Chapter 20:
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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 20
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. Christ's answer to the chief
priests' question concerning his authority (v. 1-8). II. The parable of the
vineyard let out to the unjust and rebellious husbandmen (v. 9-19). III.
Christ's answer to the question proposed to him concerning the lawfulness of
paying tribute to Caesar (v. 20-26). IV. His vindication of that great
fundamental doctrine of the Jewish and Christian institutesthe resurrection
of the dead and the future state, from the foolish cavils of the Sadducees (v.
27-38). V. His puzzling the scribes with a question concerning the Messiah's
being the Son of David (v. 39-44). VI. The caution he gave his disciples to
take heed of the scribes (v. 45-47). All which passages we had before in
Matthew and Mark, and therefore need not enlarge upon them here, unless on those
particulars which we had not there.
Verses 1-8
In this passage of story nothing is added here to what we had in
the other evangelists; but only in the first verse, where we are told,
I. That he was now
teaching the people in the temple, and
preaching the gospel. Note, Christ was a preacher of his own gospel. He
not only
purchased the salvation for us, but
published it to us,
which is a great confirmation of the truth of the gospel, and gives abundant
encouragement to us to receive it, for it is a sign that the heart of Christ was
much upon it, to have it received. This likewise puts an honour upon the
preachers of the gospel, and upon their office and work, how much soever they
are despised by a vain world. It puts an honour upon the
popular preachers
of the gospel; Christ condescended to the capacities of the
people in
preaching the gospel, and
taught them. And observe, when he was
preaching
the gospel to the people he had this interruption given him. Note, Satan and
his agents do all they can to hinder the
preaching of the gospel to the
people, for nothing weakens the interest of Satan's kingdom more.
II. That his enemies are here said to
come upon him
epesteµsan.
The word is used only here, and it intimates,
1. That they thought to surprise him with this question; they
came
upon him suddenly, hoping to catch him unprovided with an answer, as if this
were not a thing he had himself thought of.
2. That they thought to frighten him with this question. They
came
upon him in a body, with violence. But how could he be terrified with the
wrath
of men, when it was in his
own power to restrain it, and make it turn
to his praise? From this story itself we may learn, (1.) That it is not to be
thought strange, if even that which is evident to a demonstration be disputed,
and called in question, as a doubtful thing, by those that shut their eyes
against the light. Christ's miracles plainly showed
by what authority he
did these things, and sealed his commission; and yet this is that which is
here
arraigned. (2.) Those that question Christ's authority, if they be
but catechized themselves in the plainest and most evident principles of
religion, will have their folly made manifest unto all men. Christ answered
these priests and scribes with a question concerning the baptism of John, a
plain question, which the meanest of the common people could answer:
Was it
from heaven or of men? They all knew it was
from heaven; there was
nothing in it that had an earthly relish or tendency, but it was all heavenly
and divine. And this question gravelled them, and ran them aground, and served
to shame them before the people. (3.) It is not strange if those that are
governed by reputation and secular interest imprison the plainest truths, and
smother and stifle the strongest convictions, as these priests and scribes did,
who, to save their credit, would not own that John's baptism was
from
heaven, and had no other reason why they did not say it was
of men
but because they
feared the people. What good can be expected from men of
such a spirit? (4.) Those that bury the knowledge they have are justly denied
further knowledge. It was just with Christ to refuse to give an account of his
authority to them that knew the baptism of John to be from heaven and would not
believe in him, nor own their knowledge, v. 7, 8.
Verses 9-19
Christ spoke this parable against those who were resolved not to
own his authority, though the evidence of it was ever so full and convincing;
and it comes very seasonably to show that by questioning his authority they
forfeited their own. Their disowning the lord of their vineyard was a defeasance
of their lease of the vineyard, and giving up of all their title.
I. The parable has nothing added here to what we had before in
Matthew and Mark. The scope of it is to show that the Jewish nation, by
persecuting the prophets, and at length Christ himself, had provoked God to take
away from them all their church privileges, and to abandon them to ruin. It
teaches us, 1. That those who enjoy the privileges of the visible church are as
tenants and farmers that have a vineyard to look after, and rent to pay for it.
