M A T T H E W. CHAP. XXVII.
It is a very affecting story which is recorded in this chapter concerning
the sufferings and death of our Lord Jesus. Considering the thing itself,
there cannot be a more tragical story told us; common humanity would melt
the heart, to find an innocent and excellent person thus misused. But considering
the design and fruit of Christ's sufferings, it is gospel, it is good news,
that Jesus Christ was thus delivered for our offences; and there is nothing
we have more reason to glory in than the cross of Christ. In this chapter,
observe, I. How he was prosecuted. 1. The delivering of him to Pilate,
ver. 1, 2. 2. The despair of Judas, ver. 3-10. 3. The arraignment and trial
of Christ before Pilate, ver. 11-14. 4. The clamours of the people against
him, ver. 15-25. 5. Sentence passed, and the warrant signed for his execution,
ver. 26. II. How he was executed. 1. He was barbarously used, ver. 27-30.
2. Led to the place of execution, ver. 31-33. 3. There he had all possible
indignities done him, and reproaches cast upon him, ver. 34-44. 4. Heaven
frowned upon him, ver. 45-49. 5. Many remarkable things attended his death,
ver. 50-56. He was buried and a watch set on his grave, ver. 57-66.
The Repentance of Judas; The Confession of Judas; The Death of
Judas; Disposal of the Thirty Pieces of Silver.
1 When the morning was come, all the chief priests and elders of
the people took counsel against Jesus to put him to death: 2 And when they
had bound him, they led him away, and delivered him to Pontius Pilate the
governor. 3 Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was
condemned, repented himself, and brought again the thirty pieces of silver
to the chief priests and elders, 4 Saying, I have sinned in that I have
betrayed the innocent blood. And they said, What is that to us? see thou
to that. 5 And he cast down the pieces of silver in the temple, and departed,
and went and hanged himself. 6 And the chief priests took the silver pieces,
and said, It is not lawful for to put them into the treasury, because it
is the price of blood. 7 And they took counsel, and bought with them the
potter's field, to bury strangers in. 8 Wherefore that field was called,
The field of blood, unto this day. 9 Then was fulfilled that which was
spoken by Jeremy the prophet, saying, And they took the thirty pieces of
silver, the price of him that was valued, whom they of the children of
Israel did value; 10 And gave them for the potter's field, as the Lord
appointed me.
We left Christ in the hands of the chief priests and elders, condemned
to die, but they could only show their teeth; about two years before this
the Romans had taken from the Jews the power of capital punishment; they
could put no man to death, and therefore early in the morning another council
is held, to consider what is to be done. And here we are told what was
done in that morning-council, after they had been for two or three hours
consulting with their pillows.
I. Christ is delivered up to Pilate, that he might execute the sentence
they had passed upon him. Judea having been almost one hundred years before
this conquered by Pompey, had ever since been tributary to Rome, and was
lately made part of the province of Syria, and subject to the government
of the president of Syria, under whom there were several procurators, who
chiefly attended the business of the revenues, but sometimes, as Pilate
particularly, had the whole power of the president lodged in them. This
was a plain evidence that the sceptre was departed from Judah, and that
therefore now the Shiloh must come, according to Jacob's prophecy, Gen.
xlix. 10. Pilate is characterized by the Roman writers of that time, as
a man of a rough and haughty spirit, wilful and implacable, and extremely
covetous and oppressive; the Jews had a great enmity to his person, and
were weary of his government, and yet they made use of him as the tool
of their malice against Christ.
1. They bound Jesus. He was bound when he was first seized; but either
they took off these bonds when he was before the council, or now they added
to them. Having found him guilty, they tied his hands behind him, as they
usually do with convicted criminals. He was already bound with the bonds
of love to man, and of his own undertaking, else he had soon broken these
bonds, as Samson did his. We were fettered with the bond of iniquity, held
in the cords of our sins (Prov. x. 22); but God had bound the yoke of our
transgressions upon the neck of the Lord Jesus (Isa. l. 14), that we might
be loosed by his bonds, as we are healed by his stripes.
2. They led him away in a sort of triumph, led him as a lamb to the
slaughter; so was he taken from prison and from judgment, Isa. liii. 7,
8. It was nearly a mile from Caiaphas's house to Pilate's. All that way
they led him through the streets of Jerusalem, when in the morning they
began to fill, to make him a spectacle to the world.
3. They delivered him to Pontius Pilate; according to that which Christ
had often said, that he should be delivered to the Gentiles. Both Jews
and Gentiles were obnoxious to the judgment of God, and concluded under
sin, and Christ was to be the Saviour both of Jews and Gentiles; and therefore
Christ was brought into the judgment both of Jews and Gentiles, and both
had a hand in his death. See how these corrupt church-rulers abused the
civil magistrate, making use of him to execute their unrighteous decrees,
and inflict the grievance which they had prescribed, Isa. x. 1. Thus have
the kings of the earth been wretchedly imposed upon by the papal powers,
and condemned to the drudgery of extirpating with the sword of war, as
well as that of justice, those whom they have marked for heretics, right
or wrong, to the great prejudice of their own interests.
II. The money which they had paid to Judas for betraying Christ, is
by him delivered back to them, and Judas, in despair, hangs himself. The
chief priests and elders supported themselves with this, in prosecuting
Christ, that his own disciple betrayed him to them; but now, in the midst
of the prosecution, that string failed them, and even he is made to them
a witness of Christ's innocency and a monument of God's justice; which
served, 1. For glory to Christ in the midst of his sufferings, and a specimen
of his victory over Satan who had entered into Judas. 2. For warning to
his persecutors, and to leave them the more inexcusable. If their heart
had not been fully set in them to do this evil, what Judas said and did,
one would think, should have stopped the prosecution.
(1.) See here how Judas repented: not like Peter, who repented, believed,
and was pardoned: no, he repented, despaired, and was ruined. Now observe
here,
[1.] What induced him to repent. It was when he saw that he was condemned.
Judas, it is probable, expected that either Christ would have made his
escape out of their hands, or would so have pleaded his own cause at their
bar as to have come off, and then Christ would have had the honour, the
Jews the shame, and he the money, and no harm done. This he had no reason
to expect, because he had so often heard his Master say that he must be
crucified; yet it is probable that he did expect it, and when the event
did not answer his vain fancy, then he fell into this horror, when he saw
the stream strong against Christ, and him yielding to it. Note, Those who
measure actions by the consequences of them rather than by the divine law,
will find themselves mistaken in their measures. The way of sin is down-hill;
and if we cannot easily stop ourselves, much less can we stop others whom
we have set a going in a sinful way. He repented himself; that is, he was
filled with grief, anguish, and indignation, at himself, when reflecting
upon what he had done. When he was tempted to betray his Master, the thirty
pieces of silver looked very fine and glittering, like the wine, when it
is red, and gives its colour in the cup. But when the thing was done, and
the money paid, the silver was become dross, it bit like a serpent, and
stung like an adder. Now his conscience flew in his face; "What have I
done! What a fool, what a wretch, am I, to sell my Master, and all my comfort
and happiness in him, for such a trifle! All these abuses and indignities
done him are chargeable upon me; it is owing to me, that he is bound and
condemned, spit upon and buffeted. I little thought it would have come
to this, when I made that wicked bargain; so foolish was I, and ignorant,
and so like a beast." Now he curses the bag he carried, the money he coveted,
the priests he dealt with, and the day that he was born. The remembrance
of his Master's goodness to him, which he had so basely requited, the bowels
of mercy he had spurned at, and the fair warnings he had slighted, steeled
his convictions, and made them the more piercing. Now he found his Master's
words true; It were better for that man, that he had never been born. Note,
Sin will soon change its taste. Though it be rolled under the tongue as
a sweet morsel, in the bowels it will be turned into the gall of asps (Job
xx. 12-14), like John's book, Rev. x. 9.
[2.] What were the indications of his repentance.
First, He made restitution; He brought again the thirty pieces of silver
to the chief priests, when they were all together publicly. Now the money
burned in his conscience, and he was as sick of it as ever he had been
fond of it. Note, That which is ill gotten, will never do good to those
that get it, Jer. xiii. 10; Job xx. 15. If he had repented, and brought
the money back before he had betrayed Christ, he might have done it with
comfort, then he had agreed while yet in the way; but now it was too late,
now he cannot do it without horror, wishing ten thousand times he had never
meddled with it. See Jam. v. 3. He brought it again. Note, what is unjustly
gotten, must not be kept; for that is a continuance in the sin by which
it was got, and such an avowing of it as is not consistent with repentance.
He brought it to those from whom he had it, to let them know that he repented
his bargain. Note, Those who have served and hardened others in their sin,
when God gives them repentance, should let them know it whose sins they
have been partakers in, that it may be a means to bring them to repentance.
Secondly, He made confession (v. 4); I have sinner, in that I have betrayed
innocent blood. 1. To the honour of Christ, he pronounces his blood innocent.
If he had been guilty of any sinful practices, Judas, as his disciple,
would certainly have know it, and, as his betrayer, would certainly have
discovered it; but he, freely and without being urged to it, pronounces
him innocent, to the face of those who had pronounced him guilty. 2. To
his own shame, he confesses that he had sinned, in betraying this blood.
He does not lay the blame on any one else; does not say, "You have sinned,
in hiring me to do it;" but takes it all to himself; "I have sinned, in
doing it." Thus far Judas went toward his repentance, yet it was not to
salvation. He confessed, but not to God, did not go to him, and say, I
have sinned, Father, against heaven. He confessed the betraying of innocent
blood, but did not confess that wicked love of money, which was the root
of this evil. There are those who betray Christ, and yet justify themselves
in it, and so come short of Judas.
(2.) See here how the chief priests and elders entertained Judas's penitential
confession; they said, What is that to us? See thou to that. He made them
his confessors, and that was the absolution they gave him; more like the
priests of devils than like the priests of the holy living God.
[1.] See here how carelessly they speak of the betraying of Christ.
Judas had told them that the blood of Christ was innocent blood; and they
said, What is that to us? Was it nothing to them that they had thirsted
after this blood, and hired Judas to betray it, and had now condemned it
to be shed unjustly? Is this nothing to them? Does it give no check to
the violence of their prosecution, no warning to take need what they do
to this just man? Thus do fools make a mock at sin, as if no harm were
done, no hazard run, by the commission of the greatest wickedness. Thus
light do many make of Christ crucified; what is it to them, that he suffered
such things?
[2.] See here how carelessly they speak of the sin of Judas; he said,
I have sinned, and they said, "What is that to us? What are we concerned
in thy sin, that thou tellest us of it?" Note, It is folly for us to think
that the sins of others are nothing to us, especially those sins that we
are any way accessary to, or partakers in. Is it nothing to us, that God
is dishonoured, souls wounded, Satan gratified and his interests served,
and that we have aided and abetted it? If the elders of Jezreel, to please
Jezebel, murder Naboth, is that nothing to Ahab? Yes, he has killed, for
he has taken possession, 1 Kings xxi. 19. The guilt of sin is not so easily
transferred as some people think it is. If there were guilt in the matter,
they tell Judas that he must look to it, he must bear it. First, Because
he had betrayed him to them. His was indeed the greater sin (John xix.
11); but it did not therefore follow, that theirs was no sin. It is a common
instance of the deceitfulness of our hearts, to extenuate our own sin by
the aggravation of other people's sins. But the judgment of God is according
to truth, not according to comparison. Secondly, Because he knew and believed
him to be innocent. "If he be innocent, see thou to it, that is more than
we know; we have adjudged him guilty, and therefore may justly prosecute
him as such," Wicked practices are buoyed up by wicked principles, and
particularly by this, That sin is sin only to those that think it to be
so; that it is no harm to persecute a good man, if we take him to be a
bad man; but those who thus think to mock God, will but deceive and destroy
themselves.
[3.] See how carelessly they speak of the conviction, terror, and remorse,
that Judas was under. They were glad to make use of him in the sin, and
were then very fond of him; none more welcome to them than Judas, when
he said, What will ye give me, and I will betray him to you? They did not
say, What is that to us? But now that his sin had put him into a fright,
now they slighted him, had nothing to say to him, but turned him over to
his own terrors; why did he come to trouble them with his melancholy fancies?
They had something else to do than to heed him. But why so shy? First,
Perhaps they were in some fear lest the sparks of his conviction, brought
too near, should kindle a fire in their own consciences, and lest his moans,
listened to, should give an alarm to their own convictions. Note, Obstinate
sinners stand upon their guard against convictions; and those that are
resolvedly impenitent, look with disdain upon the penitent. Secondly, However,
they were in no concern to succour Judas; when they had brought him into
the snare, they not only left him, but laughed at him. Note, Sinners, under
convictions, will find their old companions in sin but miserable comforters.
It is usual for those that love the treason, to hate the traitor.
(3.) Here is the utter despair that Judas was hereby driven into. If
the chief priests had promised him to stay the prosecution, it would have
been some comfort to him; but, seeing no hopes of that, he grew desperate,
v. 5.
[1.] He cast down the pieces of silver in the temple. The chief priests
would not take the money, for fear of taking thereby the whole guilt to
themselves, which they were willing that Judas should bear the load of;
Judas would not keep it, it was too hot for him to hold, he therefore threw
it down in the temple, that, whether they would or no, it might fall into
the hands of the chief priests. See what a drug money was, when the guilt
of sin was tacked to it, or was thought to be so.
