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Matthew Chapter 6
Commentary by Matthew Henry
Christ having, in the former chapter,
armed his disciples against the corrupt doctrines and
opinions of the scribes and Pharisees, especially in their
expositions of the law (that was called their leaven,
Chapter 16:12), comes in this chapter to warn them against
their corrupt practices, against the two sins which, though
in their doctrine they did not justify, yet in their
conversation they were notoriously guilty of, and so as even
to recommend them to their admirers: these were hypocrisy
and worldly-mindedness, sins which, of all others, the
professors of religion need most to guard against, as sins
that most easily beset those who have escaped the grosser
pollutions that are in the world through lust, and which are
therefore highly dangerous. We are here cautioned, I.
Against hypocrisy; we must not be as the hypocrites are, nor
do as the hypocrites do. 1. In the giving of alms, verses
1-4. 2. In prayer, verses 5-8. We are here taught what to
pray for, and how to pray (verses 9-13); and to forgive in
prayer, verses 14, 15. 3. In fasting, verses 16-18. II.
Against worldly-mindedness, 1. In our choice, which is the
destroying sin of hypocrites, verses 19-24. 2. In our cares,
which is the disquieting sin of many good Christians, verses
25-34.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 6:1-4 –
1 Take heed that ye do not your alms
before men, to be seen of them: otherwise ye have no reward
of your Father which is in heaven. 2 Therefore when thou
doest thine alms, do not sound a trumpet before thee, as the
hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that
they may have glory of men. Verily I say unto you, they have
their reward. 3 But when thou doest alms, let not thy left
hand know what thy right hand doeth: 4 That thine alms may
be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secret himself
shall reward thee openly.
As we must do better than the
scribes and Pharisees in avoiding heart-sins,
heart-adultery, and heart-murder, so likewise in maintaining
and keeping up heart-religion, doing what we do from an
inward, vital principle, that we may be approved of God, not
that we may be applauded of men; that is, we must watch
against hypocrisy, which was the leaven of the Pharisees, as
well as against their doctrine, Luke 12:1. Almsgiving,
prayer, and fasting, are three great Christian duties--the
three foundations of the law, say the Arabians: by them we
do homage and service to God with our three principal
interests; by prayer with our souls, by fasting with our
bodies, by alms-giving with our estates. Thus we must not
only depart from evil, but do good, and do it well, and so
dwell for evermore.
Now in these verses we area
cautioned against hypocrisy in giving alms. Take heed of it.
Our being bid to take heed of it intimates that it is sin.
1. We are in great danger of; it is a subtle sin; vain-glory
insinuates itself into what we do ere we are aware. The
disciples would be tempted to it by the power they had to do
many wondrous works, and their living with some that admired
them and others that despised them, both which are
temptations to covet to make a fair show in the flesh. 2. It
is a sin we are in great danger by. Take heed of hypocrisy,
for if it reign in you, it will ruin you. It is the dead fly
that spoils the whole box of precious ointment.
Two things are here supposed,
I. The giving of alms is a great
duty, and a duty which all the disciples of Christ,
according to their ability, must abound in. It is prescribed
by the law of nature and of Moses, and great stress is laid
upon it by the prophets. Divers ancient copies here for ten
eleemosynen--your alms, read ten dikaiosynen--your
righteousness, for alms are righteousness, Psalm 112:9;
Proverbs 10:2. The Jews called the poor box the box of
righteousness. That which is given to the poor is said to be
their due, Proverbs 3:27. The duty is not the less necessary
and excellent for its being abused by hypocrites to serve
their pride. If superstitious papists have placed a merit in
works of charity, that will not be an excuse for covetous
protestants that are barren in such good works. It is true,
our alms-deeds do not deserve heaven; but it is as true that
we cannot go to heaven without them. It is pure religion
(James 1:27), and will be the test at the great day; Christ
here takes it for granted that his disciples give alms, nor
will he own those that do not.
II. That it is such a duty as has a
great reward attending it, which is lost if it be done in
hypocrisy. It is sometimes rewarded in temporal things with
plenty (Proverbs 11:24, 25; 19:17); security from want
(Proverbs 28:27; Psalm 37:21, 25); succor in distress (Psalm
16:1, 2); honor and a good name, which follow those most
that least covet them, Psalm 112:9. However, it shall be
recompensed in the resurrection of the just (Luke 14:14), in
eternal riches.
Quas dederis, solas semper habebis,
opes.
The riches you impart form the only
wealth you will always retain.--Martial.
This being supposed, observe now,
1. What was the practice of the
hypocrites about this duty. They did it indeed, but not from
any principle of obedience to God, or love to man, but in
pride and vain-glory; not in compassion to the poor, but
purely for ostentation, that they might be extolled as good
men, and so might gain an interest in the esteem of the
people, with which they knew how to serve their own turn,
and to get a great deal more than they gave. Pursuant to
this intention, they chose to give their alms in the
synagogues, and in the streets, where there was the greatest
concourse of people to observe them, who applauded their
liberality because they shared in it, but were so ignorant
as not to discern their abominable pride. Probably they had
collections for the poor in the synagogues, and the common
beggars haunted the streets and highways, and upon these
public occasions they chose to give their alms. Not that it
is unlawful to give alms when men see us; we may do it; but
not that men may see us; we should rather choose those
objects of charity that are less observed. The hypocrites,
if they gave alms to their own houses, sounded a trumpet,
under pretence of calling the poor together to be served,
but really to proclaim their charity, and to have that taken
notice of and made the subject of discourse.
Now the doom that Christ passes upon
this is very observable; Verily I say unto you, they have
their reward. At first view this seems a promise--If they
have their reward they have enough, but two words in it make
it a threatening.
(1.) It is a reward, but it is their
reward; not the reward which God promises to them that do
good, but the reward which they promise themselves, and a
poor reward it is; they did it to be seen of men, and they
are seen of men; they chose their own delusions with which
they cheated themselves, and they shall have what they
chose. Carnal professors stipulate with God for preferment,
honor, wealth, and they shall have their bellies filled with
those things (Psalm 17:14); but let them expect no more;
these are their consolation (Luke 6:24), their good things
(Luke 16:25), and they shall be put off with these. "Didst
thou not agree with me for a penny? It is the bargain that
thou art likely to abide by."
(2.) It is a reward, but it is a
present reward, they have it; and there is none reserved for
them in the future state. They now have all that they are
likely to have from God; they have their reward here, and
have none to hope for hereafter. Apechousi ton misthon. It
signifies a receipt in full. What rewards the godly have in
this life are but in part of payment; there is more behind,
much more; but hypocrites have their all in this world, so
shall their doom be; themselves have decided it. The world
is but for provision to the saints, it is their
spending-money; but it is pay to hypocrites, it is their
portion.
2. What is the precept of our Lord
Jesus about it, verses 3, 4. He that was himself such an
example of humility, pressed it upon his disciples, as
absolutely necessary to the acceptance of their
performances. "Let not thy left hand know what thy right
hand doeth when thou givest alms." Perhaps this alludes to
the placing of the Corban, the poor man's box, or the chest
into which they cast their free-will offerings, on the right
hand of the passage into the temple; so that they put their
gifts into it with the right-hand. Or the giving of alms
with the right hand, intimates readiness to it and
resolution in it; do it dexterously, not awkwardly nor with
a sinister intention. The right hand may be used in helping
the poor, lifting them up, writing for them, dressing their
sores, and other ways besides giving to them; but, "whatever
kindness thy right hand doeth to the poor, let not thy left
hand know it: conceal it as much as possible; industriously
keep it private. Do it because it is a good work, not
because it will give thee a good name." In omnibus factis,
re, non teste, moveamur--In all our actions, we should be
influenced by a regard to the object, not to the observer.
Cic. de Fin. It is intimated, (1.) That we must not let
others know what we do; no, not those that stand at our left
hand, that are very near us. Instead of acquainting them
with it, keep it from them if possible; however, appear so
desirous to keep it from them, as that in civility they may
seem not to take notice of it, and keep it to themselves,
and let it go no further. (2.) That we must not observe it
too much ourselves: the left hand is a part of ourselves; we
must not within ourselves take notice too much of the good
we do, must not applaud and admire ourselves. Self-conceit
and self-complacency, and an adoring of our own shadow, are
branches of pride, as dangerous as vain-glory and
ostentation before men. We find those had their good works
remembered to their honor, who had themselves forgotten
them: When did we see you hungry, or thirsty?
3. What is the promise to those who
are thus sincere and humble in their alms-giving. Let your
alms be in secret, and then thy Father who sees in secret
will observe them. Note, When we take least notice of our
good deeds ourselves, God takes most notice of them. As God
hears the wrongs done to us when we do not hear them (Psalm
38:14, 15), so he sees the good done by us, when we do not
see it. As it is a terror to hypocrites, so it is a comfort
to sincere Christians, that God sees in secret. But this is
not all; not only the observation and praise, but the
recompense is of God, himself shall reward thee openly.
Note, They who in their alms-giving study to approve
themselves to God, only turn themselves over to him as their
Paymaster. The hypocrite catches at the shadow, but the
upright man makes sure of the substance. Observe how
emphatically it is expressed; himself shall reward, he will
himself be the Rewarder, Hebrews 11:6. Let him alone to make
it up in kind or kindness; nay, he will himself be the
Reward (Genesis 15:1), your exceeding great reward. He will
reward thee as thy Father, not as a master who gives his
servant just what he earns and no more, but as a father who
gives abundantly more, and without stint, to his son that
serves him. Nay, he shall reward thee openly, if not in the
present day, yet in the great day; then shall every man have
praise of God, open praise, thou shall be confessed before
men. If the work be not open, the reward shall, and that is
better.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 6:5-8 –
5 And when thou prayest, thou shalt
not be as the hypocrites are: for they love to pray standing
in the synagogues and in the corners of the streets, that
they may be seen of men. Verily I say unto you, They have
their reward. 6 But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy
closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father
which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret
shall reward thee openly. 7 But when ye pray, use not vain
repetitions, as the heathen do: for they think that they
shall be heard for their much speaking. 8 Be not ye
therefore like unto them: for your Father knoweth what
things ye have need of, before ye ask him.
In prayer we have more immediately
to do with God than in giving alms, and therefore are yet
more concerned to be sincere, which is what we are here
directed to. When you pray (verse 5). It is taken for
granted that all the disciples of Christ pray. As soon as
ever Paul was converted, he prayed. You may as soon
find a living man that does not breathe, as a living
Christian that does not pray. For this shall every one that
is godly pray. If prayer-less, then graceless. "Now, when
thou prayest, thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are, nor
do as they do," verse 2. Note, Those who would not do as the
hypocrites do in their ways and actions must not be as the
hypocrites are in their frame and temper. He names nobody,
but it appears by Chapter 23:13, that by the hypocrites here
he means especially the scribes and Pharisees.
Now there were two great faults they
were guilty of in prayer, against each of which we are here
cautioned--vain-glory (verses 5, 6); and vain repetitions,
verses 7, 8.
