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Matthew Chapter 25
Commentary by Matthew Henry
This chapter continues and concludes
our Savior's discourse, which began in the foregoing
chapter, concerning his second coming and the end of the
world. This was his farewell sermon of caution, as that,
John 14:15, 16, was of comfort to his disciples; and they
had need of both in a world of so much temptation and
trouble as this is. The application of that discourse, was,
Watch therefore, and be ye also ready. Now, in prosecution
of these serious awakening cautions, in this chapter we have
three parables, the scope of which is the same--to quicken
us all with the utmost care and diligence to get ready for
Christ's second coming, which, in all his farewells to his
church, mention was made of, as in that before he died (John
14:2), in that at his ascension (Acts 1:11), and in that at
the shutting up of the canon of the scriptures, Revelation
22:20. Now it concerns us to prepare for Christ's coming; I.
That we may then be ready to attend upon him; and this is
shown in the parable of the ten virgins, verses 1-13. II.
That we may then be ready to give u our account to him; and
this is shown in the parable of the three servants, verses
14-30. III. That we may then be ready to receive from him
our final sentence, and that it may be to eternal life; and
this is shown in a more plain description of the process of
the last judgment, verses 31-46. These are things of awful
consideration, because of everlasting concern to every one
of us.
The Parable of the Ten Virgins.
Matthew 25:1-13 --
1 Then shall the kingdom of heaven be
likened unto ten virgins, which took their lamps, and went
forth to meet the bridegroom. 2 And five of them were wise,
and five were foolish. 3 They that were foolish took their
lamps, and took no oil with them: 4 But the wise took oil in
their vessels with their lamps. 5 While the bridegroom
tarried, they all slumbered and slept. 6 And at midnight
there was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye
out to meet him. 7 Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed
their lamps. 8 And the foolish said unto the wise, Give us
of your oil; for our lamps are gone out. 9 But the wise
answered, saying, Not so; lest there be not enough for us
and you: but go ye rather to them that sell, and buy for
yourselves. 10 And while they went to buy, the bridegroom
came; and they that were ready went in with him to the
marriage: and the door was shut. 11 Afterward came also the
other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. 12 But he
answered and said, Verily I say unto you, I know you not. 13
Watch therefore, for ye know neither the day nor the hour
wherein the Son of man cometh.
Here,
I. That in general which is to be
illustrated is, the kingdom of heaven, the state of things
under the gospel, the external kingdom of Christ, and the
administration and success of it. Some of Christ's parables
had shown us what it is like now in the present reception of
it, as Chapter 13: This tells us what it shall be like, when
the mystery of God shall be finished, and that kingdom
delivered up to the Father. The administration of Christ's
government, towards the ready and the unready in the great
day, may be illustrated by this similitude; or the kingdom
is put for the subjects of the kingdom. The professors of
Christianity shall then be likened to these ten virgins, and
shall be thus distinguished.
II. That by which it is illustrated,
is, a marriage solemnity. It was a custom sometimes used
among the Jews on that occasion, that the bridegroom came,
attended with his friends, late in the night, to the house
of the bride, where she expected him, attended with her
bride-maids; who, upon notice given of the bridegrooms'
approach, were to go out with lamps in their hands, to light
him into the house with ceremony and formality, in order to
the celebrating of the nuptials with great mirth. And some
think that on these occasions they had usually ten virgins;
for the Jews never held a synagogue, circumcised, kept the
Passover, or contracted marriage, but ten persons at least
were present. Boaz, when he married Ruth, had ten witnesses,
Ruth 4:2. Now in this parable,
1. The Bridegroom is our Lord Jesus
Christ; he is so represented in the 45th Psalm, Solomon's
Song, and often in the New Testament. It bespeaks his
singular and superlative love to, and his faithful and
inviolable covenant with, his spouse the church. Believers
are now betrothed to Christ (Hosea 2:19); but the
solemnizing of the marriage is reserved for the great day,
when the bride, the Lamb's wife, will have made herself
completely ready, Revelation 19:7, 9.
2. The virgins are the professors of
religion, members of the church; but here represented as her
companions (Psalm 45:14), as elsewhere her children (Isaiah
l4:1), her ornaments, Isaiah 49:18. They that follow the
Lamb, are said to be virgins (Revelation 14:4); this denotes
their beauty and purity; they are to be presented as chaste
virgins to Christ, 2 Corinthians 11:2. The bridegroom is a
king; so these virgins are maids of honor, virgins without
number (Canticles 6:8), yet here said to be ten.
3. The office of these virgins is to
meet the bridegroom, which is as much their happiness as
their duty. They come to wait upon the bridegroom when he
appears, and in the mean time to wait for him. See here the
nature of Christianity. As Christians, we profess ourselves
to be, (1.) Attendants upon Christ, to do him honor, as the
glorious Bridegroom, to be to him for a name and a praise,
especially then when he shall come to be glorified in his
saints. We must follow him as honorary servants do their
masters, John 12:26. Hold up the name, and hold forth the
praise of the exalted Jesus; this is our business. (2.)
Expectants of Christ, and of his second coming. As
Christians, we profess, not only to believe and look for,
but to love and long for, the appearing of Christ, and to
act in our whole conversation with a regard to it. The
second coming of Christ is the centre in which all the lines
of our religion meet, and to which the whole of the divine
life hath a constant reference and tendency.
4. Their chief concern is to have
lights in their hands, when they attend the bridegroom, thus
to do him honor and do him service. Note, Christians are
children of light. The gospel is light, and they who receive
it must not only be enlightened by it themselves, but must
shine as lights, must hold it forth, Philippians 2:15, 16.
This in general.
Now concerning these ten virgins, we
may observe,
(1.) Their different character, with
the proof and evidence of it.
[1.] Their character was that five
were wise, and five foolish (verse 2); and wisdom excels
folly, as far as light excels darkness; so says Solomon, a
competent judge, Ecclesiastes 2:13. Note, Those of the same
profession and denomination among men, may yet be of
characters vastly different in the sight of God. Sincere
Christians are the wise virgins, and hypocrites the foolish
ones, as in another parable they are represented by wise and
foolish builders. Note, Those are wise or foolish indeed,
that are so in the affairs of their souls. True religion is
true wisdom; sin is folly, but especially the sin of
hypocrisy, for those are the greatest fools, that are wise
in their own conceit, and those the worst of sinners, that
feign themselves just men. Some observe from the equal
number of the wise and foolish, what a charitable decorum
(it is Archbishop Tillotson's expression) Christ observes,
as if he would hope that the number of true believers was
nearly equal to that of hypocrites, or, at least, would
teach us to hope the best concerning those that profess
religion, and to think of them with a bias to the charitable
side. Though, in judging of ourselves, we ought to remember
that the gate is strait, and few find it; yet, in judging of
others, we ought to remember that the Captain of our
salvation brings many sons to glory.
[2.] The evidence of this character
was in the very thing which they were to attend to; by that
they are judged of.
First, It was the folly of the
foolish virgins, that they took their lamps, and took no oil
with them, verse 3. They had just the oil enough to make
their lamps burn for the present, to make a show with, as if
they intended to meet the bridegroom; but no cruse or bottle
of oil with them for a recruit if the bridegroom tarried;
thus hypocrites,
1. They have no principle within.
They have a lamp of profession in their hands, but have not
in their hearts that stock of sound knowledge, rooted
dispositions, and settled resolutions, which is necessary to
carry them through the services and trials of the present
state. They act under the influence of external inducements,
but are void of spiritual life; like a tradesman, that sets
up without a stock, or the seed on the stony ground, that
wanted root.
2. They have no prospect of, nor
make provision for, what is to come. They took lamps for a
present show, but not oil for after use. This incognizance
is the ruin of many professors; all their care is to
recommend themselves to their neighbors, whom they now
converse with, not to approve themselves to Christ, whom
they must hereafter appear before; as if any thing will
serve, provide it will but serve for the present. Tell them
of things not seen as yet, and you are like Lot to his
sons-in-law, as one that mocked. They do not provide for
hereafter, as the ant does, nor lay up for the time to come,
1 Timothy 6:19.
Secondly, It was the wisdom of the
wise virgins, that they took oil in their vessels with their
lamps, verse 4. They had a good principle within, which
would maintain and keep up their profession. 1. The heart is
the vessel, which it is our wisdom to get furnished; for,
out of a good treasure there, good things must be brought;
but if that root be rottenness, the blossom will be dust. 2.
Grace is the oil which we must have in this vessel; in the
tabernacle there was constant provision made of oil for the
light, Exodus 25:14. Our light must shine before men in good
works, but this cannot be, or not long, unless there be a
fixed active principle in the heart, of faith in Christ, and
love to God and our brethren, from which we must act in
every thing we do in religion, with an eye to what is before
us. They that took oil in their vessels did it upon
supposition that perhaps the bridegroom might tarry. Note,
In looking forward it is good to prepare for the worst, to
lay in for a long siege. But remember that this oil which
keeps the lamps burning, is derived to the candlestick from
Jesus Christ, the great and good Olive, by the golden pipes
of the ordinances, as it is represented in that vision
(Zechariah 4:2, 3, 12), which is explained John 1:16, Of his
fullness have all we received, and grace for grace.
(2.) Their common fault, during the
bridegroom's delay; They all slumbered and slept, verse 5.
Observe here,
[1.] The bridegroom tarried, that
is, he did not come out so soon as they expected. What we
look for as certain, we are apt to think is very near; many
in the apostles' times imagined that the day of the Lord was
at hand, but it is not so. Christ, as to us, seems to tarry,
and yet really does not, Habakkuk 2:3. There is good reason
for the Bridegroom's tarrying; there are many intermediate
counsels and purposes to be accomplished, the elect must all
be called in, God's patience must be manifested, and the
saints' patience tried, the harvest of the earth must be
ripened, and so must the harvest of heaven too. But though
Christ tarry past our time, he will not tarry past the due
time.
