Chapter 3:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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 3
Complete Concise
Nothing is related concerning our Lord Jesus from his twelfth
year to his entrance on his thirtieth year. We often think it would have been a
pleasure and advantage to us if we had journals, or at least annuls, of
occurrences concerning him; but we have as much as Infinite Wisdom thought fit
to communicate to us, and, if we improve not that, neither should we have
improved more if we had had it. The great intention of the evangelists was to
give us an account of the gospel of Christ, which we are to believe, and by
which we hope for salvation: now that began in the ministry and baptism of John,
and therefore they hasten to give us an account of that. We could wish, perhaps,
that Luke had wholly passed by what was related by Matthew and Mark, and had
written only what was new, as he has done in his two first chapters. But it was
the will of the Spirit that some things should be established out of the mouth,
not only of two, but of three witnesses; and we must not reckon it a needless
repetition, nor shall we do so if we renew out meditations upon these things,
with suitable affections. In this chapter we have, I. The beginning of John's
baptism, and the scope and intention of it (v. 1-6). His exhortation to the
multitude (v. 7-9), and the particular instructions he gave to those who desired
to be told their duty (v. 10-14). II. The notice he gave them of the approach
of the Messiah (v. 15-18), to which is added (though it happened after what
follows) the mention of his imprisonment (v. 19-20). III. Christ coming to be
baptized of John, and his entrance therein upon the execution of his prophetical
office (v. 21, 22). IV. His pedigree and genealogy recorded up to Adam (v. 23-38).
Verses 1-14
John's baptism introducing a new dispensation, it was
requisite that we should have a particular account of it. Glorious things were
said of John, what a distinguished favourite of Heaven he should be, and what a
great blessing to this earth (ch. 1:15, 17); but we lost him in the deserts, and
there he remains until
the day of his showing unto Israel, ch. 1:80. And
now at last that day dawns, and a welcome day it was to them that waited for it
more than they that waited for the morning. Observe here,
I. The date of the beginning of John's baptism, when it was
that he appeared; this is here taken notice of, which was not by the other
evangelists, that the truth of the thing might be confirmed by the exact fixing
of the time. And it is dated,
1. By the government of the heathen, which the Jews were under,
to show that they were a conquered people, and therefore it was time for the
Messiah to come to set up a spiritual kingdom, and an eternal one, upon the
ruins of all the temporal dignity and dominion of David and Judah.
(1.) It is dated by the reign of the Roman emperor; it was in
the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar, the third of the twelve Caesars, a very
bad man, given to covetousness, drunkenness, and cruelty; such a man is
mentioned first (saith Dr. Lightfoot), as it were, to teach us what to look for
from that cruel and abominable city wherein Satan reigned in all ages and
successions. The people of the Jews, after a long struggle, were of late made a
province of the empire, and were under the dominion of this Tiberius; and that
country which once had made so great a figure, and had many nations tributaries
to it, in the reigns of David and Solomon, is now itself an inconsiderable
despicable part of the Roman empire, and rather trampled upon than triumphed in.
En quo discordia cives, Perduxit miseros
What dire effects from civil discord flow!
The lawgiver was now departed from between Judah's feet; and,
as an evidence of that, their public acts are dated by the reign of the Roman
emperor, and therefore now Shiloh must come.
(2.) It is dated by the governments of the viceroys that ruled
in the several parts of the Holy Land under the Roman emperor, which was another
badge of their servitude, for they were all foreigners, which bespeaks a sad
change with that people whose
governors used to be
of themselves (Jer.
30:21), and it was their glory.
How is the gold become dim! [1.] Pilate
is here said to be the governor, president, or procurator, of Judea. This
character is given of him by some other writers, that he was a wicked man, and
one that made no conscience of a lie. He reigned ill, and at last was displaced
by Vitellius, president of Syria, and sent to Rome, to answer for his
mal-administrations. [2.] The other three are called
tetrarchs, some
think from the countries which they had the command of, each of them being over
a
fourth part of that which had been entirely under the government of
Herod the Great. Others think that they are so called from the post of honour
they held in the government; they had the
fourth place, or were
fourth-rate
governors: the emperor was the
first, the
pro-consul, who governed
a province, the
second, a
king the
third, and a
tetrarch
the
fourth. So Dr. Lightfoot.
