Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
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| Bible Gateway |
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 5
Complete Concise
We have in the gospels a faithful record of all that Jesus began
both to do and to teach, Acts 1:1. These two are interwoven, because what he
taught explained what he did, and what he did confirmed what he taught.
Accordingly, we have in this chapter a miracle and a sermon. I. The miracle was
the cure of an impotent man that had been diseased thirty-eight years, with the
circumstances of that cure (v. 1-16). II. The sermon was Christ's
vindication of himself before the sanhedrim, when he was prosecuted as a
criminal for healing the man on the sabbath day, in which, 1. He asserts his
authority as Messiah, and Mediator between God and man (v. 17-29). 2. He
proves it by the testimony of his Father, of John Baptist, of his miracles, and
of the scriptures of the Old Testament, and condemns the Jews for their unbelief
(v. 30-47).
Verses 1-16
This miraculous cure is not recorded by any other of the
evangelists, who confine themselves mostly to the miracles wrought in Galilee,
but John relates those wrought at Jerusalem. Concerning this observe,
I.
The time when this cure was wrought: it was at a
feast
of the Jews, that is, the passover, for that was the most celebrated feast.
Christ, though residing in Galilee, yet
went up to Jerusalem at the
feast, v. 1. 1. Because it was an
ordinance of God, which, as a
subject,
he would observe, being made under the law; though as a
Son he might have
pleaded an exemption. Thus he would teach us to attend religious assemblies.
Heb. 10:25. 2. Because it was an
opportunity of good; for, (1.) there
were great numbers gathered together there at that time; it was a general
rendezvous, at least of all serious thinking people, from all parts of the
country, besides proselytes from other nations: and Wisdom must
cry in the
places of concourse, Prov. 1:21. (2.) It was to be hoped that they were in a
good frame, for they came together to
worship God and to spend
their time in religious exercises. Now a mind
inclined to devotion, and
sequestering itself to the exercises of piety,
lies very open to the
further discoveries of divine light and love, and to it Christ will be
acceptable.
II. The
place where this cure was wrought: at the
pool
of Bethesda, which had a miraculous healing virtue in it, and is here
particularly described, v. 2-4.
1. Where it was situated:
At Jerusalem, by the sheep-market;
epi teµ probatikeµ. It might as well
be rendered the
sheep-cote, where the sheep were kept, or the
sheep-gate,
which we read of, Neh. 3:1, through which the sheep were
brought, as the
sheep-market,
where they were
sold. Some think it was near the temple, and, if so, it
yielded a melancholy but profitable spectacle to those that went up to the
temple to pray.
2. How it was called: It was a
pool (a pond or bath),
which
is called in Hebrew, Bethesdathe house of mercy; for therein appeared
much of the
mercy of God to the sick and diseased. In a world of so much
misery as this is, it is well that there are some
Bethesdashouses of mercy
(remedies against those maladies), that the scene is not all melancholy. An
alms-house,
so Dr. Hammond. Dr. Lightfoot's conjecture is that this was the
upper pool
(Isa. 7:3), and the
old pool, Isa. 22:11; that it had been used for
washing
from ceremonial pollutions, for convenience of which the porches were built to
dress and undress in, but it was lately become medicinal.
3. How it was fitted up: It had
five porches, cloisters,
piazzas, or
roofed walks, in which the sick lay. Thus the charity of
men concurred with the mercy of God for the relief of the distressed. Nature has
provided
remedies, but men must provide
hospitals.
4. How it was frequented with sick and cripples (v. 3):
In
these lay a great multitude of impotent folks. How many are the afflictions
of the afflicted in this world! How full of complaints are all places, and what
multitudes of impotent folks! It may do us good to visit the hospitals
sometimes, that we may take occasion, from the calamities of others, to thank
God for our comforts. The evangelist specifies three sorts of diseased people
that lay here,
blind, halt, and
withered or
sinewshrunk,
either in one particular part, as the man with the
withered hand, or all
over paralytic. These are mentioned because, being least able to help themselves
into the water, they lay longest waiting in the
porches. Those that were
sick of these bodily diseases took the pains to come
far and had the
patience to wait
long for a cure; any of us would have done the same, and
we ought to do so: but O that men were as wise for their souls, and as
solicitous to get their spiritual diseases healed! We are all by nature
impotent
folks in spiritual things,
blind, halt, and
withered; but
effectual provision is made for our cure if we will but observe orders.
5. What virtue it had for the cure of these impotent folks (v.
4).
An angel went down, and
troubled the water; and
whoso first
stepped in was made whole. That this strange virtue in the pool was
natural,
or
artificial rather, and was the effect of the washing of the
sacrifices, which impregnated the water with I know not what healing virtue even
for
blind people, and that the angel was a
messenger, a common
person, sent down to stir the water, is altogether groundless; there was a room
in the temple on purpose to wash the sacrifices in. Expositors generally agree
that the virtue this pool had was supernatural. It is true the Jewish writers,
who are not sparing in recounting the praises of Jerusalem, do none of them make
the least mention of this
healing pool, of which silence in this matter
perhaps this is the reason, that it was taken for a presage of the near approach
of the Messiah, and therefore those who denied him to be come industriously
concealed such an indication of his coming; so that this is all the account we
have of it. Observe,
(1.) The
preparation of the medicine by an angel, who
went
down into the pool, and
stirred the water. Angels are God's
servants, and friends to mankind; and perhaps are more active in the removing of
diseases (as evil angels in the inflicting of them) than we are aware of.
Raphael, the apocryphal name of an angel, signifies
medicina DeiGod's
physic, or
physician rather. See what mean offices the holy angels
condescend to, for the good of men. If we would do the will of God as the angels
do it, we must think nothing below us but sin. The
troubling of the water
was the signal given of the descent of the angel, as the
going upon the tops
of the mulberry trees was to David, and then they must
bestir themselves.
The waters of the sanctuary are then
healing when they are put in
motion.
Ministers must
stir up the gift that is in them. When they are cold and
dull in their ministrations, the waters
settle, and are not apt to
heal.
The angel descended, to
stir the water, not daily, perhaps not
frequently, but
at a certain season; some think, at the three solemn
feasts, to grace those solemnities; or,
now and then, as Infinite Wisdom
saw fit. God is a free agent in dispensing his favours.
(2.) The
operation of the medicine:
Whoever first
stepped in was made whole. here is, [1.] miraculous extent of the virtue as
to the
diseases cured; what disease soever it was, this water cured it.
Natural and artificial baths are as
hurtful in some cases as they are
useful in others, but this was a remedy for every malady, even for those that
came from contrary causes. The power of miracles
succeeds where the power
of nature
succumbs. [2.] A miraculous limitation of the virtue as to the
persons
cured: He that first stepped in had the benefit; that is, he or they that
stepped in immediately were cured, not those that lingered and came in
afterwards. This teaches us to observe and improve our opportunities, and to
look
about us, that we slip not a season which may never return. The angel
stirred
the waters, but left the diseased to themselves to
get in. God has put
virtue into the scriptures and ordinances, for he would have healed us; but, if
we do not make a due improvement of them, it is our own fault, we
would not
be healed.
Now this is all the account we have of this
standing
miracle; it is uncertain when it began and when it ceased. Some conjecture it
began when Eliashib the high priest began the building of the wall about
Jerusalem, and sanctified it with prayer; and that God testified his acceptance
by putting this virtue into the adjoining pool. Some think it began now lately
at Christ's birth; nay, others at his baptism. Dr. Lightfoot, finding in
Josephus,
Antiq. 15.121-122, mention of a great earthquake in the seventh year of
Herod, thirty years before Christ's birth, supposed, since there used to be
earthquakes at the descent of angels, that then the angel first descended to
stir this water. Some think it ceased with this miracle, others at Christ's
death; however, it is certain it had a gracious signification.
First, it
was a
token of God's good will to that people, and an indication that,
though they had been long without prophets and miracles, yet God had not
cast
them off; though they were now an oppressed despised people, and many were
ready to say,
Where are all the wonders that our fathers told us of? God
did hereby let them know that he had still a kindness for the
city of their
solemnities. We may hence take occasion to acknowledge with thankfulness God's
power and goodness in the mineral waters, that contribute so much to the health
of mankind; for God
made the fountains of water, Rev. 14:7.
Secondly,
It was a type of the Messiah, who is the
fountain opened; and was
intended to raise people's expectations of him who is the
Sun of
righteousness, that arises
with healing under his wings. These waters
had formerly been used for purifying, now for healing, to signify both the
cleansing
and
curing virtue of the blood of Christ, that incomparable bath, which
heals
all our diseases. The waters of Siloam, which filled this pool, signified
the kingdom of David, and of Christ the Son of David (Isa. 8:6); fitly therefore
have they now this
sovereign virtue put into them. The laver of
regeneration is to us as Bethesda's pool, healing our spiritual diseases; not
at certain seasons, but at all times.
Whoever will, let him come.
III. The patient on whom this cure was wrought (v. 5): one that
had
been infirm thirty-eight years. 1. His
disease was
grievous:
He had an
infirmity, a weakness; he had lost the use of his limbs, at
least on one side, as is usual in palsies. It is sad to have the body so
disabled that, instead of being the soul's instrument, it is become, even in
the affairs of this life, its burden. What reason have we to thank God for
bodily strength, to use it for him, and to pity those who are
his prisoners!
2. The duration of it was
tedious: Thirty-eight years. He was lame longer
than most live. Many are so long disabled for the offices of life that, as the
psalmist complains, they seem to be
made in vain; for suffering, not for
service; born to be always dying. Shall we complain of one wearisome night, or
one fit of illness, who perhaps for many years have scarcely known what it has
been to be a day sick, when many others, better than we, have scarcely known
what it has been to be a day well? Mr. Baxter's note on this passage is very
affecting: "How great a mercy was it to live thirty-eight years under God's
wholesome discipline! O my God," saith he, "I thank thee for the like
discipline of fifty-eight years; how safe a life is this, in comparison of full
prosperity and pleasure!"
IV. The cure and the circumstances of it briefly related, v.
6-9.
1.
Jesus saw him lie. Observe, When Christ came up to
Jerusalem he visited not the palaces, but the hospitals, which is an instance of
his humility, and condescension, and tender compassion, and an
indication
of his great design in coming into the world, which was to seek and save the
sick and wounded. There was a great multitude of poor cripples here at Bethesda,
but Christ fastened his eye upon this one, and singled him out from the rest,
because he was
senior of the house, and in a more deplorable condition
than any of the rest; and Christ delights to help the helpless, and hath mercy
on
whom he will have mercy. Perhaps his companions in tribulation insulted over
him, because he had often been disappointed of a cure; therefore Christ took him
for his patient: it is his honour to side with the weakest, and bear up those
whom he sees
run down.
