Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
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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 8
Complete Concise
Most of this chapter is a repetition of divers passages of
Christ's preaching and miracles which we had before in Matthew and Mark; they
are all of such weight, that they are worth repeating, and therefore they are
repeated, that out of the mouth not only of two, but of three, witnesses every
word may be established. Here is, I. A general account of Christ's preaching,
and how he had subsistence for himself and his numerous family by the charitable
contributions of good people (v. 1-3). II. The parable of the sower, and the
four sorts of ground, with the exposition of it, and some inferences from it (v.
4-18). III. The preference which Christ gave to his obedient disciples before
his nearest relations according to the flesh (v. 19-21). IV. His stilling a
storm at sea, with a word's speaking (v. 22-25). V. His casting a legion of
devils out of a man that was possessed by them (v. 26-40). VI. His healing the
woman that had the bloody issue, and raising Jairus's daughter to life (v. 41-56).
Verses 1-3
We are here told,
I.
What Christ
made the
constant business
of his
lifeit was
preaching; in that work he was indefatigable,
and went about doing good (v. 1),
afterward
en
toµ kathexeµs
ordine, in the proper
time or
method.
Christ took his work before him and went about it regularly. He observed a
series
or order of business, so that the end of one good work was the beginning of
another. Now observe here, 1.
Where he preached:
He went about
dioµdeue
peragrabat.
He was an
itinerant preacher, did not confine himself to one place, but
diffused the beams of his light.
CircumibatHe went his circuit, as a
judge, having found his preaching perhaps most
acceptable where it was
new.
He went about
through every city, that none might plead ignorance. Hereby
he set an example to his disciples; they must traverse the nations of the earth,
as he did the cities of Israel. Nor did he confine himself to the
cities,
but went into the
villages, among the plain country-people, to preach
to
the inhabitants of the villages, Jdg. 5:11. 2. What he preached:
He
showed the glad tidings of the kingdom of God, that it was now to be set up
among them. Tidings of the
kingdom of God are
glad tidings, and
those Jesus Christ came to bring; to tell the children of men that God was
willing to take all those
under his protection that were willing to
return
to their allegiance. It was
glad tidings to the world that
there was hope of its being
reformed and
reconciled. 3. Who were
his attendants:
The twelve were with him, not to preach if he were
present, but to learn from him what and how to preach hereafter, and, if
occasion were, to be sent to places where he could not go. Happy were these his
servants that heard his wisdom.
II.
Whence he
had the
necessary supports of
life: He lived upon the kindness of his friends. There were
certain women,
who frequently attended his ministry, that
ministered to him of their
substance, v. 2, 3. Some of them are named; but there were
many others,
who were zealously affected to the doctrine of Christ, and thought themselves
bound
in justice to
encourage it, having themselves found benefit,
and in
charity, hoping that many others might find benefit by it too.
1. They were such, for the most part, as had been
Christ's
patients, and were the monuments of his power and mercy; they had been
healed
by him of evil spirits and infirmities. Some of them had been troubled in
mind, had been melancholy, others of them afflicted in body, and he had been to
them a powerful healer. He is the physician both of body and soul, and those who
have been
healed by him ought to study what they shall
render to him.
We are bound in
interest to attend him, that we may be ready to apply
ourselves to him for help in case of a relapse; and we are bound in
gratitude
to serve him and his gospel, who hath
saved us, and saved us
by it.
2. One of them was Mary Magdalene, out of whom had been
cast
seven devils; a certain number for an uncertain. Some think that she was one
that had been
very wicked, and then we may suppose her to be the woman
that
was a sinner mentioned just before, ch. 7:37. Dr. Lightfoot, finding
in some of the Talmudists' writings that Mary Magdalene signified
Mary the
plaiter of hair, thinks it applicable to her, she having been noted, in the
days of her iniquity and infamy, for that
plaiting of hair which is
opposed to
modest apparel, 1 Tim. 2:9. But, though she had been an
immodest woman, upon her repentance and reformation she found mercy, and became
a zealous disciple of Christ. Note, The greatest of sinners must not despair of
pardon; and the worse any have been before their conversion the more they should
study to do for Christ after. Or, rather, she was one that had been
very
melancholy, and then, probably, it was Mary the sister of Lazarus, who was a
woman of a
sorrowful spirit, who might have been originally of Magdala,
but removed to Bethany. This Mary Magdalene was attending on Christ's cross
and his sepulchre, and, if she was not Mary the sister of Lazarus, either that
particular friend and favourite of Christ's did not attend then, or the
evangelists did not take notice of her, neither of which we can suppose; thus
Dr. Lightfoot argues. Yet there is this to be objected against it that Mary
Magdalene is reckoned
among the women that followed Jesus from Galilee
(Mt. 27:55, 56); whereas Mary the sister of Lazarus had her residence in
Bethany.
