155 KiB
John, Chapter 8
Commentary
In this chapter we have, I.
Christ's evading the snare which the Jews
laid for him, in bringing to him a woman taken in adultery (v. 1-11).
II.
Divers discourses or conferences of his with the Jews that cavilled
at him, and sought occasion against him, and made every thing he said a
matter of controversy. 1. Concerning his being the light of the world
(v. 12-20). 2. Concerning the ruin of the unbelieving Jews (v. 21-30).
3. Concerning liberty and bondage (v. 31-37). 4. Concerning his Father
and their father (v. 38-47). 5. Here is his discourse in answer to their
blasphemous reproaches (v. 48-50). 6. Concerning the immortality of
believers (v. 51-59). And in all this he endured the contradiction of
sinners against himself.
Verses 1-11
Though Christ was basely abused in the foregoing chapter, both by the rulers and by the people, yet here we have him still at Jerusalem, still in the temple. How often would he have gathered them! Observe,
I.
His retirement in the evening out of the town (v. 1): He went unto
the mount of olives; whether to some friend's house, or to some booth
pitched there, now at the feast of tabernacles, is not certain; whether
he rested there, or, as some think, continued all night in prayer to
God, we are not told. But he went out of Jerusalem, perhaps because he
had no friend there that had either kindness or courage enough to give
him a night's lodging; while his persecutors had houses of their own to
go to (ch. 7:53), he could not so much as borrow a place to lay his head
on, but what he must go a mile or two out of town for. He retired (as
some think) because he would not expose himself to the peril of a
popular tumult in the night. It is prudent to go out of the way of
danger whenever we can do it without going out of the way of duty. In
the day-time, when he had work to do in the temple, he willingly exposed
himself, and was under special protection, Isa. 49:2. But in the night,
when he had not work to do, he withdrew into the country, and sheltered
himself there.
II.
His return in the morning to the temple, and to his work there, v.
2. Observe,
1.
What a diligent preacher Christ was: Early in the morning he came
again, and taught. Though he had been teaching the day before, he taught
again to-day. Christ was a constant preacher, in season and out of
season. Three things were taken notice of here concerning Christ's
preaching. (1.)
The time: Early in the morning. Though he lodged out of
town, and perhaps had spent much of the night in secret prayer, yet he
came early. When a day's work is to be done for God and souls it is
good to begin betimes, and take the day before us. (2.)
The place: In
the temple; not so much because it was a consecrated place (for then he
would have chosen it at other times) as because it was now a place of
concourse; and he would hereby countenance solemn assemblies for
religious worship, and encourage people to come up to the temple, for he
had not yet left it desolate. (3.)
His posture: He sat down, and taught,
as one having authority, and as one that intended to abide by it for
some time.
2.
How diligently his preaching was attended upon: All the people came
unto him; and perhaps many of them were the country-people, who were
this day to return home from the feast, and were desirous to hear one
sermon more from the mouth of Christ before they returned. They came to
him, though he came early. They that seek him early shall find him.
Though the rulers were displeased at those that came to hear him, yet
they would come; and he taught them, though they were angry at him too.
Though there were few or none among them that were persons of any
figure, yet Christ bade them welcome, and taught them.
III.
His dealing with those that brought to him the woman taken in
adultery, tempting him. The scribes and Pharisees would not only not
hear Christ patiently themselves, but they disturbed him when the people
were attending on him. Observe here,
1.
The case proposed to him by the scribes and Pharisees, who herein
contrived to pick a quarrel with him, and bring him into a snare, v.
3-6.
(1.)
They set the prisoner to the bar (v. 3): they brought him a woman
taken in adultery, perhaps now lately taken, during the time of the
feast of tabernacles, when, it may be, their dwelling in booths, and
their feasting and joy, might, by wicked minds, which corrupt the best
things, be made occasions of sin. Those that were taken in adultery were
by the Jewish law to be put to death, which the Roman powers allowed
them the execution of, and therefore she was brought before the
ecclesiastical court. Observe, She was taken in her adultery. Though
adultery is a work of darkness, which the criminals commonly take all
the care they can to conceal, yet sometimes it is strangely brought to
light. Those that promise themselves secrecy in sin deceive themselves.
The scribes and Pharisees bring her to Christ, and set her in the midst
of the assembly, as if they would leave her wholly to the judgment of
Christ, he having sat down, as a judge upon the bench.
(2.)
They prefer an indictment against her: Master, this woman was taken
in adultery, v. 4. Here they call him Master whom but the day before
they had called a deceiver, in hopes with their flatteries to have
ensnared him, as those, Lu. 20:20. But, though men may be imposed upon
with compliments, he that searches the heart cannot.
[1.]
The crime for which the prisoner stands indicted is no less than
adultery, which even in the patriarchal age, before the law of Moses,
was looked upon as an iniquity to be punished by the judges, Job
31:9-11; Gen. 38:24. The Pharisees, by their vigorous prosecution of
this offender, seemed to have a great zeal against the sin, when it
appeared afterwards that they themselves were not free from it; nay,
they were within full of all uncleanness, Mt. 23:27, 28. Note, It is
common for those that are indulgent to their own sin to be severe
against the sins of others.
[2.]
The proof of the crime was from the notorious evidence of the
fact, an incontestable proof; she was taken in the act, so that there
was no room left to plead not guilty. Had she not been taken in this
act, she might have gone on to another, till her heart had been
perfectly hardened; but sometimes it proves a mercy to sinners to have
their sin brought to light, that they may do no more presumptuously.
Better our sin should shame us than damn us, and be set in order before
us for our conviction than for our condemnation.
(3.)
They produce the statute in this case made and provided, and upon
which she was indicted, v. 5. Moses in the law commanded that such
should be stoned. Moses commanded that they should be put to death (Lev.
20:10; Deu. 22:22), but not that they should be stoned, unless the
adulteress was espoused, not married, or was a priest's daughter, Deu.
22:21. Note, Adultery is an exceedingly sinful sin, for it is the
rebellion of a vile lust, not only against the command, but against the
covenant, of our God. It is the violation of a divine institution in
innocency, by the indulgence of one of the basest lusts of man in his
degeneracy.
(4.)
They pray his judgment in the case: "But what sayest thou, who
pretendest to be a teacher come from God to repeal old laws and enact
new ones? What hast thou to say in this case?" If they had asked this
question in sincerity, with a humble desire to know his mind, it had
been very commendable. Those that are entrusted with the administration
of justice should look up to Christ for direction; but this they said
tempting him, that they might have to accuse him, v. 6. [1.]
If he
should confirm the sentence of the law, and let it take its course, they
would censure him as inconsistent with himself (he having received
publicans and harlots) and with the character of the Messiah, who should
be meek, and have salvation, and proclaim a year of release; and perhaps
they would accuse him to the Roman governor, for countenancing the Jews
in the exercise of a judicial power. But, [2.]
If he should acquit
her, and give his opinion that the sentence should not be executed (as
they expected he would), they would represent him, First, As an enemy to
the law of Moses, and as one that usurped an authority to correct and
control it, and would confirm that prejudice against him which his
enemies were so industrious to propagate, that he came to destroy the
law and the prophets. Secondly, As a friend to sinners, and,
consequently, a favourer of sin; if he should seem to connive at such
wickedness, and let it go unpunished, they would represent him as
countenancing it, and being a patron of offences, if he was a protector
of offenders, than which no reflection could be more invidious upon one
that professed the strictness, purity, and business of a prophet.
2.
The method he took to resolve this case, and so to break this snare.
(1.)
He seemed to slight it, and turned a deaf ear to it: He stooped
down, and wrote on the ground. It is impossible to tell, and therefore
needless to ask, what he wrote; but this is the only mention made in the
gospels of Christ's writing. Eusebius indeed speaks of his writing to
Abgarus, king of Edessa. Some think they have a liberty of conjecture as
to what he wrote here. Grotius says, It was some grave weighty saying,
and that it was usual for wise men, when they were very thoughtful
concerning any thing, to do so. Jerome and Ambrose suppose he wrote, Let
the names of these wicked men be written in the dust. Others this, The
earth accuses the earth, but the judgment is mine. Christ by this
teaches us to be slow to speak when difficult cases are proposed to us,
not quickly to shoot our bolt; and when provocations are given us, or we
are bantered, to pause and consider before we reply; think twice before
we speak once: The heart of the wise studies to answer. Our translation
from some Greek copies, which add, meµ prospoioumenos (though most
copies have it not), give this account of the reason of his writing on
the ground, as though he heard them not. He did as it were look another
way, to show that he was not willing to take notice of their address,
saying, in effect, Who made me a judge or a divider? It is safe in many
cases to be deaf to that which it is not safe to answer, Ps. 38:13.
Christ would not have his ministers to be entangled in secular affairs.
Let them rather employ themselves in any lawful studies, and fill up
their time in writing on the ground (which nobody will heed), than busy
themselves in that which does not belong to them. But, when Christ
seemed as though he heard them not, he made it appear that he not only
heard their words, but knew their thoughts.
(2.)
When they importunately, or rather impertinently, pressed him for
an answer, he turned the conviction of the prisoner upon the
prosecutors, v. 7.
[1.]
They continued asking him, and his seeming not to take notice of
them made them the more vehement; for now they thought sure enough that
they had run him aground, and that he could not avoid the imputation of
contradicting either the law of Moses, if he should acquit the prisoner,
or his own doctrine of mercy and pardon, if he should condemn her; and
therefore they pushed on their appeal to him with vigour; whereas they
should have construed his disregard of them as a check to their design,
and an intimation to them to desist, as they tendered their own
reputation.
[2.]
At last he put them all to shame and silence with one word: He
lifted up himself, awaking as one out of sleep (Ps. 78:65), and said
unto them, He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone
at her.
First, Here Christ avoided the snare which they had laid for him, and effectually saved his own reputation. He neither reflected upon the law nor excused the prisoner's guilt, nor did he on the other hand encourage the prosecution or countenance their heat; see the good effect of consideration. When we cannot make our point by steering a direct course, it is good to fetch a compass.
Secondly, In the net which they spread is their own foot taken. They came with design to accuse him, but they were forced to accuse themselves. Christ owns it was fit the prisoner should be prosecuted, but appeals to their consciences whether they were fit to be the prosecutors.
a.
He here refers to that rule which the law of Moses prescribed in the
execution of criminals, that the hand of the witnesses must be first
upon them (Deu. 17:7), as in the stoning of Stephen, Acts 7:58. The
scribes and Pharisees were the witnesses against this woman. Now Christ
puts it to them whether, according to their own law, they would dare to
be the executioners. Durst they take away that life with their hands
which they were now taking away with their tongues? would not their own
consciences fly in their faces if they did?
b.
He builds upon an uncontested maxim in morality, that it is very
absurd for men to be zealous in punishing the offences of others, while
they are every whit as guilty themselves, and they are not better than
self-condemned who judge others, and yet themselves do the same thing:
"If there be any of you who is without sin, without sin of this nature,
that has not some time or other been guilty of fornication or adultery,
let him cast the first stone at her." Not that magistrates, who are
conscious of guilt themselves, should therefore connive at others'
guilt. But therefore, (a.)
Whenever we find fault with others, we ought
to reflect upon ourselves, and to be more severe against sin in
ourselves than in others. (b.)
We ought to be favourable, though not to
the sins, yet to the persons, of those that offend, and to restore them
with a spirit of meekness, considering ourselves and our own corrupt
nature. Aut sumus, aut fuimus, vel possumus esse quod hic est-We either
are, or have been, or may be, what he is. Let this restrain us from
throwing stones at our brethren, and proclaiming their faults. Let him
that is without sin begin such discourse as this, and then those that
are truly humbled for their own sins will blush at it, and be glad to
let it drop. (c.)
Those that are any way obliged to animadvert upon the
faults of others are concerned to look well to themselves, and keep
themselves pure (Mt. 7:5), Qui alterum incusat probri, ipsum se intueri
oportet. The snuffers of the tabernacle were of pure gold.
c.
Perhaps he refers to the trial of the suspected wife by the jealous
husband with the waters of jealousy. The man was to bring her to the
priest (Num. 5:15), as the scribes and Pharisees brought this woman to
Christ. Now it was a received opinion among the Jews, and confirmed by
experience, that if the husband who brought his wife to that trial had
himself been at any time guilty of adultery, Aquae non explorant ejus
uxorem-The bitter water had no effect upon the wife. "Come then,"
saith Christ, "according to your own tradition will I judge you; if you
are without sin, stand to the charge, and let the adulteress be
executed; but if not, though she be guilty, while you that present her
are equally so, according to your own rule she shall be free."
d.
In this he attended to the great work which he came into the world
about, and that was to bring sinners to repentance; not to destroy, but
to save. He aimed to bring, not only the prisoner to repentance, by
showing her his mercy, but the prosecutors too, by showing them their
sins. They sought to ensnare him; he sought to convince and convert
them. Thus the blood-thirsty hate the upright, but the just seek his
soul.
[3.]
Having given them this startling word, he left them to consider
of it, and again stooped down, and wrote on the ground, v. 8. As when
they made their address he seemed to slight their question, so now that
he had given them an answer he slighted their resentment of it, not
caring what they said to it; nay, they needed not to make any reply; the
matter was lodged in their own breasts, let them make the best of it
there. Or, he would not seem to wait for an answer, lest they should on
a sudden justify themselves, and then think themselves bound in honour
to persist in it; but gives them time to pause, and to commune with
their own hearts. God saith, I hearkened and heard, Jer. 8:6. Some Greek
copies here read, He wrote on the ground, enos hekastou autoµn tas
hamartias-the sins of every one of them; this he could do, for he sets
our iniquities before him; and this he will do, for he will set them in
order before us too; he seals up our transgressions, Job 14:17. But he
does not write men's sins in the sand; no, they are written as with a
pen of iron and the point of a diamond (Jer. 17:1), never to be
forgotten till they are forgiven.
[4.]
The scribes and Pharisees were so strangely thunderstruck with
the words of Christ that they let fall their persecution of Christ, whom
they durst no further tempt, and their prosecution of the woman, whom
they durst no longer accuse (v. 9): They went out one by one.
First, Perhaps his writing on the ground frightened them, as the hand-writing on the wall frightened Belshazzar. They concluded he was writing bitter things against them, writing their doom. Happy they who have no reason to be afraid of Christ's writing!
Secondly, What he said frightened them by sending them to their own
consciences; he had shown them to themselves, and they were afraid if
they should stay till he lifted up himself again his next word would
show them to the world, and shame them before men, and therefore they
thought it best to withdraw. They went out one by one, that they might
go out softly, and not by a noisy flight disturb Christ; they went away
by stealth, as people being ashamed steal away when they flee in battle,
2 Sa. 19:3. The order of their departure is taken notice of, beginning
at the eldest, either because they were most guilty, or first aware of
the danger they were in of being put to the blush; and if the eldest
quit the field, and retreat ingloriously, no marvel if the younger
follow them. Now see here, 1. The force of the word of Christ for the
conviction of sinners: They who heard it were convicted by their own
consciences. Conscience is God's deputy in the soul, and one word from
him will set it on work, Heb. 4:12. Those that had been old in
adulteries, and long fixed in a proud opinion of themselves, were here,
even the oldest of them, startled by the word of Christ; even scribes
and Pharisees, who were most conceited of themselves, are by the power
of Christ's word made to retire with shame. 2. The folly of sinners
under these convictions, which appears in these scribes and Pharisees.
(1.)
It is folly for those that are under convictions to make it their
principal care to avoid shame, as Judah (Gen. 38:23), lest we be shamed.
Our care should be more to save our souls than to save our credit. Saul
evidenced his hypocrisy when he said, I have sinned, yet now honour me,
I pray thee. There is no way to get the honour and comfort of penitents,
but by taking the shame of penitents. (2.)
It is folly for those that
are under convictions to contrive how to shift off their convictions,
and to get rid of them. The scribes and Pharisees had the wound opened,
and now they should have been desirous to have it searched, and then it
might have been healed, but this was the thing they dreaded and
declined. (3.)
It is folly for those that are under convictions to get
away from Jesus Christ, as these here did, for he is the only one that
can heal the wounds of conscience, and speak peace to us. Those that are
convicted by their consciences will be condemned by their Judge, if they
be not justified by their Redeemer; and will they then go from him? To
whom will they go?
[5.]