2. He knew and considered
how long he had lain in this
condition. Those that have been long in affliction may comfort themselves with
this, that God keeps account
how long, and knows our frame.
3. He asked him,
Wilt thou be made whole? A strange
question to be asked one that had been so long ill. Some indeed would not be
made whole, because their sores serve them to beg by and serve them for an
excuse for idleness; but this poor man was as unable to
go a begging as
to
work, yet Christ put it to him, (1.) To
express his own pity
and concern for him. Christ is tenderly inquisitive concerning the desires of
those that are in affliction, and is willing to know
what is their petition:
"What shall I do for you?" (2.) To try him whether he would be
beholden for a cure to him against whom the great people were so prejudiced and
sought to prejudice others. (3.) To teach him to value the mercy, and to excite
in him desires after it. In spiritual cases, people are not willing to be cured
of their sins, are loth to part with them. If this point therefore were but
gained, if people were willing to be
made whole, the work were half done,
for Christ is willing to heal, if we be but willing to be healed, Mt. 8:3.
4. The poor impotent man takes this opportunity to renew his
complaint, and to set forth the misery of his case, which makes his cure the
more illustrious:
Sir, I have no man to put me into the pool, v. 7. He
seems to take Christ's question as an imputation of carelessness and neglect:
"If thou hadst had a mind to be healed, thou wouldest have looked better to
thy hits, and have got into the healing waters long before now." "No,
Master," saith the poor man, "It is not for want of a
good will,
but of a
good friend, that I am unhealed. I have done what I could to
help myself, but in vain, for no one else will help me." (1.) He does not
think of any other way of being cured than by these waters, and desires no other
friendship than to be helped into
them; therefore, when Christ cured him,
his imagination or expectation could not contribute to it, for he thought of no
such thing. (2.) He complains for want of friends to help him in:
"I
have no man, no friend to do me that kindness." One would think that
some of those who had been themselves healed should have lent him a hand; but it
is common for the poor to be destitute of friends;
no man careth for their
soul. To the sick and impotent it is as true a piece of charity to work for
them as to relieve them; and thus the poor are capable of being charitable to
one another, and ought to be so, though we seldom find that they are so; I speak
it to their shame. (3.) He bewails his infelicity, that very often when
he
was coming
another stepped in before him. But a step between him and a
cure, and yet he continues impotent. None had the charity to say, "Your
case is worse than mine, do you go in now, and I will stay till the next time;"
for there is no getting over the old maxim,
Every one for himself. Having
been so often disappointed, he begins to despair, and now is Christ's time to
come to his relief; he delights to help in desperate cases. Observe, How mildly
this man speaks of the unkindness of those about him, without any peevish
reflections. As we should be thankful for the least kindness, so we should be
patient under the greatest contempts; and, let our resentments be ever so
just,
yet our expressions should ever be
calm. And observe further, to his
praise, that, though he had waited so long in vain, yet still he continued lying
by the pool side, hoping that some time or other help would come, Hab. 2:3.
5. Our Lord Jesus hereupon cures him with a word speaking,
though he neither asked it nor thought of it. Here is,
(1.) The word he said:
Rise, take up thy bed, v. 8. [1.]
He is bidden to
rise and walk; a strange command to be given to an
impotent
man, that had been long disabled; but this divine word was to be the vehicle of
a divine power; it was a command to the disease to
be gone, to nature to
be
strong, but it is expressed as a command to him to
bestir himself. He
must
rise and walk, that is, attempt to do it, and in the
essay he
should receive strength to do it. The conversion of a sinner is the cure of a
chronic disease; this is ordinarily done by the word, a word of command: Arise,
and walk;
turn, and live; make ye a new heart; which no more supposes a
power in us to do it, without the grace of God,
distinguishing grace,
than this supposed such a power in the impotent man. But, if he had not
attempted to help himself, he had not been cured, and he must have
borne the
blame; yet it does not therefore follow that, when he did rise and walk, it
was by his own strength; no, it was by the power of Christ, and he must have all
the glory. Observe, Christ did not bid him rise and go into the waters, but
rise
and walk. Christ did that for us which the law could not do, and set that
aside. [2.] He is bidden to
take up his bed. First, To make it to appear
that it was a
perfect cure, and purely miraculous; for he did not recover
strength by degrees, but from the extremity of weakness and impotency he
suddenly stepped into the highest degree of bodily strength; so that he was able
to carry as great a load as any porter that had been as long
used to it
as he had been
disused. He, who this minute was not able to turn himself
in his bed, the next minute was able to carry his bed. The man sick of the palsy
(Mt. 9:6) was bidden to
go to his house, but probably this man had no
house to go to, the hospital was his home; therefore he is bidden to
rise and
walk. Secondly, It was to
proclaim the cure, and make it public; for,
being the sabbath day, whoever carried a burden through the streets made himself
very remarkable, and every one would enquire what was the meaning of it; thereby
notice of the miracle would spread, to the honour of God.
Thirdly, Christ
would thus witness against the tradition of the elders, which had stretched the
law of the sabbath beyond its intention; and would likewise show that he was
Lord
of the sabbath, and had power to make what alterations he pleased about it,
and to over-rule the law. Joshua, and the host of Israel, marched about Jericho
on the sabbath day, when God commanded them, so did this man carry his bed, in
obedience to a command. The case may be such that it may become a work of
necessity,
or
mercy, to carry a bed on the sabbath day; but here it was more, it was
a work of
piety, being designed purely for the glory of God.
Fourthly,
He would hereby try the faith and obedience of his patient. By carrying his bed
publicly, he exposed himself to the censure of the ecclesiastical court, and was
liable, at least, to be
scourged in the synagogue. Now, will he run the
hazard of this, in obedience to Christ? Yes, he will. Those that have been
healed
by Christ's word should be
ruled by his word, whatever it cost
them.
(2.) The efficacy of this word (v. 9): a divine power went alone
with it, and immediately he was
made whole, took up his bed, and walked.
[1.] He felt the power of Christ's word healing him:
Immediately he was
made whole. What a joyful surprise was this to the poor cripple, to find
himself all of a sudden so easy, so strong, so able to help himself! What a new
world was he in, in an instant! Nothing is too hard for Christ to do. [2.] He
obeyed the power of Christ's word commanding him. He
took up his bed and
walked, and did not care who blamed him or threatened him for it. The proof
of our spiritual cure is our rising and walking. Hath Christ healed our
spiritual diseases? Let us go whithersoever he sends us, and
take up
whatever he is pleased to lay upon us, and
walk before him.
V. What became of the poor man after he was cured. We are here
told,
1. What passed between him and the Jews who saw him carry his
bed on the sabbath day; for on that day this cure was wrought, and it was the
sabbath that fell within the passover week, and therefore a
high day, ch.
19:31. Christ's work was such that he needed not make any difference between
sabbath days and other days, for he was always about his Father's business;
but he wrought many remarkable cures on that day, perhaps to encourage his
church to expect those spiritual favours from him, in their observance of the
Christian sabbath, which were typified by his miraculous cures. Now here,
(1.) The Jews quarrelled with the man for carrying his bed on
the sabbath day, telling him that
it was not lawful, v. 10. It does not
appear whether they were magistrates, who had power to
punish him, or
common people, who could only
inform against him; but thus far was
commendable, that, while they knew not by
what authority he did it, they
were jealous for the honour of the sabbath, and could not unconcernedly see it
profaned;
like Nehemiah. Neh. 13:17.
(2.) The man justified himself in what he did by a warrant that
would bear him out, v. 11. "I do not do it in contempt of the law and the
sabbath, but in obedience to one who, by
making me whole, has given me an
undeniable proof that he is greater than either. He that could work such a
miracle as to
make me whole no doubt might give me such a command as to
carry
my bed; he that could overrule the powers of nature no doubt might
overrule a positive law, especially in an instance not of the essence of the
law. He that was so kind as to make me whole would not be so unkind as to bid me
do what is sinful." Christ, by curing another paralytic, proved his power
to
forgive sin, here to
give law; if his pardons are valid, his
edicts are so, and his miracles prove both.
(3.) The Jews enquired further who it was that gave him this
warrant (v. 12):
What man is that? Observe, How industriously they
overlooked
that which might be a ground of their
faith in Christ. They enquire not,
no, not for curiosity, "Who is it that
made thee whole?" While
they industriously caught at that which might be a ground of reflection upon
Christ (
What man is it who said unto thee,
Take up thy bed?) they
would fain
subpoena the patient to be witness against his physician, and
to be his betrayer. In their question, observe, [1.] They resolve to look upon
Christ as a
mere man: What man is that? For, though he gave ever such
convincing proofs of it, they were resolved that they would never own him to be
the
Son of God. [2.] They resolve to look upon him as a bad
man,
and take it for granted that he who bade this man carry his bed, whatever divine
commission he might
produce, was certainly a delinquent, and as such they
resolve to prosecute him.
What man is that who durst give such orders?
(4.) The poor man was unable to give them any account of him:
He
wist not who he was, v. 13.
[1.] Christ was
unknown to him when he healed him.
Probably he had heard of the name of Jesus, but had never seen him, and
therefore could not tell that this was he. Note, Christ does many a good turn
for those that know him not, Isa. 45:4, 5. He enlightens, strengthens, quickens,
comforts us, and we
wist not who he is; nor are aware how much we receive
daily by his mediation. This man, being unacquainted with Christ, could not
actually believe in him for a cure; but Christ knew the dispositions of his
soul, and suited his favours to them, as to the blind man in a like case, ch.
9:36. Our covenant and communion with God take rise, not so much from our
knowledge of him, as from his knowledge of us. We
know God, or, rather,
are
known of him, Gal. 4:9.
[2.] For the present he
kept himself unknown; for as soon
as he had wrought the cure he
conveyed himself away, he
made himself
unknown (so some read it),
a multitude being in that place. This is
mentioned to show, either,
First, How Christ conveyed himself awayby
retiring into the crowd, so as not to be distinguished from a common person. He
that was the chief of ten thousand often made himself one of the throng. It is
sometimes the lot of those who have by their services signalized themselves to
be levelled with the multitude, and overlooked. Or
Secondly, Why he
conveyed himself away, because there was
a multitude there, and he
industriously avoided both the
applause of those who would admire the
miracle and
cry that up, and the censure of those who would censure him
as a sabbath-breaker, and
run him down. Those that are active for God in
their generation must expect to pass through
evil report and
good
report; and it is wisdom as much as may be to keep out of the hearing of
both; lest by the one we be
exalted, and by the other
depressed,
above measure. Christ left the miracle to commend itself, and the man on whom it
was wrought to justify it.
