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Matthew Chapter 16
Commentary by Matthew Henry
None of Christ's miracles are recorded
in this chapter, but four of his discourses. Here is, I. A
conference with the Pharisees, who challenged him to show
them a sign from heaven, verses 1-4. II. Another with his
disciples about the leaven of the Pharisees, verses 5-12.
III. Another with them concerning himself, as the Christ,
and concerning his church built upon him, verses 13-20. IV.
Another concerning his sufferings for them, and theirs for
him, verses 21-28. And all these are written for our
learning.
The Sign of the Prophet Jonas.
Matthew 16:1-4 --
1 The Pharisees also with the
Sadducees came, and tempting desired him that he would show
them a sign from heaven. 2 He answered and said unto them,
When it is evening, ye say, It will be
fair weather: for the sky is red. 3 And in the morning, It
will be foul weather to day: for the sky is red and
lowering. O ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the
sky; but can ye not discern the signs of the times? 4 A
wicked and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and
there shall no sign be given unto it, but the sign of the
prophet Jonas. And he left
them, and departed.
We have here Christ's discourse with
the Pharisees and Sadducees, men at variance among
themselves, as appears Acts 23:7, 8, and yet unanimous in
their opposition to Christ; because his doctrine did equally
overthrow the errors and heresies of the Sadducees, who
denied the existence of spirits and a future state; and the
pride, tyranny, and hypocrisy of the Pharisees, who were the
great imposters of the traditions of the elders. Christ and
Christianity meet with opposition on all hands. Observe,
I. Their demand, and the design of
it.
1. The demand was of a sign from
heaven; this they desired him to show them; pretending they
were very willing to be satisfied and convinced, when really
they were far from being so, but sought excuses from an
obstinate infidelity. That which they pretended to desire
was,
(1.) Some other sign than what they
had yet had. They had great plenty of signs; every miracle
Christ wrought was a sign, for no man could do what he did
unless God were with him. But this will not serve, they must
have a sign of their own choosing; they despised those signs
which relieved the necessity of the sick and sorrowful, and
insisted upon some sign which gratify the curiosity of the
proud. It is fit that the proofs of divine revelation should
be chosen by the wisdom of God, not by the follies and
fancies of men. The evidence that is given is sufficient to
satisfy an unprejudiced understanding, but was not intended
to please a vain humor. Ant it is an instance of the
deceitfulness of the heart, to think that we should be
wrought upon by the means and advantages which we have not,
while we slight those which we have. If we hear not Moses
and the prophets, neither would we be wrought upon though
one rose from the dead.
(2.) It must be a sign from heaven.
They would have such miracles to prove his commission, as
were wrought at the giving of the law upon mount Sinai:
thunder, and lightening, and the voice of words, were the
sign from heaven they required. Whereas the sensible signs
and terrible ones were not agreeable to the spiritual and
comfortable dispensation of the gospel. Now the word comes
more nigh us (Romans 10:8), and therefore the miracles do
so, and do not oblige us to keep such a distance as these
did, Hebrews 12:18.
2. The design was to tempt him; not
to be taught by him, but to ensnare him. If he should show
them a sign from heaven, they would attribute it to a
confederacy with the prince of the power of the air; if he
should not, as they supposed he would not, they would have
that to say for themselves, why they did not believe on him.
They now tempted Christ as Israel did, 1 Corinthians 10:9.
And observe their perverseness; then, when they had signs
from heaven, they tempted Christ, saying, Can he furnish a
table in the wilderness? Now that he had furnished a table
in the wilderness, they tempted him, saying, Can he give us
a sign from heaven?
II. Christ's reply to this demand;
lest they should be wise in their own conceit, he answered
these fools according to their folly, Proverbs 36:5. In his
answer,
1. He condemns their overlooking of
the signs they had, verses 2, 3. They were seeking for the
signs of the kingdom of God, when it was already among them.
The Lord was in this place, and they knew it not. Thus their
unbelieving ancestors, when miracles were their daily bread,
asked, Is the Lord among us, or is he not?
To expose this, he observes to them,
(1.) Their skillfulness and sagacity
in other things, particularly in natural prognostications of
the weather; "You know that a red sky over-night is a
presage of fair weather, and a red sky in the morning of
foul weather." There are common rules drawn from observation
and experience, by which it is easy to foretell very
probably what weather it will be. When second causes have
begun to work, we may easily guess at their issue, so
uniform is nature in its motions, and so consistent with
itself. We know not the balancing of the clouds (Job 37:16),
but we may spell something from the faces of them. This
gives no countenance at all to the wild and ridiculous
predictions of the astrologers, the star-gazers, and the
monthly prognosticators (Isaiah 47:13) concerning the
weather long before, with which weak and foolish people are
imposed upon; we are sure, in general, that seed-time and
harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, shall not cease.
But as to the particulars, till, by the weather-glasses, or
otherwise, we perceive the immediate signs and harbingers of
the change of weather, it is not for us to know, no, not
that concerning the times and seasons. Let it suffice, that
it shall be what weather pleases God; and that which pleases
God, should not displease us.
(2.) Their sottishness and stupidity
in the concerns of their souls; Can ye not discern the signs
of the times?
[1.] "Do you not see that the
Messiah is come?" The scepter was departed from Judah,
Daniel's weeks were just expiring, and yet they regarded
not. The miracles Christ wrought, and the gathering of the
people to him, were plain indications that the kingdom of
heaven was at hand, that this was the day of their
visitation. Note, First, There are signs of the times, by
which wise and upright men are enabled to make moral
prognostications, and so far to understand the motions and
methods of Providence, as from thence to take their
measures, and to know what Israel ought to do, as the men of
Issachar, as the physician from some certain symptoms finds
a crisis formed. Secondly, There are many who are skilful
enough in other things, and yet cannot or will not discern
the day of their opportunities, are not aware of the wind
when it is fair for them, and so let slip the gale. See
Jeremiah 8:7; Isaiah 1:3. Thirdly, It is great hypocrisy,
when we slight the signs of God's ordaining, to seek for
signs of our own prescribing.
[2.] "Do not you foresee your own
ruin coming for rejecting him? You will not entertain the
gospel of peace, and can you not evidently discern that
hereby you pull an inevitable destruction upon your own
heads?" Note, It is the undoing of multitudes, that they are
not aware what will be the end of their refusing Christ.
2. He refuses to give them any other
sign (verse 4), as he had done before in the same words,
Chapter 12:39. Those that persist in the same iniquities,
must expect to meet with the same reproofs. Here, as there,
(1.) He calls them an adulterous generation; because, while
they professed themselves of the true church and spouse of
God, they treacherously departed from him, and brake their
covenants with him. The Pharisees were a generation pure in
their own eyes, having the way of the adulterous woman, that
thinks she has done no wickedness, Proverbs 30:20. (2.) He
refuses to gratify their desire. Christ will not be
prescribed to; we ask, and have not, because we ask amiss.
(3.) He refers them to the sign of the prophet Jonas, which
should yet be given them; his resurrection from the dead,
and his preaching by his apostles to the Gentiles; these
were reserved for the last and highest evidences of his
divine mission. Note, Though the fancies of proud men shall
not be humored, yet the faith of the humble shall be
supported, and the unbelief of them that perish left for
ever inexcusable, and every mouth shall be stopped.
This discourse broke off abruptly;
he left them and departed. Christ will not tarry long with
those that tempt him, but justly withdraws from those that
are disposed to quarrel with him. He left them as
irreclaimable; Let them alone. He left them to themselves,
left them in the hand of their own counsels; so he gave them
up to their own hearts' lust.
Of the Leaven of the Pharisees.
Matthew 16:5-12 --
5 And when his disciples were come to
the other side, they had forgotten to take bread. 6 Then
Jesus said unto them, Take heed
and beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and of the
Sadducees. 7 And they reasoned
among themselves, saying, It is because we have taken no
bread. 8 Which when Jesus perceived, he said unto them,
O ye of little faith, why reason ye
among yourselves, because ye have brought no bread? 9 Do ye
not yet understand, neither remember the five loaves of the
five thousand, and how many baskets ye took up? 10 Neither
the seven loaves of the four thousand, and how many baskets
ye took up? 11 How is it that ye do not understand that I
spake it not to you concerning bread, that ye should beware
of the leaven of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees?
12 Then understood they how that he
bade them not beware of the leaven of bread, but of the
doctrine of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees.
We have here Christ's discourse with
his disciples concerning bread, in which, as in many other
discourses, he speaks to them of spiritual things under a
similitude, and they misunderstand him of carnal things. The
occasion of it was, their forgetting to victual their ship,
and to take along with them provisions for their family on
the other side of the water; usually they carried bread
along with them, because they were sometimes in desert
places; and when they were not, yet they would not be
burthensome. But now they forgot; we will hope it was
because their minds and memories were filled with better
things. Note, Christ's disciples are often such as have no
great forecast for the world.
I. Here is the caution Christ gave
them, to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees. He had now
been discoursing with the Pharisees and Sadducees, and saw
them to be men of such a spirit, that it was necessary to
caution his disciples to have nothing to do with them.
