Chapter 21:
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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 21
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. The notice Christ took, and the
approbation he gave, of a poor widow that cast two mites into the treasury (v.
1-4). II. A prediction of future events, in answer to his disciples' enquiries
concerning them (v. 5-7). 1. Of what should happen between that and the
destruction of Jerusalemfalse Christs arising, bloody wars and persecutions
of Christ's followers (v. 8-19). 2. Of that destruction itself (v. 20-24).
3. Of the second coming of Jesus Christ to judge the world, under the type and
figure of that (v. 25-33). III. A practical application of this, by way of
caution and counsel (v. 34-36), and an account of Christ's preaching and the
people's attendance on it (v. 37, 38).
Verses 1-4
This short passage of story we had before in Mark. It is thus
recorded twice, to teach us, 1. That
charity to the poor is a
main
matter in religion. Our Lord Jesus took all occasions to commend it and
recommend it. He had just mentioned the barbarity of the scribes, who devoured
poor
widows (ch. 20); and perhaps this is designed as an aggravation of it, that
the poor widows were the best benefactors to the public funds, of which the
scribes had the disposal. 2. That Jesus Christ has his eye upon us, to observe
what we give to the poor, and what we contribute to works of piety and charity.
Christ, though intent upon his preaching, looked up, to see what
gifts were
cast into the treasury, v. 1. He observes whether we give largely and
liberally, in proportion to what we have, or whether we be sneaking and paltry
in it; nay, his eye goes further, he observes whether we give charitably and
with a willing mind, or grudgingly and with reluctance. This should make us
afraid of coming short of our duty in this matter; men may be deceived with
excuses which Christ knows to be frivolous. And this should encourage us to be
abundant in it, without desiring that men should know it; it is enough that
Christ does; he sees in secret, and will reward openly. 3. That Christ observes
and accepts the charity of the poor in a particular manner. Those that have
nothing
to give may yet
do a great deal in charity by ministering
to the poor, and helping them, and begging for them, that cannot
help
themselves, or
beg for themselves. But here was one that was herself poor
and yet
gave what little she had to the treasury. It was but
two
mites, which make a farthing; but Christ magnified it as a piece of charity
exceeding all the rest:
She has cast in more than they all. Christ does
not blame her for indiscretion, in giving what she wanted herself, nor for
vanity in giving among the rich to the treasury; but commended her liberality,
and her willingness to part with what little she had for the glory of God, which
proceeded from a belief of and dependence upon God's providence to take care
of her.
Jehovah-jirehthe Lord will provide. 4. That, whatever may be
called
the offerings of God, we ought to have a respect for, and to our
power, yea, and beyond our power, to contribute cheerfully to. These have
cast
in unto the offerings of God. What is given to the support of the ministry
and the gospel, to the spreading and propagating of religion, the education of
youth, the release of prisoners, the relief of widows and strangers, and the
maintenance of poor families, is given to the
offerings of God, and it
shall be so accepted and recompensed.
Verses 5-19
See here, I. With what admiration some spoke of the external
pomp and magnificence of the temple, and they were some of Christ's own
disciples too; and they took notice of it to him
how it was adorned with
goodly stones and gifts, v. 5. The outside was built up with goodly stones,
and within it was beautified and enriched with the
presents that were
offered up for that purpose, and were
hung up in it. They thought their
Master should be as much affected with those things as they were, and should as
much regret the destruction of them as they did. When we
speak of the temple,
it should be of the presence of God in it, and of the ordinances of God
administered in it, and the communion which his people there have with him. It
is a poor thing, when we speak of the church, to let our discourse dwell upon
its pomps and revenues, and the dignities and powers of its officers and rulers;
for the king's daughter is all
glorious within.
II. With what contempt Christ spoke of them, and with what
assurance of their being all made desolate very shortly (v. 6):
"As for
those things which you behold, those dear things which you are so much in
love with,
behold, the days will come, and some now living may live to
see them,
in which there shall not be left one stone upon another. This
building, which seems so beautiful that one would think none could, for pity,
pull it down, and which seems so strong that one would think none would be able
to pull it down, shall yet be utterly ruined; and this shall be done as soon as
ever the spiritual temple of the gospel church (the substance of that shadow)
begins to flourish in the world." Did we by faith foresee the blasting and
withering of all external glory, we should not set our hearts upon it as those
do that cannot see, or will not look, so far before them.