[2.] While he tarried, those that
waited for him, grew careless, and forgot what they were
attending; They all slumbered and slept; as if they had
given over looking for him; for when the Son of man cometh,
he will not find faith, Luke 18:8. Those that inferred the
suddenness of it from its certainty, when that answered not
their expectation, were apt from the delay to infer its
uncertainty. The wise virgins slumbered, and the foolish
slept; so some distinguish it; however, they were both
faulty. The wise virgins kept their lamps burning, but did
not keep themselves awake. Note, Too many good Christians,
when they have been long in profession, grow remiss in their
preparations for Christ's second coming; they intermit their
care, abate their zeal, their graces are not lively, nor
their works found perfect before God; and though all love be
not lost, yet the first love is left. If it was hard to the
disciples to watch with Christ an hour, much more to watch
with him an age. I sleep, says the spouse, but my heart
wakes, Observe, First, They slumbered, and then they slept.
Note, One degree of carelessness and remissness makes way
for another. Those that allow themselves in slumbering, will
scarcely keep themselves from sleeping; therefore dread the
beginning of spiritual decays; Venienti occurrite morbo--Attend
to the first symptoms of disease. The ancients generally
understood the virgins' slumbering and sleeping of their
dying; they all died, wise and foolish (Psalm 49:10), before
judgment-day. So Ferus, Antequam veniat sponsus omnibus
obdormiscendum est, hoc est, moriendum--Before the
Bridegroom come, all must sleep, that is, die. So Calvin.
But I think it is rather to be taken as we have opened it.
(3.) The surprising summons given
them, to attend the bridegroom (verse 6); At midnight there
was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh. Note, [1.]
Though Christ tarry long, he will come at last; though he
seem slow, he is sure. In his first coming, he was thought
long by those that waited for the consolation of Israel; yet
in the fullness of time he came; so his second coming,
though long deferred, is not forgotten; his enemies shall
find, to their cost, that forbearance is no acquittal; and
his friends shall find, to their comfort, that the vision is
for an appointed time, and at the end it shall speak, and
not lie. The year of the redeemed is fixed, and it will
come. [2.] Christ's coming will be at our midnight, when we
least look for him, and are most disposed to take our rest.
His coming for the relief and comfort of his people, often
is when the good intended seems to be at the greatest
distance; and his coming to reckon with his enemies, is when
they put the evil day furthest from them. It was at midnight
that the first-born of Egypt were destroyed, and Israel
delivered, Exodus 12:29. Death often comes when it is least
expected; the soul is required this night, Luke 12:20.
Christ will come when he pleases, to show his sovereignty,
and will not let us know when, to teach us our duty. [3.]
When Christ comes, we must go forth to meet him. As
Christians we are bound to attend all the motions of the
Lord Jesus, and meet him in all his out-goings. When he
comes to us at death, we must go forth out of the body, out
of the world, to meet him with affections and workings of
soul suitable to the discoveries we then expect him to make
of himself. Go ye forth to meet him, is a call to those who
are habitually prepared, to be actually ready. [4.] The
notice given of Christ's approach, and the call to meet him,
will be awakening; There was a cry made. His first coming
was not with any observation at all, nor did they say, Lo,
here is Christ, or Lo, he is there; he was in the world, and
the world knew him not; but his second coming will be with
the observation of all the world; Every eye shall see him.
There will be a cry from heaven, for he shall descend with a
shout, Arise, ye dead, and come to judgment; and a cry from
the earth too, a cry to rocks and mountains, Revelation
6:16.
(4.) The address they all made to
answer this summons (verse 7); They all arose, and trimmed
their lamps, snuffed them and supplied them with oil and
went about with all expedition to put themselves in a
posture to receive the bridegroom. Now, [1.] This, in the
wise virgins, bespeaks an actual preparation for the
Bridegroom's coming. Note, even those that are best prepared
for death, have, upon the immediate arrests of it, work to
do, to get themselves actually ready, that they may be found
in peace (2 Peter 3:14), found doing (Chapter 24:46), and
not found naked, 2 Corinthians 5:3. It will be a day of
search and enquiry; and it concerns us to think how we shall
then be found. When we see the day approaching, we must
address ourselves to our dying work with all seriousness,
renewing our repentance for sin, our consent to the
covenant, our farewells to the world; and our souls must be
carried out toward God in suitable breathings. [2.] In the
foolish virgins, it denotes a vain confidence, and conceit
of the goodness of their state, and their readiness for
another world. Note, Even counterfeit graces will serve a
man to make a show of when he comes to die, as well as they
have done all his life long; the hypocrite's hopes blaze
when they are just expiring, like a lightening before death.
(5.) The distress which the foolish
virgins were in, for want of oil, verses 8, 9. This
bespeaks, [1.] The apprehensions which some hypocrites have
of the misery of their state, even on this side death, when
God opens their eyes to see their folly, and themselves
perishing with a lie in their right hand. Or, however, [2.]
The real misery of their state on the other side death, and
in the judgment; how far their fair, but false, profession
of religion will be from availing them any thing in the
great day; see what comes of it.
First, Their lamps are gone out. The
lamps of hypocrites often go out in this life; when they who
have begun in the spirit, end in the flesh, and the
hypocrisy breaks out in an open apostasy, 2 Peter 2:20. The
profession withers, and the credit of it is lost; the hopes
fail, and the comfort of them is gone; how often is the
candle of the wicked thus put out? Job 21:17. Yet many a
hypocrite keeps up his credit, and the comfort of his
profession, such as it is, to the last; but what is it when
God takes away his soul? Job 27:8. If his candle be not put
out before him, it is put out with him, Job 18:5, 6. He
shall lie down in sorrow, Isaiah 1:11. The gains of a
hypocritical profession will not follow a man to judgment,
Chapter 7:22, 23. The lamps are gone out, when the
hypocrite's hope proves like the spider's web (Job 8:11 &
context), and like the giving up of the ghost (Job 11:20),
like Absalom's mule that left him in the oak.
Secondly, They wanted oil to supply
them when they were going out. Note, Those that take up
short of true grace, will certainly find the want of it one
time or other. An external profession well-humored may carry
a man far, but it will not carry him through; it may light
him along this world, but the damps of the valley of the
shadow of death will put it out.
Thirdly, They would gladly be
beholden to the wise virgins for a supply out of their
vessels; Give us of your oil. Note, The day is coming, when
carnal hypocrites would gladly be found in the condition of
true Christians. Those who now hate the strictness of
religion, will, at death and judgment, wish for the solid
comforts of it. Those who care not to live the life, yet
would die the death, of the righteous. The day is coming
when those who now look with contempt upon humble contrite
saints, would gladly get an interest in them, and would
value those as their best friends and benefactors, whom now
they set with the dogs of their flock. Give us of your oil;
that is, "Speak a good word for us;" so some; but there is
no occasion for vouchers in the great day, the Judge knows
what is every man's true character. But is it not well that
they are brought to say, Give us of your oil? It is so; but,
1. This request was extorted by sensible necessity. Note,
Those will see their need of grace hereafter, when it should
save them, who will not see their need of grace now, when it
should sanctify and rule them. (2.) It comes too late. God
would have given them oil, had they asked in time; but there
is no buying when the market is over, no bidding when the
inch of candle is dropped.
Fourthly, They were denied a share
in their companions' oil. It is a sad presage of a repulse
with God, when they were thus repulsed by good people. The
wise answered, Not so; that peremptory denial is not in the
original, but supplied by the translators: these wise
virgins would rather give a reason without a positive
refusal, than (as many do) give a positive refusal without a
reason. They were well inclined to help their neighbors in
distress; but, We must not, we cannot, we dare not, do it,
lest there be not enough for us and you; charity begins at
home; but go, and buy for yourselves. Note, 1. Those that
would be saved, must have grace of their own. Though we have
benefit by the communion of saints, and the faith and
prayers of others may now redound to our advantage, yet our
own sanctification is indispensably necessary to our own
salvation. The just shall live by his faith. Every man shall
give account of himself, and therefore let every man prove
his own work; for he cannot get another to muster for him in
that day. 2. Those that have most grace, have none to spare;
all we have, is little enough for ourselves to appear before
God in. The best have need to borrow from Christ, but they
have none to lend to any of their neighbors. The church of
Rome, which dreams of works of supererogation and the
imputation of the righteousness of saints, forgets that it
was the wisdom of the wise virgins to understand that they
had but oil enough for themselves, and none for others. But
observe, These wise virgins do not upbraid the foolish with
their neglect, nor boast of their own forecast, nor torment
them with suggestions tending to despair, but give them the
best advice the case will bear, Go ye rather to them that
sell. Note, Those that deal foolishly in the affairs of
their souls, are to be pitied, and not insulted over; for
who made thee to differ? When ministers attend such as have
been mindless of God and their souls all their days, but are
under death-bed convictions; and, because true repentance is
never too late, direct them to repent, and turn to God, and
close with Christ; yet, because late repentance is seldom
true, they do but as these wise virgins did by the foolish,
even made the best of bad. They can but tell them what is to
be done, if it be not too late, but whether the door may not
be shut before it is done, is an unspeakable hazard. It is
good advice now, if it be taken in time, Go to them that
sell, and buy for yourselves. Note, Those that would have
grace, must have recourse to, and attend upon, the means of
grace. See Isaiah 55:1.
(6.) The coming of the bridegroom,
and the issue of all this different character of the wise
and foolish virgins. See what came of it.
[1.] While they went out to buy, the
bridegroom came. Note, With regard to those that put off
their great work to the last, it is a thousand to one, that
they have not time to do it then. Getting grace is a work of
time, and cannot be done in a hurry. While the poor awakened
soul addresses itself, upon a sick bed, to repentance and
prayer, in awful confusion, it scarcely knows which end to
begin at, or what to do first; and presently death comes,
judgment comes, and the work is undone, and the poor sinner
undone for ever. This comes of having oil to buy when we
should burn it, and grace to get when we should use it.
