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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
LUKE
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 14
@Lu
14:1-24. HEALING OF A DROPSICAL MAN, AND MANIFOLD
TEACHINGS AT A SABBATH FEAST.
2. man before him--not one of the company, since
this was apparently before the guests sat down, and
probably the man came in hope of a cure, though not
expressly soliciting it [DE WETTE].
3-6. (See on Mt 12:11,12).
7-11. a parable--showing that His design was not so
much to inculcate mere politeness or good manners, as underneath
this to teach something deeper (@Lu
14:11).
chief rooms--principal
seats, in the middle part of the couch on which they
reclined at meals, esteemed the most honorable.
8. wedding--and seating thyself at the wedding feast.
Our Lord avoids the appearance of personality by this
delicate allusion to a different kind of entertainment
than this of his host [BENGEL].
9. the lowest--not a lower merely [BENGEL].
with shame--"To
be lowest is only ignominious to him who affects the
highest" [BENGEL].
10. Friend--said to the modest guest only,
not the proud one (@Lu
14:9) [BENGEL].
worship--honor. The
whole of this is but a reproduction of @Pr
25:6,7. But it was reserved for the matchless Teacher
to utter articulately, and apply to the
regulation of the minutest features of social life,
such great laws of the Kingdom of God, as that of @Lu
14:11.
11. whosoever, &c.--couching them in a chaste
simplicity and proverbial terseness of style which makes
them "apples of gold in a setting of silver."
(See on Lu 18:14).
12-14. call not thy friends--Jesus certainly did
not mean us to dispense with the duties of ordinary
fellowship, but, remitting these to their proper place,
inculcates what is better [BENGEL].
lest . . . a
recompense be given thee--a fear the world is not
afflicted with [BENGEL]. The meaning, however, is that no exercise
of principle is involved in it, as selfishness itself
will suffice to prompt to it (@Mt
5:46,47).
13. call the poor--"Such God Himself
calls" (@Lu
14:21) [BENGEL].
14. blessed--acting from disinterested, god-like
compassion for the wretched.
15-24. when one . . . heard . . .
he said, Blessed, &c.--As our Lord's words seemed
to hold forth the future "recompense" under the
idea of a great Feast, the thought passes through this
man's mind, how blessed they would be who should be
honored to sit down to it. Our Lord's reply is in
substance this: "The great Feast is prepared already;
the invitations are issued, but declined; the
feast, notwithstanding, shall not want abundance of
guests; but not one of its present contemners--who shall
yet come to sue for admission--shall be allowed to taste
of it." This shows what was lacking in the seemingly
pious exclamation of this man. It was Balaam's, "Let
me die the death of the righteous, and let my last
end be like his" (@Nu
23:10), without any anxiety about living his life;
fondly wishing that all were right with him at last,
while all heedless of the precious present.
16. a great supper--(Compare @Isa
25:6).
bade many--historically,
the Jews (see on Mt 22:3); generally, those within the
pale of professed discipleship.
17. supper-time . . . all now ready--pointing
undoubtedly to the now ripening preparations for the great
Gospel call. (See on Mt 22:4.)
18. all began to make excuse--(Compare @Mt
22:5). Three excuses, given as specimens of the rest,
answer to "the care of this world" (@Lu
14:18), "the deceitfulness of riches"
(@Lu
14:19), and "the pleasures of this life"
(@Lu
14:20), which "choke the word" (@Mt
13:22 and @Lu
8:14). Each differs from the other, and each has its
own plausibility, but all come to the same result:
"We have other things to attend to, more pressing
just now." Nobody is represented as saying, I will
not come; nay, all the answers imply that but for
certain things they would come, and when these are
out of the way they will come. So it certainly is
in the case intended, for the last words clearly imply
that the refusers will one day become petitioners.