2. What passed between him and our Lord Jesus at their next
interview, v. 14. Observe here,
(1.) Where Christ found him:
in the temple, the place of
public worship. In our attendance on public worship we may expect to meet with
Christ, and improve our acquaintance with him. Observe, [1.] Christ
went to
the temple. Though he had many enemies, yet he appeared in public, because
there he bore his testimony to divine institutions, and had opportunity of doing
good. [2.] The man that was cured
went to the temple. There Christ found
him the same day, as it should seem, that he was healed; thither he straightway
went,
First, Because he had,
by his infirmity, been so long
detained
thence. Perhaps he had not been there for thirty-eight years, and therefore, as
soon as ever the embargo is taken off, his first visit shall be to the temple,
as Hezekiah intimates his shall be (Isa. 38:22):
What is the sign that I
shall go up to the house of the Lord? Secondly, Because he had
by his
recovery a good errand thither; he went up to the temple to return thanks to
God for his recovery. When God has at any time restored us our health we ought
to attend him with solemn praises (Ps. 116:18, 19), and the sooner the better,
while the sense of the mercy is fresh.
Thirdly, Because he had, by
carrying
his bed, seemed to put a contempt on the sabbath, he would thus show that he
had an honour for it, and made conscience of sabbath-sanctification, in that on
which the chief stress of it is laid, which is the
public worship of God.
Works of necessity and mercy are allowed; but when they are over we must
go
to the temple.
(2.) What he said to him. When Christ has cured us, he has not
done with us; he now applies himself to the healing of his soul, and this
by
the word too. [1.] He gives him a
memento of his cure:
Behold thou
art made whole. He found himself made whole, yet Christ calls his attention
to it.
Behold, consider it seriously, how sudden, how strange, how cheap,
how easy, the cure was:
admire it; behold, and wonder:
Remember it;
let the impressions of it abide, and never be lost, Isa. 38:9. [2.] He gives him
a caution against sin, in consideration hereof,
Being made whole, sin no
more. This implies that his disease was the punishment of sin; whether of
some remarkably flagrant sin, or only of sin in general, we cannot tell, but we
know that sin is the procuring cause of sickness, Ps. 107:17, 18. Some observe
that Christ did not make mention of sin to any of his patients, except to this
impotent
man, and another who was in like manner diseased, Mk. 2:5. While those chronical
diseases lasted, they prevented the outward acts of many sins, and therefore
watchfulness was the more necessary when the disability was removed. Christ
intimates that those who are
made whole, who are eased of the present
sensible punishment of sin, are in danger of
returning to sin when the
terror and restraint are over, unless divine grace dry up the fountain. When the
trouble which only dammed up the current is over, the waters will return to
their old course; and therefore there is great need of watchfulness, lest after
healing mercy we return again to folly. The
misery we were
made whole
from warns us to sin no more, having felt the smart of sin; the
mercy
we were
made whole by is an engagement upon us not to offend him who
healed us. This is the voice of every providence,
Go and sin no more.
This man began his new life very hopefully
in the temple, yet Christ saw
it necessary to give him this caution; for it is common for people, when they
are sick, to
promise much, when newly recovered to
perform something,
but after awhile to
forget all. [3.] He gives him warning of his danger,
in case he should return to his former sinful course:
Lest a worse thing come
to thee. Christ, who knows all men's hearts, knew that he was one of those
that must be
frightened from sin. Thirty-eight years' lameness, one
would think, was a thing bad enough; yet there is something
worse that
will come to him if he relapse into sin after God has
given him such a
deliverance as this, Ezra 9:13, 14. The hospital where he lay was a
melancholy place, but hell is much more so: the doom of apostates is a worse
thing than thirty-eight years' lameness.
VI. Now, after this interview between Christ and his patient,
observe in the two following verses, 1. The notice which the poor simple man
gave to the Jews concerning Christ, v. 15. He told them it was Jesus that had
made
him whole. We have reason to think that he intended this for the honour of
Christ and the benefit of the Jews, little thinking that he who had so much
power and goodness could have
any enemies; but those who wish well to
Christ's kingdom must have the
wisdom of the serpent, lest they do more
hurt than good with their zeal, and must not cast pearls before swine. 2. The
rage and enmity of the Jews against him:
Therefore did the rulers of the
Jews
persecute Jesus. See, (1.) How absurd and unreasonable their enmity
to Christ was.
Therefore, because he had made a poor sick man well, and
so eased the public charge, upon which, it is likely, he had subsisted;
therefore
they persecuted him, because he did good in Israel. (2.) How bloody and cruel it
was:
They sought to slay him; nothing less than his blood, his life,
would satisfy them. (3.) How it was varnished over with a colour of zeal for the
honour of the sabbath; for this was the pretended crime,
Because he had done
these things on the sabbath day, as if that circumstance were enough to
vitiate the best and most divine actions, and to render
him obnoxious
whose deeds were otherwise most meritorious. Thus hypocrites often cover their
real enmity against the
power of godliness with a pretended zeal for the
form
of it.
Verses 17-30
We have here Christ's discourse upon occasion of his being
accused as a sabbath-breaker, and it seems to be his vindication of himself
before the sanhedrim, when he was arraigned before them: whether on the same
day, or two or three days after, does not appear; probably the same day.
Observe,
I. The doctrine laid down, by which he justified what he did on
the sabbath day (v. 17):
He answered them. This supposes that he had
something laid to his charge: or what they suggested one to another, when they
sought to slay him (v. 16), he
knew, and gave this reply to,
My Father
worketh hitherto, and I work. At other times, in answer to the like charge,
he had pleaded the example of David's eating the show-bread, of the priests'
slaying the sacrifices, and of the people's watering their cattle on the
sabbath day; but here he goes higher and alleges the example of his Father and
his divine authority; waiving all other pleas, he insists upon that which was
instar
omniumequivalent to the whole, and abides by it, which he had mentioned,
Mt. 12:8.
The Son of man is Lord even of the sabbath day; but he here
enlarges on it. 1. He pleads that he was the Son of God,
plainly intimated in
his calling God his Father; and, if so, his holiness was
unquestionable
and his sovereignty
incontestable; and he might make what alterations he
pleased of the divine law.
Surely they will reverence the Son, the heir
of all things. 2. That he was a worker together with God. (1.)
My Father
worketh hitherto. The example of God's resting on the seventh day from all
his work is, in the fourth commandment, made the ground of our observing it as a
sabbath or
day of rest. Now God rested only from such work as he
had done the six days before; otherwise he
worketh hitherto, he is every
day working, sabbath days and week-days, upholding and governing all the
creatures, and concurring by his common providence to all the motions and
operations of nature,
to his own glory; therefore, when we are appointed
to rest on the sabbath day, yet we are not restrained from doing that which has
a direct tendency
to the glory of God, as the man's carrying his bed
had. (2.)
I work; not only therefore I
may work,
like him,
in doing good on sabbath days as well as other days, but I also
work with
him. As God created all things by Christ, so he supports and governs all by
him, Heb. 1:3. This sets what he does above all exception; he that is so great a
worker must needs be an uncontrollable governor; he that does all is Lord of
all, and therefore
Lord of the sabbath, which particular branch of his
authority he would now assert, because he was shortly to show it further, in the
change of the day from the seventh to the first.
II. The offence that was taken at his doctrine (v. 18):
The
Jews sought the more to kill him. His defence was made his offence, as if by
justifying himself he had made bad worse. Note, Those that will not be
enlightened by the word of Christ will be enraged and exasperated by it, and
nothing more vexes the enemies of Christ than his asserting his authority; see
Ps. 2:3-5. They sought to kill him,
1. Because he had broken the sabbath; for, let him say what he
would in his own justification, they are resolved, right or wrong, to
find
him guilty of sabbath breaking. When malice and envy sit upon the bench,
reason and justice may even be silent at the bar, for whatever they can say will
undoubtedly be over-ruled.
2. Not only so, but he had said also
that God was his Father.
Now they pretend a jealousy for
God's honour, as before for the sabbath
day, and charge Christ with it as a heinous crime that he made himself equal
with God; and a heinous crime it had been if he had not really been so. It was
the sin of Lucifer,
I will be like the Most High. Now, (1.) This was
justly inferred from what he said, that he was the
Son of God, and that
God was
his Father, patera idion
his
own Father; his, so as he was no one's else. He had said that he worked
with his Father, by the same authority and power, and hereby he made himself
equal with God.
Ecee intelligunt Judaei, quod non intelligunt ArianiBehold,
the Jews understand what the Arians do not. (2.) Yet it was unjustly imputed
to him as an offence that he equalled himself with God, for he was and is God,
equal with the Father (Phil. 2:6); and therefore Christ, in answer to this
charge, does not except against the innuendo as strained or forced, makes out
his claim and proves that he is equal with God in power and glory.
III. Christ's discourse upon this occasion, which continues
without interruption to the end of the chapter. In these verses he explains, and
afterwards confirms, his commission, as Mediator and plenipotentiary in the
treaty between God and man. And, as the honours he is hereby
entitled to
are such as it is not fit for any creature to receive, so the work he is hereby
entrusted with is such as it is not possible for any creature to go through
with, and therefore he is God, equal with the Father.
1.
In general. He is one with the Father in all he does
as Mediator, and there was a perfectly good understanding between them in the
whole matter. It is ushered in with a solemn preface (v. 19):
Verily, verily,
I say unto you; I the Amen, the Amen, say it. This intimates that the things
declared are, (1.) Very awful and great, and such as should command the most
serious attention. (2.) Very sure, and such as should command an unfeigned
assent. (3.) That they are matters purely of divine revelation; things which
Christ has told us, and which we could not otherwise have come to the knowledge
of. Two things he saith in general concerning the Son's oneness with the
Father in working:
[1.] That the Son
conforms to the Father (v. 19):
The
Son can do nothing of himself but what he sees the Father do; for
these
things does the Son. The Lord Jesus, as Mediator, is
First, Obedient to
his Father's will; so entirely obedient that he
can do nothing of
himself, in the same sense as it is said,
God cannot lie,
cannot
deny himself, which expresses the perfection of his truth, not any
imperfection in his strength; so here, Christ was so entirely devoted to his
Father's will that it was impossible for him in any thing to act separately.
Secondly,
He is
observant of his Father's counsel; he can, he will, do nothing
but
what he sees the Father do. No man can
find out the work of God, but
the only-begotten Son, who lay in his bosom, sees what he does, is intimately
acquainted with his purposes, and has the plan of them ever before him. What he
did as Mediator, throughout his whole undertaking, was the exact transcript or
counterpart of what the Father did; that is, what he designed, when he formed
the plan of our redemption in his eternal counsels, and settled those measures
in every thing which never could be
broken, nor ever needed to be
altered.
