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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
JOHN
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 19
@Joh
19:1-16. JESUS BEFORE PILATE--SCOURGED--TREATED WITH
OTHER SEVERITIES AND INSULTS--DELIVERED UP, AND LED AWAY TO
BE CRUCIFIED.
1-3. Pilate took Jesus and scourged him--in hope of
appeasing them. (See @Mr
15:15). "And the soldiers led Him away into the
palace, and they call the whole band" (@Mr
15:16)--the body of the military cohort stationed
there--to take part in the mock coronation now to be
enacted.
2. the soldiers platted a crown of thorns, and put it on
his head--in mockery of a regal crown.
and they put on him a
purple robe--in mockery of the imperial purple;
first "stripping him" (@Mt
27:28) of His own outer garment. The robe may have been
the "gorgeous" one in which Herod arrayed and sent
Him back to Pilate (@Lu
23:11). "And they put a reed into His right
hand" (@Mt
27:29)--in mockery of the regal scepter.
"And they bowed the knee before Him" (@Mt
27:29).
3. And said, Hail, King of the Jews!--doing Him
derisive homage, in the form used on approaching the
emperors. "And they spit upon Him, and took the reed
and smote Him on the head" (@Mt
27:30). The best comment on these affecting details is
to cover the face.
4, 5. Pilate . . . went forth again, and saith
. . . Behold, I bring him forth to you--am
bringing, that is, going to bring him forth to you.
that ye may know I find no
fault in him--and, by scourging Him and allowing the
soldiers to make sport of Him, have gone as far to meet your
exasperation as can be expected from a judge.
5. Then Jesus came forth, wearing the crown of thorns,
and the purple robe. And Pilate saith unto them, Behold the
man!--There is no reason to think that contempt
dictated this speech. There was clearly a struggle in the
breast of this wretched man. Not only was he reluctant to
surrender to mere clamor an innocent man, but a feeling of
anxiety about His mysterious claims, as is plain from what
follows, was beginning to rack his breast, and the object of
his exclamation seems to have been to move their pity.
But, be his meaning what it may, those three words
have been eagerly appropriated by all Christendom, and
enshrined for ever in its heart as a sublime expression of
its calm, rapt admiration of its suffering Lord.
6, 7. When the chief priests . . . saw him,
they cried out--their fiendish rage kindling afresh at
the sight of Him.
Crucify him, crucify him--(See
@Mr
15:14).
Pilate saith unto them,
Take ye him, and crucify him; for I find no fault in him--as
if this would relieve him of the responsibility of
the deed, who, by surrendering Him, incurred it all!
7. The Jews answered him, We have a law, and by oar law
he ought to die, because he made himself the Son of God--Their
criminal charges having come to nothing, they give up that
point, and as Pilate was throwing the whole responsibility
upon them, they retreat into their own Jewish law, by which,
as claiming equality with God (see @Joh
5:18 and @Joh
8:59), He ought to die; insinuating that it was Pilate's
duty, even as civil governor, to protect their law from such
insult.
8-11. When Pilate . . . heard this saying, he
was the more afraid--the name "SON OF GOD,"
the lofty sense evidently attached to it by His Jewish
accusers, the dialogue he had already held with Him, and the
dream of his wife (@Mt
27:19), all working together in the breast of the
wretched man.
9. and went again into the judgment hall, and saith to
Jesus, Whence art thou?--beyond all doubt a question
relating not to His mission but to His personal origin.
Jesus gave him no answer--He
had said enough; the time for answering such a question was
past; the weak and wavering governor is already on the point
of giving way.
10. Then saith Pilate unto him, Speakest thou not to me?--The
"me" is the emphatic word in the question. He
falls back upon the pride of office, which doubtless
tended to blunt the workings of his conscience.
knowest thou not that I
have power to crucify thee, and have power to release thee?--said
to work upon Him at once by fear and by hope.
