Chapter 7:
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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 7
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. Christ confirming the doctrine he
had preached in the former chapter, with two glorious miraclesthe curing of
one at a distance, and that was the centurion's servant (v. 1-10), and the
raising of one to life that was dead, the widow's son at Nain (v. 11-18).
II. Christ confirming the faith of John who was now in prison, and of some of
his disciples, by sending him a short account of the miracles he wrought, in
answer to a question he received from him (v. 19-23), to which he adds an
honourable testimony concerning John, and a just reproof to the men of that
generation for the contempt they put upon him and his doctrine (v. 24-35).
III. Christ comforting a poor penitent that applied herself to him, all in tears
of godly sorrow for sin, assuring her that her sins were pardoned, and
justifying himself in the favour he showed her against the cavils of a proud
Pharisee (v. 36-50).
Verses 1-10
Some difference there is between this story of the cure of the
centurion's servant as it is related here and as we had it in Mt. 8:5, etc.
There it was said that the centurion came to Christ; here it is said that he
sent to him first some of the
elders of the Jews (v. 3), and afterwards
some other
friends, v. 6. But it is a rule that
we are said to do that
which we do by anotherQuod facimus per alium, id ipsum facere judicamur.
The centurion might be said to do that which he did by his proxies; as a man
takes possession by his attorney. But it is probable that the centurion himself
came at last, when Christ said to him (Mt. 8:13),
As thou hast believed, so
be it done unto thee.
This miracle is here said to have been wrought by our Lord Jesus
when he had ended all his sayings in the audience of the people, v. 1.
What Christ said he said
publicly; whoever would might come and hear him:
In secret have I said nothing, Jn. 18:20. Now, to give an undeniable
proof of the
authority of his
preaching word, he here gives an
incontestable proof of the
power and
efficacy of his
healing
word. He that had such a commanding empire in the kingdom of nature as that
he could command away diseases, no doubt has such a sovereignty in the kingdom
of grace as to enjoin duties displeasing to flesh and blood, and bind, under the
highest penalties, to the observance of them. This miracle was wrought in
Capernaum, where most of Christ's mighty works were done, Mt. 11:23. Now
observe,
I. The centurion's servant that was sick was
dear to his
master, v. 2. It was the praise of the servant that by his diligence and
faithfulness, and a manifest concern for his master and his interest, as for
himself and for his own, he recommended himself to his master's esteem and
love. Servants should study to
endear themselves to their masters. It was
likewise the praise of the master that, when he had a good servant, he knew how
to value him. Many masters, that are haughty and imperious, think it favour
enough to the best servants they have not to rate them, and beat them, and be
cruel to them, whereas they ought to be kind to them, and tender of them, and
solicitous for their welfare and comfort.
II. The master,
when he heard of Jesus, was for making
application to him, v. 3. Masters ought to take particular care of their
servants when they are
sick, and not to neglect them then. This centurion
begged that
Christ would come and heal his servant. We may now, by
faithful and fervent prayer, apply ourselves to Christ in heaven, and ought to
do so, when sickness is in our families; for Christ is still the great
Physician.
III. He sent some of the
elders of the Jews to Christ, to
represent the case, and solicit for him, thinking that a greater piece of
respect to Christ than if he had come himself, because he was an uncircumcised
Gentile, whom he thought Christ, being a prophet, would not care for conversing
with. For that reason he sent Jews, whom he acknowledged to be favourites of
Heaven, and not ordinary Jews neither, but
elders of the Jews, persons in
authority, that the dignity of the messengers might give honour to him to whom
they were sent. Balak sent princes to Balaam.
IV. The elders of the Jews were hearty intercessors for the
centurion:
They besought him instantly (v. 4), were very urgent with him,
pleading for the centurion that which he would never have pleaded for himself,
that
he was worthy for whom he should do this. If any Gentile was qualified to
receive such a favour, surely he was. The centurion said,
I am not so
much as
worthy of a visit (Mt. 8:8), but the elders of the Jews thought
him worthy of the cure; thus
honour shall uphold the humble in spirit. Let
another man praise thee, and not thy own mouth. But that which they insisted
upon in particular was, that, though he was a Gentile, yet he was a hearty
well-wisher to the Jewish nation and religion, v. 5. They thought there needed
as much with Christ as there did with them to remove the prejudices against him
as a Gentile, a Roman, and an officer of the army, and therefore mention this,
1. That he was well-affected to the people of the Jews:
He loveth our nation
(which few of the Gentile did). Probably he had read the Old Testament, whence
it was easy to advance to a very high esteem of the Jewish nation, as favoured
by Heaven above all people. Note, Even conquerors, and those
in power,
ought to keep up an affection for the conquered, and those they have
power
over. 2. That he was well-affected to their worship:
He built them a
new
synagogue at Capernaum, finding that what they had was either gone to
decay or not large enough to contain the people, and that the inhabitants were
not of ability to build one for themselves. Hereby he testified his veneration
for the God of Israel, his belief of his being the one only living and true God,
and his desire, like that of Darius, to have an interest in the prayers of God's
Israel, Ezra 6:10. This centurion built a synagogue at his own proper costs and
charges, and probably employed his soldiers that were in garrison there in the
building, to keep them from idleness. Note, Building places of meeting for
religious worship is a very
good work, is an instance of love to God and
his people; and those who do good works of that kind are
worthy of double
honour.
