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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 25
@Mt
25:1-13. PARABLE OF THE TEN VIRGINS.
This and the following parable are in Matthew alone.
1. Then--at the time referred to at the close of
the preceding chapter, the time of the Lord's Second
Coming to reward His faithful servants and take vengeance
on the faithless. Then shall the kingdom of heaven
be likened unto ten virgins, which took
their lamps, and went
forth to meet the bridegroom--This supplies a key to
the parable, whose object is, in the main, the same as
that of the last parable--to illustrate the vigilant
and expectant attitude of faith, in respect of which
believers are described as "they that look for
Him" (@Heb
9:28), and "love His appearing" (@2Ti
4:8). In the last parable it was that of servants
waiting for their absent Lord; in this it is that of
virgin attendants on a Bride, whose duty it was to go
forth at night with lamps, and be ready on the appearance
of the Bridegroom to conduct the Bride to his house, and
go in with him to the marriage. This entire and beautiful
change of figure brings out the lesson of the former
parable in quite a new light. But let it be observed that,
just as in the parable of the Marriage Supper, so in
this--the Bride does not come into view at all in
this parable; the Virgins and the Bridegroom
holding forth all the intended instruction: nor could
believers be represented both as Bride and Bridal
Attendants without incongruity.
2. And five of them were wise, and five were foolish--They
are not distinguished into good and bad, as TRENCH
observes, but into "wise" and
"foolish"--just as in @Mt
7:25-27 those who reared their house for eternity are
distinguished into "wise" and "foolish
builders"; because in both cases a certain degree of
goodwill towards the truth is assumed. To make anything of
the equal number of both classes would, we think, be
precarious, save to warn us how large a portion of those
who, up to the last, so nearly resemble those that love
Christ's appearing will be disowned by Him when He comes.
3. They that were foolish took their lamps, and took no
oil with them:
4. But the wise took oil in their vessels with their
lamps--What are these "lamps" and this
"oil"? Many answers have been given. But since
the foolish as well as the wise took their lamps and went
forth with them to meet the Bridegroom, these lighted
lamps and this advance a certain way in company with the
wise, must denote that Christian profession which is
common to all who bear the Christian name; while the
insufficiency of this without something else, of which
they never possessed themselves, shows that "the
foolish" mean those who, with all that is common to
them with real Christians, lack the essential
preparation for meeting Christ. Then, since the wisdom
of "the wise" consisted in their taking with
their lamps a supply of oil in their vessels, keeping
their lamps burning till the Bridegroom came, and so
fitting them to go in with Him to the marriage, this
supply of oil must mean that inward reality of grace
which alone will stand when He appears whose eyes are as a
flame of fire. But this is too general; for it cannot be
for nothing that this inward grace is here set forth by
the familiar symbol of oil, by which the Spirit
of all grace is so constantly represented in
Scripture. Beyond all doubt, this was what was symbolized
by that precious anointing oil with which Aaron and his
sons were consecrated to the priestly office (@Ex
30:23-25,30); by "the oil of gladness above His
fellows" with which Messiah was to be anointed (@Ps
45:7 Heb 1:9), even as it is expressly said, that
"God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto Him"
(@Joh
3:34); and by the bowl full of golden oil, in
Zechariah's vision, which, receiving its supplies from the
two olive trees on either side of it, poured it through
seven golden pipes into the golden lamp-stand to keep it
continually burning bright (@Zec
4:1-14)--for the prophet is expressly told that it was
to proclaim the great truth, "Not by might, nor by
power, but by MY SPIRIT, saith the Lord of hosts [shall
this temple be built]. Who art thou, O great mountain [of
opposition to this issue]? Before Zerubbabel thou shalt
become a plain [or, be swept out of the way], and he shall
bring forth the head stone [of the temple], with shoutings
[crying], GRACE, GRACE unto it." This supply of oil,
then, representing that inward grace which distinguishes
the wise, must denote, more particularly, that
"supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ," which,
as it is the source of the new spiritual life at the
first, is the secret of its enduring character.