III. With what curiosity those about him enquire concerning the
time when this great desolation should be:
Master, when shall these things
be? v. 7. It is natural to us to covet to know future things and the time of
them, which
it is not for us to know, when we are more concerned to ask
what is our duty in the prospect of these things, and how we may prepare for
them, which it is for us to know. They enquire
what sign there shall be when
these things shall come to pass. They ask not for a
present sign, to
confirm the prediction itself, and to induce them to believe it (Christ's word
was enough for that), but what the future signs will be of the approaching
accomplishment of the prediction, by which they may be put in mind of it. These
signs
of the times Christ had taught them to observe.
IV. With what clearness and fulness Christ answers their
enquiries, as far as was necessary to direct them in their duty; for all
knowledge is desirable as far as it is in order to practice.
1. They must expect to hear of false Christs and false prophets
appearing, and false prophecies given out (v. 8):
Many shall come in my name;
he does not mean
in the name of Jesus, though there were some deceivers
who pretended commissions from him (as Acts 19:13), but usurping the title and
character of the Messiah. Many pretended to be the deliverers of the Jewish
church and nation from the Romans, and to fix the time when the deliverance
should be wrought, by which multitudes were drawn into a snare, to their ruin.
They shall say,
hoti egoµ eimi
I
am he, or
I am, as if they would assume that incommunicable name of
God, by which he made himself known when he came to deliver Israel out of Egypt,
I am; and, to encourage people to follow them, they added,
"The
time draws near when the kingdom shall be restored to Israel, and all who
will follow me shall share in it." Now as to this, he gives them a needful
caution (1.)
"Take heed that you be not deceived; do not imagine
that I shall myself come again in external glory, to take possession of the
throne of kingdoms. No, you must not expect any such thing, for my kingdom is
not of this world." When they asked solicitously and eagerly,
Master,
when shall these things be? the first word Christ said was,
Take heed
that you be not deceived. Note, Those that are most
inquisitive in
the things of God (though it is very good to be so) are in most danger of being
imposed upon, and have most need to be upon their guard. (2.)
"Go you
not after them. You know the Messiah is come, and you are not to look for
any other; and therefore do not so much as hearken to them, nor have any thing
to do with them." If we are sure that Jesus is the Christ, and his doctrine
is the
gospel, of God, we must be deaf to all intimations of another
Christ and another gospel.
2. They must expect to hear of great commotions in the nations,
and many terrible judgments inflicted upon the Jews and their neighbours. (1.)
There shall be
bloody wars (v. 10):
Nation shall rise against nation,
one part of the Jewish nation against another, or rather the whole against the
Romans. Encouraged by the false Christs, they shall wickedly endeavour to throw
off the Roman yoke, by taking up arms against the Roman powers; when they had
rejected the liberty with which Christ would have made them free they were left
to themselves, to grasp at their civil liberty in ways that were
sinful,
and therefore could not be
successful. (2.) There shall be
earthquakes,
great earthquakes,
in divers places, which shall not only frighten
people, but destroy towns and houses, and bury many in the ruins of them. (3.)
There shall be
famines and
pestilences, the common effects of war,
which destroys the fruits of the earth, and, by exposing men to ill weather and
reducing them to ill diet, occasions infectious diseases. God has various ways
of punishing a provoking people. The four sorts of judgments which the
Old-Testament prophets so often speak of are threatened by the New-Testament
prophets too; for, though spiritual judgments are more commonly inflicted in
gospel times, yet God makes use of temporal judgments also. (4.) There shall be
fearful
sights and
great signs from heaven, uncommon appearances in the
clouds, comets and blazing stars, which frighten the ordinary sort of beholders,
and have always been looked upon as
ominous, and
portending
something
bad. Now, as to these, the caution he gives them is,
"Be
not terrified. Others will be frightened at them, but be not you frightened,
v. 2. As to the
fearful sights, let them not be fearful to you, who look
above the visible heavens to the throne of God's government in the highest
heavens.
