in, upon this new acquaintance with Christ: "We have found him
whom we have so often talked of, so long wished and waited for; at last,
he
is come he is come, and
we have found him!" [2.] What an
advantage it was to him that he was so well acquainted with the scriptures of
the Old Testament, which prepared his mind for the reception of evangelical
light, and made the entrance of it much the more easy:
Him of whom Moses and
the prophets did write. What was written entirely and from eternity in the
book
of the divine counsels was in part, at sundry times and in divers manners,
copied out into the book of the
divine revelations. Glorious things were
written there concerning the Seed of the woman, the Seed of Abraham, Shiloh, the
prophet like Moses, the Son of David, Emmanuel, the Man, the Branch, Messiah the
Prince. Philip had studied these things, and was full of them, which made him
readily welcome Christ. [3.] What mistakes and weaknesses he laboured under: he
called Christ
Jesus of Nazareth, whereas he was of
Bethlehem; and
the
Son of Joseph, whereas he as but his
supposed Son. Young
beginners in religion are subject to mistakes, which time and the grace of God
will rectify. It was his weakness to say,
We have found him, for Christ
found them before they found Christ. He did not yet
apprehend, as Paul
did, how he was
apprehended of Christ Jesus, Phil. 3:12.
(2.) The objection which Nathanael made against this,
Can any
good thing come out of Nazareth? v. 46. Here, [1.] His
caution was
commendable, that he did not lightly assent to every thing that was said, but
took it into examination; our rule is,
Prove all things. But, [2.] His
objection arose from Ignorance. If he meant that no good thing could come out of
Nazareth it was owing to his ignorance of the divine grace, as if that were less
affected to one place than another, or tied itself to men's foolish and
ill-natured observations. If he meant that the Messiah, that great good thing,
could not come out of Nazareth, so far he was right (Moses, in the law, said
that he should come out of Judah, and the prophets had assigned Bethlehem for
the place of his nativity); but then he was ignorant of the matter of
fact,
that this Jesus was born at Bethlehem; so that the blunder Philip made, in
calling him
Jesus of Nazareth, occasioned this objection. Note, The
mistakes of preachers often give rise to the prejudices of hearers.
(3.) The short reply which Philip gave to this objection:
Come
and see. [1.] It was his
weakness that he could not give a
satisfactory answer to it; yet it is the common case of young beginners in
religion. We may
know enough to
satisfy ourselves, and yet not be
able to
say enough to
silence the cavils of a subtle adversary.
[2.] It was his
wisdom and zeal that, when he could not answer the
objection himself, he would have him go to one that could:
Come and see.
Let us not stand arguing here, and raising difficulties to ourselves which we
cannot get over; let us go and converse with Christ himself, and these
difficulties will all vanish presently. Note, It is folly to spend that time in
doubtful disputation which might be better spent, and to much better purpose, in
the exercises of piety and devotion.
Come and see; not,
Go and see,
but,
"Come, and I will go along with thee;" as Isa. 2:3; Jer.
1. 5. From this parley between Philip and Nathanael, we may observe,
First,
That many people are kept from the ways of religion by the unreasonable
prejudices they have conceived against religion, upon the account of some
foreign circumstances which do not at all touch the merits of the case.
Secondly,
The best way to remove the prejudices they have entertained against religion is
to prove themselves, and make trial of it. Let us not answer this matter before
we hear it.
2. What passed between Nathanael and our Lord Jesus. He came and
saw, not in vain.
(1.) Our Lord Jesus bore a very honourable testimony to
Nathanael's integrity:
Jesus saw him coming, and met him with
favourable encouragement; he said of him to those about him, Nathanael himself
being within hearing,
Behold an Israelite indeed. Observe,
[1.] That he
commended him; not to flatter him, or puff
him up with a good conceit of himself, but perhaps because he knew him to be a
modest
man, if not a
melancholy man, one that had hard and mean thoughts of
himself, was ready to doubt his own sincerity; and Christ by this testimony put
the matter out of doubt. Nathanael had, more than any of the candidates,
objected against Christ; but Christ hereby showed that he excused it, and was
not extreme to mark what he had said amiss, because he knew his heart was
upright. He did not retort upon him,
Can any good thing come out of Cana
(ch. 21:2), an obscure town in Galilee? But kindly gives him this character, to
encourage us to hope for acceptance with Christ, notwithstanding our weakness,
and to teach us to speak honourably of those who without cause have spoken
slightly of us, and to give them their due praise.
