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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
JOHN
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 6
@Joh
6:1-13. FIVE THOUSAND MIRACULOUSLY FED.
(See on Mr 6:31-44).
3. a mountain--somewhere in that hilly range which
skirts the east side of the lake.
4. passover . . . was nigh--but for the
reason mentioned (@Joh
7:1), Jesus kept away from it, remaining in Galilee.
@Joh
6:14-21. JESUS WALKS ON THE SEA.
(Also see on Mr 6:45-56).
14, 15. that prophet--(See on Joh 1:21).
15. departed . . . to a mountain himself alone--(1)
to rest, which He came to this "desert
place" on purpose to do before the miracle of the
loaves, but could not for the multitude that followed Him
(see @Mr
6:31); and (2) "to pray" (@Mt
14:23 Mr 6:46). But from His mountain-top He kept
watching the ship (see on Joh 6:18), and doubtless prayed
both for them, and with a view to the new manifestation
which He was to give them of His glory.
16, 17. when even was come--(See on Mr 6:35).
entered into a ship--"constrained"
to do so by their Master (@Mt
14:22 Mr 6:45), in order to put an end to the
misdirected excitement in His favor (@Joh
6:15), into which the disciples themselves may have been
somewhat drawn. The word "constrained" implies
reluctance on their part, perhaps from unwillingness to part
with their Master and embark at night, leaving Him alone on
the mountain.
went--rather,
"were proceeding."
toward Capernaum--Mark
says (@Mr
6:45), "unto Bethsaida," meaning "Bethsaida
of Galilee" (@Joh
12:21), on the west side of the lake. The place they
left was of the same name (see on Mr 6:32).
Jesus was not come to them--They
probably lingered in hopes of His still joining them, and so
let the darkness come on.
18, 19. sea arose, &c.--and they were "now
in the midst of it" (@Mt
14:24). Mark adds the graphic and touching particular,
"He saw them toiling in rowing" (@Mr
6:48), putting forth all their strength to buffet the
waves and bear on against a head wind, but to little effect.
He saw this from His mountain-top, and through the
darkness of the night, for His heart was all with them; yet
would He not go to their relief till His own time came.
19. they see Jesus--"about the fourth watch of
the night" (@Mt
14:25 Mr 6:48), or between three and six in the morning.
walking on the sea--What
Job (@Job
9:8) celebrates as the distinguishing prerogative of
GOD, "WHO ALONE spreadeth out the heavens, and TREADETH
UPON THE WAVES OF THE SEA"--What AGUR challenges as
GOD'S unapproachable prerogative, to "GATHER THE WIND
IN HIS FISTS, and BIND THE WATERS IN A GARMENT" (@Pr
30:4)--lo! this is here done in flesh, by
"THE SON OF MAN."
drawing nigh to the ship--yet
as though He "would have passed by them," @Mr
6:48 (compare @Lu
24:28 Ge 18:3:5 32:24-26).
they were afraid--"cried
out for fear" (@Mt
14:26), "supposing it had been a spirit" (@Mr
6:49). He would appear to them at first like a dark
moving speck upon the waters; then as a human figure,
but--in the dark tempestuous sky, and not dreaming that it
could be their Lord--they take it for a spirit. (How often
thus we miscall our chiefest mercies--not only thinking them
distant when they are near, but thinking the best the
worst!)
20. It is I; be not afraid--Matthew (@Mt
14:27) and Mark (@Mr
6:50) give before these exhilarating words, that to them
well-known one, "Be of good cheer!"
21. willingly received him into the ship--their first
fears being now converted into wonder and delight.
and immediately the ship
was at the land--This additional miracle, for as such it
is manifestly related, is recorded here alone. Yet all that
is meant seems to be that as the storm was suddenly calmed,
so the little bark--propelled by the secret power of the
Lord of Nature now sailing in it--glided through the now
unruffled waters, and while they were wrapt in wonder at
what had happened, not heeding their rapid motion, was
found at port, to their still further surprise.
@Joh
6:22-71. JESUS FOLLOWED BY THE MULTITUDES TO CAPERNAUM,
DISCOURSES TO THEM IN THE SYNAGOGUE OF THE BREAD OF
LIFE--EFFECT OF THIS ON TWO CLASSES OF THE DISCIPLES.
22-24. These verses are a little involved, from the
Evangelist's desire to mention every circumstance, however
minute, that might call up the scene as vividly to the
reader as it stood before his own view.