21. came, and showed, &c.--saying as in @Isa
53:1. "It is the part of ministers to report to
the Lord in their prayers the compliance or refusal of
their hearers" [BENGEL].
angry--in one sense
a gracious word, showing how sincere he was in
issuing his invitations (@Eze
33:11). But it is the slight put upon him, the
sense of which is intended to be marked by this word.
streets and lanes--historically,
those within the same pale of "the city" of God
as the former class, but the despised and outcasts of the
nation, the "publicans and sinners" [TRENCH];
generally, all similar classes, usually overlooked in the
first provision for supplying the means of grace to a
community, half heathen in the midst of revealed light,
and in every sense miserable.
22. yet there is room--implying that these classes had
embraced the invitation (@Mt
21:32 Mr 12:37, last clause; @Joh
7:48,49); and beautifully expressing the longing that
should fill the hearts of ministers to see their Master's
table filled.
23. highways and hedges--outside the city
altogether; historically, the heathen, sunk in the
lowest depths of spiritual wretchedness, as being beyond
the pale of all that is revealed and saving, "without
Christ, strangers from the covenant of promise, having no
hope, and without God in the world" (@Eph
2:12); generally, all such still. Thus, this parable prophetically
contemplates the extension of the kingdom of God to the
whole world; and spiritually, directs the Gospel
invitations to be carried to the lowest strata, and be
brought in contact with the outermost circles, of human
society.
compel them to come in--not
as if they would make the "excuses" of the first
class, but because it would be hard to get them over two
difficulties: (1) "We are not fit company for such a
feast." (2) "We have no proper dress, and are
ill in order for such a presence." How fitly does
this represent the difficulties and fears of the sincere!
How is this met? "Take no excuse--make them come as
they are--bring them along with you." What a
directory for ministers of Christ!
that my house may be
filled--"Grace no more than nature will endure a
vacuum" [BENGEL].
24. I say unto you, That none--Our Lord here
appears to throw off the veil of the parable, and proclaim
the Supper His own, intimating that when
transferred and transformed into its final glorious form,
and the refusers themselves would give all for another
opportunity, He will not allow one of them to taste it. (Note.
This parable must not be confounded with that of @Pr
1:24-33; The Marriage Supper, @Mt
22:2-14).
@Lu
14:25-35. ADDRESS TO GREAT MULTITUDES TRAVELLING WITH
HIM.
25. great multitudes with him--on His final journey
to Jerusalem. The "great multitudes" were
doubtless people going to the passover, who moved along in
clusters (@Lu
2:44), and who on this occasion falling in with our
Lord had formed themselves into one mass about Him.
26, 27. If any man, &c.--(See on Mt
10:34-36, and @Mr
8:34,35).
28-33. which of you, &c.--Common sense teaches
men not to begin any costly work without first
seeing that they have wherewithal to finish. And he
who does otherwise exposes himself to general ridicule.
Nor will any wise potentate enter on a war with any
hostile power without first seeing to it that, despite
formidable odds (two to one), he be able to stand his
ground; and if he has no hope of this, he will feel that
nothing remains for him but to make the best terms he can.
Even so, says our Lord, "in the warfare you
will each have to wage as My disciples, despise not your
enemy's strength, for the odds are all against you; and
you had better see to it that, despite every disadvantage,
you still have wherewithal to hold out and win the day, or
else not begin at all, and make the best you can in such
awful circumstances." In this simple sense of the
parable (STIER, ALFORD, &c., go wide of the mark here
in making the enemy to be God, because of the
"conditions of peace," @Lu
14:32), two things are taught: (1) Better not begin (@Re
3:15), than begin and not finish. (2) Though the
contest for salvation be on our part an awfully unequal
one, the human will, in the exercise of that
"faith which overcometh the world" (@1Jo
5:4), and nerved by power from above, which "out
of weakness makes it strong" (@Heb
11:34 1Pe 1:5), becomes heroical and will come off
"more than conqueror." But without absolute
surrender of self the contest is hopeless (@Lu
14:33).
34, 35. Salt, &c.--(See on Mt 5:13-16; and @Mr
9:50).
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