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Matthew Chapter 21
Commentary by Matthew Henry
The death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ are the two main hinges upon which the door of
salvation turns. He came into the world on purpose to give
his life a ransom; so he had lately said, Chapter 20:28. And
therefore the history of his sufferings, even unto death,
and his rising again, is more particularly recorded by all
the evangelists than any other part of his story; and to
that this evangelist now hastens apace. For at this chapter
begins that which is called the Passion-week. He had said to
his disciples more than once, Behold, we go up to Jerusalem,
and there the Son of man must be betrayed. A great deal of
good work he did by the way, and now at length he is come up
to Jerusalem; and here we have, I. The public entry which he
made into Jerusalem, upon the first day of the Passion-week,
verses 1-11. II. The authority he exercised there, in
cleansing the temple, and driving out of it the buyers and
sellers, verses 12-16. III. The barren fig-tree, and his
discourse with his disciples thereupon, verses 17-22. IV.
His justifying his own authority, by appealing to the
baptism of John, verses 23-27. V. His shaming the infidelity
and obstinacy of the chief priests and elders, with the
repentance of the publicans, illustrated by the parable of
the two sons, verses 29-32. VI. His reading the doom of the
Jewish church for its unfruitfulness, in the parable of the
vineyard let out to unthankful husbandmen, verses 33-46.
Christ's Entrance into Jerusalem.
Matthew 21:1-11 --
1 And when they drew nigh unto
Jerusalem, and were come to Bethphage, unto the mount of
Olives, then sent Jesus two disciples, 2 Saying unto them,
Go into the village over against you,
and straightway ye shall find an ass tied, and a colt with
her: loose them, and bring them unto me. 3 And if any man
say ought unto you, ye shall say, The Lord hath need of
them; and straightway he will send them.
4 All this was done, that it might be
fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying, 5 Tell ye
the daughter of Zion, Behold, thy King cometh unto thee,
meek, and sitting upon an ass, and a colt the foal of an
ass. 6 And the disciples went, and did as Jesus commanded
them, 7 And brought the ass, and the colt, and put on them
their clothes, and they set him thereon. 8 And a very great
multitude spread their garments in the way; others cut down
branches from the trees, and strawed them in the way. 9 And
the multitudes that went before, and that followed, cried,
saying, Hosanna to the Son of David: Blessed is he that
cometh in the name of the Lord; Hosanna in the highest. 10
And when he was come into Jerusalem, all the city was moved,
saying, Who is this? 11 And the multitude said, This is
Jesus the prophet of Nazareth of Galilee.
All the four evangelists take notice
of this passage of Christ's riding in triumph into
Jerusalem, five days before his death. The Passover was on
the fourteenth day of the month, and this was the tenth; on
which day the law appointed that the paschal lamb should be
taken up (Exodus 12:3), and set apart for that service; on
that day therefore Christ our Passover, who was to be
sacrificed for us, was publicly showed. So that this was the
prelude to his Passion. He had lodged at Bethany, a village
not far from Jerusalem, for some time; at a supper there the
night before Mary had anointed his feet, John 12:3. But, as
usual with ambassadors, he deferred his public entry till
some time after his arrival. Our Lord Jesus traveled much,
and his custom was to travel on foot from Galilee to
Jerusalem, some scores of miles, which was both humbling and
toilsome; many a dirty weary step he had when he went about
doing good. How ill does it become Christians to be
inordinately solicitous about their own ease and state, when
their Master had so little of either! Yet once in his life
he rode in triumph; and it was now when he went into
Jerusalem, to suffer and die, as if that were the pleasure
and preferment he courted; and then he thought himself begin
to look great.
Now here we have,
I. The provision that was made for
this solemnity; and it was very poor and ordinary, and such
as bespoke his kingdom to be not of this world. Here were no
heralds at arms provided, no trumpet sounded before him, no
chariots of state, no liveries; such things as these were
not agreeable to his present state of humiliation, but will
be far outdone at his second coming, to which his
magnificent appearance is reserved, when the last trumpet
shall sound, the glorious angels shall be his heralds and
attendants, and the clouds his chariots. But in this public
appearance,
1. The preparation was sudden and
offhand. For his glory in the other world, and ours with
him, preparation was made before the foundation of the
world, for that was the glory his heart was upon; his glory
in this world he was dead to, and therefore, though he had
it in prospect, did not forecast for it, but took what came
next. They were come to Bethphage, which was the suburb of
Jerusalem, and was accounted (say the Jewish doctors) in all
things, as Jerusalem, a long scattering street that lay
toward the mount of Olives; when he entered upon that, he
sent two of his disciples, some think Peter and John, to
fetch him an ass, for he had none ready for him.
2. It was very mean. He sent only
for an ass and her colt, verse 2. Asses were much used in
that country for travel; horses were kept only by great men,
and for war. Christ could have summoned a cherub to carry
him (Psalm 18:10); but though by his name Yah, which speaks
him God, he rides upon the heavens, yet now by his name
Jesus, Immanuel, God with us, in his state of humiliation,
he rides upon an ass. Yet some think that he had herein an
eye to the custom in Israel for the judges to ride upon
white asses (Judges 5:10), and their sons on ass-colts,
Judges 12:14. And Christ would thus enter, not as a
Conqueror, but as the Judge of Israel, who for judgment came
into this world.
3. It was not his own, but borrowed.
Though he had not a house of his own, yet, one would think,
like some wayfaring men that live upon their friends, he
might have had an ass of his own, to carry him about; but
for our sakes he became in all respects poor, 2 Corinthians
8:9. It is commonly said, "They that live on borrowing, live
on sorrowing;" in this therefore, as in other things, Christ
was a man of sorrows--that he had nothing of this world's
goods but what was given him or lent him.
The disciples who were sent to
borrow this ass are directed to say, The Lord has need of
him. Those that are in need, must not be ashamed to own
their need, nor say, as the unjust steward, To beg I am
ashamed, Luke 16:3. On the other hand, none ought to impose
upon the kindness of their friends, by going to beg or
borrow when they have not need. In the borrowing of this
ass,
(1.) We have an instance of Christ's
knowledge. Though the thing was altogether contingent, yet
Christ could tell his disciples where they should find an
ass tied, and a colt with her. His omniscience extends
itself to the meanest of his creatures; asses and their
colts, and their being bound or loosed. Doth God take care
for oxen? (1 Corinthians 9:9.) No doubt he doth, and would
not see Balaam's ass abused. He knows all the creatures, so
as to make them serve his own purpose.
(2.) We have an instance of his
power over the spirits of men. The hearts of the meanest
subjects, as well as of kings, are in the hand of the Lord.
Christ asserts his right to use the ass, in bidding them
bring it to him; the fullness of the earth is the Lord
Christ's; but he foresees some hindrance which disciples
might meet with in this service; they must not take them
clam et secreto--privily, but in the sight of the owner,
much less vi et armis--with force and arms, but with the
consent of the owner, which he undertakes they shall have;
If any man say aught to you, ye shall say, The Lord hath
need of him. Note, What Christ sets us to do, he will bear
us out in the doing of, and furnish us with answers tot he
objections we may be assaulted with, and make them
prevalent; as here, Straightway he will send them. Christ,
in commanding the ass into his service, showed that he is
Lord of hosts; and, in inclining the owner to send him
without further security, showed that he is the God of the
spirits of all flesh, and can bow men's hearts.
(3.) We have an example of justice
and honesty, in not using the ass, though for so small a
piece of service as riding the length of a street or two,
without the owner's consent. As some read the latter clause,
it gives us a further rule of justice; "You shall say the
Lord hath need of them, and he" (that is, the Lord) "will
presently send them back, and take care that they be safely
delivered to the owner, as soon as he has done with them."
Note, What we borrow we must restore in due time and in good
order; for the wicked borrows and pays not again. Care must
be taken of borrowed goods, that they be not damaged. Alas,
Master, for it was borrowed!
II. The prediction that was
fulfilled in this, verses 4, 5. Our Lord Jesus, in all that
he did and suffered, had very much his eye upon this, That
the scriptures might be fulfilled. As the prophets looked
forward to him (to him they all bare witness), so he looked
upon them, that all things which were written of the
Messiah, might be punctually accomplished in him. This
particularly which was written of him, Zechariah 9:9, where
it ushers in a large prediction of the kingdom of the
Messiah, Tell ye the daughter of Zion, Behold, thy King
cometh, must be accomplished. Now observe here,
1. How the coming of Christ is
foretold; Tell ye the daughter of Zion, the church, the holy
mountain, Behold, thy King cometh unto thee. Note, (1.)
Jesus Christ is the church's King, one of our brethren like
unto us, according to the law of the kingdom, Deuteronomy
17:15. He is appointed King over the church, Psalm 2:6. He
is accepted King by the church; the daughter of Zion swears
allegiance to him, Hosea 1:11. (2.) Christ, the King of his
church, came to his church, even in this lower world; he
comes to thee, to rule thee, to rule in thee, to rule for
thee; he is Head over all things to the church. He came to
Zion (Romans 11:26), that out of Zion the law might go
forth; for the church and its interests were all in all with
the Redeemer. (3.) Notice was given to the church beforehand
of the coming of her King; Tell the daughter of Zion. Note,
Christ will have his coming looked for, and waited for, and
his subjects big with expectation of it; Tell the daughters
of Zion, that they may go forth, and behold King Solomon,
Canticles 3:11. Notices of Christ's coming are usually
ushered in with a Behold! A note commanding both attention
and admiration; Behold thy King cometh; behold, and wonder
at him, behold, and welcome him. Here is a royal progress
truly admirable. Pilate, like Caiaphas, said he knew not
what, in that great word (John 14:14), Behold your King.
2. How his coming is described. When
a king comes, something great and magnificent is expected,
especially when he comes to take possession of his kingdom.
The King, the Lord of hosts, was seen upon a throne, high
and lifted up (Isaiah 6:1); but there is nothing of that
here; Behold, he cometh to thee, meek, and sitting upon an
ass. When Christ would appear in his glory, it is in his
meekness, not in his majesty.