2. By the government of the Jews among themselves, to show that
they were a corrupt people, and that therefore it was time that the Messiah
should come, to reform them, v. 2. Annas and Caiaphas were the high priests. God
had appointed that there should be but one high priest at a time, but here were
two, to serve some ill turn or other: one served one year and the other the
other year; so some. One was the high priest, and the other the
sagan, as
the Jews called him, to officiate for him when he was disabled; or, as others
say, one was high priest, and represented Aaron, and that was
Caiaphas;
Annas, the other, was
nasi, or head of the sanhedrim, and represented
Moses. But to us there is but one high priest, one Lord of all, to whom all
judgment is committed.
II. The origin and tendency of John's baptism.
1. The origin of it was
from heaven: The word of God came
unto John, v. 2. He received full commission and full instructions from God
to do what he did. It is the same expression that is used concerning the
Old-Testament prophets (Jer. 1:2); for John was a prophet, yea, more than a
prophet, and in him prophecy revived, which had been long suspended. We are not
told how
the word of the Lord came to John, whether by an angel, as to
his father, or by dream, or vision, or voice, but it was to his satisfaction,
and ought to be to ours. John is here called
the son of Zacharias, to
refer us to what the angel said to his father, when he assured him that he
should have this son. The word of the Lord came to him
in the wilderness;
for those whom God
fits he will find out, wherever they are. As the word
of the Lord is not
bound in a
prison, so it is not
lost in
a
wilderness. The
word of the Lord made its way to Ezekiel among
the captives by the river of Chebar, and to John in the isle of Patmos. John was
the
son of a priest, now entering upon the thirtieth year of his age; and
therefore, according to the custom of the temple, he was now to be admitted into
the temple-service, where he should have attended as a candidate five years
before. But God had called him to a more honourable ministry, and therefore the
Holy Ghost enrols him here, since he was not enrolled in the archives of the
temple:
John the son of Zacharias began his ministration such a time.
2. The scope and design of it were to bring all the people of
his country off from their sins and home to their God, v. 3.
He came
first
into all the country about Jordan, the neighbourhood wherein he
resided, that part of the country which Israel took possession of first, when
they entered the land of promise under Joshua's conduct; there was the banner
of the gospel first displayed. John resided in the most solitary part of the
country: but, when the word of the Lord came to him, he quitted his deserts, and
came into the inhabited country. Those that are
best pleased in their
retirements must cheerfully
exchange them, when God calls them into
places of concourse.
He came out of the wilderness
into all the
country, with some marks of distinction,
preaching a new
baptism;
not a sect, or party, but a
profession, or distinguishing badge. The
sign, or ceremony, was such as was ordinarily used among the Jews,
washing
with water, by which proselytes were sometimes admitted, or disciples to
some great master; but the meaning of it was,
repentance for the remission of
sins: that is, all that submitted to his baptism,
(1.) Were thereby obliged to
repent of their sins, to be
sorry
for what they had done amiss, and to
do so no more. The former they
professed,
and were concerned to be
sincere in their professions; the latter they
promised,
and were concerned to
make good what they promised. He bound them, not to
such ceremonious observances as were imposed by the tradition of the elders, but
to change their mind, and change their way, to
cast away from them all their
transgressions, and to
make them new hearts and to live new lives.
The design of the gospel, which now began, was to make men devout and pious,
holy and heavenly, humble and meek, sober and chaste, just and honest,
charitable and kind, and good in every relation, who had been much otherwise;
and this is to
repent.
(2.) They were thereby assured of the pardon of their sins, upon
their repentance. As the baptism he administered bound them not to submit to the
power of sin, so it sealed to them a gracious and pleadable discharge from the
guilt of sin.
Turn yourselves from all your transgressions, so iniquity shall
not be your ruin; agreeing with the word of the Lord, by the Old-Testament
prophets, Eze. 18:30.
III. The fulfilling of the scriptures in the ministry of John.
The other evangelists had referred us to the same text that is here referred to,
that of Esaias, ch. 40:3. It is
written in the book of the words of Esaias
the prophet, which he heard from God, which he spoke for God, those words of
his which were
written for the generations to come. Among them it is
found that there should be
the voice of one crying in the wilderness; and
John is that voice, a clear distinct voice, a loud voice, an articulate one; he
cries,
Prepare ye the way of the Lord, and make his paths straight. John's
business is to
make way for the entertainment of the gospel in the hearts
of the people, to bring them into such a frame and temper as that Christ might
be welcome to them, and they welcome to Christ. Luke goes further on with the
quotation than Matthew and Mark had done, and applies the following words
likewise to John's ministry (v. 5, 6),
Every valley shall be filled.