[2.] He went, and hanged himself. First, He retired--anechorese; he
withdrew into some solitary place, like the possessed man that was drawn
by the devil into the wilderness, Luke viii. 29. Woe to him that is in
despair, and is alone. If Judas had gone to Christ, or to some of the disciples,
perhaps he might have had relief, bad as the case was; but, missing of
it with the chief priests, he abandoned himself to despair: and the same
devil that with the help of the priests drew him to the sin, with their
help drove him to despair. Secondly, He became his own executioner; He
hanged himself; he was suffocated with grief, so Dr. Hammond: but Dr. Whitby
is clear that our translation is right. Judas had a sight and sense of
sin, but no apprehension of the mercy of God in Christ, and so he pined
away in his iniquity. His sin, we may suppose, was not in its own nature
unpardonable: there were some of those saved, that had been Christ's betrayers
and murderers; but he concluded, as Cain, that his iniquity was greater
than could be forgiven, and would rather throw himself on the devil's mercy
than God's. And some have said, that Judas sinned more in despairing of
the mercy of God, than in betraying his Master's blood. Now the terrors
of the Almighty set themselves in array against him. All the curses written
in God's book now came into his bowels like water, and like oil into his
bones, as was foretold concerning him (Ps. cix. 18, 19), and drove him
to this desperate shift, for the escaping of a hell within him, to leap
into that before him, which was but the perfection and perpetuity of this
horror and despair. He throws himself into the fire, to avoid the flame;
but miserable is the case when a man must go to hell for ease.
Now, in this story, 1. We have an instance of the wretched end of those
into whom Satan enters, and particularly those that are given up to the
love of money. This is the destruction in which many are drowned by it,
1 Tim. vi. 9, 10. Remember what became of the swine into which, and of
the traitor into whom, the devil enters; and give not place to the devil.
2. We have an instance of the wrath of God revealed from heaven against
the ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, Rom. i. 18. As in the story
of Peter we behold the goodness of God, and the triumphs of Christ's grace
in the conversion of some sinners; so in the story of Judas we behold the
severity of God, and the triumphs of Christ's power and justice in the
confusion of other sinners. When Judas, into whom Satan entered, was thus
hung up, Christ made an open show of the principalities and powers he undertook
the spoiling of, Col. ii. 15. 3. We have an instance of the direful effects
of despair; it often ends in self-murder. Sorrow, even that for sin, if
not according to God, worketh death (2 Cor. vii. 10), the worst kind of
death; for a wounded spirit, who can bear? Let us think as bad as we can
of sin, provided we do not think it unpardonable; let us despair of help
in ourselves, but not of help in God. He that thinks to ease his conscience
by destroying his life, doth, in effect, dare God Almighty to do his worst.
And self-murder, though prescribed by some of the heathen moralists, is
certainly a remedy worse than the disease, how bad soever the disease may
be. Let us watch against the beginnings of melancholy, and pray, Lord,
lead us not into temptation.
(4.) The disposal of the money which Judas brought back, v. 6-10. It
was laid out in the purchase of a field, called the potter's field; because
some potter had owned it, or occupied it, or lived near it, or because
broken potters' vessels were thrown into it. And this field was to be a
burying-place for strangers, that is, proselytes to the Jewish religion,
who were of other nations, and, coming to Jerusalem to worship, happened
to die there. [1.] It looks like an instance of their humanity, that they
took care for the burying of strangers; and it intimates that they themselves
allowed (as St. Paul saith, Acts xxiv. 15), that there shall be a resurrection
of the dead, both of the just and of the unjust; for we therefore take
care of the dead body, not only because it has been the habitation of a
rational soul, but because it must be so again. But, [2.] It was no instance
of their humility that they would bury strangers in a place by themselves,
as if they were not worthy to be laid in their burying-places; strangers
must keep their distance, alive and dead, and that principle must go down
to the grace, Stand by thyself, come not near me, I am holier than thou,
Isa. lxv. 5. The sons of Seth were better affected towards Abraham, though
a stranger among them, when they offered him the choicest of their own
sepulchres, Gen. xxiii. 6. But the sons of the stranger, that have joined
themselves to the Lord, though buried by themselves, shall rise with all
that are dead in Christ.
This buying of the potter's field did not take place on the day that
Christ died (they were then too busy to mind any thing else but hunting
him down); but it took place not long after; for Peter speaks of it soon
after Christ's ascension; yet it is here recorded.
First, To show the hypocrisy of the chief priests and elders. They were
maliciously persecuting the blessed Jesus, and now,
1. They scruple to put that money into the treasury, or corban, of the
temple, with which they had hired the traitor. Though perhaps they had
taken it out of the treasury, pretending it was for the public good, and
though they were great sticklers for the corban, and laboured to draw all
the wealth of the nation into it, yet they would not put that money into
it, which was the price of blood. The hire of a traitor they thought parallel
to the hire of a whore, and the price of a malefactor (such a one they
made Christ to be) equivalent to the price of a dog, neither of which was
to be brought into the house of the Lord, Deut. xxiii. 18. They would thus
save their credit with the people, by possessing them with an opinion of
their great reverence for the temple. Thus they that swallowed a camel,
strained at a gnat.
2. They think to atone for what they had done, by this public good act
of providing a burying-place for strangers, though not at their own charge.
Thus in times of ignorance people were made to believe that building churches
and endowing monasteries would make amends for immoralities.
Secondly, To signify the favour intended by the blood of Christ to strangers,
and sinners of the Gentiles. Through the price of his blood, a resting
place is provided for them after death. Thus many of the ancients apply
this passage. The grave is the potter's field, where the bodies are thrown
as despised broken vessels; but Christ by his blood purchased it for those
who by confessing themselves strangers on earth seek the better country;
he has altered the property of it (as a purchaser doth), so that now death
is ours, the grave is ours, a bed of rest for us. The Germans, in their
language, call burying-places God's fields; for in them God sows his people
as a corn of wheat, John xii. 24. See Hos. ii. 23; Isa. xxvi. 19.
Thirdly, To perpetuate the infamy of those that bought and sold the
blood of Christ. This field was commonly called Aceldama--the field of
blood; not by the chief priests, they hoped in this burying-place to bury
the remembrance of their own crime; but by the people; who took notice
of Judas's acknowledgment that he had betrayed the innocent blood, though
the chief priests made nothing of it. They fastened this name upon the
field in perpetuam rei memoriam--for a perpetual memorial. Note, Divine
Providence has many ways of entailing disgrace upon the wicked practices
even of great men, who, though they seek to cover their shame, are put
to a perpetual reproach.
Fourthly, That we may see how the scripture was fulfilled (v. 9, 10);
Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the prophet. The words
quoted are found in the prophecy of Zechariah, ch. xi. 12. How they are
here said to be spoken by Jeremy is a difficult question; but the credit
of Christ's doctrine does not depend upon it; for that proves itself perfectly
divine, though there should appear something human as to small circumstances
in the penmen of it. The Syriac version, which is ancient, reads only,
It was spoken by the prophet, not naming any, whence some have thought
that Jeremy was added by some scribe; some think that the whole volume
of the prophets, being in one book, and the prophecy of Jeremiah put first,
it might not be improper, currente calamo--for a transcriber to quote any
passage out of that volume, under his name. The Jews used to say, The spirit
of Jeremiah was in Zechariah, and so they were as one prophet. Some suggest
that it was spoken by Jeremiah, but written by Zechariah; or that Jeremiah
wrote the ninth, tenth, and eleventh chapters of Zechariah. Now this passage
in the prophet is a representation of the great contempt of God, that was
found among the Jews, and the poor returns they made to him for rich receivings
from him. But here that is really acted, which was there but figuratively
expressed. The sum of money is the same--thirty pieces of silver; this
they weighed for his price, at this rate they valued him; a goodly price;
and this was cast to the potter in the house of the Lord; which was here
literally accomplished. Note, We should better understand the events of
Providence, if we were better acquainted even with the language and expressions
of scripture; for even those also are sometimes written upon the dispensations
of Providence so plainly, that he who runs may read them. What David spoke
figuratively (Ps. xlii. 7), Jonah made a literal application of; All thy
waves and thy billows are gone over me, Jonah iii. 3.
The giving of the price of him that was valued, not for him, but for
the potter's field, bespeaks, 1. The high value that ought to be put upon
Christ. The price was given, not for him; no, when it was given for him,
it was soon brought back again with disdain, as infinitely below his worth;
he cannot be valued with the gold of Ophir, nor this unspeakable Gift brought
with money. 2. The low value that was put upon him. They of the children
of Israel did strangely undervalue him, when his price did but reach to
buy a potter's field, a pitiful sorry spot of ground, not worth looking
upon. It added to the reproach of his being bought and sold, that it was
at so low a rate. Cast it to the potter, so it is in Zechariah; a contemptible
petty chapman, not the merchant that deals in things of value. And observe,
They of the children of Israel thus undervalued him; they who were his
own people, that should have known better what estimate to put upon him,
they to whom he was first sent, whose glory he was, and whom he had valued
so highly, and bought so dear. He gave kings' ransoms for them, and the
richest countries (so precious were they in his sight, Isa. xliii. 3, 4),
Egypt, and Ethiopia, and Seba; but they gave a slave's ransom for him (see
Exod. xxi. 32), and valued him but at the rate of a potter's field; so
was that blood trodden under foot, which bought the kingdom of heaven for
us. But all this was as the Lord appointed; so the prophetic vision was,
which typified this event, and so the event itself, as the other instances
of Christ's sufferings, was by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge
of God.
Christ at the Bar of Pilate.
11 And Jesus stood before the governor: and the governor asked him,
saying, Art thou the King of the Jews? And Jesus said unto him, Thou sayest.
12 And when he was accused of the chief priests and elders, he answered
nothing. 13 Then said Pilate unto him, Hearest thou not how many things
they witness against thee? 14 And he answered him to never a word; insomuch
that the governor marvelled greatly. 15 Now at that feast the governor
was wont to release unto the people a prisoner, whom they would. 16 And
they had then a notable prisoner, called Barabbas. 17 Therefore when they
were gathered together, Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that I release
unto you? Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ? 18 For he knew that
for envy they had delivered him. 19 When he was set down on the judgment
seat, his wife sent unto him, saying, Have thou nothing to do with that
just man: for I have suffered many things this day in a dream because of
him. 20 But the chief priests and elders persuaded the multitude that they
should ask Barabbas, and destroy Jesus. 21 The governor answered and said
unto them, Whether of the twain will ye that I release unto you? They said,
Barabbas. 22 Pilate saith unto them, What shall I do then with Jesus which
is called Christ? They all say unto him, Let him be crucified. 23 And the
governor said, Why, what evil hath he done? But they cried out the more,
saying, Let him be crucified. 24 When Pilate saw that he could prevail
nothing, but that rather a tumult was made, he took water, and washed his
hands before the multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this
just person: see ye to it. 25 Then answered all the people, and said, His
blood be on us, and on our children.
We have here an account of what passed in Pilate's judgment-hall, when
the blessed Jesus was brought thither betimes in the morning. Though it
was no court-day, Pilate immediately took his case before him. We have
there,
I. The trial Christ had before Pilate.
1. His arraignment; Jesus stood before the governor, as the prisoner
before the judge. We could not stand before God because of our sins, nor
lift up our face in his presence, if Christ had not been thus made sin
for us. He was arraigned that we might be discharged. Some think that this
bespeaks his courage and boldness; he stood undaunted, unmoved by all their
rage. He thus stood in this judgment, that we might stand in God's judgment.
He stood for a spectacle, as Naboth, when he was arraigned, was set on
high among the people.
2. His indictment; Art thou the king of the Jews? The Jews were now
not only under the government, but under the very jealous inspection, of
the Roman powers, which they were themselves to the highest degree disaffected
to, and yet now pretended a concern for, to serve this turn; accusing Jesus
as an Enemy to Cæsar (Luke xxiii. 2), which they could produce no
other proof of, than that he himself had newly owned he was the Christ.
Now they thought that whoever was the Christ, must be the king of the Jews,
and must deliver them from the Roman power, and restore to them a temporal
dominion, and enable them to trample upon all their neighbours. According
to this chimera of their own, they accused our Lord Jesus, as making himself
king of the Jews, in opposition to the Roman yoke; whereas, though he said
that he was the Christ, he meant not such a Christ as this. Note, Many
oppose Christ's holy religion, upon a mistake of the nature of it; they
dress it up in false colours, and then fight against it. They assuring
the governor that, if he made himself Christ, he made himself king of the
Jews, the governor takes it for granted, that he goes about to pervert
the nation, and subvert the government. Art thou a king? It was plain that
he was not so de facto--actually; "But dost thou lay any claim to the government,
or pretend a right to rule the Jews?" Note, It has often been the hard
fate of Christ's holy religion, unjustly to fall under the suspicions of
the civil powers, as if it were hurtful to kings and provinces, whereas
it tends mightily to the benefit of both.
3. His plea; Jesus said unto him, "Thou sayest. It is as thou sayest,
though not as thou meanest; I am a king, but not such a king as thou dost
suspect me to be." Thus before Pilate he witnessed a good confession, and
was not ashamed to own himself a king, though it looked ridiculous, nor
afraid, though at this time it was dangerous.