I. We must not be proud and
vain-glorious in prayer, nor aim at the praise of men. And
here observe,
1. What was the way and practice of
the hypocrites. In all their exercises of devotion, it was
plain, the chief thing they aimed at was to be commended by
their neighbors, and thereby to make an interest for
themselves. When they seemed to soar upwards in prayer (and
if it be right, it is the soul's ascent toward God), yet
even then their eye was downwards upon this as their prey.
Observe,
(1.) What the places were which they
chose for their devotions; they prayed in the synagogues,
which were indeed proper places for public prayer, but not
for personal. They pretended hereby to do honor to the place
of their assemblies, but intended to do honor to themselves.
They prayed in the corners of the streets, the broad streets
(so the word signifies), which were most frequented. They
withdrew thither, as if they were under a pious impulse
which would not admit delay, but really it was to cause
themselves to be taken notice of. There, where two streets
met, they were not only within view of both, but every
passenger turning close upon them would observe them, and
hear what they said.
(2.) The posture they used in
prayer; they prayed standing; this is a lawful and proper
posture for prayer (Mark 11:25, When ye stand praying), but
kneeling being the more humble and reverent gesture, Luke
22:41; Acts 7:60; Ephesians 3:14, their standing seemed to
savor of pride and confidence in themselves (Luke 18:11),
The Pharisee stood and prayed.
(3.) Their pride in choosing these
public places, which is expressed in two things: [1.] They
love to pray there. They did not love prayer for its own
sake, but they loved it when it gave them an opportunity of
making themselves noticed. Circumstances may be such, that
our good deeds must needs be done openly, so as to fall
under the observation of others, and be commended by them;
but the sin and danger is when we love it, and are pleased
with it, because it feeds the proud humor. [2.] It is that
they may be seen of men; not that God might accept them, but
that men might admire and applaud them; and that they might
easily get the estates of widows and orphans into their
hands (who would not trust such devout, praying men?) and
that, when they had them, they might devour them without
being suspected (Chapter 23:14); and effectually carry on
their public designs to enslave the people.
(4.) The product of all this, they
have their reward; they have all the recompense they must
ever expect from God for their service, and a poor
recompense it is. What will it avail us to have the good
word of our fellow-servants, if our Master do not say, Well
done? But if in so great a transaction as is between us and
God, when we are at prayer, we can take in so poor a
consideration as the praise of men is, it is just that that
should be all our reward. They did it to be seen of men, and
they are so; and much good may it do them. Note, Those that
would approve themselves to God by their integrity in their
religion, must have to regard to the praise of men; it is
not to men that we pray, nor from them that we expect an
answer; they are not to be our judges, they are dust and
ashes like ourselves, and therefore we must not have our eye
to them: what passes between God and our own souls must be
out of sight. In our synagogue-worship, we must avoid every
thing that tends to make our personal devotion remarkable,
as they that caused their voice to be heard on high, Isaiah
58:4. Public places are not proper for private solemn
prayer.
2. What is the will of Jesus Christ
in opposition to this. Humility and sincerity are the two
great lessons that Christ teaches us; Thou, when you pray,
do so and so (verse 6); thou in particular by thyself, and
for thyself. Personal prayer is here supposed to be the duty
and practice of all Christ's disciples.
Observe, (1.) The directions here
given about it.
[1.] Instead of praying in the
synagogues and in the corners of the streets, enter into thy
closet, into some place of privacy and retirement. Isaac
went into the field (Genesis 24:63), Christ to a mountain,
Peter to a housetop. No place amiss in point of ceremony, if
it do but answer the end. Note, Secret prayer is to be
performed in retirement, that we may be unobserved, and so
may avoid ostentation; undisturbed, and so may avoid
distraction; unheard, and so may use greater freedom; yet if
the circumstances be such that we cannot possibly avoid
being taken notice of, we must not therefore neglect the
duty, lest the omission be a greater scandal than the
observation of it.
[2.] Instead of doing it to be seen
of men, pray to thy Father who is in secret; to me, even to
me, Zechariah 7:5, 6. The Pharisees prayed rather to men
than to God; whatever was the form of their prayer, the
scope of it was to beg the applause of men, and court their
favors. "Well, do thou pray to God, and let that be enough
for thee. Pray to him as a Father, as thy Father, ready to
hear and answer, graciously inclined to pity, help, and
succor thee. Pray to thy Father who is in secret." Note, In
secret prayer we must have an eye to God, as present in all
places; he is there in thy closet when no one else is there;
there especially nigh to thee in what thou call upon him
for. By secret prayer we give God the glory of his universal
presence (Acts 17:24), and may take to ourselves the comfort
of it.
(2.) The encouragements here given
us to it.
[1.] Your Father sees in secret; his
eye is upon you to accept you, when the eye of no man is
upon you to applaud you; under the fig-tree, I saw you,
said Christ to Nathaniel, John 1:48. He saw Paul at prayer
in such a street, at such a house, Acts 9:11. There is not a
secret, sudden breathing after God, but he observes it.
[2.] He will reward thee openly;
they have their reward that do it openly, and you shall not
lose yours for your doing it in secret. It is called a
reward, but it is of grace, not of debt; what merit can
there be in begging? The reward will be open; they shall not
only have it, but have it honorably: the open reward is that
which hypocrites are fond of, but they have not patience to
stay for it; it is that which the sincere are dead to, and
they shall have it over and above. Sometimes secret prayers
are rewarded openly in this world by signal answers to them,
which manifests God's praying people in the consciences of
their adversaries; however, at the great day there will be
an open reward, when all praying people shall appear in
glory with the great Intercessor. The Pharisees had their
reward before all the town, and it was a mere flash and
shadow; true Christians shall have theirs before all the
world, angels and men, and it shall be a weight of glory.
II. We must not use vain repetitions in prayer, verses 7, 8.
Though the life of prayer lies in lifting up the soul and
pouring out the heart, yet there is some interest which
words have in prayer, especially in joint prayer; for in
that, words are necessary, and it should seem that our
Savior speaks here especially of that; for before he said,
when thou pray, he here, when ye pray; and the Lord's prayer
which follows is a joint prayer, and in that, he that is the
mouth of others is most tempted to an ostentation of
language and expression, against which we are here warned;
use not vain repetitions, either alone or with others: the
Pharisees affected this, they made long prayers (Chapter
23:14), all their care was to make them long. Now observe,
1. What the fault is that is here
reproved and condemned; it is making a mere lip-labor of the
duty of prayer, the service of the tongue, when it is not
the service of the soul. This is expressed here by two
words, Battologia, Polylogia. (1.) Vain
repetitions--tautology, battology, idle babbling over the
same words again and again to no purpose, like Battus, Sub
illis montibus erant, erant sub montibus illis; like that
imitation of the wordiness of a fool, Ecclesiastes 10:14, A
man cannot tell what shall be; and what shall be after him
who can tell? which is indecent and nauseous in any
discourse, much more in speaking to God. It is not all
repetition in prayer that is here condemned, but vain
repetitions. Christ himself prayed, saying the same words
(Chapter 36:44), out of more than ordinary fervor and zeal,
Luke 22:44. So Daniel, Chapter 9:18, 19. And there is a very
elegant repetition of the same words, Psalm 136. It may be
of use both to express our own affections, and to excite the
affections of others. But the superstitious rehearsing of a
tale of words, without regard to the sense of them, as the
papists saying by their beads so many Ave-Marys and
Paternosters; or the barren and dry going over of the same
things again and again, merely to drill out the prayer to
such a length, and to make a show of affection when really
there is none; these are the vain repetitions here
condemned. When we would fain say much, but cannot say much
to the purpose; this is displeasing to God and all wise men.
(2.) Much speaking, an affectation of prolixity in prayer,
either out of pride or superstition, or an opinion that God
needs either to be informed or argued with by us, or out of
mere folly and impertinence, because men love to hear
themselves talk. Not that all long prayers are forbidden;
Christ prayed all night, Luke 6:12. Solomon's was a long
prayer. There is sometimes need of long prayers when our
errands and our affections are extraordinary; but merely to
prolong the prayer, as if it would make it more pleasing or
more prevailing with God, is that which is here condemned;
it is not much praying that is condemned; no, we are bid to
pray always, but much speaking; the danger of this error is
when we only say our prayers, and not when we pray them.
This caution is explained by that of Solomon (Ecclesiastes
5:2), Let your words be few, considerate and well weighed;
take with you words (Hosea 14:2), choose out words (Job
9:14), and do not say every thing that comes uppermost.
2. What reasons are given against
this.
(1.) This is the way of the heathen,
as the heathen do; and it ill becomes Christians to worship
their God as the Gentiles worship theirs. The heathen were
taught by the light of nature to worship God; but becoming
vain in their imaginations concerning the object of their
worship, no wonder they became so concerning the manner of
it, and particularly in this instance; thinking God
altogether such a one as themselves, they thought he needed
many words to make him understand what was said to him, or
to bring him to comply with their requests; as if he were
weak and ignorant, and hard to be entreated. Thus Baal's
priests were hard at it from morning till almost night with
their vain repetitions; O Baal, hear us; O Baal, hear us;
and vain petitions they were; but Elijah, in a grave,
composed frame, with a very concise prayer, prevailed for
fire from heaven first, and then water, 1 Kings 18:26, 36.
Lip-labor in prayer, though ever so well labored, if that be
all, is but lost labor.
(2.) "It need not be your way, for
your Father in heaven knows what things ye have need of
before ye ask him, and therefore there is no occasion for
such abundance of words. It does not follow that therefore
ye need not pray; for God requires you by prayer to own your
need of him and dependence on him, and to please his
promises; but therefore you are to open your case, and pour
out your hearts before him, and then leave it with him."
Consider, [1.] The God we pray to is our Father by creation,
by covenant; and therefore our addresses to him should be
easy, natural, and unaffected; children do not use to make
long speeches to their parents when they want any thing; it
is enough to say, my head, my head. Let us come to him with
the disposition of children, with love, reverence, and
dependence; and then they need not say many words, that are
taught by the Spirit of adoption to say that one aright,
Abba, Father. [2.] He is a Father that knows our case and
knows our wants better than we do ourselves. He knows what
things we have need of; his eyes run to and fro through the
earth, to observe the necessities of his people (2
Chronicles 16:9), and he often gives before we call (Isaiah
65:24), and more than we ask for (Ephesians 3:20), and if he
do not give his people what they ask, it is because he knows
they do not need it, and that it is not for their good; and
of that he is fitter to judge for us than we for ourselves.
We need not be long, nor use many words in representing our
case; God knows it better than we can tell him, only he will
know it from us (what will ye that I should do unto you?);
and when we have told him what it is, we must refer
ourselves to him, Lord, all my desire is before thee, Psalm
38:9. So far is God from being wrought upon by the length or
language of our prayers, that the most powerful
intercessions are those which are made with groanings that
cannot be uttered, Romans 8:26. We are not to prescribe, but
subscribe to God.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 6:9-15 –
9 After this manner therefore pray ye:
Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. 10 Thy
kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.
11 Give us this day our daily bread. 12 And forgive us our
debts, as we forgive our debtors. 13 And lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the
kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen. 14
For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father
will also forgive you: 15 But if ye forgive not men their
trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your
trespasses.