It was the copy of that
great original; it was Christ's faithfulness,
as it was Moses's, that he did all
according to the pattern shown him in
the mount. This is expressed in the present tense, what he
sees the
Father do, for the same reason that, when he was here upon earth, it was
said, He
is in heaven (ch. 3:13), and
is in the bosom of the
Father (ch. 1:18); as he was even then by his divine nature present in heaven,
so the things done in heaven were
present to his knowledge. What the
Father did in his counsels, the Son had ever in his view, and still he had his
eye upon it, as David in spirit spoke of him,
I have set the Lord always
before me, Ps. 16:8.
Thirdly, Yet he is
equal with the Father
in
working; for
what things soever the Father does
these also
does the Son likewise; he did the
same things, not
such
things, but
tauta, the
same
things; and he did them in the
same manner, homoioµs,
likewise, with the same authority, and liberty, and wisdom, the same
energy and efficacy. Does the Father enact, repeal, and alter, positive laws?
Does he over-rule the course of nature, know men's hearts? So does the Son.
The power of the Mediator is a divine power.
[2.] That the Father
communicates to the Son, v. 20.
Observe,
First, The inducement to it:
The Father loveth the Son;
he declared,
This is my beloved Son. He had not only a good will to the
undertaking, but an infinite complacency in the undertaker. Christ was now hated
of men, one whom the nation abhorred (Isa. 49:7); but he comforted himself with
this, that his Father loved him.
Secondly, The instances of it. He shows it, 1. In what he
does
communicate to him:
He shows him all things that himself doth. The Father's
measures in making and ruling the world are shown to the Son, that he may take
the same measures in framing and governing the church, which work was to be a
duplicate of the work of creation and providence, and it is therefore called
the
world to come. He shows him all things
ha autos
poiei
which he does, that is, which the
Son does, so
it might be construed; all that the Son does is by direction from the Father; he
shows him. 2. In what he
will communicate; he will
show him,
that is, will appoint and direct him to do
greater works than these. (1.)
Works of greater
power than the
curing of the impotent man; for he
should raise the dead, and should himself rise from the dead. By the power of
nature, with the use of means, a disease may possibly in time be cured; but
nature can never, by the use of any means, in any time raise the dead. (2.)
Works of greater
authority than warranting the man to
carry his bed on
the sabbath day. They thought this a daring attempt; but what was this to
his abrogating the whole ceremonial law, and instituting new ordinances, which
he would shortly do,
"that you may marvel!" Now they looked
upon his works with contempt and indignation, but he will shortly do that which
they will look upon with amazement, Lu. 7:16. Many are brought to marvel at
Christ's works, whereby he has the honour of them, who are not brought to
believe, by which they would have the benefit of them.
2.
In particular. He proves his equality with the Father,
by specifying some of those works which he does that are the peculiar works of
God. This is enlarged upon, v. 21-30. He does, and shall do, that which is the
peculiar work of God's sovereign dominion and jurisdiction
judging
and
executing judgment, v. 22-24, 27. These two are interwoven, as
being nearly connected; and what is said once is repeated and inculcated; put
both together, and they will prove that Christ said not amiss when he made
himself
equal with God.
(1.) Observe what is here said concerning the Mediator's power
to
raise the dead and
give life. See [1.] His
authority to
do it (v. 21):
As the Father raiseth up the dead, so
the Son
quickeneth whom he will. First, It is God's prerogative to raise the dead,
and give life, even his who first
breathed into man the
breath of
life, and so made him a
living soul; see Deu. 32:30; 1 Sa. 2:6; Ps.
68:20; Rom. 4:17. This God had done by the prophets Elijah and Elisha, and it
was a confirmation of their mission. A
resurrection from the dead never
lay in the common road of nature, nor ever fell within the thought of those that
studied only the compass of nature's power, one of whose received axioms was
point blank against it:
A privatione ad habitum non datur regressusExistence,
when once extinguished, cannot be rekindled. It was therefore ridiculed at
Athens as an
absurd thing, Acts 17:32. It is purely the work of a divine
power, and the knowledge of it purely by divine revelation. This the Jews would
own.
Secondly, The Mediator is invested with this prerogative:
He
quickens whom he will; raises to life whom he pleases, and when he pleases.
He does not enliven things by natural necessity, as the sun does, whose beams
revive of course; but he acts as a free agent, has the dispensing of his power
in his own hand, and is never either
constrained, or
restrained,
in the use of it. As he has the power, so he has the wisdom and sovereignty, of
a God; has the
key of the grave and of death (Rev. 1:18), not as a
servant, to open and shut as he is bidden, for he has it as the
key of David,
which he is master of, Rev. 3:7. An absolute prince is described by this (Dan.
5:19):
Whom he would he slew or kept alive; it is true of Christ without
hyperbole.
[2.] His
ability to do it.
Therefore he has power
to quicken whom he will as the Father does, because
he has life in himself,
as the Father has, v. 26.
First, It is certain that the Father
has
life in himself. Not only he is a
self-existent Being, who does not
derive from, or depend upon, any other (Ex. 3:14), but he is a sovereign giver
of life; he has the disposal of life in himself; and of all good (for so
life
sometimes signifies); it is all derived from him, and dependent on him. He is to
his creatures the fountain of life, and all good; author of their being and
well-being; the living God, and the God of all living.
Secondly, It is as
certain that he has
given to the Son to have life in himself. As the
Father is the original of all natural life and good, being the great Creator, so
the Son, as Redeemer, is the original of all spiritual life and good; is that to
the church which the Father is to the world; see 1 Co. 8:6; Col. 1:19. The
kingdom of grace, and all the life in that kingdom, are as fully and absolutely
in the hand of the Redeemer as the kingdom of providence is in the hand of the
Creator; and as God, who gives being to all things, has his being of himself, so
Christ, who gives life, raised himself to life by his own power, ch. 10:18.
[3.] His
acting according to this authority and ability.
Having
life in himself, and being authorized to
quicken whom he will,
by virtue hereof there are, accordingly, two resurrections performed by his
powerful word, both which are here spoken of:
First, A resurrection that
now is (v. 29), a
resurrection from the death of sin to the life of righteousness, by the power of
Christ's grace.
The hour is coming, and now is. It is a resurrection
begun already, and further to be carried on,
when the dead shall hear the
voice of the Son of God. This is plainly distinguished from that in v. 28,
which speaks of the resurrection at the end of time. This says nothing, as that
does, of the dead in their graces, and of all of them, and their coming forth.
Now, 1. Some think this was fulfilled in those whom he miraculously raised to
life, Jairus's daughter, the widow's son, and Lazarus; and it is observable
that all whom Christ raised were
spoken to, as,
Damsel, arise; Young
man, arise; Lazarus, come forth; whereas those raised under the Old
Testament were raised, not by a word, but other applications, 1 Ki. 17:21; 2 Ki.
4:34; 13:21. Some understand it of those saints that rose with Christ; but we do
not read of the
voice of the Son of God calling them. But, 2. I rather
understand it of the power of the doctrine of Christ, for the recovering and
quickening of those that were
dead in trespasses and sins, Eph. 2:1. The
hour
was
coming when dead souls should be made alive by the
preaching
of the gospel, and a spirit of life from God accompanying it: nay, it
then
was, while Christ was upon earth. It may refer especially to the
calling
of the Gentiles, which is said to be as life from the dead, and, some think,
was prefigured by Ezekiel's vision (ch. 37:1), and foretold, Isa. 26:19.
Thy
dead men shall live. But it is to be applied to all the wonderful success of
the gospel, among both Jews and Gentiles; an hour which still
is, and is
still
coming, till all the elect be effectually called. Note, (1.)
Sinners are spiritually
dead, destitute of spiritual life, sense,
strength, and motion, dead to God, miserable, but neither sensible of their
misery nor able to help themselves out of it. (2.) The conversion of a soul to
God is its resurrection from death to life; then it begins to live when it
begins to
live to God, to breathe after him, and move towards him. (3.)
It is by the
voice of the Son of God that souls are raised to spiritual
life; it is wrought by his power, and that power conveyed and communicated by
his word:
The dead shall hear, shall be made to hear, to understand,
receive, and believe, the
voice of the Son of God, to hear it as his
voice; then the Spirit by it gives life, otherwise the
letter kills. (4.)
The voice of Christ must be heard by us, that we may live by it. They that hear,
and attend to what they hear, shall live.
Hear and your soul shall live,
Isa. 55:3.
Secondly, A resurrection yet
to come; this is spoken
of, v. 28, 29, introduced with,
"Marvel not at this, which I have
said of the
first resurrection, do not reject it as incredible and
absurd, for at the end of time you shall all see a more sensible and amazing
proof of the power and authority of the Son of man." As
his own
resurrection was reserved to be the final and concluding proof of his personal
commission, so the resurrection of
all men is reserved to be a like proof
of his commission to be executed by his spirit. Now observe here,
a. When this resurrection shall be:
The hour is coming;
it is
fixed to an hour, so very punctual is this great appointment. The
judgment is not adjourned
sine dieto some time not yet pitched upon;
no,
he hath appointed a day. The hour is coming. (
a.) It is
not
yet come, it is not the hour spoken of at v. 25, that is coming, and
now
is. Those erred dangerously who said that the
resurrection was past
already, 2 Tim. 2:18, But, (
b.) It
will certainly come, it is
coming on, nearer every day than other; it is at the door. How far off it is we
know not; but we know that it is infallibly designed and unalterably determined.
b. Who shall be raised:
All that are in the graves,
all that have died from the beginning of time, and all that shall die to the end
of time. It was said (Dan. 12:2),
Many shall arise; Christ here tells us
that those
many shall be
all; all must appear before the Judge,
and therefore
all must be raised; every person, and the whole of every
person; every soul shall return to its body, and every
bone to its bone.
The grave is the prison of dead bodies, where they are
detained; their
furnace, where they are
consumed (Job 24:19); yet, in prospect of their
resurrection, we may call it their
bed, where they sleep to be
awaked
again; their treasury, where they are laid up to be used again. Even those that
are not
put into graves shall arise; but, because most are put into
graves, Christ uses this expression,
all that are in the graves. The Jews
used the word
sheol for the
grave, which signifies
the state of
the dead; all that are in that state
shall hear.
c. How they shall be raised. Two things are here told us:(
a.)