(1.) His temper is very mild. He
comes not in wrath to take vengeance, but in mercy to work
salvation. He is meek to suffer the greatest injuries and
indignities for Zion's cause, meek to bear with the follies
and unkindness of Zion's own children. He is easy of access,
easy to be entreated. He is meek not only as a Teacher, but
as a Ruler; he rules by love. His government is mild and
gentle, and his laws not written in the blood of his
subjects, but in his own. His yoke is easy.
(2.) As an evidence of this, his
appearance is very mean, sitting upon an ass, as creature
made not for state, but service, not for battles, but for
burdens; slow in its motions, but sure, and safe, and
constant. The foretelling of this so long before, and the
care taken that it should be exactly fulfilled, intimate it
to have a peculiar significance, for the encouragement of
poor souls to apply themselves to Christ. Zion's King comes
riding, not on a prancing horse, which the timorous
petitioner dares not come near, or a running horse, which
the slow-footed petitioner cannot keep pace with, but on a
quiet ass, that the poorest of his subjects may not be
discouraged in their access to him. Mention is made in the
prophecy of a colt, the foal of an ass; and therefore Christ
sent for the colt with the ass, that the scripture might be
fulfilled.
III. The procession itself, which
was answerable to the preparation, both being destitute of
worldly pomp, and yet both accompanied with a spiritual
power.
Observe, 1. His equipage; The
disciples did as Jesus commanded them (verse 6); they went
to fetch the ass and the colt, not doubting but to find
them, and to find the owner willing to lend them. Note,
Christ's commands must not be disputed, but obeyed; and
those that sincerely obey them, shall not be balked or
baffled in it; They brought the ass and the colt. The
meanness and contemptibleness of the beast Christ rode on,
might have been made up with the richness of the trappings;
but those were, like all the rest, such as came next to
hand; they had not so much as a saddle for the ass, but the
disciples threw some of their clothes upon it, and that must
serve for want of better accommodations. Note, We ought not
to be nice or curious, or to affect exactness, in outward
conveniences. A holy indifference or neglect well becomes us
in these things: it will evidence that our heart is not upon
them, and that we have learned the apostle's rule (Romans
12:16, margin), to be content with mean things. Any thing
will serve travelers; and there is a beauty in some sort of
carelessness, a noble negligence; yet the disciples
furnished him with the best they had, and did not object the
spoiling of their clothes when the Lord had need of them.
Note, We must not think the clothes on our backs too dear to
part with for the service of Christ, for the clothing of his
poor destitute and afflicted members. I was naked, and you
clothed me, Chapter 25:36. Christ stripped himself for us.
2. His retinue; there was nothing in
this stately or magnificent. Zion's King comes to Zion, and
the daughter of Zion was told of his coming long before; yet
he is not attended by the gentlemen of the country, nor met
by the magistrates of the city in their formalities as one
might have expected; he should have had the keys of the city
presented to him, and should have been conducted with all
possible convenience to the thrones of judgment, the thrones
of the house of David; but here is nothing of all this; yet
he has his attendants, a very great multitude; they were
only the common people, the mob (the rabble we should have
been apt to call them), that graced the solemnity of
Christ's triumph, and none but such. The chief priests and
the elders afterward herded themselves with the multitude
that abused him upon the cross; but we find none of them
here joining with the multitude that did him honor. Ye see
here your calling, brethren, not many mighty, or noble,
attend on Christ, but the foolish things of this world and
base things, which are despised, 1 Corinthians 1:26, 28.
Note, Christ is honored by the multitude, more than by the
magnificence, of his followers; for he values men by their
souls, not by their preferments, names, or titles of honor.
Now, concerning this great
multitude, we are here told,
(1.) What they did; according to the
best of their capacity, they studied to do honor to Christ.
[1.] They spread their garments in the way, that he might
ride upon them. When Jehu was proclaimed king, the captains
put their garments under him, in token of their subjection
to him. Note, Those that take Christ for their King must lay
their all under his feet; the clothes, in token of the
heart; for when Christ comes, though not when any one else
comes, it must be said to the soul, Bow down, that he may go
over. Some think that these garments were spread, not upon
the ground, but on the hedges or walls, to adorn the roads;
as, to beautify a cavalcade, the balconies are hung with
tapestry. This was but a poor piece of state, yet Christ
accepted their good-will; and we are hereby taught to
contrive how to make Christ welcome, Christ and his grace,
Christ and his gospel, into our hearts and houses. How shall
we express our respects to Christ? What honor and what
dignity shall be done to him? [2.] Others cut down branches
from the trees, and strewed them in the way, as they used to
do at the feast of tabernacles, in token of liberty,
victory, and joy; for the mystery of that feast is
particularly spoken of as belonging to gospel times,
Zechariah 14:16.
(2.) What they said; They that went
before, and they that followed, were in the same tune; both
those that gave notice of his coming, and those that
attended him with their applauses, cried, saying, Hosanna to
the Son of David, verse 9. When they carried branches about
at the feast of tabernacles, they were wont to cry Hosanna,
and from thence to call their bundles of branches their
hosannas. Hosanna signifies, Save now, we beseech thee;
referring to Psalm 118:25, 26, where the Messiah is
prophesied of as the Head-stone of the corner, though the
builders refused him; and all his loyal subjects are brought
in triumphing with him, and attending him with hearty good
wishes to the prosperity of all his enterprises. Hosanna to
the Son of David is, "This we do in honor of the Son of
David."
The hosannas with which Christ was
attended bespeak two things:
[1.] Their welcoming his kingdom.
Hosanna bespeaks the same with, Blessed is he that cometh in
the name of the Lord. It was foretold concerning this Son of
David, that all nations shall call him blessed (Psalm
72:17); these here began, and all true believers in all ages
concur in it, and call him blessed; it is the genuine
language of faith. Note, First, Jesus Christ comes in the
name of the Lord; he is sanctified, and sent into the world,
as Mediator; him hath God the Father sealed. Secondly, The
coming of Christ in the name of the Lord, is worthy of all
acceptation; and we all ought to say, Blessed is he that
cometh; to praise him, and be pleased in him. Let his coming
in the name of the Lord be mentioned with strong affections,
to our comfort, and joyful acclamations, to his glory. Well
may we say, Blessed is he; for it is in him that we are
blessed. Well may we follow him with our blessings, who
meets us with his.
[2.] Their wishing well to his
kingdom; intimated in their Hosanna; earnestly desiring that
prosperity and success may attend it, and that it may be a
victorious kingdom; "Send now prosperity to that kingdom."
If they understood it of a temporal kingdom, and had their
hearts carried out thus toward that, it was their mistake,
which a little time would rectify; however, their good-will
was accepted. Note, It is our duty earnestly to desire and
pray for the prosperity and success of Christ's kingdom in
the world. Thus prayer must be made for him continually
(Psalm 72:15), that all happiness may attend his interest in
the world, and that, though he may ride on an ass, yet in
his majesty he may ride prosperously, because of that
meekness, Psalm 44:4. This we mean when we pray, Thy kingdom
come. They add, Hosanna in the highest: Let prosperity in
the highest degree attend him, let him have a name above
every name, a throne above every throne; or, Let us praise
him in the best manner for his church ascend to heaven, to
the highest heavens, and fetch in peace and salvation from
thence. See Psalm 20:6. The Lord saves his Anointed, and
will hear from his high, his holy heaven.
3. We have here his entertainment in
Jerusalem (verse 10); When he was come into Jerusalem, all
the city was moved; every one took notice of him, some were
moved with wonder at the novelty of the thing, others with
laughter at the meanness of it; some perhaps were moved with
joy, who waited for the Consolation of Israel; others, of
the Pharisaical class, were moved with envy and indignation.
So various are the motions in the minds of men upon the
approach of Christ's kingdom!
Upon this commotion we are further
told,
(1.) What the citizens said; Who is
this? [1.] They were, it seems, ignorant concerning Christ.
Though he was the Glory of his people Israel, yet Israel
knew him not; though he had distinguished himself by the
many miracles he wrought among them, yet the daughters of
Jerusalem knew him not from another beloved, Canticles verse
9. The Holy One unknown in the holy city! In places where
the clearest light shines, and the greatest profession of
religion is made, there is more ignorance than we are. [2.]
Yet they were inquisitive concerning him. Who is this that
is thus cried, and comes with so much observation? Who is
this King of glory, that demands admission into our hearts?
Psalm 24:8; Isaiah 63:1.
(2.) How the multitude answered
them; This is Jesus, verse 11. The multitude were better
acquainted with Christ than the great ones. Vox populi--The
voice of the people, is sometimes Vox Dei--the voice of God.
Now, in the account they give of him, [1.] They were right
in calling him the Prophet, that great Prophet. Hitherto he
had been known as a Prophet, teaching and working miracles;
now they attend him as a King; Christ's priestly office was,
of all the three, last discovered. [2.] Yet they missed it,
in saying he was of Nazareth; and it helped to confirm some
in their prejudices against him. Note, Some that are willing
to honor Christ, and bear their testimony to him, yet labor
under mistakes concerning him, which would be rectified if
they would take pains to inform themselves.
The Profaners of the Temple
Punished.
Matthew 21:12-17 --
12 And Jesus went into the temple of
God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the
temple, and overthrew the tables of the money-changers, and
the seats of them that sold doves, 13 And said unto them,
It is written, My house shall be
called the house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of
thieves. 14 And the blind and
the lame came to him in the temple; and he healed them. 15
And when the chief priests and scribes saw the wonderful
things that he did, and the children crying in the temple,
and saying, Hosanna to the Son of David; they were sore
displeased, 16 And said unto him, Hearest thou what these
say? And Jesus saith unto them,
Yea; have ye never read, Out of the mouth of babes and
sucklings thou hast perfected praise?
17 And he left them, and went out of
the city into Bethany; and he lodged there.
When Christ came into Jerusalem, he
did not go up to the court or the palace, though he came in
as a King, but into the temple; for his kingdom is
spiritual, and not of this world; it is in holy things that
he rules, in the temple of God that he exercises authority.
Now, what did he do there?
I. Thence he drove the buyers and
sellers. Abuses must first be purged out, and the plants not
of God's planting be plucked up, before that which is right
can be established. The great Redeemer appear as a great
Reformer, that turns away ungodliness, Romans 11:26. Here we
are told,
1. What he did (verse 12); He cast
out all them that sold and bought; he had done this once
before (John 2:14, 15), but there was occasion to do it
again. Note, Buyers and sellers driven out of the temple,
will return and nestle there again, if there be not a
continual care and oversight to prevent it, and if the blow
be not followed, and often repeated.
