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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
LUKE
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 18
@Lu
18:1-8. PARABLE OF THE IMPORTUNATE WIDOW.
1-5. always--Compare @Lu
18:7, "night and day."
faint--lose heart,
or slacken.
2. feared not . . . neither regarded--defying
the vengeance of God and despising the opinion of men.
widow--weak,
desolate, defenseless (@1Ti
5:5, which is taken from this).
3. came--kept coming. See @Lu
18:5, "her continual coming."
Avenge me--that is,
rid me of the oppression of.
5. continual coming--coming for ever.
6-8. the Lord--a name expressive of the authoritative
style in which He interprets His own parable.
7. shall not God--not unjust, but the infinitely
righteous Judge.
avenge--redeem from
oppression.
his own elect--not
like this widow, the object of indifference and contempt,
but dear to Him as the apple of the eye (@Zec
2:8).
cry day and night--whose
every cry enters into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth (@Jas
5:4), and how much more their incessant and
persevering cries!
bear long with them--rather,
"in their case," or "on their account"
(as) @Jas
5:7, "for it"), [GROTIUS, DE WETTE,
&c.].
8. speedily--as if pained at the long delay,
impatient for the destined moment to interpose. (Compare @Pr
29:1.)
Nevertheless,
&c.--that is, Yet ere the Son of man comes to redress
the wrongs of His Church, so low will the hope of relief
sink, through the length of the delay, that one will be
fain to ask, Will He find any faith of a coming avenger
left on the earth? From this we learn: (1) That the primary
and historical reference of this parable is to the
Church in its widowed, desolate, oppressed,
defenseless condition during the present absence of her
Lord in the heavens; (2) That in these circumstances
importunate, persevering prayer for deliverance is the
Church's fitting exercise; (3) That notwithstanding every
encouragement to this, so long will the answer be delayed,
while the need of relief continues the same, and all hope
of deliverance will have nearly died out, and
"faith" of Christ's coming scarcely to be found.
But the application of the parable to prayer in general
is so obvious as to have nearly hidden its more direct
reference, and so precious that one cannot allow it to
disappear in any public and historical interpretation.
@Lu
18:9-14. PARABLE OF THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN.
11, 12. stood--as the Jews in prayer (@Mr
11:25).
God, &c.--To
have been kept from gross iniquities was undoubtedly a
just cause of thankfulness to God; but instead of the
devoutly humble, admiring frame which this should inspire,
the Pharisee arrogantly severs himself from the rest of
mankind, as quite above them, and, with a contemptuous
look at the poor publican, thanks God that he has not to
stand afar off like him, to hang down his head like a
bulrush and beat his breast like him. But these are only
his moral excellencies. His religious merits
complete his grounds for congratulation. Not confining
himself to the one divinely prescribed annual fast (@Le
16:29), he was not behind the most rigid, who fasted
on the second and fifth days of every week [LIGHTFOOT],
and gave the tenth not only of what the law laid under
tithing, but of "all his gains." Thus, besides
doing all his duty, he did works of
supererogation; while sins to confess and spiritual
wants to be supplied he seems to have felt none. What a
picture of the Pharisaic character and religion!
13. standing afar off--as unworthy to draw near;
but that was the way to get near (@Ps
34:18 Isa 57:15).
would not lift up--blushing
and ashamed to do so (@Ezr
9:6).
smote, &c.--kept
smiting; for anguish (@Lu
23:48), and self-reproach (@Jer
31:19).
be merciful--"be
propitiated," a very unusual word in such a sense,
only once else used in the New Testament, in the sense of
"making reconciliation" by sacrifice (@Heb
2:17). There may therefore, be some allusion to
this here, though not likely.
a sinner--literally,
"the sinner"; that is, "If ever
there was one, I am he."
14. rather than the other--The meaning is,
"and not the other"; for the Pharisee was not
seeking justification, and felt no need of it. This great
law of the Kingdom of God is, in the teaching of Christ,
inscribed, as in letters of gold, over its entrance gate.
