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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 6
SERMON ON THE MOUNT--continued.
@Mt
6:1-18. FURTHER ILLUSTRATION OF THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF
THE KINGDOM--ITS UNOSTENTATIOUSNESS.
General Caution against Ostentation in Religious Duties
(@Mt
6:1).
1. Take heed that ye do not your alms--But the true
reading seems clearly to be "your
righteousness." The external authority for both
readings is pretty nearly equal; but internal evidence is
decidedly in favor of "righteousness." The
subject of the second verse being "almsgiving"
that word--so like the other in Greek--might easily
be substituted for it by the copyist: whereas the opposite
would not be so likely. But it is still more in favor of
"righteousness," that if we so read the first
verse, it then becomes a general heading for this whole
section of the discourse, inculcating unostentatiousness
in all deeds of righteousness--Almsgiving, Prayer,
and Fasting being, in that case, but selected examples of
this righteousness; whereas, if we read, "Do not your
alms," &c., this first verse will have no
reference but to that one point. By
"righteousness," in this case, we are to
understand that same righteousness of the kingdom of
heaven, whose leading features--in opposition to
traditional perversions of it--it is the great object of
this discourse to open up: that righteousness of which the
Lord says, "Except your righteousness shall exceed
the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall
in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven" (@Mt
5:20). To "do" this righteousness,
was an old and well-understood expression. Thus,
"Blessed is he that doeth righteousness at all
times" (@Ps
106:3). It refers to the actings of
righteousness in the life--the outgoings of the gracious
nature--of which our Lord afterwards said to His
disciples, "Herein is My Father glorified, that ye
bear much fruit; so shall ye be My disciples" (@Joh
15:8).
before men, to be seen
of them--with the view or intention of being beheld of
them. See the same expression in @Mt
5:28. True, He had required them to let their light so
shine before men that they might see their good works, and
glorify their Father which is in heaven (@Mt
5:16). But this is quite consistent with not making a
display of our righteousness for self-glorification. In
fact, the doing of the former necessarily implies our not
doing the latter.
otherwise ye have no
reward of your Father which is in heaven--When all
duty is done to God--as primarily enjoining and finally
judging of it--He will take care that it be duly
recognized; but when done purely for ostentation, God
cannot own it, nor is His judgment of it even thought
of--God accepts only what is done to Himself. So much for
the general principle. Now follow three illustrations of
it.
Almsgiving (@Mt
6:2-4).
2. Therefore, when thou doest thine alms, do not sound
a trumpet before thee--The expression is to be taken
figuratively for blazoning it. Hence our expression
to "trumpet."
as the hypocrites do--This
word--of such frequent occurrence in Scripture, signifying
primarily "one who acts a part"--denotes one who
either pretends to be what he is not (as here), or dissembles
what he really is (as in @Lu
12:1,2).
in the synagogues and in
the streets--the places of religious and secular
resort.
that they may have glory
of men. Verily I say unto you--In such august
expressions, it is the Lawgiver and Judge Himself that we
hear speaking to us.
They have their reward--All
they wanted was human applause, and they have it--and with
it, all they will ever get.
3. But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know
what thy right hand doeth--So far from making a
display of it, dwell not on it even in thine own thoughts,
lest it minister to spiritual pride.
4. That thine alms may be in secret, and thy Father
which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee
openly--The word "Himself" appears to be an
unauthorized addition to the text, which the sense no
doubt suggested. (See @1Ti
5:25 Ro 2:16 1Co 4:5).
Prayer (@Mt
6:5,6).
5. And when thou prayest, thou shalt--or,
preferably, "when ye pray ye shall."
not be as the hypocrites
are: for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and
in the corners of the streets--(See on Mt
6:2).
that they may be seen of
men. Verily I say unto you, They have, &c.--The standing
posture in prayer was the ancient practice, alike in the
Jewish and in the early Christian Church. But of course
this conspicuous posture opened the way for the
ostentatious.
6. But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet--a
place of retirement.
and when thou hast shut
thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy
Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly--Of
course, it is not the simple publicity of prayer which is
here condemned. It may be offered in any circumstances,
however open, if not prompted by the spirit of
ostentation, but dictated by the great ends of prayer
itself. It is the retiring character of true prayer
which is here taught.