(1.) The abuse was, buying and
selling, and changing money, in the temple. Note, Lawful
things, ill timed and ill placed, may become sinful things.
That which was decent enough in another place, and not only
lawful, but laudable, on another day, defiles the sanctuary,
and profanes the Sabbath. This buying and selling, and
changing money, though secular employments, yet had the
pretence of being in ordine ad spiritualia--for spiritual
purposes. They sold beasts for sacrifice, for the
convenience of those that could more easily bring their
money with them than their beast; and they changed money for
those that wanted the half shekel, which was their yearly
poll, or redemption-money; or, upon the bills of return; so
that this might pass for the outward business of the house
of God; and yet Christ will not allow of it. Note, Great
corruptions and abuses come into the church by the practices
of those whose gain is godliness, that is, who make worldly
gain the end of their godliness, and counterfeit godliness
their way to worldly gain (1 Timothy 6:5); from such
withdraw thyself.
(2.) The purging out of this abuse.
Christ cast them out that sold. He did it before with a
scourge of small cords (John 2:15); now he did it with a
look, with a frown, with a word of command. Some reckon this
none of the least of Christ's miracles, that he should
himself thus clear the temple, and not be opposed in it by
them who by this craft got their living, and were backed in
it by the priests and elders. It is an instance of his power
over the spirits of men, and the hold he has of them by
their own consciences. This was the only act of regal
authority and coercive power that Christ did in the days of
his flesh; he began with it, John 2. and here ended with it.
Tradition says, that his face shone, and beams of light
darted from his blessed eyes, which astonished these
market-people, and compelled them to yield to his command;
if so, the scripture was fulfilled, Proverbs 20:8, A King
that sits in the throne of judgment scatters away all evil
with his eyes. He overthrew the tables of the
money-changers; he did not take the money to himself, but
scattered it, threw it to the ground, the fittest place for
it. The Jews, in Esther's time, on the spoil laid not their
hand, Esther 9:10.
2. What he said, to justify himself,
and to convict them (verse 13); It is written. Note, In the
reformation of the church, the eye must be upon the
scripture, and that must be adhered to as the rule, the
pattern in the mount; and we must go no further than we can
justify ourselves with, It is written. Reformation is then
right, when corrupted ordinances are reduced to their
primitive institution.
(1.) He shows, from a scripture
prophecy, what the temple should be, and was designed to be;
My house shall be called the house of prayer; which is
quoted from Isaiah 61:7. Note, All the ceremonial
institutions were intended to be subservient to moral
duties; the house of sacrifices was to be a house of prayer,
for that was the substance and soul of all those services;
the temple was in a special manner sanctified to be a house
of prayer, for it was not only the place of that worship,
but the medium of it, so that the prayers made in or toward
that house had a particular promise of acceptance (2
Chronicles 6:21), as it was a type of Christ; therefore
Daniel looked that way in prayer; and in this sense no house
or place is now, or can be, a house of prayer, for Christ is
our Temple; yet in some sense the appointed places of our
religious assemblies may be so called, as places where
prayer is wont to be made, Acts 16:13.
(2.) He shows, from a scripture
reproof, how they had abused the temple, and perverted the
intention of it; Ye have made it a den of thieves. This is
quoted from Jeremiah 7:11, Is this house become a den of
robbers in your eyes? When dissembled piety is made the
cloak and cover of iniquity, it may be said that the house
of prayer is become a den of thieves, in which they lurk,
and shelter themselves. Markets are too often dens of
thieves, so many are the corrupt and cheating practices in
buying and selling; but markets in the temple are certainly
so, for they rob God of his honor, the worst of thieves,
Malachi 3:8. The priests lived, and lived plentifully, upon
the altar; but, not content with that, they found other ways
and means to squeeze money out of the people; and therefore
Christ here calls them thieves, for they exacted that which
did not belong to them.
II. There, in the temple, he healed
the blind and the lame, verse 14. When he had driven the
buyers and sellers out of the temple, he invited the blind
and lame into it; for he fills the hungry with good things,
but the rich he sends empty away. Christ, in the temple, by
his word there preached, and in answer to the prayers there
made, heals those that are spiritually blind and lame. It is
good coming to the temple, when Christ is there, who, as he
shows himself jealous for the honor of his temple, in
expelling those who profane it, so he shows himself gracious
to those who humbly seek him. The blind and the lame were
debarred David's palace (2 Samuel 5:8), but were admitted
into God's house; for the state and honor of his temple lie
not in those things wherein the magnificence of princes'
palaces is supposed to consist; from them blind and lame
must keep their distance, but from God's temple only the
wicked and profane. The temple was profane and abused when
it was made a market-place, but it was graced and honored
when it was made an hospital; to be doing good in God's, is
more honorable, and better becomes it, than to be getting
money there. Christ's healing was a real answer to that
question, Who is this? His works testified of him more than
the hosannas; and his healing in the temple was the
fulfilling of the promise, that the glory of the latter
house should be greater than the glory of the former.
There also he silenced the offence
which the chief priests and scribes took at the acclamations
with which he was attended, verses 15, 16. They that should
have been most forward to give him honor were his worst
enemies.
1. They were inwardly vexed at the
wonderful things that he did; they could not deny them to be
true miracles, and therefore were cut to the heart with
indignation at them, as Acts 4:16; verse 33. The works that
Christ did, recommended themselves to every man's
conscience. If they had any sense, they could not but own
the miracle of them; and if any good nature, could not but
be in love with the mercy of them: yet, because they were
resolved to oppose him, for these they envied him, and bore
him a grudge.
2. They openly quarreled at the
children's hosannas; they thought that hereby an honor was
given him, which did not belong to him, and that it looked
like ostentation. Proud men cannot bear that honor should be
done to any but to themselves, and are uneasy at nothing
more than at the just praises of deserving men. Thus Saul
envied David the women's songs; and "Who can stand before
envy?" When Christ is most honored, his enemies are most
displeased.
Just now we had Christ preferring
the blind and the lame before the buyers and sellers; now
here we have him (verse 16), taking part with the children
against priests and scribes.
Observe, (1.) The children were in
the temple, perhaps playing there; no wonder, when the
rulers make it a market-place, that the children make it a
place of pastime; but we are willing to hope that many of
them were worshipping there. Note, It is good to bring
children betimes to the house of prayer, for of such is the
kingdom of heaven. Let children be taught to keep up the
form of godliness, it will help to lead them to the power of
it. Christ has a tenderness for the lambs of his flock.
(2.) They were there crying Hosanna
to the Son of David. This they learned from those that were
grown up. Little children say and do as they hear others
say, and see others do; so easily do they imitate; and
therefore great care must be taken to set them good
examples, and no bad ones. Maxima debetur puero reverentia--Our
intercourse with the young should be conducted with the most
scrupulous care. Children will learn of those that are with
them, either to curse and swear, or to pray and praise. The
Jews did betimes teach their children to carry branches at
the feast of tabernacles, and to cry Hosanna; but God taught
them here to apply it to Christ. Note, Hosanna to the Son of
David well becomes the mouths of little children, who should
learn young the language of Canaan.
(3.) Our Lord Jesus not only allowed
it, but was very well pleased with it, and quoted a
scripture which was fulfilled in it (Psalm 8:2), or, at
least, may be accommodated to it; Out of the mouth of babes
and sucklings thou hast perfected praise; which, some think,
refers to the children's joining in the acclamations of the
people, and the women's songs with which David was honored
when he returned from the slaughter of the Philistine, and
therefore is very fitly applied here to the hosannas with
which the Son of David was saluted, now that he was entering
upon his conflict with Satan, that Goliath. Note, [1.]
Christ is so far from being ashamed of the services of
little children, that he takes particular notice of them
(and children love to be taken notice of), and is well
pleased with them. If God may be honored by babes and
sucklings, who are made to hope at the best, much more by
children who are grown up to maturity and some capacity.
[2.] Praise is perfected out of the mouth of such; it has a
peculiar tendency to the honor and glory of God for little
children to join in his praises; the praise would be
accounted defective and imperfect, if they had not their
share in it; which is an encouragement for children to be
good betimes, and to parents to teach them to be so; the
labor neither of the one nor of the other shall be in vain.
In the psalm it is, Thou hast ordained strength. Note, God
perfects praise, by ordaining strength out of the mouths of
babes and sucklings. When great things are brought about by
weak and unlikely instruments, God is thereby much honored,
for his strength is perfected in weakness, and the
infirmities of the babes and sucklings serve for a foil to
the divine power. That which follows in the psalm, That thou
mightest still the enemy and the avenger, was very
applicable to the priests and scribes; but Christ did not
apply it to them, but left it to them to apply it.
Lastly, Christ, having thus silenced
them, forsook them, verse 17. He left them, in prudence,
lest they should now have seized him before his hour was
come; in justice, because they had forfeited the favor of
his presence. By repining at Christ's praises we drive him
from us. He left them as incorrigible, and he went out of
the city to Bethany, which was a more quiet retired place;
not so much that he might sleep undisturbed as that he might
pray undisturbed. Bethany was but two little miles from
Jerusalem; thither he went on foot, to show that, when he
rode, it was only to fulfill the scripture. He was not
lifted up with the hosannas of the people; but, as having
forgot them, soon returned to his mean and toilsome way of
traveling.
The Barren Fig-Tree Cursed.
18 Now in the
morning as he returned into the city, he hungered. 19 And
when he saw a fig tree in the way, he came to it, and found
nothing thereon, but leaves only, and said unto it,
Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward
for ever. And presently the fig
tree withered away. 20 And when the disciples saw it, they
marveled, saying, How soon is the fig tree withered away! 21
Jesus answered and said unto them,
Verily I say unto you, If ye have
faith, and doubt not, ye shall not only do this which is
done to the fig tree, but also if ye shall say unto this
mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it
shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in
prayer, believing, ye shall receive.