The day following--the
miracle of the loaves, and the stormy night; the day on
which they landed at Capernaum.
the people which stood on
the other side of the sea--not the whole multitude that
had been fed, but only such of them as remained over night
about the shore, that is, on the east side of the
lake; for we are supposed to have come, with Jesus and His
disciples in the ship, to the west side, to
Capernaum.
saw that there was none
other boat there, &c.--The meaning is, the people
had observed that there had been only one boat on the east
side where they were; namely, the one in which the disciples
had crossed at night to the other, the west side, and they
had also observed that Jesus had not gone on board that
boat, but His disciples had put off without Him:
23. Howbeit, &c.--"Howbeit," adds the
Evangelist, in a lively parenthesis, "there came other
boats from Tiberias" (which lay near the southwest
coast of the lake), whose passengers were part of the
multitude that had followed Jesus to the east side, and been
miraculously fed; these boats were fastened somewhere (says
the Evangelist)
nigh unto the place where
they did eat bread, after that the Lord had given thanks--thus
he refers to the glorious "miracle of the
loaves"--and now they were put in requisition to convey
the people back again to the west side. For when "the
people saw that Jesus was not there, neither His disciples,
they also took shipping [in these boats] and came to
Capernaum, seeking for Jesus."
25. when they had found him on the other side--at
Capernaum.
they said,
&c.--astonished at His being there, and wondering
how He could have accomplished it, whether by land or
water, and when He came; for being quite unaware of
His having walked upon the sea and landed with the disciples
in the ship, they could not see how, unless He had travelled
all night round the head of the lake alone, He could have
reached Capernaum, and even then, how He could have arrived
before themselves.
26. Ye seek me, &c.--Jesus does not put them
through their difficulty, says nothing of His treading on
the waves of the sea, nor even notices their question, but
takes advantage of the favorable moment for pointing out to
them how forward, flippant, and superficial were their
views, and how low their desires. "Ye seek Me not
because ye saw the miracles"--literally, "the signs,"
that is, supernatural tokens of a higher presence, and a
divine commission, "but because ye did eat of the
loaves and were filled." From this He proceeds at once
to that other Bread, just as, with the woman of
Samaria, to that other Water (@Joh
4:9-15). We should have supposed all that follows to
have been delivered by the wayside, or wherever they
happened first to meet. But from @Joh
6:59 we gather that they had probably met about the door
of the synagogue--"for that was the day in which they
assembled in their synagogues" [LIGHTFOOT]--and that on
being asked, at the close of the service, if He had any word
of exhortation to the people, He had taken the two breads,
the perishing and the living bread, for the
subject of His profound and extraordinary discourse.
27. which the Son of man--taking that title of
Himself which denoted His incarnate life.
shall give unto you--in
the sense of @Joh
6:51.
him hath God the Father
sealed--marked out and authenticated for that
transcendent office, to impart to the world the bread of an
everlasting life, and this in the character of "the Son
of man."
28-31. What shall we do . . . the works of God--such
works as God will approve. Different answers may be given to
such a question, according to the spirit which
prompts the inquiry. (See @Ho
6:6-8 Lu 3:12-14). Here our Lord, knowing whom He had to
deal with, shapes His reply accordingly.
29. This is the work of God--That lies at the
threshold of all acceptable obedience, being not only the
prerequisite to it, but the proper spring of it--in that
sense, the work of works, emphatically "the work
of God."
30. What sign showest thou, &c.--But how could
they ask "a sign," when many of them scarce a day
before had witnessed such a "sign" as had never
till then been vouchsafed to men; when after witnessing it,
they could hardly be restrained from making Him a king; when
they followed Him from the one side of the lake to the
other; and when, in the opening words of this very
discourse, He had chided them for seeking Him, "not
because they saw the signs," but for the loaves?
The truth seems to be that they were confounded by the novel
claims which our Lord had just advanced. In proposing to
make Him a king, it was for far other purposes than
dispensing to the world the bread of an .everlasting life;
and when He seemed to raise His claims even higher still, by
representing it as the grand "work of God," that
they should believe on Himself as His Sent One, they
saw very clearly that He was making a demand upon them
beyond anything they were prepared to accord to Him, and
beyond all that man had ever before made. Hence their
question, "What dost Thou work?"
31. Our fathers did eat manna, &c.--insinuating
the inferiority of Christ's miracle of the loaves to those
of Moses: "When Moses claimed the confidence of the
fathers, 'he gave them bread from heaven to eat'--not for a
few thousands, but for millions, and not once only, but
daily throughout their wilderness journey."
