Chapter 10:
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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 10
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. Christ's parabolical discourse
concerning himself as the door of the sheepfold, and the shepherd of the sheep
(v. 1-18). II. The various sentiments of people upon it (v. 19-21). III. The
dispute Christ had with the Jews in the temple at the feast of dedication (v. 22-39).
IV. His departure into the country thereupon (v. 40-42).
Verses 1-18
It is not certain whether this discourse was at the
feast of
dedication in the winter (spoken of v. 22), which may be taken as the date,
not only of what follows, but of what goes before (that which countenances this
is, that Christ, in his discourse there, carries on the metaphor of the sheep,
v. 26, 27, whence it seems that that discourse and this were at the same time);
or whether this was a continuation of his parley with the Pharisees, in the
close of the foregoing chapter. The Pharisees supported themselves in their
opposition to Christ with this principle, that they were the
pastors of the
church, and that Jesus, having no commission from them, was an intruder and
an impostor, and therefore the people were bound in duty to stick to
then,
against
him. In opposition to this, Christ here describes who were the
false shepherds, and who the true, leaving them to infer what they were.
I. Here is the parable or similitude proposed (v. 1-5); it is
borrowed from the custom of that country, in the management of their sheep.
Similitudes, used for the illustration of divine truths, should be taken from
those things that are most familiar and common, that the things of God be not
clouded by that which should clear them. The preface to this discourse is
solemn:
Verily, verily, I say unto you,Amen, amen. This vehement
asseveration intimates the certainty and weight of what he said; we find
amen
doubled in the church's praises and prayers, Ps. 41:13; 72:19; 89:52. If we
would have our
amens accepted in heaven, let Christ's
amens be
prevailing on earth; his repeated
amens.
1. In the parable we have, (1.) The evidence of a thief and
robber, that comes to do mischief to the flock, and damage to the owner, v. 1.
He
enters not by the door, as having no lawful cause of entry, but
climbs up
some other way, at a window, or some breach in the wall. How industrious are
wicked people to do mischief! What plots will they lay, what pains will they
take, what hazards will they run, in their wicked pursuits! This should shame us
out of our slothfulness and cowardice in the service of God. (2.) The character
that distinguishes the rightful owner, who has a property in the sheep, and a
care for them:
He enters in by the door, as one having authority (v. 2),
and he comes to do them some good office or other, to
bind up that which is
broken, and
strengthen that which is sick, Eze. 34:16. Sheep need man's
care, and, in return for it, are serviceable to man (1 Co. 9:7); they clothe and
feed those by whom they are coted and fed. (3.) The ready entrance that the
shepherd finds:
To him the porter openeth, v. 3. Anciently they had their
sheepfolds within the outer gates of their houses, for the greater safety of
their flocks, so that none could come to them the right way, but such as the
porter opened to or the master of the house gave the keys to. (4.) The care he
takes and the provision he makes for his sheep. The
sheep hear his voice,
when he speaks familiarly to them, when they come into the fold, as men now do
to their dogs and horses; and, which is more, he
calls his own sheep by name,
so exact is the notice he takes of them, the account he keeps of them; and he
leads them our from the fold to the green pastures; and (v. 4, 5) when he
turns
them out to graze he does not drive them, but (such was the custom in those
times) he goes before them, to prevent any mischief or danger that might meet
them, and they, being used to it,
follow him, and are safe. (5.) The
strange attendance of the sheep upon the shepherd:
They know his voice,
so as to discern his mind by it, and to distinguish it from that of a stranger
(for
the ox knows his owner, Isa. 1:3), and
a stranger will they not
follow, but, as suspecting some ill design, will flee from him, not
knowing
his voice, but that it is not the voice of their own shepherd. This is the
parable; we have the key to it, Eze. 34:31:
You my flock are men, and I am
your God.
2. Let us observe from this parable, (1.) That good men are
fitly compared to sheep. Men, as creatures depending on their Creator, are
called the
sheep of his pasture. Good men, as new creatures, have the
good qualities of sheep,
harmless and inoffensive as sheep;
meek
and quiet, without noise;
patient as sheep under the hand both of the
shearer and of the butcher;
useful and profitable, tame and tractable, to
the shepherd, and
sociable one with another, and much used in sacrifices.
(2.) The church of God in the world is a
sheepfold, into which the
children
of God that were scattered abroad are
gathered together (ch. 11:52),
and in which they are united and incorporated; it is a good fold, Eze. 34:14.
See Mic. 2:12. This fold is well fortified, for God himself is as a
wall of
fire about it, Zec. 2:5. (3.) This sheepfold lies much exposed to thieves
and robbers; crafty seducers that debauch and deceive, and cruel persecutors
that destroy and devour;
grievous wolves (Acts 20:29); thieves that would
steal Christ's sheep from him, to sacrifice them to devils, or steal their
food from them, that they might perish for lack of it;
wolves in sheep's
clothing, Mt. 7:15. (4.) The great Shepherd of the sheep takes wonderful care of
the flock and of all that belong to it. God is the great Shepherd, Ps. 23:1. He
knows those that are his calls them by name, marks them for himself, leads them
out to fat pastures, makes them both feed and rest there, speaks comfortably to
them, guards them by his providence, guides them by his Spirit and word, and
goes before them,
to set them in the way of his steps. (5.) The
under-shepherds, who are entrusted to feed the flock of God, ought to be careful
and faithful in the discharge of that trust; magistrates must defend them, and
protect and advance all their secular interests; ministers must serve them in
their spiritual interests, must
feed their souls with the word of God
faithfully opened and applied, and with gospel ordinances duly administered,
taking
the oversight of them. They must
enter by the door of a regular
ordination, and to such
the porter will open; the Spirit of Christ will
set
before them an open door, give them authority in the church, and assurance
in their own bosoms. They must know the members of their flocks by name, and
watch over them; must lead them into the pastures of public ordinances, preside
among them, be their mouth to God and God's to them; and in their conversation
must be examples to the believers. (6.) Those who are truly the sheep of Christ
will be very observant of their Shepherd, and very cautious and shy of
strangers. [1.]
They follow their Shepherd, for they
know his voice,
having both a discerning ear, and an obedient heart. [2.]
They flee from a
stranger, and dread following him, because they know not his voice. It is
dangerous following those in whom we discern not the
voice of Christ, and
who would draw us from
faith in him to
fancies concerning him. And
those who have experienced the power and efficacy of divine truths upon their
souls, and have the savour and relish of them, have a wonderful sagacity to
discover Satan's wiles, and to discern between good and evil.
II. The Jew's ignorance of the drift and meaning of this
discourse (v. 6):
Jesus spoke this parable to them, this figurative, but
wise, elegant, and instructive discourse,
but they understood not what the
things were which he spoke unto them, were not aware whom he meant by the
thieves
and robbers and whom by the
good Shepherd. It is the sin and shame of
many who hear the word of Christ that they do not understand it, and they do not
because they will not, and because they will
mis-understand it. They have
no acquaintance with, nor taste of, the things themselves, and therefore do not
understand the parables and comparisons with which they are illustrated. The
Pharisees had a great conceit of their own knowledge, and could not bear that it
should be questioned, and yet they had not sense enough to
understand the
things that Jesus spoke of; they were above their capacity. Frequently the
greatest pretenders to knowledge are most ignorant in the things of God.
III. Christ's explication of this parable, opening the
particulars of it fully. Whatever difficulties there may be in the sayings of
the Lord Jesus, we shall find him ready to explain himself, if we be but willing
to understand him. We shall find one scripture expounding another, and the
blessed
Spirit interpreter to the
blessed Jesus. Christ, in the parable, had
distinguished the shepherd from the robber by this, that he
enters in by the
door. Now, in the explication of the parable, he makes himself to be both
the
door by which the shepherd enters and the shepherd that enters in by the
door. Though it may be a solecism in rhetoric to make the same person to be both
the
door and the
shepherd, it is no solecism in divinity to make
Christ to have his authority from himself, as he has life in himself; and
himself
to
enter by his own blood, as the door,
into the holy place.
1. Christ is
the door. This he saith to those who
pretended to
seek for righteousness, but, like the Sodomites,
wearied
themselves to find the door, where it was not to be found. He saith it to
the Jews, who would be thought God's only sheep, and to the Pharisees, who
would be thought their only shepherds:
I am the door of the sheepfold;
the door of the church.
(1.) In general, [1.] He is as a
door shut, to keep out
thieves and robbers, and such as are not fit to be admitted. The shutting of the
door is the securing of the house; and what greater security has the church of
God than the interposal of the Lord Jesus, and his wisdom, power, and goodness,
betwixt it and all its enemies? [2.] He is as a
door open for passage and
communication.