When the self-conceited prosecutors quitted the field, and fled
for the same, the self-condemned prisoner stood her ground, with a
resolution to abide by the judgment of our Lord Jesus: Jesus was left
alone from the company of the scribes and Pharisees, free from their
molestations, and the woman standing in the midst of the assembly that
were attending on Christ's preaching, where they set her, v. 3. She did
not seek to make her escape, though she had opportunity for it; but her
prosecutors had appealed unto Jesus, and to him she would go, on him she
would wait for her doom. Note, Those whose cause is brought before our
Lord Jesus will never have occasion to remove it into any other court,
for he is the refuge of penitents. The law which accuses us, and calls
for judgment against us, is by the gospel of Christ made to withdraw;
its demands are answered, and its clamours silenced, by the blood of
Jesus. Our cause is lodged in the gospel court; we are left with Jesus
alone, it is with him only that we have now to deal, for to him all
judgment is committed; let us therefore secure our interest in him, and
we are made for ever. Let his gospel rule us, and it will infallibly
save us.
[6.]
Here is the conclusion of the trial, and the issue it was brought
to: Jesus lifted up himself, and he saw none but the woman, v. 10, 11.
Though Christ may seem to take no notice of what is said and done, but
leave it to the contending sons of men to deal it out among themselves,
yet, when the hour of his judgment is come, he will no longer keep
silence. When David had appealed to God, he prayed, Lift up thyself, Ps.
7:6, and 94:2. The woman, it is likely, stood trembling at the bar, as
one doubtful of the issue. Christ was without sin, and might cast the
first stone; but though none more severe than he against sin, for he is
infinitely just and holy, none more compassionate than he to sinners,
for he is infinitely gracious and merciful, and this poor malefactor
finds him so, now that she stands upon her deliverance. Here is the
method of courts of judicature observed.
First, The prosecutors are called: Where are those thine accusers? Hath no man condemned thee? Not but that Christ knew where they were; but he asked, that he might shame them, who declined his judgment, and encourage her who resolved to abide by it. St. Paul's challenge is like this, Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect? Where are those their accusers? The accuser of the brethren shall be fairly cast out, and all indictments legally and regularly quashed.
Secondly, They do not appear when the question is asked: Hath no man condemned thee? She said, No man, Lord. She speaks respectfully to Christ, calls him Lord, but is silent concerning her prosecutors, says nothing in answer to that question which concerned them, Where are those thine accusers? She does not triumph in their retreat nor insult over them as witnesses against themselves, not against her. If we hope to be forgiven by our Judge, we must forgive our accusers; and if their accusations, how invidious soever, were the happy occasion of awakening our consciences, we may easily forgive them this wrong. But she answered the question which concerned herself, Has no man condemned thee? True penitents find it enough to give an account of themselves to God, and will not undertake to give an account of other people.
Thirdly, The prisoner is therefore discharged: Neither do I condemn thee; go, and sin no more. Consider this,
(a.)
As her discharge from the temporal punishment: "If they do not
condemn thee to be stoned to death, neither do I.
" Not that Christ came
to disarm the magistrate of his sword of justice, nor that it is his
will that capital punishments should not be inflicted on malefactors; so
far from this, the administration of public justice is established by
the gospel, and made subservient to Christ's kingdom: By me kings
reign. But Christ would not condemn this woman, (a.)
Because it was none
of his business; he was no judge nor divider, and therefore would not
intermeddle in secular affairs. His kingdom was not of this world.
Tractent fabrilia fabri-Let every one act in his own province. (b.)
Because she was prosecuted by those that were more guilty than she and
could not for shame insist upon their demand of justice against her. The
law appointed the hands of the witnesses to be first upon the criminal,
and afterwards the hands of all the people, so that if they fly off, and
do not condemn her, the prosecution drops. The justice of God, in
inflicting temporal judgments, sometimes takes notice of a comparative
righteousness, and spares those who are otherwise obnoxious when the
punishing of them would gratify those that are worse than they, Deu.
32:26, 27. But, when Christ dismissed her, it was with this caution, Go,
and sin no more. Impunity emboldens malefactors, and therefore those who
are guilty, and yet have found means to escape the edge of the law, need
to double their watch, lest Satan get advantage; for the fairer the
escape was, the fairer the warning was to go and sin no more. Those who
help to save the life of a criminal should, as Christ here, help to save
the soul with this caution.
(b.)
As her discharge from the eternal punishment. For Christ to say, I
do not condemn thee is, in effect, to say, I do forgive thee; and the
Son of man had power on earth to forgive sins, and could upon good
grounds give this absolution; for as he knew the hardness and impenitent
hearts of the prosecutors, and therefore said that which would confound
them, so he knew the tenderness and sincere repentance of the prisoner,
and therefore said that which would comfort her, as he did to that woman
who was a sinner, such a sinner as this, who was likewise looked upon
with disdain by a Pharisee (Lu. 7:48, 50): Thy sins are forgiven thee,
go in peace. So here, Neither do I condemn thee. Note, (a.)
Those are
truly happy whom Christ doth not condemn, for his discharge is a
sufficient answer to all other challenges; they are all coram non
judice-before an unauthorized judge. (b.)
Christ will not condemn those
who, though they have sinned, will go and sin no more, Ps. 85:8; Isa.
55:7. he will not take the advantage he has against us for our former
rebellions, if we will but lay down our arms and return to our
allegiance. (c.)
Christ's favour to us in the remission of the sins
that are past should be a prevailing argument with us to go and sin no
more, Rom. 6:1, 2. Will not Christ condemn thee? Go then and sin no
more.
Verses 12-20
The rest of the chapter is taken up with debates between Christ and contradicting sinners, who cavilled at the most gracious words that proceeded out of his mouth. It is not certain whether these disputes were the same day that the adulteress was discharged; it is probable they were, for the evangelist mentions no other day, and takes notice (v. 2) how early Christ began that day's work. Though those Pharisees that accused the woman had absconded, yet there were other Pharisees (v. 13) to confront Christ, who had brass enough in their foreheads to keep them in countenance, though some of their party were put to such a shameful retreat; nay perhaps that made them the more industrious to pick quarrels with him, to retrieve, if possible, the reputation of their baffled party. In these verses we have,
I.
A great doctrine laid down, with the application of it.
1.
The doctrine is, That Christ is the light of the world (v. 12): Then
spoke Jesus again unto them; though he had spoken a great deal to them
to little purpose, and what he had said was opposed, yet he spoke again,
for he speaketh once, yea, twice. They had turned a deaf ear to what he
said, and yet he spoke again to them, saying, I am the light of the
world. Note, Jesus Christ is the light of the world. One of the rabbies
saith, Light is the name of the Messiah, as it is written, Dan. 2:22,
And light dwelleth with him. God is light, and Christ is the image of
the invisible God; God of gods, Light of lights. He was expected to be a
light to enlighten the Gentiles (Lu. 2:32), and so the light of the
world, and not of the Jewish church only. The visible light of the world
is the sun, and Christ is the Sun of righteousness. One sun enlightens
the whole world, so does one Christ, and there needs no more. Christ in
calling himself the light expresses, (1.)
What he is in himself-most
excellent and glorious. (2.)
What he is to the world-the fountain of
light, enlightening every man. What a dungeon would the world be without
the sun! So would it be without Christ by whom light came into the
world, ch. 3:19.
2.
The inference from this doctrine is, He that followeth me, as a
traveller follows the light in a dark night, shall not walk in darkness,
but shall have the light of life. If Christ be the light, then, (1.)
It
is our duty to follow him, to submit ourselves to his guidance, and in
every thing take directions from him, in the way that leads to
happiness. Many follow false lights-ignes fatui, that lead them to
destruction; but Christ is the true light. It is not enough to look at
this light, and to gaze upon it, but we must follow it, believe in it,
and walk in it, for it is a light to our feet, not our eyes only. (2.)
It is the happiness of those who follow Christ that they shall not walk
in darkness. They shall not be left destitute of those instructions in
the way of truth which are necessary to keep them from destroying error,
and those directions in the way of duty which are necessary to keep them
from damning sin. They shall have the light of life, that knowledge and
enjoyment of God which will be to them the light of spiritual life in
this world and of everlasting life in the other world, where there will
be no death nor darkness. Follow Christ, and we shall undoubtedly be
happy in both worlds. Follow Christ, and we shall follow him to heaven.
II.
The objection which the Pharisees made against this doctrine, and
it was very trifling and frivolous: Thou bearest record of thyself; thy
record is not true, v. 13. In this objection they went upon the
suspicion which we commonly have of men's self-condemnation, which is
concluded to be the native language of self-love, such as we are all
ready to condemn in others, but few are willing to own in themselves.
But in this case the objection was very unjust, for, 1. They made that
his crime, and a diminution to the credibility of his doctrine, which in
the case of one who introduced a divine revelation was necessary and
unavoidable. Did not Moses and all the prophets bear witness of
themselves when they avouched themselves to be God's messengers? Did
not the Pharisees ask John Baptist, What sayest thou of thyself? 2. They
overlooked the testimony of all the other witnesses, which corroborated
the testimony he bore of himself. Had he only borne record of himself,
his testimony had indeed been suspicious, and the belief of it might
have been suspended; but his doctrine was attested by more than two or
three credible witnesses, enough to establish every word of it.
III.
Christ's reply to this objection, v. 14. He does not retort upon
them as he might ("You profess yourselves to be devout and good men,
but your witness is not true"), but plainly vindicates himself; and,
though he had waived his own testimony (ch. 5:31), yet here he abides by
it, that it did not derogate from the credibility of his other proofs,
but was necessary to show the force of them. He is the light of the
world, and it is the property of light to be self-evidencing. First
principles prove themselves. He urges three things to prove that his
testimony, though of himself, was true and cogent.
1.
That he was conscious to himself of his own authority, and
abundantly satisfied in himself concerning it. He did not speak as one
at uncertainty, nor propose a disputable notion, about which he himself
hesitated, but declared a decree, and gave such an account of himself as
he would abide by: I know whence I came, and whither I go. He was fully
apprised of his own undertaking from first to last; knew whose errand he
went upon, and what his success would be. He knew what he was before his
manifestation to the world, and what he should be after; that he came
from the Father, and was going to him (ch. 16:28), came from glory, and
was going to glory, (ch. 17:5). This is the satisfaction of all good
Christians, that though the world know them not, as it knew him not, yet
they know whence their spiritual life comes, and whither it tends, and
go upon sure grounds.
2.
That they are very incompetent judges of him, and of his doctrine,
and not to be regarded. (1.)
Because they were ignorant, willingly and
resolvedly ignorant: You cannot tell whence I came, and whither I go. To
what purpose is it to talk with those who know nothing of the matter,
nor desire to know? He had told them of his coming from heaven and
returning to heaven, but it was foolishness to them, they received it
not; it was what the brutish man knows not, Ps. 92:6. They took upon
them to judge of that which they did not understand, which lay quite out
of the road of their acquaintance. Those that despise Christ's
dominions and dignities speak evil of what they know not, Jude, v. 8,
10. (2.)
Because they were partial (v. 15): You judge after the flesh.
When fleshly wisdom gives the rule of judgment, and outward appearances
only are given in evidence, and the case decided according to them, then
men judge after the flesh; and when the consideration of a secular
interest turns the scale in judging of spiritual matters, when we judge
in favour of that which pleases the carnal mind, and recommends us to a
carnal world, we judge after the flesh; and the judgment cannot be right
when the rule is wrong. The Jews judged of Christ and his gospel by
outward appearances, and, because he appeared so mean, thought it
impossible he should be the light of the world; as if the sun under a
cloud were no sun. (3.)
Because they were unjust and unfair towards him,
intimated in this: "I judge no man; I neither make nor meddle with your
political affairs, nor does my doctrine or practice at all intrench
upon, or interfere with, your civil rights or secular powers." He thus
judged no man. Now, if he did not war after the flesh, it was very
unreasonable for them to judge him after the flesh, and to treat him as
an offender against the civil government. Or, "I judge no man," that
is, "not now in my first coming, that is deferred till I come again,"
ch. 3:17. Prima dispensatio Christi medicinalis est, non judicialis-The
first coming of Christ was for the purpose of administering, not
justice, but medicine.
3.
That his testimony of himself was sufficiently supported and
corroborated by the testimony of his Father with him and for him (v.
16): And yet, if I judge, my judgment is true. He did in his doctrine
judge (ch. 9:39), though not politically. Consider him then,
(1.)
As a judge, and his own judgment was valid: "If I judge, I who
have authority to execute judgments, I to whom all things are delivered,
I who am the Son of God, and have the Spirit of God, if I judge, my
judgment is true, of incontestable rectitude and uncontrollable
authority, Rom. 2:2. If I should judge, my judgment must be true, and
then you would be condemned; but the judgment-day is not yet come, you
are not yet to be condemned, but spared, and therefore now I judge no
man;" so Chrysostom. Now that which makes his judgment unexceptionable
is, [1.]
His Father's concurrence with him: I am not alone, but I and
the Father. He has the Father's concurring counsels to direct; as he
was with the Father before the world in forming the counsels, so the
Father was with him in the world in prosecuting and executing those
counsels, and never left him inops consilii-without advice, Isa. 11:2.
All the counsels of peace (and of war too) were between them both, Zec.
6:13. He had also the Father's concurring power to authorize and
confirm what he did; see Ps. 89:21, etc.; Isa. 42:1. He did not act
separately, but in his own name and his Father's, and by the authority
aforesaid, ch. 5:17, and 14:9, 10. [2.]
His Father's commission to
him: "It is the Father that sent me." Note, God will go along with
those that he sends; see Ex. 3:10, 12: Come, and I will send thee, and
certainly I will be with thee. Now, if Christ had a commission from the
Father, and the Father's presence with him in all his administrations,
no doubt his judgment was true and valid; no exception lay against it,
no appeal lay from it.
(2.)
Look upon him as a witness, and now he appeared no otherwise
(having not as yet taken the throne of judgment), and as such his
testimony was true and unexceptionable; this he shows, v. 17, 18, where,
[1.]
He quotes a maxim of the Jewish law, v. 17. That the testimony of
two men is true. Not as if it were always true in itself, for many a
time hand has been joined in hand to bear a false testimony, 1 Ki.
21:10. But it is allowed as sufficient evidence upon which to ground a
verdict (verum dictum), and if nothing appear to the contrary it is
taken for granted to be true. Reference is here had to that law (Deu.
17:6), At the mouth of two witnesses shall he that is worthy of death be
put to death. And see Deu. 9:15; Num. 35:30. It was in favour of life
that in capital cases two witnesses wee required, as with us in case of
treason. See Heb. 6:18.
[2.]
He applies this to the case in hand (v. 18): I am one that bear
witness of myself, and the Father that sent me bears witness of me.
Behold two witnesses! Though in human courts, where two witnesses are
required, the criminal or candidate is not admitted to be a witness for
himself; yet in a matter purely divine, which can be proved only by a
divine testimony, and God himself must be the witness, if the formality
of two or three witnesses be insisted on, there can be no other than the
eternal Father, the eternal Son of the Father, and the eternal Spirit.
Now if the testimony of two distinct persons, that are men, and
therefore may deceive or be deceived, is conclusive, much more ought the
testimony of the Son of God concerning himself, backed with the
testimony of his Father concerning him, to command assent; see 1 Jn.
5:7, 9-11. Now this proves not only that the Father and the Son are two
distinct persons (for their respective testimonies are here spoken of as
the testimonies of two several persons), but that these two are one, not
only one in their testimony, but equal in power and glory, and therefore
the same in substance. St. Austin here takes occasion to caution his
hearers against Sabellianism on the one hand, which confounded the
persons in the Godhead, and Arianism on the other, which denied the
Godhead of the Son and Spirit. Alius est filius, et alius pater, non
tamed aliud, sed hoc ipsum est et pater, et filius, scilicet unus Deus
est-The Son is one Person, and the Father is another; they do not,
however, constitute two Beings, but the Father is the same Being that
the Son is, that is, the only true God. Tract. 36, in Joann. Christ here
speaks of himself and the Father as witnesses to the world, giving in
evidence to the reason and conscience of the children of men, whom he
deals with as men. And these witnesses to the world now will in the
great day be witnesses against those that persist in unbelief, and their
word will judge men.
This was the sum of the first conference between Christ and these carnal Jews, in the conclusion of which we are told how their tongues were let loose, and their hands tied.