32, 33. Moses gave you not, &c.--"It was not
Moses that gave you the manna, and even it was but from the
lower heavens; 'but My Father giveth you the true
bread,' and that 'from heaven.'"
33. For the bread of God is he, &c.--This verse
is perhaps best left in its own transparent
grandeur--holding up the Bread Itself as divine,
spiritual, and eternal; its ordained Fountain and
essential Substance, "Him who came down from heaven
to give it" (that Eternal Life which was with the
Father and was manifested unto us, @1Jo
1:2); and its designed objects, "the world."
34. Lord, evermore give us this bread--speaking now
with a certain reverence (as at @Joh
6:25), the perpetuity of the manna floating perhaps in
their minds, and much like the Samaritan woman, when her
eyes were but half opened, "Sir, give Me this
water," &c. (@Joh
4:15).
35. I am the bread of life--Henceforth the discourse
is all in the first person, "I,"
"Me," which occur in one form or other, as STIER
reckons, thirty-five times.
he that cometh to me--to
obtain what the soul craves, and as the only all-sufficient
and ordained source of supply.
hunger . . .
thirst--shall have conscious and abiding satisfaction.
36. But . . . ye have seen me, and believe not--seen
Him not in His mere bodily presence, but in all the majesty
of His life, His teaching, His works.
37-40. All that, &c.--This comprehensive and very
grand passage is expressed with a peculiar artistic
precision. The opening general statement (@Joh
6:37) consists of two members: (1) "ALL THAT THE
FATHER GIVETH ME SHALL COME TO ME"--that is,
"Though ye, as I told you, have no faith in Me, My
errand into the world shall in no wise be defeated; for all
that the Father giveth Me shall infallibly come to Me."
Observe, what is given Him by the Father is expressed
in the singular number and neuter
gender--literally, "everything"; while those who come
to Him are put in the masculine gender and singular
number--"every one." The whole mass, so to
speak, is gifted by the Father to the Son as a unity,
which the Son evolves, one by one, in the execution of His
trust. So @Joh
17:2, "that He should give eternal life to all
that which Thou hast given Him" [BENGEL]. This
"shall" expresses the glorious certainty
of it, the Father being pledged to see to it that the gift
be no empty mockery. (2) "AND HIM THAT COMETH TO MEI
WILL IN NO WISE CAST OUT." As the former was the divine,
this is just the human side of the same thing. True,
the "coming" ones of the second clause are just
the "given" ones of the first. But had our Lord
merely said, "When those that have been given Me
of My Father shall come to Me, I will receive
them"--besides being very flat, the impression conveyed
would have been quite different, sounding as if there were no
other laws in operation, in the movement of sinners to
Christ, but such as are wholly divine and inscrutable
to us; whereas, though He does speak of it as a sublime
certainty which men's refusals cannot frustrate, He
speaks of that certainty as taking effect only by men's voluntary
advances to Him and acceptance of Him--"Him that
cometh to Me," "whosoever will," throwing the
door wide open. Only it is not the simply willing,
but the actually coming, whom He will not cast out;
for the word here employed usually denotes arrival,
as distinguished from the ordinary word, which rather
expresses the act of coming (see @Joh
8:42, Greek), [WEBSTER and WILKINSON]. "In
no wise" is an emphatic negative, to meet the fears of
the timid (as in @Re
21:27, to meet the presumption of the hardened). These,
then, being the two members of the general opening
statement, what follows is meant to take in both,
38. For I came down from heaven not to do Mine own will--to
play an independent part.
but--in respect to
both the foregoing things, the divine and the human
side of salvation.
the will of Him that sent
Me--What this twofold will of Him that sent Him is, we
are next sublimely told (@Joh
6:39,40):
39. And this--in the first place.
is the will of Him that
sent me, that of all--everything.
which He hath given Me--(taking
up the identical words of @Joh
6:37).
I should lose nothing, but
should raise it up at the last day--The meaning is not,
of course, that He is charged to keep the objects entrusted
to Him as He received them, so as they should merely
suffer nothing in His hands. For as they were just
"perishing" sinners of Adam's family, to
let "nothing" of such "be lost," but
"raise them up at the last day," must involve, first,
giving His flesh for them (@Joh
6:51), that they "might not perish, but have
everlasting life"; and then, after "keeping
them from falling," raising their sleeping dust in
incorruption and glory, and presenting them, body and soul,
perfect and entire, wanting nothing, to Him who gave them to
Him, saying, "Behold I and the children which God hath
given Me." So much for the first will of Him
that sent Him, the divine side of man's salvation,
whose every stage and movement is inscrutable to us, but
infallibly certain.