Everything short of this may be possessed by
"the foolish"; while it is the possession of
this that makes "the wise" to be
"ready" when the Bridegroom appears, and fit to
"go in with Him to the marriage." Just so in the
parable of the Sower, the stony-ground hearers,
"having no deepness of earth" and "no root
in themselves," though they spring up and get even
into ear, never ripen, while they in the good ground bear
the precious grain.
5. While the bridegroom tarried--So in @Mt
24:48, "My Lord delayeth His coming"; and so
Peter says sublimely of the ascended Saviour, "Whom
the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of
all things" (@Ac
3:21, and compare @Lu
19:11,12). Christ "tarries," among other
reasons, to try the faith and patience of His people. they
all slumbered and slept--the
wise as well as the foolish. The world
"slumbered" signifies, simply,
"nodded," or, "became drowsy"; while
the world "slept" is the usual word for lying
down to sleep, denoting two stages of spiritual
declension--first, that half-involuntary lethargy or
drowsiness which is apt to steal over one who falls into
inactivity; and then a conscious, deliberate yielding to
it, after a little vain resistance. Such was the state
alike of the wise and the foolish virgins, even till the
cry of the Bridegroom's approach awoke them. So likewise
in the parable of the Importunate Widow: "When the
Son of man cometh, shall He find faith on the earth?"
(@Lu
18:8).
6. And at midnight--that is, the time when the
Bridegroom will be least expected; for "the day of
the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night" (@1Th
5:2).
there was a cry made,
Behold, the Bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him--that
is, Be ready to welcome Him.
7. Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed their
lamps--the foolish virgins as well as the wise. How
very long do both parties seem the same--almost to the
moment of decision! Looking at the mere form of the
parable, it is evident that the folly of "the
foolish" consisted not in having no oil at all; for
they must have had oil enough in their lamps to keep them
burning up to this moment: their folly consisted in not
making provision against its exhaustion, by taking
with their lamp an oil-vessel wherewith to
replenish their lamp from time to time, and so have it
burning until the Bridegroom should come. Are we,
then--with some even superior expositors--to conclude that
the foolish virgins must represent true Christians as well
as do the wise, since only true Christians have the
Spirit, and that the difference between the two classes
consists only in the one having the necessary watchfulness
which the other wants? Certainly not. Since the parable
was designed to hold forth the prepared and the unprepared
to meet Christ at His coming, and how the unprepared
might, up to the very last, be confounded with the
prepared--the structure of the parable behooved to
accommodate itself to this, by making the lamps of the
foolish to burn, as well as those of the wise, up to a
certain point of time, and only then to discover their
inability to burn on for want of a fresh supply of oil.
But this is evidently just a structural device; and
the real difference between the two classes who profess to
love the Lord's appearing is a radical one--the
possession by the one class of an enduring principle of
spiritual life, and the want of it by the other.
8. And the foolish said unto the wise, Give us of your
oil; for our lamps are gone out--rather, as in the Margin,
"are going out"; for oil will not light an
extinguished lamp, though it will keep a burning one from
going out. Ah! now at length they have discovered not only
their own folly, but the wisdom of the other class, and
they do homage to it. They did not perhaps despise them
before, but they thought them righteous overmuch; now they
are forced, with bitter mortification, to wish they were
like them.
9. But the wise answered, Not so; lest there be not
enough for us and you--The words "Not so,"
it will be seen, are not in the original, where the reply
is very elliptical--"In case there be not enough for
us and you." A truly wise answer this. "And
what, then, if we shall share it with you? Why, both will
be undone."
but go ye rather to them
that sell, and buy for yourselves--Here again it would
be straining the parable beyond its legitimate design to
make it teach that men may get salvation even after they
are supposed and required to have it already gotten. It is
merely a friendly way of reminding them of the proper way
of obtaining the needed and precious article, with a
certain reflection on them for having it now to seek.
Also, when the parable speaks of "selling" and
"buying" that valuable article, it means simply,
"Go, get it in the only legitimate way." And yet
the word "buy" is significant; for we are
elsewhere bidden, "buy wine and milk without money
and without price," and "buy of Christ gold
tried in the fire," (@Isa
55:1 Re 3:18). Now, since what we pay the demanded
price for becomes thereby our own property, the
salvation which we thus take gratuitously at God's hands,
being bought in His own sense of that word, becomes ours
thereby in inalienable possession. (Compare for the
language, @Pr
23:23 Mt 13:44).