The bridegroom came. Note, Our Lord
Jesus will come to his people, at the great day, as a
Bridegroom; will come in pomp and rich attire, attended with
his friends: now that the Bridegroom is taken away from us,
we fast (Chapter 9:15), but then will be an everlasting
feast. Then the Bridegroom will fetch home his bride, to be
where he is (John 17:24), and will rejoice over his bride,
Isaiah 52:5.
[2.] They that were ready, went in
with him to the marriage. Note, First, To be eternally
glorified is to go in with Christ to the marriage, to be in
his immediate presence, and in the most intimate fellowship
and communion with him in a state of eternal rest, joy, and
plenty. Secondly, Those, and those only, shall go to heaven
hereafter, that are made ready for heaven here, that are
wrought to the self-same thing, 2 Corinthians 5:5. Thirdly,
The suddenness of death, and of Christ's coming to us then,
will be no obstruction to our happiness, if we have been
habitually prepared.
[3.] The door was shut, as is usual
when all the company is come, that are to be admitted. The
door was shut, First, To secure those that were within;
that, being now made pillars in the house of our God, they
may go no more out, Revelation 3:12. Adam was put into
paradise, but the door was left open and so he went out
again; but when glorified saints are put into the heavenly
paradise, they are shut in. Secondly, To exclude those that
were out. The state of saints and sinners will then be
unalterably fixed, and those that are shut out then, will be
shut out for ever. Now the gate is strait, yet it is open;
but then it will be shut and bolted, and a great gulf fixed.
This was like the shutting of the door of the ark when Noah
was in; as he was thereby preserved, so all the rest were
finally abandoned.
[4.] The foolish virgins came when
it was too late (verse 11); Afterward came also the other
virgins. Note, First, There are many that will seek
admission into heaven when it is too late; as profane Esau,
who afterward would have inherited the blessing. God and
religion will be glorified by those late solicitations,
though sinners will not be saved by them; it is for the
honor of Lord, Lord, that, of fervent and importunate
prayer, that those who slight it now, will flee to it
shortly, and it will not be called whining and canting then.
Secondly, The vain confidence of hypocrites will carry them
very far in their expectations of happiness. They go to
heaven-gate, and demand entrance, and yet are shut out;
lifted up to heaven in a fond conceit of the goodness of
their state, and yet thrust down to hell.
[5.] They were rejected, as Esau was
(verse 12); I know you not. Note, We are all concerned to
seek the Lord while he may be found; for there is a time
coming when he will not be found. Time was, when, Lord,
Lord, open to us, would have sped well, by virtue of that
promise, Knock, and it shall be opened to you; but now it
comes too late. The sentence is solemnly bound on with,
Verily I say unto you, which amounts to no less than
swearing in his wrath, that they shall never enter into his
rest. It bespeaks him resolved, and them silenced by it.
Lastly, Here is a practical
inference drawn from this parable (verse 13); Watch
therefore, We had it before (Chapter 24:42), and here it is
repeated as the most needful caution. Note, 1. Our great
duty is to watch, to attend to the business of our souls
with the utmost diligence and circumspection. Be awake, and
be wakeful. 2. It is a good reason for our watching, that
the time of our Lord's coming is very uncertain; we know
neither the day nor the hour. Therefore every day and every
hour we must be ready, and not off our watch any day in the
year, or any hour in the day. Be thou in the fear of the
Lord every day and all the day long.
The Parable of the Talents.
Matthew 25:14-30 --
14 For the kingdom of heaven is as a
man traveling into a far country, who called his own
servants, and delivered unto them his goods. 15 And unto one
he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one; to
every man according to his several ability; and straightway
took his journey. 16 Then he that had received the five
talents went and traded with the same, and made them other
five talents. 17 And likewise he that had received two, he
also gained other two. 18 But he that had received one went
and dug in the earth, and hid his lord's money. 19 After a
long time the lord of those servants cometh, and reckons
with them. 20 And so he that had received five talents came
and brought other five talents, saying, Lord, thou delivers
unto me five talents: behold, I have gained beside them five
talents more. 21 His lord said unto him, Well done, thou
good and faithful servant: thou hast been faithful over a
few things, I will make thee ruler over many things: enter
thou into the joy of thy lord. 22 He also that had received
two talents came and said, Lord, thou delivers unto me two
talents: behold, I have gained two other talents beside
them. 23 His lord said unto him, Well done, good and
faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things,
I will make thee ruler over many things: enter thou into the
joy of thy lord. 24 Then he which had received the one
talent came and said, Lord, I knew thee that thou art a hard
man, reaping where thou hast not sown, and gathering where
thou hast not strawed: 25 And I was afraid, and went and hid
thy talent in the earth: lo, there thou hast that is thine.
26 His lord answered and said unto him, Thou wicked and
slothful servant, thou knew that I reap where I sowed not,
and gather where I have not strawed: 27 Thou ought therefore
to have put my money to the exchangers, and then at my
coming I should have received mine own with usury. 28 Take
therefore the talent from him, and give it unto him which
hath ten talents. 29 For unto every one that hath shall be
given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath
not shall be taken away even that which he hath. 30 And cast
ye the unprofitable servant into outer darkness: there shall
be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
We have here the parable of the
talents committed to three servants; this implies that we
are in a state of work and business, as the former implies
that we are in a state of expectancy. That showed the
necessity of habitual preparation, this of actual diligence
in our present work and service. In that we were stirred up
to do well for our own souls; in this to lay out ourselves
for the glory of God and the good of others.
In this parable, 1. The Master is
Christ, who is the absolute Owner and Proprietor of all
persons and things, and in a special manner of his church;
into his hands all things are delivered. 2. The servants are
Christians, his own servants, so they are called; born in
his house, bought with his money, devoted to his praise, and
employed in his work. It is probable that ministers are
specially intended here, who are more immediately attending
on him, and sent by him. St. Paul often calls himself a
servant of Jesus Christ. See 2 Timothy 2:24.
We have three things, in general, in
this parable.
I. The trust committed to these
servants; Their master delivered to them his goods: having
appointed them to work (for Christ keeps no servants to be
idle), he left them something to work upon. Note, 1.
Christ's servants have and receive their all from him; for
they are of themselves worth nothing, nor have any thing
they can call their own but sin. 2. Our receiving from
Christ is in order to our working for him. Our privileges
are intended to find us with business. The manifestation of
the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal. 3.
Whatever we receive to be made use of for Christ, still the
property is vested in him; we are but tenants upon his land,
stewards of his manifold grace, 1 Peter 4:10. Now observe
here,
(1.) On what occasion this trust was
committed to these servants: The master was traveling into a
far country. This is explained, Ephesians 4:8. When he
ascended on high, he gave gifts to men. Note, [1.] When
Christ went to heaven, he was as a man traveling into a far
country; that is, he went with a purpose to be away a great
while. [2.] When he went, he took care to furnish his church
with all things necessary for it during his personal
absence. For, and in consideration of, his departure, he
committed to his church truths, laws, promises and powers;
these were the parakatatheke--the great depositum (as it is
called, 1 Timothy 6:20; 2 Timothy 1:14), the good thing that
is committed to us; and he sent his Spirit to enable his
servants to teach and profess those truths, to press and
observe those laws, to improve and apply those promises, and
to exercise and employ those powers, ordinary or
extraordinary. Thus Christ, at his ascension, left his goods
to his church.
(2.) In what proportion this trust
was committed. [1.] He gave talents; a talent of silver is
computed to be in our money three hundred and fifty-three
pounds eleven shillings and ten pence halfpenny; so the
learned Bishop Cumberland. Note, Christ's gifts are rich and
valuable, the purchases of his blood inestimable, and none
of them mean. [2.] He gave to some more, to others less; to
one five talents, to another two, to another one; to every
one according to his several ability. When Divine Providence
has made a difference in men's ability, as to mind, body,
estate, relation, and interest, divine grace dispenses
spiritual gifts accordingly, but still the ability itself is
from him. Observe, First, Every one had some one talent at
least, and that is not a despicable stock for a poor servant
to begin with. A soul of our own is the one talent we are
every one of us entrusted with, and it will find us with
work. Hoc nempe ab homine exigiture, ut prosit hominibus; si
fieri potest, multis; si minus, paucis; si minus, proximis,
si minus, sibi: nam cum se utilem cæteris efficit, commune
agit negotium. Et si quis bene de se meretur, hoc ipso aliis
prodest quod aliis profuturum parat--It is the duty of a man
to render himself beneficial to those around him; to a great
number if possible; but if this is denied him, to a few; to
his intimate connections; or, at least, to himself. He that
is useful to others, may be reckoned a common good. And
whoever entitles himself to his own approbation, is
serviceable to others, as forming himself to those habits
which will result in their favor. Seneca de Otio Sapient.
Secondly, All had not alike, for they had not all alike
abilities and opportunities. God is a free Agent, dividing
to every man severally as he will; some are cut out for
service in one kind, others in another, as the members of
the natural body. When the householder had thus settled his
affairs, he straightway took his journey. Our Lord Jesus,
when he had given commandments to his apostles, as one in
haste to be gone, went to heaven.
II. The different management and
improvement of this trust, which we have an account of,
verse 16-18.
1. Two of the servants did well.
(1.) They were diligent and
faithful; They went, and traded; they put the money they
were entrusted with, to the use for which it was
intended--laid it out in goods, and made returns of it; as
soon as ever their master was gone, they immediately applied
themselves to their business. Those that have so much work
to do, as every Christian has, need to set about it quickly,
and lose not time. They went, and traded. Note, A true
Christian is a spiritual tradesman. Trades are called
mysteries, and without controversy great is the mystery of
godliness; it is a manufacture trade; there is something to
be done by upon our own hearts, and for the good of others.