40. And this--in the second place.
is the will of Him that
sent Me, that every one which seeth the Son and believeth on
Him--seeing the Son believeth on Him.
may have everlasting life,
and I will raise him up at the last day--This is the human
side of the same thing as in the foregoing verse, and
answering to "Him that cometh unto Me I will in no
wise cast out"; that is, I have it expressly in
charge that everyone that so "beholdeth" (so
vieweth) the Son as to believe on Him shall have everlasting
life; and, that none of Him be lost, "I will
raise him up at the last day." (See on Joh 6:54).
41-46. Jews murmured--muttered, not in our Lord's
hearing, but He knew it (@Joh
6:43 Joh 2:25).
he said, I am the bread,
&c.--Missing the sense and glory of this, and having no
relish for such sublimities, they harp upon the "Bread
from heaven." "What can this mean? Do we not know
all about Him--where, when, and of whom He was born? And yet
He says He came down from heaven!"
43, 44. Murmur not . . . No man--that is,
Be not either startled or stumbled at these sayings; for it
needs divine teaching to understand them, divine drawing to
submit to them.
44. can come to me--in the sense of @Joh
6:35.
except the Father which
hath sent me--that is, the Father as the Sender of Me
and to carry out the design of My mission.
draw him--by an internal
and efficacious operation; though by all the means of
rational conviction, and in a way altogether consonant to
their moral nature (@So
1:4 Jer 31:3 Ho 11:3,4).
raise him up,
&c.--(See on Joh 6:54).
45. written in the prophets--in @Isa
54:13 Jer 31:33,34; other similar passages may also have
been in view. Our Lord thus falls back upon Scripture
authority for this seemingly hard saying.
all taught of God--not
by external revelation merely, but by internal
illumination, corresponding to the "drawing"
of @Joh
6:44.
Every man therefore,
&c.--that is, who hath been thus efficaciously taught of
Him.
cometh unto me--with
absolute certainty, yet in the sense above given of
"drawing"; that is, "As none can come to Me
but as divinely drawn, so none thus drawn shall fail to
come."
46. Not that any man hath seen, &c.--Lest they
should confound that "hearing and learning of the
Father," to which believers are admitted by divine teaching,
with His own immediate access to Him, He here throws in a
parenthetical explanation; stating, as explicitly as words
could do it, how totally different the two cases were, and
that only He who is "from God" hath this naked,
immediate access to the Father. (See @Joh
1:18).
47-51. He that believeth, &c.--(See on Joh 3:36;
Joh 5:24).
48. I am the bread of life--"As he that
believeth in Me hath everlasting life, so I am Myself the
everlasting Sustenance of that life." (Repeated
from @Joh
6:35).
49. Your fathers--of whom ye spake (@Joh
6:31); not "ours," by which He would
hint that He had a higher descent, of which they
dreamt not [BENGEL].
did eat manna
. . . and are dead--recurring to their own
point about the manna, as one of the noblest of the ordained
preparatory illustrations of His own office: "Your
fathers, ye say, ate manna in the wilderness; and ye say
well, for so they did, but they are dead--even they
whose carcasses fell in the wilderness did eat of that
bread; the Bread whereof I speak cometh down from heaven,
which the manna never did, that men, eating of it, may live
for ever."
51. I am, &c.--Understand, it is of MYSELF I now
speak as the Bread from heaven; of MEif a man eat he shall
live for ever; and "THE BREAD WHICH I WILL GIVE IS MY
FLESH, WHICH I WILL GIVE FOR THE LIFE OF THE WORLD."
Here, for the first time in this high discourse, our Lord
explicitly introduces His sacrificial death--for only
rationalists can doubt this not only as that which
constitutes Him the Bread of life to men, but as THAT very
element IN HIM WHICH POSSESSES THE LIFE-GIVING
VIRTUE.--"From this time we hear no more (in this
discourse) of "Bread"; this figure is dropped, and
the reality takes its place" [STIER]. The words "I
will give" may be compared with the words of
institution at the Supper, "This is My body which is given
for you" (@Lu
22:19), or in Paul's report of it, "broken
for you" (@1Co
11:24).