3. Another of them was
Joanna the wife of Chuza, Herod's
steward. She had been his wife (so some), but was now a widow, and left in
good circumstances. If she was now his wife, we have reason to think that her
husband,
though preferred in Herod's court, had received the gospel, and was very
willing that his wife should be both a hearer of Christ and a contributor to
him.
4. There were many of them that
ministered to Christ of their
substance. It was an instance of the meanness of that condition to which our
Saviour humbled himself that he needed it, and of his great humility and
condescension that he accepted it. Though he was rich, yet for our sakes
he
became poor, and lived upon alms. Let none say that they scorn to be
beholden to the charity of their neighbours, when Providence has brought them
into straits; but let them ask and be thankful for it as a favour. Christ would
rather be beholden to his known friends for a maintenance for himself and his
disciples than be burdensome to strangers in the cities and villages whither he
came to preach. Note, It is the duty of those who are taught in the word to
communicate
to them who teach them in all good things; and those who are herein liberal
and cheerful honour the Lord with their substance, and bring a blessing upon it.
Verses 4-21
The former paragraph began with an account of Christ's
industry in
preaching (v. 1); this begins with an account of the people's
industry in hearing, v. 4. He
went into every city, to preach; so they,
one would think, should have contented themselves to hear him when he came to
their own city (we know those that would); but there were those here that came
to
him out of every city, would not stay till he came to
them, nor think
that they had enough when he left
them, but
met him when he was
coming towards them, and
followed him when he was going from them. Nor
did he excuse himself from going
to the cities with this, that there were
some
from the cities that
came to him; for, though there were, yet
the most had not zeal enough to bring them to him, and therefore such is his
wonderful condescension that he will go to them; for
he is found of those
that sought him not, Isa. 65:1.
Here was, it seems, a vast concourse,
much people were
gathered together, abundance of fish to cast their net among; and he was as
ready and willing to
teach as they were to be
taught. Now in these
verses we have,
I. Necessary and excellent rules and cautions for hearing the
word, in the parable of
the sower and the explanation and application of
it, all which we had twice before more largely. When Christ had put forth this
parable, 1. The disciples were
inquisitive concerning the meaning of it,
v. 9. They asked him,
What might this parable be? Note, We should covet
earnestly to know the true
intent, and full
extent, of the word we
hear, that we may be neither mistaken nor defective in our knowledge. 2. Christ
made them sensible of what great advantage it was to them that they had
opportunity of acquainting themselves with the mystery and meaning of his word,
which others had not:
Unto you it is given, v. 10. Note, Those who would
receive instruction from Christ must know and consider what a privilege it is to
be instructed by him, what a distinguishing privilege to be led into the light,
such a light, when others are left in darkness, such a darkness. Happy are we,
and for ever indebted to free grace, if the same thing that is a
parable
to others, with which they are only
amused, is a
plain truth to
us, by which we are
enlightened and
governed, and into the mould
of which we are
delivered.
Now from the parable itself, and the explication of it, observe,
(1.) The
heart of man is as
soil to the
seed of
God's word; it is capable of receiving it, and bringing forth the fruits
of it; but, unless that seed be sown in it, it will bring forth nothing
valuable. Or care therefore must be to bring the
seed and the
soil
together. To what purpose have we the
seed in the scripture, if it be not
sown? And to what purpose have we the soil in our own hearts, if it be
not sown with that seed?
(2.) The
success of the
seeding is very much
according to the nature and temper of the
soil, and as that is, or is
not, disposed to receive the seed. The word of God
is to us, as
we
are, a
savour of life unto life, or
of death unto death.