Disciples are in most danger from hypocrites; against those
that are openly vicious they stand upon their guard, but
against Pharisees, who are great pretenders to devotion, and
Sadducees, who pretend to a free and impartial search after
truth, they commonly lie unguarded: and therefore the
caution is doubted, Take heed, and beware.
The corrupt principles and practices
of the Pharisees and Sadducees are compared to leaven; they
were souring, and swelling, and spreading, like leaven; they
fermented wherever they came.
II. Their mistake concerning this
caution, verse 7. They thought Christ hereby upbraided them
with their improvidence and forgetfulness, that they were so
busy attending to his discourse with the Pharisees, that
therefore they forgot their private concerns. Or, because
having no bread of their own with them, they must be
beholden to their friends for supply, he would not have them
to ask it of the Pharisees and Sadducees, nor to receive of
their alms, because he would not so far countenance them;
or, for fear, lest, under pretence of feeding them, they
should do them a mischief. Or, they took it for a caution,
not to be familiar with the Pharisees and Sadducees, not to
eat with them (Proverbs 23:6), whereas the danger was not in
their bread (Christ himself did eat with them, Luke 7:36;
11:37; 14:1), but in their principles.
III. The reproof Christ gave them
for this.
1. He reproves their distrust of his
ability and readiness to supply them in this strait (verse
8); "O ye of little faith, why are ye in such perplexity
because ye have taken no bread, that ye can mind nothing
else, that ye think your Master is as full of it as you, and
apply every thing he says to that?" He does not chide them
for their little forecast, as they expected he would. Note,
Parents and masters must not be angry at the forgetfulness
of their children and servants, more than is necessary to
make them take more heed another time; we are all apt to be
forgetful of our duty. This should serve to excuse a fault,
Peradventure it was an oversight. See how easily Christ
forgave his disciples' carelessness, though it was in such a
material point as taking bread; and do likewise. But that
which he chides them for is their little faith.
(1.) He would have them to depend
upon him for supply, though it were in a wilderness, and not
to disquiet themselves with anxious thoughts about it. Note,
Though Christ's disciples be brought into wants and straits,
through their own carelessness and incognizance, yet he
encourages them to trust in him for relief. We must not
therefore use this as an excuse for our want of charity to
those who are really poor, that they should have minded
their own affairs better, and then they would not have been
in need. It may be so, but they must not therefore be left
to starve when they are in need.
(2.) He is displeased at their
solicitude in this matter. The weakness and shiftlessness of
good people in their worldly affairs is that for which men
are apt to condemn them; but it is not such an offence to
Christ as their inordinate care and anxiety about those
things. We must endeavor to keep the mean between the
extremes of carelessness and carefulness; but of the two,
the excess of thoughtfulness about the world worst becomes
Christ's disciples. "O ye of little faith, why are ye
disquieted for want of bread?" Note, To distrust Christ, and
to disturb ourselves when we are in straits and
difficulties, is an evidence of the weakness of our faith,
which, if it were in exercise as it should be, would ease us
of the burthen of care, by casting it on the Lord, who cares
for us.
(3.) The aggravation of their
distrust was the experience they had so lately had of the
power and goodness of Christ in providing for them, verses
9, 10. Though they had no bread with them, they had him with
them who could provide bread for them. If they had not the
cistern, they had the Fountain. Do ye not yet understand,
neither remember? Note, Christ's disciples are often to be
blamed for the shallowness of their understandings, and the
slipperiness of their memories. "Have ye forgot those
repeated instances of merciful and miraculous supplies; five
thousand fed with five loaves, and four thousand with seven
loaves, and yet they had enough and to spare? Remember how
many baskets ye took up." These baskets were intended for
memorials, by which to keep the mercy in remembrance, as the
pot of manna which was preserved in the ark, Exodus 16:32.
The fragments of those meals would be a feast now; and he
that could furnish them with such an overage then, surely
could furnish them with what was necessary now. That meat
for their bodies was intended to be meat or their faith
(Psalm 74:14), which therefore they should have lived upon,
now that they had forgotten to take bread. Note, We are
therefore perplexed with present cares and distrusts,
because we do not duly remember our former experiences of
divine power and goodness.
2. He reproves their
misunderstanding of the caution he gave them (verse 11); How
is it that you do not understand? Note, Christ's disciples
may well be ashamed of the slowness and dullness of their
apprehensions in divine things; especially when they have
long enjoyed the means of grace; I spoke it not unto you
concerning bread. He took it ill, (1.) That they should
think him as thoughtful about bread as they were; whereas
his meat and drink were to do his Father's will. (2.) That
they should be so little acquainted with his way of
preaching, as to take that literally which he spoke by way
of parable; and should thus make themselves like the
multitude, who, when Christ spoke to them in parables,
seeing, saw not, and hearing, heard not, Chapter 13:13.
IV. The rectifying of the mistake by
this reproof (verse 12); Then understood they what he meant.
Note, Christ therefore shows us our folly and weakness, that
we may stir up ourselves to take things right. He did not
tell them expressly what he meant, but repeated what he had
said, that they should beware of the leaven; and so obliged
them, by comparing this with his other discourses, to arrive
at the sense of it in their own thoughts. Thus Christ
teaches by the Spirit of wisdom in the heart, opening the
understanding to the Spirit of revelation in the word. And
those truths are most precious, which we have dug for, and
have found out after some mistakes. Though Christ did not
tell them plainly, yet now they were aware that by the
leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees, he meant their
doctrine and way, which were corrupt and vicious, but, as
they managed them, very apt to insinuate themselves into the
minds of men like leaven, and to eat like a canker. They
were leading men, and were had in reputation, which made the
danger of infection by their errors the greater. In our age,
we may reckon atheism and deism to be the leaven of the
Sadducees, and popery to be the leaven of the Pharisees,
against both which it concerns all Christians to stand upon
their guard.
Christ's Conference with His
Disciples.
Matthew 16:13-20 --
13 When Jesus came into the coasts of
Cæsarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying,
Whom do men say that I the Son of man am?
14 And they said, Some say that thou
art John the Baptist: some, Elias; and others, Jeremias, or
one of the prophets. 15 He saith unto them,
But whom say ye that I am?
16 And Simon Peter answered and said,
Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God. 17 And Jesus
answered and said unto him,
Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath
not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.
18 And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon
this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell
shall not prevail against it. 19 And I will give unto thee
the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt
bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou
shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.
20 Then charged he his disciples that
they should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ.
We have here a private conference
which Christ had with his disciples concerning himself. It
was in the coasts of Caesarea Philippi, the utmost borders
of the land of Canaan northward; there in that remote
corner, perhaps, there was less flocking after him than in
other places, which gave him leisure for this private
conversation with his disciples. Note, When ministers are
abridged in their public work, they should endeavor to do
the more in their own families.
Christ is here catechizing his
disciples.
I. He enquires what the opinions of
others were concerning him; Who do men say that I, the Son
of man, am?
1. He calls himself the Son of man;
which may be taken either, (1.) As a title common to him
with others. He was called, and justly, the Son of God, for
so he was (Luke 1:35); but he called himself the Son of man;
for he is really and truly "Man, made of a woman." In courts
of honor, it is a rule to distinguish men by their highest
titles; but Christ, having now emptied himself, though he
was the Son of God, will be known by the style and title of
the Son of man. Ezekiel was often so called to keep him
humble; Christ called himself so, to show that he was
humble. Or, (2.) As a title peculiar to him as Mediator. He
is made known, in Daniel's vision, as the Son of man, Daniel
7:13. I am the Messiah, that Son of man that was promised.
But,
2. He enquires what people's
sentiments were concerning him: "Who do men say that I am?
The Son of man?" (So I think it might better be read). "Do
they own me for the Messiah?" He asks not, "Who do the
scribes and Pharisees say that I am?" They were prejudiced
against him, and said that he was a deceiver and in league
with Satan; but, "Who do men say that I am?" He referred to
the common people, whom the Pharisees despised. Christ asked
this question, not as one that knew not; for if he knows
what men think, much more what they say; nor as one desirous
to hear his own praises, but to make the disciples
solicitous concerning the success of their preaching, by
showing that he himself was so. The common people conversed
more familiarly with the disciples than they did with their
Master, and therefore from them he might better know what
they said. Christ had not plainly said who he was, but left
people to infer it from his works, John 10:24, 25. Now he
would know what inferences the people drew from them, and
from the miracles which his apostles wrought in his name.
3. To this question the disciples
have him an answer (verse 14), Some say, thou art John the
Baptist, & context. There were some that said, he was the
Son of David (Chapter 12:23), and the great Prophet, John
6:14. The disciples, however, do not mention that opinion,
but only such opinions as were wide of the truth, which they
gathered up from their countrymen. Observe,
(1.) They are different opinions;
some say one thing, and others another. Truth is one; but
those who vary from that commonly vary one from another.
Thus Christ came eventually to send division, Luke 12:51.