First, How their tongues were let loose (such was the malice of hell) to cavil at his discourse, v. 19. Though in what he said there appeared nothing of human policy or artifice, but a divine security, yet they set themselves to cross questions with him. None so incurably blind as those that resolve they will not see. Observe,
a.
How they evaded the conviction with a cavil: Then said they unto
him, Where is thy Father? They might easily have understood, by the
tenour of this and his other discourses, that when he spoke of his
Father he meant no other than God himself; yet they pretend to
understand him of a common person, and, since he appeals to his
testimony, they bid him call his witness, and challenge him, if he can,
to produce him: Where is thy Father? Thus, as Christ said of them (v.
15), they judge after the flesh. Perhaps they hereby intend a reflection
upon the meanness and obscurity of his family: Where is thy Father, that
he should be fit to give evidence in such a case as this? Thus they
turned it off with a taunt, when they could not resist the wisdom and
spirit with which he spoke.
b.
How he evaded the cavil with a further conviction; he did not tell
them where his Father was, but charged them with wilful ignorance: "You
neither know me nor my Father. It is to no purpose to discourse to you
about divine things, who talk of them as blind men do of colours. Poor
creatures! you know nothing of the matter." (a.)
He charges them with
ignorance of God: "You know not my Father." In Judah was God known
(Ps. 76:1); they had some knowledge of him as the God that made the
world, but their eyes were darkened that they could not see the light of
his glory shining in the face of Jesus Christ. The little children of
the Christian church know the Father, know him as a Father (1 Jn. 2:13);
but these rulers of the Jews did not, because they would not so know
him. (b.)
He shows them the true cause of their ignorance of God: If you
had known me, you would have known my Father also. The reason why men
are ignorant of God is because they are unacquainted with Jesus Christ.
Did we know Christ, [a.]
In knowing him we should know the Father, of
whose person he is the express image, ch. 14:9. Chrysostom proves hence
the Godhead of Christ, and his equality with his Father. We cannot say,
"He that knows a man knows an angel," or, "He that knows a creature
knows the Creator;" but he that knows Christ knows the Father. [b.]
By him we should be instructed in the knowledge of God, and introduced
into an acquaintance with him. If we knew Christ better, we should know
the Father better; but, where the Christian religion is slighted and
opposed, natural religion will soon be lost and laid aside. Deism makes
way for atheism. Those become vain in their imaginations concerning God
that will not learn of Christ.
Secondly, See how their hands were tied, though their tongues were thus let loose; such was the power of Heaven to restrain the malice of hell. These words spoke Jesus, these bold words, these words of conviction and reproof, in the treasury, an apartment of the temple, where, to be sure, the chief priests, whose gain was their godliness, were mostly resident, attending the business of the revenue. Christ taught in the temple, sometimes in one part, sometimes in another, as he saw occasion. Now the priests who had so great a concern in the temple, and looked upon it as their demesne, might easily, with the assistance of the janizaries that were at their beck, either have seized him and exposed him to the rage of the mob, and that punishment which they called the beating of the rebels; or, at least, have silenced him, and stopped his mouth there, as Amos, though tolerated in the land of Judah, was forbidden to prophesy in the king's chapel, Amos, 7:12, 13. Yet even in the temple, where they had him in their reach, no man laid hands on him, for his hour was not yet come. See here, 1. The restraint laid upon his persecutors by an invisible power; none of them durst meddle with him. God can set bounds to the wrath of men, as he does to the waves of the sea. Let us not therefore fear danger in the way of duty; for God hath Satan and all his instruments in a chain. 2. The reason of this restraint: His hour was not yet come. The frequent mention of this intimates how much the time of our departure out of the world depends upon the fixed counsel and decree of God. It will come, it is coming; not yet come, but it is at hand. Our enemies cannot hasten it any sooner, nor our friends delay it any longer, than the time appointed of the Father, which is very comfortable to every good man, who can look up and say with pleasure, My times are in thy hands; and better there than in our own. His hour was not yet come, because his work was not done, nor his testimony finished. To all God's purposes there is a time.
Verses 21-30
Christ here gives fair warning to the careless unbelieving Jews to consider what would be the consequence of their infidelity, that they might prevent it before it was too late; for he spoke words of terror as well as words of grace. Observe here,
I.
The wrath threatened (v. 21): Jesus said again unto them that which
might be likely to do them good. He continued to teach, in kindness to
those few who received his doctrine, though there were many that
resisted it, which is an example to ministers to go on with their work,
notwithstanding opposition, because a remnant shall be saved. Here
Christ changes his voice; he had piped to them in the offers of his
grace, and they had not danced; now he mourns to them in the
denunciations of his wrath, to try if they would lament. He said, I go
my way, and you shall seek me, and shall die in your sins. Whither I go
you cannot come. Every word is terrible, and bespeaks spiritual
judgments, which are the sorest of all judgments; worse than war,
pestilence, and captivity, which the Old-Testament prophets denounced.
Four things are here threatened against the Jews.
1.
Christ's departure from them: I go my way, that is, "It shall not
be long before I go; you need not take so much pains to drive me from
you, I shall go of myself." They said to him, Depart from us, we desire
not the knowledge of thy ways; and he takes them at their word; but woe
to those from whom Christ departs. Ichabod, the glory is gone, our
defence is departed, when Christ goes. Christ frequently warned them of
his departure before he left them: he bade often farewell, as one loth
to depart, and willing to be invited, and that would have them stir up
themselves to take hold on him.
2.
Their enmity to the true Messiah, and their fruitless and infatuated
enquiries after another Messiah when he was gone away, which were both
their sin and their punishment: You shall seek me, which intimates
either, (1.)
Their enmity to the true Christ: "You shall seek to ruin
my interest, by persecuting my doctrine and followers, with a fruitless
design to root them out." This was a continual vexation and torment to
themselves, made them incurably ill-natured, and brought wrath upon them
(God's and their own) to the uttermost. Or, (2.)
Their enquiries after
false Christs: "You shall continue your expectations of the Messiah,
and be the self-perplexing seekers of a Christ to come, when he is
already come;" like the Sodomites, who, being struck with blindness,
wearied themselves to find the door. See Rom. 9:31, 32.
3.
Their final impenitency: You shall die in your sins. Here is an
error in all our English Bibles, even the old bishops' translation, and
that of Geneva (the Rhemists only excepted), for all the Greek copies
have it in the singular number, en teµ hamartia hymoµn-in your sin, so
all the Latin versions; and Calvin has a note upon the difference
between this and v. 24, where it is plural, tais hamartiais, that here
it is meant especially of the sin of unbelief, in hoc peccato vestro-in
this sin of yours. Note, Those that live in unbelief are for ever undone
if they die in unbelief. Or, it may be understood in general, You shall
die in your iniquity, as Eze. 3:19, and 33:9. Many that have long lived
in sin are, through grace, saved by a timely repentance from dying in
sin; but for those who go out of this world of probation into that of
retribution under the guilt of sin unpardoned, and the power of sin
unbroken, there remaineth no relief: salvation itself cannot save them,
Job 20:11; Eze. 32:27.
4.
Their eternal separation from Christ and all happiness in him:
Whither I go you cannot come. When Christ left the world, he went to a
state of perfect happiness; he went to paradise. Thither he took the
penitent thief with him, that did not die in his sins; but the
impenitent not only shall not come to him, but they cannot; it is
morally impossible, for heaven would not be heaven to those that die
unsanctified and unmeet for it. You cannot come, because you have no
right to enter into that Jerusalem, Rev. 22:14. Whither I go you cannot
come, to fetch me thence, so Dr. Whitby; and the same is the comfort of
all good Christians, that, when they get to heaven, they will be out of
the reach of their enemies' malice.
II.
The jest they made of this threatening. Instead of trembling at
this word, they bantered it, and turned it into ridicule (v. 22): Will
he kill himself? See here, 1. What slight thoughts they had of Christ's
threatenings; they could make themselves and one another merry with
them, as those that mocked the messengers of the Lord, and turned the
burden of the word of the Lord into a by-word, and precept upon precept,
line upon line, into a merry song, Isa. 28:13. But be ye not mockers,
lest your bands be made strong. 2. What ill thoughts they had of
Christ's meaning, as if he had an inhuman design upon his own life, to
avoid the indignities done him, like Saul. This is indeed (say they) to
go whither we cannot follow him, for we will never kill ourselves. Thus
they make him not only such a one as themselves, but worse; yet in the
calamities brought by the Romans upon the Jews many of them in
discontent and despair did kill themselves. They had put a much more
favourable construction upon this word of his (ch. 7:34, 35): Will he go
to the dispersed among the Gentiles? But see how indulged malice grows
more and more malicious.
III.
The confirmation of what he had said.
1.
He had said, Whither I go you cannot come, and here he gives the
reason for this (v. 23): You are from beneath, I am from above; you are
of this world, I am not of this world. You are ek toµn katoµ-of those
things which are beneath; noting, not so much their rise from beneath as
their affection to these lower things: "You are in with these things,
as those that belong to them; how can you come where I go, when your
spirit and disposition are so directly contrary to mine?" See here,
(1.)
What the spirit of the Lord Jesus was-not of this world, but from
above. He was perfectly dead to the wealth of the world, the ease of the
body, and the praise of men, and was wholly taken up with divine and
heavenly things; and none shall be with him but those who are born from
above and have their conversation in heaven. (2.)
How contrary to this
their spirit was: "You are from beneath, and of this world." The
Pharisees were of a carnal worldly spirit; and what communion could
Christ have with them?
2.
He had said, You shall die in your sins, and here he stand to it:
"Therefore I said, You shall die in your sins, because you are from
beneath;" and he gives this further reason for it, If you believe not
that I am he, you shall die in your sins, v. 24. See here, (1.)
What we
are required to believe: that I am he, hoti egoµ eimi-that I am, which
is one of God's names, Ex. 3:14. It was the Son of God that there said,
Ehejeh asher Ehejeh-I will be what I will be; for the deliverance of
Israel was but a figure of good things to come, but now he saith, "I am
he; he that should come, he that you expect the Messias to be, that you
would have me to be to you. I am more than the bare name of the Messiah;
I do not only call myself so, but I am he." True faith does not amuse
the soul with an empty sound of words, but affects it with the doctrine
of Christ's mediation, as a real thing that has real effects. (2.)
How
necessary it is that we believe this. If we have not this faith, we
shall die in our sins; for the matter is so settled that without this
faith, [1.]
We cannot be saved from the power of sin while we live,
and therefore shall certainly continue in it to the last. Nothing but
the doctrine of Christ's grace will be an argument powerful enough, and
none but the Spirit of Christ's grace will be an agent powerful enough,
to turn us from sin to God; and that Spirit is given, and that doctrine
given, to be effectual to those only who believe in Christ: so that, if
Satan be not by faith dispossessed, he has a lease of the soul for its
life; if Christ do not cure us, our case is desperate, and we shall die
in our sins. [2.]
Without faith we cannot be saved from the punishment
of sin when we die, for the wrath of God remains upon them that believe
not, Mk. 16:16. Unbelief is the damning sin; it is a sin against the
remedy. Now this implies the great gospel promise: If we believe that
Christ is he, and receive him accordingly, we shall not die in our sins.
The law saith absolutely to all, as Christ said (v. 21), You shall die
in your sins, for we are all guilty before God; but the gospel is a
defeasance of the obligation upon condition of believing. The curse of
the law is vacated and annulled to all that submit to the grace of the
gospel. Believers die in Christ, in his love, in his arms, and so are
saved from dying in their sins.
IV.
Here is a further discourse concerning himself, occasioned by his
requiring faith in himself as the condition of salvation, v. 25-29.
Observe,
1.
The question which the Jews put to him (v. 25): Who art thou? This
they asked tauntingly, and not with any desire to be instructed. he had
said, You must believe that I am he. By his not saying expressly who he
was, he plainly intimated that in his person he was such a one as could
not be described by any, and in his office such a one as was expected by
all that looked for redemption in Israel; yet this awful manner of
speaking, which had so much significancy in it, they turned to his
reproach, as if he knew not what to say of himself: "Who art thou, that
we must with an implicit faith believe in thee, that thou art some
mighty HE, we know not who or what, nor are worthy to know?"
2.
His answer to this question, wherein he directs them three ways for
information:-
(1.)
He refers them to what he had said all along: "Do you ask who I
am? Even the same that I said unto you from the beginning." The
original here is a little intricate, teµn archeµn ho ti kai laloµ hymin
which some read thus: I am the beginning, which also I speak unto you.
So Austin takes it. Christ is called Archeµ-the beginning (Col. 1:18;
Rev. 1:8; 21:6; 3:14), and so it agrees with v. 24, I am he. Compare
Isa. 41:4: I am the first, I am he. Those who object that it is the
accusative case, and therefore not properly answering to tis ei, must
undertake to construe by grammar rules that parallel expression, Rev.
1:8, ho eµn. But most interpreters agree with our version, Do you ask
who I am? [1.]
I am the same that I said to you from the beginning of
time in the scriptures of the Old-Testament, the same that from the
beginning was said to be the Seed of the woman, that should break the
serpent's head, the same that in all the ages of the church was the
Mediator of the covenant, and the faith of the patriarchs. [2.]
From
the beginning of my public ministry. The account he had already given of
himself he resolved to abide by; he had declared himself to be the Son
of God (ch. 5:17), to be the Christ (ch. 4:26), and the bread of life,
and had proposed himself as the object of that faith which is necessary
to salvation, and to this he refers them for an answer to their
question. Christ is one with himself; what he had said from the
beginning, he saith still. His is an everlasting gospel.
(2.)
He refers them to his Father's judgment, and the instructions he
had from him (v. 26): "I have many things, more than you think of, to
say, and in them to judge of you. But why should I trouble myself any
further with you? I know very well that he who sent me is true, and will
stand by me, and bear me out, for I speak to the world (to which I am
sent as an ambassador) those things, all those and those only, which I
have heard of him." Here,
[1.]
He suppresses his accusation of them. He had many things to
charge them with, and many evidences to produce against them; but for
the present he had said enough. Note, Whatever discoveries of sin are
made to us, he that searches the heart has still more to judge of us, 1
Jn. 3:20. How much soever God reckons with sinners in this world there
is still a further reckoning yet behind, Deu. 32:34. Let us learn hence
not to be forward to say all we can say, even against the worst of men;
we may have many things to say, by way of censure, which yet it is
better to leave unsaid, for what is it to us?
[2.]
He enters his appeal against them to his Father: He that sent me.
Here two things comfort him:-First, That he had been true to his Father,
and to the trust reposed in him: I speak to the world (for his gospel
was to be preached to every creature) those things which I have heard of
him. Being given for a witness to the people (Isa. 55:4), he was Amen, a
faithful witness, Rev. 3:14. He did not conceal his doctrine, but spoke
it to the world (being of common concern, it was to be of common
notice); nor did he change or alter it, nor vary from the instructions
he received from him that sent him. Secondly, That his Father would be
true to him; true to the promise that he would make his mouth like a
sharp sword; true to his purpose concerning him, which was a decree (Ps.
2:7); true to the threatenings of his wrath against those that should
reject him. Though he should not accuse them to his Father, yet the
Father, who sent him, would undoubtedly reckon with them, and would be
true to what he had said (Deu. 18:19), that whosoever would not hearken
to that prophet whom God would raise up he would require it of him.
Christ would not accuse them; "for," saith he, "he that sent me is
true, and will pass judgment on them, though I should not demand
judgment against them." Thus, when he lets fall the present
prosecution, he binds them over to the judgment-day, when it will be too
late to dispute what they will not now be persuaded to believe. I, as a
deaf man, heard not; for thou wilt hear, Ps. 38:13, 15. Upon this part
of our Saviour's discourse the evangelist has a melancholy remark (v.
27): They understood not that he spoke to them of the Father. See here,
1.
The power of Satan to blind the minds of those who believe not.
Though Christ spoke so plainly of God as his Father in heaven, yet they
did not understand whom he meant, but thought he spoke of some father he
had in Galilee. Thus the plainest things are riddles and parables to
those who are resolved to hold fast their prejudices; day and night are
alike to the blind. 2. The reason why the threatenings of the word make
so little impression upon the minds of sinners; it is because they
understand not whose the wrath is that is revealed in them. When Christ
told them of the truth of him that sent him, as a warning to them to
prepare for his judgment, which is according to truth, they slighted the
warning, because they understood not to whose judgment it was that they
made themselves obnoxious.