Observe,
I. Christ returned in the morning to
Jerusalem, verse 18. Some think that he went out of the city
over-night, because none of his friends there durst
entertain him, for fear of the great men; yet, having work
to do there, he returned. Note, We must never be driven off
from our duty either by the malice of our foes, or the
unkindness of our friends. Though he knew that in this city
bonds and afflictions did abide him, yet none of these
things moved him. Paul followed him when he went bound in
the spirit to Jerusalem, Acts 20:22.
II. As he went, he hungered. He was
a Man, and submitted to the infirmities of nature; he was an
active Man, and was so intent upon his work, that he
neglected his food, and came out, fasting; for the zeal of
God's house did even eat him up, and his meat and drink was
to do his Father's will. He was a poor Man, and had no
present supply; he was a Man that pleased not himself, for
he would willingly have taken up with green raw figs for his
breakfast, when it was fit that he should have had something
warm.
Christ therefore hungered, that he
might have occasion to work this miracle, in cursing and so
withering the barren fig-tree, and therein might give us an
instance of his justice and his power, and both instructive.
1. See his justice, verse 19. He
went to it, expecting fruit, because it had leaves; but,
finding none, he sentenced it to a perpetual barrenness. The
miracle had its significance, as well as others of his
miracles. All Christ's miracles hitherto were wrought for
the good of men, and proved the power of his grace and
blessing (the sending the devils into the herd of swine was
but a permission); all he did was for the benefit and
comfort of his friends, none for the terror or punishment of
his enemies; but now, at last, to show that all judgment is
committed to him, and that he is able not only to save, but
to destroy, he would give a specimen of the power of his
wrath and curse; yet this not on any man, woman, or child,
because the great day of his wrath is not yet come, but on
an inanimate tree; that is set forth for an example; Come,
learn a parable of the fig-tree, Chapter 24:32. The scope of
it is the same with the parable of the fig-tree, Luke 13:6.
(1.) This cursing of the barren
fig-tree, represents the state of hypocrites in general; and
so it teaches us, [1.] That the fruit of fig-trees may
justly be expected from those that have the leaves. Christ
looks for the power of religion from those that make
profession of it; the favor of it from those that have the
show of it; grapes from the vineyard that is planted in a
fruitful hill: he hungers after it, his soul desires the
first ripe fruits. [2.] Christ's just expectations from
flourishing professors are often frustrated and
disappointed; he comes to many, seeking fruit, and finds
leaves only, and he discovers it. Many have a name to live,
and are not alive indeed; dote on the form of godliness, and
yet deny the power of it. [3.] The sin of barrenness is
justly punished with the curse and plague of barrenness; Let
no fruit grow on thee henceforward for ever. As one of the
highest blessings, and which was the first, is, Be fruitful;
so one of the saddest curses is, Be no more fruitful. Thus
the sin of hypocrites is made their punishment; they would
not do good, and therefore they shall do none; he that is
fruitless, let him be fruitless still, and lose his honor
and comfort. [4.] A false and hypocritical profession
commonly withers in this world, and it is the effect of
Christ's curse; the fig-tree that had no fruit, soon lost
its leaves. Hypocrites may look plausible for a time, but,
having no principle, no root in themselves, their profession
will soon come to nothing; the gifts wither, common graces
decay, the credit of the profession declines and sinks, and
the falseness and folly of the pretender are manifested to
all men.
(2.) It represents the state of the
nation and people of the Jews in particular; they were a
fig-tree planted in Christ's way, as a church. Now observe,
[1.] The disappointment they gave to our Lord Jesus. He came
among them, expecting to find some fruit, something that
would be pleasing to him; he hungered after it; not that he
desired a gift, he needed it not, but fruit that might
abound to a good account. But his expectations were
frustrated; he found nothing but leaves; they called Abraham
their father, but did not do the works of Abraham; they
professed themselves expectants of the promised Messiah,
but, when he came, they did not receive and entertain him.
[2.] The doom he passed upon them, that never any fruit
should grow upon them or be gathered from them, as a church
or as a people, from henceforward for ever. Never any good
came from them (except the particular persons among them
that believe), after they rejected Christ; they became worse
and worse; blindness and hardness happened to them, and grew
upon them, till they were unchurched, unpeopled, and undone,
and their place and nation rooted up; their beauty was
defaced, their privileges and ornaments, their temple, and
priesthood, and sacrifices, and festivals, and all the
glories of their church and state, fell like leaves in
autumn. How soon did their fig-tree wither away, after they
said, His blood be on us, and our children! And the Lord was
righteous in it.
2. See the power of Christ; the
former is wrapped up in the figure, but this more fully
discoursed of; Christ intending thereby to direct his
disciples in the use of their powers.
(1.) The disciples admired the
effect of Christ's curse (verse 20); They marveled; no power
could do it but his, who spoke, and it was done. They
marveled at the suddenness of the thing; How soon is the
fig-tree withered away! There was no visible cause of the
fig-tree's withering, but it was a secret blast, a worm at
the root; it was not only the leaves of it that withered,
but the body of the tree; it withered away in an instant and
became like a dry stick. Gospel curses are, upon this
account, the most dreadful--that they work insensibly and
silently, by a fire not blown, but effectually.
(2.) Christ empowered them by faith
to do the like (verses 21, 22); as he said (John 14:12),
Greater works than these shall ye do.
Observe, [1.] The description of
this wonder-working faith; If ye have faith, and doubt not.
Note, Doubting of the power and promise of God is the great
thing that spoils the efficacy and success of faith. "If you
have faith, and dispute not" (so some read it), "dispute not
with yourselves, dispute not with the promise of God; if you
stagger not at the promise" (Romans 4:20); for, as far as we
do so, our faith is deficient; as certain as the promise is,
so confident our faith should be.
[2.] The power and prevalence of it
expressed figuratively; If ye shall say to this mountain,
meaning the mount of Olives, Be thou removed, it shall be
done. There might be a particular reason for his saying so
of this mountain, for there was a prophecy, that the mount
of Olives, which is before Jerusalem, should cleave in the
midst, and then remove, Zechariah 14: 4. Whatever was the
intent of that word, the same must be the expectation of
faith, how impossible however it might appear to sense. But
this is a proverbial expression; intimating that we are to
believe that nothing is impossible with God, and therefore
that what he has promised shall certainly be performed,
though to us it seem impossible. It was among the Jews a
usual commendation of their learned Rabbis, that they were
removers of mountains, that is, could solve the greatest
difficulties; now this may be done by faith acted on the
word of God, which will bring great and strange things to
pass.
[3.] The way and means of exercising
this faith, and of doing that which is to be done by it; All
things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye
shall receive. Faith is the soul, prayer is the body; both
together make a complete man for any service. Faith, if it
be right, will excite prayer; and prayer is not right, if it
do not spring from faith. This is the condition of our
receiving--we must ask in prayer, believing. The requests of
prayer shall not be denied; the expectations of faith shall
not be frustrated. We have many promises to this purport
from the mouth of our Lord Jesus, and all to encourage
faith, the principal grace, and prayer, the principal duty,
of a Christian. It is but ask and have, believe and receive;
and what would we more? Observe, How comprehensive the
promise is--all things whatsoever ye shall ask; this is like
all and every the premises in a conveyance. All things, in
general; whatsoever, brings it to particulars; though
generals include particulars, yet such is the folly of our
unbelief, that, though we think we assent to promises in the
general, yet we fly off when it comes to particulars, and
therefore, that we might have strong consolation, it is thus
copiously expressed, All things whatsoever.
Christ Questioned as to His
Authority.
Matthew 21:23-27 --
23 And when he was come into the
temple, the chief priests and the elders of the people came
unto him as he was teaching, and said, By what authority
doest thou these things? and who gave thee this authority?
24 And Jesus answered and said unto them,
I also will ask you one thing, which
if ye tell me, I in like wise will tell you by what
authority I do these things. 25 The baptism of John, whence
was it? from heaven, or of men?
And they reasoned with themselves, saying, If we shall say,
From heaven; he will say unto us, Why did ye not then
believe him? 26 But if we shall say, Of men; we fear the
people; for all hold John as a prophet. 27 And they answered
Jesus, and said, We cannot tell. And he said unto them,
Neither tell I you by what authority I
do these things.
Our Lord Jesus (like St. Paul after
him) preached his gospel with much contention; his first
appearance was in a dispute with the doctors in the temple,
when he was twelve years old; and here, just before he died,
we have him engaged in controversy. In this sense, he was
like Jeremiah, a man of contention; not striving, but
striven with. The great contenders with him, were, the chief
priests and the elders, the judges of two distinct courts:
the chief priests presided in the ecclesiastical court, in
all matters of the Lord, as they are called; the elders of
the people were judges of the civil courts, in temporal
matters. See an idea of both, 2 Chronicles 19:5, 8, 11.
These joined to attack Christ thinking they should find or
make him obnoxious either to the one or to the other. See
how woefully degenerate that generation was, when the
governors both in church and state, who should have been the
great promoters of the Messiah's kingdom, were the great
opposers of it! Here we have them disturbing him when he was
preaching, verse 23. They would neither receive his
instructions themselves, nor let others receive them.
Observe,
I. As soon as he came into
Jerusalem, he went to the temple, though he had been
affronted there the day before, was there in the midst of
enemies and in the mouth of danger; yet thither he went, for
there he had a fairer opportunity of doing good to souls
than any where else in Jerusalem. Though he came hungry to
the city, and was disappointed of a breakfast at the barren
fig-tree, yet, for aught that appears, he went straight to
the temple, as one that esteemed the words of God's mouth,
the preaching of them, more than his necessary food.
II. In the temple he was teaching;
he had called it a house of prayer (verse 13), and here we
have him preaching there. Note, In the solemn assemblies of
Christians, praying and preaching must go together, and
neither must encroach upon, or jostle out, the other. To
make up communion with God, we must not only speak to him in
prayer, but hear what he has to say to us by his word;
ministers must give themselves both to the word and to
prayer, Acts 6:4. Now that Christ taught in the temple, that
scripture was fulfilled (Isaiah 2:3), Let us go up to the
house of the Lord, and he will teach us his ways. The
priests of old often taught there the good knowledge of the
Lord; but they never had such a teacher as this.