11. Thou couldest--rather, "shouldst."
have no power at all
against me--neither to crucify nor to release, nor to do
anything whatever against Me [BENGEL].
except it were--"unless
it had been."
given thee from above--that
is, "Thou thinkest too much of thy power, Pilate:
against Me that power is none, save what is meted out to
thee by special divine appointment, for a special end."
therefore he that
delivered me unto thee--Caiaphas, too wit--but he only
as representing the Jewish authorities as a body.
hath the greater sin--as
having better opportunities and more knowledge of such
matters.
12-16. And from thenceforth--particularly this
speech, which seems to have filled him with awe, and
redoubled his anxiety.
Pilate sought to release
him--that is, to gain their consent to it, for he
could have done it at once on his authority.
but the Jews cried--seeing
their advantage, and not slow to profit by it. If thou let
this man go, thou art not Cæsar's friend,
&c.--"This was equivalent to a threat of impeachment,
which we know was much dreaded by such officers as the
procurators, especially of the character of Pilate or Felix.
It also consummates the treachery and disgrace of the Jewish
rulers, who were willing, for the purpose of destroying
Jesus, to affect a zeal for the supremacy of a foreign
prince" [WEBSTER and WILKINSON]. (See @Joh
19:15).
When Pilate . . .
heard that, . . . he brought Jesus forth, and sat
down in--"upon"
the judgment seat--that
he might pronounce sentence against the Prisoner, on this
charge, the more solemnly.
in a place called the
Pavement--a tesselated pavement, much used by the
Romans.
in the Hebrew, Gabbatha--from
its being raised.
14. It was the preparation--that is, the day before
the Jewish sabbath.
and about the sixth hour--The
true reading here is probably, "the third
hour"--or nine A.M.--which agrees best with the whole
series of events, as well as with the other Evangelists.
he saith to the Jews,
Behold your King!--Having now made up his mind to yield
to them, he takes a sort of quiet revenge on them by this
irony, which he knew would sting them. This only reawakens
their cry to despatch Him.
15. crucify your King? . . . We have no king
but Cæsar--"Some of those who thus cried died
miserably in rebellion against Cæsar forty years
afterwards. But it suited their present purpose"
[ALFORD].
16. Then delivered he him therefore unto them to be
crucified, &c.--(See @Mr
15:15).
@Joh
19:17-30. CRUCIFIXION AND DEATH OF THE LORD JESUS.
17. And he bearing his cross--(See on Lu 23:26).
went forth--Compare @Heb
13:11-13, "without the camp"; "without
the gate." On arriving at the place, "they gave
Him vinegar to drink mingled with gall [wine mingled with
myrrh, @Mr
15:23], and when He had tasted thereof, He would not
drink" (@Mt
27:34). This potion was stupefying, and given to
criminals just before execution, to deaden the sense of
pain.
|
Fill high the bowl,
and spice it well, and pour
The dews oblivious: for the Cross is sharp,
The Cross is sharp, and He
Is tenderer than a lamb.
KEBLE. |
But our Lord would die
with every faculty clear, and in full sensibility to all His
sufferings.
|
Thou wilt feel all,
that Thou may'st pity all;
And rather would'st Thou wrestle with strong pain
Than
overcloud Thy soul,
So clear
in agony,
Or lose one glimpse of Heaven before the time,
O most entire and perfect Sacrifice,
Renewed in every pulse.