First, By Christ, as the door, we have our first admission
into the flock of God, ch. 14:6.
Secondly, We go in and out in a
religious conversation, assisted by him, accepted in him; waling up and down in
his name, Zec. 10:12.
Thirdly, By him God comes to his church, visits it,
and communicates himself to it.
Fourthly, By him, as the door, the sheep
are at last admitted into the heavenly kingdom, Mt. 25:34.
(2.) More particularly,
[1.] Christ is the door of
the shepherds, so that none
who come not in by him are to be accounted
pastors, but (according to the
rule laid down, v. 1)
thieves and robbers (though they pretended to be
shepherds);
but the
sheep did not hear them. This refers to all those that had the
character of shepherds in
Israel, whether magistrates or ministers, that
exercised their office without any regard to the Messiah, or any other
expectations of him than what were suggested by their own carnal interest.
Observe,
First, The character given of them: they are
thieves and
robbers (v. 8); all that
went before him, not in time, many of them
were faithful shepherds, but all that
anticipated his commission, and
went before he sent them (Jer. 23:21), that assumed a precedency and superiority
above him, as the antichrist is said to
exalt himself, 2 Th. 2:4.
"The scribes, and Pharisees, and chief priests,
all, even as many as
have come before me, that have endeavoured to forestal my interest, and to
prevent my gaining any room in the minds of people, by prepossessing them with
prejudices against me, they are
thieves and robbers, and steal those
hearts which they have no title to, defrauding the right owner of his property."
They condemned our Saviour as a thief and a robber, because he did not come in
by them as the door, nor take out a license from them; but he shows that they
ought to have received their commission from him, to have been admitted by him,
and to have come after him, and because they did not, but stepped
before him,
they were
thieves and robbers. They would not come in as his disciples,
and therefore were condemned as usurpers, and their pretended commissions
vacated and superseded. Note, Rivals with Christ are robbers of his church,
however they pretend to be
shepherds, nay,
shepherds of shepherds.
Secondly, The care taken to preserve the sheep from them:
But the sheep
did not hear them. Those that had a true savour of piety, that were
spiritual and heavenly, and sincerely devoted to God and godliness, could by no
means approve of the traditions of the elders, nor relish their formalities.
Christ's disciples, without any particular instructions from their Master,
made no conscience of eating with unwashen hands, or plucking the ears of corn
on the sabbath day; for nothing is more opposite to true Christianity than
Pharisaism is, nor any thing more disrelishing to a soul truly devout than their
hypocritical devotions.
[2.] Christ is the door of
the sheep (v. 9):
By me
(
di emou
through me as the
door)
if any man enter into the sheepfold, as one of the flock, he
shall
be saved; shall not only by safe from thieves and robbers, but he shall be
happy, he
shall go in and out. Here are,
First, Plain directions
how to come into the fold: we must come in
by Jesus Christ as the door.
By faith in him, as the great Mediator between God and man, we come into
covenant and communion with God. There is no entering into God's church but by
coming into Christ's church; nor are any looked upon as members of the kingdom
of God among men but those that are willing to submit to the grace and
government of the Redeemer. We must now enter by the
door of faith (Acts
14:27), since the door of
innocency is shut against us, and that
pass
become unpassable, Gen. 3:24.
Secondly, Precious promises to those who
observe this direction. 1. They
shall be saved hereafter; this is the
privilege of
their home. These sheep shall be saved from being distrained
and impounded by divine justice for trespass done, satisfaction being made for
the damage by their great Shepherd, saved from being a prey to the roaring lion;
they shall be
for ever happy. 2. In the mean time they shall
go in and
out and find pasture; this is the privilege of
their way. They shall
have their conversation in the world by the grace of Christ, shall be in his
fold as a man at his own house, where he has
free ingress, egress, and
regress.
True believers are
at home in Christ; when they go out, they are not
shut
out as strangers, but have liberty to come in again; when they come in, they
are not
shut in as trespassers, but have liberty to go out. They go out
to the field in the morning, they come into the fold at night; and in both the
Shepherd leads and keeps them, and they
find pasture in both: grass in
the field, fodder in the fold. In public, in private, they have the word of God
to converse with, by which their spiritual life is supported and nourished, and
out of which their gracious desires are satisfied; they are replenished with the
goodness of God's house.
2. Christ is the
shepherd, v. 11, etc. He was prophesied
of under the Old Testament as a
shepherd, Isa. 40:11; Eze. 34:23; 37:24;
Zec. 13:7. In the New Testament he is spoken of as the
great Shepherd
(Heb. 13:20), the
chief Shepherd (1 Pt. 5:4), the
Shepherd and bishop
of our souls, 1 Pt. 2:25. God, our great owner, the sheep of whose pasture
we are by creation, has constituted his Son Jesus to be our
shepherd; and
here again and again he owns the relation. He has all that care of his church,
and every believer, that a good shepherd has of his flock; and expects all that
attendance and observance from the church, and every believer, which the
shepherds in those countries had from their flocks.
(1.) Christ is
a shepherd, and not as the thief, not as
those that
came not in by the door. Observe,
[1.] The mischievous design of the thief (v. 10):
The thief
cometh not with any good intent, but to
steal, and to kill, and to
destroy. First, Those whom they
steal, whose hearts and affections
they steal from Christ and his pastures, they
kill and destroy
spiritually; for the
heresies they
privily bring in are
damnable.
Deceivers of souls are murderers of souls. Those that steal away the scripture
by keeping it in an unknown tongue, that steal away the sacraments by maiming
them and altering the property of them, that steal away Christ's ordinances to
put their own inventions in the room of them, they
kill and destroy;
ignorance and idolatry are destructive things.
Secondly, Those whom they
cannot
steal, whom they can neither lead, drive, nor carry away, from the
flock of Christ, they aim by persecutions and massacres to
kill and destroy
corporally. He that will not suffer himself to be robbed is in danger of being
slain.
[2.] The gracious design of the shepherd; he is come,
First, To
give life to the sheep. In opposition to
the design of the thief, which is to
kill and destroy (which was the
design of the
scribes and
Pharisees) Christ saith,
I am come
among men, 1. That
they might have life. He came to put life into the
flock, the church in general, which had seemed rather like a valley full of dry
bones than like a pasture covered over with flocks. Christ came to vindicate
divine truths, to purify divine ordinances, to redress grievances, and to revive
dying zeal, to
seek those of his flock that were
lost, to
bind
up that which was broken (Eze. 34:16), and this to his church is
as life
from the dead. He came to
give life to particular believers. Life is
inclusive of all good, and stands in opposition to the death threatened (Gen.
2:17); that
we might have life, as a criminal has when he is pardoned, as
a sick man when he is cured, a dead man when he is raised; that we might be
justified, sanctified, and at last glorified. 2. That they might have it
more
abundantly, kai perisson echoµsin.
As we read it, it is
comparative, that they might have a life
more
abundant than that which was lost and forfeited by sin, more abundant than
that which was promised by the law of Moses, length of days in Canaan, more
abundant than could have been expected or than we are
able to ask or think.
But it may be construed without a note of comparison,
that they might have
abundance, or might
have it abundantly. Christ came to give life and
perisson
ti
something more, something
better, life with
advantage; that in Christ we might not only live, but live comfortably, live
plentifully, live and rejoice. Life in abundance is
eternal life, life
without death or fear of death, life and
much more.
Secondly, To
give his life for the sheep, and this
that he might give life
to them (v. 11):
The good shepherd giveth his
life for the sheep. 1. It is the property of every good shepherd to hazard
and expose his life for the sheep. Jacob did so, when he would go through such a
fatigue to attend them, Gen. 31:40. So did David, when he
slew the lion and
the bear. Such a shepherd of souls was St. Paul, who would gladly
spend,
and be spent, for their service, and
counted not his life dear to him,
in comparison with their salvation. But, 2. It was the prerogative of the great
Shepherd to give his life to purchase his flock (Acts 20:28), to satisfy for
their trespass, and to shed his blood to wash and cleanse them.
(2.) Christ is
a good shepherd, and not as a hireling.
There were many that were not thieves, aiming to kill and destroy the sheep, but
passed for shepherds, yet were very careless in the discharge of their duty, and
through their neglect the flock was greatly damaged;
foolish shepherds, idle
shepherds, Zec. 11:15, 17. In opposition to these,
[1.] Christ here
calls himself the good shepherd (v. 11),
and again (v. 14)
ho poimeµn ho kalos
that
shepherd, that good Shepherd, whom God had promised. Note, Jesus Christ is
the best of shepherds, the best in the world to take the over-sight of souls,
none so skilful, so faithful, so tender, as he, no such feeder and leader, no
such protector and healer of souls as he.