III. When Christ was teaching the
people, the priests and elders came upon him, and challenged
him to produce his orders; the hand of Satan was in this, to
hinder him in his work. Note, It cannot but be a trouble to
a faithful minister, to be taken off, or diverted from,
plain and practical preaching, by an unavoidable necessity
of engaging in controversies, yet good was brought out of
this evil, for hereby occasion was given to Christ to dispel
the objections that were advanced against him, to the
greater satisfaction of his followers; and, while his
adversaries thought by their power to have silenced him, he
by his wisdom silenced them.
Now, in this dispute with them, we
may observe,
1. How he was assaulted by their
insolent demand; By what authority doest thou these things,
and who gave thee this authority? Had they duly considered
his miracles, and the power by which he wrought them, they
needed not to have asked this question; but they must have
something to say for the shelter of an obstinate infidelity.
"Thou ride in triumph into Jerusalem, receive the hosannas
of the people, controls in the temple, drives out such as
had license to be there, from the rulers of the temple, and
paid them rent; thou are here preaching a new doctrine;
whence had thou a commission to do all this? Was it from
Cæsar, or from the high priest, or from God? Produce thy
warrant, thy credentials. Dost not thou take too much upon
thee?" Note, It is good for all that take upon them to act
with authority, to put this question to themselves, "Who
gave us that authority?" For, unless a man be clear in his
own conscience concerning that, he cannot act with any
comfort or hope of success. They who run before their
warrant, run without their blessing, Jeremiah 23:21, 22.
Christ had often said it, and proved
it beyond contradiction, and Nicodemus, a master in Israel,
had owned it, that he was a teacher sent of God (John 3:2);
yet, at this time of day, when that point had been so fully
cleared and settled, they come to him with this question.
(1.) In the ostentation of their own power, as chief priests
and elders, which they thought authorized them to call him
to an account in this manner. How haughtily do they ask, Who
gave thee this authority? Intimating that he could have no
authority, because he had none from them, 1 Kings 22:24;
Jeremiah 20:1. Note, It is common for the greatest abusers
of their power to be the most rigorous assertors of it, and
to take a pride and pleasure in any thing that looks like
the exercise of it. (2.) It was to ensnare and entangle him.
Should he refuse to answer this question, they would enter
judgment against him upon Nihil dicit--He says nothing;
would condemn him as standing mute; and would insinuate to
the people, that his silence was a tacit confessing of
himself to be a usurper: should he plead an authority from
God, they would, as formerly, demand a sign from heaven, or
make his defense his offence, and accuse him of blasphemy
for it.
2. How he answered this demand with
another, which would help them to answer it themselves
(verses 24, 25); I also will ask you one thing. He declined
giving them a direct answer, lest they should take advantage
against him; but answers them with a question. Those that
are as sheep in the midst of wolves, have need to be wise as
serpents: the heart of the wise studies to answer. We must
give a reason of the hope that is in us, not only with
meekness, but with fear (1 Peter 3:15), with prudent
caution, lest truth be damaged, or ourselves endangered.
Now this question is concerning
John's baptism, here put for his whole ministry, preaching
as well as baptizing; "Was this from heaven, or of men? One
of the two it must be; either what he did was of his own
head, or he was sent of God to do it." Gamaliel's argument
turned upon this hinge (Acts 5:38, 39); either this counsel
is of men or of God. Though that which is manifestly bad
cannot be of God, yet that which is seemingly good may be of
men, nay of Satan, when he transforms himself into an angel
of light. This question was not at all shuffling, to evade
theirs; but,
(1.) If they answered this question,
it would answer theirs: should they say, against their
consciences, that John's baptism was of men, yet it would be
easy to answer, John did no miracle (John 10:41), Christ did
many; but should they say, as they could not but own, that
John's baptism was from heaven (which was supposed in the
questions sent him, John 1:21, Art thou Elias, or that
prophet?) then their demand was answered, for he bare
testimony to Christ. Note, Truths appear in the clearest
light when they are taken in their due order; the resolving
of the previous questions will be a key to the main
question.
(2.) If they refused to answer it,
that would be a good reason why he should not offer proofs
of his authority to men that were obstinately prejudiced
against the strongest conviction; it was but to cast pearls
before swine. Thus he takes the wise in their own craftiness
(1 Corinthians 3:19); and those that would not be convinced
of the plainest truths, shall be convicted of the vilest
malice, against John first, then against Christ, and in both
against God.
3. How they were hereby baffled and
run aground; they knew the truth, but would not own it, and
so were taken in the snare they laid for our Lord Jesus.
Observe,
(1.) How they reasoned with
themselves, not concerning the merits of the cause, what
proofs there were of the divine original of John's baptism;
no, their care was, how to make their part good against
Christ. Two things they considered and consulted, in this
reasoning with themselves--their credit, and their safety;
the same things which they principally aim at, who seek
their own things.
[1.] They consider their own credit,
which they would endanger if they should own John's baptism
to be of God; for then Christ would ask them, before all the
people. Why did ye not believe him? And to acknowledge that
a doctrine is from God, and yet not to receive and entertain
it, is the greatest absurdity and iniquity that a man can be
charged with. Many that will not be kept by the fear of sin
from neglecting and opposing that which they know to be true
and good are kept by the fear of shame from owning that to
be true and good which they neglect and oppose. Thus they
reject the counsel of God against themselves, in not
submitting to John's baptism, and are left without excuse.
[2.] They consider their own safety,
that they would expose themselves to the resentments of the
people, if they should say that John's baptism was of men;
We fear the people, for all hold John as a prophet. It
seems, then, First, That the people had truer sentiments of
John than the chief priests and the elders had, or, at
least, were more free and faithful in declaring their
sentiments. This people, of whom they said in their pride
that they knew not the law, and were cursed (John 7:49), it
seems, knew the gospel, and were blessed. Secondly, That the
chief priests and elders stood in awe of the common people,
which is an evidence that things were in disorder among
them, and that mutual jealousies were at a great height;
that the government was become obnoxious to the hatred and
scorn of the people, and the scripture was fulfilled, I have
made you contemptible and base, Malachi 2:8, 9. If they had
kept their integrity, and done their duty, they had kept up
their authority, and needed not to fear the people. We find
sometimes that the people feared them, and it served them
for a reason why they did not confess Christ, John 9:22,
12:42. Note, Those could not but fear the people, who
studied only how to make the people fear them. Thirdly, That
it is usually the temper even of common people to be zealous
for the honor of that which they account sacred and divine.
If they account John as a prophet, they will not endure that
it should be said, His baptism was of men; hence the hottest
contests have been about holy things. Fourthly, That the
chief priests and elders were kept from an open denial of
the truth, even against the conviction of their own minds,
not by the fear of God, but purely by the fear of the
people; as the fear of man may bring good people into a
snare (Proverbs 24:25), so sometimes it may keep bad people
from being overmuch wicked, lest they should die before
their time, Ecclesiastes 7:17. Many bad people would be much
worse than they are, if they durst.
(2.) How they replied to our Savior,
and so dropped the question. They fairly confessed We cannot
tell; that is, "We will not;" ouk oi damen--We never knew.
The more shame for them, while they pretended to be leaders
of the people, and by their office were obliged to take
cognizance of such things; when they would not confess their
knowledge, they were constrained to confess their ignorance.
And observe, by the way, when they said, We cannot tell,
they told a lie, for they knew that John's baptism was of
God. Note, There are many who are more afraid of the shame
of lying than of the sin, and therefore scruple not to speak
that which they know to be false concerning their own
thoughts and apprehensions, their affections and intentions,
or their remembering or forgetting of things, because in
those things they know nobody can disprove them.
Thus Christ avoided the snare they
laid for him, and justified himself in refusing to gratify
them; Neither tell I you by what authority I do these
things. If they be so wicked and base as either not to
believe, or not to confess, that the baptism of John was
from heaven (though it obliged to repentance, that great
duty, and sealed the kingdom of God at hand, that great
promise), they were not fit to be discoursed with concerning
Christ's authority; for men of such a disposition could not
be convinced of the truth, nay, they could not but be
provoked by it, and therefore he that is thus ignorant, let
him be ignorant still. Note, Those that imprison the truths
they know, in unrighteousness (either by not professing
them, or by not practicing according to them), are justly
denied the further truths they enquire after, Romans 1:18,
19. Take away the talent from him that buried it; those that
will not see, shall not see.
The Parable of the Two Sons.
Matthew 21:28-32 --
28 But what think ye? A certain man
had two sons; and he came to the first, and said, Son, go
work to day in my vineyard. 29 He answered and said, I will
not: but afterward he repented, and went. 30 And he came to
the second, and said likewise. And he answered and said, I
go, sir: and went not. 31 Whether of them twain did the will
of his father? They say unto
him, The first. Jesus saith unto them,
Verily I say unto you, That the
publicans and the harlots go into the kingdom of God before
you. 32 For John came unto you in the way of righteousness,
and ye believed him not: but the publicans and the harlots
believed him: and ye, when ye had seen it, repented not
afterward, that ye might believe him.
As Christ instructed his disciples
by parables, which made the instructions the more easy, so
sometimes he convinced his adversaries by parables, which
bring reproofs more close, and make men, or ever they are
aware, to reprove themselves. Thus Nathan convinced David by
a parable (2 Samuel 22:1), and the woman of Tekoa surprised
him in like manner, 2 Samuel 14:2: Reproving parables are
appeals to the offenders themselves, and judge them out of
their own mouths. This Christ designs here, as appears by
the first words (verse 28), But what think you?
In these verses we have the parable
of the two sons sent to work in the vineyard, the scope of
which is to show that they who knew not John's baptism to be
of God, were shamed even by the publicans and harlots, who
knew it, and owned it. Here is,
I. The parable itself, which
represents two sorts of persons; some that prove better than
they promise, represented by the first of those sons; others
that promise better than they prove represented by the
second.
1. They had both one and the same
father, which signifies that God is a common Father to all
mankind. There are favors which all alike receive from him,
and obligations which all alike lie under to him; Have we
not all one Father? Yes, and yet there is a vast difference
between men's characters.
