Chapter 15:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Mark John
Luke 15
Complete Concise
Evil manners, we say, beget good laws; so, in this chapter, the
murmuring of the scribes and Pharisees at the grace of Christ, and the favour he
showed to publicans and sinners, gave occasion for a more full discovery of that
grace than perhaps otherwise we should have had in these three parables which we
have in this chapter, the scope of all of which is the same, to show, not only
what God had said and sworn in the Old Testament, that he had no pleasure in the
death and ruin of sinners, but that he had great pleasure in their return and
repentance, and rejoices in the gracious entertainment he gives them thereupon.
Here is, I. The offence which the Pharisees took at Christ for conversing with
heathen men and publicans, and preaching his gospel to them (v. 1, 2). II. His
justifying himself in it, by the design and proper tendency of it, which with
many had been the effect of it, and that was, the bringing of them to repent and
reform their lives, than which there could not be a more pleasing and acceptable
service done to God, which he shows in the parables, 1. Of the lost sheep that
was brought home with joy (v. 4-7). 2. Of the lost silver that was found with
joy (v. 8-10). 3. Of the lost son that had been a prodigal, but returned to
his father's house, and was received with great joy, though his elder brother,
like these scribes and Pharisees, was offended at it (v. 11-32).
Verses 1-10
Here is, I. The diligent attendance of the publicans and sinners
upon Christ's ministry.
Great multitudes of Jews
went with him (ch.
14:25), with such an assurance of admission into the kingdom of God that he
found it requisite to say that to them which would shake their vain hopes. Here
multitudes of
publicans and
sinners drew near to him, with a
humble modest fear of being
rejected by him, and to them he found it
requisite to give encouragement, especially because there were some haughty
supercilious people that frowned upon them. The
publicans, who collected
the tribute paid to the
Romans, were perhaps some of them
bad men,
but they were all industriously put into an
ill name, because of the
prejudices of the Jewish nation against their office. They are sometimes ranked
with
harlots (Mt. 21:32); here and elsewhere with
sinners, such as
were openly vicious, that traded with
harlots, known rakes. Some think
that the
sinners here meant were
heathen, and that Christ was now
on the other side Jordan, or in
Galilee of the Gentiles. These
drew
near, when perhaps the multitude of the Jews that had followed him had (upon
his discourse in the close of the foregoing chapter)
dropped off; thus
afterwards the Gentiles took their turn in hearing the apostles, when the Jews
had rejected them.
They drew near to him, being afraid of drawing nearer
than just to come within
hearing. They drew near to him, not, as some
did, to solicit for cures, but to hear his excellent doctrine. Note, in all our
approaches to Christ we must have this in our eye, to
hear him; to hear
the instructions he gives us, and his answers to our prayers.
II. The offence which the
scribes and
Pharisees
took at this. They
murmured, and turned it to the reproach of our Lord
Jesus:
This man receiveth sinners, and eateth with them, v. 2. 1. They
were angry that
publicans and
heathens had the means of grace
allowed them, were called to repent, and encouraged to hope for pardon upon
repentance; for they looked upon their case as
desperate, and thought
that none but Jews had the privilege of repenting and being pardoned, though the
prophets preached repentance to the nations, and Daniel particularly to
Nebuchadnezzar. 2. They thought it a disparagement to Christ, and inconsistent
with the dignity of his character, to make himself familiar with such sort of
people, to
admit them into his company and to
eat with them. They
could not, for shame, condemn him for
preaching to them, though that was
the thing they were most enraged at; and therefore they reproached him for
eating
with them, which was more expressly contrary to the tradition of the elders.
Censure will fall, not only upon the most innocent and the most excellent
persons,
but upon the most innocent and most excellent
actions, and we must not
think it strange.
III. Christ's justifying himself in it, by showing that the
worse these people were, to whom he preached, the more glory would redound to
God, and the more joy there would be in heaven, if by his preaching they were
brought to repentance. It would be a more pleasing sight in heaven to see
Gentiles brought to the worship of the true God than to see Jews go on in it,
and to see publicans and sinners live an orderly sort of life than to see
scribes
and
Pharisees go on in living such a life. This he here illustrates by
two parables, the explication of both of which is the same.
1. The parable of the
lost sheep. Something like it we
had in Mt. 18:12. There it was designed to show the care God takes for the
preservation of saints, as a reason why we should not offend them; here it is
designed to show the pleasure God takes in the conversion of sinners, as a
reason why we should rejoice in it. We have here,
(1.) The case of a sinner that goes on in sinful ways. He is
like a
lost sheep, a sheep
gone astray; he is
lost to God,
who has not the honour and service he should have from him;
lost to the
flock, which has not communion with him;
lost to himself: he knows not
where he is, wanders endlessly, is continually exposed to the beasts of prey,
subject to frights and terrors, from under the shepherd's care, and wanting
the green pastures; and he cannot of himself find the way back to the fold.
(2.) The care the God of heaven takes of poor wandering sinners.
He
continues his care of the sheep that did not go astray; they are
safe
in the wilderness. But there is a particular care to be taken of this lost
sheep; and though he has a hundred sheep, a considerable flock, yet he will not
lose
that
one, but he goes after it, and shows abundance of care, [1.] In
finding
it out. He follows it, enquiring after it, and looking about for it, until
he
finds it. God follows backsliding sinners with the calls of his word
and the strivings of his Spirit, until at length they are wrought upon to think
of returning. [2.] In
bringing it home. Though he finds it
weary,
and perhaps
worried and worn away with its wanderings, and not able to
bear being driven home, yet he does not leave it to perish, and say, It is not
wroth carrying home; but
lays it on his shoulders, and, with a great deal
of tenderness and labour, brings it to the fold. This is very applicable to the
great work of our redemption. Mankind were gone astray, Isa. 53:6. The value of
the whole race to God was not so much as that of one sheep to him that had a
hundred; what loss would it have been to God if they had all been left to
perish? There is a world of holy angels that are as the ninety-nine sheep, a
noble flock; yet God sends his Son to
seek and save that which was lost,
ch. 19:10. Christ is said to
gather the lambs in his arms, and carry
them
in his bosom, denoting his pity and tenderness towards poor sinners; here he
is said to bear them
upon his shoulders, denoting the power wherewith he
supports and bears them up; those can never perish whom he carries upon his
shoulders.
(3.) The pleasure that God takes in repenting returning sinners.
He
lays it on his shoulders rejoicing that he has not lost his labour in
seeking; and the joy is the greater because he began to be out of hope of
finding it; and he
calls his friends and neighbours, the shepherds that
keep their flocks about him,
saying, Rejoice with me. Perhaps among the
pastoral songs which the shepherds used to sing there was one for such an
occasion as this, of which these words might be the burden,
Rejoice with me,
for I have found my sheep which was lost; whereas they never sung,
Rejoice
with me, for I have lost none. Observe, he calls it
his sheep, though
a
stray, a wandering sheep. He has a right to it
(all souls are mine),
and he will claim his own, and recover his right; therefore he looks after it
himself:
I have found it; he did not send a servant, but his own Son, the
great and good Shepherd, who will find what he seeks, and will be found of those
that seek him not.