The efficient of this resurrection:
They shall hear his voice; that is,
he shall cause them to hear it, as Lazarus was made to hear that word,
Come
forth; a divine power shall go along with the voice, to put life into them,
and enable them to obey it. When Christ rose, there was no voice heard, not a
word spoken, because he rose by his own power; but at the resurrection of the
children of men we find three voices spoken of, 1 Th. 4:16. The Lord shall
descend with a
shout, the shout of a king, with
the voice of the
archangel; either Christ himself, the prince of the angels, or the
commander-in-chief, under him, of the heavenly hosts; and with
the trumpet of
God: the soldier's trumpet sounding the alarm of war, the judge's
trumpet publishing the summons to the court. (
b.) The effect of it:
They
shall come forth out of their graves, as prisoners out of their
prison-house; they shall
arise out of the dust, and shake themselves from
it; see Isa. 52:1, 2, 11. But this is not all; they shall
appear before
Christ's tribunal, shall
come forth as those that are to be tried,
come
forth to the bar, publicly to receive their doom.
d. To what they shall be raised; to a different state of
happiness or misery, according to their different character; to a state of
retribution, according to what they did in the state of probation.
(
a.)
They that have done good shall come forth to the
resurrection of life; they shall live again, to live for ever. Note, [
a.]
Whatever name men are called by, or whatever plausible profession they make, it
will be well in the great day with those only that have
done good, have
done that which is pleasing to God and profitable to others. [
b.] The
resurrection of the body will be a resurrection of life to all those, and those
only, that have been sincere and constant in
doing good. They shall not
only be publicly
acquitted, as a pardoned criminal, we say, has
his
life, but they shall be
admitted into the presence of God, and that
is life, it is better than life; they shall be
attended with comforts in
perfection. To live is to be
happy, and they shall be
advanced
above the fear of death; that is
life indeed in which
mortality is
for ever
swallowed up.
(
b.)
They that have done evil to the resurrection of
damnation; they shall live again, to be for ever dying. The Pharisees
thought that the resurrection pertained only to the just, but Christ here
rectifies that mistake. Note, [
a.]
Evil doers, whatever they
pretend, will be treated in the day of judgment as
evil men. [
b.]
The resurrection will be to evil doers, who did not by repentance undo what they
had done amiss, a
resurrection of damnation. They shall come forth to be
publicly convicted of rebellion against God, and publicly
condemned to
everlasting punishment; to be
sentenced to it, and immediately
sent
to it without reprieve. Such will the resurrection be.
(2.) Observe what is here said concerning the Mediator's
authority
to execute judgment, v. 22-24, 27. As he has an almighty power, so he has
a sovereign jurisdiction; and who so fit to preside in the great affairs of the
other life as he who is the Father and fountain of life? Here is,
[1.] Christ's commission or delegation to the office of a
judge, which is twice spoken of here (v. 22):
He hath committed all judgment
to the Son; and again (v. 27):
he hath given him authority.
First, The
Father judges no man; not that the Father
hath resigned the government, but he is pleased to govern by Jesus Christ; so
that man is not under the terror of dealing with God immediately, but has the
comfort of access to him by a Mediator. Having made us, he
may do what he
pleases with us, as the potter with the clay; yet he does not take
advantage of this, but draws us
with the cords of a man. 2. He does not
determine our everlasting condition by the
covenant of innocency, nor
take the advantage he has against us for the violation of that covenant. The
Mediator having undertaken to make a
vicarious satisfaction, the matter
is referred to him, and God is willing to enter upon a new treaty;
not under
the law of the Creator,
but the grace of the Redeemer.
Secondly, He has committed all judgment to the Son, has
constituted him
Lord of all (Acts 10:36; Rom. 14:9), as Joseph in Egypt,
Gen. 41:40. This was prophesied of, Ps. 72:1; Isa. 11:3, 4; Jer. 23:5; Mic.
5:1-4; Ps. 67:4; 96:13; 98:9. All judgment is committed to our Lord Jesus; for
1. He is
entrusted with the administration of the
providential
kingdom, is
head over all things (Eph. 1:11), head of every man, 1
Co. 11:3. All things consist by him, Col. 1:17. 2. He is empowered to make laws
immediately to bind conscience.
I say unto you is now the form in which
the statues of the kingdom of heaven run.
Be it enacted by the Lord
Jesus, and by
his authority. All the acts now in force are touched with
his sceptre. 3. He is authorized to appoint and settle the terms of the new
covenant, and to draw up the articles of peace between God and man; it is God in
Christ that reconciles the world, and to him he has given power to confer
eternal life. The book of life is the Lamb's book; by his award we must stand
or fall. 4. He is commissioned to carry on and complete the war with the powers
of darkness; to cast out and
give judgment against the prince of this world,
ch. 12:31. He is commissioned not only to
judge, but to
make war,
Rev. 19:11. All that will fight
for God against Satan must enlist
themselves under
his banner. 5. He is constituted sole manager of the
judgment of the great day. The ancients generally understood these words of that
crowning act of his judicial power. The final and universal judgment is
committed to the Son of man; the tribunal is
his, it is the judgment-seat
of Christ; the retinue is his,
his mighty angels; he will try the causes,
and pass the sentence. Acts 17:31.
Thirdly, He has
given him authority to execute judgment
also, v. 27. Observe, 1. What the authority is which our Redeemer is
invested with:
An authority to execute judgment; he has not only a
legislative and judicial power, but an
executive power too. The phrase
here is used particularly for the judgment of condemnation, Jude 15.
poieµsai
krisin
to execute judgment upon all; the same with his
taking
vengeance, 2 Th. 1:8. The ruin of impenitent sinners comes from the hand of
Christ; he that
executes judgment upon them is the same that would have
wrought
salvation for them, which makes the sentence unexceptionable; and there is
no relief against the sentence of the Redeemer; salvation itself cannot save
those whom the Saviour
condemns, which makes the ruin
remediless.
2. Whence he has that authority: the Father
gave it to him. Christ's
authority as Mediator is delegated and derived; he acts as the Father's
Viceregent, as the Lord's Anointed, the Lord's Christ. Now all this redounds
very much to the honour of Christ, acquitting him from the guilt of blasphemy,
in making himself
equal with God; and very much to the comfort of all
believers, who may with the greatest assurance venture their all in such hands.
[2.] Here are the reasons (reasons of state) for which this
commission was given him. He has all judgment committed to him for two reasons:
First, Because he is the
Son of man; which denotes
these three things:1. His humiliation and gracious condescension. Man is a
worm, the son of man a worm; yet this was the nature, this the character, which
the Redeemer assumed, in pursuance of the counsels of love; to this low estate
he stooped, and submitted to all the mortifications attending it, because it was
his Father's will; in recompence therefore of this wonderful obedience,
God did thus dignify him. Because he condescended to be the
Son of man,
his Father made him
Lord of all, Phil. 2:8, 9. 2. His affinity and
alliance to us. The Father has committed the government of the children of men
to him, because, being the
Son of man, he is of the same nature with
those whom he is
set over, and therefore the more unexceptionable, and
the more acceptable, as a Judge.
Their governor shall proceed from the midst
of them, Jer. 30:21. Of this that law was typical;
One of thy brethren
shalt thou set king over thee, Deu. 17:15. 3. His being the Messiah
promised. In that famous vision of his kingdom and glory, Dan. 7:13, 14, he is
called the
Son of man; and Ps. 8:4-6. Thou has made the Son of man have
dominion
over the works of thy hands. He is the Messiah, and therefore is invested
with all this power. The Jews usually called the Christ the
Son of David;
but Christ usually called himself the
Son of man, which was the more
humble title, and bespeaks him a prince and Saviour, not the Jewish nation only,
but to the whole race of mankind.
Secondly, That all men should honour the Son, v. 23. The
honouring of Jesus Christ is here spoken of as God's great design (the Son
intended to glorify the Father, and therefore the Father intended to glorify the
Son, ch. 12:32); and as man's great duty, in compliance with that design. If
God will have the Son honoured, it is the duty of all to whom he is made known
to honour him. Observe here, 1. The
respect that is to be paid to our
Lord Jesus: We must
honour the Son, must look upon him as one that is to
be
honoured, both on account of his transcendent excellences and
perfections in himself, and of the relations he stands in to us, and must study
to give him honour accordingly; must
confess that he is Lord, and worship
him; must honour him who was dishonoured for us. 2. The degree of it:
Even as
they honour the Father. This
supposes it to be our duty to
honour
the Father; for revealed religion is founded on natural religion, and
directs
us to
honour the Son, to honour him with
divine honour; we must
honour the Redeemer with the same honour with which we honour the Creator. So
far was it from blasphemy for him to make himself
equal with God that it
is the highest injury that can be for us to make him otherwise. The truths and
laws of the Christian religion, so far as they are revealed, are as sacred and
honourable as those of natural religion, and to be equally had in estimation;
for we lie under the same obligations to Christ, the Author of our being; and
have as necessary a dependence upon the Redeemer's grace as upon the Creator's
providence, which is a sufficient ground for this law
to honour the Son as
we honour the Father. To enforce this law, it is added,
He that honours
not the Son honours not the Father who has sent him. Some pretend a
reverence for the Creator, and speak
honourably of him, who make light of
the Redeemer, and speak
contemptibly of him; but let such know that the
honours and interests of the Father and Son are so inseparably twisted and
interwoven that the Father never reckons himself
honoured by any that
dishonour
the Son. Note, (1.) Indignities done to the Lord Jesus reflect upon God himself,
and will so be construed and reckoned for in the court of heaven. The Son having
so far espoused the Father's honour as to take
to himself the
reproaches
cast on him (Rom. 15:3), the Father does no less espouse the Son's honour,
and counts himself struck at through him. (2.) The reason of this is because the
Son is sent and commissioned by the Father; it is the
Father who hath sent
him. Affronts to an ambassador are justly resented by the prince that sends
him. And by this rule those who truly
honour the Son honour the Father also;
see Phil. 2:11.
[3.] Here is the rule by which the Son goes in executing this
commission, so those words seem to come in (v. 24):
He that heareth and
believeth hath
everlasting life. Here we have the substance of the
whole gospel; the preface commands
attention to a thing most weighty, and
assent to a thing most certain:
"Verily, verily, I say unto you,
I, to whom you hear
all judgment is committed, I, in whose lips is a
divine sentence; take from
me the Christian's
character and
charter."
First, The
character of a Christian:
He that
heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me. To be a Christian indeed
is, 1. To
hear the word of Christ. It is not enough to be within hearing
of it, but we must
attend on it, as scholars on the instructions of their
teachers; and
attend to it, as servants to the commands of their masters;
we must hear and obey it, must abide by the gospel of Christ as the fixed rule
of our faith and practice. 2. To
believe on him that sent him; for Christ's
design is to
bring us to God; and, as he is the first original of all
grace, so is he the last object of all faith. Christ is our
way; God is
our rest. We must believe on God as
having sent Jesus Christ, and
recommended himself to our faith and love, by manifesting his glory in
the
face of Jesus Christ (2 Co. 4:6), as
his Father and
our Father.
