By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE PUBLIC APPEARANCE AND ENTHUSIASTIC RECEPTION OF CHRIST
SECTION XII
the first journey of Jesus from
Capernaum through Galilee. the
sermons on the mount. the
healing of the leper
(Mat 4:23-8:4; Mar 1:31-45; Mar
3:12-13; Luk 5:12-16; Luk
6:12-49)
With His four companions, Jesus
travelled from Capernaum through
Galilee, hastening from place to
place, from one synagogue to
another. Everywhere He
proclaimed the glad tidings that
the kingdom of God had
commenced: and He proved the
great announcement by His deeds;
for He healed the sick, and
removed every infirmity and
disorder of the people which met
Him in His progress. On the
bright path of the Prince of
Life, every form of suffering
which encountered Him vanished
like a dissolving view. He
became highly celebrated. His
fame spread far and wide through
all Syria at this time, in the
first outburst of joy on account
of the great salvation. A
general impulse was diffused
abroad, to bring the sick to
Jesus, as if everything diseased
had been tracked and hunted out
for the purpose. But especially
He healed ‘many that were
possessed, and those which were
lunatic, and those which had the
palsy.’ But He had not merely to
do with crowds streaming to and
fro, but many groups of
travellers followed Him, His
Galilean adherents especially,
but also those who were well
affected towards Him in
Decapolis, in Jerusalem, and
Judea generally, as well as
Perea.
The Evangelists have not given
us many particulars of this
journey, but only three facts of
importance: the sermon on the
Mount, the sermon on the
mountain-plain, and the healing
of a leper. As to the two
sermons, it is in the first
place doubtful whether they are
to be distinguished from one
another, or identical, and only
differing in the manner of being
reported: in the former case,
whether they belong to the same
period of Christ’s ministry or
not; and lastly, for what
reason, if they belong to one
time, they belong to this place
according to Matthew, and not to
the beginning of the summer of
the year 782, in which Luke
seems to place them.
In our times the two discourses
have been generally considered
as identical, that is, as two
different evangelical reports of
one and the same discourse of
Jesus;1 so that, by some
Matthew’s report,2 by others
that of Luke,3 has been held as
the least authentic; by a third
class, no great authenticity has
been ascribed to either.4 It
certainly cannot be denied that
the similarity of the two
discourses in the leading
thoughts is so great, that we
may be induced to believe that
they are to be regarded as the
same discourse, only differently
reported. Truly the fundamental
thought of both is the same: the
representation of the exaltation
of the depressed and the humble,
and the depression of those who
are falsely exalted, the
self-exalted,—which begins with
the year of jubilee. The
similarity appears most
strikingly as to form in the
beatitudes. But in all of them
the differences are so great,
that they cannot possibly be set
to the account of the
Evangelists, unless the right
can be established generally to
ascribe to them a faded, ‘washy’
(verwaschene) representation of
the Lord’s evangelical ministry.
The number of the beatitudes is
not the same in the two
discourses, and the construction
of single sentences is
different. The Evangelist Luke
presents a contrast to the
beatitudes in a parallel series
of woes. The contrast is,
indeed, found in Matthew as to
the substance, in the
delineation of pharisaical
righteousness and its
consequences, but the form in
Luke is totally different. Add
to this the difference of the
locality and of the auditory
which the Evangelists state for
each discourse. According to the
Evangelist Matthew, Jesus
delivered His discourse seated
on the top of a mountain;
according to Luke, He came to a
level place on the side of a
mountain in order to preach to
the people. There, He, at
the sight of the multitude of
people, withdrew to the circle
of His disciples;5
here, He came
down with His disciples from the
top of the mountain, and places
Himself in the midst of the
multitude, in order to speak to
them. Thus, therefore, we have
evidently two different
addresses or discourses, which
are formed of the same
materials, before us; and before
we turn to the hypothesis of
‘faded representations,’ we have
first of all to try our good
fortune on the method of
estimating the most living
peculiarities of the Gospels.
But here the two discourses
immediately appear to us as
highly characteristic. The
Sermon on the Mount (properly so
called) manifests throughout the
character of a discourse such as
Christ would not deliver to a
promiscuous audience. This
remark applies particularly to
the delineation of the Pharisees
and scribes and their
righteousness, and to the
description of the striking
contrast between His doctrine
and theirs. He could not have
yet spoken in this manner to the
Jewish people in general,
without endangering His work to
the utmost by a disregard of
consequences. And if in this
discourse we also admit that the
Evangelist might give some
particular passages in a
different connection than they
stood in the original, and have
inserted some others, yet the
discourse, in its whole
structure, has too original and
harmonious a character for us to
ascribe it in essentials to the
Evangelist.6 The Sermon on the
Mount appears to us,
consequently, as a discourse of
Christ which has throughout an
esoteric, confidential
character. But in this character
it corresponds entirely to the
account of the Evangelist repecting its origin, according
to which the Lord delivered it
to His disciples in the mountain
solitude, withdrawn from the
people; though the Evangelist,
by the inexact observation at
the close, that the people were
‘astonished at His teaching,’
which is only to be referred to
the second mountain discourse of
Christ, has in some measure
weakened that more exact
statement. In the Sermon on the
Mount, the Lord exhibited to His
confidential disciples the
leading doctrines and
characteristics of His kingdom,
in opposition to the doctrine
and religion of its opponents.
But by the disciples we need not
necessarily understand only the
four already distinctly called,
but rather the circle of His
confidential adherents
generally. Even a Matthew might
properly find himself among
them, though his calling to the
apostleship did not take place
till a later period. While this
discourse has a marked esoteric
character, on the contrary the
discourse in Luke is throughout
popular in its concrete
vivacity, symbolic phraseology,
and conciseness; it has
altogether an exoteric
character, and so it exactly
corresponds to the connection
which the Evangelist Luke has
given to it. Christ delivers
this discourse standing among
the multitude, though His eye
rests with a blessing on His
disciples, who form the choicest
part of the audience.
If we now propose the question,
in what relation the two
discourses stand to one another
as to the time of their
delivery, from various
indications we arrive at the
conclusion, that the discourse
to the people (Volkspredigt) was
delivered immediately after that
to the disciples
(Gemeindepredigt). First
of all, in reference to the
order of time, we may be guided
by the history of the centurion
at Capernaum. As this in Matthew
follows close upon the discourse
to the disciples, so in Luke it
follows close upon the discourse
to the people. Thus the two
discourses are brought very near
one another; they occur within
the same time of one journey of
Jesus through Galilee. Let us
now add to this, that a
multitude of people stand
waiting below the mountain while
Jesus delivers His first sermon
to His disciples, and that when
He has come down from the
mountain with His disciples, He
delivers the latter sermon to
the people; and if we thus
account for the material
resemblance of the two
discourses, we gain in this way
a perspicuous, comprehensive
view of the whole question. We
see how Christ, first of all, in
the mountain solitude initiates
His confidential disciples into
the mysteries of His kingdom,
and then, on His return to the
people, propounds the same
doctrine in its leading
features, but in a form more
suited to the popular
apprehension.
We must now examine to which of
the Evangelists the preference
is to be given in reference to
determining the time. In this
respect Matthew furnishes
important elements for
determining the question. First
of all, we take into account
that the longer discourse so
shortly preceded his own
calling. It is not at all
probable that he would have
placed the great events which
occurred so close to that
calling in a chronologically
false position. Add to this, the
contents of the second discourse
presuppose a circle of hearers
for the most part wholly
susceptible; a larger than which
Jesus rarely had in His second
official summer. But the most
significant circumstance is,
that the contents of the
discourse in both forms very
distinctly refer back to the
leading thoughts of the first
announcement of salvation made
by Jesus, namely, to the thought
that the great, real jubilee
year of God had commenced.
If we would thoroughly apprehend
the import of the twofold
discourse, we must set out from
its relation to the jubilee year
in the legislation of the Old
Covenant.8
The law speaks respecting the
year of jubilee as a deeply
typical determination of the
eternal ideal divine law which
is to overrule the historical
relations of earthly social
rights, including those of
person and property. In it is
plainly reflected the correct
relation of God’s proprietorship
and that of the holy national
community, founded and invested
by God, to the proprietorship of
the individual, and the personal
right of the individual in
contrast to the relations or
duties of servitude.
The year of jubilee was the
Sabbath of the holy community;
hence it was founded on the
sabbatical year which brought
about a great Sabbath9 of the
Holy Land, which also was for
the advantage of the community.
The land was to be once every
seven years free from the
discipline and coercion of
cultivation; it was not, as
commonly, to be sown and cleared
by reaping, but to produce
freely whatever it carried in
its bosom as its own genius
pleased. It was to be quite as
free from the checks on its own
luxuriance which the
self-interest of the possessor
might commonly impose, and to
pour forth its abundance as a
pure divine property, and be for
the common benefit of all,
masters and servants, Jews and
strangers, man and beast. Every
seven years, therefore, the splendour of a theocratic
Arcadia, of a glorified
paradisaical world, was to shine
forth in the Holy Land. But by
this rest (or Sabbath) the
principle was expressed, that
the ground and soil of the earth
must ever be a middle property
between common property and
private possession; that it
could never become absolute
common property, Church, State,
or communal property, but also
never absolute private property.
So, then, in the seventh year
the claim of the community, and
especially of the poor in it,
also of foreigners, and even of
the beasts within their range,
to the free abundance of the
land, was celebrated. But as
nature in seven years completed
its cycle through toil to rest,
so the holy national community
completed its cycle in seven
times seven years. For society
is nature multiplied by
itself-nature elaborating,
spiritualizing itself. The
fiftieth year (not the
nine-and-fortieth) must
therefore be the sabbatical year
of the congregation of Jehovah,
the year of jubilee, or
trumpet-year. Its beginning was
to be signalized by the great
feast of atonement; therefore,
from the remission of debt
before God must proceed the
remission of debts in society.
The opening of this great
festival was to be announced by
trumpets; and from this custom
its name is explained.10 In this
year, every inheritance which an
Israelite had sold from
necessity reverted again to him,
and upon this reversion the
purchase—money was to be
calculated.11 Also, the servitude
into which the Israelite, by his
poverty, had been subjected to
his brother, a wealthier
Israelite, was to cease with
this year;12
it could never amount to
slavery. Thus with the year of
jubilee the bondsman became
free, and he who had lost his
inheritance regained it. The
ideal fundamental relations of
the holy nation, in which the
eternal kingdom of God was
reflected, sprang out of the
complications and privations of
a severe reality, and the
community rested from its own
hardships as the holy
congregation of the rich and
equally portioned heirs and
heiresses of Jehovah.13
Thus the Divine Spirit in Israel
had withdrawn the three most
essential goods of life from the
will, the absolute possession of
the individual, as well as the
right of prescription and
perpetual exchange—the produce
of the field, the holy soil of
the land, and the personal
freedom of the individual. These
goods were reserved for the
Lord, and hence must always
revert to the holy congregation
of God. From the right of goods,
a twofold right of eternal
possession was distinguished,
both downwards and upwards.
There was, upwards, an eternal
divine possession, or possession
of the holy community, which
could not become the possession
of individuals. To this belonged
the fields of the Levites (Lev
25:34). But there was also,
downwards, a perpetual private
possession, which was not
included in the great reversion
of the year of jubilee. To this,
without doubt, belonged
especially money14 and moveable
goods, besides the
dwelling-house in an unwalled
town, if it was not redeemed
within the first year after the
sale. Yet from this the houses
in the cities of the Levites
were excepted. They could be
sold like the landed property of
other Israelites, but must
revert like that, since they
were the landed property of the
Levitical individual (Lev
25:29). Further, the heathen who
had become the bondsman of a Jew
was regarded as private
property; he might be held in
perpetual slavery. Moveable
goods, wealth, are incorporated
with the individual; they belong
to his personal dignity. But
this slave, as a heathen in the
typical ritual, had not yet
attained the enjoyment of
personal dignity; yet he was not
treated as a thing, as among the
heathen, but as a man
theocratically under age.15
Lastly, as to the unwalled house
in a city, it was separated by
the walls from the fields of the
country (Lev 25:30-31), and the
individuality was measured by
this boundary. The unenclosed
house belonged, with the fields,
to the divine community and to
Jehovah; the house in a walled
city fell to the individual, and
belonged again, like himself, to
the Lord.
In these fundamental
distinctions of an ideal right
of property, are underlaid,
without doubt, the ideas of the
eternal right of the kingdom of
God. They form the typical
ground-plan of the rights and
regulations of the Christian
social age, the realization of
the kingdom of heaven upon
earth.16 They stood so high above
the reality, that they could not
easily in Israel become a fixed
civil usage. But they answered
this valuable purpose, that the
people, when better disposed,
could always use them as a
directory. Moses foresaw that
the people would not grant the
land its Sabbath, and foretold
that in the future desolations
the land would obtain its
rights, and enjoy its Sabbaths
(Lev 26:34-35). And his
prediction was fulfilled first
of all, according to 2Ch 36:21,
in the misconduct of the people
before the Babylonish captivity,
and in the punishment which
followed. In the last days
before that catastrophe, the
people, it is true, made an
attempt to realize the
theocratic rights of persons,
but in vain (Jer. 34.) But in
proportion as the actual state
of things contravened the law,
the prophets perceived that the
year of jubilee must first of
all be exhibited in its
spiritual relations, before it
could be realized in the earthly
ones. They saw in spirit that
Jehovah Himself must establish,
and would establish, a great
year of jubilee,—that He
Himself, as the great creditor,
must proclaim remission for His
debtors, and release His
captives, and thus would
establish the time of a great
general restoration of the
children of God. Thus arose the
visions of the most delightful
longing, hope, and promise, in
which the age of the Messiah is
depicted as the great jubilee of
Jehovah, in which the Messiah
appears as the messenger of God
who sounds the trumpet of the
jubilee; as in the passage of
Isaiah (61:1, 2) which the Lord
read and expounded in the
synagogue at Nazareth.
Just as He there announced the
kingdom of heaven as the
beginning of the spiritual and
everlasting jubilee, so He
appears to have preached the
kingdom of heaven variously in
this figurative representation,
which was admirably suited to
move the Israelites in their
inmost souls, and was, indeed,
from the first an ideal of the
new heavenly age. This is
testified by the last words of
the message of Jesus to
John—‘the poor have the Gospel
preached to them.’17
Just so, this equalizing which
is to bring the kingdom of God
as a year of jubilee for both
poor and rich of the old world,
is a fundamental thought in the
two discourses of the
blessedness of the poor in the
new world.
On the first great journey of
Jesus through Galilee, not only
the groups of His adherents in a
narrower sense increased, but
also the multitude of sufferers,
and began to press upon Him more
and more. When He saw the crowds
thus increasing, He felt Himself
obliged to withdraw from their
excessive intrusion, since He
never would expose the holy
action of His life to being
overpowered by a host of carnal
proselytes and their mean
interests. He went therefore to
the mountain, the Evangelists
narrate here in the same sense
as John on another occasion; the
mountain (τὸ ὄρος), namely, in
distinction from the high plains
or terraces on which the people
stayed.18 He withdrew into the
mountain solitude exactly
overhanging the encampment of
the people.19
This we gather very distinctly
from the representation of Luke
(6:17).20
But into that loneliness He took
only His confidential disciples
with Him: ‘whom He would’ (Mar
3:14). It is very possible that
not only the later twelve
apostles formed this circle, but
that also many others of His
more confidential disciples
surrounded Him. On that account
Mark and Luke might transfer to
this place the more distinct
separation of the Twelve, which
took place somewhat later in
their being actually sent out,
especially since these
Evangelists do not particularly
report that later sending. At
all events, it was a
confidential circle that
surrounded the Lord, as is
indicated by the significant and
historically certain fact, that
He stayed and sat down sociably
in their midst. On the other
hand, surrounded by thousands of
people, He could not well preach
to them sitting. ‘And He opened
His mouth,’ says the Evangelist.
He felt the world-historical
importance of this moment, in
which Christianity was first
expressed in its grand outlines
by Christ, and that in contrast
to Judaism. It was the moment of
breaking open the greatest seal
of the world, the moment of the
revelation of a new religion, of
a religion that transcended
Judaism. He opened His mouth and
revealed the mystery of this new
religion, the Christian in a
circle of persons animated with
the strongest attachment to
Judaism.21
This discourse of Christ is
called the Sermon on the Mount
in a literal sense, but it may
be likewise so called in a
symbolical sense. Christ stands
on the summit of spiritual human
life; His soul is filled with
the beatitudes of His holy and
perfected divine-human life.
From this elevation He addresses
poor man in error and confusion,
in the depths of an unhappy
life, in order to call him up,
to lead him, to draw him to His
own stand-point; for His word is
not only the word of light, but
also of power. We may call this
discourse the Summit-sermon in
order to distinguish it from the
following, which was delivered
on an elevated plain or lower
mountain-terrace, and hence may
be designated the
Plateau-sermon.
We may contemplate the
Summit-sermon as an organic
unity which unfolds two
principal parts in a most
significant contrast, and closes
with a third practical part. If
we look at it as a unity, the
doctrine of Christ appears to us
in it in its main outlines, or,
more definitely, the
representation of the
righteousness of Christ as it is
unfolded in His disciples, or as
the announcement of the
spiritual jubilee year, as it
consists in rectifying
inequalities in the kingdom of
God. If we consider it in its
two chief component parts, it
exhibits the contrariety of the
doctrine of Christ to the
doctrine of the scribes and
Pharisees, or, more definitely,
the true righteousness of His
disciples in opposition to the
false righteousness of His
adversaries; or also, the
contrasted equalizing which is
brought by Christ’s jubilee-the
exaltation of the poor, and the
humiliation of the rich. If,
lastly, we fix our attention on
the threefold division of the
discourse,—the first part
depicts the gradual progression
of Christian righteous men, how
it rises from the depths of
poverty of spirit to the summit
of blessedness in the vision of
God (Mat 5:1-19); the second
part depicts the descent of the pharisaically righteous, how
they begin their way of error
with deforming the law, and end
it by giving that which is holy
to the dogs and casting pearls
before swine, and in return are
torn in pieces by them (Mat
5:20; Mat 7:6); the third part
gives directions how to avoid
the false way down—hill, and to
choose the true way up-hill,-it
announces, therefore, the true
method of the spiritual life. In
this threefold division, those
distinctions are shown to us,
according to which the great
equalization is effected which
the year of jubilee brings.