2. The parable of the
lost piece of silver. (1.) The
loser
is here supposed to be
a woman, who will more passionately grieve for her
loss, and rejoice in finding what she had lost, than perhaps a man would do, and
therefore it the better serves the purpose of the parable. She has
ten pieces
of silver, and out of them loses only one. Let this keep up in us high
thoughts of the divine goodness, notwithstanding the sinfulness and misery of
the world of mankind, that there are nine to one, nay, in the foregoing parable
there are ninety-nine to one, of God's creation, that retain their integrity,
in whom God
is praised, and never
was dishonoured. O the
numberless beings, for aught we know numberless worlds of beings, that never
were lost, nor stepped aside from the laws and ends of their creation! (2.) That
which is lost is a piece of silver,
drachmeµn
the
fourth part of a shekel. The soul is
silver, of intrinsic worth and
value; not base metal, as iron or lead, but
silver, the mines of which
are
royal mines. The Hebrew word for
silver is taken from the
desirableness
of it. It is
silver coin, for so the
drachma was; it is stamped
with God's
image and superscription, and therefore must be
rendered
to him. Yet it is comparatively but of small value; it was but seven pence
half-penny; intimating that if sinful men be left to perish God would be no
loser. This silver was lost
in the dirt; a soul plunged in the world, and
overwhelmed with the love of it and care about it, is like a piece of money in
the dirt; any one would say, It is a thousand pities that it should
lie
there. (3.) Here is a great deal of care and pains taken in quest of it. The
woman
lights a candle, to look behind the door, under the table, and in
every corner of the house,
sweeps the house, and
seeks diligently till
she finds it. This represents the various means and methods God makes use of
to bring lost souls home to himself: he has
lighted the candle of the
gospel, not to show himself the way to us, but to show us the way to him, to
discover us to ourselves; he has
swept the house by the convictions of
the word; he
seeks diligently, his heart is upon it, to bring lost souls
to himself. (4.) Here is a great deal of joy for the finding of it:
Rejoice
with me, for I have found the piece which I had lost, v. 9. Those that
rejoice desire that others should rejoice with them; those that are merry would
have others merry with them. She was glad that she had found the piece of money,
though she should spend it in entertaining those whom she called to
make
merry with her. The pleasing surprise of finding it put her, for the
present, into a kind of transport,
heureµka,
heureµka
I have found, I have
found, is the language of joy.
3. The explication of these two parables is to the same purport
(v. 7, 10):
There is joy in heaven, joy in the presence of the angels of God,
over one sinner that repenteth, as those publicans and sinners did, some of
them at least (and, if but
one of them did repent, Christ would reckon it
worth his while), more than
over a great number of
just persons, who
need no repentance. Observe,
(1.) The
repentance and
conversion of sinners on
earth are
matter of joy and rejoicing
in heaven. It is possible
that the greatest sinners may be brought to repentance. While there is life
there is hope, and the worst are not to be despaired of; and the worst of
sinners, if they repent and turn, shall find mercy. Yet this is not all, [1.]
God will
delight to show them mercy, will reckon their conversion a
return for all the expense he has been at upon them. There is always
joy in
heaven. God
rejoiceth in all his works, but particularly in the works
of his grace. He rejoiceth to do good to penitent sinners, with his
whole
heart and his
whole soul. He rejoiceth not only in the conversion of
churches and nations, but even over
one sinner that repenteth, though but
one. [2.] The good angels will be glad that mercy is shown them, so far
are they from repining at it, though those of their nature that sinned be left
to perish, and no mercy shown to them; though those sinners that repent, that
are so mean, and have been so vile, are, upon their repentance, to be taken into
communion with them, and shortly to be made like them, and equal to them. The
conversion of sinners is the joy of angels, and they gladly become ministering
spirits to them for their good, upon their conversion. The redemption of mankind
was matter of joy in the presence of the angels; for they sung,
Glory to God
in the highest, ch. 2:14.
(2.) There is more joy over
one sinner that repenteth,
and turneth to be religious from a course of life that had been notoriously vile
and vicious, than there is
over ninety-nine just persons, who need no
repentance. [1.] More joy for the redemption and salvation of fallen man
than for the preservation and confirmation of the angels that stand, and did
indeed need no repentance. [2.] More joy for the conversion of the sinners of
the Gentiles, and of those publicans that now heard Christ preach, than for all
the praises and devotions, and all the
God I thank thee, of the
Pharisees, and the other self-justifying Jews, who though that they
needed no
repentance, and that therefore God should abundantly rejoice in them, and
make
his boast of them, as those that were most
his honour; but Christ
tells them that it was quite otherwise, that God was more praised
in, and
pleased
with, the penitent broken heart of one of those despised, envied
sinners, than all the long prayers which the scribes and Pharisees made, who
could not see any thing amiss in themselves. Nay, [3.] More joy for the
conversion of one such great sinner, such a Pharisee as Paul had been in his
time, than for the regular conversion of one that had always conducted himself
decently and well, and comparatively
needs no repentance, needs not such
a universal change of the life as those great sinners need. Not but that it is
best not to go astray; but the grace of God, both in the power and the pity of
that grace, is more manifested in the
reducing of great sinners than in
the
conducting of those that never went astray. And many times those that
have been great sinners before their conversion prove more eminently and
zealously good after, of which Paul is an instance, and therefore in him God was
greatly
glorified, Gal. 1:24. They to whom much is forgiven will love
much. It is spoken after the manner of men. We are moved with a more sensible
joy for the recovery of what we had lost than for the continuance of what we had
always enjoyed, for health
out of sickness than for health
without
sickness. It is as
life from the dead. A constant course of religion may
in itself be more valuable, and yet a sudden return from an evil course and way
of sin may yield a more surprising pleasure. Now if there is such
joy in
heaven, for the conversion of sinners, then the Pharisees were very much
strangers to a heavenly spirit, who did all they could to hinder it and were
grieved at it, and who were exasperated at Christ when he was doing a piece of
work that was of all others most grateful to Heaven.
Verses 11-32
We have here the parable of the prodigal son, the scope of which
is the same with those before, to show how pleasing to God the conversion of
sinners is, of great sinners, and how ready he is to receive and entertain such,
upon their repentance; but the circumstances of the parable do much more largely
and fully set forth the riches of gospel grace than those did, and it has been,
and will be while the world stands, of unspeakable use to poor sinners, both to
direct and to encourage them in repenting and returning to God. Now,
I. The parable represents God as a
common Father to all
mankind, to the whole family of Adam. We are all his
offspring, have all
one
Father, and
one God created us, Mal. 2:10.
From him we
had
our being,
in him we still
have it, and from him we receive our
maintenance.
He is
our Father, for he has the
educating and
portioning
of us, and will
put us in his testament, or
leave us out,
according as we are, or are not, dutiful children to him. Our Saviour hereby
intimates to those proud Pharisees that these publicans and sinners, whom they
thus despised, were their brethren, partakers of the same nature, and therefore
they ought to be glad of any kindness shown them. God is the God,
not of the
Jews only, but of the Gentiles, (Rom. 3:29): the
same Lord over all, that
is rich in mercy to all that call upon him.