Secondly, The
charter of a Christian, in which all
that are Christians indeed are interested. See what we get by Christ. 1. A
charter of pardon:
He shall not come into condemnation. The grace of the
gospel is a full discharge from the curse of the law. A believer shall not only
not
lie under condemnation eternally, but shall not
come into
condemnation now, not come into the danger of it (Rom. 8:1), not
come
into judgment, not be so much as arraigned. 2. A charter of privileges: He
is
passed out of death to life, is invested in a present happiness in
spiritual life and entitled to a future happiness in eternal life. The tenour of
the first covenant was,
Do this and live; the man that doeth them shall
live in them. Now this proves Christ equal with the Father that he has power to
propose the
same benefit to the
hearers of his word that had been
proposed to the
keepers of the old law, that is, life:
Hear and live,
believe and live, is what we may venture our souls upon, when we are
disabled to
do and live; see ch. 17:2.
[4.] Here is the righteousness of his proceedings pursuant to
this commission, v. 30. All judgment being committed to him, we cannot but ask
how
he manages it. And here he answers,
My judgment is just. All Christ's
acts of government, both
legislative and
judicial, are exactly
agreeable to the rules of equity; see Prov. 8:8. There can lie no exceptions
against any of the determinations of the Redeemer; and therefore, as there shall
be no repeal of any of his statutes, so there shall be no appeal from any of his
sentences. His judgments are certainly just, for they are directed,
First, By the Father's
wisdom: I can of my ownself
do nothing, nothing without the Father, but
as I hear I judge, as he had
said before (v. 19), The Son
can do nothing but what he sees the Father do;
so here, nothing but what he hears the Father
say: As I hear, 1. From the
secret eternal counsels of the Father,
so I judge. Would we know what we
may depend upon in our dealing with God?
Hear the word of Christ. We need
not dive into the divine counsels, those
secret things which belong not
to us, but attend to the revealed dictates of Christ's government and
judgment, which will furnish us with an unerring guide; for what Christ has
adjudged is an exact copy or counterpart of what the Father has decreed. 2. From
the published records of the Old Testament. Christ, in all the execution of his
undertaking, had an eye to the scripture, and made it his business to conform to
this, and
fulfil it:
As it was written in the volume of the book.
Thus he taught us to do
nothing of ourselves, but,
as we hear from
the word of God,
so to judge of things, and act accordingly.
Secondly, By the Father's
will: My judgment is just,
and cannot be otherwise,
because I seek not my own will, but
his who
sent me. Not as if the will of Christ were contrary to the will of the
Father, as the flesh is contrary to the spirit in us; but, 1. Christ had, as
man, the natural and innocent affections of the human nature,
sense of pain
and
pleasure, an inclination to life, an aversion to death: yet he
pleased
not himself, did not confer with these, nor consult these, when he was to go
on his undertaking, but acquiesced entirely in the will of his Father. 2. What
he did as Mediator was not the result of any
peculiar or
particular
purpose and design of his own; what he did
seek to do was not for his own
mind's sake, but he was therein guided by his Father's will, and the purpose
which he had
purposed to himself. This our Saviour did upon all occasions
refer himself to and govern himself by.
Thus our Lord Jesus has opened his commission (whether to the
conviction of his enemies or no) to his own honour and the everlasting comfort
of all his friends, who here see him
able to save to the uttermost.
Verses 31-47
In these verses our Lord Jesus proves and confirms the
commission he had produced, and makes it out that he was sent of God to be the
Messiah.
I. He
sets aside his own testimony of himself (v. 31):
"If
I bear witness of myself, though it is infallibly true (ch. 8:14), yet,
according to the common rule of judgment among men, you will not admit it as
legal
proof, nor allow it to be
given in evidence." Now, 1. This
reflects reproach upon the sons of men, and their veracity and integrity. Surely
we may say deliberately, what David said in haste,
All men are liars,
else it would never have been such a received maxim that a man's testimony of
himself is suspicious, and not to be relied on; it is a sign that self-love is
stronger than the love of truth. And yet, 2. It reflects honour on the Son of
God, and bespeaks his wonderful condescension, that, though he is the
faithful
witness, the truth itself, who may challenge to be credited
upon his
honour, and his own single testimony, yet he is pleased to
waive his
privilege, and, for the confirmation of our faith, refers himself to his
vouchers,
that we may have full satisfaction.
II. He produces other witnesses that bear testimony to him that
he was sent of God.
1. The Father himself bore testimony to him (v. 32):
There is
another that beareth witness. I take this to be meant of God the Father, for
Christ mentions
his testimony with his own (ch. 8:18):
I bear witness
of myself, and the Father beareth witness of me. Observe,
(1.) The seal which the Father put to his commission: He
beareth
witness of me, not only has done so by a voice from heaven, but still does
so by the tokens of his presence with me. See who they are to whom God will bear
witness. [1.] Those whom he
sends and
employs; where he gives
commissions he give credentials. [2.] Those who
bear witness to him; so
Christ did. God will own and honour those that own and honour him. [3.] Those
who decline
bearing witness of themselves; so Christ did. God will take
care that those who humble and abase themselves, and seek not their own glory,
shall not
lose by it.
(2.) The satisfaction Christ had in this testimony:
"I
know that the witness which he witnesseth of me is true. I am very well
assured that I have a divine mission, and do not in the least hesitate
concerning it; thus he had the
witness in himself." The devil
tempted him to question his being the Son of God, but he never yielded.
2. John Baptist witnessed to Christ, v. 33, etc. John came to
bear
witness of the light (ch. 1:7); his business was to prepare his way, and
direct people to him:
Behold the Lamb of God.
(1.) Now the testimony of John was, [1.] A
solemn and
public testimony: "You sent an embassy of priests and Levites to John,
which gave him an opportunity of publishing what he had to say; it was not a
popular, but a judicial testimony." [2.] It was a
true testimony:
He
bore witness to the truth, as a witness ought to do, the
whole truth,
and
nothing but the truth. Christ does not say,
He bore witness to me
(though every one knew he did), but, like an honest man,
He bore witness to
the truth. Now John was confessedly such a holy, good man, so mortified to
the world, and so conversant with divine things, that it could not be imagined
he should be guilty of such a forgery and imposture as to say what he did
concerning Christ if it had not been so, and if he had not been sure of it.
(2.) Two things are added concerning John's testimony:
[1.] That it was a testimony
ex abundanti
more than
he needed to vouch (v. 34):
I receive not testimony from man. Though
Christ saw fit to quote John's testimony, it was with a protestation that it
shall not be deemed or construed so as to prejudice the prerogative of his
self-sufficiency. Christ needs no letters or commendation, no testimonials or
certificates, but what his own worth and excellency bring with him; why then did
Christ here urge the testimony of John? Why,
these things I say, that you may
be saved. This he aimed at in all this discourse, to save not his own life,
but the souls of others; he produced John's testimony because, being one
of
themselves, it was to be hoped that they would hearken to it. Note,
First,
Christ desires and designs the salvation even of his enemies and persecutors.
Secondly,
The word of Christ is the ordinary means of salvation.
Thirdly, Christ in
his word considers our infirmities and condescends to our capacities, consulting
not so much what it befits so great a prince to say as what we can bear, and
what will be most likely to do us good.
[2.] That it was a testimony
ad hominem
to the man,
because John Baptist was one whom
they had a respect for (v. 35):
He
was a light among you.
First, The character of John Baptist:
He was a burning
and a shining light. Christ often spoke honourably of John; he was now in
prison under a cloud, yet Christ gives him his
due praise, which we must
be ready to do to all that faithfully serve God. 1. He was a
light, not
phoµs
lux,
light (so Christ was
the light), but
lyknos
lucerna,
a luminary, a derived subordinate light. His office was to enlighten a dark
world with notices of the Messiah's approach, to whom he was as the
morning
star. 2. He was a
burning light, which denotes
sincerity;
painted fire may be made to shine, but that which burns is true fire. It denotes
also his
activity, zeal, and fervency, burning in love to God and the
souls of men; fire is always working on itself or something else, so is a good
minister. 3. He was a
shining light, which denotes either his
exemplary
conversation, in which our light should shine (Mt. 5:16), or an
eminent
diffusive influence. He was illustrious in the sight of others; though he
affected obscurity and retirement, and was
in the deserts, yet such were
his doctrine, his baptism, his life, that he became very
remarkable, and
attracted the eyes of the nation.
Secondly, The affections of the people to him:
you were
willing for a season to rejoice in his light. 1. It was a
transport
that they were
in, upon the appearing of John:
"You were willing
eµtheleµsate,
you delighted to rejoice in his light; you were very proud that you had
such a man among you, who was the honour of your country; you were willing
agalliastheµnaiwilling
to
dance, and make a noise about this light, as boys about a bonfire."
2. It was but
transient, and soon over: "You were fond of him,
pros
hoµran
for an hour, for
a season, as little children
are fond of a new thing, you were pleased with John awhile, but soon grew weary
of him and his ministry, and said that
he had a devil, and now you have
him in prison." Note, Many, that seem to be affected and pleased with the
gospel at first, afterwards despise and reject it; it is common for forward and
noisy professors to cool and fall off. These here rejoiced in John's light,
but never walked in it, and therefore did not keep to it; they were like the
stony ground. While Herod was a friend to John Baptist, the people caressed him;
but when he fell under Herod's frowns he lost their favours:
"You were
willing to countenance John,
pros hoµran
that is, for
temporal ends" (so some take it); "you were glad
of him, in hopes to make a tool of him, by his interest and under the shelter of
his name to have shaken off the Roman yoke, and recovered the civil liberty and
honour of your country." Now, (1.) Christ mentions their respect to John,
to
condemn them for their present opposition to himself, to whom John
bore witness. If they had continued their veneration for John, as they ought to
have done, they would have embraced Christ. (2.) He mentions the passing away of
their respect, to justify God in depriving them, as he had now done, of John's
ministry, and putting that light under a bushel.