When Christ had condemned what was
amiss, he directs to do better; for his are reproofs of
instruction. Because we know not what to pray for as we
ought, he here helps our infirmities, by putting words into
our mouths; after this manner therefore pray ye, verse 9. So
many were the corruptions that had crept into this duty of
prayer among the Jews, that Christ saw it needful to give a
new directory for prayer, to show his disciples what must
ordinarily be the matter and method of their prayer, which
he gives in words that may very well be used as a form; as
the summary or contents of the several particulars of our
prayers. Not that we are tied up to the use of this form
only, or of this always, as if this were necessary to the
consecrating of our other prayers; we are here bid to pray
after this manner, with these words, or to this effect. That
in Luke differs from this; we do not find it used by the
apostles; we are not here taught to pray in the name of
Christ, as we are afterward; we are here taught to pray that
the kingdom might come which did come when the Spirit was
poured out: yet, without doubt, it is very good to use it as
a form, and it is a pledge of the communion of saints, it
having been used by the church in all ages, at least (says
Dr. Whitby) from the third century. It is our Lord's prayer,
it is of his composing, of his appointing; it is very
compendious, yet very comprehensive, in compassion to our
infirmities in praying. The matter is choice and necessary,
the method instructive, and the expression very concise. It
has much in a little, and it is requisite that we acquaint
ourselves with the sense and meaning of it, for it is used
acceptably no further than it is used with understanding and
without vain repetition.
The Lord's prayer (as indeed every
prayer) is a letter sent from earth to heaven. Here is the
inscription of the letter, the person to whom it is
directed, our Father; the where, in heaven; the contents of
it in several errands of request; the close, for thine is
the kingdom; the seal, Amen; and if you will, the date too,
this day.
Plainly thus: there are three parts of the prayer.
I. The preface, Our Father who art
in heaven. Before we come to our business, there must be a
solemn address to him with whom our business lies; Our
Father. Intimating, that we must pray, not only alone and
for ourselves, but with and for others; for we are members
one of another, and are called into fellowship with each
other. We are here taught to whom to pray, to God only, and
not to saints and angels, for they are ignorant of us, are
not to have the high honors we give in prayer, nor can give
favors we expect. We are taught how to address ourselves to
God, and what title to give him, that which speaks him
rather beneficent than magnificent, for we are to come
boldly to the throne of grace.
1. We must address ourselves to him
as our Father, and must call him so. He is a common Father
to all mankind by creation, Malachi 2:10; Acts 17:28. He is
in a special manner a Father to the saints, by adoption and
regeneration (Ephesians 1:5; Galatians 4:6); and an
unspeakable privilege it is. Thus we must eye him in prayer,
keep up good thoughts of him, such as are encouraging and
not affrighting; nothing more pleasing to God, nor pleasant
to ourselves, than to call God Father. Christ in prayer
mostly called God Father. If he be our Father, he will pity
us under our weaknesses and infirmities (Psalm 103:13), will
spare us (Malachi 3:17), will make the best of our
performances, though very defective, will deny us nothing
that is good for us, Luke 11:11-13. We have access with
boldness to him, as to a father, and have an advocate with
the Father, and the Spirit of adoption. When we come
repenting of our sins, we must eye God as a Father, as the
prodigal did (Luke 15:18; Jeremiah 3:19); when we come
begging for grace, and peace, and the inheritance and
blessing of sons, it is an encouragement that we come to
God, not as an unreconciled, avenging Judge, but as a
loving, gracious, reconciled Father in Christ, Jeremiah 3:4.
2. As our Father in heaven: so in
heaven as to be every where else, for the heaven cannot
contain him; yet so in heaven as there to manifest his
glory, for it is his throne (Psalm 103:19), and it is to
believers a throne of grace: thitherward we must direct our
prayers, for Christ the Mediator is now in heaven, Hebrews
8:1. Heaven is out of sight, and a world of spirits,
therefore our converse with God in prayer must be spiritual;
it is on high, therefore in prayer we must be raised above
the world, and lift up our hearts, Psalm 5:1. Heaven is a
place of perfect purity, and we must therefore lift up pure
hands, must study to sanctify his name, who is the Holy One,
and dwells in that holy place, Leviticus 19:3. From heaven
God beholds the children of men, Psalm 33:13, 14. And we
must in prayer see his eye upon us: thence he has a full and
clear view of all our wants and burdens and desires, and all
our infirmities. It is the firmament of his power likewise,
as well as of his prospect, Psalm 150:1. He is not only, as
a Father, able to help us, able to do great things for us,
more than we can ask or think; he has wherewith to supply
our needs, for every good gift is from above. He is a
Father, and therefore we may come to him with boldness, but
a Father in heaven, and therefore we must come with
reverence, Ecclesiastes 5:2. Thus all our prayers should
correspond with that which is our great aim as Christians,
and that is, to be with God in heaven. God and heaven, the
end of our whole conversation, must be particularly eyed in
every prayer; there is the centre to which we are all
tending. By prayer, we send before us thither, where we
profess to be going.
II. The petitions, and those are
six; the three first relating more immediately to God and
his honor, the three last to our own concerns, both temporal
and spiritual; as in the ten commandments, the four first
teach us our duty toward God, and the last six our duty
toward our neighbor. The method of this prayer teaches us to
seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and
then to hope that other things shall be added.
1. Hallowed be thy name. It is the
same word that in other places is translated sanctified. But
here the old word hallowed is retained, only because people
were used to it in the Lord's prayer. In these words, (1.)
We give glory to God; it may be taken not as a petition, but
as an adoration; as that, the Lord be magnified, or
glorified, for God's holiness is the greatness and glory of
all his perfections. We must begin our prayers with praising
God, and it is very fit he should be first served, and that
we should give glory to God, before we expect to receive
mercy and grace from him. Let him have praise of his
perfections, and then let us have the benefit of them. (2.)
We fix our end, and it is the right end to be aimed at, and
ought to be our chief and ultimate end in all our petitions,
that God may be glorified; all our other requests must be in
subordination to this, and in pursuance of it. "Father,
glorify thyself in giving me my daily bread and pardoning my
sins," &c. Since all is of him and through him, all must be
to him and for him. In prayer our thoughts and affections
should be carried out most to the glory of God. The
Pharisees made their own name the chief end of their prayers
(verse 5, to be seen of men), in opposition to which we are
directed to make the name of God our chief end; let all our
petitions centre in this and be regulated by it. "Do so and
so for me, for the glory of thy name, and as far as is for
the glory of it." (3.) We desire and pray that the name of
God, that is, God himself, in all that whereby he has made
himself known, may be sanctified and glorified both by us
and others, and especially by himself. "Father, let thy name
be glorified as a Father, and a Father in heaven; glorify
thy goodness and thy highness, thy majesty and mercy. Let
thy name be sanctified, for it is a holy name; no matter
what becomes of our polluted names, but, Lord, what wilt
thou do to thy great name?" When we pray that God's name may
be glorified, [1.] We make a virtue of necessity; for God
will sanctify his own name, whether we desire it or not; I
will be exalted among the heathen, Psalm 66:10. [2.] We ask
for that which we are sure shall be granted; for when our
Savior prayed, Father glorify thy name, it was immediately
answered, I have glorified it, and will glorify it again.
2. Thy kingdom come. This petition
has plainly a reference to the doctrine which Christ
preached at this time, which John Baptist had preached
before, and which he afterwards sent his apostles out to
preach--the kingdom of heaven is at hand. The kingdom of
your Father who is in heaven, the kingdom of the Messiah,
this is at hand, pray that it may come. Note, We should turn
the word we hear into prayer, our hearts should echo to it;
does Christ promise, surely I come quickly? our hearts
should answer, Even so, come. Ministers should pray over the
word: when they preach, the kingdom of God is at hand, they
should pray, Father, thy kingdom come. What God has promised
we must pray for; for promises are given, not to supersede,
but to quicken and encourage prayer; and when the
accomplishment of a promise is near and at the door, when
the kingdom of heaven is at hand, we should then pray for it
the more earnestly; thy kingdom come; as Daniel set his face
to pray for the deliverance of Israel, when he understood
that the time of it was at hand, Daniel 9:2. See Luke 19:11.
It was the Jews' daily prayer to God, Let him make his
kingdom reign, let his redemption flourish, and let his
Messiah come and deliver his people. Dr. Whitby, ex Vitringa.
"Let thy kingdom come, let the gospel be preached to all and
embraced by all; let all be brought to subscribe to the
record God has given in his word concerning his Son, and to
embrace him as their Savior and Sovereign. Let the bounds of
the gospel-church be enlarged, the kingdom of the world be
made Christ's kingdom, and all men become subjects to it,
and live as becomes their character."
3. Thy will be done in earth as it
is in heaven. We pray that God's kingdom being come, we and
others may be brought into obedience to all the laws and
ordinances of it. By this let it appear that Christ's
kingdom is come, let God's will be done; and by this let it
appear that it is come as a kingdom of heaven, let it
introduce a heaven upon earth. We make Christ but a titular
Prince, if we call him King, and do not do his will: having
prayed that he may rule us, we pray that we may in every
thing be ruled by him. Observe, (1.) The thing prayed for,
thy will be done; "Lord, do what thou pleasest with me and
mine; 1 Samuel 3:18. I refer myself to thee, and am well
satisfied that all thy counsel concerning me should be
performed." In this sense Christ prayed, not my will, but
thine be done. "Enable me to do what is pleasing to thee;
give me that grace that is necessary to the right knowledge
of thy will, and an acceptable obedience to it. Let thy will
be done conscientiously by me and others, not our own will,
the will of the flesh, or the mind, not the will of men (1
Peter 4:2), much less Satan's will (John 8:44), that we
may neither displease God in any thing we do (ut nihil
nostrum displiceat Deo), nor be displeased at any thing God
does" (ut nihil Dei displiceat nobis). (2.) The pattern of
it, that it might be done on earth, in this place of our
trial and probation (where our work must be done, or it
never will be done), as it is done in heaven, that place of
rest and joy. We pray that earth may be made more like
heaven by the observance of God's will (this earth, which,
through the prevalence of Satan's will, has become so near
akin to hell), and that saints may be made more like the
holy angels in their devotion and obedience. We are on
earth, blessed be God, not yet under the earth; we pray for
the living only, not for the dead that have gone down into
silence.
4. Give us this day our daily bread.
Because our natural being is necessary to our spiritual
well-being in this world, therefore, after the things of
God's glory, kingdom, and will, we pray for the necessary
supports and comforts of this present life, which are the
gifts of God, and must be asked of him, Ton arton epiousion--Bread
for the day approaching, for all the remainder of our lives.
Bread for the time to come, or bread for our being and
subsistence, that which is agreeable to our condition in the
world (Proverbs 30:8), food convenient for us and our
families, according to our rank and station.