Supplementary Directions and Model Prayer (@Mt
6:7-15).
7. But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions--"Babble
not" would be a better rendering, both for the form
of the word--which in both languages is intended to
imitate the sound--and for the sense, which expresses not
so much the repetition of the same words as a senseless
multiplication of them; as appears from what follows.
as the heathen do: for
they think that they shall be heard for their much
speaking--This method of heathen devotion is still
observed by Hindu and Mohammedan devotees. With the Jews,
says LIGHTFOOT, it was a maxim, that "Every one who
multiplies prayer is heard." In the Church of Rome,
not only is it carried to a shameless extent, but, as
THOLUCK justly observes, the very prayer which our Lord
gave as an antidote to vain repetitions is the most abused
to this superstitious end; the number of times it is
repeated counting for so much more merit. Is not this just
that characteristic feature of heathen devotion which our
Lord here condemns? But praying much, and using at times
the same words, is not here condemned, and has the
example of our Lord Himself in its favor.
8. Be not ye therefore like unto them: for your Father
knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him--and
so needs not to be informed of our wants, any more
than to be roused to attend to them by our
incessant speaking. What a view of God is here given, in
sharp contrast with the gods of the heathen! But let it be
carefully noted that it is not as the general Father of
mankind that our Lord says, "Your Father"
knoweth what ye need before ye ask it; for it is not men,
as such, that He is addressing in this discourse, but His
own disciples--the poor in spirit, the mourners, the meek,
hungry and thirsty souls, the merciful, the pure in heart,
the peacemakers, who allow themselves to have all manner
of evil said against them for the Son of man's sake--in
short, the new-born children of God, who, making their
Father's interests their own, are here assured that their
Father, in return, makes their interests His, and needs
neither to be told nor to be reminded of their wants. Yet
He will have His children pray to Him, and links all His
promised supplies to their petitions for them; thus
encouraging us to draw near and keep near to Him, to talk
and walk with Him, to open our every case to Him, and
assure ourselves that thus asking we shall receive--thus
seeking we shall find--thus knocking it shall be opened to
us.
9. After this manner--more simply "Thus."
therefore pray ye--The
"ye" is emphatic here, in contrast with the
heathen prayers. That this matchless prayer was given not
only as a model, but as a form, might be
concluded from its very nature. Did it consist only of
hints or directions for prayer, it could only be used as a
directory; but seeing it is an actual prayer--designed,
indeed, to show how much real prayer could be compressed
into the fewest words, but still, as a prayer, only the
more incomparable for that--it is strange that there
should be a doubt whether we ought to pray that very
prayer. Surely the words with which it is introduced, in
the second utterance and varied form of it which we have
in @Lu
11:2, ought to set this at rest: "When ye pray, say,
Our Father." Nevertheless, since the second form of
it varies considerably from the first, and since no
example of its actual use, or express quotation of its
phraseology, occurs in the sequel of the New Testament, we
are to guard against a superstitious use of it. How early
this began to appear in the church services, and to what
extent it was afterwards carried, is known to every one
versed in Church History. Nor has the spirit which bred
this abuse quite departed from some branches of the
Protestant Church, though the opposite and equally
condemnable extreme is to be found in other branches of
it.
Model Prayer (@Mt
6:9-13). According to the Latin fathers and the
Lutheran Church, the petitions of the Lord's Prayer are seven
in number; according to the Greek fathers, the Reformed
Church and the Westminster divines, they are only six;
the two last being regarded--we think, less correctly--as
one. The first three petitions have to do exclusively with
God: "Thy name be hallowed"--"Thy
kingdom come"--"Thy will be done."
And they occur in a descending scale--from Himself
down to the manifestation of Himself in His kingdom; and
from His kingdom to the entire subjection of its subjects,
or the complete doing of His will. The remaining four
petitions have to do with OURSELVES: "Give us
our daily bread"--"Forgive us our
debts"--"Lead us not into
temptation"--"Deliver us from evil."
But these latter petitions occur in an ascending
scale--from the bodily wants of every day up to our final
deliverance from all evil.