(3.) The devil is a subtle and spiteful enemy, that makes it his
business to hinder our profiting by the word of God. He takes the word out of
the hearts of
careless hearers,
lest they should believe and be saved,
v. 12. This is added here to teach us, [1.] That we cannot be
saved
unless we
believe. The word of the gospel will not be a saving word to
us, unless it be mixed with faith. [2.] That therefore the devil does all he can
to keep us from
believing, to make us not believe the word when we read
and hear it; or, if we heed it for the present, to make us forget it again, and
let it slip (Heb. 2:1); or, if we remember it, to create prejudices in our minds
against it, or
divert our minds from it to something else; and all is
lest
we should believe and be saved, lest we should believe and
rejoice,
while he believes and
trembles.
(4.) Where the word of God is heard
carelessly there is
commonly a
contempt put upon it too. It is added here in the parable that
the seed which fell by the way-side was
trodden down, v. 5. They that
wilfully shut their ears against the word do in effect trample it under their
feet; they
despise the commandment of the Lord.
(5.) Those on whom the word makes
some impressions, but
they are not
deep and
durable ones, will show their hypocrisy in a
time of trial; as the seed sown upon the rock, where it gains no root, v. 13.
These
for awhile believe a little while; their profession promises
something, but in
time of temptation they fall away from their good
beginnings. Whether the temptation arises from the smiles or the frowns, of the
world, they are easily overcome by it.
(6.) The
pleasures of this life are as dangerous and
mischievous thorns to choke the good seed of the word as any other. This is
added here (v. 14), which was not in the other evangelists. Those that are
not
entangled in the cares of this life, nor inveigled with the
deceitfulness
of riches, but boast that they are dead to them, may yet be kept from heaven
by an affected indolence, and the love of ease and pleasure. The delights of
sense may ruin the soul, even lawful delights, indulged, and too much delighted
in.
(7.) It is not enough that the fruit be brought forth, but it
must be
brought to perfection, it must be fully ripened. If it be not, it
is as if there was no fruit at all brought forth; for that which in Matthew and
Mark is said to be
unfruitful is the same that here is said to
bring
forth none to perfection. For
factum non dicitur quod non perseverat
perseverance
is necessary to the perfection of a work.
(8.) The good ground, which brings forth
good fruit, is
an
honest and
good heart, well disposed to receive instruction and
commandment (v. 15); a heart free from sinful pollutions, and firmly fixed for
God and duty, an upright heart, a tender heart, and a heart that
trembles at
the word, is an honest and good heart, which, having heard the word,
understands
it (so it is in Matthew),
receives it (so it is in Mark), and
keeps
it (so it is here), as the soil not only
receives, but keeps, the seed;
and the stomach not only receives, but keeps, the food or physic.
(9.) Where the word is well kept there is fruit brought forth
with
patience. This also is added here. There must be both
bearing
patience and
waiting patience; patience to suffer the
tribulation
and
persecution which may
arise because of the word; patience to
continue to the end in well-doing.
(10.) In consideration of all this, we ought to take
heed how
we hear (v. 18); take heed of those things that will hinder our profiting by
the word we hear, watch over our hearts in hearing, and take heed lest they
betray us; take heed
lest we hear carelessly and slightly, lest, upon any
account, we entertain prejudice against the word we hear; and take heed to the
frame of our spirits after we have heard the word, lest we lose what we have
gained.
II. Needful instructions given to those that are appointed to
preach the word, and to those also that have heard it. 1. Those that have
received
the gift must
minister the same. Ministers that have the dispensing
of the gospel committed to them, people that have profited by the word and are
thereby qualified to profit others, must look upon themselves as
lighted
candles: ministers must in solemn authoritative preaching, and people in
brotherly familiar discourse, diffuse their light, for a
candle must not
be
covered with a vessel nor
put under a bed, v. 16. Ministers and
Christians are to be lights in the world,
holding forth the word of life.
Their light must shine before men; they must not only
be good, but
do
good. 2. We must expect that what is now done
in secret, and from
unseen springs, will shortly be
manifested and
made known, v. 17.
What is committed to you
in secret should be made manifest
by you;
for your Master did not give you talents to be buried, but to be traded with.