And in how many different forms is it repeated (@Ps
138:6 147:6 Lu 1:53). To be self-emptied, or,
"poor in spirit," is the fundamental and
indispensable preparation for the reception of the
"grace which bringeth salvation": wherever this
exists, the "mourning" for it which precedes
"comfort" and the earnest "hungerings and
thirstings after righteousness" which are rewarded by
the "fulness" of it, will, as we see here, be
surely found. Such, therefore, and such only, are the
justified ones (@Job
33:27,28 Ps 34:18 Isa 57:15).
@Lu
18:15-17. LITTLE CHILDREN BROUGHT TO CHRIST.
15. infants--showing that some, at least, of those
called in Matthew (@Mt
19:13) and Mark (@Mr
10:13) simply "little" or "young
children," were literally "babes."
touch them--or, as
more fully in Matthew (@Mt
19:13), "put His hands on them and pray,"
or invoke a "blessing" on them (@Mr
10:16), according to venerable custom (@Ge
48:14,15).
rebuked them--Repeatedly
the disciples thus interposed to save annoyance and
interruption to their Master; but, as the result showed, always
against the mind of Christ (@Mt
15:23 Lu 18:39,40). Here, it is plain from our Lord's
reply, that they thought the intrusion a useless one, as infants
were not capable of receiving anything from Him. His
ministrations were for grown people.
16. But Jesus--"much displeased,"
says Mark (@Mr
10:14); and invaluable addition.
said--"SUFFER
THE LITTLE CHILDREN TO COME UNTO ME"--"AND
FORBID THEM NOT," is the important addition of
Matthew (@Mt
19:14) and Mark (@Mr
10:14). What words are these from the lips of Christ!
The price of them is above rubies. But the reason
assigned, "FOR OF SUCH IS THE KINGDOM OF GOD,"
or "of heaven," as in @Mt
19:14, completes the previous information here
conveyed; especially as interpreted by what immediately
follows: "AND HE TOOK THEM UP IN HIS ARMS, PUT HIS
HANDS UPON THEM, AND BLESSED THEM" (@Mr
10:16). It is surely not to be conceived that all our
Lord meant was to inform us, that seeing grown people
must become childlike in order to be capable of the
Kingdom of God, therefore they should not hinder infants
from coming to Him, and therefore He took up and blessed the
infants themselves. Was it not just the grave mistake
of the disciples that infants should not be brought to
Christ, because only grown people could profit by Him,
which "much displeased" our Lord? And though He
took the irresistible opportunity of lowering their pride
of reason, by informing them that, in order to enter the
Kingdom, "instead of the children first becoming
like them, they must themselves become like the children"
[RICHTER in STIER], this was but by the way; and,
returning to the children themselves, He took them
up in His gracious arms, put His hands upon them and
blessed them, for no conceivable reason but to show that they
were thereby made capable, AS INFANTS, of the
Kingdom of God. And if so, then "Can any man
forbid water that these should not be baptized which have
received the Holy Ghost as well as we?" (@Ac
10:47). But such application of the baptismal water
can have no warrant here, save where the infants have been
previously brought to Christ Himself for His
benediction, and only as the sign and seal of that
benediction.
@Lu
18:18-30. THE RICH YOUNG RULER AND DISCOURSE THEREON.
This case presents some remarkable points. (1) The man was
of irreproachable moral character; and this amidst all the
temptations of youth, for he was a "young
man" (@Mt
19:22), and wealth, for "he was very
rich" (@Lu
18:23 Mr 10:22). (2) But restless notwithstanding, his
heart craves eternal life. (3) Unlike the
"rulers," to whose class he belonged (@Lu
18:18), he so far believed in Jesus as to be persuaded
He could authoritatively direct him on this vital point.
(4) So earnest is he that he comes "running" and
even "kneeling before Him," and that when He was
gone forth into the war (@Mr
10:17)--the high-road, by this time crowded with
travellers to the passover; undeterred by the virulent
opposition of the class he belonged to as a
"ruler" and by the shame he might be expected to
feel at broaching such a question in the hearing of a
crowd and on the open road.
19. Why, &c.--Did our Lord mean then to teach
that God only ought to be called "good?"