Invocation:
Our Father which art in
heaven--In the former clause we express His nearness
to us; in the latter, His distance from us. (See @Ec
5:2 Isa 66:1). Holy, loving familiarity suggests the
one; awful reverence the other. In calling Him
"Father" we express a relationship we have all
known and felt surrounding us even from our infancy; but
in calling Him our Father "who art in heaven,"
we contrast Him with the fathers we all have here below,
and so raise our souls to that "heaven" where He
dwells, and that Majesty and Glory which are there as in
their proper home. These first words of the Lord's
Prayer--this invocation with which it opens--what a
brightness and warmth does it throw over the whole prayer,
and into what a serene region does it introduce the
praying believer, the child of God, as he thus approaches
Him! It is true that the paternal relationship of God to
His people is by no means strange to the Old Testament.
(See @De
32:6 Ps 103:13 Isa 63:16 Jer 3:4,19 Mal 1:6 2:10). But
these are only glimpses--the "back parts" (@Ex
33:23), if we may so say, in comparison with the
"open face" of our Father revealed in Jesus.
(See on 2Co
3:18). Nor is it too. much to say, that the view which
our Lord gives, throughout this His very first lengthened
discourse, of "our Father in heaven," beggars
all that was ever taught, even in God's own Word, or
conceived before by His saints, on this subject.
First Petition:
Hallowed be--that
is, "Be held in reverence"; regarded and treated
as holy.
thy name--God's name
means "Himself as revealed and manifested."
Everywhere in Scripture God defines and marks off the
faith and love and reverence and obedience He will have
from men by the disclosures which He makes to them of what
He is; both to shut out false conceptions of Him, and to
make all their devotion take the shape and hue of His own
teaching. Too much attention cannot be paid to this.
Second Petition:
10. Thy kingdom come--The
kingdom of God is that moral and spiritual kingdom which
the God of grace is setting up in this fallen world, whose
subjects consist of as many as have been brought into
hearty subjection to His gracious scepter, and of which
His Son Jesus is the glorious Head. In the inward reality
of it, this kingdom existed ever since there were men who
"walked with God" (@Ge
5:24), and "waited for His salvation" (@Ge
49:18); who were "continually with Him, holden by
His right hand" (@Ps
73:23), and who, even in the valley of the shadow of
death, feared no evil when He was with them (@Ps
23:4). When Messiah Himself appeared, it was, as a
visible kingdom, "at hand." His death laid the
deep foundations of it. His ascension on high,
"leading captivity captive and receiving gifts for
men, yea, for the rebellious, that the Lord God might
dwell among them," and the Pentecostal effusion of
the Spirit, by which those gifts for men descended upon
the rebellious, and the Lord God was beheld, in the
persons of thousands upon thousands, "dwelling"
among men--was a glorious "coming" of this
kingdom. But it is still to come, and this petition,
"Thy kingdom come," must not cease to ascend so
long as one subject of it remains to be brought in. But
does not this prayer stretch further forward--to "the
glory to be revealed," or that stage of the kingdom
called "the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ" (@2Pe
1:11)? Not directly, perhaps, since the petition that
follows this--"Thy will be done in earth, as it is in
heaven"--would then bring us back to this present
state of imperfection. Still, the mind refuses to be so
bounded by stages and degrees, and in the act of praying,
"Thy kingdom come," it irresistibly stretches
the wings of its faith, and longing, and joyous
expectation out to the final and glorious consummation of
the kingdom of God.
Third Petition:
Thy will be done in
earth, as it is in heaven--or, as the same words are
rendered in Luke, "as in heaven, so upon earth"
(@Lu
11:2)--as cheerfully, as constantly, as perfectly.
But some will ask, Will this ever be? We answer, If the
"new heavens and new earth" are to be just our
present material system purified by fire and transfigured,
of course it will. But we incline to think that the
aspiration which we are taught in this beautiful petition
to breathe forth has no direct reference to any such organic
fulfilment, and is only the spontaneous and resistless
longing of the renewed soul--put into words--to see the
whole inhabited earth in entire conformity to the will of
God. It asks not if ever it shall be--or if ever it can
be--in order to pray this prayer. It must have its
holy yearnings breathed forth, and this is just the bold
yet simple expression of them. Nor is the Old Testament
without prayers which come very near to this (@Ps
7:9 67:1-7 72:19, &c.).