4. The evidence (v. 12); He was accused of the chief priests. Pilate
found no fault in him; whatever was said, nothing was proved, and therefore
what was wanting in matter they made up in noise and violence, and followed
him with repeated accusations, the same as they had given in before; but
by the repetition they thought to force a belief from the governor. They
had learned, not only calumniari--to calumniate, but fortiter calumniari--to
calumniate stoutly. The best men have often been accused of the worst crimes.
5. The prisoner's silence as to the prosecutors' accusations; He answered
nothing, (1.) Because there was no occasion; nothing was alleged but what
carried its own confutation along with it. (2.) He was now taken up with
the great concern that lay between him and his Father, to whom he was offering
up himself a Sacrifice, to answer the demands of his justice, which he
was so intent upon, that he minded not what they said against him. (3.)
His hour was come, and he submitted to his Father's will; Not as I will,
but as thou wilt. He knew what his Father's will was, and therefore silently
committed himself to him that judgeth righteously. We must not thus by
our silence throw away our lives, because we are not lords of our lives,
as Christ was of his; nor can we know, as he did, when our hour is come.
But hence we must learn, not to render railing for railing, 1 Pet. ii.
23.
Now, [1.] Pilate pressed him to make some reply (v. 13); Hearest thou
not how many things they witness against thee? What these things were,
may be gathered from Luke xxiii. 3, 5, and John xix. 7. Pilate, having
no malice at all against him, was desirous he should clear himself, urges
him to it, and believes he could do it; Hearest thou not? Yes, he did hear;
and still he hears all that is witnessed unjustly against his truths and
ways; but he keeps silence, because it is the day of his patience, and
doth not answer, as he will shortly, Ps. l. 3. [2.] He wondered at his
silence; which was not interpreted so much into a contempt of the court,
as a contempt of himself. And therefore Pilate is not said to be angry
at it, but to have marvelled greatly at it, as a thing very unusual. He
believed him to be innocent, and had heard perhaps that never man spake
like him; and therefore he thought it strange that he had not one word
to say for himself. We have,
II. The outrage and violence of the people, in pressing the governor
to crucify Christ. The chief priests had a great interest in the people,
they called them Rabbi, Rabbi, made idols of them, and oracles of all they
said; and they made use of this to incense them against him, and by the
power of the mob gained the point which they could not otherwise carry.
Now here are two instances of their outrage.
1. Their preferring Barabbas before him, and choosing to have him released
rather than Jesus.
(1.) It seems it was grown into a custom with the Roman governors, for
the honouring of the Jews, to grace the feast of the passover with the
release of a prisoner, v. 15. This, they thought, did honour to the feast,
and was agreeable to the commemoration of their deliverance; but it was
an invention of their own, and no divine institution; though some think
that it was ancient, and kept up by the Jewish princes, before they became
a province of the empire. However, it was a bad custom, an obstruction
to justice, and an encouragement to wickedness. But our gospel-passover
is celebrated with the release of prisoners, by him who hath power on earth
to forgive sins.
(2.) The prisoner put in competition with our Lord Jesus was Barabbas;
he is here called a notable prisoner (v. 16); either because by birth and
breeding he was of some note and quality, or because he had signalized
himself by something remarkable in his crimes; whether he was so notable
as to recommend himself the more to the favours of the people, and so the
more likely to be interceded for, or whether so notable as to make himself
more liable to their age, is uncertain. Some think the latter, and therefore
Pilate mentioned him, as taking it for granted that they would have desired
any one's release rather than his. Treason, murder, and felony, are the
three most enormous crimes that are usually punished by the sword of justice;
and Barabbas was guilty of all three, Luke xxiii. 19; John xviii. 40. A
notable prisoner indeed, whose crimes were so complicated.
(3.) The proposal was made by Pilate the governor (v. 17); Whom will
ye that I release unto you? It is probable that the judge had the nomination
of two, one of which the people were to choose. Pilate proposed to them
to have Jesus released; he was convinced of his innocency, and that the
prosecution was malicious; yet had not the courage to acquit him, as he
ought to have done, by his own power, but would have him released by the
people's election, and so he hoped to satisfy both his own conscience,
and the people too; whereas, finding no fault in him, he ought not to have
put him upon the country, or brought him into peril of his life. But such
little tricks and artifices as these, to trim the matter, and to keep in
with conscience and the world too, are the common practice of those that
seek more to please men than God. What shall I do then, saith Pilate, with
Jesus, who is called Christ? He puts the people in mind of this, that this
Jesus, whose release he proposed, was looked upon by some among them as
the Messiah, and had given pregnant proofs of his being so; "Do not reject
one of whom your nation has professed such an expectation."
The reason why Pilate laboured thus to get Jesus discharged was because
he knew that for envy the chief priests had delivered him up (v. 18); that
it was not his guilt, but his goodness, that they were provoked at; and
for this reason he hoped to bring him off by the people's act, and that
they would be for his release. When David was envied by Saul, he was the
darling of the people; and any one that heard the hosannas with which Christ
was but a few days ago brought into Jerusalem, would have thought that
he had been so, and that Pilate might safely have referred this matter
to the commonalty, especially when so notorious a rogue was set up as a
rival with him for their favours. But it proved otherwise.
(4.) While Pilate was thus labouring the matter, he was confirmed in
his unwillingness to condemn Jesus, by a message sent him from his wife
(v. 19), by way of caution; Have thou nothing to do with that just man
(together with the reason), for I have suffered many things this day in
a cream because of him. Probably, this message was delivered to Pilate
publicly, in the hearing of all that were present, for it was intended
to be a warning not to him only, but to the prosecutors. Observe,
[1.] The special providence of God, in sending this dream to Pilate's
wife; it is not likely that she had heard any thing, before, concerning
Christ, at least not so as to occasion her dreaming of him, but it was
immediately from God: perhaps she was one of the devout and honourable
women, and had some sense of religion; yet God revealed himself by dreams
to some that had not, as to Nebuchadnezzar. She suffered many things in
this dream; whether she dreamed of the cruel usage of an innocent person,
or of the judgments that would fall upon those that had any hand in his
death, or both, it seems that it was a frightful dream, and her thoughts
troubled her, as Dan. ii. 1; iv. 5. Note, The Father of spirits has many
ways of access to the spirits of men, and can seal their instruction in
a dream, or vision of the night, Job xxxiii. 15, 16. Yet to those who have
the written word, God more ordinarily speaks by conscience on a waking
bed, than by dreams, when deep sleep falls upon men.
[2.] The tenderness and care of Pilate's wife, in sending this caution,
thereupon, to her husband; Have nothing to do with that just man. First,
This was an honourable testimony to our Lord Jesus, witnessing for him
that he was a just man, even then when he was persecuted as the worst of
malefactors: when his friends were afraid to appear in defence of him,
God made even those that were strangers and enemies, to speak in his favour;
when Peter denied him, Judas confessed him; when the chief priests pronounced
him guilty of death, Pilate declared he found no fault in him; when the
women that loved him stood afar off, Pilate's wife, who knew little of
him, showed a concern for him. Note, God will not leave himself without
witnesses to the truth and equity of his cause, even when it seems to be
most spitefully run down by its enemies, and most shamefully deserted by
its friends. Secondly, It was a fair warning to Pilate; Have nothing to
do with him. Note, God has many ways of giving checks to sinners in their
sinful pursuits, and it is a great mercy to have such checks from Providence,
from faithful friends, and from our own consciences; it is also our great
duty to hearken to them. O do not this abominable thing which the Lord
hates, is what we may hear said to us, when we are entering into temptation,
if we will but regard it. Pilate's lady sent him this warning, out of the
love she had to him; she feared not a rebuke from him for meddling with
that which belonged not to her; but, let him take it how he would, she
would give him the caution. Note, It is an instance of true love to our
friends and relations, to do what we can to keep them from sin; and the
nearer any are to us, and the greater affection we have for them, the more
solicitous we should be not to suffer sin to come or lie upon them, Lev.
xix. 17. The best friendship is friendship to the soul. We are not told
how Pilate turned this off, probably with a jest; but by his proceeding
against the just man it appears that he did not regard it. Thus faithful
admonitions are made light of, when they are given as warnings against
sin, but will not be so easily made light of, when they shall be reflected
upon as aggravations of sin.
(5.) The chief priests and the elders were busy, all this while, to
influence the people in favour of Barabbas, v. 20. They persuaded the multitude,
both by themselves and their emissaries, whom they sent abroad among them,
that they should ask Barabbas, and destroy Jesus; suggesting that this
Jesus was a deceiver, in league with Satan, an enemy to their church and
temple; that, if he were let alone, the Romans would come, and take away
their place and nation; that Barabbas, though a bad man, yet, having not
the interest that Jesus had, could not do so much mischief. Thus they managed
the mob, who otherwise were well affected to Jesus, and, if they had not
been so much at the beck of their priests, would never have done such a
preposterous thing as to prefer Barabbas before Jesus. Here, [1.] We cannot
but look upon these wicked priests with indignation; by the law, in matters
of controversy between blood and blood, the people were to be guided by
the priests, and to do as they informed them, Deut. xvii. 8, 9. This great
power put into their hands they wretchedly abused, and the leaders of the
people caused them to err. [2.] We cannot but look upon the deluded people
with pity; I have compassion on the multitude, to see them hurried thus
violently to so great wickedness, to see them thus priest-ridden, and falling
in the ditch with their blind leaders.
(6.) Being thus over-ruled by the priests, at length they made their
choice, v. 21. Whether of the twain (saith Pilate) will ye that I release
unto you? He hoped that he had gained his point, to have Jesus released.
But, to his great surprise, they said Barabbas; as if his crimes were less,
and therefore he less deserved to die; or as if his merits were greater,
and therefore he better deserved to live. The cry for Barabbas was so universal,
one and all, that there was no colour to demand a poll between the candidates.
Be astonished, O heavens, at this, and, thou earth, be horribly afraid!
Were ever men that pretended to reason or religion, guilty of such prodigious
madness, such horrid wickedness! This was it that Peter charged so home
upon them (Acts iii. 14); Ye desired a murderer to be granted to you; yet
multitudes who choose the world, rather than God, for their ruler and portion,
thus choose their own delusions.
2. Their pressing earnestly to have Jesus crucified, v. 22, 23. Pilate,
being amazed at their choice of Barabbas, was willing to hope that it was
rather from a fondness for him than from an enmity to Jesus; and therefore
he puts it to them, "What shall I do then with Jesus? Shall I release him
likewise, for the greater honour of your feast, or will you leave it to
me?" No, they all said, Let him be crucified. That death they desired he
might die, because it was looked upon as the most scandalous and ignominious;
and they hoped thereby to make his followers ashamed to own him, and their
relation to him. It was absurd for them to prescribe to the judge what
sentence he should pass; but their malice and rage made them forget all
rules of order and decency, and turned a court of justice into a riotous,
tumultuous, and seditious assembly. Now was truth fallen in the street,
and equity could not enter; where one looked for judgment, behold, oppression,
the worst kind of oppression; for righteousness, behold, a cry, the worse
cry that ever was, Crucify, crucify the Lord of glory. Though they that
cried thus, perhaps, were not the same persons that the other day cried
Hosanna, yet see what a change was made upon the mind of the populace in
a little time: when he rode in triumph into Jerusalem, so general were
the acclamations of praise, that one would have thought he had no enemies;
but now when he was led in triumph to Pilate's judgment-seat, so general
were the outcries of enmity, that one would think he had no friends. Such
revolutions are there in this changeable world, through which our way to
heaven lies, as our Master's did, by honour and dishonour, by evil report,
and good report, counter-changed (2 Cor. vi. 8); that we may not be lifted
up by honour, as if, when we were applauded and caressed, we had made our
nest among the stars, and should die in that nest; nor yet be dejected
or discouraged by dishonour, as if, when we were trodden to the lowest
hell, from which there is no redemption. Bides tu istos qui te laudant;
omnes aut sunt hostes, aut (quod in æquo est) esse possunt--You observe
those who applaud you; either they are all your enemies, or, which is equivalent,
they may become so. Seneca de Vita Beat.
Now, as to this demand, we are further told,
(1.) How Pilate objected against it; Why, what evil hath he done? A
proper question to ask before we censure any in common discourse, much
more for a judge to ask before he pass a sentence of death. Note, It is
much for the honour of the Lord Jesus, that, though he suffered as an evil-doer,
yet neither his judge nor his prosecutors could find that he had done any
evil. Had he done any evil against God? No, he always did those things
that pleased him. Had he done any evil against the civil government? No,
as he did himself, so he taught others, to render to Cæsar the things
that were Cæsar's. Had he done any evil against the public peace?
No, he did not strive or cry, nor did his kingdom come with observation.
Had he done any evil to particular persons? Whose ox had he taken, or whom
had he defrauded? No, so far from that, that he went about doing good.
This repeated assertion of his unspotted innocency, plainly intimates that
he died to satisfy for the sins of others; for if it had not been for our
transgressions that he was thus wounded, and for our offences that he was
delivered up, and that upon his own voluntary undertaking to atone for
them, I see not how these extraordinary sufferings of a person that had
never thought, said, or done, any thing amiss, could be reconciled with
the justice and equity of that providence that governs the world, and at
least permitted this to be done in it.
(2.) How they insisted upon it; They cried out the more, Let him be
crucified. They do not go about to show any evil he had done, but, right
or wrong, he must be crucified. Quitting all pretensions to the proof of
the premises, they resolve to hold the conclusion, and what was wanting
in evidence to make up in clamour; this unjust judge was wearied by importunity
into an unjust sentence, as he in the parable into a just one (Luke xviii.