KEBLE. |
18. they crucified him, and two others with him--"malefactors"
(@Lu
23:33), "thieves" (rather "robbers,"
@Mt
27:38 Mr 15:27).
on either side one and
Jesus in the midst--a hellish expedient, to hold Him up
as the worst of the three. But in this, as in many other of
their doings, "the scripture was fulfilled, which saith
(@Isa
53:12), And he was numbered with the transgressors"--(@Mr
15:28)--though the prediction reaches deeper. "Then
said Jesus"--["probably while being nailed to the
CROSS,"] [OLSHAUSEN], "FATHER, FORGIVE THEM, FOR
THEY KNOW NOT WHAT THEY DO" (@Lu
23:34)--and again the Scripture was fulfilled which
said, "And He made intercession for the
transgressors" (@Isa
53:12), though this also reaches deeper. (See @Ac
3:17 13:27; and compare @1Ti
1:13). Often have we occasion to observe how our Lord is
the first to fulfil His own precepts--thus furnishing the
right interpretation and the perfect Model of them. (See on Mt
5:44). How quickly was it seen in "His martyr
Stephen," that though He had left the earth in Person,
His Spirit remained behind, and Himself could, in some of
His brightest lineaments, be reproduced in His disciples! (@Ac
7:60). And what does the world in every age owe to these
few words, spoken where and as they were
spoken!
19-22. Pilate wrote a title, and put it on the cross . . .
Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews . . . and
it was written in Hebrew--or Syro-Chaldaic, the
language of the country.
and Greek--the current
language.
and Latin--the
official language. These were the chief languages of the
earth, and this secured that all spectators should be able
to read it. Stung by this, the Jewish ecclesiastics entreat
that it may be so altered as to express, not His real
dignity, but His false claim to it. But Pilate thought he
had yielded quite enough to them; and having intended
expressly to spite and insult them by this title, for having
got him to act against his own sense of justice, he
peremptorily refused them. And thus, amidst the conflicting
passions of men, was proclaimed, in the chief tongues of
mankind, from the Cross itself and in circumstances which
threw upon it a lurid yet grand light, the truth which drew
the Magi to His manger, and will yet be owned by all the
world!
23, 24. Then the soldiers, when they had crucified Jesus,
took his garments, and made four parts; to every soldier--the
four who nailed Him to the cross, and whose perquisite they
were.
a part, and also his coat--the
Roman tunic, or close-fitting vest.
without seam, woven from
the top throughout--"perhaps denoting considerable
skill and labor as necessary to produce such a garment, the
work probably of one or more of the women who ministered in
such things unto Him, @Lu
8:3" [WEBSTER and WILKINSON].
24. Let us not rend it, but cast lots . . .
whose it shall be, that the scripture might be fulfilled
which saith, They parted my raiment among them; and for my
vesture they did cast lots--(@Ps
22:18). That a prediction so exceedingly
specific--distinguishing one piece of dress from others, and
announcing that while those should be parted amongst
several, that should be given by lot to one
person--that such a prediction should not only be fulfilled
to the letter, but by a party of heathen military, without
interference from either the friends of the enemies of the
Crucified One, is surely worthy to be ranked among the
wonders of this all-wonderful scene. Now come the mockeries,
and from four different quarters:--(1) "And they
that passed by reviled Him, wagging their heads" in
ridicule (@Ps
22:7 109:25; compare @Jer
18:16 La 2:15). "Ah!"--"Ha," an
exclamation here of derision. "Thou that destroyest the
temple, and buildest it in three days, save Thyself and come
down from the cross" (@Mt
27:39,40 Mr 15:29,30). "It is evident that our
Lord's saying, or rather this perversion of it (for
He claimed not to destroy, but to rebuild the
temple destroyed by them) had greatly exasperated the
feeling which the priests and Pharisees had contrived to
excite against Him. It is referred to as the principal fact
brought out in evidence against Him on the trial (compare @Ac
6:13,14), as an offense for which He deserved to suffer.