(3.)
He refers them to their own convictions hereafter, v. 28, 29. He
finds they will not understand him, and therefore adjourns the trial
till further evidence should come in; they that will not see shall see,
Isa. 26:11. Now observe here,
[1.]
What they should ere long be convinced of: "You shall know that
I am he, that Jesus is the true Messiah. Whether you will own it or no
before men, you shall be made to know it in your own consciences, the
convictions of which, though you may stifle, yet you cannot baffle: that
I am he, not that you represent me to be, but he that I preach myself to
be, he that should come!" Two things they should be convinced of, in
order to this:-First, That he did nothing of himself, not of himself as
man, of himself alone, of himself without the Father, with whom he was
one. He does not hereby derogate from his own inherent power, but only
denies their charge against him as a false prophet; for of false
prophets it is said that they prophesied out of their own hearts, and
followed their own spirits. Secondly, That as his Father taught him so
he spoke these things, that he was not autodidaktos-selftaught, but
Theodidaktos-taught of God. The doctrine he preached was the counterpart
of the counsels of God, with which he was intimately acquainted; kathoµs
edidaxe, tauta laloµ-I speak those things, not only which he taught me,
but as he taught me, with the same divine power and authority.
[2.]
When they should be convinced of this: When you have lifted up
the Son of man, lifted him up upon the cross, as the brazen serpent upon
the pole (ch. 3:14), as the sacrifices under the law (for Christ is the
great sacrifice), which, when they were offered, were said to be
elevated, or lifted up; hence the burnt-offerings, the most ancient and
honourable of all, were called elevations (Gnoloth from Gnolah,
asendit-he ascended), and in many other offerings they used the
significant ceremony of heaving the sacrifice up, and moving it before
the Lord; thus was Christ lifted up. Or the expression denotes that his
death was his exaltation. They that put him to death thought thereby for
ever to have sunk him and his interest, but it proved to be the
advancement of both, ch. 12:24. When the Son of man was crucified, the
Son of man was glorified. Christ had called his dying his going away;
here he calls it his being lifted up; thus the death of the saints, as
it is their departure out of this world, so it is their advancement to a
better. Observe, He speaks of those he is now talking with as the
instruments of his death: when you have lifted up the Son of man; not
that they were to be the priests to offer him up (no, that was his own
act, he offered up himself), but they would be his betrayers and
murderers; see Acts 2:23. They lifted him up to the cross, but then he
lifted up himself to his Father. Observe with what tenderness and
mildness Christ here speaks to those who he certainly knew would put him
to death, to teach us not to hate or seek the hurt of any, though we may
have reason to think they hate us and seek our hurt. Now, Christ speaks
of his death as that which would be a powerful conviction of the
infidelity of the Jews. When you have lifted up the Son of man, then
shall you know this. And why then? First, Because careless and
unthinking people are often taught the worth of mercies by the want of
them, Lu. 17:22. Secondly, The guilt of their sin in putting Christ to
death would so awaken their consciences that they would be put upon
serious enquiries after a Saviour, and then would know that Jesus was he
who alone could save them. And so it proved, when, being told that with
wicked hands they had crucified and slain the Son of God, they cried
out, What shall we do? and were made to know assuredly that this Jesus
was Lord and Christ, Acts 2:36. Thirdly, There would be such signs and
wonders attending his death, and the lifting of him up from death in his
resurrection, as would give a stronger proof of his being the Messiah
than any that had been yet given: and multitudes were hereby brought to
believe that Jesus is the Christ, who had before contradicted and
opposed him. Fourthly, By the death of Christ the pouring out of the
Spirit was purchased, who would convince the world that Jesus is he, ch.
16:7, 8. Fifthly, The judgments which the Jews brought upon themselves,
by putting Christ to death, which filled up the measure of their
iniquity, were a sensible conviction to the most hardened among them
that Jesus was he. Christ had often foretold that desolation as the just
punishment of their invincible unbelief, and when it came to pass (lo,
it did come) they could not but know that the great prophet had been
among them, Eze. 33:33.
[3.]
What supported our Lord Jesus in the mean time (v. 29): He that
sent me is with me, in my whole undertaking; for the Father (the
fountain and first spring of this affair, from whom as its great cause
and author it is derived) hath not left me alone, to manage it myself,
hath not deserted the business nor me in the prosecution of it, for do I
always those things that please him. Here is,
First, The assurance which Christ had of his Father's presence with him, which includes both a divine power going along with him to enable him for his work, and a divine favour manifested to him to encourage him in it. He that sent me is with me, Isa. 42:1; Ps. 89:21. This greatly emboldens our faith in Christ and our reliance upon his word that he had, and knew he had, his Father with him, to confirm the word of his servant, Isa. 44:26. The King of kings accompanied his own ambassador, to attest his mission and assist his management, and never left him alone, either solitary or weak; it also aggravated the wickedness of those that opposed him, and was an intimation to them of the premunire they ran themselves into by resisting him, for thereby they were found fighters against God. How easily soever they might think to crush him and run him down, let them know he had one to back him with whom it is the greatest madness that can be to contend.
Secondly, The ground of this assurance: For I do always those things that please him. That is, 1. That great affair in which our Lord Jesus was continually engaged was an affair which the Father that sent him was highly well pleased with. His whole undertaking is called the pleasure of the Lord (Isa. 53:10), because of the counsels of the eternal mind about it, and the complacency of the eternal mind in it. 2. His management of that affair was in nothing displeasing to his Father; in executing his commission he punctually observed all his instructions, and did in nothing vary from them. No mere man since the fall could say such a word as this (for in many things we offend all) but our Lord Jesus never offended his Father in any thing, but, as became him, he fulfilled all righteousness. This was necessary to the validity and value of the sacrifice he was to offer up; for if he had in any thing displeased the Father himself, and so had had any sin of his own to answer for, the Father could not have been pleased with him as a propitiation for our sins; but such a priest and such a sacrifice became us as was perfectly pure and spotless. We may likewise learn hence that God's servants may then expect God's presence with them when they choose and do those things that please him, Isa. 66:4, 5.
V.
Here is the good effect which this discourse of Christ's had upon
some of his hearers (v. 30): As he spoke these words many believed on
him. Note, 1. Though multitudes perish in their unbelief, yet there is a
remnant according to the election of grace, who believe to the saving of
the soul. If Israel, the whole body of the people, be not gathered, yet
there are those of them in whom Christ will be glorious, Isa. 49:5. This
the apostle insists upon, to reconcile the Jews' rejection with the
promises made unto their fathers. There is a remnant, Rom. 11:5. 2. The
words of Christ, and particularly his threatening words, are made
effectual by the grace of God to bring in poor souls to believe in him.
When Christ told them that if they believed not they should die in their
sins, and never get to heaven, they thought it was time to look about
them, Rom, 1:16, 18. 3. Sometimes there is a wide door opened, and an
effectual one, even where they are many adversaries. Christ will carry
on his work, though the heathen rage. The gospel sometimes gains great
victories where it meets with great opposition. Let this encourage
God's ministers to preach the gospel, though it be with much
contention, for they shall not labour in vain. Many may be secretly
brought home to God by those endeavours which are openly contradicted
and cavilled at by men of corrupt minds. Austin has an affectionate
ejaculation in his lecture upon these words: Utinam et, me loquenti,
multi credant; non in me, sed mecum in eo-I wish that when I speak, many
may believe, not on me, but with me on him.
Verses 31-37
We have in these verses,
I.
A comfortable doctrine laid down concerning the spiritual liberty of
Christ's disciples, intended for the encouragement of those Jews that
believed. Christ, knowing that his doctrine began to work upon some of
his hearers, and perceiving that virtue had gone out of him, turned his
discourse from the proud Pharisees, and addressed himself to those weak
believers. When he had denounced wrath against those that were hardened
in unbelief, then he spoke comfort to those few feeble Jews that
believed in him. See here,
1.
How graciously the Lord Jesus looks to those that tremble at his
word, and are ready to receive it; he has something to say to those who
have hearing ears, and will not pass by those who set themselves in his
way, without speaking to them.
2.
How carefully he cherishes the beginnings of grace, and meets those
that are coming towards him. These Jews that believed were yet but weak;
but Christ did not therefore cast them off, for he gathers the lambs in
his arms. When faith is in its infancy, he has knees to prevent it,
breasts for it to suck, that it may not die from the womb. In what he
said to them, we have two things, which he saith to all that should at
any time believe:-
(1.)
The character of a true disciple of Christ: If you continue in my
word, then are you my disciples indeed. When they believed on him, as
the great prophet, they gave up themselves to be his disciples. Now, at
their entrance into his school, he lays down this for a settled rule,
that he would own none for his disciples but those that continued in his
word. [1.]
It is implied that there are many who profess themselves
Christ's disciples who are not his disciples indeed, but only in show
and name. [2.]
It highly concerns those that are not strong in faith
to see to it that they be sound in the faith, that, though not disciples
of the highest form, they are nevertheless disciples indeed. [3.]
Those who seem willing to be Christ's disciples ought to be told that
they had as good never come to him, unless they come with a resolution
by his grace to abide by him. Let those who have thoughts of covenanting
with Christ have no thoughts of reserving a power of revocation.
Children are sent to school, and bound apprentices, only for a few
years; but those only are Christ's who are willing to be bound to him
for the term of life. [4.]
Those only that continue in Christ's word
shall be accepted as his disciples indeed, that adhere to his word in
every instance without partiality, and abide by it to the end without
apostasy. It is menein-to dwell in Christ's word, as a man does at
home, which is his centre, and rest, and refuge. Our converse with the
word and conformity to it must be constant. If we continue disciples to
the last, then, and not otherwise, we approve ourselves disciples
indeed.
(2.)
The privilege of a true disciple of Christ. Here are two precious
promises made to those who thus approve themselves disciples indeed, v.
32.
[1.]
"You shall know the truth, shall know all that truth which it is
needful and profitable for you to know, and shall be more confirmed in
the belief of it, shall know the certainty of it." Note, First, Even
those who are true believers, and disciples indeed, yet may be, and are,
much in the dark concerning many things which they should know. God's
children are but children, and understand and speak as children. Did we
not need to be taught, we should not need to be disciples. Secondly, It
is a very great privilege to know the truth, to know the particular
truths which we are to believe, in their mutual dependences and
connections, and the grounds and reasons of our belief,-to know what is
truth and what proves it to be so. Thirdly, It is a gracious promise of
Christ, to all who continue in his word, that they shall know the truth
as far as is needful and profitable for them. Christ's scholars are
sure to be well taught.
[2.]
The truth shall make you free; that is, First, The truth which
Christ teaches tends to make men free, Isa. 61:1. Justification makes us
free from the guilt of sin, by which we were bound over to the judgment
of God, and bound under amazing fears; sanctification makes us free from
the bondage of corruption, by which we were restrained from that service
which is perfect freedom, and constrained to that which is perfect
slavery. Gospel truth frees us from the yoke of the ceremonial law, and
the more grievous burdens of the traditions of the elders. It makes us
free from our spiritual enemies, free in the service of God, free to the
privileges of sons, and free of the Jerusalem which is from above, which
is free. Secondly, The knowing, entertaining, and believing, of this
truth does actually make us free, free from prejudices, mistakes, and
false notions, than which nothing more enslaves and entangles the soul,
free from the dominion of lust and passion; and restores the soul to the
government of itself, by reducing it into obedience to its Creator. The
mind, by admitting the truth of Christ in the light and power, is vastly
enlarged, and has scope and compass given it, is greatly elevated and
raised above things of sense, and never acts with so true a liberty as
when it acts under a divine command, 2 Co. 3:17. The enemies of
Christianity pretend to free thinking, whereas really those are the
freest reasonings that are guided by faith, and those are men of free
thought whose thoughts are captivated and brought into obedience to
Christ.
II.
The offence which the carnal Jews took at this doctrine, and their
objection against it. Though it was a doctrine that brought glad tidings
of liberty to the captives, yet they cavilled at it, v. 33. The
Pharisees grudged this comfortable word to those that believed, the
standers by, who had no part nor lot in this matter; they thought
themselves reflected upon and affronted by the gracious charter of
liberty granted to those that believed, and therefore with a great deal
of pride and envy they answered him, "We Jews are Abraham's seed, and
therefore are free-born, and have not lost our birthright-freedom; we
were never in bondage to any man; how sayest thou then, to us Jews, You
shall be made free?" See here,
1.
What it was that they were grieved at; it was an innuendo in those
words, You shall be made free, as if the Jewish church and nation were
in some sort of bondage, which reflected on the Jews in general, and as
if all that did not believe in Christ continued in that bondage, which
reflected on the Pharisees in particular. Note, The privileges of the
faithful are the envy and vexation of unbelievers, Ps. 112:10.
2.
What it was that they alleged against it; whereas Christ intimated
that they needed to be made free, they urge, (1.)
"We are Abraham's
seed, and Abraham was a prince and a great man; though we live in
Canaan, we are not descended from Canaan, nor under his doom, a servant
of servants shall he be; we hold in frank-almoign-free alms, and not in
villenage-by a servile tenure." It is common for a sinking decaying
family to boast of the glory and dignity of its ancestors, and to borrow
honour from that name to which they repay disgrace; so the Jews here
did. But this was not all. Abraham was in covenant with God, and his
children by his right, Rom. 11:28. Now that covenant, no doubt, was a
free charter, and invested them with privileges not consistent with a
state of slavery, Rom. 9:4. And therefore they thought they had no
occasion with so great a sum as they reckoned faith in Christ to be to
obtain this freedom, when they were thus free-born. Note, It is the
common fault and folly of those that have pious parentage and education
to trust to their privilege and boast of it, as if it would atone for
the want of real holiness. They were Abraham's seed, but what would
this avail them, when we find one in hell that could call Abraham
father? Saving benefits are not, like common privileges, conveyed by
entail to us and our issue, nor can a title to heaven be made by
descent, nor may we claim as heirs at law, by making out our pedigree;
our title is purely by purchase, not our own but our Redeemer's for us,
under certain provisos and limitations, which if we do not observe it
will not avail us to be Abraham's seed. Thus many, when they are
pressed with the necessity of regeneration, turn it off with this, We
are the church's children; but they are not all Israel that are of
Israel. (2.)
We were never in bondage to any man. Now observe, [1.]
How false this allegation was. I wonder how they could have the
assurance to say a thing in the face of a congregation which was so
notoriously untrue. Were not the seed of Abraham in bondage to the
Egyptians? Were they not often in bondage to the neighbouring nations in
the time of the judges? Were they not seventy years captives in Babylon?
Nay, were they not at this time tributaries to the Romans, and, though
not in a personal, yet in a national bondage to them, and groaning to be
made free? And yet, to confront Christ, they have the impudence to say,
We were never in bondage. Thus they would expose Christ to the ill-will
both of the Jews, who were very jealous for the honour of their liberty,
and of the Romans, who would not be thought to enslave the nations they
conquered. [2.]
How foolish the application was. Christ had spoken of
a liberty wherewith the truth would make them free, which must be meant
of a spiritual liberty, for truth as it is the enriching, so it is the
enfranchising of the mind, and the enlarging of that from the captivity
of error and prejudice; and yet they plead against the offer of
spiritual liberty that they were never in corporal thraldom, as if,
because they were never in bondage to any man, they were never in
bondage to any lust. Note, Carnal hearts are sensible of no other
grievances than those that molest the body and injure their secular
affairs. Talk to them of encroachments upon their civil liberty and
property,-tell them of waste committed upon their lands, or damage done
to their houses,-and they understand you very well, and can give you a
sensible answer; the thing touches them and affects them. But discourse
to them of the bondage of sin, a captivity to Satan, and a liberty by
Christ,-tell them of wrong done to their precious souls, and the hazard
of their eternal welfare,-and you bring certain strange things to their
ears; they say of it (as those did, Eze. 20:49), Doth he not speak
parables? This was much like the blunder Nicodemus made about being born
again.
III.
Our Saviour's vindication of his doctrine from these objections,
and the further explication of it, v. 34-37, where he does these four
things:-
1.
He shows that, notwithstanding their civil liberties and their
visible church-membership, yet it was possible that they might be in a
state of bondage (v. 34): Whosoever commits sin, though he be of
Abraham's seed, and was never in bondage to any man, is the servant of
sin. Observe, Christ does not upbraid them with the falsehood of their
plea, or their present bondage, but further explains what he had said
for their edification. Thus ministers should with meekness instruct
those that oppose them, that they may recover themselves, not with
passion provoke them to entangle themselves yet more. Now here,
(1.)