[2.] He
proves himself so, in opposition to all
hirelings, v. 12-14. Where observe,
First, The carelessness of the unfaithful shepherd described
(v. 12, 13); he that is a hireling, that is employed as a servant and is paid
for his pains,
whose own the sheep are not, who has neither profit nor
loss by them,
sees the wolf coming, or some other danger threatening, and
leaves the sheep to the wolf, for in truth he
careth not for them.
Here is plain reference to that of the idol-shepherd, Zec. 11:17. Evil
shepherds, magistrates and ministers, are here described both by their bad
principles and their bad practices.
a. Their
bad principles, the root of their bad
practices. What makes those that have the charge of souls in trying times to
betray their trust, and in quiet times not to mind it? What makes them false,
and trifling, and self-seeking? It is because they are
hirelings, and
care
not for the sheep. That is, (
a.) The wealth of the world is the chief
of their good; it is because they are
hirelings. They undertook the
shepherds' office, as a trade to live and grow rich by, not as an opportunity
of serving Christ and doing good. It is the love of money, and of their own
bellies, that carries them on in it. Not that those are hirelings who, while
they
serve at the altar, live, and live comfortably,
upon the altar.
The labourer is worthy of his meat; and a scandalous maintenance will soon make
a scandalous ministry. But those are
hirelings that love the wages more
than the work, and
set their hearts upon that, as the hireling is said to
do, Deu. 24:15. See 1 Sa. 2:29; Isa. 56:11; Mic. 3:5, 11. (
b.) The work
of their place is the least of their care. They
value not the sheep, are
unconcerned in the souls of others; their business is to be their brothers'
lords, not their brothers' keepers or helpers; they
seek their own things,
and do not, like Timothy,
naturally care for the state of souls. What can
be expected but that they will flee when the
wolf comes. He
careth not
for the sheep, for he is one
whose own the sheep are not. In one
respect we may say of the best of the under-shepherds that the sheep are
not
their own, they have not dominion over them not property in them
(feed my
sheep and
my lambs, saith Christ); but in respect of dearness and
affection they should be
their own. Paul looked upon those as
his own
whom he called his
dearly beloved and longed for. Those who do not
cordially espouse the church's interests, and make them their own, will not
long be faithful to them.
b. Their
bad practices, the effect of these bad
principles, v. 12. See here, (
a.) How basely the hireling deserts his
post; when he sees
the wolf coming, though then there is most need of
him, he
leaves the sheep and flees. Note, Those who mind their safety
more than their duty are an easy prey to Satan's temptations. (
b.) How
fatal the consequences are! the hireling fancies the sheep may look to
themselves, but it does not prove so:
the wolf catches them, and
scatters
the sheep, and woeful havoc is made of the flock, which will all be charged
upon the treacherous shepherd. The blood of perishing souls is required at the
hand of the careless watchmen.
Secondly, See here the grace and tenderness of the good
Shepherd set over against the former, as it was in the prophecy (Eze. 34:21, 22,
etc.):
I am the good Shepherd. It is matter of comfort to the church, and
all her friends, that, however she may be damaged and endangered by the
treachery and mismanagement of her under-officers, the Lord Jesus is, and will
be, as he ever has been,
the good Shepherd. Here are two great instances
of the shepherd's goodness.
a. His
acquainting himself with his flock, with all
that belong or in any wise appertain to his flock, which are of two sorts, both
known to him:
(
a.) He is acquainted with all that
are now of his
flock (v. 14, 15), as the good Shepherd (v. 3, 4):
I know my sheep and am
known of mine. Note, There is a mutual acquaintance between Christ and true
believers; they know one another very well, and knowledge notes affection.
[
a.] Christ
knows his sheep. He knows with a
distinguishing
eye who are his sheep, and who are not; he knows the sheep under their many
infirmities, and the goats under their most plausible disguises. He knows with a
favourable eye those that in truth are his own sheep; he takes cognizance
of their state, concerns himself for them, has a tender and affectionate regard
to them, and is continually mindful of them in the intercession he ever lives to
make within the veil; he visits them graciously by his Spirit, and has communion
with them; he
knows them, that is, he approves and accepts of them, as
Ps. 1:6; 37:18; Ex. 33:17.
[
b.] He is
known of them. He observes them with an
eye of favour, and they observe him with an eye of faith. Christ's knowing his
sheep is put before their knowing him, for he knew and loved us first (1 Jn.
4:19), and it is not so much our knowing him as our being known of him that is
our happiness, Gal. 4:9. Yet it is the character of Christ's sheep that
they
know him; know him from all pretenders and intruders; they know his mind,
know his voice, know by experience the power of his death. Christ speaks here as
if he gloried in being known by his sheep, and thought their respect an honour
to him. Upon this occasion Christ mentions (v. 15) the mutual acquaintance
between his Father and himself:
As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the
Father. Now this may be considered, either,
First, As the
ground
of that intimate acquaintance and relation which subsist between Christ and
believers. The covenant of grace, which is the bond of this relation, is founded
in the covenant of redemption between the Father and the Son, which, we may be
sure, stands firm; for the Father and the Son understood one another perfectly
well in that matter, and there could be no mistake, which might leave the matter
at any uncertainty, or bring it into any hazard. The Lord Jesus
knows whom he
hath chosen, and is sure of them (ch. 13:18), and they also
know whom
they have trusted, and are sure of him (2 Tim. 1:12), and the ground of both
is the perfect knowledge which the Father and the Son had of one another's
mind, when
the counsel of peace was between them both. Or,
Secondly,
As an apt similitude, illustrating the intimacy that is between Christ and
believers. It may be connected with the foregoing words, thus:
I know my
sheep, and am known of mine, even as the Father knows me, and I know the Father;
compare ch. 17:21. 1. As the Father knew the Son, and loved him, and owned him
in his sufferings, when he was
led as a sheep to the slaughter, so Christ
knows his sheep, and has a watchful tender eye upon them, will be with them when
they are
left alone, as his Father was with him. 2. As the Son knew the
Father, loved and obeyed him, and always did those things that pleased him,
confiding in him as his God even when he seemed to forsake him, so believers
know Christ with an obediential fiducial regard.
(
b.) He is acquainted with those that are
hereafter to be of this
flock (v. 16):
Other sheep I have, have a right to and an interest
in,
which are not of this fold, of the Jewish church;
them also I must
bring. Observe,
[
a.] The eye that Christ had to the poor Gentiles. He had
sometimes intimated his special concern for
the lost sheep of the house of
Israel; to them indeed his personal ministry was confined; but, saith he,
I
have other sheep. Those who in process of time should believe in Christ, and
be brought into obedience to him from among the Gentiles, are here called
sheep,
and he is said to have them, though as yet they were
uncalled, and many
of them
unborn, because they were chosen of God, and given to Christ in
the counsels of divine love from eternity. Christ has a right, by virtue of the
Father's donation and his own purchase, to many a soul of which he has not yet
the possession; thus he had
much people in Corinth, when as yet it lay in
wickedness, Acts 18:10. "Those other sheep
I have," saith
Christ, "I have them on my heart, have them in my eye, am as sure to have
them as if I had them already." Now Christ speaks of those
other sheep,
First, To take off the contempt that was put upon him, as having
few
followers, as having but a
little flock, and therefore, if a
good
shepherd, yet a
poor shepherd: "But," saith he, "I have
more sheep than you see."
Secondly, To take down the pride and
vain-glory of the Jews, who thought the Messiah must gather all his sheep from
among them. "No," saith Christ, "I have others whom I will set
with the lambs of my flock, though you disdain to set them with the dogs of your
flock."
[
b.] The purposes and resolves of his grace concerning
them:
"Them also I must bring, bring home to God, bring into the
church, and, in order to this, bring off from their vain conversation, bring
them back from their wanderings, as that
lost sheep," Lu. 15:5. But
why
must he bring them? What was the necessity?
First, The
necessity
of their case required it: "I
must bring, or they must be left
to wander endlessly, for, like sheep, they will never come back of themselves,
and no other can or will bring them."
Secondly, The
necessity of
his own engagements required it; he must bring them, or he would not be
faithful to his trust, and true to his undertaking. "They are
my own,
bought and paid for, and therefore I
must not neglect them nor leave them
to perish." He
must in honour
bring those with whom he was
entrusted.
[
c.] The happy effect and consequence of this, in two
things:
First, "They shall hear my voice. Not only my voice shall
be heard
among them (whereas they have not heard, and therefore could not
believe, now the
sound of the gospel shall
go to the ends of the earth),
but it shall be heard
by them; I will speak, and give to them to hear."
Faith comes by hearing, and our diligent observance of the voice of Christ is
both a means and an evidence of our being brought to Christ, and to God by him.