[2.] That he commended him for his
integrity. First, Behold
an Israelite indeed. It is Christ's prerogative to know what men are
indeed;
we can but
hope the best. The whole nation were Israelites in name, but
all
are not Israel that are of Israel (Rom. 9:6); here, however, was
an
Israelite indeed. 1. A sincere follower of the good example of Israel, whose
character it was that he was a
plain man, in opposition to Esau's
character of a
cunning man. He was a genuine son of
honest Jacob,
not only of his
seed, but of his
spirit. 2. A sincere professor of
the faith of Israel; he was true to the religion he professed, and lived up to
it: he was really as good as he seemed, and his practice was
of a piece
with his profession. He is the Jew that is one
inwardly (Rom. 2:29), so
is he
the Christian. Secondly, He is one in whom is
no guilethat
is the character of an Israelite indeed, a Christian indeed:
no guile
towards men; a man without trick or design; a man that one may trust;
no
guile towards God, that is, sincere in his repentance for sin; sincere in
his covenanting with God; in whose spirit is
no guile, Ps. 32:2. He does
not say without
guilt, but without
guile. Though in many things he
is foolish and forgetful, yet in nothing false, nor
wickedly departing from
God: there is no allowed approved guilt in him; not painted, though he have
his spots:
"Behold this Israelite
indeed." 1. "Take
notice of him, that you may learn his way, and do like him." 2.
"Admire him;
behold, and
wonder." The hypocrisy of the
scribes and Pharisees had so leavened the Jewish church and nation, and their
religion was so degenerated into formality or state-policy, that an Israelite
indeed was a
man wondered at, a miracle of divine grace, like Job, ch.
1:8.
(2.) Nathanael is much surprised at this, upon which Christ
gives him a further proof of his omnisciency, and a kind memorial of his former
devotion.
[1.] Here is Nathanael's modesty, in that he was soon put out
of countenance at the kind notice Christ was pleased to take of him:
"Whence
knowest thou me, me that am unworthy of thy cognizance?
who am I, O Lord
God?" 2 Sa. 7:18. This was an evidence of his sincerity, that he did
not catch at the praise he met with, but declined it. Christ knows us better
than we know ourselves; we know not what is in a man's heart by looking in his
face, but all things are naked and open before Christ, Heb. 4:12, 13. Doth
Christ know us? Let us covet to know him.
[2.] Here is Christ's further
manifestation of himself
to him:
Before Philip called thee, I saw thee. First, He gives him to
understand that he
knew him, and so manifests his divinity. It is God's
prerogative infallibly to know all persons and all things; by this Christ proved
himself to be God upon many occasions. It was prophesied concerning the Messiah
that he should be of
quick understanding in the fear of the Lord, that
is, in judging the sincerity and degree of the fear of God in others, and that
he should not
judge after the sight of his eyes, Isa. 11:2, 3. Here he
answers that prediction. See 2 Tim. 2:19.
Secondly, That before Philip
called him he saw him under the fig-tree; this manifests a particular kindness
for him. 1. His eye was towards him before Philip called him, which was the
first time that ever Nathanael was acquainted with Christ. Christ has knowledge
of us before we have any knowledge of him; see Isa. 45:4; Gal. 4:9. 2. His eye
was upon him when he as
under the fig-tree; this was a private token
which nobody understood but Nathanael: "When thou wast retired
under the
fig-tree in thy garden, and thoughtest that no eye saw thee, I have then my
eye upon thee, and saw that which was very acceptable." It is most probable
that Nathanael under the fig-tree was employed, as Isaac in the field, in
meditation, and prayer, and communion with God. Perhaps then and there it was
that he solemnly joined himself to the Lord in an inviolable covenant. Christ
saw in secret, and by this public notice of it did in part reward him openly.
Sitting
under the fig-tree denotes quietness and composedness of spirit, which much
befriend communion with God. See Mic. 4:4; Zec. 3:10. Nathanael herein was an
Israelite indeed, that, like Israel, he
wrestled with God alone (Gen.
32:24), prayed not like the hypocrites, in the corners of the streets, but under
the fig-tree.
(3.) Nathanael hereby obtained a full assurance of faith in
Jesus Christ, expressed in that noble acknowledgment (v. 49):
Rabbi, thou art
the Son of God, thou art the king of Israel; that is, in short, thou art the
true Messiah. Observe here, [1.] How
firmly he believed
with the
heart. Though he had lately laboured under some prejudices concerning
Christ, they had now all vanished. Note, The grace of God, in working faith,
casts down imaginations. Now he asks no more,
Can any good thing come out of
Nazareth? For he believes Jesus of Nazareth to be the chief good, and
embraces him accordingly. [2.] How
freely he confessed
with the mouth.
His confession is made in form of an adoration, directed to our Lord Jesus
himself, which is a proper way of confessing our faith.
First, He
confesses Christ's prophetical office, in calling him
Rabbi, a title
which the Jews commonly gave to their teachers. Christ is the great rabbi, at
whose feet we must all be
brought up. Secondly, He confesses his divine
nature and mission, in calling him the Son of God (that Son of God spoken of Ps.
2:7); though he had but a human
form and
aspect, yet having a
divine knowledge, the knowledge of the heart, and of things distant and secret,
Nathanael thence concludes him to be the
Son of God. Thirdly, He
confesses,
"Thou art the king of Israel; that king of Israel whom we
have been long waiting for." If he be the Son of God, he is king of the
Israel of God. Nathanael hereby proves himself an Israelite indeed that he so
readily owns and submits to the king of Israel.