4, 5), and the cause carried purely by noise.
III. Here is the devolving of the guilt of Christ's blood upon the people
and priests.
1. Pilate endeavours to transfer it from himself, v. 24.
(1.) He sees it to no purpose to contend. What he said, [1.] Would do
no good; he could prevail nothing; he could not convince them what an unjust
unreasonable thing it was for him to condemn a man whom he believed innocent,
and whom they could not prove guilty. See how strong the stream of lust
and rage sometimes is; neither authority nor reason will prevail to give
check to it. Nay, [2.] It was more likely to do hurt; he saw that rather
a tumult was made. This rude and brutish people fell to high words, and
began to threaten Pilate what they would do if he did not gratify them;
and how great a matter might this fire kindle, especially when the priests,
those great incendiaries, blew the coals! Now this turbulent tumultuous
temper of the Jews, by which Pilate was awed to condemn Christ against
his conscience, contributed more than any thing to the ruin of that nation
not long after; for their frequent insurrections provoked the Romans to
destroy them, though they had reduced them, and their inveterate quarrels
among themselves made them an easy prey to the common enemy. Thus their
sin was their ruin.
Observe how easily we may be mistaken in the inclination of the common
people; the priests were apprehensive that their endeavours to seize Christ
would have caused an uproar, especially on the feast day; but it proved
that Pilate's endeavour to save him, caused an uproar, and that on the
feast day; so uncertain are the sentiments of the crowd.
(2.) This puts him into a great strait, betwixt the peace of his own
mind, and the peace of the city; he is loth to condemn an innocent man,
and yet loth to disoblige the people, and raise a devil that would not
be soon laid. Had he steadily and resolutely adhered to the sacred laws
of justice, as a judge ought to do, he had not been in any perplexity;
the matter was plain and past dispute, that a man in whom was found no
faulty, ought not to be crucified, upon any pretence whatsoever, nor must
an unjust thing be done, to gratify any man or company of men in the world;
the cause is soon decided; Let justice be done, though heaven and earth
come together--Fiat justitia, ruat cœlum. If wickedness proceed from the
wicked, though they be priests, yet my hand shall not be upon him.
(3.) Pilate thinks to trim the matter, and to pacify both the people
and his own conscience too, by doing it, and yet disowning it, acting the
thing, and yet acquitting himself from it at the same time. Such absurdities
and self-contradictions do they run upon, whose convictions are strong,
but their corruptions stronger. Happy is he (saith the apostle, Rom. xiv.
22) that condemneth not himself in that thing which he alloweth; or, which
is all one, that allows not himself in that thing which he condemns.
Now Pilate endeavours to clear himself from the guilt,
[1.] By a sign; He took water, and washed his hands before the multitude;
not as if he thought thereby to cleanse himself from any guilt contracted
before God, but to acquit himself before the people, from so much as contracting
any guilt in this matter; as if he had said, "If it be done, bear witness
that it is none of my doing." He borrowed the ceremony from that law which
appointed it to be used for the clearing of the country from the guilt
of an undiscovered murder (Deut. xxi. 6, 7); and he used it the more to
affect the people with the conviction he was under of the prisoner's innocency;
and, probably, such was the noise of the rabble, that, if he had not used
some such surprising sign, in the view of them all, he could not have been
heard.
[2.] By a saying; in which, First, He clears himself; I am innocent
of the blood of this just person. What nonsense was this, to condemn him,
and yet protest that he was innocent of his blood! For men to protest against
a thing, and yet to practise it, is only to proclaim that they sin against
their consciences. Though Pilate professed his innocency, God charges him
with guilt, Acts iv. 27. Some think to justify themselves, by pleading
that their hands were not in the sin; but David kills by the sword of the
children of Ammon, and Ahab by the elders of Jezreel. Pilate here thinks
to justify himself, by pleading that his heart was not in the action; but
this is an averment which will never be admitted. Protestatio non valet
contra factum--In vain does he protest against the deed which at the same
time he perpetrates. Secondly, He casts it upon the priests and people;
"See ye to it; if it must be done, I cannot help it, do you answer it before
God and the world." Note, Sin is a brat that nobody is willing to own;
and many deceive themselves with this, that they shall bear no blame if
they can but find any to lay the blame upon; but it is not so easy a thing
to transfer the guilt of sin as many think it is. The condition of him
that is infected with the plague is not the less dangerous, either for
his catching the infection from others, or his communicating the infection
to others; we may be tempted to sin, but cannot be forced. The priests
threw it upon Judas; See thou to it; and now Pilate throws it upon them;
See ye to it; for with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you.
2. The priests and people consented to take the guilt upon themselves;
they all said, "His blood be on us, and one our children; we are so well
assured that there is neither sin nor danger in putting him to death, that
we are willing to run the hazard of it;" as if the guilt would do no harm
to them or theirs. They saw that it was the dread of guilt that made Pilate
hesitate, and that he was getting over this difficulty by a fancy of transferring
it; to prevent the return of his hesitation, and to confirm him in that
fancy, they, in the heat of their rage, agreed to it, rather than lose
the prey they had in their hands, and cried, His blood be upon us. Now,
(1.) By this they designed to indemnify Pilate, that is, to make him
think himself indemnified, by becoming bound to divine justice, to save
him harmless. But those that are themselves bankrupts and beggars will
never be admitted security for others, nor taken as a bail for them. None
could bear the sin of others, except him that had none of his own to answer
for; it is a bold undertaking, and too big for any creature, to become
bound for a sinner to Almighty God.
(2.) But they did really imprecate wrath and vengeance upon themselves
and their posterity. What a desperate word was this, and how little did
they think what as the direful import of it, or to what an abyss of misery
it would bring them and theirs! Christ had lately told them, that upon
them would come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth, from that
of the righteous Abel; but as if that were too little, they here imprecate
upon themselves the guilt of that blood which was more precious than all
the rest, and the guilt of which would lie heavier. O the daring presumption
of wilful sinners, that run upon God, upon his neck, and defy his justice!
Job xv. 25, 26. Observe,
[1.] How cruel they were in their imprecation. They imprecated the punishment
of this sin, not only upon themselves, but upon their children too, even
those that were yet unborn, without so much as limiting the entail of the
curse, as God himself had been pleased to limit it, to the third and fourth
generation. It was madness to pull it upon themselves, but the height of
barbarity to entail it on their posterity. Surely they were like the ostrich;
they were hardened against their young ones, as though they were not theirs.
What a dreadful conveyance was this of guilt and wrath to them and their
heirs for ever, and this delivered by joint consent, nemine contradicents--unanimously,
as their own act and deed; which certainly amounted to a forfeiture and
defeasance of that ancient charter, I will be a God to thee, and to thy
seed. Their entailing the curse of the Messiah's blood upon their nation,
cut off the entail of the blessings of that blood from their families,
that, according to another promise made to Abraham, in him all the families
of the earth might be blessed. See what enemies wicked men are to their
own children and families; those that damn their own souls, care not how
many they take to hell with them.
[2.] How righteous God was, in his retribution according to this imprecation;
they said, His blood be on us, and on our children; and God said Amen to
it, so shall thy doom be; as they loved cursing, so it came upon them.
The wretched remains of that abandoned people feel it to this day; from
the time they imprecated this blood upon them, they were followed with
one judgment after another, till they were quite laid waste, and made an
astonishment, a hissing, and a byword; yet on some of them, and some of
theirs, this blood came, not to condemn them, but to save them; divine
mercy, upon their repenting and believing, cut off this entail, and then
the promise was again to them, and to their children. God is better to
us and ours than we are.
Christ Scourged and Derided; Christ Mocked by the Soldiers.
26 Then released he Barabbas unto them: and when he had scourged
Jesus, he delivered him to be crucified. 27 Then the soldiers of the governor
took Jesus into the common hall, and gathered unto him the whole band of
soldiers. 28 And they stripped him, and put on him a scarlet robe. 29 And
when they had platted a crown of thorns, they put it upon his head, and
a reed in his right hand: and they bowed the knee before him, and mocked
him, saying, Hail, King of the Jews! 30 And they spit upon him, and took
the reed, and smote him on the head. 31 And after that they had mocked
him, they took the robe off from him, and put his own raiment on him, and
led him away to crucify him. 32 And as they came out, they found a man
of Cyrene, Simon by name: him they compelled to bear his cross.
In these verses we have the preparatives for, and prefaces to, the crucifixion
of our Lord Jesus. Here is,
I. The sentence passed, and the warrant signed for his execution; and
this immediately, the same hour.
1. Barabbas was released, that notorious criminal: if he had not been
put in competition with Christ for the favour of the people, it is probable
that he had died for his crimes; but that proved the means of his escape;
to intimate that Christ was condemned for this purpose, that sinners, even
the chief of sinners, might be released; he was delivered up, that we might
be delivered; whereas the common instance of divine Providence, is, that
the wicked is a ransom for the righteous, and the transgressor for the
upright, Prov. xxi. 18; xi. 18. In this unparalleled instance of divine
grace, the upright is a ransom for the transgressors, the just for the
unjust.
2. Jesus was scourged; this was an ignominious cruel punishment, especially
as is was inflicted by the Romans, who were not under the moderation of
the Jewish law, which forbade scourgings, above forty stripes; this punishment
was most unreasonably inflicted on one that was sentenced to die: the rods
were not to introduce the axes, but to supersede them. Thus the scripture
was fulfilled, The ploughers ploughed upon my back (Ps. cxxix. 3), I gave
my back to the smiters (Isa. l. 6), and, By his stripes we are healed,
Isa. liii. 5. He was chastised with whips, that we might not be for ever
chastised with scorpions.
3. He was then delivered to be crucified; though his chastisement was
in order to our peace, yet there is no peace made but by the blood of his
cross (Col. i. 20); therefore the scourging is not enough, he must be crucified;
a kind of death used only among the Romans; the manner of it is such, that
it seems to be the result of wit and cruelty in combination, each putting
forth itself to the utmost, to make death in the highest degree terrible
and miserable. A cross was set up in the ground, to which the hands and
feet were nailed, on which nails the weight of the body hung, till it died
of the pain. This was the death to which Christ was condemned, that he
might answer the type of the brazen serpent lifted up upon a pole. It was
a bloody death, a painful, shameful, cursed death; it was so miserable
a death, that merciful princes appointed those who were condemned to it
by the law, to be strangled first, and then nailed to the cross; so Julius
Cæsar did by some pirates, Sueton. lib. 1. Constantine, the first
Christian emperor, by an edict abolished the use of that punishment among
the Romans, Sozomen, Hist. lib. 1. ch. 8. Ne salutare signum subserviret
ad perniciem--That the symbol of salvation might not be subservient to
the victim's destruction.
II. The barbarous treatment which the soldiers gave him, while things
were getting ready for his execution. When he was condemned, he ought to
have had some time allowed him to prepare for death. There was a law made
by the Roman senate, in Tiberius's time, perhaps upon complaint of this
and the like precipitation, that the execution of criminals should be deferred
at least ten days after sentence. Sueton in Tiber. cap. 25. But there were
scarcely allowed so many minutes to our Lord Jesus; nor had he any breathing-time
during those minutes; it was a crisis, and there were no lucid intervals
allowed him; deep called unto deep, and the storm continued without any
intermission.
When he was delivered to be crucified, that was enough; they that kill
the body, yield that there is no more that they can do, but Christ's enemies
will do more, and, if it be possible, wrap up a thousand deaths in one.
Though Pilate pronounced him innocent, yet his soldiers, his guards, set
themselves to abuse him, being swayed more by the fury of the people against
him, than by their master's testimony for him; the Jewish rabble infected
the Roman soldiery, or perhaps it was not so much in spite to him, as to
make sport for themselves, that they thus abused him. They understood that
he pretended to a crown; to taunt him with that gave them some diversion,
and an opportunity to make themselves and one another merry. Note, It is
an argument of a base, servile, sordid spirit, to insult over those that
are in misery, and to make the calamities of any matter of sport and merriment.
Observe, 1. Where this was done--in the common hall. The governor's
house, which should have been a shelter to the wronged and abused, is made
the theatre of this barbarity. I wonder that the governor, who was so desirous
to acquit himself from the blood of this just person, would suffer this
to be done in his house. Perhaps he did not order it to be done, but he
connived at it; and those in authority will be accountable, not only for
the wickedness which they do, or appoint, but for that which they do not
restrain, when it is in the power of their hands. Masters of families should
not suffer their houses to be places of abuse to any, nor their servants
to make sport with the sins, or miseries, or religion, of others.
2. Who were concerned in it. They gathered the whole band, the soldiers
that were to attend the execution, would have the whole regiment (at least
five hundred, some think twelve or thirteen hundred) to share in the diversion.
If Christ was thus made a spectacle, let none of his followers think it
strange to be so used, 1 Cor. iv. 9; Heb. x. 33.
3. What particular indignities were done him.
(1.) They stripped him, v. 28. The shame of nakedness came in with sin
(Gen. iii. 7); and therefore Christ, when he came to satisfy for sin, and
take it away, was made naked, and submitted to that shame, that he might
prepare for us white raiment, to cover us, Rev. iii. 18.
