| |
THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
LUKE
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
[17]
[18]
[19]
[20]
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24]
CHAPTER 23
@Lu
23:1-5. JESUS BEFORE PILATE.
(See on Mr 15:1-5; and Joh 18:28-19:22.)
@Lu
23:6-12. JESUS BEFORE HEROD.
(See @Mr
15:6.)
7. sent him to Herod--hoping thus to escape the
dilemma of an unjust condemnation or an unpopular release.
at Jerusalem . . .
at that time--to keep the passover.
8. some miracle--Fine sport thou expectedst, as the
Philistines with Samson (@Jud
16:25), O coarse, crafty, cruel tyrant! But thou hast
been baulked before (see on Lu 13:31-33), and shalt be
again.
9. answered . . . nothing--(See @Mt
7:6).
10. stood and vehemently accused him--no doubt both
of treason before the king, and of blasphemy,
for the king was a Jew.
11. his men of war--his bodyguard.
set him at naught,
&c.--stung with disappointment at His refusal to amuse
him with miracles or answer any of his questions.
gorgeous robe--bright
robe. If this mean (as sometimes) of shining white, this
being the royal color among the Jews, it may have been in
derision of His claim to be "King of the Jews."
But if so, "He in reality honored Him, as did Pilate
with His true title blazoned on the cross" [BENGEL].
sent him again to Pilate--instead
of releasing him as he ought, having established nothing
against Him (@Lu
23:14,15). "Thus he implicated himself with
Pilate in all the guilt of His condemnation, and with him
accordingly he is classed" (@Ac
4:27) [BENGEL].
at enmity--perhaps
about some point of disputed jurisdiction, which this
exchange of the Prisoner might tend to heal.
@Lu
23:13-38. JESUS AGAIN BEFORE PILATE--DELIVERED UP--LED
AWAY TO BE CRUCIFIED.
(See on Mr 15:6-15; and Joh 19:2-17).
26. Cyrenian--of Cyrene, in Libya, on the north
coast of Africa, where were many Jews who had a synagogue
at Jerusalem (@Ac
6:9, and see @Ac
2:10). He was "the father of ALEXANDER and
Rufus" (@Mr
15:21), probably better known afterwards than himself,
as disciples. (See @Ro
16:13).
out of the country--and
casually drawn into that part of the crowd.
laid the cross--"Him
they compel to bear His cross," (@Mt
27:32)--sweet compulsion, if it issued in him or his
sons voluntarily "taking up their
cross!" It would appear that our Lord had first to
bear His own cross (@Joh
19:17), but being from exhaustion unable to proceed,
it was laid on another to bear it "after Him."
27-31. women--not the precious Galilean women (@Lu
23:49), but part of the crowd.
28. not for me, &c.--noble spirit of
compassion, rising above His own dread endurances, in
tender commiseration of sufferings yet in the distance and
far lighter, but without His supports and consolations!
30. mountains . . . hills, &c.--(@Ho
10:8), flying hither and thither as they did in
despair for shelter, during the siege; a very slight
premonition of cries of another and more awful kind (@Isa
2:10,19,21 Re 6:16,17).
31. green tree--that naturally resists the fire.
the dry--that
attracts the fire, being its proper fuel. The proverb here
plainly means: "If such sufferings alight upon the
innocent One, the very Lamb of God, what must be in store
for those who are provoking the flames?"
@Lu
23:32-38, 44-46. CRUCIFIXION AND DEATH OF THE LORD
JESUS.
(See on Joh 19:17-30).
@Lu
23:39-43. THE TWO THIEVES.
39. railed on him--catching up the universal
derision, but with a turn of his own. Jesus,
"reviled, reviles not again"; but another voice
from the cross shall nobly wipe out this dishonor and turn
it to the unspeakable glory of the dying Redeemer.
40. Dost not thou--"thou" is emphatic:
"Let others jeer, but dost thou?"
fear God--Hast thou
no fear of meeting Him so soon as thy righteous Judge?