2. They had both the same command
given them; Son, go work to-day in my vineyard. Parents
should not breed up their children in idleness; nothing is
more pleasing, and yet nothing more pernicious, to youth
than that. Lamentations 3:27. God sets his children to work,
though they are all heirs. This command is given to every
one of us. Note, (1.) The work of religion, which we are
called to engage in, is vineyard work, creditable,
profitable, and pleasant. By the sin of Adam we were turned
out to work upon the common, and to eat the herb of the
field; but by the grace of our Lord Jesus we are called to
work again in the vineyard. (2.) The gospel call to work in
the vineyard, requires present obedience; Son, go work
to-day, while it is called to-day, because the night comes
when no man can work. We were not sent into the world to be
idle, nor had we daylight given us to play by; and
therefore, if ever we mean to do any thing for God and our
souls, why not now? Why not to-day? (3.) The exhortation to
go work to-day in the vineyard, speaks unto us as unto
children (Hebrews 12:5); Son, go work. It is the command of
a Father, which carries with it both authority and
affection, a Father that pities his children, and considers
their frame, and will not overly task them (Psalm 103:13,
14), a Father that is very tender of his Son that serves
him, Malachi 3:17. If we work in our Father's vineyard, we
work for ourselves.
3. Their conduct was very different.
(1.) One of the sons did better than
he said, proved better than he promised. His answer was bad,
but his actions were good.
[1.] Here is the untoward answer
that he gave to his father; he said, flat and plain I will
not. See to what a degree of impudence the corrupt nature of
man rises, to say, I will not, to the command of a Father;
such a command of such a Father; they are impudent children,
and stiff-hearted. Those that will not bend, surely they
cannot blush; if they had any degree of modesty left them,
they could not say, We will not. Jeremiah 2:25. Excuses are
bad, but downright denials are worse; yet such peremptory
refusals do the calls of the gospel often meet with. First,
Some love their ease, and will not work; they would live in
the world as leviathan in the waters, to play therein (Psalm
104:26); they do not love working. Secondly, Their hearts
are so much upon their own fields, that they are not for
working in God's vineyard. They love the business of the
world better than the business of their religion. Thus some
by the delights of sense, and others by the employments of
the world, are kept from doing that great work which they
were sent into the world about, and so stand all the day
idle.
[2.] Here is the happy change of his
mind, and of his way, upon second thought; Afterward he
repented, and went. Note, There are many who in the
beginning are wicked and willful, and very unpromising, who
afterward repent and mend, and come to something. Some that
God hath chosen, are suffered for a great while to run to a
great excess of riot; Such were some of you, 1 Corinthians
6:11. These are set forth for patterns of long-suffering, 1
Timothy 1:16. Afterward he repented. Repentance is metanoia--an
after-wit: and metameleia--an after-care. Better late than
never. Observe, When he repented he went; that was the fruit
meet for repentance. The only evidence of our repentance for
our former resistance, is, immediately to comply, and set to
work; and then what is past, shall be pardoned, and all
shall be well. See what a kind Father God is; he resents not
the affront of our refusals, as justly he might. He that
told his father to his face, that he would not do as he bid
him, deserved to be turned out of doors, and disinherited;
but our God waits to be gracious, and, not withstanding our
former follies, if we repent and mend, will favorably accept
of us; blessed be God, we are under a covenant that leaves
room for such a repentance.
(2.) The other son said better than
he did, promised better than he proved; his answer was good
but his actions bad. To him the father said likewise, verse
30. The gospel call, though very different, is, in effect,
the same to all, and is carried on with an even tenor. We
have all the same commands, engagements, encouragements,
though to some they are a savor of life unto life, to others
of death unto death. Observe,
[1.] How fairly this other son
promised; He said, I go, sir. He gives his father a title of
respect, sir. Note, It becomes children to speak
respectfully to their parents. It is one branch of that
honor which the fifth commandment requires. He professes a
ready obedience, I go; not, "I will go by and by," but,
"Ready, sir, you may depend upon it, I go just now." This
answer we should give from the heart heartily to all the
calls and commands of the word of God. See Jeremiah 3:22;
Psalm 27:8.
[2.] How he failed in the
performance; He went not. Note, There are many that give
good words, and make fair promises, in religion, and those
from some good motions for the present, that rest there, and
go no further, and so come to nothing. Saying and doing are
two things; and many there are that say, and do not; it is
particularly charged upon the Pharisees, Chapter 23:3. Many
with their mouth show much love, but their heart goes
another way. They had a good mind to be religious, but they
met with something to be done, that was too hard, or
something to be parted with, that was too dear, and so their
purposes are to no purpose. Buds and blossoms are not fruit.
II. A general appeal upon the
parable; Whether of them twain did the will of his father?
verse 31. They both had their faults, one was rude and the
other was false, such variety of exercises parents sometimes
have in the different humors of their children, and they
have need of a great deal of wisdom and grace to know what
is the best way of managing them. But the question is, Which
was the better of the two, and the less faulty? And it was
soon resolved; the first, because his actions were better
than his words, and his latter end than his beginning. This
they had learned from the common sense of mankind, who would
much rather deal with one that will be better than his word,
than with one that will be false to his word. And, in the
intention of it, they had learned from the account God gives
of the rule of his judgment (Ezekiel 18:21-24), that if the
sinner turn from his wickedness, he shall be pardoned; and
if the righteous man turn from his righteousness, he shall
be rejected. The tenor of the whole scripture gives us to
understand that those are accepted as doing their Father's
will, who, wherein they have missed it, are sorry for it,
and do better.
III. A particular application of it
to the matter in hand, verses 31, 32. The primary scope of
the parable is, to show how the publicans and harlots, who
never talked of the Messiah and his kingdom, yet entertained
the doctrine, and submitted to the discipline, of John the
Baptist, his forerunner, when the priests and elders, who
were big with expectations of the Messiah, and seemed very
ready to go into his measures, slighted John the Baptist,
and ran counter to the designs of his mission. But it has a
further reach; the Gentiles were sometimes disobedient, had
been long so, children of disobedience, like the elder son
(Titus 3:3, 4); yet, when the gospel was preached to them,
they became obedient to the faith; whereas the Jews who
said, I go, sir, promised fair (Exodus 24:7; Joshua 24:24);
yet went not; they did but flatter God with their mouth.
Psalm 73:36.
In Christ's application of this
parable, observe.
1. How he proves that John's baptism
was from heaven, and not of men. "If you cannot tell," says
Christ, "you might tell,"
(1.) By the scope of his ministry;
John came unto you in the way of righteousness. Would you
know whether John had his commission from heaven, remember
the rule of trial, By their fruits ye shall know them; the
fruits of their doctrines, the fruits of their doings.
Observe but their way, and you may trace out both their rise
and their tendency. Now it was evident that John came in the
way of righteousness. In his ministry, he taught people to
repent, and to work the works of righteousness. In his
conversation, he was a great example of strictness, and
seriousness, and contempt of the world, denying himself, and
doing good to every body else. Christ therefore submitted to
the baptism of John, because it became him to fulfill all
righteousness. Now, if John thus came in the way of
righteousness, could they be ignorant that his baptism was
from heaven, or make any doubt of it?
(2.) By the success of his ministry;
The publicans and the harlots believed him; he did abundance
of good among the worst sort of people. St. Paul proves his
apostleship by the seals of his ministry, 1 Corinthians 9:2.
If God had not sent John the Baptist, he would not have
crowned his labors with such wonderful success, nor have
made him so instrumental as he was for the conversion f
souls. If publicans and harlots believe his report, surely
the arm of the Lord is with him. The people's profiting is
the minister's best testimonial.
2. How he reproves them for their
contempt of John's baptism, which yet, for fear of the
people, they were not willing to own. To shame them for it,
he sets before them the faith, repentance, and obedience, of
the publicans and harlots, which aggravated their unbelief
and impenitence. As he shows, Chapter 11:21, that the less
likely would have repented, so here that the less likely did
repent.
(1.) The publicans and harlots were
like the first son in the parable, from whom little of
religion was expected. They promised little good, and those
that knew them promised themselves little good from them.
Their disposition was generally rude, and their conversation
profligate and debauched; and yet many of them were wrought
upon the by the ministry of John, who came in the spirit and
power of Elias. See Luke 7:29. These fitly represented the
Gentile world; for, as Dr. Whitby observes, the Jews
generally ranked the publicans with the heathen; nay, and
the heathen were represented by the Jews as harlots, and
born of harlots, John viii. 41.
(2.) The scribes and Pharisees, the chief priests and
elders, and indeed the Jewish nation in general, were like
the other son that gave good words; they made a specious
profession of religion, and yet, when the kingdom of the
Messiah was brought among them by the baptism of John, they
slighted it, they turned their back upon it, nay they lifted
up the heel against it. A hypocrite is more hardly convinced
and converted than a gross sinner; the form of godliness, if
that be rested in, becomes one of Satan's strongholds, by
which he opposes the power of godliness. It was an
aggravation of their unbelief, [1.] That John was such an
excellent person, that he came, and came to them, in the way
of righteousness. The better the means are, the greater will
the account be, if not improved. [2.] That, when they saw
the publicans and harlots go before them into the kingdom of
heaven, they did not afterward repent and believe; were not
thereby provoked to a holy emulation, Romans 11:14. Shall
publicans and harlots go away with grace and glory; and
shall not we put in for a share? Shall our inferiors be more
holy and more happy than we? They had not the wit and grace
that Esau had, who was moved to take other measures than he
had done, by the example of his younger brother, Geneses
28:6. These proud priests, that set up for leaders, scorned
to follow, though it were into the kingdom of heaven,
especially to follow publicans; through the pride of their
countenance, they would not seek after God, after Christ,
Psalm 10:4.
The Parable of the Wicked
Husbandmen.
Matthew 21:33-46 --
33 Hear another parable: There was a
certain householder, which planted a vineyard, and hedged it
round about, and digged a winepress in it, and built a
tower, and let it out to husbandmen, and went into a far
country: 34 And when the time of the fruit drew near, he
sent his servants to the husbandmen, that they might receive
the fruits of it. 35 And the husbandmen took his servants,
and beat one, and killed another, and stoned another. 36
Again, he sent other servants more than the first: and they
did unto them likewise. 37 But last of all he sent unto them
his son, saying, They will reverence my son. 38 But when the
husbandmen saw the son, they said among themselves, This is
the heir; come, let us kill him, and let us seize on his
inheritance. 39 And they caught him, and cast him out of the
vineyard, and slew him. 40 When the lord therefore of the
vineyard cometh, what will he do unto those husbandmen?