Be not dismayed at the signs of heaven, for the heathen are dismayed
at them, Jer. 10:2. And, as to the
famines and
pestilences,
you fall into the hands of God, who has promised to those who are his that
in
the days of famine they shall be satisfied, and that he will keep them from
the
noisome pestilence; trust therefore in him, and
be not afraid.
Nay, when you hear of wars, when without are fightings and within are fears, yet
then
be not you terrified; you know the worst that any of these judgments
can do to you, and therefore be not afraid of them; for," [1.] "It is
your interest to
make the best of that which is, for all your fears
cannot alter it:
these things must first come to pass; there is no
remedy; it will be your wisdom to make yourselves easy by accommodating
yourselves to them." [2.] "There is
worse behind; flatter not
yourselves with a fancy that you will soon see an end of these troubles, no, not
so soon as you think of:
the end is not by and by, not
suddenly.
Be not
terrified, for, if you begin so quickly to be discouraged, how
will you bear up under what is yet before you?"
3. They must expect to be themselves for
signs and
wonders
in Israel; their being
persecuted would be a prognostic of the
destruction of the city and temple, which he had now foretold. Nay, this would
be the
first sign of their ruin coming:
"Before all these, they
shall lay their hands on you. The judgment shall begin at the house of God;
you must smart first, for warning to them, that, if they have any consideration,
they may consider,
If this be done to the green tree, what shall be done to
the dry? See 1 Pt. 4:17, 18. But this is not all; this must be considered
not only as the
suffering of the
persecuted, but as the
sin
of the
persecutors. Before God's judgments are brought upon them, they
shall fill up the measure of their iniquity by
laying their hands on you."
Note, The ruin of a people is always introduced by their sin; and nothing
introduces a surer or sorer ruin than the sin of persecution. This is a
sign
that God's wrath is coming upon a people to the uttermost when their
wrath
against the servants of God
comes to the uttermost. Now as to this,
(1.) Christ tells them what hard things they should suffer for
his name's sake, much to the same purport with what he had told them when he
first called them to follow him, Mt. 10: They should know the wages of it, that
they might
sit down and count the cost. St. Paul, who was the greatest
labourer and sufferer of them all, not being now among them, was told by Christ
himself what
great things he should suffer for his
name's sake
(Acts 9:16), so necessary is it that all who will live godly in Christ Jesus
should count upon persecution. The Christians, having themselves been originally
Jews, and still retaining an equal veneration with them for the Old Testament
and all the essentials of their religion, and differing only in ceremony, might
expect fair quarter with them; but Christ bids them not expect it: "No,
they shall be the most forward to
persecute you." [1.] "They
shall use their own church-power against you:
They shall deliver you up to
the synagogues to be scourged there, and stigmatized with their
anathemas."
[2.] "They shall incense the magistrates against you: they shall
deliver
you into prisons, that you may be
brought before kings and rulers for my
name's sake, and be punished by them." [2.] "Your own relations
will betray you (v. 16),
your parents, brethren, and kinsfolks, and friends;
so that you will not know whom to put a confidence in, or where to be safe."
[4.] "Your religion will be made a capital crime, and you will be called to
resist unto blood. Some of you shall they cause to be put to death; so
far must you be from expecting honour and wealth that you must expect nothing
but death in its most frightful shapes, death in all its dreadful pomp. Nay."
[5.]
"You shall be hated of all men for my name's sake." This
is worse than death itself, and was fulfilled when the apostles were not only
appointed
to death, but made a
spectacle to the world, and counted as the
filth
of the world, and the
offscouring of all things, which every body
loathes, 1 Co. 4:9, 13. They were hated of
all men, that is, of all bad
men, who could not bear the light of the gospel (because it discovered their
evil deeds), and therefore hated those who brought in that light, flew in their
faces, and would have pulled them to pieces. The wicked world, which hated to be
reformed, hated Christ the great Reformer, and all that were his, for his sake.
