Chapter 19:
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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 19
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. The conversion of Zaccheus the
publican at Jericho (v. 1-10). II. The parable of the pounds which the king
entrusted with his servants, and of his rebellious citizens (v. 11-27). III.
Christ's riding in triumph (such triumph as it was) into Jerusalem; and his
lamentation in prospect of the ruin of that city (v. 28-44). IV. His teaching
in the temple, and casting the buyers and sellers out of it (v. 45-48).
Verses 1-10
Many, no doubt, were converted to the faith of Christ of whom no
account is kept in the gospels; but the conversion of some, whose case had
something in it extraordinary, is recorded, as this of Zaccheus. Christ passed
through Jericho, v. 1. This city was build under a curse, yet Christ honoured it
with his presence, for the gospel
takes away the curse. Though it ought
not to have been built, yet it was not therefore a sin to live in it when it was
built. Christ was now going from the other side Jordan to Bethany near
Jerusalem, to raise Lazarus to life; when he was going to do one good work he
contrived to do many by the way. He did good both to the
souls and to the
bodies of people; we have here an instance of the former. Observe,
I. Who, and what, this Zaccheus was. His name bespeaks him a
Jew.
Zaccai was a common name among the Jews; they had a famous rabbi,
much about this time, of that name. Observe, 1. His calling, and the post he was
in:
He was the chief among the publicans, receiver-general; other
publicans were officers under him; he was, as some think, farmer of the customs.
We often read of publicans coming to Christ; but here was one that was
chief
of the publicans, was in authority, that enquired after him. God has his remnant
among all sorts. Christ came to save even the
chief of publicans. 2. His
circumstances in the world were very considerable:
He was rich. The
inferior publicans were commonly men of broken fortunes, and low in the world;
but he that was
chief of the publicans had raised a good estate. Christ
had lately shown how
hard it is for
rich people to enter into the
kingdom of God, yet presently produces an instance on one rich man that had
been lost, and was found, and that not as the prodigal by being reduced to want.
II. How he came in Christ's way, and what was the occasion of
his acquaintance with him. 1. He had a great
curiosity to see Jesus, what
kind of a man he was, having heard great talk of him, v. 3. It is natural to us
to come in sight, if we can, of those whose fame has filled our ears, as being
apt to imagine there is something extraordinary in their countenances; at least,
we shall be able to say hereafter that we have seen such and such
great men.
But the eye is
not satisfied with seeing. We should now
seek to see
Jesus with an eye of faith, to see
who he is; we should address
ourselves in holy ordinances with this in our eye,
We would see Jesus. 2.
He could not get his curiosity gratified in this matter because he was
little,
and the crowd was
great. Christ did not study to
show himself, was
not carried on men's shoulders (as the pope is in procession), that all men
might see him; neither he nor his kingdom
came with observation. He did
not ride in an open chariot, as princes do, but, as
one of us, he was
lost
in a crowd; for that was the day of his humiliation. Zaccheus was
low of
stature, and over-topped by all about him, so that he could not get a sight
of Jesus. Many that are little of stature have large souls, and are lively in
spirit. Who would not rather be a Zaccheus than a Saul, though he was
higher
by head and shoulders than all about him? Let not those that are little of
stature
take thought of adding
cubits to it. 3. Because he would
not disappoint his curiosity he
forgot his gravity, as chief of the
publicans, and
ran before, like a boy, and
climbed up into a
sycamore-tree, to see him. Note, Those that sincerely desire a sight of
Christ will use the proper means for gaining a sight of him, and will break
through a deal of difficulty and opposition, and be willing to take pains to see
him. Those that find themselves
little must take all the advantages they
can get to
raise themselves to a sight of Christ, and not be ashamed to
own that they need them, and all little enough. Let not dwarfs despair, with
good help, by aiming high to reach high.
III. The notice Christ took of him, the call he gave him to a
further acquaintance (v. 5), and the efficacy of that call, v. 6. 1. Christ
invited
himself to Zaccheus's house, not doubting of his hearty welcome there;
nay, wherever Christ comes, as he brings his own
entertainment along with
him, so he brings his own
welcome; he opens the heart, and inclines it to
receive him. Christ
looked up into the tree, and
saw Zaccheus. He
came to look upon Christ, and resolved to take particular notice of him, but
little thought of being taken notice of by Christ. That was an honour too great,
and too far above his merit, for him to have any thought of. See how Christ
prevented
him with the blessings of his goodness, and
outdid his expectations; and
see how he
encouraged very weak beginnings, and helped them forward. He
that had a mind to know Christ shall be
known of him; he that only
courted to see him shall be admitted to converse with him. Note, Those that are
faithful in a little shall be entrusted with more. And sometimes those that come
to hear the word of Christ, as Zaccheus did, only for curiosity, beyond what
they thought of, have their consciences awakened, and their hearts changed.
Christ called him
by name, Zaccheus, for he knows his chosen
by name;
are they not in his book? He might ask, as Nathanael did (Jn. 1:48),
Whence
knowest thou me? But before he climbed the sycamore-tree Christ saw him, and
knew him. He bade him
make haste, and come down. Those that Christ calls
must
come down, must humble themselves, and not think to climb to heaven
by any righteousness of their own; and they must
make haste and come
down, for delays are dangerous. Zaccheus must not hesitate, but hasten; he knows
it is not a matter that needs consideration whether he should welcome such a
guest to his house. He must
come down, for Christ intends this day to
bait
at his house, and stay an hour or two with him.