Let that which is now hid be
made known; for, if it be not manifested
by
you, it will be manifested
against you, will be produced in evidence
of your treachery. 3. The gifts we have will either be continued to us, or taken
from us, according as we do, or do not, make use of them for the glory of God
and the edification of our brethren:
Whosoever hath, to him shall be given,
v. 18. He that hath gifts, and does good with them, shall have more; he that
buries
his talent shall lose it. From him that hath not shall be taken away even
that
which he hath, so it is in Mark; that which he
seemeth to have, so it
is in Luke. Note, The grace that is lost was but
seeming grace, was never
true. Men do but
seem to have what they do not
use, and
shows of religion will be lost and forfeited. They
went out from us, because
they were not of us, 1 Jn. 2:19. Let us see to it that we have grace in
sincerity, the
root of the matter found in us; that is a good part which
shall never be taken away from those that have it.
III. Great encouragement given to those that prove themselves
faithful
hearers of the word, by being
doers of the work, in a
particular instance of Christ's respect to his disciples, in preferring them
even before his nearest relations (v. 19-21), which passage of story we had
twice before. Observe, 1. What crowding there was after Christ. There was no
coming near for the throng of people that attended him, who, though they were
crowded very so much, would not be crowded out from his congregation. 2. Some of
his nearest kindred were least solicitous to hear him preach. Instead of getting
within, as they might easily have done if they had come in time, desiring
to
hear him, they stood
without, desiring to
see him; and,
probably, out of a foolish fear, lest he should spend himself with too much
speaking, designing nothing but to interrupt him, and oblige him to break off.
3. Jesus Christ would rather be busy at his work than conversing with his
friends. He would not leave his preaching, to speak with his
mother and
his
brethren, for it was his
meat and drink to be so employed. 4.
Christ is pleased to own those as his nearest and dearest relations that
hear
the word of God and do it; they are to him more than
his mother and
brethren.
Verses 22-39
We have here two illustrious proofs of the power of our Lord
Jesus which we had beforehis power over the
winds, and his power over
the
devils. See Mk. 4 and 5.
I. His power over the winds, those
powers of the air that
are so much a terror to men, especially upon sea, and occasion the death of such
multitudes. Observe,
1. Christ ordered his disciples to put to sea, that he might
show his glory upon the water, in stilling the waves, and might do an act of
kindness to a poor possessed man on the other side the water:
He went into a
ship with his disciples, v. 22. They that observe Christ's orders may
assure themselves of his presence. If Christ sends his disciples, he goes
with
them. And those may safely and boldly venture any where that have Christ
accompanying them.
He said, Let us go over unto the other side; for he
had a piece of good work to do there. He might have gone by land, a little way
about; but he chose to go by
water, that he might show his
wonders in
the deep.
2. Those that put to sea in a calm, yea, and at Christ's word,
must yet
prepare for a storm, and for the utmost peril in that storm;
There
came down a storm of wind on the lake (v. 23), as if it were there,
and no where else; and presently their ship was so tossed that it was filled
with water, and they were in jeopardy of their lives. Perhaps the devil, who is
the
prince of the power of the air, and who
raiseth winds by the
permission of God, had some suspicion, from some words which Christ might let
fall, that he was coming over the lake now on purpose to cast that legion of
devils out of the poor man on the other side, and therefore poured this storm
upon the ship he was in, designing, if possible, to have sunk him and prevented
that victory.
3. Christ was
asleep in the storm, v. 23. Some bodily
refreshment he must have, and he chose to take it when it would be least a
hindrance to him in his work. The disciples of Christ may really have his
gracious presence with them at sea, and in a storm, and yet he may seem as if he
were
asleep; he may not immediately appear for their relief, no, not when
things seem to be brought even to the last extremity. Thus he will try their
faith and patience, and quicken them by prayer to awake, and make their
deliverance the more welcome when it comes at last.
4. A complaint to Christ of our danger, and the distress his
church is in, is enough to engage him to awake, and appear for us, v. 24. They
cried,
Master, master, we perish! The way to have our fears silenced is
to bring them to Christ, and lay them before him. Those that in sincerity call
Christ
Master, and with faith and fervency call upon him as
their
Master, may be sure that he will not let them
perish. There is no
relief for poor souls that are under a sense of guilt, and a fear of wrath, like
this, to go to Christ, and call him
Master, and say, "I am
undone,
if thou do not
help me."