II. It represents the children of men as of
different
characters, though all related to God as their common Father. He had
two
sons, one of them a solid grave youth,
reserved and
austere,
sober himself, but not at all
good-humoured to those about him; such a
one would adhere to his education, and not be easily drawn from it; but the
other
volatile and
mercurial, and impatient of restraint, roving,
and willing to try his fortune, and, if he fall into ill hands, likely to be a
rake, notwithstanding his virtuous education. Now this latter represents the
publicans and sinners, whom Christ is endeavouring to bring to repentance, and
the Gentiles, to whom the apostles were to be sent forth to
preach
repentance. The former represents the Jews in general, and particularly the
Pharisees, whom he was endeavouring to reconcile to that grace of God which was
offered to, and bestowed upon, sinners.
The
younger son is the prodigal, whose character and case
are here designed to represent that of a sinner, that of every one of us in our
natural state, but especially of some. Now we are to observe concerning him,
1. His
riot and
ramble when he was a prodigal, and
the extravagances and miseries he fell into. We are told,
(1.) What his request to his father was (v. 12):
He said to
his father, proudly and pertly enough,
"Father, give me"he
might have put a little more in his mouth, and have said,
Pray give me,
or,
Sir, if you please, give me, but he makes an imperious demand
"give
me the portion of goods that falleth to me; not so much as you
think fit
to allot to me, but that which falls to me as
my due." Note, It is
bad, and the beginning of worse, when men look upon God's gifts as debts.
"Give
me the portion, all
my child's part, that falls to me;" not,
"Try
me with a little, and see how I can manage that, and accordingly trust me
with more;" but,
"Give it me all at present in possession, and
I will never expect any thing in
reversion, any thing
hereafter."
Note, The great folly of sinners, and that which ruins them, is being content to
have
their portion in hand, now in this lifetime to
receive their good
things. They look only at the things that are seen, that are temporal, and
covet only a present gratification, but have no care for a future felicity, when
that is spent and gone. And why did he desire to have his portion in his own
hands? Was it that he might apply himself to business, and trade with it, and so
make it more? No, he had no thought of that. But, [1.] He was
weary of
his
father's government, of the good order and discipline of his father's
family, and was fond of liberty falsely so called, but indeed the greatest
slavery, for such a
liberty to sin is. See the folly of many young men,
who are religiously educated, but are impatient of the confinement of their
education, and never think themselves their own masters, their own men, till
they have broken all God's bands in sunder, and cast away his cords from them,
and, instead of them, bound themselves with the cords of their own lust. Here is
the original of the apostasy of sinners from God; they will not be tied up to
the rules of
God's government; they will themselves
be as gods,
knowing no other
good and evil than what themselves please. [2.] He was
willing to get
from under his father's eye, for that was always a check
upon him, and often gave a check to him. A shyness of God, and a willingness to
disbelieve his omniscience, are at the bottom of the wickedness of the wicked.
[3.] He was distrustful of his
father's management. He would have his
portion
of goods himself, for he thought that his father would be laying up for
hereafter for him, and, in order to that, would limit him in his present
expenses, and that he did not like. [4.] He was
proud of himself, and had
a
great conceit of his own sufficiency. He thought that if he had but his
portion in his own hands he could manage it better than his father did, and make
a better figure with it. There are more young people ruined by
pride than
by any one lust whatsoever. Our first parents ruined themselves and all theirs
by a foolish ambition to be
independent, and not to be beholden even to
God himself; and this is at the bottom of sinners' persisting in their sinthey
will be
for themselves.
(2.) How kind his father was to him:
He divided unto them his
living. He computed what he had to dispose of between his sons, and gave the
younger son
his share, and offered the elder his, which ought to be a
double
portion; but, it should seem, he desired his father to keep it in his own
hands still, and we may see what he got by it (v. 31):
All that I have is
thine. He got all by staying for something in reserve. He gave the younger
son what he asked, and the son had no reason to complain that he did him any
wrong in the dividend; he had as much as he expected, and perhaps more. [1.]
Thus he might
now see his father's kindness, how willing he was to
please him and make him easy, and that he was not such an unkind father as he
was willing to represent him when he wanted an excuse to be gone. [2.] Thus he
would in a little time be made to see
his own folly, and that he was not
such a wise manager for himself as he would be thought to be. Note, God is a
kind Father to all his children, and gives to them all
life, and breath, and
all things, even to the evil and unthankful,
dieilen
autois ton bion
He divided to them life. God's giving us
life is putting us in a capacity to serve and glorify him.
(3.) How he managed himself when he had got his portion in his
own hands. He set himself to spend it as fast as he could, and, as prodigals
generally do, in a little time he made himself a beggar:
not many days after,
v. 13. Note, if God leave us ever so little to ourselves, it will not be long
ere we depart from him. When the bridle of restraining grace is taken off we are
soon gone. That which the younger son determined was to
be gone
presently, and, in order to that, he
gathered all together. Sinners, that
go astray from God,
venture their all.
Now the condition of the prodigal in this ramble of his
represents to us a
sinful state, that
miserable state into which
man is
fallen.
[1.] A sinful state is a state of
departure and
distance
from God.
First, It is the
sinfulness of sin that it is an
apostasy from God. He
took his journey from his father's house. Sinners
are fled from God; they
go a whoring from him; they revolt from their
allegiance to him, as a servant that runs from his service, or a wife that
treacherously departs from her husband, and they say unto God,
Depart.
They get as far off him as they can. The world is the
far country in
which they take up their residence, and are as at home; and in the service and
enjoyment of it they spend their all.
Secondly. It is the misery of
sinners that they are afar off from God, from him who is the Fountain of all
good, and are going further and further from him. What is hell itself, but being
afar off from God?
[2.] A sinful state is a
spending state: There he
wasted
his substance with riotous living (v. 13), devoured it
with harlots
(v. 30), and in a little time
he had spent all, v. 14. He bought fine
clothes, spent a great deal in meat and drink, treated high, associated with
those that helped him to make an end of what he had in a little time. As to this
world, they that
live riotously waste what they have, and will have a
great deal to answer for, that they spend that upon their lusts which should be
for the necessary substance of themselves and their families. But this is to be
applied spiritually. Wilful sinners
waste their patrimony; for they
misemploy their thoughts and all the powers of their souls, misspend their time
and all their opportunities, do not only bury, but embezzle, the talents they
are entrusted to trade with for their Master's honour; and the gifts of
Providence, which were intended to enable them to serve God and to do good with,
are made the food and fuel of their lusts. The soul that is made a drudge,
either to the world or to the flesh,
wastes its substance, and
lives
riotously. One sinner destroys much good, Eccl. 9:18. The good he destroys
is valuable, and it is none of his own; they are his
Lord's goods that
he
wastes, which must be accounted for.
