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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 21
@Mt
21:1-9. CHRIST'S TRIUMPHAL ENTRY INTO JERUSALEM ON THE
FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK. ( = @Mr
11:1-11 Lu 19:29-40 Joh 12:12-19).
For the exposition of this majestic scene--recorded, as
will be seen, by all the Evangelists--see on Lu
19:29-40.
@Mt
21:10-22. STIR ABOUT HIM IN THE CITY--SECOND CLEANSING
OF THE TEMPLE, AND MIRACLES THERE--GLORIOUS VINDICATION OF
THE CHILDREN'S TESTIMONY--THE BARREN FIG TREE CURSED, WITH
LESSONS FROM IT. ( = @Mr
11:11-26 Lu 19:45-48).
For the exposition, see on Lu
19:45-48; and Mr
11:12-26.
@Mt
21:23-46. THE AUTHORITY OF JESUS QUESTIONED AND THE
REPLY--THE PARABLES OF THE TWO SONS, AND OF THE WICKED
HUSBANDMAN. ( = @Mr
11:27-12 12 Lu 20:1-19).
Now commences, as ALFORD remarks, that series of parables
and discourses of our Lord with His enemies, in which He
develops, more completely than ever before, His hostility
to their hypocrisy and iniquity: and so they are stirred
up to compass His death.
The Authority of Jesus Questioned, and the Reply (@Mt
21:23-27).
23. By what authority doest thou these things!--referring
particularly to the expulsion of the buyers and sellers
from the temple, and who gave thee this authority?
24. And Jesus answered and said unto them, I also will
ask you one thing, &c.
25. The baptism of John--meaning his whole mission
and ministry, of which baptism was the proper character.
whence was it? from
heaven, or of men?--What wisdom there was in this way
of meeting their question will best appear by their reply.
If we shall say, From
heaven; he will say unto us, Why did ye not then believe
him?--"Why did ye not believe the testimony which
he bore to Me, as the promised and expected Messiah?"
for that was the burden of John's whole testimony.
26. But if we shall say, Of men; we fear the people--rather,
"the multitude." In Luke (@Lu
20:6) it is, "all the people will stone us."
for all hold John as a
prophet--Crooked, cringing hypocrites! No wonder Jesus
gave you no answer.
27. And they answered Jesus, and said, We cannot tell--Evidently
their difficulty was, how to answer, so as neither to
shake their determination to reject the claims of Christ
nor damage their reputation with the people. For the truth
itself they cared nothing whatever.
Neither tell I you by
what authority I do these things--What composure and
dignity of wisdom does our Lord here display, as He turns
their question upon themselves, and, while revealing His
knowledge of their hypocrisy, closes their mouths! Taking
advantage of the surprise, silence, and awe produced by
this reply, our Lord followed it up immediately by the two
following parables.
Parable of the Two Sons (@Mt
21:28-32).
28. But what think ye? A certain man had two sons; and
he came to the first and said, Son, go work to-day in my
vineyard--for true religion is a practical thing, a
"bringing forth fruit unto God."
29. He answered and said, I will not--TRENCH
notices the rudeness of this answer, and the total absence
of any attempt to excuse such disobedience, both
characteristic; representing careless, reckless sinners
resisting God to His face.
30. And he came to the second, and said likewise. And
he answered and said, I go, sir--"I,
sir." The emphatic "I," here, denotes the
self-righteous complacency which says, "God, I thank
thee that I am not as other men" (@Lu
18:11).
and went not--He
did not "afterward repent" and refuse to go; for
there was here no intention to go. It is the class
that "say and do not" (@Mt
23:3)--a falseness more abominable to God, says STIER,
than any "I will not."
31. Whether of them twain did the will of his Father?
They say unto him, The first--Now comes the
application.
Jesus saith unto them,
Verily I say unto you, That the publicans and the harlots
go--or, "are going"; even now entering,
while ye hold back.
into the kingdom of God
before you--The publicans and the harlots were the
first son, who, when told to work in the Lord's vineyard,
said, I will not; but afterwards repented and went. Their
early life was a flat and flagrant refusal to do what they
were commanded; it was one continued rebellion against the
authority of God. The chief priests and the elders of the
people, with whom our Lord was now speaking, were the
second son, who said, I go, sir, but went not. They were
early called, and all their life long professed obedience
to God, but never rendered it; their life was one of
continued disobedience.
32. For John came unto you in the way of righteousness--that
is, calling you to repentance; as Noah is styled "a
preacher of righteousness" (@2Pe
2:5), when like the Baptist he warned the old world to
"flee from the wrath to come."
and ye believed him not--They
did not reject him; nay, they "were willing for a
season to rejoice in his light" (@Joh
5:35); but they would not receive his testimony to
Jesus.
but the publicans and
the harlots believed him--Of the publicans this is
twice expressly recorded, @Lu
3:12 7:29. Of the harlots, then, the same may be taken
for granted, though the fact is not expressly recorded.
These outcasts gladly believed the testimony of John to
the coming Saviour, and so hastened to Jesus when He came.
See @Lu
7:37 15:1, &c.
and ye, when ye had seen
it, repented not afterward, that ye might believe him--Instead
of being "provoked to jealousy" by their
example, ye have seen them flocking to the Saviour and
getting to heaven, unmoved.
Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen (@Mt
21:33-46).