Behold, he stands at the
door and knocks. 2. Zaccheus was
overjoyed to have such an honour put
upon his house (v. 6):
He made haste, and came down, and received him
joyfully; and his receiving him
into his house was an indication and
token of his receiving him
into his heart. Note, When Christ
calls
to us we must
make haste to answer his calls; and when he
comes to us
we must
receive him joyfully. Lift up your heads, O ye gates. We may well
receive him joyfully who brings all good along with him, and, when he
takes possession of the soul, opens springs of joy there which shall flow to
eternity. How often has Christ said to us,
Open to me, when we have, with
the spouse, made excuses! Cant. 5:2, 3. Zaccheus's forwardness to receive
Christ will shame us. We have not now Christ to entertain in our houses, but we
have his disciples, and what is done to them he takes as done to himself.
IV. The offence which the people took at this
kind greeting
between Christ and Zaccheus. Those narrow-souled censorious Jews
murmured,
saying that he was
gone to be a guest with a man that is a sinner, para
hamartoµloµ andri
with a sinful man; and were not they
themselves sinful men? Was it not Christ's errand into the world to seek and
save
men that are
sinners? But Zaccheus they think to be a sinner
above all men that dwelt in Jericho, such a sinner as was not fit to be
conversed with. Now this was very unjust to blame Christ for going
to his
house; for, 1. Though he was a
publican, and many of the publicans
were
bad men, it did not therefore follow that they were
all so.
We must take heed of condemning men in the lump, or by common fame, for at God's
bar every man will be judged as he is. 2. Though he
had been a sinner, it
did not therefore follow that he was now as bad as he had been; though they knew
his past life to be bad, Christ might know his present frame to be good. God
allows room for repentance, and so must we. 3. Though he was
now a sinner,
they ought not to blame Christ for going to him, because he was in
no danger
of getting hurt by a sinner, but in
great hopes of doing good to a
sinner; whither should the physician go but to the sick? Yet see how that which
is
well done may be
ill construed.
V. The proofs which Zaccheus gave publicly that, though he had
been a
sinner, he was now a
penitent, and a true
convert,
v. 8. He does not expect to be justified by his works as the Pharisee who
boasted of what he had done, but by his
good works he will, through the
grace of God, evidence the
sincerity of his
faith and
repentance;
and here he declares what his determination was. He made this declaration
standing,
that he might be seen and heard by those who murmured at Christ for coming to
his house;
with the mouth confession is made of repentance as well as
faith. He
stood, which denotes his saying it deliberately and with
solemnity, in the nature of a vow to God. He addressed himself to Christ in it,
not to the people (they were not to be his judges), but to the Lord, and he
stood
as it were at his bar. What we do that is good we must do
as unto him; we
must appeal to him, and approve ourselves to him, in our integrity, in all our
good purposes and resolutions. He makes it appear that there is a change
in
his heart (and that is repentance), for there is a change in his way. His
resolutions are of second-table duties; for Christ, upon all occasions, laid
great stress on them: and they are such as are suited to his condition and
character; for in them will best appear the truth of our repentance.
1. Zaccheus had a good estate, and, whereas he had been in it
hitherto laying up treasure for himself, and doing hurt to himself, now he
resolves that for the future he will be all towards God, and do good to others
with it:
Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor. Not,
"I
will give it by my will when I die," but, "I
do
give it now." Probably he had heard of the command of trial which Christ
gave to another rich man to sell what he had, and give to the poor (Mt. 19:21),
and how he broke with Christ upon it. "But so will not I," saith
Zaccheus; "I agree to it at the first word; though hitherto I have been
uncharitable to the poor, now I will relieve them, and give so much the more for
having neglected the duty so long, even the
half of my goods." This
is a very large proportion to be set apart for works of piety and charity. The
Jews used to say that a fifth part of a man's income yearly was very fair to
be given to pious uses, and about that share the law directed; but Zaccheus
would go much further, and give one moiety to the poor, which would oblige him
to retrench all his extravagant expenses, as his retrenching these would enable
him to relieve many with his superfluities. If we were but more temperate and
self-denying, we should be more charitable; and, were we content with less
ourselves, we should have the more to give to them that need. This he mentions
here as a fruit of his repentance. Note, It well becomes converts to God to be
charitable to the poor.
2. Zaccheus was conscious to himself that he had not gotten all
he had honestly and fairly, but some by indirect and unlawful means, and of what
he had gotten by such means he promises to make restitution: "If
I have
taken any thing from any man by false accusation, or if I have wronged any
man in the way of my business as a
publican, exacting more than was
appointed, I promise to restore him
four-fold." This was the
restitution that a thief was to make, Ex. 22:1. (1.) He seems plainly to own
that he had
done wrong; his office, as a publican, gave him opportunity
to do wrong, imposing upon the merchants to curry favour with the government.
True penitents will own themselves not only in general guilty before God, but
will particularly reflect upon that which has been their own iniquity, and
which, by reason of their business and employment in the world, has most easily
beset them. (2.) That he had done wrong
by false accusation; this was the
temptation of the publicans, which John Baptist had warned them of particularly,
ch. 3:14. They had the ear of the government, and every thing would be stretched
in favour of the revenue, which gave them an opportunity of gratifying their
revenge if they bore a man an ill will. (3.) He promises to restore
four-fold,
as far as he could recollect or find by his books that he had
wronged any
man. He does not say, "If I be sued, and compelled to it, I will make
restitution" (some are
honest when they cannot help it); but he will
do it
voluntarily: It shall be
my own act and deed. Note, Those
who are convinced of having done wrong cannot evidence the sincerity of their
repentance but by
making restitution. Observe, He does not think that his
giving half his estate to the poor will atone for the wrong he has done. God
hates
robbery for burnt-offerings, and we must first
do justly and then
love
mercy. It is no charity, but hypocrisy, to give that which is
none of our
own; and we are not to reckon that our own which we have not come honestly
by, nor that our own which is not so when all our debts are paid, and
restitution made for wrong done.
