Chapter 18:
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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 18
Complete Concise
Hitherto this evangelist has recorded little of the history of
Christ, only so far as was requisite to introduce his discourses; but now that
the time drew nigh that Jesus must die he is very particular in relating the
circumstances of his sufferings, and some which the others had omitted,
especially his sayings. So far were his followers from being ashamed of his
cross, or endeavouring to conceal it, that this was what, both by word and
writing, they were most industrious to proclaim, and gloried in it. This chapter
relates, I. How Christ was arrested in the garden and surrendered himself a
prisoner (v. 1-12). II. How he was abused in the high priest's court, and
how Peter, in the meantime, denied him (v. 13-27). III. How he was prosecuted
before Pilate, and examined by him, and put in election with Barabbas for the
favour of the people, and lost it (v. 28-40).
Verses 1-12
The hour was now come that
the captain of our salvation,
who was to be
made perfect by sufferings, should engage the enemy. We
have here his entrance upon the encounter. The day of recompence is in his
heart, and
the year of his redeemed is come, and his own arm works the
salvation, for he has no second.
Let us turn aside now, and see this
great sight.
I. Our Lord Jesus, like a bold champion, takes the field first
(v. 1, 2):
When he had spoken these words, preached the sermon, prayed
his prayer, and so finished his testimony, he would lose no time, but
went
forth immediately out of the house, out of the city, by moon-light, for the
passover was observed at the full moon,
with his disciples (the eleven,
for Judas was otherwise employed), and
he went over the brook Cedron,
which runs between Jerusalem and the mount of Olives,
where was a garden,
not his own, but some friend's, who allowed him the liberty of it. Observe,
1. That our Lord Jesus entered upon his sufferings
when he
had spoken these words, as Mt. 26:1,
When he had finished all these
sayings. Here it is intimated, (1.) That our Lord Jesus took his work before
him. The office of the priest was to teach, and pray, and offer sacrifice.
Christ, after teaching and praying, applies himself to make atonement. Christ
had said all he had to say as a prophet, and now he addresses himself to the
discharge of his office as a priest, to
make his soul an offering for sin;
and, when he had gone through this, he entered upon his kingly office. (2.) That
having by his sermon prepared his disciples for this hour of trial, and by his
prayer prepared himself for it, he then courageously went out to meet it. When
he had put on his armour, he entered the lists, and not till then. Let those
that suffer according to the will of God, in a good cause, with a good
conscience, and having a clear call to it, comfort themselves with this, that
Christ will not engage those that are his in any conflict, but he will first do
that for them which is necessary to prepare them for it; and if we receive
Christ's instructions and comforts, and be interested in his intercession, we
may, with an unshaken resolution, venture through the greatest hardships in the
way of duty.
2. That
he went forth with his disciples. Judas knew what
house he was in in the city, and he could have staid and met his sufferings
there; but, (1.) He would do as he was wont to do, and not alter his method,
either to meet the cross or to miss it, when his hour was come. It was his
custom when he was at Jerusalem, after he had spent the day in public work, to
retire at night
to the mount of Olives; there his quarters were, in the
skirts of the city, for they would not make room for him in the palaces, in the
heart of the town. This being his custom, he could not be put out of his method
by the foresight of his sufferings, but, as Daniel, did then just
as he did
aforetime, Dan. 6:10. (2.) He was as unwilling that there should be
an
uproar among the people as his enemies were, for it was not his way
to
strive or cry. If he had been seized in the city, and a tumult raised
thereby, mischief might have been done, and a great deal of blood shed, and
therefore he withdrew. Note, When we find ourselves involved in trouble, we
should be afraid of involving others with us. It is no disgrace to the followers
of Christ to fall tamely. Those who aim at honour from men value themselves upon
a resolution to sell their lives as dearly as they can; but those who know that
their blood is precious to Christ, and that not a drop of it shall be shed but
upon a valuable consideration, need not stand upon such terms. (3.) He would set
us an example in the beginning of his passion, as he did at the end of it, of
retirement from the world.
Let us go forth to him, without the camp, bearing
his reproach, Heb. 13:13. We must lay aside, and leave behind, the crowds,
and cares, and comforts, of cities, even holy cities, if we would cheerfully
take up our cross, and keep up our communion with God therein.
3. That he went
over the brook Cedron. He must go over
this to go to
the mount of Olives, but the notice taken of it intimates
that there was something in it significant; and it points, (1.) At David's
prophecy concerning the Messiah (Ps. 110:7), that
he shall drink of the brook
in the way; the brook of suffering in the way to his glory and our
salvation, signified by
the brook Cedron, the black brook, so called
either from the darkness of the valley it ran through or the colour of the
water, tainted with the dirt of the city; such a brook Christ drank of, when it
lay in the way of our redemption, and
therefore shall he lift up the head,
his own and ours. (2.) At David's pattern, as a type of the Messiah. In his
flight from Absalom, particular notice is taken of his
passing over the brook
Cedron, and going up by the ascent of mount Olivet, weeping, and all that
were with him in tears too, 2 Sa. 15:23, 30.
The Son of David, being
driven out by the rebellious Jews, who would
not have him to reign over them
(and Judas, like Ahithophel, being in the plot against him), passed over the
brook in meanness and humiliation, attended by a company of true mourners. The
godly kings of Judah had burnt and destroyed the idols they found at
the
brook Cedron; Asa, 2 Chr. 15:16; Hezekiah, 2 Chr. 30:14; Josiah, 2 Ki. 23:4,
6. Into that brook the abominable things were cast. Christ,
being now made
sin for us, that he might abolish it and take it away, began his passion by
the same brook. Mount Olivet, where Christ began his sufferings, lay on the east
side of Jerusalem; mount Calvary, where he finished them, on the west; for in
them he had an eye to such as should
come from the east and the west.
4. That he entered into a garden. This circumstance is taken
notice of only by this evangelist, that Christ's sufferings began in a garden.
In the garden of Eden sin began; there the curse was pronounced, there the
Redeemer was promised, and therefore in a garden that promised seed entered the
lists with the old serpent. Christ was buried also in a garden. (1.) Let us,
when we walk in our gardens, take occasion thence to meditate on Christ's
sufferings in a garden, to which we owe all the pleasure we have in our gardens,
for by them the curse upon the ground for man's sake was removed. (2.) When we
are in the midst of our possessions and enjoyments, we must keep up an
expectation of troubles, for our gardens of delight are in a vale of tears.
5. That he had his disciples with him, (1.) Because he used to
take them with him when he retired for prayer. (2.) They must be witnesses of
his sufferings, and his patience under them, that they might with the more
assurance and affection preach them to the world (Lu. 24:48), and be themselves
prepared to suffer. (3.) He would take them into the danger to show them their
weakness, notwithstanding the promises they had made of fidelity. Christ
sometimes brings his people into difficulties, that he may magnify himself in
their deliverance.
6. That Judas the traitor
knew the place, knew it to be
the place of his usual retirement, and probably, by some word Christ had
dropped, knew that he intended to be there that night, for want of a better
closet. A solitary garden is a proper place for meditation and prayer, and after
a passover is a proper time to retire for private devotion, that we may pray
over the impressions made and the vows renewed, and clench the nail. Mention is
made of Judas's knowing the place, (1.) To aggravate the sin of Judas, that he
would betray his Master, notwithstanding the intimate acquaintance he had with
him; nay, and that he would make use of his familiarity with Christ, as giving
him an opportunity of betraying him; a generous mind would have scorned to do so
base a thing. Thus has Christ's holy religion been
wounded in the house of
its friends, as it could not have been wounded any where else. Many an
apostate could not have been so profane, if he had not been a professor; could
not have ridiculed scriptures and ordinances, if he had not known them. (2.) To
magnify the love of Christ, that, though he knew where the traitor would seek
him, thither he went to be found of him, now that he knew his
hour was come.
Thus he showed himself willing to suffer and die for us. What he did was not by
constraint, but by consent; though as man he said,
Let this cup pass away,
as Mediator he said,
"Lo, I come, I come with a good will." It
was late in the night (we may suppose eight or nine o'clock) when Christ went
out to the garden; for it was not only his
meat and drink, but his rest
and sleep,
to do the will of him that sent him. When others were going to
bed, he was going to prayer, going to suffer.
II.
The captain of our salvation having taken the field,
the enemy presently comes upon the spot, and attacks him (v. 3): Judas with his
men comes thither, commissioned by the chief priests, especially those among
them that were Pharisees, who were the most bitter enemies to Christ. This
evangelist passes over Christ's agony, because the other three had fully
related it, and presently introduces Judas and his company that came to seize
him. Observe,
1. The persons employed in this action
a band of men and
officers from the chief priests, with Judas. (1.) Here is a multitude
engaged against Christ
a band of men, speira
cohors,
a regiment, a Roman band, which some think was five hundred men, others a
thousand. Christ's friends were few, his enemies many. Let us therefore
not
follow a multitude to do evil, nor fear a multitude designing evil to us,
if
God be for us. (2.) Here is a mixed multitude; the band of men were
Gentiles, Roman soldiers, a detachment out of the guards that were posted in the
tower of Antonia, to be a curb upon the city; the
officers of the chief
priests, hypeµretas. Either their
domestic servants, or the officers of their courts, were Jews; these had an
enmity to each other, but were united against Christ, who came to
reconcile
both to God in one body. (3.) It is a commissioned multitude, not a popular
tumult; no, they have received orders
from the chief priests, upon whose
suggestion to the governor that this Jesus was a dangerous man, it is likely
they had a warrant from him too to take him up,
for they feared the people.
See what enemies Christ and his gospel have had, and are likely to have,
numerous and potent, and therefore formidable: ecclesiastical and civil powers
combined against them, Ps. 2:1, 2. Christ said it would be so (Mt. 10:18), and
found it so. (4.) All under the direction of Judas. He
received this
band
of men; it is probable that he requested it, alleging that it was necessary
to send a good force, being as ambitious of the honour of commanding in chief in
this expedition as he was covetous of
the wages of this
unrighteousness.
He thought himself wonderfully preferred from coming in the rear of the
contemptible twelve to be placed at the head of these formidable hundreds; he
never made such a figure before, and promised himself, perhaps, that this should
not be the last time, but he should be rewarded with a captain's commission,
or better, if he succeeded well in this enterprise.
2. The preparation they had made for an attack: They came
with
lanterns, and torches, and weapons. (1.) If Christ should abscond, though
they had moonlight, they would have occasion for their lights; but they might
have spared these; the second Adam was not driven, as the first was, to hide
himself, either for fear or shame,
among the trees of the garden. It was
folly to light a candle to seek the Sun by. (2.) If he should resist, they would
have occasion for their arms.