Secondly,
There shall be one fold and one shepherd. As there is one shepherd, so there
shall be one fold. Both Jews and Gentiles, upon their turning to the faith of
Christ, shall be incorporated in one church, be joint and equal sharers in the
privileges of it, without distinction. Being united to Christ, they shall unite
in him; two sticks shall become one in the hand of the Lord. Note, One shepherd
makes one fold; one Christ makes one church. As the church is one in its
constitution, subject to one head, animated by one Spirit, and guided by one
rule, so the members of it ought to be one in love and affection, Eph. 4:3-6.
b. Christ's
offering up himself for his sheep is
another proof of his being a
good shepherd, and in this he yet more
commended
his love, v. 15, 17, 18.
(
a.) He declares his purpose of
dying for his flock
(v. 15):
I lay down my life for the sheep. He not only ventured his life
for them (in such a case, the hope of
saving it might balance the fear of
losing it), but he actually
deposited it, and submitted to a
necessity of dying for our redemption;
titheµmi
I
put it as a pawn or pledge; as purchase-money paid down. Sheep appointed for
the slaughter, ready to be sacrificed, were ransomed with the blood of the
shepherd. He laid down his life,
hyper toµn
probatoµn, not only for the good of the sheep, but
in their
stead. Thousands of sheep had been offered in sacrifice for their shepherds,
as sin-offerings, but here, by a surprising reverse, the shepherd is sacrificed
for the sheep. When David, the shepherd of Israel, was himself guilty, and the
destroying angel drew his sword against the flock for his sake, with good reason
did he plead,
These sheep, what evil have they done? Let thy hand be against
me, 2 Sa. 24:17. But the Son of David was sinless and spotless; and his
sheep, what evil have they not done? Yet he saith,
Let thine hand be against
me. Christ here seems to refer to that prophecy, Zec. 13:7,
Awake, O
sword, against my shepherd; and, though the smiting of the shepherd be for
the present the
scattering of the flock, it is in order to the gathering
of them in.
(
b.) He takes off the offence of the cross, which to many
is a stone of stumbling, by four considerations:
[
a.] That his
laying down his life for the sheep
was the condition, the performance of which entitled him to the honours and
powers of his exalted state (v. 17):
"Therefore doth my Father love me,
because I lay down my life. Upon these terms I am, as Mediator, to expect my
Father's acceptance and approbation, and the glory designed methat I become
a sacrifice for the chosen remnant." Not but that, as the Son of God, he
was beloved of his Father from eternity, but as
Godman, as
Immanuel,
he was
therefore beloved of the Father because he undertook to
die for
the sheep; therefore God's soul delighted in him as his elect because
herein he was his
faithful servant (Isa. 42:1); therefore he said,
This
is my beloved Son. What an instance is this of God's love to man, that he
loved his Son the more for loving us! See what a value Christ puts upon his
Father's love, that, to recommend himself to that, he would lay down his life
for the sheep. Did he think God's love recompence sufficient for all his
services and sufferings, and shall we think it too little for ours, and court
the smiles of the world to make it up?
Therefore doth my Father love me,
that is, me, and all that by faith become one with me; me, and the mystical
body,
because I lay down my life.
[
b.] That his laying down his life was in order to his
resuming it:
I lay down my life, that I may receive it again. First, This
was the effect of his Father's love, and the first step of his exaltation, the
fruit of that love. Because he was God's
holy one, he must not
see
corruption, Ps. 16:10. God loved him too well to leave him in the grave.
Secondly,
This he had in his eye, in laying down his life, that he might have an
opportunity of declaring himself to be the Son of God with power by his
resurrection, Rom. 1:4. By a divine stratagem (like that before Ai, Jos. 8:15)
he yielded to death, as if he were smitten before it, that he might the more
gloriously conquer death, and triumph over the grave. He laid down a
vilified
body, that he might assume a
glorified one, fit to ascend to the world of
spirits; laid down a life adapted to this world, but assumed one adapted to the
other, like a corn of wheat, ch. 12:24.
[
c.] That he was perfectly voluntary in his sufferings
and death (v. 18): "No one doth or can force my life from me against my
will, but I freely
lay it down of myself, I deliver it as my own act and
deed, for I
have (which no man has)
power to lay it down, and to take
it again."
First, See here the power of Christ, as the Lord of life,
particularly of his own life, which he had
in himself. 1. He had power to
keep his life against all the world, so that it could not be wrested from
him without his own consent. Though Christ's life seemed to be taken by storm,
yet really it was surrendered, otherwise it had been impregnable, and never
taken. The Lord Jesus did not fall into the hands of his persecutors because he
could not avoid it, but threw himself into their hands because his hour was
come.
No man taketh my life from me. This was such a challenge as was
never given by the most daring hero. 2. He had power to
lay down his life.
(1.) He had ability to do it. He could, when he pleased, slip the knot of union
between soul and body, and, without any act of violence done to himself, could
disengage them from each other: having voluntarily
taken up a body, he
could voluntarily lay it down again, which appeared when he cried with a loud
voice, and gave up the ghost. (2.) He had authority to do it,
exousian.
Though we could find instruments of cruelty, wherewith to make an end of our own
lives, yet
Id possumus quod jure possumuswe can do that, and that only,
which we can do lawfully. We are not at liberty to do it; but Christ had a
sovereign authority to dispose of his own life as he pleased. He was no debtor
(as we are) either to life or death, but perfectly
sui juris. 3. He had
power to
take it again; we have not. Our life, once laid down, is
as
water spilt upon the ground; but Christ, when he laid down his life, still
had it within reach, within call, and could resume it. Parting with it by a
voluntary conveyance, he might limit the surrender at pleasure, and he did it
with a power of revocation, which was necessary to preserve the intentions of
the surrender.
Secondly, See here the grace of Christ; since none could
demand his life of him by law, or extort it by force, he
laid it down of
himself, for our redemption. He offered himself to be the Saviour:
Lo, I
come; and then, the necessity of our case calling for it, he offered himself
to be a sacrifice:
Here am I, let these go their way; by which will we are
sanctified, Heb. 10:10. He was both the offerer and the offering, so that
his
laying down his life was his offering up himself.
[
d.] That he did all this by the express order and
appointment of his Father, into which he ultimately resolves the whole affair:
This
commandment have I received of my Father; not such a commandment as made
what he did necessary, prior to his own voluntary undertaking; but this was the
law
of mediation, which he was willing to have
written in his heart, so
as to
delight in doing
the will of God according to it, Ps. 40:8.
Verses 19-21
We have here an account of the people's different sentiments
concerning Christ, on occasion of the foregoing discourse; there was a division,
a
schism, among them; they differed in their opinions, which threw them
into heats and parties. Such a ferment as this they had been in before (ch.
7:43; 9:16); and where there has once been a division again. Rents are sooner
made than made up or mended. This division was occasioned by the sayings of
Christ, which, one would think, should rather have united them all in him as
their centre; but they set them at variance, as Christ foresaw, Lu. 12:51. But
it is better that men should be
divided about the doctrine of Christ than
united in the service of sin, Lu. 11:21. See what the debate was in
particular.
I. Some upon this occasion spoke ill of Christ and of his
sayings, either openly in the face of the assembly, for his enemies were very
impudent, or privately among themselves. They said,
He has a devil, and is
mad, why do you hear him? 1. They reproach him as a demoniac. The worst of
characters is put upon the best of men. He is a distracted man, he raves and is
delirious, and no more to be heard than the rambles of a man in bedlam. Thus
still, if a man preaches seriously and pressingly of another world, he shall be
said to talk like an enthusiast; and his conduct shall be imputed to fancy, a
heated brain, and a crazed imagination. 2. They ridicule his hearers:
"Why
hear you him? Why do you so far encourage him as to take notice of what he
says?" Note, Satan ruins many by putting them out of conceit with the word
and ordinances, and representing it as a weak and silly thing to attend upon
them. Men would not thus be laughed out of their necessary food, and yet suffer
themselves to be laughed out of what is more necessary. Those that hear Christ,
and mix faith with what they hear, will soon be able to give a good account
why
they hear him.