God, by setting up revealed religion and instituted orders in the world, hath
planted a vineyard, which he lets out to those people among whom his tabernacle
is, v. 9. And they have
vineyard-work to do, needful and constant work,
but pleasant and profitable. Whereas man was, for sin, condemned to
till the
ground, they that have a place in the church are restored to that which was
Adam's work in innocency, to
dress the garden, and to keep it; for the
church is a paradise, and Christ the tree of life in it. They have also
vineyard-fruits
to present to the Lord of the vineyard. There are rents to be paid and services
to be done, which, though bearing no proportion to the value of the premises,
yet must be
done and must be
paid. 2. That the work of God's
ministers is to call upon those who enjoy the privileges of the church to
bring
forth fruit accordingly. They are God's rent-gatherers, to put the
husbandmen in mind of their arrears, or rather to put them in mind that they
have a landlord who expects to hear from them, and to receive some
acknowledgment of their dependence on him, and obligations to him, v. 10. The
Old-Testament prophets were sent on this errand to the Jewish church, to demand
from them the duty and obedience they owed to God. 3. That it has often been the
lot of God's faithful servants to be wretchedly abused by his own tenants;
they have been
beaten and
treated shamefully by those that
resolved to
send them empty away. They that are resolved not to do their
duty to God cannot bear to be called upon to do it. Some of the best men in the
world have had the hardest usage from it, for their best services. 4. That God
sent his Son into the world to carry on the same work that the prophets were
employed in, to
gather the fruits of the vineyard for God; and one would
have thought that he would have been reverenced and received. The prophets spoke
as
servants, Thus saith the Lord; but Christ
as a Son, among his
own,
Verily, I say unto you. Putting such an honour as this upon them, to
send him, one would have thought, should have won upon them. 5. That those who
reject Christ's ministers would reject Christ himself if he should come to
them; for it has been tried, and found that the persecutors and murderers of his
servants the prophets were the persecutors and murderers of himself. They said,
This
is the heir, come let us kill him. When they slew the servants, there were
other servants sent. "But, if we can but be the death of the son, there is
never another son to be sent, and then we shall be no longer molested with these
demands; we may have a quiet possession of the vineyard for ourselves." The
scribes and Pharisees promised themselves that, if they could but get Christ out
of the way, they should for ever ride masters in the Jewish church; and
therefore they took the bold step, they
cast him out of the vineyard, and
killed him. 6. That the putting of Christ to death filled up the measure of
the Jewish iniquity, and brought upon them ruin without remedy. No other could
be expected than that God should
destroy those wicked husbandmen. They
began in
not paying their rent, but then proceeded to beat and kill the
servants, and at length their young Master himself. Note, Those that live in the
neglect of their duty to God know not what degrees of sin and destruction they
are running themselves into.
II. To the application of the parable is added here, which we
had not before, their deprecation of the doom included in it (v. 16):
When
they heart it, they said, God forbid, Meµ
genoito
Let not this be done, so it should be read. Though
they could not but own that for such a sin such a punishment was just, and what
might be expected, yet they could not bear to hear of it. Note, It is an
instance of the folly and stupidity of sinners that they proceed and persevere
in their sinful ways though at the same time they have a foresight and dread of
the destruction that is at the end of those ways. And see what a cheat they put
themselves, to think to avoid it by a cold
God forbid, when they do
nothing towards the preventing of it; but will this make the threatening of no
effect? No, they shall know whose word shall stand, God's or theirs. Now
observe what Christ said, in answer to this childish deprecation of their ruin.
1. He
beheld them. This is taken notice of only by this evangelist, v.
17. He
looked upon them with pity and compassion, grieved to see them
cheat themselves thus to their own ruin. He
beheld them, to see if they
would blush at their own folly, or if he could discern in their countenances any
indication of relenting. 2. He referred them to the scripture:
"What is
this then that is written? How can you escape the judgment of God, when you
cannot prevent the exaltation of him whom you despise and reject? The word of
God hath said it, that
the stone which the builders rejected is become the
head of the corner." The Lord Jesus will be exalted to the Father's
right hand. He has all judgment and all power committed to him; he is the
corner-stone and top-stone of the church, and, if so, his enemies can expect no
other than to be destroyed. Even those that slight him, that stumble at him, and
are offended in him,
shall be brokenit will be their ruin; but as to
those that not only reject him, but hate and persecute him, as the Jews did, he
will fall upon them and crush them to pieceswill
grind them to powder.
The condemnation of spiteful persecutors will be much sorer than that of
careless unbelievers.