Being so noted a Person, every one would be ready to pass
his verdict upon him, and, "Many men, many minds;" those
that were not willing to own him to be the Christ, wandered
in endless mazes, and followed the chase of every uncertain
guess and wild hypothesis.
(2.) They are honorable opinions,
and bespeak the respect they had for him, according to the
best of their judgment. These were not the sentiments of his
enemies, but the sober thoughts of those that followed him
with love and wonder. Note, It is possible for men to have
good thoughts of Christ, and yet not right ones, a high
opinion of him, and yet not high enough.
(3.) They all suppose him to be one
risen from the dead; which perhaps arose from a confused
notion they had of the resurrection of the Messiah, before
his public preaching, as of Jonas. Or their notions arose
from an excessive value for antiquity; as if it were not
possible for an excellent man to be produced in their own
age, but it must be one of the ancients returned to life
again.
(4.) They are all false opinions,
built upon mistakes, and willful mistakes. Christ's
doctrines and miracles bespoke him to be an extraordinary
Person; but because of the meanness of his appearance, so
different from what they expected, they would not own him to
be the Messiah, but will grant him to be any thing rather
than that.
[1.] Some say, thou art John the
Baptist. Herod said so (Chapter 14:2), and those about him
would be apt to say as he said. This notion might be
strengthened by an opinion they had, that those who died as
martyrs, should rise again before others; which some think
the second of the seven sons refers to, in his answer to
Antiochus, 2 Maccabees 7:9, The King of the world shall
raise us up, who have died for his laws, unto everlasting
life.
[2.] Some Elias; taking occasion, no
doubt, from the prophecy of Malachi (Chapter 4:5), Behold, I
will send you Elijah. And the rather, because Elijah (as
Christ) did many miracles, and was himself, in his
translation, the greatest miracle of all.
[3.] Others Jeremiah: they fasten
upon him, either because he was the weeping prophet, and
Christ was often in tears; or because God had set him over
the kingdoms and nations (Jeremiah 1:10), which they thought
agreed with their notion of the Messiah.
[4.] Or, one of the prophets. This
shows what an honorable idea they entertained of the
prophets; and yet they were the children of them that
persecuted and slew them, Chapter 23:29. Rather than they
would allow Jesus of Nazareth, one of their own country, to
be such an extraordinary Person as his works bespoke him to
be, they would say, "It was not he, but one of the old
prophets."
II. He enquires what their thoughts
were concerning him; "But who say ye that I am? verse 15. Ye
tell me what other people say of me; can ye say better?" 1.
The disciples had themselves been better taught than others;
had, by their intimacy with Christ, greater advantages of
getting knowledge than others had. Note, It is justly
expected that those who enjoy greater plenty of the means of
knowledge and grace than others, should have a more clear
and distinct knowledge of the things of God than others.
Those who have more acquaintance with Christ than others,
should have truer sentiments concerning him, and be able to
give a better account of him than others. 2. The disciples
were trained up to teach others, and therefore it was highly
requisite that they should understand the truth themselves:
"Ye that are to preach the gospel of the kingdom, what are
your notions of him that sent you?" Note, Ministers must be
examined before they be sent forth, especially what their
sentiments are of Christ, and who they say that he is; for
how can they be owned as ministers of Christ, that are
either ignorant or erroneous concerning Christ? This is a
question we should every one of us be frequently putting to
ourselves, "Who do we say, what kind of one do we say, that
the Lord Jesus is? Is he precious to us? Is he in our eyes
the chief of ten thousand? Is he the Beloved of our souls?"
It is well or ill with us, according as our thoughts are
right or wrong concerning Jesus Christ.
Well, this is the question; now let
us observe,
(1.) Peter's answer to this
question, verse 16. To the former question concerning the
opinion others had of Christ, several of the disciples
answered, according as they had heard people talk; but to
this Peter answers in the name of all the rest, they all
consenting to it, and concurring in it. Peter's temper led
him to be forward in speaking upon all such occasions, and
sometimes he spoke well, sometimes amiss; in all companies
there are found some warm, bold men, to whom a precedence of
speech falls of course; Peter was such a one: yet we find
other of the apostles sometimes speaking as the mouth of the
rest; as John (Mark 9:38), Thomas, Philip, and Jude, John
14:5, 8, 22. So that this is far from being a proof of such
primacy and superiority of Peter above the rest of the
apostles, as the Church of Rome ascribes to him. They will
needs advance him to be a judge, when the utmost they can
make of him, is, that he was but foreman of the jury, to
speak for the rest, and that only pro hâc vice--for this
once; not the perpetual dictator or speaker of the house,
only chairman upon this occasion.
Peter's answer is short, but it is
full, and true, and to the purpose; Thou art the Christ, the
Son of the Living God. Here is a confession of the Christian
faith, addressed to Christ, and so made an act of devotion.
Here is a confession of the true God as the living God, in
opposition to dumb and dead idols, and of Jesus Christ, whom
he hath sent, whom to know is life eternal. This is the
conclusion of the whole matter.
[1.] The people called him a
Prophet, that Prophet (John 6:14); but the disciples own him
to be the Christ, the anointed One; the great Prophet,
Priest, and King of the church; the true Messiah promised to
the fathers, and depended on by them as He that shall come.
It was a great thing to believe this concerning one whose
outward appearance was so contrary to the general idea the
Jews had of the Messiah.
[2.] He called himself the Son of
Man; but they owned him to be the Son of the living God. The
people's notion of him was, that he was the ghost of a dead
man, Elias, or Jeremiah; but they know and believe him to be
the Son of the living God, who has life in himself, and has
given to his Son to have life in himself, and to be the Life
of the world. If he be the Son of the living God, he is of
the same nature with him: and though his divine nature was
now veiled with the cloud of flesh, yet there were those who
looked through it, and saw his glory, the glory as of the
Only-Begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth. Now
can we with an assurance of faith subscribe to this
confession? Let us then, with a fervency of affection and
adoration, go to Christ, and tell him so; Lord Jesus, thou
art the Christ, the Son of the living God.
(2.) Christ's approbation of his
answer (verses 17-19); in which Peter is replied to, both as
a believer and as an apostle.
[1.] As a believer, verse 17. Christ
shows himself well pleased with Peter's confession, that it
was so clear and express, without ifs or ands, as we say.
Note, The proficiency of Christ's disciples in knowledge and
grace is very acceptable to him; and Christ shows him whence
he received the knowledge of this truth. At the first
discovery of this truth in the dawning of the gospel day, it
was a mighty thing to believe it; all men had not this
knowledge, had not this faith. But,
First, Peter had the happiness of
it; Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona. He reminds him of his
rise and original, the meanness of his parentage, the
obscurity of his extraction; he was Bar-Jonas--The son of a
dove; so some. Let him remember the rock out of which he was
hewn, that he may see he was not born to this dignity, but
preferred to it by the divine favor; it was free grace that
made him to differ. Those that have received the Spirit must
remember who is their Father, 1 Samuel 10:12. Having
reminded him of this, he makes him sensible of his great
happiness as a believer; Blessed art thou. Note, True
believers are truly blessed, and those are blessed indeed
whom Christ pronounces blessed; his saying they are so,
makes them so. "Peter, thou art a happy man, who thus knows
the joyful sound," Psalm 89:15. Blessed are your eyes,
chapter 13:16. All happiness attends the right knowledge of
Christ.
Secondly, God must have the glory of
it; "For flesh and blood have not revealed it to thee. Thou
had this neither by the invention of thy own wit and reason,
nor by the instruction and information of others; this light
sprang neither from nature nor from education, but from my
Father who is in heaven." Note, 1. The Christian religion is
a revealed religion, has its rise in heaven; it is a
religion from above, given by inspiration of God, not the
learning of philosophers, nor the politics of statesmen. 2.
Saving faith is the gift of God, and, wherever it is, is
wrought by him, as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, for
his sake, and upon the score of his mediation, Philippians
1:29. Therefore thou art blessed, because my Father has
revealed it to thee. Note, The revealing of Christ to us and
in us is a distinguishing token of God's good will, and a
firm foundation of true happiness; and blessed are they that
are thus highly favored.
Perhaps Christ discerned something
of pride and vain-glory in Peter's confession; a subtle sin,
and which is apt to mingle itself even with our good duties.
It is hard for good men to compare themselves with others,
and not to have too great a conceit of themselves; to
prevent which, we should consider that our preference to
others is no achievement of our own, but the free gift of
God's grace too us, and not to others; so that we have
nothing to boast of, Psalm 115:1; 1 Corinthians 4:7.
[2.] Christ replies to him as an
apostle or minister, verse 18, 19. Peter, in the name of the
church, had confessed Christ, and to him therefore the
promise intended for the church is directed. Note, There is
nothing lost by being forward to confess Christ; for those
who honor him, he will honor.