It is a merchant-trade; things of less value to us are
parted with for things of greater value; wisdom's
merchandize, Proverbs 3:15; Matthew 13:45. A tradesman is
one who, having made his trade his choice, and taken pains
to learn it, makes it his business to follow it, lays out
all he has for the advancement of it, makes all other
affairs bend to it, and lives upon the gain of it. Thus does
a true Christian act in the work of religion; we have no
stock of our own to trade with, but trade as factors with
our master's stock. The endowments of the mind--reason, wit,
learning, must be used in subservience to religion; the
enjoyments of the world--estate, credit, interest, power,
preferment, must be improved for the honor of Christ. The
ordinances of the gospel, and our opportunities of attending
them, bibles, ministers, Sabbaths, sacraments, must be
improved for the end for which they were instituted, and
communion with God kept up by them, and the gifts and graces
of the Spirit must be exercised; and this is trading with
our talents.
(2.) They were successful; they
doubled their stock, and in a little time made cent. per
cent. of it: he that had five talents, soon made them other
five. Trading with our talents is not always successful with
others, but, however, it shall be so to ourselves, Isaiah
49:4. Note, The hand of the diligent makes rich in graces,
and comforts, and treasures of good works. There is a great
deal to be got by industry in religion.
Observe, The returns were in
proportion to the receiving. [1.] From those to whom God
hath given five talents, he expects the improvement of five,
and to reap plentifully where he sows plentifully. The
greater gifts any have, the more pains they ought to take,
as those must that have a large stock to manage. [2.] From
those to whom he has given but two talents, he expects only
the improvement of two, which may encourage those who are
placed in a lower and narrower sphere of usefulness; if they
lay out themselves to do good according to the best of their
capacity and opportunity, they shall be accepted, though
they do not so much good as others.
2. The third did ill (verse 18); He
that had received one talent, went, and hid his lord's
money. Though the parable represents but one in three
unfaithful, yet in a history that answers this parable, we
find the disproportion quite the other way, when ten lepers
were cleansed, nine of ten hid the talent, and only one
returned to give thanks, Luke 17:17, 18. The unfaithful
servant was he that had but one talent: doubtless there are
many that have five talents, and bury them all; great
abilities, great advantages, and yet do no good with them:
but Christ would hint to us, (1.) That if he that had but
one talent, be reckoned with thus for burying that one, much
more will they be accounted offenders, that have more, that
have many, and bury them. If he that was but of small
capacity, was cast into utter darkness because he did not
improve what he had as he might have done, of how much sorer
punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, that
tramples underfoot the greatest advantages? (2.) That those
who have least to do for God, frequently do least of what
they have to do. Some make it an excuse for their laziness,
that they have not the opportunities of serving God that
others have; and because they have not wherewithal to do
what they say they would, they will not do what we are sure
they can, and so sit down and do nothing; it is really an
aggravation of their sloth, that when they have but one
talent to take care about, they neglect that one.
He dug in the earth, and hid the
talent, for fear it should be stolen; he did not misspend or
misemploy it, did not embezzle it or squander it away, but
he hid it. Money is like manure (so my Lord Bacon used to
say,) good for nothing in the heap, but it must be spread;
yet it is an evil which we have often seen under the sun,
treasure heaped together (James 5:3; Ecclesiastes 6:1, 2),
which does good to nobody; and so it is in spiritual gifts;
many have them, and make no use of them for the end for
which they were given them. Those that have estates, and do
not lay them out in works of piety and charity; that have
power and interest, and do not with it promote religion in
the places where they live; ministers that have capacities
and opportunities of doing good, but do not stir up the gift
that is in them, are those slothful servants that seek their
own things more than Christ's.
He hid his lord's money; had it been
his own, he might have done as he pleased; but, whatever
abilities and advantages we have, they are not our own, we
are but stewards of them, and must give account to our Lord,
whose goods they are. It was an aggravation of his
slothfulness, that his fellow-servants were busy and
successful in trading, and their zeal should have provoked
his. Are others active, and shall we be idle?
III. The account of this
improvement, verse 19. 1. The account is deferred; it is not
till after a long time that they are reckoned with; not that
the master neglects his affairs, or that God is slack
concerning his promise (2 Peter 3:9); no, he is ready to
judge (1 Peter 4:5); but every thing must be done in its
time and order. 2. Yet the day of account comes at last; The
lord of those servants reckons with them. Note, The stewards
of the manifold grace of God must shortly give account of
their stewardship. We must all be reckoned with--what good
we have got to our own souls, and what good we have done to
others by the advantages we have enjoyed. See Romans 14:10,
11. Now here is,
(1.) The good account of the
faithful servants; and here observe,
[1.] The servants giving up the
account (verses 20, 22); "Lord, thou deliveredst to me five
talents, and to me two; behold, I have gained five talents,
and I two talents more."
First, Christ's faithful servants
acknowledge with thankfulness his vouchsafing to them; Lord,
thou delivered to me such and such things. Note, 1. It is
good to keep a particular account of our receiving from God,
to remember what we have received, that we may know what is
expected from us, and may render according to the benefit.
2. We must never look upon our improvements but with a
general mention of God's favor to us, of the honor he has
put upon us, in entrusting us with his goods, and of that
grace which is the spring and fountain of all the good that
is in us or is done by us. For the truth is, the more we do
for God, the more we are indebted to him for making use of
us, and enabling us, for his service.
Secondly, They produce, as an
evidence of their faithfulness, what they have gained. Note,
God's good stewards have something to show for their
diligence; Show me thy faith by thy works. He that is a good
man, let him show it, James 3:13. If we be careful in our
spiritual trade, it will soon be seen by us, and our works
will follow us, Revelation 14:13. Not that the saints will
in the great day make mention of their own good deeds; no,
Christ will do that for them (verse 35); but it intimates
that they who faithfully improve their talents, shall have
boldness in the day of Christ, 1 John 2:28-4:17. And it is
observable that he who had but two talents, gave up his
account as cheerfully as he who had five; for our comfort,
in the day of account, will be according to our
faithfulness, not according to our usefulness; our
sincerity, not our success; according to the uprightness of
our hearts, not according to the degree of our
opportunities.
[2.] The master's acceptance and
approbation of their account, verses 21, 23.
First, He commended them; Well done,
good and faithful servant. Note, The diligence and integrity
of those who approve themselves the good and faithful
servants of Jesus Christ, will certainly be found to praise,
and honor, and glory, at his appearing, 1 Peter 1:7. Those
that own and honor God now, he will own and honor shortly.
1. Their persons will be accepted; Thou good and faithful
servant. He that knows the integrity of his servants now,
will witness to it in the great day; and they that are found
faithful, shall be called so. Perhaps they were censured by
men, as righteous overmuch; but Christ will give them their
just characters, of good and faithful. 2. Their performances
will be accepted; Well done. Christ will call those, and
those only, good servants, that have done well; for it is by
patient continuance in well-doing that we seek for this
glory and honor; and if we seek, we shall find; if we do
that which is good, and do it well, we shall have praise of
the same. Some masters are so morose, that they will not
commend their servants, though they do their work ever so
well; it is thought enough not to chide: but Christ will
commend his servants that do well; whether their praise be
of men or not, it is of him; and if we have the good word of
our Master, the matter is not great what our fellow-servants
say of us; if he says, Well done, we are happy, and it
should then be a small thing to us to be judged of men's
judgment; as, on the contrary, not he who commends himself,
or whom his neighbors commend, is approved, but whom the
Lord commends.
Secondly, He rewards them. The
faithful servants of Christ shall not be put off with bare
commendation; no, all their work and labor of love shall be
rewarded.
Now this reward is here expressed
two ways.
1. In one expression agreeable to
the parable; Thou hast been faithful over a few things, I
will make thee ruler over many things. It is usual in the
courts of princes, and families of great men, to advance
those to higher offices, that have been faithful in lower.
Note, Christ is a master that will prefer his servants who
acquit themselves well. Christ has honor in store for those
that honor him--a crown (2 Timothy 4:8), a throne
(Revelation 3:21), a kingdom, Chapter 25:34. Here they are
beggars; in heaven they shall be rulers. The upright shall
have dominion: Christ's servants are all princes.
Observe the disproportion between
the work and the reward; there are but few things in which
the saints are serviceable to the glory of God, but there
are many things wherein they shall be glorified with God.
What charge we receive from God, what work we do for God in
this world, is but little, very little, compared with the
joy set before us. Put together all our service, all our
sufferings, all our improvements, all the good we do to
others, all we get to ourselves, and they are but a few
things, next to nothing, not worthy to be compared, not fit
to be named the same day with the glory to be revealed.
2. In another expression, which
slips out of the parable into the thing signified by it;
Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. Note, (1.) The state of
the blessed is a state of joy, not only because all tears
shall then be wiped away, but all the springs of comfort
shall be opened to them, and the fountains of joy broken up.
Where there are the vision and fruition of God, a perfection
of holiness, and the society of the blessed, there cannot
but be a fullness of joy. (2.) This joy is the joy of their
Lord; the joy which he himself has purchased and provided
for them; the joy of the redeemed, bought with the sorrow of
the Redeemer. It is the joy which he himself is in the
possession of, and which he had his eye upon when he endured
the cross, and despised the shame, Hebrews 12:2. It is the
joy of which he himself is the fountain and centre. It is
the joy of our Lord, for it is joy in the Lord, who is our
exceeding joy. Abraham was not willing that the steward of
his house, though faithful, should be his heir (Genesis
15:3); but Christ admits his faithful stewards into his own
joy, to be joint-heirs with him. (3.) Glorified saints shall
enter into this joy, shall have a full and complete
possession of it, as the heir when he comes of age enters
upon his estate, or as they that were ready, went in to the
marriage feast. Here the joy of our Lord enters into the
saints, in the earnest of the Spirit; shortly they shall
enter into it, shall be in it to eternity, as in their
element.