And it is very remarkable that now while it was receiving
its real fulfilment, it should be made more public and
more impressive by the insulting proclamation of His
enemies. Hence the importance attached to it after the
resurrection, @Joh
2:22" [WEBSTER and WILKINSON]. (2) "Likewise
also the chief priests, mocking Him, with the
scribes and elders, said, He saved others, Himself He
cannot save" (@Mt
27:41,42). There was a deep truth in this, as in other
taunts; for both He could not do, having "come
to give His life a ransom for many" (@Mt
20:28 Mr 10:45). No doubt this added an unknown sting to
the reproach. "If He be the king of Israel, let Him now
come down from the cross, and we will believe Him" (@Mt
27:42). No, they would not; for those who
resisted the evidence from the resurrection of Lazarus, and
from His own resurrection, were beyond the reach of any
amount of merely external evidence. "He trusted
in God that He would deliver him; let Him deliver Him now if
He will have Him [or 'delight in Him,' compare @Ps
18:19 De 21:14]; for He said, I am the Son of God"
(@Mt
27:41-43). We thank you, O ye chief priests, scribes,
and elders, for this triple testimony, unconsciously borne
by you, to our Christ: first to His habitual trust in
God, as a feature in His character so marked and
palpable that even ye found upon it your impotent taunt;
next, to His identity with the Sufferer of the
twenty-second Psalm, whose very words (@Ps
22:8) ye unwittingly appropriate, thus serving
yourselves heirs to the dark office and impotent
malignity of Messiah's enemies; and again, to the true sense
of that august title which He took to Himself, "THE SON
OF GOD," which He rightly interpreted at the very first
(see @Joh
5:18) as a claim to that oneness of nature with
Him, and dearness to Him, which a son has to his
father. (3) "And the soldiers also mocked Him,
coming to Him and offering Him vinegar, and saying, If thou
be the king of the Jews, save Thyself" (@Lu
23:36,37). They insultingly offer to share with Him
their own vinegar, or sour wine, the usual drink of Roman
soldiers, it being about the time of their midday meal. In
the taunt of the soldiers we have one of those undesigned
coincidences which so strikingly verify these historical
records. While the ecclesiastics deride Him for calling
Himself, "the Christ, the King of Israel,
the Chosen, the Son of God," the
soldiers, to whom all such phraseology was mere Jewish
jargon, make sport of Him as a pretender to royalty
("KING of the Jews"), an office and dignity which
it belonged to them to comprehend. "The thieves
also, which were crucified with Him, cast the same in His
teeth" (@Mt
27:44 Mr 15:32). Not both of them, however, as
some commentators unnaturally think we must understand these
words; as if some sudden change came over the penitent
one, which turned him from an unfeeling railer into a
trembling petitioner. The plural "thieves" need
not denote more than the quarter or class
whence came this last and cruelest taunt--that is, "Not
only did scoffs proceed from the passers-by, the ecclesiastics,
the soldiery, but even from His fellow-sufferers,"
a mode of speaking which no one would think necessarily
meant both of them. Compare @Mt
2:20, "They are dead which sought the
child's life," meaning Herod; and @Mr
9:1, "There be some standing here,"
where it is next to certain that only John, the youngest and
last survivor of the apostles, is meant. And is it
conceivable that this penitent thief should have first
himself reviled the Saviour, and then, on his views of
Christ suddenly changing, he should have turned upon his
fellow sufferer and fellow reviler, and rebuked him not only
with dignified sharpness, but in the language of astonishment
that he should be capable of such conduct? Besides, there is
a deep calmness in all that he utters, extremely unlike what
we should expect from one who was the subject of a mental
revolution so sudden and total. On the scene itself, see on
Lu 23:29-43.
25-27. Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother,
and his mother's sister, Mary, wife of Cleophas--This
should be read, as in the Margin, "Clopas,"
the same as "Alpheus" (@Mt
10:3). The "Cleopas" of @Lu
24:18 was a different person.
26, 27. When Jesus . . . saw his mother, and
the disciple whom he loved, standing by, he saith to his
mother, WOMAN, BEHOLD THY SON! Then saith he to the
disciple, BEHOLD THY MOTHER!--What forgetfulness of
self, what filial love, and to the "mother" and
"son" what parting words!
from that hour . . .
took her to his own home--or, home with him; for his
father Zebedee and his mother Salome were both alive, and
the latter here present (@Mr
15:40). See on Mt 13:55. Now occurred the supernatural darkness,
recorded by all the other Evangelists, but not here.