[3.] A sinful state is a
wanting state:
When he had
spent all upon his harlots, they left him, to seek such another prey; and
there
arose a mighty famine in that land, every thing was scarce and dear, and he
began
to be in want, v. 14. Note, Wilful waste brings woeful want. Riotous living
in time, perhaps in a little time, brings men to a
morsel of bread,
especially when
bad times hasten on the consequences of
bad husbandry,
which good husbandry would have
provided for. This represents the misery
of
sinners, who have thrown away
their own mercies, the favour of
God, their interest in Christ, the strivings of the Spirit, and admonitions of
conscience; these they
gave away for the pleasure of sense, and the
wealth of the world, and then are ready to perish for want of them. Sinners want
necessaries for their souls; they have neither food nor raiment for them, nor
any provision for hereafter. A sinful state is like a land where
famine
reigns, a
mighty famine; for the
heaven is as brass (the dews
of God's favour and blessing are withheld, and we must needs want good things
if God deny them to us), and the
earth is as iron (the sinner's heart,
that should bring forth good things, is dry and barren, and has no good in it).
Sinners are
wretchedly and
miserably poor, and, what aggravates
it, they brought themselves into that condition, and keep themselves in it by
refusing the supplies offered.
[4.] A sinful state is
a vile servile state. When this
young man's riot had brought him to want his want brought him to servitude.
He
went, and joined himself to a citizen of that country, v. 15. The same
wicked life that before was represented by
riotous living is here
represented by
servile living; for sinners are perfect slaves. The devil
is the
citizen of that country; for he is both in city and country.
Sinners
join themselves to him, hire themselves into his service, to do
his
work, to be at
his beck, and to depend upon him for maintenance and a
portion. They that commit sin are the
servants of sin, Jn. 8:34. How did
this young gentleman debase and disparage himself, when he hired himself into
such a service and under such a master as this! He
sent him into the fields,
not to feed sheep (there had been some credit in that employment; Jacob, and
Moses, and David, kept sheep), but to
feed swine. The business of the
devil's servants is to
make provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts
thereof, and that is no better than feeding greedy, dirty, noisy swine; and
how can rational immortal souls more disgrace themselves?
[5.] A sinful state is a state of
perpetual dissatisfaction.
When the prodigal began to be in want, he thought to help himself by
going to
service; and he must be content with the provision which not the house, but
the field, afforded; but it is poor provision:
He would fain have filled his
belly, satisfied his hunger, and nourished his body,
with the husks which
the swine did eat, v. 16. A fine pass my young master had brought himself
to, to be fellow-commoner with the swine! Note, That which sinners, when they
depart
from God, promise themselves
satisfaction in, will certainly
disappoint them; they are
labouring for that which satisfieth not, Isa.
55:2. That which is the
stumbling-block of their iniquity will never
satisfy
their souls, nor fill their bowels, Eze. 7:19. Husks are food for swine, but
not for men. The wealth of the world and the entertainments of sense will serve
for bodies; but what are these to
precious souls? They neither suit their
nature, nor satisfy their desires, nor supply their needs. He that takes up with
them
feeds on wind (Hos. 12:1),
feeds on ashes, Isa. 44:20.
[6.] A sinful state is a state which
cannot expect relief from any
creature. This prodigal, when he could not earn his bread by
working,
took to
begging; but
no man gave unto him, because they knew he
had brought all this misery upon himself, and because he was rakish, and
provoking to every body; such poor are
least pitied. This, in the
application of the parable, intimates that those who depart from God cannot be
helped by any creature. In vain do we cry to the world and the flesh (those gods
which we have served); they have that which will
poison a soul, but have
nothing to give it which will
feed and
nourish it. If thou refuse
God's help, whence shall any creature help thee?
[7.] A sinful state is a
state of death: This my son was
dead, v. 24, 32. A sinner is not only dead in law, as he is under a sentence
of death, but dead in state too, dead in trespasses and sins, destitute of
spiritual life; no union with Christ, no spiritual senses exercised, no living
to God, and therefore
dead. The prodigal in the
far country was
dead
to his father and his family, cut off from them, as a member from the body or a
branch from the tree, and therefore
dead, and it is his own doing.
[8.] A sinful state is a
lost state: This my son was lostlost
to every thing that was goodlost to all virtue and honourlost to his
father's house; they had no joy of him. Souls that are separated from God are
lost
souls; lost as a
traveller that is out of his way, and, if infinite mercy
prevent not, will soon be lost as a ship that is sunk at sea, lost
irrecoverably.
[9.] A sinful state is a state of
madness and
frenzy.
This is intimated in that expression (v. 17),
when he came to himself,
which intimates that he had been
beside himself. Surely he was so when he
left his father's house, and much more so when he joined himself to the
citizen of that country.
Madness is said to be
in the heart of
sinners, Eccl. 9:3. Satan has got possession of the soul; and how raging mad was
he that was possessed by Legion! Sinners, like those that are
mad,
destroy themselves with
foolish lusts, and yet at the same time deceive
themselves with foolish
hopes; and they are, of all diseased persons,
most enemies to their own cure.
2. We have here his
return from this
ramble, his
penitent
return to his father again. When he was brought to the last
extremity, then he bethought himself how much it was his interest to go home.
Note, We must not despair of the worst; for while there is life there is hope.
The grace of God can soften the hardest heart, and give a happy turn to the
strongest stream of corruption. Now observe here,
(1.) What was the
occasion of his return and repentance.
It was his
affliction; when he was in
want, then he
came to
himself. Note, Afflictions, when they are sanctified by divine grace, prove
happy means of turning sinners from the error of their ways. By them the ear is
opened to discipline and the heart disposed to receive instructions; and they
are sensible proofs both of the vanity of the world and of the mischievousness
of sin. Apply it spiritually. When we find the insufficiency of creatures to
make us happy, and have tried all other ways of relief for our poor souls in
vain, then it is time to think of returning to God. When we see what miserable
comforters, what physicians of no value, all but Christ are, for a soul that
groans under the guilt and power of sin, and no
man gives unto us what we
need, then surely we shall apply ourselves to Jesus Christ.
(2.) What was the
preparative for it; it was
consideration.
He said within himself, he reasoned with himself, when he recovered his right
mind,
How many hired servants of my father's have bread enough! Note,
Consideration is the first step towards conversion, Eze. 18:28.
He considers,
and turns. To consider is to retire into ourselves, to reflect upon
ourselves, to compare one thing with another, and determine accordingly. Now
observe what it was that he considered.
[1.] He considered how bad his condition was:
I perish with
hunger. Not only, "I am
hungry," but,
"I perish
with hunger, for I see not what way to expect relief." Note, Sinners
will not come to the service of Christ till they are brought to see themselves
just ready to perish in the service of sin; and the consideration of that should
drive us to Christ.
Master, save us, we perish. And though we be thus
driven to Christ he will not therefore reject us, nor think himself dishonoured
by our being forced to him, but rather honoured by his being applied to in a
desperate case.
[2.] He considered how much better it might be made if he would
but return:
How many hired servants of my father's, the meanest in his
family, the very day-labourers,
have bread enough, and to spare, such a
good house does he keep! Note,
First, In our
Father's house
there is bread for all his family. This was taught by the twelve loaves of
showbread,
that were constantly upon the holy table in the sanctuary, a loaf for every
tribe.