Fourth Petition:
11. Give us this day our
daily bread--The compound word here rendered
"daily" occurs nowhere else, either in classical
or sacred Greek, and so must be interpreted by the
analogy of its component parts. But on this critics are
divided. To those who would understand it to mean,
"Give us this day the bread of to-morrow"--as if
the sense thus slid into that of Luke "Give us day
by day" (@Lu
11:2, as BENGEL, MEYER, &c.) it may be answered
that the sense thus brought out is scarcely intelligible,
if not something less; that the expression "bread of
to-morrow" is not at all the same as bread "from
day to day," and that, so understood, it would seem
to contradict @Mt
6:34. The great majority of the best critics (taking
the word to be compounded of ousia, "substance,"
or "being") understand by it the "staff of life,"
the bread of subsistence, and so the sense will be,
"Give us this day the bread which this day's
necessities require." In this case, the rendering of
our authorized version (after the Vulgate, LUTHER
and some of the best modern critics)--"our daily
bread"--is, in sense, accurate enough. (See @Pr
30:8). Among commentators, there was early shown an
inclination to understand this as a prayer for the
heavenly bread, or spiritual nourishment; and in this they
have been followed by many superior expositors, even down
to our own times. But as this is quite unnatural, so it
deprives the Christian of one of the sweetest of his
privileges--to cast his bodily wants in this short prayer,
by one simple petition, upon his heavenly Father. No doubt
the spiritual mind will, from "the meat that
perisheth," naturally rise in thought to "that
meat which endureth to everlasting life." But let it
be enough that the petition about bodily wants
irresistibly suggests a higher petition; and let us
not rob ourselves--out of a morbid spirituality--of our
one petition in this prayer for that bodily provision
which the immediate sequel of this discourse shows that
our heavenly Father has so much at heart. In limiting our
petitions, however, to provision for the day, what a
spirit of childlike dependence does the Lord both demand
and beget!
Fifth Petition:
12. And forgive us our
debts--A vitally important view of sin, this--as an
offense against God demanding reparation to His dishonored
claims upon our absolute subjection. As the debtor in the
creditor's hand, so is the sinner in the hands of God.
This idea of sin had indeed come up before in this
discourse--in the warning to agree with our adversary
quickly, in case of sentence being passed upon us,
adjudging us to payment of the last farthing, and to
imprisonment till then (@Mt
5:25,26). And it comes up once and again in our Lord's
subsequent teaching--as in the parable of the creditor and
his two debtors (@Lu
7:41, &c.), and in the parable of the unmerciful
debtor (@Mt
18:23, &c.). But by embodying it in this brief
model of acceptable prayer, and as the first of three
petitions more or less bearing upon sin, our Lord teaches
us, in the most emphatic manner conceivable, to regard
this view of sin as the primary and fundamental one.
Answering to this is the "forgiveness" which it
directs us to seek--not the removal from our own hearts of
the stain of sin, nor yet the removal of our just dread of
God's anger, or of unworthy suspicions of His love, which
is all that some tell us we have to care about--but the
removal from God's own mind of His displeasure against us
on account of sin, or, to retain the figure, the wiping or
crossing out from His "book of remembrance" of
all entries against us on this account.
as we forgive our
debtors--the same view of sin as before; only now
transferred to the region of offenses given and received
between man and man. After what has been said on @Mt
5:7, it will not be thought that our Lord here teaches
that our exercise of forgiveness towards our offending
fellow men absolutely precedes and is the proper ground of
God's forgiveness of us. His whole teaching, indeed--as of
all Scripture--is the reverse of this. But as no one can
reasonably imagine himself to be the object of divine
forgiveness who is deliberately and habitually unforgiving
towards his fellow men, so it is a beautiful provision to
make our right to ask and expect daily forgiveness of our
daily shortcomings and our final absolution and acquittal
at the great day of admission into the kingdom, dependent
upon our consciousness of a forgiving disposition towards
our fellows, and our preparedness to protest before the
Searcher of hearts that we do actually forgive them. (See
@Mr
11:25,26). God sees His own image reflected in His
forgiving children; but to ask God for what we ourselves
refuse to men, is to insult Him. So much stress does our
Lord put upon this, that immediately after the close of
this prayer, it is the one point in it which He comes back
upon (@Mt
6:14,15), for the purpose of solemnly assuring us that
the divine procedure in this matter of forgiveness will be
exactly what our own is.