The rulers of the Jewish church, knowing very well that if the gospel obtained
among the Jews their usurped abused power was at an end, raised all their forces
against it, put it into an ill name, filled people's minds with prejudices
against it, and so made the preachers and professors of it odious to the mob.
(2.) He encourages them to bear up under their trials, and to go
on in their work, notwithstanding the opposition they would meet with.
[1.] God will bring glory both to himself and them out of their
sufferings:
"It shall turn to you for a testimony, v. 13. Your being
set up thus for a mark, and publicly
persecuted, will make you the more
taken notice of and your doctrine and miracles the more enquired into; your
being brought
before kings and rulers will give you an opportunity of
preaching the gospel to them, who otherwise would never have come within hearing
of it; your suffering such severe things, and being so hated by the worst of
men, men of the most vicious lives, will be a testimony that you are good, else
you would not have such bad men for your enemies; your courage, and
cheerfulness, and constancy under your sufferings will be a testimony for you,
that you believe what you preach, that you are supported by a divine power, and
that the Spirit of God and glory rests upon you."
[2.] "God will stand by you, and own you, and assist you,
in your trials; you are his advocates, and you shall be well furnished with
instructions, v. 14, 15. Instead of setting your hearts on work to contrive an
answer to informations, indictments, articles, accusations, and interrogatories,
that will be exhibited against you in the ecclesiastical and civil courts, on
the contrary,
settle it in your hearts, impress it upon them, take pains
with them to persuade them
not to meditate before what you shall answer;
do not
depend upon your own wit and ingenuity, your own prudence and
policy, and do not
distrust or
despair of the immediate and
extraordinary aids of the divine grace. Think not to bring yourselves off in the
cause of Christ as you would in a cause of your own, by your own parts and
application, with the common assistance of divine Providence, but promise
yourselves, for I promise you, the special assistance of divine grace:
I will
give you a mouth and wisdom." This proves Christ to be God; for it is
God's prerogative to
give wisdom, and he it is that
made man's
mouth. Note,
First, A
mouth and
wisdom together
completely fit a man both for services and sufferings;
wisdom to know
what to say, and a
mouth wherewith to say it as it should be said. It is
a great happiness to have both
matter and
words wherewith to
honour God and do good; to have in the mind a
storehouse well furnished
with things
new and old, and a
door of utterance by which
to
bring them forth. Secondly, Those that plead Christ's cause may depend
upon him to give them
a mouth and wisdom, which way soever they are
called to plead it, especially when they are brought before magistrates for his
name's sake. It is not said that he will send an angel from heaven to answer
for them, though he could do this, but that he will give them a
mouth and
wisdom to enable them to answer for themselves, which puts a greater
honour upon them, which requires them to use the gifts and graces Christ
furnishes them with, and redounds the more to the glory of God, who
stills
the enemy and the avenger out of the mouths of babes and sucklings. Thirdly,
When Christ gives to his witnesses a
mouth and wisdom, they are enabled
to say that both for him and themselves which
all their adversaries are not
able to gainsay or resist, so that they are silenced, and put to confusion.
This was remarkably fulfilled presently after the pouring out of the Spirit, by
whom Christ gave his disciples this
mouth and
wisdom, when the
apostles were brought before the priest sand rulers, and answered them so as to
make them ashamed, Acts 4, 5, and 6.
[3.] "You shall suffer no real damage by all the hardships
they shall put upon you (v. 18):
There shall not a hair of your head perish."
Shall some of them lose their heads, and yet not lose a hair? It is a proverbial
expression, denoting the greatest indemnity and security imaginable; it is
frequently used both in the Old Testament and New, in that sense. Some think
that it refers to the preservation of the lives of all the Christians that were
among the Jews when they were cut off by the Romans; historians tell us that not
one Christian perished in that desolation. Others reconcile it with the deaths
of multitudes in the cause of Christ, and take it figuratively in the same sense
that Christ saith,
He that loseth his life for my sake shall find it.