3. Christ's own works witnessed to him (v. 36):
I have a
testimony greater than that of John; for
if we believe the witness of men
sent of God, as John was, the
witness of God immediately, and not by the
ministry of men,
is greater, 1 Jn. 5:9. Observe, Though the witness of
John was a less
cogent and less
considerable witness, yet our Lord
was pleased to make use of it. We must be glad of all the supports that offer
themselves for the confirmation of our faith, though they may not amount to a
demonstration, and we must not
invalidate any, under pretence that there
are others more
conclusive; we have occasion for them all. Now this
greater testimony was that of the
works which
his Father had given him
to finish. That is, (1.) In general the whole course of his life and
ministry his revealing God and his will to us, setting up his kingdom among
men, reforming the world, destroying Satan's kingdom, restoring fallen man to
his primitive purity and felicity, and shedding abroad in men's hearts the
love of God and of one anotherall that work of which he said when he died,
It
is finished, it was all, from first to last,
opus Deo dignuma work
worthy of God; all he said and did was
holy and
heavenly, and
a divine purity, power, and grace shone in it, proving abundantly that he was
sent
of God. (2.) In particular. The miracles he wrought for the proof of his
divine mission witnessed of him. Now it is here said, [1.] That these works were
given him by the Father, that is, he was both
appointed and
empowered
to work them; for, as Mediator, he
derived both commission and strength
from his Father. [2.] They were given to him to
finish; he must do all
those works of wonder which the counsel and foreknowledge of God had before
determined to be done; and his finishing them proves a divine power; for as
for
God his work is perfect. [3.] These works did
bear witness of him,
did prove that he was sent of God, and that what he said concerning himself was
true; see Heb. 2:4; Acts 2:22. That the Father had sent him as
a Father,
not as a master sends his servant on an errand, but as a father sends his son to
take possession for himself; if God had not sent him, he would not have
seconded
him, would not have
sealed him, as he did by the works he gave him to do;
for the world's Creator will never be its deceiver.
4. He produces, more fully than before, his Father's testimony
concerning him (v. 37):
The Father that sent me hath borne witness of me.
The prince is not accustomed to follow his ambassador himself, to confirm his
commission
viva voceby speaking; but God was pleased to bear witness
of his Son himself by a voice from heaven at his baptism (Mt. 3:17): This is my
ambassador,
This is my beloved Son. The Jews reckoned
Bath-kol;the
daughter of a voice, a voice from heaven, one of the ways by which God made
known his mind; and in that way he had owned Christ publicly and solemnly, and
repeated it, Mt. 17:5. Note, (1.) Those whom God
sends he will
bear
witness of; where he gives a commission, he will not fail to seal it; he
that never
left himself without witness (Acts 14:17) will never leave any
of his servants so, who go upon his errand. (2.) Where God demands belief, he
will not fail to give sufficient
evidence, as he has done concerning
Christ. That which was to be witnessed concerning Christ was chiefly this, that
the God we had offended was willing to accept of him as a Mediator. Now
concerning this he has
himself given us full satisfaction (and he was
fittest to do it), declaring himself well-pleased in him; if we be so, the work
is done. Now, it might be suggested, if God himself thus bore witness of Christ,
how came it to pass that he was not universally received by the Jewish nation
and their rulers? To this Christ here answers that it was not to be thought
strange, nor could their infidelity weaken his credibility, for two reasons:[1.]
Because they were not acquainted with such extraordinary revelations of God and
his will:
You have neither heard his voice at any time, nor seen his shape,
or
appearance. They showed themselves to be as ignorant of God, though
they professed relation to him, as we are of a man we never either saw or heard.
"But why do I talk to you of God's bearing witness of me? He is one you
know nothing of, nor have any acquaintance or communion with." Note,
Ignorance of God is the true reason of men's rejecting the record he has given
concerning his Son. A right understanding of
natural religion would
discover to us such admirable congruities in the
Christian religion as
would greatly dispose our minds to the entertainment of it. Some give this sense
of it: "The Father bore witness of me by a
voice, and the
descent
of a dove, which is such an extraordinary thing that you never saw or heard
the like; and yet for my sake there was such a voice and appearance; yea, and
you might have
heard that voice, you might have
seen that appearance,
as others did, if you had closely attended the ministry of John, but by
slighting it you missed of that testimony." [2.] Because they were not
affected, no, not with the ordinary ways by which God had revealed himself to
them:
You have not his word abiding in you, v. 38. They had the
scriptures of the Old Testament; might they not by them be disposed to receive
Christ? Yes, if they had had their due influence upon them. But,
First,
The word of God was not in them; it was
among them, in their country, in
their hands, but not
in them, in their hearts; not ruling in their souls,
but only shining in their eyes and sounding in their ears. What did it avail
them that they had the oracles of God
committed to them (Rom. 3:2), when
they had not these oracles
commanding in them? If they had, they would
readily have embraced Christ.
Secondly, It did not
abide. Many
have the word of God coming into them, and making some impressions for awhile,
but it does not
abide with them; it is not constantly in them, as a man
at home, but only now and then, as a
wayfaring man. If the word
abide
in us, if we converse with it by frequent meditation, consult with it upon
every occasion, and conform to it in our conversation, we shall then readily
receive the witness of the Father concerning Christ; see ch. 7:17. But how did
it appear that they
had not the word of God abiding in them? It appeared
by this,
Whom he hath sent, him ye believe not. There was so much said in
the Old Testament concerning Christ, to direct people when and where to look for
him, and so to facilitate the discovery of him, that, if they had duly
considered these things, they could not have avoided the conviction of Christ's
being sent of God; so that their not believing in Christ was a certain sign that
the word of God did not abide in them. Note, The in-dwelling of the word, and
Spirit, and grace of God in us, is best tried by its effects, particularly by
our
receiving what he sends, the commands, the messengers, the
providences he sends, especially Christ whom he hath sent.
5. The last witness he calls is the Old Testament, which
witnessed of him, and to it he appeals (v. 39, etc.):
Search the scriptures,
ereunate.
(1.) This may be read, either, [1.]
"You search the
scriptures, and you do well to do so; you read them daily in your
synagogues, you have rabbies, and doctors, and scribes, that make it their
business to study them, and criticize upon them." The Jews boasted of the
flourishing of scripture-learning in the days of Hillel, who died about twelve
years after Christ's birth, and reckoned some of those who were then members
of the sanhedrim the
beauties of their wisdom and the
glories of their
law; and Christ owns that they did indeed search the scriptures, but it was
in search of their
own glory: "You search the scriptures, and
therefore, if you were not
wilfully blind, you would
believe in me."
Note, It is possible for men to be very studious in the letter of the scripture,
and yet to be strangers to the power and influence of it. Or, [2.] As we read
it:
Search the scriptures; and so,
First, It was spoken to
them
in the nature of an
appeal: "You profess to receive and believe the
scripture; here I will
join issue with you, let this be the judge,
provided you will not
rest in the letter" (haerere in cortice),
"but will
search into it." Note, when appeals are made to the
scriptures, they must be searched. Search the whole book of scripture
throughout,
compare one passage with another, and explain one by another. We must likewise
search particular passages
to the bottom, and see not what they
seem
to say
prima facieat the first appearance, but what they say
indeed.
Secondly, It is spoken to
us in the nature of an
advice, or a
command to all Christians to search the scriptures. Note, All those who would
find
Christ must
search the scriptures; not only read them, and hear them,
but search them, which denotes, 1.
Diligence in seeking, labour, and
study, and close application of mind. 2.
Desire and
design of
finding. We must aim at some spiritual benefit and advantage in reading and
studying the scripture, and often ask, "What am I now searching for?"
We must search as for
hidden treasures (Prov. 2:4), as those that
sink
for gold or silver, or that
dive for pearl, Job 28:1-11. This ennobled
the Bereans, Acts 17:11.
(2.) Now there are two things which we are here directed to have
in our eye, in our searching the scripture:
heaven our end, and
Christ
our way. [1.] We must search the scriptures for
heaven as our
great
end: For in them you think you have eternal life. The scripture assures us
of an eternal state set before us, and offers to us an eternal life in that
state: it contains the
chart that
describes it, the
charter
that
conveys it, the
direction in the way that leads to it, and
the
foundation upon which the hope of it is built; and this is worth
searching for where we are sure to find it. But to the Jews Christ saith only,
You
think you have
eternal life in the scriptures, because, though they
did retain the belief and hope of eternal life, and grounded their expectations
of it upon the scriptures, yet herein they missed it, that they looked for it by
the bare reading and studying of the scripture. It was a common but corrupt
saying among them,
He that has the words of the law has eternal life;
they thought they were sure of heaven if they could say by
heart, or
rather by
rote, such and such passages of scripture as they were directed
to by the tradition of the elders; as they thought all the
vulgar cursed
because they did not thus know the law (ch. 7:49), so they concluded all the
learned
undoubtedly
blessed. [2.] We must
search the scriptures for
Christ,
as the new and living
way that leads to this
end. These are
they,
the great and principal witnesses,
that testify of me. Note,
First,
The scriptures, even those of the Old Testament,
testify of Christ, and
by them God
bears witness to him. The Spirit of Christ in the prophets
testified beforehand of him (1 Pt. 1:11), the purposes and promises of God
concerning him, and the previous notices of him. The Jews knew very well that
the Old Testament testified of the Messiah, and were critical in their remarks
upon the passages that looked that way; and yet were careless, and wretchedly
overseen, in the application of them.
Secondly, Therefore we must
search
the scriptures, and may hope to find eternal life in that search, because
they testify of Christ; for this is
life eternal, to know him; see 1 Jn.
5:11. Christ is the treasure hid in the field of the scriptures, the water in
those wells, the milk in those breasts.
(3.) To this testimony he annexes a reproof of their infidelity
and wickedness in four instances; particularly,
[1.] Their
neglect of him and his doctrine:
"You
will not come tome, that you might have life, v. 40. You search the
scriptures, you believe the prophets, who you cannot but see testify of me; and
yet you will not
come to me, to whom they direct you." Their
estrangement from Christ was the fault not so much of their
understandings
as of their
wills. This is expressed as a complaint; Christ offered life,
and it was not accepted. Note,
First, There is
life to be had with
Jesus Christ for poor souls; we may have life, the life of
pardon and
grace,
and
comfort and
glory: life is the perfection of our being, and
inclusive of all happiness; and Christ is our life.
Secondly, Those that
would have this life must
come to Jesus Christ for it; we may have it for
the coming for. It
supposes an assent of the understanding to the
doctrine of Christ and the record given concerning him; it
lies in the
consent of the will to his government and grace, and it
produces an
answerable compliance in the affections and actions.
Thirdly, The only
reason why sinners die is because they
will not come to Christ for life
and happiness; it is not because they
cannot, but because they
will
not. They will neither
accept the life offered, because
spiritual
and
divine, nor will they
agree to the terms on which it is
offered, nor
apply themselves to the use of the appointed means: they
will not be cured, for they will not observe the methods of cure.