Upon occasion of this great
confession made of Christ, which is the church's homage and
allegiance, he signed and published this royal, this divine
charter, by which that body politic is incorporated. Such is
the communion between Christ and the church, the Bridegroom
and the spouse. God had a church in the world from the
beginning, and it was built upon the rock of the promised
Seed, Genesis 3:15. But now, that promised Seed being come,
it was requisite that the church should have a new charter,
as Christian, and standing in relation to a Christ already
come. Now here we have that charter; and a thousand pities
it is, that this word, which is the great support of the
kingdom of Christ, should be wrested and pressed into the
service of antichrist. But the devil has employed his
subtlety to pervert it, as he did that promise, Psalm 91:11,
which he perverted to his own purpose, Chapter 4:6, and
perhaps both that scripture and this he thus perverted
because they stood in his way, and therefore he owed them a
spite.
Now the purpose of this charter is,
First, To establish the being of the
church; I say also unto thee. It is Christ that makes the
grant, he who is the church's Head, and Ruler, to whom all
judgment is committed, and from whom all power is derived;
he who makes it pursuant to the authority received from the
Father, and his undertaking for the salvation of the elect.
The grant is put into Peter's hand; "I say it to thee." The
Old Testament promises relating to the church were given
immediately to particular persons, eminent for faith and
holiness, as to Abraham and David; which yet gave no
supremacy to them, much less to any of their successors; so
the New-Testament charter is here delivered to Peter as an
agent, but to the use and behoove of the church in all ages,
according to the purposes therein specified and contained.
Now it is here promised,
1. That Christ would build his
church upon a rock. This body politic is incorporated by the
style and title of Christ's church. It is a number o the
children of men called out of the world, and set apart from
it, and dedicated to Christ. It is not thy church, but mine.
Peter remembered this, when he cautioned ministers not to
lord it over God's heritage. The church is Christ's
peculiar, appropriated to him. The world is God's, and they
that dwell therein; but the church is a chosen remnant, that
stands in relation to God through Christ as Mediator. It
bears him image and superscription.
(1.) The Builder and Maker of the
church is Christ himself; I will build it. The church is a
temple which Christ is the Builder of, Zechariah 6:11-13.
Herein Solomon was a type of Christ, and Cyrus, Isaiah
44:28. The materials and workmanship are his. By the working
of his Spirit with the preaching of his word he adds souls
to his church, and so builds it up with living stones, 1
Peter 2:5. Ye are God's building; and building is a
progressive work; the church in this world is but in fieri--in
the forming, like a house in the building. It is a comfort
to all those who wish well to the church, that Christ, who
has divine wisdom and power, undertakes to build it.
(2.) The foundation on which it is
built is, this Rock. Let the architect do his part ever so
well, if the foundation be rotten, the building will not
stand; let us therefore see what the foundation is, and it
must be meant of Christ, for other foundation can no man
lay. See Isaiah 28:16.
[1.] The church is built upon a
rock; a firm, strong, and lasting foundation, which time
will not waste, nor will it sink under the weight of the
building. Christ would not build his house upon the sand,
for he knew that storms would arise. A rock is high, Psalm
61:2. Christ's church does not stand upon a level with this
world; a rock is large, and extends far, so does the
church's foundation; and the more large, the more firm;
those are not the church's friends that narrow its
foundation.
[2.] It is built upon this rock;
thou art Peter, which signifies a stone or rock; Christ gave
him that name when he first called him (John 1:42), and here
he confirms it; "Peter, thou dost answer thy name, thou art
a solid, substantial disciple, fixed and stayed, and one
that there is some hold of. Peter is thy name, and strength
and stability are with thee. Thou art not shaken with the
waves of men's fluctuating opinions concerning me, but
established in the present truth," 2 Peter 1:12. From the
mention of this significant name, occasion is taken for this
metaphor of building upon a rock.
First, Some by this rock understand
Peter himself as an apostle, the chief, though not the
prince, of the twelve, senior among them, but not superior
over them. The church is built upon the foundation of the
apostles, Ephesians 2:20. The first stones of that building
were laid in and by their ministry; hence their names are
said to be written in the foundations of the new Jerusalem,
Revelation 21:14. Now Peter being that apostle by whose hand
the first stones of the church were laid, both in Jewish
converts (Acts 2), and in the Gentile converts (Acts 10), he
might in some sense be said to be the rock on which it was
built. Cephas was one that seemed to be a pillar, Galatians
2:9. But it sounds very harsh, to call a man that only lays
the first stone of a building, which is a transient act, the
foundation on which it is built, which is an abiding thing.
Yet if it were so, this would not serve to support the
pretensions of the Bishop of Rome; for Peter had no such
headship as he claims, much less could he derive it to his
successors, least of all to the Bishops of Rome, who,
whether they are so in place or no, is a question, but that
they are not so in the truth of Christianity, is past all
question.
Secondly, Others, by this rock,
understand Christ; "Thou art Peter, thou hast the name of a
stone, but upon this rock, pointing to himself, I will build
my church." Perhaps he laid his hand on his breast, as when
he said, Destroy this temple (John 2:19), when he spoke of
the temple of his body. Then he took occasion from the
temple, where he was, so to speak of himself, and gave
occasion to some to misunderstand him of that; so here he
took occasion from Peter, to speak of himself as the Rock,
and gave occasion to some to misunderstand him of Peter. But
this must be explained by those many scriptures which speak
of Christ as the only Foundation of the church; see 1
Corinthians 3:11; 1 Peter 2:6. Christ is both its Founder
and its Foundation; he draws souls, and draws them to
himself; to him they are united, and on him they rest and
have a constant dependence.
Thirdly, Others by this rock
understand this confession which Peter made of Christ, and
this comes all to one with understanding it of Christ
himself. It was a good confession which Peter witnessed,
Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God; the rest
concurred with him in it. "Now," says Christ, "this is that
great truth upon which I will build my church." 1. Take away
this truth itself, and the universal church falls to the
ground. If Christ be not the Son of God, Christianity is a
cheat, and the church is a mere chimera; our preaching is
vain, your faith is vain, and you are yet in your sins, 1
Corinthians 15:14-17. If Jesus be not the Christ, those that
own him are not of the church, but deceivers and deceived.
2. Take away the faith and confession of this truth from any
particular church, and it ceases to be a part of Christ's
church, and relapses to the state and character of
infidelity. This is articulus stantis et cadentis
ecclesia--that article, with the admission or the denial of
which the church either rises or falls; "the main hinge on
which the door of salvation turns;" those who let go this,
do not hold the foundation; and though they may call
themselves Christians, they give themselves the lie; for the
church is a sacred society, incorporated upon the certainty
and assurance of this great truth; and great it is, and has
prevailed.
2. Christ here promises to preserve
and secure his church, when it is built; The gates of hell
shall not prevail against it; neither against this truth,
nor against the church which is built upon it.
(1.) This implies that the church
has enemies that fight against it, and endeavor its ruin
overthrow, here represented by the gates of hell, that is,
the city of hell; (which is directly opposite to this
heavenly city, this city of the living God), the devil's
interest among the children of men. The gates of hell are
the powers and policies of the devil's kingdom, the dragon's
head and horns, by which he makes war with the Lamb; all
that comes out of hell-gates, as being hatched and contrived
there. These fight against the church by opposing gospel
truths, corrupting gospel ordinances, persecuting good
ministers and good Christians; drawing or driving,
persuading by craft or forcing by cruelty, to that which is
inconsistent with the purity of religion; this is the design
of the gates of hell, to root out the name of Christianity
(Psalm 83:4), to devour the man-child (Revelation 12:9), to
raze this city to the ground.
(2.) This assures us that the
enemies of the church shall not gain their point. While the
world stands, Christ will have a church in it, in which his
truths and ordinances shall be owned and kept up, in spite
of all the opposition of the powers of darkness; They shall
not prevail against it, Psalm 129:1, 2. This gives no
security to any particular church, or church-governors that
they shall never err, never apostatize or be destroyed; but
that somewhere or other the Christian religion shall have a
being, though not always in the same degree of purity and
splendor, yet so as that the entail of it shall never be
quite cut off. The woman lives, though in a wilderness
(Revelation 12:14), cast down but not destroyed (2
Corinthians 4:9). Corruptions grieving, persecutions
grievous, but neither fatal. The church may be foiled in
particular encounters, but in the main battle it shall come
off more than a conqueror. Particular believers are kept by
the power of God, through faith, unto salvation, 1 Peter
1:5.
Secondly, The other part of this
charter is, to settle the order and government of the
church, verse 19. When a city or society is incorporated,
officers are appointed and empowered to act for the common
good. A city without government is a chaos. Now this
constituting of the government of the church, is here
expressed by the delivering of the keys, and, with them, a
power to bind and loose. This is not to be understood of any
peculiar power that Peter was invested with, as if he were
sole door-keeper of the kingdom of heaven, and had that key
of David which belongs only to the Son of David; no, this
invests all the apostles and their successors with a
ministerial power to guide and govern the church of Christ,
as it exists in particular congregations or churches,
according to the rules of the gospel. Claves regni cælorum
in B. Petro apostolo cuncti suscepimus sacerdotes--All we
that are priests, received, in the person of the blessed
apostle Peter, the keys of the kingdom of heaven; so Ambrose
De Dignit. Sacerd. Only the keys were first put into Peter's
hand, because he was the first that opened the door of faith
to the Gentiles, Acts 10:28. As the king, in giving a
charter to a corporation, empowers the magistrates to hold
courts in his name, to try matters of fact, and determine
therein according to law, confirming what is so done
regularly as if done in any of the superior courts; so
Christ, having incorporated his church, hath appointed the
office of the ministry for the keeping up of order and
government, and to see that his laws be duly served; I will
give thee the keys. He doth not say, "I have given them," or
"I do now;" but "I will do it," meaning after his
resurrection; when he ascended on high, he gave those gifts,
Ephesians 4:8; then this power was actually given, not to
Peter only, but to all the rest, Chapter 28:19, 20; John
20:21. He doth not say, The keys shall be given, but, I will
give them; for ministers derive their authority from Christ,
and all their power is to be used in his name, 1 Corinthians
5:4.