41 They say unto him, He will
miserably destroy those wicked men, and will let out his
vineyard unto other husbandmen, which shall render him the
fruits in their seasons. 42 Jesus saith unto them,
Did ye never read in the scriptures,
The stone which the builders rejected, the same is become
the head of the corner: this is the Lord's doing, and it is
marvellous in our eyes? 43 Therefore say I unto you, The
kingdom of God shall be taken from you, and given to a
nation bringing forth the fruits thereof. 44 And whosoever
shall fall on this stone shall be broken: but on whomsoever
it shall fall, it will grind him to powder.
45 And when the chief priests and
Pharisees had heard his parables, they perceived that he
spake of them. 46 But when they sought to lay hands on him,
they feared the multitude, because they took him for a
prophet.
This parable plainly sets forth the
sin and ruin of the Jewish nation; they and their leaders
are the husbandmen here; and what is spoken for conviction
to them, is spoken for caution to all that enjoy the
privileges of the visible church, not to be high-minded, but
fear.
I. We have here the privileges of
the Jewish church, represented by the letting out of a
vineyard to the husbandmen; they were as tenants holding by,
from, and under, God the great Householder. Observe,
1. How God established a church for
himself in the world. The kingdom of God upon earth is here
compared to a vineyard, furnished with all things requisite
to an advantageous management and improvement of it. (1.) He
planted this vineyard. The church is the planting of the
Lord, Isaiah 61:3. The forming of a church is a work by
itself, like the planting of a vineyard, which requires a
great deal of cost and care. It is the vineyard which his
right hand has planted (Psalm 80:15), planted with the
choicest vine (Isaiah 5:2), a noble vine, Jeremiah 2:21. The
earth of itself produces thorns and briars; but vines must
be planted. The being of a church is owing to God's
distinguishing favor, and his manifesting himself to some,
and not to others. (2.) He hedged it round about. Note,
God's church in the world is taken under his special
protection. It is a hedge round about, like that about Job
on every side (Job 1:10), a wall of fire, Zechariah 2:5.
Wherever God has a church, it is, and will always be, his
peculiar care. The covenant of circumcision and the
ceremonial law were a hedge or a wall of partition about the
Jewish church, which is taken down by Christ; who yet has
appointed a gospel order and discipline to be the hedge of
his church. He will not have his vineyard to lie in common,
that those who are without, may thrust in at pleasure; not
to lie at large, that those who are within, may lash out at
pleasure; but care is taken to set bounds about this holy
mountain. (3.) He dug a wine-press and built a tower. The
altar of burnt-offerings was the wine-press, to which all
the offerings were brought. God instituted ordinances in his
church, for the due oversight of it, and for the promoting
of its fruitfulness. What could have been done more to make
it every way convenient?
2. How he entrusted these visible
church-privileges with the nation and people of the Jews,
especially their chief priests and elders; he let it out to
them as husbandmen, not because he had need of them as
landlords have of their tenants, but because he would try
them, and be honored by them. When in Judah God was known,
and his name was great, when they were taken to be to God
for a people, and for a name, and for a praise (Jeremiah
13:11), when he revealed his word unto Jacob (Psalm 147:19),
when the covenant of life and peace was made with Levi
(Malachi 2:4, 5), then this vineyard was let out. See an
abstract of the lease, Canticles 8:11, 12. The Lord of the
vineyard was to have a thousand pieces of silver (compare
Isaiah 7:13); the main profit was to be his, but the keepers
were to have two hundred, a competent and comfortable
encouragement. And then he went into a far country. When God
had in a visible appearance settled the Jewish church at
Mount Sinai, he did in a manner withdraw; they had no more
such open vision, but were left to the written word. Or,
they imagined that he was gone into a far country, as
Israel, when they made the calf, fancied that Moses was
gone. They put far from them the evil day.
II. God's expectation of rent from
these husbandmen, verse 34. It was a reasonable expectation;
for who plants a vineyard, and eats not of the fruit
thereof? Note, From those that enjoy church-privileges, both
ministers and people, God looks for fruit accordingly. 1.
His expectations were not hasty; he did not demand a
fore-rent, though he had been at such expense upon it; but
staid till the time of the fruit drew near, as it did now
that John preached the kingdom of heaven is at hand. God
waits to be gracious, that he may give us time. 2. They were
not high; he did not require them to come at their peril,
upon penalty of forfeiting their lease if they ran
behind-hand; but he sent his servants to them, to remind
them of their duty, and of the rent-day, and to help them in
gathering in the fruit, and making return of it. These
servants were the prophets of the Old Testament, who were
sent, and sometimes directly, to the people of the Jews, to
reprove and instruct them. 3. They were not hard; it was
only to receive the fruits. He did not demand more than they
could make of it, but some fruit of that which he himself
planted--an observance of the laws and statutes he gave
them. What could have been done more reasonable? Israel was
an empty vine, nay it was become the degenerate plant of a
strange vine, and brought forth wild grapes.
III. The husbandmen's baseness in
abusing the messengers that were sent to them.
1. When he sent them his servants,
they abused them, though they represented the master
himself, and spoke in his name. Note, The calls and reproofs
of the word, if they do not engage, will but exasperate. See
here what hath all along been the lot of God's faithful
messengers, more or less; (1.) To suffer; so persecuted they
the prophets, who were hated with a cruel hatred. They not
only despised and reproached them, but treated them as the
worst of malefactors--they beat them, and killed them, and
stoned them. They beat Jeremiah, killed Isaiah, stoned
Zechariah the son of Jehoiada in the temple. If they that
live godly in Christ Jesus themselves shall suffer
persecution, much more they that press others to it. This
was God's old quarrel with the Jews, misusing his prophets,
2 Chronicles 36:16. (2.) It has been their lot to suffer
from their Master's own tenants; they were the husbandmen
that treated them thus, the chief priests and elders that
sat in Moses' chair, that professed religion and relation to
God; these were the most bitter enemies of the Lord's
prophets, that cast them out, and killed them, and said, Let
the Lord be glorified, Isaiah 66:5. See Jeremiah 20:1, 2;
26:11.
Now see, [1.] How God persevered in
his goodness to them. He sent other servants, more than the
first; though the first sped not, but were abused. He had
sent them John the Baptist, and him they had beheaded; and
yet he sent them his disciples, to prepare his way. O the
riches of the patience and forbearance of God, in keeping up
in his church a despised, persecuted ministry! [2.] How they
persisted in their wickedness. They did unto them likewise.
One sin makes way for another of the same kind. They that
are drunk with the blood of the saints, add drunkenness to
thirst, and still cry, Give, give.
2. At length, he sent them his Son;
we have seen God's goodness in sending, and their badness in
abusing, the servants; but in the latter instance both these
exceed themselves.
(1.) Never did grace appear more
gracious than in sending the Son. This was done last of all.
Note, All the prophets were harbingers and forerunners to
Christ. He was sent last; for if nothing else would work
upon them, surely this would; it was therefore served for
the ratio ultima--the last expedient. Surely they will
reverence my Son, and therefore I will send him. Note, It
might reasonably be expected that the Son of God, when he
came to his own, should be reverenced; and reverence to
Christ would be a powerful and effectual principle of
fruitfulness and obedience, to the glory of God; if they
will but reverence the Son, the point is gained. Surely they
will reverence my Son, for he comes with more authority than
the servants could; judgment is committed to him, that all
men should honor him. There is greater danger in refusing
him than in despising Moses' Law.
(2.) Never did sin appear more
sinful than in the abusing of him, which was now to be done
in two or three days. Observe,
[1.] How it was plotted (verse 38);
When they saw the Son: when he came, whom the people owned
and followed as the Messiah, who would either have the rent
paid, or go to debtor's prison for it; this touched their copyhold, and
they were resolved to make one bold push for it, and to
preserve their wealth and grandeur by taking him out of the
way, who was the only hindrance to it, and rival with them.
This is the heir, come, let us kill him. Pilate and Herod,
the princes of this world, knew not; for if they had known,
they would not have crucified the Lord of glory, 1
Corinthians 2:8. But the chief priests and elders knew
that this was the heir, at least some of them; and therefore
Come, let us kill him. Many are killed for what they have.
The chief thing they envied him, and for which they hated
and feared him, was his interest in the people, and their
hosannas, which, if he was taken off, they hope to engross
securely to themselves. They pretended that he must die, to
save the people from the Romans (John 11:50); but really he
must die, to save their hypocrisy and tyranny from that
reformation which the expected kingdom of the Messiah would
certainly bring along with it. He drives the buyers and
sellers out of the temple; and therefore let us kill him;
and then, as if the premises must of course go to the
occupant, let us seize on his inheritance. They thought, if
they could but get rid of this Jesus, they should carry all
before them in the church without control, might impose what
traditions, and force the people to what submissions, they
pleased. Thus they take counsel against the Lord and his
Anointed; but he that sits in heaven, laughs to see them
out-shot by their own bow; for, while they thought to kill
him, and so to seize on his inheritance, he went by his
cross to his crown, and they were broken pieces with a rod
of iron, and their inheritance seized. Psalm 2:2, 3, 6, 9.
[2.] How this plot was executed,
verse 39. While they were so set upon killing him, in
pursuance of their design to secure their own pomp and
power, and while he was so set upon dying, in pursuance of
his design to subdue Satan, and save his chosen, no wonder
if they soon caught him, and slew him, when his hour was
come. Though the Roman power condemned him, yet it is still
charged upon the chief priests and elders; for they were not
only the prosecutors, but the principal agents, and had the
greater sin. Ye have taken, Acts 2:23. Nay looking upon him
to be as unworthy to live, as they were unwilling he should,
they cast him out of the vineyard, out of the holy church,
which they supposed themselves to have the key of, and out
of the holy city for he was crucified without the gate,
Hebrews 13:12. As if He had been the shame and reproach, who
was the greatest glory of his people Israel. Thus they who
persecuted the servants, persecuted the Son; as men treat
God's ministers, they would treat Christ himself, if he were
with them.
IV. Here is their doom read out of
their own mouths, verses 40, 41. He puts it to them, When
the Lord of the vineyard cometh, what will he do unto these
husbandmen? He puts it to themselves, for their stronger
conviction, that knowing the judgment of God against them
which do such things, they might be the more inexcusable.