(2.) They put on him a scarlet robe, some old red cloak, such as the
Roman soldiers wore, in imitation of the scarlet robes which kings and
emperors wore; thus upbraiding him with his being called a King. This sham
of majesty they put upon him in his dress, when nothing but meanness and
misery appeared in his countenance, only to expose him to the spectators,
as the more ridiculous; yet there was something of mystery in it; this
was he that was red in his apparel (Isa. lxiii. 1, 2), that washed his
garments in wine (Gen. xlix. 11); therefore he was dressed in a scarlet
robe. Our sins were as scarlet and crimson. Christ being clad in a scarlet
robe, signified his bearing our sins, to his shame, in his own body upon
the tree; that we might wash our robes, and make them white, in the blood
of the Lamb.
(3.) They platted a crown of thorns, and put it upon his head, v. 29.
This was to carry on the humour of making him a mock-king; yet, had they
intended it only for a reproach, they might have platted a crown of straw,
or rushes, but they designed it to be painful to him, and to be literally,
what crowns are said to be figuratively, lined with thorns; he that invented
this abuse, it is likely, valued himself upon the wit of it; but there
was a mystery in it. [1.] Thorns came in with sin, and were part of the
curse that was the product of sin, Gen. iii. 18. Therefore Christ, being
made a curse for us, and dying to remove the curse from us, felt the pain
and smart of those thorns, nay, and binds them as a crown to him (Job xxxi.
36); for his sufferings for us were his glory. [2.] Now he answered to
the type of Abraham's ram that was caught in the thicket, and so offered
up instead of Isaac, Gen. xxii. 13. [3.] Thorns signify afflictions, 2
Chron. xxxiii. 11. These Christ put into a crown; so much did he alter
the property of them to them that are his, giving them cause to glory in
tribulation, and making it to work for them a weight of glory. [4.] Christ
was crowned with thorns, to show that his kingdom was not of this world,
nor the glory of it worldly glory, but is attended here with bonds and
afflictions, while the glory of it is to be revealed. [5.] It was the custom
of some heathen nations, to bring their sacrifices to the altars, crowned
with garlands; these thorns were the garlands with which this great Sacrifice
was crowned. [6.] these thorns, it is likely, fetched blood from his blessed
head, which trickled down his face, like the previous ointment (typifying
the blood of Christ with which he consecrated himself) upon the head, which
ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's beard, Ps. cxxxiii. 2. Thus, when
he came to espouse to himself his love, his dove, his undefiled church,
his head was filled with dew, and his locks with the drops of the night,
Cant. v. 2.
(4.) They put a reed in his right hand; this was intended for a mock-sceptre,
another of the insignia of the majesty they jeered him with; as if this
were a sceptre good enough for such a King, as was like a reed shaken with
the wind (ch. xi. 7); like sceptre, like kingdom, both weak and wavering,
and withering and worthless; but they were quite mistaken, for his throne
is for ever and ever, and the sceptre of his kingdom is a right sceptre,
Ps. xlv. 6.
(5.) They bowed the knee before him, and mocked him, saying, Hail, King
of the Jews! Having made him a sham King, they thus make a jest of doing
homage to him, thus ridiculing his pretensions to sovereignty, as Joseph's
brethren (Gen. xxxvii. 8); Shalt thou indeed reign over us? But as they
were afterward compelled to do obeisance to him, and enrich his dreams,
so these here bowed the knee, in scorn to him who was, soon after this,
exalted to the right hand of God, that at his name every knee might bow,
or break before him; it is ill jesting with that which, sooner or later,
will come in earnest.
(6.) They spit upon him; thus he had been abused in the High Priest's
hall, ch. xxvi. 67. In doing homage, the subject kissed the sovereign,
in token of his allegiance; thus Samuel kissed Saul, and we are bid to
kiss the Son: but they, in this mock-homage, instead of kissing him, spit
in his face; that blessed face which outshines the sun, and before which
the angels cover theirs, was thus polluted. It is strange that the sons
of men should ever do such a piece of villany, and that the Son of God
should ever suffer such a piece of ignominy.
(7.) They took the reed, and smote him on the head. That which they
had made the mock-ensign of his royalty, they now make the real instrument
of their cruelty, and his pain. They smote him, it is probable, upon the
crown of thorns, and so struck them into his head, that they might wound
it the deeper, which made the more sport for them, to whom his pain was
the greatest pleasure. Thus was he despised and rejected of men; a man
of sorrows, and acquainted with grief. All this misery and shame he underwent,
that he might purchase for us everlasting life, and joy, and glory.
III. The conveying of him to the place of execution. After they had
mocked and abused him, as long as they thought fit, they then took the
robe off from him; to signify their divesting him of all the kingly authority
they had invested him with, by putting it on him; and they put his own
raiment on him, because that was to fall to the soldiers' share, that were
employed in the execution. They took off the robe, but no mention is made
of their taking off the crown of thorns, whence it is commonly supposed
(though there is no certainty of it) that he was crucified with that on
his head; for as he is a Priest upon his throne, so he was a King upon
his cross. Christ was led to be crucified in his own raiment, because he
himself was to bear our sins in his own body upon the tree. And here,
1. They led him away to be crucified; he was led as a lamb to the slaughter,
as a sacrifice to the altar. We may well imagine how they hurried him on,
and dragged him along, with all the speed possible, lest any thing should
intervene to prevent the glutting of their cruel rage with his precious
blood. It is probable that they now loaded him with taunts and reproaches,
and treated him as the off-scouring of all things. They led him away out
of the city; for Christ, that he might sanctify the people with his own
blood, suffered without the gate (Heb. xiii. 12), as if he that was the
glory of them that waited for redemption in Jerusalem was not worthy to
live among them. To this he himself had an eye, when in the parable he
speaks of his being cast out of the vineyard, ch. xxi. 39.
2. They compelled Simon of Cyrene to bear his cross, v. 32. It seems,
at first he carried the cross himself, as Isaac carried the wood for the
burnt-offering, which was to burn him. And this was intended, as other
things, both for pain and shame to him. But after a while they took the
cross off from him, either, (1.) In compassion to him, because they saw
it was too great a load for him. We can hardly think that they had any
consideration of that, yet it teaches us that God considers the frame of
his people, and will not suffer them to be tempted above what they are
able; he gives them some breathing-time, but they must expect that the
cross will return, and the lucid intervals only give them space to prepare
for the next fit. But, (2.) Perhaps it was because he could not, with the
cross on his back, go forward so fast as they would have him. Or, (3.)
They were afraid, lest he should faint away under the load of his cross,
and die, and so prevent what their malice further intended to do against
him: thus even the tender mercies of the wicked (which seem to be so) are
really cruel. Taking the cross off from him, they compelled one Simon of
Cyrene to bear it, pressing him to the service by the authority of the
governor or the priests. It was a reproach, and none would do it but by
compulsion. Some think that this Simon was a disciple of Christ, at least
a well-wisher to him, and that they knew it, and therefore put this upon
him. Note, All that will approve themselves disciples indeed, must follow
Christ, bearing his cross (ch. xvi. 24), bearing his reproach, Heb. xiii.
13. We must know the fellowship of his sufferings for us, and patiently
submit to all the sufferings for him we are called out to; for those only
shall reign with him, that suffer with him; shall sit with him in his kingdom,
that drink of his cup, and are baptized with his baptism.
The Crucifixion.
33 And when they were come unto a place called Golgotha, that is
to say, a place of a skull, 34 They gave him vinegar to drink mingled with
gall: and when he had tasted thereof, he would not drink. 35 And they crucified
him, and parted his garments, casting lots: that it might be fulfilled
which was spoken by the prophet, They parted my garments among them, and
upon my vesture did they cast lots. 36 And sitting down they watched him
there; 37 And set up over his head his accusation written, THIS IS JESUS
THE KING OF THE JEWS. 38 Then were there two thieves crucified with him,
one on the right hand, and another on the left. 39 And they that passed
by reviled him, wagging their heads, 40 And saying, Thou that destroyest
the temple, and buildest it in three days, save thyself. If thou be the
Son of God, come down from the cross. 41 Likewise also the chief priests
mocking him, with the scribes and elders, said, 42 He saved others; himself
he cannot save. If he be the King of Israel, let him now come down from
the cross, and we will believe him. 43 He trusted in God; let him deliver
him now, if he will have him: for he said, I am the Son of God. 44 The
thieves also, which were crucified with him, cast the same in his teeth.
45 Now from the sixth hour there was darkness over all the land unto the
ninth hour. 46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice,
saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is to say, My God, my God, why
hast thou forsaken me? 47 Some of them that stood there, when they heard
that, said, This man calleth for Elias. 48 And straightway one of them
ran, and took a sponge, and filled it with vinegar, and put it on a reed,
and gave him to drink. 49 The rest said, Let be, let us see whether Elias
will come to save him.
We have here the crucifixion of our Lord Jesus.
I. The place where our Lord Jesus was put to death.
1. They came to a place called Golgotha, near adjoining to Jerusalem,
probably the common place of execution. If he had had a house of his own
in Jerusalem, probably, for his greater disgrace, they would have crucified
him before his own door. But now in the same place where criminals were
sacrificed to the justice of the government, was our Lord Jesus sacrificed
to the justice of God. Some think that it was called the place of a skull,
because it was the common charnel-house, where the bones and skulls of
dead men were laid together out of the way, lest people should touch them,
and be defiled thereby. Here lay the trophies of death's victory over multitudes
of the children of men; and when by dying Christ would destroy death, he
added this circumstance of honour to his victory, that he triumphed over
death upon his own dunghill.
2. There they crucified him (v. 35), nailed his hands and feet to the
cross, and then reared it up, and him hanging on it; for so the manner
of the Romans was to crucify. Let our hearts be touched with the feeling
of that exquisite pain which our blessed Saviour now endured, and let us
look upon him who was thus pierced, and mourn. Was ever sorrow like unto
his sorrow? And when we behold what manner of death he died, let us in
that behold with what manner of love he loved us.
II. The barbarous and abusive treatment they gave him, in which their
wit and malice vied which should excel. As if death, so great a death,
were not bad enough, they contrived to add to the bitterness and terror
of it.
1. By the drink they provided for him before he was nailed to the cross,
v. 34. It was usual to have a cup of spiced wine for those to drink of,
that were to be put to death, according to Solomon's direction (Prov. xxxi.
6, 7), Give strong drink to him that is ready to perish; but with that
cup which Christ was to drink of, they mingled vinegar and gall, to make
it sour and bitter. This signified, (1.) The sin of man, which is a root
of bitterness, bearing gall and wormwood, Deut. xxix. 18. The sinner perhaps
rolls it under his tongue as a sweet morsel, but to God it is grapes of
gall, Deut. xxxii. 32. It was so to the Lord Jesus, when he bare our sins,
and sooner or later it will be so to the sinner himself, bitterness at
the latter end, more bitter than death, Eccl. vii. 26. (2.) It signified
the wrath of God, that cup which is Father put into his hand, a bitter
cup indeed, like the bitter water which caused the curse, Num. v. 18. This
drink they offered him, as was literally foretold, Ps. lxix. 21. And, [1.]
He tasted thereof, and so had the worst of it, took the bitter taste into
his mouth; he let no bitter cup go by him untasted, when he was making
atonement for all our sinful tasting of forbidden fruit; now he was tasting
death in its full bitterness. [2.] He would not drink it, because he would
not have the best of it; would have nothing like an opiate to lessen his
sense of pain, for he would die so as to feel himself die, because he had
so much work to do, as our High Priest, in his suffering work.
2. By the dividing of his garments, v. 35. When they nailed him to the
cross, they stripped him of his garments, at least his upper garments;
for by sin we were made naked, to our shame, and thus he purchased for
us white raiment to cover us. If we be at any time stripped of our comforts
for Christ, let us bear it patiently; he was stripped for us. Enemies may
strip us of our clothes, but cannot strip us of our best comforts; cannot
take from us the garments of praise. The clothes of those that are executed
are the executioner's fee: four soldiers were employed in crucifying Christ,
and they must each of them have a share: his upper garment, if it were
divided, would be of no use to any of them, and therefore they agreed to
cast lots for it. (1.) Some think that the garment was so fine and rich,
that it was worth contending for; but that agreed not with the poverty
Christ appeared in. (2.) Perhaps they had heard of those that had been
cured by touching the hem of his garment, and they thought it valuable
for some magic virtue in it. Or, (3.) They hoped to get money of his friends
for such a sacred relic. Or, (4.) Because, in derision, they would seem
to put a value upon it, as royal clothing. Or, (5.) It was for diversion;
to pass away the time while they waited for his death, they would play
a game at dice for the clothes; but, whatever they designed, the word of
God is herein accomplished. In that famous psalm, the first words of which
Christ made use of upon the cross, it was said, They parted my garments
among them, and cast lots upon my vesture, Ps. xxii. 18. This was never
true of David, but looks primarily at Christ, of whom David, in spirit,
spoke. Then is the offence of this part of the cross ceased; for it appears
to have been by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God. Christ
stripped himself of his glories, to divide them among us.
They now sat down, and watched him, v. 36. The chief priests were careful,
no doubt, in setting this guard, lest the people, whom they still stood
in awe of, should rise, and rescue him. But Providence so ordered it, that
those who were appointed to watch him, thereby became unexceptionable witnesses
for him; having the opportunity to see and hear that which extorted from
them that noble confession (v. 54), Truly this was the Son of God.