Impossible, for that had been to contradict all Scripture
teaching, and His own, too (@Ps
112:5 Mt 25:21 Tit 1:8). Unless therefore we are to
ascribe captiousness to our Lord, He could have had but
one object--to raise the youth's ideas of Himself,
as not to be classed merely with other "good
masters," and declining to receive this title apart
from the "One" who is essentially and only
"good." This indeed is but distantly hinted; but
unless this is seen in the background of our Lord's
words, nothing worthy of Him can be made out of them.
(Hence, Socinianism, instead of having any support
here, is only baffled by it).
20. Thou knowest, &c.--Matthew (@Mt
19:17) is more complete here: "but if thou wilt
enter into life, keep the commandments. He saith unto him,
Which--as if he had said, Point me out one of them which I
have not kept?--"Jesus said, Thou shalt,"
&c. (@Mt
19:17,18). Our Lord purposely confines Himself to the second
table, which He would consider easy to keep, enumerating
them all--for in Mark (@Mr
10:19), "Defraud not" stands for the tenth
(else the eighth is twice repeated). In Matthew (@Mt
19:19) the sum of this second table of the law
is added, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself," as if to see if he would venture to say he
had kept that.
21. All these, &c.--"what lack I
yet?" adds Matthew (@Mt
19:20). Ah! this gives us a glimpse of his heart.
Doubtless he was perfectly sincere; but something within
whispered to him that his keeping of the
commandments was too easy a way of getting to
heaven. He felt something beyond this to be necessary;
after keeping all the commandments he was at a loss to
know what that could be; and he came to Jesus just upon
that point. "Then," says Mark (@Mr
10:21), "Jesus beholding him loved him," or
"looked lovingly upon him." His sincerity,
frankness, and nearness to the kingdom of God, in
themselves most winning qualities, won our Lord's regard
even though he turned his back upon Him--a lesson to those
who can see nothing lovable save in the regenerate.
22. lackest . . . one thing--Ah! but that
a fundamental, fatal lack.
sell, &c.--As
riches were his idol, our Lord, who knew if from the
first, lays His great authoritative grasp at once upon it,
saying, "Now give Me up that, and all is right."
No general direction about the disposal of riches, then,
is here given, save that we are to sit loose to them and
lay them at the feet of Him who gave them. He who does
this with all he has, whether rich or poor, is a true heir
of the kingdom of heaven.
23-25. was very sorrowful--Matthew (@Mt
19:22) more fully, "went away
sorrowful"; Mark still more, "was sad" or
"sullen" at that saying, and "went away
grieved." Sorry he was, very sorry, to part with
Christ; but to part with his riches would have cost him a
pang more. When Riches or Heaven, on Christ's terms, were
the alternative, the result showed to which side the
balance inclined. Thus was he shown to lack the one
all-comprehensive requirement of the law--the absolute
subjection of the heart to God, and this want vitiated
all his other obediences.
24. when Jesus saw--Mark says (@Mr
3:34), He "looked round about"--as if first
following the departing youth with His eye--"and
saith unto His disciples."
How hardly,
&c.--with what difficulty. In Mark (@Mr
10:24) an explanation is added, "How hard is it
for them that trust in riches," &c.--that
is, with what difficulty is this idolatrous trust
conquered, without which they cannot enter; and this is
introduced by the word "children"--sweet
diminutive of affection and pity (@Joh
21:5).
25. easier for a camel, &c.--a proverbial
expression denoting literally a thing impossible, but
figuratively, very difficult.
26, 27. For, &c.--"At that rate none can
be saved": "Well, it does pass human
power, but not divine."
28-30. Lo, &c.--in the simplicity of his heart
(as is evident from the reply), conscious that the
required surrender had been made, and generously taking in
his brethren with him--"we"; not in the
spirit of the young ruler. "All these have I
kept,"
left all--"The
workmen's little is as much his "all" as the
prince's much" [BENGEL]. In Matthew (@Mt
19:27) he adds, "What shall we have
therefore?" How shall it fare with us?
29. There is no man, &c.--graciously
acknowledging at once the completeness and the
acceptableness of the surrender as a thing already made.
house, &c.--The
specification is still more minute in Matthew and Mark, (@Mt
19:27 Mr 10:29) to take in every form of
self-sacrifice.
for the kingdom of God's
sake--in Mark (@Mr
10:29), "for MY sake and the Gospel's." See
on Lu 6:22.