Lastly, We are told how the chief priests and scribes were
exasperated by this parable (v. 19):
They perceived that he had spoken this
parable against them; and so he had. A guilty conscience needs no accuser;
but they, instead of yielding to the convictions of conscience, fell into a rage
at him who awakened that sleeping lion in their bosoms, and
sought to lay
hands on him. Their corruptions rebelled against their convictions, and got
the victory. And it was not because they had any fear of God or of his wrath
before their eyes, but only because they
feared the people, that they did
not now fly in his face, and take him by the throat. They were just ready to
make his words good:
This is the heir, come let us kill him. Note, When
the hearts of the sons of men are fully set in them to do evil, the fairest
warnings both of the sin they are about to commit and of the consequences of it
make no impression upon them. Christ tells them that instead of
kissing the
Son of God they would
kill him, upon which they should have said,
What,
is thy servant a dog? But they do, in effect, say this: "And so we
will; have at him now." And, though they deprecate the punishment of the
sin, in the next breath they are projecting the commission of it.
Verses 20-26
We have here Christ's evading a snare which his enemies laid
for him, by proposing a question to him about tribute. We had this passage
before, both in Matthew and Mark. Here is,
I. The mischief designed him, and that is more fully related
here than before. The plot was to
deliver him unto the power and authority of
the governor, v. 20. They could not themselves put him to death by course of
law, nor otherwise than by a
popular tumult, which they could not depend
upon; and, since they could not be his judges, they would willingly condescend
to be his prosecutors and accusers, and would themselves
inform against
him. They hoped to gain their point, if they could but incense the governor
against him. Note, It has been the common artifice of persecuting church-rulers
to make the secular powers the tools of their malice, and oblige the
kings of
the earth to do their drudgery, who, if they had not been instigated, would
have let their neighbours live quietly by them, as Pilate did Christ till the
chief priests and the scribes presented Christ to him. But thus Christ's word
must be fulfilled by their cursed politics, that he should be
delivered into
the hands of the Gentiles.
II. The persons they employed. Matthew and Mark told us that
they were disciples of the Pharisees, with some Herodians. Here it is added,
They were
spies, who should feign themselves just men. Note, It is no new
thing for
bad men to feign themselves
just men, and to cover the
most wicked projects with the most specious and plausible pretences. The devil
can
transform himself into an angel of light, and a Pharisee appear in
the garb, and speak the language, of a disciple of Christ. A spy must go in
disguise. These spies must take on them to have a value for Christ's judgment,
and to depend upon it as an oracle, and therefore must desire his advice in a
case of conscience. Note, Ministers are concerned to stand upon their guard
against some that feign themselves to be
just men, and to be
wise as
serpents when they are in the midst of a
generation of vipers and
scorpions.
III. The question they proposed, with which they hoped to
ensnare him. 1. Their preface is very courtly:
Master, we know that thou
sayest and teachest rightly, v. 21. Thus they thought to flatter him into an
incautious freedom and openness with them, and so to gain their point. They that
are proud, and love to be commended, will be brought to do any thing for those
that will but flatter them, and speak kindly to them; but they were much
mistaken who thought thus to impose upon the humble Jesus. He was not pleased
with the testimony of such hypocrites, nor thought himself honoured by it. It is
true that he
accepts not the person of any, but it is as true that he
knows the hearts of all, and knew theirs, and the
seven abominations that
were there, though they
spoke fair. It was certain that he
taught the
way of God truly; but he knew that they were unworthy to be taught by him,
who came to
take hold of his words, not to be
taken hold of by
them. 2. Their case is very nice: "Is it lawful
for us" (this
is added here in Luke)
"to give tribute to Caesarfor us Jews, us
the free-born seed of Abraham, us that pay the Lord's tribute, may give
tribute to Caesar?" Their pride and covetousness made them loth to pay
taxes, and then they would have it a question whether it was lawful or no. Now
if Christ should say that
it was lawful the people would take it ill, for
they expected that he who set up to be the Messiah should in the first place
free them from the Roman yoke, and stand by them in denying tribute to Caesar.
But if he should say that
it was not lawful, as they expected he would
(for if he had not been of that mind they thought he could not have been so much
the darling of the people as he was), then they should have something to accuse
him of to the governor, which was what they wanted.