V. Jesus Christ was very ready to show kindness to the
centurion. He presently
went with them (v. 6), though he was a Gentile;
for
is he the Saviour of the Jews only? Is he not also of the Gentiles? Yes,
of the Gentiles also, Rom. 3:29. The centurion did not think himself worthy
to visit Christ (v. 7), yet Christ thought him worthy to be visited by him; for
those that
humble themselves shall be exalted.
VI. The centurion, when he heard that Christ was doing him the
honour to come to his house, gave further proofs both of his humility and of his
faith. Thus the graces of the saints are quickened by Christ's approaches
towards them.
When he was now not far from the house, and the centurion
had notice of it, instead of setting his house in order for his reception, he
sends
friends to meet him with fresh expressions, 1. Of his
humility:
"Lord, trouble not thyself, for I am unworthy of such an honour,
because I am a Gentile." This bespeaks not only his low thoughts of himself
notwithstanding the greatness of his figure; but his high thoughts of Christ,
notwithstanding the meanness of his figure in the world. He knew how to honour a
prophet of God, though he was despised and rejected of men. 2. Of his
faith:
"Lord,
trouble not thyself, for I know there is no occasion; thou
canst
cure my servant without coming
under my roof, by that
almighty power from which
no thought can be withholden. Say, in a word, and
my servant shall be healed:" so far was this centurion from Namaan's
fancy, that he should come to him, and stand, and
strike his hand over the
patient, and so
recover him, 2 Ki. 5:11. He illustrates this faith of his
by a comparison taken from his own profession, and is confident that Christ can
as easily command away the distemper as he can command any of his soldiers, can
as easily send an angel with commission to cure this servant of his as he can
send a soldier on an errand, v. 8. Christ has a sovereign power over all the
creatures and all their actions, and can change the course of nature as he
pleases, can rectify its disorders and repair its decays in human bodies; for
all
power is given to him.
VII. Our Lord Jesus was wonderfully well pleased with the faith
of the centurion, and the more surprised at it because he was a Gentile; and,
the centurion's faith having thus honoured Christ, see how he honoured it (v.
9):
He turned him about, as one amazed, and
said to the people that
followed him, I have not found so great faith, no not in Israel. Note,
Christ will have those that follow him to observe and take notice of the great
examples of faith that are sometimes set before themespecially when any such
are found among those that do not follow Christ so closely as they do in
professionthat we may be shamed by the strength of their faith out of the
weakness and waverings of ours.
VIII. The cure was
presently and
perfectly wrought
(v. 10).
They that were sent knew they had their errand, and therefore
went back, and found the servant well, and under no remains at all of his
distemper. Christ will take cognizance of the distressed case of poor servants,
and be ready to relieve them; for there
is no respect of persons with him.
Nor are the Gentiles excluded from the benefit of his grace; nay, this was a
specimen of that much greater faith which would be found among the Gentiles,
when the gospel should be published, than among the Jews.
Verses 11-18
We have here the story of Christ's raising to life a widow's
son at Nain, that was dead and in the carrying out to be buried, which Matthew
and Mark had made no mention of; only, in the general, Matthew had recorded it,
in Christ's answer to the disciples of John, that
the dead were raised
up, Mt. 11:5. Observe,
I. Where, and when, this miracle was wrought. It was the
next
day after he had cured the centurion's servant, v. 11. Christ was doing
good
every day, and never had cause to complain that he had
lost a
day. It was done at the gate of a small city, or town, called
Nain,
not far from Capernaum, probably the same with a city called
Nais, which
Jerome speaks of.
II. Who were the witnesses of it. It is as well attested as can
be, for it was done in the sight of two crowds that met in or near the gate of
the city. There was a crowd of
disciples and other
people
attending Christ (v. 11), and a crowd of relations and neighbours attending the
funeral of the young man, v. 12. Thus there was a sufficient number to attest
the truth of this miracle, which furnished greater proof of Christ's divine
authority than his healing diseases; for by no power of nature, or any means,
can the dead be raised.
III. How it was wrought by our Lord Jesus.
1. The person raised to life was a
young man, cut off by
death in the beginning of his daysa common case;
man comes forth like a
flower and is cut down. That he was really dead was universally agreed.
There could be no collusion in the case; for Christ was
entering into the
town, and had not seen him till now that he met him upon the bier. He was
carried
out of the city; for the Jews' burying-places were without their cities,
and at some distance from them. This young man was the
only son of his
mother, and
she a widow. She depended upon him to be the staff of her
old age, but he proves a broken reed; every man at his best estate is so. How
numerous, how various, how very calamitous, are the afflictions of the afflicted
in this world! What a vale of tears is it! What a Bochim, a place of weepers! We
may well think how deep the
sorrow of this poor mother was for her
only
son (such sorrowing is referred to as expressive of the greatest grief,Zec.