10. And while they went to buy, the Bridegroom came;
and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage:
and the door was shut--They are sensible of their past
folly; they have taken good advice: they are in the act of
getting what alone they lacked: a very little more, and
they also are ready. But the Bridegroom comes; the ready
are admitted; "the door is shut," and they are
undone. How graphic and appalling this picture of one almost
saved--but lost!
11. Afterward came also the other virgins, saying,
Lord, Lord, open to us--In @Mt
7:22 this reiteration of the name was an exclamation
rather of surprise; here it is a piteous cry of urgency,
bordering on despair. Ah! now at length their eyes are
wide open, and they realize all the consequences of their
past folly.
12. But he answered and said, Verily I say unto you, I
know you not--The attempt to establish a difference
between "I know you not" here, and "I never
knew you" in @Mt
7:23--as if this were gentler, and so implied a milder
fate, reserved for "the foolish" of this
parable--is to be resisted, though advocated by such
critics as OLSHAUSEN, STIER, and ALFORD. Besides being
inconsistent with the general tenor of such language, and
particularly the solemn moral of the whole (@Mt
25:13), it is a kind of criticism which tampers
with some of the most awful warnings regarding the future.
If it be asked why unworthy guests were admitted to the
marriage of the King's Son, in a former parable, and the
foolish virgins are excluded in this one, we may answer,
in the admirable words of GERHARD, quoted by TRENCH, that
those festivities are celebrated in this life, in the
Church militant; these at the last day, in the Church
triumphant; to those, even they are admitted who are not
adorned with the wedding garment; but to these, only they
to whom it is granted to be arrayed in fine linen clean
and white, which is the righteousness of saints (@Re
19:8); to those, men are called by the trumpet of the
Gospel; to these by the trumpet of the Archangel; to
those, who enters may go out from them, or be cast out;
who is once introduced to these never goes out, nor is
cast out, from them any more: wherefore it is said,
"The door is shut."
13. Watch therefore; for ye know neither the day nor
the hour wherein the Son of man cometh--This, the
moral or practical lesson of the whole parable, needs no
comment.
@Mt
25:14-30. PARABLE OF THE TALENTS.
This parable, while closely resembling it, is yet a
different one from that of THE POUNDS, in @Lu
19:11-27; though CALVIN, OLSHAUSEN, MEYER, and others
identify them--but not DE WETTE and NEANDER. For the
difference between the two parables, see the opening
remarks on that of The Pounds. While, as TRENCH observes
with his usual felicity, "the virgins were
represented as waiting for their Lord, we have the
servants working for Him; there the inward
spiritual life of the faithful was described; here his
external activity. It is not, therefore, without
good reason that they appear in their actual order--that
of the Virgins first, and of the Talents following--since
it is the sole condition of a profitable outward activity
for the kingdom of God, that the life of God be diligently
maintained within the heart."
14. For the kingdom of heaven is as a man--The
ellipsis is better supplied by our translators in the
corresponding passage of Mark (@Mr
13:34), "[For the Son of man is] as a man"
travelling into a far
country--or more simply, "going abroad." The
idea of long "tarrying" is certainly implied
here, since it is expressed in @Mt
25:19.
who called his own
servants, and delivered unto them his goods--Between
master and slaves this was not uncommon in ancient times.
Christ's "servants" here mean all who, by their
Christian profession, stand in the relation to Him of
entire subjection. His "goods" mean all their
gifts and endowments, whether original or acquired,
natural or spiritual. As all that slaves have belongs to
their master, so Christ has a claim to everything which
belongs to His people, everything which, may be turned to
good, and He demands its appropriation to His service, or,
viewing it otherwise, they first offer it up to Him; as
being "not their own, but bought with a price"
(@1Co
6:19,20), and He "delivers it to them" again
to be put to use in His service.
15. And unto one he gave five talents, to another two,
and to another one--While the proportion of gifts
is different in each, the same fidelity is required
of all, and equally rewarded. And thus there is perfect
equity.
to every man according
to his several ability--his natural capacity as
enlisted in Christ's service, and his opportunities in
providence for employing the gifts bestowed on him.
and straightway took his
journey--Compare @Mt
21:33, where the same departure is ascribed to God,
after setting up the ancient economy. In both cases, it
denotes the leaving of men to the action of all those
spiritual laws and influences of Heaven under which they
have been graciously placed for their own salvation and
the advancement of their Lord's kingdom.