Dr. Hammond understands this as a prediction of the desolation coming upon the
people of the Jews for their infidelity: the land should be made plain by the
pioneers for the Roman army, and should be laid waste by it, and there should
then be a visible distinction made between the impenitent on the one side and
the receivers of the gospel on the other side. But it seems rather to be meant
of the gospel of Christ, of which that was the introduction. 1. The humble shall
by it be
enriched with grace:
Every valley that lies
low
and
moist shall be
filled and be
exalted. 2. The proud
shall by it be humbled; the
self-confident that stand upon
their own
bottom, and the
self-conceited that lift up
their own top,
shall have contempt put upon them:
Every mountain and hill shall be brought
low. If they repent, they are brought to the dust; if not, to the lowest
hell. 3. Sinners shall be converted to God:
The crooked ways and the
crooked
spirits shall be
made straight; for, though
none can make that
straight which God hath made crooked (Eccl. 7:13), yet God by his grace can
make that straight which sin hath made crooked. 4. Difficulties that were
hindering and discouraging in the way to heaven shall be removed:
The rough
ways shall be made smooth; and they that love God's law shall have
great
peace, and
nothing shall offend them. The gospel has made the way to
heaven
plain and easy to be
found, smooth and easy to be
walked
in. 5. The great salvation shall be more fully discovered than ever, and the
discovery of it shall spread further (v. 6):
All flesh shall see the
salvation of God; not the Jews only, but the Gentiles. All shall
see
it; they shall have it set before them and offered to them, and some of all
sorts shall
see it, enjoy it, and have the benefit of it. When way is
made for the gospel into the heart, by the captivation of high thoughts and
bringing them into obedience to Christ, by the leveling of the soul and the
removing of all obstructions that stand in the way of Christ and his grace, then
prepare to bid the salvation of God welcome.
IV. The general warnings and exhortations which he gave to those
who submitted to his baptism, v. 7-9. In Matthew he is said to have preached
these same things to
many of the Pharisees and Sadducees, that
came to
his baptism (Mt. 3:7-10); but here he is said to have spoken them
to
the multitude, that came forth to be baptized of him, v. 7. This was the
purport of his preaching to all that came to him, and he did not alter it in
compliment to the Pharisees and Sadducees, when they came, but dealt as plainly
with them as with any other of his hearers. And as he did not flatter the
great,
so neither did he compliment the
many, or make his court to them, but
gave the same reproofs of sin and warnings of wrath to the
multitude that
he did to the Sadducees and Pharisees; for, if they had not the same faults,
they had others as bad. Now observe here,
1. That the guilty corrupted race of mankind is become a
generation
of vipers; not only poisoned, but poisonous; hateful to God, hating one
another. This magnifies the patience of God, in continuing the race of mankind
upon the earth, and not destroying that
nest of vipers. He did it once by
water, and will again by fire.
2. This generation of vipers is fairly warned to
flee from
the wrath to come, which is certainly before them if they continue such; and
their being a
multitude will not be at all their security, for it will be
neither
reproach nor
loss to God to cut them off. We are not only
warned of this wrath, but are put into a way to escape it, if we look about us
in time.
3. There is no way of
fleeing from the wrath to come, but
by
repentance. They that submitted to the baptism of repentance thereby
evidenced that they were
warned to flee from the wrath to come and
took
the warning; and we by our baptism profess to have fled out of Sodom, for fear
of what is coming upon it.
4. Those that profess repentance are highly concerned to live
like penitents (v. 8):
"Bring forth therefore fruits meet for
repentance, else, notwithstanding your professions of repentance, you cannot
escape
the wrath to come." By the fruits of repentance it will be
known whether it be sincere or no. By the change of our way must be evidenced
the change of our mind.
5. If we be not really holy, both in heart and life, our
profession of religion and relation to God and his church will stand us in no
stead at all:
Begin not now to frame excuses from this great duty of
repentance, by
saying within yourselves, We have Abraham to our father.
What will it avail us to be the children of godly parents if we be not godly, to
be within the pale of the Church if we be not brought into the bond of the
covenant?
6. We have therefore no reason to depend upon our external
privileges and professions of religion, because God has no need of us or of our
services, but can effectually secure by his own honour and interest without us.
If we were cut off and ruined, he could raise up to himself a church out of the
most unlikely,
children to Abraham even
out of stones.