Every word here has a lesson in it:
(1.) We ask for bread; that teaches us sobriety and
temperance; we ask for bread, not dainties, not
superfluities; that which is wholesome, though it be not
nice. (2.) We ask for our bread; that teaches us honesty and
industry: we do not ask for the bread out of other people's
mouths, not the bread of deceit (Proverbs 20:17), not the
bread of idleness (Proverbs 31:27), but the bread honestly
gotten. (3.) We ask for our daily bread; which teaches us
not to take thought for the morrow (verse 34), but
constantly to depend upon divine Providence, as those that
live from hand to mouth. (4.) We beg of God to give it us,
not sell it us, nor lend it us, but give it. The greatest of
men must be beholden to the mercy of God for their daily
bread, (5.) We pray, "Give it to us; not to me only, but to
others in common with me." This teaches us charity, and a
compassionate concern for the poor and needy. It intimates
also, that we ought to pray with our families; we and our
households eat together, and therefore ought to pray
together. (6.) We pray that God would give us this day;
which teaches us to renew the desire of our souls toward
God, as the wants of our bodies are renewed; as duly as the
day comes, we must pray to our heavenly Father, and reckon
we could as well go a day without meat, as without prayer.
5. And forgive us our debts, as we
forgive our debtors, This is connected with the former; and
forgive, intimating, that unless our sins be pardoned, we
can have no comfort in life, or the supports of it. Our
daily bread does but feed us as lambs for the slaughter, if
our sins be not pardoned. It intimates, likewise, that we
must pray for daily pardon, as duly as we pray for daily
bread. He that is washed, needs to wash his feet. Here we
have,
(1.) A petition; Father in heaven
forgive us our debts, our debts to thee. Note, [1.] Our sins
are our debts; there is a debt of duty, which, as creatures,
we owe to our Creator; we do not pray to be discharged from
that, but upon the non-payment of that there arises a debt
of punishment; in default of obedience to the will of God,
we become obnoxious to the wrath of God; and for not
observing the precept of the law, we stand obliged to the
penalty. A debtor is liable to process, so are we; a
malefactor is a debtor to the law, so are we. [2.] Our
hearts' desire and prayer to our heavenly Father every day
should be, that he would forgive us our debts; that the
obligation to punishment may be cancelled and vacated, that
we may not come into condemnation; that we may be
discharged, and have the comfort of it. In suing out the
pardon of our sins, the great plea we have to rely upon is
the satisfaction that was made to the justice of God for the
sin of man, by the dying of the Lord Jesus our Surety, or
rather Bail to the action, that undertook our discharge.
(2.) An argument to enforce this
petition; as we forgive our debtors. This is not a plea of
merit, but a plea of grace. Note, Those that come to God for
the forgiveness of their sins against him, must make
conscience of forgiving those who have offended them, else
they curse themselves when they say the Lord's prayer. Our
duty is to forgive our debtors; as to debts of money, we
must not be rigorous and severe in exacting them from those
that cannot pay them without ruining themselves and their
families; but this means debt of injury; our debtors are
those that trespass against us, that smite us (verses 39,
40), and in strictness of law, might be prosecuted for it;
we must forbear, and forgive, and forget the affronts put
upon us, and the wrongs done us; and this is a moral
qualification for pardon and peace; it encourages to hope,
that God will forgive us; for if there be in us this
gracious disposition, it is wrought of God, and therefore is
a perfection eminently and transcendently in himself; it
will be an evidence to us that he has forgiven us, having
wrought in us the condition of forgiveness.
6. And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil. This petition is expressed,
(1.) Negatively: Lead us not into
temptation. Having prayed that the guilt of sin may be
removed, we pray, as it is fit, that we may never return
again to folly, that we may not be tempted to it. It is not
as if God tempted any to sin; but, "Lord, do not let Satan
loose upon us; chain up that roaring lion, for he is subtle
and spiteful; Lord, do not leave us to ourselves (Psalm
19:13), for we are very weak; Lord, do not lay
stumbling-blocks and snares before us, nor put us into
circumstances that may be an occasion of falling."
Temptations are to be prayed against, both because of the
discomfort and trouble of them, and because of the danger we
are in of being overcome by them, and the guilt and grief
that then follow.
(2.) Positively: But deliver us from
evil; apo tou ponerou--from the evil one, the devil, the
tempter; "keep us, that either we may not be assaulted by
him, or we may not be overcome by those assaults:" Or from
the evil thing, sin, the worst of evils; an evil, an only
evil; that evil thing which God hates, and which Satan
tempts men to and destroys them by. "Lord, deliver us from
the evil of the world, the corruption that is in the world
through lust; from the evil of every condition in the world;
from the evil of death; from the sting of death, which is
sin: deliver us from ourselves, from our own evil hearts:
deliver us from evil men, that they may not be a snare to
us, nor we a prey to them."
III. The conclusion: For thine is
the kingdom, and the power and the glory, for ever. Amen.
Some refer this to David's doxology, 1 Chronicles 29:11.
Thine, O Lord, is the greatness. It is,
1. A form of plea to enforce the
foregoing petitions. It is our duty to plead with God in
prayer, to fill our mouth with arguments (Job 23:4) not to
move God, but to affect ourselves; to encourage the faith,
to excite our fervency, and to evidence both. Now the best
pleas in prayer are those that are taken from God himself,
and from that which he has made known of himself. We must
wrestle with God in his own strength, both as to the nature
of our pleas and the urging of them. The plea here has
special reference to the first three petitions; "Father in
heaven, thy kingdom come, for thine is the kingdom; thy will
be done, for thine is the power; hallowed be thy name, for
thine is the glory." And as to our own particular errands,
these are encouraging: "Thine is the kingdom; thou hast the
government of the world, and the protection of the saints,
thy willing subjects in it;" God gives and saves like a
king. "Thine is the power, to maintain and support that
kingdom, and to make good all thine engagements to thy
people." Thine is the glory, as the end of all that which is
given to, and done for, the saints, in answer to their
prayers; for their praise waiteth for him. This is matter of
comfort and holy confidence in prayer.
2. It is a form of praise and
thanksgiving. The best pleading with God is praising of him;
it is the way to obtain further mercy, as it qualifies us to
receive it. In all our addresses to God, it is fit that
praise should have a considerable share, for praise becometh
the saints; they are to be our God for a name and for a
praise. It is just and equal; we praise God, and give him
glory, not because he needs it--he is praised by a world of
angels, but because he deserves it; and it is our duty to
give him glory, in compliance with his design in revealing
himself to us. Praise is the work and happiness of heaven;
and all that would go to heaven hereafter, must begin their
heaven now. Observe, how full this doxology is, The kingdom,
and the power, and the glory, it is all thine. Note, It
becomes us to be copious in praising God. A true saint never
thinks he can speak honorably enough of God: here there
should be a gracious fluency, and this for ever. Ascribing
glory to God for ever, intimates an acknowledgement, that it
is eternally due, and an earnest desire to be eternally
doing it, with angels and saints above, Psalm 71:14.
Lastly, To all this we are taught to
affix our Amen, so be it. God's Amen is a grant; his fiat
is, it shall be so; our Amen is only a summary desire; our
fiat is, let it be so: it is in the token of our desire and
assurance to be heard, that we say Amen. Amen refers to
every petition going before, and thus, in compassion to our
infirmities, we are taught to knit up the whole in one word,
and so to gather up, in the general, what we have lost and
let slip in the particulars. It is good to conclude
religious duties with some warmth and vigor, that we may go
from them with a sweet savor upon our spirits. It was of old
the practice of good people to say, Amen, audibly at the end
of every prayer, and it is a commendable practice, provided
it be done with understanding, as the apostle directs (1
Corinthians 14:16), and uprightly, with life and liveliness,
and inward expressions, answerable to that outward
expression of desire and confidence.
Most of the petitions in the Lord's
prayer had been commonly used by the Jews in their
devotions, or words to the same effect: but that clause in
the fifth petition, As we forgive our debtors, was perfectly
new, and therefore our Savior here shows for what reason he
added it, not with any personal reflection upon the
peevishness, litigiousness, and ill nature of the men of
that generation, though there was cause enough for it, but
only from the necessity and importance of the thing itself.
God, in forgiving us, has a peculiar respect to our
forgiving those that have injured us; and therefore, when we
pray for pardon, we must mention our making conscience of
that duty, not only to remind ourselves of it, but to bind
ourselves to it. See that parable, Chapter 18:23-35. Selfish
nature is loath to comply with this, and therefore it is
here inculcated, verses 14, 15.
1. In a promise. If ye forgive, your
heavenly Father will also forgive. Not as if this were the
only condition required; there must be repentance and faith,
and new obedience; but as where other graces are in truth,
there will be this, so this will be a good evidence of the
sincerity of our other graces. He that relents toward his
brother, thereby shows that he repents toward his God. Those
which in the prayer are called debts, are here called
trespasses, debts of injury, wrongs done to us in our
bodies, goods, or reputation: trespasses is an extenuating
term for offences, paraptomata--stumbles, slips, falls.
Note, It is a good evidence, and a good help of our
forgiving others, to call the injuries done us by a
mollifying, excusing name. Call them not treasons, but
trespasses; not willful injuries, but casual inadvertencies;
peradventure it was an oversight (Genesis 43:12), therefore
make the best of it. We must forgive, as we hope to be
forgiven; and therefore must not only bear no malice, nor
mediate revenge, but must not upbraid our brother with the
injuries he has done us, nor rejoice in any hurt that
befalls him, but must be ready to help him and do him good,
and if he repent and desire to be friends again, we must be
free and familiar with him, as before.
2. In a threatening. "But if you
forgive not those that have injured you, that is a bad sign
you have not the other requisite conditions, but are
altogether unqualified for pardon: and therefore your
Father, whom you call Father, and who, as a father, offers
you his grace upon reasonable terms, will nevertheless not
forgive you. And if other grace be sincere, and yet you be
defective greatly in forgiving, you cannot expect the
comfort of your pardon, but to have your spirit brought down
by some affliction or other to comply with this duty." Note,
Those who would have found mercy with God must show mercy to
their brethren; nor can we expect that he should stretch out
the hands of his favor to us, unless we lift up to him pure
hands, without wrath, 1 Timothy 2:8. If we pray in anger, we
have reason to fear God will answer in anger. It has been
said, Prayers made in wrath are written in gall. What reason
is it that God should forgive us the talents we are indebted
to him, if we forgive not our brethren the pence they are
indebted to us? Christ came into the world as the great
Peace-Maker, and not only to reconcile us to God, but one to
another, and in this we must comply with him. It is great
presumption and of dangerous consequence, for any to make a
light matter of that which Christ here lays such a stress
upon. Men's passions shall not frustrate God's word.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 6:16-18 –
16 Moreover when ye fast, be not, as
the hypocrites, of a sad countenance: for they disfigure
their faces, that they may appear unto men to fast. Verily I
say unto you, They have their reward. 17 But thou, when thou
fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy face; 18 That thou
appear not unto men to fast, but unto thy Father which is in
secret: and thy Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward
thee openly.
We are here cautioned against
hypocrisy in fasting, as before in almsgiving, and in
prayer.
I. It is here supposed that
religious fasting is a duty required of the disciples of
Christ, when God, in his providence, calls to it, and when
the case of their own souls upon any account requires it;
when the bridegroom is taken away, then shall they fast,
Chapter 9:15. Fasting is here put last, because it is not so
much a duty for its own sake, as a means to dispose us for
other duties. Prayer comes in between almsgiving and
fasting, as being the life and soul of both. Christ here
speaks especially of private fasts, such as particular
persons prescribe to themselves, as free-will offerings,
commonly used among the pious Jews; some fasted one day,
some two, every week; others less, as they saw cause. On
those days they did not eat till sun-set, and then very
sparingly. It was not the Pharisee's fasting twice in the
week, but his boasting of it, that Christ condemned, Luke
18:12. It is a laudable practice, and we have reason to
lament it, that is so generally neglected among Christians.