3. By the title set up over his head, v. 37. It was usual for the vindicating
of public justice, and putting the greater shame upon malefactors that
were executed, not only by a crier to proclaim before them, but by a writing
also over their heads to notify what was the crime for which they suffered;
so they set up over Christ's head his accusation written, to give public
notice of the charge against him; This is Jesus the King of the Jews. This
they designed for his reproach, but God so overruled it, that even his
accusation redounded to his honour. For, (1.) Here was no crime alleged
against him. It is not said that he was a pretended Saviour, or a usurping
King, though they would have it thought so (John xix. 21); but, This is
Jesus, a Saviour; surely that was no crime; and, This is the King of the
Jews; nor was that a crime; for they expected that the Messiah should be
so: so that, his enemies themselves being judges, he did no evil. Nay,
(2.) Here was a very glorious truth asserted concerning him--that he is
Jesus the King of the Jews, that King whom the Jews expected and ought
to have submitted to; so that his accusation amounts to this, That he was
the true Messiah and Saviour of the world; as Balaam, when he was sent
for to curse Israel, blessed them all together, and that three times (Num.
xxiv. 10), so Pilate, instead of accusing Christ as a Criminal, proclaimed
him a King, and that three times, in three inscriptions. Thus God makes
men to serve his purposes, quite beyond their own.
4. By his companions with him in suffering, v. 38. There were two thieves
crucified with him at the same time, in the same place, under the same
guard; two highway-men, or robbers upon the road, as the word properly
signifies. It is probable that this was appointed to be execution-day;
and therefore they hurried the prosecution of Christ in the morning, that
they might have him ready to be executed with the other criminals. Some
think that Pilate ordered it thus, that this piece of necessary justice,
in executing these thieves, might atone for his injustice in condemning
Christ; others, that the Jews contrived it, to add to the ignominy of the
sufferings of our Lord Jesus; however it was, the scripture was fulfilled
in it (Isa. liii. 12), He was numbered with the transgressors.
(1.) It was a reproach to him, that he was crucified with them. Though,
while he lived, he was separate from sinners, yet in their deaths they
were not divided, but he was made to partake with the vilest malefactors
in their plagues, as if he had been a partaker with them in their sins;
for he was made sin for us, and took upon him the likeness of sinful flesh.
He was, at his death, numbered among the transgressors, and had his lot
with the wicked, that we, at our death, might be numbered among the saints,
and have our lot among the chosen.
(2.) It was an additional reproach, that he was crucified in the midst,
between them, as if he had been the worst of the three, the principal malefactor;
for among three the middle is the place for the chief. Every circumstance
was contrived to his dishonour, as if the great Saviour were of all others
the greatest sinner. It was also intended to ruffle and discompose him,
in his last moments, with the shrieks, and groans, and blasphemies, of
these malefactors, who, it is likely, made a hideous outcry when they were
nailed to the cross; but thus would Christ affect himself with the miseries
of sinners, when he was suffering for their salvation. Some of Christ's
apostles were afterwards crucified, as Peter, and Andrew, but none of them
were crucified with him, lest it should have looked as if they had been
joint undertakers with him, in satisfying for man's sin, and joint purchasers
of life and glory; therefore he was crucified between two malefactors,
who could not be supposed to contribute any thing to the merit of his death;
for he himself bare our sins in his own body.
5. By the blasphemies and revilings with which they loaded him when
he was hanging upon the cross; though we read not that they cast any reflections
on the thieves that were crucified with him. One would have thought that,
when they had nailed him to the cross, they had done their worst, and malice
itself had been exhausted: indeed if a criminal be put into the pillory,
or carted, because it is a punishment less than death, it is usually attended
with such expressions of abuse; but a dying man, though an infamous man,
should be treated with compassion. It is an insatiable revenge indeed which
will not be satisfied with death, so great a death. But, to complete the
humiliation of the Lord Jesus, and to show that, when he was dying, he
was bearing iniquity, he was then loaded with reproach, and, for aught
that appears, not one of his friends, who the other day cried Hosanna to
him, durst be seen to show him any respect.
(1.) The common people, that passed by, reviled him. His extreme misery
and exemplary patience under it, did not mollify them, or make them to
relent; but they who by their outcries brought him to this, now think to
justify themselves in it by their reproaches, as if they did well to condemn
him. They reviled him: eblasphemoun--they blasphemed him; and blasphemy
it was, in the strictest sense, speaking evil of him who thought it not
robbery to be equal with God. Observe here,
[1.] The persons that reviled him; they that passed by, the travellers
that went along the road, and it was a great road, leading from Jerusalem
to Gibeon; they were possessed with prejudices against him by the reports
and clamours of the High Priest's creatures. It is a hard thing, and requires
more application and resolution than is ordinarily met with, to keep up
a good opinion of persons and things that are every where run down, and
spoken against. Every one is apt to say as the most say, and to throw a
stone at that which is put into an ill name. Turba Remi sequitur fortunam
semper et odit damnatos--The Roman rabble fluctuate with a man's fluctuating
fortunes, and fail not to depress those that are sinking. Juvenal.
[2.] The gesture they used, in contempt of him--wagging their heads;
which signifies their triumph in his fall, and their insulting over him,
Isa. xxxvii. 22; Jer. xviii. 16; Lam. ii. 15. The language of it was, Aha,
so would we have it, Ps. xxxv. 25. Thus they insulted over him that was
the Saviour of their country, as the Philistines did over Samson the destroyer
of their country. This very gesture was prophesied of (Ps. xxii. 7); They
shake the head at me. And Ps. cix. 25.
[3.] The taunts and jeers they uttered. These are here recorded.
First, They upbraided him with his destroying of the temple. Though
the judges themselves were sensible that what he had said of that was misrepresented
(as appears Mark xiv. 59), yet they industriously spread it among the people,
to bring an odium upon him, that he had a design to destroy the temple;
than which nothing would more incense the people against him. And this
was not the only time that the enemies of Christ had laboured to make others
believe that of religion and the people of God, which they themselves have
known to be false, and the charge unjust "Thou that destroyest the temple,
that vast and strong fabric, try thy strength now in plucking up that cross,
and drawing those nails, and so save thyself; if thou hast the power thou
hast boasted of, this is a proper time to exert it, and give proof of it;
for it is supposed that every man will do his utmost to save himself."
This made the cross of Christ such a stumbling-block to the Jews, that
they looked upon it to be inconsistent with the power of the Messiah; he
was crucified in weakness (2 Cor. xiii. 4), so it seemed to them; but indeed
Christ crucified is the Power of God.
Secondly, They upbraided him with his saying that he was the Son of
God; If thou be so, say they, come down from the cross. Now they take the
devil's words out of his mouth, with which he tempted him in the wilderness
(ch. iv. 3, 6), and renew the same assault; If thou be the Son of God.
They think that now, or never, he must prove himself to be the Son of God;
forgetting that he had proved it by the miracles he wrought, particularly
his raising of the dead; and unwilling to wait for the complete proof of
it by his own resurrection, to which he had so often referred himself and
them; which, if they had observed it, would have anticipated the offence
of the cross. This comes of judging things by the present aspect of them,
without a due remembrance of what is past, and a patient expectation of
what may further be produced.
(2.) The chief priests and scribes, the church rulers, and the elders,
the state rulers, they mocked him, v. 41. They did not think it enough
to invite the rabble to do it, but gave Christ the dishonour, and themselves
the diversion, or reproaching him in their own proper persons. They should
have been in the temple at their devotion, for it was the first day of
the feast of unleavened bread, when there was to be a holy convocation
(Lev. xxiii. 7); but they were here at the place of execution, spitting
their venom at the Lord Jesus. How much below the grandeur and gravity
of their character was this! Could any thing tend more to make them contemptible
and base before the people? One would have thought, that, though they neither
feared God nor regarded man, yet common prudence should have taught them
who had so great a hand in Christ's death, to keep as much as might be
behind the curtain, and to play least in sight; but nothing is so mean
as that malice may stick at it. Did they disparage themselves thus, to
do despite to Christ, and shall we be afraid of disparaging ourselves,
by joining with the multitude to do him honour, and not rather say, If
this be to be vile, I will be yet more vile?
Two things the priests and elders upbraided him with.
[1.] That he could not save himself, v. 42. He had been before abused
in his prophetical and kingly office, and now in his priestly office as
a Saviour. First, They take it for granted that he could not save himself,
and therefore had not the power he pretended to, when really he would not
save himself, because he would die to save us. They should have argued,
"He saved others, therefore he could save himself, and if he do not, it
is for some good reason." But, Secondly, They would insinuate, that, because
he did not now save himself, therefore all his pretence to save others
was but sham and delusion, and was never really done; though the truth
of his miracles was demonstrated beyond contradiction. Thirdly, They upbraid
him with being the King of Israel. They dreamed of the external pomp and
power of the Messiah, and therefore thought the cross altogether disagreeable
to the King of Israel, and inconsistent with that character. Many people
would like the King of Israel well enough, if he would but come down from
the cross, if they could have his kingdom without the tribulation through
which they must enter into it. But the matter is settled; if no cross,
then no Christ, no crown. Those that would reign with him, must be willing
to suffer with him, for Christ and his cross are nailed together in this
world. Fourthly, They challenged him to come down from the cross. And what
had become of us then, and the work of our redemption and salvation? If
he had been provoked by these scoffs to come down from the cross, and so
to have left his undertaking unfinished, we had been for ever undone. But
his unchangeable love and resolution set him above, and fortified him against,
this temptation, so that he did not fail, nor was discouraged. Fifthly,
They promised that, if he would come down from the cross, they would believe
him. Let him give them that proof of his being the Messiah, and they will
own him to be so. When they had formerly demanded a sign, he told them
that the sign he would give them, should be not his coming down from the
cross, but, which was a greater instance of his power, his coming up from
the grave, which they had not patience to wait two or three days for. If
he had come down from the cross, they might with as much reason have said
that the soldiers had juggled in nailing him to it, as they said, when
he was raised from the dead, that the disciples came by night, and stole
him away. But to promise ourselves that we would believe, if we had such
and such means and motives of faith as we ourselves would prescribe, when
we do not improve what God has appointed, is not only a gross instance
of the deceitfulness of our hearts, but the sorry refuge, or subterfuge
rather, of an obstinate destroying infidelity.
[2.] That God, his Father, would not save him (v. 43); He trusted in
God, that is, he pretended to do so; for he said, I am the Son of God.
Those who call God Father, and themselves his children, thereby profess
to put a confidence in him, Ps. ix. 10. Now they suggest, that he did but
deceive himself and others, when he made himself so much the darling of
heaven; for, if he had been the Son of God (as Job's friends argued concerning
him), he would not have been abandoned to all this misery, much less abandoned
in it. This was a sword in his bones, as David complains of the like (Ps.
xlii. 10); and it was a two-edged sword, for it was intended, First, To
vilify him, and to make the standers-by think him a deceiver and an impostor;
as if his saying, that he was the Son of God, were now effectually disproved.
Secondly, To terrify him, and drive him to distrust and despair of his
Father's power and love; which some think, was the thing he feared, religiously
feared, prayed against, and was delivered from, Heb. v. 7. David complained
more of the endeavours of his persecutors to shake his faith, and drive
him from his hope in God, than of their attempts to shake his throne, and
drive him from his kingdom; their saying, There is no help for him in God
(Ps. iii. 2), and, God has forsaken him, Ps. lxxi. 11. In this, as in other
things, he was a type of Christ. Nay, these very words David, in that famous
prophecy of Christ, mentions, as spoken by his enemies (Ps. xxii. 8); He
trusted on the Lord that he would deliver him. Surely these priests and
scribes had forgotten their psalter, or they would not have used the same
words, so exactly to answer the type and prophecy: but the scriptures must
be fulfilled.
(3.) To complete the reproach, the thieves also that were crucified
with him were not only not reviled as he was, as if they had been saints
compared with him, but, though fellow-sufferers with him, joined in with
his prosecutors, and cast the same in his teeth; that is, one of them did,
who said, If thou be the Christ, save thyself and us, Luke xxiii. 39. One
would think that of all people this thief had least cause, and should have
had least mind, to banter Christ. Partners in suffering, though for different
causes, usually commiserate one another; and few, whatever they have done
before, will breathe their last in revilings. But, it seems, the greatest
mortifications of the body, and the most humbling rebukes of Providence,
will not of themselves mortify the corruptions of the soul, nor suppress
the wickedness of the wicked, without the grace of God.
Well, thus our Lord Jesus having undertaken to satisfy the justice of
God for the wrong done him in his honour by sin, he did it by suffering
in his honour; not only by divesting himself of that which was due to him
as the Son of God, but by submitting to the utmost indignity that could
be done to the worst of men; because he was made sin for us, he was thus
made a curse for us, to make reproach easy to us, if at any time we suffer
it, and have all manner of evil said against us falsely, for righteousness'
sake.