7. The greater professions we make of repentance, and the
greater assistances and encouragements are given us to repentance, the nearer
and the sorer will our destruction be if we do not
bring forth fruits meet
for repentance. Now that the gospel begins to be preached, now that the
kingdom of heaven is at hand,
now that the
axe is laid to the root of
the tree, threatenings to the wicked and impenitent are now more terrible
than before, as encouragements to the penitent are now more comfortable.
"Now that you are upon your behaviour, look to yourselves."
8. Barren trees will be cast into the fire at length; it is the
fittest place for them:
Every tree that doth not bring forth fruit,
good
fruit, is
hewn down, and
cast into the fire. If it serve not
for fruit, to the honour of God's grace, let it serve for fuel, to the honour
of his justice.
V. The particular instructions he gave to several sorts of
persons, that enquired of him concerning their duty: the
people, the
publicans,
and the
soldiers. Some of the Pharisees and Sadducees came to his
baptism; but we do not find them asking,
What shall we do? They thought
they knew what they had to do as well as he could tell them, or were determined
to do what they pleased, whatever he told them. But the
people, the
publicans,
and the
soldiers, who knew that they had done amiss, and that they ought
to do better, and were conscious to themselves of great ignorance and
unacquaintedness with the divine law, were particularly inquisitive:
What
shall we do? Note, 1. Those that are
baptized must be
taught,
and those that have baptized them are concerned, as they have opportunity, to
teach them, Mt. 28:19, 20. 2. Those that profess and promise repentance in
general must evidence it by particular instances of reformation, according as
their place and condition are. 3. They that would do their duty must desire to
know their duty, and enquire concerning it. The first good word Paul said, when
he was converted, was,
Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? These here
enquire, not,
What shall this man do? but, What shall
we do? What
fruits
meet for repentance shall we
bring forth? Now John gives answer to
each, according to their place and station.
(1.) He tells the
people their duty, and that is to be
charitable (v. 11): He
that has two coats, and, consequently, one to
spare, let him
give, or
lend at least,
to him that has none,
to keep him warm. Perhaps he saw among his hearers some that were overloaded
with clothes, while others were ready to perish in rags, and he puts those who
had superfluities upon contributing to the relief of those that had not
necessaries. The gospel requires
mercy, and not sacrifice; and the design
of it is to engage us to do all the good we can.
Food and raiment are the
two supports of life; he that hath
meat to spare, let him give to him
that is destitute of
daily food, as well as he that hath clothes to
spare: what we have we are but stewards of, and must use it, accordingly, as our
Master directs.
(2.) He tells the
publicans their duty, the collectors of
the emperor's revenue (v. 13):
Exact no more than that which is appointed
you. They must do justice between the government and the merchant, and not
oppress the people in levying the taxes, nor any way make them heavier or more
burdensome than the law had made them. They must not think that because it was
their office to take care that the people did not defraud the prince they might
therefore, by the power they had, bear hard upon the people; as those that have
ever so little a branch of power are apt to abuse it: "No, keep to your
book
of rates, and reckon it enough that you collect for Caesar the things that
are Caesar's, and do not enrich yourselves by taking more." The public
revenues must be applied to the public service, and not to gratify the avarice
of private persons. Observe, He does not direct the publicans to quit their
places, and to go no more to the receipt of custom; the employment is in itself
lawful and necessary, but let them be just and honest in it.
(3.) He tells the
soldiers their duty, v. 14. Some think
that these soldiers were of the Jewish nation and religion: others think that
they were Romans; for it was not likely either that the Jews would serve the
Romans or that the Romans would trust the Jews in their garrisons in their own
nation; and then it is an early instance of Gentiles embracing the gospel and
submitting to it. Military men seldom seem inclined to religion; yet these
submitted even to the Baptist's strict profession, and desired to receive the
word
of command from him:
What must we do? Those who more than other men
have their lives in their hands, and are in deaths often, are concerned to
enquire what they shall do that they may be
found in peace. In answer to
this enquiry, John does not bid them lay down their arms, and desert the
service, but cautions them against the sins that soldiers were commonly guilty
of; for this is fruit meet for repentance, to
keep ourselves from our
iniquity. [1.] They must not be injurious to
the people among whom
they were quartered, and over whom indeed they were set:
"Do violence to
no man. Your business is to keep the peace, and prevent men's doing
violence to one another; but do not you
do violence to any.