IV. His evading the snare which they laid for him:
He
perceived their craftiness, v. 23. Note, Those that are most crafty in their
designs against Christ and his gospel cannot with all their art conceal them
from his cognizance. He can see through the most politic disguises, and so break
through the most dangerous snare; for
surely in vain is the net spread in the
sight of any bird. He did not give them a direct answer, but reproved them
for offering to impose upon him
Why tempt ye me? and called for a
piece
of money, current money with the merchants
Show me a penny; and
asked them whose money it was, whose stamp it bore, who coined it. They owned,
"It is Caesar's money." "Why them," saith Christ,
"you should first have asked whether it was lawful to
pay and
receive
Caesar's money among yourselves, and to admit that to be the instrument of
your commerce. But, having granted this by a common consent, you are concluded
by your own act, and, no doubt, you ought to give tribute to him who furnished
you with this convenience for your trade, protects you in it, and lends you the
sanction of his authority for the value of your money. You must therefore
render
to Caesar the things that are Caesar's. In civil things you ought to
submit to the civil powers, and so, if Caesar protects you in your civil rights
by laws and the administration of justice, you ought to
pay him tribute;
but in sacred things God only is your King. You are not bound to be of Caesar's
religion; you must
render to God the things that are God's, must
worship and adore him only, and not any golden image that Caesar sets up;"
and we must worship and adore him in such way as he had appointed, and not
according to the inventions of Caesar. It is God only that has authority to say
My
son, give me thy heart.
V. The confusion they were hereby put into, v. 26. 1. The snare
is broken;
They could not take hold of his words before the people. They
could not fasten upon any thing wherewith to incense either the governor or the
people against him. 2. Christ is honoured; even the wrath of man is made to
praise him. They
marvelled at his answer, it was so discreet and
unexceptionable, and such an evidence of that wisdom and sincerity which make
the face to shine. 3. Their mouths are stopped; they
held their peace.
They had nothing to object, and durst ask him nothing else, lest he should shame
and expose them.
Verses 27-38
This discourse with the Sadducees we had before, just as it is
here, only that the description Christ gives of the future state is somewhat
more full and large here. Observe here,
I. In every age there have been men of corrupt minds, that have
endeavoured to subvert the fundamental principles of revealed religion. As there
are deists now, who call themselves
free-thinkers, but are really
false-thinkers;
so there were Sadducees in our Saviour's time, who bantered the doctrine of
the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come, though they were
plainly revealed in the Old Testament, and were articles of the Jewish faith.
The Sadducees deny that
there is any resurrection, any
future state,
so
anastasis may signify; not only no
return of the body
to life, but no continuance of the soul
in life,
no world of spirits, no state of recompence and retribution for what was done in
the body. Take away this, and all religion falls to the ground.
II. It is common for those that design to undermine any truth of
God to perplex it, and load it with difficulties. So these Sadducees did; when
they would weaken people's faith in the doctrine of the resurrection, they put
a question upon the supposition of it, which they thought could not be answered
either way to satisfaction. The case perhaps was matter of fact, at least it
might be so, of a woman that had
seven husbands. Now in the resurrection
whose
wife shall she be? whereas it was not at all material whose she was, for
when death puts an end to that relation it is not to be resumed.
III. There is a great deal of difference between the state of
the children of men on earth and that of the children of God in heaven, a vast
unlikeness between
this world and
that world; and we wrong
ourselves, and wrong the truth of Christ, when we form our notions of that world
of spirits by our present enjoyments in this world of sense.
1. The children of men in this world
marry, and are given in
marriage, hyioi tou aioµnos toutou
the
children of this age, this generation, both good and bad, marry themselves
and give their children in marriage. Much of our business in this world is to
raise and build up families, and to provide for them. Much of our pleasure in
this world is in our relations, our wives and children; nature inclines to it.
Marriage is instituted for the comfort of human life, here in this state where
we carry bodies about with us. It is likewise a remedy against fornication, that
natural desires might not become brutal, but be under direction and control. The
children of this world are dying and going off the stage, and
therefore
they marry and give their children in marriage, that they may furnish the world
of mankind with needful recruits, that as one generation passeth away another
may come, and that they may have some of their own offspring to leave the fruit
of their labours to, especially that the chosen of God in future ages may be
introduced, for it is a
godly seed that is sought by
marriage
(Mal. 2:15), a seed to serve the Lord, that shall be a
generation to him.
2. The world to come is quite another thing; it is called
that
world, by way of emphasis and eminency. Note, There are more worlds than
one; a present visible world, and a future invisible world; and it is the
concern of every one of us to compare worlds,
this world and
that
world, and give the preference in our thoughts and cares to that which
deserves them. Now observe,
(1.) Who shall be the inhabitants of
that world: They
that shall be
accounted worthy to obtain it, that is, that are interested
in
Christ's merit, who
purchased it for us, and have a holy
meetness
for it wrought in them by the Spirit, whose business it is to prepare us for it.