II. Others stood up in defence of him and his discourse, and,
though the stream ran strong, dared to swim against it; and, though perhaps they
did not believe on him as the Messiah, they could not bear to hear him thus
abused. If they could say no more of him, this they would maintain, that he was
a man in his wits, that he had not a devil, that he was neither senseless nor
graceless. The absurd and most unreasonable reproaches, that have sometimes been
cast upon Christ and his gospel, have excited those to appear for him and it who
otherwise had no great affection to either. Two things they plead:1. The
excellency of his doctrine:
"These are not the words of him that hath a
devil; they are not idle words; distracted men are not used to talk at this
rate. These are not the words of one that is either violently possessed with a
devil or voluntarily in league with the devil." Christianity, if it be not
the true religion, is certainly the greatest cheat that ever was put upon the
world; and, if so, it must be of the devil, who is the father of all lies: but
it is certain that the doctrine of Christ is no doctrine of devils, for it is
levelled directly against the devil's kingdom, and Satan is too subtle to be
divided against himself. So much of holiness there is in the words of Christ
that we may conclude they are
not the words of one that has a devil, and
therefore are the words of one that was sent of God; are not from hell, and
therefore must be from heaven. 2. The power of his miracles:
Can a devil,
that is, a man that has a devil,
open the eyes of the blind? Neither mad
men nor bad men can work miracles. Devils are not such lords of the power of
nature as to be able to work such miracles; nor are they such friends to mankind
as to be willing to work them if they were able. The devil will sooner put out
men's eyes than open them. Therefore Jesus
had not a devil.
Verses 22-38
We have here another rencounter between Christ and the Jews in
the temple, in which it is hard to say which is more strange, the gracious words
that came out of his mouth or the spiteful ones that came out of theirs.
I. We have here the time when this conference was:
It was at
the feast of dedication, and it was winter, a feast that was annually
observed by consent, in remembrance of the dedication of a new altar and the
purging of the temple, by Judas Maccabaeus, after the temple had been profaned
and the altar defiled; we have the story of it at large in the history of the
Maccabees (lib. 1, cap. 4); we have the prophecy of it, Dan. 8:13, 14. See more
of the feast, 2 Mac. 1:18. The return of their liberty was to them as life from
the dead, and, in remembrance of it, they kept an annual feast on the
twenty-fifth day of the month
Cisleu, about the beginning of
December,
and seven days after. The celebrating of it was not confined to Jerusalem, as
that of the divine feasts was, but every one observed it in his own place, not
as a
holy time (it is only a divine institution that can sanctify a day),
but as a
good time, as the days of Purim, Esth. 9:19. Christ forecasted
to be now at Jerusalem, not in honour of the feast, which did not require his
attendance there, but that he might improve those eight days of vacation for
good purposes.
II. The place where it was (v. 23):
Jesus walked in the
temple in Solomon's porch; so called (Acts 3:11), not because built by
Solomon, but because built in the same place with that which had borne his name
in the first temple, and the name was kept up for the greater reputation of it.
Here Christ walked, to observe the proceedings of the great sanhedrim that sat
here (Ps. 82:1);
he walked, ready to give audience to any that should
apply to him, and to offer them his services. He walked, as it should seem, for
some time
alone, as one neglected; walked pensive, in the foresight of
the ruin of the temple. Those that have any thing to say to Christ may find him
in the temple and walk with him there.
III. The conference itself, in which observe,
1. A weighty question put to him by the Jews, v. 24. They
came
round about him, to tease him; he was waiting for an opportunity to do them
a kindness, and they took the opportunity to do him a mischief. Ill-will for
good-will is no rare and uncommon return. He could not enjoy himself, no, not in
the temple, his Father's house, without disturbance. They came about him, as
it were, to lay siege to him:
encompassed him about like bees. They came
about him as if they had a joint and unanimous desire to be satisfied; came as
one man, pretending an impartial and importunate enquiry after truth, but
intending a general assault upon our Lord Jesus; and they seemed to speak the
sense of their nation, as if they were the mouth of all the Jews:
How long
dost thou make us to doubt? If thou be the Christ tell us.
(1.) They quarrel with him, as if he had unfairly held them in
suspense hitherto.
Teµn psycheµn heµmoµn aireis
How
long dost thou steal away our hearts? Or,
take away our souls? So
some read it; basely intimating that what share he had of the people's love
and respect he did not obtain fairly, but by indirect methods, as Absalom stole
the hearts of the men of Israel; and as seducers deceive the
hearts of the
simple, and so
draw away disciples after them, Rom. 16:18; Acts
20:30. But most interpreters understand it as we do:
"How long dost thou
keep us in suspense? How long are we kept debating whether thou be the
Christ or no, and not able to determine the question?" Now, [1.] It was the
effect of their infidelity, and powerful prejudices, that after our Lord Jesus
had so fully proved himself to be the Christ they were still in doubt concerning
it; this they willingly hesitated about, when they might easily have been
satisfied. The struggle was between their convictions, which told them he was
Christ, and their corruptions, which said, No, because he was not such a Christ
as they expected. Those who choose to be sceptics may, if they please, hold the
balance so that the most cogent arguments may not weigh down the most trifling
objections, but scales may still hang even. [2.] It was an instance of their
impudence and presumption that they laid the blame of their doubting upon Christ
himself, as if he
made them to doubt by inconsistency with himself,
whereas in truth they made themselves doubt by indulging their prejudices. If
Wisdom's sayings appear doubtful, the fault is not in the object, but in the
eye; they are all
plain to him that understands. Christ would make us to
believe; we make ourselves to
doubt.
(2.) They challenge him to give a direct and categorical answer
whether he was the Messiah or no:
"If thou be the Christ, as many
believe thou art,
tell us plainly, not by parables, as,
I am the light
of the world, and
the good Shepherd, and the like, but
totidem
verbisin so many words, either that thou art the Christ, or, as John
Baptist, that thou art not," ch. 1:20. Now this pressing query of theirs
was
seemingly good; they pretended to be desirous to know the truth, as
if they were ready to embrace it; but it was
really bad, and put with an
ill design; for, if he should tell them plainly that he was the Christ, there
needed no more to make him obnoxious to the jealousy and severity of the Roman
government. Every one knew the Messiah was to be a king, and therefore whoever
pretended to be the Messiah would be prosecuted as a traitor, which was the
thing they would have been at; for, let him tell them ever so plainly that he
was the Christ, they would have this to say presently,
Thou bearest witness
of thyself, as they had said, ch. 8:13.
2. Christ's answer to this question, in which,
(1.) He justifies himself as not at all accessary to their
infidelity and skepticism, referring them, [1.] To what he had said:
I have
told you. He had told them that he was the Son of God, the Son of man, that
he had life in himself, that he had
authority to execute judgment, etc.
And is not this the Christ then? These things he had told them, and they
believed not; why then should they be told them again, merely to gratify their
curiosity?
You believed not. They pretended that they only doubted, but
Christ tells them that they did not believe. Skepticism in religion is no better
than downright infidelity. It is now for us to teach God how he should teach us,
nor prescribe to him how plainly he should tell us his mind, but to be thankful
for divine revelation as we have it. If we do not believe this, neither should
we be persuaded if it were ever so much adapted to our humour. [2.] He refers
them to his works, to the example of his life, which was not only perfectly
pure, but highly beneficent, and of a piece with his doctrine; and especially to
his miracles, which he wrought for the confirmation of his doctrine. It was
certain that no man could do those miracles except God were with him, and God
would not be with him to attest a forgery.
(2.) He condemns them for their obstinate unbelief,
notwithstanding all the most plain and powerful arguments used to convince them:
"You believed not; and again,
You believed not. You still are
what you always were, obstinate in your unbelief." But the reason he gives
is very surprising:
"You believed not, because you are not of my sheep:
you believe not in me, because you belong not to me." [1.] "You are
not disposed to be my followers, are not of a tractable teachable temper, have
no inclination to receive the doctrine and law of the Messiah; you will not herd
yourselves with my sheep, will not come and see, come and hear my voice."
Rooted antipathies to the gospel of Christ are the bonds of iniquity and
infidelity. [2.] "You are not
designed to be my followers; you are
not of those that were given me by my Father, to be brought to grace and glory.
You are not of the number of the elect; and your unbelief, if you persist in it,
will be a certain evidence that you are not." Note, Those to whom God never
gives the grace of faith were never designed for heaven and happiness. What
Solomon saith of immorality is true of infidelity, It is
a deep ditch, and he
that is abhorred of the Lord shall fall therein, Prov. 22:14.
Non esse
electum, non est causa incredulitatis propriè
dicta, sed causa per accidens.
Fides autem est donum Dei et effectus praedestinationisThe not being included
among the elect is not the proper
cause of infidelity, but merely the
accidental
cause. But faith is the gift of God, and the effect of
predestination. So Jansenius distinguishes well here.
(3.) He takes this occasion to describe both the gracious
disposition and the happy state of those that are his sheep; for such there are,
though
they be not.
[1.] To convince them that they were not his sheep, he tells
them what were the characters of his sheep.
First, They
hear his voice
(v. 27), for they know it to be his (v. 4), and he has undertaken that they
shall hear it, v. 16. They discern it,
It is the voice of my beloved,
Cant. 2:8. They delight in it, are in their element when they are sitting at his
feet to hear his word. They do according to it, and make his word their rule.
Christ will not account those his sheep that are deaf to his calls, deaf to his
charms, Ps. 58:5.