5. Christ's business is to
lay storms, as it is Satan's
business to
raise them. He can do it; he has done it; he delights to do
it: for he came to
proclaim peace on earth. He
rebuked the wind and
the raging of the water, and immediately
they ceased (v. 24); not, as
at other times, by degrees, but all of a sudden,
there was a great calm.
Thus Christ showed that, though the devil pretends to be the prince of the power
of the air, yet even there he has him in a chain.
6. When our dangers are over, it becomes us to take to ourselves
the shame of our own fears and to give to Christ the glory of his power. When
Christ had turned the
storm into a
calm, then were they glad because
they were quiet, Ps. 107:30. And then, (1.) Christ gives them a rebuke for
their inordinate fear:
Where is your faith? v. 25. Note, Many that have
true
faith have it to seek when they have occasion to use it. They tremble, and
are discouraged, if second causes frown upon them. A little thing disheartens
them; and
where is their faith then? (2.) They give him the glory of his
power:
They, being afraid, wondered. Those that had feared the storm, now
that the danger was over with good reason feared him that had stilled it, and
said
one to another, What manner of man is this! They might as well have said,
Who
is a God like unto thee? For it is God's prerogative to
still the noise
of the seas, the noise of their waves, Ps. 65:7.
II. His power over
the devil, the
prince of the power
of the air. In the next passage of story he comes into a closer grapple with
him than he did when he commanded
the winds. Presently after the winds
were stilled they were brought to their desired haven, and
arrived at the
country of the Gadarenes, and there went ashore (v. 26, 27); and he soon met
with that which was his business over, and which he thought it worth his while
to go through a storm to accomplish.
We may learn a great deal out of this story concerning this
world of infernal, malignant spirits, which, though not working now ordinarily
in the same way as here, yet we are all concerned at all times to stand upon our
guard against.
1. These
malignant spirits are very
numerous. They
that had taken possession of this one man called themselves
Legion (v.
30), because
many devils were entered into him: he had
had devils a
long time, v. 27. But perhaps those that had been long in possession of him,
upon some foresight of our Saviour's coming to make an attack upon them, and
finding they could not prevent it by the storm they had raised, sent for
recruits, intending this to be
a decisive battle, and hoping now to be
too hard for him that had cast out so many unclean spirits, and to give him a
defeat. They either were, or at least would be thought to be, a
legion,
formidable as an
army with banners; and now, at least, to be, what the
twentieth
legion of the Roman army, which was long quartered at Chester, was styled,
legio
victrixa
victorious legion.
2. They have an
inveterate enmity to man, and all his
conveniences and comforts. This man in whom the devils had got possession, and
kept it long, being under their influence,
wore no clothes, neither abode in
any house (v. 27), though
clothing and a
habitation are two of
the necessary supports of this life. Nay, and because man has a natural dread of
the habitations of the dead, they forced this man to
abide in the tombs,
to make him so much the more a terror to himself and to all about him, so that
his soul had as much cause as ever any man's had to be weary of his life, and
to
choose strangling and death rather.
3. They are very
strong, fierce, and unruly, and hate and
scorn to be restrained:
He was kept bound with chains and in fetters,
that he might not be mischievous either to others or to himself, but he
broke
the bands, v. 29. Note, Those that are
ungovernable by any other
thereby show that they are under Satan's government; and this is the language
of those that are so, even concerning God and Christ, their best friends, that
would not either bind them
from or bind them
to any thing but for
their own good:
Let us break their bands in sunder. He was driven of the
devil. Those that are under Christ's government are
sweetly led
with the cords of a man and the bands of love; those that are under the devil's
government are
furiously driven.
4. They are much enraged against our Lord Jesus, and have a
great dread and horror of him:
When the man whom they had possession of,
and who spoke as they would have him,
saw Jesus, he
roared out as
one in an agony, and
fell down before him, to deprecate his wrath, and
owned him to be
the Son of God most high, that was infinitely above him
and too hard for him; but protested against having any league or confederacy
with him (which might sufficiently have silenced the blasphemous cavils of the
scribes and Pharisees):
What have I to do with thee? The devils have
neither inclination to do service to Christ nor expectation to receive benefit
by him:
What have we to do with thee? But they dreaded his power and
wrath:
I beseech thee, torment me not. They do not say,
I beseech
thee, save me, but only,
Torment me not. See whose language
they
speak that have only a dread of hell as a place of torment, but no desire of
heaven as a place of holiness and love.