They have not a
legal worthiness, upon account of any thing in them or
done by them, but an
evangelical worthiness, upon account of the
inestimable price which Christ paid for the
redemption of the purchased
possession. It is a worthiness imputed by which we are glorified, as well as
righteousness imputed by which we are justified;
kataxioµthentes,
they are
made agreeable to that world. The disagreeableness that there is
in the corrupt nature is taken away, and the dispositions of the soul are by the
grace of God conformed to that state. They are by grace made and
counted
worthy to obtain that world; it intimates some
difficulty in reaching
after it, and danger of coming short. We must
so run as that we may
obtain. They shall obtain the
resurrection from the dead, that is, the
blessed resurrection; for that of
condemnation (as Christ calls it, Jn.
5:29), is rather a resurrection
to death, a second death, an eternal
death, than
from death.
(2.) What shall be the happy state of the inhabitants of that
world we cannot express or conceive, 1 Co. 2:9. See what Christ here says of it.
[1.] They
neither marry nor are given in marriage. Those that have
entered into the joy of their Lord are entirely taken up with that, and need not
the joy of the bridegroom in his bride. The love in that world of love is all
seraphic, and such as eclipses and loses the purest and most pleasing loves we
entertain ourselves with in this world of sense. Where the body itself shall be
a spiritual body, the delights of sense will all be banished; and where there is
a perfection of holiness there is no occasion for marriage as a preservative
from sin. Into the
new Jerusalem there enters nothing that defiles. [2.]
They cannot
die any more; and this comes in as a reason why they do not
marry.
In this dying world there must be marriage, in order to the filling up of the
vacancies made by death; but, where there are no burials, there is no need of
weddings. This crowns the comfort of that world that there is no more death
there, which sullies all the beauty, and damps all the comforts, of this world.
Here death reigns, but thence it is for ever excluded. [3.] They are
equal
unto the angels. In the other evangelists it was said, They are
as the
angels
oµs angeloi, but here they
are said to be
equal to the angels, isangeloi
angels'
peers; they have a glory and bliss no way inferior to that of the holy
angels. They shall see the same sight, be employed in the same work, and share
in the same joys, with the holy angels. Saints, when they come to heaven, shall
be
naturalized, and, though by nature strangers, yet, having
obtained
this freedom with a
great sum, which Christ paid for them, they have
in all respects equal privileges with them that were free-born, the angels that
are the natives and aborigines of that country. They shall be companions with
the angels, and converse with those blessed spirits that love them dearly, and
with an innumerable company, to whom they are now come in faith, hope, and love.
[4.] They
are the children of God, and so they are as the angels, who are
called the
sons of God. In the
inheritance of sons, the
adoption
of sons will be completed. Hence believers are said to
wait for the
adoption, even
the redemption of the body, Rom. 8:23. For till the
body is redeemed from the grave the adoption is not completed.
Now are we the
sons of God, 1 Jn. 3:2. We have the nature and disposition of sons, but that
will not be
perfected till we come to heaven. [5.] They are the
children
of the resurrection, that is, they are made capable of the employments and
enjoyments of the future state; they are
born to that world, belong to
that family, had their education for it here, and shall there have their
inheritance in it. They are the
children of God, being the
children of
the resurrection. Note, God owns those only for his children that are the
children of the resurrection, that are born from above, are allied to the world
of spirits, and prepared for that world, the children of that family.
IV. It is an undoubted truth that there is another life after
this, and there were eminent discoveries made of this truth in the early ages of
the church (v. 37, 38):
Moses showed this, as it was shown to Moses at the
bush, and he hath shown it to us, when
he calleth the Lord, as the
Lord calleth himself, the
God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God
of Jacob. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, were then
dead as to our world;
they had departed out of it many years before, and their bodies were turned into
dust in the cave of Machpelah; how then could God say, not
I was, but
I
am the
God or Abraham? It is absurd that the living God and Fountain
of life should continue related to them as their God, if there were no more of
them in being than what lay in that cave, undistinguished from common dust. We
must therefore conclude that they were then in being in another world; for
God
is not the God of the dead, but of the living. Luke here adds,
For all
live unto him, that is, all who, like them, are true believers; though they
are dead, yet they
do live; their souls, which
return to God who gave
them (Eccl. 12:7), live to him as the Father of spirits: and their bodies
shall live again at the end of time by the power of God; for he calleth things
that are not as though they were, because he is the God that
quickens the
dead, Rom. 4:17. But there is more in it yet; when God called himself
the
God of these patriarchs, he meant that he was their felicity and portion, a
God
all-sufficient to them (Gen. 17:1), their
exceeding great reward,
Gen. 15:1. Now it is plain by their history that he never did that for them in
this world which would answer the
true intent and
full extent of
that great undertaking, and therefore there must be another life after this, in
which he will do that for them that will amount to a
discharge in full of
that promisethat he would be to them a God, which he is able to do, for
all
live to him, and he has wherewithal to make every soul happy that lives to
him; enough for
all, enough for
each.
