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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
LUKE
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 15
@Lu
15:1-32. PUBLICANS AND SINNERS WELCOMED BY
CHRIST--THREE PARABLES TO EXPLAIN THIS.
1. drew near . . . all the publicans and
sinners, &c.--drawn around Him by the
extraordinary adaptation of His teaching to their case,
who, till He appeared--at least His forerunner--might well
say, "No man careth for my soul."
2. murmured, saying, &c.--took it ill, were
scandalized at Him, and insinuated (on the principle that
a man is known by the company he keeps) that He must have
some secret sympathy with their character. But oh,
what a truth of unspeakable preciousness do their lips, as
on other occasions, unconsciously utter., Now follow three
parables representing the sinner: (1) in his stupidity;
(2) as all-unconscious of his lost condition; (3) knowingly
and willingly estranged from God [BENGEL]. The first
two set forth the seeking love of God; the last,
His receiving love [TRENCH].
@Lu
15:3-7. I. THE LOST SHEEP.
3-7. Occurring again (@Mt
18:12-14); but there to show how precious one of His
sheep is to the Good Shepherd; here, to show that the
shepherd, though the sheep stray never so widely, will
seek it out, and when he hath found, will rejoice over it.
4. leave the ninety and nine--bend all His
attention and care, as it were, to the one object of
recovering the lost sheep; not saying. "It is but
one; let it go; enough remain."
go after . . .
until, &c.--pointing to all the diversified means
which God sets in operation for recovering sinners.
6. Rejoice with me, &c.--The principle here is,
that one feels exuberant joy to be almost too much
for himself to bear alone, and is positively relieved by
having others to share it with him. (See on Lu
15:10).
7. ninety-nine just . . . needing no
repentance--not angels, whose place in these
parables is very different from this; but those
represented by the prodigal's well-behaved brother,
who have "served their Father" many years and
not at any time transgressed His commandment (in the
outrageous sense of the prodigal). (See on Lu 15:29; Lu
15:31). In other words, such as have grown up from
childhood in the fear of God and as the sheep of His
pasture. Our Lord does not say "the Pharisees
and scribes" were such; but as there was undoubtedly
such a class, while "the publicans and sinners"
were confessedly the strayed sheep and the prodigal
children, He leaves them to fill up the place of the other
class, if they could.
@Lu
15:8-10. II. THE LOST COIN.
8. sweep the house--"not done without dust
on man's part" [BENGEL].
10. Likewise--on the same principle.
joy, &c.--Note
carefully the language here--not "joy on the part,"
but "joy in the presence of the angels of
God." True to the idea of the parables. The Great
Shepherd. The Great Owner Himself, is He whose the joy
properly is over His own recovered property; but so
vast and exuberant is it (@Zec
8:17), that as if He could not keep it to Himself, He
"calleth His friends and neighbors
together"--His whole celestial family--saying,
"Rejoice WITH ME, for I have found My
sheep-My-piece," &c. In this sublime sense it is
"joy," before "or in the presence
of the angels"; they only "catch the flying
joy," sharing it with Him! The application of
this to the reception of those publicans and sinners that
stood around our Lord is grand in the extreme: "Ye
turn from these lost ones with disdain, and because I do
not the same, ye murmur at it: but a very different
feeling is cherished in heaven. There, the recovery of
even one such outcast is watched with interest and hailed
with joy; nor are they left to come home of themselves or
perish; for lo! even now the great Shepherd is going after
His lost sheep, and the Owner is making diligent search
for the lost property; and He is finding it, too, and
bringing it back with joy, and all heaven is full of
it." (Let the reader mark what sublime claims Himself
our Lord covertly puts in here--as if in Him they beheld,
all unknown to themselves, nothing less than heaven in the
habiliments of earth, the Great Shepherd above, clothed in
a garment of flesh, come "to seek and to save that
which was lost")!
@Lu
15:11-32. III. THE PRODIGAL SON.