III. We have here the frowns of heaven, which our Lord Jesus was under,
in the midst of all these injuries and indignities from men. Concerning
which, observe,
1. How this was signified--by an extraordinary and miraculous eclipse
of the sun, which continued for three hours, v. 45. There was darkness
epi pasan ten gen--over all the earth; so most interpreters understand
it, though our translation confines it to that land. Some of the ancients
appealed to the annals of the nation concerning this extraordinary eclipse
at the death of Christ, as a thing well known, and which gave notice to
those parts of the world of something great then in doing; as the sun's
going back in Hezekiah's time did. It is reported that Dionysius, at Heliopolis
in Egypt, took notice of this darkness, and said, Aut Deus naturæ
patitur, aut mundi machina dissolvitur--Either the God of nature is suffering,
or the machine of the world is tumbling into ruin. An extraordinary light
gave intelligence of the birth of Christ (ch. ii. 2), and therefore it
was proper that an extraordinary darkness should notify his death, for
he is the Light of the world. The indignities done to our Lord Jesus, made
the heavens astonished, and horribly afraid, and even put them into disorder
and confusion; such wickedness as this the sun never saw before, and therefore
withdrew, and would not see this. This surprising, amazing, darkness was
designed to stop the mouths of those blasphemers, who were reviling Christ
as he hung on the cross; and it should seem that, for the present, it struck
such a terror upon them, that though their hearts were not changed, yet
they were silent, and stood doubting what this should mean, till after
three hours the darkness scattered, and then (as appears by v. 47), like
Pharaoh when the plague was over, they hardened their hearts. But that
which was principally intended in this darkness, was, (1.) Christ's present
conflict with the powers of darkness. Now the prince of this world, and
his forces, the rulers of the darkness of this world, were to be cast out,
to be spoiled and vanquished; and to make his victory the more illustrious,
he fights them on their own ground; gives them all the advantage they could
have against him by this darkness, lets them take the wind and sun, and
yet baffles them, and so becomes more than a conqueror. (2.) His present
want of heavenly comforts. This darkness signified that dark cloud which
the human soul of our Lord Jesus was now under. God makes his sun to shine
upon the just and upon the unjust; but even the light of the sun was withheld
from our Saviour, when he was made sin for us. A pleasant thing it is for
the eyes to behold the sun; but because now his soul was exceeding sorrowful,
and the cup of divine displeasure was filled to him without mixture, even
the light of the sun was suspended. When earth denied him a drop of cold
water, heaven denied him a beam of light; having to deliver us from utter
darkness, he did himself, in the depth of his sufferings, walk in darkness,
and had no light, Isa. l. 10. During the three hours that this darkness
continued, we do not find that he said one word, but passed this time in
a silent retirement into his own soul, which was now in agony, wrestling
with the powers of darkness, and taking in the impressions of his Father's
displeasure, not against himself, but the sin of man, which he was now
making his soul an offering for. Never were there three such hours since
the day that God created man upon the earth, never such a dark and awful
scene; the crisis of that great affair of man's redemption and salvation.
2. How he complained of it (v. 46); About the ninth hour, when it began
to clear up, after a long and silent conflict. Jesus cried, Eli, Eli, lama
sabachthani? The words are related in the Syriac tongue, in which they
were spoken, because worthy of double remark, and for the sake of the perverse
construction which his enemies put upon them, in putting Elias for Eli.
Now observe here,
(1.) Whence he borrowed this complaint--from Ps. xxii. 1. It is not
probable (as some have thought) that he repeated the whole psalm; yet hereby
he intimated that the whole was to be applied to him, and that David, in
spirit, there spoke of his humiliation and exaltation. This, and that other
word, Into thy hands I commit my spirit, he fetched from David's psalms
(though he could have expressed himself in his own words), to teach us
of what use the word of God is to us, to direct us in prayer, and to recommend
to us the use of scripture-expressions in prayer, which will help our infirmities.
(2.) How he uttered it--with a loud voice; which bespeaks the extremity
of his pain and anguish, the strength of nature remaining in him, and the
great earnestness of his spirit in this expostulation. Now the scripture
was fulfilled (Joel iii. 15, 16); The sun and the moon shall be darkened.
The Lord shall also roar out of Zion, and utter his voice form Jerusalem.
David often speaks of his crying aloud in prayer, Ps. lv. 17.
(3.) What the complaint was--My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken
me? A strange complaint to come from the mouth of our Lord Jesus, who,
we are sure, was God's elect, in whom his soul delighted (Isa. xlii. 1),
and one in whom he was always well pleased. The Father now loved him, nay,
he knew that therefore he loved him, because he laid down his life for
the sheep; what, and yet forsaken of him, and in the midst of his sufferings
too! Surely never sorrow was like unto that sorrow which extorted such
a complaint as this from one who, being perfectly free from sin, could
never be a terror to himself; but the heart knows its own bitterness. No
wonder that such a complaint as this made the earth to quake, and rent
the rocks; for it is enough to make both the ears of every one that hears
it to tingle, and ought to be spoken of with great reverence.
Note, [1.] That our Lord Jesus was, in his sufferings, for a time, forsaken
by his Father. So he saith himself, who we are sure was under no mistake
concerning his own case. Not that the union between the divine and human
nature was in the least weakened or shocked; no, he was now by the eternal
Spirit offering himself: nor as if there were any abatement of his Father's
love to him, or his to his Father; we are sure that there was upon his
mind no horror of God, or despair of his favour, nor any thing of the torments
of hell; but his Father forsook him; that is, First, He delivered him up
into the hands of his enemies, and did not appear to deliver him out of
their hands. He let loose the powers of darkness against him, and suffered
them to do their worst, worse than against Job. Now was that scripture
fulfilled (Job xvi. 11), God hath turned me over into the hands of the
wicked; and no angel is sent from heaven to deliver him, no friend on earth
raised up to appear for him. Secondly, He withdrew from him the present
comfortable sense of his complacency in him. When his soul was first troubled,
he had a voice from heaven to comfort him (John xii. 27, 28); when he was
in his agony in the garden, there appeared an angel from heaven strengthening
him; but now he had neither the one nor the other. God hid his face from
him, and for awhile withdrew his rod and staff in the darksome valley.
God forsook him, not as he forsook Saul, leaving him to an endless despair,
but as sometimes he forsook David, leaving him to a present despondency.
Thirdly, He let out upon his soul an afflicting sense of his wrath against
man for sin. Christ was made Sin for us, a Curse for us; and therefore,
though God loved him as a Son, he frowned upon him as a Surety. These impressions
he was pleased to admit, and to waive that resistance of them which he
could have made; because he would accommodate himself to this part of his
undertaking, as he had done to all the rest, when it was in his power to
have avoided it.
[2.] That Christ's being forsaken of his Father was the most grievous
of his sufferings, and that which he complained most of. Here he laid the
most doleful accents; he did not say, "Why am I scourged? And why spit
upon? And why nailed to the cross?" Nor did he say to his disciples, when
they turned their back upon him, Why have ye forsaken me? But when his
Father stood at a distance, he cried out thus; for this as it that put
wormwood and gall into the affliction and misery. This brought the waters
into the soul, Ps. lxix. 1-3.
[3.] That our Lord Jesus, even when he was thus forsaken of his Father,
kept hold of him as his God, notwithstanding; My God, my God; though forsaking
me, yet mine. Christ was God's servant in carrying on the work of redemption,
to him he was to make satisfaction, and by him to be carried through and
crowned, and upon that account he calls him his God; for he was now doing
his will. See Isa. xlix. 5-9. This supported him, and bore him up, that
even in the depth of his sufferings God was his God, and this he resolves
to keep fast hold of.
(4.) See how his enemies impiously bantered and ridiculed this complaint
(v. 47); They said, This man calleth for Elias. Some think that this was
the ignorant mistake of the Roman soldiers, who had heard talk of Elias,
and of the Jews' expectation of the coming of Elias, but knew not the signification
of Eli, Eli, and so made this blundering comment upon these words of Christ,
perhaps not hearing the latter part of what he said, for the noise of the
people. Note, Many of the reproaches cast upon the word of God and the
people of God, take rise from gross mistakes. Divine truths are often corrupted
by ignorance of the language and style of the scripture. Those that hear
by the halves, pervert what they hear. But others think that it was the
wilful mistake of some of the Jews, who knew very well what he said, but
were disposed to abuse him, and make themselves and their companions merry,
and to misrepresent him as one who, being forsaken of God, was driven to
trust in creatures; perhaps hinting also, that he who had pretended to
be himself the Messiah, would now be glad to be beholden to Elias, who
was expected to be only the harbinger and forerunner of the Messiah. Note,
It is no new thing for the most pious devotions of the best men to be ridiculed
and abused by profane scoffers; nor are we to think it strange if what
is well said in praying and preaching be misconstrued, and turned to our
reproach; Christ's words were so, though he spoke as never man spoke.
IV. The cold comfort which his enemies ministered to him in this agony,
which was like all the rest.
1. Some gave him vinegar to drink (v. 48); instead of some cordial-water
to revive and refresh him under this heavy burthen, they tantalized him
with that which did not only add to the reproach they were loading him
with, but did too sensibly represent that cup of trembling which his Father
had put into his hand. One of them ran to fetch it, seeming to be officious
to him, but really glad of an opportunity to abuse and affront him, and
afraid lest any one should take it out of his hands.
2. Others, which the same purpose of disturbing and abusing him, refer
him to Elias (v. 49); "Let be, let us see whether Elias will come to save
him. Come, let him alone, his case is desperate, neither heaven nor earth
can help him; let us do nothing either to hasten his death, or to retard
it; he has appealed to Elias, and to Elias let him go."
The Crucifixion; The Death of Christ.
50 Jesus, when he had cried again with a loud voice, yielded up the
ghost. 51 And, behold, the veil of the temple was rent in twain from the
top to the bottom; and the earth did quake, and the rocks rent; 52 And
the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which slept arose,
53 And came out of the graves after his resurrection, and went into the
holy city, and appeared unto many. 54 Now when the centurion, and they
that were with him, watching Jesus, saw the earthquake, and those things
that were done, they feared greatly, saying, Truly this was the Son of
God. 55 And many women were there beholding afar off, which followed Jesus
from Galilee, ministering unto him: 56 Among which was Mary Magdalene,
and Mary the mother of James and Joses, and the mother of Zebedee's children.
We have here, at length, an account of the death of Christ, and several
remarkable passages that attended it.
I. The manner how he breathed his last (v. 50); between the third and
the sixth hour, that is, between nine and twelve o'clock, as we reckon,
he was nailed to the cross, and soon after the ninth hour, that is, between
three and four o'clock in the afternoon, he died. That was the time of
the offering of the evening sacrifice, and the time when the paschal lamb
was killed; and Christ our Passover was sacrificed for us and offered himself
in the evening of the world a sacrifice to God of a sweet-smelling savour.
It was at that time of the day, that the angel Gabriel delivered to Daniel
that glorious prediction of the Messiah, Dan. ix. 21, 24, &c. And some
think that from that very time when the angel spoke it, to this time when
Christ died, was just seventy weeks, that is, four hundred and ninety years
to a day, to an hour; as the departure of Israel out of Egypt was at the
end of the four hundred and thirty years, even the self-same day, Exod.
xii. 41.
Two things are here noted concerning the manner of Christ's dying.
1. That he cried with a loud voice, as before, v. 46. Now,
(1.) This was a sign, that, after all his pains and fatigues, his life
was whole in him, and nature strong. The voice of dying men is one of the
first things that fails; with a panting breath and a faltering tongue,
a few broken words are hardly spoken, and more hardly heard. But Christ,
just before he expired, spoke like a man in his full strength, to show
that his life was not forced from him, but was freely delivered by him
into his Father's hands, as his own act and deed. He that had strength
to cry thus when he died, could have got loose from the arrest he was under,
and have bid defiance to the powers of death; but to show that by the eternal
Spirit he offered himself, being the Priest as well as the Sacrifice, he
cried with a loud voice.
(2.) It was significant. This loud voice shows that he attacked our
spiritual enemies with an undaunted courage, and such a bravery of resolution
as bespeaks him hearty in the cause and daring in the encounter. He was
now spoiling principalities and powers, and in this loud voice he did,
as it were, shout for mastery, as one mighty to save, Isa. lxiii. 1. Compare
with this, Isa. lxxii. 13, 14. He now bowed himself with all his might,
as Samson did, when he said, Let me die with the Philistines, Judg. xvi.
30. Animamque in vulnere ponit--And lays down his life. His crying with
a loud voice when he died, signified that his death should be published
and proclaimed to all the world; all mankind being concerned in it, and
obliged to take notice of it. Christ's loud cry was like a trumpet blown
over the sacrifices.
2. That then he yielded up the ghost. This is the usual periphrasis
of dying; to show that the Son of God upon the cross did truly and properly
die by the violence of the pain he was put to. His soul was separated from
his body, and so his body was left really and truly dead. It was certain
that he did die, for it was requisite that he should die; thus it was written,
both in the close rolls of the divine counsels, and in the letters patent
of the divine predictions, and therefore thus it behoved him to suffer.
Death being the penalty for the breach of the first covenant (Thou shalt
surely die), the Mediator of the new covenant must make atonement by means
of death, otherwise no remission, Heb. ix. 15. He had undertaken to make
his soul an offering for sin; and he did it, when he yielded up the ghost,
and voluntarily resigned it.
II. The miracles that attended his death. So many miracles being wrought
by him in his life, we might well expect some to be wrought concerning
him at his death, for his name was called Wonderful. Had he been fetched
away as Elijah in a fiery chariot, that had itself been miracle enough;
but, being sent for away by an ignominious cross, it was requisite that
his humiliation should be attended with some signal emanations of the divine
glory.