"Now from the sixth hour (twelve o'clock, noon) there
was darkness over all the land unto the ninth hour" (@Mt
27:45). No ordinary eclipse of the sun could have
occurred at this time, it being then full moon, and
this obscuration lasted about twelve times the length
of any ordinary eclipse. (Compare @Ex
10:21,23). Beyond doubt, the divine intention of the
portent was to invest this darkest of all tragedies with a
gloom expressive of its real character. "And about the
ninth hour Jesus cried, ELI, ELI, LAMA SABACHTHANI . . .
My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" (@Mt
27:46). As the darkness commenced at the sixth hour, the
second of the Jewish hours of prayer, so it continued till
the ninth hour, the hour of the evening sacrifice,
increasing probably in depth, and reaching its deepest
gloom at the moment of this mysterious cry, when the
flame of the one great "Evening Sacrifice" was
burning fiercest. The words were made to His hand. They are
the opening words of a Psalm (@Ps
22:1) full of the last "sufferings of Christ and
the following glories" (@1Pe
1:11). "FATHER," was the cry in the first
prayer which He uttered on the cross, for matters had not
then come to the worst. "Father" was the cry of
His last prayer, for matters had then passed their worst.
But at this crisis of His sufferings, "Father"
does not issue from His lips, for the light of a Father's
countenance was then mysteriously eclipsed. He falls back,
however, on a title expressive of His official
relation, which, though lower and more distant in itself,
yet when grasped in pure and naked faith was mighty in its
claims, and rich in psalmodic associations. And what deep
earnestness is conveyed by the redoubling of this title! But
as for the cry itself, it will never be fully comprehended.
An absolute desertion is not indeed to be thought of; but a
total eclipse of the felt sense of God's presence it
certainly expresses. It expre'sses surprise, as under
the experience of something not only never before known,
but inexplicable on the footing which had till then
subsisted between Him and God. It is a question which the
lost cannot utter. They are forsaken, but they know why.
Jesus is forsaken, but does not know and demands to know
why. It is thus the cry of conscious innocence, but
of innocence unavailing to draw down, at that moment,
the least token of approval from the unseen Judge--innocence
whose only recognition at that moment lay in the thick
surrounding gloom which but reflected the horror of great
darkness that invested His own spirit. There was indeed a
cause for it, and He knew it too--the "why"
must not be pressed so far as to exclude this. He must
taste this bitterest of the wages of sin "who
did no sin" (@1Pe
2:22). But that is not the point now. In Him there was
no cause at all (@Joh
14:30) and He takes refuge in the glorious fact. When no
ray from above shines in upon Him, He strikes a light out of
His own breast. If God will not own Him, He shall own
Himself. On the rock of His unsullied allegiance to Heaven
He will stand, till the light of Heaven returns to His
spirit. And it is near to come. While He is yet speaking,
the fierceness of the flame is beginning to abate. One
incident and insult more, and the experience of one other
predicted element of suffering, and the victory is His. The
incident, and the insult springing out of it, is the
misunderstanding of the cry, for we can hardly suppose that
it was anything else. "Some of them that stood there,
when they heard that, said, This man calleth for Elias"
(@Mt
27:47).
28-30. After this, Jesus knowing that all things were now
accomplished--that is, the moment for the fulfilment of
the last of them; for there was one other small particular,
and the time was come for that too, in consequence of the
burning thirst which the fevered state of His frame
occasioned (@Ps
22:15).
that the scripture--(@Ps
69:21).
might be fulfilled saith,
I thirst. Now there was set a vessel full of vinegar--on
the offer of the soldiers' vinegar, see on Joh 19:24.
and they--"one of
them," (@Mt
27:48).