Especially, therefore, is this
discourse to be considered in
its unity. We see here the
beginning of the New Testament
law of life breaking forth from
the husk of the Old Testament
law. For only by the specially
strict law of Jehovah in a
narrower sense could be
appointed poverty of spirit and
the disposition of divine
mourning connected with it be
produced-the longing after
righteousness. We see, then, how
in this new legally progressive
unfolding the old law celebrates
its glorification, since here
all its literal appointments are
spiritually fulfilled. Then the
Lord shows how this new life
completely loosens itself from
the withered husk of pharisaical
maxims by which it was covered,
and we are taught the element of
Christian practice (Askese), of
spiritual good conduct, in which
this fruit ripens into the
complete purity and blessedness
of the inner life.
Therefore the Sermon on the
Mount in its unity is an organic
representation of the appointed
forms of life according to
Christianity. In this relation
it has, not without reason, been
compared with the giving of the
law on Sinai. As the first
comprehensive announcement of
the Gospel, it forms the most
expressive contrast to the
announcement of the law from
Sinai. There, the prophet of the
Old Covenant received the
revelation from the hand of
Jehovah by the mediation of
angels, therefore with feelings
which elevated his life far
above the ordinary state; here,
the Prophet of the New Covenant
utters the revelations of God
from the depths of His own
innermost life, from the matured
moments of His most habitual and
yet highest spiritual condition.
There, a law is announced which
confronts the people with
threatenings on tables of
stone—accompanied by thunder and
lightning, the phenomena of
Omnipotence which stands in
harmony with the righteousness
of God, and therefore
accompanied by the signs of
armed, threatening, and warning
righteousness. Here, a law
utters its voice, which begins
to write the power of the Spirit
of Christ in the hearts of men,
and whose vivifying power makes
itself known in the promises of
salvation by which it is
accompanied. And while there,
Moses shattered the first tables
of the law in displeasure at the
idolatry of the people, and then
brings a second, perfectly
similar, stern repetition of the
law; so here, Jesus brings the
first form of the Sermon on the
Mount, which is only
comprehensible by His initiated
disciples, in a second concrete
and more comprehensible form,
out of tender regard to the
weakness of the people. But His
law remains in all its features
a gospel, as His Gospel
preserves in all fulness the
legal precision. This,
therefore, is the unity of the
Sermon on the Mount; it is the
Gospel of the law, or the law of
the Gospel. The origin of this
law is a human heart, the holy
heart of the Lord; the tables of
this law are human hearts, the
susceptible hearts of believers;
all its written characters are
life-forms of the real world. If
we look at the Sermon on the
Mount according to the
antagonism which animates it,
its peculiar theme lies
evidently in the twentieth
verse. The righteousness of the
disciples of Jesus is delineated
in opposition to the
righteousness of the scribes and
Pharisees. The one rise upwards
as copartners of the shame and
glory of Christ, till they stand
near Him in the light of
glorification; the others
descend into the depths of
grossness, till they are
trampled under foot by the dogs
and swine of the spiritual
world. The close of the
discourse shows how men have to
walk in one way, and to avoid
the other.
If we let this closing word come
forth in its entire significance
along with the preceding words,
the division of the three parts
is plainly shown, according to
which we wish to consider the
discourse in particulars.
The beatitudes form the chief
materials of the first part.
These beatitudes are certainly
nine, if we number them
mechanically; but if we keep in
view the main point, the
successive steps, it will be
seen that the old reckoning of
seven beatitudes is perfectly
well founded. While the
beatitudes, as far as the
seventh, exhibit a definite
succession of steps in the
Christian life, the eighth
relates to the pursuit of the
Christian after righteousness in
general, and to his holy
sufferings arising from it in
the world, as both begin when he
takes the first step in the
inner life. He must suffer for
righteousness’ sake on all the
stages of his development; and
this is a blessed suffering. But
that he suffers for
righteousness’ sake is identical
with suffering for Christ’s
sake, which is extolled in the
ninth beatitude. Here only the
life which at first was depicted
in its general spiritual form,
appears in its concrete
Christian distinctness and
beauty, and it is manifest that
Christ is the historical,
perfected life-principle of
Christian righteousness, and of
its unfolding through all its
stages.
As to what regards the relation
of this delineation of the inner
life, we have to contemplate it
in accordance with its
evangelical character, not as an
outward legal prescription of
the Lord respecting the conduct
of His disciples. Rather His
lawgiving is a creative act.
When He describes the righteous,
He calls them into life by His
word; a new world is drawn
forth, not from the gloomy
fermentation of the elements,
but from the night of internal
judgments and divine sorrow.
This world exists upon His word.
We see, therefore, the holy
mount surrounded by steps, and
all the steps covered by souls
rising from the depths to the
heights. They are, these ‘poor
in spirit,’ these ‘mourners;’
they live, and that in the
spirit. In their unfolding we
witness the noiseless formation
of the new heavens in the quiet
recesses of the hidden world of
the affections, and even in the
abysses of an unutterable
sorrow, by which the Christian
life makes its way through the
opposition of the old world
life.
Life in the spirit is the
fundamental character of all
Christians. The Christian begins
his Christian existence with
feeling himself poverty-struck
in spirit: he is conscious of an
infinite want in his spirit,
with an equally powerful craving
after satisfaction. But he feels
this want so strongly in the
spirit, because he lives in the
spirit. Without life in the
spirit there is no Christianity
whatever; no theological
science, no moral culture, no
church ceremonial, can supply
the place of life in the spirit.
In spiritual life, that is, in
that life in which the spirit of
man comes in contact and is
united with the Spirit of God,
the various stages of
righteousness and blessedness
are all identical. It lies in
the nature of the spirit that it
exhibit itself in the whole
circumference of its constituent
elements. Therefore the poor in
spirit on the first stage must
also be in the germ a
peacemaker; and in the blessed
peacemaker of the seventh stage
there is still poverty in spirit
in its essential contents,
though transformed into a most
blessed humility. Nevertheless,
the succession of stages is a
necessary, organic, and
perfectly definite succession.
Every step has its own
character, controlling and
determining the whole inner
life, and the Christian in his
inner life must experience all
these phases of his spirit’s
constitution to verify their
eternal value, and to exhibit
them on the summit of his
development in perfect unity.
It is the foundation of an
organically determined
development, that man begins his
new life in the spirit in the
feeling of his woeful
destitution of all the highest
goods of the spirit. This
poverty embraces the whole new
life of the spirit as a germ,
and breaks forth in a twofold
direction in polar unfolding. In
poverty of spirit, man comes to
himself, and now he necessarily
comprehends in his inmost soul
his most intimate relation to
God. Then the root of his new
life is formed in pure, holy
sorrow, which in its nature is a
divine sorrow, a mourning on
account of separation from God,
a pining after home. But in this
divine sorrow his relation to
other men becomes a new one; the
old fierceness and hardness of
his natural egoism is stripped
off, and the stem of his life is
formed under the smooth
spiritual control of gentleness
with which he now meets his
fellow-men. That sorrow is
nourished by this gentleness,
and, striking its roots deeper,
becomes an ardent longing after
the righteousness of God. This
gentleness, under the holy
longing after righteousness and
its satisfaction, is developed
into tenderheartedness, which
recognizes his neighbour as
miserable, and is interested in
positively rescuing him. Lastly,
that hungering and thirsting
after righteousness before God
is satisfied under the exercises
of mercifulness and the acts of
self-denial which accompany it,
and purity of heart is its
fruit, the lily-blossom of the
perfection of the life turned to
God; and so at last this
mercifulness ripens to the
highest vitality in power to
bring the peace of God, and to
establish peace upon earth, and
therefore in the perfection of
the life turned to men. But this
double threefold development of
the Christian is a conflict
against the world for eternal
righteousness, and therefore is
connected with the severest
suffering; it is a suffering for
God. But it is equally a
suffering for holy man, a
suffering for Christ’s
sake,—indeed a dying with Him on
His cross.
These phenomena of the spiritual
life consist neither in
well-disposed natural states of
the affections, nor in imperfect
strivings of the will; they are
neither moral virtues, nor legal
habitual acts of a laborious,
striving self-determination.
They are rather, as constituents
of the proper spiritual life,
such dispositions as on the one
hand may be contemplated as
operations of God, as new states
of the spirit, and, on the
other, altogether as the ripe,
free, ardent, decided acts of
human striving; therefore
spiritual determinations in
which man, striving and free,
lays hold of the divine life as
he is laid hold of by it.
Now, if the Lord pronounces men
blessed in these spiritual
states, it is not merely a
promise of blessedness. They are
already blessed, although they
have not attained the full
consciousness of this
blessedness. The deepest divine
sorrow exists under the
influence of the peace of God,
and is more blessed than the
highest worldly enjoyment. But
this blessedness is to be
perfected;—the promises express
that. To the poor in spirit the
whole kingdom of heaven is
allotted. Since he is poor in
spirit, he is poor in the
infinity of the divine life;
therefore he is craving,
poverty-struck, with a
consecrated hungering after the
Eternal,22 and on that account,
because the infinite fulness of
the Divine Spirit has already
enkindled him, and thus he is
nobly covetous of the highest,
he is become a spiritual
mendicant, so that the whole
world can no longer satisfy him.
In his eager anticipation, that
fulness has already touched him
and penetrated his inmost life;
hereafter the complete
effulgence of that fulness shall
enter his spirit. But as his
poverty in spirit is formed and
unfolded before God and the
world, so also is his reward, or
the inheritance that is promised
him. To mourning absolutely—that
is, the highest, pure, divine
mourning sorrow for destitution
of God—corresponds consolation
absolutely; therefore,
consolation from God in the
heavenly refreshment and
encouragement of his life. For
this mourning proceeds from the
disgust man feels with pleasure
in vain things: the mourner
absolutely is impelled by the
presentiment of the eternal,
serene, divine life, the peace
of God; and hence this peace is
to greet him in a spiritual rejuvenescence of life, and will
hereafter become altogether his
portion. But the disciples of
Jesus inherit the earth as the
meek. The holy land of the
world, now in the course of
transformation, and hereafter to
be wholly transformed, gains
immediately for them a fresh
splendour, and will be one day
their heritage, the earthly
basis for the appearance of
their glory,23 not only because
meekness, as the mightiest
spiritual life, must lead to
victory over the rude,
impassioned men of violence, and
because God makes up to the
patient his injured rights by
abundant recompense, but also
because the meek is already
filled with the ideal of the
transformed earth, and therefore
cannot eagerly contend about the
provisional forms of the earth
and earthly phantoms; since he
has chosen paradise in the
earth, while others have chosen
in it the accursed ground,
therefore, in fact, only the
curse which is to be withdrawn
from the earth.24 Here it becomes
evident in what a rich sense the
rights of the Jewish year of
jubilee find their essential
realization in the consummation
of Christ’s kingdom. Therefore
the disciples of Jesus appear as
renouncing their claims in the
old world, not because they have
no sense of the beauty of the
world, but because the
resplendent image of the pure
divine world ravishes and
ennobles them, and has raised
them above the lower desires of
transitory things. But above all
things they yearn after the
prime fundamental condition of
all divine life—righteousness.
All their longing, every desire
of their life, is tinged and
controlled by this highest
spiritual aspiration, and is
drawn into the ardent revolution
of this aspiration; therefore,
their very breaking of bread
easily becomes the supper for
the remembrance of the death of
Jesus, and their bridal
festivity a symbol of Christ’s
relation to the Church. But
since in all things they long
after righteousness, all the fulness of life to their life’s
satisfaction is to be given to
them in and with the
righteousness of God; they are
to be satisfied
absolutely—altogether calmed
with the reconciling
righteousness first of all, but
also with all heaven, which is
in its train, until they are
satisfied in their infinite
longing, and express it in
never-ending praise. This
satisfaction is already
announced in their hunger and
thirst; for the most ardent
desire after righteousness is
the most ardent motive to be
released from the bondage of
creature-desire, the cessation
of the desire of human
nature—life, by entrance into
the Christian ideality of the
world, in which man enjoys
everything in the spirit. The
pain suffered for eternal
righteousness leads the higher
longing of life into the quiet
tribunal in the breast in which
earthly wishes die, there to be
examined and tried; and thus it
is glorified as the joy of
sorrow, rests in God, comes
forth from this tribunal, and in
the transformed sorrow of life’s
deepest depths has recognized
its choicest part, the
blessedness of the cross. With
this divine satisfaction of
their life, the disciples of
Jesus have become rich in the
presence of suffering humanity;
and as in these riches they
exercise mercy, so also they
obtain mercy. In the soothing
balm which now streams forth
from their benevolent heart into
the wounds of their neighbours
and of the world, they have
gained the sense for the rich,
divine balm of healing mercy
which streams into their own
sick life, their life’s wounds,
in order to complete their
restoration; and in the gentle
influence of God’s Spirit they
feel assured of finding mercy
both with God and man—in
distress and death—that even
after they lose their health and
sink strengthless, everything
must be transformed for them
into a sheltering bosom of God’s
love—into a holy grave filled
with the healing and reviving
power of God. The perfection of
their life in its upward
direction consists in purity of
heart. The heart is first pure
in positive power, in the
firmness of the eternal spirit,
when it desires, grasps, and
retains nothing worldly as
worldly, and nothing of its own
as its own; when it seeks and
finds all things only in God,
and only God in all things. In
this state of the perfected
spirit no desire disturbs its
Christian ideal or holy relation
to God and the world; and
therefore the heart has become a
pure mirror in which the glory
of God is expressed most clearly
to a spiritual eye that can see
God. This seeing of God is to be
accomplished as the most
intimate knowledge and
experience of God’s
administration and nature, as it
is revealed through all the
world; therefore it is mediated
by the spiritual contemplation
of Christ, in whom the organic
life-principle of the world is
revealed, in whom the image of
God has appeared. The
possibility of God’s being seen
is conditioned by this
revelation of God (which at the
same time is the glorification
of the world), by the being of
Christ. Moreover the possibility
of the heart’s becoming pure is
conditioned by the believing
contemplation of the positive
purifying divine purity in him.25
According to this promise, the
heart’s becoming pure must be
essentially allied to the
elevation of the spirit to the
sight of God. Hence it follows
that the cognitive power of man,
his power of spiritual vision,
has its innermost nerve in the
life of his heart. If he is
foolish in his thinking, so is
he foolish in his heart,26 and
out of the corruption of his
feelings arises the corruption
of his thoughts. If a man is
wise, he is wise in his heart:
the fear of God is the beginning
of wisdom. The highest form of
knowledge is therefore not the
abstract apprehension of
philosophizing thought, but the
spiritual seeing in which all
the faculties (Qualitäten) of
the spirit discharge their
functions, priest-like, in the
most living unity—a seeing in
which the whole life becomes
knowledge, and all knowledge
perfect life—the eye one with
the heart, and indeed one in the
clearest beholding of God, as it
proceeds from union with God in
the purity of the heart.27 The
human heart was originally
consecrated to be a place for
the spaceless, a measure of time
for the timeless, a uniqueness
of the revelation of the eternal
God; therefore it can never
become a tabula rasa of infinite
desolation and worthless
insensibility; as it has died
altogether to the world, it has
become alive in the eternal God.
Now, since man, according to the
measure of this purification
becomes a peacemaker and a
messenger of peace for the
world, an angel of the Gospel,
or a Christian genius of the
world’s peace resting in
reconciliation with God,—so he
also obtains an inheritance that
corresponds to this life. The
kings and judges of the earth
were from the beginning destined
to rule as peacemakers in a
higher sense over the earth full
of contentions, and to quell the
hellish strife of the passions;
and in accordance with this
destination they are called in a
higher sense, children or sons
of God.28 But the kings and
judges of the ancient world
mostly contradicted their
destination, and in the best
instances exhibited only more or
less strong symbols of the
essential heavenly life of their
calling that could be first
realized in spirit in the life
of the disciples of Jesus. These
therefore undertook in the most
real sense the office to judge
and to rule on the earth by the
word of God in the spirit of His
love; and for this ever more, as
the end of the world approaches,
will the honour be awarded them,
that they have become the true
chiefs of the human race,29 its
perpetual assessors of peace,30
and the most genuine sons of God
in the world’s history. They
were once the most real, most
absolute mendicants,—mendicants
emphatically, as the poor in
spirit; and to this character it
corresponds that they have now
become the most special chiefs
of humanity, illustrious chiefs
in the kingdom of the spirit,
sons of God, and are recognized
as such.31 Thus the rewards of
the disciples of Jesus rise with
their virtues. In their
spiritual position before God
they were first of all
comforted, then filled, lastly
illuminated and glorified in the
vision of God by His sun-like splendour; but in the presence
of the world, they gained the
inheritance of the new earth,
they experienced the healing of
all their life’s wounds, and
attained those spiritual honours
which are the reflection of
their inner life and outward
conduct in the award of God and
the acknowledgment of men. But
as that Christian deportment
towards God and towards men
unfolded itself in a constant
polar reciprocal action—so that,
for example, mourning before God
became meekness towards men, and
from mercy towards men came
purity of heart before God; so
likewise their rewards unfold
themselves in this reciprocal
action. As the comforted ones,
Christians have begun to
understand the true enjoyment of
the earth, and the images in it
of the Eternal; as those who see
God, they have gained that power
of light which is reflected in
their countenances, so that they
can overpower the demons of
strife on earth. But because on
the whole path of this spiritual
life they have been persecuted
for righteousness’ sake, theirs
is the kingdom of heaven. But
why again the kingdom of heaven,
as well as in the case of the
poor in spirit? For this reason:
the kingdom of heaven is the
all-comprehensive expression of
the divine requital, and because
it develops itself in a distinct
contrast from the deepest
secrecy as the work of God in
the heart to the highest
glorification of the life and of
the world. As the poor in
spirit, they already possess the
kingdom of heaven in its
foundation, for the work of God
has made its beginning in their
hearts. But they scarcely know
themselves how rich they have
become. As the rich in spirit,
they have been driven and
persecuted through the world;
but by this means they have
become conscious that to them
belongs the kingdom of heaven,
and indeed that they exhibit,
reveal, and spread it in the
world by their life; and at last
they know perfectly that their
life is one and the same with
the kingdom of heaven, and that
the kingdom of heaven, in its
complete manifested glory,
becomes their inheritance. But
this was the historical, the
satisfied form of their holy
life, that they suffered for
Christ’s sake and with Him. He
was the life-principle of their
whole spiritual life and
condition; therefore their
inheritance gains the complete
historical form; they enter into
the kingdom of Christ’s glory,
in which they associate
themselves with their
predecessors the prophets in one
grand choir, and in the
perfected relations of
blessedness receive their full
reward in the personal assembly
of the redeemed. The spiritual
relations of the kingdom of
heaven, therefore, perfectly
coincide with its individual
relations; the name of Christ is
one with righteousness; and as
the suffering for righteousness
was a suffering of persecution
for Christ’s sake, so the
spiritual gain of the kingdom of
heaven is an individual entrance
into heaven, and a reception of
the reward in the circle of the
blessed prophets.