Secondly, There is
enough and to
spare, enough for
all, enough for each, enough to spare for such as will join themselves to his
domestics, enough and
to spare for
charity. Yet there is room;
there are
crumbs that fall from his table, which many would be glad of,
and thankful for.
Thirdly, Even the
hired servants in God's
family are well provided for; the meanest that will but hire themselves into his
family, to
do his work, and
depend upon his rewards, shall be well
provided for.
Fourthly, The consideration of this should encourage
sinners, that have gone astray from God, to think of returning to him. Thus the
adulteress reasons with herself, when she is disappointed in her new lovers:
I
will go and return to my first husband, for then was it better with me than now,
Hos. 2:7.
(3.) What was the
purpose of it. Since it is so, that his
condition is so bad, and may be bettered by returning to his father, his
consideration issues, at length, in this conclusion:
I will arise, and go to
my father. Note, Good purposes are good things, but still good performances
are all in all.
[1.] He determined what to do:
I will arise and go to my
father. He will not take any longer time to consider of it, but will
forthwith
arise and go. Though he be in a
far country, a great way off from his
father's house, yet, far as it is, he will return; every step of backsliding
from God must be a step back again in return to him. Though he be
joined to a
citizen of this country, he makes no difficulty of breaking his bargain with
him. We
are not debtors to the flesh; we are under no obligation at all
to our Egyptian task-masters to give them warning, but are at liberty to quit
the service when we will. Observe with what resolution he speaks:
"I
will arise, and go to my father: I am resolved I will, whatever the issue
be, rather than
stay here and
starve."
[2.] He determined what to say. True repentance is a
rising,
and
coming to God:
Behold, we come unto thee. But what words shall
we take with us? He here considers what to say. Note, In all our addresses to
God, it is good to deliberate with ourselves beforehand what we shall say, that
we may
order our cause before him, and
fill our mouth with arguments.
We have
liberty of speech, and we ought to consider seriously with
ourselves, how we may use that liberty to the utmost, and yet not abuse it. Let
us observe what he purposed to say.
First, He would confess his fault and folly:
I have
sinned. Note, Forasmuch as we have all sinned, it behoves us, and well
becomes us, to own that we have sinned. The confession of sin is required and
insisted upon, as a necessary condition of peace and pardon. If we plead
not
guilty, we put ourselves upon a trial by the covenant of innocency, which
will certainly condemn us. If
guilty, with a contrite, penitent, and
obedient heart, we refer ourselves to the covenant of grace, which offers
forgiveness to those that
confess their sins.
Secondly, He would aggravate it, and would be so far from
extenuating the matter that he would
lay a load upon himself for it: I
have sinned
against Heaven, and
before thee. Let those that are
undutiful
to their
earthly parents think of this; they sin
against heaven, and
before God. Offences against them are offences against God. Let us all think
of this, as that which renders our
sin exceedingly sinful, and should
render us exceedingly sorrowful for it. 1. Sin is committed in contempt of God's
authority over us:
We have sinned against Heaven. God is here called
Heaven,
to signify how highly he is exalted above us, and the dominion he has over us,
for the
Heavens do rule. The malignity of sin aims high; it is
against
Heaven. The daring sinner is said to have
set his mouth against the
heavens, Ps. 63:9. Yet it is
impotent malice, for we cannot hurt the
heavens. Nay, it is foolish malice; what is shot
against the heavens will
return upon the head of him that shoots it, Ps. 7:16. Sin is an affront to the
God
of heaven, it is a forfeiture of the glories and joys of heaven, and a
contradiction to the designs of the kingdom of heaven. 2. It is committed in
contempt of God's eye upon us: "I have sinned
against Heaven and
yet
before thee, and under thine eye," than which there could not be
a greater affront put upon him.
Thirdly, He would judge and condemn himself for it, and
acknowledge himself to have forfeited all the privileges of the family:
I am
no more worthy to be called thy son, v. 19. He does not deny the relation
(for that was all he had to trust to), but he owns that his father might justly
deny the relation, and shut his doors against him. He had, at his own demand,
the portion of goods that belonged to him, and had reason to expect no more.
Note, It becomes sinners to acknowledge themselves unworthy to receive any
favour from God, and to humble and abase themselves before him.
Fourthly, He would nevertheless sue for admission into the
family, though it were into the meanest post there:
"Make me as one of
thy hired servants: that is good enough, and too good for me." Note,
True penitents have a high value for God's house, and the privileges of it,
and will be glad of any place, so they may but be in it, though it be but as
door-keepers,
Ps. 84:10. If it be imposed on him as a mortification to sit with the servants,
he will not only submit to it, but count it a preferment, in comparison with his
present state. Those that return to God, from whom they have revolted, cannot
but be desirous some way or other to be employed for him, and put into a
capacity of serving and honouring him:
"Make me as a hired servant,
that I may show I love my father's house as much as ever I slighted it."
Fifthly, In all this he would have an eye to his father as a
father:
"I will arise, and go to my father, and will say unto him,
Father." Note, Eyeing God as a Father, and our Father, will be of great
use in our repentance and return to him. It will make our sorrow for sin
genuine, our resolutions against it strong, and encourage us to hope for pardon.
God delights to be called
Father both by penitents and petitioners.
Is
not Ephraim a dear son?
(4.) What was the performance of this purpose:
He arose, and
came to his father. His good resolve he put in execution without delay; he
struck while the iron was hot, and did not adjourn the thought to some more
convenient season. Note, It is our interest speedily to close with our
convictions. Have we said that we will arise and go? Let us immediately arise
and come. He did not come halfway, and then pretend that he was tired and could
get no further, but, weak and weary as he was, he made a thorough business of
it.
If thou wilt return, O Israel, return unto me, and
do thy first
works.
3. We have here his reception and entertainment with his father:
He came to his father; but was he welcome? Yes, heartily welcome. And, by
the way, it is an example to parents whose children have been foolish and
disobedient, if they repent, and submit themselves, not to be harsh and severe
with them, but to be governed in such a case by the wisdom that is from above,
which is
gentle and easy to be entreated; herein let them be followers of
God, and merciful, as he is. But it is chiefly designed to set forth the grace
and mercy of God to poor sinners that repent and return to him, and his
readiness to forgive them. Now here observe,
(1.) The great love and affection wherewith the father received
the son:
When he was yet a great way off his father saw him, v. 20. He
expressed his kindness before the son expressed his repentance; for God prevents
us with the blessings of his goodness. Even
before we call he answers;
for he knows what is in our hearts.
I said, I will confess, and thou
forgavest. How lively are the images presented here! [1.] Here were
eyes
of mercy, and those eyes quick-sighted:
When he was yet a great way off
his father saw him, before any other of the family were aware of him, as if
from the top of some high tower he had been looking that way which his son was
gone, with such a thought as this, "O that I could see yonder wretched son
of mine coming home!" This intimates God's desire of the conversion of
sinners, and his readiness to meet them that are coming towards him.