16. Then he that had received the five talents went and
traded with the same--expressive of the activity which
he put forth and the labor he bestowed.
and made them other five
talents.
17. And likewise he that had received two he also
gained other two--each doubling what he received, and
therefore both equally faithful.
18. But he that had received one went and digged in the
earth, and hid his lord's money--not misspending, but
simply making no use of it. Nay, his action seems that of
one anxious that the gift should not be misused or lost,
but ready to be returned, just as he got it.
19. After a long time the lord of those servants cometh
and reckoneth with them--That any one--within the
lifetime of the apostles at least--with such words before
them, should think that Jesus had given any reason to
expect His Second Appearing within that period, would seem
strange, did we not know the tendency of enthusiastic,
ill-regulated love of His appearing ever to take this
turn.
20. Lord, thou deliveredst unto me five talents;
behold, I have gained besides them five talents more--How
beautifully does this illustrate what the beloved disciple
says of "boldness in the day of judgment," and
his desire that "when He shall appear we may have
confidence, and not be ashamed before Him at His
coming!" (@1Jo
4:17 2:28).
21. His lord said unto him, Well done--a single
word, not of bare satisfaction, but of warm and delighted
commendation. And from what Lips!
thou hast been faithful
over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many
things, &c.
22. He also that had received two talents came
. . . good and faithful servant: thou hast been
faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over
many things--Both are commended in the same terms,
and the reward of both is precisely the same. (See on Mt
25:15). Observe also the contrasts: "Thou hast
been faithful as a servant; now be a ruler--thou
hast been entrusted with a few things; now have dominion
over many things."
enter thou into the joy
of thy lord--thy Lord's own joy. (See @Joh
15:11 Heb 12:2).
24. Then he which had received the one talent came and
said, Lord, I knew thee that thou art an hard man--harsh.
The word in Luke (@Lu
19:21) is "austere."
reaping where thou hast
not sown, and gathering where thou hast not strawed--The
sense is obvious: "I knew thou wast one whom it was
impossible to serve, one whom nothing would please:
exacting what was impracticable, and dissatisfied with
what was attainable." Thus do men secretly think of
God as a hard Master, and virtually throw on Him the blame
of their fruitlessness.
25. And I was afraid--of making matters worse by
meddling with it at all.
and went and hid thy
talent in the earth--This depicts the conduct of all
those who shut up their gifts from the active service of
Christ, without actually prostituting them to unworthy
uses. Fitly, therefore, may it, at least, comprehend
those, to whom TRENCH refers, who, in the early Church,
pleaded that they had enough to do with their own souls,
and were afraid of losing them in trying to save others;
and so, instead of being the salt of the earth, thought
rather of keeping their own saltness by withdrawing
sometimes into caves and wildernesses, from all those
active ministries of love by which they might have served
their brethren.
Thou wicked and slothful
servant--"Wicked" or "bad" means
"falsehearted," as opposed to the others, who
are emphatically styled "good servants."
The addition of "slothful" is to mark the
precise nature of his wickedness: it consisted, it seems,
not in his doing anything against, but simply nothing
for his master.
Thou knewest that I reap
where I sowed not, and gather where I have not strawed--He
takes the servant's own account of his demands, as
expressing graphically enough, not the hardness
which he had basely imputed to him, but simply his demand
of a profitable return for the gift entrusted.
27. thou oughtest therefore to have put my money to the
exchangers--the banker.
and then at my coming I
should have received mine own with usury--interest.
29. For unto every one that hath shall be given,
&c.--See on Mt
13:12.
30. And cast ye--cast ye out.
the unprofitable servant--the
useless servant, that does his Master no service.
into outer darkness--the
darkness which is outside. On this expression see on Mt
22:13.
there shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth--See on Mt
13:42.
@Mt
25:31-46. THE LAST JUDGMENT.
The close connection between this sublime scene--peculiar
to Matthew--and the two preceding parables is too obvious
to need pointing out.