Thus has the Lord marked out the
ascent of His disciples to the
summit of their felicity. This
heavenly way forms a contrast to
the world’s way of death; and
hence the conflict and
persecution experienced by
believers. Therefore they should
not think this experience
strange; they must go through
this necessity of conflict. The
Lord points this out to them by
two similitudes. They are the
salt of the earth. Salt, as the
most living mineral substance,
as the highest, sharpest
life-spirit of earthy minerals,
seasons the earthy nutritious
matter, and checks the
corruption of animal substances;
and so the children of the
Spirit of Christ, in the power
of this Spirit punishing what is
evil, vivifying and transforming
what is naturally good, are the
seasoning, conservative, and
transforming life-power of human
society.32 But since salt is the
noblest mineral, which can
improve even bread and flesh,
vegetable and animal life, it
becomes the least valuable when
it is decayed, and loses its
seasoning power; it then sinks
below dead rubbish, and can only
serve as the most worthless
mineral, to be cast out of doors
to mend the road. Such
deterioration is indeed not
possible in pure earthly salt;
and as little is it possible in
the pure spiritual salt, the
life of Christ. But as there is
in nature an imperfect salt,
which, on account of its earthy
mixture, can decay and become
worthless,33 so it is also
possible with the spiritual salt
which the disciples exhibit
before the world. Just as Christ
calls them the light of the
world on account of the
illumination which they receive
from Him, although much that is
dark in their minds requires to
be removed; so here He calls
them the salt of the earth
because the sharp, spiritual
power that He imparts to them
must form the governing
principle of their life,
although still much that is
earthly is in their spiritual
nature, by which they may be
again corrupted, and then most
awfully be cast away. The
disciples therefore are to
preserve their salt-power and
sharpness before the world. And
while as the salt of the earth
they are to preserve the world
from moral corruption and
hellish ruin, they must likewise
plant in it the highest,
heavenly life as the light of
the world. They are not to
imagine that they can remain
hidden any more than a city that
is set upon a hill.34 Still less
should they aim at concealing
their luminous spiritual life. A
lamp is lighted, not to be put
under a corn-measure,35 but on a
stand, that it may give light to
all that are in the house. So
should they confidently let
their light, of which the first
ray is poverty in spirit, and
therefore humility, shine before
men; and if people at first
revile in them the mystic source
of their light, the name of
Christ, yet they will at last
learn to value the beneficial
effects of their light, their
good works, and glorify the
Father in heaven. This is the
practical close of the discourse
on the beatitudes.
But now the Lord must display to
His disciples the world with
which they will come in conflict
in its worst form, in the
positive descent from the
mountain, from the pure legal
standpoint, therefore (so to
speak) from the consecrated
heights of Sinai, as it was
exhibited in the righteousness
of the Pharisees and scribes.
And since His disciples, like
the Jews generally, were wont to
identify the law of Moses and
the maxims of the scribes, the
hallowing of that law and the
righteousness of the Pharisees
according to those maxims, so
they were in danger of being
perplexed at the doctrine of
Christ as soon as they perceived
its contrariety to the maxims of
the Pharisees. Hence Christ
first of all determines the
relations in which, on the one
hand, He stands with His
doctrine to the Old Covenant,
and in which, on the other, the
Pharisees and scribes are to the
same.
This is the relation of Christ
to the Old Covenant. He came not
to destroy the law or the
prophets.36
Generally He came not to
destroy, but to fulfil.37
In His institution the
perfection of all the legal
institutions and ordinances of
the kingdom of God lies in their
unity; just as in the flower,
not the half, but the whole
substance of the plant is
brought into splendid
exhibition. In His life this
fulfilling of the Old Testament
seed was completed in its chosen
part or centre. But as to its
circumference, the unfolding of
this fulfilment continues to the
end of the world.38
And before heaven and earth or
the old world-form are
dissolved, not an iota, not a
tittle39 of the law will be
dissolved or destroyed; nothing
of it will be destroyed till all
which it has determined has
become a reality.40 Whatever was
fixed as law can only be removed
by its being changed into a
principle of life by the spirit.
But when a false spirit, as
Spiritualism, would remove such
a legal appointment by a pure
negation, without renewing and
elevating it into an evangelical
appointment, the supposed
expunged iota or the
misunderstood fragment of the
mutilated law will make its
appearance again in large or
even flaming characters; it will
take vengeance on those who in a
perverse spirit misinterpreted
or rejected it. And thus will
the law for ever enforce its
claims till every part of it has
come to pass or become
life—until this mature
life-birth of the realized law
makes its appearance as a new
world, and the enclosing shell
of the old world is broken
through and destroyed.
Therefore he is not a reformer,
but a revolutionist, who relaxes
or destructively repeals one of
the least enactments of the law,
or perverts it by a false
interpretation,41 without
restoring or preserving it in an
evangelical form. And whoever
misleads others to this
nullification, such a person
will be called least in the
kingdom of heaven, because his
spirit has the smallest compass,
because he cannot come to the
life of the law without giving
up the fulness of its enactments
and confining himself to a few
abstract principles. But whoever
strives above all things to keep
the law in its power and full
extent, and teaches accordingly,
shall be called great in the
kingdom of heaven. This is the
greatness of the reformer, that
he collects together all the
riches of the enactments of the
law, and unfolds them in the
fully comprehensive, though not
directly explicit, enactments of
the Gospel.42 But such
revolutionists who disannul the
true law we have had to seek for
a thousand times in a quarter
where we should least suspect
them to exist—among the men of
prescriptions. The righteousness
of the Pharisees and scribes
leads not to the kingdom of
heaven, but downhill to the
abyss. And this is shown first
of all in their disfiguring the
true law. While, therefore, in
Christianity the glorification
of Sinai, the fulfilling and
bloom of the Old Covenant, must
be recognized, we see in the
righteousness of the Pharisees
and scribes a dissolution of
this covenant.43 This heavy
charge the Lord establishes in
the sequel. From His showing, it
appears that the old law might
be annulled in different ways.
This annulment had been brought
about slowly, by a succession of
criminal acts, the offspring of
false tradition. We cannot say
who did it; it was effected by
the general spirit of the
interpretation (ἐῤῥέθη); but
this tradition was carefully
taken up by the ancients, or at
least by those who were
like-minded (ἀρχαίοις). The
first corruption of the law was
shown in this, that it was not
developed according to its
spirit, but was limited to its
literal meaning. Thus the Jews
had understood the law, Thou shalt not kill, by the addition
of the civil enactment,
Whosoever shall kill shall be in
danger of the judgment, in stiff
literality, without ascertaining
its spirit and applying it to
the life; therefore they had
deprived it of its spirit and
annulled it. But the law must be
developed if it is to remain
true; it operates falsely as
soon as it is only enforced
according to the letter. This we
see in the first example. Christ
develops this first law
according to its spirit.
Whosoever is angry with his
brother without a cause44 shall
be in danger45 of the district
court;46 for he has exalted
himself against its right to be
judge over him, and thereby made
an insolent attack on the rights
of this court. But whoever says
to his brother, Racha! thou
detestable one! thou accursed
one!47 he is obnoxious to the
judgment of the Sanhedrim, since
he has designated his brother as
one excommunicated from the
congregation—a judgment which
belongs only to the Sanhedrim.
But whoever says to him, Thou
fool! thou wicked, abandoned
reprobate! he is obnoxious to
the heaviest divine judgment in
Israel, which sentences to be
thrown into the hell of fire, to
be executed and thrown into the
valley of Gehinnom, and to be
burnt as a corpse with the
corpses that are thrown there,48
according to the same law,
because, without right or
reason, he had condemned his
brother to this penal court.
Therefore the unauthorized judge
rightly incurs the same judgment
which, contrary to love, he
inflicts on his neighbour. If he
treats him as a criminal, he
exposes himself to the criminal
court; if he condemns him as a
heretic, he is obnoxious to the
tribunal for heresy; and if he
gives him up as a reprobate past
recovery, he is obnoxious to the
highest religious tribunal in
which the punishment of
damnation is reflected. It is
therefore manifest that Christ
does not merely intend to
represent an uncharitable
disposition as damnable, by an
arbitrarily marked hyperbolic
punishment: He rather exhibits
uncharitableness from the first
in its subtle, social offences,
as to make it punishable
according to the spirit of the
law in a social sense. The
aggravations of guilt are quite
definite, and with the same
definiteness the succession of
courts of justice to which the
person guilty of
uncharitableness would be
amenable. The meaning of the
succession of courts of justice
was, in short, this: It is
criminal when a man stamps his
brother, in unauthorized private
passion, arbitrarily as a
criminal; it is heretical when
he stamps him as a heretic; and
damnable when he dooms him to
perdition. These sharp
distinctions must serve to show
how far the law, ‘Thou shalt not
kill,’ goes beyond the limited
exposition, the murderer alone
falls under the judgment of the
criminal court: how soon the
uncharitable would be lost with
the first expressions of his uncharitableness, if he were
judged by God and man according
to the standard which his own
uncharitableness has set up.
That severity, therefore, which
too hastily judges a brother,
always exposes itself to its own
sentences, and that according to
its own rules. So sharp is the
law in its development, since it
demands the greatest gentleness
of love, the placable spirit
which the Lord characterized by
a single case. ‘If thou bring
thy gift to the altar, and there
recollectest before God—where
the admonitory and punitive
Spirit of God looks sharply upon
man, and where the pious easily
becomes conscious of a hidden
fault—that thy brother hath
ought against thee, leave there
thy gift before the altar, and
go thy way, and be reconciled to
thy brother, and then come and
offer thy gift.’ So very much is
reconciliation with God
conditioned by the spirit of reconcilableness towards man.
The point in question is,
indeed, not an outward and
literal, but a spiritual
fulfilment of this rule; as, for
example, it was in this sense a
custom among the early
Christians for the members of a
family to beg forgiveness of one
another before they went to the
holy supper. ‘See to it,’ the
Lord adds, ‘that thou agreest
with thy adversary who hastens a
suit against thee whilst thou
art on the way to the judge;
quickly come to terms with him,
that he may not hand thee over
to the judge, and the judge
cause thee by his officers to be
cast into prison.’ If there is
the right to bring to judgment,
it will operate in the form of
judgment; there will be no
release till the last farthing
is paid, till the debt has been
discharged according to law.
Thus man must cherish a deep,
holy solicitude, lest he should
in any way violate love. This
spirit of mildness and
reconciliation is the spirit of
the law, Thou shalt not kill.
Also a second command, the law,
Thou shalt not commit adultery,
the Jews had deprived of its due
force by not developing it
according to its meaning, but,
on the contrary, misinterpreting
it. The Lord restores this
development: Whoever looketh on
a woman with the design to lust
after her, he has already
committed adultery with her in
his heart.49 So easily may guilt
be contracted if we are not on
our guard. The law of marriage
requires a holy caution, which
shows itself particularly in two
respects. A man must pluck out
his right eye, if he is seduced
by the eye to commit this
transgression. This probably is
to be understood of the
pleasurable gazing on beauty.
The pleasure of beholding which
leads to ruinous desires must be
entirely renounced, though it
may be the most ardent
enthusiasm, the pleasure of the
right eye. And so a man must cut
off his right hand, if by this
hand he is seduced into
transgression. This probably is
to be understood of friendly
intercourse. It must be entirely
given up, if a man cannot
overcome and destroy the
temptation in it by faith, even
though it were the most powerful
attachment.50 But not only had
the Jews injured the law of
marriage by the want of
development, but likewise in
another way: that political
concession which Moses had
annexed to the promulgation of
the eternal law itself, in order
gradually to pave the way for
the true sanctification of
marriage, they neither
recognized nor practised
according to its true and holy
intent, but had represented it
with lightness as a trivial
matter. Moses found the practice
of divorce, as a natural result
of his people’s hardness of
heart, to be a custom which he
could not put a stop to by
legislation, because the actual
marriage very often did not
correspond to the ideal true
marriage. As long as the actual
marriage was frequently at
variance with the ideal of
marriage, so long it was needful
for the concession to continue.
But it must be regulated and
checked by the law, in order
that many marriage-contracts
might not be contaminated by the
preceding unrestrained divorces,
and that the law might promote
the continual tending of the
actual marriage towards the
ideal. Therefore Moses
introduced a check on the
unrestrained practice of divorce
by ordaining ‘a writing of
divorcement.’51 But instead of
seeing a limitation of divorce
in this statute, the Jews saw an
encouragement of it. Hence
Christ pronounced the decision,
‘Every divorce which is not
occasioned by adultery
(whoredom) is itself adultery,
inasmuch as the divorced is
beguiled to regard herself as
free, and to marry again; and so
also he violates the marriage
who espouses the divorced.’
Adultery, therefore, is
committed when the divorce of
the former marriage ends in a
new one.
A similar manner of obscuring
the law by a misinterpretation
of its decisions, is shown in
the way the Jews decided on the
law of oaths.52 Moses looked upon
the oath in civil matters as an
unavoidable instrument of
justice.53 But in general he
counterworked the taking an
oath. This he did in three ways.
In the first place he
interdicted the false oath as an
abuse of the name of God (Exo
20:7; Lev 19:12); then he
insisted on regarding as sacred,
and on fulfilling, a vow made
with an oath;54 and thirdly, he
decided that persons were to
swear by the name of the Lord.55
In this way of counterworking
the taking of oaths, Christ
advances to the full
accomplishment; and certainly in
opposition to the Jews, who had
made out of the Mosaic
regulations a very easy theory
of oath-taking. Christ forbids
the spontaneous swearing of the
individual absolutely, that is,
asseverations by oath in a
literal sense. The person
swearing appeals to some object
as a witness; he constitutes
that object an avenger or a
pledge for the truth of his
deposition. But in this lies the
wrongfulness of the common
voluntary adjuration. How can a
person constitute anything as a
pledge for the truth of his
assertions when all things
belong to God? If he swears by
heaven, he presumes to pledge
the throne of God. Just so, he
acts against eternal right when
he would pledge the earth, which
is God’s footstool; or
Jerusalem, the chief city of
Jehovah as the great King of the
theocracy; or even his own head,
his life, which altogether, even
to every hair, in all its
several relations, is under the
control of God. Only his own
consciousness can he pledge. But
this is done when he makes his
simple assertion in yea and nay
serve for an oath, when he
strengthens the common Yea or
Nay by a solemn Yea! or Nay! and
therefore speaks with a
collectedness and certainty
which may be regarded as the
consciousness of one taking an
oath who speaks in the presence
of God. Whatever goes beyond
that, the Lord says, is from the
evil one, at all events,
proceeds from the corruption of
the world. When the State makes
a form of adjuration, because it
cannot dispense with it for the
sake of the general body, the
Christian should then drop his
yea and nay, but should know
that his yea and nay signify the
pledge of his moral person for
his word before God; and that of
themselves no adjurations can
have greater force which do not
become him, and which obscure
the true essential oath-nature
of veracious speech (Jam 5:12).
It is no contradiction of this
statement respecting the law of
oaths when Christ admitted the
validity of the oath before the
Sanhedrim, for He rendered it on
His part by the solemn yea,
which to Him was always
equivalent to an oath. And when
the Apostle Paul appeals to the
truth of Christ within him (2Co
11:10), or to his conscience in
the Holy Ghost (Rom 9:1), or
calls God to witness,—in these
assurances there appears to us
precisely the glorification of
the oath, namely, the avowal of
his Christian elevated
consciousness, in which the
truth of Christ, the witness of
God and his conscience, are one.
For his consciousness is exactly
that over which the speaker has
power, which he can pledge by
his assurance as a witness. From
this it may be inferred that the
pure oath in God’s sight, in the
life of the believer who has
united himself with God, is no
oath in the common sense, and
hence it was not mentioned by
Christ. But when it is said, God
swore by Himself (Isa 45:23; Heb
6:13), this is the expression of
the perfect self-consciousness
of God, which is one with His
personality, and the most solemn
assurance that in the power of
His self-consciousness or
personality, He makes an
everlasting covenant with His
children as personal beings
related to Him.
Again, another perversion of the
law takes place when it is
falsely applied; when, for
example, a regulation for public
State life is extended to
private life. So it was with the
strict law of retaliation (Lex
talionis), ‘Eye for eye, tooth
for tooth.’56 The Mosaic
legislation expressed this law
of sheer retaliation most
vividly in these words. Moses
gave this right of retaliation
the form of revenge, in order to
intimate that it should set
aside revenge and be a
substitute for it. Indeed,
private revenge he expressly
forbids (Lev 19:18). And that
legislation itself was not
wanting in the living
explanation and application of
this enactment. The enactment
was orally made (Exo 21:26),
when any one smote his servant
or maid in the eye, and the eye
perished, or when he smote out a
tooth of either, he was to be
punished by letting the injured
party go free. But the Jew
brought this right of
retaliation as a right of
revenge into his private life;
exactly contrary to the
intention of the law, which was
to guard against revenge.
Therefore the Lord developed the
law in His declaration, ‘Resist
not evil:’ you are not to assert
your right by personal
individual violence, but by the
greatest patience and
forbearance promote the rule of
public justice, appeal to and
announce the eternal justice.