Sixth Petition:
13. And lead us not into
temptation--He who honestly seeks and has the
assurance of, forgiveness for past sin, will strive to
avoid committing it for the future. But conscious that
"when we would do good evil is present with us,"
we are taught to offer this sixth petition, which comes
naturally close upon the preceding, and flows, indeed,
instinctively from it in the hearts of all earnest
Christians. There is some difficulty in the form of the
petition, as it is certain that God does bring His
people--as He did Abraham, and Christ Himself--into
circumstances both fitted and designed to try them, or
test the strength of their faith. Some meet this by
regarding the petition as simply an humble expression of
self-distrust and instinctive shrinking from danger; but
this seems too weak. Others take it as a prayer against
yielding to temptation, and so equivalent to a prayer for
support and deliverance when we are tempted; but this
seems to go beyond the precise thing intended. We incline
to take it as a prayer against being drawn or
sucked, of our own will, into temptation, to which
the word here used seems to lend some
countenance--"Introduce us not." This view,
while it does not put into our mouths a prayer against
being tempted--which is more than the divine procedure
would seem to warrant--does not, on the other hand, change
the sense of the petition into one for support under
temptation, which the words will hardly bear; but it gives
us a subject for prayer, in regard to temptation, most definite,
and of all others most needful. It was precisely
this which Peter needed to ask, but did not ask, when--of
his own accord, and in spite of difficulties--he pressed
for entrance into the palace hall of the high priest, and
where, once sucked into the scene and atmosphere of
temptation, he fell so foully. And if so, does it not seem
pretty clear that this was exactly what our Lord meant His
disciples to pray against when He said in the
garden--"Watch and pray, that ye enter not into
temptation"? (@Mt
26:41).
Seventh Petition:
But deliver us from evil--We
can see no good reason for regarding this as but the
second half of the sixth petition. With far better ground
might the second and third petitions be regarded as one.
The "but" connecting the two petitions is an
insufficient reason for regarding them as one, though
enough to show that the one thought naturally follows
close upon the other. As the expression "from
evil" may be equally well rendered "from the
evil one," a number or superior critics think the
devil is intended, especially from its following close
upon the subject of "temptation." But the
comprehensive character of these brief petitions, and the
place which this one occupies, as that on which all our
desires die away, seems to us against so contracted a view
of it. Nor can there be a reasonable doubt that the
apostle, in some of the last sentences which he penned
before he was brought forth to suffer for his Lord,
alludes to this very petition in the language of calm
assurance--"And the Lord shall deliver me from every
evil work (compare the Greek of the two passages),
and will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom" (@2Ti
4:18). The final petition, then, is only rightly
grasped when regarded as a prayer for deliverance from all
evil of whatever kind--not only from sin, but from all its
consequences--fully and finally. Fitly, then, are our
prayers ended with this. For what can we desire which this
does not carry with it?
For thine is the
kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen--If
any reliance is to be placed on external evidence, this
doxology, we think, can hardly be considered part of the
original text. It is wanting in all the most ancient
manuscripts; it is wanting in the Old Latin version
and in the Vulgate: the former mounting up to about
the middle of the second century, and the latter being a
revision of it in the fourth century by JEROME, a most
reverential and conservative as well as able and impartial
critic. As might be expected from this, it is passed by in
silence by the earliest Latin fathers; but even the Greek
commentators, when expounding this prayer, pass by the
doxology. On the other hand, it is found in a majority of
manuscripts, though not the oldest; it is found in all the
Syriac versions, even the Peschito--dating
probably as early as the second century--although this
version lacks the "Amen," which the doxology, if
genuine, could hardly have wanted; it is found in the Sahidic
or Thebaic version made for the Christians of Upper
Egypt, possibly as early as the Old Latin; and it
is found in perhaps most of the later versions. On a
review of the evidence, the strong probability, we think,
is that it was no part of the original text.
14. For if ye forgive men, &c.--See on Mt
6:12.
15. But if ye forgive not, &c.--See on Mt
6:12.
Fasting (@Mt
6:16-18). Having concluded His supplementary
directions on the subject of prayer with this Divine
Pattern, our Lord now returns to the subject of Unostentatiousness
in our deeds of righteousness, in order to give one more
illustration of it, in the matter of fasting.