Shake no
man" ( so the word signifies); "do not put people into fear; for
the sword of war, as well as that of justice, is to be a terror only to evil
doers, but a protection to those that do well. Be not rude in your quarters;
force not money from people by frightening them. Shed not the blood of war in
peace; offer no incivility either to man or woman, nor have any hand in the
barbarous devastations that armies sometimes make." Nor must they
accuse
any falsely to the government, thereby to make themselves formidable, and
get bribes. [2.] They must not be injurious to their
fellow-soldiers; for
some think that caution, not to
accuse falsely, has special reference to
them: "Be not forward to complain one of another to your superior officers,
that you may be revenged on those whom you have a pique against, or undermine
those above you, and get into their places."
Do not oppress any; so
some think the word here signifies as used by the Septuagint in several passages
of the Old Testament. [3.] They must not be given to mutiny, or contend with
their generals about their pay:
"Be content with your wages. While
you have what you agreed for, do not murmur that it is not more." It is
discontent with what they have that makes men oppressive and injurious; they
that never think they have enough themselves will not scruple at any the most
irregular practices to make it more, by defrauding others. It is a rule to all
servants that they
be content with their wages; for they that indulge
themselves in discontents expose themselves to many temptations, and it is
wisdom to make the best of that which is.
Verses 15-20
We are now drawing near to the appearance of our Lord Jesus
publicly; the Sun will not be long after the morning-star. We are here told,
I. How the people took occasion, from the ministry and baptism
of John, to think of the Messiah, and to think of him as at the door, as now
come. Thus the way of the Lord was
prepared, and people were prepared to
bid Christ welcome; for, when men's expectations are raised, that which they
are in expectation of becomes doubly acceptable. Now when they observed what an
excellent doctrine John Baptist preached, what a divine power went along with
it, and what a tendency it had to reform the world, 1. They began presently to
consider that now was the time for the Messiah to appear. The sceptre was
departed from Judah, for they had no king but Caesar; nay, and the law-giver too
was gone from between his feet, for Herod had lately slain the sanhedrim. Daniel's
seventy weeks were now expiring; and therefore it was but three or four years
after this that they looked that the kingdom of heaven should appear
immediately, Lu. 19:11. Never did the corrupt state of the Jews more need a
reformation, nor their distressed state more need a deliverance, than now. 2.
Their next thought was, "Is not his he that should come?"
All
thinking
men mused, or reasoned,
in their hearts, concerning John,
whether he were the Christ or not. He had indeed none of the external
pomp and grandeur in which they generally expected the Messiah to appear; but
his life was holy and strict, his preaching powerful and with authority, and
therefore "why may we not think that he is the Messiah, and that he will
shortly throw off this disguise, and appear in more glory?" Note, That
which puts people upon considering, reasoning with themselves, prepares the way
for Christ.
II. How John disowned all pretensions to the honour of being
himself the Messiah, but confirmed them in their expectations of him that really
was the Messiah, v. 16, 17. John's office, as a crier or herald, was to give
notice that the
kingdom of God and the King of that kingdom were
at
hand; and therefore, when he had told all manner of people severally what
they must do ("You must do this, and you must do that"), he tells them
one thing more which they must all do: they must expect the Messiah now shortly
to appear. And this serves as an
answer to their
musings and
debates concerning himself. Though he knew not their thoughts, yet, in declaring
this, he
answered them.
1. He declares that the utmost he could do was to
baptize
them
with water. He had no access to
the Spirit, nor could command
that or work upon
that; he could only exhort them to
repent,
and assure them of forgiveness, upon repentance; he could not work repentance in
them, nor confer remission on them.
2. He consigns them, and turns them over, as it were, to Jesus
Christ, for whom he was sent to
prepare the way, and to whom he was ready
to transfer all the interest he had in the affections of the people, and would
have them no longer to
debate whether John was the Messiah or no, but to
look for him that was really so.
(1.) John owns the Messiah to have a greater
excellency
than he had, and that he was in all things preferable to him; he is one the
latchet
of whose shoe he does not think himself
worthy to loose; he does not
think himself worthy to be the meanest of his servants, to help him on and off
with his shoes. John was
a prophet, yea
more than a prophet, more
so than any of the Old-Testament prophets; but Christ was a prophet more than
John, for it was both
by the Spirit of Christ, and
of the grace of
Christ, that all the prophets prophesied, and John among the rest, 1 Pt.