(2.) The bad account of the slothful
servant. Observe,
[1.] His apology for himself, verses
24, 25. Though he had received but one talent, for that one
he is called to account. The smallness of our receiving will
not excuse us from a reckoning. None shall be called to an
account for more than they have received; but for what we
have, we must all account.
Observe, First, What he confides in.
He comes to the account with a deal of assurance, relying on
the plea he had to put in, that he was able to say, "Lo,
there thou hast that is thine; if I have not made it more,
as the others have done, yet this I can say, I have not made
it less." This, he thinks, may serve to bring him off, if
not with praise, yet with safety.
Note, Many a one goes very securely
to judgment, presuming upon the validity of a plea that will
be overruled as vain and frivolous. Slothful professors,
that are afraid of doing too much for God, yet hope to come
off as well as those that take so much pains in religion.
Thus the sluggard is wiser in his own conceit than seven men
that can render a reason, Proverbs 26:16. This servant
thought that his account would pass well enough, because he
could say, There thou hast that is thine. "Lord, I was no
spendthrift of my estate, no prodigal of my time, no
profaner of my Sabbaths, no opposer of good ministers and
good preaching; Lord, I never ridiculed my bible, nor set my
wits to work to banter religion, nor abused my power to
persecute any good man; I never drowned my parts, nor wasted
God's good creatures in drunkenness and gluttony, nor ever
to my knowledge did I injury to any body." Many that are
called Christians, build great hopes for heaven upon their
being able to make such an account; yet all this amounts to
no more than there thou hast that is thine; as if no more
were required, or could be expected.
Secondly, What he confesses. He owns
the burying of his talent; I hid thy talent in the earth. He
speaks as if that were no great fault; nay, as if he
deserved praise for his prudence in putting it in a safe
place, and running no hazards with it. Note, It is common
for people to make a very light matter of that which will be
their condemnation in the great day. Or, if he was conscious
to himself that it was his fault, it intimates how easily
slothful servants will be convicted in the judgment; there
will need no great search for proof, for their own tongues
shall fall upon them.
Thirdly, What he makes his excuse; I
knew that thou were a hard man, and I was afraid. Good
thought of God would beget love, and that love would make us
diligent and faithful; but hard thoughts of God beget fear,
and that fear makes us slothful and unfaithful. His excuse
bespeaks,
1. The sentiments of an enemy; I
knew thee, that thou art a hard man. This was like that
wicked saying of the house of Israel, The way of the Lord is
not equal, Ezekiel 18:25. Thus his defense is his offence.
The foolishness of man perverts his way, and then, as if
that would mend the matter, his heart frets against the
Lord. This is covering the transgression, as Adam, who
implicitly laid the fault on God himself; The woman which
thou gave me. Note, Carnal hearts are apt to conceive false
and wicked opinions concerning God, and with them to harden
themselves in their evil ways. Observe how confidently he
speaks; I knew thee to be so. How could he know him to be
so? What iniquity have we or our fathers found in him?
Jeremiah 2:5. Wherein has he wearied us with his work, or
deceived us in his wages? Micah 6:3. Has he been a
wilderness to us, or a land of darkness? Thus long God has
governed the world, and may ask with more reason than Samuel
himself could, Whom have I defrauded? or whom have I
oppressed? Does not all the world know the contrary, that he
is so far from being a hard master, that the earth is full
of his goodness, so far from reaping where he sowed not,
that he sows a great deal where he reaps nothing? For he
causes the sun to shine, and his rain to fall, upon the evil
and unthankful, and fills their hearts with food and
gladness who say to the Almighty, Depart from us. This
suggestion bespeaks the common reproach which wicked people
cast upon God, as if all the blame of their sin and ruin lay
at his door, for denying them his grace; whereas it is
certain that never any who faithfully improved the common
grace they had, perished for want of special grace; nor can
any show what could in reason have been done more for an
unfruitful vineyard than God has done in it. God does not
demand brick, and deny straw; no, whatever is required in
the covenant, is promised in the covenant; so that if we
perish, it is owing to ourselves.
2. The spirit of a slave; I was
afraid, This ill affection toward God arose from his false
notions of him; and nothing is more unworthy of God, nor
more hinders our duty to him, than slavish fear. This has
bondage and torment, and is directly opposite to that entire
love which the great commandment requires. Note, Hard
thoughts of God drive us from, and cramp us in his service.
Those who think it impossible to please him, and in vain to
serve him, will do nothing to purpose in religion.
[2.] His Lord's answer to this
apology. His plea will stand him in no stead, it is
overruled, nay, it is made to turn against him, and he is
struck speechless with it; for here we have his conviction
and his condemnation.
First, His conviction, verses 26,
27. Two things he is convicted of.
1. Slothfulness; Thou wicked and
slothful servant. Note, Slothful servants are wicked
servants, and will be reckoned with as such by their master,
for he that is slothful in his work, and neglects the good
that God has commanded, is brother to him that is a great
waster, by doing the evil that God has forbidden, Proverbs
18:9. He that is careless in God's work, is near akin to him
that is busy in the devil's work. Satis est mali nihil
fecisse boni--To do no good is to incur very serious blame.
Omissions are sins, and must come into judgment;
slothfulness makes way for wickedness; all become filthy,
for there is none that doeth good, Psalm 14:3. When the
house is empty, the unclean spirit takes possession. Those
that are idle in the affairs of their souls, are not only
idle, but something worse, 1 Timothy 5:13. When men sleep,
the enemy sows tares.
2. Self-contradiction (verses 26,
27); Thou knew that I reap where I sowed not: thou ought
therefore to have put my money to the exchangers. Note, The
hard thoughts which sinners have of God, though false and
unjust, will be so far from justifying their wickedness and
slothfulness, that they will rather aggravate and add to
their guilt. Three ways this may be taken; (1.) "Suppose I
had been so hard a master, should not thou therefore have
been the more diligent and careful to please me, if not for
love, yet for fear, and for that reason ought not thou to
have minded thy work?" If our God is a consuming fire, in
consideration of that let us study how to serve him. Or
thus, (2.) "If thou didst think me to be a hard master, and
therefore durst not trade with the money thyself, for fear
of losing by it, and being made to stand to the loss, yet
thou might have put it into the hands of the exchangers, or
goldsmith, might have brought it into the bank, and then at
my coming, if I could not have had the greater improvement,
by trade and merchandize (as of the other talents), yet I
might have had the less improvement, of bare interest, and
should have received my own with usury;" which, it seems,
was a common practice at that time, and not disallowed by
our Savior. Note, If we could not, or durst not, do what we
would, yet that excuse will not serve, when it will be made
to appear that we did not do what we could and durst. If we
could not find in our hearts to venture upon more difficult
and hazardous services, yet will that justify us in
shrinking from those that were more safe and easy? Something
is better than nothing; if we fail of showing our courage in
bold enterprises, yet we must not fail to testify our good
will in honest endeavors; and our Master will not despise
the day of small things. Or thus, (3.) "Suppose I did reap
where I sowed not, yet that is nothing to thee, for I had
sowed upon thee, and the talent was my money which thou was
entrusted with, not only to keep, but to improve." Note, In
the day of account, wicked and slothful servants will be
left quite without excuse; frivolous pleas will be
overruled, and every mouth will be stopped; and those who
now stand so much upon their own justification will not have
one word to say for themselves.
Secondly, His condemnation. The
slothful servant is sentenced,
1. To be deprived of his talent
(verses 28, 29); Take therefore the talent from him. The
talents were first disposed of by the Master, as an absolute
Owner, but this was now disposed of by him as a Judge; he
takes it from the unfaithful servant, to punish him, and
gives it to him that was eminently faithful, to reward him.
And the meaning of this part of the parable we have in the
reason of the sentence (verse 29), To every one that hath
shall be given. This may be applied, (1.) To the blessings
of this life--worldly wealth and possessions. These we are
entrusted with, to be used for the glory of God, and the
good of those about us. Now he that hath these things, and
use them for these ends, he shall have abundance; perhaps
abundance of the things themselves, at least, abundance of
comfort in them, and of better things; but from him that
hath not, that is, that hath these things as if he had them
not, had not power to eat of them, or to do good with (Avaro
deest, tam quod habet, quam quod non habet--The miser may be
considered as destitute of what he has, as well as of what
he has not), they shall be taken away. Solomon explains
this, Proverbs 11:24. There is that scatters, and yet
increases; and there is that withholds more than is meet,
and it tends to poverty. Giving to the poor is trading with
what we have, and the returns will be rich; it will multiply
the meal in the barrel, and the oil in the cruse: but those
that are sordid, and niggardly, and uncharitable, will find
that those riches which are so got, perish by evil travail,
Ecclesiastes verse 13, 14. Sometimes Providence strangely
transfers estates from those that do no good with them to
those that do; they are gathered for him that will pity the
poor, Proverbs 28:8. See Proverbs 13:22; Job 27:16, 17;
Ecclesiastes 2:26. (2.) We may apply it to the means of
grace. They who are diligent in improving the opportunities
they have, God will enlarge them, will set before them an
open door (Revelation 3:8); but they who know not the day of
their visitation, shall have the things that belong to their
peace hid from their eyes. For proof of this, go see what
God did to Shiloh, Jeremiah 7:12. (3.) We may apply it to
the common gifts of the Spirit. He that hath these, and
doeth good with them, shall have abundance; these gifts
improve by exercise, and brighten by being used; the more we
do, the more we may do, in religion; but those who stir not
up the gift that is in them, who do not exert themselves
according to their capacity, their gifts rust, and decay,
and go out like a neglected fire. From his that hath not a
living principle of grace in his soul, shall be taken away
the common gifts which he hath, as the lamps of the foolish
virgins went out for want of oil, verse 8. Thus the arm of
the idle shepherd, which he had sluggishly folded up in his
bosom, comes to be dried up, and his right eye, which he had
carelessly or willfully shut, becomes utterly darkened, as
it is threatened, Zechariah 11:17.