The preface is very solemn: Verily, verily, I say unto you; an
awful asseveration, which our Saviour often used, to command a reverent
attention and a ready assent. The style of the prophets was, Thus saith
the Lord, for they were faithful as servants; but Christ, being a Son,
speaks in his own name: I say unto you, I the Amen, the faithful
witness; he pawns his veracity upon it. "I say it to you, who boast of
your relation to Abraham, as if that would save you."
(2.)
The truth is of universal concern, though here delivered upon a
particular occasion: Whosoever commits sin is the servant of sin, and
sadly needs to be made free. A state of sin is a state of bondage.
[1.]
See who it is on whom this brand is fastened-on him that commits
sin, pas ho poioµn hamartian-every one that makes sin. There is not a
just man upon earth, that lives, and sins not; yet every one that sins
is not a servant of sin, for then God would have no servants; but he
that makes sin, that makes choice of sin, prefers the way of wickedness
before the way of holiness (Jer. 44:16, 17),-that makes a covenant with
sin, enters into league with it, and makes a marriage with it,-that
makes contrivances of sin, makes provision for the flesh, and devises
iniquity,-and that makes a custom of sin, who walks after the flesh, and
makes a trade of sin. [2.]
See what the brand is which Christ fastens
upon those that thus commit sin. He stigmatizes them, gives them a mark
of servitude. They are servants of sin, imprisoned under the guilt of
sin, under an arrest, in hold for it, concluded under sin, and they are
subject to the power of sin. He is a servant of sin, that is, he makes
himself so, and is so accounted; he has sold himself to work wickedness;
his lusts give law to him, he is at their beck, and is not his own
master. He does the work of sin, supports its interest, and accepts its
wages, Rom. 6:16.
2.
He shows them that, being in a state of bondage, their having a
place in the house of God would not entitle them to the inheritance of
sons; for (v. 35) the servant, though he be in the house for awhile,
yet, being but a servant, abideth not in the house for ever. Services
(we say) are no inheritances, they are but temporary, and not for a
perpetuity; but the son of the family abideth ever. Now, (1.)
This
points primarily at the rejection of the Jewish church and nation.
Israel had been God's son, his first-born; but they wretchedly
degenerated into a servile disposition, were enslaved to the world and
the flesh, and therefore, though by virtue of their birthright they
thought themselves secure of their church membership, Christ tells them
that having thus made themselves servants they should not abide in the
house for ever. Jerusalem, by opposing the gospel of Christ, which
proclaimed liberty, and adhering to the Sinai-covenant, which gendered
to bondage, after its term was expired came to be in bondage with her
children (Gal. 4:24, 25), and therefore was unchurched and
disfranchised, her charter seized and taken away, and she was cast out
as the son of the bond-woman, Gen. 21:14. Chrysostom gives this sense of
this place: "Think not to be made free from sin by the rites and
ceremonies of the law of Moses, for Moses was but a servant, and had not
that perpetual authority in the church which the Son had; but, if the
Son make you free, it is well," v. 36. But, (2.)
It looks further, to
the rejection of all that are the servants of sin, and receive not the
adoption of the sons of God; though those unprofitable servants may be
in God's house awhile, as retainers to his family, yet there is a day
coming when the children of the bond-woman and of the free shall be
distinguished. True believers only, who are the children of the promise
and of the covenant, are accounted free, and shall abide for ever in the
house, as Isaac: they shall have a nail in the holy place on earth (Ezra
9:8) and mansions in the holy place in heaven, ch. 14:2.
3.
He shows them the way of deliverance out of the state of bondage
into the glorious liberty of the children of God, Rom. 8:21. The case of
those that are the servants of sin is sad, but thanks be to God it is
not helpless, it is not hopeless. As it is the privilege of all the sons
of the family, and their dignity above the servants, that they abide in
the house for ever; so he who is the Son, the first-born among many
brethren, and the heir of all things, has a power both of manumission
and of adoption (v. 36): If the Son shall make you free, you shall be
free indeed. Note,
(1.)
Jesus Christ in the gospel offers us our freedom; he has authority
and power to make free. [1.]
To discharge prisoners; this he does in
justification, by making satisfaction for our guilt (on which the gospel
offer is grounded, which is to all a conditional act of indemnity, and
to all true believers, upon their believing, an absolute charter of
pardon), and for our debts, for which we were by the law arrested and in
execution. Christ, as our surety, or rather our bail (for he was not
originally bound with us, but upon our insolvency bound for us),
compounds with the creditor, answers the demands of injured justice with
more than an equivalent, takes the bond and judgment into his own hands,
and gives them up cancelled to all that by faith and repentance give him
(if I may so say) a counter-security to save his honour harmless, and so
they are made free; and from the debt, and every part thereof, they are
for ever acquitted, exonerated, and discharged, and a general release is
sealed of all actions and claims; while against those who refuse to come
up to these terms the securities lie still in the Redeemer's hands, in
full force. [2.]
He has a power to rescue bond-slaves, and this he
does in sanctification; by the powerful arguments of his gospel, and the
powerful operations of his Spirit, he breaks the power of corruption in
the soul, rallies the scattered forces of reason and virtue, and
fortifies God's interest against sin and Satan, and so the soul is made
free. [3.]
He has a power to naturalize strangers and foreigners, and
this he does in adoption. This is a further act of grace; we are not
only forgiven and healed, but preferred; there is a charter of
privileges as well as pardon; and thus the Son makes us free denizens of
the kingdom of priests, the holy nation, the new Jerusalem.
(2.)
Those whom Christ makes free are free indeed. It is not aleµthoµs,
the word used (v. 31) for disciples indeed, but ontoµs-really. It
denotes, [1.]
The truth and certainty of the promise, the liberty
which the Jews boasted of was an imaginary liberty; they boasted of a
false gift; but the liberty which Christ gives is a certain thing, it is
real, and has real effects. The servants of sin promise themselves
liberty, and fancy themselves free, when they have broken religion's
bands asunder; but they cheat themselves. None are free indeed but those
whom Christ makes free. [2.]
It denotes the singular excellency of the
freedom promised; it is a freedom that deserves the name, in comparison
with which all other liberties are no better than slaveries, so much
does it turn to the honour and advantage of those that are made free by
it. It is a glorious liberty. It is that which is (so ontoµs signifies);
it is substance (Prov. 8:21); while the things of the world are shadows,
things that are not.
4.
He applies this to these unbelieving cavilling Jews, in answer to
their boasts of relation to Abraham (v. 37): "I know very well that you
are Abraham's seed, but now you seek to kill me, and therefore have
forfeited the honour of your relation to Abraham, because my word hath
no place in you." Observe here,
(1.)
The dignity of their extraction admitted: "I know that you are
Abraham's seed, every one knows it, and it is your honour." He grants
them what was true, and in what they said that was false (that they were
never in bondage to any) he does not contradict them, for he studied to
profit them, and not to provoke them, and therefore said that which
would please them: I know that you are Abraham's seed. They boasted of
their descent from Abraham, as that which aggrandized their names, and
made them exceedingly honourable; whereas really it did but aggravate
their crimes, and make them exceedingly sinful. Out of their own mouths
will he judge vain-glorious hypocrites, who boast of their parentage and
education: "Are you Abraham's seed? Why then did you not tread in the
steps of his faith and obedience?"
(2.)
The inconsistency of their practice with this dignity: But you seek
to kill me. They had attempted it several times, and were now designing
it, which quickly appeared (v. 59), when they took up stones to cast at
him. Christ knows all the wickedness, not only which men do, but which
they seek, and design, and endeavour to do. To seek to kill any innocent
man is a crime black enough, but to compass and imagine the death of him
that was King of kings was a crime the heinousness of which we want
words to express.
(3.)
The reason of this inconsistency. Why were they that were
Abraham's seed so very inveterate against Abraham's promised seed, in
whom they and all the families of the earth should be blessed? Our
Saviour here tells them, It is because my word hath no place in you, ou
choµrei en hymin, Non capit in vobis, so the Vulgate. "My word does not
take with you, you have no inclination to it, no relish of it, other
things are more taking, more pleasing." Or, "It does not take hold of
you, it has no power over you, makes no impression upon you." Some of
the critics read it, My word does not penetrate into you; it descended
as the rain, but it came upon them as the rain upon the rock, which it
runs off, and did not soak into their hearts, as the rain upon the
ploughed ground. The Syriac reads it, "Because you do not acquiesce in
my word; you are not persuaded of the truth of it, nor pleased with the
goodness of it." Our translation is very significant: It has no place
in you. They sought to kill him, and so effectually to silence him, not
because he had done they any harm, but because they could not bear the
convincing, commanding power of his word. Note, [1.]
The words of
Christ ought to have a place in us, the innermost and uppermost place,-a
dwelling place, as a man at home, and not as a stranger or sojourner,-a
working place; it must have room to operate, to work sin out of us, and
to work grace in us; it must have a ruling place, its place must be upon
the throne, it must dwell in us richly. [2.]
There are many that make
a profession of religion in whom the word of Christ has no place; they
will not allow it a place, for they do not like it; Satan does all he
can to displace it; and other things possess the place it should have in
us. [3.]
Where the word of God has no place no good is to be expected,
for room is left there for all wickedness. If the unclean spirit find
the heart empty of Christ's word, he enters in, and dwells there.
Verses 38-47
Here Christ and the Jews are still at issue; he sets himself to convince and convert them, while they still set themselves to contradict and oppose him.
I.
He here traces the difference between his sentiments and theirs to a
different rise and origin (v. 38): I speak that which I have seen with
my Father, and you do what you have seen with your father. Here are two
fathers spoken of, according to the two families into which the sons of
men are divided-God and the devil, and without controversy these are
contrary the one to the other.
1.
Christ's doctrine was from heaven; it was copied out of the
counsels of infinite wisdom, and the kind intentions of eternal love.
(1.)
I speak that which I have seen. The discoveries Christ has made to
us of God and another world are not grounded upon guess and hearsay, but
upon ocular inspection; so that he was thoroughly apprized of the
nature, and assured of the truth, of all he said. He that is given to be
a witness to the people is an eye-witness, and therefore
unexceptionable. (2.)
It is what I have seen with my Father. The
doctrine of Christ is not a plausible hypothesis, supported by probable
arguments, but it is an exact counterpart of the incontestable truths
lodged in the eternal mind. It was not only what he had heard from his
Father, but what he had seen with him when the counsel of peace was
between them both. Moses spoke what he heard from God, but he might not
see the face of God; Paul had been in the third heaven, but what he had
seen there he could not, he must not, utter; for it was Christ's
prerogative to have seen what he spoke, and to speak what he had seen.
2.
Their doings were from hell: "You do that which you have seen with
your father. You do, by your own works, father yourselves, for it is
evident whom you resemble, and therefore easy to find out your origin."
As a child that is trained up with his father learns his father's words
and fashions, and grows like him by an affected imitation as well as by
a natural image, so these Jews, by their malicious opposition to Christ
and the gospel, made themselves as like the devil as if they had
industriously set him before them for their pattern.
II.
He takes off and answers their vain-glorious boasts of relation to
Abraham and to God as their fathers, and shows the vanity and falsehood
of their pretensions.
1.
They pleaded relation to Abraham, and he replies to this plea. They
said, Abraham is our father, v. 39. In this they intended, (1.)
To do
honour to themselves, and to make themselves look great. They had
forgotten the mortification given them by that acknowledgement
prescribed them (Deu. 26:5), A Syrian ready to perish was my father; and
the charge exhibited against their degenerate ancestors (whose steps
they trod in, and not those of the first founder of the family), Thy
father was an Amorite, and thy mother a Hittite, Eze. 16:3. As it is
common for those families that are sinking and going to decay to boast
most of their pedigree, so it is common for those churches that are
corrupt and depraved to value themselves upon their antiquity and the
eminence of their first planters. Fuimus Troes, fuit Ilium-We have been
Trojans, and there once was Troy. (2.)
They designed to cast an odium
upon Christ as if he reflected upon the patriarch Abraham, in speaking
of their father as one they had learned evil from. See how they sought
an occasion to quarrel with him. Now Christ overthrows this plea, and
exposes the vanity of it by a plain and cogent argument: "Abraham's
children will do the works of Abraham, but you do not do Abraham's
works, therefore you are not Abraham's children."
[1.]
The proposition is plain: "If you were Abraham's children, such
children of Abraham as could claim an interest in the covenant made with
him and his seed, which would indeed put an honour upon you, then you
would do the works of Abraham, for to those only of Abraham's house who
kept the way of the Lord, as Abraham did, would God perform what he had
spoken," Gen. 18:19. Those only are reckoned the seed of Abraham, to
whom the promise belongs, who tread in the steps of his faith and
obedience, Rom. 4:12. Though the Jews had their genealogies, and kept
them exact, yet they could not by them make out their relation to
Abraham, so as to take the benefit of the old entail (performam
doni-according to the form of the gift), unless they walked in the same
spirit; good women's relation to Sarah is proved only by this-whose
daughters you are as long as you do well, and no longer, 1 Pt. 3:6.
Note, Those who would approve themselves Abraham's seed must not only
be of Abraham's faith, but do Abraham's works (James 2:21, 22),-must
come at God's call, as he did,-must resign their dearest comforts to
him,-must be strangers and sojourners in this world,-must keep up the
worship of God in their families, and always walk before God in their
uprightness; for these were the works of Abraham.
[2.]
The assumption is evident likewise: But you do not do the works
of Abraham, for you seek to kill me, a man that has told you the truth,
which I have heard of God; this did not Abraham, v. 40.
First, He shows them what their work was, their present work, which they were now about; they sought to kill him; and three things are intimated as an aggravation of their intention:-1. They were so unnatural as to seek the life of a man, a man like themselves, bone of their bone, and flesh of their flesh, who had done them no harm, nor given them any provocation. You imagine mischief against a man, Ps. 62:3. 2. They were so ungrateful as to seek the life of one who had told them the truth, had not only done them no injury, but had done them the greatest kindness that could be; had not only not imposed upon them with a lie, but had instructed them in the most necessary and important truths; was he therefore become their enemy? 3. They were so ungodly as to seek the life of one who told them the truth which he had heard from God, who was a messenger sent from God to them, so that their attempt against him was quasi deicidium-an act of malice against God. This was their work, and they persisted in it.
Secondly, He shows them that this did not become the children of Abraham; for this did not Abraham. 1. "He did nothing like this." He was famous for his humanity, witness his rescue of the captives; and for his piety, witness his obedience to the heavenly vision in many instances, and some tender ones. Abraham believed God; they were obstinate in unbelief: Abraham followed God; they fought against him; so that he would be ignorant of them, and would not acknowledge them, they were so unlike him, Isa. 63:16. See Jer. 22:15-17. 2. "He would not have done thus if he had lived now, or I had lived then." Hoc Abraham non fecisset-He would not have done this; so some read it. We should thus reason ourselves out of any way of wickedness; would Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob have done so? We cannot expect to be ever with them, if we be never like them.
[3.]
The conclusion follows of course (v. 41): "Whatever your boasts
and pretensions be, you are not Abraham's children, but father
yourselves upon another family (v. 41); there is a father whose deeds
you do, whose spirit you are of, and whom you resemble." He does not
yet say plainly that he means the devil, till they by their continued
cavils forced him so to explain himself, which teaches us to treat even
bad men with civility and respect, and not to be forward to say that of
them, or to them, which, though true, sounds harsh. He tried whether
they would suffer their own consciences to infer from what he said that
they were the devil's children; and it is better to hear it from them
now that we are called to repent, that is, to change our father and
change our family, by changing our spirit and way, than to hear it from
Christ in the great day.
2.
So far were they from owning their unworthiness of relation to
Abraham that they pleaded relation to God himself as their Father: "We
are not born of fornication, we are not bastards, but legitimate sons;
we have one Father, even God."
(1.)
Some understand this literally. They were not the sons of the
bondwoman, as the Ishmaelites were; nor begotten in incest, as the
Moabites and Ammonites were (Deu. 23:3); nor were they a spurious brood
in Abraham's family, but Hebrews of the Hebrews; and, being born in
lawful wedlock, they might call God Father, who instituted that
honourable estate in innocency; for a legitimate seed, not tainted with
divorces nor the plurality of wives, is called a seed of God, Mal. 2:15.