30. manifold more in this present time--in Matthew
(@Mt
19:29) "an hundredfold," to which Mark (@Mr
10:30) gives this most interesting addition, "Now
in this present time, houses, and brethren, and sisters,
and mothers, and children, and lands, with
persecutions." We have here the blessed promise of a reconstruction
of all human relationships and affections on a Christian
basis and in a Christian state, after being sacrificed, in
their natural form, on the altar of love to Christ.
This He calls "manifold more"--"an
hundredfold more"--than what they sacrificed. Our
Lord was Himself the first to exemplify this new
adjustment of His own relationships. (See on Mt
12:49,50; and 2Co 6:14-18.) But this "with
persecutions"; for how could such a transfer take
place without the most cruel wrenches to flesh and blood?
but the persecution would haply follow them into their new
and higher circle, breaking that up too! But best of all,
"in the world to come life everlasting." And
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When
the shore is won at last
Who will count the billows past?
KEBLE
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These
promises are for every one who forsakes his all for
Christ. But in Matthew (@Mt
19:28) this is prefaced by a special promise to the
Twelve: "Verily I say unto you, That ye which
have followed Me in the Regeneration, when the Son of man
shall sit in the throne of His glory, ye also shall sit on
twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel."
Ye who have now adhered to Me shall, in the new kingdom,
rule, or give law to, the great Christian world, here set
forth in Jewish dress as the twelve tribes, presided over
by the twelve apostles on so many judicial thrones. In
this sense certainly the promise has been illustriously
fulfilled [CALVIN, GROTIUS, LIGHTFOOT, &c.]. But if
the promise refers to the yet future glory (as may be
thought from @Lu
22:28-30, and as most take it), it points to the
highest personal distinction of the first founders of the
Christian Church.
@Lu
18:31-34. FULLER ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS APPROACHING DEATH
AND RESURRECTION.
(See on Mr 10:32-34.)
31. all written by the prophets concerning the Son of
man . . . be accomplished--showing how
Christ Himself read, and would have us to read, the Old
Testament, in which some otherwise evangelical
interpreters find no prophecies, or virtually none,
of the sufferings of the Son of man.
34. understood none, &c.--The Evangelist seems
unable to say strongly enough how entirely hidden from
them at that time was the sense of these exceeding
plain statements: no doubt to add weight to their
subsequent testimony, which from this very circumstance
was prodigious, and with all the simple-hearted
irresistible.
@Lu
18:35-43. BLIND MAN HEALED.
In @Mt
20:29-34, they are two, as in the case of the
Demoniac of Gadara. In Matthew and Mark (@Mr
10:46-52) the occurrence is connected with Christ's departure
from Jericho; in Luke with His approach to it.
Many ways of accounting for these slight divergences of
detail have been proposed. Perhaps, if we knew all the
facts, we should see no difficulty; but that we have
been left so far in the dark shows that the thing is of no
moment any way. One thing is plain, there could have been
no collusion among the authors of these Gospels, else they
would have taken care to remove these "spots on the
sun."
38. son of David, &c.--(See on Mt 12:23).
39. rebuked, &c.--(See on Lu 18:15).
so much the more--that
importunity so commended in the Syrophenician
woman, and so often enjoined (@Lu
11:5-13 18:1-8).
40. commanded, &c.--Mark (@Mr
10:49) has this interesting addition: "And they
call the blind man, saying unto him, Be of good comfort,
rise, He calleth thee"--just as one earnestly
desiring an interview with some exalted person, but told
by one official after another that it is vain to wait, as
he will not succeed (they know it), yet persists in
waiting for some answer to his suit, and at length the
door opens, and a servant appears, saying, "You will
be admitted--he has called you." And are there no
other suitors to Jesus who sometimes fare thus?
"And he, casting away his garment"--how lively
is this touch, evidently of an eye-witness, expressive of
his earnestness and joy--"came to Jesus" (@Mr
10:49,50).
41-43. What wilt thou, &c.--to try them; to
deepen their present consciousness of need; and to draw
out their faith in Him. Lord "Rabboni" (@Mr
10:51); an emphatic and confiding exclamation. (See on
Joh 20:16.)
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