2. He is sentenced to be cast into
outer darkness, verse 30. Here,
(1.) His character is that of an
unprofitable servant. Note, Slothful servants will be
reckoned with as unprofitable servants, who do nothing to
the purpose of their coming into the world, nothing to
answer the end of their birth or baptism, who are no way
serviceable to the glory of God, the good of others, or the
salvation of their own souls. A slothful servant is a
withered member in the body, a barren tree in the vineyard,
an idle drone in the hive, he is good for nothing. In one
sense, we are all unprofitable servants (Luke 17:10); we
cannot profit God, Job 22:2. But to others, and to
ourselves, it is required that we be profitable; if we be
not, Christ will not own us as his servants: it is not
enough not to do hurt, but we must do good, must bring forth
fruit, and though thereby God is not profited, yet he is
glorified, John 15:8.
(2.) His doom is, to be cast into
outer darkness. Here, as in what was said to the faithful
servants, our Savior slides insensibly out of the parable
into the thing intended by it, and it serves as a key to the
whole; for, outer darkness, where there is weeping and
gnashing of teeth, is, in Christ's discourses, the common
periphrasis of the miseries of the damned in hell. Their
state is, [1.] Very dismal; it is outer darkness. Darkness
is uncomfortable and frightful: it was one of the plagues of
Egypt. In hell there are chains of darkness, 2 Peter 2:4. In
the dark no man can work, a fit punishment for a slothful
servant. It is outer darkness, out from the light of heaven,
out from the joy of their Lord, into which the faithful
servants were admitted; out from the feast. Compare Chapter
8:12; 22:13. [2.] Very doleful; there is weeping, which
bespeaks great sorrow, and gnashing of teeth, which bespeaks
great vexation and indignation. This will be the portion of
the slothful servant.
The Process of the Last Judgment.
Matthew 25:31-46 --
31 When the Son of man shall come in
his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he
sit upon the throne of his glory: 32 And before him shall be
gathered all nations: and he shall separate them one from
another, as a shepherd divides his sheep from the goats: 33
And he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats
on the left. 34 Then shall the King say unto them on his
right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the
kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world:
35 For I was hungry, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and
ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in: 36
Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I
was in prison, and ye came unto me. 37 Then shall the
righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an
hungru, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? 38
When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and
clothed thee? 39 Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and
came unto thee? 40 And the King shall answer and say unto
them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it
unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it
unto me. 41 Then shall he say also unto them on the left
hand, Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his angels: 42 For I was an
hungry, and ye gave me no meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave
me no drink: 43 I was a stranger, and ye took me not in:
naked, and ye clothed me not: sick, and in prison, and ye
visited me not. 44 Then shall they also answer him, saying,
Lord, when saw we thee an hungry, or athirst, or a stranger,
or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister unto
thee? 45 Then shall he answer them, saying, Verily I say
unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of
these, ye did it not to me. 46 And these shall go away into
everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.
We have here a description of the
process of the last judgment in the great day. There are
some passages in it that are parables; as the separating
between the sheep and the goats, and the dialogues between
the judge and the persons judged: but there is no thread of
similitude carried through the discourse, and therefore it
is rather to be called a draught or delineation of the final
judgment, than a parable; it is, as it were, the explanation
of the former parables. And here we have,
I. The placing of the judge upon the
judgment-seat (verse 31); When the Son of man shall come.
Observe here,
1. That there is a judgment to come,
in which every man shall be sentenced to a state of
everlasting happiness, or misery, in the world of recompense
or retribution, according to what he did in this world of
trial and probation, which is to be judged of by the rule of
the everlasting gospel.
2. The administration of the
judgment of the great day is committed to the Son of man;
for by him God will judge the world (Acts 17:31), and to him
all judgment is committed, and therefore the judgment of
that day, which is the centre of all. Here, as elsewhere,
when the last judgment is spoken of, Christ is called the
son of man, because he is to judge the sons of men (and,
being himself of the same nature, he is the more
unexceptionable); and because his wonderful condescension to
take upon him our nature, and to become the son of man, will
be recompensed by this exaltation in that day, and an honor
put upon the human nature.
3. Christ's appearing to judge the
world will be splendid and glorious. Agrippa and Bernice
came to the judgment-seat with great pomp (Acts 25:23); but
that was (as the original word is) great fancy. Christ will
come to the judgment-seat in real glory: the Sun of
righteousness shall then shine in his meridian luster, and
the Prince of the kings of the earth shall show the riches
of his glorious kingdom, and the honors of his excellent
majesty; and all the world shall see what the saints only do
now believe--that he is the brightness of his Father's
glory. He shall come not only in the glory of his Father,
but in his own glory, as mediator: his first coming was
under a black cloud of obscurity; his second will be in a
bright cloud of glory. The assurance Christ gave his
disciples of his future glory, might help to take off the
offence of the cross, and his approaching disgrace and
suffering.
4. When Christ comes in his glory to
judge the world, he will bring all his holy angels with him.
This glorious person will have a glorious retinue, his holy
myriads, who will be not only his attendants, but ministers
of his justice; they shall come with him both for state and
service. They must come to call the court (1 Thessalonians
4:16), to gather the elect (Chapter 24:31), to bundle the
tares (Chapter 13:40), to be witnesses of the saints' glory
(Luke 12:8), and of sinners' misery, Revelation 14:10.
5. He will then sit upon the throne
of his glory. He is now set down with the Father upon his
throne; and it is a throne of grace, to which we may come
boldly; it is a throne of government, the throne of his
father David; he is a priest upon that throne: but then he
will sit upon the throne of glory, the throne of judgment.
See Daniel 7:9, 10. Solomon's throne, though there was not
its like in any kingdom, was but a dunghill to it. Christ,
in the days of his flesh, was arraigned as a prisoner at the
bar; but at his second coming, he will sit as a judge upon
the bench.
II. The appearing of all the
children of men before him (verse 32); Before him shall be
gathered all nations. Note, The judgment of the great day
will be a general judgment. All must be summoned before
Christ's tribunal; all of every age of the world, from the
beginning to the end of time; all of every place on earth,
even from the remotest corners of the world, most obscure,
and distant from each other; all nations, all those nations
of men that are made of one blood, to dwell on all the face
of the earth.
III. The distinction that will then
be made between the precious and the vile; He shall separate
them one from another, as the tares and wheat are separated
at the harvest, the good fish and the bad at the shore, the
corn and chaff in the floor. Wicked and godly here dwell
together in the same kingdoms, cities, churches, families,
and are not certainly distinguishable one from another; such
are the infirmities of saints, such the hypocrisies of
sinners, and one event to both: but in that day they will be
separated, and parted for ever; Then shall ye return, and
discern between the righteous and the wicked, Malachi 3:18.
They cannot separate themselves one from another in this
world (1 Corinthians 5:10), nor can any one else separate
them (Chapter 13:29); but the Lord knows them that are his,
and he can separate them. This separation will be so exact,
that the most inconsiderable saints shall not be lost in the
crowd of sinners, nor the most plausible sinner hid in the
crowd of saints (Psalm 1:5), but every one shall go to his
own place. This is compared to a shepherd's dividing between
the sheep and the goats; it is taken from Ezekiel 34:17,
Behold, I judge between cattle and cattle. Note, 1. Jesus
Christ is the great Shepherd; he now feeds his flock like a
shepherd, and will shortly distinguish between those that
are his, and those that are not, as Laban divided his sheep
from Jacob's, and set three days' journey between them,
Genesis 30:35, 36. 2. The godly are like sheep--innocent,
mild, patient, useful: the wicked are like goats, a baser
kind of animal, unsavory and unruly. The sheep and goats are
here feeding all day in the same pasture, but will be coted
at night in different folds. Being thus divided, he will set
the sheep on his right hand, and the goats on his left,
verse 33. Christ puts honor upon the godly, as we show
respect to those we set on our right hand; but the wicked
shall rise to everlasting shame, Daniel 12:2. It is not said
that he shall put the rich on his right hand, and the poor
on his left; the learned and noble on his right hand, and
unlearned and despised on his left; but the godly on his
right hand, and the wicked on his left. All other divisions
and subdivisions will then be abolished; but the great
distinction of men into saints and sinners, sanctified and
unsanctified, will remain for ever, and men's eternal state
will be determined by it. The wicked took up with
left-handed blessings, riches and honor, and so shall their
doom be.
IV. The process of the judgment
concerning each of these.
1. Concerning the godly, on the
right hand. Their cause must be first dispatched, that they
may be assessors with Christ in the judgment of the wicked,
whose misery will be aggravated by their seeing Abraham, and
Isaac, and Jacob, admitted into the kingdom of heaven, Luke
13:28. Observe here,
(1.) The glory conferred upon them;
the sentence by which they shall be not only acquitted, but
preferred and rewarded (verse 34); The king shall say unto
them. He that was the Shepherd (which bespeaks the care and
tenderness wherewith he will make this disquisition), is
here the King, which bespeaks the authority wherewith he
will then pronounce the sentence: where the word of this
King is, there is power. Here are two things in this
sentence:
[1.] The acknowledging of the saints
to be the blessed of the Lord; Come, ye blessed of my
Father. First, He pronounces them blessed; and his saying
they are blessed, makes them so. The law curses them for
their many discontinuances; but Christ having redeemed them
from the curse of the law, and purchased a blessing for
them, commands a blessing on them. Secondly, Blessed of his
Father; reproached and cursed by the world, but blessed of
God. As the Spirit glorifies the Son (John 16:14), so the
Son glorifies the Father by referring the salvation of the
saints to him as the First Cause; all our blessings in
heavenly things flow to us from God, as the Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, Ephesians 1:3. Thirdly, He calls them to
come: this come is, in effect, "Welcome, ten thousand
welcomes, to the blessings of my father; come to me, come to
be for ever with me; you that followed me bearing the cross,
now come along with me wearing the crown. The blessed of my
Father are the beloved of my soul, that have been too long
at a distance from me; come, now, come into my bosom, come
into my arms, come into my dearest embraces!" O with what
joy will this fill the hearts of the saints in that day! We
now come boldly to the throne of grace, but we shall then
come boldly to the throne of glory; and this word holds out
the golden scepter, with an assurance that our requests
shall be granted to more than the half of the kingdom. Now
the Spirit says, Come, in the word; and the bride says,
Come, in prayer; and the result hereof is a sweet communion:
but the perfection of bliss will be, when the King shall
say, Come.