He
looketh on men, when they are gone astray from him, to see whether they will
return to him, and he is aware of the first inclination towards him. [2.] Here
were
bowels of mercy, and those bowels turning within him, and yearning
at the sight of his son:
He had compassion. Misery is the object of pity,
even the misery of a sinner; though he has brought it upon himself, yet God
compassionates.
His soul was grieved for the misery of Israel, Hos. 11:8;
Jdg. 10:16. [3.] Here were
feet of mercy, and those feet quick-paced:
He
ran. This denotes how swift God is to show mercy. The prodigal son came
slowly, under a burden of shame and fear; but the tender father ran to meet him
with his encouragements. [4.] Here were
arms of mercy, and those arms
stretched out to embrace him:
He fell on his neck. Though guilty and
deserving to be beaten, though dirty and newly come from feeding swine, so that
any one who had not the strongest and tenderest compassions of a father would
have loathed to touch him, yet he thus takes him in his arms, and lays him in
his bosom. Thus dear are true penitents to God, thus welcome to the Lord Jesus.
[5.] Here were
lips of mercy, and those lips dropping as a honey-comb:
He
kissed him. This kiss not only
assured him of his
welcome, but
sealed his pardon; his former follies shall be all forgiven, and not
mentioned against him, nor is one word said by way of upbraiding. This was like
David's kissing Absalom, 2 Sa. 14:33. And this intimates how ready, and free,
and forward the Lord Jesus is to receive and entertain poor returning repenting
sinners, according to his Father's will.
(2.) The penitent submission which the poor prodigal made to his
father (v. 21): He
said unto him, Father, I have sinned. As it commends
the good father's kindness that he showed it before the prodigal expressed his
repentance, so it commends the prodigal's repentance that he expressed it
after his father had shown him so much kindness. When he had received the kiss
which sealed his pardon, yet he said,
Father, I have sinned. Note, Even
those that have received the pardon of their sins, and the comfortable sense of
their pardon, must have in their hearts a sincere contrition for it, and with
their mouths must make a penitent confession of it, even of those sins which
they have reason to hope are pardoned. David penned the fifty-first psalm after
Nathan had said,
The Lord has taken away thy sin, thou shall not die.
Nay, the comfortable sense of the pardon of sin should increase our sorrow for
it; and that is ingenuous evangelical sorrow which is increased by such a
consideration. See Eze. 16:63,
Thou shalt be ashamed and confounded, when I
am pacified towards thee. The more we see of God's readiness to
forgive
us, the more difficult it should be to us to
forgive ourselves.
(3.) The splendid provision which this kind father made for the
returning prodigal. He was going on in his submission, but one word we find in
his purpose to say (v. 19) which we do not find that he did say (v. 21), and
that was,
Make me as one of thy hired servants. We cannot think that he
forgot it, much less that he changed his mind, and was now either less desirous
to be in the family or less willing to be a hired servant there than when he
made that purpose; but his father interrupted him, prevented his saying it:
"Hold, son, talk no more of thy unworthiness, thou art heartily welcome,
and, though not
worthy to be called a son, shalt be treated as a
dear
son, as a
pleasant child." He who is thus entertained at first
needs not ask to be made
as a hired servant. Thus when
Ephraim
bemoaned himself God comforted him, Jer. 31:18-20. It is strange that here
is not one word of rebuke: "Why did you not stay with your harlots and your
swine? You could never find the way home till beaten hither with your own rod."
No, here is nothing like this; which intimates that, when God forgives the sins
of true penitents, he forgets them, he remembers them no more, they
shall not
be mentioned against them, Eze. 18:22. But this is not all; here is rich and
royal provision made for him, according to his birth and quality, far beyond
what he did or could expect. He would have thought it sufficient, and been very
thankful, if his father had but taken notice of him, and bid him go to the
kitchen, and get his dinner with his servants; but God does for those who return
to their duty, and cast themselves upon his mercy, abundantly above what they
are able to ask or think. The prodigal came home between hope and fear, fear of
being rejected and hope of being received; but his father was not only better to
him than his fears, but better to him than his hopesnot only
received
him, but received him with respect.
[1.] He came home
in rags, and his father not only
clothed
him, but
adorned him. He
said to the servants, who all attended
their master, upon notice that his son was come,
Bring forth the best robe,
and put it on him. The worst old clothes in the house might have served, and
these had been good enough for him; but the father calls not for a
coat,
but for a
robe, the garment of princes and great men, the
best robe
teµn
stoleµn teµn proµteµn. There is a double emphasis:
"that
robe, that principal robe, you know which I mean;" the
first robe
(so it may be read); the robe he wore before he ran his ramble. When backsliders
repent and do their
first works, they shall be received and dressed in
their
first robes. "Bring hither that robe, and put it on him; he
will be ashamed to wear it, and think that it ill becomes him who comes home in
such a dirty pickle, but
put it on him, and do not merely offer it to
him: and
put a ring on his hand, a signet-ring, with the arms of the
family, in token of his being owned as a branch of the family." Rich people
wore rings, and his father hereby signified that though he had spent one
portion, yet, upon his repentance, he intended him another. He came home
barefoot, his feet perhaps sore with travel, and therefore, "Put
shoes
on his feet, to make him easy." Thus does the grace of God provide for
true penitents.
First, The
righteousness of Christ is the robe,
that
principal robe, with which they are clothed; they
put on the Lord
Jesus Christ, are
clothed with that
Sun. The
robe of
righteousness is the
garment of salvation, Isa. 61:10. A
new
nature is this
best robe; true penitents are clothed with this, being
sanctified throughout.
Secondly, The
earnest of the Spirit, by
whom we are sealed to the day of redemption, is the
ring on the hand.
After
you believed you were sealed. They that are sanctified are adorned
and dignified, are put in power, as Joseph was by Pharaoh's giving him a ring:
"Put a ring on his hand, to be before him a constant memorial of his
father's kindness, that he may never forget it."
Thirdly, The
preparation
of the gospel of peace is as
shoes for our feet (Eph. 6:15), so that,
compared with this here, signifies (saith Grotius) that God, when he receives
true penitents into his favour, makes use of them for the convincing and
converting of others by their instructions, at least by their examples. David,
when pardoned, will teach transgressors God's ways, and Peter, when converted,
will strengthen his brethren. Or it intimates that they shall go on cheerfully,
and with resolution, in the way of religion, as a man does when he has shoes on
his feet, above what he does when he is barefoot.
[2.] He came home
hungry, and his father not only
fed
him, but
feasted him (v. 23):
"Bring hither the fatted calf,
that has been stall-fed, and long reserved for some special occasion, and
kill
it, that my son may be satisfied with the best we have." Cold meat
might have served, or the leavings of the last meal; but he shall have fresh
meat and hot meat, and the fatted calf can never be better bestowed. Note, There
is excellent food provided by our heavenly Father for all those that
arise
and
come to him. Christ himself is the Bread of Life; his flesh is meat
indeed, and his blood drink indeed; in him there is a feast for souls, a feast
for fat things. It was a great change with the prodigal, who just before
would
fain have filled his belly with husks. How sweet will the supplies of the
new covenant be, and the relishes of its comforts, to those who have been
labouring
in vain for satisfaction in the creature! Now he found his own words made
good,
In my father's house there is bread enough and to spare.