5. They are perfectly
at the command, and under
the
power, of our Lord Jesus; and they knew it, for they
besought him that he
would not command them to go eis ton abysson
into
the deep, the place of their torment, which they acknowledge he could easily
and justly do. O what a comfort is this to the Lord's people, that all the
powers of darkness are under the check and control of the Lord Jesus! He has
them all in a chain. He can send them to
their own place, when he
pleaseth.
6. They delight in
doing mischief. When they found there
was no remedy, but they must quit their hold of this poor man, they begged they
might have leave to take possession of a
herd of swine, v. 32. When the
devil at first brought man into a miserable state he brought a curse likewise
upon the whole creation, and that became subject to enmity. And here, as an
instance of that extensive enmity of his, when he could not destroy the man, he
would destroy the swine. If he could not hurt them in their bodies, he would
hurt them in their goods, which sometimes prove a great temptation to men to
draw them from Christ, as here. Christ
suffered them to enter into the swine,
to convince the country what mischief the devil could do in it, if he should
suffer him. No sooner had the devils leave than they entered into the
swine;
and no sooner had they entered into them than the herd ran violently
down a
steep place into the lake, and were
drowned. For it is a miracle of
mercy if those whom Satan possesses are not brought to destruction and
perdition. This, and other instances, show that that roaring lion and red dragon
seeks
what and whom he may devour.
7. When the devil's power is broken in any soul that soul
recovers itself, and returns into a right frame, which supposes that those whom
Satan gets possession of are put out of the possession of themselves:
The man
out of whom the devils were departed sat at the feet of Jesus, v. 35. While
he was under the devil's power he was ready to
fly in the face of
Jesus; but now he
sits at his feet, which is a sign that he is come to
his
right mind. If God has possession of us, he preserves to us the
government and enjoyment of ourselves; but, if Satan has possession of us, he
robs us of both. Let his power therefore in our souls be overturned, and let
him
come whose right our hearts are, and let us give them to him; for we are never
more our own than when we are his.
Let us now see what was the effect of this miracle of casting
the legion of devils out of this man.
(1.) What effect it had upon the people of that country who had
lost their swine by it:
The swineherds went and told it both
in city
and country (v. 34), perhaps with a design to incense people against Christ.
They told
by what means he that was possessed of the devils was healed
(v. 36), that it was by sending the devils into the swine, which was capable of
an invidious representation, as if Christ could not have delivered the man out
of their hands, but by delivering the swine into them.
The people came out,
to see what was done, and to enquire into it; and
they were afraid
(v. 35); they were
taken with great fear (v. 37); they were surprised and
amazed at it, and knew not what to say to it. They thought more of the
destruction of the swine than of the deliverance of their poor afflicted
neighbour, and of the country from the terror of his frenzy, which was become a
public nuisance; and therefore
the whole multitude besought Christ to depart
from them for fear he should bring some other judgment upon them; whereas
indeed none need to be afraid of Christ that are willing to forsake their sins
and give up themselves to him. But Christ took them at their word:
He went up
into the ship, and returned back again. Those lose their Saviour, and their
hopes in him, that love their swine better.
(2.) What effect it had upon the poor man who had recovered
himself by it. He
desired Christ's company as much as others
dreaded
it: he besought Christ that
he might be with him as others were
that
had been healed by him of evil spirits and infirmities (v. 2), that Christ
might be to him a protector and teacher, and that he might be to Christ for a
name and a praise. He was loth to stay among those rude and brutish Gadarenes
that desired Christ to depart from them.
O gather not my soul with these
sinners! But Christ would not take him along with him, but sent him home, to
publish among those that knew him the great things God had done for him, that so
he might be a blessing to his country, as he had been a burden to it. We must
sometimes deny ourselves the satisfaction even of spiritual benefits and
comforts, to gain an opportunity of being serviceable to the souls of others.
Perhaps Christ knew that, when the resentment of the loss of their swine was a
little over, they would be better disposed to consider the miracle, and
therefore left the man among them to be a standing monument, and a monitor to
them of it.