The weapons of his warfare were spiritual,
and at these
weapons he had often beaten them, and
put them to
silence, and therefore they have now recourse to other
weapons, swords
and staves.
III. Our Lord Jesus gloriously repulsed the first onset of the
enemy, v. 4-6, where observe,
1. How he received them, with all the mildness imaginable
towards them, and all the calmness imaginable in himself.
(1.) He met them with a very soft and mild question (v. 4):
Knowing
all things that should come upon him, and therefore not at all surprised
with this alarm, with a wonderful intrepidity and presence of mind, undisturbed
and undaunted, he
went forth to meet them, and, as if he had been
unconcerned, softly asked,
"Whom seek you? What is the matter? What
means this bustle at this time of night?" See here, [1.] Christ's
foresight of his sufferings; He
knew all those things that should come upon
him, for he had bound himself to suffer them. Unless we had strength, as
Christ had, to bear the discovery, we should not covet to know what shall come
upon us; it would but anticipate our pain;
sufficient unto the day is the
evil thereof: yet it will do us good to expect sufferings in general, so
that when they come we may say, "It is but what we looked for, the cost we
sat down and counted upon." [2.] Christ's forwardness to his sufferings;
he did not run away from them, but went out to meet them, and reached forth his
hand to take the bitter cup. When the people would have forced him to a crown,
and offered to make him a king in Galilee, but he withdrew, and hid himself (ch.
6:15); but, when they came to force him to a cross, he offered himself; for he
came to this world to suffer and went to the other world to reign. This will not
warrant us needlessly to expose ourselves to trouble, for we know not when our
hour is come; but we are called to suffering when we have no way to avoid it but
by sin; and, when it comes to this, let
none of these things move us, for
they cannot hurt us.
(2.) He met them with a very calm and mild answer when they told
him whom they were in quest of, v. 5. They said,
Jesus of Nazareth; and
he said,
I am he. [1.] It should seem,
their eyes were held, that they
could not know him. It is highly probable that many of the Roman band, at
least the officers of the temple, had often seen him, if only to satisfy their
curiosity; Judas, however, to be sure, knew him well enough, and yet none of
them could pretend to say,
Thou art the man we seek. Thus he showed them
the folly of bringing lights to see for him, for he could make them not to know
him when they saw him; and he has herein shown us how easily he can infatuate
the counsels of his enemies, and make them lose themselves, when they are
seeking mischief. [2.] In their enquiries for him they called him
Jesus of
Nazareth, which was the only title they knew him by, and probably he was so
called in their warrant. It was a name of reproach given him, to darken the
evidence of his being the Messiah. By this it appears that they knew him not,
whence he was; for, if they had known him, surely they would not have persecuted
him. [3.] He fairly answers them:
I am he. He did not improve the
advantage he had against them by their blindness, as Elisha did against the
Syrians, telling them,
This is not the way, neither is this the city; but
improves it as an opportunity of showing his willingness to suffer. Though they
called him Jesus of Nazareth, he answered to the name, for he despised the
reproach; he might have said,
I am not he, for he was
Jesus of
Bethlehem; but he would by no means allow equivocations. He has hereby
taught us to own him, whatever it cost us; not to be
ashamed of him or his
words; but even in difficult times
to confess Christ crucified, and
manfully to fight under his banner. I am he, Egoµ
eimi
I am he, is the glorious name of the blessed God (Ex.
3:14), and the honour of that name is justly challenged by the blessed Jesus.
[4.] Particular notice is taken, in a parenthesis,
that Judas stood with
them. He that used to stand with those that followed Christ now stood with
those that fought against him. This describes an apostate; he is one that
changes sides. He herds himself with those with whom his heart always was, and
with whom he shall have his lot in the judgment-day. This is mentioned,
First,
To show the impudence of Judas. One would wonder where he got the confidence
with which he now faced his Master, and
was not ashamed, neither could he
blush; Satan in his heart gave him a whore's forehead.
Secondly, To
show that Judas was particularly aimed at in the power which went along with
that word,
I am he, to foil the aggressors. It was an arrow levelled at
the traitor's conscience, and pierced him to the quick; for Christ's coming
and his voice will be more terrible to apostates and betrayers than to sinners
of any other class.
2. See how he terrified them, and obliged them to retire (v. 6):
They went backward, and, like men thunder-struck,
fell to the ground.
It should seem, they did not fall forward, as humbling themselves before him,
and yielding to him, but backward, as standing it out to the utmost. Thus Christ
was declared to be more than a man, even when he was trampled upon as
a worm,
and no man. This word,
I am he, had revived his disciples, and raised
them up (Mt. 14:27); but the same word strikes his enemies down. Hereby he
showed plainly,
(1.) What he could have done with them. When he struck them
down, he could have struck them dead; when he spoke them
to the ground,
he could have spoken them to hell, and have sent them, like Korah's company,
the next way thither; but he would not do so, [1.] Because the hour of his
suffering was come, and he would not put it by; he would only show that his life
was not forced from him, but
he laid it down of himself, as he had said.
[2.] Because he would give an instance of his patience and forbearance with the
worst of men, and his compassionate love to his very enemies. In striking them
down, and no more, he gave them both a call to repent and space to repent; but
their
hearts were hardened, and all was in vain.
(2.) What he will do at last with all his implacable enemies,
that
will not repent to give him glory; they shall flee, they shall fall, before him.
Now the scripture was accomplished (Ps. 21:12),
Thou shalt make them turn
their back, and Ps. 20:8. And it will be accomplished more and more;
with
the breath of his mouth he will slay the wicked, 2 Th. 2:8; Rev. 19:21.
Quid
judicaturus faciet, qui judicandus hoc facit?
What will he do when he
shall come to judge, seeing he did this when he came to be judged?Augustine.
IV. Having given his enemies a repulse, he gives his friends a
protection, and that by his word too, v. 7-9, where we may observe,
1. How he continued to expose himself to their rage, v. 7. They
did not lie long where they fell, but, by divine permission, got up again; it is
only in the other world that God's judgments are everlasting. When they were
down, one would have thought Christ should have made his escape; when they were
up again, one would have thought they should have let fall their pursuit; but
still we find, (1.) They are as eager as ever to seize him. It is in some
confusion and disorder that they recover themselves; they cannot imagine what
ailed them, that they could not keep their ground, but will impute it to any
thing rather than Christ's power. Note, There are hearts so very hard in sin
that nothing will work upon them to reduce and reclaim them. (2.) He is as
willing as ever to be seized. When they were fallen before him, he did not
insult over them, but seeing them at a loss, asked them the same question,
Whom
seek you? And they gave him the same answer,
Jesus of Nazareth. In
his repeating the question, he seems to come yet closer to their consciences:
"Do you not know
whom you seek? Are you not aware that you are in
error, and will you meddle with your match? Have you not had enough of it, but
will you try the other struggle?
Did ever any harden his heart against God
and prosper?" In their repeating the same answer, they showed an
obstinacy in their wicked way; they still call him
Jesus of Nazareth,
with as much disdain as ever, and Judas is as unrelenting as any of them.
Let
us therefore fear lest, by a few bold steps at first in a sinful way,
our
hearts be hardened.
2. How he contrived to secure his disciples from their rage. He
improved this advantage against them for the protection of his followers. When
he shows his courage with reference to himself,
I have told you that I am he,
he shows his care for his disciples,
Let these go their way. He speaks
this as a command to them, rather than a contract with them; for they lay at his
mercy, not he at theirs. He charges them therefore as
one having authority:
"Let these go their way; it is at your peril if you meddle with them"
This aggravated the sin of the disciples in forsaking him, and particularly
Peter's in denying him, that Christ had given them this pass, or warrant of
protection, and yet they had not faith and courage enough to rely upon it, but
betook themselves to such base and sorry shifts for their security. When Christ
said,
Let these go their way, he intended,
(1.) To manifest his affectionate concern for his disciples.
When he exposed himself, he excused them, because they were not as yet fit to
suffer; their faith was weak, and their spirits were low, and it would have been
as much as their souls, and the lives of their souls, were worth, to bring them
into sufferings now.
New wine must not be
put into old bottles.
And, besides, they had other work to do; they must go their way, for they are to
go into all the world, to preach the gospel.
Destroy them not, for a blessing
is in them. Now herein, [1.] Christ gives us a great encouragement to follow
him; for, though he has allotted us sufferings, yet he considers our frame, will
wisely time the cross, and proportion it to our strength, and will
deliver
the godly out of temptation, either from it, or through it. [2.] He gives us
a good example of love to our brethren and concern for their welfare. We must
not consult our own ease and safety only, but others, as well as our own, and in
some cases more than our own. There is a generous and heroic love, which will
enable us to
lay down our lives for the brethren, 1 Jn. 3:16.
(2.) He intended to give a specimen of his undertaking as
Mediator. When he offered himself to suffer and die, it was that we might
escape. He was our
antipsychos
a
sufferer in our stead; when he said,
Lo, I come, he said also,
Let
these go their way; like the ram offered instead of Isaac.
3. Now herein he confirmed the word which he had spoken a little before (ch.
17:12),
Of those whom thou gavest me, I have lost none. Christ, by
fulfilling that word in this particular, gave an assurance that it should be
accomplished in the full extent of it, not only for those that were now with
him, but for all that should believe on him through their word. Though Christ's
keeping them was meant especially of the preservation of their souls from sin
and apostasy, yet it is here applied to the preservation of their natural lives,
and very fitly, for even the body was a part of Christ's charge and care; he
is to
raise it up at the last day, and therefore to preserve it as well
as
the spirit and soul, 1 Th. 5:23; 2 Tim. 4:17, 18. Christ will preserve
the natural life for the service to which it is designed; it is given to him to
be used for him, and he will not lose the service of it, but will be magnified
in it,
whether by life or death; it shall be held in life as long as any
use is to be made of it. Christ's witnesses shall not die till they have given
in their evidence. But this is not all; this preservation of the disciples was,
in the tendency of it, a spiritual preservation. They were now so weak in faith
and resolution that in all probability, if they had been called out to suffer at
this time, they would have shamed themselves and their Master, and some of them,
at least the weaker of them, would have been lost; and therefore, that he might
lose
none, he would not expose them. The safety and preservation of the saints
are owing, not only to the divine grace in proportioning the strength to the
trial, but to the divine providence in proportioning the trial to the strength.
V. Having provided for the safety of his disciples, he rebukes
the rashness of one of them, and represses the violence of his followers, as he
had repulsed the violence of his persecutors, v. 10, 11, where we have,
1. Peter's rashness. He had a sword; it is not likely that he
wore one constantly as a gentleman, but they had two swords among them all (Lu.