"Not a hair of your head shall perish but,"
First, "I will
take
cognizance of it." To this end he had said (Mt. 10:30),
The
hairs of your head are all numbered; and an account is kept of them, so that
none of them shall perish but he will miss it.
Secondly, "It shall
be upon a
valuable consideration." We do not reckon that
lost
or
perishing which is laid out for good purposes, and will turn to a good
account. If we drop the body itself for Christ's name's sake, it does not
perish, but is well bestowed.
Thirdly, "It shall be abundantly
recompensed; when you come to balance profit and loss, you will find that
nothing has perished, but, on the contrary, that you have great gain in present
comforts, especially in the joys of a life eternal;" so that though we may
be losers for Christ we shall not, we cannot, be losers by him in the end.
[4.] "It is therefore your duty and interest, in the midst
of your own sufferings and those of the nation, to maintain a holy sincerity and
serenity of mind, which will keep you always easy (v. 19):
In your patience
possess ye your souls; get and keep possession of your souls." Some
read it as a promise, "You
may or
shall possess your souls."
It comes all to one. Note,
First, It is our duty and interest at all
times, especially in perilous trying times, to secure the possession of our own
souls; not only that they be not destroyed and lost for ever, but that they be
not distempered now, nor our possession of them disturbed and interrupted.
"Possess
your souls, be your own men, keep up the authority and dominion of reason,
and keep under the tumults of passion, that neither grief nor fear may tyrannize
over you, nor turn you out of the possession and enjoyment of yourselves."
In difficult times, when we can keep possession of nothing else, then let us
make that sure which may be made sure, and keep possession of our souls.
Secondly,
It is by patience, Christian patience, that we keep possession of our own souls.
"In suffering times, set patience upon the guard for the preserving of your
souls; by it keep your souls composed and in a good frame, and keep out all
those impressions which would ruffle you and put you out of temper."
Verses 20-28
Having given them an idea of the times for about thirty-eight
years next ensuing, he here comes to show them what all those things would issue
in at last, namely, the destruction of Jerusalem, and the utter dispersion of
the Jewish nation, which would be a little day of judgment, a type and figure of
Christ's second coming, which was not so fully spoken of here as in the
parallel place (Mt. 24), yet glanced at; for the destruction of Jerusalem would
be as it were the destruction of the world to those whose hearts were bound up
in it.
I. He tells them that they should see Jerusalem besieged,
compassed
with armies (v. 20), the Roman armies; and, when they saw this, they might
conclude that
its desolation was nigh, for in this the siege would
infallibly
end, though it might be a long siege. Note, As in mercy, so in
judgment, when God begins, he will make an end.
II. He warns them, upon this signal given, to shift for their
own safety (v. 21):
"Then let them that are in Judea quit the
country and
flee to the mountains; let them that are in the midst of it"
(Of Jerusalem)
"depart out, before the city be closely shut up, and"
(as we say now) "before the trenches be opened; and let not them that are
in the countries and villages about enter into the city, thinking to be safe
there. Do you abandon a city and country which you see God has abandoned and
given up to ruin.
Come out of her, my people."
III. He foretels the terrible havoc that should be made of the
Jewish nation (v. 22):
Those are the days of vengeance so often spoken of
by the Old-Testament prophets, which would complete the ruin of that provoking
people. All their predictions must now be fulfilled, and the blood of all the
Old-Testament martyrs must now be required.
All things that are written must
be fulfilled at length. After days of patience long abused, there will come
days
of vengeance; for reprieves are not pardons. The greatness of that
destruction is set forth, 1. By the inflicting cause of it. It is
wrath upon
this people, the wrath of God, that will kindle this devouring consuming
fire. 2. By the particular terror it would be to women with child, and poor
mothers that are nurses.
Woe to them, not only because they are most
subject to frights, and least able to shift for their own safety, but because it
will be a very great torment to them to think of having borne and nursed
children for the murderers. 3. By the general confusion that should be all the
nation over. There shall be
great distress in the land, for men will not
know what course to take, nor how to help themselves.