Note, God's proceedings are so unexceptionable, that there
needs but an appeal to sinners themselves concerning the
equity of them. God will be justified when he speaks. They
could readily answer, He will miserably destroy those wicked
men. Note, Many can easily prognosticate the dismal
consequences of other people's sins, that see not what will
be the end of their own.
1. Our Savior, in his question,
supposes that the lord of the vineyard will come, and reckon
with them. God is the Lord of the vineyard; the property is
his, and he will make them know it, who now lord it over his
heritage, as if it were all their own. The Lord of the
vineyard will come. Persecutors say in their hearts, He
delays his coming, he doth not see, he will not require; but
they shall find, though he bear long with them, he will not
bear always. It is comfort to abused saints and ministers,
that the Lord is at hand, the Judge stands before the door.
When he comes, what will he do to carnal professors? What
will he do to cruel persecutors? They must be called to
account, they have their day now; but he sees that his day
is coming.
2. They, in their answer, suppose
that it will be a terrible reckoning; the crime appearing so
very black, you may be sure,
(1.) That he will miserably destroy
those wicked men; it is destruction that is their doom.
Kakous kakos apolesei-Malos male perdet. Let men never
expect to do ill, and fare well. This was fulfilled upon the
Jews, in that miserable destruction which was brought upon
them by the Romans, and was completed about forty years
after this; and unparalleled ruin, attended with all the
most dismal aggravating circumstances. It will be fulfilled
upon all that tread in the steps of their wickedness; hell
is everlasting destruction, and it will be the most
miserable destruction to them of all others, that have
enjoyed the greatest share of church privileges, and have
not improved them. The hottest place in hell will be the
portion of hypocrites and persecutors.
(2.) That he will let out his
vineyard to other husbandmen. Note, God will have a church
in the world, notwithstanding the unworthiness and
opposition of many that abuse the privileges of it. The
unbelief and frowardness of man shall not make the word of
God of no effect. If one will not, another will. The Jews'
leavings were the Gentiles' feast. Persecutors may destroy
the ministers, but cannot destroy the church. The Jews
imagined that no doubt they were the people, and wisdom and
holiness must die with them; and if they were cut off, what
would God do for a church in the world? But when God makes
use of any to bear up his name, it is not because he needs
them, nor is he at all beholden to them. If we were made a
desolation and an astonishment, God could build a
flourishing church upon our ruins; for he is never at a loss
what to do for his great name, whatever becomes of us, and
of our place and nation.
V. The further illustration and
application of this by Christ himself, telling them, in
effect, that they had rightly judged.
1. He illustrates it by referring to
a scripture fulfilled in this (verse 42); Did ye never read
in the scriptures? Yes, no doubt, they had often read and
sung it, but had not considered it. We lose the benefit of
what we read for want of meditation. The scripture he quotes
is Psalm 118:22, 23, the same context out of which the
children fetched their hosannas. The same word yields matter
of praise and comfort to Christ's friends and followers,
which speaks conviction and terror to his enemies. Such a
two-edged sword is the word of God. That scripture, the
Stone which the builders refused is become the headstone of
the corner, illustrates the preceding parable, especially
that part of it which refers to Christ.
(1.) The builders' rejecting of the
stone is the same with the husbandmen's abusing of the son
that was sent to them. The chief priests and the elders were
the builders, had the oversight of the Jewish church, which
was God's building: and they would not allow Christ a place
in their building, would not admit his doctrine or laws into
their constitution; they threw him aside as a despised
broken vessel, a stone that would serve only for a
stepping-stone, to be trampled upon.
(2.) The advancing of this stone to
be the head of the corner is the same with letting out the
vineyard to other husbandmen. He who was rejected by the
Jews was embraced by the Gentiles; and to that church where
there is no difference of circumcision or un-circumcision,
Christ is all, and in all. His authority over the gospel
church, and influence upon it, his ruling it as the Head,
and uniting it as the Corner-stone, are the great tokens of
his exaltation. Thus, in spite of the malice of the priests
and elders, he divided a portion with the great, and
received his kingdom, though they would not have him to
reign over them.
(3.) The hand of God was in all
this; This is the Lord's doing. Even the rejecting of him by
the Jewish builders was by the determinate counsel and
foreknowledge of God; he permitted and overruled it; much
more was his advancement to the Head of the corner; his
right hand and his holy arm brought it about; it was God
himself that highly exalted him, and gave him a name above
every name; and it is marvelous in our eyes. The wickedness
of the Jews that rejected him is marvelous,; that men should
be so prejudiced against their own interest! See Isaiah
29:9, 10, 14. The honor done him by the Gentile world,
notwithstanding the abuses done him by his own people, is
marvelous; that he whom men despised and abhorred, should be
adored by kings! Isaiah 49:7. But it is the Lord's doing.
2. He applies it to them, and
application is the life of preaching.
(1.) He applies the sentence which
they had passed (verse 41), and turns it upon themselves;
not the former part of it, concerning the miserable
destruction of the husbandmen (he could not bear to speak of
that), but the latter part, of letting out the vineyard to
others; because though it looked black upon the Jews, it
spoke good to the Gentiles. Know then,
[1.] That the Jews shall be
unchurched; The kingdom of God shall be taken from you. This
turning out of the husbandmen speaks the same doom with that
of dismantling the vineyard, and laying it common. Isaiah
5:5. To the Jews had long pertained the adoption and the
glory (Romans 9:4); to them were committed the oracles of
God (Romans 3:2), and the sacred trust of revealed religion,
and bearing up of God's name in the world (Psalm 76:1, 2);
but now it shall be so no longer. They were not only
unfruitful in the use of their privileges, but, under
pretence of them, opposed the gospel of Christ, and so
forfeited them, and it was not long ere the forfeiture was
taken. Note, It is a righteous thing with God to remove
church privileges from those that not only sin against them,
but sin with them, Revelation 2:4, 5. The kingdom of God was
taken from the Jews, not only by the temporal judgments that
befell them, but by the spiritual judgments they lay under,
their blindness of mind, hardness of heart, and indignation
at the gospel, Romans 11:8-10; 1 Thessalonians 2:15.
[2.] That the Gentiles shall be
taken in. God needs not ask us leave whether he shall have a
church in the world; though his vine be plucked up in one
place, he will find another to plant it in. He will give it
ethnei--to the Gentile world, that will bring forth the
fruit of it. They who had been not a people, and had not
obtained mercy, became favorites of Heaven. This is the
mystery which blessed Paul was so much affected with (Romans
11:30, 33), and which the Jews were so much affronted by,
Acts 22:21, 22. At the first planting of Israel in Canaan,
the fall of the Gentiles was the riches of Israel (Psalm
135:10, 11), so, at their extirpation, the fall of Israel
was the riches of the Gentiles, Romans 11:12. It shall go to
a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof. Note, Christ
knows beforehand who will bring forth gospel fruits in the
use of gospel means; because our fruitfulness is all the
work of his own hands, and known unto God are all his works.
They shall bring forth the fruits better than the Jews had
done; God has had more glory from the New Testament church
than from that of the Old Testament; for, when he changes,
it shall not be to his loss.
(2.) He applies the scripture which
he had quoted (verse 42), to their terror, verse 44. This
Stone, which the builders refused, is set for the fall of
many in Israel; and we have here the doom of two sorts of
people, for whose fall it proves that Christ is set.
[1.] Some, through ignorance,
stumble at Christ in his estate of humiliation; when this
Stone lies on the earth, where the builders threw it, they,
through their blindness and carelessness, fall on it, fall
over it, and they shall be broken. The offence they take at
Christ, will not hurt him, any more than he that stumbles,
hurts the stone he stumbles at; but it will hurt themselves;
they will fall, and be broken, and snared, Isaiah 8:14; 1
Peter 2:7, 8. The unbelief of sinners will be their ruin.
[2.] Others, through malice, oppose
Christ, and bid defiance to him in his estate of exaltation,
when this Stone is advanced to the head of the corner; and
on them it shall fall, for they pull it on their own heads,
as the Jews did by that challenge, His blood be upon us and
upon our children, and it will grind them to powder. The
former seems to bespeak the sin and ruin of all unbelievers;
this is the greater sin, and sorer ruin, of persecutors,
that kick against the pricks, and persist in it. Christ's
kingdom will be a burthensome stone to all those that
attempt to overthrow it, or heave it out of its place; see
Zechariah 12:3. This Stone cut out of the mountain without
hands, will break in pieces all opposing power, Daniel 2:34,
35. Some make this an allusion to the manner of stoning to
death among the Jews. The malefactors were first thrown down
violently from a high scaffold upon a great stone, which
would much bruise them; but then they threw another great
stone upon them, which would crush them to pieces: one way
or other, Christ will utterly destroy all those that fight
against him. If they be so stout-hearted, that they are not
destroyed by falling on this stone, yet it shall fall on
them, and so destroy them. He will strike through kings, he
will fill the places with dead bodies, Psalm 110:5, 6. None
ever hardened his heart against God and prospered.
Lastly, The entertainment which this
discourse of Christ met with among the chief priests and
elders, that heard his parables.
1. They perceived that he spoke of
them (verse 45), and that in what they said (verse 41) they
had but read their own doom. Note, A guilty conscience needs
no accuser, and sometimes will save a minister the labor of
saying, Thou art the man. Mutato nomine, de te fabula
narratur-Change but the name, the tale is told of the. So
quick and powerful is the word of God, and such a discerner
of the thoughts and intents of the heart, that it is easy
for bad men (if conscience be not quite seared) to perceive
that it speaks of them.
2. They sought to lay hands on him.
Note, When those who hear the reproofs of the word, perceive
that it speaks of them, if it do not do them a great deal of
good, it will certainly do them a great deal of hurt. If
they be not pricked to the heart with conviction and
contrition, as they were Acts 2:37, they will be cut to the
heart with rage and indignation, as they were Acts 5:33.
3. They dared not do it, for fear of
the multitude, who took him for a prophet, though not for
the Messiah; this served to keep the Pharisees in awe. The
fear of the people restrained them from speaking ill of John
(5:26), and here from doing ill to Christ. Note, God has
many ways of restraining the remainders of wrath, as he has
of making that which breaks out redound to his praise, Psalm
76:10.
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