22:38), and Peter, being entrusted with one, drew it; for now, if ever, he
thought it was his time to use it; and
he smote one of the high priest's
servants, who was probably one of the forwardest, and aiming, it is likely,
to cleave him down the head, missed his blow, and only
cut off his right ear.
The servant's name, for the greater certainty of the narrative, is
recorded; it
was Malchus, or
Malluch, Neh. 10:4.
(1.) We must here acknowledge Peter's good-will; he had an
honest zeal for his Master, though now misguided. He had lately promised to
venture his life for him, and would now make his words good. Probably it
exasperated Peter to see Judas at the head of this gang; his baseness excited
Peter's boldness, and I wonder that when he did draw his sword he did not aim
at the traitor's head.
(2.) Yet we must acknowledge Peter's ill conduct; and, though
his good intention did excuse, yet it would not justify him. [1.] He had no
warrant from his Master for what he did. Christ's soldiers must wait the word
of command, and not outrun it; before they expose themselves to sufferings, they
must see to it, not only that their cause be good, but their call clear. [2.] He
transgressed the duty of his place, and resisted the powers that were, which
Christ had never countenanced, but forbidden (Mt. 5:39):
that you resist not
evil [3.] He opposed his Master's sufferings, and, notwithstanding the
rebuke he had for it once, is ready to repeat,
Master, spare thyself;
suffering be
far from thee; though Christ had told him that he must and
would suffer, and that his hour was now come. Thus, while he seemed to fight for
Christ, he fought against him. [4.] He broke the capitulation his Master had
lately made with the enemy. When he said,
Let these go their way, he not
only indented for their safety, but in effect passed his word for their good
behaviour, that they should go away peaceably; this Peter heard, and yet would
not be bound by it. As we may be guilty of a sinful cowardice when we are called
to appear, so we may be of a sinful forwardness when we are called to retire.
[5.] He foolishly exposed himself and his fellow disciples to the fury of this
enraged multitude. If he had cut off Malchus's head when he cut off his ear,
we may suppose the soldiers would have fallen upon all the disciples, and have
hewn them to pieces, and would have represented Christ as not better than
Barabbas. Thus many have been guilty of self-destruction, in their zeal for
self-preservation. [6.] Peter played the coward so soon after this (denying his
Master) that we have reason to think he would not have done this but that he saw
his Master cause them to fall on the ground, and then he could deal with them;
but, when he saw him surrender himself notwithstanding, his courage failed him;
whereas the true Christian hero will appear in the cause of Christ, not only
when it is prevailing, but when it seems to be declining; will be on the right
side, though it be not the rising side.
(3.) We must acknowledge God's over-ruling providence in
directing the stroke (so that it should do no more execution, but only cut off
his ear, which was rather marking him than maiming him), as also in giving
Christ an opportunity to manifest his power and goodness in healing the hurt,
Lu. 22:51. Thus what was in danger of turning to Christ's reproach proved an
occasion of that which redounded much to his honour, even among his adversaries.
2. The rebuke his Master gave him (v. 11):
Put up thy sword
into the sheath, or scabbard; it is a gentle reproof, because it was his
zeal that carried him beyond the bounds of discretion. Christ did not aggravate
the matter, only bade him
do so no more. Many think their being in grief
and distress will excuse them if they be hot and hasty with those about them;
but Christ has here set us an example of meekness in sufferings. Peter must put
up his sword, for it was the
sword of the Spirit that was to be committed
to him
weapons of warfare not carnal, yet
mighty. When Christ
with a word felled the aggressors, he showed Peter how he should be armed with a
word, quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, and with
that, not long after this, he laid Ananias and Sapphira dead at his feet.
3. The reason for this rebuke:
The cup which my Father has
given me, shall I not drink it? Matthew relates another reason which Christ
gave for this rebuke, but John preserves this, which he had omitted; in which
Christ gives us, (1.) A full proof of his own submission to his Father's will.
Of all that was amiss in what Peter did, he seems to resent nothing so much as
that he would have hindered his sufferings now that his
hour was come:
"What,
Peter, wilt thou step in between the cup and the lip?
Get
thee hence, Satan." If Christ be determined to suffer and die, it is
presumption for Peter in word or deed to oppose it:
Shall I not drink it?
The manner of expression bespeaks a settled resolution, and that he would not
entertain a thought to the contrary. He was willing to drink of this cup, though
it was a bitter cup, an infusion of the wormwood and the gall, the cup of
trembling, a bloody cup, the
dregs of the cup of the Lord's wrath, Isa.
51:22. He drank it, that he might put into our hands the cup of salvation, the
cup of consolation, the cup of blessing; and
therefore he is willing to
drink it, because
his Father put it into his hand. If his Father will
have it so, it is for the best, and be it so. (2.) A fair pattern to us of
submission to God's will in every thing that concerns us. We must
pledge
Christ in the cup that he drank of (Mt. 20:23), and must argue ourselves into a
compliance. [1.] It is but a
cup; a small matter comparatively, be it
what it will. It is not a sea, a red sea, a dead sea, for it is not hell; it is
light, and but for a moment. [2.] It is a cup that is given us; sufferings are
gifts. [3.] It is given us by a Father, who has a Father's authority, and does
us no wrong; a Father's affection, and means us no hurt.
VI. Having entirely reconciled himself to the dispensation, he
calmly surrendered, and yielded himself a prisoner, not because he could not
have made his escape, but because he would not. One would have thought the cure
of Malchus's ear should have made them relent, but nothing would win upon
them.
Maledictus furor, quem nec majestast miraculi nec pietas beneficii
confringere potuit
Accursed rage, which the grandeur of the miracle
could not appease, nor the tenderness of the favour conciliate.Anselm.
Observe here,
1. How they seized him:
They took Jesus. Only some few of
them could lay hands on him, but it is charged upon them all, for they were all
aiding and abetting. In treason there are not accessaries; all are principals.
Now the scripture was fulfilled,
Bulls have compassed me (Ps. 22:12),
compassed
me like bees, Ps. 118:12.
The breath of our nostrils is taken in their
pit, Lam. 4:20. They had so often been frustrated in their attempts to seize
him that now, having got him into their hands, we may suppose they flew upon him
with so much the more violence.
2. How they secured him:
They bound him. This particular
of his sufferings is taken notice of only by this evangelist, that, as soon as
ever he was taken, he was bound, pinioned, handcuffed; tradition says,
"They bound him with such cruelty that the blood started out at his fingers'
ends; and, having bound his hands behind him, they clapped an iron chain about
his neck, and with that dragged him along." See
Gerhard. Harm. cap.
5.
(1.) This shows the spite of his persecutors. They bound him,
[1.] That they might torment him, and put him in pain, as they bound Samson to
afflict him. [2.] That they might disgrace him, and put him to shame; slaves
were bound, so was Christ, though free-born. [3.] That they might prevent his
escape, Judas having told them to hold him fast. See their folly, that they
should think to fetter that power which had but just now proved itself
omnipotent. [4.] They bound him as one already condemned, for they were resolved
to prosecute him to the death, and that he should die as a fool dieth, that is,
as a malefactor, with his hands bound, 2 Sa. 3:33, 34. Christ had bound the
consciences of his persecutors with the power of his word, which galled them;
and, to be revenged on him, they laid these bonds on him.
(2.) Christ's being bound was very significant; in this as in
other things there was a mystery. [1.] Before they bound him, he had bound
himself by his own undertaking to the work and office of a Mediator. He was
already bound to the horns of the altar with the cords of his own love to man,
and duty to his Father, else their cords would not have held him. [2.] We were
bound
with the cords of our iniquities (Prov. 5:22), with the
yoke of our
transgressions, Lam. 1:14. Guilt is a bond on the soul, by which we are
bound over to the judgment of God; corruption is a bond on the soul, by which we
are bound under the power of Satan. Christ, being made sin for us, to free us
from those bonds, himself submitted to be bound for us, else we had been bound
hand and foot, and reserved in chains of darkness. To his bonds we owe our
liberty; his confinement was our enlargement; thus the Son maketh us free. [3.]
The types and prophecies of the Old Testament were herein accomplished. Isaac
was bound, that he might be sacrificed; Joseph was bound, and the
irons
entered into his soul, in order to his being brought from prison to reign,
Ps. 105:18, etc. Samson was bound in order to his slaying more of the
Philistines at his death than he had done in his life. And the Messiah was
prophesied of as a prisoner, Isa. 53:8. [4.] Christ was bound, that he might
bind us to duty and obedience. His bonds for us are bonds upon us, by which we
are for ever obliged to love him and serve him. Paul's salutation to his
friends is Christ's to us all:
"Remember my bonds (Col. 4:18),
remember them as bound with him from all sin, and to all duty." [5.] Christ's
bonds for us were designed to make our bonds for him easy to us, if at any time
we be so called out to suffer for him, to sanctify and sweeten them, and put
honour upon them; these enabled Paul and Silas to sing in the stocks, and
Ignatius to call his bonds for Christ spiritual pearls.
Epist. ad Ephes.
Verses 13-27
We have here an account of Christ's arraignment before the
high priest, and some circumstances that occurred therein which were omitted by
the other evangelists; and Peter's denying him, which the other evangelists
had given the story of entire by itself, is interwoven with the other passages.
The crime laid to his charge having relation to religion, the judges of the
spiritual court took it to fall directly under their cognizance. Both Jews and
Gentiles seized him, and so both Jews and Gentiles tried and condemned him, for
he died for the sins of both. Let us go over the story in order.
I. Having seized him, they
led him away to Annas first,
before they brought him to the court that was sat, expecting him, in the house
of Caiaphas, v. 13. 1. They
led him away, led him in triumph, as a trophy
of their victory; led him
as a lamb to the slaughter, and they led him
through the sheep-gate spoken of Neh. 3:1. For through that they went from the
mount of Olives into Jerusalem. They hurried him away with violence, as if he
had been the worst and vilest of malefactors. We had been led away of our own
impetuous lusts, and led captive by Satan at his will, and, that we might be
rescued, Christ was led away, led captive by Satan's agents and instruments.