12:10), and it was the deeper in that she was a
widow, broken with breach
upon breach, and a
full end made of her comforts. Much people of the city was
with her, condoling with her loss, to
comfort her.
2. Christ showed both his
pity and his
power in
raising him to life, that he might give a specimen of both, which shine so
brightly in man's redemption.
(1.) See how
tender his
compassions are towards
the afflicted (v. 13):
When the Lord saw the poor widow following her son
to the grave,
he had compassion on her. Here was not application made to
him for her, not so much as that he would speak some words of comfort to her,
but,
ex mero motupurely from the goodness of his nature, he was
troubled for her. The case was piteous, and he looked upon it with pity. His eye
affected his heart; and he
said unto her, Weep not. Note, Christ has a
concern for the mourners, for the miserable, and often
prevents them with the
blessing of his goodness. He undertook the work of our redemption and
salvation,
in his love and in his pity, Isa. 63:9. What a pleasing idea
does this give us of the compassions of the Lord Jesus, and the multitude of his
tender mercies, which may be very comfortable to us when at any time we
are in sorrow! Let poor widows comfort themselves in their sorrows with this,
that Christ
pities them and knows their souls in adversity; and, if
others despise their grief, he does not. Christ said,
Weep not; and he
could give her a reason for it which no one else could: "Weep not for a
dead
son, for he shall presently become a
living one." This was a
reason peculiar to her case; yet there is a reason common to all that sleep in
Jesus, which is of equal force against inordinate and excessive grief for their
death that they shall rise again, shall rise in glory; and therefore we must
not
sorrow as those that have no hope, 1 Th. 4:13. Let Rachel, that
weeps for
her children, refrain her eyes from tears, for
there is hope in thine
end, saith the Lord, that thy children shall come again to their own border,
Jer. 31:17. And let our
passion at such a time be checked and claimed by
the consideration of Christ's
compassion.
(2.) See how
triumphant his
commands are over even
death itself (v. 14):
He came, and touched the bier, or coffin, in or
upon which the dead body lay; for to him it would be no pollution. Hereby he
intimated to the bearers that they should not proceed; he had something to say
to the dead young man.
Deliver him from going down to the pit; I have found a
ransom, Job 33:24. Hereupon
they that bore him stood still, and
probably let down the bier from their shoulders to the ground, and opened the
coffin, it if was closed up; and then with solemnity, as one that had authority,
and to whom belonged the issues from death, he said,
Young man, I say unto
thee, Arise. The young man was
dead, and could not arise by any power
of his own (no more can those that are spiritually dead in trespasses and sins);
yet it was no absurdity at all for Christ to bid him
arise, when a power
went along with that word to
put life into him. The gospel call to all
people, to young people particularly, is,
"Arise, arise from the
dead, and Christ shall give you light and life." Christ's dominion over
death was evidenced by the immediate effect of his word (v. 15):
He that was
dead sat up. Have we grace from Christ? Let us show it. Another evidence of
life was that he
began to speak; for whenever Christ gives us spiritual
life he
opens the lips in prayer and praise. And,
lastly, he would
not oblige this young man, to whom he had given a new life, to go along with him
as his disciple, to minister to him (though he owed him even his own self), much
less as a trophy or show to get honour by him, but
delivered him to his
mother, to attend her as became a dutiful son; for Christ's miracles were
miracles of mercy, and a great act of mercy this was to this widow; now she was
comforted,
according to the time in which she had been afflicted and much more, for she
could now look upon this son as a particular favourite of Heaven, with more
pleasure than if he had not died.
IV. What influence it had upon the people (v. 16):
There came
a fear on all; it frightened them all, to see a dead man start up alive out
of his coffin in the open street, at the command of a man; they were all struck
with wonder at his miracle, and
glorified God. The Lord and his goodness,
as well as the Lord and his greatness, are to be feared. The inference they drew
from it was,
"A great prophet is risen up among us, the great
prophet that we have been long looking for; doubtless, he is one divinely
inspired who can thus breathe life into the dead, and in him
God hath visited
his people, to redeem them, as was expected," Lu. 1:68. This would be
life
from the dead indeed to all them that waited for the consolation of Israel.
When dead souls are thus raised to spiritual life, by a divine power going along
with the gospel, we must glorify God, and look upon it as a gracious visit to
his people. The report of this miracle was carried, 1. In general, all the
country over (v. 17):
This rumour of him, that he was the great prophet,
went
forth upon the wings of fame
through all Judea, which lay a great way
off, and throughout all Galilee, which was the
region round about. Most
had this notice of him, yet few believed in him, and gave up themselves to him.
Many have the
rumour of Christ's gospel in their ears that have not the
savour and
relish of it in their souls. 2. In particular, it was
carefully brought to John Baptist, who was now in prison (v. 18):
His
disciples came, and gave him an account of all things, that he might know
that though
he was bound yet
the word of the Lord was not bound;
God's work was going on, though he was laid aside.
Verses 19-35
All this discourse concerning John Baptist, occasioned by his
sending to ask whether he was the Messiah or no, we had, much as it is here
related, Mt. 11:2-19.