Now, 1. The power here delegated is
a spiritual power; it is a power pertaining to the kingdom
of heaven, that is, to the church, that part of it which is
militant here on earth, to the gospel dispensation; that is
it about which the apostolic and ministerial power is wholly
conversant. It is not any civil, secular power that is
hereby conveyed, Christ's kingdom is not of this world;
their instructions afterward were in things pertaining to
the kingdom of God, Acts 1:3.
2. It is the power of the keys that
is given, alluding to the custom of investing men with
authority in such a place, by delivering to them the keys of
the place. Or as the master of the house gives the keys to
the steward, the keys of the stores where the provisions are
kept, that he may give to every one in the house his portion
of meat in due season (Luke 12:42), and deny it as there is
occasion, according to the rules of the family. Ministers
are stewards, 1 Corinthians 4:1; Titus 1:7. Eliakim, who had
the key of the house of David, was over the household,
Isaiah 22:22.
3. It is a power to bind and loose,
that is (following the metaphor of the keys), to shut and
open. Joseph, who was lord of Pharaoh's house, and steward
of the stores, had power to bind his princes, and to teach
his senators wisdom, Psalm 105:21, 22. When the stores and
treasures of the house are shut up from any, they are bound,
interdico tibi aqu&acric; et igne--I forbid thee the use of
fire and water; when they are opened to them again, they are
loosed from that bond, are discharged from the censure, and
restored to their liberty.
4. It is a power which Christ has
promised to own the due administration of; he will ratify
the sentences of his stewards with his own approbation; It
shall be bound in heaven, and loosed in heaven: not that
Christ hath hereby obliged himself to confirm all
church-censures, right or wrong; but such as are duly passed
according to the word, clave non errante--the key turning
the right way, such are sealed in heaven; that is, the word
of the gospel, in the mouth of faithful ministers, is to be
looked upon, not as the word of man, but as the word of God,
and to be received accordingly, 1 Thessalonians 2:13; John
12:20.
Now the keys of the kingdom of
heaven are,
(1.) The key of doctrine, called the
key of knowledge. "Your business shall be to explain to the
world the will of God, both as to truth and duty; and for
this you shall have your commissions, credentials, and full
instructions to bind and loose:" these, in the common speech
of the Jews, at that time, signified to prohibit and permit;
to teach or declare a thing to be unlawful was to bind; to
be lawful, was to loose. Now the apostles had an
extraordinary power of this kind; some things forbidden by
the law of Moses were now to be allowed, as the eating of
such and such meats; some things allowed there were now to
be forbidden, as divorce; and the apostles were empowered to
declare this to the world, and men might take it upon their
words. When Peter was first taught himself, and then taught
others, to call nothing common or unclean, this power was
exercised. There is also an ordinary power hereby conveyed
to all ministers, to preach the gospel as appointed
officers; to tell people, in God's name, and according to
the scriptures, what is good, and what the Lord requires of
them: and they who declare the whole counsel of God, use
these keys well, Acts 20:27.
Some make the giving of the keys to
allude to the custom of the Jews in creating a doctor of the
law, which was to put into his hand the keys of the chest
where the book of the law was kept, denoting his being
authorized to take and read it; and the binding and loosing,
to allude to the fashion about their books, which were in
rolls; they shut them by binding them up with a string,
which they untied when they opened them. Christ gives his
apostles power to shut or open the book of the gospel to
people, as the case required. See the exercise of this
power, Acts 13: 46; 18:6. When ministers preach pardon and
peace to the penitent, wrath and the curse to the
impenitent, in Christ's name, they act then pursuant to this
authority of binding and loosing.
(2.) The key of discipline, which is
but the application of the former to particular persons,
upon a right estimate of their characters and actions. It is
not legislative power that is hereby conferred, but
judicial; the judge doth not make the law, but only declares
what is law, and upon an impartial enquiry into the merits
of the cause, gives sentence accordingly. Such is the power
of the keys, wherever it is lodged, with reference to
church-membership and the privileges thereof. [1.] Christ's
ministers have a power to admit into the church; "Go,
disciple all nations, baptizing them; those who profess
faith in Christ, and obedience to him, admit them and their
seed members of the church by baptism." Ministers are to let
in to the wedding-feast those that are bidden; and to keep
out such as are apparently unfit for so holy a communion.
[2.] They have a power to expel and cast out such as have
forfeited their church-membership, that is binding; refusing
to unbelievers the application of gospel promises and the
seals of them; and declaring to such as appear to be in the
gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity, that they have no
part or lot in the matter, as Peter did to Simon Magus,
though he had been baptized; and this is a binding over to
the judgment of God. [3.] They have a power to restore and
to receive in again, upon their repentance, such as had been
thrown out; to loose those whom they had bound; declaring to
them, that, if their repentance be sincere, the promise of
pardon belongs to them. The apostles had a miraculous gift
of discerning spirits; yet even they went by the rule of
outward appearances (as Acts 8:21; 1 Corinthians 5:1; 2
Corinthians 2:7; 1 Timothy 1:20), which ministers may still
make a judgment upon, if they be skilful and faithful.
Lastly, Here is the charge which
Christ gave his disciples, to keep this private for the
present (verse 20); They must tell no man that he was Jesus
the Christ. What they had professed to him, they must not
yet publish to the world, for several reasons; 1. Because
this was the time of preparation for his kingdom: the great
thing now preached, was, that the kingdom of heaven was at
hand; and therefore those things were now to be insisted on,
which were proper to make way for Christ; as the doctrine of
repentance; not this great truth, in and with which the
kingdom of heaven was to be actually set up. Every thing is
beautiful in its season, and it is good advice, Prepare thy
work, and afterwards build, Proverbs 24:27. 2. Christ would
have his Messiahship proved by his works, and would rather
they should testify of him than that his disciples should,
because their testimony was but as his own, which he
insisted not on. See John 5:31, 34. He was so secure of the
demonstration of his miracles, that he waived other
witnesses, John 10:25, 38. 3. If they had known that he was
Jesus the Christ, they would not have crucified the Lord of
glory, 1 Corinthians 2:8. 4. Christ would not have the
apostles preach this, till they had the most convincing
evidence ready to allege in confirmation of it. Great truths
may suffer damage by being asserted before they can be
sufficiently proved. Now the great proof of Jesus being the
Christ was his resurrection: by that he was declared to be
the Son of God, with power; and therefore the divine wisdom
would not have this truth preached, till that could be
alleged for proof of it. 5. It was requisite that the
preachers of so great a truth should be furnished with
greater measures of the Spirit than the apostles as yet had;
therefore the open asserting of it was adjourned till the
Spirit should be poured out upon them. But when Christ was
glorified and the Spirit poured out, we find Peter
proclaiming upon the house-tops what was here spoken in a
corner (Acts 2:36), That God hath made this same Jesus both
Lord and Christ; for, as there is a time to keep silence, so
there is a time to speak.
Christ Reproves Peter.
Matthew 16:21-23 --
21 From that time forth began Jesus to
show unto his disciples, how that he must go unto Jerusalem,
and suffer many things of the elders and chief priests and
scribes, and be killed, and be raised again the third day.
22 Then Peter took him, and began to rebuke him, saying, Be
it far from thee, Lord: this shall not be unto thee. 23 But
he turned, and said unto Peter,
Get thee behind me, Satan: thou art an offence unto me: for
thou savors not the things that be of God, but those that be
of men.
We have here Christ's discourse with
his disciples concerning his own sufferings; in which
observe,
I. Christ's foretelling of his
sufferings. Now he began to do it, and from this time he
frequently spoke of them. Some hints he had already given of
his sufferings, as when he said, Destroy this temple: when
he spoke of the Son of man being lifted up, and of eating
his flesh, and drinking his blood: but now he began to show
it, to speak plainly and expressly of it. Hitherto he had
not touched upon this, because the disciples were weak, and
could not well bear the notice of a thing so very strange,
and so very melancholy; but now that they were more ripe in
knowledge, and strong in faith, he began to tell them this.
Note, Christ reveals his mind to his people gradually, and
lets in light as they can bear it, and are fit to receive
it.