IV. He describes the issue of the struggles between the Jews and
the Romans, and what they will come to at last; in short, 1. Multitudes of them
shall
fall by the edge of the sword. It is computed that in those wars of the Jews
there fell by the sword above eleven hundred thousand. And the siege of
Jerusalem was, in effect, a military execution. 2. The rest shall be
led away
captive; not into
one nations, as when they were conquered by the
Chaldeans, which gave them an opportunity of keeping together, but
into all
nations, which made it impossible for them to
correspond with each
other, much less to
incorporate. 3. Jerusalem itself was
trodden down
of the Gentiles. The Romans, when they had made themselves masters of it,
laid it quite waste, as a
rebellious and bad city, hurtful to kings and
provinces, and therefore hateful to them.
V. He describes the great frights that people should generally
be in. Many frightful
sights shall be
in the sun, moon, and stars,
prodigies in the heavens, and here in this lower world, the
sea and the waves
roaring, with terrible storms and tempests, such as had not been known, and
above the ordinary working of natural causes. The effect of this shall be
universal confusion and consternation
upon the earth, distress of nations
with perplexity, v. 25. Dr. Hammond understands by the
nations the
several governments or tetrarchies of the Jewish nation, Judea, Samaria, and
Galilee; these shall be brought to the last extremity.
Men's hearts shall
fail them for fear (v. 26),
apopsychontoµn
anthroµpoµn
men being quite exanimated, dispirited,
unsouled,
dying away for fear. Thus those are
killed all the day long by whom
Christ's apostles were so (Rom. 8:36), that is, they are all the day long in
fear of being killed; sinking under that which lies upon them, and yet still
trembling for fear of worse, and
looking after those things which are coming
upon the world. When
judgment begins at the house of God, it will not
end there; it shall be as if all the world were falling in pieces; and where can
any be secure then? The
powers of heaven shall be shaken, and then the
pillars of the earth cannot but tremble. Thus shall the present Jewish policy,
religion, laws, and government, be all entirely dissolved by a series of
unparalleled calamities, attended with the utmost confusion. So Dr. Clarke. But
our Saviour makes use of these figurative expressions because at the end of time
they shall be literally accomplished, when the
heavens shall be rolled
together as a scroll, and all their powers not only shaken, but broken, and
the
earth and
all the works that are therein shall be burnt up, 2.
Pet. 3:10, 12. As that day was all terror and destruction to the unbelieving
Jews, so the great day will be to all unbelievers.
VI. He makes this to be a kind of
appearing of the Son of
man: Then shall they see the Son of man coming in a cloud, with power and great
glory, v. 27. The destruction of Jerusalem was in a particular manner an act
of Christ's judgment, the judgment committed to the Son of man; his religion
could never be thoroughly established but by the destruction of the temple, and
the abolishing of the Levitical priesthood and economy, after which even the
converted Jews, and many of the Gentiles too, were still hankering, till they
were destroyed; so that it might justly be looked upon as
a coming of the Son
of man, in power and great glory, yet not visibly, but
in the clouds;
for in executing such judgments as these
clouds and darkness are round about
him. Now this was, 1. An
evidence of the first coming of the Messiah;
so some understand it. Then the unbelieving Jews shall be confined, when it is
too late, that Jesus was the Messiah; those that would not see him coming in the
power of his grace to
save them shall be made to see him coming in the
power of his wrath to
destroy them; those that would not have him to
reign
over them shall have him to
triumph over them. 2. It was an
earnest
of his second coming.
Then in the terrors of that day they shall
see
the Son of man coming in a cloud, and all the terrors of the last day. They
shall see a
specimen of it, a faint resemblance of it. If this be so
terrible, what will that be?
VII. He encourages all the faithful disciples in reference to
the terrors of that day (v. 28):
"When these things begin to come to
pass, when Jerusalem is besieged, and every thing is concurring to the
destruction of the Jews,
then do you look
up, when others are
looking down, look heavenward, in faith, hope, and prayer, and
lift up your
heads with cheerfulness and confidence,
for your redemption draws night."