I. We have here the message John Baptist sent to Christ, and the
return he made to it. Observe,
1. The great thing we are to enquire concerning Christ is
whether he be he that should come to redeem and save sinners, or whether we are
to look for another, v. 19, 20. We are sure that God has promised that a Saviour
shall come, an anointed Saviour; we are as sure that what he has promised he
will perform in its season. If this Jesus be that promised Messiah, we will
receive him, and will look for no other; but, if not, we will continue our
expectations, and, though he tarry, will wait for him.
2. The faith of John Baptist himself, or at least of his
disciples, wanted to be
confirmed in this matter; for Christ had not yet
publicly declared himself to be indeed the Christ, nay, he would not have his
disciples, who knew him to be so, to speak of it, till the proofs of his being
so were completed in his resurrection. The great men of the Jewish church had
not owned him, nor had he gained any interest that was likely to set him upon
the throne of his father David. Nothing of that power and grandeur was to be
seen about him in which it was expected that the Messiah would appear; and
therefore it is not strange that they should ask,
Art thou the Messiah?
not doubting but that, if he was not, he would direct them what
other to
look
for.
3. Christ left it to his own works to praise him in the gates,
to tell what he was and to prove it. While John's messengers were with him, he
wrought many miraculous cures,
in that same hour, which perhaps intimates
that they staid but
an hour with him; and what a deal of work did Christ
do in a little time! v. 21.
He cured many of their infirmities and plagues
in body, and of
evil spirits that affected the mind either with frenzy or
melancholy, and
unto many that were blind he gave sight. He multiplied
the cures, that there might be no ground left to suspect a fraud; and then (v.
22) he bade them
go and tell John what they had seen. And he and they
might easily argue, as even the common people did (Jn. 7:31),
When Christ
cometh, will he do more miracles than these which this man hath done? These
cures, which they saw him work, were not only confirmations of his commission,
but explications of it. The Messiah must come to cure a diseased world, to give
light and sight to them that sit in darkness, and to restrain and conquer evil
spirits. You see that Jesus does this to the bodies of people, and therefore
must conclude this is he that should come to do it to the souls of people, and
you are to
look for no other. To his miracles in the kingdom of nature he
adds this in the kingdom of grace (v. 22),
To the poor the gospel is
preached, which they knew was to be done by the Messiah; for he was anointed
to
preach the gospel to the meek (Isa. 61:1), and to
save the souls of
the poor and needy, Ps. 72:13. Judge, therefore, whether you can look for
any other that will more fully answer the characters of the Messiah and the
great intentions of his coming.
4. He gave them an intimation of the danger people were in of
being prejudiced against him, notwithstanding these evident proofs of his being
the Messiah (v. 23):
Blessed is he whosoever shall not be offended in me,
or
scandalized at me. We are here in a state of trial and probation; and
it is agreeable to such a state that, as there are sufficient arguments to
confirm
the truth to those that are
honest and
impartial in searching
after it, and have their minds prepared to receive it, so there should be also
objections, to
cloud the truth to those that are careless, worldly, and
sensual. Christ's education at Nazareth, his residence at Galilee, the
meanness of his family and relations, his poverty, and the despicableness of his
followersthese and the like were stumbling-blocks to many, which all the
miracles he wrought could not help them over. He is
blessed, for he is
wise, humble, and well disposed, that is not overcome by these prejudices. It is
a sign that God has
blessed him, for it is by his grace that he is helped
over these stumbling-stones;
and he shall be blessed indeed, blessed in
Christ.
II. We have here the high encomium which Christ gave of John
Baptist; not while his messengers were present (lest he should seem to flatter
him), but
when they were departed (v. 24), to make the people sensible of
the advantages they had enjoyed in John's ministry, and were deprived of by
his imprisonment. Let them now consider
what they went out into the
wilderness to see, who that was about whom there had been so much talk and
such a great and general amazement. "Come," saith Christ, "I will
tell you."
1. He was a man of unshaken
self-consistence, a man of
steadiness and constancy. He was not a
reed shaken with the wind, first
in one direction and then in another, shifting with every wind; he was
firm
as a
rock, not
fickle as a
reed. If he could have bowed
like a
reed to Herod, and have complied with the court, he might have
been a favourite there; but
none of these things moved him.
2. He was a man of unparalleled
self-denial, a great
example of mortification and contempt of the world. He was not
a man clothed
in soft raiment, nor did he
live delicately (v. 25); but, on the
contrary, he lived in a wilderness and was clad and fed accordingly. Instead of
adorning and pampering the body, he brought it under, and kept it in subjection.
3. He was
a prophet, had his commission and instructions
immediately from God, and not of man or by man. He was by birth a
priest,
but that is never taken notice of; for his glory, as a prophet, eclipsed the
honour of his priesthood. Nay, he was
more, he was
much more than a
prophet (v. 26), than any of the prophets of the Old Testament; for they
spoke of Christ as at a distance, he spoke of him as at the door.
4. He was the harbinger and forerunner of the Messiah, and was
himself prophesied of in the Old Testament (v. 27):
This is he of whom it is
written (Mal. 3:1),
Behold, I send my messenger before thy face.