52. Jews strove among themselves--arguing the point
together.
How can, &c.--that
is, Give us His flesh to eat? Absurd.
53-58. Except ye eat the flesh . . . and drink
the blood . . . no life, &c.--The harshest
word He had yet uttered in their ears. They asked how it was
possible to eat His flesh. He answers, with great
solemnity, "It is indispensable." Yet even
here a thoughtful hearer might find something to temper the
harshness. He says they must not only "eat His flesh"
but "drink His blood," which could not but
suggest the idea of His death--implied in the
separation of one's flesh from his blood. And as He had
already hinted that it was to be something very different
from a natural death, saying, "My flesh I will
give for the life of the world" (@Joh
6:51), it must have been pretty plain to candid hearers
that He meant something above the gross idea which the bare
terms expressed. And farther, when He added that they
"had no life in them unless they thus ate and
drank," it was impossible they should think He meant
that the temporal life they were then living was
dependent on their eating and drinking, in this gross sense,
His flesh and blood. Yet the whole statement was certainly
confounding, and beyond doubt was meant to be so. Our Lord
had told them that in spite of all they had "seen"
in Him, they "did not believe" (@Joh
6:36). For their conviction therefore he does not
here lay Himself out; but having the ear not only of them
but of the more candid and thoughtful in the crowded
synagogue, and the miracle of the loaves having led up to
the most exalted of all views of His Person and Office, He
takes advantage of their very difficulties and objections to
announce, for all time, those most profound truths which are
here expressed, regardless of the disgust of the unteachable,
and the prejudices even of the most sincere, which His
language would seem only designed to deepen. The truth
really conveyed here is no other than that expressed in @Joh
6:51, though in more emphatic terms--that He Himself, in
the virtue of His sacrificial death, is the spiritual and
eternal life of men; and that unless men voluntarily
appropriate to themselves this death, in its sacrificial
virtue, so as to become the very life and nourishment of
their inner man, they have no spiritual and eternal life at
all. Not as if His death were the only thing of
value, but it is what gives all else in Christ's Incarnate
Person, Life, and Office, their whole value to us
sinners.
54. Whoso eateth . . . hath, &c.--The
former verse said that unless they partook of Him
they had no life; this adds, that whoever does so
"hath eternal life."
and I will raise him up at
the last day--For the fourth time this is
repeated (see @Joh
6:39,40,44)--showing most clearly that the "eternal
life" which such a man "hath" cannot
be the same with the future resurrection life from
which it is carefully distinguished each time, but a life
communicated here below immediately on believing (@Joh
3:36 5:24,25); and giving to the resurrection of the
body as that which consummates the redemption of the
entire man, a prominence which in the current theology,
it is to be feared, it has seldom had. (See @Ro
8:23 1Co 15:1-58, throughout).
56. He that eateth . . . dwelleth in me and I
in him--As our food becomes incorporated with ourselves,
so Christ and those who eat His flesh and drink His blood
become spiritually one life, though personally
distinct.
57. As the living Father hath sent me--to communicate
His own life.
and I live by the Father--literally,
"because of the Father"; My life and His being
one, but Mine that of a Son, whose it is to be "of
the Father." (See @Joh
1:18 5:26).
he that eateth me,
. . . shall live by me--literally,
"because of Me." So that though one spiritual
life with Him, "the Head of every man is Christ, as
the head of Christ is God" (@1Co
11:3 3:23).
58. This is that bread, &c.--a sort of summing up
of the whole discourse, on which let this one further remark
suffice--that as our Lord, instead of softening down His
figurative sublimities, or even putting them in naked
phraseology, leaves the great truths of His Person and
Office, and our participation of Him and it, enshrined for
all time in those glorious forms of speech, so when we
attempt to strip the truth of these figures, figures though
they be, it goes away from us, like water when the vessel is
broken, and our wisdom lies in raising our own spirit, and
attuning our own ear, to our Lord's chosen modes of
expression. (It should be added that although this discourse
has nothing to do with the Sacrament of the Supper, the
Sacrament has everything to do with it, as the visible
embodiment of these figures, and, to the believing
partaker, a real, yea, and the most lively and
affecting participation of His flesh and blood, and
nourishment thereby of the spiritual and eternal life, here
below).
59. These things said he in the synagogue--which
seems to imply that what follows took place after the
congregation had broken up.