This precept the Lord
illustrates by concrete
specifications which are to be
explained together, not
literally, but spiritually:
‘Whosoever shall smite thee on
the right cheek, offer him also
the left:’ let him feel by thy
equanimity and willingness to
suffer that thou art not
agitated about thy right, but
with firm joyfulness abidest
certain of eternal justice,
which protects thy dignity. Let
not the civil tribunal be thy
highest confidence. If any man
will sue thee for thy coat, and
seek to take it from thee in
that way, let him have thy cloak
also, though it may be of
greater value.57
Let him quietly dispute with
thee about thy property, and
rather let all go as a poor
beggar, than oppose in court a
quarrelsome disposition with the
same spirit, or lose thy
Christian equanimity by a false
judgment Do not continue
disputing in an earthly court of
judicature, but give an
unequivocal sign that thou art
certain of the eternal court of
judicature. And though the
supreme earthly power does thee
injustice, when a person more
powerful than thyself compels
thee to go a mile as a
messenger,58 outvie the coercion
of this world of violence by the
alacrity of a spirit which
proclaims the victory of love
over force by going two miles
with him. And when, lastly, any
one employs the most powerful
weapons against thee, gentle
entreaty, as a needy person, or
a borrower, grant him his
request. Here in a wonderful
manner culminates the enactment,
Eye for eye, tooth for tooth.
The highest, strictest justice
is, according to its innermost
meaning, this tender love which,
in the deep humiliation of a man
before his fellow-man as if he
were a king, beholds a claim to
which he must respond by the tenderest compliance.
It is due to one’s neighbour, it
is due to one’s self, to limit
these maxims in actual life, or
to apply them with wisdom. But
the preservation of personality
which opposes ill-usage must
never become revenge; the
preservation of property must
never become a fondness for
litigation; the preservation of
free self-determination must
never become a fierce wrestling
with superior power; the
preservation of domestic economy
against beggars and borrower
must never become a heartless
‘turning thyself away’ (Mat
5:42); but in all these cases,
the spirit of the highest love
must dictate and animate the
protective measures. Thus the
Christian spirit, by cheerful
submission to suffering,
moderation, compliance, and
willingness to serve others, is
to spread abroad a spirit of
life which overcomes the endless
litigations of the old world,
which always threaten to become
an endless complication of
revenge, and allows the bloom of
the most rigid public
retribution to appear in the
manifestation of the free
kingdom of love. But how these
precepts are to be fulfilled, in
the spirit, not in the letter,
that was shown by the Lord, when
before the Sanhedrim one of the
officers smote Him with the palm
of his hand (Joh 18:22). The
calm reprimand which He gave to
the man, showed that He was not
afraid of a second blow, and
perhaps was the occasion of His
being smitten still more (Mat
26:67).
The last obscuration of the law
is the worst, namely, the
positive falsification and
perversion of a legal enactment.
The bigoted pharisaical spirit
had referred the Mosaic command,
Thou shalt love thy neighbour,59
exclusively to the Jews, and
then deduced from it the
poisonous false converse, and
hate thy enemy. To this vile
perversion (Lev 24:22) the
Saviour opposes the true
development of the law of love
to our neighbour. Our enemy is
exactly so far our neighbour,
that he more than any one else
agitates and occupies our
thoughts; therefore he is
especially commended to our
love. Precisely on those who
curse us must we more urgently
invoke than upon others the
blessings of illumination and
mercy, if their curse is not to
kindle in us the curse of
hatred. Towards them that hate
us, we have most of all to take
pains not to damage, but to
benefit the bedimmed human life
in them; and lastly, for those
who slander, threaten, and
actively injure us,60 our
intercessions are especially
demanded, since they are
constantly giving us fresh
impressions of their unhappy
state. These are the mournful
images in which our neighbour
must always continue to be
commended to our love. It is
God’s plan so to rule over His
enemies with sunshine and rain:
the children of His spirit must
imitate Him in this love of
enemies. This is the special
test of the spiritual life of a
genuine believer. But if we
merely love our friends, and
kindly salute our brethren, this
is merely an exercise of the
natural affections as they are
found among publicans and
heathens, without any
self-conquest; no victory and no
blessed fruit of the spiritual
life.
After the Lord had shown how His
Jewish opponents had deformed
and relaxed the law of God61
by their maxims, He points out
how they corrupted religious
life by their sanctimoniousness
and hypocrisy, and precisely ‘in
the three chief modes of
practical religion, in the
performance of which the
arrogance of pharisaic piety was
pre-eminently displayed, and
which the Church of Rome has
specially comprehended under the
name of good works, almsgiving,
fasting, and prayer.’62 Pharisaism
imagined that it rendered the
highest obedience in these
principal relations of religious
life, which ought to exhibit the
right demeanour of a good man
towards his neighbour, towards
God, and towards his own life,
while in reality, by forced
service and false appearances,
it corrupted these works, and
sank down to the poorest and
grossest unreality of the
heathen.
These hypocrites, first of all,
made out of righteousness63 a
dead mechanical service of
almsgiving, and out of this
mechanical service a parade of
pretended holiness. When they
gave alms, they caused trumpets
to be sounded before them in the
synagogues and public places.
The trumpets which the Lord
refers to were probably the loud
and shrill beggars’ litanies,
which are always the offspring
of mendicity wherever pharisaic
beneficence carries on its
operations; and so they have
their reward—the foolish praise
of blind admirers. But the
Christian ought to give his alms
with the greatest quietness and
absence of parade. His left hand
is not to know what his right
hand doeth (Mat 6:3). No
scrupulous counting out of one
hand into the other is permitted
before the almsgiving, and no
vainglorious clapping of hands
after it. The deed is performed
as a pure impulse of the heart
by the beneficent hand under the
protection of its inward
truthfulness, and never is it
published to the bystanders.
Whoever thus performs his good
works in secret is seen by his
Father in heaven; and in the
public blessing which He causes
to come upon him, it is manifest
that He has recognized and
rewarded his liberality.
Equally did these pretended
religionists desecrate prayer.
Since the Jew everywhere
performed his prescribed
devotions, as soon as the
appointed hour of prayer
arrived, wherever he might be,
‘the hypocrite could so contrive
that exactly at that time he
should be in the streets.’64 In
such public situations these men
preferred to pray in order to be
seen by the people. But in
return, this show was their only
gain. The Christian, on the
contrary, prays according to
another rule. He prays in his
chamber65 with closed doors; for
he has to do with his Father,
who Himself acts in secret, and
from His secrecy beholds him who
is praying in secret. And this
prayer, this most secret of
secret things, as it were lost
in invisibility, is blessed by
God as a living spiritual work,
and becomes manifest in the most
glorious open effects.
But not only by their
hypocritical pretensions and
gloomy slave-like service did
the hypocrites desecrate their
prayers, like the heathen, they
made them, in their delusion,
mere babbling: the more words,
forms, litanies of devotion, so
much greater merit and
acceptance with God. The
Christian dare not and cannot so
pray; for he knows that He to
whom he speaks, who already
knows all that he has to say,
and whose Spirit meets the words
in his own spirit, anticipates
his wishes, and changes his
prayer to praise.
The Lord now points out to His
disciples how they ought to
pray, by communicating to them
what we call the Lord’s Prayer.
This does not appear to stand
here in its right place, since
it interrupts the progressive
delineation of pharisaic
corruption. At all events, Luke
has specified a more suitable
occasion for it. He narrates
(11:2) that the disciples had
seen their Lord praying in
private, and that at the close
of the prayer one of them
availed himself of the
opportunity to request Him that
He would teach them to pray, as
John had taught his disciples.
It has been supposed that the
time when the Lord communicated
the prayer to His disciples is
more correctly given by Luke
than by Matthew.66 But since Luke
does not everywhere keep to the
exact order of events, since
particularly he gives this
history in a connection that
rests on no exact chronological
datum, we may well admit that
the place where the disciples
saw the Lord praying was the top
of the mountain, the summit,
where He first honoured them to
live in the most cordial
intercourse with Him, and so to
see Him praying; and as soon as
we make that point clear, this
occurrence becomes very
probable. The most distinguished
of these disciples were
themselves of the school of
John, and prayed in forms which
John had taught them, and which
probably referred to the kingdom
of the Messiah and the baptism
of the Spirit as future divine
institutions. As soon,
therefore, as in this
confidential intercourse they
saw the Lord’s method of prayer,
it occurred to them that in
their method of prayer they were
still the disciples of John, and
now the forms of prayer they had
received from him must appear to
them as unsatisfactory, perhaps
as quite unsuitable. Hence the
boldest in their circle was
induced to represent this
circumstance to the Lord, with
the wish that now, as they had
become His disciples, they might
be taught to pray according to
His method.
Here, therefore, the request of
the disciples is clearly
accounted for. If, on the other
hand, we suppose it was made by
them half a year later, perhaps
in the summer of 782, the time
to which the general position of
the prayer in Luke may point, it
might then appear as rather too
late; and the exact reference of
the disciples to the
circumstance that John also
taught his disciples to pray,
would be without any adequate
reason, since Jesus, in a great
variety of ways, had already
explained His relation to John.
But if the Lord’s Prayer was
dictated in the manner we have
specified on that Galilean
mountain-top, in all probability
it originally preceded the
Sermon on the Mount. It formed
the transition, so to speak, to
the instructions which Jesus
here imparted to His disciples.
But the Evangelist, who wished
to exhibit the whole discourse
of Jesus in uninterrupted
connection, placed it here,
where the subject under
consideration was the right
method of praying, in opposition
to the pharisaical.
John the Baptist, in accordance
with his general character,
would attach much greater weight
than Jesus to training his
disciples in outwardly fixed
religious exercises, since he
could not impart to them what
constitutes the life of all true
exercises of devotion, the
baptism of the Spirit. Christ,
on the contrary, taught His
disciples to pray from the first
by a different method, since He
carried them on imperceptibly in
the way of evangelical guidance
to life in the Spirit. He taught
them, in truth, to pray without
ceasing. Yet He did not deny
their pious request, and so they
received, at their little but
living request, which itself was
a beginning of most spiritual
praying, that great, infinitely
deep prayer, the form of prayer
which they preserved as an
invaluable jewel, and have
handed down to the Church. We
may regard this prayer as the
most concentrated form of all
Christian spiritual life. Just
as the Eternal Word, generally,
was made flesh in Christ, or as
the whole æthereal fire which
animates our planetary system
has found its expression in the
sun; just as in the diamond all
the elements, particularly water
and light, seem to sparkle in
concentrated unity; so is this
prayer a form in which all the
elements of the Christian
spiritual life are united.
First, all the doctrines of the
fundamental relations of the
Christian life, and of the
correct order and sequence of
its component parts, are to be
found in it. Then it is also a
compendium of all the divine
promises which invite man to
Christianity, and lead him to
find in it his complete
redemption. On the other hand,
it presents the arranged pure
expression of all true human
prayers as they issue from the
flames of all human sighs, from
the purified glow of all human
aspirations.67 Therefore it is,
at the same time, the
combination of all Christian
vows, in which the promises of
God have become one with human
sighs, and the work of the
regeneration of the Christian
completed. And as this whole
Christian life rests on the life
of Christ, so at the same time
we may see in it a regular
series of the redeeming facts of
Christ’s life. Lastly, the
course of the Christian’s life,
and, in fact, the
world-historical development of
the Church, is expressed in it;
for the Christian’s pilgrimage
begins with calling on the
Father, and closes with
redemption from death. The
Church of God is born into the
world with calling on the name
of God, and the general judgment
at last brings its complete
redemption.
The invocation of the prayer
manifests the pure and perfect
spirit of prayer, which is one
with the spirit of perfect
religion, and with the spirit of
the highest knowledge. Father,
prays the Christian in the
spirit of a child. But this
child-spirit is not without the
feeling of humanity and
brotherhood, in truth a
fraternizing with all good
spirits; therefore it is said,
Our Father—Father of us all. And
great as the Father and as the
praying family is the Father’s
house: the spirit of devout
Christian Theism, in its
elevation above all Polytheism,
Pantheism, and Deism, expresses
this by the addition, Who art in
heaven! Present in all heavens,
not merely, according to the meagre representation of modern
Pantheists, superintending the
earth, or rather only struggling
into consciousness Himself:
transforming all worlds into
heavens, not, according to the
representation of the more
profound ancient Pantheism,
inundated and darkened by all
worlds: in all heavens One, not,
according to the erroneous fancy
of Polytheists, divided into
numberless powers: in all
heavens comprehending also the
earth, not, according to the
false notion of the Deists,
withdrawn into a heaven beyond
the visible universe; He Himself
is in all heavens; the supreme
consciousness, the perfect
personality, the Father who
hears His praying child when he
calls upon Him. So is He our
Father in the heavens!
After the invocation follow
seven petitions, in which the
primary relations of the kingdom
of God, as well as of the
Christian life, appear in
orderly sequence and in the most
living form. In seven spiritual
acts and priestly dedications of
life the child of God
consummates the one spiritual
act by which he calls down his
Father with His heaven to earth,
but which causes him to be drawn
upwards by the Father out of all
distresses, sins, and evils,
into heaven.
But this is the order of the
spiritual life and of prayer:
first of all, man must bear in
his heart the cause of God, then
the concerns of his own life and
heart in God. If he merely, or
first and chiefly, directs his
regards to himself, then he
loses God, or shrivels his sense
of God into Pietism. In this
case he is more conscious of his
own devoutness than of his God.
But were he to lose himself in
God, and not also apprehend his
own life in God, then would he
not recognize God with a pure,
child-like feeling, as the
Father who loves and protects
His child; he would give himself
up as a Pantheist to the
illusion of a Deity absorbing
his life, or at all events allow
his life to dissolve in
Mysticism. In the life of a
healthy piety, man apprehends
God in himself and himself in
God, by the Eternal Spirit which
is given him in Christ; but he
puts the life of God before his
own life, for by the beholding
of God in Christ must his own
life be glorified.
The Father Himself is the true
heaven of all heavens; He
therefore must come upon earth,
in order that earth may become
heaven. The faith of the child
of God sees Him coming; but he
also sees what is disposed to
obstruct His advent, and stands
ready to meet it with dark
threatenings, though powerless.
Therefore the most ardent
longing is unfolded, and hastens
its flight towards Him. It calls
to the Father that He would come
with His heaven in the three
first great petitions. God is
indeed on earth already, as in
heaven, with His essential
presence and superintendence,
but not in the knowledge and
acknowledgment of men—not with
His name. The essence of God
cannot be desecrated, but His
name may be desecrated; just as
the sun itself cannot be
darkened, but the clear image of
the sun in the earthly
water-mirror, since it is broken
and vanishes when the wind
agitates the stream and obscures
its clearness by the mud of its
bed. In the turbid religions of
earth the name of God is
desecrated. In the true
religion, which in its
concentration is one with the
person of Christ, the reflection
of God’s glory, the express
image of His essence, this name
must become glorified to
humanity, that it may confess to
the Heaven of heavens, Hallowed
be Thy name!
But in proportion as humanity
acknowledges and hallows this
name in the reception of the
right knowledge of God through
Christ, this heaven lowers
itself to earth. The kingdom of
God which is in the heart of
Christ is unfolded in the life
of a holy community in which the
perfect kingdom of God is
exhibited—a kingdom in which the
domain, the laws, the Ruler, and
His administration, make up
together one spiritual life, in
which the King has His throne in
every heart, and every heart has
in its King its most glorious
inheritance. This kingdom is in
progress, but is confronted by
the resistance of a kingdom of
darkness. God must prepare its
way, and the Christian will
prepare its way in God. ‘Thy
kingdom come!’
But if heaven descends to earth,
then must earth become heaven.
How will it become heaven? Not
by satisfaction being given to
the millions of morbid human
desires and all the false
aspirations of sinful human
hearts, which would be doing the
will of the world: by having
everything removed which strives
against and withstands the will
of God, so that every heart is
offered to Him, all life becomes
subject to Him. Thus will the
earth become a beautiful heaven
when humanity in its life shall
be entirely one with the life of
God’s Spirit. Thy will be done,
as in heaven so on earth.
Thus the Christian in praying
has given glory to God. The name
of God has so cast its rays upon
him that he has forgotten his
own name; the kingdom of God has
overwhelmed him with its
fulness, and humbled him, so
that his own glory has become
nothing; the will of God has
seized him like the glowing last
day, and has consumed him as a
burnt-offering with the
innermost part of his own
life—his self-will. Thus he has
given God His due, but he
himself seems vanished from the
scene. The world itself appears
a sacred pile of ashes under
this devouring fire of the will
of God, seizing and penetrating
all things. Yet the God of the
Christian does not consume his
sacrifices, but transforms them,
by consuming the evil in them.
Thus then the believer comes
forth purified from the divine
fire, and now brings his own
concerns to God. In the three
first petitions, zeal was
perfected for the honour of God,
for the heavenly name of the
Father, for the kingdom of the
Son, for the perfected will of
the Holy Spirit. In the four
last petitions, on the other
hand, the blessedness of the
Christian is completed which
proceeds from the view of this
honour done to God, the higher
world-life of men wherein they
stand before God as eternal
individuals. Three is the number
of the Spirit; four is the
number of the world-life. The
man who rightly sinks himself in
God, finds himself again in Him
as a God-loved child, with his
whole life borne and sustained
by Him by means of his daily
bread. Daily bread appears to
him as the noble central point
in that great operation of God’s
hand which always preserves him.
But what preserves and animates
him? The whole divine agency
appears to him as daily bread, a
single agency in all, whatever
promotes his outer and inner
life. It is not, therefore,
simply earthly bread, such as a
mortal father provides for his
mortal child, that is here
spoken of, but the bread of God
with which the Eternal Father
daily nourishes the life of His
eternal child and satisfies his
heart, as this bread consists of
bread and wine, light and air,
men and solitude, friendship and
love, God’s word and light,
according to the varying needs
of every soul. For the Christian
daily bread becomes a
nourishment of the spirit by
thanksgiving, and the
nourishment of the spirit
becomes daily bread by the
intensity of the enjoyment; the
two always becoming more one by
the unity of his outer and inner
life.68 And in this spirit he
feels all his own peculiar
wants, he understands human
necessity, and the divine
provision for his trusting
brethren, and the morbid
indigence of the starving world.
But with a bold soaring of
filial confidence he sets
himself free from all the
infinite anxiety of his own
heart and of the world by taking
refuge with the Father. Our
bread—the essential (or what
corresponds to our nature as the
essential nourishment of life),
the super-substantial, the bread
of heaven, the bread of men and
Christians69—give us to-day. Thus
first of all his present time is
glorified.
But in the next place, not the
future but the past troubles
him. The Christian cares first
of all for yesterday, then for
to-morrow. It is true he stands,
in general, already in faith in
the atonement; of the blotting
out of his transgressions he is
assured, and absolved from the
sentence of final condemnation.