[2.] The admission of the saints
into the blessedness and kingdom of the Father; Inherit the
kingdom prepared for you.
First, the happiness they shall be
possessed of is very rich; we are told what it is by him who
had reason to know it, having purchased it for them, and
possessed it himself.
1. It is a kingdom; which is
reckoned the most valuable possession on earth, and includes
the greatest wealth and honor. Those that inherit kingdoms,
wear all the glories of the crown, enjoy all the pleasures
of the court, and command the peculiar treasures of the
provinces; yet this is but a faint resemblance of the
felicities of the saints in heaven. They that here are
beggars, prisoners, accounted as the off-scouring of all
things, shall then inherit a kingdom, Psalm 113:7;
Revelation 2:26, 27.
2. It is a kingdom prepared: the
happiness must needs be great, for it is the product of the
divine counsels. Note, There is great preparation made for
the entertainment of the saints in the kingdom of glory. The
Father designed it for them in his thoughts of love, and
provided it for them in the greatness of his wisdom and
power. The Son purchased it for them, and is entered as the
fore-runner to prepare a place, John 14:2. And the blessed
Spirit, in preparing them for the kingdom, in effect, is
preparing it for them.
3. It is prepared for them. This
bespeaks, (1.) The suitableness of this happiness; it is in
all points adapted to the nature of a soul, and to the new
nature of a a sanctified soul. (2.) Their property and
interest in it. It is prepared on purpose for them; not only
for such as you, but for you, you by name, you personally
and particularly, who were chosen to salvation through
sanctification.
4. It is prepared from the
foundation of the world. This happiness was designed for the
saints, and they for it, before time began, from all
eternity, Ephesians 1:4. The end, which is last in
execution, is first in intention. Infinite Wisdom had an eye
to the eternal glorification of the saints, from the first
founding of the creation: All things are for your sakes, 2
Corinthians 4:15. Or, it denotes the preparation of the
place of this happiness, which is to be the seat and
habitation of the blessed, in the very beginning of the work
of creation, Genesis 1:1. There in the heaven of heavens the
morning stars were singing together, when the foundations of
the earth were fastened, Job 38:4-7.
Secondly, The tenure by which they
shall hold and possess it is very good, they shall come and
inherit it. What we come to by inheritance, is not got by
any procurement of our own, but purely, as the lawyers
express it, by the act of God. It is God that makes heirs,
heirs of heaven. We come to an inheritance by virtue of our
sonship, our adoption; if children, then heirs. A title by
inheritance is the sweetest and surest title; it alludes to
possessions in the land of Canaan, which passed by
inheritance, and would not be alienated longer than to the
year of Jubilee. Thus is the heavenly inheritance
indefeasible, and unalienable. Saints, in this world, are as
heirs under age, tutored and governed till the time
appointed of the Father (Galatians 4:1, 2); and then they
shall be put in full possession of that which now through
grace they have a title to; Come, and inherit it.
(2.) The ground of this (verses 35,
36), For I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat. We cannot
hence infer that any good words of ours merit the happiness
of heaven, by any intrinsic worth or excellence in them: our
goodness extends not unto God; but it is plain that Jesus
Christ will judge the world by the same rule by which he
governs it, and therefore will reward those that have been
obedient to that law; and mention will be made of their
obedience, not as their title, but as their evidence of an
interest in Christ, and his purchase. This happiness will be
adjudged to obedient believers, not upon a quantum meruit--an
estimate of merit, which supposes a proportion between the
work and the reward, but upon the promise of God purchased
by Jesus Christ, and the benefit of it secured under certain
provisos and limitations; and it is the purchase and promise
that give the title, the obedience is only the qualification
of the person designed. An estate made by deed or will upon
condition, when the condition is performed according to the
true intent of the donor or testator, becomes absolute; and
then, though the title be built purely upon the deed or
will, yet the performing of the condition must be given in
evidence: and so it comes in here; for Christ is the Author
of eternal salvation to those only that obey him, and who
patiently continue in well doing.
Now the good works here mentioned
are such as we commonly call works of charity to the poor:
not but that many will be found on the right hand who never
were in a capacity to feed the hungry, or clothe the naked,
but were themselves fed and clothed by the charity of
others; but one instance of sincere obedience is put for all
the rest, and it teaches us this in general, that faith
working by love is all in all in Christianity; Show me thy
faith by thy works; and nothing will abound to a good
account hereafter, but the fruits of righteousness in a good
conversation now. The good works here described imply three
things, which must be found in all that are saved.
[1.] Self-denial, and contempt of
the world; reckoning the things of the world no further good
things, than as we are enabled to do good with them: and
those who have not wherewithal to do good, must show the
same disposition, by being contentedly and cheerfully poor.
Those are fit for heaven that are mortified to the earth.
[2.] Love to our brethren; which is
the second great commandment, the fulfilling of the law, and
an excellent preparative for the world of everlasting love.
We must give proof of this love by our readiness to do good,
and to communicate; good wishes are but mockeries without
good works, James 2:15, 16; 1 John 3:17. Those that have not
to give, must show the same disposition some other way.
[3.] A believing regard to Jesus
Christ. That which is here rewarded is the relieving of the
poor for Christ's sake, out of love to him, and with an eye
to him. This puts an excellence upon the good work, when in
it we serve the Lord Christ, which those may do that work
for their own living, as well as those that help to keep
others alive. See Ephesians 6:5-7. Those good works shall
then be accepted which are done in the name of the Lord
Jesus, Colossians 3:17.
I was hungry, that is, my disciples
and followers were so, either by the persecutions of enemies
for well-doing, or by the common dispensations of
Providence; for in these things there is one event to the
righteous and wicked: and you gave them meat. Note, First,
Providence so variously orders and disposes of the
circumstances of his people in this world, as that while
some are in a condition to give relief, others need it. It
is no new thing for those that are feasted with the dainties
of heaven to be hungry and thirsty, and to want daily food;
for those that are at home in God, to be strangers in a
strange land; for those that have put on Christ, to want
clothes to keep them warm; for those that have healthful
souls, to have sickly bodies; and for those to be in prison,
that Christ has made free. Secondly, Works of charity and
beneficence, according as our ability is, are necessary to
salvation; and there will be more stress laid upon them in
the judgment of the great day, than is commonly imagined;
these must be the proofs of our love, and of our professed
subjection to the gospel of Christ, 2 Corinthians 9:13. But
they that show no mercy, shall have judgment without mercy.
Now this reason is modestly excepted
against by the righteous, but is explained by the Judge
himself.
1. It is questioned by the
righteous, verses 37-39. Not as if they were loath to
inherit the kingdom, or were ashamed of their good deeds, or
had not the testimony of their own consciences concerning
them: but, (1.) The expressions are parables, designed to
introduce and impress these great truths, that Christ has a
mighty regard to works of charity, and is especially pleased
with kindnesses done to his people for his sake. Or, (2.)
They bespeak the humble admiration which glorified saints
will be filled with, to find such poor and worthless
services, as theirs are, so highly celebrated, and richly
rewarded: Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee?
Note, Gracious souls are apt to think meanly of their own
good deeds; especially as unworthy to be compared with the
glory that shall be revealed. Far from this is the temper of
those who said, Wherefore have we fasted, and thou sees not?
Isaiah 58:3. Saints in heaven will wonder what brought them
thither, and that God should so regard them and their
services. It even put Nathanael to the blush, to hear
Christ's encomium of him: Whence knows thou me? John 1:47,
48. See Ephesians 3:20. "When saw we thee an hungered? We
have seen the poor in distress many a time; but when saw we
thee?" Note, Christ is more among us than we think he is;
surely the Lord is in this place, by his word, his
ordinances, his ministers, his Spirit, yea, and his poor,
and we know it not: When thou wert under the fig-tree, I saw
thee, John 1:48.
2. It is explained by the Judge
himself (verse 40); Inasmuch as ye have done it to these my
brethren, to the least, to one of the least of them, ye have
done it unto me. The good works of the saints, when they are
produced in the great day, (1.) Shall all be remembered; and
not the least, not one of the least, overlooked, no not a
cup of cold water. (2.) They shall be interpreted most to
their advantage, and the best construction that can be put
upon them. As Christ makes the best of their infirmities, so
he makes the most of their services.
We see what recompenses Christ has
for those that feed the hungry, and clothe the naked; but
what will become of the godly poor, that had not wherewithal
to do so? Must they be shut out? No, [1.] Christ will own
them, even the least of them, as his brethren; he will not
be ashamed, nor think it any disparagement to him, to call
them brethren, Hebrews 2:11. In the height of his glory, he
will not disown his poor relations; Lazarus is there laid in
his bosom, as a friend, as a brother. Thus he will confess
them, Chapter 10:32. [2.] He will take the kindness done to
them, as done to himself; Ye have done it unto me; which
shows a respect to the poor that were relieved, as well as
to the rich that did relieve them. Note, Christ espouses his
people's cause, and interests himself in their interests,
and reckons himself received, and love, and owned in them.
If Christ himself were among us in poverty, how readily
would we relieve him? In prison, how frequently would we
visit him? We are ready to envy the honor they had, who
ministered to him of their substance, Luke 8:3. Wherever
poor saints and poor ministers are, there Christ is ready to
receive our kindnesses in them, and they shall be put to his
account.
