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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 11
@Mt
11:1-19. THE IMPRISONED BAPTIST'S MESSAGE TO HIS
MASTER--THE REPLY, AND DISCOURSE, ON THE DEPARTURE OF THE
MESSENGERS, REGARDING JOHN AND HIS MISSION. ( = @Lu
7:18-35).
1. And it came to pass, when Jesus had made an end of
commanding his twelve disciple--rather, "the
twelve disciples,"
he departed thence to
teach and to preach in their cities--This was scarcely
a fourth circuit--if we may judge from the less formal way
in which it was expressed--but, perhaps, a set of visits
paid to certain places, either not reached at all before,
or too rapidly passed through, in order to fill up the
time till the return of the Twelve. As to their labors,
nothing is said of them by our Evangelist. But Luke (@Lu
9:6) says, "They departed, and went through, the
towns," or "villages," "preaching the
Gospel, and healing everywhere." Mark (@Mr
6:12,13), as usual, is more explicit: "And they
went out, and preached that men should repent. And they
cast out many devils (demons) and anointed with oil many
that were sick, and healed them." Though this
"anointing with oil" was not mentioned in our
Lord's instructions--at least in any of the records of
them--we know it to have been practiced long after this in
the apostolic Church (see @Jas
5:14, and compare @Mr
6:12,13)--not medicinally, but as a sign of the
healing virtue which was communicated by their hands, and
a symbol of something still more precious. It was unction,
indeed, but, as BENGEL remarks, it was something very
different from what Romanists call extreme unction.
He adds, what is very probable, that they do not appear to
have carried the oil about with them, but, as the Jews
used oil as a medicine, to have employed it just as they
found it with the sick, in their own higher way.
2. Now when John had heard in the prison--For the
account of this imprisonment, see on Mr
6:17-20.
the works of Christ, he
sent, &c.--On the whole passage, see on Lu
7:18-35.
@Mt
11:20-30. OUTBURST OF FEELING SUGGESTED TO THE MIND OF
JESUS BY THE RESULT OF HIS LABORS IN GALILEE.
The connection of this with what goes before it and the
similarity of its tone make it evident, we think, that it
was delivered on the same occasion, and that it is but a
new and more comprehensive series of reflections in the
same strain.
20. Then began he to upbraid the cities wherein most of
his mighty works were done, because they repented not.
21. Woe unto thee, Chorazin!--not elsewhere
mentioned, but it must have lain near Capernaum.
woe unto thee, Bethsaida--"fishing-house,"
a fishing station--on the western side of the Sea of
Galilee, and to the north of Capernaum; the birthplace of
three of the apostles--the brothers Andrew and Peter, and
Philip. These two cities appear to be singled out to
denote the whole region in which they lay--a region
favored with the Redeemer's presence, teaching, and works
above every other.
for if the mighty works--the
miracles
which were done in you
had been done in Tyre and Sidon--ancient and
celebrated commercial cities, on the northeastern shores
of the Mediterranean Sea, lying north of Palestine, and
the latter the northernmost. As their wealth and
prosperity engendered luxury and its concomitant
evils--irreligion and moral degeneracy--their overthrow
was repeatedly foretold in ancient prophecy, and once and
again fulfilled by victorious enemies. Yet they were
rebuilt, and at this time were in a flourishing condition.
they would have repented
long ago in sackcloth and ashes--remarkable language,
showing that they had done less violence to conscience,
and so, in God's sight, were less criminal than the region
here spoken of.
22. But I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for
Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgment, than for you--more
endurable.
23. And thou, Capernaum--(See on Mt
4:13).
which art exalted unto
heaven--Not even of Chorazin and Bethsaida is this
said. For since at Capernaum Jesus had His stated abode
during the whole period of His public life which He spent
in Galilee, it was the most favored spot upon earth,
the most exalted in privilege.
shall be brought down to
hell: for if the mighty works, which have been done in
thee, had been done in Sodom--destroyed for its
pollutions.
it would have remained
until this day--having done no such violence to
conscience, and so incurred speakably less guilt.
24. But I say unto you, That it shall be more tolerable
for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for
thee--"It has been indeed," says DR.
STANLEY, "more tolerable, in one sense, in the day of
its earthly judgment, for the land of Sodom than for
Capernaum; for the name, and perhaps even the remains of
Sodom are still to be found on the shores of the Dead Sea;
while that of Capernaum has, on the Lake of Gennesareth,
been utterly lost." But the judgment of which our
Lord here speaks is still future; a judgment not on
material cities, but their responsible inhabitants--a
judgment final and irretrievable.