VI. Christ's
approbation and
acceptance of
Zaccheus's conversion, by which also he cleared himself from any imputation in
going to be a guest with him, v. 9, 10.
1. Zaccheus is declared to be now a
happy man. Now he is
turned from sin to God; now he has bidden Christ welcome to his house, and is
become an honest, charitable, good man:
This day is salvation come to this
house. Now that he is
converted he is in effect
saved, saved
from his sins, from the guilt of them, from the power of them; all the benefits
of salvation are his. Christ is come
to his house, and, where Christ
comes, he brings salvation along with him. He is, and will be, the
Author of
eternal salvation to all that own him as Zaccheus did. Yet this is not all.
Salvation this day
comes to his house. (1.) When Zaccheus becomes a
convert, he will be, more than he had been, a
blessing to his house. He
will bring the means of grace and salvation to his house, for he is a
son of
Abraham indeed now, and therefore, like Abraham, will teach his household to
keep the way of the Lord. He that is greedy of gain troubles his own house,
and brings a curse upon it (Hab. 2:9), but he that is charitable to the poor
does a kindness to his own house, and brings a blessing upon it and salvation to
it, temporal at least, Ps. 112:3. (2.) When Zaccheus is brought to Christ
himself his
family also become related to Christ, and his children are
admitted members of his church, and so
salvation comes to his house, for
that he is
a son of Abraham, and therefore interested in God's covenant
with Abraham, that
blessing of Abraham which comes upon the publicans,
upon
the Gentiles, through faith, that God will be a God
to them and to their
children; and therefore, when he believes,
salvation comes to his
house, as the gaoler's to whom it was said, Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ,
and
thou shalt be saved, and thy house, Acts 16:31. Zaccheus is by birth a son
of Abraham, but, being a publican, he was deemed a heathen; they are put upon a
level, Mt. 18:17. And as such the Jews were shy of conversing with him, and
expected Christ should be so; but he shows that, being a true penitent, he is
become
rectus in curiaupright in court, as good a son of Abraham as if
he had never been an publican, which therefore ought not to be mentioned against
him.
2. What Christ had done to make him, in particular, a happy man,
was consonant to the great design and intention of his coming into the world, v.
10. With the same argument he had before justified his conversing with
publicans, Mt. 9:13. There he pleaded that he came to
call sinners to
repentance; now that he came to
seek and save that which was lost, to
apoloµlos-
the lost thing. Observe, (1.) The
deplorable
case of the
sons of men: they were
lost; and here the whole
race of mankind is spoken of as
one body. Note, The whole world of
mankind, by the fall, is become a
lost world: lost as a city is lost when
it has revolted to the rebels, as a traveller is lost when he has missed his way
in a wilderness, as a sick man is lost when his disease is incurable, or as a
prisoner is lost when sentence is passed upon him. (2.) The
gracious design
of the
Son of God: he came to
seek and save, to seek in order to
saving. He came from heaven to earth (a long journey), to
seek that which
was
lost (which had
wandered and gone astray), and to bring it
back (Mt. 18:11, 12), and to
save that which was lost, which was
perishing, and in a manner destroyed and cut off. Christ undertook the cause
when it was given up for
lost: undertook to bring those to themselves
that were
lost to God and all goodness. Observe, Christ
came into
this lost world to seek and save it. His design was to
save, when
there
was not salvation in any other. In prosecution of that design, he
sought,
took all probable means to effect that salvation. He seeks those that were not
worth seeking to; he seeks those that sought him not, and asked not for him, as
Zaccheus here.
Verses 11-27
Our Lord Jesus is now upon his way to Jerusalem, to his last
passover, when he was to suffer and die; now here we are told,
I. How the expectations of his friends were
raised upon
this occasion:
They thought that the kingdom of God would immediately appear,
v. 11. The Pharisees expected it about this time (ch. 17:20), and, it seems, so
did Christ's own disciples; but they both had a mistaken notion of it. The
Pharisees thought that it must be introduced by some other temporal prince or
potentate. The disciples thought that their Master would introduce it, but with
temporal pomp and power, which, with the power he had to work miracles, they
knew he could clothe himself with in a short time, whenever he pleased.
Jerusalem, they concluded, must be the seat of his kingdom, and therefore, now
that he is going directly thither, they doubt not but in a little time to see
him upon the throne there. Note, Even good men are subject to mistakes
concerning the kingdom of Christ, and to form wrong notions of it, and are ready
to think that will
immediately appear which is reserved for hereafter.
II. How their expectations were
checked, and the mistakes
rectified upon which they were founded; and this he does in three things:
1. They expected that he should appear in his glory now
presently,
but he tells them that he must not be publicly installed in his kingdom for a
great while yet. He is like
a certain nobleman anthroµpos
tis eugeneµs
a certain man of high birth (so Dr. Hammond),
for he is the Lord from heaven, and is entitled by birth to the kingdom; but he
goes
into a far country, to receive for himself a kingdom. Christ must go to
heaven, to sit down at the right hand of the Father there, and to receive from
him
honour and glory, before the Spirit was poured out by which his
kingdom was to be set up on earth, and before a church was to be set up for him
in the Gentile world. He must receive the kingdom, and then
return.