But he well knows that he has
been infinitely indebted to God
with his sins and shortcomings,
and will ever be indebted, and
with him all his brethren.70 His
own past casts a dark shadow
over his life. The longer he
stands before God, with so much
greater force all his own debt
affects him; the debts also of
his brethren press upon him as
well as his own sins.71 And even
the sins by which his brethren
had injured him, he now feels as
his own trouble before God. The
spirit of reconciliation in its
unity with the spirit of reconcilableness agitates his
soul, and his readiness to
forgive his neighbour is to him
a sign of the grace which will
forgive him much more. On this
point it cannot be supposed that
‘our reconcilableness gives a
measure for the divine,’ still
less that it can be a
meritorious means of obtaining
it. But reconciliation is
reconciliation once for all; it
is a spirit moving in every
direction. If the offerer of the
petition does not find the
moving of the spirit of
reconcilableness in his own
breast, he cannot comfort
himself with the divine
reconciliation. What, then, he
feels and performs in this
respect is to him a sacramental
sign of the great reconciliation
in God. Thus he lays down
forgiveness for his neighbour,
which his neighbour perhaps
cannot yet understand, on the
altar of God. He really pledges
himself in the most solemn
manner to forgive all offenders,
as he feels that he needs
forgiveness; so that his prayer
would be an imprecation on his
own life, if it were not the
most certain dedication of it in
commemoration of the general
atonement. He therefore seeks
the transformation of his whole
past, and of the past of all
men, through grace. Forgive us
our debts as we forgive our
debtors!
And now he turns confidently to
the future, with heavenly
composure, but also with the
holiest earnestness. His heart
still trembles at the
recollection, how a thousand
times he has grievously
transgressed through
light-mindedness. He now knows
the whole danger of the past,
and has an impression that the
path of his future will be
haunted by the spirits of
darkness. It has become evident
to him that man tempts God a
thousand times by his pride, and
that, according to God’s
justice, the temptation which he
has practised must be abandoned,
if he is to be humbled. He sees
that, according to the
everlasting right, most men
under the effect of the old
curse-destiny enter a tragical
course in some peculiar sentence
of temptation, or even of death;
thereby they come to the real
redemption from the curse which
oppresses their life. And in the
life of the Lord, the certainty
makes him tremble that they
might be led into such courses
in the deepest temptation, not
merely for themselves, but also
for others, since in the
tragical or retributive leading
of Providence, everywhere men
with men—the most innocent with
the most guilty—are swallowed up
in one catastrophe. But it is
for him a most awful phenomenon,
that many men mar again their tragical course to redemption in
the catastrophe, and so get
another fall, under great
temptation, and plunge into
deeper ruin. This danger, which
threatens his own life and that
of all his associates, terrifies
him. It cannot indeed surprise a
Christian, that throughout his
whole life he should meet with a
succession of temptations; and
this general character of his
pilgrimage he cannot wish
altered, since only thus he
fights out the battle of his
life so as to test it. But he
knows that the most
inconsiderable temptation would
be his ruin, unless he took
refuge in God. And what might be
the issue if all the destructive
materials of temptation, if all
the powers of darkness, were
permitted in a concentrated
position to attack him in all
his weakness, and completely to
agitate and imperil him? He
knows not what he may
unconsciously have been guilty
of in this respect, or what may
impend over him on account of
others. But the mere possibility
horrifies him, as the prospect
of the crucifixion agonized the
Lord in Gethsemane. And so, in
sympathy with that future agony
of his Lord, and from regard to
thousands of his brethren who
all in some way or other are in
peril, and to the millions who
still recklessly rush onwards
into darkness, an irrepressible
sense of his own and all human
weakness rises within him, and
he entreats God, Impel us not
thither; do not, in retribution,72
carry us away into temptation!
A profound sense of the justice
of God, which plunges sinners
who tempt God into critical
situations, catastrophes, and
judgments, is expressed in this
entreaty, Hurry us not away into
temptation! After this prayer, a
profound sense of the mercy of
God can discharge itself in the
petition,73 Rather bear us upward
to Thyself in redemption from
evil.74
He has confessed all his
weakness to God, and entrusted
Him with his whole temporal
future. He has become assured,
in his weakness, of God’s
redeeming omnipotence, and of
its victory which annihilates
the domination of all the powers
of darkness. Over the evil one,
and over evil and all the
consequences of evil—all ills,
over distress and death, his joy
in God now soars aloft. He knows
that all present ills are to be
changed into angels of
redemption, and that with the
last ill, death, full redemption
must come. Therefore now, with
eagle’s wings, his hope flies to
meet the coming redeeming Lord
above all the troubles of time,
and transports him in spirit to
His own heaven. And in this hope
he embraces also the whole still
threatened and oppressed
community, the entire suffering
humanity, in its misery,
supported by the promise of
Christ, ‘And I, when I am lifted
up from the earth, will draw all
men unto Me’ (Joh 12:32). And,
rejoicing in spirit, he sees how
redeeming Omnipotence carries
upwards the whole heavenly
humanity from the distress and
anguish of the old earth and the
bonds of darkness, from death
and the flames of judgment, in
triumph. In this anticipation of
blessedness he utters his last
petition.75 Thus the entire
present and past, with the
temporal and eternal future of
the Christian, obtain through
the prayer a heavenly
transfiguration.
The prayer here loses itself in
a solemn silence which in its
nature is an inexpressible act
of adoration, a glorification of
God resounding through the life.
The doxology which has been
added later76 to the Lord’s
Prayer, translates this blessed
silence into words which may be
regarded as its correct
interpretation. The words of
this doxology express that the fulness of God, that His
majesty, is the basis, the soul,
and the aim of the prayer.
The essence of this majesty of
God spreads itself out in a
threefold manner on the deep
foundation of His eternity. The
world is His kingdom, for He
rules over it with absolute
control; and thus everything
which the Christian implores
must proceed from His fulness
and His appointment. The world
is His work, for with absolute
power He establishes and
sustains the world; therefore
the petitioner stands in the
contemplation of His power. His
very prayer is an effect of it,
and all which is asked for must
be obtained by its operation.
Lastly, the world is the theatre
of His honour, for with absolute
clearness He reveals Himself in
the world, and through it in its
constantly increasing
transfiguration, and all
prayers, as well as all the
fulfilments of all prayers, tend
to His glory. Finally, the Amen
is the seal of the prayer, in
which the Spirit of God
harmonizes with man, and the
spirit of man with God; it is
the announcement of the
fulfilment of the prayer, and
therefore a prophecy of the
world’s transformation.77
The Evangelist Matthew appends
to the prayer a comment on the
fifth petition: ‘For if ye
forgive men their trespasses,
your heavenly Father will also
forgive you: but if ye forgive
not men their trespasses,
neither will your Father forgive
your trespasses’ (6:14, 15). We
learn from the Evangelist Mark
(11:25) the true relation of
this explanatory remark to
Christ’s doctrine concerning
prayer. Christ urged in that
connection, that the disciples
before every prayer, just as
before every sacrifice, under
the enlightening, purifying
effects of God’s presence,
should call to mind the ill-will
which might be in their heart
against any offender, and effect
a reconciliation in their hearts
with him, that the curse of
hypocrisy might not fall on
their prayer. They were bound to
make it clear to the last that
the spirit of the need of
reconciliation before God was
identical with the spirit of
reconcilableness towards their
neighbour, and to recognize in
the absence of the one, the
absence of the other, and in the
presence of the one, the
presence of the other.
The Lord next proceeds to give a
representation of the third
positive corruption of religious
life. It shows itself first in
legal, then in hypocritical
fasts, and in works of
worldly-mindedness which proceed
from the operation of worldly
sorrow and a false renunciation
of the world. The hypocrites put
on dismal looks at their fasts;
they disfigure their
countenances, exchange
cheerfulness for gloom, to make
a show before other people;
their renunciation of the world
is therefore in itself false; it
is, in fact, a hankering after
the praise of the world. But the
abstemiousness of a Christian,
when he finds it needful for the
discipline of his outer and the
furtherance of his inner life,
ought to be a festival of his
soul, and to proceed from the
elevation of his soul above the
lower necessities of the world;
therefore he ought to fast with
anointed head and fresh-washed
countenance, with cheerful
appearance and demeanour.78 His
painful, free renunciation
remains a mystery to the world,
but it is manifest in a rich
recompense from God. What the
Spirit of God takes from him, it
gives him back a hundredfold.
From the pain of his
renunciations, his higher life
acquires fresh vigour.
Upon this follows a longer
warning against avarice and
worldly anxiety, the connection
of which with what goes before
has been mistaken by many
persons.79 And yet it might be
understood by a glance at the
conduct of the Pharisees, which
the Lord had described. These
men were, on the one hand,
persons who fasted with a sad
countenance; and on the other
hand, such as were greedy of
gain, amassing riches, and even
devouring widows’ houses.80
Therefore in their hearts that
fasting and this avariciousness
must have a most intimate
connection, or form a decided
polarity. The history of
monastic life is also an
important voucher for the
deep-lying connection of these
passages. In it are seen the
intensely dismal looks of a
pseudo-Christian unworldliness;
in the enormous accumulation of
wealth and property in monastic
institutions, the other pole is
shown of the same perverse
tendency. Discontent with the
world (Weltgroll) always turns
into eager desire after the
world (Weltgier), since from the
first it is animated and excited
by a hidden germ of it. And when
the monastic spirit has once
realized its worldly greed, it
is then preeminently a collector
of ‘treasures upon earth;’ it
appropriates a dead estate, and
lays upon it its oppressive dead
hand81 (Mortmain); while the
merchant, the banker, and every
man engaged in secular concerns,
does not, at all events, collect
his treasures so absolutely for
himself as to withdraw them
entirely from the general social
system. But if we see in the
Sermon on the Mount a
confidential discourse, in which
Christ communicates to His
disciples the main outlines of
His doctrine and of His kingdom
in opposition to the Pharisaical
system, we shall understand how
strongly He charged upon them as
a sin this amassing of treasure,
and how this crimination itself
might arise from a presentiment
of the corruption which, in
future times, the monkish and
hierarchical covetousness would
bring into the Church. He has
warned His own people,
particularly in relation to
their apostolic mission in the
world, with peculiar
earnestness, of this tendency to
suffocate men professing to
renounce the world by dead
monastic property,—the
Protestant Church, by immense
endowments,—the ecclesiastical
office, by the management of
small or perhaps gigantic and
princely pastoral possessions,
and altogether by striving after
secular wealth.
The treasures which are
accumulated on earth
imperceptibly escape from their
foolish collector; they are
consumed or taken away from him
by moth, rust,82 and thieves;
therefore, by the vegeto-animal,
by the chemical, and by the
moral principle of destruction
in the lower transitory world,
or, on the one hand, because by
the lapse of time the property
wears itself out and becomes
valueless, and, on the other
hand, by worldly fraud, it is
soon snatched away from the
possessor. But the treasures in
heaven are beyond the reach of
the destroyers; these are what
men ought to acquire. The
treasure should correspond to
the heart in the wants of its
eternity; it must therefore be a
treasure embracing eternity—the
divine life itself. For by the
treasure the heart is polarized,
it is in the treasure by its
aims and desires. The heart
reposes, therefore, in the
eternity of heaven when its
treasure is in heaven; on the
contrary, it always suffers the
death-pang of transitoriness
when it has its treasure on
earth, in earthly things. But
how can it come to pass that the
heart of an immortal being
cleaves to the transitory earth?
By the deceit of the inner eye,
the sight of the spirit. Just as
the eye of the body is light,
the organ of light in affinity
to the sun, enlightening the
body, the individual sunlight of
the body,83 transporting the body
into the light of the world; so
is the judgment of the spirit
the inner light which mediates
to the soul the light of God’s
eternal world, the knowledge of
its ideality and holiness, or of
the eternal relations, rules,
and laws of its being. If now
the eye is simply in close
junction84 with the soul,
animated by the spirit and
consciously directed to its
proper object, then the whole
body is luminous; it occupies
its right place. But when the
eye by inward thoughtlessness
has lost its power of
perception, and by a distracting
vagrancy, so to speak, is become
evil and false, the whole body
is awfully darkened, it stands
in night, and becomes a
night-piece for others to
contemplate. But this blindness
of the spirit has a dreadful
result. When the inner eye, the
discernment of the soul, the
understanding, becomes
double-sighted and confused by
the divided state of the heart,
and thus a darkening power for
the soul, how great then must be
the darkness of all nature and
the world in which the soul
finds itself involved, not
merely the sphere of its
inclinations and desires, but
also its experiences, means, and
objects! The whole of God’s
world becomes a midnight for one
thus darkened, so that, groping
in the dark, he seizes on the
perishable as if it were the
imperishable. It is true, the
covetous man does not imagine
that he is doing homage only to
the earthly, but he wishes to
connect the two, the service of
God and the service of Mammon.85
But he cannot persist in this
divided allegiance, but must
neglect, hate, and despise one
of the two masters, and that
will be the lawful one. The
servant of Mammon is therefore,
as such, necessarily a despiser
of God. After this solemn
declaration, Christ lays open
the fatal source of
covetousness, which consists in
heathenish anxiety. With the
most glorious expressions of
filial confidence, He dissuades
from giving way to a baleful
anxiety. But this anxiety is a
distinct, over-hasty, irregular,
conjectural brooding over the
possible necessities of the
future, by which the heart is
disturbed in its distinct
obligatory consideration of the
requirements of the present,
since its aims are divided.86
Anxiety reckons falsely, for it
is founded on a false estimate
of life. In order to unlearn the
pernicious reckoning of anxiety,
men must reckon correctly
according to the thoughts of
God; they must reckon in the
following manner: He who gives
life that is so valuable, will
also give the nourishment for it
that is less valuable; He who
gives the body, will provide the
clothing that is less important;
He who feeds the fowls of heaven
that live in the open air of
heaven, that neither sow nor
reap, will provide food for His
human family, who yet, with all
their anxiety, cannot add to the
essential measure of their life,
in any of its relations, so much
as a cubit;87 He who so
gloriously adorns the lilies
that grow wild in the fields,
that neither toil nor spin, will
much rather clothe men; He who
so urgently holds out to man the
kingdom of God and His
righteousness as the highest
object, will give in addition to
him, as he may need, all lesser
things, which vanish in the
comparison. And as a man is
certain of his existence to-day,
in its full, clear, sharp
reality, with all the troubles
of the day, so ought he still
more to commit himself
confidently to God for the
morrow, which rests entirely in
the bosom of His providence, and
the troubles of which he cannot
and should not know. A man must
expect that the following day
will take care of its own, and
will bring with it its peculiar
earthly troubles and its
peculiar heavenly aids. Thus he
should reckon according to truth
with the unlimited cheerfulness
of trust in God, and not
gloomily according to an
erroneous fancy, as the heathen
are wont to reckon, because for
them there is no treasure in
heaven. But it ought to be the
first care of the present day to
seek first after the kingdom,
and most decidedly to seek after
the righteousness of this
kingdom. Let the Christian thus
seek to live according to
righteousness, and it will be
found that in doing so he
provides for all the affairs of
life, and that he will receive
all the good things of life
according to his need.
Along with the obscuration of
man’s vital energy towards God,
which shows itself in anxiety,
is ever more developed the last
corruption of religious life in
pharisaical righteousness, since
on the one side it unfolds a
fanaticism which always judges
harshly of others, while on the
other side it falls into an
increasing carnal administration
and waste of holy things. And as
that monastic disposition has a
polarized connection with
anxious worldliness, so also
this judicial fanaticism is
connected with this desecration
of holy things.88
The Lord opens His
representation of that
propensity to judge with the
dehortation, ‘Judge not, that ye
be not judged!’ God always lets
man, in His administration,
experience the consequences of
his own principles, of his own
doings.89 As he judges, is he
judged; therefore, for example,
the Jew who has always condemned
the heathen as a child of
darkness, has been covered
through all ages of the Church
with the ban of contempt, and is
now regarded by the converted
heathen as an unenlightened
half-heathen. And as a man
attributes goodness to others,
is it measured to him;
therefore, for example, the
secret order which has made
Christian toleration from the
first its watchword, has always
enjoyed a decided toleration in
the modern European States. But
this is the way with the
fanatic: he sees the splinter in
his brother’s eye, and is not
aware of the beam in his own
eye. In the little faults of his
brother which bedim his eye, he
sees a dangerous hurt, he calls
upon him to submit to his rude
attempt at curing it, while he
himself is in a far worse state
of blindness. And this blindness
is shown in the profanation and
waste of sacred things. He gives
what is holy, the priestly food,
the sacrificial meat,90 to the
dogs; for example, the assurance
of the forgiveness of sins, the
Gospel absolution to the most
impure men,—he deals out what is
holy without regulating it by
the conditions of the law, of
church discipline, and of
repentance. He throws pearls, as
if they were acorns,91 before
swine; before the most brutish,
the most stupid men, sunk in
sensuality, he casts the most
precious pearls—perhaps the honourable
distinctions of orthodoxy, good
churchmanship, and a title to
heaven, or the communication of
the most glorious mysteries of
the kingdom of heaven and of
Christian experience; he
distributes, therefore, Christ’s
noble treasures without
protecting these goods by the
instrumentality of the Spirit,
of instruction, and of
consecration.92
But when the adherents of
pharisaical righteousness have
gone such lengths, they have
made the whole descent from the
pure heights of the law to the
very abyss of corrupt
injunctions. And now judgment
begins to break forth fearfully.
The impure spirits and
profligates, as scoffers at
religion, tread the wasted
treasures under their feet; at
last they turn round malignantly
upon their unspiritual and
unintelligent leaders, they make
a revolution (στραφέντες), and
in the fanaticism of unbelief
they tear in pieces the depraved
servants of the sanctuary. Just
as the disciples of Jesus, in
their mountain-ascent along the
path of true righteousness, come
at last by the inner ways of the
spirit to the bright height of
Christ, to the company of the
prophets, to the vision of God;
so these, in their descent to
the valley along the way of
false righteousness, in dead
outward observances, at last
reach the abyss among brutalized
men, where the ruin of their
disordered nature is completed.
After the Lord in these two
divisions of His discourse had
pointed out the great
equalization which takes place
in His kingdom, in the third
part He gives instructions how
to avoid the false way, and to
proceed in the true way.