16. Moreover, when ye fast--referring, probably, to
private and voluntary fasting, which was to be regulated
by each individual for himself; though in spirit it would
apply to any fast.
be not, as the
hypocrites, of a sad countenance: for they disfigure their
faces--literally, "make unseen"; very well
rendered "disfigure." They went about with a
slovenly appearance, and ashes sprinkled on their head.
that they may appear
unto men to fast--It was not the deed, but reputation
for the deed which they sought; and with this view those
hypocrites multiplied their fasts. And are the exhausting
fasts of the Church of Rome, and of Romanizing
Protestants, free from this taint?
Verily I say unto you,
They have their reward.
17. But thou, when thou fastest, anoint thine head, and
wash thy face--as the Jews did, except when mourning
(@Da
10:3); so that the meaning is, "Appear as
usual"--appear so as to attract no notice.
18. That thou appear not unto men to fast, but unto thy
Father which is in secret: and thy Father, which seeth in
secret, shall reward thee openly--The
"openly" seems evidently a later addition to the
text of this verse from @Mt
6:4,7, though of course the idea is implied.
@Mt
6:19-34. CONCLUDING ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE RIGHTEOUSNESS
OF THE KINGDOM--HEAVENLY-MINDEDNESS AND FILIAL CONFIDENCE.
19. Lay not up for ourselves treasures upon earth--hoard
not.
where moth--a
"clothes-moth." Eastern treasures, consisting
partly in costly dresses stored up (@Job
27:16), were liable to be consumed by moths (@Job
13:28 Isa 50:9 51:8). In @Jas
5:2 there is an evident reference to our Lord's words
here.
and rust--any
"eating into" or "consuming"; here,
probably, "wear and tear."
doth corrupt--cause
to disappear. By this reference to moth and rust our Lord
would teach how perishable are such earthly
treasures.
and where thieves break
through and steal--Treasures these, how precarious!
20. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven--The
language in Luke (@Lu
12:33) is very bold--"Sell that ye have, and give
alms; provide yourselves bags which wax not old, a
treasure in the heavens that faileth not," &c.
where neither moth nor
rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through
nor steal--Treasures these, imperishable and unassailable!
(Compare @Col
3:2).
21. For where your treasure is--that which ye value
most.
there will your heart be
also--"Thy treasure--thy heart" is probably
the true reading here: "your," in @Lu
12:34, from which it seems to have come in here.
Obvious though this maxim be, by what multitudes who
profess to bow to the teaching of Christ is it practically
disregarded! "What a man loves," says LUTHER,
quoted by THOLUCK, "that is his God. For he carries
it in his heart, he goes about with it night and day, he
sleeps and wakes with it; be it what it may--wealth or
pelf, pleasure or renown." But because "laying
up" is not in itself sinful, nay, in some cases
enjoined (@2Co
12:14), and honest industry and sagacious enterprise
are usually rewarded with prosperity, many flatter
themselves that all is right between them and God, while
their closest attention, anxiety, zeal, and time are
exhausted upon these earthly pursuits. To put this right,
our Lord adds what follows, in which there is profound
practical wisdom.
22. The light--the lamp.
of the body is the eye:
if therefore thine eye be single--simple, clear. As
applied to the outward eye, this means general soundness;
particularly, not looking two ways. Here, as also in
classical Greek, it is used figuratively to denote the
simplicity of the mind's eye, singleness of purpose,
looking right at its object, as opposed to having two ends
in view. (See @Pr
4:25-27).
thy whole body shall be
full of light--illuminated. As with the bodily vision,
the man who looks with a good, sound eye, walks in light,
seeing every object clear; so a simple and persistent
purpose to serve and please God in everything will make
the whole character consistent and bright.
23. But if thine eye be evil--distempered, or, as
we should say, If we have got a bad eye.
thy whole body shall be
full of darkness--darkened. As a vitiated eye, or an
eye that looks not straight and full at its object, sees
nothing as it is, so a mind and heart divided between
heaven and earth is all dark.