2. They led him away to their masters that sent them. It was now about midnight,
and one would think they should have put him in ward (Lev. 24:12), should have
led him to some prison, till it was a proper time to call a court; but he is
hurried away immediately, not to the justices of peace, to be committed, but to
the judges to be condemned; so extremely violent was the prosecution, partly
because they feared a rescue, which they would thus not only leave no time for,
but give a terror to; partly because they greedily thirsted after Christ's
blood, as
the eagle that hasteth to the prey. 3. They led him to Annas
first. Probably his house lay in the way, and was convenient for them to call at
to refresh themselves, and, as some think, to be paid for their service. I
suppose Annas was old and infirm, and could not be present in council with the
rest at that time of night, and yet earnestly desired to see the prey. To
gratify him therefore with the assurance of their success, that the old man
might sleep the better, and to receive his blessing for it, they produce their
prisoner before him. It is sad to see those that are old and sickly, when they
cannot commit sin as formerly, taking pleasure in those that do. Dr. Lightfoot
thinks Annas was not present, because he had to attend early that morning in the
temple, to examine the sacrifices which were that day to be offered, whether
they were without blemish; if so, there was a significancy in it, that Christ,
the great sacrifice, was presented to him, and sent away bound, as approved and
ready for the altar. 4. This Annas was father-in-law to Caiaphas the high
priest; this kindred by marriage between them comes in as a reason either why
Caiaphas ordered that this piece of respect should be done to Annas, to favour
him with the first sight of the prisoner, or why Annas was willing to
countenance Caiaphas in a matter his heart was so much upon. Note, Acquaintance
and alliance with wicked people are a great confirmation to many in their wicked
ways.
II. Annas did not long detain them, being as willing as any of
them to have the prosecution pushed on, and therefore sent him bound to Caiaphas,
to his house, which was appointed for the rendezvous of the sanhedrim upon this
occasion, or to the usual place in the temple where the high priest kept his
court; this is mentioned, v. 24. But our translators intimate in the margin that
it should come in here, and, accordingly, read it there,
Annas had sent him.
Observe here,
1. The power of Caiaphas intimated (v. 13). He was
high
priest that same year. The high priest's commission was during life; but
there were now such frequent changes, by the Simoniacal artifices of aspiring
men with the government, that it was become almost an annual office, a presage
of its final period approaching; while they were undermining one another. God
was overturning them all, that he might come whose right it was. Caiaphas was
high priest that same year when Messiah was to be cut off, which intimates, (1.)
That when a bad thing was to be done by a high priest, according to the
foreknowledge of God, Providence so ordered it that a bad man should be in the
chair to do it. (2.) That, when God would make it to appear what corruption
there was in the heart of a bad man, he put him into a place of power, where he
had temptation and opportunity to exert it. It was the ruin of Caiaphas that he
was high priest that year, and so became a ringleader in the putting of Christ
to death. Many a man's advancement has lost him his reputation, and he had not
been dishonoured if he had not been preferred.
2. The malice of Caiaphas, which is intimated (v. 14) by the
repeating of what he had said some time before, that, right or wrong, guilty or
innocent,
it was expedient that one man should die for the people, which
refers to the story ch. 11:50. This comes in here to show, (1.) What a bad man
he was; this was that Caiaphas that governed himself and the church by rules of
policy, in defiance of the rules of equity. (2.) What ill usage Christ was
likely to meet with in his court, when his case was adjudged before it was
heard, and they were already resolved what to do with him;
he must die;
so that his trial was a jest. Thus the enemies of Christ's gospel are
resolved, true or false, to run it down. (3.) It is a testimony to the innocency
of our Lord Jesus, from the mouth of one of his worst enemies, who owned that he
fell a sacrifice to the public good, and that it was not just he should die, but
expedient only.
3. The concurrence of Annas in the prosecution of Christ. He
made himself a partaker in guilt, (1.) With the captain and officers, that
without law or mercy had bound him; for he approved it by continuing him bound
when he should have loosed him, he not being convicted of any crime, nor having
attempted an escape. If we do not what we can to undo what others have ill done,
we are accessaries
ex post factoafter the fact. It was more excusable
in the rude soldiers to bind him than in Annas, who should have known better, to
continue him bound. (2.) With the chief priest and council that condemned him,
and prosecuted him to death. This Annas was not present with them, yet thus he
wished them
good speed, and became a
partaker of their evil deeds.
III. In the house of Caiaphas, Simon Peter began to deny his
Master, v. 15-18.
1. It was with much ado that Peter got into the hall where the
court was sitting, an account of which we have v. 15, 16. Here we may observe,
(1.) Peter's kindness to Christ, which (though it proved no
kindness) appeared in two things:[1.] That he
followed Jesus when he
was
led away; though at first he fled with the rest, yet afterwards he
took heart a little, and followed at some distance, calling to mind the promises
he had made to adhere to him, whatever it should cost him. Those that had
followed Christ in the midst of his honours, and shared with him in those
honours, when the people cried Hosanna to him, ought to have followed him now in
the midst of his reproaches, and to have shared with him in these. Those that
truly love and value Christ will follow him all weathers and all ways. [2.] When
he could not get in where Jesus was in the midst of his enemies, he
stood at
the door without, willing to be as near him as he could, and waiting for an
opportunity to get nearer. Thus when we meet with opposition in following Christ
we must show our good-will. But yet this kindness of Peter's was no kindness,
because he had not strength and courage enough to persevere in it, and so, as it
proved, he did but run himself into a snare: and even his following Christ,
considering all things, was to be blamed, because Christ, who knew him better
than he knew himself, had expressly told him (ch. 13:36),
Whither I go thou
canst not follow me now, and had told him again and again that he would deny
him; and he had lately had experience of his own weakness in forsaking him.
Note, We must take heed of tempting God by running upon difficulties beyond our
strength, and venturing too far in a way of suffering. If our call be clear to
expose ourselves, we may hope that God will enable us to honour him; but, if it
be not, we may fear that God will leave us to shame ourselves.
(2.) The other disciple's kindness to Peter, which yet, as it
proved, was no kindness neither. St. John several times in this gospel speaking
of himself as another disciple, many interpreters have been led by this to fancy
that this other disciple here was John; and many conjectures they have how he
should come to be known to the high-priest;
propter generis nobilitatembeing
of superior birth, saith
Jerome, Epitaph. Marcel., as if he were a
better gentleman born than his brother James, when they were both the sons of
Zebedee the fisherman; some will tell you that he had sold his estate to the
high priest, others that he supplied his family with fish, both which are very
improbable. But I see no reason to think that this other disciple was John, or
one of the twelve; other sheep Christ had, which were not of the fold; and this
might be, as the Syriac read it,
unus ex discipulis aliisone of those
other disciples that believe in Christ, but resided at Jerusalem, and kept
their places there; perhaps Joseph of Arimathea, or Nicodemus, known to the high
priest, but not known to him to be disciples of Christ. Note, As there are many
who seem disciples and are not so, so there are many who are disciples and seem
not so. There are good people hid in courts, even in Nero's, as well as hid in
crowds. We must not conclude a man to be no friend to Christ merely because he
has acquaintance and conversation with those that were his known enemies. Now,
[1.] This other disciple, whoever he was, showed a respect to Peter, in
introducing him, not only to gratify his curiosity and affection, but to give
him an opportunity of being serviceable to his Master upon his trial, if there
were occasion. Those that have a real kindness for Christ and his ways, though
their temper may be reserved and their circumstances may lead them to be
cautious and retired, yet, if their faith be sincere, they will discover, when
they are called to it, which way their inclination lies, by being ready to do a
professed disciple a good turn. Peter perhaps had formerly introduced this
disciple into conversation with Christ, and now he requites his kindness, and is
not ashamed to own him, though, it should seem, he had at this time but a poor
downcast appearance. [2.] But this kindness proved no kindness, nay a great
diskindness; by letting him into the high priest's hall, he let him into
temptation, and the consequence was bad. Note, The courtesies of our friends
often prove a snare to us, through a misguided affection.
2. Peter, having got in, was immediately assaulted with the
temptation, and foiled by it, v. 17. Observe here,
(1.) How slight the attack was. It was but a silly maid, of so
small account that she was set to keep the door, that challenged him, and she
only asked him carelessly,
Art not thou one of this man's disciples?
probably suspecting it by his sheepish look, and coming in timorously. We should
many a time better maintain a good cause if we had a
good heart on it,
and could put a
good face on it. Peter would have had some reason to take
the alarm if Malchus had set upon him, and had said, "This is he that cut
off my ear, and I will have his head for it;" but when a maid only asked
him,
Art not thou one of them? he might without danger have answered,
And
what if I am? Suppose the servants had ridiculed him, and insulted over him,
upon it, those can bear but little for Christ that cannot
bear this; this
is but
running with the footmen.
(2.) How speedy the surrender was. Without taking time to
recollect himself, he suddenly answered,
I am not. If he had had the
boldness of the lion, he would have said, "It is my honour that I am so;"
or, if he had had the wisdom of the serpent, he would have kept silence at this
time, for it was an evil time. But, all his care being for his own safety, he
thought he could not secure this but by a peremptory denial:
I am not; he
not only denies it, but even disdains it, and scorns her words.
(3.) Yet he goes further into the temptation:
And the
servants and officers stood there, and Peter with them v. 18.
[1.] See how the servants made much of themselves; the night
being cold, they made a fire in the hall, not for their masters (they were so
eager in persecuting Christ that they forgot cold), but for themselves to
refresh themselves. They cared not what became of Christ; all their care was to
sit and warm themselves, Amos 6:6.
[2.] See how Peter herded himself with them, and made one among them.
He
sat and warmed himself. First, It was a fault bad enough that he did not
attend his Master, and appear for him at the upper end of the hall, where he was
now under examination. He might have been a witness for him, and have confronted
the false witnesses that swore against him, if his Master had called him; at
least, he might have been a witness to him, might have taken an exact notice of
what passed, that he might relate it to the other disciples, who could none of
them get in to hear the trial; he might have learned by his Master's example
how to carry himself when it should come to his turn to suffer thus; yet neither
his conscience nor his curiosity could bring him into the court, but he sits by,
as if, like Gallio, he cared for none of these things. And yet at the same time
we have reason to think his heart was as full of grief and concern as it could
hold, but he had not the courage to own it.
Lord, lead us not into
temptation. Secondly, It was much worse that he joined himself with those
that were his Master's enemies:
He stood with them, and warmed himself;
this was a poor excuse for joining with them. A little thing will draw those
into bad company that will be drawn to it by the love of a good fire. If Peter's
zeal for his Master had not frozen, but had continued in the heat it seemed to
be of but a few hours before, he had not had occasion to warm himself now. Peter
was much to be blamed, 1. Because he associated with these wicked men, and kept
company with them. Doubtless they were diverting themselves with this night's
expedition, scoffing at Christ, at what he had said, at what he had done, and
triumphing in their victory over him; and what sort of entertainment would this
give to Peter? If he said as they said, or by silence gave consent, he involved
himself in sin; if not, he exposed himself to danger. If Peter had not so much
courage as to appear publicly for his Master, yet he might have had so much
devotion as to retire into a corner, and weep in secret for his Master's
sufferings, and his own sin in forsaking him; if he could not have done good, he
might have kept out of the way of doing hurt. It is better to abscond than
appear to no purpose, or bad purpose. 2. Because he desired to be thought
one
of them, that he might not be suspected to be a disciple of Christ. Is this
Peter? What a contradiction is this to the prayer of every good man,
Gather
not my soul with sinners! Saul among the prophets is not so absurd as David
among the Philistines. Those that deprecate the lot of the scornful hereafter
should dread the
seat of the scornful now. It is ill warming ourselves
with those with whom we are in danger of burning ourselves, Ps. 141:4.