Anna was much in fasting, Luke 2:37. Cornelius fasted and
prayed, Acts 10:30. The primitive Christians were much in
it, see Acts 13:3; 14:23. Private fasting is supposed, 1
Corinthians 7:5. It is an act of self-denial, and
mortification of the flesh, a holy revenge upon ourselves,
and humiliation under the hand of God. The most grown
Christians must hereby own, they are so far from having any
thing to be proud of, that they are unworthy of their daily
bread. It is a means to curb the flesh and the desires of
it, and to make us more lively in religious exercises, as
fullness of bread is apt to make us drowsy. Paul fasted
often, and so he kept under this body, and brought it into
subjection.
II. We are cautioned not to do this
as the hypocrites did it, lest we lose the reward of it; and
the more difficulty attends the duty, the greater loss it is
to lose the reward of it.
Now, 1. The hypocrites pretended
fasting, when there was nothing of that contrition or
humiliation of soul in them, which is the life and soul of
the duty. Theirs were mock-fasts, the show and shadow
without the substance; they took on them to be more humbled
than really they were, and so endeavored to put a cheat upon
God, than which they could not put a greater affront upon
him. The fast that God has chosen, is a day to afflict the
soul, not to hang down the head like a bulrush, nor for a
man to spread sackcloth and ashes under him; we are quite
mistaken if we call this a fast, Isaiah 58:5. Bodily
exercise, if that be all, profits little, since that is not
fasting to God, even to him.
2. They proclaimed their fasting, and managed it so that all
who saw them might take notice that it was a fasting-day
with them. Even on these days they appeared in the streets,
whereas they should have been in their closets; and the
affected a downcast look, a melancholy countenance, a slow
and solemn pace; and perfectly disfigured themselves, that
men might see how often they fasted, and might extol them as
devout, mortified men. Note, It is sad that men, who have,
in some measure, mastered their pleasure, which is sensual
wickedness, should be ruined by their pride, which is
spiritual wickedness, and no less dangerous. Here also they
have their reward, that praise and applause of men which
they court and covet so much; they have it, and it is their
all.
III. We are directed how to manage a
private fast; we must keep it in private, verses 17, 18. He
does not tell us how often we must fast; circumstances vary,
and wisdom is profitable therein to direct; the Spirit in
the word has left that to the Spirit in the heart; but take
this for a rule, whenever you undertake this duty, study
therein to approve yourselves to God, and not to recommend
yourselves to the good opinion of men; humility must
evermore attend upon our humiliation. Christ does not direct
to abate any thing of the reality of the fast; he does not
say, "take a little meat, or a little drink, or a little
cordial;" no, "let the body suffer, but lay aside the show
and appearance of it; appear with thy ordinary countenance,
guise, and dress; and while thou deny thyself thy bodily
refreshments, do it so as that it may not be taken notice
of, no, not by those that are nearest to thee; look
pleasant, anoint thine head and wash thy face, as thou dost
on ordinary days, on purpose to conceal thy devotion; and
thou shalt be no loser in the praise of it at last; for
though it be not of men, it shall be of God." Fasting is the
humbling of the soul (Psalm 35:13), that is the inside of
the duty; let that therefore be thy principal care, and as
to the outside of it, covet not to let it be seen. If we be
sincere in our solemn fasts, and humble, and trust God's
omniscience for our witness, and his goodness for our
reward, we shall find, both that he did see in secret, and
will reward openly. Religious fasts, if rightly kept, will
shortly be recompensed with an everlasting feast. Our
acceptance with God in our private fasts should make us
dead, both to the applause of men (we must not do the duty
in hopes of this), and to the censures of men too (we must
not decline the duty for fear of them). David's fasting was
turned to his reproach, Psalm 69:10; and yet, verse 13, As
for me, let them say what they will of me, my prayer is unto
thee in an acceptable time.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 6:19-24 –
19 Lay not up for yourselves treasures
upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where
thieves break through and steal: 20 But lay up for
yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust
doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor
steal: 21 For where your treasure is, there will your heart
be also. 22 The light of the body is the eye: if therefore
thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light.
23 But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of
darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be
darkness, how great is that darkness! 24 No man can serve
two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the
other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the
other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon.
Worldly-mindedness is as common and
as fatal a symptom of hypocrisy as any other, for by no sin
can Satan have a surer and faster hold of the soul, under
the cloak of a visible and passable profession of religion,
than by this; and therefore Christ, having warned us against
coveting the praise of men, proceeds next to warn us against
coveting the wealth of the world; in this also we must take
heed, lest we be as the hypocrites are, and do as they do:
the fundamental error that they are guilty of is, that they
choose the world for their reward; we must therefore take
heed of hypocrisy and worldly-mindedness, in the choice we
make of our treasure, our end, and our masters.
I. In choosing the treasure we lay
up. Something or other every man has which he makes his
treasure, his portion, which his heart is upon, to which he
carries all he can get, and which he depends upon for
futurity. It is that good, that chief good, which Solomon
speaks of with such an emphasis, Ecclesiastes 2:3. Something
the soul will have, which it looks upon as the best thing,
which it has a complacency and confidence in above other
things. Now Christ designs not to deprive us of our
treasure, but to direct us in the choice of it; and here we
have,
1. A good caution against making the
things that are seen, that are temporal, our best things,
and placing our happiness in them. Lay not up for yourselves
treasures upon earth. Christ's disciples had left all to
follow him, let them still keep in the same good mind. A
treasure is an abundance of something that is in itself, at
least in our opinion, precious and valuable, and likely to
stand us in stead hereafter. Now we must not lay up our
treasures on earth, that is, (1.) We must not count these
things the best things, nor the most valuable in themselves,
nor the most serviceable to us: we must not call them glory,
as Laban's sons did, but see and own that they have no glory
in comparison with the glory that excels. (2.) We must not
covet an abundance of these things, nor be still grasping at
more and more of them, and adding to them, as men do to that
which is their treasure, as never knowing when we have
enough. (3.) We must not confide in them for futurity, to be
our security and supply in time to come; we must not say to
the gold, Thou art my hope. (4.) We must not content
ourselves with them, as all we need or desire: we must be
content with a little for our passage, but not with all for
our portion. These things must not be made our consolation
(Luke 6:24), our good things, Luke 16:25. Let us consider
we are laying up, not for our posterity in this world, but
for ourselves in the other world. We are put to our choice,
and made in a manner our own carvers; that is ours which we
lay up for ourselves. It concerns thee to choose wisely, for
you are choosing for yourself, and shall have as you
choose. If we know and consider ourselves what we are, what
we are made for, how large our capacities are, and how long
our continuance, and that our souls are ourselves, we shall
see it is foolish thing to lay up our treasures on earth.
2. Here is a good reason given why
we should not look upon any thing on earth as our treasure,
because it is liable to loss and decay: (1.) From corruption
within. That which is treasure upon earth moth and rust do
corrupt. If the treasure be laid up in fine clothes, the
moth frets them, and they are gone and spoiled insensibly,
when we thought them most securely laid up. If it be in corn
or other eatables, as his was who had his barns full (Luke
12:16, 17), rust (so we read it) corrupts that: Brosis--eating,
eating by men, for as goods are increased they are increased
that eat them (Ecclesiastes 5:11); eating by mice or other
vermin; manna itself bred worms; or it grows moldy and
musty, is struck, or smutted, or blasted; fruits soon rot.
Or, if we understand it of silver and gold, they tarnish and
canker; they grow less with using, and grow worse with
keeping (James 5:2, 3); the rust and the moth breed in the
metal itself and in the garment itself. Note, Worldly riches
have in themselves a principal of corruption and decay; they
wither of themselves, and make themselves wings. (2.) From
violence without. Thieves break through and steal. Every
hand of violence will be aiming at the house where treasure
is laid up; nor can any thing be laid up so safe, but we may
be spoiled of it. Numquam ego fortunĉ credidi, etiam si
videretur pacem agere; omnia illa quĉ in me indulgentissime
conferebat, pecuniam, honores, gloriam, eo loco posui, unde
posset ea, since metu meo, repetere--I never reposed
confidence in fortune, even if she seemed propitious:
whatever were the favors which her bounty bestowed, whether
wealth, honors, or glory, I so disposed of them, that it was
in her power to recall them without occasioning me any
alarm. Seneca. Consol. ad Helv. It is folly to make that our
treasure which we may so easily be robbed of.
3. Good counsel, to make the joys
and glories of the other world, those things not seen that
are eternal, our best things, and to place our happiness in
them. Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven. Note, (1.)
There are treasures in heaven, as sure as there are on this
earth; and those in heaven are the only true treasures, the
riches and glories and pleasures that are at God's right
hand, which those that are sanctified truly arrive at, when
they come to be sanctified perfectly. (2.) It is our wisdom
to lay up our treasure in those treasures; to give all
diligence to make sure our title to eternal life through
Jesus Christ, and to depend upon that as our happiness, and
look upon all things here below with a holy contempt, as not
worthy to be compared with it. We must firmly believe there
is such a happiness, and resolve to be content with that,
and to be content with nothing short of it. If we thus make
those treasures ours, they are laid up, and we may trust God
to keep them safe for us; thither let us then refer all our
designs, and extend all our desires; thither let us send
before our best efforts and best affections. Let us not
burthen ourselves with the cash of this world, which will
but load and defile us, and be liable to sink us, but lay up
in store good securities. The promises are bills of
exchange, by which all true believers return their treasure
to heaven, payable in the future state: and thus we make
that sure that will be made sure. (3.) It is a great
encouragement to us to lay up our treasure in heaven, that
there it is safe; it will not decay of itself, no moth nor
rust will corrupt it; nor can we be by force or fraud
deprived of it; thieves do not break through and steal. It
is a happiness above and beyond the changes and chances of
time, an inheritance incorruptible.
4. A good reason why we should thus
choose, and an evidence that we have done so (verse 21), Where
your treasure is, on earth or in heaven, there will your
heart be. We are therefore concerned to be right and wise in
the choice of our treasure, because the temper of our minds,
and consequently the tenor of our lives, will be accordingly
either carnal or spiritual, earthly or heavenly. The heart
follows the treasure, as the needle follows the loadstone,
or the sunflower the sun. Where the treasure is there the
value and esteem are, there the love and affection are
(Colossians 3:2), that way the desires and pursuits go,
thitherward the aims and intents are leveled, and all is
done with that in view. Where the treasure is, there our
cares and fears are, lest we come short of it; about that we
are most solicitous; there our hope and trust are (Proverbs
18:10, 11); there our joys and delights will be (Psalm
119:111); and there our thoughts will be, there the inward
thought will be, the first thought, the free thought, the
fixed thought, the frequent, the familiar thought. The heart
is God's due (Proverbs 23:26), and that he may have it, our
treasure must be laid up with him, and then our souls will
be lifted up to him.