If therefore the light
that is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness!--As
the conscience is the regulative faculty, and a man's
inward purpose, scope, aim in life, determines his
character--if these be not simple and heavenward, but
distorted and double, what must all the other faculties
and principles of our nature be which take their direction
and character from these, and what must the whole man and
the whole life be but a mass of darkness? In Luke (@Lu
11:36) the converse of this statement very strikingly
expresses what pure, beautiful, broad perceptions the clarity
of the inward eye imparts: "If thy whole body
therefore be full of light, having no part dark, the whole
shall be full of light, as when the bright shining of a
candle doth give thee light." But now for the
application of this.
24. No man can serve--The word means to
"belong wholly and be entirely under command
to."
two masters: for either
he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will
hold to the one, and despise the other--Even if the
two masters be of one character and have but one object,
the servant must take law from one or the other:
though he may do what is agreeable to both, he cannot, in
the nature of the thing, be servant to more than
one. Much less if, as in the present case, their interests
are quite different, and even conflicting. In this case,
if our affections be in the service of the one--if we
"love the one"--we must of necessity "hate
the other"; if we determine resolutely to "hold
to the one," we must at the same time disregard, and
(if he insist on his claims upon us) even "despise
the other."
Ye cannot serve God and
mammon--The word "mamon"--better
written with one m--is a foreign one, whose precise
derivation cannot certainly be determined, though the most
probable one gives it the sense of "what one trusts
in." Here, there can be no doubt it is used for riches,
considered as an idol master, or god of the heart. The
service of this god and the true God together is here,
with a kind of indignant curtness, pronounced impossible.
But since the teaching of the preceding verses might seem
to endanger our falling short of what is requisite for the
present life, and so being left destitute, our Lord now
comes to speak to that point.
25. Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought--"Be
not solicitous." The English word
"thought," when our version was made, expressed
this idea of "solicitude," "anxious
concern"--as may be seen in any old English classic;
and in the same sense it is used in @1Sa
9:5, &c. But this sense of the word has now nearly
gone out, and so the mere English reader is apt to be
perplexed. Thought or forethought, for temporal
things--in the sense of reflection, consideration--is
required alike by Scripture and common sense. It is that
anxious solicitude, that oppressive care, which springs
from unbelieving doubts and misgivings, which alone is
here condemned. (See @Php
4:6).
for your life, what ye
shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body,
what ye shall put on--In Luke (@Lu
12:29) our Lord adds, "neither be ye
unsettled"--not "of doubtful mind," as in
our version. When "careful (or 'full of care') about
nothing," but committing all in prayer and
supplication with thanksgiving unto God, the apostle
assures us that "the peace of God, which passeth all
understanding, shall keep our hearts and minds in Christ
Jesus" (@Php
4:6,7); that is, shall guard both our feelings and our
thoughts from undue agitation, and keep them in a holy
calm. But when we commit our whole temporal condition to
the wit of our own minds, we get into that
"unsettled" state against which our Lord exhorts
His disciples.
Is not the life more
than meat--food.
and the body than
raiment?--If God, then, gives and keeps up the
greater--the life, the body--will He withhold the less,
food to sustain life and raiment to clothe the body?
26. Behold the fowls of the air--in @Mt
6:28, "observe well," and in @Lu
12:24, "consider"--so as to learn wisdom
from them.
for they sow not,
neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your
heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than
they?--nobler in yourselves and dearer to God. The
argument here is from the greater to the less; but how
rich in detail! The brute creation--void of reason--are
incapable of sowing, reaping, and storing: yet your
heavenly Father suffers them not helplessly to perish, but
sustains them without any of those processes. Will He see,
then, His own children using all the means which reason
dictates for procuring the things needful for the
body--looking up to Himself at every step--and yet leave
them to starve?
27. Which of you, by taking thought--anxious
solicitude.
can add one cubit unto
his stature?--"Stature" can hardly be the
thing intended here: first, because the subject is the prolongation
of life, by the supply of its necessaries of food and
clothing: and next, because no one would dream of adding a
cubit--or a foot and a half--to his stature, while in the
corresponding passage in Luke (@Lu
12:25,26) the thing intended is represented as
"that thing which is least." But if we
take the word in its primary sense of "age"
(for "stature" is but a secondary sense) the
idea will be this, "Which of you, however anxiously
you vex yourselves about it, can add so much as a step to
the length of your life's journey?" To compare the
length of life to measures of this nature is not foreign
to the language of Scripture (compare @Ps
39:5 2Ti 4:7, &c.). So understood, the meaning is
clear and the connection natural. In this the best critics
now agree.