Before he sent the Master himself, he sent a messenger, to give notice of his
coming, and prepare people to receive him. Had the Messiah been to appear as a
temporal
prince, under which character the carnal Jews expected him, his
messenger
would have appeared either in the
pomp of a
general or the
gaiety
of a
herald at arms; but it was a
previous indication, plain
enough, of the
spiritual nature of Christ's kingdom, that the messenger
he sent before him to
prepare his way did it by preaching repentance and
reformation of men's hearts and lives. Certainly that kingdom was not of this
world which was thus ushered in.
5. He was, upon this account, so great, that really there was
not a
greater prophet than he.
Prophets were the
greatest
that were
born of women, more honourable than kings and princes, and John
was the
greatest of all the
prophets. The country was not sensible
what a
valuable, what an
invaluable, man it had in it, when John
Baptist went about preaching and baptizing. And yet
he that is least in the
kingdom of God is greater than he. The least gospel minister, that has
obtained mercy of the Lord to be
skilful and
faithful in his work,
or the meanest of the
apostles and first preachers of the gospel, being
employed
under a more
excellent dispensation, are in a more honourable office than
John Baptist. The meanest of those that
follow the Lamb far excel the
greatest of those that went before him. Those therefore who live under the
gospel dispensation have so much the more to answer for.
III. We have here the just censure of the men of that
generation, who were not wrought upon by the ministry either of John Baptist or
of Jesus Christ himself.
1. Christ here shows what contempt was put upon John Baptist,
while he was preaching and baptizing. (1.) Those who did show him any respect
were but the common ordinary sort of people, who, in the eye of the gay part of
mankind, were rather a disgrace to him than a credit, v. 29.
The people
indeed, the vulgar herd, of whom it was said,
This people, who know not the
law, are cursed (Jn. 7:49), and the publicans, men of ill fame, as being
generally men of bad morals, or taken to be so, these were
baptized with his
baptism, and became his disciples; and these, though glorious monuments of
divine grace, yet did not
magnify John in the eye of the world; but by
their repentance and reformation they
justified God, justified his
conduct and the wisdom of it in appointing such a one as John Baptist to be the
forerunner of the Messiah: they hereby made it to appear that it was the best
method that could be taken, for it was not in vain to
them whatever it
was to others. (2.) The great men of their church and nation, the
polite
and the
politicians, that would have done him some credit in the eye of
the world, did him all the dishonour they could; they heard him indeed, but they
were not
baptized of him, v. 30. The Pharisees, who were most in
reputation for religion and devotion, and the lawyers, who were celebrated for
their learning, especially their knowledge of the scriptures,
rejected the
counsel of God against themselves; they
frustrated it, they
received
the grace of God, by the baptism of John, in
vain. God in sending
that
messenger among them had a kind
purpose of good to them,
designed
their salvation by it, and, if they had closed with the counsel of God, it had
been
for themselves, they had been made for ever; but they
rejected
it, would not comply with it, and it was
against themselves, it was
to their own ruin; they came short of the benefit intended them, and not only
so, but forfeited the grace of God, put a bar in their own door, and, by
refusing that discipline which was to fit them for the kingdom of the Messiah,
shut themselves out of it, and they not only excluded themselves, but hindered
others, and stood in their way.
2. He here shows the strange perverseness of the men of that
generation, in their cavils both against John and Christ, and the prejudices
they conceived against them.
(1.) They made but a jesting matter of the methods God took to
do them good (v. 31):
"Whereunto shall I liken the men of this
generation? What can I think of absurd enough to represent them by? They
are, then,
like children sitting in the market-place, that mind nothing
that is serious, but are as full of play as they can hold. As if God were but in
jest with them, in all the methods he takes to do them good, as children are
with one another in the market-place (v. 32), they turn it all off with a
banter, and are not more affected with it than with a piece of pageantry."
This is the ruin of multitudes, they can never persuade themselves to be
serious
in the concerns of their souls. Old men, sitting in the sanhedrim, were but as
children
sitting in the market-place, and no more affected with the things that
belonged to their everlasting peace than people are with children's play. O
the amazing stupidity and vanity of the blind and ungodly world! The Lord awaken
them out of their security.
(2.) They still found something or other to carp at. [1.] John
Baptist was a reserved austere man, lived much in solitude, and ought to have
been admired for being such a humble, sober, self-denying man, and hearkened to
as a man of thought and contemplation; but this, which was his praise, was
turned to his reproach. Because he came
neither eating nor drinking, so
freely, plentifully, and cheerfully, as others did,
you say, "He has a
devil; he is a melancholy man, he is possessed, as the demoniac whose
dwelling was
among the tombs, though he be not quite so wild." [2.]