1. When Christ came to destroy the Jews, he came to redeem the Christians that
were persecuted and oppressed by them;
then had the churches rest. 2.
When he comes to judge the world at the last day, he will
redeem all that
are his, from all their grievances. And the foresight of that day is as pleasant
to all good Christians as it is terrible to the wicked and ungodly. Their death
itself is so; when they see that day approaching, they can
lift up their
heads with joy, knowing that
their redemption draws nigh, their
removal to their Redeemer.
VIII. Here is one word of prediction that looks further than the
destruction of the Jewish nation, which is not easily understood; we have it in
v. 24:
Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, till the times of the
Gentiles be fulfilled. 1. Some understand it of what is past; so Dr.
Hammond. The Gentiles, who have conquered Jerusalem, shall keep possession of
it, and it shall be purely Gentile, till the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled,
till a great part of the Gentile world shall have become Christian, and then
after Jerusalem shall have been rebuilt by Adrian the emperor, with an exclusion
of all the Jews from it, many of the Jews shall turn Christians, shall join with
the Gentile Christians, to set up a church in Jerusalem, which shall flourish
there for a long time. 2. Others understand it of what is yet to come; so Dr.
Whitby. Jerusalem shall be possessed by the Gentiles, of one sort or other, for
the most part, till the time come when the nations that yet remain infidels
shall embrace the Christian faith, when the kingdoms of this world shall become
Christ's kingdoms, and then all the Jews shall be converted. Jerusalem shall
be inhabited by them, and neither they nor their city any longer trodden down by
the Gentiles.
Verses 29-38
Here, in the close of this discourse,
I. Christ appoints his disciples to observe the signs of the
times, which they might judge by, if they had an eye to the foregoing
directions, with as much certainty and assurance as they could judge of the
approach of summer by the budding forth of the trees, v. 29-31. As in the
kingdom of nature there is a chain of causes, so in the kingdom of providence
there is a consequence of one event upon another. When we see a nation filling
up the measure of their iniquity, we may conclude that their ruin is nigh; when
we see the ruin of persecuting powers hastening on, we may thence infer that
the
kingdom of God is nigh at hand, that when the opposition given to it is
removed it shall gain ground. As we may lawfully prognosticate the change of the
seasons when second causes have begun to work, so we may, in the disposal of
events, expect something uncommon when God is already
raised up out of his
holy habitation (Zec. 2:13); then
stand still and see his salvation.
II. He charges them to look upon those things as neither
doubtful
nor
distant (for then they would not make a due impression on them), but
as
sure and very
near. The destruction of the Jewish nation, 1.
Was
near (v. 32):
This generation shall not pass away till all be
fulfilled. There were some now alive that should see it; some that now heard
the prediction of it. 2. It was
sure; the sentence was irreversible; it
was a
consumption determined; the decree was gone forth (v. 33):
"Heaven
and earth shall pass away sooner than any word of mine: nay, they certainly
shall pass away, but
my words shall not; whether they
take hold or
no, they will
take effect, and not one of them
fall to the ground,"
1 Sa. 3:19.
III. He cautions them against security and sensuality, by which
they would unfit themselves for the trying times that were coming on, and make
them to be a great surprise and terror to them (v. 34, 35):
Take heed to
yourselves. This is the word of command given to all Christ's disciples:
"Take
heed to yourselves, that you be not overpowered by temptations, nor betrayed
by your own corruptions." Note, We cannot be
safe if we be
secure.