Verses 40-56
Christ was driven away by the
Gadarenes; they were weary
of him, and willing to be rid of him. But when he had crossed the water, and
returned to the
Galileans, they
gladly received him, wished and
waited
for his return, and
welcomed him with all their hearts when he did
return, v. 40. If some
will not accept the favours Christ offers them,
others
will. If the Gadarenes be not gathered, yet there are many among
whom
Christ shall be glorious. When Christ had done his work on the other
side of the water he returned, and found work to do in the place whence he came,
fresh work. They that will lay out themselves to do good shall never want
occasion for it. The needy you have always with you.
We have here two miracles interwoven, as they were in Matthew
and Markthe raising of Jairus's daughter to life, and the cure of the woman
that had an issue of blood, as he was going in a crowd to Jairus's house. We
have here,
I. A
public address made to Christ by
a ruler of the
synagogue, whose name was
Jairus, on the behalf of a little daughter
of his, that was very ill, and, in the apprehension of all about here,
lay a
dying. This address was very humble and reverent. Jairus, though a
ruler,
fell down at Jesus's feet, as owning him to be a ruler
above him.
It was very importunate. He
besought him that he would
come into his
house; not having the
faith, at least not having the
thought,
of the centurion, who desired Christ only to
speak the healing
word
at a distance. But Christ complied with his request;
he went along with
him. Strong faith shall be applauded, and yet weak faith shall not be rejected.
In the houses where sickness and death are, it is very desirable to have the
presence of Christ. When Christ was going,
the people thronged him, some
out of curiosity to see him, others out of an affection to him. Let us not
complain of a crowd, and a throng, and a hurry, as long as we are in the way of
our duty, and
doing good; but otherwise it is what every wise man will
keep himself out of as much as he can.
II. Here is a
secret application made to Christ by a
woman ill of a
bloody issue, which had been the consumption of her body
and the consumption of her purse too; for
she had spent all her living upon
physicians, and was never the better, v. 43. The nature of her disease was
such that she did not care to make a public complaint of it (it was agreeable to
the modesty of her sex to be very shy of speaking of it), and therefore she took
this opportunity of coming to Christ
in a crowd; and the more people were
present the more likely she thought it was that she should be
concealed.
Her
faith was very
strong; for she doubted not but that by the
touch
of the
hem of his garment she should derive from him healing virtue
sufficient for her relief, looking upon him to be such a full fountain of
mercies that she should
steal a cure and he not
miss it. Thus many
a poor soul is
healed, and
helped, and
saved, by Christ,
that is
lost in a crowd, and that nobody takes notice of. The woman found
an immediate change for the better in herself, and that her disease was cured,
v. 44. As believers have comfortable communion with Christ, so they have
comfortable communications from him
incognito
secretly, meat to eat
that the
world knows not of, and
joy that a
stranger does not
intermeddle with.
III. Here is a
discovery of this secret cure, to the
glory both of the physician and the patient.
1. Christ takes notice that there is a cure wrought:
Virtue
is gone out of me, v. 46. Those that have been healed by virtue derived from
Christ must
own it, for he
knows it. He speaks of it here, not in
a way of
complaint, as if he were hereby either
weakened or
wronged,
but in a way of
complacency. It was his delight that
virtue was
gone out of him to do any good, and he did not grudge it to the meanest; they
were as welcome to it as to the light and heat of the sun. Nor had he the less
virtue
in him for the going out of the virtue
from him for he is
an
overflowing fountain.
2. The poor patient owns her case, and the benefit she had
received:
When she saw that she was not hid, she came, and fell down before
him, v. 47. Note, The consideration of this, that we cannot be
hid from
Christ, should engage us to
pour out
our hearts before him,
and to show before him all our sin and all our trouble.
She came trembling,
and yet
her faith saved her, v. 48. Note, There may be
trembling
where yet there is saving faith. She
declared before all the people for what
cause she had touched him because she believed that a touch would cure her,
and it did so. Christ's patients should communicate their experiences to one
another.
3. The great physician confirms her cure, and sends her away
with the comfort of it:
Be of good comfort; thy faith hath made thee whole,
v. 48. Jacob got the blessing from Isaac clandestinely, and by a wile; but, when
the fraud was discovered, Isaac ratified it designedly. It was obtained
surreptitiously
and
under-hand, but it was secured and seconded
above-board. So
was the cure here. He is
blessed, and he
shall be blessed; so
here, She
is healed, and she
shall be healed.