From that time, when they had made
that full confession of Christ, that he was the Son of God,
then he began to show them this. When he found them knowing
in one truth, he taught them another; for to him that has,
shall be given. Let them first be established in the
principles of the doctrine of Christ, and then go on to
perfection, Hebrews 6:1. If they had not been well grounded
in the belief of Christ's being the Son of God, it would
have been a great shaking to their faith. All truths are not
to be spoken to all persons at all times, but such as are
proper and suitable to their present state. Now observe,
1. What he foretold concerning his
sufferings, the particulars and circumstances of them, and
all surprising.
(1.) The place where he should
suffer. He must go to Jerusalem, the head city, the holy
city, and suffer there. Though he lived most of his time in
Galilee, he must die at Jerusalem; there all the sacrifices
were offered, there therefore he must die, who is the great
sacrifice.
(2.) The persons by whom he should
suffer; the elders, and chief priests, and scribes; these
made up the great Sanhedrin, which sat at Jerusalem, and was
had in veneration by the people. Those that should have been
most forward in owning and admiring Christ, were the most
bitter in persecuting him. It was strange that men of
knowledge in the scripture, who professed to expect the
Messiah's coming, and pretended to have something sacred in
their character, should use him thus barbarously when he did
come. It was the Roman power that condemned and crucified
Christ, but he lays it at the door of the chief priests and
scribes, who were the first movers.
(3.) What he should suffer; he must
suffer many things, and be killed. His enemies' insatiable
malice, and his own invincible patience, appear in the
variety and multiplicity of his sufferings (he suffered many
things) and in the extremity of them; nothing less than his
death would satisfy them, he must be killed. The suffering
of many things, if not unto death, is more tolerable; for
while there is life, there is hope; and death, without such
prefaces, would be less terrible; but he must first suffer
many things, and then be killed.
(4.) What should be the happy issue
of all his sufferings; he shall be raised again the third
day. As the prophets, so Christ himself, when he testified
beforehand his sufferings, testified withal the glory that
should follow, 1 Peter 1:11. His rising again the third day
proved him to be the Son of God, notwithstanding his
sufferings; and therefore he mentions that, to keep up their
faith. When he spoke of the cross and the shame, he spoke in
the same breath of the joy set before him, in the prospect
of which he endured the cross, and despised the shame. Thus
we must look upon Christ's suffering for us, trace in it the
way to his glory; and thus we must look upon our suffering
for Christ, look through it to the recompense of reward. If
we suffer with him, we shall reign with him.
2. Why he foretold his sufferings.
(1.) To show that they were the product of an eternal
counsel and consent; were agreed upon between the Father and
the Son from eternity; Thus is behooved Christ to suffer.
The matter was settled in the determinate counsel and
foreknowledge, in pursuance of his own voluntary susception
and undertaking for our salvation; his sufferings were no
surprise to him, did not come upon him as a snare, but he
had a distinct and certain foresight of them, which greatly
magnifies his love, John 18: 4. (2.) To rectify the mistakes
which his disciples had imbibed concerning the external pomp
and power of his kingdom. Believing him to be the Messiah,
they counted upon nothing but dignity and authority in the
world; but here Christ reads them another lesson, tells them
of the cross and sufferings; nay, that the chief priests and
the elders, whom, it is likely, they expected to be the
supports of the Messiah's kingdom, should be its great
enemies and persecutors; this would give them quite another
idea of that kingdom which they themselves had preached the
approach of; and it was requisite that this mistake should
be rectified. Those that follow Christ must be dealt plainly
with, and warned not to expect great things in this world.
(3.) It was to prepare them for the share, at least, of
sorrow and fear, which they must have in his sufferings.
When he suffered many things, the disciples could not but
suffer some; if their Master be killed, they will be seized
with terror; let them know it before, that they may provide
accordingly, and, being fore-warned, may be fore-armed.
II. The offence which Peter took at
this he said, Be it far from thee, Lord: probably he spoke
the sense of the rest of the disciples, as before, for he
was chief speaker. He took him, and began to rebuke him.
Perhaps Peter was a little elevated with the great things
Christ had how said unto him, which made him more bold with
Christ than did become him; so hard is it to keep the spirit
low and humble in the midst of great advancements!
1. It did not become Peter to
contradict his Master, or take upon him to advise him; he
might have wished, that, if it were possible, this cup might
pass away, without saying so peremptorily, This shall not
be, when Christ had said, It must be. Shall any teach God
knowledge? He that reproves God, let him answer it. Note,
When God's dispensations are either intricate or cross to
us, it becomes us silently to acquiesce in, and not to
prescribe to, the divine will; God knows what he has to do,
without our teaching. Unless we know the mind of the Lord,
it is not for us to be his counselors, Romans 11:34.
2. It savored much of fleshly
wisdom, for him to appear so warmly against suffering, and
to startle thus at the offence of the cross. It is the
corrupt part of us, that is thus solicitous to sleep in a
whole skin. We are apt to look upon sufferings as they
relate to this present life, to which they are uneasy; but
there are other rules to measure them by, which, if duly
observed, will enable us cheerfully to bear them, Romans
8:18. See how passionately Peter speaks: "Be it far from
thee, Lord. God forbid, that thou should suffer and be
killed; we cannot bear the thoughts of it." Master, spare
thyself: so it might be read; hileos soi, kyrie--"Be
merciful to thyself, and then no one else can be cruel to
thee; pity thyself, and then this shall not be to thee." He
would have Christ to dread suffering as much as he did; but
we mistake, if we measure Christ's love and patience by our
own. He intimates, likewise, the improbability of the thing,
humanly speaking; "This shall not be unto thee. It is
impossible that one who hath so great an interest in the
people as thou hast, should be crushed by the elders, who
fear the people: this can never be; we that have followed
thee, will fight for thee, if occasion be; and there are
thousands that will stand by us."
III. Christ's displeasure against
Peter for this suggestion of his, verse 23. We do not read
of any thing said or done by any of his disciples, at any
time, that he resented so much as this, though they often
offended.
Observe, 1. How he expressed his
displeasure: He turned upon Peter, and (we may suppose) with
a frown said, Get thee behind me, Satan. He did not so much
as take time to deliberate upon it, but gave an immediate
reply to the temptation, which was such as made it to appear
how ill he took it. Just now, he had said, Blessed art thou,
Simon, and had even laid him in his bosom; but here, Get
thee behind me, Satan; and there was cause for both. Note, A
good man may by a surprise of temptation soon grow very
unlike himself. He answered him as he did Satan himself,
Chapter 4:10. Note, (1.) It is the subtlety of Satan, to
send temptations to us by the unsuspected hands of our best
and dearest friends. Thus he assaulted Adam by Eve, Job by
his wife, and here Christ by his beloved Peter. It concerns
us therefore not to be ignorant of his devices, but to stand
against his wiles and depths, by standing always upon our
guard against sin, whoever moves us to it. Even the
kindnesses of our friends are often abused by Satan, and
made use of as temptations to us. (2.) Those who have their
spiritual senses exercised, will be aware of the voice of
Satan, even in a friend, a disciple, a minister, that
dissuades them from their duty. We must not regard who
speaks, so much as what is spoken; we should learn to know
the devil's voice when he speaks in a saint as well as when
he speaks in a serpent. Whoever takes us off from that which
is good, and would have us afraid of doing too much for God,
speaks Satan's language. (3.) We must be free and faithful
in reproving the dearest friend we have, that says or does
amiss, though it may be under colors of kindness to us. We
must not compliment, but rebuke, mistaken courtesies.
Faithful are the wounds of a friend. Such smitings must be
accounted kindnesses, Psalm 141:5. (4.) Whatever appears to
be a temptation to sin, must be resisted with abhorrence,
and not parleyed with.
2. What was the ground of this
displeasure; why did Christ thus resent a motion that seemed
not only harmless, but kind? Two reasons are given:
(1.) Thou art an offence to me--Skandalon
mou ei--Thou art my hindrance (so it may be read); "thou
standest in my way." Christ was hastening on in the work of
our salvation, and his heart was so much upon it, that he
took it ill to be hindered, or tempted to start back from
the hardest and most discouraging part of his undertaking.
So strongly was he engaged for our redemption, that they who
but indirectly endeavored to divert him from it, touched him
in a very tender and sensible part. Peter was not so sharply
reproved for disowning and denying his Master in his
sufferings as he was for dissuading him from them; though
that was the defect, this the excess, of kindness. It argues
a very great firmness and resolution of mind in any
business, when it is an offence to be dissuaded, and a man
will not endure to hear any thing to the contrary; like that
of Ruth, Entreat me not to leave thee. Note, Our Lord Jesus
preferred our salvation before his own ease and safety; for
even Christ pleased not himself (Romans 15:3); he came into
the world, not to spare himself, as Peter advised, but to
spend himself.
See why he called Peter Satan, when
he suggested this to him; because, whatever stood in the way
of our salvation, he looked upon as coming from the devil,
who is a sworn enemy to it. The same Satan that afterward
entered into Judas, maliciously to destroy him in his
undertaking, here prompted Peter plausibly to divert him
from it. Thus he changes himself into an angel of light.