This direction about laying up our
treasure, may very fitly be applied to the foregoing
caution, of not doing what we do in religion to be seen of
men. Our treasure is our alms, prayers, and fasting, and the
reward of them; if we have done these only to gain the
applause of men, we have laid up this treasure on earth,
have lodged it in the hands of men, and must never expect to
hear any further of it. Now it is folly to do this, for the
praise of men we covet so much is liable to corruption: it
will soon be rusted, and moth-eaten, and tarnished; a little
folly, like a dead fly, will spoil it all, Ecclesiastes
10:1. Slander and calumny are thieves that break through and
steal it away, and so we lose all the treasure of our
performances; we have run in vain, and labored in vain,
because we misplaced our intentions in doing of them.
Hypocritical services lay up nothing in heaven (Isaiah
58:3); the gain of them is gone, when the soul is called
for, Job 27:8. But if we have prayed and fasted and given
alms in truth and uprightness, with an eye to God and to his
acceptance, and have approved ourselves to him therein, we
have laid up that treasure in heaven; a book of remembrance
is written there (Malachi 3:16), and being there recorded,
they shall be there rewarded, and we shall meet them again
with comfort on the other side death and the grave.
Hypocrites are written in the earth (Jeremiah 17:13), but
God's faithful ones have their names written in heaven, Luke
10:20. Acceptance with God is treasure in heaven, which can
neither be corrupted nor stolen. His well done shall stand
for ever; and if we have thus laid up our treasure with him,
with him our hearts will be; and where can they be better?
II. We must take heed of hypocrisy
and worldly-mindedness in choosing the end we look at. Our
concern as to this is represented by two sorts of eyes which
men have, a single eye and an evil eye, verses 22, 23. The
expressions here are somewhat dark because concise; we shall
therefore take them in some variety of interpretation. The
light of the body is the eye, that is plain; the eye is
discovering and directing; the light of the world would
avail us little without this light of the body; it is the
light of the eye that rejoices the heart (Proverbs 15:30),
but what is that which is here compared to the eye in the
body.
1. The eye, that is, the heart (so
some) if that be single--haplous--free and bountiful (so the
word is frequently rendered, as Romans 12:8; 2 Corinthians
8:2, 9:11, 13; James 1:5, and we read of a bountiful eye,
Proverbs 22:9). If the heart be liberally affected and stand
inclined to goodness and charity, it will direct the man to
Christian actions, the whole conversation will be full of
light, full of evidences and instances of true Christianity,
that pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father
(James 1:27), full of light, of good works, which are our
light shining before men; but if the heart be evil,
covetous, and hard, and envious, griping and grudging (such
a temper of mind is often expressed by an evil eye, Chapter
20:15; Mark 7:22; Proverbs 23:6, 7), the body will be full
of darkness, the whole conversation will be heathenish and
unchristian. The instruments of the churl are and always
will be evil, but the liberal devises liberal things, Isaiah
32:5-8. If the light that is in us, those affections which
should guide us to that which is good, be darkness, if these
be corrupt and worldly, if there be not so much as good
nature in a man, not so much as a kind disposition, how
great is the corruption of a man, and the darkness in which
he sits! This sense seems to agree with the context; we must
lay up treasure in heaven by liberality in giving alms, and
that not grudgingly but with cheerfulness, Luke 12:33; 2
Corinthians 9:7. But these words in the parallel place do
not come in upon any such occasion, Luke 11:34, and
therefore the coherence here does not determine that to be
the sense of them.
2. The eye, that is, the
understanding (so some); the practical judgment, the
conscience, which is to the other faculties of the soul, as
the eye is to the body, to guide and direct their motions;
now if this eye be single, if it make a true and right
judgment, and discern things that differ, especially in the
great concern of laying up the treasure so as to choose
aright in that, it will rightly guide the affections and
actions, which will all be full of the light of grace and
comfort; but if this be evil and corrupt, and instead of
leading the inferior powers, is led, and bribed, and biased
by them, if this be erroneous and misinformed, the heart and
life must needs be full of darkness, and the whole
conversation corrupt. They that will not understand, are
said to walk on in darkness, Psalm 82:5. It is sad when the
spirit of a man, that should be the candle of the Lord, is
an ignis fatuus: when the leaders of the people, the leaders
of the faculties, cause them to err, for then they that are
led of them are destroyed, Isaiah 9:16. An error in the
practical judgment is fatal, it is that which calls evil
good and good evil (Isaiah 5:20); therefore it concerns us
to understand things aright, to get our eyes anointed with
eye-salve.
3. The eye, that is, the aims and
intentions; by the eye we set our end before us, the mark we
shoot at, the place we go to, we keep that in view, and
direct our motion accordingly; in every thing we do in
religion; there is something or other that we have in our
eye; now if our eye be single, if we aim honestly, fix right
ends, and move rightly towards them, if we aim purely and
only at the glory of God, seek his honor and favor, and
direct all entirely to him, then the eye is single; Paul's
was so when he said, To me to live is Christ; and if we be
right here, the whole body will be full of light, all the
actions will be regular and gracious, pleasing to God and
comfortable to ourselves; but if this eye be evil, if,
instead of aiming only at the glory of God, and our
acceptance with him, we look aside at the applause of men,
and while we profess to honor God, contrive to honor
ourselves, and seek our own things under color of seeking
the things of Christ, this spoils all, the whole
conversation will be perverse and unsteady, and the
foundations being thus out of course, there can be nothing
but confusion and every evil work in the superstructure.
Draw the lines from the circumference to any other point but
the centre, and they will cross. If the light that is in
thee be not only dim, but darkness itself, it is a
fundamental error, and destructive to all that follows. The
end specifies the action. It is of the last importance in
religion, that we be right in our aims, and make eternal
things, not temporal, our scope, 2 Corinthians 4:18. The
hypocrite is like the waterman, that looks one way and rows
another; the true Christian like the traveler, that has his
journey's end in his eye. The hypocrite soars like the kite,
with his eye upon the prey below, which he is ready to come
down to when he has a fair opportunity; the true Christian
soars like the lark, higher and higher, forgetting the
things that are beneath.
III. We must take heed of hypocrisy
and worldly-mindedness in choosing the master we serve,
verse 24. No man can serve two masters. Serving two masters
is contrary to the single eye; for the eye will be to the
master's hand, Psalm 123:1, 2. Our Lord Jesus here exposes
the cheat which those put upon their own souls, who think to
divide between God and the world, to have a treasure on
earth, and a treasure in heaven too, to please God and
please men too. Why not? says the hypocrite; it is good to
have two strings to one's bow. They hope to make their
religion serve their secular interest, and so turn to
account both ways. The pretending mother was for dividing
the child; the Samaritans will compound between God and
idols. No, says Christ, this will not do; it is but a
supposition that gain is godliness, 1 Timothy 6:5. Here is,
1. A general maxim laid down; it is
likely it was a proverb among the Jews, No man can serve two
masters, much less two gods; for their commands will some
time or other cross or contradict one another, and their
occasions interfere. While two masters go together, a
servant may follow them both; but when they part, you will
see to which he belongs; he cannot love, and observe, and
cleave to both as he should. If to the one, not to the
other; either this or that must be comparatively hated and
despised. This truth is plain enough in common cases.
2. The application of it to the
business in hand. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon. Mammon is
a Syriac word, that signifies gain; so that whatever in this
world is, or is accounted by us to be, gain (Philippians
3:7), is mammon. Whatever is in the world, the lust of the
flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life, is
mammon. To some their belly is their mammon, and they serve
that (Philippians 3:19); to others their ease, their sleep,
their sports and pastimes, are their mammon (Proverbs 6:9);
to others worldly riches (James 4:13); to others honors and
preferments; the praise and applause of men was the
Pharisees' mammon; in a word, self, the unity in which the
world's trinity centers, sensual, secular self, is the
mammon which cannot be served in conjunction with God; for
if it be served, it is in competition with him and in
contradiction to him. He does not say, We must not or we
should not, but we cannot serve God and Mammon; we cannot
love both (1 John 2:15; James 4:4); or hold to both, or hold
by both in observance, obedience, attendance, trust, and
dependence, for they are contrary the one to the other. God
says, "My son, give me thy heart." Mammon says, "No, give it
me." God says, "Be content with such things as you have."
Mammon says, "Grasp at all that ever you can. Rem, rem,
quocunque modo rem--Money, money; by fair means or by foul,
money." God says, "Defraud not, never lie, be honest and
just in all thy dealings." Mammon says "Cheat thine own
Father, if thou canst gain by it." God says, "Be
charitable." Mammon says, "Hold thy own: this giving undoes
us all." God says, "Be careful for nothing." Mammon says,
"Be careful for every thing." God says, "Keep holy thy
Sabbath-day." Mammon says, "Make use of that day as well as
any other for the world." Thus inconsistent are the commands
of God and Mammon, so that we cannot serve both. Let us not
then halt between God and Baal, but choose you this day whom
you will serve, and abide by our choice.
The Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 6:25-34 –
25 Therefore I say unto you, Take no
thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall
drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not
the life more than meat, and the body than raiment? 26
Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do
they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father
feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they? 27 Which of
you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature? 28
And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of
the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they
spin: 29 And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all
his glory was not arrayed like one of these. 30 Wherefore,
if God so clothe the grass of the field, which to day is,
and to morrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more
clothe you, O ye of little faith? 31 Therefore take no
thought, saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink?
or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? 32 (For after all these
things do the Gentiles seek:) for your heavenly Father
knoweth that ye have need of all these things. 33 But seek
ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all
these things shall be added unto you. 34 Take therefore no
thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought
for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the
evil thereof.
There is scarcely any one sin
against which our Lord Jesus more largely and earnestly
warns his disciples, or against which he arms them with more
variety of arguments, than the sin of disquieting,
distracting, distrustful cares about the things of life,
which are a bad sign that both the treasure and the heart
are on the earth; and therefore he thus largely insists upon
it. Here is,
I. The prohibition laid down. It is
the counsel and command of the Lord Jesus, that we take no
thought about the things of this world; I say unto you. He
says it as our Lawgiver, and the Sovereign of our hearts; he
says it as our Comforter, and the Helper of our joy. What is
it that he says? It is this, and he that hath ears to hear,
let him hear it. Take no thought for your life, nor yet for
your body (verse 25). Take no thought, saying, What shall we
eat? (verse 31) and again (verse 34), Take no thought --Be
not in care. As against hypocrisy, so against worldly cares,
the caution is thrice repeated, and yet no vain repetition:
precept must be upon precept, and line upon line, to the
same purport, and all little enough; it is a sin which doth
so easily beset us. It intimates how pleasing it is to
Christ, and of how much concern it is to ourselves, that we
should live without carefulness. It is the repeated command
of the Lord Jesus to his disciples, that they should not
divide and pull in pieces their own minds with care about
the world. There is a thought concerning the things of this
life, which is not only lawful, but duty, such as is
commended in the virtuous woman. See Proverbs 27:23. The
word is used concerning Paul's care of the churches, and
Timothy's care for the state of souls, 2 Corinthians 11:28;
Philippians 2:20.