1:10, 11. This was a great truth which John came to preach; but the manner of
his expressing it bespeaks his humility, and in it he not only
does justice
to the Lord Jesus, but
does him honour too: "He is one whom I am not
worthy to approach, or draw nigh to, no not as a servant." Thus highly does
it become us to speak of Christ, and thus humbly of ourselves.
(2.) He owns him to have a greater
energy than he had:
"He is
mightier than I, and does that which I cannot do, both for
the comfort of the faithful and for the terror of hypocrites and dissemblers."
They thought that a wonderful power went along with John; but what was that
compared with the power which Jesus would come clothed with? [1.] John can do no
more than
baptize with water, in token of this, that they ought to purify
and cleanse themselves; but Christ can, and will,
baptize with the Holy
Ghost; he can give the Spirit to cleanse and purify the heart, not only as
water
washes off the
dirt on the outside, but as
fire purges out the
dross
that is within, and
melts down the metal, that it may be cast into a
new
mould. [2.] John can only preach a
distinguishing doctrine, and by
word and sign
separate between the precious and the vile; but Christ hath
his
fan in his hand, with which he can, and will, perfectly separate
between the wheat and the chaff. He
will thoroughly purge his floor; it
is
his own, and therefore he will
purge it, and will cast out of
his church the unbelieving impenitent Jews, and confirm in his church all that
faithfully follow him. [3.] John can only
speak comfort to those that
receive the gospel, and, like other prophets,
say to the righteous that
it
shall be well with them; but Jesus Christ will
give them comfort.
John can only promise them that they shall be safe; but Christ will make them
so: he will
gather the wheat into his garner; good, serious, solid people
he will gather now into his church on earth, which shall be made up of such, and
he will shortly gather them into his church in heaven, where they shall be for
ever sheltered. [4.] John can only
threaten hypocrites, and tell the
barren
trees that they shall be
hewn down and
cast into the fire; but
Christ can execute that threatening; those that are as
chaff, light, and
vain, and worthless,
he will burn with fire unquenchable. John refers
here to Mal. 3:18; 4:1, 2.
Then, when the
floor is purged, ye shall
return, and discern between the righteous and the wicked, for
the day
comes that shall burn as an oven.
The evangelist concludes his account of John's preaching with
an
et caetera (v. 18):
Many other things in his exhortation preached
he unto the people, which are not recorded.
First, John was an
affectionate
preacher. He was
parakaloµn
exhorting,
beseeching; he pressed things home upon his hearers, followed his doctrine
close, as one in earnest.
Secondly, He was a
practical preacher.
Much of his preaching was
exhortation, quickening them to their duty,
directing them in it, and not amusing them with matters of nice speculation.
Thirdly,
He was a
popular preacher. Though he had scribes and Pharisees, men of
polite learning, attending his ministry, and Sadducees, men of
free thought,
as they pretended, yet he addressed himself
to the people, pros
ton laon
to the laity, and accommodated himself to their
capacity, as promising himself best success among them.
Fourthly, He was
an
evangelical preacher, for so the word here used signifies,
eueµngelizeto
he
preached the gospel to the people; in all his
exhortations, he
directed people to Christ, and excited and encouraged their expectations of
him.
When we press duty upon people, we must direct them to Christ, both for
righteousness and strength.
Fifthly, He was a
copious preacher:
Many
other things he preached, polla men kai hetera
many
things, and different. He preached a great deal, shunned not to declare the
whole counsel of God; and he
varied in his preaching, that those who were
not reached, and touched, and wrought upon, by one truth, might be by another.
III. How full a stop was put to John's preaching. When he was
in the midst of his usefulness, going on thus successfully, he was imprisoned by
the malice of Herod (v. 19, 20):
Herod the tetrarch being reproved by him,
not only for living in incest with his brother Philip's wife, but for the many
other
evils which Herod had done (for those that are wicked in one
instance are commonly so in many others), he could not
bear it, but
contracted an antipathy to him for his plain dealing, and
added this
wickedness to all the rest, which was indeed
above all, that he
shut
up John in prison, put that burning and shining light under a bushel.