Thou art an offence to me. Note,
[1.] Those that engage in any great good work must expect to
meet with hindrance and opposition from friends and foes,
from within and from without. [2.] Those that obstruct our
progress in any duty must be looked upon as an offence to
us. Then we do the will of God as Christ did, whose meat and
drink it was to do it, when it is a trouble to us to be
solicited from our duty. Those that hinder us from doing or
suffering for God, when we are called to it, whatever they
are in other things in that they are Satans, adversaries to
us.
(2.) You savor not the things that
are of God, but those that are of men. Note, [1.] The things
that are of God, that is, the concerns of his will and
glory, often clash and interfere with the things that are of
men, that is, with our own wealth, pleasure, and reputation.
While we mind Christian duty as out way and work, and the
divine favor as our end and portion, we savor the things of
God; but if these be minded, the flesh must be denied,
hazards must be run and hardships borne; and here is the
trial which of the two we savor. [2.] Those that
inordinately fear, and industriously decline suffering for
Christ, when they are called to it, savor more of the things
of man than of the things of God; they relish those things
more themselves, and make it appear to others that they do
so.
The Value of the Soul.
Matthew 16:24-28 --
24 Then said Jesus unto his disciples,
If any man will come after me, let him
deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For
whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever
will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is
a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose
his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his
soul? 27 For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his
Father with his angels; and then he shall reward every man
according to his works. 28 Verily I say unto you, There be
some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till
they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom.
Christ, having shown his disciples
that he must suffer, and that he was ready and willing to
suffer, here shows them that they must suffer too, and must
be ready and willing. It is a weighty discourse that we have
in these verses.
I. Here is the law of discipleship
laid down, and the terms fixed, upon which we may have the
honor and benefit of it, verse 24. He said this to his
disciples, not only that they might instruct others
concerning it, but that by this rule they might examine
their own security. Observe,
1. What it is to be a disciple of
Christ; it is to come after him. When Christ called his
disciples, this was the word of command, Follow me. A true
disciple of Christ is one that doth follow him in duty, and
shall follow him to glory. He is one that comes after
Christ, not one that prescribes to him, as Peter now
undertook to do, forgetting his place. A disciple of Christ
comes after him, as the sheep after the shepherd, the
servant after his master, the soldiers after their captain;
he is one that aims at the same end that Christ aimed at,
the glory of God, and the glory of heaven: and one that
walks in the same way that he walked in, is led by his
Spirit, treads in his steps, submits to his conduct, and
follows the Lamb, whithersoever he goes, Revelation 14:4.
2. What are the great things
required of those that will be Christ's disciples; If any
man will come, ei tis thelei--If any man be willing to come.
It denotes a deliberate choice, and cheerfulness and
resolution in that choice. Many are disciples more by chance
or the will of others than by any act of their own will; but
Christ will have his people volunteers, Psalm 110:3. It is
as if Christ had said, "If any of the people that are not my
disciples, be steadfastly minded to come to me, and if you
that are, be in like manner minded to adhere to me, it is
upon these terms, these and no other; you must follow me in
sufferings as well as in other things, and therefore when
you sit down to count the cost, reckon upon it."
Now what are these terms?
(1.) Let him deny himself. Peter had
advised Christ to spare himself, and would be ready, in the
like case, to take the advice; but Christ tells them all,
they must be so far from sparing themselves, that they must
deny themselves. Herein they must come after Christ, for his
birth, and life, and death, were all a continued act of
self-denial, a self-emptying, Philippians 2:7, 8. If
self-denial be a hard lesson, and against the grain to flesh
and blood, it is no more than what our Master learned and
practiced before us and for us, both for our redemption and
for our instruction; and the servant is not above his lord.
Note, All the disciples and followers of Jesus Christ must
deny themselves. It is the fundamental law of admission into
Christ's school, and the first and great lesson to be
learned in this school, to deny ourselves; it is both the
strait gate, and the narrow way; it is necessary in order to
our learning all the other good lessons that are there
taught. We must deny ourselves absolutely, we must not
admire our own shadow, nor gratify our own humor; we must
not lean to our own understanding, nor seek our own things,
nor be our own end. We must deny ourselves comparatively; we
must deny ourselves for Christ, and his will and glory, and
the service of his interest in the world; we must deny
ourselves for our brethren, and for their good; and we must
deny ourselves for ourselves, deny the appetites of the body
for the benefit of the soul.
(2.) Let him take up his cross. The
cross is here put for all sufferings, as men or Christians;
providential afflictions, persecutions for righteousness'
sake, every trouble that befalls us, either for doing well
or for not doing ill. The troubles of Christians are fitly
called crosses, in allusion to the death of the cross, which
Christ was obedient to; and it should reconcile us to
troubles, and take off the terror of them, that they are
what we bear in common with Christ, and such as he hath
borne before us. Note, [1.] Every disciple of Christ hath
his cross, and must count upon it; as each hath his special
duty to be done, so each hath his special trouble to be
borne, and every one feels most from his own burthen.
Crosses are the common lot of God's children, but of this
common lot of God's children, but of this common lot each
hath his particular share. That is our cross which Infinite
Wisdom has appointed for us, and a Sovereign Providence has
laid on us, as fittest for us. It is good for us to call the
cross we are under our own, and entertain it accordingly. We
are apt to think we could bear such a one's cross better
than our own; but that is best which is, and we ought to
make the best of it. [2.] Every disciple of Christ must take
up that which the wise God hath made his cross. It is an
allusion to the Roman custom of compelling those that were
condemned to be crucified, to carry their cross: when Simon
carried Christ's cross after him, this phrase was
illustrated. First, It is supposed that the cross lies in
our way, and is prepared for us. We must not make crosses to
ourselves, but must accommodate ourselves to those which God
has made for us. Our rule is, not to go a step out of the
way of duty, either to meet a cross, or to miss one. We must
not by our rashness and indiscretion pull crosses down upon
our own heads, but must take them up when they are laid in
our way. We must so manage an affliction, that it may not be
a stumbling-block or hindrance to us in any service we have
to do for God. We must take it up out of our way, by getting
over the offence of the cross; None of these things move me;
and we must then go on with it in our way, though it lie
heavy. Secondly, That which we have to do, is, not only to
bear the cross (that a stock, or a stone, or a stick may
do), not only to be silent under it, but we must take up the
cross, must improve it to some good advantage. We should not
say, "This is an evil, and I must bear it, because I cannot
help it;" but, "This is an evil, and I will bear it, because
it shall work for my good." When we rejoice in our
afflictions, and glory in them, then we take up the cross.
This fitly follows upon denying ourselves; for he that will
not deny himself the pleasures of sin, and the advantages of
this world for Christ, when it comes to the push, will never
have the heart to take up his cross. "He that cannot take up
the resolution to live a saint, has a demonstration within
himself, that he is never likely to die a martyr;" so
Archbishop Tillotson.
(3.) Let him follow me, in this
particular of taking up the cross. Suffering saints must
look unto Jesus, and take from him both direction and
encouragement in suffering. Do we bear the cross? We therein
follow Christ, who bears it before us, bears it for us, and
so bears it from us. He bore the heavy end of the cross, the
end that had the curse upon it, that was a heavy end, and so
made the other light and easy for us. Or, we may take it in
general, we must follow Christ in all instances of holiness
and obedience. Note, The disciples of Christ must study to
imitate their Master, and conform themselves in every thing
to his example, and continue in well-doing, whatever crosses
lie in their way. To do well and to suffer ill, is to follow
Christ. If any man will come after me, let him follow me;
that seems to be idem per idem--the same thing over again.
What is the difference? Surely it is this, "If any man will
come after me, in profession, and so have the name and
credit of a disciple, let him follow me in truth, and so do
the work and duty of a disciple." Or thus, "If any man will
set out after me, in good beginnings, let him continue to
follow me with all perseverance." That is following the Lord
fully, as Caleb did. Those that come after Christ, must
follow after him.
II. Here are arguments to persuade
us to submit to these laws, and come up to these terms.
Self-denial, and patient suffering, are hard lessons, which
will never be learned if we consult with flesh and blood;
let us therefore consult with our Lord Jesus, and see what
advice he gives us; and here he gives us,
1. Some considerations proper to
engage us to these duties of self-denial and suffering for
Christ. Consider,
(1.) The weight of that eternity
which depends upon our present choice (verse 25); Whosoever
will save his life, by denying Christ, shall lose it: and
whosoever is content to lose his life, for owning Christ,
shall find it. Here are life and death, good and evil, the
blessing and the curse, set before us. Observe,
[1.] The misery that attends the
most plausible apostasy. Whosoever will save his life in
this world, if it be by sin, he shall lose it in another; he
that forsakes Christ, to preserve a temporal life and avoid
a temporal death, will certainly come short of eternal life,
and will be hurt of the second death, and eternally held by
it. There cannot be a fairer pretence for apostasy and
iniquity than saving the life by it, so cogent is the law of
self-preservation; and yet even that is folly, for it will
prove in the end self-destruction; the life saved is but for
a moment, the death shunned is but as a sleep; but the life
lost is everlasting, and the death run upon is the depth and
complement of all misery, and an endless separation from all
good. Now, let any rational man consider of it, take advice
and speak his mind, whether there is any thing got, at long
run, by apostasy, though a man save his estate, preferment,
or life, by it.