(4.) The great joy and rejoicing occasioned by his return. The
bringing of the fatted calf was designed to be not only a
feast for him,
but a
festival for the family:
"Let us all eat, and be merry,
for it is a good day; for
this my son was dead, when he was in his
ramble, but his return is as
life from the dead, he
is alive again;
we thought that he was dead, having heard nothing from him of a long time, but
behold
he lives; he
was lost, we gave him up for lost, we
despaired of hearing of him, but he
is found." Note, [1.] The
conversion of a soul from sin to God is the raising of that soul from death to
life, and the finding of that which seemed to be lost: it is a great, and
wonderful, and happy change. What was in itself
dead is made
alive,
what was
lost to God and his church is
found, and what was
unprofitable
becomes
profitable, Philem. 11. It is such a change as that upon the face
of the earth when the spring returns. [2.] The conversion of sinners is greatly
pleasing to the God of heaven, and all that belong to his family ought to
rejoice in it; those in heaven
do, and those on earth
should.
Observe, It was
the father that began the joy, and set all the rest on
rejoicing.
Therefore we should be glad of the repentance of sinners,
because it accomplishes God's design; it is the bringing of those to Christ
whom the Father had given him, and in whom he will be for ever glorified.
We
joy for your sakes before our God, with an eye to him (1 Th. 3:9), and
ye
are our rejoicing in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the
Master of the family, 1 Th. 2:19. The family complied with the master:
They
began to be merry. Note, God's children and servants ought to be affected
with things as he is.
4. We have here the
repining and envying of the elder
brother, which is described by way of reproof to the scribes and Pharisees,
to show them the folly and wickedness of their discontent at the repentance and
conversion of the publicans and sinners, and the favour Christ showed them; and
he represents it so as not to aggravate the matter, but as allowing them still
the privileges of elder brethren: the Jews had those privileges (though the
Gentiles were favoured), for the preaching of the gospel must begin at
Jerusalem. Christ, when he reproved them for their faults, yet accosted them
mildly, to smooth them into a good temper towards the poor publicans. But by the
elder brother here we may understand those who are really good, and have
been so from their youth up, and never went astray into any vicious course of
living, who
comparatively need no repentance; and to such these words in
the close,
Son, thou art ever with me, are applicable without any
difficulty, but not to the scribes and Pharisees. Now concerning the elder
brother, observe,
(1.) How
foolish and
fretful he was upon occasion
of his brother's reception, and how he was disgusted at it. It seems he was
abroad
in the field, in the country, when his brother came, and by the
time he had returned home the
mirth was
begun; When he drew nigh to
the house he heard music and dancing, either while the dinner was getting
ready, or rather after they had eaten and were full, v. 25. He enquired
what
these things meant (v. 26), and was informed that his brother was come, and
his father had made him a feast for his
welcome home, and great joy there
was because he had received him
safe and sound, v. 27. It is but one word
in the original, he had
received him
hygiainonta
in
health, well both in body and mind. He received him not only well in body,
but a penitent, returned to his
right mind, and well reconciled to his
father's house, cured of his vices and his rakish disposition, else he had not
been received
safe and
sound. Now this offended him to the highest
degree:
He was angry, and would not go in (v. 28), not only because he
was resolved he would not himself join in the mirth, but because he would show
his displeasure at it, and would intimate to his father that he should have kept
out his younger brother. This shows what is a common fault,
[1.] In men's families. Those who have always been a comfort
to their parents think they should have the monopoly of their parents' favours,
and are apt to be
too sharp upon those who have transgressed, and to
grudge their parents' kindness to them.
[2.] In God's family. Those who are comparatively
innocents
seldom know how to be compassionate towards those who are manifestly
penitents.
The language of such we have here, in what the
elder brother said (v. 29,
30), and it is written for warning to those who by the grace of God are kept
from scandalous sin, and kept in the way of virtue and sobriety, that they sin
not after the similitude of this transgression. Let us observe the particulars
of it.
First, He
boasted of
himself and
his own virtue
and
obedience. He had not only not run from his father's house, as his
brother did, but had made himself as a
servant in it, and had long done
so:
Lo, these many years do I serve thee, neither transgressed I at any time
thy commandment. Note, It is too common for those that are better than their
neighbours to boast of it, yea, and to make their boast of it before God
himself, as if he were indebted to them for it. I am apt to think that this
elder brother said more than was true, when he gloried that he had never
transgressed
his father's commands, for them I believe he would not have been so
obstinate as now he was to
his father's entreaties. However, we will
admit it comparatively; he had not been so disobedient as his brother had been.
O what need have good men to take heed of pride, a corruption that arises out of
the ashes of other corruptions! Those that have long served God, and been kept
from gross sins, have a great deal to be humbly thankful for, but nothing
proudly to boast of.
Secondly, He
complained of his father, as if
he had not been so kind as he ought to have been to him, who had been so
dutiful:
Thou never gavest me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends.
He was out of humour now, else he would not have made this complaint; for, no
questions, if he had asked such a thing at any time, he might have had it at the
first word; and we have reason to think that he did not desire it, but the
killing
of the fatted calf put him upon making this peevish reflection. When men are
in a passion they are apt to reflect in a way they would not if they were
in their right mind. He had been fed at his father's table, and had many a
time been merry with him and the family; but his father had never given him so
much as a kid, which was but a small token of love compared with the
fatted
calf. Note, Those that think
highly of themselves and their services
are apt to think
hardly of their master and meanly of his favours. We
ought to own ourselves utterly unworthy of those mercies which God has thought
fit to give us, much more of those that he has not thought fit to give us, and
therefore we must not
complain. He would have had a kid, to
make merry
with his friends abroad, whereas the
fatted calf he grudged so much
was given to his brother, not to
make merry with his friends abroad, but
with
the family at home: the mirth of God's children should be with their
father and his family, in communion with God and his saints, and not with any
other
friends. Thirdly, He was very
ill-humoured towards his younger
brother, and harsh in what he thought and said concerning him. Some good people
are apt to be overtaken in this fault, nay, and to indulge themselves too much
in it, to look with disdain upon those who have not preserved their reputation
so clean as they have done, and to be sour and morose towards them, yea, though
they have given very good evidence of their repentance and reformation. This is
not the Spirit of Christ, but of the Pharisees. Let us observe the instances of
it. 1. He
would not go in, except his brother were
turned out; one
house shall not hold him and his own brother, no, not his
father's house.