IV. Peter, Christ's friend, having begun to deny him, the high
priest, his enemy, begins to accuse him, or rather urges him to accuse himself,
v. 19-21. It should seem, the first attempt was to prove him a seducer, and a
teacher of false doctrine, which this evangelist relates; and, when they failed
in the proof of this, then they charged him with blasphemy, which is related by
the other evangelists, and therefore omitted here. Observe,
1. The articles or heads upon which Christ was examined (v. 19):
concerning
his disciples and his doctrine. Observe,
(1.) The irregularity of the process; it was against all law and
equity. They seize him as a criminal, and now that he is their prisoner they
have nothing to
lay to his charge; no libel, no prosecutor; but the judge
himself must be the prosecutor, and the prisoner himself the witness, and,
against all reason and justice, he is put on to be his own accuser.
(2.) The intention. The
high priest then (
oun
therefore,
which seems to refer to v. 14), because he had resolved that Christ must be
sacrificed to their private malice under colour of the public good, examined him
upon those interrogatories which would touch his life. He examined him, [1.]
Concerning his disciples, that he might charge him with sedition, and represent
him as dangerous to the Roman government, as well as to the Jewish church. He
asked him who were his discipleswhat number they wereof what countrywhat
were their names and characters, insinuating that his scholars were designed for
soldiers, and would in time become a formidable body. Some think his question
concerning his disciples was, "What is now become of them all? Where are
they? Why do they not appear?" upbraiding him with their cowardice in
deserting him, and thus adding to the affliction of it. There was something
significant in this, that Christ's calling and owning his disciples was the
first thing laid to his charge, for it was
for their sakes that he
sanctified
himself and suffered. [2.] Concerning his doctrine, that they might charge
him with heresy, and bring him under the penalty of the law against false
prophets, Deu. 13:9, 10. This was a matter properly cognizable in that court (Deu.
17:12), therefore a prophet could not perish but at Jerusalem, where that court
sat. They could not prove any false doctrine upon him; but they hoped to extort
something from him which they might distort to his prejudice, and to make him an
offender for some word or other, Isa. 29:21. They said nothing to him concerning
his miracles, by which he had done so much good, and proved his doctrine beyond
contradiction, because of these they were sure they could take no hold. Thus the
adversaries of Christ while they are industriously quarrelling with his truth,
willfully shut their eyes against the evidences of it, and take no notice of
them.
2. The appeal Christ made, in answer to these interrogatories.
(1.) As to his disciples, he said nothing, because it was an impertinent
question; if his doctrine was sound and good, his having disciples to whom to
communicate it was no more than what was practised and allowed by their own
doctors. If Caiaphas, in asking him concerning his disciples, designed to
ensnare them, and bring them into trouble, it was in kindness to them that
Christ said nothing of them, for he had said,
Let these go their way. If
he meant to upbraid him with their cowardice, no wonder that he said nothing,
for
Rudet haec opprobria nobis,
Et dici potuisse, et non potuisse refelli
Shame attaches when charges are exhibited that
cannot be refuted:
he would say nothing to condemn them, and could say nothing to
justify them. (2.) As to his doctrine, he said nothing in particular, but in
general referred himself to those that heard him, being not only made manifest
to God, but made manifest also in their consciences, v. 20, 21.
[1.] He tacitly charges his judges with illegal proceedings. He
does not indeed speak evil of the rulers of the people, nor say now to these
princes,
You are wicked; but he appeals to the settled rules of their own
court, whether they dealt fairly by him.
Do you indeed judge righteously?
Ps. 58:1. So here,
Why ask you me? Which implies two absurdities in
judgment:
First, "Why ask you me now concerning my doctrine, when
you have already condemned it?" They had made an order of court for
excommunicating all that owned him (ch. 9:22), had issued out a proclamation for
apprehending him; and now they come to ask what his doctrine is! Thus was he
condemned, as his doctrine and cause commonly are, unheard.
Secondly,
"Why ask you me? Must I accuse myself, when you have no evidence
against me?"
[2.] He insists upon his fair and open dealing with them in the
publication of his doctrine, and justifies himself with this. The crime which
the sanhedrim by the law was to enquire after was the clandestine spreading of
dangerous doctrines, enticing secretly, Deu. 13:6. As to this, therefore, Christ
clears himself very fully.
First, As to the manner of his preaching. He
spoke openly,
parreµsia
with
freedom and plainness of speech; he did not deliver things ambiguously, as
Apollo did his oracles. Those that would undermine the truth, and spread corrupt
notions, seek to accomplish their purpose by sly insinuation, putting queries,
starting difficulties, and asserting nothing; but Christ explained himself
fully, with,
Verily, verily, I say unto you; his reproofs were free and
bold, and his testimonies express against the corruptions of the age.
Secondly,
As to the persons he preached to:
He spoke to the world, to all that had
ears
to hear, and were willing to hear him, high or low, learned or unlearned,
Jew or Gentile, friend or foe. His doctrine feared not the censure of a mixed
multitude; nor did he grudge the knowledge of it to any (as the masters of some
rare invention commonly do), but freely communicated it, as the sun does his
beams.
Thirdly, As to the places he preached in. When he was in the
country, he preached ordinarily in the synagoguesthe places of meeting for
worship, and on the sabbath-day-the time of meeting; when he came up to
Jerusalem, he preached the same doctrine in the temple at the time of the solemn
feasts, when the Jews from all parts assembled there; and though he often
preached in private houses, and on mountains, and by the sea-side, to show that
his word and worship were not to be confined to temples and synagogues, yet what
he preached in private was the very same with what he delivered publicly. Note,
The doctrine of Christ, purely and plainly preached, needs not be ashamed to
appear in the most numerous assembly, for it carries its own strength and beauty
along with it. What Christ's faithful ministers say they would be willing all
the world should hear. Wisdom cries in the places of concourse, Prov. 1:21; 8:3;
9:3.
Fourthly, As to the doctrine itself. He
said nothing in secret
contrary to what he said in public, but only by way of repetition and
explication:
In secret have I said nothing; as if he had been either
suspicious of the truth of it, or conscious of any ill design in it. He sought
no corners, for he feared no colours, nor said any thing that he needed to be
ashamed of; what he did speak in private to his disciples he ordered them to
proclaim on the house-tops, Mt. 10:27. God saith of himself (Isa. 45:19),
I
have not spoken in secret; his commandment is not hidden, Deu. 30:11. And
the righteousness of faith speaks in like manner, Rom. 10:6.
Veritas nihil
metuit nisi absconditruth fears nothing but concealment.Tertullian.
[3.] He appeals to those that had heard him, and desires that
they might be examined what doctrine he had preached, and whether it had that
dangerous tendency that was surmised:
"Ask those that heard me what I
said unto them; some of them may be in court, or may be sent for out of
their beds." He means not his friends and followers, who might be presumed
to speak in his favour, but, Ask any impartial hearer; ask your own officers.
Some think he pointed to them, when he said,
Behold, they know what I said,
referring to the report which they had made of his preaching (ch. 7:46),
Never
man spoke like this man. Nay, you may ask some upon the bench; for it is
probable that some of them had heard him, and had been put to silence by him.
Note, The doctrine of Christ may safely appeal to all that know it, and has so
much right and reason on its side that those who will judge impartially cannot
but witness to it.
V. While the judges were examining him, the servants that stood
by were abusing him, v. 22, 23.
1. It was a base affront which one of the officers gave him;
though he spoke with so much calmness and convincing evidence, this insolent
fellow
struck him with the palm of his hand, probably on the side of his
head or face, saying,
Answerest thou the high priest so? as if he had
behaved himself rudely to the court.
(1.) He
struck him, edoµke
rhapisma
he gave him a blow. Some think it signifies a blow
with a rod or wand, from
rhabdos, or
with the staff which was the badge of his office. Now the scripture was
fulfilled (Isa. 50:6),
I gave my cheeks, eis
rhapismata (so the Septuagint)
to blows, the word here used.
And Mic. 5:1,
They shall smite the judge of Israel with a rod upon the cheek;
and the type answered (Job 16:10),
They have smitten me upon the cheek
reproachfully. It was unjust to strike one that neither said nor did amiss;
it was insolent for a mean servant to strike one that was confessedly a person
of account; it was cowardly to strike one that had his hands tied; and barbarous
to strike a prisoner at the bar. Here was a breach of the peace in the face of
the court, and yet the judges countenanced it. Confusion of face was our due;
but Christ here took it to himself: "Upon me be the curse, the shame."
(2.) He checked him in a haughty imperious manner:
Answerest
thou the high priest so? As if the blessed Jesus were not good enough to
speak to his master, or not wise enough to know how to speak to him, but, like a
rude and ignorant prisoner, must be controlled by the jailor, and taught how to
behave. Some of the ancients suggest that this officer was Malchus, who owed to
Christ the healing of his ear, and the saving of his head, and yet made him this
ill return. But, whoever it was, it was done to please the high priest, and to
curry favour with him; for what he said implied a jealousy for the dignity of
the high priest. Wicked rulers will not want wicked servants, who will
help
forward the affliction of those whom their masters persecute. There was a
successor of this high priest that commanded the bystanders to smite Paul thus
on
the mouth, Acts 23:2. Some think this officer took himself to be affronted
by Christ's appeal to those about him concerning his doctrine, as if he would
have vouched him to be a witness; and perhaps he was one of those officers that
had spoken honourably of him (ch. 7:46), and, lest he should now be thought a
secret friend to him, he thus appears a bitter enemy.
2. Christ bore this affront with wonderful meekness and patience
(v. 23):
"If I have spoken evil, in what I have now said,
bear
witness of the evil. Observe it to the court, and let them judge of it, who
are the proper judges; but if well, and as it did become me,
why smitest thou
me?" Christ could have answered him with a miracle of wrath, could have
struck him dumb or dead, or have withered the hand that was lifted up against
him. But this was the day of his patience and suffering, and he answered him
with the
meekness of wisdom, to teach us not to avenge ourselves, not to
render
railing for railing, but with the
innocency of the dove to
bear injuries, even when with the
wisdom of the serpent, as our Saviour,
we show the injustice of them, and appeal to the magistrate concerning them.