Verses 39-47
The scribes were
students in the law, and
expositors
of it to the people, men in reputation for wisdom and honour, but the generality
of them were enemies to Christ and his gospel. Now here we have some of them
attending him, and four things we have in these verses concerning them, which we
had before:
I. We have them here commending the reply which Christ made to
the Sadducees concerning the resurrection:
Certain of the scribes said,
Master, thou hast well said, v. 39. Christ had the testimony of his
adversaries that he said well; and
therefore the scribes were his enemies
because he would not
conform to the traditions of the elders, but yet
when he vindicated the fundamental practices of religion, and appeared in the
defence of them, even the scribes commended his performance, and owned that he
said well. Many that call themselves Christians come short even of this spirit.
II. We have them here struck with an awe of Christ, and of his
wisdom and authority (v. 40):
They durst not ask him any questions at all,
because they say that he was too hard for all that contended with him. His own
disciples, though weak, yet, being willing to receive his doctrine, durst
ask
him any question; but the Sadducees, who contradicted and cavilled at his
doctrine, durst ask him none.
III. We have them here
puzzled and run aground with a
question concerning the Messiah, v. 41. It was plain by many scriptures that
Christ was to be the
Son of David; even the blind man knew this (ch.
18:39); and yet it was plain that David called the Messiah
his Lord (v.
42, 44), his owner, and ruler, and benefactor:
The Lord said to my Lord.
God said it to the Messiah, Ps. 110:1. Now if he be
his Son, why doth he
call him
his Lord? If he be
his Lord, why do
we call him
his
Son? This he left them to consider of, but they could not reconcile this
seeming contradiction; thanks be to God, we can; that Christ,
as God, was
David's Lord, but Christ,
as man, was David's Son. He was both the
root
and the
offspring of David, Rev. 22:16. By his
human nature he was
the
offspring of David, a branch of his family; by his
divine nature
he was the
root of David, from whom he had his being and life, and all
the supplies of grace.
IV. We have them here described in their black characters, and a
public caution given to the disciples to take heed of them, v. 45-47. This we
had, just as it is here, Mk. 12:38, and more largely Mt. 23. Christ bids his
disciples
beware of the scribes, that is,
1. "Take heed of being drawn
into sin by them, of
learning their way, and going into their measures; beware of such a spirit as
they are governed by. Be not you such in the Christian church as they are in the
Jewish church."
2. "Take heed of being
brought into trouble by them,"
in the same sense that he had said (Mt. 10:17),
"Beware of men, for they
will deliver you up to the councils; beware of the scribes, for they will do
so. Beware of them, for," (1.) "They are
proud and
haughty.
They
desire to walk about the streets in
long robes, as those that
are above business (for men of business went with their
loins girt up),
and as those that take state, and take place."
Cedant arma togaeLet
arms yield to the gown. They loved in their hearts to have people make their
obeisance to them
in the markets, that many might see what respect was
paid them; and were very proud of the precedency that was given them in all
places of concourse. They
loved the highest seats in the synagogues and
the
chief rooms at feasts, and, when they were placed in them, looked upon
themselves with great conceit and upon all about them with great contempt.
I
sit as a queen. (2.) "They are
covetous and oppressive, and make
their religion a cloak and cover for crime." They
devour widows'
houses, get their estates into their hands, and then by some trick or other
make them their own, or they live upon them, and eat up what they have; and
widows
are an easy prey to them, because they are apt to be deluded by their specious
pretences:
for a show they make long prayers, perhaps long prayers with
the widows when they are in sorrow, as if they had not only a
piteous but
a
pious concern for them, and thus endeavour to ingratiate themselves
with them, and get their money and effects into their hands. Such devout men may
surely be trusted with
untold gold; but they will give such an account of
it as they think fit.
Christ reads them their doom in a few words:
These shall
receive a more abundant judgment, a double damnation, both for their abuse
of the poor
widows, whose houses they devoured, and for their abuse of
religion, and particularly of prayer, which they had made use of as a pretence
for the more plausible and effectual carrying on of their worldly and wicked
projects; for
dissembled piety is double iniquity.
Chapter 20:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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