(2.)
Others take it figuratively. They begin to be aware now that Christ
spoke of a spiritual not a carnal father, of the father of their
religion; and so,
[1.]
They deny themselves to be a generation of idolaters: "We are
not born of fornication, are not the children of idolatrous parents, nor
have been bred up in idolatrous worships." Idolatry is often spoken of
as spiritual whoredom, and idolaters as children of whoredoms, Hosea
2:4; Isa. 57:3. Now, if they meant that they were not the posterity of
idolaters, the allegation was false, for no nation was more addicted to
idolatry than the Jews before the captivity; if they meant no more than
that they themselves were not idolaters, what then? A man may be free
from idolatry, and yet perish in another iniquity, and be shut out of
Abraham's covenant. If thou commit no idolatry (apply it to this
spiritual fornication), yet if thou kill thou art become a transgressor
of the covenant. A rebellious prodigal son will be disinherited, though
he be not born of fornication.
[2.]
They boast themselves to be true worshippers of the true God. We
have not many fathers, as the heathens had, gods many and lords many,
and yet were without God, as filius populi-a son of the people, has many
fathers and yet none certain; no, the Lord our God is one Lord and one
Father, and therefore it is well with us. Note, Those flatter
themselves, and put a damning cheat upon their own souls, who imagine
that their professing the true religion and worshipping the true God
will save them, though they worship not God in spirit and in truth, nor
are true to their profession. Now our Saviour gives a full answer to
this fallacious plea (v. 42, 43), and proves, by two arguments, that
they had no right to call God Father.
First, They did not love Christ: If God were your Father, you would love me. He had disproved their relation to Abraham by their going about to kill him (v. 40), but here he disproves their relation to God by their not loving and owning him. A man may pass for a child of Abraham if he do not appear an enemy to Christ by gross sin; but he cannot approve himself a child of God unless he be a faithful friend and follower of Christ. Note, All that have God for their Father have a true love to Jesus Christ, and esteem of his person, a grateful sense of his love, a sincere affection to his cause and kingdom, a complacency in the salvation wrought out by him and in the method and terms of it, and a care to keep his commandments, which is the surest evidence of our love to him. We are here in a state of probation, upon our trial how we will conduct ourselves towards our Maker, and accordingly it will be with us in the state of retribution. God has taken various methods to prove us, and this was one: he sent his Son into the world, with sufficient proofs of his sonship and mission, concluding that all that called him Father would kiss his Son, and bid him welcome who was the first-born among many brethren; see 1 Jn. 5:1. By this our adoption will be proved or disproved- Did we love Christ, or no? If any man do not, he is so far from being a child of God that he is anathema, accursed, 1 Co. 16:22. Now our Saviour proves that if they were God's children they would love him; for, saith he, I proceeded forth and came from God. They will love him; for, 1. He was the Son of God: I proceeded forth from God. Exeµlthon this means his divine exeleusis, or origin from the Father, by the communication of the divine essence, and also the union of the divine logos to his human nature; so Dr. Whitby. Now this could not but recommend him to the affections of all that were born of God. Christ is called the beloved, because, being the beloved of the Father, he is certainly the beloved of all the saints, Eph. 1:6. 2. He was sent of God, came from him as an ambassador to the world of mankind. He did not come of himself, as the false prophets, who had not either their mission or their message from God, Jer. 23:21. Observe the emphasis he lays upon this: I came from God; neither came I of myself, but he sent me. He had both his credentials and his instructions from God; he came to gather together in one the children of God (ch. 11:51), to bring many sons to glory, Heb. 2:10. And would not all God's children embrace with both arms a messenger sent from their Father on such errands? But these Jews made it appear that they were nothing akin to God, by their want of affection to Jesus Christ.
Secondly, They did not understand him. It was a sign they did not belong to God's family that they did not understand the language and dialect of the family: You do not understand my speech (v. 43), teµn lalian teµn emeµn. Christ's speech was divine and heavenly, but intelligible enough to those that were acquainted with the voice of Christ in the Old Testament. Those that had made the word of the Creator familiar to them needed no other key to the dialect of the Redeemer; and yet these Jews make strange of the doctrine of Christ, and find knots in it, and I know not what stumbling stones. Could a Galilean be known by his speech? An Ephraimite by his sibboleth? And would any have the confidence to call God Father to whom the Son of God was a barbarian, even when he spoke the will of God in the words of the Spirit of God? Note, Those who are not acquainted with the divine speech have reason to fear that they are strangers to the divine nature. Christ spoke the words of God (ch. 3:34) in the dialect of the kingdom of God; and yet they, who pretended to belong to the kingdom, understood not the idioms and properties of it, but like strangers, and rude ones too, ridiculed it. And the reason why they did not understand Christ's speech made the matter much worse: Even because you cannot hear my word, that is, "You cannot persuade yourselves to hear it attentively, impartially, and without prejudice, as it should be heard." The meaning of this cannot is an obstinate will not; as the Jews could not hear Stephen (Acts 7:57) nor Paul, Acts 23:22. Note, The rooted antipathy of men's corrupt hearts to the doctrine of Christ is the true reason of their ignorance of it, and of their errors and mistakes about it. They do not like it nor love it, and therefore they will not understand it; like Peter, who pretended he knew not what the damsel said (Mt. 26:70), when in truth he knew not what to say to it. You cannot hear my words, for you have stopped your ears (Ps. 58:4, 5), and God, in a way of righteous judgment, has made your ears heavy, Isa. 6:10.
III.
Having thus disproved their relation both to Abraham and to God,
he comes next to tell them plainly whose children they were: You are of
your father the devil, v. 44. If they were not God's children, they
were the devil's, for God and Satan divide the world of mankind; the
devil is therefore said to work in the children of disobedience, Eph.
2:2. All wicked people are the devil's children, children of Belial (2
Co. 6:15), the serpent's seed (Gen. 3:15), children of the wicked one,
Mt. 13:38. They partake of his nature, bear his image, obey his
commands, and follow his example. Idolaters said to a stock, Thou art
our father, Jer. 2:27.
This is a high charge, and sounds very harsh and horrid, that any of the children of men, especially the church's children, should be called children of the devil, and therefore our Saviour fully proves it.
1.
By a general argument: The lusts of your father you will do, thelete
poiein. (1.)
"You do the devil's lusts, the lusts which he would have
you to fulfil; you gratify and please him, and comply with his
temptation, and are led captive by him at his will: nay, you do those
lusts which the devil himself fulfils." Fleshly lusts and worldly lusts
the devil tempts men to; but, being a spirit, he cannot fulfil them
himself. The peculiar lusts of the devil are spiritual wickedness; the
lusts of the intellectual powers, and their corrupt reasonings; pride
and envy, and wrath and malice; enmity to that which is good, and
enticing others to that which is evil; these are lusts which the devil
fulfils, and those who are under the dominion of these lusts resemble
the devil, as the child does the parent. The more there is of
contemplation, and contrivance, and secret complacency, in sin, the more
it resembles the lusts of the devil. (2.)
You will do the devil's
lusts. The more there is of the will in these lusts, the more there is
of the devil in them. When sin is committed of choice and not by
surprise, with pleasure and not with reluctancy, when it is persisted in
with a daring presumption and a desperate resolution, like theirs that
said, We have loved strangers and after them we will go, then the sinner
will do the devil's lusts. "The lusts of your father you delight to
do;" so Dr. Hammond; they are rolled under the tongue as a sweet
morsel.
2.
By two particular instances, wherein they manifestly resembled the
devil-murder and lying. The devil is an enemy to life, because God is
the God of life and life is the happiness of man; and an enemy to truth,
because God is the God of truth and truth is the bond of human society.
(1.)
He was a murderer from the beginning, not from his own beginning,
for he was created an angel of light, and had a first estate which was
pure and good, but from the beginning of his apostasy, which was soon
after the creation of man. He was anthroµpoktonos-homicida, a
man-slayer. [1.]
He was a hater of man, and so in affection an
disposition a murderer of him. He has his name, Satan, from
sitnah-hatred. He maligned God's image upon man, envied his happiness,
and earnestly desired his ruin, was an avowed enemy to the whole race.
[2.]
He was man's tempter to that sin which brought death into the
world, and so he was effectually the murderer of all mankind, which in
Adam had but one neck. He was a murderer of souls, deceived them into
sin, and by it slew them (Rom. 7:11), poisoned man with the forbidden
fruit, and, to aggravate the matter, made him his own murderer. Thus he
was not only at the beginning, but from the beginning, which intimates
that thus he has been ever since; as he began, so he continues, the
murderer of men by his temptations. The great tempter is the great
destroyer. The Jews called the devil the angel of death. [3.]
He was
the first wheel in the first murder that ever was committed by Cain, who
was of that wicked one, and slew his brother, 1 Jn. 3:12. If the devil
had not been very strong in Cain, he could not have done such an
unnatural thing as to kill his own brother. Cain killing his brother by
the instigation of the devil, the devil is called the murderer, which
does not speak Cain's personal guilt the less, but the devil's the
more, whose torments, we have reason to think, will be the greater, when
the time comes, for all that wickedness into which he has drawn men. See
what reason we have to stand upon our guard against the wiles of the
devil, and never to hearken to him (for he is a murderer, and certainly
aims to do us mischief, even when he speaks fair), and to wonder that he
who is the murderer of the children of men should yet be, by their own
consent, so much their master. Now herein these Jews were followers of
him, and were murderers, like him; murderers of souls, which they led
blindfold into the ditch, and made the children of hell; sworn enemies
of Christ, and now ready to be his betrayers and murderers, for the same
reason that Cain killed Abel. These Jews were that seed of the serpent
that were to bruise the heel of the seed of the woman; Now you seek to
kill me.
(2.)
He was a liar. A lie is opposed to truth (1 Jn. 2:21), and
accordingly the devil is here described to be,
[1.]
An enemy to truth, and therefore to Christ. First, He is a
deserter, from the truth; he abode not in the truth, did not continue in
the purity and rectitude of his nature wherein he was created, but left
his first state; when he degenerated from goodness, he departed from
truth, for his apostasy was founded in a lie. The angels were the hosts
of the Lord; those that fell were not true to their commander and
sovereign, they were not to be trusted, being charged with folly and
defection, Job 4:18. By the truth here we may understand the revealed
will of God concerning the salvation of man by Jesus Christ, the truth
which Christ was now preaching, and which the Jews opposed; herein they
did like their father the devil, who, seeing the honour put upon the
human nature in the first Adam, and foreseeing the much greater honour
intended in the second Adam, would not be reconciled to that counsel of
God, nor stand in the truth concerning it, but, from a spirit of pride
and envy, set himself to resist it, and to thwart the designs of it; and
so did these Jews here, as his children and agents. Secondly, He is
destitute of the truth: There is no truth in him. His interest in the
world is supported by lies and falsehoods, and there is no truth,
nothing you can confide in, in him, nor in any thing he says or does.
The notions he propagates concerning good and evil are false and
erroneous, his proofs are lying wonders, his temptations are all cheats;
he has great knowledge of the truth, but having no affection to it, but
on the contrary being a sworn enemy to it, he is said to have no truth
in him.
[2.]
He is a friend and patron of lying: When he speaketh a lie he
speaketh of his own. Three things are here said of the devil with
reference to the sin of lying:-First, That he is a liar; his oracles
were lying oracles, his prophets lying prophets, and the images in which
he was worshipped teachers of lies. He tempted our first parents with a
downright lie. All his temptations are carried on by lies, calling evil
good and good evil, and promising impunity in sin; he knows them to be
lies, and suggests them with an intention to deceive, and so to destroy.
When he now contradicted the gospel, in the scribes and Pharisees, it
was by lies; and when afterwards he corrupted it, in the man of sin, it
was by strong delusions, and a great complicated lie. Secondly, That
when he speaks a lie he speaks of his own, ek toµn idioµn. It is the
proper idiom of his language; of his own, not of God; his Creator never
put it into him. When men speak a lie they borrow it from the devil,
Satan fills their hearts to lie (Acts 5:3); but when the devil speaks a
lie the model of it is of his own framing, the motives to it are from
himself, which bespeaks the desperate depth of wickedness into which
those apostate spirits are sunk; as in their first defection they had no
tempter, so their sinfulness is still their own. Thirdly, That he is the
father of it, autou. 1. He is the father of every lie; not only of the
lies which he himself suggests, but of those which others speak; he is
the author and founder of all lies. When men speak lies, they speak from
him, and as his mouth; they come originally from him, and bear his
image. 2. He is the father of every liar; so it may be understood. God
made men with a disposition to truth. It is congruous to reason and
natural light, to the order of our faculties and the laws of society,
that we should speak truth; but the devil, the author of sin, the spirit
that works in the children of disobedience, has so corrupted the nature
of man that the wicked are said to be estranged from the womb, speaking
lies (Ps. 58:3); he has taught them with their tongues to use deceit,
Rom. 3:13. He is the father of liars, who begat them, who trained them
up in the way of lying, whom they resemble and obey, and with whom all
liars shall have their portion for ever.
IV.
Christ, having thus proved all murderers and all liars to be the
devil's children, leaves it to the consciences of his hearers to say,
Thou art the man. But he comes in the following verses to assist them in
the application of it to themselves; he does not call them liars, but
shows them that they were no friends to truth, and therein resembled him
who abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. Two things
he charges upon them:-
1.
That they would not believe the word of truth (v. 45), hoti teµn
aleµtheian legoµ, ou pisteuete moi.
(1.)
Two ways it may be taken;-[1.]
"Though I tell you the truth, yet
you will not believe me (hoti), that I do so." Though he gave abundant
proof of his commission from God, and his affection to the children of
men, yet they would not believe that he told them the truth. Now was
truth fallen in the street, Isa. 59:14, 15. The greatest truths with
some gained not the least credit; for they rebelled against the light,
Job 24:13. Or, [2.]
Because I tell you the truth (so we read it)
therefore you believe me not. They would not receive him, nor entertain
him as a prophet, because he told them some unpleasing truths which they
did not care to hear, told them the truth concerning themselves and
their own case, showed them their faces in a glass that would not
flatter them; therefore they would not believe a word he said. Miserable
is the case of those to whom the light of divine truth is become a
torment.
(2.)
Now, to show them the unreasonableness of their infidelity, he
condescends to put the matter to this fair issue, v. 46. He and they
being contrary, either he was in an error or they were. Now take it
either way.
[1.]
If he were in an error, why did they not convince him? The
falsehood of pretended prophets was discovered either by the ill
tendency of their doctrines (Deu. 13:2), or by the ill tenour of their
conversation: You shall know them by their fruits; but (saith Christ)
which of you, you of the sanhedrim, that take upon you to judge of
prophets, which of you convinceth me of sin? They accused him of some of
the worst of crimes-gluttony, drunkenness, blasphemy, sabbath-breaking,
confederacy with Satan, and what not. But their accusations were
malicious groundless calumnies, and such as every one that knew him knew
to be utterly false. When they had done their utmost by trick and
artifice, subornation and perjury, to prove some crime upon him, the
very judge that condemned him owned he found no fault in him. The sin he
here challenges them to convict him of is, First, An inconsistent
doctrine. They had heard his testimony; could they show any thing in it
absurd or unworthy to be believed, any contradiction either of himself
or of the scriptures, or any corruption of truth or manners insinuated
by his doctrine? ch. 18:20. Or, Secondly, An incongruous conversation:
"Which of you can justly charge me with any thing, in word or deed,
unbecoming a prophet?" See the wonderful condescension of our Lord
Jesus, that he demanded not credit any further than the allowed motives
of credibility supported his demands. See Jer. 2:5, 31; Mic. 6:3.
Ministers may hence learn, 1. To walk so circumspectly as that it may
not be in the power of their most strict observers to convince them of
sin, that the ministry be not blamed. The only way not to be convicted
of sin is not to sin. 2. To be willing to admit a scrutiny; though we
are confident in many things that we are in the right, yet we should be
willing to have it tried whether we be not in the wrong. See Job 6:24.
[2.]
If they were in an error, why were they not convinced by him?