Our Lord Jesus was of a more free and open conversation; he
came eating and
drinking, v. 34. He would go and dine with Pharisees, though he knew they
did not care for him; and with publicans, though he knew they were no credit to
him; yet, in hopes of doing good both to the one and the other, he conversed
familiarly with them. By this it appears that the ministers of Christ may be of
very different tempers and dispositions, very different ways of preaching and
living, and yet all good and useful;
diversity of gifts, but each given
to
profit withal. Therefore none must make themselves a standard to all
others, nor judge hardly of those that do not do just as they do. John Baptist
bore witness to Christ, and Christ applauded John Baptist, though they were the
reverse of each other in their way of living. But the common enemies of them
both reproached them both. The very same men that had represented John as
crazed
in his intellects, because he came
neither eating nor drinking,
represented our Lord Jesus as
corrupt in his morals, because he came
eating
and drinking; he is a gluttonous man, and a wine-bibber. Ill-will never
speaks well. See the malice of wicked people, and how they put the worst
construction upon every thing they meet with in the gospel, and in the preachers
and professors of it; and hereby they think to depreciate
them, but
really destroy
themselves.
3. He shows that, notwithstanding this, God will be glorified in
the salvation of a chosen remnant (v. 35):
Wisdom is justified of all her
children. There are those who are given to wisdom
as her children,
and they shall be brought by the grace of God to submit to wisdom's conduct
and government, and thereby to justify wisdom in the ways she takes for bringing
them to that submission; for to them they are effectual, and thereby appear well
chosen. Wisdom's children are herein unanimous, one and all, they have all a
complacency in the methods of grace which divine wisdom takes, and think never
the worse of them for their being ridiculed by some.
Verses 36-50
When and where this passage of story happened does not appear;
this evangelist does not observe order of time in his narrative so much as the
other evangelists do; but it comes in here, upon occasion of Christ's being
reproached as
a friend to publicans and sinners, to show that it was only
for their good, and to bring them to repentance, that he conversed with them;
and that those whom he admitted hear him were reformed, or in a hopeful way to
be so. Who this woman was that here testified so great an affection to Christ
does not appear; it is commonly said to be Mary Magdalene, but I find no ground
in scripture for it: she is described (ch. 8:2 and Mk. 16:9) to be one
out of
whom Christ had cast seven devils; but that is not mentioned here, and
therefore it is probable that it was not she. Now observe here,
I. The civil entertainment which a Pharisee gave to Christ, and
his gracious acceptance of that entertainment (v. 36):
One of the Pharisees
desired him that he would eat with him, either because he thought it would
be a reputation to him to have such a guest at his table or because his company
would be an entertainment to him and his family and friends. It appears that
this Pharisee did not believe in Christ, for he will not own him to be a
prophet
(v. 39), and yet our Lord Jesus accepted his invitation,
went into his house,
and sat down to meat, that they might see he took the same liberty with
Pharisees that he did with publicans, in hopes of
doing them good. And
those may venture further into the society of such as are prejudiced against
Christ, and his religion, who have wisdom and grace sufficient to instruct and
argue with them, than others may.
II. The great respect which a poor penitent sinner showed him,
when he was at meat in the Pharisee's house. It was a woman in the city
that
was a sinner, a Gentile, a
harlot, I doubt, known to be so, and
infamous. She
knew that Jesus sat at meat in the Pharisee's house, and,
having been converted from her wicked course of life by his preaching, she came
to acknowledge her obligations to him, having no opportunity of doing it in any
other way than by
washing his feet, and anointing them with some sweet
ointment that she brought with her for that purpose. The way of sitting at table
then was such that their feet were partly
behind them. Now this woman did
not look Christ in the face, but came
behind him, and did the part of a
maid-servant,
whose office it was to
wash the feet of the guests (1 Sa. 25:41) and to
prepare the ointments.
Now in what this good woman did, we may observe,
1. Her
deep humiliation for sin. She stood behind him
weeping;
her eyes had been the inlets and outlets of sin, and now she makes them
fountains of tears. Her face is now foul with weeping, which perhaps used to be
covered with paints. Her hair now made a towel of, which before had been plaited
and adorned. We have reason to think that she had before sorrowed for sin; but,
now that she had an opportunity of coming into the presence of Christ, the wound
bled afresh and her sorrow was renewed. Note, It well becomes penitents, upon
all their approaches to Christ, to renew their godly sorrow and shame for sin,
when
he is pacified, Eze. 16:63.
2. Her
strong affection to the Lord Jesus. This was what
our Lord Jesus took special notice of, that she
loved much, v. 42, 47.
She
washed his feet, in token of her ready submission to the meanest
office in which she might
do him honour. Nay, she washed them with
her
tears, tears of joy; she was in a transport, to find herself so near her
Saviour, whom her soul loved. She
kissed his feet, as one unworthy of the
kisses of his mouth, which the spouse coveted, Cant. 1:2. It was a kiss of
adoration as well as affection.
She wiped them with her hair, as one
entirely devoted to his honour. Her eyes shall yield water to wash them, and her
hair be a towel to wipe them; and she
anointed his feet
with the
ointment, owning him hereby to be the Messiah, the
Anointed. She
anointed his feet in token of her consent to God's design in anointing his
head with the
oil of gladness. Note, All true penitents have a dear love
to the Lord Jesus.