Fourthly,
The wilfulness and obstinacy of sinners in rejecting the tenders of grace are a
great grief to the Lord Jesus, and what he complains of. Those words (v. 41),
I
receive not honour from men, come in a parenthesis, to obviate an objection
against him, as if he sought his own glory, and made himself the head of a
party, in obliging all to come to
him, and applaud him. Note, 1. He did
not
covet nor
court the applause of men, did not in the least
affect that worldly pomp and splendour in which the carnal Jews expected their
Messiah to appear. He charged those whom he cured not to make him known, and
withdrew from those that would have made him king. 2. He
had not the
applause of men. Instead of
receiving honour from men, he received a
great deal of
dishonour and disgrace from men, for he made himself of no
reputation. 3. He
needed not the applause of men; it was no addition to
his glory whom all the angels of God worship, nor was he any otherwise pleased
with it than as it was according to his Father's will, and for the happiness
of those who, in giving honour
to him, received much greater honour
from
him.
[2.] Their
want of the love of God (v. 42):
"I
know you very well,
that you have not the love of God in you. Why
should I wonder that you do not come to me, when you want even the first
principle of
natural religion, which is the
love of God?"
Note, The reason why people
slight Christ is because they do not
love
God; for, if we did indeed love God, we should love him who is his express
image, and hasten to him by whom only we may be restored to the favour of God.
He charged them (v. 37) with
ignorance of God, and here with want of love
to him;
therefore men have not the love of God because they desire not
the knowledge of him. Observe,
First, The crime charged upon them:
You
have not the love of God in you. They pretended a great love to God, and
thought they proved it by their zeal for the law, the temple, and the sabbath;
and yet they were really without the love of God. Note, There are many who make
a great profession of religion who yet show they want the love of God by their
neglect of Christ and their contempt of his commandments; they hate his holiness
and undervalue his goodness. Observe, It is the love of God
in us, that
love seated
in the heart, a living active principle there, that God will
accept;
the love
shed abroad there, Rom. 5:5.
Secondly, The proof of this
charge, by the personal knowledge of Christ, who
searches the heart (Rev.
2:23) and knows what is
in man: I know you. Christ sees through all our
disguises, and can say to each of us,
I know thee. 1. Christ knows men
better than
their neighbours know them. The people thought that the
scribes and Pharisees were very devout and good men, but Christ knew that they
had not the love of God in them. 2. Christ knows men better than
they know
themselves. These Jews had a very good opinion of themselves, but Christ
knew how corrupt their inside was, notwithstanding the speciousness of their
outside; we may deceive ourselves, but we cannot deceive him. 3. Christ knows
men who do not, and will not, know him; he looks
on those who
industriously look
off from him, and calls by their own name, their true
name, those who have not known him.
[3.] Another crime charged upon them is their readiness to
entertain false Christs and false prophets, while they obstinately opposed him
who was the true Messias (v. 43):
I am come in my Father's name, and you
receive me not. If another shall come in his own name, him you will receive. Be
astonished, O heavens, at this (Jer. 2:12, 13);
for my people have
committed two evils, great evils indeed.
First, They have
forsaken
the fountain of living waters, for they would not receive Christ, who came
in his Father's name, had his commission from his Father, and did all for his
glory.
Secondly, They have
hewn out broken cisterns, they hearken
to every one that will set up in his own name. They forsake their own mercies,
which is bad enough; and it is for
lying vanities, which is worse.
observe here, 1. Those are false prophets who come in their own name, who run
without being sent, and set up for themselves only. 2. It is just with God to
suffer those to be deceived with false prophets who receive not the truth in the
love of it. 2 Th. 2:10, 11. The errors of antichrist are the just punishment of
those who obey not the doctrine of Christ. They that shut their eyes against the
true light are by the judgment of God given up to wander endlessly after
false
lights, and to be led aside after every
ignis fatuus. 3. It is the
gross folly of many that, while they
nauseate ancient truths, they are
fond
of upstart errors; they loathe manna, and at the same time
feed upon ashes.
After the Jews had rejected Christ and his gospel, they were continually haunted
with spectres, with
false Christs and
false prophets (Mt. 24:24),
and their proneness to follow such occasioned those distractions and seditions
that hastened their ruin.
[4.] They are here charged with pride and vain-glory, and
unbelief, the effect of them, v. 44. Having sharply reproved their unbelief,
like a wise physician, he here searches into the cause, lays the axe to the
root. They
therefore slighted and undervalued Christ because they
admired
and
overvalued themselves. Here is,
First, Their ambition of worldly honour. Christ despised it,
v. 41. They set their hearts upon it:
You receive honour one of another;
that is, "You look for a Messiah in outward pomp, and promise yourselves
worldly honour by him."
You receive honour:1. "You desire to
receive it, and aim at this in all you do." 2. "You give honour to
others, and applaud them, only that they may return it, and may applaud you."
Petimus dabimusque vicissimWe ask and we bestow. It is the proud man's
art to throw honour upon others only that it may rebound upon himself. 3.
"You are very careful to keep all the honours to yourselves, and confine
them to your own party, as if you had the monopoly of that which is honourable."
4. "What respect is shown to you you
receive yourselves, and do not
transmit to God, as Herod." Idolizing men and their sentiments, and
affecting to be idolized by them and their applauses, are pieces of idolatry as
directly contrary to Christianity as any other.
Secondly, Their neglect of spiritual honour, called here
the
honour that comes from God only; this they sought not, nor minded. Note, 1.
True honour is that which
comes from God only, that is real and lasting
honour; those are honourable indeed whom he takes into covenant and communion
with himself. 2.
This honour have all the saints. All that believe in
Christ, through him receive the honour that comes from God. He is not partial,
but will give glory wherever he gives grace. 3. This honour that comes from God
we must
seek, must aim at it, and act for it, and take up with nothing
short of it (Rom. 2:29); we must account it
our reward, as the Pharisees
accounted the praise of men. 4. Those that will not come to Christ, and those
that are ambitious of worldly honour, make it appear that they seek not the
honour that comes from God, and it is their folly and ruin.
Thirdly, The influence this had upon their infidelity.
How
can you believe who are thus affected? Observe here, 1. The difficulty of
believing arises from ourselves and our own corruption; we make our work hard to
ourselves, and then complain it is impracticable. 2. The ambition and
affectation of worldly honour are a great hindrance to faith in Christ. How can
they believe who make the praise and applause of men their idol? When the
profession and practice of serious godliness are unfashionable, are
every
where spoken against,when Christ and his followers are men wondered at,
and to be a Christian is to be like a
speckled bird (and this is the
common case),how can they believe the summit of whose ambition is to
make
a fair show in the flesh?
6. The last witness here called is Moses, v. 45, etc. The Jews
had a great veneration for Moses, and valued themselves upon their being the
disciples
of Moses, and pretended to adhere to Moses, in their opposition to Christ; but
Christ here shows them,
(1.) That Moses was a witness against the unbelieving Jews,
and
accused them to the Father: There is one that accuses you, even Moses. This
may be understood either, [1.] As showing the difference between the law and the
gospel. Moses, that is, the law,
accuses you, for by the law is the
knowledge of sin; it
condemns you, it is to those that trust to it a
ministration of death and condemnation. But it is not the design of Christ's
gospel to
accuse us:
Think not that I will accuse you. Christ did
not come into the world as a
Momus, to find fault and pick quarrels with
every body, or as a
spy upon the actions of men, or a
promoter, to
fish for crimes; no, he came to be an advocate, not an accuser; to reconcile God
and man, and not to set them more at variance. What fools were they then that
adhered to Moses against Christ, and
desired to be under the law! Gal.
4:21. Or, [2.] As showing the manifest unreasonableness of their infidelity:
"Think not that I will appeal from your bar to God's and challenge you to
answer there for what you do against me, as injured innocency usually does; no,
I do not need; you are already accused, and cast, in the court of heaven; Moses
himself says enough to convict you of, and condemn you for, your unbelief."
Let them not mistake
concerning Christ; though he was a prophet, he did
not improve his interest in heaven against those that persecuted him, did not,
as Elias,
make intercession against Israel (Rom. 6:2), nor as Jeremiah
desire to
see God's vengeance on them. Nor let them mistake concerning
Moses, as if he would stand by them in rejecting Christ; no,
There is one
that accuses you, even Moses in whom you trust. Note,
First, External
privileges and advantages are commonly the vain confidence of those who reject
Christ and his grace. The Jews
trusted in Moses, and thought their having
his laws and ordinances would save them.
Secondly, Those that confide in
their privileges, and do not improve them, will find not only that their
confidence is disappointed, but that those very privileges will be witnesses
against them.
(2.) That Moses was a witness for Christ and to his doctrine (v.
46, 47):
He wrote of me. Moses did particularly prophesy of Christ, as
the Seed of the woman, the Seed of Abraham, the Shiloh, the great Prophet; the
ceremonies of the law of Moses were
figures of him that was to come. The
Jews made Moses the patron of their opposition to Christ; but Christ here shows
them their error, that Moses was so far from writing against Christ that he
wrote
for him, and
of him. But, [1.] Christ here charges it on the
Jews that they
did not believe Moses. He had said (v. 45) that they
trusted
in Moses, and yet here he undertakes to make out that they did not believe
Moses; they trusted to his name, but they did not receive his doctrine in its
true sense and meaning; they did not rightly understand, nor give credit to,
what there was in the writings of Moses concerning the Messiah. [2.] He proves
this charge from their disbelief of him:
Had you believed Moses, you would
have believed me. Note,
First, The surest trial of faith is by the
effects it produces. Many say that they believe whose actions give their words
the lie; for had they believed the scriptures they would have done otherwise
than they did.
Secondly, Those who rightly believe one part of scripture
will receive every part. The prophecies of the old Testament were so fully
accomplished in Christ that those who rejected Christ did in effect deny those
prophecies, and set them aside. [3.] From their disbelief of Moses he infers
that it was not strange that they rejected him:
If you believe not his
writings, how shall you believe my words? How can it be thought that you
should?
First, "If you do not believe sacred
writings, those
oracles which are in black and white, which is the most certain way of
conveyance,
how shall you believe my words, words being usually less
regarded?"
Secondly, "If you do not believe Moses, for whom you
have such a profound veneration, how is it likely that you should believe me,
whom you look upon with so much contempt?" See Ex. 6:12.
Thirdly,
"If you believe not what Moses spoke and wrote of me, which is a strong and
cogent testimony for me, how shall you believe me and my mission?" If we
admit not the premises, how shall we admit the conclusion? The truth of the
Christian religion, it being a matter purely of divine revelation, depends upon
the divine authority of the scripture; if therefore we believe not the divine
inspiration of those writings, how shall be receive the doctrine of Christ?
Thus ends Christ's plea for himself, in answer to the charge
exhibited against him. What effect it had we know not; it would seem to have had
this, their
mouths were
stopped for the present, and they could
not for shame but drop the prosecution, and yet their
hearts were
hardened.
Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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