The first condition is a most
decided striving of the spirit
after true righteousness,
especially in prayer. His
disciples were to attain the
right mark by asking, by
seeking, by knocking; that is,
by a progressive, continually
more distinct, more urgent, and
more humble craving for eternal
righteousness with God. They
could not possibly seek this
righteousness with God in vain.
Christ so expresses Himself on
this subject, that we feel He
could not sufficiently inculcate
it on His disciples. It is
invariably so, He means to say:
he who asks receives, he who
seeks finds, to him that knocks
it will be opened, as a rule,
because these strivers follow an
internal motive; but how much
more does this hold good in the
striving of human souls upwards!
This certainty the Lord
illustrates by a comparison. No
father would meet the request of
his child with trickery, and
hand him a stone for bread, a
serpent for a fish; he gives him
the good thing that he needs. So
fatherhood does credit to itself
among sinful men. How much more
must the child on earth be
certain that his Father in
heaven will not disregard his
holy importunity!
Then follows the exhortation:
‘Therefore all things whatsoever
ye would that men should do to
you, do ye even so to them.’93
These words appear not to stand
in the right connection with the
following. But this appearance
is deceptive. It arises from
this, that the exhortation forms
a section by itself, and that
its relation to the rest is so
little developed. But it
sketches the second means of
attaining true righteousness,
that it consists in right
conduct towards men; while the
first section represented the
first means, in right conduct
towards God. Hence the form of
transition is explained, ‘All
things therefore’ (πάντα οὖν).
What man seeks with God, that He
finds with Him. And so he will
at last find with men what he
expects from them, if he trusts
them, and therefore attests and
proves it. He trusts God for
divine things, and seeks them
with Him in a divine life
through religion as a
petitioner. He is to trust men
for human things, and must
accordingly seek them with them
by evincing to them the pure
human of humanity. He is to seek
the peace of God by praying, and
the peace of his neighbour by
bringing his peace to his
neighbour. In the former case he
must feel himself within the
heart of God by the feeling of
his own need; in the latter,
within the heart of his
neighbour, by the feeling of his
own wishes. If a man makes it
the law of his life to hold
himself in living unity with his
fellow-men, to transport himself
everywhere into their situation,
to feel and advocate their
interests in his heart, then he
is under the attraction and on
the path of that love in which
the law and the prophets have
originated on their human side,
from which they set out, and in
which they meet.
True human noble-mindedness of
this kind always stands in
intimate communion with that
thirsting after holiness which
is manifested in importunate
prayer. This is Christian
endeavour constituted in its
polarity.
We are next taught the polarity
of Christian avoidance, the two
means of right negative conduct,
of right precaution against the
destructive path of error.
The first rule is, that we do
not allow ourselves to be
carried away by the immense
sympathetic attraction of the
erring multitude, who are
running to destruction through
the wide gate and on the broad
way, but that we keep ourselves
free from that demoniac
sympathy, and, sober-minded,
free, and independent, proceed
to life with the comparatively
small company through the strait
gate on the narrow way. The
figurative exhortation of the
Lord is founded on the spectacle
of the egress from a city. The
main body of the people go out
by the principal gate on the
broad highway, and bear away
with them whatever is not
independent. The wise, the
independent man, finds a very
small door in the wall which
leads him by a difficult steep
path to the heights where he
finds the true enjoyment of
life.94 As we are here first of
all put on our guard against the
mighty seductive influence which
proceeds from the great crowds
of the erring, so also by the
second rule we are put on our
guard against the company of
false prophets, small, but
operating with demoniacal
powers. We may be easily
deceived by them, since they
come in sheep’s clothing; since
they present themselves with the
appearance of a correct creed
and Christian zeal as members of
the Church, while inwardly they
are ravening wolves, actuated by
a selfishness (Egoismus) which
could sacrifice the whole Church
to its interests, and propagate
principles which must destroy
it, as the irruption of wolves
destroys the flock. But the Lord
gives a palpable mark by which
they may be known, namely, their
fruits. Men do not gather grapes
off thorns, nor figs95 off
thistles; but as the plant, as
the tree, so is the fruit. Thus,
therefore, were the disciples to
judge of the tree by the fruits,
by the practice; that is, in
this case especially, by the
pretensions, doctrines,
projects, and institutions of
the false prophets, they were to
judge of their character as well
as of the purity of their
knowledge. They were to judge by
the sour, biting fruit of the
sloe, by the unrefreshing, harsh
dogma of the thorn; by the
tenaciously, bur-like clinging,
the obtrusive proselyte-making
of the thistle. But deceptive
marks might be confounded with
the undeceptive. On this point
Christ lays down the
distinction: ‘Not every one that
saith unto Me, Lord! Lord! shall
enter into the kingdom of
heaven, but he that doeth the
will of my Father which is in
heaven.’ Only the most
prejudiced aversion to the
genuine confession of Christ can
adopt the interpretation, that
Christ Himself intended here to
depreciate such a confession.
But the mere confession is not
an infallible sign; and if it
becomes formal and garrulous, if
a man is lavish with his
expressions of homage, Lord!
Lord! he makes himself
suspected, and forces observers
to examine more narrowly how far
the will of the Father in heaven
is fulfilled by him. In truth,
it is possible for a man to
prophesy formally or with
reference to the cause of
Christ, to express in glowing
language Christian sentiments
and feelings, or on the other
hand to cast out demons, to
correct morbid states of mind in
individual cases, or in numbers,
by impassioned energetic words,
and to perform other works of
power, without his having really
entered into communion with
Christ’s life, or made a decided
surrender of himself to Him. And
many such ardent but impure
operations will in the day of
retribution be placed in the
right light; Christ will declare
to pretentious prophets and
wonder-workers of this sort, ‘I
know you not! Depart from Me, ye
who are prompted by lawlessness
as your calling.’
The discourse delivered on the
mountain-summit closes with a
parabolic address, which depicts
the decided opposition that
exists between the true hearers
of Christ’s sayings who fulfil
them, and the light-minded who
let them slip. This practical
declaration, suited to the
popular intelligence, formed
probably the close of the
plateau-discourse which Jesus
addressed to the assembled
multitude, and which we now have
to consider.
The Lord now quitted with His
disciples the lofty mountain
solitude where He had
communicated to them the first
principles of His doctrine and
of His kingdom, and returned to
the multitude who were waiting
for Him on a plateau of the
mountain-slope. In this circle
also He wished to announce the
equalizing principles of the
kingdom of heaven, and for that
reason delivered an address
which repeated the former
discourse in a modified form,
adapted to a popular audience.
The fundamental thought of the
spiritual jubilee stands out in
this discourse more forcibly
than in the former. His auditory
represents to Him the ancient
community, with its inversion of
all the eternal relations of
right in temporal as well as in
spiritual things. But in the
spiritual foreground He finds
His disciples in the poor, the
hungry, the mourning, the
despised, as they form the
contrast to the rich, the full,
those that laugh, those that men
speak well of, who might also be
then present. But of the
outwardly afflicted as such He
does not speak, but of men who,
for His name’s sake, were hated,
reviled, and excommunicated,
specially for the Son of man’s
sake, after whom they called
themselves (Luk 6:22). In this
one suffering for Christ’s sake,
that threefold suffering has its
climax which the Lord pronounces
blessed, as in the Sermon on the
Mount. The seven beatitudes find
their unity in the eighth, which
is identical with the ninth.
That Christ could not bless the
outwardly poor abstractly
considered, even not in the
apprehension of our Evangelists,
must of itself be understood as
reasonable. Or, ought He then to
have seen the weeping in those
that were actually defiling
their faces with tears, and
given them the consolation that
a future hearty laughing in a
literal sense would be their
blessedness? There are, to be
sure, critics who are on the
look-out for such absurdities.
But, on the other hand, Christ
did not mean exclusively and
simply, spiritually poor,
hungry, and mourning. There are,
indeed, spiritually poor persons
who are outwardly rich and
temporally poor, who stand
before God in the self-deception
of internal riches: both classes
at once find themselves placed
here, if we attribute a divine
spirit to the discourse of
Jesus, or to the account of the
Evangelists; namely, the
outwardly rich find themselves
among the poor, and the
outwardly poor among the rich of
the Gospel. But there is also a
region where this dualism
vanishes, where the inward want
coincides with the outward, the
inward sorrow with the outward
unhappiness, a region of holy
unhappiness that will lead to
the highest salvation, and this
is the preparatory school—the
seminary of Christianity. To
this seminary of His disciples,
in which the earlier agency of
the unsearchable God, who breaks
the hearts of His chosen ones,
had prepared the way for the new
work of the compassionate
Redeemer, who was to heal just
such hearts, Jesus turns
Himself; and He knew that they
immediately understood Him,
since they had already eaten
their bread in the tears of
divine mourning, and were ripe
for the Gospel. An Ebionitish
poor man, who fancies that his
poverty in this world gives him
a right to the riches of the
future world, is a spiritually
proud beggar; such an one cannot
be here intended. Nor the
carnally-minded poor of any kind
whatever, who are rich in
resentment, envy, covetousness,
and generally in the indulgence
of their passions. But where
distress of whatever kind is
transformed into calm, gentle,
pure longing before the throne
of the divine fulness; where
want does not produce rapacity,
but has for its effect pure
hunger, the painful feeling of
destitution, inward and outward;
where the weeper drops a true,
genuine human tear, in which the
eternal Sun is reflected and
transforms it into a
pearl,—there is Christ ready
with the Gospel: and that such
sufferers are ripe for Him is
shown by this, that they
willingly receive Him, adhere
firmly to Him, and allow all men
to hate, cast out, and reject
them, for His name’s sake. They
are blessed together, and are
now to know, experience, and
enjoy it from the lips of
Christ. And as their distress
was greatly hallowed, so also is
their blessedness: to these poor
is promised the kingdom of
God,—to these hungry ones, fulness or satisfaction,—to
those that weep, laughter.96 In
truth, although isolated, they
are driven out from the world,
under the heaviest burdens of
the cross, into the night of
shame and death for Christ’s
sake: it is they who immediately
exult with heavenly delight, who
already begin here the choral
dance of a blessed community
enclosed in God, and yonder, in
the new world, celebrate the
great jubilee with their
associates, the prophets of the
kingdom of God, who before them
had experienced the same
destiny. But opposite to them
stand the fortunate ones of
ancient time, who occupy a lower
place by the equalization of the
spiritual jubilee;—obtuse rich
men, outwardly and inwardly at
ease, comfortable in their
superabundance, who enjoyed
their comfort, and have changed
it into discomfort; the
overfilled, whose hunger
reappears in a demoniacal
surfeit; laughers, from whose
merry jubilee already sounds
forth the woe of an endless
discord. These men form the
class of those who are praised
by all the world, the
celebrities of the day, who are
at once conceivable to the extremest superficiality of the
worldly mind, and are
intelligible from a distance;
they are the heroes of the hour,
celebrated as were formerly the
false prophets, whose names are
known no longer.
In these men Christ does not
find His seminary, and the woe
which He pronounces upon them is
the authentication of a fact; it
is one with their situation
itself, a progressive inward and
outward world of endless woe.
Yet His disciples are not to
stand proudly aloof from that
circle. In these relations they
must rather show that they are
Christians. Hence the Lord now
proceeds to deliver exhortations
which express the high
demonstrations of love,
particularly in the love of
enemies, which the Christian
spirit can render, and ought to
render.
These exhortations the Lord has
not here connected with an
express criticism on the
pharisaic maxims, for the people
at large were not yet ripe to
bear such an exposure. But a
tacit criticism lies in the very
words themselves. First of all,
the Lord gives directions for
right conduct in love. Love
conquers all enmity, since it
encounters its evil weapons with
the weapons of light. It meets
enmity in general as energetic
love; and in particular, deeds
of hatred with deeds of
beneficence, and so on. Then
follow directions how men are to
endure, to exercise patience in
love. The fundamental law is
this: in the Christian spirit of
glory a divine power of
endurance is to be unfolded,
which rises above and puts to
shame all the persecuting power
of hatred. The two first
directions we are also taught in
the former discourse; the third,
‘Of him that taketh away thy
goods, ask them not again,’ will
indeed establish a Christian law
of superannuation which must put
an end to the innumerable
contentions which proceed from
lawful protestations against
inveterate and ancient wrongs in
political, ecclesiastical, and
civil relations. Then follows
the establishment of lofty
precepts by the canon, ‘As ye
would that men should do to you,
do ye also to them likewise.’
But if a man knows himself, he
must find that, after all, he
expects and requires from his
neighbour those high proofs of
Christian love; consequently he
ought to render them. In this
way, he must prove himself to be
a child of the Divine Spirit.
For the canon, that we love
those that love us, already
exists in the natural
constitution of man. ‘What thank
have ye?’ the Lord asks,-what
gain, what spiritual victory,
what blessing of God, is there
in such a love which is to be
found even among sinners, the
servants of sin? He does not
here hold up the publicans as an
example; perhaps less out of
regard to the presence of
publicans among His hearers,
than to the popular odium
against them. Sinners also, He
says, do good to those who do
good to them, and lend to those
who return the loan. On such
grounds, therefore, they would
always find themselves in the
kingdom of natural selfishness,
not in that kingdom of love in
which man overcomes himself.
When a man enters this kingdom,
when his love begins to embrace
his enemy, and his lending
begins to change itself into a
free gift, into a permanent
benefit, then he becomes like
God, who evinces His goodness
even to the unthankful and to
the evil, and his reward is
great. It is his satisfaction
that he has favour (χάρις) from
God. He will then find the
highest blessedness in being one
with God in His world-embracing
love. His chief characteristic
is mercy, as the Father is
merciful. He judges not: he
judges not the individual; and
judges not absolutely. He
condemns not: he establishes no
tribunal of condemnation in his
zeal for what is holy. He leaves
judging to the judges and
tribunals appointed by God, and
condemnation to the Judge of the
world, whose justice is ever
identical with His mercy. But
not only in what he avoids, but
in what he does, he evinces this
mercy. He forgives, he
cheerfully absolves, when he is
injured in his personality, and
has anything to absolve. He
gives: he gives to his neighbour
whenever he has something to
bestow, cheerfully in the most
abundant measure; and so
everything comes back to him
marvellously,—the absolution as
well as the gift; and full
measured returns fall into his
bosom, ‘pressed down, shaken
together, and running over.’
Upon this the Lord closes His
plateau-discourse with
corresponding parables. The
first shows so plainly with what
caution He treated the people on
account of their submissive
relation to the Pharisees: ‘Can
the blind lead the blind? Shall
they not both fall into the
ditch?’ That befell the Jews
under the guidance of the
Pharisees and scribes, and the
latter with the former. At the
destruction of Jerusalem, they
fell together into the ditch of
an unheard-of ignominy and
misery, into the foulest,
deepest quagmire of the world.
Without doubt Christ had these
blind ones in His eye. For ‘the
disciple is not above his
master,’ He adds. If he is
perfect, he is exactly as his
master; the disciples of the
Pharisees are Pharisees
themselves. The same subject is
continued in the second parable.
The pharisaic spirit is
precisely that judicial spirit
which always busies itself with
the splinter in his brother’s
eye, while he never detects the
beam in his own eye. The third
parable treats of the tree, how
it must be known by its fruit.
As the tree bears the fruit
which is peculiar to it from its
own sap and pith, so man brings
forth the fruit of his life from
his heart; it comes forth in the
words of his mouth from the
overflow (περίσσευμα), the
over-pressure or spiritual
productiveness, of his heart.
And these ever acrid words of
the Pharisees and scribes0151these
fault-findings, and provisoes,
and maxims, and conditions, and
curses-are they not as
distasteful as the sloes on the
thorn-bush? Who would take these
fruits for the proper life-fruit
of the theocracy-for the figs,
the choice traveller’s food0151for
the grapes that cheer the heart
of man in the kingdom of love?
The Lord now impresses on the
people, that if they would call
Him Lord! Lord! they must also
keep His words; in this way they
must decide for Him.
This is enforced in the
parabolic words with which
Matthew’s Sermon on the Mount is
concluded, which exhibit the
contrast of the wise man who
built his house upon a rock, and
of the foolish man who built his
house upon the sand.
This prophetic parable is
fulfilled everywhere in
individual life, in the contrast
between the true believer and
the pseudo-believer or
unbeliever. But it is fulfilled
on the large scale in the
contrast between the carnal and
the spiritual Church, into which
Israel was divided in reference
to the words of Jesus; and
without doubt Jesus consciously
pointed here to the unfolding of
this world-historical contrast.
The true disciples of Jesus are
represented by the wise man.
They have dug deep, in order to
lay the foundation of their
house. They have laid it in the
depths of bearing the cross and
renunciation of the world, on
the solid rock of God’s
faithfulness and Christ’s
conflict and victory. And the
great world-storm has come with
winds and torrents of rain, and
in beating on the house has
proved its stability: it is
firmly fixed, a strong fortress.
On the contrary, the foolish man
built his house on a loose
unstable soil, on sand. Thus
built the carnal community in
Israel: they also heard the
sayings of Christ, but kept them
not. It was rendered evident by
the critical storm that their
house had no foundation. When
the great world-storm beat upon
it, and shook its foundation,
immediately it fell; and the
fall of that house was great, a
world-appalling event.
Just as this similitude was
fulfilled in the contrast of the
spiritual and the carnal Israel,
so must its fulfilment
everywhere be repeated, where
the contrast of a spiritual and
a secularized church comes to
maturity. But the similitude is
fulfilled generally by
individuals, either on its
joyful or its dreadful side.
It is perhaps difficult to
ascertain how far, by
evangelical tradition, shorter
passages have been transferred
from the discourse in Matthew’s
Gospel to that in Luke’s or
inversely. The possibility of
such transferences is shown by
the passages in which the second
discourse agrees verbally with
the first. But it is not to be
overlooked, that not only has
the second the peculiar
colouring of Luke’s mode of
compiling and exhibiting the
Gospel history, but that it also
forms a complete unity—the
unity, too, of a discourse which
perfectly corresponds with its
object. It is evidently a
discourse to the people, in
which the references to the
Pharisees and publicans, as they
are found in the former
discourse, are with the highest
wisdom couched in more general
terms, as was suited to the
spiritual stand-point of the
people, without giving up a
particle of the truth. The
disciples of Jesus, therefore,
received with the twofold
discourse of the Lord at the
same time a living specimen of
His heavenly wisdom in teaching,
which is one with the highest
courage of the preacher, and
which they so much needed in
after times.