Christ returned when the Spirit was poured out, when Jerusalem was destroyed, by
which time that generation, both of friends and enemies, which he had personally
conversed with, was wholly worn off by death, and gone to give up their account.
But his chief return here meant is that at the great day, of which we are yet in
expectation. That which they thought would
immediately appear, Christ
tells them will not appear till this same Jesus who is taken into heaven shall
in
like manner come again; see Acts 1:11.
2. They expected that his apostles and immediate attendants
should be advanced to dignity and honour, that they should all be made princes
and peers, privy-counsellors and judges, and have all the pomp and preferments
of the court and of the town. But Christ here tells them that, instead of this,
he designed them to be
men of business; they must expect no other
preferment in this world than that of the trading end of the town; he would set
them up with a stock under their hands, that they might employ it themselves, in
serving him and the interest of his kingdom among men. That is the true honour
of a Christian and a minister which, if we be as we ought to be truly ambitious
of it, will enable us to look upon all temporal honours with a holy contempt.
The apostles had dreamed of
sitting on his right hand and on his left in his
kingdom, enjoying ease after their present toil and honour after the present
contempt put upon them, and were pleasing themselves with this dream; but Christ
tells them that which, if they understood it aright, would fill them with care,
and concern, and serious thoughts, instead of those
aspiring ones with
which they filled their heads.
(1.) They have a
great work to do now. Their Master
leaves them, to receive his kingdom, and, at parting, he gives each of them a
pound,
which the margin of our common bibles tells us amounts in our money to
three
pounds and
half a crown; this signifies the same thing with the
talents in the parable that is parallel to this (Mt. 25), all the gifts with
which Christ's apostles were endued, and the advantages and capacities which
they had of serving the interests of Christ in the world, and others, both
ministers and Christians, like them in a lower degree. But perhaps it is in the
parable thus represented to make them the more humble; their honour in this
world is only that of
traders, and that not of first-rate merchants, who
have vast stocks to begin upon, but that of poor traders, who must take a great
deal of care and pains to make any thing of what they have. He gave these pounds
to his servants, not to buy rich liveries, much less robes, and a splendid
equipage, for themselves to appear in, as they expected, but with this charge:
Occupy
till I come. Or, as it might much better be translated,
Trade till I
come, Pragmateusasthe
Be busy.
So the word properly signifies. "You are sent forth to preach the gospel,
to set up a church for Christ in the world, to bring the nations to the
obedience of faith, and to build them up in it.
You shall receive power to do
this, for you shall be filled with the
Holy Ghost," Acts 1:8.
When Christ
breathed on the eleven disciples, saying,
Receive ye the
Holy Ghost, then he delivered them
ten pounds. "Now," saith
he, "mind your business, and make a business of it; set about it in good
earnest, and stick to it. Lay out yourselves to do all the good you can to the
souls of men, and to gather them in to Christ." Note, [1.] All Christians
have
business to do for Christ in this world, and ministers especially;
the former were not
baptized, nor the latter
ordained, to be
idle.
[2.] Those that are called to business for Christ he furnishes with gifts
necessary for their business; and, on the other hand, from those to whom he
gives power he expects service. He delivers the
pounds with this charge,
Go work, go trade.
The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to
profit withal, 1 Co. 12:7. And
as every one has received the gift, so
let him
minister the same, 1 Pt. 4:10. [3.] We must continue to mind our
business
till our Master comes, whatever difficulties or oppositions we
may meet with in it; those only that
endure to the end shall
be saved.
(2.) They have a
great account to make shortly. These
servants are
called to him, to show what use they made of the gifts they
were dignified with, what service they had done for Christ, and what good to the
souls of men,
that he might know what every man had gained by trading.
Note,
[1.] They that trade diligently and faithfully in the service of
Christ shall be
gainers. We cannot say so of the business of the world;
many a labouring tradesman has been a loser; but those that trade for Christ
shall be
gainers; though
Israel be not gathered, yet they
will
be glorious.
[2.] The conversion of souls is the
winning of them;
every true convert is clear gain to Jesus Christ. Ministers are but factors for
him, and to him they must give account what fish they have enclosed in the
gospel-net, what guests they have prevailed with to come to the wedding-supper;
that is, what they have
gained by trading. Now observe,
First, The
good account which was given by
some
of the servants, and the master's approbation of them. Two such are instanced,
v. 16, 19. 1. They had both made considerable improvements, but not both
alike;
one had gained
ten pounds by his trading, and another
five. Those
that are diligent and faithful in serving Christ are commonly blessed in being
made blessings to the places where they live. They shall
see the travail of
their soul, and not
labour in vain. And yet all that are alike
faithful
are not alike
successful. And perhaps, though they were both faithful, it
is intimated that one of them took more pains, and applied himself more closely
to his business, than the other, and sped accordingly. Blessed Paul was surely
this servant that gained
ten pounds, double to what any of the rest did,
for he
laboured more abundantly than they all, and
fully preached the
gospel of Christ. 2. They both acknowledged their obligations to their
Master for entrusting them with these abilities and opportunities to do him
service: Lord, it is not
my industry, but
thy pound, that has
gained
ten pounds. Note, God must have all the glory of all our gains;
not
unto us, but unto him, must be
the praise, Ps. 115:1. Paul, who
gained the
ten pounds, acknowledges,
"I laboured, yet not I. By
the grace of God, I am what I am, and do what I do; and
his grace was not
in vain," 1 Co. 15:10. He will not speak of what he had done, but of
what God
had done by him, Rom. 15:18. 3. They were both commended for
their fidelity and industry:
Well done, thou good servant, v. 17. And to
the other he
said likewise, v. 19. Note, They who do that which is good
shall have
praise of the same. Do well, and Christ will say to thee,
Well
done: and, if he says
Well done, the matter is not great who says
otherwise. See Gen. 4:7. 4. They were
preferred in proportion to the
improvement they had made:
"Because thou hast been faithful in a very
little, and didst not say, 'As good sit still as go to trade with one
pound, what can one do with so small a stock?' but didst humbly and honestly
apply thyself to the improvement of that,
have thou authority over ten
cities." Note, Those are in a fair way to rise who are content to begin
low.