Christ did not here
turn the other cheek, by which it appears that that
rule, Mt. 5:39, is not to be understood literally; a man may possibly
turn
the other cheek, and yet have his heart full of malice; but, comparing
Christ's precept with his pattern, we learn, (1.) That in such cases we must
not be our own avengers, nor judges in our own cause. We must rather receive
than give the second blow, which makes the quarrel; we are allowed to defend
ourselves, but not to avenge ourselves: the magistrate (if it be necessary for
the preserving of the public peace, and the restraining and terrifying of
evil-doers) is to be the avenger, Rom. 13:4. (2.) Our resentment of injuries
done us must always be rational, and never passionate; such Christ's here was;
when he suffered, he reasoned, but
threatened not. He fairly
expostulated with him that did him the injury, and so may we. (3.) When we are
called out to suffering, we must
accommodate ourselves to the
inconveniences of a suffering state, with patience, and by one indignity done us
be prepared to receive another, and to make the best of it.
VI. While the servants were thus abusing him, Peter was
proceeding to deny him, v. 25-27. It is a sad story, and none of the least of
Christ's sufferings.
1. He repeated the sin the second time, v. 25. While he was
warming himself with the servants, as one of them, they asked him,
Art not
thou one of his disciples? What dost thou here among us? He, perhaps,
hearing that Christ was examined about his disciples, and fearing he should be
seized, or at least smitten, as his Master was, if he should own it, flatly
denied it, and said,
I am not.
(1.) It was his great folly to thrust himself into the
temptation, by continuing in the company of those that were unsuitable for him,
and that he had nothing to do with. He staid to warm himself; but those that
warm themselves with evil doers grow cold towards good people and good things,
and those that are fond of the devil's fire-side are in danger of the devil's
fire. Peter might have stood by his Master at the bar, and have warmed himself
better than here, at the fire of his Master's love, which
many waters could
not quench, Cant. 8:6, 7. He might there have warmed himself with zeal for
his Master, and indignation at his persecutors; but he chose rather to warm with
them than to warm against them. But how could one (one disciple) be warm alone?
Eccl. 4:11.
(2.) It was his great unhappiness that he was again assaulted by
the temptation; and no other could be expected, for this was a place, this an
hour, of temptation. When the judge asked Christ about his disciples, probably
the servants took the hint, and challenged Peter for one of them, "Answer
to thy name." See here, [1.] The subtlety of the tempter in running down
one whom he saw falling, and mustering a greater force against him; not a maid
now, but all the servants. Note, Yielding to one temptation invites another, and
perhaps a stronger. Satan redoubles his attacks when we give ground. [2.] The
danger of bad company. We commonly study to approve ourselves to those with whom
we choose to associate; we value ourselves upon their good word and covet to
stand right in their opinion. As we choose our people we choose our praise, and
govern ourselves accordingly; we are therefore concerned to make the first
choice well, and not to mingle with those whom we cannot please without
displeasing God.
(3.) It was his great weakness, nay, it was his great
wickedness, to yield to the temptation, and to say,
I am not one of his
disciples, as one ashamed of that which was his honour, and afraid of suffering
for it, which would have been yet more his honour. See how the
fear of man
brings a snare. When Christ was admired, and caressed, and treated with
respect, Peter pleased himself, and perhaps prided himself, in this, that he was
a disciple of Christ, and so put in for a share in the honours done to his
Master. Thus many who seem fond of the reputation of religion when it is in
fashion are ashamed of the reproach of it; but we must take it
for better and
worse.
2. He repeated the sin the third time, v. 26, 27. Here he was
attacked by one of the servants, who was kinsman to Malchus, who, when he heard
Peter deny himself to be a disciple of Christ, gave him the lie with great
assurance:
"Did not I see thee in the garden with him? Witness my
kinsman's ear." Peter then denied again, as if he knew nothing of Christ,
nothing of the garden, nothing of all this matter.
(1.) This third assault of the temptation was more close than
the former: before his relation to Christ was only suspected, here it is proved
upon him by one that saw him with Jesus, and saw him draw his sword in his
defence. Note, Those who by sin think to help themselves out of trouble do but
entangle and embarrass themselves the more. Dare to be brave, for truth will
out.
A bird of the air may perhaps
tell the matter which we seek
to conceal with a lie. Notice is taken of this servant's being akin to Malchus,
because this circumstance would make it the more a terror to Peter. "Now,"
thinks he, "I am gone, my business is done, there needs no other witness
nor prosecutor." We should not make any man in particular our enemy if we
can help it, because the time may come when either he or some of his relations
may have us at their mercy. He that may need a friend should not make a foe. But
observe, though here was sufficient evidence against Peter, and sufficient
provocation given by his denial to have prosecuted him, yet he escapes, has no
harm done him nor attempted to be done. Note, We are often drawn into sin by
groundless causeless fears, which there is no occasion for, and which a small
degree of wisdom and resolution would make nothing of.
(2.) His yielding to it was no less base than the former:
He
denied again. See here, [1.] The nature of sin in general:
the heart is
hardened by the deceitfulness of it, Heb. 3:13. It was a strange degree of
effrontery that Peter had arrived to on a sudden, that he could with such
assurance stand in a lie against so clear a disproof; but
the beginning of
sin is as the letting forth of water, when once the fence is broken men
easily go from bad to worse. [2.] Of the sin of lying in particular; it is a
fruitful sin, and upon this account
exceedingly sinful: one lie needs
another to support it, and that another. It is a rule in the devil's politics
Male
facta male factis tegere, ne perpluant
To cover sin with sin, in order
to escape detection.
(3.) The hint given him for the awakening of his conscience was
seasonable and happy:
Immediately the cock crew; and this is all that is
here said of his repentance, it being recorded by the other evangelists. This
brought him to himself, by bringing to his mind the words of Christ. See here,
[1.] The care Christ has of those that are his, notwithstanding their follies;
though
they fall, they are not utterly cast down, not utterly cast off.
[2.] The advantage of having faithful remembrancers near us, who, though they
cannot tell us more than we know already, yet may remind us of that which we
know, but have forgotten. The crowing of the cock to others was an accidental
thing, and had not significancy; but to Peter it was the voice of God, and had a
blessed tendency to awaken his conscience, by putting him in mind of the word of
Christ.
Verses 28-40
We have here an account of Christ's arraignment before Pilate,
the Roman governor, in the
praetorium (a Latin word made Greek), the
praetor's house, or
hall of judgment; thither they hurried him, to get
him condemned in the Roman court, and executed by the Roman power. Being
resolved on his death, they took this course, 1. That he might be put to death
the more legally and regularly, according to the present constitution of their
government, since they became a province of the empire; not stoned in a popular
tumult, as Stephen, but put to death with the present formalities of justice.
Thus he was treated as a malefactor,
being made sin for us. 2. That he
might be put to death the more safely. If they could engage the Roman government
in the matter, which the people stood in awe of, there would be little danger of
an uproar. 3. That he might be put to death with more reproach to himself.
The
death of the cross, which the Romans commonly used, being of all deaths the
most ignominious, they were desirous by it to put an indelible mark of infamy
upon him, and so to sink his reputation for ever. This therefore they harped
upon,
Crucify him. 4. That he might be put to death with less reproach to
them. It was an invidious thing to put one to death that had done so much good
in the world, and therefore they were willing to throw the odium upon the Roman
government, to make that the less acceptable to the people, and save themselves
from the reproach. Thus many are more afraid of the scandal of a bad action than
of the sin of it. See Acts 5:28. Two things are here observed concerning the
prosecution:(1.) Their policy and industry in the prosecution:
It was
early; some think about two or three in the morning, others about five or
six, when most people were in their beds; and so there would be the less danger
of opposition from the people that were for Christ; while, at the same time,
they had their agents about, to call those together whom they could influence to
cry out against him. See how much their heart was upon it, and how violent they
were in the prosecution. Now that they had him in their hands, they would lose
no time till they had him upon the cross, but denied themselves their natural
rest, to push on this matter. See Mic. 2:1. (2.) Their superstition and vile
hypocrisy:
The chief priests and elders, though they came along with the
prisoner, that the thing might be done effectually,
went not into the
judgment-hall, because it was the house of an uncircumcised Gentile,
lest
they should be defiled, but kept out of doors,
that they might eat the
passover, not the paschal lamb (that was eaten the night before) but the
passover-feast, upon the sacrifices which were offered on the fifteenth day,
the
Chagigah, as they called it, the passover-bullocks spoken of Deu. 16:2; 2
Chr. 30:24; 35:8, 9. These they were to eat of, and therefore would not go into
the court, for fear of touching a Gentile, and thereby contracting, not a legal,
but only a traditional pollution. This they scrupled, but made no scruple of
breaking through all the laws of equity to persecute Christ to the death.
They
strained at a gnat, and swallowed a camel. Let us now see what passed at
the
judgment-hall. Here is,
I. Pilate's conference with the prosecutors. They were called
first, and stated what they had to say against the prisoner, as was very fit, v.
29-32.
1. The judge calls for the indictment. Because they would not come into the
hall,
he went out to them into the court before the house, to talk with
them. Looking upon Pilate as a magistrate, that we may give every one his due,
here are three things commendable in him:(1.) His diligent and close
application to business. If it had been upon a good occasion, it had been very
well that he was willing to be called up early to the judgment-seat. Men in
public trusts must not love their ease. (2.) His condescending to the humour of
the people, and receding from the honour of his place to gratify their scruples.
He might have said, "If they be so nice as not to come in to me, let them
go home as they came;" by the same rule as we might say, "If the
complainant scruple to take off his hat to the magistrate, let not his complaint
be heard;" but Pilate insists not upon it, bears with them, and goes out to
them; for, when it is for good, we should
become all things to all men.
(3.) His adherence to the rule of justice, in demanding the accusation,
suspecting the prosecution to be malicious:
"What accusation bring you
against this man?" What is the crime you charge him with, and what
proof have you of it? It was a law of nature, before Valerius Publicola made it
a Roman law,
Ne quis indicta causa condemneturNo man should be condemned
unheard. See Acts 25:16, 17. It is unreasonable to commit a man, without
alleging some cause in the warrant, and much more to arraign a man when there is
no bill of indictment found against him.
2. The prosecutors demand judgment against him upon a general
surmise that he was a criminal, not alleging, much less proving, any thing in
particular
worthy of death or of bonds (v. 30):
If he were not a
malefactor, or evildoer,
we would not have delivered him to thee to
be condemned. This bespeaks them, (1.) Very rude and uncivil to Pilate, a
company of ill-natured men, that affected to despise dominion. When Pilate was
so complaisant to them as to come out to treat with them, yet they were to the
highest degree out of humour with him. He put the most reasonable question to
them that could be; but, if it had been the most absurd, they could not have
answered him with more disdain. (2.) Very spiteful and malicious towards our
Lord Jesus: right or wrong, they will have him to be a malefactor, and treated
as one. We are to presume a man innocent till he is proved guilty, but they will
presume him guilty who could prove himself innocent. They cannot say, "He
is a traitor, a murderer, a felon, a breaker of the peace," but they say,
"He is an evil-doer." He an evil-doer who
went about doing good!