III. The offence which the Pharisee took at Christ, for
admitting the respect which this poor penitent paid him (v. 39):
He said
within himself (little thinking that Christ knew what he thought),
This
man, if he were a prophet, would then have so much
knowledge as to
perceive that
this woman is a sinner, is a Gentile, is a woman of ill
fame, and so much
sanctity as
therefore not to suffer her to come
so near him; for can one of such a character approach a prophet, and his heart
not rise at it? See how apt proud and narrow souls are to think that others
should be as haughty and censorious as themselves. Simon, if she had touched
him, would have said,
Stand by thyself, come not near me, for I am holier
than thou (Isa. 65:5); and he thought Christ should say so too.
IV. Christ's justification of the woman in what she did to
him, and of himself in admitting it. Christ knew what the Pharisee spoke
within
himself, and made answer to it:
Simon, I have something to say unto thee,
v. 40. Though he was kindly entertained at his table, yet even there he reproved
him for what he saw amiss in him, and would not
suffer sin upon him.
Those whom Christ hath
something against he hath something to
say to,
for his
Spirit shall
reprove. Simon is willing to give him the
hearing:
He saith, Master, say on. Though he could not believe him to be
a prophet (because he was not so nice and precise as he was), yet he can
compliment him with the title of
Master, among those that cry
Lord,
Lord, but
do not the things which he saith. Now Christ, in his answer
to the Pharisee, reasons thus:It is true this woman has been a sinner: he
knows it; but she is a
pardoned sinner, which supposes her to be a
penitent
sinner. What she did to him was an expression of her
great love to her
Saviour, by whom her sins were forgiven. If she was pardoned, who had been
so
great a sinner, it might reasonably be expected that she should love her
Saviour more than others, and should give greater proofs of it than others; and
if this was the fruit of her love, and flowing from a sense of the pardon of her
sin, it became him to accept of it, and it ill became the Pharisee to be
offended at it. Now Christ has a further intention in this. The Pharisee doubted
whether he was a
prophet or no, nay, he did in effect deny it; but Christ
shows that he was more than a prophet, for he is one that has
power on earth
to forgive sins, and to whom are due the affections and thankful
acknowledgments of penitent pardoned sinners. Now, in his answer,
1. He by a parable forces Simon to acknowledge that the greater
sinner this woman had been the greater love she ought to show to Jesus Christ
when her
sins were
pardoned, v. 41-43. A man had
two debtors
that were both insolvent, but one of them owed him
ten times more than
the other. He very freely
forgave them both, and did not take the
advantage of the law against them, did not order them and their children to be
sold, or
deliver them to the tormentors. Now they were both sensible of
the great kindness they had received; but
which of them will love him most?
Certainly, saith the Pharisee, he to
whom he forgave most; and herein he
rightly judged. Now we, being obliged to
forgive, as we are and hope to
be
forgiven, may hence learn the duty between debtor and creditor.
(1.) The
debtor, if he have
any thing to pay,
ought to make satisfaction to his
creditor. No man can reckon any thing
his
own or have any comfortable enjoyment of it, but that which is so when
all
his debts are paid.
(2.) If God in his providence have disabled the debtor to pay
his debt, the creditor ought not to be severe with him, nor to go to the utmost
rigour of the law with him, but
freely to forgive him. Summum jus est summa
injuriaThe law stretched into rigour becomes unjust. Let the unmerciful
creditor read that parable, Mt. 18:23, etc., and tremble; for
they shall
have judgment without mercy that show no mercy.
(3.) The debtor that has found his creditors merciful ought to
be very grateful to them; and, if he cannot otherwise recompense them, ought to
love them. Some insolvent debtors, instead of being
grateful, are
spiteful,
to their creditors that lose by them, and cannot give them a good word, only
because they complain, whereas losers may have leave to speak. But this parable
speaks of God as the Creator (or rather of the Lord Jesus himself, for he it is
that forgives, and is beloved by, the debtor) and sinners are the debtors: and
so we may learn here, [1.] That
sin is a debt, and
sinners are debtors
to God Almighty. As creatures, we owe a debt, a debt of obedience to the precept
of the law, and, for non-payment of that, as sinners, we become liable to the
penalty. We have not paid our rent; nay, we have wasted our Lord's goods, and
so we become debtors. God has an action against us for the injury we have done
him, and the omission of our duty to him. [2.] That some are deeper in debt to
God, by reason of sin, than others are:
One owed five hundred pence and the
other fifty. The Pharisee was the less debtor, yet he a debtor too, which
was more than he thought himself, but rather that God was his debtor, Lu. 18:10,
11. This woman, that had been a scandalous notorious sinner, was the
greater
debtor. Some sinners are in themselves greater debtors than others, and some
sinners, by reason of divers aggravating circumstances, greater debtors; as
those that have sinned most openly and scandalously, that have sinned against
greater light and knowledge, more convictions and warnings, and more mercies and
means. [3.] That, whether our debt be more or less, it is
more than we
are able to pay:
They had nothing to pay, nothing at all to make a
composition with; for the debt is great, and we have nothing at all to pay it
with. Silver and gold will not pay our debt, nor will sacrifice and offering,
no, not
thousands of rams. No righteousness of our own will pay it, no,
not our repentance and obedience for the future; for it is what we are already
bound to, and it is God that works it within us. [4.] That the God of heaven is
ready
to forgive,
frankly to
forgive, poor sinners, upon gospel terms,
though their debt be ever so great. If we repent, and believe in Christ, our
iniquity shall not be our ruin, it shall not be laid to our charge. God has
proclaimed his name gracious and merciful, and ready to forgive sin; and, his
Son having purchased pardon for penitent believers, his gospel promises it to
them, and his Spirit seals it and gives them the comfort of it. [5.] That those
who have their sins
pardoned are obliged to
love him that pardoned
them; and the more is forgiven them, the more they should love him. The
greater
sinners any have been before their conversion, the
greater saints
they should be after, the more they should study to do for God, and the more
their hearts should be enlarged in obedience. When a
persecuting Saul
became a preaching Paul he
laboured more abundantly.