IV. Here is an
encouragement to Jairus not to distrust
the power of Christ,
though his daughter was now dead, and they that
brought him the tidings advised him not to give
the Master any further
trouble about her:
Fear not, saith Christ,
only believe. Note,
Our
faith in Christ should be bold and daring, as well as our
zeal for
him. They that are willing to do any thing for him may depend upon his doing
great things for them, above what they are able to ask or think. When the
patient is dead there is no room for prayer, or the use of means; but here,
though the child is dead, yet
believe, and all shall be well.
Post
mortem medicus
to call in the physician after death, is an
absurdity; but not
post mortem Christus
to call in Christ after
death.
V. The
preparatives for the raising of her to life again.
1. The
choice Christ made of witnesses that should see the miracle
wrought. A
crowd followed him, but perhaps they were rude and noisy;
however, it was not fit to let such a multitude come into a gentleman's house,
especially now that the family was all in sorrow;
therefore he sent them
back, and not because he was afraid to let the miracle pass their scrutiny; for
he raised Lazarus and the widow's son
publicly. He took none with him
but Peter, and James, and John, that triumvirate of his disciples that he was
most intimate with, designing these three, with the parents, to be the only
spectators of the miracle, they being a competent number to attest the truth of
it. 2. The
check he gave to the mourners.
They all wept, and bewailed
her; for, it seems, she was a very agreeable hopeful child, and dear not
only to the parents, but to all the neighbours. But Christ bid them
not weep;
for she is not dead, but sleepeth. He means, as to her peculiar case, that
she was not dead for good and all, but that she should now shortly be raised to
life, so that it would be to her friends as if she had been but a few hours
asleep. But it is applicable to all that die in the Lord; therefore we should
not sorrow for them as those that have
no hope, because death is but a
sleep
to them, not only as it is a
rest from all the
toils of the
days
of time, but as there will be a
resurrection, a waking and rising
again to all the
glories of the
days of eternity. This was a
comfortable word which Christ said to these mourners, yet they wickedly
ridiculed it, and
laughed him to scorn for it here was
a pearl cast
before swine. They were ignorant of the scriptures of the Old Testament who
bantered it as an absurd thing to call death a
sleep; yet
this
good came out of
that evil that hereby the truth of the miracle was
evinced; for they
knew that she was dead, they were certain of it, and
therefore nothing less than a
divine power could restore her to life. We
find not any answer that he made them; but he soon
explained himself, I
hope to their conviction, so that they would never again laugh at any word of
his. But he
put them all out, v. 54. They were unworthy to be the
witnesses of this work of wonder; they who in the midst of their mourning were
so merrily disposed as to laugh at him for what he
said would, it may be,
have found something to laugh at in what he
did, and therefore are justly
shut out.
VI. Her return to life, after a
short visit to the
congregation
of the dead: He took her by the hand (as we do by one that we would awake
out of sleep, and help up), and he called, saying,
Maid, arise, v. 55.
Thus the
hand of Christ's grace goes along with the
calls of his
word, to make them effectual. Here that is expressed which was only implied
in the other evangelists, that
her spirit came again; her soul returned
again to animate her body. This plainly proves that the soul exists and acts in
a state of separation from the body, and therefore is immortal; that death does
not extinguish this
candle of the Lord, but takes it out of a
dark
lantern. It is not, as Grotius well observes, the
krasis
or
temperament of the body, or anything that dies with it; but it is
anthypostaton
ti
something that subsists by itself, which, after death, is
somewhere else than where the body is. Where the soul of this child was in this
interval we are not told; it was in the hand of the
Father of spirits, to
whom all souls at death return. When
her spirit came again she arose, and
made it appear that she was alive by her motion, as she did also by her
appetite; for Christ
commanded to give her meat. As babes newly born, so
those that are newly raised, desire spiritual food, that they may grow
thereby.
In the last verse, we need not wonder to find
her parents astonished; but
if that implies that
they only were so, and not the other by-standers,
who had laughed Christ to scorn, we may well wonder at their stupidity, which
perhaps was the reason why Christ would not have it proclaimed, as well as to
give an instance of his humility.
Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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