The discourse of Jesus also here
again made a powerful impression
on the people; for He taught
them as one who had authority
(the living power of teaching),
and not as the scribes.
Having ended His discourse, He
quitted the last declivity of
the mountain, and the people
streamed after Him. We cast a
glance back at the consecrated
height, and inquire what point
it might have been which the
Lord thus rendered illustrious.
The Latin tradition has
designated the ‘Horns of Hattin,
between Mount Tabor and
Tiberias, as the Mount of
Beatitudes.’ In respect of its
position and configuration, this
mountain may well represent the
site of both discourses. It lies
in a south-westerly direction
about two German miles from
Capernaum. As Jesus was now
engaged in travelling through
Galilee, He might easily come to
this precise point on His way
back to Capernaum. In its form,
the mountain is a low ridge or
saddle with two points or horns.
The mental contemplation of that
evangelical mountain-scene might
easily transfer the confidential
discourse of Jesus to one of
those points, and the public
discourse to a grassy spot on
the mountain-ridge.97 But
Robinson has plainly shown that
there is no evidence to support
this tradition, which is found
only in the Latin Church. The
first written notice of it is by Brocardus, in the thirteenth
century, who also mentions the
same mountain as the scene of
the feeding of the five
thousand; which only renders it
more obscure. Yet there are no
positive reasons against the
supposition that this mountain
was the hallowed site where the
two discourses were delivered.
It would, indeed, be remarkable
in the highest degree, if
exactly on this spot Jesus had
uttered the words,
Jesus had uttered the words, ‘
Blessed are the meek, for they
shall inherit the earth (or
land),’—the same spot, namely,
where the power of the Christian
Crusaders was broken by a
terrible defeat inflicted upon
them by the Sultan Saladin, in
the battle of Hattin, on the
fifth of July, av. 1187, so that
in consequence of it they lost
the Holy Land. Exactly at the
last moment the combatants
retreated to the summit of Mount
Hattin; and here they were
overpowered by the Saracens,
after they had a short time
before assembled round the
cross.98 At all events, in this very district so many great battles, renowned in the history of the world, were fought, where Christ pronounced His true disciples blessed, as the meek, the merciful, and the peacemakers. Neander supposes, without sufficient reason, that Jesus delivered this discourse on His return from one of His journeys to the feasts. And even then it is not sufficiently accounted for, when he supposes that the mountain was in the vicinity of Capernaum, and that Jesus, after passing a night on the mountain, and had given another discourse in the morning, returned thence to Capernaum. We might suppose this, according to Matthew's representation, though even Matthew places the healing of a leper between the Sermon on the Mount and the entrance of Jesus into Capernaum. But this incident is fully narrated by the other Evangelists, in a manner which we cannot fail to perceive is a complementary representation. On the way back from that Galilean mountain, Jesus (according to Luke 5:12) came to one of the cities which He intended to visit, and, though in its immediate vicinity, was solicited by a leper that He would heal him. ‘The man was full of leprosy (πλήρης λέπρας), and according to the law dare not come near Him; he therefore cried to Him for relief from a distance, but then ran and fell on His knees before Him, exclaiming, ‘ Lord, if Thou wilt, Thou canst make me clean!’ And Jesus had compassion upon him, and His compassion impelled Him to put out His hand and touch him with the kingly word, ‘T will,—be thou clean!’ And as He spoke, the leprosy was seen to depart from him. The white appearance of the leprosy broke out upon him, the sign of healing (Lev. 13, 14.) The man was cleansed; but Jesus in the fervour of His compassion had touched him, before he was cleansed ; and this might be interpreted, according to the Levitical statute, as having defiled Himself. He ventured to take upon Himself this appearance; for thus He appeared to defile Himself on the great scale with sinful humanity by coming into the most intimate contact with it until it brought Him to death, while in fact He sanctified humanity by this communion. But because it might appear that he had become unclean according to the statute, while the leper had become pure, He must withdraw from Tim. He sent him away from Himself with a strong emotion,99 since He charged him to take care that he told no man100 how he had been healed, but to go and show himself to the priest, and bring the offering of purification ordained by Moses, in order to obtain the legal attestation to his restored purity.101 But the man violated the command when he left Him, and announced in the city what had happened to him. He proclaimed it far and wide ; probably he also mentioned his having been touched by Jesus. The consequence of this publication of the cure was, that the Lord could no longer carry out His intention of going freely and publicly into that102 city, since He felt Himself bound to spare the legal spirit of the people. In order, therefore, to occasion no disturbance in the social relations of the city by the Levitical scruples which the law of purification brought with it, He turned back and sought a desert place, perhaps in order to perform a sort of Levitical quarantine, not according to the spirit of the law, but according to the interpretation which might be put upon it by Levitical casuists. He devoted this time to solitary prayer. But while He on His part paid respect to the morbid legal spirit of the people, the spirit of His evangelical freedom continued to operate among them, among whom the narrative of the leper, of the miraculous cure he had experienced, was spread abroad. This was shown by the result, that the sufferers did not trouble themselves about the circumstance of His having touched the leper, but thronged to Him from all quarters to seek His aid. Thus the period of the retirement of Jesus passed away, and He returned back to Capernaum. ───♦─── Notes 1. In the above representation I believe that I have satisfactorily explained the original difference of the two Sermons on the Mount in connection with their remarkable affinity. This affinity is accounted for, (1.) from the fact, that the announcement of the year of the spiritual jubilee is at the basis of the two discourses ; (2.) from the inducement Jesus had to communicate to His disciples in a more restricted sense, as well as to the wider circle of disciples, the main outlines of His kingdom in a similar form as far as possible ; (3.) from the blending of some elements of the second discourse, particularly the conclusion, with the first, which takes place in Matthew's account. That original difference, on the other hand, is explained from the necessity which influenced the Lord, in the discourse to the people, to have regard not only to the pharisaic element in the larger circle of disciples, but also to the judaizing hearers who were more estranged from His own spirit ; and it is proved on this supposition by the fact, that the discourses, as pure, compact, organic structures, exactly correspond to these definite different objects. We see, therefore, in this relation of the affinity and diversity of the two discourses, not the repetitions of a ‘povertystruck’ speaker, but the management of the most richly furnished and skilful master-spirit, to whom it might appear quite suitable to pour forth the fulness of His spirit in reiterated allied forms of speech, since he could not have the interest of a common speaker, to veil the proper measure of the actual amount of thought in its contractedness by the act of rhetorical transformation. 2. That a view of the world so inadequate, paltry, and external as the Ebionitish—of which the leading tenet was, that whoever had his position in this life would go destitute into the next, but whoever renounced earthly riches would thereby acquire heavenly treasures—must be foreign not only to Christianity, but to Judaism, and therefore likewise to the transition from Judaism to Christianity, ought to occur at once to every one who possesses some familiarity with the New and Old Testaments. ‘The true Israelite could not adopt this tenet, since he regarded himself as the son of Abraham, his opulent and yet pious ancestor, not only in a bodily but in a spiritual respect, and since he held sacred the promises of temporal blessings which were given so abundantly to the pious in the Old Testament. But Christianity could still less begin its course with so paltry and preposterous a maxim, since from the first it came forward in diametric opposition to all sanctimonious performances, penances, monkish austerities, and misanthropic renunciation of the world, as meritorious in God's sight, and immediately numbered not only the poor but the rich among its professors. How an element so heterogencous, originating in a totally different view of the world, could find its way into the centre of the transition of one religion into the other, is simply inconceivable. But, from the first, Ebionitism showed itself to be a barren border-land of expiring Judaism and Jewish Christianity, in which the theocratic religious feeling was mingled, as in the kindred Exsenism, with the elements of a dualistic and pantheistic heathenish view of the world and asceticism. It has been also attempted to find in the Apostle James traces of that supposed Ebionitism which some have fancied they have discovered in the second Sermon on the Mount especially. But this supposition is contradicted by the passage in Jas. 1:10. Here the fact is recognized, that the same person may be a Christian and a rich man; and such an one is not exhorted to throw away his riches, but to humble himself in spirit, and to be rightly conscious of the transitoriness of these outward possessions. It is evident, moreover, from the passage in chap. 2:1, &c., that in the Christian societies to which James wrote, there was danger of giving preference to the non-professing rich men who entered their assembly, and of slighting the poor, which would not have been the case had these societies adopted Ebionitish views. Or would any one suppose James agreed in this view of the world with those societies whom yet he corrected? But when he inveighs against that sinful preference of the rich to the poor, it is throughout in an ethical, never in a superstitious tone. He never reproaches the rich for being rich, but that they are in general opposers of Christianity (ii. 7)—that they placed their trust in riches—that they defrauded the labourers—that they wasted in luxury what belonged to the poor, but oppressed and despised the pious (v. 1). A similar ‘Ebionitism’ to this of James often lets its voice be heard again in our times, though in general it does not appear with a religious and moral purity of spirit like that of James; and very soon the second Sermon on the Mount, like the Epistle of James, might easily come into special honour, although grievously misinterpreted and abused. But this is evident, that the criticism in question, with the protection with which it has favoured the rich man in the parable, as generally with its hunting out Ebionitism in the New Testament, has already perceptibly fallen behind the progress of the spirit of the age. Compare on this point the admirable remarks of Schliemann, die Clementinen, &c., p. 377. Also the general proof, that it has been charged most unjustly on the ancient Church, and from the beginning was regarded in the Church as heresy, p. 409, &c. 3. As to the relation of the parallel passages which occur to the first Sermon on the Mount in Matthew, in the second in Luke, and here and there in the latter, as well as in Mark, the apparent confusion in which, to some, they are involved (see Strauss, i. 614), is in part explained by the foregoing remarks, and indeed (i.) by the difference pointed out in the two discourses, to which (ii.) the circumstance is owing, that Luke could introduce in other places those exhortations of Jesus which belonged especially to the disciples. This is particularly the case with the Lord’s Prayer, Luke xi. 1-4; with the exhortation to prayer, 9-13 ; with the parable, vers, 34-36; as well as with the warning against heathenish anxiety, xii. 22-31. It is, indeed, very conceivable that several of the sentences of the first Sermon on the Mount which recur in the other Evangelists, were repeated by the Lord in other connections ; as, for example, the sayings in Mark 9:50; Luke 12:34, 13:24, 16:13, 17, and 18. But single passages might also be first brought by the Evangelist into another connection; as, for example, Luke xii. 58. As to the passages in question, particularly in relation to Strauss (i. 606) and Schneckenburger (Bettrage, p. 58), it will be seen how far this connection, even in a spiritual relation, can be marked as insufficient, or be placed partially under the category of ‘lexical connection.’ 4. The Sermon on the Mount, as the pure, spiritual, fundamental law of the New Testament kingdom of God, may be compared with other forms of religious and moral legislation. The comparison of this new form of the eternal law with the Mosaic, as well as with the pharisaic maxims, lies in the representation of it, therefore in the sermon itself. It appears, namely, as a harmonious development of the former (not as a correction of it, which would be altogether against Christ’s express declaration) ; as a cutting, decided antagonism against the latter. On the relation of the statements of the Sermon on the Mount to heathen morals, Tholuck has adduced many illustrations in his excellent Commentary. Stier, in his Words of the Lord Jesus, i. 172, has made some striking remarks on the false application of the Sermon on the Mount to political relations ; as, for example, by the Quakers and other sects, and more lately in the evangelical Church, in reference to the political law of marriage. 5. It has been a controversy of long standing, how far the Lord’s Prayer is an original creation of Jesus, or a composition from materials already known. 'Tholuck has discussed this question at length in his Commentary, under the title of ‘Sources from which the Lord's Prayer may have been derived, p. 322. According to Herder, Richter, Rhode, and others, the prayer must have been taken from the Zendavesta. This hypothesis is regarded by Tholuck as exploded. It belongs, indeed, originally to the category of those hypotheses in which the difference of- national mental character in the ancient world, and especially the characteristic differences of the religious systems, was utterly misunderstood, The case is different as to the derivation of this prayer from the old Jewish and rabbinical prayers of the synagogue. Tholuck himself remarks that the collections of prayers, of which the Jews still make use (called מַחְזוֹר), contain striking prayers, borrowed both in thought and expression from the Old Testament. ‘And why might not the Saviour have collected and combined the best petitions of those well-known prayers ?’ (p. 323). But he finds, in conclusion, that only similarities can be pointed out, which give no ground for supposing ‘that the Lord’s Prayer originated from the rabbinical prayers.” Von Ammon, in his History of the Life of Jesus (Geschichte des Lebens Jesu, ii. 76), reverts to these similarities very fully, The address, Father in Heaven, he says, is frequently found in the Mishna. But it has been justly remarked that Christ needed not to take this address from the Mishna. As to the first petition, it is noticed that in the Kaddish, one of the oldest morning prayers of the ancient synagogue, it is said, May Thy name be highly exalted and honoured (hallowed). As to the second petition, the Kaddish has again ימליד מלכותיה regnare fueiat regnum suum, followed by the words, May His redemption bloom; may the Messiah appear. Maniiestly the first petition in the Lord's Prayer is reduced from an indefinite feeling to a clearly defined thought, and the second is essentially altered. This represents the kingdom of God as one still coming; the Jew, in his prayer, assumes that it is one already existing. ‘he sentences adduced in reference to the third petition—Let is name be glorified on earth as it is glorified in heaven; and fulfill Thy will above in heaven, and give Thy worshippers rest of spirit on earth—are manifestly very different from the third petition. The analogy to the fourth petition taken from the Gemara is very interesting. Thy people Israel need much, but their insight is little. Therefore, may it please Thee, O God, to give to every individual what he needs for life, and as much to every body as is necessary for it. These words may certainly be applied to the exposition of the fourth petition. Had the Lord already found this formula, it might be said that the fourth petition bore the same relation to it as a finished creation to a world in process of formation. For the fifth petition the author has only quoted this sentence from the Mishna: May God blot the sins against his neighbour only when the transgressor has reconciled himself with his neighbour ; also the petition from a Jewish liturgy of an undetermined date, Forgive us, O Father, for all have sinned. As to the sixth and seventh petitions it is said, ‘In the seventh and tenth petitions of the eighteen blessings, the subject spoken of is expressly the many afflictions and scatterings of the Jews in their dispersion, and then the hope of their near redemption, when the trumpet shall sound to bring them back to their own land? This manifestly presents no definite analogy. Also an ascription of praise similar to the doxology is found, according to the author, ‘not only in other Jewish prayers, but also in the eighteen blessings.’ He looks upon this as a reason why the critical examination respecting the doxology in Matthew should not be considered as finally settled. In the relation of the prayer of Jesus to the rabbinical similarities adduced, we see at least the common participation of the two forms in a theocratic religion. Moreover, the Lord’s Prayer is related to these similarities, in their scattered state, as a piece of pure gold to a piece of ore containing gold but in very small quantities. We cannot here speak of a mere collection, nor of a mere composition, nor indeed of a mere reproduction. For, apart from the scattered state of these similarities, definite parallels are altogether wanting to some petitions, and even the more definite analogies are here found in a new form. But we see from the comparison that the fundamental thoughts of the ancient Jewish devotion are concentrated in the purest gold form in the devotions of Jesus, while in the rabbinical synagogues they are lost in discursive expressions, so that the Lord's Prayer is as exactly related to these similarities as Christianity itself in general is related to Talmudism. 6. ‘Legally, fasting among the Jews on the great festival of Atonement was from evening to evening (Lev. 16:29), and traditionally (Taanit. iii. § 8) in autumn, when the rainy season had not begun and the sowing seemed in danger. But since the conservatives (Stabilitatsmanner) or rigorists held it to be meritorious, they fasted twice (Luke 18:12), or even four times in the week (Taanit. iv. § 3); they appeared in the synagogue negligently dressed, pale, and gloomy, in order to make the meritoriousness of their maceration visible to every one.—Von Ammon, p. 81. 7. On the disease of leprosy, compare the article relating to it in Winer’s R. W. B. 8. Since the bad tree, δενδρον σαπρον (ver. 17), had been already characterized by thorns and thistles as plants which belong to that class, we cannot understand by it either a tree that bears no fruit, or an old half-dead tree which often bears good fruit, but rather a degenerate or wild-growing tree. See V. Ammon, ii. 103. According to this, the expression is significant, and testifies that Christ recognized a depravation in nature (corresponding to the ethical evil in the world) which showed itself specially in the nature of thorns and thistles.