Because he could not bear his reproofs, others should be deprived of the benefit
of his instructions and counsels. Some little good he might do to those who had
access to him, when he was in prison; but nothing to what he might have done if
he had had liberty to go about all the country, as he had done. We cannot think
of Herod's doing this without the greatest compassion and lamentation, nor of
God's permitting it without admiring the depth of the divine counsels, which
we cannot account for. Must he be silenced who is the
voice of one crying in
the wilderness? Must such a preacher be shut up in prison who ought to have
been set up in the courts of the temple? But thus the faith of his disciples
must be tried; thus the unbelief of those who rejected him must be punished;
thus he must be Christ's forerunner in suffering as well as preaching; and
thus, having been for about a year and a half preparing people for Christ, he
must now give way to him, and, the Sun being risen, the morning-star must of
course disappear.
Verses 21-38
The evangelist mentioned John's imprisonment before Christ's
being baptized, though it was nearly a year after it, because he would finish
the story of John's ministry, and then introduce that of Christ. Now here we
have,
I. A short account of Christ's baptism, which had been more
fully related by St. Matthew. Jesus came, to be baptized of John, and he was so,
v. 21, 22.
1. It is here said that,
when all the people were baptized,
then
Jesus was baptized: all that were then present. Christ would be
baptized last, among the common people, and in the rear of them; thus he humbled
himself, and made himself of no reputation, as one of the least, nay, as less
than the least. He saw what multitudes were hereby prepared to receive him, and
then he appeared.
2. Notice is here taken of Christ's
praying when he was
baptized, which was not in Matthew: being baptized, and
praying.
He did not
confess sin, as others did, for he had none to confess; but he
prayed, as others did, for he would thus keep up communion with his
Father. Note, The inward and spiritual grace of which sacraments are the outward
and visible signs must be fetched in by prayer; and therefore prayer must always
accompany them. We have reason to think that Christ now prayed for this
manifestation of God's favour to him which immediately followed; he prayed for
the discovery of his Father's favour to him, and the descent of the Spirit.
What was promised to Christ, he must obtain by prayer:
Ask of me and I will
give thee, etc. Thus he would put an honour upon prayer, would tie us to it,
and encourage us in it.
3. When he prayed,
the heaven was opened. He that by his
power parted the waters, to make a way through them to Canaan, now by his power
parted the air, another fluid element, to open a correspondence with the
heavenly Canaan. Thus was there opened to Christ, and by him to us,
a new and
living way into the holiest; sin had shut up heaven, but Christ's prayer
opened it again. Prayer is an ordinance that
opens heaven: Knock, and it
shall be opened unto you.
4.
The Holy Ghost descended in a bodily shape like a dove
upon him; our Lord Jesus was now to receive greater measures of the Spirit
than before, to qualify him for his prophetical office, Isa. 61:1. When he
begins to preach,
the Spirit of the Lord is upon him. Now this is here
expressed by a sensible evidence for his encouragement in his work, and for the
satisfaction of John the Baptist; for he was told before that by this sign it
should be notified to him which was the Christ. Dr. Lightfoot suggests that the
Holy Ghost descended in a bodily shape, that he might be revealed to be a
personal substance, and not merely an operation of the Godhead: and thus (saith
he) was made a full, clear, and sensible demonstration of the Trinity, at the
beginning of the gospel; and very fitly is this done at Christ's baptism, who
was to make the ordinance of baptism a badge of the profession of that faith in
the doctrine of the Trinity,
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
5. There came
a voice from heaven, from God the Father,
from the
excellent glory (so it is expressed, 2 Pt. 1:17),
Thou art my
beloved Son. Here, and in Mark, it is expressed as spoken
to Christ;
in Matthew as spoken
of him:
This is my beloved Son. It comes all
to one; it was intended to be a notification to John, and as such was properly
expressed by,
This is my beloved Son; and likewise an answer to his
prayer, and so it is most fitly expressed by.
Thou art. It was foretold
concerning the Messiah,
I will be his Father, and he shall be my Son, 2
Sa. 7:14.
I will make him my First-born, Ps. 89:27. It was also foretold
that he should be God's
elect, in whom his soul delighted (Isa. 42:1);
and, accordingly, it is here declared,
Thou art my beloved Son, in whom I am
well pleased.
II. A long account of Christ's pedigree, which had been more
briefly related by St. Matthew. Here is,
1. His age:
He now began to be about thirty years of age.
So old Joseph was when he stood before Pharaoh (Gen. 41:46), David when he began
to reign (2 Sa. 5:4), and at this age the priests were to enter upon the full
execution of their office, Num. 4:3. Dr. Lightfoot thinks that it is plain, by
the manner of expression here, that he was just twenty-nine years old complete,
and entering upon his thirtieth year, in the month
Tisri; that, after
this, he lived three years and a half, and died when he was thirty-two years and
a half old.