Secondly, They
follow him; they submit to his
guidance by a willing obedience to all his commands, and a cheerful conformity
to his spirit and pattern. The word of command has always been,
Follow me.
We must eye him as our leader and captain, and
tread in his steps, and
walk as he walkedfollow the prescriptions of his word, the intimations of his
providence, and the directions of his Spirit
follow the Lamb (the
dux
gregisthe leader of the flock) whithersoever he goes. In vain do we
hear
his voice if we do not
follow him.
[2.] To convince them that it was their great unhappiness and
misery not to be of Christ's sheep, he here describes the blessed state and
case of those that are, which would likewise serve for the support and comfort
of his poor despised followers, and keep them from envying the power and
grandeur of those that were not of his sheep.
First, Our Lord Jesus
takes cognizance of his sheep:
They
hear my voice, and
I know them. He distinguishes them from
others (2 Tim. 2:19), has a particular regard to every individual (Ps. 34:6); he
knows their wants and desires, knows their souls in adversity, where to find
them, and what to do for them. He knows others afar off, but knows them near at
hand.
Secondly, He has provided a happiness for them, suited to
them:
I give unto them eternal life, v. 28. 1. The estate settled upon
them is rich and valuable; it is life, eternal life. Man has a living soul;
therefore the happiness provided is life, suited to his nature. Man has an
immortal soul: therefore the happiness provided is eternal life, running
parallel with his duration.
Life eternal is the felicity and chief good
of a
soul immortal. 2. The manner of conveyance is
free: I give it
to them; it is not bargained and sold upon a valuable consideration, but given
by the free grace of Jesus Christ. The donor has power to give it. He who is the
fountain of life, and Father of eternity, has authorized Christ to give eternal
life, ch. 17:2. Not
I will give it, but
I do give it; it is a
present gift. He gives the assurance of it, the pledge and earnest of it, the
first-fruits and foretastes of it, that
spiritual life which is
eternal
life begun, heaven in the seed, in the bud, in the embryo.
Thirdly, He has undertaken for their security and
preservation to this happiness.
a. They shall be
saved from everlasting perdition. They
shall by no means perish for ever; so the words are. As there is an eternal
life, so there is an eternal destruction; the soul not
annihilated, but
ruined;
its being continued, but its comfort and happiness irrecoverably lost. All
believers are saved from this; whatever cross they may come under, they shall
not
come into condemnation. A man is never undone till he is in hell, and
they shall not go down to that. Shepherds that have large flocks often lose some
of the sheep and suffer them to perish; but Christ has engaged that none of his
sheep shall perish, not one.
b. They cannot be kept from their
everlasting happiness;
it is in reserve, but he that gives it to them will preserve them to it. (
a.)
His own power is engaged for them:
Neither shall any man pluck them out of my
hand. A mighty contest is here supposed about these sheep. The Shepherd is
so careful of their welfare that he has them not only within his fold, and under
his eye, but
in his hand, interested in his special love and taken under
his special protection
(all his saints are in thy hand, Deu. 33:3); yet
their enemies are so daring that they attempt to pluck them out of his hand
his
whose
own they are, whose
care they are; but they cannot, they
shall not, do it. Note, Those are safe who are in the hands of the Lord Jesus.
The saints are
preserved in Christ Jesus: and their salvation is not in
their own keeping, but in the keeping of a Mediator. The Pharisees and rulers
did all they could to frighten the disciples of Christ from following him,
reproving and threatening them, but Christ saith that they shall not prevail. (
b.)
His Father's power is likewise engaged for their preservation, v. 29. He now
appeared in weakness, and, lest his security should therefore be thought
insufficient,
he brings in his Father as a further security. Observe, [
a.] The power of
the Father:
My Father is greater than all; greater than all the other
friends
of the church, all the other shepherds, magistrates or ministers, and able to do
that for them which they cannot do. Those shepherds slumber and sleep, and it
will be easy to pluck the sheep out of their hands; but he keeps his flock day
and night. He is greater than all the enemies of the church, all the opposition
given to her interests, and able to secure his own against all their insults; he
is
greater than all the combined force of hell and earth. He is greater
in wisdom than the
old serpent, though noted for subtlety; greater in
strength than the great red dragon, though his name be
legion, and his
title
principalities and powers. The devil and his angels have had many a
push, many a pluck for the mastery, but have never yet prevailed, Rev. 12:7, 8.
The
Lord on high is mightier. [
b.] The interest of the Father in the
sheep, for the sake of which this power is engaged for them: "It is my
Father
that gave them to me, and he is concerned in honour to uphold his
gift." They were given to the Son as a trust to be managed by him, and
therefore God will still look after them. All the divine power is engaged for
the accomplishment of all the divine counsels. [
c.] The safety of the
saints inferred from these two. If this be so, then
none (neither man nor
devil) is
able to pluck them out of the Father's hand, not able to
deprive them of the grace they have, nor to hinder them from the glory that is
designed them; not able to put them out of God's protection, nor get them into
their own power. Christ had himself experienced the power of his Father
upholding
and
strengthening him, and therefore puts all his followers into his hand
too. He that secured the glory of the Redeemer will secure the glory of the
redeemed. Further to corroborate the security, that the sheep of Christ may have
strong consolation, he asserts the union of these two undertakers:
"I
and my Father are one, and have jointly and severally undertaken for the
protection of the saints and their perfection." This denotes more than the
harmony, and consent, and good understanding, that were between the Father and
the Son in the work of man's redemption. Every good man is so far one with God
as to concur with him; therefore it must be meant of the
oneness of the
nature of Father and Son, that they are the same in substance, and equal in
power and glory. The fathers urged this both against the Sabellians, to prove
the distinction and plurality of the persons, that the Father and the Son are
two, and against the Arians, to prove the unity of the nature, that these two
are
one. If we should altogether hold our peace concerning this sense of
the words, even the stones which the Jews took up to cast at him would speak it
out, for the Jews understood him as hereby making himself God (v. 33) and he did
not deny it. He proves that none could pluck them out
of his hand because
they could not pluck them out
of the Father's hand, which had not been
a conclusive argument if the Son had not had the same almighty power with the
Father, and consequently been one with him in essence and operation.
IV. The rage, the outrage, of the Jews against him for this discourse:
The
Jews took up stones again, v. 31. It is not the word that is used before (ch.
8:59), but
ebastasan lithous
they
carried stonesgreat stones, stones that were a
load, such as they
used in stoning malefactors. They
brought them from some place at a
distance, as it were preparing things for his execution without any judicial
process; as if he were convicted of blasphemy upon the notorious evidence of the
fact, which needed no further trial. The absurdity of this insult which the Jews
offered to Christ will appear if we consider, 1. That they had
imperiously,
not to say
impudently, challenged him to tell them plainly whether he was
the Christ or no; and yet now that he not only said
he was the Christ,
but proved himself so, they condemned him as a malefactor. If the preachers of
the truth propose it
modestly, they are branded as cowards; if
boldly,
as insolent; but
Wisdom is justified of her children. 2. That when they
had before made a similar attempt it was in vain; he
escaped through the
midst of them (ch. 8:59); yet they repeat their baffled attempt. Daring
sinners will throw stones at heaven, though they return upon their own heads;
and will strengthen themselves against the Almighty, though none ever hardened
themselves against him and prospered.
V. Christ's tender expostulation with them upon occasion of
this outrage (v. 32):
Jesus answered what they
did, for we do not
find that they
said any thing, unless perhaps they stirred up the crown
that they had gathered about him to join with them, crying,
Stone him, stone
him, as afterwards,
Crucify him, crucify him. When he could have
answered them with fire from heaven, he mildly replied,
Many good works have
I shown you from my Father: for which of those works do you stone me? Words
so very tender that one would think they should have melted a heart of stone. In
dealing with his enemies he still argued from his works (men evidence what they
are
by what they
do), his
good works
kala
erga excellent, eminent works.
Opera eximia vel praeclara; the
expression signifies both
great works and
good works.
1. The divine power of his works convicted them of the most
obstinate infidelity. They were works
from his Father, so far above the
reach and course of nature as to prove him who did them
sent of God, and
acting by commission from him. These works he
showed them; he did them
openly before the people, and not in a corner. His works would bear the test,
and refer themselves to the testimony of the most inquisitive and impartial
spectators. He did not show his works by candle-light, as those that are
concerned only for
show, but he showed them at noon-day before the world,
ch. 18:20. See Ps. 111:6. His works so undeniably
demonstrated that they
were an incontestable
demonstration of the validity of his commission.