|
|
1) See Tholuck's Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount, p. 1 (Clark's Tr., 1860). 2) Olshausen, i. 181. 3) Tholuck, 17. 4) Strauss, i. 614. 5) This is, at all events, the meaning of the passage Matt. v. 1 . Compare Weisse, ii. 27. 6) Tholuck, 17. 7) We return, on good grounds, to the hypothesis of Augustin (see Tholuck, p. 1). 8) Lev. xxv. 5 ; Deut. xv.; Isa. lxi. 2 9) שַֹבַּת שַֹבָּתוֹן Every seventh year was to be a Sabbath of rest to the land. Lev. xxv. 4. 10) ʻשְֺנַת הַיּוֹבֵל, Te has this name from the rams’ horns by which it was announced.’—Winer, R. W, B., art. Jubeljahr, The year of jubilee would accordingly be designated the year of trumpets. But if, according to the Chaldee and Hebrew expositors (see Gesenius, Lexicon), the word יוֹבֵל is interpreted a ram, hence rams’ horns, trumpets made of rams’ horns, the choice of these horns, would mark a return to the poetic, glorified state of nature, The jubilee horn was the festive horn of the theocratic Arcadia, and to be regarded in a distinct relation to similar institutions which have for their basis the idea of a theocratic festal nature-life, particularly the feast of Tabernacles and the Nazarite’s vow. 11) “The voluntary seller of his estate certainly could gain nothing by that appointment, since, on account of the reference to the year of jubilee (and the right of reselling), the real purchase-price was reduced, and literally would only be turned into a rent.’—Winer, 12) The legal time of service of a Hebrew slave was six years. He became, therefore, free in the seventh year, according to Exod. xxi. 2, unless the exception in ver. 5 should occur. The seventh year, or year of release (Deut. xv.), is not to be identified with the sabbatical year of the land. The latter was a universal fixed period, contemporaneous for all the people; the year of release, on the contrary, dated from the time when a Hebrew became the bondsman of another. He must, therefore, us a rule, serve six years, But when the year of jubilee came, it made all the Hebrew slaves free. 13) According to the fundamental idea of this right, in the future, at the expiration of a greater period of debt, Canaan must revert to Israel. The nations, in their calling to the kingdom of heaven, are the heirs of Jehovah on the great scale. 14) Perhaps the passage in Josephus, Antiq. iii. 12, § 3, according to which, debts generally were remitted at the jubilee, is so to be understood as meaning that there was also a cancelling of money-debts. See Winer. 15) Exod, xxi 20,26. The twenty-first verse certainly appears to contradict this, since here the slave is spoken of as property (‘for he is his money’): but from the connection it may be inferred that this is to be understood only in a limited sense. 16) Stier has clearly marked the idea of the kingdom of heaven in distinction from the idea of the kingdom of God. The phrase contains ‘an indication of real consummation in the future. Hence this idea was developed in the calamitous times of the Jewish theocracy (Dan. if, 41), when the antagonism between the profane kingdoms of the world and the heavenly kingdom of God, which was hereafter to be realized on earth, was fully grasped by the consciousness of the theocrat.’ 17) According to Wieseler, the year from. the autumn of 779 to the autumn of 780 was a sabbatical year. 18) In this way may be most easily explained the difficulty which Gfrérer (h. Sage, 138) and Bruno Bauer (Kritik, p. 288) have found in the standing expression τὸ ὄρος in the Gospels. Our explanation, vol. i. p. 174, is accordingly to be supplemented, that the sea-shore, which in John vi. 2 forms the contrast to the mountain, is to be regarded as the place where the people assembled, from which Jesus retired. This is apparent particularly from the words ἀνεχώρησε πάλιν εἰς τὸ ὄρος (ver. 15). Ebrard explains the use of the definite article from a contrast which resulted front the formation of the Jewish land. It might, indeed, be difficult to consider the high table-land of Canaan as one mountain—the mountain; yet thus much results from this notice of the character of the Palestinian high table-land, that we see how the going of Jesus to the mountain is favoured by it. Since the multitude followed the Lord on the beaten roads of the country, so it was easy in a mountainous district for Him, in withdrawing from their place of assembling, to go to the mountain, as in every Louse where there is a battlement one goes not to a battlement, but to the battlement. 19) That the going to the mountain always here means withdrawing from the people, besides the connection here and in Luke, is supported by Mark iii. 13 and John vi. 15, 20) The Evangelist Mark here relates inaccurately (iii. 18), inasmuch as he confounds together two occasions on which the people thronged around the Lord. But it is an inaccuracy easily explained, if Matthew allow the discourse to the people to be identified with that to the disciples, so that it appears as if the assembled multitude were the auditory who heard the Lord's first discourse. 21) ʻThe first word of His mouth is Blessed!—and again and again, Blessed!’—Stier, i. WS. 22) ʻTo translate πτωχοὶ with perfect exactness, we should use cgeni and mendici, to which it corresponds, as πένης to pauper.ʼ—Tholuck, 67. [See Trench's Synonyms of the New Testament (First Series), pp. 141-144. TB.] 23) ʻThen shall the lambs feed after their manner upon their pasture;’ Isa, v. 17.Stier, i, 106. 24) [ʻThe dross of the earth the meek do not inherit; the damnosa hæreditas of the earth’s pomps and vanities descends to others ; but all the true enjoyments, the wisdom, love, peace, and independence, which earth can bestow, are assured to the meek as in their meckness inherent.’—Henry Taylor, Notes from Life, 29.—ED.] 25) On the reciprocal relation of seeing God, and likeness to God, compare the admirable remarks of Tholuck, p. 95. 26) Ps. xiv. 1. When people are foolish, they are foolish in their heart. 27) The origin of the spiritual promise of seeing God proceeds from Eastern customs. Eastern kings kept themselves aloof from the view of their subjects ; hence beholding the countenance of the king was regarded by them as a peculiar favour and distinction. See Tholuck, p. 91, where what is essential in the spiritual application of this expression is admirably pointed out. 28) John x. 34; compare Ps. lxxxii. 6. 29) Rev. i. 6 30) Matt. xix. 23. 31) Without doubt Christians in this more definite sense are here called viol Οεοῦ. 32) On the great value attached to salt by the ancients, see Tholuck, 106. 33) Compare the quotation in Tholuck from Maundrell’s Travels, ‘In the valley of salt at Dschebal, some 16 miles from Aleppo, there is a declivity of twelve feet high which has been’ formed by the continual removal of the salt. I broke off a piece where the surface is exposed to the action of the rain, air, and sun ; and found that, although it contained the mica and particles of the salt, it had entirely lost the taste of salt. The inner portion, however, which was more joined to the rock, still retained the peculiar taste,ʼ 34) It has been often supposed that in these words Jesus alluded to the town of Safed ; but, according to Robinson, it is doubtful whether Safed was in existence in the time of Jesus. See Biblical Rescarehes, ii, 425. 35) See Tholuck, p. 114. 36) ἢ τούς προφήτας, The ἢ here is not to be taken as equivalent to ca, Among the Jews there were different ways of annulling the Old Covenant. The Sadducees annulled the prophets, the Essenes the law, the Pharisees in reality both the legal and prophetical portions, The ‘or’ refers to such contrarieties. Christ held the whole development sacred, and exhibited it complete on His higher standpoint. 37) See Tholuck, p. 121. Stier (i 136) explains this passage in a very beautiful and striking manner. 38) See Tholuck, p. 122. 39) The iota denotes the smallest Hebrew letter, י; but the little point or tittle, κεραῖαι, denotes a smaller stroke which distinguishes similar letters from one another, as ד from ר. And so figuratively the smallest part of the law. See ‘Tholuck, 132. 40) ʻἙως ἂν πάντα γένηται. The law has therefore two termini; one negative, and the other positive. The negative is the destruction of the old world form ; the positive is its realization in the new world form, 41) Tholuck says: ‘There is a fulfilling of the law which, because it is only a fulfilment of the letter, is really a transgression, according to the profound truth of the saying, Summum jus summa injuria ; and, on the other hand, there is a transgression of the letter which is essentially a fulfilment of the law.’ 42) We are here reminded of the contrast between the Peasant War and the Reformation ; between the Revolution and the Christian renovation of the world which is still to come. 43) It will be understood that, in taking a correct view of Christ's words, we are not to think of finding in thein a rectification of the Mosaic law. Christ certainly comes forward in contrast to Moses, but in that harmonious contrast which has for its base an organic connection, not in contradiction to him. See Olshausen, i, 199. 44) We read ό ὀργίζομενος with the addition εἰκῆ, not only because the authorities, according to Griesbach, are stronger for this reading than those which are against it, but especially because the connection appears to require this addition. ‘The εἰκῆ, must, at all events, denote a peculiar form, an outbreak of anger, by which it is characterized as being angry for a trifle, extravagantly, at random, “It has often been remarked in connection with this passage, that anger in itself may be a holy feeling, as we read of the wrath of God and of the anger of Christ. 45) ’Ἑνοχος ἔσται. He will be subject to that tribunal. The choice of expressions indicates that he is to be considered as one doomed to the sentence mentioned according to justice, not as really so to be sentenced, 46) As in ver. 21 mention is made in a definite sense of the Jewish inferior courts or district courts in criminal cases (which was preceded by a smaller court for civil causes), the expression here must refer to the same tribunal. 47) Racha is probably not to be derived from רֵיק ,רִיק in the sense of stupid. This word of reproach would probably stand highest in the first category : it describes the brother who belongs as a malefactor to the Sanhedrim, We would rather consider as correct the derivation from רָקַק, to spit upon, since it appears to have been a symbolical act to spit on persons who were condemned as heretics, Racha, according to the analogy of the lengthened imperative (see Ewald’s Grammar of the Hebrew Language, translated by Nicholson, p. 164), may be an interjection (Spit!), which might express the sentence of the judge condemning the heretic, which permitted the accuser to spit on the condemned, 48) The Jewish hell (Gehenna, from גֵּיא הִנּוֹם) is quite different from Sheol, or the kingdom of the dead. It was first of all the place of the execution which would be inflicted on a malefactor when his corpse was thrown into the valley of the sons of Hinnom, where from time to time the proscribed corpses were burnt. ‘This punishment marked a rejection continued in the other world, and hence was an image of damnation. In that valley the Hebrews once practised the horrible Moloch-worship (1 Kings xi. 7); hence King Josiah defiled it by causing corpses to be thrown there (2 Kings xxiii. 13, 14). See Tholuck. It is remarkable that the symbolical place of hell proceeded mediately from the Moloch-worship—the place of horror from the place of abomination. 49) We must regard it as decided that πρός designates the inward aim. Tholuck, p. 208. Therefore it is not the unpremeditated feeling that is here spoken of, but the intentional and conscious desire. Although the former is a sin, yet, as Luther expresses himself, it is like an evil thought without consent, not a deadly sin. Nevertheless it is a sin, but comprehended in the general forgiveness. See Tholuck, p. 209. According to the exact grammatical construction of the sentence, the desecration of marriage in conjugal intercourse by the designed excitement of sensual desire might be intended. 50) Hardly does the eye denote merely ʻthe organ of ἀκολάστως βλέπειν and the hand that of ἀναισχύντως ἄπτεσθει;ʼ for if so, why should the right eye and the right hand be specified? 51) Compare Dent. xxiv. 1 ; Matt. xix. 8. 52) Compare Matt, xxiii. 16. 53) Num. xxx. 3. 54) Num. xxx. 3. 55) Deut. vi. 10. 56) Exod. xxi. 24; Lev. xxiv. 20 57) Μὴ κολύσῃς, says Luke. He inverts the relation between cloak (ἱμάτιον) and coat (χιτών), because he had in his eye the violence of the robbery which must begin first of all with the cloak, while the litigious man would begin with the least valuable, and therefore lays claim to the coat. 58) On the meaning of the word ἀγγαρεύειν, see Tholuck, p. 273 [De Wette, Exeg. Handbuch]. 59) Lev. xix. 18. 60) That more private and contemptible persecution which ia carried on by threats and slander is probably intended by ἐπηρεάζειν, and the more violent and public by διωκειν. 61) See Stier, vol. i. p. 194 62) Tholuck, 293. 63) According to the reading δικαιοσύνη, vil. 1. In the Old Testament, almsgiving, ἐλεημοσύνη, proceeds from justice; in the New Testament it proceeds from love, the practical charité, from the believing charitas. 64) Tholuck, 305. 65) Although this is said of a chamber in a general sense, yet there may be a special reference to the upper apartment in a Hebrew house, the Alijah. See Tholuck, 306. 66) See Schleiennacher, Lukas, 172 ; Olshausen, Commentary, i. 217. Tholuck, p. 815, and Stier, i. 214, in an ingenious manner, give a twofold origin to the prayer, that Christ the first time exhibited the prayer to the people as an example how men should pray without vain repetitions; and at another time gave it to the disciples, at their request, as a form of prayer. That the disciples, before the Sermon on the Mount, requested the Lord to give them a form of prayer, other expositors also have supposed. 67) ʻAll the cries of the human heart, which ascend from earth to heaven, meet here in their fundamental notes.’—Stier, i. 213. 68) Comp. Stier, i. 227. 69) So probably may the obscure word έπιούσιος be explained : what corresponds to our nature, with a special reference to the super-substantial, therefore to the subjective, to the ideal bread of heaven; au exposition which, after the example of Jerome, is plainly given by Zwingli in his comment on Matthew, p. 236: Dum vero corpora nostra alimeuto quotidiauo cibat, non satis esse putemus; sedanimum intendamus altius et epiusion, hoc est super-substantialein petamus, plus de aniinoc cibo quam corporis solliciti. On the various interpretations, see Tholuck, p. 341. 70) Stier, 231. 71) If it is remarked that Christ could only communicate this petition to His disciples didactically, but could not offer it Himself (compare Tholuck, p. 353), yet it must not be overlooked that no one could feel as He did the sins of humanity, by means of the human sympathy in his heart, and pray for their forgiveness as the debt of the universal family of man. 72) Μὴ εἰσενέγκῃς ἡμᾶς εἰς has at all events this meaning, as not only the expression and the thonght in itself leads to it, but also the antithetical clause ἄλλά ῥῦέαι ἡμᾶς. 73) The greatness and clearness of this antithesis is decisive for regarding the two clauses as distinct petitions, though in the winged course of the prayer they are joined by the ἄλλά into a living unity. We reckon therefore, with Augustin, Seven petitions, The reckoning of six petitions, which has been customary, after Chrysostom, in the Reformed Church, and among the Arminians and Socinians (see Tholuck, pp. 827 and 363), overlooks the great difference and progress which exist between the thought of the sixth and that of the seventh petition. 74) Ῥύομαι, ‘properly, to draw a person, namely, out of danger; hence, in the current use of the word, to draw or snatch out of danger, i.e. to rescue, to save.’—Passow. 75) According to the whole connection of the petition, the expression ἀπὸ τοῦ πονηροῦ can in fact refer only to the whole sphere of πειρασμοί, of temptations, as Tholuck remarks, p, 364; so that the word is here construed as neuter, and denotes the sum-total of all evil, moral and physical. See Stier, i. 235. 76) The doxology is not only wanting in the parallel passage in Luke, but also in the principal Greek manuscripts as well as in the tradition of the oldest Latin fathers, See Tholuck, p. 365, It is no doubt of later origin, and added for liturgical use. In the Const. Apos. vii. 24, it appears in its first form, ὅτι σου ἔστιν ὴ βασιλεία εἰς αἰῶνας· Ἀμήν.. Olshansen, i. 217, For its biblical materials a reference has been made to 1 Chron, xxix. 11, We may find the germ of this liturgical amplification in 2 Tim. iv. 18, which Stier considers as a sign of the originality of the words. 77) See Stier, i. 240. ‘Whenever the Amen of the prayer is uttered, it anticipates the great universal Amen of all creation.’ 78) Compare Stier, i. 243. The Lord unsparingly condemns all affectation in its minutest form, and counsels His disciples, in order that they may more securely avoid this danger, to adopt as defence against it, where they have only to do with themselves in the sight of their Father m secret, a certain directly opposite dissimulation of face. 79) Strauss, i. 601; Tholuck, p. 376. 80) Matt, xxiii. 1 4. 81) Manns mortua The freedom from taxes, &c. 82) It is doubtful whether the word βρῶσις is not to be taken in the more general sense of eating, gnawing; although gold and silver in a literal sense do not rust, yet in a higher sense they may rust for their possessors. 83) Tholuck, p. 377. 84) Ἀπλοῦς. The opposite, πονηρός, appears to me to correspond to this word and ita meaning, and to denote a condition in which the eye deceives by seeing double. 85) On the meaning of this word, see vol. i. p. 504. 86) ʻAs the etymology of μεριμνᾶν expresses it. Tholuck, p. 384, 87) ’Πλικία probably here denotes neither age nor stature, but the full unfolding in the nature of the individual in every relation; his matured temporal appearance in general 88) The connection also here is by no means wanting. 89) In God s moral government, the unrighteous blow which I aim at another falls back upon myself. Compare Tholuck, 397. 90) So Tholuck (p. 405) explains ἅγιον after Herm. von der Hardt. 91) Tholuck has ingeniously remarked on the external resemblance between pearls and acorns. 92) ʻDogs and swine were often classed together in antiquity as unclean beasts.ʼ Tholuck, p. 401. Dogs and swine taken together may represent what is savage and wild in common human nature—the dogs, more especially the untrustworthy servile, the swine, the stupidly obstinate and savage. 93) On the relation of this maxim to similar expressions in heathen and philosophical writings, compare Tholuck, p. 412. Moreover, this precept of Christ is not so merely formal that every one can bring into it whatever he likes, and consequently the meaning would depend on the character of the person addressed. Whoever is induced to regulate his expectations on the part of mankind by his performances towards it, will be induced to abjure selfishness (Egoismus), and to live for mankind. 94) The door certainly stands at the head of the way, and marks the decision, while the way marks the carrying out the decision. 95) ʻἈκανθαι or ἄκανθα is the generic term for all thorn-plants, the best of which is the buckthorn אָטָד, which bears small blackberries similar to those of the vine; the τρίβολοι have a flower which might be likened to a fig. Tholuck, 426. 96) Compare Ps. cxxvi. 97) ʻThe road passes down to Hattin on the west of the Tell; as we approached, we turned off from the path towards the right, in order to ascend the eastern horn, As seen on this side, the Tell or mountain is merely a low ridge some 30 or 40 feet in height, and not 10 minutes in length from E. to W. At its eastern end is an elevated point or horn, perhaps 60 feet above the plain, and at the western end another, not so high; these give to the ridge at a distance the appearance of a saddle, and are called Kurûn Hattin, “Horns of Hatin.” But the singularity of this ridge is, that on reaching the top, you find that it lies along the very border of the great southern plain, where this latter sinks off at once by a precipitous offset to the lower plain of Hattin, from which the northern side of the Tell rises very steeply, not much less than 400 feet. . . . The summit of the eastern horn is a little circular plain, and the top of the lower ridge between the two horns is also flattened to a plain, The whole mountain is of limestone,’—Robinson, ii. 370. 98) ‘What a battlefield round about this mountain of Beatitudes and about Nazareth!’ —K. v. Raumer, Palest. pp. 87,41. 1n 1799 Bonaparte with 3000 men defeated 25,000 Turks in the plain of Jezreel. 99) Ἔμβριμησάμειός αὐτῷ εὐθέως ἐξέβαλεν αὐτόν. 100) Μηδενὶ μηδὲν, Mark 1:44. On the different occasions of similar prohibitions, see Olshausen, Olshausen thinks that in this instance the injunction had merely a pedagogical significance for the cured leper, “since the healing was wrought in the presence of many. But the connection seems rather to indicate that the act of healing was not wrought in the presence of many. 101) See Lev. xiii, ‘The expression εἰς μαρτύριον αι’τοῖς is so to be understood that the purified person, by the offering which he brought after his recognition on the part of the priest, obtained from the priesthood a legal attestation of his purity. 102) Ὥστε μηκέι·ι αὐτὸν δύνασθαι φανερῶς εἰς πόλιν εἰσελθεῖν.
|