28. And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider--observe
well.
the lilies of the field,
how they grow: they toil not--as men, planting and
preparing the flax.
neither do they spin--as
women.
29. And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all
his glory was not arrayed like one of these--What
incomparable teaching!--best left in its own transparent
clearness and rich simplicity.
30. Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass--the
"herbage."
of the field, which
to-day is, and to-morrow is cast into the oven--wild
flowers cut with the grass, withering by the heat, and
used for fuel. (See @Jas
1:11).
shall He not much more
clothe you, O ye of little faith?--The argument here
is something fresh. Gorgeous as is the array of the
flowers that deck the fields, surpassing all artificial
human grandeur, it is for but a brief moment; you are
ravished with it to-day, and to-morrow it is gone; your
own hands have seized and cast it into the oven: Shall,
then, God's children, so dear to Him, and instinct with a
life that cannot die, be left naked? He does not say,
Shall they not be more beauteously arrayed? but, Shall He
not much more clothe them? that being all He will
have them regard as secured to them (compare @Heb
13:5). The expression, "Little-faithed
ones," which our Lord applies once and again to His
disciples (@Mt
8:26 14:31 16:8), can hardly be regarded as rebuking
any actual manifestations of unbelief at that early
period, and before such an audience. It is His way of
gently chiding the spirit of unbelief, so natural
even to the best, who are surrounded by a world of sense,
and of kindling a generous desire to shake it off.
31. Therefore take no thought--solicitude.
saying, What shall we
eat? or, What shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be
clothed?
32. (For after all these things do the Gentiles seek)--rather,
"pursue." Knowing nothing definitely beyond the
present life to kindle their aspirations and engage their
supreme attention, the heathen naturally pursue present
objects as their chief, their only good. To what an
elevation above these does Jesus here lift His disciples!
for your heavenly Father
knoweth that ye have need of all these things--How
precious this word! Food and raiment are pronounced needful
to God's children; and He who could say, "No man
knoweth the Father but the Son, and he to whomsoever the
Son will reveal Him" (@Mt
11:27), says with an authority which none but Himself
could claim, "Your heavenly Father knoweth
that ye have need of all these things." Will not that
suffice you, O ye needy ones of the household of faith?
33. But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his
righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto
you--This is the great summing up. Strictly speaking,
it has to do only with the subject of the present
section--the right state of the heart with reference to
heavenly trod earthly things; but being couched in the
form of a brief general directory, it is so comprehensive
in its grasp as to embrace the whole subject of this
discourse. And, as if to make this the more evident, the
two keynotes of this great sermon seem purposely struck in
it--"the KINGDOM" and "the
RIGHTEOUSNESS" Of the kingdom--as the grand objects,
in the supreme pursuit of which all things needful for the
present life will be added to us. The precise sense of
every word in this golden verse should be carefully
weighed. "The kingdom of God" is the
primary subject of the Sermon on the Mount--that kingdom
which the God of heaven is erecting in this fallen world,
within which are all the spiritually recovered and
inwardly subject portion of the family of Adam, under
Messiah as its Divine Head and King. "The
righteousness thereof" is the character of all
such, so amply described and variously illustrated in the
foregoing portions of this discourse. The "seeking"
of these is the making them the object of supreme choice
and pursuit; and the seeking of them "first"
is the seeking of them before and above all else. The
"all these things" which shall in that
case be added to us are just the "all these
things" which the last words of @Mt
6:32 assured us "our heavenly Father knoweth that
we have need of"; that is, all we require for the
present life. And when our Lord says they shall be "added,"
it is implied, as a matter of course, that the seekers of
the kingdom and its righteousness shall have these as
their proper and primary portion: the rest being their
gracious reward for not seeking them. (See an
illustration of the principle of this in @2Ch
1:11,12). What follows is but a reduction of this
great general direction into a practical and ready form
for daily use.
34. Take therefore no thought--anxious care.
for the morrow: for the
morrow shall take thought for the things of itself--(or,
according to other authorities, "for
itself")--shall have its own causes of anxiety.
Sufficient unto the day
is the evil thereof--An admirable practical maxim, and
better rendered in our version than in almost any other,
not excepting the preceding English ones. Every day brings
its own cares; and to anticipate is only to double them.
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