2. The divine grace of his works convicted them of the most base
ingratitude. The works he did among them were not only miracles, but mercies;
not only works of wonder to amaze them, but works of love and kindness to do
them good, and so make them good, and endear himself to them. He healed the
sick, cleansed the lepers, cast out devils, which were favours, not only to the
persons concerned, but to the public; these he had repeated, and multiplied:
"Now
for which of these do you stone me? You cannot say that I have done you any
harm, or given you any just provocation; if therefore you will pick a quarrel
with me, it must be for some good work, some good turn done you; tell me for
which." Note, (1.) The horrid ingratitude that there is in our sins against
God and Jesus Christ is a great aggravation of them, and makes them appear
exceedingly sinful. See how God argues to this purpose, Deu. 32:6, Jer. 2:5; Mic.
6:3. (2.) We must not think it strange if we meet with those who not only hate
us without cause, but are our adversaries for our love, Ps. 35:12; 41:9. When he
asks,
For which of these do you stone me? as he intimates the abundant
satisfaction he had in his own innocency, which gives a man courage in a
suffering day, so he puts his persecutors upon considering what was the true
reason of their enmity, and asking, as all those should do that create trouble
to their neighbour,
Why persecute we him? As Job advises his friends to
do, Job 19:28.
VI. Their vindication of the attempt they made upon Christ, and
the cause upon which they grounded their prosecution, v. 33. What sin will want
fig-leaves with which to cover itself, when even the bloody persecutors of the
Son of God could find something to say for themselves?
1. They would not be thought such enemies to their country as to
persecute him for a good work:
For a good work we stone thee not. For
indeed they would scarcely allow any of his works to be so. His curing the
impotent man (ch. 5) and the blind man (ch. 9) were so far from being
acknowledged good services to the town, and meritorious, that they were put upon
the score of his crimes, because done on the sabbath day. But, if he had done
any good works, they would not own that they stoned him
for them, though
these were really the things that did most exasperate them, ch. 11:47. Thus,
though most absurd, they could not be brought to own their absurdities.
2. They would be thought such friends to God and his glory as to
prosecute him for blasphemy:
Because that thou, being a man, makest thyself
God. Here is,
(1.) A pretended zeal for the law. They seem mightily concerned
for the honour of the divine majesty, and to be seized with a religious horror
at that which they imagined to be a reproach to it. A blasphemer was to be
stoned,
Lev. 24:16. This law, they thought, did not only justify, but sanctify, what
they attempted, as Acts 26:9. Note, The vilest practices are often varnished
with plausible pretences. As nothing is more
courageous than a
well-informed conscience, so nothing is more
outrageous than a mistaken
one. See Isa. 66:5; ch. 16:2.
(2.) A real enmity to the gospel, on which they could not put a
greater affront than by representing Christ as a blasphemer. It is no new thing
for the worst of characters to be put upon the best of men, by those that
resolve to give them the worst of treatment. [1.] The crime laid to his charge
is
blasphemy, speaking reproachfully and despitefully of God. God himself
is out of the sinner's reach, and not capable of receiving any real injury;
and therefore enmity to God spits its venom at his name, and so shows its
ill-will. [2.] The proof of the crime:
Thou, being a man, makest thyself God.
As it is God's glory that
he is God, which we rob him of when we make
him altogether such a one as ourselves, so it is his glory that
besides him
there is no other, which we rob him of when we make ourselves, or any
creature, altogether like him. Now,
First, Thus far they were in the
right, that what Christ said of himself amounted to thisthat he was God, for
he had said that he was
one with the Father and that he would
give
eternal life; and Christ does not deny it, which he would have done if it
had been a mistaken inference from his words. But,
secondly, They were
much mistaken when they looked upon him as a
mere man, and that the
Godhead he claimed was a usurpation, and of his own making. They thought it
absurd and impious that such a one as he, who appeared in the fashion of a poor,
mean, despicable man, should profess himself the Messiah, and entitle himself to
the honours confessedly due to the Son of God. Note, 1. Those who say that Jesus
is a
mere man, and only a
made God, as the Socinians say, do in
effect charge
him with blasphemy, but do effectually prove it upon
themselves. 2. He who, being a man, a sinful man, makes himself a god as the
Pope does, who claims divine powers and prerogatives, is unquestionably a
blasphemer,
and
that antichrist.
VII. Christ's reply to their accusation of him (for such their
vindication of themselves was), and his making good those claims which they
imputed to him as blasphemous (v. 34, etc.), where he proves himself to be no
blasphemer, by two arguments:
1. By an argument taken from
God's word. He appeals to
what was
written in their law, that is, in the Old Testament; whoever
opposes Christ, he is sure to have the scripture
on his side. It is
written (Ps. 82:6),
I have said, You are gods. It is an argument
a
minore ad majusfrom the less to the greater. If they were gods, much more
am I. Observe,
(1.) How he explains the text (v. 35):
He called them gods to
whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken. The word of
God's commission came to them, appointing them to their offices, as judges,
and therefore they are called
gods, Ex. 22:28. To some the word of God
came immediately, as to Moses; to others in the way of an instituted ordinance.
Magistracy is a divine institution; and magistrates are God's delegates, and
therefore the scripture calleth them gods; and we are sure that the scripture
cannot
be broken, or broken in upon, or found fault with. Every word of God is
right;
the very style and language of scripture are unexceptionable, and not to be
corrected, Mt. 5:18.
(2.) How he applies it. Thus much in general is easily inferred,
that those were very rash and unreasonable who condemned Christ as a blasphemer,
only for calling himself the Son of God, when yet they themselves called their
rulers so, and therein the scripture warranted them. But the argument goes
further (v. 36): If magistrates were called Gods, because they were commissioned
to administer justice in the nation,
say you of him whom the Father hath
sanctified, Thou blasphemest? We have here two things concerning the Lord
Jesus:[1.] The honour done him by the
Father, which he justly glories
in: He
sanctified him, and
sent him into the world. Magistrates
were called
the sons of God, though the word of God only came to them,
and the spirit of government came upon them by measure, as upon Saul; but our
Lord Jesus was himself the
Word, and had the
Spirit without measure.
They were constituted for a particular country, city, or nation; but he was sent
into the world, vested with a universal authority, as Lord of all. They
were
sent to, as persons at a distance; he was
sent forth, as
having been from eternity with God. The Father
sanctified him, that is,
designed him and set him apart to the office of Mediator, and qualified and
fitted him for that office.
Sanctifying him is the same with
sealing
him, ch. 6:27. Note, Whom the Father sends he sanctifies; whom he designs for
holy purposes he prepares with holy principles and dispositions. The holy God
will reward, and therefore will employ, none but such as he finds or makes holy.
The Father's sanctifying and sending him is here vouched as a sufficient
warrant for his calling himself the
Son of God; for because he was a
holy
thing he was
called the Son of God, Lu. 1:35. See Rom. 1:4. [2.] The
dishonour done him by the Jews, which he justly complains ofthat they
impiously said of him, whom the Father had thus dignified, that he was a
blasphemer,
because he called himself the
Son of God: "Say you of him so and so?
Dare you say so? Dare you thus set your mouths against the heavens? Have you
brow and brass enough to tell the God of truth that he lies, or
to condemn
him that is most just? Look me in the face, and say it if you can. What! say
you of the Son of God that
he is a blasphemer?" If devils, whom he
came to condemn, had said so of him, it had not been so strange; but that
men,
whom he came to teach and save, should say so of him,
be astonished, O
heavens! at this. See what is the language of an obstinate unbelief; it
does, in effect, call the holy Jesus a blasphemer. It is hard to say which is
more to be wondered at, that men who breathe in God's air should yet speak
such things, or that men who have spoken such things should still be suffered to
breathe in God's air. The wickedness of man, and the patience of God, as it
were, contend which shall be most
wonderful.
2. By an argument taken from
his own works, v. 37, 38. In
the former he only answered the charge of blasphemy by an argument
ad hominemturning
a man's own argument against himself; but he here makes out his own
claims, and proves that he and the Father are one (v. 37, 38):
If I do not
the works of my Father, believe me not. Though he might justly have
abandoned such blasphemous wretches as incurable, yet he vouchsafes to reason
with them. Observe,
(1.)
From what he arguesfrom his works, which he had
often vouched as his credentials, and the proofs of his mission. As he proved
himself sent of God by the
divinity of his works, so we must prove
ourselves allied to Christ by the
Christianity of ours. [1.] The argument
is very cogent; for the works he did were the
works of his Father, which
the Father only could do, and which could not be done in the ordinary course of
nature, but only by the sovereign over-ruling power of the God of nature.
