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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
LUKE
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 21
@Lu
21:1-4. THE WIDOW'S TWO MITES.
1. looked up--He had "sat down over against
the treasury" (@Mr
12:41), probably to rest, for He had continued long
standing as he taught in the temple court (@Mr
11:27), and "looking up He saw"--as in
Zaccheus' case, not quite casually.
the rich,
&c.--"the people," says @Mr
12:41 "cast money into the treasury, and many
rich east in much"; that is, into chests deposited in
one of the courts of the temple to receive the offerings
of the people towards its maintenance (@2Ki
12:9 Joh 8:20).
2. two mites--"which make a farthing" (@Mr
12:42), the smallest Jewish coin. "She might have
kept one" [BENGEL].
3. And he said--"to His disciples," whom
He "called to Him" (@Mr
12:43), to teach from it a great future lesson.
more than . . .
all--in proportion to her means, which is God's
standard (@2Co
8:12).
4. of their abundance--their superfluity;
what they had to spare," or beyond what they needed.
of her penury--or
"want" (@Mr
12:44)--her deficiency, of what was less
than her own wants required, "all the living she
had." Mark (@Mr
12:44) still more emphatically, "all that she
had--her whole subsistence." Note: (1) As
temple offerings are needed still for the service of
Christ at home and abroad, so "looking down"
now, as then "up," Me "sees" who
"cast in," and how much. (2) Christ's
standard of commendable offering is not our superfluity,
but our deficiency--not what will never be missed, but
what costs us some real sacrifice, and just in proportion
to the relative amount of that sacrifice. (See @2Co
8:1-3.)
@Lu
21:5-38. CHRIST'S PROPHECY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF
JERUSALEM AND WARNINGS TO PREPARE FOR HIS SECOND COMING,
SUGGESTED BY IT--HIS DAYS AND NIGHTS DURING HIS LAST WEEK.
5-7. (See on Mt 24:1-3.)
8. the time--of the Kingdom, in its full glory.
go . . . not . . .
after them--"I come not so very soon" (@2Th
2:1,2) [STIER].
9-11. not terrified--(See @Lu
21:19 Isa 8:11-14).
end not by and by--or
immediately, not yet (@Mt
24:6 Mr 13:7): that is, "Worse must come before
all is over."
10. Nation, &c.--Matthew and Mark (@Mt
24:8 Mr 13:8) add, "All these are the beginning
of sorrows," or travail pangs, to which heavy
calamities are compared (@Jer
4:31, &c.).
12. brought before, &c.--The book of Acts
verifies all this.
13. for a testimony--an opportunity of bearing
testimony.
18. not a hair . . . perish--He had just
said (@Lu
21:16) they should be put to death; showing
that this precious promise is far above immunity from mere
bodily harm, and furnishing a key to the right
interpretation of the ninety-first Psalm, and such like.
Matthew adds the following (@Mt
24:12): "And because iniquity shall abound, the
love of many," the many or, the most--the generality
of professed disciples--"shall wax cold." But he
that endureth to the end shall be saved. Sad illustrations
of the effect of abounding iniquity in cooling the love of
faithful disciples we have in the Epistle of James,
written about this period referred to, and too frequently
ever since (@Heb
10:38,39 Re 2:10). "And this gospel of the
kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness,
and then shall the end come" (@Mt
24:14). God never sends judgment without previous
warning; and there can be no doubt that the Jews, already
dispersed over most known countries, had nearly all heard
the Gospel "as a witness," before the end of the
Jewish state. The same principle was repeated and will
repeat itself to the end.
20, 21. by armies--encamped armies, that is,
besieged: "the abomination of desolation"
(meaning the Roman ensigns, as the symbols of an
idolatrous, pagan, unclean power) "spoken of by
Daniel the prophet" (@Da
9:27) "standing where it ought not" (@Mr
13:14). "Whoso readeth [that prophecy] let him
understand" (@Mt
24:15).
Then . . .
flee, &c.--EUSEBIUS says the Christians fled to Pella,
at the north extremity of Perea, being "prophetically
directed"; perhaps by some prophetic intimation still
more explicit than this, which still would be their chart.
23. woe unto--"alas for."
with child,
&c.--from the greater suffering it would involve; as
also "flight in winter, and on the sabbath,"
which they were to "pray" against (@Mt
24:20), the one as more trying to the body, the other
to the soul. "For then shall be tribulation such as
was not since the beginning of the world, nor ever shall
be"--language not unusual in the Old Testament for
tremendous calamities, though of this it may perhaps be
literally said, "And except those days should be
shortened, there should no flesh be saved, but for the
elect's sake those days shall be shortened" (@Mt
24:21,22). But for this merciful
"shortening," brought about by a remarkable
concurrence of causes, the whole nation would have
perished, in which there yet remained a remnant to be
afterwards gathered out. Here in Matthew and Mark (@Mt
24:24 Mr 13:22) are some particulars about "false
Christs," who should, "if possible"--a
precious clause--"deceive the very elect."
(Compare @2Th
2:9-11 Re 13:13.)
24. Jerusalem . . . trodden down . . .
until, &c.--Implying (1) that one day Jerusalem
shall cease to be "trodden down by the Gentiles"
(@Re
11:2), as then by pagan so now by Mohammedan
unbelievers; (2) that this shall be at the
"completion" of "the times of the
Gentiles," which from @Ro
11:25 (taken from this) we conclude to mean till the
Gentiles have had their full time of that place in
the Church which the Jews in their time had before
them--after which, the Jews being again "grafted into
their own olive tree," one Church of Jew and Gentile
together shall fill the earth (@Ro
11:1-36). What a vista this opens up!
25-28. signs, &c.--Though the grandeur of this
language carries the mind over the head of all periods but
that of Christ's second coming, nearly every expression
will be found used of the Lord's coming in terrible
national judgments, as of Babylon, &c.; and from @Lu
21:28,32, it seems undeniable that its immediate
reference was to the destruction of Jerusalem, though its ultimate
reference beyond doubt is to Christ's final coming.
28. redemption--from the oppression of
ecclesiastical despotism and legal bondage by the total
subversion of the Jewish state and the firm establishment
of the evangelical kingdom (@Lu
21:31). But the words are of far wider and more
precious import. Matthew (@Mt
24:30) says, "And then shall appear the sign
of the Son of man in heaven," evidently something
distinct from Himself, mentioned immediately after. What
this was intended to mean, interpreters are not agreed.
But as before Christ came to destroy Jerusalem, some
appalling portents were seen in the air, so before His
personal appearing it is likely that something analogous
will be witnessed, though of what nature it is vain to
conjecture.
32. This generation--not "this nation,"
as some interpret it, which, though admissible in itself,
seems very unnatural here. It is rather as in @Lu
9:27.
34-37. surfeiting, and drunkenness--All animal
excesses, quenching spirituality.
cares of this life--(See
on Mr 4:7; Mr 4:19).
36. Watch . . . pray, &c.--the two
great duties which in prospect of trial are constantly
enjoined. These warnings, suggested by the need of
preparedness for the tremendous calamities approaching,
and the total wreck of the existing state of things, are
the general improvement of the whole discourse,
carrying the mind forward to Judgment and Vengeance of
another kind and on a grander and more awful scale--not
ecclesiastical or political but personal, not temporal but
eternal--when all safety and blessedness will be found to
lie in being able to "STAND BEFORE THE SON OF
MAN" in the glory of His personal appearing.
37, 38. in the daytime--of this His last week.
abode in the mount--that
is, at Bethany (@Mt
21:17).
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