He that has used the office of a deacon well purchaseth to himself a
good degree, 1 Tim. 3:13. Two things are hereby promised the apostles:(1.)
That when they have taken pains to
plant many churches they shall have
the satisfaction and honour of presiding in them, and governing among them; they
shall have great respect paid them, and have a great interest in the love and
esteem of good Christians.
He that keepeth the fig-tree shall eat the fruit
thereof; and he that
laboureth in the word and doctrine shall be
counted
worthy of double honour. (2.) That, when they have served their generation,
according to the will of Christ, though they pass through this world despised
and trampled upon, and perhaps pass out of it under disgrace and persecution as
the apostles did, yet in the other world they shall reign as kings with Christ,
shall sit with him on his throne, shall have
power over the nations, Rev.
2:26. The happiness of heaven will be a much greater advancement to a good
minister or Christian than it would be to a poor tradesman, that with much ado
had cleared ten pounds, to be made governor of ten cities. He that had gained
but
five pounds had dominion over
five cities. This intimates that
there are
degrees of glory in heaven; every vessel will be alike
full,
but not alike
large. And the degrees of glory there will be according to
the degrees of usefulness here.
Secondly, The
bad account that was given by
one
of them, and the sentence passed upon him for his slothfulness and
unfaithfulness, v. 20, etc. 1. He owned that he had not
traded with the
pound with which he had been entrusted (v. 20):
"Lord, behold, here is
thy pound; it is true, I have not made it
more, but withal I have not
made it
less; I have kept it safely
laid up in a napkin."
This represents the carelessness of those who have gifts, but never lay out
themselves to do good with them. It is all one to them whether the interests of
Christ's kingdom sink or swim, go backward or forward; for their parts, they
will take no care about it, no pains, be at no expenses, run no hazard. Those
are the servants that lay up their pound
in a napkin who think it enough
to say that they have done no hurt in the world, but
did no good. 2. He
justified himself in his omission, with a plea that made the matter worse and
not better (v. 21):
I feared thee, because thou art an austere man, rigid
and severe,
anthroµpos austeµros ei.
Austere
is the Greed word itself: a
sharp man:
Thou takest up that which thou
laidst not down. He thought that his master put a hardship upon his servants
when he required and expected the improvement of their pounds, and that it was
reaping
where he did not sow; whereas really it was reaping where he
had sown,
and, as the husbandman, expecting in proportion to what he had sown. He had no
reason to
fear his master's austerity, nor blame his expectations, but
this was a mere sham, a frivolous groundless excuse for his idleness, which
there was no manner of colour for. Note, The pleas of slothful professors, when
they come to be examined, will be found more to their
shame than in their
justification. 3. His excuse is turned upon him:
Out of thine own
mouth will I judge thee, thou wicked servant, v. 22. He will be
condemned
by his crime, but
self-condemned by his plea. "If thou didst look
upon it as hard that I should expect the profit of thy trading, which would have
been the greater profit, yet, if thou hadst had any regard to my interest, thou
mightest have put my money
into the bank, into some of the funds, that I
might have had, not only
my own, but my own
with usury, which,
though a
less advantage, would have been
some." If he durst
not
trade for fear of
losing the principal, and so being made
accountable to his lord for it though it was lost, which he pretends, yet that
would be no excuse for his not setting it out to interest, where it would be
sure. Note, Whatever may be the pretences of slothful professors, in excuse of
their slothfulness, the true reason of it is a reigning indifference to the
interests of Christ and his kingdom, and their coldness therein. They care not
whether religion gets around or loses ground, so they can but live at ease. 4.
His pound is taken from him, v. 24. It is fit that those should
lose
their gifts who will not
use them, and that those who have dealt falsely
should be no longer trusted. Those who will not serve their Master with what he
bestows upon them, why should they be suffered to serve themselves with it?
Take
from him the pound. 5. It is given to him that had the
ten pounds.
When this was objected against by the standers-by, because he had so much
already
(Lord, he has ten pounds, v. 25), it is answered (v. 26),
Unto
every one that hath shall be given. It is the rule of justice, (1.) That
those should be most encouraged who have been most industrious, and that those
who have laid out themselves most to do good should have their opportunities of
doing good
enlarged, and be put into a higher and more extensive sphere
of usefulness. To him that hath gotten shall more be given, that he may be in a
capacity to get more. (2.) That those who have their gifts, as if they had them
not, who have them to no purpose, who do no good with them, should be deprived
of them. To those who endeavour to increase the grace they have, God will impart
more; those who neglect it, and suffer it to decline, can expect no other than
that God should do so too. This needful warning Christ gives to his disciples,
lest, while they were gaping for honours on earth, they should neglect their
business, and so come short of their happiness in heaven.