Let those be called whom he had cured, and fed, and taught; whom he has rescued
from devils, and raised from death; and let them be asked whether he be an
evil-doer or no. Note, It is no new thing for the best of benefactors to be
branded and run down as the worst of malefactors. (3.) Very proud and conceited
of themselves, and their own judgment and justice, as if their delivering a man
up, under the general character of a malefactor, were sufficient for the civil
magistrate to ground a judicial sentence upon, than which what could be more
haughty?
3. The judge remands him to their own court (v. 31):
"Take
you him, and judge him according to your own
law, and do not trouble
me with him." Now, (1.) Some think Pilate herein complimented them,
acknowledging the remains of their power, and allowing them to exert it.
Corporal punishment they might inflict, as
scourging in their synagogues;
whether capital or no is uncertain. "But," saith Pilate, "go as
far as your law will allow you, and, if you go further, it shall be connived at."
This he said, willing to do the Jews a pleasure, but unwilling to do them the
service they required. (2.) Others think he bantered them, and upbraided them
with their present state of weakness and subjection. They would be the sole
judges of the guilt. "Pray," saith Pilate, "if you will be so, go
on as you have begun; you have found him guilty by your own law, condemn him, if
you dare, by your own law, to carry on the humour." Nothing is more absurd,
nor more deserves to be exposed, than for those to pretend to dictate, and boast
of their wisdom, who are weak and in subordinate stations, and whose lot it is
to be dictated to. Some think Pilate here reflects upon the law of Moses, as if
it allowed them what the Roman law would by no means allowthe judging of a
man unheard. "It may be your law will suffer such a thing, but ours will
not." Thus, through their corruptions, the law of God was blasphemed; and
so is his gospel too.
4. They disown any authority as judges, and (since it must be
so) are content to be prosecutors. They now grow less insolent and more
submissive, and own,
"It is not lawful for us to put any man to death,
whatever less punishment we may inflict, and this is a malefactor whom we would
have the blood of."
(1.) Some think they had lost their power to give judgment in
matters of life and death only by their own carelessness, and cowardly yielding
to the darling iniquities of the age; so Dr. Lightfoot
ouk
exesti
It is not in our power to pass sentence of death upon
any, if we do, we shall have the mob about us immediately.
(2.) Others think their power was taken from them by the Romans,
because they had not used it well, or because it was thought too great a trust
to be lodged in the hands of a conquered and yet an unsubdued people. Their
acknowledgement of this they designed for a compliment to Pilate, and to atone
for their rudeness (v. 30), but it amounts to a full evidence that
the
sceptre was departed from Judah, and therefore that now the Messiah was
come, Gen. 49:10. If the Jews have no power
to put any man to death,
where is the sceptre? Yet they ask not,
Where is the Shiloh?
(3.) However, there was a providence in it, that either they
should have not power to put any man to death, or should decline the exercise of
it upon this occasion,
That the saying of Jesus might be fulfilled, which he
spoke, signifying what death he should die, v. 32. Observe, [1.] In general,
that even those who designed the defeating of Christ's sayings were, beyond
their intention, made serviceable to the fulfilling of them by an overruling
hand of God.
No word of Christ shall fall to the ground; he can never
either deceive or be deceived. Even
the chief priests, while they
persecuted him as
a deceiver, had their spirit so directed as to help to
prove him true, when we should think that by taking other measures they might
have defeated his predictions.
Howbeit, they meant not so, Isa. 10:7.
[2.] Those sayings of Christ in particular were fulfilled which he had spoken
concerning his own death. Two sayings of Christ concerning his death were
fulfilled, by the Jews declining to
judge him according to their law. First,
He had said that he should be
delivered to the Gentiles, and that
they
should put him to death (Mt. 20:19; Mk. 10:33; Lu. 18:32, 33), and hereby
that saying was fulfilled.
Secondly, He had said that he should be
crucified (Mt. 20:19; 26:2),
lifted up, ch. 3:14; 12:32. Now, if they had
judged him by their law, he had been stoned; burning, strangling, and
beheading, were in some cases used among the Jews, but never crucifying. It was
therefore necessary that Christ should be put to death by the Romans, that,
being
hanged upon a tree, he might be
made a curse for us (Gal.
3:13), and
his hands and feet might be
pierced. As the Roman power
had brought him to be born at Bethlehem, so now to die upon a cross, and both
according to the scriptures. It is likewise determined concerning us, though not
discovered to us,
what death we shall die, which should free us from all
disquieting cares about that matter. "Lord, what, and when, and how thou
hast appointed."
II. Here is Pilate's conference with the prisoner, v. 33,
etc., where we have,
1. The prisoner set to the bar. Pilate, after he had conferred
with the chief priests at his door, entered into the hall, and called for Jesus
to be brought in. He would not examine him in the crowd, where he might be
disturbed by the noise, but ordered him to be brought
into the hall; for
he made no difficulty of going in among the Gentiles. We by sin were become
liable to the judgment of God, and were to be brought before his bar; therefore
Christ,
being made sin and a curse for us, was arraigned as a criminal. Pilate
entered into judgment with him, that God might not enter into judgment with us.
2. His examination. The other evangelists tell us that his
accusers had laid it to his charge that
he perverted the nation, forbidding
to give tribute to Caesar, and upon this he is examined.
(1.) Here is a question put to him, with a design to ensnare him
and to find out something upon which to ground an accusation:
"Art thou
the king of the Jews? ho basileus
that
king of the Jews who has been so much talked of and so long expectedMessiah
the prince, art thou he? Dost thou pretend to be he? Dost thou call thyself, and
wouldest thou be thought so?" For he was far from imagining that really he
was so, or making a question of that. Some think Pilate asked this with an air
of scorn and contempt: "What!
art thou a king, who makest so mean a
figure?
Art thou the king of the Jews, by whom thou art thus hated and
persecuted?
Art thou king de jureof right, while the emperor is only
king
de factoin fact?" Since it could not be proved he ever said
it, he would constrain him to say it now, that he might proceed upon his own
confession.
(2.) Christ answers this question with another; not for evasion,
but as an intimation to Pilate to consider what he did, and upon what grounds he
went (v. 34):
"Sayest thou this thing of thyself, from a suspicion
arising in thy own breast,
or did others tell it thee of me, and dost
thou ask it only to oblige them?" [1.] "It is plain that thou hast no
reason to
say this of thyself." Pilate was bound by his office to
take care of the interests of the Roman government, but he could not say that
this was in any danger, or suffered any damage, from any thing our Lord Jesus
had ever said or done. He never appeared in worldly pomp, never assumed any
secular power, never acted as a judge or divider; never were any traitorous
principles or practices objected to him, nor any thing that might give the least
shadow of suspicion. [2.] "If others
tell it thee of me, to incense
thee against me, thou oughtest to consider who they are, and upon what
principles they go, and whether those who represent me as an
enemy to Caesar
are not really such themselves, and therefore use this only as a pretence to
cover their malice, for, if so, the matter ought to be well weighed by a judge
that would do justice." Nay, if Pilate had been as inquisitive as he ought
to have been in this matter, he would have found that the true reason why the
chief priests were outrageous against Jesus was because he did not set up a
temporal kingdom in opposition to the Roman power; if he would have done this,
and would have wrought miracles to bring the Jews out of the Roman bondage, as
Moses did to bring them out of the Egyptian, they would have been so far from
siding with the Romans against him that they would have made him their king, and
have fought under him against the Romans; but, not answering this expectation of
theirs, they charged that upon him of which they were themselves most
notoriously guilty-disaffection to and design against the present government;
and was such an information as this fit to be countenanced?
(3.) Pilate resents Christ's answer, and takes it very ill, v.
35. This is a direct answer to Christ's question, v. 34. [1.] Christ had asked
him whether he spoke of himself. "No," says he;
"am I a Jew,
that thou suspectest me to be in the plot against thee? I know nothing of the
Messiah, nor desire to know, and therefore interest not myself in the dispute
who is the Messiah and who not; the dispute who is the Messiah and who not; it
is all alike to me." Observe with what disdain Pilate asks,
Am I a Jew?
The Jews were, upon many accounts, an honourable people; but, having corrupted
the covenant of their God,
he made them contemptible and base before all the
people (Mal. 2:8, 9), so that a man of sense and honour reckoned it a
scandal to be counted a Jew. Thus good names often suffer for the sake of the
bad men that wear them. It is sad that when a Turk is suspected of dishonesty he
should ask, "What! do you take me for a Christian?" [2.] Christ had
asked him whether others told him. "Yes," says he, "and those
thine
own people, who, one would think would be biased in favour of thee, and
the
priests, whose testimony,
in verbum sacerdotison the word of a priest,
ought to be regarded; and therefore I have nothing to do but to proceed upon
their information." Thus Christ, in his religion, still suffers by those
that are of his own nation, even the priests, that profess relation to him, but
do not live up to their profession. [3.] Christ had declined answering that
question,
Art thou the king of the Jews? And therefore Pilate puts
another question to him more general,
"What hast thou done? What
provocation hast thou given to thy own nation, and particularly the priests, to
be so violent against thee? Surely there cannot be all this smoke without some
fire, what is it?"
(4.) Christ, in his next reply, gives a more full and direct
answer to Pilate's former question,
Art thou a king? explaining in what
sense he was a king, but not such a king as was any ways dangerous to the Roman
government, not a secular king, for his interest was not supported by secular
methods, v. 36. Observe,
[1.] An account of the nature and constitution of Christ's
kingdom: It
is not of this world. It is expressed negatively to rectify
the present mistakes concerning it; but the positive is implied, it is
the
kingdom of heaven, and belongs to another world. Christ is a king, and has a
kingdom, but
not of this world. First Its rise is not from this world;
the kingdoms of men arise
out of the sea and the earth (Dan. 7:3; Rev.
13:1, 11); but
the holy city comes from God out of heaven, Rev. 22:2. His
kingdom is not by succession, election, or conquest, but by the immediate and
special designation of the divine will and counsel.
Secondly, Its nature
is not worldly; it is a kingdom within men (Lu. 16:21), set up in their hearts
and consciences (Rom. 14:17), its riches spiritual, its powers spiritual, and
all
its glory within. The ministers of state in Christ's kingdom have not
the
spirit of the world, 1 Co. 2:12.
Thirdly, Its guards and supports are
not worldly; its weapons are spiritual. It neither needed nor used secular force
to maintain and advance it, nor was it carried on in a way
hurtful to kings
or provinces; it did not in the least interfere with the prerogatives of
princes nor the property of their subjects; it tended not to alter any national
establishment in secular things, nor opposed any kingdom but that of sin and
Satan.