But the thought here forbidden is,
1. A disquieting, tormenting thought, which hurries the mind
hither and thither, and hangs it in suspense; which disturbs
our joy in God, and is a damp upon our hope in him; which
breaks the sleep, and hinders our enjoyment of ourselves, of
our friends, and of what God has given us. 2. A distrustful,
unbelieving thought. God has promised to provide for those
that are his all things needful for life as well as
godliness, the life that now is, food and a covering: not
dainties, but necessaries. He never said, "They shall be
feasted," but, "Verily, they shall be fed." Now an
inordinate care for time to come, and fear of wanting those
supplies, spring from a disbelief of these promises, and of
the wisdom and goodness of Divine Providence; and that is
the evil of it. As to present sustenance, we may and must
use lawful means to get it, else we tempt God; we must be
diligent in our callings, and prudent in proportioning our
expenses to what we have, and we must pray for daily bread;
and if all other means fail, we may and must ask relief of
those that are able to give it. He was none of the best of
men that said, To beg I am ashamed (Luke 16:3); as he was,
who (verse 21) desired to be fed with the crumbs; but for the
future, we must cast our care upon God, and take no thought,
because it looks like a jealousy of God, who knows how to
give what we want when we know not how to get it. Let our
souls dwell at ease in him! This gracious carelessness is
the same with that sleep which God gives to his beloved, in
opposition to the world’s toil, Psalm 127:2. Observe the
cautions here,
(1.) Take no thought for your life.
Life is our greatest concern for this world; All that a man
has will he give for his life; yet take no thought about it.
[1.] Not about the continuance of it; refer it to God to
lengthen or shorten it as he pleases; my times are in thy
hand, and they are in a good hand. [2.] Not about the
comforts of this life; refer it to God to embitter or
sweeten it as he pleases. We must not be solicitous, no not
about the necessary support of this life, food and raiment;
these God has promised, and therefore we may more
confidently expect; say not, What shall we eat? It is the
language of one at a loss, and almost despairing; whereas,
though many good people have the prospect of little, yet
there are few but have present support.
(2.) Take no thought for the morrow,
for the time to come. Be not solicitous for the future, how
you shall live next year, or when you are old, or what you
shall leave behind you. As we must not boast of to-morrow,
so we must not care for to-morrow, or the events of it.
II. The reasons and arguments to
enforce this prohibition. One would think the command of
Christ was enough to restrain us from this foolish sin of
disquieting, distrustful care, independently of the comfort
of our own souls, which is so nearly concerned; but to show
how much the heart of Christ is upon it, and what pleasures
he takes in those that hope in his mercy, the command is
backed with the most powerful arguments. If reason may but
rule us, surely we shall ease ourselves of these thorns. To
free us from anxious thoughts, and to expel them, Christ
here suggests to us comforting thoughts, that we may be
filled with them. It will be worth while to take pains with
our own hearts, to argue them out of their disquieting
cares, and to make ourselves ashamed of them. They may be
weakened by right reason, but it is by an active faith only
that they can be overcome. Consider then,
1. Is not the life more than meat,
and the body than raiment? verse 25. Yes, no doubt it is; so
he says who had reason to understand the true value of
present things, for he made them, he supports them, and
supports us by them; and the thing speaks for itself. Note,
(1.) Our life is a greater blessing than our livelihood. It
is true, life cannot subsist without a livelihood; but the
meat and raiment which are here represented as inferior to
the life and body are such as are for ornament and delight;
for about such as are for ornament ad delight; for about
such we are apt to be solicitous. Meat and raiment are in
order to life, and the end is more noble and excellent than
the means. The daintiest food and finest raiment are from
the earth, but life from the breath of God. Life is the
light of men; meat is but the oil that feeds that light: so
that the difference between rich and poor is very
inconsiderable, since, in the greatest things, they stand on
the same level, and differ only in the less. (2.) This is an
encouragement to us to trust God for food and raiment, and
so to ease ourselves of all perplexing cares about them. God
has given us life, and given us the body; it was an act of
power, it was an act of favor, it was done without our care:
what cannot he do for us, who did that?--what will he not?
If we take care about our souls and eternity, which are more
than the body, and its life, we may leave it to God to
provide for us food and raiment, which are less. God has
maintained our lives hitherto; if sometimes with pulse and
water, that has answered the end; he has protected us and
kept us alive. He that guards us against the evils we are
exposed to, will supply us with the good things we are in
need of. If he had been pleased to kill us, to starve us, he
would not so often have given his angels a charge concerning
us to keep us.
2. Behold the fowls of the air, and
consider the lilies of the field. Here is an argument taken
from God's common providence toward the inferior creatures,
and their dependence, according to their capacities, upon
that providence. A fine pass fallen man has come to, that he
must be sent to school to the fowls of the air, and that
they must teach him! Job 12:7, 8.
(1.) Look upon the fowls, and learn
to trust God for food (verse 26), and disquiet not
yourselves with thoughts what you shall eat.
[1.] Observe the providence of God
concerning them. Look upon them, and receive instruction.
There are various sorts of fowls; they are numerous, some of
them ravenous, but they are all fed, and fed with food
convenient for them; it is rare that any of them perish for
want of food, even in winter, and there goes no little to
feed them all the year round. The fowls, as they are least
serviceable to man, so they are least within his care; men
often feed upon them, but seldom feed them; yet they are
fed, we know not how, and some of them fed best in the
hardest weather; and it is your heavenly Father that feeds
them; he knows all the wild fowls of the mountains, better
than you know the tame ones at your own barn-door, Psalm
1:11. Not a sparrow lights to the ground, to pick up a grain
of corn, but by the providence of God, which extends itself
to the meanest creatures. But that which is especially
observed here is, that they are fed without any care or
project of their own; they sow not, neither do they reap,
nor gather into barns. The ant indeed does, and the bee, and
they are set before us as examples of prudence and industry;
but the fowls of the air do not; they make no provision for
the future themselves, and yet every day, as duly as the day
comes, provision is made for them, and their eyes wait on
God, that great and good Housekeeper, who provides food for
all flesh.
[2.] Improve this for your
encouragement to trust in God. Are ye not much better than
they? Yes, certainly you are. Note, The heirs of heaven are
much better than the fowls of heaven; nobler and more
excellent beings, and, by faith, they soar higher; they are
of a better nature and nurture, wiser than the fowls of
heaven (Job 35:11): though the children of this world, that
know not the judgment of the Lord, are not so wise as the
stork, and the crane, and the swallow (Jeremiah 8:7), you
are dearer to God, and nearer, though they fly in the open
firmament of heaven. He is their Master and Lord, their
Owner and Master; but besides all this, he is your Father,
and in his account ye are of more value than many sparrows;
you are his children, his first-born; now he that feeds his
birds surely will not starve his babes. They trust your
Father's providence, and will not you trust it? In
dependence upon that, they are careless for the morrow; and
being so, they live the merriest lives of all creatures;
they sing among the branches (Psalm 104:12), and, to the
best of their power, they praise their Creator. If we were,
by faith, as unconcerned about the morrow as they are, we
should sing as cheerfully as they do; for it is worldly care
that mars our mirth and damps our joy, and silences our
praise, as much as any thing.
(2.) Look upon the lilies, and learn
to trust God for raiment. That is another part of our care,
what we shall put on; for decency, to cover us; for defense,
to keep us warm; yea, and, with many, for dignity and
ornament, to make them look great and fine; and so much
concerned are they for gaiety and variety in their clothing,
that this care returns almost as often as that for their
daily bread. Now to ease us of this care, let us consider
the lilies of the field; not only look upon them (every eye
does that with pleasure), but consider them. Note, There is
a great deal of good to be learned from what we see every
day, if we would but consider it, Proverbs 6:6; 24:32.
[1.] Consider how frail the lilies
are; they are the grass of the field. Lilies, though
distinguished by their colors, are still but grass. Thus all
flesh is grass: though some in the endowments of body and
mind are as lilies, much admired, still they are grass; the
grass of the field in nature and constitution; they stand
upon the same level with others. Man's days, at best, are as
grass, as the flower of the grass 1 Peter 1:24. This grass
to-day is, and to-morrow is cast into the oven; in a little
while the place that knows us will know us no more. The
grave is the oven into which we shall be cast, and in which
we shall be consumed as grass in the fire, Psalm 49:14. This
intimates a reason why we should not take thought for the
morrow, what we shall put on, because perhaps, by to-morrow,
we may have occasion for our grave-clothes.
[2.] Consider how free from care the
lilies are: they toil not as men do, to earn clothing; as
servants, to earn their liveries; neither do they spin, as
women do, to make clothing. It does not follow that we must
therefore neglect, or do carelessly, the proper business of
this life; it is the praise of the virtuous woman, that she
lays her hand to the spindle, makes fine linen and sells it,
Proverbs 31:19, 24. Idleness tempts God, instead of trusting
him; but he that provides for inferior creatures, without
their labor, will much more provide for us, by blessing our
labor, which he has made our duty. And if we should, through
sickness, be unable to toil and spin, God can furnish us
with what is necessary for us.
[3.] Consider how fair, how fine the
lilies are; how they grow; what they grow from. The root of
the lily or tulip, as other bulbous roots, is, in winter,
lost and buried under ground, yet, when spring returns, it
appears, and starts up in a little time; hence it is
promised to God's Israel, that they should grow as the lily,
Hosea 14:5. Consider what they grow to. Out of that
obscurity in a few weeks they come to be so very gay, that
even Solomon, in all his glory, was not arrayed like one of
these. The array of Solomon was very splendid and
magnificent: he that had the peculiar treasure of kings and
provinces, and studiously affected pomp and gallantry,
doubtless had the richest clothing, and the best made up,
that could be got; especially when he appeared in his glory
on high days. And yet, let him dress himself as fine as he
could, he comes far short of the beauty of the lilies, and a
bed of tulips outshines him. Let us, therefore, be ambitious
of the wisdom of Solomon, in which he was outdone by none
(wisdom to do our duty in our places), rather than the glory
of Solomon, in which he was outdone by the lilies. Knowledge
and grace are the perfection of man, not beauty, much less
fine clothes. Now God is here said thus to clothe the grass
of the field. Note, All the excellences of the creature flow
from God, the Fountain and spring of them. It was he that
gave the horse his strength, and the lily its beauty; every
creature is in itself, as well as to us, what he makes it to
be.
[4.] Consider how instructive all
this is to us, verse 30.
First, As to fine clothing, this
teaches us not to care for it at all, not to covet it, nor
to be proud of it, not to make the putting on of apparel our
adorning, for after all our care in this the lilies will far
outdo us; we cannot dress so fine as they do, why then
should we attempt to vie with them? Their adorning will soon
perish, and so will ours; they fade--are to-day, and
to-morrow are cast, as other rubbish, into the oven; and the
clothes we are proud of are wearing out, the gloss is soon
gone, the color fades, the shape goes out of fashion, or in
awhile the garment itself is worn out; such is man in all
his pomp (Isaiah 40:6, 7), especially rich men (James 1:10);
they fade away in their ways.
Secondly, As to necessary clothing;
this teaches us to cast the care of it upon God--Jehovah-jireh;
trust him that clothes the lilies, to provide for you what
you shall put on. If he give such fine clothes to the grass,
much more will he give fitting clothes to his own children;
clothes that shall be warm upon them, not only when he
quieteth the earth with the south wind, but when he
disquiets it with the north wind, Job 37:17. He shall much
more clothe you: for you are nobler creatures, of a more
excellent being; if so he clothes the short-lived grass,
much more will he clothe you that are made for immortality.