25. At that time Jesus answered and said--We are
not to understand by this, that the previous discourse had
been concluded, and that this is a record only of
something said about the same period. For the connection
is most close, and the word "answered"--which,
when there is no one to answer, refers to something just
before said, or rising in the mind of the speaker in
consequence of something said--confirms this. What Jesus
here "answered" evidently was the melancholy
results of His ministry, lamented over in the foregoing
verses. It is as if He had said, "Yes; but there is a
brighter side to the picture; even in those who have
rejected the message of eternal life, it is the pride of
their own hearts only which has blinded them, and the
glory of the truth does but the more appear in their
inability to receive it. Nor have all rejected it even
here; souls thirsting for salvation have drawn water with
joy from the wells of salvation; the weary have found
rest; the hungry have been filled with good things, while
the rich have been sent empty away."
I thank thee--rather,
"I assent to thee." But this is not strong
enough. The idea of "full" or
"cordial" concurrence is conveyed by the
preposition. The thing expressed is adoring acquiescence,
holy satisfaction with that law of the divine procedure
about to be mentioned. And as, when He afterwards uttered
the same words, He "exulted in spirit" (see on Lu
10:21), probably He did the same now, though not
recorded.
O Father, Lord of heaven
and earth--He so styles His Father here, to signify
that from Him of right emanates all such high
arrangements.
because thou hast hid
these things--the knowledge of these saving truths.
from the wise and
prudent--The former of these terms points to the men
who pride themselves upon their speculative or
philosophical attainments; the latter to the men of
worldly shrewdness--the clever, the sharp-witted, the men
of affairs. The distinction is a natural one, and was well
understood. (See @1Co
1:19, &c.). But why had the Father hid from such
the things that belonged to their peace, and why did Jesus
so emphatically set His seal to this arrangement? Because
it is not for the offending and revolted to speak or to
speculate, but to listen to Him from whom we have broken
loose, that we may learn whether there be any recovery for
us at all; and if there be, on what principles--of what
nature--to what ends. To bring our own "wisdom and
prudence" to such questions is impertinent and
presumptuous; and if the truth regarding them, or the
glory of it, be "hid" from us, it is but a
fitting retribution, to which all the right-minded will
set their seal along with Jesus.
hast revealed them unto
babes--to babe-like men; men of unassuming docility,
men who, conscious that they know nothing, and have no
right to sit in judgment on the things that belong to
their peace, determine simply to "hear what God the
Lord will speak." Such are well called
"babes." (See @Heb
5:13 1Co 13:11:14:20, &c.).
26. Even so, Father; for so it seemed good--the
emphatic and chosen term for expressing any object of
divine complacency; whether Christ Himself (see on Mt
3:17), or God's gracious eternal arrangements (see on Php
2:13).
in thy sight--This
is just a sublime echo of the foregoing words; as if
Jesus, when He uttered them, had paused to reflect on it,
and as if the glory of it--not so much in the light of its
own reasonableness as of God's absolute will that so it
should be--had filled His soul.
27. All things are delivered unto me of my Father--He
does not say, They are revealed--as to one who knew
them not, and was an entire stranger to them save as they
were discovered to Him--but, They are "delivered
over," or "committed," to Me of My Father;
meaning the whole administration of the kingdom of grace.
So in @Joh
3:35, "The Father loveth the Son, and hath given
all things into His hand" (see on Joh
3:35). But though the "all things" in both
these passages refer properly to the kingdom of grace,
they of course include all things necessary to the full
execution of that trust--that is, unlimited power.
(So @Mt
28:18 Joh 17:2 Eph 1:22).
and no man knoweth the
Son, but the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father,
save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will--willeth
to reveal him--What
a saying is this, that "the Father and the Son are
mutually and exclusively known to each other!" A
higher claim to equality with the Father cannot be
conceived. Either, then, we have here one of the revolting
assumptions ever uttered, or the proper divinity of Christ
should to Christians be beyond dispute. "But, alas
for me!" may some burdened soul, sighing for relief,
here exclaim. If it be thus with us, what can any poor
creature do but lie down in passive despair, unless he
could dare to hope that he may be one of the
favored class "to whom the Son is willing to reveal
the Father." But nay. This testimony to the
sovereignty of that gracious "will," on which
alone men's salvation depends, is designed but to reveal
the source and enhance the glory of it when once
imparted--not to paralyze or shut the soul up in despair.
Hear, accordingly, what follows:
28. Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy
laden, and I will give you rest--Incomparable,
ravishing sounds these--if ever such were heard in this
weary, groaning world! What gentleness, what sweetness is
there in the very style of the invitation--"Hither to
Me"; and in the words, "All ye that toil and are
burdened," the universal wretchedness of man is
depicted, on both its sides--the active and the passive
forms of it.
29. Take my yoke upon you--the yoke of subjection
to Jesus.
and learn of me; for I
am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto
your souls--As Christ's willingness to empty Himself
to the uttermost of His Father's requirements was the
spring of ineffable repose to His own Spirit, so in the
same track does He invite all to follow Him, with the
assurance of the same experience.
30. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light--Matchless
paradox, even among the paradoxically couched maxims in
which our Lord delights! That rest which the soul
experiences when once safe under Christ's wing makes all
yokes easy, all burdens light.
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