3. Another thing they expected was, that, when the kingdom of
God should appear, the body of the Jewish nation would immediately fall in with
it, and submit to it, and all their aversions to Christ and his gospel would
immediately vanish; but Christ tells them that, after his departure, the
generality of them would persist in their obstinacy and rebellion, and it would
be their ruin. This is shown here,
(1.) In the message which his citizens sent after him, v. 14.
They not only opposed him, while he was in obscurity; but, when he was gone into
glory, to be invested in his kingdom, then they continued their enmity to him,
protested against his dominion, and said,
We will not have this man to reign
over us. [1.] This was fulfilled in the prevailing infidelity of the Jews
after the ascension of Christ, and the setting up of the gospel kingdom. They
would not submit their necks to his yoke, nor touch the top of his golden
sceptre. They said,
Let us break his bands in sunder, Ps. 2:1-3; Acts
4:26. [2.] It speaks the language of all unbelievers; they could be content that
Christ should
save them, but they will not have him to
reign over
them; whereas Christ is a Saviour to those only to whom he is a prince, and
who are willing to obey him.
(2.) In the sentence passed upon them at his return:
Those
mine enemies bring hither, v. 27. When his faithful subjects are preferred
and rewarded, then he will take vengeance on his enemies, and particularly on
the Jewish nation, the doom of which is here read. When Christ had set up his
gospel kingdom, and thereby put reputation upon the gospel ministry, then he
comes to
reckon with the Jews; then it is remembered against them that
they had particularly disclaimed and protested against his kingly office, when
they said,
We have no king but Caesar, nor would own him for their king.
They appealed to Caesar, and to Caesar they shall go; Caesar shall be their
ruin. Then the
kingdom of God appeared when vengeance was taken on those
irreconcileable enemies to Christ and his government; they were
brought forth
and slain before him. Never was so much slaughter made in any war as in the
wars of the Jews. That nation lived to see Christianity victorious in the
Gentile world, in spite of their enmity and opposition to it, and then it was
taken
away as dross. The wrath of Christ came upon them to the uttermost (1 Th.
2:15, 16), and their destruction redounded very much to the honour of Christ and
the peace of the church. But this is applicable to all others who
persist
in their infidelity, and will undoubtedly perish in it. Note, [1.] Utter ruin
will certainly be the portion of all Christ's enemies; in the day of vengeance
they shall all be brought
forth, and
slain before him. Bring them
hither, to be made a spectacle to saints and angels; see Jos. 10:22, 24.
Bring
them hither, that they may see the glory and happiness of Christ and his
followers, whom they hated and persecuted.
Bring them hither, to have
their frivolous pleas overruled, and to receive sentence according to their
merits. Bring them, and
slay them before me, as Agag before Samuel. The
Saviour whom they have slighted will stand by and see them slain, and not
interpose on their behalf. [2.] Those that
will not have Christ to reign over
them shall be reputed and dealt with as his enemies. We are ready to think
that none are Christ's enemies but persecutors of Christianity, or scoffers at
least; but you see that those will be accounted so that dislike the terms of
salvation, will not submit to Christ's yoke, but will be their own masters.
Note, Whoever will not be
ruled by the grace of Christ will inevitably be
ruined by the wrath of Christ.
Verses 28-40
We have here the same account of Christ's riding in some sort
of triumph (such as it was) into Jerusalem which we had before in Matthew and
Mark; let us therefore here only observe,
I. Jesus Christ was forward and willing to suffer and die for
us. He went forward,
bound in the spirit, to Jerusalem, knowing very well
the
things that should
befal him there, and yet
he went before,
ascending up to Jerusalem, v. 28. He was the foremost of the company, as if
he longed to be upon the spot, longed to engage, to take the field, and to enter
upon action. Was he so forward to suffer and die for us, and shall we draw back
from any service we are capable of doing for him?
II. It was no ways inconsistent either with Christ's humility
or with his present state of humiliation to make a
public entry into
Jerusalem a little before he died. Thus he made himself to be the more taken
notice of, that the ignominy of his death might appear the greater.
III. Christ is entitled to a dominion over all the creatures,
and may use them when and as he pleases. No man has a property in his estate
against Christ, but that
his title is prior and superior. Christ sent to
fetch an
ass and her
colt from their
owner's and
master's
crib, when he had occasion for their service, and might do so, for all the
beasts
of the forest are his, and the tame beasts too.
IV. Christ has all men's hearts both under his eye and in his
hand. He could influence those to whom the ass and the colt belonged to consent
to their taking them away, as soon as they were told that the Lord had occasion
for them.
V. Those that go on Christ's errands are sure to speed (v.
32):
They that were sent found what he told them they should find, and
the owners willing to part with them. It is a comfort to Christ's messengers
that they shall bring what they are sent for, if indeed the Lord has occasion
for it.
VI. The disciples of Christ, who fetch that for him from others
which he has occasion for, and which they have not, should not think that
enough, but, whatever they have themselves wherewith he may be served and
honoured, they should be ready to serve him with it. Many can be willing to
attend Christ at other people's expense who care not to be at any charge upon
him themselves; but those disciples not only fetched the ass's colt for him,
but
cast their own
garments upon the colt, and were willing that
they should be used for his trappings.