60-65. Many . . . of his disciples--His
pretty constant followers, though an outer circle of them.
hard saying--not
merely harsh, but insufferable, as the word often means in
the Old Testament.
who can hear--submit
to listen to it.
61, 62. Doth this offend . . . What and
if, &c.--that is, "If ye are stumbled at what I
have said, how will ye bear what I now say?" Not
that His ascension itself would stumble them more than His
death, but that after recoiling from the mention of
the one, they would not be in a state of mind to take in the
other.
63. the flesh profiteth nothing--Much of His
discourse was about "flesh"; but flesh as
such, mere flesh, could profit nothing, much less impart
that life which the Holy Spirit alone communicates to
the soul.
the words that I speak
. . . are spirit and . . . life--The
whole burden of the discourse is "spirit,"
not mere flesh, and "life" in its highest,
not its lowest sense, and the words I have employed are to
be interpreted solely in that sense.
64. But there are some, &c.--that is, "But
it matters little to some of you in what sense I speak, for
ye believe not." This was said, adds the Evangelist,
not merely of the outer but of the inner circle of His
disciples; for He knew the traitor, though it was not yet
time to expose him.
65. Therefore said I, &c.--that is, "That
was why I spoke to you of the necessity of divine teaching
which some of you are strangers to."
except it were given him--plainly
showing that by the Father's "drawing" (@Joh
6:44) was meant an internal and efficacious
operation, for in recalling the statement here He says, it
must be "given to a man to come" to Christ.
66-71. From that time, &c.--or, in
consequence of this. Those last words of our Lord seemed to
have given them the finishing stroke--they could not stand
it any longer.
walked no more--Many a
journey, it may be, they had taken with Him, but now they
gave Him up finally!
67. the twelve--the first time they are thus
mentioned in this Gospel.
Will ye also go away?--Affecting
appeal! Evidently Christ felt the desertion of Him
even by those miserable men who could not abide His
statements; and seeing a disturbance even of the wheat
by the violence of the wind which blew away the chaff
(not yet visibly showing itself, but open to His eyes of
fire), He would nip it in the bud by this home
question.
68. Then Simon Peter--whose forwardness in this case
was noble, and to the wounded spirit of His Lord doubtless
very grateful.
Lord, to whom,
&c.--that is, "We cannot deny that we have
been staggered as well as they, and seeing so many go away
who, as we thought, might have been retained by teaching a
little less hard to take in, our own endurance has been
severely tried, nor have we been able to stop short of the
question, Shall we follow the rest, and give it up?
But when it came to this, our light returned, and our hearts
were reassured. For as soon as we thought of going away,
there arose upon us that awful question, 'TO WHOM shall we
go?' To the lifeless formalism and wretched traditions of
the elders? to the gods many and lords many of the heathen
around us? or to blank unbelief? Nay, Lord, we are shut up. They
have none of that 'ETERNAL LIFE' to offer us whereof Thou
hast been discoursing, in words rich and ravishing as well
as in words staggering to human wisdom. That life we cannot
want; that life we have learnt to crave as a necessity of
the deeper nature which Thou hast awakened: 'the words
of that eternal life' (the authority to reveal it and
the power to confer it). Thou hast: Therefore will we stay
with Thee--we must."
69. And we believe,--(See on Mt
16:16). Peter seems to have added this not
merely--probably not so much--as an assurance to his Lord
of his heart's belief in Him, as for the purpose of
fortifying himself and his faithful brethren against
that recoil from his Lord's harsh statements which he
was probably struggling against with difficulty at that
moment. Note.--There are seasons when one's faith is
tried to the utmost, particularly by speculative
difficulties; the spiritual eye then swims, and all truth
seems ready to depart from us. At such seasons, a clear
perception that to abandon the faith of Christ is to face
black desolation, ruin and death; and on recoiling from
this, to be able to fall back, not merely on first
principles and immovable foundations, but on personal
experience of a Living Lord in whom all truth is wrapt up
and made flesh for our very benefit--this is a relief
unspeakable. Under that blessed Wing taking shelter, until
we are again fit to grapple with the questions that have
staggered us, we at length either find our way through them,
or attain to a calm satisfaction in the discovery that they
lie beyond the limits of present apprehension.
70. Have not I chosen . . . and one of you is a
devil:--"Well said, Simon-Barjonas, but that 'we'
embraces not so wide a circle as in the simplicity of thine
heart thou thinkest; for though I have chosen you but
twelve, one even of these is a 'devil'" (the temple,
the tool of that wicked one).
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