Three years and a half, the time of Christ's ministry, is a
period of time very remarkable in scripture.
Three years and six months
the heavens were shut up in Elijah's time, Lu. 4:25; Jam. 5:17. This was the
half week in which the Messiah was to confirm the covenant, Dan. 9:27. This
period is expressed in the prophetical writings by a time, times, and half a
time (Dan. 12:7; Rev. 12:14); and by forty-two months, and a thousand two
hundred and threescore days, Rev. 11:2, 3. It is the time fixed for the
witnesses' prophesying in sackcloth, in conformity to Christ's preaching in
his humiliation just so long.
2. His pedigree, v. 23, etc. Matthew had given us somewhat of
this. He goes no higher than Abraham, but Luke brings it as high as Adam.
Matthew designed to show that Christ was the son of Abraham, in whom
all the
families of the earth are blessed, and that he was heir to the throne of
David; and therefore he begins with Abraham, and brings the genealogy down to
Jacob, who was the father of Joseph, and heir-male of the house of David: but
Luke, designing to show that Christ was the
seed of the woman, that
should break the serpent's head, traces his pedigree upward as high as Adam,
and begins it with Ei, or Heli, who was the father, not of Joseph, but of the
virgin Mary. And some suggest that the supply which our translators all along
insert here is not right, and that it should not be read
which, that is,
which
Joseph was the son of Heli, but which
Jesus; he was
the
son of Joseph, of Eli, of Matthat, etc., and he, that is, Jesus, was the son
of Seth, of Adam, of God, v. 38. The difference between the two
evangelists in the genealogy of Christ has been a stumbling-block to infidels
that cavil at the word, but such a one as has been removed by the labours of
learned men, both in the early ages of the church and in latter times, to which
we refer ourselves. Matthew draws the pedigree from Solomon, whose natural line
ending in Jechonias, the legal right was transferred to Salathiel, who was of
the house of Nathan, another son of David, which line Luke here pursues, and so
leaves out all the kings of Judah. It is well for us that our salvation doth not
depend upon our being able to solve all these difficulties, nor is the divine
authority of the gospels at all weakened by them; for the evangelists are not
supposed to write these genealogies either of their own knowledge or by divine
inspiration, but to have copied them out of the authentic records of the
genealogies among the Jews, the heralds' books, which therefore they were
obliged to follow; and in them they found the pedigree of Jacob, the father of
Joseph, to be as it is set down in Matthew; and the pedigree of Heli, the father
of Mary, to be as it is set down here in Luke. And this is the meaning of
hoµs
enomizeto (v. 23), not,
as it was supposed, referring only to
Joseph, but
uti sancitum est legeas it is entered into the books, as
we find it upon record; by which is appeared that Jesus was both by father and
mother's side the Son of David, witness this extract out of their own records,
which any one might at that time have liberty to compare with the original, and
further the evangelists needed not to go; nay, had they varied from that, they
had not gained their point. Its not being contradicted at that time is
satisfaction enough to us now that it is a true copy, as it is further worthy of
observation, that, when those records of the Jewish genealogies had continued
thirty or forty years after these extracts out of them, long enough to justify
the evangelists therein, they were all lost and destroyed with the Jewish state
and nation; for now there was no more occasion for them.
One difficulty occurs between Abraham and Noah, which gives us
some perplexity, v. 35, 36. Sala is said to be the
son of Cainan, and he
the
son of Arphaxad, whereas Sala was the son of Arphaxad (Gen. 10:24; 11:12),
and there is no such man as Cainan found there. But, as to that, it is
sufficient to say that the Seventy Interpreters, who, before our Saviour's
time, translated the Old Testament into Greek, for reasons best known to
themselves inserted that Cainan; and St. Luke, writing among the
Hellenist
Jews, was obliged to make use of that translation, and therefore to take it
as he found it.
The genealogy concludes with this,
who was the son of Adam,
the son of God. (1.) Some refer it to Adam; he was in a peculiar manner the
son
of God, being, more immediately than any of his offspring, the offspring of
God by creation. (2.) Others refer it to Christ, and so make the last words of
this genealogy to denote his divine and human nature. He was both the
Son of
Adam and the
Son of God that he might be a proper Mediator between
God and the sons of Adam, and might bring the sons of Adam to be, through him,
the
sons of God.
Chapter 3:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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