It concerns us at
all times, but especially at
some times, to be
very cautious. See here, 1. What our
danger is: that
the day of
death and judgment should
come upon us unawares, when we do not
expect
it, and are not
prepared for it,lest, when we are called to meet our
Lord, that be found the
furthest thing from our thoughts which ought
always to be laid
nearest our hearts, lest it
come upon us as a snare;
for so
it will come upon the most of men, who
dwell upon the earth,
and mind
earthly things only, and have no converse with heaven; to them
it will be
as a snare. See Eccl. 9:12. It will be a
terror and a
destruction
to them; it will put them into an inexpressible fright, and hold them fast for a
doom yet more frightful. 2. What our
duty is, in consideration of this
danger: we must
take heed lest our hearts be overcharged, lest they be
burdened and overloaded, and so unfitted and disabled to do what must be done in
preparation for death and judgment. Two things we must watch against, lest our
hearts be overcharged with them:(1.) The indulging of the appetites of the
body, and allowing of ourselves in the gratifications of sense to an excess:
Take
heed lest you be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness, the immoderate
use of meat and drink, which burden the heart, not only with the guilt thereby
contracted, but by the ill influence which such disorders of the body have upon
the mind; they make men dull and lifeless to their duty, dead and listless in
their duty; they stupify the conscience, and cause the mind to be
unaffected
with those things that are most
affecting. (2.) The inordinate pursuit of
the good things of this world. The heart is overcharged with the
cares of
this life. The former is the snare of those that are given to their
pleasures: this is the snare of the men of business, that
will be rich.
We have need to guard on both hands, not only lest at the time when death comes,
but lest
at any time our hearts should be thus overcharged. Our caution
against sin, and our care of our own souls, must be
constant.
IV. He counsels them to prepare and get ready for this great
day, v. 36. Here see, 1. What should be
our aim: that we may be
accounted
worthy to escape all these things; that, when the judgments of God are
abroad, we may be preserved from the malignity of them; that either we may not
be involved in the common calamity or it may not be that to us which it is to
others; that in the day of death we may escape the sting of it, which is the
wrath of God, and the damnation of hell. Yet we must aim not only to
escape
that, but to
stand before the Son of man; not only to stand
acquitted
before him as our Judge (Ps. 1:5), to have boldness in the day of Christ (that
is supposed in our
escaping all those things), but to
stand before
him, to attend on him as our Master, to stand continually before his throne,
and serve him day and night in his temple (Rev. 7:15), always to
behold his
face, as the angels, Mt. 18:10. The saints are here said to be
accounted
worthy, as before, ch. 20:35. God, by the good work of his grace in them,
makes
them meet for this happiness, and, by the good will of his grace towards
them,
accounts them worthy of it: but, as Grotius here says, a great part
of our worthiness lies in an acknowledgment of our own unworthiness. 2. What
should be our
actings in these aims:
Watch therefore, and pray always.
Watching and praying must go together, Neh. 4:9. Those that would escape the
wrath to come, and make sure of the joys to come, must
watch and
pray,
and must do so always, must make it the constant business of their lives, (1.)
To keep a guard upon themselves. "Watch against sin, watch to every duty,
and to the improvement of every opportunity of doing good. Be awake, and keep
awake, in expectation of your Lord's coming, that you may be in a right frame
to receive him, and bid him welcome." (2.) To keep up their communion with
God:
"Pray always; be always in an habitual disposition to that
duty; keep up stated times for it; abound in it; pray upon all occasions."
Those shall be accounted worthy to live a life of praise in the other world that
live a life of prayer in this world.
V. In the last two verses we have an account how Christ disposed
of himself during those three or four days between his riding in triumph into
Jerusalem and the night in which he was betrayed. 1. He was
all day teaching
in the temple. Christ preached on week-days as well as sabbath days. He was
an indefatigable preacher; he preached in the face of opposition, and in the
midst of those that he knew sought occasion against him. 2. At night he went out
to lodge at a friend's house, in the mount of Olives, about a mile out of
town. It is probable that he had some friends in the city that would gladly have
lodged him, but he was willing to retire in the evening out of the noise of the
town, that he might have more time for secret devotion, now that his hour was at
hand. 3. Early in the morning he was in the temple again, where he had a morning
lecture for those that were willing to attend it; and the people were forward to
hear one that they saw forward to preach (v. 38):
They all came early in the
morning, flocking to the temple, like doves to their windows,
to hear
him, though the chief priests and scribes did all they could to prejudice
them against him. Sometimes the taste and relish which serious, honest, plain
people have of good preaching are more to be valued and judged by than the
opinion of the witty and learned, and those in authority.
Chapter 21:
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