29. filled a sponge with vinegar, and put it upon--a
stalk of
hyssop, and put it to his
mouth--Though a stalk of this plant does not exceed
eighteen inches in length, it would suffice, as the feet of
crucified persons were not raised high. "The rest said,
Let be"--[that is, as would seem, 'Stop that officious
service'] "let us see whether Elias will come to save
Him" (@Mt
27:49). This was the last cruelty He was to suffer, but
it was one of the most unfeeling. "And when Jesus had
cried with a loud voice" (@Lu
23:46). This "loud voice," noticed by
three of the Evangelists, does not imply, as some able
interpreters contend, that our Lord's strength was so far
from being exhausted that He needed not to die then, and
surrendered up His life sooner than Nature required, merely
because it was the appointed time. It was indeed the
appointed time, but time that He should be "crucified through
weakness" (@1Co
13:4), and Nature was now reaching its utmost
exhaustion. But just as even His own dying saints,
particularly the martyrs of Jesus, have sometimes had such
gleams of coming glory immediately before breathing their
last, as to impart to them a strength to utter their
feelings which has amazed the by-standers, so this mighty
voice of the expiring Redeemer was nothing else but the
exultant spirit of the Dying Victor, receiving the fruit of
His travail just about to be embraced, and nerving the
organs of utterance to an ecstatic expression of its sublime
feelings (not so much in the immediately following
words of tranquil surrender, in Luke, as in the final
shout, recorded only by John): "FATHER, INTO THY HANDS
I COMMEND MY SPIRIT!" (@Lu
23:46). Yes, the darkness is past, and the true light
now shineth. His soul has emerged from its mysterious
horrors; "My God" is heard no more, but in
unclouded light He yields sublime into His Father's
hands the infinitely precious spirit--using here also the
words of those matchless Psalms (@Ps
31:5) which were ever on His lips. "As the Father
receives the spirit of Jesus, so Jesus receives those of the
faithful" (@Ac
7:59) [BENGEL]. And now comes the expiring mighty shout.
30. It is finished! and he bowed his head and gave up the
ghost--What is finished? The Law is fulfilled as never
before, nor since, in His "obedience unto death, even
the death of the cross"; Messianic prophecy is
accomplished; Redemption is completed; "He hath
finished the transgression, and made reconciliation for
iniquity, and brought in everlasting righteousness, and
sealed up the vision and prophecy, and anointed a holy of
holies"; He has inaugurated the kingdom of God and
given birth to a new world.
@Joh
19:31-42. BURIAL OF CHRIST.
31-37. the preparation--sabbath eve.
that the bodies should not
remain--over night, against the Mosaic law (@De
21:22,23).
on the sabbath day, for
that sabbath day was an high day--or "great"
day--the first day of unleavened bread, and, as concurring
with an ordinary sabbath, the most solemn season of the
ecclesiastical year. Hence their peculiar jealousy lest the
law should be infringed.
besought Pilate that their
legs might be broken--to hasten their death, which was
done in such cases with clubs.
33. But when they came to Jesus, and saw that he was dead
already--there being in His case elements of
suffering, unknown to the malefactors, which might naturally
hasten His death, lingering though it always was in such
cases, not to speak of His previous sufferings.
they brake not his legs--a
fact of vast importance, as showing that the reality
of His death was visible to those whose business it was to
see to it. The other divine purpose served by it will
appear presently.
34. But one of the soldiers--to make assurance of the
fact doubly sure.
with a spear pierced his
side--making a wound deep and wide, as indeed is plain
from @Joh
20:27,29. Had life still remained, it must have fled
now.
and forthwith came
thereout blood and water--"It is now well known
that the effect of long-continued and intense agony is
frequently to produce a secretion of a colorless lymph
within the pericardium (the membrane enveloping the heart),
amounting in many cases to a very considerable
quantity" [WEBSTER and WILKINSON].