Thou art within an hour or two of eternity, and dost thou
spend it in reckless disregard of coming judgment?
in the same condemnation--He
has been condemned to die, but is it better with thee?
Doth even a common lot kindle no sympathy in thy breast?
41. we . . . justly, &c.--He owns the
worst of his crimes and deserts, and would fain shame his
fellow into the same.
nothing amiss--literally,
"out of place"; hence "unnatural"; a
striking term here. Our Lord was not charged with ordinary
crime, but only with laying claim to office and honors
which amounted to blasphemy. The charge of treason had not
even a show of truth, as Pilate told His enemies. In this
defense then there seems more than meets the eye. "He
made Himself the promised Messiah, the Son of God; but in
this He 'did nothing amiss'; He ate with publicans and
sinners, and bade all the weary and heavy laden come and
rest under His wing; but in this He 'did nothing amiss':
He claimed to be Lord of the Kingdom of God, to shut it at
will, but also to open it at pleasure even to such as we
are; but in this He 'did nothing amiss!'" Does His
next speech imply less than this? Observe: (1) His
frank confession and genuine self-condemnation. (2) His
astonishment and horror at the very different state of his
fellow's mind. (3) His anxiety to bring him to a better
mind while yet there was hope. (4) His noble testimony,
not only to the innocence of Jesus, but to all that this
implied of the rightfulness of His claims.
42. said unto Jesus, &c.--Observe here (1) The
"kingdom" referred to was one beyond the
grave; for it is inconceivable that he should have
expected Him to come down from the cross to erect any temporal
kingdom. (2) This he calls Christ's own (Thy) kingdom. (3)
As such, he sees in Christ the absolute right to dispose
of that kingdom to whom He pleased. (4) He does not
presume to ask a place in that kingdom, though that
is what he means, but with a humility quite affecting,
just says, "Lord, remember me when,"
&c. Yet was there mighty faith in that word. If Christ
will but "think upon him" (@Ne
5:19), at that august moment when He "cometh into
His kingdom," it will do. "Only assure me that
then Thou wilt not forget such a wretch as I, that once
hung by Thy side, and I am content." Now contrast
with this bright act of faith the darkness even of the
apostles' minds, who could hardly be got to believe that
their Master would die at all, who now were almost
despairing of Him, and who when dead had almost buried
their hopes in His grave. Consider, too, the man's
previous disadvantages and bad life. And
then mark how his faith comes out--not in protestations,
"Lord, I cannot doubt, I am firmly persuaded that
Thou art Lord of a kingdom, that death cannot disannul Thy
title nor impede the assumption of it in due time,"
&c.--but as having no shadow of doubt, and rising
above it as a question altogether, he just says,
"Lord, remember me when Thou comest,"
&c. Was ever faith like this exhibited upon earth? It
looks as if the brightest crown had been reserved for the
Saviour's head at His darkest moment!
43. Jesus said, &c.--The dying Redeemer speaks
as if He Himself viewed it in this light. It was a
"song in the night." It ministered cheer to His
spirit in the midnight gloom that now enwrapt it.
Verily I say unto thee--"Since
thou speakest as to the king, with kingly authority speak
I to thee."
To-day--"Thou
art prepared for a long delay before I come into My
kingdom, but not a day's delay shall there be for thee;
thou shalt not be parted from Me even for a moment, but
together we shall go, and with Me, ere this day expire,
shalt thou be in Paradise" (future bliss, @2Co
12:4 Re 2:7). Learn (1) How "One is taken and
another left"; (2) How easily divine teaching can
raise the rudest and worst above the best instructed and
most devoted servants of Christ; (3) How presumption
and despair on a death hour are equally
discountenanced here, the one in the impenitent thief, the
other in his penitent fellow.
@Lu
23:47-56. SIGNS AND CIRCUMSTANCES FOLLOWING HIS
DEATH--HIS BURIAL.
(See on Mt 27:51-56; Mt 27:62-66; and Joh 19:31-42).
|
|