1. Behold, the veil of the temple was rent in twain. This relation is
ushered in with Behold; "Turn aside, and see this great sight, and be astonished
at it." Just as our Lord Jesus expired, at the time of the offering of
the evening-sacrifice, and upon a solemn day, when the priests were officiating
in the temple, and might themselves be eyewitnesses of it, the veil of
the temple was rent by an invisible power; that veil which parted between
the holy place and the most holy. They had condemned him for saying, I
will destroy this temple, understanding it literally; now by this specimen
of his power he let them know that, if he had pleased, he could have made
his words good. In this, as in others of Christ's miracles, there was a
mystery.
(1.) It was in correspondence with the temple of Christ's body, which
was now in the dissolving. This was the true temple, in which dwelt the
fulness of the Godhead; when Christ cried with a loud voice, and gave up
the ghost, and so dissolved that temple, the literal temple did, as it
were, echo to that cry, and answer the stroke, by rending its veil. Note,
Death is the rending of the veil of flesh which interposes between us and
the holy of holies; the death of Christ was so, the death of true Christians
is so.
(2.) It signified the revealing and unfolding of the mysteries of the
Old Testament. The veil of the temple was for concealment, as was that
on the face of Moses, therefore it was called the veil of the covering;
for it was highly penal for any person to see the furniture of the most
holy place, except the High-Priest, and he but once a year, with great
ceremony and through a cloud of smoke; all which signified the darkness
of that dispensation; 2 Cor. iii. 13. But now, at the death of Christ,
all was laid open, the mysteries were unveiled, so that now he that runs
may read the meaning of them. Now we see that the mercy-seat signified
Christ the great Propitiation; the pot of manna signified Christ the Break
of life. Thus we all with open face behold, as in a glass (which helps
the sight, as the veil hindered it), the glory of the Lord. Our eyes see
the salvation.
(3.) It signified the uniting of Jew and Gentile, by the removing of
the partition wall between them, which was the ceremonial law, by which
the Jews were distinguished from all other people (as a garden enclosed),
were brought near to God, while others were made to keep their distance.
Christ, in his death, repealed the ceremonial law, cancelled that hand-writing
of ordinances, took it out of the way, nailed it to his cross, and so broke
down the middle wall of partition; and by abolishing those institutions
abolished the enmity, and made in himself of twain one new man (as two
rooms are made one, and that large and lightsome, by taking down the partition),
so making peace, Eph. ii. 14-16. Christ died, to rend all dividing veils,
and to make all his one, John xvii. 21.
(4.) It signified the consecrating and laying open of a new and living
way to God. The veil kept people off from drawing near to the most holy
place, where the Shechinah was. But the rending of it signified that Christ
by his death opened a way to God, [1.] For himself. This was the great
day of atonement, when our Lord Jesus, as the great High-Priest, not by
the blood of goats and calves, but by his own blood, entered once for all
into the holy place; in token of which the veil was rent, Heb. ix. 7, &c.
Having offered his sacrifice in the outer court, the blood of it was now
to be sprinkled upon the mercy-seat within the veil; wherefore lift up
your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; for the
King of glory, the Priest of glory, shall come in. Now was he caused to
draw near, and made to approach, Jer. xxx. 21. Though he did not personally
ascend into the holy place not made with hands till above forty days after,
yet he immediately acquired a right to enter, and had a virtual admission.
[2.] For us in him: so the apostle applies it, Heb. x. 19, 20. We have
boldness to enter into the holiest, by that new and living way which he
has consecrated for us through the veil. He died, to bring us to God, and,
in order thereunto, to rend that veil of guilt and wrath which interposed
between us and him, to take away the cherubim and flaming sword, and to
open the way to the tree of life. We have free access through Christ to
the throne of grace, or mercy-seat, now, and to the throne of glory hereafter,
Heb. iv. 16; vi. 20. The rending of the veil signified (as that ancient
hymn excellently expresses it), that, when Christ had overcome the sharpness
of death, he opened the kingdom of heaven to all believers. Nothing can
obstruct or discourage our access to heaven, for the veil is rent; a door
is opened in heaven, Rev. iv. 1.
2. The earth did quake; not only mount Calvary, where Christ was crucified,
but the whole land, and the adjacent countries. This earthquake signified
two things.
(1.) The horrible wickedness of Christ's crucifiers. The earth, by trembling
under such a load, bore its testimony to the innocency of him that was
persecuted, and against the impiety of those that persecuted him. Never
did the whole creation, before, groan under such a burthen as the Son of
God crucified, and the guilty wretches that crucified him. The earth quaked,
as if it feared to open its mouth to receive the blood of Christ, so much
more precious than that of Abel, which it had received, and was cursed
for it (Gen. iv. 11, 12); and as if it fain would open its mouth, to swallow
up those rebels that put him to death, as it had swallowed up Dathan and
Abiram for a much less crime. When the prophet would express God's great
displeasure against the wickedness of the wicked, he asks, Shall not the
land tremble for this? Amos viii. 8.
(2.) The glorious achievements of Christ's cross. This earthquake signified
the mighty shock, nay, the fatal blow, now given to the devil's kingdom.
So vigorous was the assault Christ now made upon the infernal powers, that
(as of old, when he went out of Seir, when he marched through the field
of Edom) the earth trembled, Judg. v. 4; Ps. lxviii. 7, 8. God shakes all
nations, when the Desire of all nations is to come; and there is a yet
once more, which perhaps refers to this shaking, Hag. ii. 6, 21.
3. The rocks rent; the hardest and firmest part of the earth was made
to feel this mighty shock. Christ had said, that if the children should
cease to cry Hosanna, the stones would immediately cry out; and now, in
effect, they did so, proclaiming the glory of the suffering Jesus, and
themselves more sensible of the wrong done him than the hard-hearted Jews
were, who yet will shortly be glad to find a hole in the rocks, and a cleft
in the ragged rocks, to hide them from the face of him that sitteth on
the throne. See Rev. vi. 16; Isa. ii. 21. But when God's fury is poured
out like fire, the rocks are thrown down by him, Nah. i. 6. Jesus Christ
is the Rock; and the rending of these rocks, signified the rending of that
rock, (1.) That in the clefts of it was may be hid, as Moses in the cleft
of the rock at Horeb, that there we may behold the glory of the Lord, as
he did, Exod. xxxiii. 22. Christ's dove is said to be hid in the clefts
of the rock (Cant. ii. 14), that is, as some make the allusion, sheltered
in the wounds of our Lord Jesus, the Rock rent. (2.) That from the cleft
of it rivers of living water may flow, and follow us in this wilderness,
as from the rock which Moses smote (Exod. xvii. 6), and which God clave
(Ps. lxxviii. 15); and that rock was Christ, 1 Cor. x. 4. When we celebrate
the memorial of Christ's death, our hard and rocky hearts must be rent--the
heart, and not the garments. That heart is harder than a rock, that will
not yield, that will not melt, where Jesus Christ is evidently set forth
crucified.
4. The graves were opened. This matter is not related so fully as our
curiosity would wish; for the scripture was not intended to gratify that;
it should seem, that same earthquake that rent the rocks, opened the graves,
and many bodies of saints which slept, arose. Death to the saints is but
the sleep of the body, and the grave the bed it sleeps in; they awoke by
the power of the Lord Jesus, and (v. 53) came out of the graves after his
resurrection, and went into Jerusalem, the holy city, and appeared unto
many. Now here,
(1.) We may raise many enquiries concerning it, which we cannot resolve:
as, [1.] Who these saints were, that did arise. Some think, the ancient
patriarchs, that were in such care to be buried in the land of Canaan,
perhaps in the believing foresight of the advantage of this early resurrection.
Christ had lately proved the doctrine of the resurrection from the instance
of the patriarchs (ch. xxii. 32), and here was a speedy confirmation of
his argument. Others think, these that arose were modern saints, such as
had been Christ in the flesh, but died before him; as his father Joseph,
Zecharias, Simeon, John Baptist, and others, that had been known to the
disciples, while they lived, and therefore were the fitter to be witnesses
to them in an apparition after. What if we should suppose that they were
the martyrs, who in the Old-Testament times had sealed the truths of God
with their blood, that were thus dignified and distinguished? Christ particularly
points at them as his forerunners, ch. xxiii. 35. And we find (Rev. xx.
4, 5), that those who were beheaded for the testimony of Jesus, arose before
the rest of the dead. Sufferers with Christ shall first reign with him.
[2.] It is uncertain whether (as some think) they arose to life, now at
the death of Christ, and disposed of themselves elsewhere, but did not
go into the city till after his resurrection; or whether (as others think),
though their sepulchres (which the Pharisees had built and varnished, ch.
xxiii. 29), and so made remarkable, were shattered now by the earthquake
(so little did God regard that hypocritical respect), yet they did not
revive and rise till after the resurrection; only, for brevity-sake, it
is mentioned here, upon the mention of the opening of the graves, which
seems more probable. [3.] Some think that they arose only to bear witness
of Christ's resurrection to those to whom they appeared, and, having finished
their testimony, retired to their graves again. But it is more agreeable,
both to Christ's honour and theirs, to suppose, though we cannot prove,
that they arose as Christ did, to die no more, and therefore ascended with
him to glory. Surely on them who did partake of his first resurrection,
a second death had no power. [4.] To whom they appeared (not to all the
people it is certain, but to many), whether enemies or friends, in what
manner they appeared, how often, what they said and did, and how they disappeared,
are secret things which belong not to us; we must not covet to be wise
above what is written. The relating of this matter so briefly, is a plain
intimation to us, that we must not look that way for a confirmation of
our faith; we have a more sure word of prophecy. See Luke xvi. 31.
(2.) Yet we may learn many good lessons from it. [1.] That even those
who lived and died before the death and resurrection of Christ, had saving
benefit thereby, as well as those who have lived since; for he was the
same yesterday that he is to-day, and will be for ever, Heb. xiii. 8. [2.]
That Jesus Christ, by dying, conquered, disarmed, and disabled, death.
These saints that arose, were the present trophies of the victory of Christ's
cross over the powers of death, which he thus made a show of openly. Having
by death destroyed him that had the power of death, he thus led captivity
captive, and gloried in these re-taken prizes, in them fulfilling that
scripture, I will ransom them from the power of the grave. [3.] That, in
virtue of Christ's resurrection, the bodies of all the saints shall, in
the fulness of time, rise again. This was an earnest of the general resurrection
at the last day, when all that are in the graves shall hear the voice of
the Son of God. And perhaps Jerusalem is therefore called here the holy
city, because the saints, at the general resurrection, shall enter into
the new Jerusalem; which will be indeed what the other was in name and
type only, the holy city, Rev. xxi. 2. [4.] That all the saints do, by
the influence of Christ's death, and in conformity to it, rise from the
death of sin to the life of righteousness. They are raised up with him
to a divine and spiritual life; they go into the holy city, become citizens
of it, have their conversation in it, and appear to many, as persons not
of this world.
III. The conviction of his enemies that were employed in the execution
(v. 54), which some make no less than another miracle, all things considered.
Observe,
1. The persons convinced; the centurion, and they that were with him
watching Jesus; a captain and his company, that were set on the guard on
this occasion. (1.) They were soldiers, whose profession is commonly hardening,
and whose breasts are commonly not so susceptible as some others of the
impressions either of fear or pity. But there is no spirit too big, too
bold, for the power of Christ to break and humble. (2.) They ware Romans,
Gentiles, who knew not the scriptures which were now fulfilled; yet they
only were convinced. A sad presage of the blindness that should happen
to Israel, when the gospel should be sent to the Gentiles, to open their
eyes. Here were the Gentiles softened, and the Jews hardened. (3.) They
were the persecutors of Christ, and those that but just before had reviled
him, as appears Luke xxiii. 36. How soon can God, by the power he has over
men's consciences, alter their language, and fetch confessions of his truths,
to his own glory, out of the mouths of those that have breathed nothing
but threatenings, and slaughter, and blasphemies!
2. The means of their conviction; they perceived the earthquake, which
frightened them, and saw the other things that were done. These were designed
to assert the honour of Christ in his sufferings, and had their end on
these soldiers, whatever they had on others. Note, The dreadful appearances
of God in his providence sometimes work strangely for the conviction and
awakening of sinners.
3. The expressions of this conviction, in two things.
(1.) The terror that was struck upon them; they feared greatly; feared
lest they should have been buried in the darkness, or swallowed up in the
earthquake. Note, God can easily frighten the most daring of his adversaries,
and make them know themselves to be but men. Guilt puts men into fear.
He that, when iniquity abounds, doth not fear always, with a fear of caution,
when judgments are abroad, cannot but fear greatly, with a fear of amazement;
whereas there are those who will not fear, though the earth be removed,
Ps. xlvi. 1, 2.
(2.) The testimony that was extorted from them; they said, Truly this
was the Son of God; a noble confession; Peter was blessed for it, ch. xvi.
16, 17. It was the great matter now in dispute, the point upon which he
and his enemies had joined issue, ch. xxvi. 63, 64. His disciples believed
it, but at this time durst not confess it; our Saviour himself was tempted
to question it, when he said, Why hast thou forsaken me? The Jews, now
that he was dying upon the cross, looked upon it as plainly determined
against him, that he was not the Son of God, because he did not come down
from the cross. And yet now this centurion and the soldiers make this voluntary
confession of the Christian faith, Truly this was the Son of God. The best
of his disciples could not have said more at any time, and at this time
they had not faith and courage enough to say thus much. Note, God can maintain
and assert the honour of a truth then when it seems to be crushed, and
run down; for great is the truth, and will prevail.