VII. Christ's triumphs are the matter of his disciples'
praises. When Christ came nigh to Jerusalem, God put it of a sudden into the
hearts of the
whole multitude of the disciples, not of the twelve only,
but abundance more, that were disciples at large,
to rejoice and praise God
(v. 37), and the
spreading of their clothes in the way (v. 36) was a
common expression of joy, as at the feast of tabernacles. Observe, 1. What was
the matter or occasion of their joy and praise. They praised God
for all the
mighty works they had seen, all the miracles Christ had wrought, especially
the
raising of Lazarus, which is particularly mentioned, Jn. 12:17, 18.
That brought others to mind, for fresh miracles and mercies should revive the
remembrance of the former. 2. How they expressed their joy and praise (v. 38):
Blessed
be the king that cometh in the name of the Lord. Christ is
the king;
he
comes in the name of the Lord, clothed with a divine authority,
commissioned from heaven to
give law and treat of
peace. Blessed be
he. Let us
praise him, let God
prosper him. He is
blessed
for ever, and we will speak well of him.
Peace in heaven. Let the God of
heaven send peace and success to his undertaking, and then there will be
glory
in the highest. It will redound to the glory of the most high God; and the
angels, the glorious inhabitants of the upper world, will give him the glory of
it. Compare this song of the saints on earth with that of the angels, ch. 2:14.
They both agree to give glory to God in the highest. There the praises of both
centre; the angels say,
On earth peace, rejoicing in the benefit which
men on earth have by Christ; the saints say,
Peace in heaven, rejoicing
in the benefit which the angels have by Christ. Such is the communion we have
with the holy angels that, as
they rejoice in the
peace on earth,
so
we rejoice in the
peace in heaven, the
peace God
makes
in his high places (Job 25:2), and both in Christ, who hath reconciled all
things to himself, whether
things on earth or things in heaven.
VIII. Christ's triumph's, and his disciples' joyful
praises of them, are the vexation of proud Pharisees, that are enemies to him
and his kingdom. There were some Pharisees among
the multitude who were
so far from joining with them that they were enraged at them, and, Christ being
a famous example of humility, they thought that he would not admit such
acclamations as these, and therefore expected that he should
rebuke his
disciples, v. 39. But it is the honour of Christ that, as he despises the
contempt of the proud, so he accepts the praises of the humble.
IX. Whether men praise Christ or no he will, and shall, and must
be praised (v. 40):
If these should hold their peace, and not speak the
praises of the Messiah's kingdom,
the stones would immediately cry out,
rather than that Christ should not be praised. This was, in effect, literally
fulfilled, when, upon men's reviling Christ upon the cross, instead of
praising him, and his own disciples' sinking into a profound silence, the
earth
did quake and the rocks rent. Pharisees would silence the praises of Christ,
but they cannot gain their point; for as God can
out of stones raise up
children unto Abraham, so he can out of the mouths of those children perfect
praise.
Verses 41-48
The great Ambassador from heaven is here making his public entry
into Jerusalem, not to be
respected there, but to be
rejected; he
knew what a nest of vipers he was throwing himself into, and yet see here two
instances of his love to that place and his concern for it.
I. The
tears he shed for the
approaching ruin of
the
city (v. 41):
When he was come near, he beheld the city, and wept
over it. Probably, it was when he was coming down the descent of the hill
from the
mount of Olives, where he had a full view of the city, the large
extent of it, and the many stately structures in it, and his eye affected his
heart, and his heart his eye again. See here,
1. What a tender spirit Christ was of; we never read that he
laughed, but we often find him in tears. In this very place his father David
wept, and those that were with him, though he and they were
men of war.
There are cases in which it is no disparagement to the stoutest of men to melt
into tears.
2. That Jesus Christ
wept in the midst of his triumphs,
wept
when all about him were
rejoicing, to show how little he was elevated
with the applause and acclamation of the people. Thus he would teach us to
rejoice
with trembling, and
as though we rejoiced not. If Providence do not
stain the beauty of our triumphs, we may ourselves see cause to sully it with
our sorrows.
3. That he
wept over Jerusalem. Note, There are cities to
be wept over, and none to be more lamented than Jerusalem, that had been the
holy city, and the joy of the whole earth, if it be degenerated. But why did
Christ weep at the sight of Jerusalem? Was it because "Yonder is the city
in which I must be betrayed and bound, scourged and spit upon, condemned and
crucified?" No, he himself gives us the reason of his tears.
(1.) Jerusalem has not improved the day of her opportunities. He
wept, and said,
If thou hadst known, even thou at least in this thy day,
if thou wouldst but yet know, while the gospel is preached to thee, and
salvation offered thee by it; if thou wouldest at length bethink thyself, and
understand
the things that belong to thy peace, the making of thy peace
with God, and the securing of thine own spiritual and eternal welfarebut thou
dost not know the day of thy visitation, v. 44. The manner of speaking is
abrupt:
If thou hadst known! O that thou hadst, so some take it; like
that
O that my people had hearkened unto me, Ps. 81:13; Isa. 48:18. Or,
If
thou hadst known, well; like that of the
fig-tree, ch. 13:9. How
happy had it been for thee! Or, "If thou hadst known, thou wouldest have
wept for thyself, and I should have no occasion to weep for thee, but should
have rejoiced rather." What he says lays all the blame of Jerusalem's
impending ruin upon herself. Note, [1.] There are things which
belong to our
peace, which we are all concerned to
know and
understand; the
way how peace is made, the offers made of peace, the terms on which we may have
the benefit of peace. The things that belong to our peace are those things that
relate to our present and future welfare; these we must know with application.