2. Here is the process concerning
the wicked, those on the left hand. And in that we have,
(1.) The sentence passed upon them,
verse 41. It was a disgrace to be set on the left hand; but
that is not the worst of it, he shall say to them, Depart
from me, ye cursed. Every word has terror in it, like that
of the trumpet at mount Sinai, waxing louder and louder,
every accent more and more doleful, and exclusive of
comfort.
[1.] To be so near to Christ was
some satisfaction, though under his frowns; but that will
not be allowed, Depart from me. In this world they were
often called to come to Christ, to come for life and rest,
but they turned a deaf ear to his calls; justly therefore
are they bid to depart from Christ, that would not come to
him. "Depart from me the Fountain of all good, from me the
Savior, and therefore from all hope of salvation; I will
never have any thing more to say to you, or do with you."
Here they said to the Almighty, Depart from us; then he will
choose their delusions, and say to them, Depart from me.
Note, It is the hell of hell to depart from Christ.
[2.] If they must depart, and depart
from Christ, might they not be dismissed with a blessing,
with one kind and compassionate word at least? No, Depart,
ye cursed, They that would not come to Christ, to inherit a
blessing, must depart from him under the burthen of a curse,
that curse of the law on every one that breaks it, Galatians
3:10. As they loved cursing, so it shall come unto them. But
observe, The righteous are called the blessed of my Father;
for their blessedness is owing purely to the grace of God
and his blessing, but the wicked are called only ye cursed,
for their damnation is of themselves. Hath God sold them?
No, they have sold themselves, have laid themselves under
the curse, Isaiah 50:1.
[3.] If they must depart, and depart
with a curse, may they not go into some place of ease and
rest? Will it not be misery enough for them to bewail their
loss? No, there is a punishment of sense as well as loss;
they must depart into fire, into torment as grievous as that
of fire is to the body, and much more. This fire is the
wrath of the eternal God fastening upon the guilty souls and
consciences of sinners that have made themselves fuel for
it. Our God is a consuming fire, and sinners fall
immediately into his hands, Hebrews 10:31; Romans 2:8, 9.
[4.] If into fire, may it not be
some light or gentle fire? No, it is prepared fire; it is a
torment ordained of old, Isaiah 30:33. The damnation of
sinners is often spoken of as an act of the divine power; he
is able to cast into hell. In the vessels of wrath he makes
his power known; it is a destruction from the presence of
the Lord, and from the glory of his power. In it shall be
seen what a provoked God can do to make a provoking creature
miserable.
[5.] If into fire, prepared fire, O
let it be but of short continuance, let them but pass
through fire; no, the fire of God's wrath will be an
everlasting fire; a fire, that, fastening and preying upon
immortal souls, can never go out for want of fuel; and,
being kindled and kept burning by the wrath of an immortal
God, can never go out for want of being blown and stirred
up; and, the streams of mercy and grace being for ever
excluded, there is nothing to extinguish it. If a drop of
water be denied to cool the tongue, buckets of water will
never be granted to quench this flame.
[6.] If they must be doomed to such
a state of endless misery, yet may they not have some good
company there? No, none but the devil and his angels, their
sworn enemies, that helped to bring them to this misery, and
will triumph over them in it. They served the devil while
they lived, and therefore are justly sentenced to be where
he is, as those that served Christ, are taken to be with him
where he is. It is terrible to lie in a house haunted with
devils; what will it be then to be companions with them for
ever? Observe here, First, Christ intimates that there is
one that is the prince of the devils, the ring-leader of the
rebellion, and that the rest are his angels, his messengers,
by whose agency he supports his kingdom. Christ and his
angels will in that day triumph over the dragon and his,
Revelation 12:7, 8. Secondly, The fire is said to be
prepared, not primarily for the wicked, as the kingdom is
prepared for the righteous; but it was originally intended
for the devil and his angels. If sinners make themselves
associates with Satan by indulging their lusts, they may
thank themselves if they become sharers in that misery which
was prepared for him and his associates. Calvin notes upon
this, that therefore the torment of the damned is said to be
prepared for the devil and his angels, to cut off all hope
of escaping it; the devil and his angels are already made
prisoners in the pit, and can worms of the earth think to
escape?
(2.) The reason of this sentence
assigned. God's judgments are all just, and he will be
justified in them. He is Judge himself, and therefore the
heavens shall declare his righteousness.
Now, [1.] All that is charged upon
them, on which the sentence is grounded, is, omission; as,
before, the servant was condemned, not for wasting his
talent, but for burying it; so here, he doth not say, "I was
hungry and thirsty, for you took my meat and drink from me;
I was a stranger, for you banished me; naked, for you
stripped me; in prison, for you laid me there:" but, "When I
was in these distresses, you were so selfish, so taken up
with your own ease and pleasure, made so much of your labor,
and were so loath to part with your money, that you did not
minister as you might have done to my relief and succor. You
were like those epicures that were at ease in Zion, and were
not grieved for the affliction of Joseph," Amos 6:4-6. Note,
Omissions are the ruin of thousands.
[2.] It is the omission of works of
charity to the poor. They are not sentenced for omitting
their sacrifices and burnt-offerings (they abounded in
these, Psalm 50:8), but for omitting the weightier matter of
the law, judgment, mercy, and faith. The Ammonites and
Moabites were excluded the sanctuary, because they met not
Israel with bread and water, Deuteronomy 23:3, 4. Note,
Un-charity to the poor is a damning sin. If we will not be
brought to works of charity by the hope of reward, let us be
influenced by fear of punishment; for they shall have
judgment without mercy, that have showed no mercy. Observe,
He doth not say, "I was sick, and you did not cure me; in
prison, and you did not release me" (perhaps that was more
than they could do); but, "You visited me not, which you
might have done." Note, Sinners will be condemned, at the
great day, for the omission of that good which it was in the
power of their hand to do. But if the doom of the
uncharitable be so dreadful, how much more intolerable will
the doom of the cruel be, the doom of persecutors! Now this
reason of the sentence is.
First, Objected against by the
prisoners (verse 44); Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, or
athirst? Condemned sinners, though they have no plea that
will bear them out, will yet in vain offer at excuses. Now.
1. The manner of their pleading bespeaks their present
precipitation. They cut it short, as men in haste; when saw
we thee hungry, or thirsty, or naked? They care not to
repeat the charge, as conscious to themselves of their own
guilt, and unable to bear the terrors of the judgment. Nor
will they have time allowed them to insist upon such
frivolous pleas; for it is all (as we say) but "trifling
with the court." 2. The matter of their plea bespeaks their
former inconsideration of that which they might have known,
but would not till now that it was too late. They that had
slighted and persecuted poor Christians, would not own that
they had slighted and persecuted Christ: no, they never
intended any affront to him, nor expected that so great a
matter would have been made of it. They imagined it was only
a company of poor, weak, silly, and contemptible people, who
made more ado than needed about religion, that they put
those slights upon; but they who do so, will be made to
know, either in the day of their conversion, as Paul, or of
their condemnation, as these here, that it was Jesus whom
they persecuted. And, if they say, Behold, we knew it not:
doth not he that ponders the heart consider it? Proverbs
24:11, 12.
Secondly, Justified by the Judge,
who will convince all the ungodly of the hard speeches
spoken against him in those that are his, Jude 15. He goes
by this rule (verse 45); Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of
the least of these, ye did it not to me. Note, What is done
against the faithful disciples and followers of Christ, even
the least of them, he takes as done against himself. He is
reproached and persecuted in them, for they are reproached
and persecuted for his sake, and in all their afflictions he
is afflicted. He that touches them, touches him in a part no
less tender than the apple of his eye.
Lastly, Here is the execution of
both these sentences, verse 46. Execution is the life of the
law, and Christ will take care that that be done according
to the sentence.
1. The wicked shall go away into
everlasting punishment. Sentence will then be executed
speedily, and no reprieve granted, nor any time allowed to
move in arrest of judgment. The execution of the wicked is
first mentioned; for first the tares are gathered and
burned. Note, (1.) The punishment of the wicked in the
future state will be an everlasting punishment, for that
state is an unalterable state. It can neither be thought
that sinners should change their own natures, nor that God
should give his grace to change them, when in this world the
day of grace was misspent, the Spirit of grace resisted, and
the means of grace abused and baffled. (2.) The wicked shall
be made to go away into that punishment; not that they will
go voluntarily, no, they are driven from light into
darkness; but it bespeaks an irresistible conviction of
guilt, and a final despair of mercy.
2. The righteous shall go away into
life eternal; that is, they shall inherit the kingdom, verse
34. Note, (1.) Heaven is life, it is all happiness. The life
of the soul results from its union with God by the mediation
of Jesus Christ, as that of the body from its union with the
soul by the animal spirits. The heavenly life consists in
the vision and fruition of God, in a perfect conformity to
him, and an immediate uninterrupted communion with him. (2.)
It is eternal life. There is no death to put a period to the
life itself, nor old age to put a period to the comfort of
it, or any sorrow to embitter it. Thus life and death, good
and evil, the blessing and the curse, are set before us,
that we may choose our way; and so shall our end be. Even
the heathen had some notion of these different states of
good and bad in the other world. Cicero in his Tusculan
Questions, lib. 1, brings in Socrates thus speaking, Duæ
sunt viæ, duplicesque cursus è corpore exeuntium: nam qui se
vitiis humanis contaminarunt, et libidinibus se tradiderunt,
iis devium quoddam iter est, seclusum à consilio deorum; qui
autem se integros castosque servarunt, quibusque fuerit
minima cum corporibus contagio, suntque in corporibus
humanis vitam imitati deorum, iis ad illos a quibus sunt
profecti facile patet reditus--Two paths open before those
who depart out of the body. Such as have contaminated
themselves with human vices, and yielded to their lusts,
occupy a path that conducts them far from the assembly and
council of the gods; but the upright and chaste, such as
have been least defiled by the flesh, and have imitated,
while in the body, the gods, these find it easy to return to
the sublime beings from whom they came.
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