33. Hear another parable: There was a certain
householder, which planted a vineyard--(See on Lu
13:6).
and hedged it round
about, and digged a winepress in it, and built a tower--These
details are taken, as is the basis of the parable itself,
from that beautiful parable of @Isa
5:1-7, in order to fix down the application and
sustain it by Old Testament authority.
and let it out to
husbandmen--These are just the ordinary spiritual
guides of the people, under whose care and culture the
fruits of righteousness are expected to spring up.
and went into a far
country--"for a long time" (@Lu
20:9), leaving the vineyard to the laws of the
spiritual husbandry during the whole time of the Jewish
economy. On this phraseology, see on Mr
4:26.
34. And when the time of the fruit drew near, he sent
his servants to the husbandmen--By these
"servants" are meant the prophets and other
extraordinary messengers, raised up from time to time. See
on Mt
23:37.
that they might receive
the fruits of it--Again see on Lu
13:6.
35. And the husbandmen took his servants, and beat one--see
@Jer
37:15 38:6.
and killed another--see
@Jer
26:20-23.
and stoned another--see
@2Ch
24:21. Compare with this whole verse @Mt
23:37, where our Lord reiterates these charges in the
most melting strain.
36. Again, he sent other servants more than the first;
and they did unto them likewise--see @2Ki
17:13 2Ch 36:16,18 Ne 9:26.
37. But last of all he sent unto them his son, saying,
They will reverence my son--In Mark (@Mr
12:6) this is most touchingly expressed: "Having
yet therefore one son, His well-beloved, He sent Him also
last unto them, saying, They will reverence My Son."
Luke's version of it too (@Lu
20:13) is striking: "Then said the lord of the
vineyard, What shall I do? I will send My beloved Son: it
may be they will reverence Him when they see Him."
Who does not see that our Lord here severs Himself, by the
sharpest line of demarcation, from all merely human
messengers, and claims for Himself Sonship in its
loftiest sense? (Compare @Heb
3:3-6). The expression, "It may be they
will reverence My Son," is designed to teach the
almost unimaginable guilt of not reverentially
welcoming God's Son.
38. But when the husbandmen saw the son, they said
among themselves--Compare @Ge
37:18-20 Joh 11:47-53.
This is the heir--Sublime
expression this of the great truth, that God's inheritance
was destined for, and in due time is to come into the
possession of, His own Son in our nature (@Heb
1:2).
come, let us kill him,
and let us seize on his inheritance--that so, from
mere servants, we may become lords. This is
the deep aim of the depraved heart; this is emphatically
"the root of all evil."
39. And they caught him, and cast him out of the
vineyard--compare @Heb
13:11-13 ("without the gate--without the
camp"); @1Ki
21:13 Joh 19:17.
and slew him.
40. When the lord therefore of the vineyard cometh--This
represents "the settling time," which, in the
case of the Jewish ecclesiastics, was that judicial trial
of the nation and its leaders which issued in the
destruction of their whole state.
what will he do unto
those husbandmen?
41. They say unto him, He will miserably destroy those
wicked men--an emphatic alliteration not easily
conveyed in English: "He will badly destroy those bad
men," or "miserably destroy those miserable
men," is something like it.
and will let out his
vineyard unto other husbandmen, which shall render him the
fruits in their seasons--If this answer was given by
the Pharisees, to whom our Lord addressed the parable,
they thus unwittingly pronounced their own condemnation:
as did David to Nathan the prophet (@2Sa
12:5-7), and Simon the Pharisee to our Lord (@Lu
7:43, &c.). But if it was given, as the two other
Evangelists agree in representing it, by our Lord Himself,
and the explicitness of the answer would seem to favor
that supposition, then we can better explain the
exclamation of the Pharisees which followed it, in Luke's
report (@Lu
20:16)--"And when they heard it, they said, God
forbid"--His whole meaning now bursting upon them.
42. Jesus saith unto them. Did ye never read in the
scriptures--(@Ps
118:22,23).
The stone which the
builders rejected, &c.--A bright Messianic
prophecy, which reappears in various forms (@Isa
28:16, &c.), and was made glorious use of by Peter
before the Sanhedrim (@Ac
4:11). He recurs to it in his first epistle (@1Pe
2:4-6).
43. Therefore say I unto you, The kingdom of God--God's
visible Kingdom, or Church, upon earth, which up to this
time stood in the seed of Abraham.
shall be taken from you,
and given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof--that
is, the great evangelical community of the faithful,
which, after the extrusion of the Jewish nation, would
consist chiefly of Gentiles, until "all Israel should
be saved" (@Ro
11:25,26). This vastly important statement is given by
Matthew only.
44. And whosoever shall fall on this stone shall be
broken: but on whomsoever it shall fall, it will grind him
to powder--The Kingdom of God is here a Temple, in the
erection of which a certain stone, rejected as
unsuitable by the spiritual builders, is, by the great
Lord of the House, made the keystone of the whole. On that
Stone the builders were now "falling" and being
"broken" (@Isa
8:15). They were sustaining great spiritual hurt; but
soon that Stone should "fall upon them"
and "grind them to powder" (@Da
2:34,35 Zec 12:2)--in their corporate capacity,
in the tremendous destruction of Jerusalem, but personally,
as unbelievers, in a more awful sense still.
45. And when the chief priests and Pharisees had heard
his parables--referring to that of the Two Sons and
this one of the Wicked Husbandmen.
they perceived that he
spake of them.
46. But when they sought to lay hands on him--which
Luke (@Lu
20:19) says they did "the same hour," hardly
able to restrain their rage.
they feared the
multitude--rather, "the multitudes."
because they took him
for a prophet--just as they feared to say John's
baptism was of men, because the masses took him for a
prophet (@Mt
21:26). Miserable creatures! So, for this time,
"they left Him and went their way" (@Mr
12:12).
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