35. And he that saw it bare record--hath borne
witness.
and his witness is true,
and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe--This
solemn way of referring to his own testimony in this matter
has no reference to what he says in his Epistle about
Christ's "coming by water and blood" (see on 1Jo
5:6), but is intended to call attention both to the
fulfilment of Scripture in these particulars, and to the
undeniable evidence he was thus furnishing of the reality
of Christ's death, and consequently of His resurrection;
perhaps also to meet the growing tendency, in the Asiatic
churches, to deny the reality of our Lord's body, or that
"Jesus Christ is come in the flesh" (@1Jo
4:1-3).
36. that the scripture should be fulfilled, A bone of him
shall not be broken--The reference is to the paschal
lamb, as to which this ordinance was stringent (@Ex
12:46 Nu 9:12. Compare @1Co
5:7). But though we are to see here the fulfilment of a
very definite typical ordinance, we shall, on searching
deeper, see in it a remarkable divine interposition to
protect the sacred body of Christ from the last indignity
after He had finished the work given Him to do. Every
imaginable indignity had been permitted before that,
up to the moment of His death. But no sooner is that over
than an Unseen hand is found to have provided against the
clubs of the rude soldiers coming in contact with that
temple of the Godhead. Very different from such violence was
that spear-thrust, for which not only doubting Thomas
would thank the soldier, but intelligent believers in every
age, to whom the certainty of their Lord's death and
resurrection is the life of their whole Christianity.
37. And again another scripture saith, They shall look on
him whom they pierced--The quotation is from @Zec
12:10; not taken as usual from the Septuagint
(the current Greek version), which here is all wrong,
but direct from the Hebrew. And there is a remarkable
nicety in the choice of the words employed both by the
prophet and the Evangelist for "piercing." The
word in Zechariah means to thrust through with spear,
javelin, sword, or any such weapon. In that sense it is used
in all the ten places, besides this, where it is found. How
suitable this was to express the action of the Roman
soldier, is manifest; and our Evangelist uses the exactly
corresponding word, which the Septuagint certainly
does not. Very different is the other word for "pierce"
in @Ps
22:16, "They pierced my hands and my feet."
The word there used is one signifying to bore as with
an awl or hammer. How striking are these small niceties!
38-40. Joseph of Arimathea--"a rich man" (@Mt
27:57), thus fulfilling @Isa
53:9; "an honorable counsellor," a member of
the Sanhedrim, and of good condition, "which also
waited for the kingdom of God" (@Mr
15:43), a devout expectant of Messiah's kingdom; "a
good man and a just, the same had not consented to the
counsel and deed of them" (@Lu
23:50,51--he had gone the length, perhaps, of dissenting
and protesting in open council against the condemnation of
our Lord); "who also himself was Jesus' disciple,"
(@Mt
27:57).
being a disciple of Jesus,
but secretly, for fear of the Jews--"He went in
boldly unto Pilate" (@Mr
15:43)--literally, "having taken courage went
in," or "had the boldness to go in." Mark
alone, as his manner is, notices the boldness which
this required. The act would without doubt identify him for
the first time with the disciples of Christ. Marvellous
it certainly is, that one who while Jesus was yet alive
merely refrained from condemning Him, not having the courage
to espouse His cause by one positive act, should, now that
He was dead, and His cause apparently dead with Him, summon
up courage to go in personally to the Roman governor and ask
permission to take down and inter the body. But if this be
the first instance, it is not the last, that a seemingly
dead Christ has wakened a sympathy which a living one had
failed to evoke. The heroism of faith is usually kindled by
desperate circumstances, and is not seldom displayed by
those who before were the most timid, and scarce
known as disciples at all. "And Pilate marvelled if
he were already dead" (@Mr
15:44)--rather "wondered that he was already
dead." "And calling the centurion, he asked him
whether He had been any while dead" (@Mr
15:44)--Pilate could hardly credit what Joseph had told
him, that He had been dead "some time," and,
before giving up the body to His friends, would learn how
the fact stood from the centurion, whose business it was to
oversee the execution. "And when he knew it of the
centurion" (@Mr
15:45), that it was as Joseph had said, "he
gave"--rather "made a gift of"--"the
body to Joseph"; struck, possibly, with the rank of the
petitioner and the dignified boldness of the petition, in
contrast with the spirit of the other party and the low rank
to which he had been led to believe all the followers of
Christ belonged. Nor would he be unwilling to Show that he
was not going to carry this black affair any farther. But,
whatever were Pilate's motives, two most blessed objects
were thus secured: (1) The reality of our Lords death was
attested by the party of all others most competent to
decide on it, and certainly free from all bias--the officer
in attendance--in full reliance on whose testimony Pilate
surrendered the body: (2) The dead Redeemer, thus delivered
out of the hands of His enemies, and committed by the
supreme political authority to the care of His friends, was
thereby protected from all further indignities; a thing most
befitting indeed, now that His work was done, but
impossible, so far as we can see, if His enemies had been at
liberty to do with Him as they pleased. How wonderful are
even the minutest features of this matchless History!