[2.] The advantage that attends the
most perilous and expensive constancy; Whosoever will lose
his life for Christ's sake in this world, shall find it in a
better, infinitely to his advantage. Note, First, Many a
life is lost, for Christ's sake, in doing his work, by
laboring fervently for his name; in suffering work, by
choosing rather to die than to deny him or his truths and
ways. Christ's holy religion is handed down to us, sealed
with the blood of thousands, that have not known their own
souls, but have despised their lives (as Job speaks in
another case), though very valuable ones, when they have
stood in competition with their duty and the testimony of
Jesus, Revelation 20:4. Secondly, Though many have been
losers for Christ, even of life itself, yet never any one
was, or will be, a loser by him in the end. The loss of
other comforts, for Christ, may possibly be made up in this
world (Mark 10:30); the loss of life cannot, but it shall be
made up in the other world, in an eternal life; the
believing prospect of which hath been the great support of
suffering saints in all ages. An assurance of the life they
should find, in lieu of the life they hazarded, hath enabled
them to triumph over death in all its terrors; to go smiling
to a scaffold, and stand singing at a stake, and to call the
utmost instances of their enemies' rage but a light
affliction.
[3.] The worth of the soul which
lies at stake, and the worthlessness of the world in
comparison of it (verse 26). What is a man profited, if he
gain the whole world and lose his own soul? ten psychen
autou; the same word which is translated his life (verse
25), for the soul is the life, Genesis 2:7. This alludes to
that common principle, that, whatever a man gets, if he lose
his life, it will do him no good, he cannot enjoy his gains.
But it looks higher, and speaks of the soul as immortal, and
a loss of it beyond death, which cannot be compensated by
the gain of the whole world. Note, First, Every man has a
soul of his own. The soul is the spiritual and immortal part
of man, which thinks and reasons, has a power of reflection
and prospect, which actuates the body now, and will shortly
act in a separation from the body. Our souls are our own not
in respect of dominion and property (for we are not our own,
All souls are mine, says God), but in respect of nearness
and concern; our souls are our own, for they are ourselves.
Secondly, It is possible for the soul to be lost, and there
is danger of it. The soul is lost when it is eternally
separated from all the good to all the evil that a soul is
capable of; when it dies as far as a soul can die; when it
is separated from the favor of God, and sunk under his wrath
and curse. A man is never undone till he is in hell.
Thirdly, If the soul be lost, it is of the sinner's own
losing. The man loses his own soul, for he does that which
is certainly destroying to it, and neglects that which alone
would be saving, Hosea 13:9. The sinner dies because he will
die; his blood is on his own head. Fourthly, One soul is
worth more than all the world; our own souls are of greater
value to us than all the wealth, honor, and pleasures of
this present time, if we had them. Here is the whole world
set in the scale against one soul, and Tekel written upon
it; it is weighed in the balance, and found too light to
weigh it down. This is Christ's judgment upon the matter,
and he is a competent Judge; he had reason to know the price
of souls, for he redeemed them; nor would he under-rate the
world, for he made it. Fifthly, The winning of the world is
often the losing of the soul. Many a one has ruined his
eternal interest by his preposterous and inordinate care to
secure and advance his temporal ones. It is the love of the
world, and the eager pursuit of it, that drowns men in
destruction and perdition. Sixthly, The loss of the soul is
so great a loss, that the gain of the whole world will not
countervail it, or make it up. He that loses his soul,
though it be to gain the world, makes a very bad bargain for
himself, and will sit down at last an unspeakable loser.
When he comes to balance the account, and to compare profit
and loss, he will find that, instead of the advantage he
promised himself, he is ruined to all intents and purposes,
is irreparably broken.
What shall a man give in exchange
for his soul? Note, If once the soul be lost, it is lost for
ever. There is no antallagma--counter-price, that can be
paid, or will be accepted. It is a loss that can never be
repaired, never be retrieved. If, after that great price
which Christ laid down to redeem our souls, and to restore
us to the possession of them, they be so neglected for the
world, that they come to be lost, that new mortgage will
never be taken off; there remains no more sacrifice for
sins, nor price for souls, but the equity of redemption is
eternally precluded. Therefore it is good to be wise in
time, and do well for ourselves.
2. Here are some considerations
proper to encourage us in self-denial and suffering for
Christ.
(1.) The assurance we have of
Christ's glory, at his second coming to judge the world,
verse 27. If we look to the end of all these things, the
period of the world, and the posture of souls then, we shall
thence form a very different idea of the present state of
things. If we see things as the will appear then, we shall
see them as they should appear now.
The great encouragement to
steadfastness in religion is taken from the second coming of
Christ, considering it,
[1.] As his honor; The Son of man
shall come in the glory of his Father, with his angels. To
look upon Christ in his state of humiliation, so abased, so
abused, a reproach of men, and despised of the people, would
discourage his followers from taking any pains, or running
any hazards for him; but with an eye of faith to see the
Captain of our salvation coming in his glory, in all the
pomp and power of the upper world, will animate us, and make
us think nothing too much to do, or too hard to suffer, or
him. The Son of man shall come. He here gives himself the
title of his humble state (he is the Son of man), to show
that he is not ashamed to own it. His first coming was in
the meanness of his children, who being partakers of flesh,
he took part of the same; but his second coming will be in
the glory of his Father. At his first coming, he was
attended with poor disciples; at his second coming, he will
be attended with glorious angels; and if we suffer with him,
we shall be glorified with him, 2 Timothy 2:12.
[2.] As our concern; Then he shall
reward every man according to his works. Observe, First,
Jesus Christ will come as a Judge, to dispense rewards and
punishments, infinitely exceeding the greatest that any
earthly potentate has the dispensing of. The terror of men's
tribunal (Chapter 10:18) will be taken off by a believing
prospect of the glory of Christ's tribunal. Secondly, Men
will then be rewarded, not according to their gains in this
world, but according to their works, according to what they
were and did. In that day, the treachery of backsliders will
be punished with eternal destruction, and the constancy of
faithful souls recompensed with a crown of life. Thirdly,
The best preparative for that day is to deny ourselves, and
take up our cross, and follow Christ; for so we shall make
the Judge our Friend, and these things will then pass well
in the account. Fourthly, The rewarding of men according to
their works is deferred till that day. Here good and evil
seem to be dispensed promiscuously; we see not apostasy
punished with immediate strokes, nor fidelity encouraged
with immediate smiles, from heaven; but in that day all will
be set to rights. Therefore judge nothing before the time, 2
Timothy 4:6-8.
(2.) The near approach of his
kingdom in this world, verse 28. It was so near, that there
were some attending him who should live to see it. As Simeon
was assured that he should not see death till he had seen
the Lord's Christ come in the flesh; so some here are
assured that they shall not taste death (death is a sensible
thing, its terrors are seen, its bitterness is tasted) till
they had seen the Lord's Christ coming in his kingdom. At
the end of time, he shall come in his Father's glory; but
now, in the fullness of time, he was to come in his own
kingdom, his mediatorial kingdom. Some little specimen was
given of his glory a few days after this, in his
transfiguration (Chapter 17:1); then he tried his robes. But
this points at Christ's coming by the pouring out of his
Spirit, the planting of the gospel church, the destruction
of Jerusalem, and the taking away of the place and nation of
the Jews, who were the most bitter enemies to Christianity.
Here was the Son of man coming in his kingdom. Many then
present lived to see it, particularly John, who lived till
after the destruction of Jerusalem, and saw Christianity
planted in the world. Let this encourage the followers of
Christ to suffer for him, [1.] That their undertaking shall
be succeeded; the apostles were employed in setting up
Christ's kingdom; let them know, for their comfort, that
whatever opposition they meet with, yet they shall carry
their point, shall see of the travail of their soul. Note,
It is a great encouragement to suffering saints to be
assured, not only of the safety, but of the advancement of
Christ's kingdom among men; not only notwithstanding their
sufferings, but by their sufferings. A believing prospect of
the success of the kingdom of grace, as well as of our share
in the kingdom of glory, may carry us cheerfully through our
sufferings. [2.] That their cause shall be pleaded; their
deaths shall be revenged, and their persecutors reckoned
with. [3.] That this shall be done shortly, in the present
age. Note, The nearer the church's deliverances are, the
more cheerful should we be in our sufferings for Christ.
Behold the Judge stands before the door. It is spoken as a
favor to those that should survive the present cloudy time,
that they should see better days. Note, It is desirable to
share with the church in her joys, Daniel 12:12. Observe,
Christ says, Some shall live to see those glorious days, not
all; some shall enter into the promised land, but others
shall fall in the wilderness. He does not tell them who
shall live to see this kingdom, lest if they had known, they
should have put off the thoughts of dying, but some of them
shall; Behold, the Lord is at hand. The Judge stands before
the door; be patient, therefore, brethren.
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