31. When the Son of man shall come in his glory--His
personal glory.
and all the holy angels
with him--See @De
33:2 Da 7:9,10 Jude 1:14; with @Heb
1:6 1Pe 3:22.
then shall he sit upon
the throne of his glory--the glory of His judicial
authority.
32. And before him shall be gathered all nations--or,
"all the nations." That this should be
understood to mean the heathen nations, or all except
believers in Christ, will seem amazing to any simple
reader. Yet this is the exposition of OLSHAUSEN, STIER,
KEIL, ALFORD (though latterly with some diffidence), and
of a number, though not all, of those who hold that Christ
will come the second time before the millennium, and that
the saints will be caught up to meet Him in the air before
His appearing. Their chief argument is, the impossibility
of any that ever knew the Lord Jesus wondering, at the
Judgment Day, that they should be thought to have done--or
left undone--anything "unto Christ." To that we
shall advert when we come to it. But here we may just say,
that if this scene does not describe a personal, public,
final judgment on men, according to the treatment they
have given to Christ--and consequently men within the
Christian pale--we shall have to consider again whether
our Lord's teaching on the greatest themes of human
interest does indeed possess that incomparable simplicity
and transparency of meaning which, by universal consent,
has been ascribed to it. If it be said, But how can this
be the general judgment, if only those within the
Christian pale be embraced by it?--we answer, What is here
described, as it certainly does not meet the case of all
the family of Adam, is of course so far not
general. But we have no right to conclude that the whole
"judgment of the great day" will be limited to
the point of view here presented. Other explanations will
come up in the course of our exposition.
and he shall separate
them--now for the first time; the two classes having
been mingled all along up to this awful moment.
as a shepherd divideth
his sheep from the goats--(See @Eze
34:17).
33. And he shall set the sheep on his right hand--the
side of honor (@1Ki
2:19 Ps 45:9 110:1, &c.).
but the goats on the
left--the side consequently of dishonor.
34. Then shall the King--Magnificent title, here
for the first and only time, save in parabolical language,
given to Himself by the Lord Jesus, and that on the eve of
His deepest humiliation! It is to intimate that in then
addressing the heirs of the kingdom, He will put on all
His regal majesty.
say unto them on his
right hand, Come--the same sweet word with which He
had so long invited all the weary and heavy laden to come
unto Him for rest. Now it is addressed exclusively to such
as have come and found rest. It is still,
"Come," and to "rest" too; but to rest
in a higher style, and in another region.
ye blessed of my Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world--The whole story of this their
blessedness is given by the apostle, in words which seem
but an expression of these: "Blessed be the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with
all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ;
according as He hath chosen us in Him before the
foundation of the world, that we should be holy and
without blame before Him in love." They were chosen
from everlasting to the possession and enjoyment of all
spiritual blessings in Christ, and so chosen in order to
be holy and blameless in love. This is the holy love whose
practical manifestations the King is about to recount in
detail; and thus we see that their whole life of love to
Christ is the fruit of an eternal purpose of love to them
in Christ.
35. For I was an hungered . . . thirsty
. . . a stranger, &c.
36. Naked . . . sick . . . prison,
and ye came unto me.
37-39. Then shall the righteous answer him, &c.
40. And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily
I say unto you, &c.--Astonishing dialogue this
between the King, from the Throne of His glory, and His
wondering people! "I was an hungered, and ye gave Me
meat," &c.--"Not we," they reply.
"We never did that, Lord: We were born out of due
time, and enjoyed not the privilege of ministering unto
Thee." "But ye did it to these My brethren, now
beside you, when cast upon your love." "Truth,
Lord, but was that doing it to Thee? Thy name was indeed
dear to us, and we thought it a great honor to suffer
shame for it. When among the destitute and distressed we
discerned any of the household of faith, we will not deny
that our hearts leapt within us at the discovery, and when
their knock came to our dwelling, our bowels were moved,
as though 'our Beloved Himself had put in His hand by the
hole of the door.' Sweet was the fellowship we had with
them, as if we had 'entertained angels unawares'; all
difference between giver and receiver somehow melted away
under the beams of that love of Thine which knit us
together; nay, rather, as they left us with gratitude for
our poor givings, we seemed the debtors--not they. But,
Lord, were we all that time in company with Thee?