12. the younger--as the more thoughtless.
said, &c.--weary
of restraint, panting for independence, unable longer to
abide the check of a father's eye. This is man
impatient of divine control, desiring to be independent of
God, seeking to be his own master; that "sin of sins,
in which all subsequent sins are included as in their
germ, for they are but the unfolding of this one"
[TRENCH].
he divided,
&c.--Thus "God, when His service no longer
appears a perfect freedom, and man promises himself
something far better elsewhere, allows him to make the
trial; and he shall discover, if need be by saddest proof,
that to depart from Him is not to throw off the yoke, but
to exchange a light yoke for a heavy one, and one gracious
Master for a thousand imperious tyrants and lords"
[TRENCH].
13. not many days--intoxicated with his new--found
resources, and eager for the luxury of using them at Will.
a far country--beyond
all danger of interference from home.
wasted, &c.--So
long as it lasted, the inward monitor (@Isa
55:2) would be silenced (@Isa
9:10 57:10 Am 4:6-10).
riotous living--(@Lu
15:30), "with harlots." Ah! but this reaches
farther than the sensualist; for "in the deep
symbolical language of Scripture fornication is the
standing image of idolatry; they are in fact ever spoken
of as one and the same sin, considered now in its fleshly,
now in its spiritual aspect" (@Jer
3:1-15 Eze 16:1-17:24) [TRENCH].
14. when he had spent all . . . a mighty
famine--a mysterious providence holding back the
famine till he was in circumstances to feel it in all its
rigor. Thus, like Jonah, whom the storm did not overtake
till on the mighty deep at the mercy of the waves, does
the sinner feel as if "the stars in their courses
were fighting against" him (@Jud
5:20).
in want--the first
stage of his bitter experience, and preparation for a
change.
15. joined himself, &c.--his pride not yet
humbled, unable to brook the shame of a return.
to feed swine--glad
to keep life anyhow, behold the son sank into a
swineherd--among the Jews, on account of the prohibition
of swine's flesh, emphatically vile! "He who begins
by using the world as a servant, to minister to his
pleasure, ends by reversing the relationship"
[TRENCH].
16. would fain have filled--rather, "was fain
to fill," ate greedily of the only food he could get.
the husks--"the
hulls of a leguminous plant which in the East is the food
of cattle and swine, and often the nourishment of the
poorest in times of distress" [STIER].
no man gave . . .
him--not this food, for that he had, but anything
better (@Jer
30:14). This was his lowest depth--perishing
unpitied, alone in the world, and ready to
disappear from it unmissed! But this is just the
blessed turning-point; midnight before dawn of day (@2Ch
12:8 33:11-13 Jer 2:19).
17. came to himself--Before, he had been
"beside himself" (@Ec
9:3), in what sense will presently appear.
How many hired,
&c.--What a testimony to the nature of the home
he had left! But did he not know all this ere he departed
and every day of his voluntary exile? He did, and he did
not. His heart being wholly estranged from home and
steeped in selfish gratification, his father's house never
came within the range of his vision, or but as another
name for bondage and gloom. Now empty, desolate, withered,
perishing, home, with all its peace, plenty,
freedom, dignity, starts into view, fills all his visions
as a warm and living reality, and breaks his heart.
18. I will arise and go to my FATHER--The change
has come at last, and what a change!--couched in terms of
such exquisite simplicity and power as if expressly framed
for all heart-broken penitents.
Father,
&c.--Mark the term. Though "no more worthy
to be called his son," the prodigal sinner is taught
to claim the defiled, but still existing
relationship, asking not to be made a servant, but remaining
a son to be made "as a servant,"
willing to take the lowest place and do the meanest work.
Ah! and is it come to this? Once it was, "Any place
rather than home." Now, "Oh, that home! Could I
but dare to hope that the door of it would not be closed
against me, how gladly would I take any place and do any
worK, happy only to be there at all." Well, that
is conversion--nothing absolutely new, yet all new;
old familiar things seen in a new light and for the first
time as realities of overwhelming magnitude and power. How
this is brought about the parable says not. (We have
that abundantly elsewhere, @Php
2:13, &c.). Its one object is to paint the welcome
home of the greatest sinners, when (no matter for the
present how) they "arise and go to their
Father."