"If I say the truth, why do you not believe me? If you cannot convince
me of error, you must own that I say the truth, and why do you not then
give me credit? Why will you not deal with me upon trust?" Note, If men
would but enquire into the reason of their infidelity, and examine why
they do not believe that which they cannot gainsay, they would find
themselves reduced to such absurdities as they could not but be ashamed
of; for it will be found that the reason why we believe not in Jesus
Christ is because we are not willing to part with our sins, and deny
ourselves, and serve God faithfully; that we are not of the Christian
religion, because we would not indeed be of any, and unbelief of our
Redeemer resolves itself into a downright rebellion against our Creator.
2.
Another thing charged upon them is that they would not hear the
words of God (v. 47), which further shows how groundless their claim of
relation to God was. Here is,
(1.)
A doctrine laid down: He that is of God heareth God's words; that
is, [1.]
He is willing and ready to hear them, is sincerely desirous
to know what the mind of God is, and cheerfully embraces whatever he
knows to be so. God's words have such an authority over, and such an
agreeableness with all that are born of God, that they meet them, as the
child Samuel did, with, Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth. Let the
word of the Lord come. [2.]
He apprehends and discerns them, he so
hears them as to perceive the voice of God in them, which the natural
man does not, 1 Co. 2:14. He that is of God is soon aware of the
discoveries he makes of himself of the nearness of his name (Ps. 75:1),
as they of the family know the master's tread, and the master's knock,
and open to him immediately (Lu. 12:36), as the sheep know the voice of
their shepherd from that of a stranger, ch. 10:4, 5; Cant. 2:8.
(2.)
The application of this doctrine, for the conviction of these
unbelieving Jews: You therefore hear them not; that is, "You heed not,
you understand not, you believe not, the words of God, nor care to hear
them, because you are not of God. Your being thus deaf and dead to the
words of God is a plain evidence that you are not of God." It is in his
word that God manifests himself and is present among us; we are
therefore reckoned to be well or ill affected to his word; see 2 Co.
4:4; 1 Jn. 4:6. Or, their not being of God was the reason why they did
not profitably hear the words of God, which Christ spoke; they did not
understand and believe him, not because the things themselves were
obscure or wanted evidence, but because the hearers were not of God,
were not born again. If the word of the kingdom do not bring forth
fruit, the blame is to be laid upon the soil, not upon the seed, as
appears by the parable of the sower, Mt. 13:3.
Verses 48-50
Here is, I.
The malice of hell breaking out in the base language which
the unbelieving Jews gave to our Lord Jesus. Hitherto they had cavilled
at his doctrine, and had made invidious remarks upon it; but, having
shown themselves uneasy when he complained (v. 43, 47) that they would
not hear him, now at length they fall to downright railing, v. 48. They
were not the common people, but, as it should seem, the scribes and
Pharisees, the men of consequence, who, when they saw themselves
convicted of an obstinate infidelity, scornfully turned off the
conviction with this: Say we not well that thou art a Samaritan, and
hast a devil? See here, see it and wonder, see it and tremble,
1.
What was the blasphemous character commonly given of our Lord Jesus
among the wicked Jews, to which they refer. (1.)
That he was a
Samaritan, that is, that he was an enemy to their church and nation, one
that they hated and could not endure. Thus they exposed him to the ill
will of the people, with whom you could not put a man into a worse name
than to call him a Samaritan. If he had been a Samaritan, he had been
punishable, by the beating of the rebels (as they called it), for coming
into the temple. They had often enough called him a Galilean-a mean man;
but as if that were not enough, though it contradicted the other, they
will have him a Samaritan-a bad man. The Jews to this day call the
Christians, in reproach, Cuthaei-Samaritans. Note, Great endeavours have
in all ages been used to make good people odious by putting them under
black characters, and it is easy to run that down with a crowd and a cry
which is once put into an ill name. Perhaps because Christ justly
inveighed against the pride and tyranny of the priests and elders, they
hereby suggest that he aimed at the ruin of their church, in aiming at
its reformation, and was falling away to the Samaritans. (2.)
That he
had a devil. Either, [1.]
That he was in league with the devil. Having
reproached his doctrine as tending to Samaritanism, here they reflect
upon his miracles as done in combination with Beelzebub. Or, rather
[2.]
That he was possessed with a devil, that he was a melancholy man,
whose brain was clouded, or a mad man, whose brain was heated, and that
which he said was no more to be believed than the extravagant rambles of
a distracted man, or one in a delirium. Thus the divine revelation of
those things which are above the discovery of reason have been often
branded with the charge of enthusiasm, and the prophet was called a mad
fellow, 2 Ki. 9:11; Hosea 9:7. The inspiration of the Pagan oracles and
prophets was indeed a frenzy, and those that had it were for the time
beside themselves; but that which was truly divine was not so. Wisdom is
justified of her children, as wisdom indeed.
2.
How they undertook to justify this character, and applied it to the
present occasion: Say we not well that thou art so? One would think that
his excellent discourses should have altered their opinion of him, and
have made them recant; but, instead of this, their hearts were more
hardened and their prejudices confirmed. They value themselves on their
enmity to Christ, as if they had never spoken better than when they
spoke the worst they could of Jesus Christ. Those have arrived at the
highest pitch of wickedness who avow their impiety, repeat what they
should retract, and justify themselves in that for which they ought to
condemn themselves. It is bad to say and do ill, but it is worse to
stand to it; I do well to be angry. When Christ spoke with so much
boldness against the sins of the great men, and thereby incensed them
against him, those who were sensible of no interest but what is secular
and sensual concluded him beside himself, for they thought none but a
madman would lose his preferment, and hazard his life, for his religion
and conscience.
II.
The meekness and mercifulness of Heaven shining in Christ's reply
to this vile calumny, v. 49, 50.
1.
He denies their charge against him: I have not a devil; as Paul
(Acts 26:25), I am not mad. The imputation is unjust; "I am neither
actuated by a devil, nor in compact with one;" and this he evidenced by
what he did against the devil's kingdom. He takes no notice of their
calling him a Samaritan, because it was a calumny that disproved itself,
it was a personal reflection, and not worth taking notice of: but saying
he had a devil reflected on his commission, and therefore he answered
that. St. Augustine gives this gloss upon his not saying any thing to
their calling him a Samaritan-that he was indeed that good Samaritan
spoken of in the parable, Lu. 10:33.
2.
He asserts the sincerity of his own intentions: But I honour my
Father. They suggested that he took undue honours to himself, and
derogated from the honour due to God only, both which he denies here, in
saying that he made it his business to honour his Father, and him only.
It also proves that he had not a devil; for, if he had, he would not
honour God. Note, Those who can truly way that they make it their
constant care to honour God are sufficiently armed against the censures
and reproaches of men.
3.
He complains of the wrong they did him by their calumnies: You do
dishonour me. By this it appears that, as man, he had a tender sense of
the disgrace and indignity done him; reproach was a sword in his bones,
and yet he underwent it for our salvation. It is the will of God that
all men should honour the Son, yet there are many that dishonour him;
such a contradiction is there in the carnal mind to the will of God.
Christ honoured his Father so as never man did, and yet was himself
dishonoured so as never man was; for, though God has promised that those
who honour him he will honour, he never promised that men should honour
them.
4.
He clears himself from the imputation of vain glory, in saying this
concerning himself, v. 50. See here, (1.)
His contempt of worldly
honour: I seek not mine own glory. He did not aim at this in what he had
said of himself or against his persecutors; he did not court the
applause of men, nor covet preferment in the world, but industriously
declined both. He did not seek his own glory distinct from his
Father's, nor had any separate interest of his own. For men to search
their own glory is not glory indeed (Prov. 25:27), but rather their
shame to be so much out in their aim. This comes in here as a reason why
Christ made so light of their reproaches: "You do dishonour me, but
cannot disturb me, shall not disquiet me, for I seek not my own glory."
Note, Those who are dead to men's praise can safely bear their
contempt. (2.)
His comfort under worldly dishonour: There is one that
seeketh and judgeth. In two things Christ made it appear that he sought
not his own glory; and here he tells us what satisfied him as to both.
[1.]
He did not court men's respect, but was indifferent to it, and
in reference to this he saith, "There is one that seeketh, that will
secure and advance, my interest in the esteem and affections of the
people, while I am in no care about it." Note, God will seek their
honour that do not seek their own; for before honour is humility. [2.]
He did not revenge men's affronts, but was unconcerned at them, and in
reference to this he saith, "There is one that judgeth, that will
vindicate my honour, and severely reckon with those that trample upon
it." Probably he refers here to the judgments that were coming upon the
nation of the Jews for the indignities they did to the Lord Jesus. See
Ps. 37:13-15. I heard not, for thou wilt hear. If we undertake to judge
for ourselves, whatever damage we sustain, our recompence is in our own
hands; but if we be, as we ought to be, humble appellants and patient
expectants, we shall find, to our comfort, there is one that judgeth.
Verses 51-59
In these verses we have,
I.
The doctrine of the immortality of believers laid down, v. 51. It is
ushered in with the usual solemn preface, Verily, verily, I say unto
you, which commands both attention and assent, and this is what he says,
If a man keep my sayings, he shall never see death. Here we have, 1. The
character of a believer: he is one that keeps the sayings of the Lord
Jesus, ton logon ton emon-my word; that word of mine which I have
delivered to you; this we must not only receive, but keep; not only
have, but hold. We must keep it in mind and memory, keep it in love and
affection, so keep it as in nothing to violate it or go contrary to it,
keep it without spot (1 Tim. 6:14), keep it as a trust committed to us,
keep in it as our way, keep to it as our rule. 2. The privilege of a
believer: He shall by no means see death for ever; so it is in the
original. Not as if the bodies of believers were secured from the stroke
of death. No, even the children of the Most High must die like men, and
the followers of Christ have been, more than other men, in deaths often,
and killed all the day long; how then is this promise made good that
they shall not see death? Answer, (1.)
The property of death is so
altered to them that they do not see it as death, they do not see the
terror of death, it is quite taken off; their sight does not terminate
in death, as theirs does who live by sense; no, they look so clearly, so
comfortably, through death, and beyond death, and are so taken up with
their state on the other side death, that they overlook death, and see
it not. (2.)
The power of death is so broken that though there is no
remedy, but they must see death, yet they shall not see death for ever,
shall not be always shut up under its arrests, the day will come when
death shall be swallowed up in victory. (3.)
They are perfectly
delivered from eternal death, shall not be hurt of the second death.
That is the death especially meant here, that death which is for ever,
which is opposed to everlasting life; this they shall never see, for
they shall never come into condemnation; they shall have their
everlasting lot where there will be no more death, where they cannot die
any more, Lu. 20:36. Though now they cannot avoid seeing death, and
tasting it too, yet they shall shortly be there where it will be seen no
more for ever, Ex. 14:13.
II.
The Jews cavil at this doctrine. Instead of laying hold of this
precious promise of immortality, which the nature of man has an ambition
of (who is there that does not love life, and dread the sight of death?)
they lay hold of this occasion to reproach him that makes them so kind
an offer: Now we know that thou hast a devil. Abraham is dead. Observe
here,
1.
Their railing: "Now we know that thou hast a devil, that thou art a
madman; thou ravest, and sayest thou knowest not what." See how these
swine trample underfoot the precious pearls of gospel promises. If now
at last they had evidence to prove him mad, why did they say (v. 48),
before they had that proof, Thou hast a devil? But this is the method of
malice, first to fasten an invidious charge, and then to fish for
evidence of it: Now we know that thou hast a devil. If he had not
abundantly proved himself a teacher come from God, his promises of
immortality to his credulous followers might justly have been ridiculed,
and charity itself would have imputed them to a crazed fancy; but his
doctrine was evidently divine, his miracles confirmed it, and the Jews'
religion taught them to expect such a prophet, and to believe in him;
for them therefore thus to reject him was to abandon that promise to
which their twelve tribes hoped to come, Acts 26:7.
2.
Their reasoning, and the colour they had to run him down thus. In
short, they look upon him as guilty of an insufferable piece of
arrogance, in making himself greater than Abraham and the prophets:
Abraham is dead, and the prophets, they are dead too; very true, by the
same token that these Jews were the genuine offspring of those that
killed them. Now, (1.)
It is true that Abraham and the prophets were
great men, great in the favour of God, and great in the esteem of all
good men. (2.)
It is true that they kept God's sayings, and were
obedient to them; and yet, (3.)
It is true that they died; they never
pretended to have, much less to give, immortality, but every one in his
own order was gathered to his people. It was their honour that they died
in faith, but die they must. Why should a good man be afraid to die,
when Abraham is dead, and the prophets are dead? They have tracked the
way through that darksome valley, which should reconcile us to death and
help to take off the terror of it. Now they think Christ talks madly,
when he saith, If a man keep my sayings, he shall never taste death.
Tasting death means the same thing with seeing it; and well may death be
represented as grievous to several of the senses, which is the
destruction of them all. Now their arguing goes upon two
mistakes:-[1.]
They understood Christ of an immortality in this world,
and this was a mistake. In the sense that Christ spoke, it was not true
that Abraham and the prophets were dead, for God is still the God of
Abraham and the God of the holy prophets (Rev. 22:6); now God is not the
God of the dead, but of the living; therefore Abraham and the prophets
are still alive, and, as Christ meant it, they had not seen nor tasted
death. [2.]
They thought none could be greater than Abraham and the
prophets, whereas they could not but know that the Messiah would be
greater than Abraham or any of the prophets; they did virtuously, but he
excelled them all; nay, they borrowed their greatness from him. It was
the honour of Abraham that he was the Father of the Messiah, and the
honour of the prophets that they testified beforehand concerning him: so
that he certainly obtained a far more excellent name than they.
Therefore, instead of inferring from Christ's making himself greater
than Abraham that he had a devil, they should have inferred from his
proving himself so (by doing the works which neither Abraham nor the
prophets ever did) that he was the Christ; but their eyes were blinded.
They scornfully asked, Whom makest thou thyself? As if he had been
guilty of pride and vain-glory; whereas he was so far from making
himself greater than he was that he now drew a veil over his own glory,
emptied himself, and made himself less than he was, and was the greatest
example of humility that ever was.
III.
Christ's reply to this cavil; still he vouchsafes to reason with
them, that every mouth may be stopped. No doubt he could have struck
them dumb or dead upon the spot, but this was the day of his patience.
1.
In his answer he insists not upon his own testimony concerning
himself, but waives it as not sufficient nor conclusive (v. 54): If I
honour myself, my honour is nothing, ean egoµ doxazoµ-if I glorify
myself. Note, Self-honour is no honour; and the affectation of glory is
both the forfeiture and the defeasance of it: it is not glory (Prov.
25:27), but so great a reproach that there is no sin which men are more
industrious to hide than this; even he that most affects praise would
not be thought to do it. Honour of our own creating is a mere chimera,
has nothing in it, and therefore is called vain-glory. Self-admirers are
self-deceivers. Our Lord Jesus was not one that honoured himself, as
they represented him; he was crowned by him who is the fountain of
honour, and glorified not himself to be made a high priest, Heb. 5:4, 5.
2.
He refers himself to his Father, God; and to their father, Abraham.
(1.)
To his Father, God: It is my Father that honoureth me. By this he
means, [1.]
That he derived from his Father all the honour he now
claimed; he had commanded them to believe in him, to follow him, and to
keep his word, all which put an honour upon him; but it was the Father
that laid help upon him, that lodged all fulness in him, that sanctified
him, and sealed him, and sent him into the world to receive all the
honours due to the Messiah, and this justified him in all these demands
of respect. [2.]
That he depended upon his Father for all the honour
he further looked for. He courted not the applauses of the age, but
despised them; for his eye and heart were upon the glory which the
Father had promised him, and which he had with the Father before the
world was. He aimed at an advancement with which the Father was to exalt
him, a name he was to give him, Phil. 2:8, 9. Note, Christ and all that
are his depend upon God for their honour; and he that is sure of honour
where he is known cares not though he be slighted where he is in
disguise. Appealing thus often to his Father, and his Father's
testimony of him, which yet the Jews did not admit nor give credit to,
First, He here takes occasion to show the reason of their incredulity, notwithstanding this testimony-and this was their unacquaintedness with God; as if he had said, "But why should I talk to you of my Father's honouring me, when he is one you know nothing of? You say of him that he is your God, yet you have not known him." Here observe,
a.