Even the children of Nineveh are preferred before the gourd
(Jonah 4:10, 11), much more the sons of Zion, that are in
covenant with God. Observe the title he gives them (verse 30),
O ye of little faith. This may be taken, 1. As an
encouragement to truth faith, though it be but weak; it
entitles us to the divine care, and a promise of suitable
supply. Great faith shall be commended, and shall procure
great things, but little faith shall not be rejected, even
that shall procure food and raiment. Sound believers shall
be provided for, though they be not strong believers. The
babes in the family are fed and clothed, as well as those
that are grown up, and with a special care and tenderness;
say not, I am but a child, but a dry tree (Isaiah 56:3, 5),
for though poor and needy yet the Lord thinks on thee. Or,
2. It is rather a rebuke to weak faith, though it be true,
Chapter 14:31. It intimates what is at the bottom of all our
inordinate care and thoughtfulness; it is owing to the
weakness of our faith, and the remains of unbelief in us. If
we had but more faith, we should have less care.
3. Which of you, the wisest, the
strongest of you, by taking thought, can add one cubit to
his stature? (verse 27) to his age, so some; but the measure
of a cubit denotes it to be meant of the stature, and the
age at longest is but a span, Psalm 39:5. Let us consider,
(1.) We did not arrive at the stature we are of by our own
care and thought, but by the providence of God. An infant of
a span long has grown up to be a man of six feet, and how
was one cubit after another added to his stature? not by his
own forecast or contrivance; he grew he knew not how, by the
power and goodness of God. Now he that made our bodies, and
made them of such size, surely will take care to provide for
them. Note, God is to be acknowledged in the increase of our
bodily strength and stature, and to be trusted for all
needful supplies, because he has made it to appear, that he
is mindful for the body. The growing age is the thoughtless,
careless age, yet we grow; and shall not he who reared us to
this, provide for us now we are reared? (2.) We cannot alter
the stature we are of, if we would: what a foolish and
ridiculous thing would it be for a man of low stature to
perplex himself, to break his sleep, and beat his brains,
about it, and to be continually taking thought how he might
be a cubit higher; when, after all, he knows he cannot
effect it, and therefore he had better be content and take
it as it is! We are not all of a size, yet the difference in
stature between one and another is not material, nor of any
great account; a little man is ready to wish he were as tall
as such a one, but he knows it is to no purpose, and
therefore does as well as he can with it. Now as we do in
reference to our bodily stature, so we should do in
reference to our worldly estate. [1.] We should not covet an
abundance of the wealth of this world, any more than we
would covet the addition of a cubit to one's stature, which
is a great deal in a man's height; it is enough to grow by
inches; such an addition would but make one unwieldy, and a
burden to one's self. [2.] We must reconcile ourselves to
our state, as we do to our stature; we must set the
conveniences against the inconveniences, and so make a
virtue of necessity: what cannot be remedied must be made
the best of. We cannot alter the disposals of Providence,
and therefore must acquiesce in them, accommodate ourselves
to them, and relieve ourselves, as well as we can, against
inconveniences, as Zaccheus against the inconvenience of his
stature, by climbing into the tree.
4. After all these things do the
Gentiles seek, verse 32. Thoughtfulness about the world is a
heathenish sin, and unbecoming Christians. The Gentiles seek
these things, because they know not better things; they are
eager for this world, because they are strangers to a
better; they seek these things with care and anxiety,
because they are without God in the world, and understand
not his providence. They fear and worship their idols, but
know not how to trust them for deliverance and supply, and,
therefore, are themselves full of care; but it is a shame
for Christians, who build upon nobler principles, and
profess a religion which teaches them not only that there is
a Providence, but that there are promises made to the good
of the life that now is, which teaches them a confidence in
God and a contempt of the world, and gives such reasons for
both; it is a shame for them to walk as Gentiles walk, and
to fill their heads and hearts with these things.
5. Your heavenly Father knows ye
have need of all these things; these necessary things, food
and raiment; he knows our wants better than we do ourselves;
though he be in heaven, and his children on earth, he
observes what the least and poorest of them has occasion for
(Revelation 2:9), I know thy poverty. You think, if such a
good friend did not but know your wants and straits, you
would soon have relief: your God knows them; and he is your
Father that loves you and pities you, and is ready to help
you; your heavenly Father, who has wherewithal to supply all
your needs: away, therefore, with all disquieting thoughts
and cares; go to thy Father; tell him, he knows that thou
has need of such and such things; he asks you, Children,
have you any meat? John 21:5. Tell him whether you have or
have not. Though he knows our wants, he will know them from
us; and when we have opened them to him, let us cheerfully
refer ourselves to his wisdom, power, and goodness, for our
supply. Therefore, we should ease ourselves of the burthen
of care, by casting it upon God, because it is he that cares
for us (1 Peter 5:7), and what needs all this ado? If he
care, why should be care?
6. Seek first the kingdom of God,
and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added
unto you. verse 33. Here is a double argument against the
sin of thoughtfulness; take no thought for your life, the
life of the body; for, (1.) You have greater and better
things to take thought about, the life of your soul, your
eternal happiness; that is the one thing needful (Luke
10:42), about which you should employ your thoughts, and
which is commonly neglected in those hearts wherein worldly
cares have the ascendant. If we were but more careful to
please God, and to work out our own salvation, we should be
less solicitous to please ourselves, and work out an estate
in the world. Thoughtfulness for our souls is the most
effectual cure of thoughtfulness for the world. (2.) You
have a surer and easier, a safer and more compendious way to
obtain the necessaries of this life, than by carking, and
caring, and fretting about them; and that is, by seeking
first the kingdom of God, and making religion your business:
say not that this is the way to starve, no, it is the way to
be well provided for, even in this world. Observe here,
[1.] The great duty required: it is
the sum and substance of our whole duty: "Seek first the
kingdom of God, mind religion as your great and principle
concern." Our duty is to seek; to desire, pursue, and aim at
these things; it is a word that has in it much of the
constitution of the new covenant in favor of us; though we
have not attained, but in many things fail and come short,
sincere seeking (a careful concern and an earnest endeavor)
is accepted. Now observe, First, The object of this seeking;
The kingdom of God, and his righteousness; we must mind
heaven as our end, and holiness as our way. "Seek the
comforts of the kingdom of grace and glory as your felicity.
Aim at the kingdom of heaven; press towards it; give
diligence to make it sure; resolve not to take up short of
it; seek for this glory, honor, and immortality; prefer
heaven and heavenly blessings far before earth and earthly
delights." We make nothing of our religion, if we do not
make heaven of it. And with the happiness of this kingdom,
seek the righteousness of it; God's righteousness, the
righteousness which he requires to be wrought in us, and
wrought by us, such as exceeds that of the scribes and
Pharisees; we must follow peace and holiness, Hebrews 12:14.
Secondly, The order of it. Seek first the kingdom of God.
Let your care for your souls and another world take the
place of all other cares: and let all the concerns of this
life be made subordinate to those of the life to come: we
must seek the things of Christ more than our own things; and
if ever they come in competition, we must remember to which
we are to give the preference. "Seek these things first;
first in thy days: let the morning of thy youth be dedicated
to God. Wisdom must be sought early; it is good beginning
betimes to be religious. Seek the first every day; let
waking thoughts be of God." Let this be our principle, to do
that first which is most needful, and let him that is the
First, have the first.
[2.] The gracious promise annexed;
all these things, the necessary supports of life, shall be
added unto you; shall be given over and above; so it is in
the margin. You shall have what you seek, the kingdom of God
and his righteousness, for never any sought in vain, that
sought in earnest; and besides that, you shall have food and
raiment, by way of surplus; as he that buys goods has paper
and packthread given him in the bargain. Godliness has the
promise of the life that now is, 1 Timothy 4:8. Solomon
asked wisdom, and had that and other things added to him, 2
Chronicles 1:11, 12. O what a blessed change would it make
in our hearts and lives, did we but firmly believe this
truth, that the best way to be comfortably provided for in
this world, is to be most intent upon another world! We then
begin at the right end of our work, when we begin with God.
If we give diligence to make sure to ourselves the kingdom
of God and the righteousness thereof, as to all the things
of this life, Jehovah-jireh--the Lord will provide as much
of them as he sees good for us, and more we would not wish
for. Have we trusted in him for the portion of our
inheritance at our end, and shall we not trust him for the
portion of our cup, in the way to it? God's Israel were not
only brought to Canaan at last, but had their charges borne
through the wilderness. O that we were more thoughtful about
the things that are not seen, that are eternal, and then the
less thoughtful we should be, and the less thoughtful we
should need to be, about the things that are seen, that are
temporal! Also regard not your stuff, Genesis 45:20, 23.
7. The morrow shall take thought for
the things of itself: sufficient unto the day is the evil
thereof, verse 34. We must not perplex ourselves
inordinately about future events, because every day brings
along with it its own burthen of cares and grievances, as,
if we look about us, and suffer not our fears to betray the
succors which grace and reason offer, it brings along with
it its own strength and supply too. So that we are here
told,
(1.) That thoughtfulness for the morrow is needless; Let the
morrow take thought for the things of itself. If wants and
troubles be renewed with the day, there are aids and
provisions renewed likewise; compassions, that are new every
morning, Lamentations 3: 22, 23. The saints have a Friend
that is their arm every morning, and gives out fresh
supplies daily (Isaiah 33:2), according as the business of
every day requires (Ezra 3:4), and so he keeps his people in
constant dependence upon him. Let us refer it therefore to
the morrow's strength, to do the morrow's work, and bear the
morrow's burthen. To-morrow, and the things of it, will be
provided for without us; why need we anxiously care for that
which is so wisely cared for already? This does not forbid a
prudent foresight, and preparation accordingly, but a
perplexing solicitude, and a prepossession of difficulties
and calamities, which may perhaps never come, or if they do,
may be easily borne, and the evil of them guarded against.
The meaning is, let us mind present duty, and then leave
events to God; do the work of the day in its day, and then
let to-morrow bring its work along with it.
(2.) That thoughtfulness for the
morrow is one of those foolish and hurtful lusts, which
those that will be rich fall into, and one of the many
sorrows, wherewith they pierce themselves through.
Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof. This present
day has trouble enough attending it, we need not accumulate
burdens by anticipating our trouble, nor borrow perplexities
from to-morrow's evils to add to those of this day. It is
uncertain what to-morrow's evils may be, but whatever they
be, it is time enough to take thought about them when they
come. What a folly it is to take that trouble upon ourselves
this day by care and fear, which belongs to another day, and
will be never the lighter when it comes? Let us not pull
that upon ourselves all together at once, which Providence
has wisely ordered to be borne by parcels. The conclusion of
this whole matter then is, that it is the will and command
of the Lord Jesus, that his disciples should not be their
own tormentors, nor make their passage through this world
more dark and unpleasant, by their apprehension of troubles,
than God has made it by the troubles themselves. By our
daily prayers we may procure strength to bear us up under
our daily troubles, and to arm us against the temptations
that attend them, and then let none of these things move us.
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