. . . Yes, that scene was all with Me,"
replies the King--"Me in the disguise of My poor
ones. The door shut against Me by others was opened by
you--'Ye took Me in.' Apprehended and imprisoned by the
enemies of the truth, ye whom the truth had made free
sought Me out diligently and found Me; visiting Me in My
lonely cell at the risk of your own lives, and cheering My
solitude; ye gave Me a coat, for I shivered; and then I
felt warm. With cups of cold water ye moistened My parched
lips; when famished with hunger ye supplied Me with
crusts, and my spirit revived--"YE DID IT UNTO
ME." What thoughts crowd upon us as we listen to such
a description of the scenes of the Last Judgment! And in
the light of this view of the heavenly dialogue, how bald
and wretched, not to say unscriptural, is that view of it
to which we referred at the outset, which makes it a
dialogue between Christ and heathens who never
heard of His name, and of course never felt any stirrings
of His love in their hearts! To us it seems a poor,
superficial objection to the Christian view of this
scene, that Christians could never be supposed to ask such
questions as the "blessed of Christ's Father"
are made to ask here. If there were any difficulty in
explaining this, the difficulty of the other view is such
as to make it, at least, insufferable. But there is
no real difficulty. The surprise expressed is not at their
being told that they acted from love to Christ, but that Christ
Himself was the Personal Object of all their
deeds: that they found Him hungry, and supplied Him
with food: that they brought water to Him, and
slaked His thirst; that seeing Him naked and
shivering, they put warm clothing upon Him, paid Him
visits when lying in prison for the truth, and sat by His
bedside when laid down with sickness. This is the
astonishing interpretation which Jesus says "the
King" will give to them of their own actions here
below. And will any Christian reply, "How could this
astonish them? Does not every Christian know that He does
these very things, when He does them at all, just as they
are here represented?" Nay, rather, is it conceivable
that they should not be astonished, and almost
doubt their own ears, to hear such an account of their own
actions upon earth from the lips of the Judge? And
remember, that Judge has come in His glory, and now sits
upon the throne of His glory, and all the holy angels are
with Him; and that it is from those glorified Lips that
the words come forth, "Ye did all this unto ME."
Oh, can we imagine such a word addressed to ourselves,
and then fancy ourselves replying, "Of course we
did--To whom else did we anything? It must be others than
we that are addressed, who never knew, in all their good
deeds, what they were about?" Rather, can we imagine
ourselves not overpowered with astonishment, and scarcely
able to credit the testimony borne to us by the King?
41.Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand,
Depart from me, ye cursed, &c.--As for you on the
left hand, ye did nothing for Me. I came to you also, but
ye knew Me not: ye had neither warm affections nor kind
deeds to bestow upon Me: I was as one despised in your
eyes." "In our eyes, Lord? We never saw
Thee before, and never, sure, behaved we so to Thee."
"But thus ye treated these little ones that believe
in Me and now stand on My right hand. In the disguise of
these poor members of Mine I came soliciting your pity,
but ye shut up your bowels of compassion from Me: I asked
relief, but ye had none to give Me. Take back therefore
your own coldness, your own contemptuous distance: Ye bid
Me away from your presence, and now I bid you from Mine--Depart
from Me, ye cursed!"
46. And these shall go away--these
"cursed" ones. Sentence, it should seem, was
first pronounced--in the hearing of the
wicked--upon the righteous, who thereupon sit as
assessors in the judgment upon the wicked (@1Co
6:2); but sentence is first executed, it should
seem, upon the wicked, in the sight of the
righteous--whose glory will thus not be beheld by the
wicked, while their descent into "their own
place" will be witnessed by the righteous, as BENGEL
notes.
into everlasting
punishment--or, as in @Mt
25:41, "everlasting fire, prepared for the devil
and his angels." Compare @Mt
13:42 2Th 1:9, &c. This is said to be
"prepared for the devil and his angels," because
they were "first in transgression." But both
have one doom, because one unholy character.
but the righteous into
life eternal--that is, "life everlasting."
The word in both clauses, being in the original the same,
should have been the same in the translation also. Thus
the decisions of this awful day will be final,
irreversible, unending.
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