2. He applies this parable to the different temper and conduct
of the Pharisee and the sinner towards Christ. Though the Pharisee would not
allow Christ to be a prophet, Christ seems ready to allow him to be in a
justified state, and that he was one
forgiven, though to him
less was
forgiven. He did indeed show some love to Christ, in inviting him to his
house, but nothing to what this poor woman showed. "Observe," saith
Christ to him, "she is one that has much forgiven her, and therefore,
according to thine own judgment, it might be expected that she should love much
more than thou dost, and so it appears.
Seest thou this woman? v. 44.
Thou lookest upon her with contempt, but consider how much kinder a friend she
is to me than thou art; should I then accept thy kindness, and refuse hers?"
(1.) "Thou didst not so much as order a basin of water to be brought, to
wash my feet in, when I came in, wearied and dirtied with my walk, which would
have been some refreshment to me; but she has done much more:
she has washed
my feet with tears, tears of affection to me, tears of affliction for sin,
and has
wiped them with the hairs of her head, in token of her great love
to me." (2.) "Thou didst not so much as kiss my cheek" (which was
a usual expression of a hearty and affectionate welcome to a friend); "but
this
woman has not ceased to kiss my feet (v. 45), thereby expressing both a
humble and an affectionate love." (3.) "Thou didst not provide me a
little common oil, as usual, to anoint my head with; but she has bestowed a box
of precious
ointment upon
my feet (v. 46), so far has she outdone
thee." The reason why some people blame the pains and expense of zealous
Christians, in religion, is because they are not willing themselves to come up
to it, but resolve to rest in a
cheap and
easy religion.
3. He silenced the Pharisee's cavil:
I say unto thee,
Simon,
her sins, which are many, are forgiven, v. 47. He owns that she
had been guilty of
many sins: "But they are
forgiven her, and
therefore it is no way unbecoming in me to accept her kindness. They
are
forgiven, for she loved much." It should be rendered,
therefore she
loved much; for it is plain, by the tenour of Christ's discourse, that the
loving much was not the
cause, but the
effect, of her pardon, and
of her comfortable sense of it; for
we love God because
he first loved
us; he did not forgive us because we first loved him. "But
to whom
little is forgiven, as is to thee,
the same loveth little, as thou
dost." Hereby he intimates to the Pharisee that his love to Christ was so
little that he had reason to question whether he loved him at all in sincerity;
and, consequently, whether indeed his sin, though comparatively
little,
were forgiven him. Instead of grudging greater sinners the mercy they find with
Christ, upon their repentance, we should be stirred up by their example to
examine ourselves whether we be indeed forgiven, and do love Christ.
4. He silenced her fears, who probably was discouraged by the
Pharisee's conduct, and yet would not so far yield to the discouragement as to
fly off. (1.) Christ said unto her,
Thy sins are forgiven, v. 48. Note,
The more we express our sorrow for sin, and our love to Christ, the clearer
evidence we have of the forgiveness of our sins; for it is by the experience of
a
work of grace wrought
in us that we obtain the assurance of an
act
of grace wrought
for us. How well was she paid for her pains and
cost, when she was dismissed with this word from Christ,
Thy sins are
forgiven! and what an effectual prevention would this be of her return to
sin again! (2.) Though there were those present who quarrelled with Christ, in
their own minds, for presuming to forgive sin, and to pronounce sinners absolved
(v. 49), as those had done (Mt. 9:3), yet he
stood to what he had said;
for as he had there proved that he had
power to forgive sin, by curing
the man sick of the palsy, and therefore would not here take notice of the
cavil, so he would now show that he had
pleasure in forgiving sin, and it
was his delight; he loves to speak pardon and peace to penitents:
He said to
the woman, Thy faith hath saved thee, v. 50. This would confirm and double
her comfort in the forgiveness of her sin, that she was
justified by her
faith. All these expressions of sorrow for sin, and love to Christ, were the
effects and products of faith; and therefore, as faith of all graces doth most
honour God, so Christ doth of all graces put most honour upon faith. Note, They
who know that their faith hath saved them may go in peace, may go on their way
rejoicing.
Chapter 7:
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| Gill
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| Matthew Henry
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| McGee
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