(4.) Christ hereupon raises the hopes and expectations of
Nathanael to something further and greater than all this, v. 50, 51. Christ is
very tender of young converts, and will encourage good beginnings, though weak,
Mt. 12:20.
[1.] He here signifies his acceptance, and (it should seem) his
admiration, of the ready faith of Nathanael:
Because I said, I saw thee under
the fig-tree, believest thou? He wonders that such a small indication of
Christ's divine knowledge should have such an effect; it was a sign that
Nathanael's heart was prepared beforehand, else the work had not been done so
suddenly. Note, It is much for the honour of Christ and his grace, when the
heart is surrendered to him at the first summons.
[2.] He promises him much greater helps for the confirmation and
increase of his faith than he had had for the first production of it.
First, In general:
"Thou shalt see greater things
than these, stronger proofs of my being the Messiah;" the miracles of
Christ, and his resurrection. Note, 1. To him that hath, and maketh good use of
what he hath, more shall be given. 2. Those who truly believe the gospel will
find its evidences grow upon them, and will see more and more cause to believe
it. 3. Whatever discoveries Christ is pleased to make of himself to his people
while they are here in this world, he hath still greater things than these to
make known to them; a glory yet further
to be revealed.
Secondly, In particular: "Not thou only, but you, all
you my disciples, whose faith this is intended for the confirmation of, you
shall
see heaven opened;" this is more than telling Nathanael of his being
under the fig-tree. This is introduced with a solemn preface,
Verily, verily
I say unto you, which commands both a
fixed attention to what is said
as very weighty, and a
full assent to it as undoubtedly true: "I say
it, whose word you may rely upon,
amen, amen." None used this word
at the beginning of a sentence but Christ, though the Jews often used it at the
close of a prayer, and sometimes doubled it. It is a solemn asseveration. Christ
is called the
Amen (Rev. 3:14), and so some take it here,
I the Amen,
the Amen, say unto you. I the faithful witness. Note, The assurances we have
of the glory to be revealed are built upon the word of Christ. Now see what it
is that Christ assures them of:
Hereafter, or
within awhile, or
ere
long, or henceforth, ye shall see heaven opened.
a. It is a mean title that Christ here takes to himself:
The
Son of man; a title frequently applied to him in the gospel, but always by
himself. Nathanael had called him the
Son of God and
king of Israel:
he calls himself
Son of man, (1.) To express his
humility in the
midst of the honours done him. (
b.) To teach his
humanity, which
is to be believed as well as his divinity. (
c.) To intimate his present
state of humiliation, that Nathanael might not expect this king of Israel to
appear in external pomp.
b. Yet they are great things which he here foretels:
You
shall see heaven opened, and
the angels of God ascending and descending
upon the Son of man. (
a.) Some understand it literally, as pointing
at some particular event. Either, [
a.] There was some vision of Christ's
glory, in which this was exactly fulfilled, which Nathanael was an eye-witness
of, as Peter, and James, and John were of his transfiguration. There were many
things which Christ did, and those in the presence of his disciples, which were
not written (ch. 20:30), and why not this? Or, [
b.] It was fulfilled in
the many ministrations of the angels to our Lord Jesus, especially that at his
ascension, when heaven was opened to receive him, and the angels
ascended
and
descended, to attend him and to do him honour, and this in the sight
of the disciples. Christ's ascension was the great proof of his mission, and
much confirmed the faith of his disciples, ch. 6:62. Or, [
c.] It may
refer to Christ's second coming, to judge the world, when the heavens shall be
open, and every eye shall see him, and the angels of God shall ascend and
descend about him, as attendants on him, every one employed; and a busy day it
will be. See 2 Th. 1:10. (
b.) Others take it figuratively, as speaking of
a state or series of things to commence
from henceforth; and so we may
understand it, [
a.] Of Christ's
miracles. Nathanael believed,
because Christ, as the prophets of old, could tell him things secret; but what
is this? Christ is now beginning a dispensation of miracles, much more great and
strange than this, as if heaven were opened; and such a power shall be exerted
by the Son of man as if the angels, which excel in strength, were continually
attending his orders. Immediately after this, Christ began to work miracles, ch.
2:11. Or, [
b.] Of his
mediation, and that blessed intercourse
which he hath settled between heaven and earth, which his disciples should be
degrees be let into the mystery of.
First, By Christ, as Mediator, they
shall see
heaven opened, that we may
enter into the holiest by his
blood (Heb. 10:19, 20); heaven opened, that by faith we may
look in, and
at length may
go in; may now behold the glory of the Lord, and hereafter
enter into the joy of our Lord. And,
Secondly, They shall
see angels
ascending and descending upon the Son of man. Through Christ we have
communion with and benefit by the holy angels, and things in heaven and things
on earth are
reconciled and
gathered together. Christ is to us as
Jacob's ladder (Gen. 28:12), by whom angels continually ascend and descend for
the good of the saints.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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