[2.] There is a
time of visitation when those things which
belong to
our peace may be
known by us, and known to good purpose. When we
enjoy the means of grace in great plenty, and have the word of God powerfully
preached to uswhen the Spirit strives with us, and our own consciences are
startled and awakenedthen is the
time of visitation, which we are
concerned to improve. [3.] With those that have long neglected the time of their
visitation, if at length, if at last, in this their day, their eyes be opened,
and they bethink themselves, all will be well yet. Those shall not be refused
that come into the vineyard
at the eleventh hour. [4.] It is the amazing
folly of multitudes that enjoy the means of grace, and it will be of fatal
consequence to them, that they do not improve the day of their opportunities.
The
things of their peace are revealed to them, but are not minded or
regarded by them; they
hide their eyes from them, as if they were not
worth taking notice of. They are not aware of the
accepted time and the
day
of salvation, and to let it slip and perish through mere carelessness. None
are so
blind as those that will not
see; nor have any the things
of their peace more certainly hidden from their eyes than those that turn their
back upon them. [5.] The sin and folly of those that persist in a contempt of
gospel grace are a great grief to the Lord Jesus, and should be so to us. He
looks with weeping eyes upon lost souls, that continue impenitent, and run
headlong upon their own ruin; he had rather that they would
turn and live
than
go on and die, for he is not willing that any should perish.
(2.) Jerusalem cannot escape the day of her desolation. The
things
of her peace are now in a manner hidden from her eyes; they will be shortly.
Not but that after this the gospel was preached to them by the apostles;
all
the house of Israel were called to
know assuredly that Christ was
their
peace (Acts 2:36), and multitudes were convinced and converted. But
as to the body of the nation, and the leading part of it, they were sealed up
under unbelief; God had
given them the spirit of slumber, Rom. 11:8. They
were so prejudiced and enraged against the gospel, and those few that did
embrace it then, that nothing less than a miracle of divine grace (like that
which converted Paul) would work upon them; and it could not be expected that
such a miracle should be wrought, and so they were justly given up to
judicial
blindness and hardness. The
peaceful things are not
hidden from the
eyes of particular persons; but it is too late to think now of the nation of
the Jews,
as such, becoming a Christian nation, by embracing Christ. And
therefore they are marked for ruin, which Christ here foresees and foretels, as
the certain consequence of their rejecting Christ. Note, Neglecting the great
salvation often brings temporal judgments upon a people; it did so upon
Jerusalem in less than forty years after this, when all that Christ here
foretold was exactly fulfilled. [1.] The Romans besieged the city,
cast a
trench about it, compassed it round, and
kept their inhabitants in
on
every side. Josephus relates that Titus ran up a wall in a very short time,
which surrounded the city, and cut off all hopes of escaping. [2.] They
laid
it even with the ground. Titus commanded his soldiers to
dig up the city,
and the whole compass of it was levelled, except three towers; see Josephus's
history of the wars of the Jews, 5.356-360; 7.1. Not only the city, but the
citizens were laid even with the ground
(thy children within thee), by
the cruel slaughters that were made of them: and there was scarcely one stone
left
upon another. This was for their crucifying Christ; this was because they
knew
not the day of their visitation. Let other cities and nations take warning.
II. The
zeal he showed for the
present purification of
the temple. Though it must be destroyed ere long, it does not therefore
follow that no care must be taken of it in the mean time.
1. Christ cleared it of those who profaned it. He went straight
to the temple, and
began to cast out the buyers and sellers, v. 45.
Hereby (though he was represented as an enemy to the temple, and that was the
crime laid to his charge before the high priest) he made it to appear that he
had a truer love for the temple than they had who had such a veneration for its
corban, its treasury, as a sacred thing; for its purity was more its glory than
its wealth was. Christ gave reason for his dislodging the temple-merchants, v.
46. The temple is a
house of prayer, set apart for communion with God:
the
buyers and
sellers made it a
den of thieves by the
fraudulent bargains they made there, which was by no means to be suffered, for
it would be a distraction to those who came there to pray.
2. He put it to the best use that ever it was put to, for he
taught
daily in the temple, v. 47. Note, It is not enough that the corruptions of a
church be purged out, but the preaching of the gospel must be encouraged. Now,
when Christ preached in the temple, observe here, (1.) How spiteful the
church-rulers were against him; how industrious to seek an
opportunity, or
pretence rather, to do him a mischief (v. 47):
The chief priests and
scribes, and the chief of the people, the great sanhedrim, that should have
attended him, and summoned the people too to attend him,
sought to destroy
him, and put him to death. (2.) How respectful the common people were to
him. They were
very attentive to hear him. He spent most of his time in
the country, and did not then preach in the temple, but, when he did, the people
paid him great respect, attended on his preaching with diligence, and let no
opportunity slip of hearing him, attended to it with care, and would not lose a
word. Some read it,
All the people as they heard him, took his part; and
so it comes in very properly as a reason why his enemies
could not find what
they might do against him; they saw the people ready to fly in their faces
if they offered him any violence. Till his hour was come his interest in the
common people protected him; but, when his hour was come, the chief priests'
influence upon the common people delivered him up.
Chapter 19:
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