39. also Nicodemus, which at the first came to Jesus by
night--"This remark corresponds to the secrecy of
Joseph's discipleship, just noticed, and calls attention to
the similarity of their previous character and conduct, and
the remarkable change which had now taken place"
[WEBSTER and WILKINSON].
brought . . .
myrrh and aloes, about an hundred pounds weight--an
immense quantity, betokening the greatness of their love,
but part of it probably intended as a layer for the spot on
which the body was to lie. (See @2Ch
16:14) [MEYER].
40. Then took they the body of Jesus, and wound it in
linen clothes with the spices, as the manner of the Jews is
to bury--the mixed and pulverized myrrh and aloes shaken
into the folds, and the entire body, thus swathed, wrapt in
an outer covering of "clean linen cloth" (@Mt
27:59). Had the Lord's own friends had the least reason
to think that the spark of life was still in Him, would they
have done this? But even if one could conceive them
mistaken, could anyone have lain thus enveloped for the
period during which He was in the grave, and life still
remained? Impossible. When, therefore, He walked forth from
the tomb, we can say with the most absolute certainty,
"Now is Christ risen from the dead, and become
the first-fruits of them that slept" (@1Co
15:20). No wonder that the learned and the barbarians
alike were prepared to die for the name of the Lord Jesus;
for such evidence was to the unsophisticated resistless. (No
mention is made of anointing in this operation. No
doubt it was a hurried proceeding, for fear of interruption,
and because it was close on the sabbath, the women seem to
have set this as their proper task "as soon as the
sabbath should be past" [@Mr
16:1]. But as the Lord graciously held it as
undesignedly anticipated by Mary at Bethany [@Mr
14:8], so this was probably all the anointing, in the
strict sense of it, which He received.)
41, 42. Now in the place where he was crucified there was
a garden, and in the garden a new sepulchre--The choice
of this tomb was, on their part, dictated by the
double circumstance that it was so near at hand, and by its
belonging to a friend of the Lord; and as there was need of
haste, even they would be struck with the providence which
thus supplied it. "There laid they Jesus therefore,
because of the Jew's preparation day, for the sepulchre was
nigh at hand." But there was one recommendation of it
which probably would not strike them; but God had it in
view. Not its being "hewn out of a rock" (@Mr
15:46), accessible only at the entrance, which doubtless
would impress them with its security and suitableness. But
it was "a new sepulchre" (@Joh
19:41), "wherein never man before was laid"
(@Lu
23:53): and Matthew (@Mt
27:60) says that Joseph laid Him "in his own new
tomb, which he had hewn out in the rock"--doubtless
for his own use, though the Lord had higher use for it. Thus
as He rode into Jerusalem on an ass "whereon never
man before had sat" (@Mr
11:2), so now He shall lie in a tomb wherein never
man before had lain, that from these specimens it may be
seen that in all things He was "SEPARATE FROM
SINNERS" (@Heb
7:26).
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