The language of this was that of the Pharisee (Isa. 65:5):
Stand by thyself,
come not near to me, for I am holier than thou; and (ch. 18:11)
I am not
as other men are, nor even as this publican. Note, Though we are to shun the
society of those sinners by whom we are in danger of being infected, yet we must
not be shy of the company of penitent sinners, by whom we may get good. He saw
that his father had
taken him in, and yet he would not
go in to
him. Note, We think too well of ourselves, if we cannot find in our hearts to
receive
those whom God
hath received, and to admit those into favour, and
friendship, and fellowship with us, whom we have reason to think God has a
favour for, and who are taken into friendship and fellowship with him. 2. He
would not call him
brother; but
this thy son, which sounds
arrogantly, and not without reflection upon his father, as if his indulgence had
made him a prodigal: "He is
thy son, thy darling." Note,
Forgetting the relation we stand in to our brethren, as brethren, and disowning
that, are at the bottom of all our neglects of our duty to them and our
contradictions to that duty. Let us give our relations, both in the flesh and in
the Lord, the titles that belong to them. Let the rich call the poor
brethren,
and let the innocents call the penitents so. 3. He
aggravated his brother's
faults, and made the worst of them, endeavouring to incense his father
against him: He
is thy son, who hath devoured thy living with harlots. It
is true, he had spent his own portion foolishly enough (whether
upon harlots
or no we are not told before, perhaps that was only the language of the elder
brother's jealousy and ill will), but that he had devoured
all his father's
living was false; the father had still a good estate. Now this shows how apt
we are, in censuring our brethren, to
make the worst of every thing, and
to set it out in the blackest colours, which is not doing as we would be done
by, nor as our heavenly Father does by us, who is not extreme to mark
iniquities. 4. He
grudged him the
kindness that his father
showed
him: Thou hast killed for him the fatted calf, as if he were such a son as
he should be. Note, It is a wrong thing to
envy penitents the grace of
God, and to have our eye evil because he is good. As we must not envy those that
are the worst of sinners the gifts of common providence
(Let not thine
heart envy sinners), so we must not envy those that
have been the
worst of sinners the gifts of covenant love upon their repentance; we must not
envy them their pardon, and peace, and comfort, no, nor any extraordinary gift
which God bestows upon them, which makes them eminently acceptable or useful.
Paul, before his conversion, had been a prodigal, had
devoured his
heavenly Father's
living by the
havoc he made of the
church;
yet when after his conversion he had greater measures of grace given him, and
more honour put upon him, than the other apostles, they who were the elder
brethren, who had been
serving Christ when he was persecuting him, and
had not transgressed at any time his commandment, did not envy him his visions
and revelations, nor his more extensive usefulness, but
glorified God in him,
which ought to be an example to us, as the reverse of this elder brother.
(2.) Let us now see how
favourable and
friendly
his father was in
his carriage towards him when he was thus sour and ill-humoured.
This is as surprising as the former. Methinks the mercy and grace of our God in
Christ shine almost as brightly in his tender and gentle bearing with
peevish
saints, represented by the elder brother here, as before in his reception of
prodigal sinners upon their repentance, represented by the younger brother. The
disciples of Christ themselves had many infirmities, and were men subject to
like passions as others, yet Christ bore with them, as a nurse with her
children. See 1 Th. 2:7.
[1.] When he would not come in, his
father came out, and
entreated him, accosted him mildly, gave him good words, and desired him to
come in. He might justly have said, "If he will not come in, let him stay
out, shut the doors against him, and send him to seek a lodging where he can
find it. Is not the house my own? and may I not do what I please in it? Is not
the fatted calf my own? and may I not do what I please with it?" No, as he
to meet the younger son, so now he goes to court the elder, did not send a
servant out with a kind message to him, but went himself. Now,
First,
This is designed to represent to us the goodness of God; how strangely gentle
and winning he has been towards those that were strangely froward and provoking.
He reasoned with Cain:
Why art thou wroth? He
bore Israel's manners
in the wilderness, Acts 13:18. How mildly did God reason with Elijah, when
he was upon the fret (1 Ki. 19:46), and especially with Jonah, whose case was
very parallel with this here, for he was there disquieted at the repentance of
Nineveh, and the mercy shown to it, as the elder brother here; and those
questions,
Dost thou well to be angry? and,
Should not I spare
Nineveh? are not unlike these expostulations of the father with the elder
brother here.
Secondly, It is to teach all superiors to be mild and
gentle with their inferiors, even when they are in a fault and passionately
justify themselves in it, than which nothing can be more provoking; and yet even
in that case let fathers
not provoke their children to more wrath, and
let
masters forbear threatening, and both show all
meekness.
[2.] His father assured him that the kind entertainment he gave
his younger brother was neither any reflection upon him nor should be any
prejudice to him (v. 31): "Thou shalt fare never the worse for it, nor have
ever the less for it.
Son, thou art ever with me; the reception of him is
no rejection of thee, nor what is laid out on him any sensible diminution of
what I design for thee; thou shalt still remain entitled to the
pars enitia
(so our law calls it), the
double portion (so the Jewish law called it);
thou shalt be
haeres ex asse (so the Roman law called it):
all that I
have is thine, by an indefeasible title." If he had not
given him a
kid to make merry with his friends, he had allowed him to eat bread at his
table continually; and it is better to be
happy with our Father in heaven
than
merry with any
friend we have in this world. Note,
First,
It is the unspeakable happiness of all the children of God, who keep close to
their Father's house, that they are, and shall be, ever with him. They are so
in this world by faith; they shall be so in the other world by fruition; and all
that he has is theirs; for,
if children, then heirs, Rom. 8:17.
Secondly,
Therefore we ought not to envy others God's grace to them because we shall
have never the less for their sharing in it. If we be true believers, all that
God is, all that he has, is
ours; and, if others come to be true
believers, all that he is, and all that he has, is theirs too, and yet we have
not the less, as they that walk in the light and warmth of the sun have all the
benefit they can have by it, and yet not the less for others having as much; for
Christ in his church is like what is said of the soul in the body: it is
tota
in toto
the whole in the whole, and yet
tota in qualibet parte
the
whole in each part.
[3.] His father gave him a good reason for this uncommon joy in
the family:
It was meet that we should make merry and be glad, v. 32. He
might have insisted upon his own authority: "It was
my will that the
family should make merry and be glad."
Stat pro ratione voluntasMy
reason is, I will it to be so. But it does not become even those that have
authority to be vouching and appealing to it upon every occasion, which does but
make it cheap and common, it is better to give a convincing reason, as the
father does here:
It was meet, and very becoming,
that we should make
merry for the return of a prodigal son, more than for the perseverance of a
dutiful son; for, though the latter is a greater blessing to a family, yet the
former is a more sensible pleasure. Any family would be much more transported
with joy at the raising of a dead child to life, yea, or at the recovery of a
child from a sickness that was adjudged mortal, than for the continued life and
health of many children. Note, God will be justified when he speaks, and all
flesh shall, sooner or later, be silent before him. We do not find that the
elder brother made any reply to what his father said, which intimates that he
was entirely satisfied, and acquiesced in his father's will, and was well
reconciled to his prodigal brother; and his father put him in mind that he was
his brother:
This thy brother. Note, A good man, though he have not such
a command of himself at all times as to
keep his temper, yet will, with
the grace of God,
recover his temper; though
he fall, yet shall he not
be utterly cast down. But as for the scribes and Pharisees, for whose
conviction it was primarily intended, for aught that appears they continued the
same disaffection to the sinners of the Gentiles, and to the gospel of Christ
because it was preached to them.
Chapter 15:
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