20. a great way off--Oh yes, when but the face is
turned homeward, though as yet far, far away, our
Father recognizes His own child in us, and bounds to meet
us--not saying, Let him come to Me and sue for pardon
first, but Himself taking the first step.
fell on his neck and
kissed him--What! In all his filth? Yes. In all his
rags? Yes. In all his haggard, shattered wretchedness?
Yes. "Our Father who art in heaven," is this Thy
portraiture? It is even so (@Jer
31:20). And because it is so, I wonder not that such
incomparable teaching hath made the world new.
21. Father, I have sinned, &c.--"This
confession is uttered after the kiss of reconciliation"
(@Eze
16:63) [TRENCH].
22. But the Father said, &c.--The son has not
said all he purposed, not so much, because the father's
demonstrations had rekindled the filial, and swallowed up
all servile feeling [TRENCH] (on the word
"Father," see on Lu
15:18), but because the father's heart is made to
appear too full to listen, at that moment, to more in this
strain.
the best robe--Compare
@Zec
3:4,5, "Take away the filthy garments from him;
behold I have clothed thee with change of raiment; and
they clothed him with garments" (@Isa
61:10 Re 3:18).
a ring--(Compare @Ge
41:42 Jas 2:2).
shoes--Slaves went
barefoot. Thus, we have here a threefold symbol of freedom
and honor, restored, as the fruit of perfect
reconciliation.
23. the fatted calf--kept for festive occasions.
24. my son--now twice his son.
dead . . .
lost--to me; to himself--to my service,
my satisfaction; to his own dignity, peace, profit.
alive again . . .
found--to all these.
merry--(See on Lu
15:10).
25. in the field--engaged in his father's business:
compare @Lu
15:29, "These many years do I serve
thee."
28. came his father out, and entreated him--"Like
as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them
that fear Him" (@Ps
103:13). As it is the elder brother who now errs, so
it is the same paternal compassion which had fallen
on the neck of the younger that comes forth and pleads
with the elder.
29. these many years . . . neither
transgressed I at any time thy commandment--The words
are not to be pressed too far. He is merely contrasting his
constancy of love and service with the conduct of his
brother; just as Job, resenting the charge of hypocrisy
by his friends, speaks as if nothing could be laid to his
charge (@Job
23:10-12), and David too (@Ps
18:20-24). The father attests the truth of all he
says.
never . . . a
kid--I say not a calf, but not even a kid.
that I might make merry
with my friends--Here lay his misapprehension. It was
no entertainment for the gratification of the prodigal: it
was a father's expression of the joy he felt
at his recovery.
thy son . . .
thy living--How unworthy a reflection on the common
father of both, for the one not only to disown the other,
but fling him over upon his father, as if he should say,
Take him, and have joy of him!
31. Son, &c.--The father resents not the
insult--how could he, after the largeness of heart which
had kissed the returning prodigal? He calmly expostulates
with him, "Son, listen to reason. What need for
special, exuberant joy over thee? Didst thou say, 'Lo,
these many years do I serve thee?' In that saidst thou
truly; but just for that reason do I not set the
whole household a-rejoicing over thee. For thee is
reserved what is higher still--a tranquil lifelong
satisfaction in thee, as a true-hearted faithful son in
thy father's house, nor of the inheritance reserved for
thee is aught alienated by this festive and fitting joy
over the once foolish but now wise and newly recovered
one."
32. It was meet--Was it possible he should simply
take his long vacant place in the family without one
special sign of wonder and delight at the change? Would
that have been nature? But this being the
meaning of the festivity, it would for that very reason be
temporary. In time, the dutifulness of even the
younger son would become the law and not the exception;
he too at length might venture to say, "Lo, these
many years do I serve thee"; and of him the father
would say, "Son, thou art ever with me." In that
case, therefore, it would not be "meet that
they should make merry and be glad." The lessons are
obvious, but how beautiful! (1) The deeper sunk and the
longer estranged any sinner is, the more exuberant is the
joy which his recovery occasions. (2) Such joy is not
the portion of those whose whole lives have been spent in
the service of their Father in heaven. (3) Instead of
grudging the want of this, they should deem it the highest
testimony to their lifelong fidelity, that something
better is reserved for them--the deep, abiding complacency
of their Father in heaven.
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