The profession they made of relation to God: "You say that he is
your God, the God you have chosen, and are in covenant with; you say
that you are Israel; but all are not so indeed that are of Israel,"
Rom. 9:6. Note, Many pretend to have an interest in God, and say that he
is theirs, who yet have no just cause to say so. Those who called
themselves the temple of the Lord, having profaned the excellency of
Jacob, did but trust in lying words. What will it avail us to say, He is
our God, if we be not in sincerity his people, nor such as he will own?
Christ mentions here their profession of relation to God, as that which
was an aggravation of their unbelief. All people will honour those whom
their God honours; but these Jews, who said that the Lord was their God,
studied how to put the utmost disgrace upon one upon whom their God put
honour. Note, The Profession we make of a covenant relation to God, and
an interest in him, if it be not improved by us will be improved against
us.
b.
Their ignorance of him, and estrangement from him, notwithstanding
this profession: Yet you have not known him. (a.)
You know him not at
all. These Pharisees were so taken up with the study of their traditions
concerning things foreign and trifling that they never minded the most
needful and useful knowledge; like the false prophets of old, who caused
people to forget God's name by their dreams, Jer. 23:27. Or, (b.)
You
know him not aright, but mistake concerning him; and this is as bad as
not knowing him at all, or worse. Men may be able to dispute subtly
concerning God, and yet may think him such a one as themselves, and not
know him. You say that he is yours, and it is natural to us to desire to
know our own, yet you know him not. Note, There are many who
claim-kindred to God who yet have no acquaintance with him. It is only
the name of God which they have learned to talk of, and to hector with;
but for the nature of God, his attributes and perfections, and relations
to his creatures, they know nothing of the matter; we speak this to
their shame, 1 Co. 15:34. Multitudes satisfy themselves, but deceive
themselves, with a titular relation to an unknown God. This Christ
charges upon the Jews here, [a.]
To show how vain and groundless their
pretensions of relation to God were. "You say that he is yours, but you
give yourselves the lie, for it is plain that you do not know him;" and
we reckon that a cheat is effectually convicted if it be found that he
is ignorant of the persons he pretends alliance to. [b.]
To show the
true reason why they were not wrought upon by Christ's doctrine and
miracles. They knew not God; and therefore perceived not the image of
God, nor the voice of God in Christ. Note, The reason why men receive
not the gospel of Christ is because they have not the knowledge of God.
Men submit not to the righteousness of Christ because they are ignorant
of God's righteousness, Rom. 10:3. They that know not God, and obey not
the gospel of Christ, are put together, 2 Th. 1:8.
Secondly, He gives them the reason of his assurance that his Father would honour him and own him: But I know him; and again, I know him; which bespeaks, not only his acquaintance with him, having lain in his bosom, but his confidence in him, to stand by him, and bear him out in his whole undertaking; as was prophesied concerning him (Isa. 50:7, 8), I know that I shall not be ashamed, for he is near that justifies; and as Paul, "I know whom I have believed (2 Tim. 1:12), I know him to be faithful, and powerful, and heartily engaged in the cause which I know to be his own." Observe, 1. How he professes his knowledge of his Father, with the greatest certainty, as one that was neither afraid nor ashamed to own it: If I should say I know him not, I should be a liar like unto you. He would not deny his relation to God, to humour the Jews, and to avoid their reproaches, and prevent further trouble; nor would he retract what he had said, nor confess himself either deceived or a deceiver; if he should, he would be found a false witness against God and himself. Note, Those who disown their religion and relation to God, as Peter, are liars, as much as hypocrites are, who pretend to know him, when they do not. See 1 Tim. 6:13, 14. Mr Clark observes well, upon this, that it is a great sin to deny God's grace in us. 2. How he proves his knowledge of his Father: I know him and keep his sayings, or his word. Christ, as man, was obedient to the moral law, and, as Redeemer, to the mediatorial law; and in both he kept his Father's word, and his own word with the Father. Christ requires of us (v. 51) that we keep his sayings; and he has set before us a copy of obedience, a copy without a blot: he kept his Father's sayings; well might he who learned obedience teach it; see Heb. 5:8, 9. Christ by this evinced that he knew the Father. Note, The best proof of our acquaintance with God is our obedience to him. Those only know God aright that keep his word; it is a ruled case, 1 Jn. 2:3. Hereby we know that we know him (and do not only fancy it), if we keep his commandments.
(2.)
Christ refers them to their father, whom they boasted so much of a
relation to, and that was Abraham, and this closes the discourse.
[1.]
Christ asserts Abraham's prospect of him, and respect to him:
Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day, and he saw it, and was glad,
v. 56. And by this he proves that he was not at all out of the way when
he made himself greater than Abraham. Two things he here speaks of as
instances of that patriarch's respect to the promised Messiah:-
First, The ambition he had to see his day: He rejoiced, eµgalliasto-he leaped at it. The word, though it commonly signifies rejoicing, must here signify a transport of desire rather than of joy, for otherwise the latter part of the verse would be a tautology; he saw it, and was glad. He reached out, or stretched himself forth, that he might see my day; as Zaccheus, that ran before, and climbed the tree, to see Jesus. The notices he had received of the Messiah to come had raised in him an expectation of something great, which he earnestly longed to know more of. The dark intimation of that which is considerable puts men upon enquiry, and makes them earnestly ask Who? and What? and Where? and When? and How? And thus the prophets of the Old Testament, having a general idea of a grace that should come, searched diligently (1 Pt. 1:10), and Abraham was as industrious herein as any of them. God told him of a land that he would give his posterity, and of the wealth and honour he designed them (Gen. 15:14); but he never leaped thus to see that day, as he did to see the day of the Son of man. He could not look with so much indifferency upon the promised seed as he did upon the promised land; in that he was, but to the other he could not be, contentedly a stranger. Note, Those who rightly know any thing of Christ cannot but be earnestly desirous to know more of him. Those who discern the dawning of the light of the Sun of righteousness cannot but wish to see his rising. The mystery of redemption is that which angels desire to look into, much more should we, who are more immediately concerned in it. Abraham desired to see Christ's day, though it was at a great distance; but this degenerate seed of his discerned not his day, nor bade it welcome when it came. The appearing of Christ, which gracious souls love and long for, carnal hearts dread and loathe.
Secondly, The satisfaction he had in what he did see of it: He saw it, and was glad. Observe here,
a.
How God gratified the pious desire of Abraham; he longed to see
Christ's day, and he saw it. Though he saw it not so plainly, and
fully, and distinctly as we now see it under the gospel, yet he saw
something of it, more afterwards than he did at first. Note, To him that
has, and to him that asks, shall be given; to him that uses and improves
what he has, and that desires and prays for more of the knowledge of
Christ, God will give more. But how did Abraham see Christ's day? (a.)
Some understand it of the sight he had of it in the other world. The
separate soul of Abraham, when the veil of flesh was rent, saw the
mysteries of the kingdom of God in heaven. Calvin mentions this sense of
it, and does not much disallow it. Note, The longings of gracious souls
after Jesus Christ will be fully satisfied when they come to heaven, and
not till then. But, (b.)
It is more commonly understood of some sight he
had of Christ's day in this world. They that received not the promises,
yet saw them afar off, Heb. 11:13. Balaam saw Christ, but not now, not
nigh. There is room to conjecture that Abraham had some vision of Christ
and his day, for his own private satisfaction, which is not, nor must
be, recorded in his story, like that of Daniel's, which must be shut
up, and sealed unto the time of the end, Dan. 12:4. Christ knew what
Abraham saw better than Moses did. But there are divers things recorded
in which Abraham saw more of that which he longed to see than he did
when the promise was first made to him. He saw in Melchizedek one made
like unto the Son of God, and a priest for ever; he saw an appearance of
Jehovah, attended with two angels, in the plains of Mamre. In the
prevalency of his intercession for Sodom he saw a specimen of Christ's
intercession; in the casting out of Ishmael, and the establishment of
the covenant with Isaac, he saw a figure of the gospel day, which is
Christ's day; for these things were an allegory. In offering Isaac, and
the ram instead of Isaac, he saw a double type of the great sacrifice;
and his calling the place Jehovah-jireh-It shall be seen, intimates that
he saw something more in it than others did, which time would produce;
and in making his servant put his hand under his thigh, when he swore,
he had a regard to the Messiah.
b.
How Abraham entertained these discoveries of Christ's day, and bade
them welcome: He saw, and was glad. He was glad of what he saw of God's
favour to himself, and glad of what he foresaw of the mercy God had in
store for the world. Perhaps this refers to Abraham's laughing when God
assured him of a son by Sarah (Gen. 17:16, 17), for that was not a
laughter of distrust as Sarah's but of joy; in that promise he saw
Christ's day, and it filled him with joy unspeakable. Thus he embraced
the promises. Note, A believing sight of Christ and his day will put
gladness into the heart. No joy like the joy of faith; we are never
acquainted with true pleasure till we are acquainted with Christ.
[2.]
The Jews cavil at this, and reproach him for it (v. 57): Thou art
not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham? Here, First, They
suppose that if Abraham saw him and his day he also had seen Abraham,
which yet was not a necessary innuendo, but this turn of his words would
best serve to expose him; yet it was true that Christ had seen Abraham,
and had talked with him as a man talks with his friend. Secondly, They
suppose it a very absurd thing for him to pretend to have seen Abraham,
who was dead so many ages before he was born. The state of the dead is
an invisible state; but here they ran upon the old mistake,
understanding that corporally which Christ spoke spiritually. Now this
gave them occasion to despise his youth, and to upbraid him with it, as
if he were but of yesterday, and knew nothing: Thou art not yet fifty
years old. They might as well have said, Thou art not forty; for he was
now but thirty-two or thirty-three years old. As to this, Irenaeus, one
of the first fathers, with this passage supports the tradition which he
says he had from some that had conversed with St. John, that our Saviour
lived to be fifty years old, which he contends for, Advers. Haeres. lib.
2, cap. 39, 40. See what little credit is to be given to tradition; and,
as to this here, the Jews spoke at random; some year they would mention,
and therefore pitched upon one that they thought he was far enough short
of; he did not look to be forty, but they were sure he could not be
fifty, much less contemporary with Abraham. Old age is reckoned to begin
at fifty (Num. 4:47), so that they meant no more than this, "Thou art
not to be reckoned an old man; many of us are much thy seniors, and yet
pretend not to have seen Abraham." Some think that his countenance was
so altered, with grief and watching, that, together with the gravity of
his aspect, it made him look like a man of fifty years old: his visage
was so marred, Isa. 52:14.
[3.]
Our Saviour gives an effectual answer to this cavil, by a solemn
assertion of his own seniority even to Abraham himself (v. 58):
"Verily, verily, I say unto you; I do not only say it in private to my
own disciples, who will be sure to say as I say, but to you my enemies
and persecutors; I say it to your faces, take it how you will: Before
Abraham was, I am;" prin Abraam genesthai, egoµ eimi, Before Abraham
was made or born, I am. The change of the word is observable, and
bespeaks Abraham a creature, and himself the Creator; well therefore
might he make himself greater than Abraham. Before Abraham he was,
First, As God. I am, is the name of God (Ex. 3:14); it denotes his
self-existence; he does not say, I was, but I am, for he is the first
and the last, immutably the same (Rev. 1:8); thus he was not only before
Abraham, but before all worlds, ch. 1:1; Prov. 8:23. Secondly, As
Mediator. He was the appointed Messiah, long before Abraham; the Lamb
slain from the foundation of the world (Rev. 13:8), the channel of
conveyance of light, life, and love from God to man. This supposes his
divine nature, that he is the same in himself from eternity (Heb. 13:8),
and that he is the same to man ever since the fall; he was made of God
wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption, to Adam, and
Abel, and Enoch, and Noah, and Shem, and all the patriarchs that lived
and died by faith in him before Abraham was born. Abraham was the root
of the Jewish nation, the rock out of which they were hewn. If Christ
was before Abraham, his doctrine and religion were no novelty, but were,
in the substance of them, prior to Judaism, and ought to take place of
it.
[4.]
This great word ended the dispute abruptly, and put a period to
it: they could bear to hear no more from him, and he needed to say no
more to them, having witnessed this good confession, which was
sufficient to support all his claims. One would think that Christ's
discourse, in which shone so much both of grace and glory, should have
captivated them all; but their inveterate prejudice against the holy
spiritual doctrine and law of Christ, which were so contrary to their
pride and worldliness, baffled all the methods of conviction. Now was
fulfilled that prophecy (Mal. 3:1, 2), that when the messenger of the
covenant should come to his temple they would not abide the day of his
coming, because he would be like a refiner's fire. Observe here,
First, How they were enraged at Christ for what he said: They took up stones to cast at him, v. 59. Perhaps they looked upon him as a blasphemer, and such were indeed to be stoned (Lev. 24:16); but they must be first legally tried and convicted. Farewell justice and order if every man pretend to execute a law at his pleasure. Besides, they had said but just now that he was a distracted crack-brained man, and if so it was against all reason and equity to punish him as a malefactor for what he said. They took up stones. Dr. Lightfoot will tell you how they came to have stones so ready in the temple; they had workmen at this time repairing the temple, or making some additions, and the pieces of stone which they hewed off served for this purpose. See here the desperate power of sin and Satan in and over the children of disobedience. Who would think that ever there should be such wickedness as this in men, such an open and daring rebellion against one that undeniably proved himself to be the Son of God? Thus every one has a stone to throw at his holy religion, Acts 28:22.
Secondly, How he made his escape out of their hands. 1. He absconded;
Jesus hid himself; ekrybeµ-he was hid, either by the crowd of those that
wished well to him, to shelter him (he that ought to have been upon a
throne, high and lifted up, is content to be lost in a crowd); or
perhaps he concealed himself behind some of the walls or pillars of the
temple (in the secret of his tabernacle he shall hide me, Ps. 27:5); or
by a divine power, casting a mist before their eyes, he made himself
invisible to them. When the wicked rise a man is hidden, a wise and good
man, Prov. 28:12, 28. Not that Christ was afraid or ashamed to stand by
what he had said, but his hour was not yet come, and he would
countenance the flight of his ministers and people in times of
persecution, when they are called to it. The Lord hid Jeremiah and
Baruch, Jer. 36:26. 2. He departed, he went out of the temple, going
through the midst of them, undiscovered, and so passed by. This was not
a cowardly inglorious flight, nor such as argued either guilt or fear.
It was foretold concerning him that he should not fail nor be
discouraged, Isa. 42:4. But, (1.)
It was an instance of his power over
his enemies, and that they could do no more against him than he gave
them leave to do; by which it appears that when afterwards he was taken
in their pits he offered himself, ch. 10:18. They now thought they had
made sure of him and yet he passed through the midst of them, either
their eyes being blinded or their hands tied, and thus he left them to
fume, like a lion disappointed of his prey. (2.)
It was an instance of
his prudent provision for his own safety, when he knew that his work was
not done, nor his testimony finished; thus he gave an example to his own
rule, When they persecute you in one city flee to another; nay, if
occasion be, to a wilderness, for so Elijah did (1 Ki. 19:3, 4), and the
woman, the church, Rev. 12:6. When they took up loose stones to throw at
Christ, he could have commanded the fixed stones, which did cry out of
the wall against them, to avenge his cause, or the earth to open and
swallow them up; but he chose to accommodate himself to the state he was
in, to make the example imitable by the prudence of his followers,
without a miracle. (3.)
It was a righteous deserting of those who (worse
than the Gadarenes, who prayed him to depart) stoned him from among
them. Christ will not long stay with those who bid him be gone. Christ
did again visit the temple after this; as one loth to depart, he bade
oft farewell; but at last he abandoned it for ever, and left it
desolate. Christ now went through the midst of the Jews, and none of
them courted his stay, nor stirred up himself to take hold of him, but
were even content to let him go. Note, God never forsakes any till they
have first provoked him to withdraw, and will have none of him. Calvin
observes that these chief priests, when they had driven Christ out of
the temple, valued themselves on the possession they kept of it:
"But," says he, "those deceive themselves who are proud of a church
or temple which Christ has forsaken." Longe falluntur, cum templum se
habere putant Deo vacuum. When Christ left them it is said that he
passed by silently and unobserved; pareµgen houtoµs, so that they were
not aware of him. Note, Christ's departures from a church, or a
particular soul, are often secret, and not soon taken notice of. As the
kingdom of God comes not, so it goes not, with observation. See Jdg.
16:20. Samson wist not that the Lord was departed from him. Thus it was
with these forsaken Jews, God left them, and they never missed him.