Fourthly, Its tendency and design are not worldly. Christ neither
aimed nor would allow his disciples to aim at the pomp and power of
the great
men of the earth. Fifthly, Its subjects, though they are in the world, yet
are
not of the world; they
are called and chosen out of the world, are
born from, and bound for, another world; they are neither the world's pupils
nor its darlings, neither governed by its wisdom nor enriched with its wealth.
[2.] An evidence of the spiritual nature of Christ's kingdom
produced. If he had designed an opposition to the government, he would have
fought them at their own weapons, and would have repelled force with force of
the same nature; but he did not take this course:
If my kingdom were of this
world, then would my servants fight, that I should not be delivered to the Jews,
and my kingdom be ruined by them. But,
First, His followers did not offer
to fight; there was no uproar, no attempt to rescue him, though the town was now
full of Galileans, his friends and countrymen, and they were generally armed;
but the peaceable behaviour of his disciples on this occasion was enough
to
put to silence the ignorance of foolish men. Secondly, He did not order them
to fight; nay, he forbade them, which was an evidence both that he did not
depend upon worldly aids (for he could have summoned
legions of angels
into his service, which showed that his
kingdom was from above), and also
that he did not dread worldly opposition, for he was very willing to be
delivered
to the Jews, as knowing that what would have been the destruction of any
worldly kingdom would be the advancement and establishment of his; justly
therefore does he conclude,
Now you may see
my kingdom is not from
hence; in the world but not of it.
(5.) In answer to Pilate's further query, he replies yet more
directly, v. 37, where we have, [1.] Pilate's plain question:
"Art
thou a king then? Thou speakest of a kingdom thou hast; art thou then, in
any sense, a king? And what colour hast thou for such a claim? Explain thyself."
[2.] The good confession which our Lord Jesus witnessed before Pontius Pilate,
in answer to this (1 Tim. 6:13):
Thou sayest that I am a king, that is,
It is as thou sayest, I am a king; for
I came to bear witness of the truth.
First, He grants himself to be a king, though not in the sense that Pilate
meant. The Messiah was expected under the character of a king,
Messiah the
prince; and therefore, having owned to Caiaphas that he was the Christ, he
would not disown to Pilate that he was king, lest he should seem inconsistent
with himself. Note, Though Christ
took upon him the form of a servant,
yet even then he justly claimed the honour and authority of a king.
Secondly,
He explains himself, and shows how he is a king, as
he came to bear witness
of the truth; he rules in the minds of men by the power of truth. If he had
meant to declare himself a temporal prince, he would have said,
For this end
was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, to rule the nations,
to conquer kings, and to take possession of kingdoms; no,
he came to be a
witness, a witness for the God that made the world, and against sin that
ruins the world, and by this
word of his testimony he sets up, and keeps
up, his kingdom. It was foretold that he should be
a witness to the people,
and, as such,
a leader and commander to the people, Isa. 55:4. Christ's
kingdom was not of this world, in which
truth faileth (Isa. 59:15,
Qui
nescit dissimulare, nescit regnareHe that cannot dissemble knows not how to
reign), but of that world in which truth reigns eternally. Christ's errand
into the world, and his business in the world, were
to bear witness to the
truth. 1. To reveal it, to discover to the world that which otherwise could
not have been known concerning God and his will and
good-will to men, ch.
1:18; 17:26. 2. To confirm it, Rom. 15:8. By his miracles
he bore witness to
the truth of religion, the truth of divine revelation, and of God's
perfections and providence, and the truth of his promise and covenant,
that
all men through him might believe. Now by doing this he is a king, and sets
up a kingdom. (1.) The foundation and power, the spirit and genius, of Christ's
kingdom, is truth, divine truth. When he said,
I am the truth, he said,
in effect, I am a king. He conquers by the convincing evidence of truth; he
rules by the commanding power of truth, and
in his majesty rides
prosperously, because of truth, Ps. 45:4. It is with his truth that he shall
judge the people, Ps. 96:13. It is the sceptre of his kingdom; he
draws with
the cords of a man, with truth revealed to us, and received by us in
the
love of it; and thus he
brings thoughts into obedience. He came
a
light into the world, and rules as the sun by day. (2.) The subjects of this
kingdom are those that are
of the truth. All that by the grace of God are
rescued from under the power of
the father of lies, and are disposed to
receive the truth and submit to the power and influence of it, will hear Christ's
voice, will become his subjects, and will bear faith and true allegiance to him.
Every one that has any real sense of true religion will entertain the Christian
religion, and they belong to his kingdom; by the power of truth he makes them
willing, Ps. 90:3. All that are in love with truth will hear the voice of
Christ, for greater, better, surer, sweeter truths can nowhere be found than are
found in Christ, by whom
grace and truth came; so that, by
hearing
Christ's voice, we know that we are
of the truth, 1 Jn. 3:19.
(6.) Pilate, hereupon, puts a good question to him, but does not
stay for an answer, v. 38. He said,
What is truth? and
immediately
went out again.
[1.] It is certain that this was a good question, and could not
be put to one that was better able to answer it. Truth is that
pearl of great
price which the human understanding has a desire for and is in quest of; for
it cannot rest but in that which is, or at least is apprehended to be, truth.
When we
search the scriptures, and attend the ministry of the word, it
must be with this enquiry,
What is truth? and with this prayer,
Lead
me in thy truth, into all truth. But many put this question that have not
patience and constancy enough to persevere in their search after truth, or not
humility and sincerity enough to receive it when they have found it, 2 Tim. 3:7.
Thus many deal with their own consciences; they ask them those needful
questions, "What am I?" "What have I done?" but will not
take time for an answer.
[2.] It is uncertain with what design Pilate asked this
question.
First, Perhaps he spoke it as a learner, as one that began to
think well of Christ, and to look upon him with some respect, and desired to be
informed what new notions he advanced and what improvements he pretended to in
religion and learning. But while he desired to hear some new truth from him, as
Herod to see some miracle, the clamour and outrage of the priests' mob at his
gate obliged him abruptly to let fall the discourse.
Secondly, Some think
he spoke it as a judge, enquiring further into the cause now brought before him:
"Let me into this mystery, and tell me what the truth of it is, the true
state of this matter."
Thirdly, Others think he spoke it as a
scoffer, in a jeering way: "Thou talkest of truth; canst thou tell what
truth is, or give me a definition of it?" Thus he makes a jest of the
everlasting gospel, that great truth which the chief priests hated and
persecuted, and which Christ was now witnessing to and suffering for; and like
men of no religion, who take a pleasure in bantering all religions, he ridicules
both sides; and therefore Christ made him no reply.
Answer not a fool
according to his folly; cast not pearls before swine. But, though Christ
would not tell Pilate what is truth, he has told his disciples, and by them has
told us, ch. 14:6.
III. The result of both these conferences with the prosecutors
and the prisoner (v. 38-40), in two things:
1. The judge appeared his friend, and favourable to him, for,
(1.) He publicly declared him innocent, v. 38. Upon the whole
matter,
I find in him no fault at all. He supposes there might be some
controversy in religion between him and them, wherein he was as likely to be in
the right as they; but nothing criminal appears against him. This solemn
declaration of Christ's innocency was, [1.] For the justification and honour
of the Lord Jesus. By this it appears that though he was treated as the worst of
malefactors he had never merited such treatment. [2.] For explaining the design
and intention of his death, that he did not die for any sin of his own, even in
the judgement of the judge himself, and therefore he died as a sacrifice for our
sins, and that, even in the judgment of the prosecutors themselves,
one man
should die for the people, ch. 11:50. This is he that
did no violence,
neither was any deceit in his mouth (Isa. 53:9), who was to
be cut off,
but not for himself, Dan. 9:26. [3.] For aggravating the sin of the Jews
that prosecuted him with so much violence. If a prisoner has had a fair trial,
and has been acquitted by those that are proper judges of the crime, especially
if there be no cause to suspect them partial in his favour, he must be believed
innocent, and his accusers are bound to acquiesce. But our Lord Jesus, though
brought in not guilty, is still run down as a malefactor, and his blood thirsted
for.
(2.) He proposed an expedient for his discharge (v. 39):
You
have a custom, that I should release to you a prisoner at the passover;
shall it be this king of the Jews? He proposed this, not to the chief priests
(he knew they would never agree to it), but to the multitude; it was an appeal
to the people, as appears, Mt. 27:15. Probably he had heard how this Jesus had
been attended but the other day with the hosannas of the common people; he
therefore looked upon him to be the darling of the multitude, and the envy only
of the rulers, and therefore he made no doubt but they would demand the release
of Jesus, and this would stop the mouth of the prosecutors, and all would be
well. [1.] He allows their custom, for which, perhaps, they had had a long
prescription, in honour of the passover, which was a memorial of their release.
But it was adding to God's words, as if he had not instituted enough for the
due commemoration of that deliverance, and, though an act of mercy, might be
injustice to the public, Prov. 17:15. [2.] He offers to release Jesus to them,
according to the custom. If Pilate had had the honesty and courage that became a
judge, he would not have named an innocent person to be competitor with a
notorious criminal for this favour; if he
found no fault in him, he was
bound in conscience to discharge him. But he was willing to trim the matter, and
please all sides, being governed more by worldly wisdom than by the rules of
equity.
2. The people appeared his enemies, and implacable against him
(v. 40):
They cried all again and again,
Not this man, let not him
be released,
but Barabbas. Observe, (1.) How fierce and outrageous they
were. Pilate proposed the thing to them calmly, as worthy their mature
consideration, but they resolved it in a heat, and gave in their resolution with
clamour and noise, and in the utmost confusion. Note, The enemies of Christ's
holy religion cry it down, and so hope to run it down; witness the outcry at
Ephesus, Acts 19:34. But those who think the worse of things or persons merely
for their being thus exclaimed against have a very small share of constancy and
consideration. Nay, there is cause to suspect a deficiency of reason and justice
on that side which calls in the assistance of popular tumult. (2.) How foolish
and absurd they were, as is intimated in the short account here given of the
other candidate:
Now Barabbas was a robber, and therefore, [1.] A breaker
of the law of God; and yet he shall be spared, rather than one who reproved the
pride, avarice, and tyranny of the priests and elders. Though Barabbas be a
robber, he will not rob them of Moses's seat, nor of their traditions, and
then no matter. [2.] He was an enemy to the public safety and personal property.
The clamour of the town is wont to be against robbers (Job 30:5,
Men cried
after them as after a thief), yet here it is for one. Thus those do who
prefer their sins before Christ. Sin is a robber, every base lust is a robber,
and yet foolishly chosen rather than Christ, who would truly enrich us.
Chapter 18:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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3 John
Jude
Revelation
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