Opera
Deo propriaworks peculiar to God, and
Opera Deo Dignaworks worthy
of Godthe works of a divine power. He that can dispense with the laws of
nature, repeal, altar, and overrule them at his pleasure, by his own power, is
certainly the sovereign prince who first instituted and enacted those laws. The
miracles which the apostles wrought in his name, by his power, and for the
confirmation of his doctrine, corroborated this argument, and continued the
evidence of it when he was gone. [2.] It is proposed as fairly as can be
desired, and put to a short issue.
First, If I do not the works of my Father,
believe me not. He does not demand a blind and implicit faith, nor an assent
to his divine mission further than he gave proof of it. He did not wind himself
into the affections of the people, nor wheedle them by sly insinuations, nor
impose upon their credulity by bold assertions, but with the greatest fairness
imaginable quitted all demands of their faith, further than he produced warrants
for these demands. Christ is no hard master, who expects to reap in assents
where he has not sown in arguments. None shall perish for the disbelief of that
which was not proposed to them with sufficient motives of credibility, Infinite
Wisdom itself being judge.
Secondly, "But if I do
the works of my
Father, if I work undeniable miracles for the confirmation of a holy
doctrine,
though you believe not me, though you are so scrupulous as not
to take my word, yet
believe the works: believe your own eyes, your own
reason; the thing speaks itself plainly enough." As the invisible things of
the Creator are clearly seen by his works of creation and common providence
(Rom. 1:20), so the invisible things of the Redeemer were seen by his miracles,
and by all his works both of power and mercy; so that those who were not
convinced by these works were
without excuse.
(2.)
For what he argues
that you may know and
believe, may believe it intelligently, and with an entire satisfaction, that
the Father is in me and I in him; which is the same with what he had said
(v. 30):
I and my Father are one. The Father was so in the Son as that in
him
dwelt all the fulness of the Godhead, and it was by a divine power
that he wrought his miracles; the Son was so in the Father as that he was
perfectly acquainted with the whole of his mind, not by communication, but by
consciousness, having lain in his bosom. This we must
know; not know and
explain
(for we cannot by searching find it out to perfection), but know and
believe
it; acknowledging and adoring the depth, when we cannot find the bottom.
Verses 39-42
We have here the issue of the conference with the Jews. One
would have thought it would have convinced and melted them, but their hearts
were hardened. Here we are told,
I. How they attacked him by force. Therefore
they sought
again to take him, v. 39. Therefore, 1. Because he had fully answered their
charge of blasphemy, and wiped off that imputation, so that they could not for
shame go on with their attempts to stone him, therefore they contrived to seize
him, and prosecute him as an offender against the state. When they were
constrained to drop their attempt by a popular tumult, they would try what they
could do under colour of a legal process. See Rev. 12:13. Or, 2. Because he
persevered in the same testimony concerning himself, they persisted in their
malice against him. What he had said before he did in effect say again, for the
faithful
witness never departs from what he has once said; and therefore, having the
same provocation, they express the same resentment, and justify their attempt to
stone him by another attempt to take him. Such is the temper of a persecuting
spirit, and such its policy,
malè
facta malè
factis tegere ne perpluant
to
cover one set of bad deeds with another, lest the former should fall through.
II. How he avoided them by flight; not an inglorious retreat, in
which there was any thing of human infirmity, but a glorious retirement, in
which there was much of a divine power. He
escaped out of their hands,
not by the interposal of any friend that helped him, but by his own wisdom he
got
clear of them; he drew a veil over himself, or cast a mist before their
eyes, or tied the hands of those whose hearts he did not turn. Note, No weapon
formed against our Lord Jesus shall prosper, Ps. 2:4. He
escaped, not
because he was afraid to suffer, but because
his hour was not come. And
he who knew how to
deliver himself no doubt knows how to
deliver the
godly out of temptation, and to make
a way for them to escape.
III. How he disposed of himself in his retirement: He
went
away again beyond Jordan, v. 40. The bishop of our souls came not to be
fixed in one see, but to go about from place to place, doing good. This great
benefactor was never out of his way, for wherever he came there was work to be
done. Though Jerusalem was the royal city, yet he made many a kind visit to the
country, not only to his own country Galilee, but to other parts, even those
that lay most remote beyond Jordan. Now observe,
1. What
shelter he found there. He went into a private
part of the country, and
there he abode; there he found some rest and
quietness, when in Jerusalem he could find none. Note, Though persecutors may
drive Christ and his gospel out of their own city or country, they cannot drive
him or it out of the world. Though Jerusalem was not gathered, nor would be, yet
Christ was glorious, and would be. Christ's going now beyond Jordan was a
figure of the taking of the kingdom of God from the Jews, and bringing it to the
Gentiles. Christ and his gospel have often found better entertainment among the
plain country-people than among
the wise, the mighty, the noble, 1 Co.
1:26, 27.
2. What
success he found there. He did not go thither
merely for his own security, but to do good there; and he chose to go thither,
where John at first baptized (ch. 1:28), because there could not but remain some
impressions of John's ministry and baptism thereabouts, which would dispose
them to receive Christ and his doctrine; for it was not three years since John
was baptizing, and Christ was himself baptized here at Bethabara. Christ came
hither now to see what fruit there was of all the pains John Baptist had taken
among them, and what they retained of the things they then heard and received.
The event in some measure answered expectation; for we are told,
(1.) That they flocked after him (v. 41):
Many resorted to
him. The return of the means of grace to a place, after they have been for
some time intermitted, commonly occasions a great stirring of affections. Some
think Christ chose to
abide at
Bethabara, the
house of passage,
where the ferry-boats lay by which they crossed the river Jordan, that the
confluence of people thither might give an opportunity of teaching many who
would come to hear him when it
lay in their way, but who would scarcely
go a step out of the road for an opportunity of attending on his word.
(2.) That they reasoned in his favour, and sought arguments to
induce them to close with him as much as those at Jerusalem sought objections
against him. They said very judiciously,
John did no miracle, but all things
that John spoke of this man were true. Two things they considered, upon
recollecting what they had seen and heard from John, and comparing it with
Christ's ministry. [1.] That Christ far exceeded John Baptist's power, for
John
did no miracle, but Jesus does many; whence it is easy to infer that Jesus
is greater than John. And, if John was so great a prophet, how great then is
this Jesus! Christ is best known and acknowledged by such a comparison with
others as sets him superlatively above others. Though John came in the spirit
and power of Elias, yet he did not work miracles, as Elias did, lest the minds
of people should be made to hesitate between him and Jesus; therefore the honour
of working miracles was reserved for Jesus as a flower of his crown, that there
might be a sensible demonstration, and
undeniable one, that though he
came after John, yet he was
preferred far before him. [2.] That Christ
exactly answered John Baptist's testimony. John not only
did no miracle
to
divert people from Christ, but he said a great deal to direct them to
Christ, and to turn them over as apprentices to him, and this came to their
minds
now: all things that
John said of this man were true, that
he should be the
Lamb of God, should
baptize with Holy Ghost and with
fire. Great things John had said of him, which raised their expectations; so
that though they had not zeal enough to carry them into his country to enquire
after him, yet, when he came into theirs, and brought his gospel to their doors,
they acknowledged him as great as John had said he would be. When we get
acquainted with Christ, and come to know him experimentally, we find all things
that the scripture saith of him to be true; nay, and that the reality exceeds
the report, 1 Ki. 10:6, 7. John Baptist was now dead and gone, and yet his
hearers profited by what they had heard formerly, and, by comparing what they
heard then with what they saw now, they gained a double advantage; for,
First,
They were confirmed in their belief that
John was a prophet, who foretold
such things, and spoke of the eminency to which this Jesus would arrive, though
his beginning was so small.
Secondly, They were prepared to believe that
Jesus
was the Christ, in whom they saw those things accomplished which John
foretold. By this we see that the success and efficacy of the word preached are
not confined to the life of the preacher, nor do they expire with his breath,
but that which seemed as
water spilt upon the ground may afterwards be
gathered
up again. See Zec. 1:5, 6.
(3.) That many believed on him there. Believing that he who wrought such
miracles, and in whom John's predictions were fulfilled, was what he declared
himself to be, the Son of God, they gave up themselves to him as his disciples,
v. 42. An emphasis is here to be laid, [1.] Upon the persons that believed on
him; they were
many. While those that received and embraced his doctrine
at Jerusalem were but as the grape-gleanings of the vintage, those that believed
on him in the country, beyond the Jordan, were a full harvest gathered in to
him. [2.] Upon the place where this was; it was where John had been preaching
and baptizing and had had great success;
there many believed on the Lord
Jesus. Where the preaching of the doctrine of repentance has had success, as
desired, there the preaching of the doctrine of reconciliation and gospel grace
is most likely to be prosperous. Where John has been acceptable, Jesus will not
be unacceptable. The jubilee-trumpet sounds sweetest in the ears of those who in
the day of atonement have afflicted their souls for sin.
Chapter 10:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
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