By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE TIME OF JESUS APPEARING AND DISAPPEARING AMID THE PERSECUTIONS OF HIS MORTAL ENEMIES.
Section XXVIII
Christ receiving publicans and
sinners. the communion existing
among the disciples of christ
(Mat 18:12-35. Luk 15:1-17:10)
The severe requirement which
Jesus had made of His followers
hindered not that especially
many publicans and sinners, who
in part had no doubt already for
some while regarded Him with
reverence, now associated
themselves with His avowed
followers. For among them were
many who, through the distress
and curse brought upon them by
their former course of life, had
in a right sense become poor,
and therefore were able to
follow the Redeemer with a
spirit of true self-surrender.
But if the Pharisees had
previously censured the
intercourse which Jesus held
with publicans and sinners, they
would be sure to seize with
avidity this opportunity of
blackening Him to the populace
more than ever. A great train of
publicans and sinners,—that was
what appeared to them to be the
main constituent of His
spiritual gains, the Church
which He was founding. The
Pharisees could not help
whispering against Him behind
His back, as He travelled
through the country attended by
such a following, and was seen
eating and drinking with them.
These were the savoury elements
(as they might perhaps express
themselves) out of which He
appeared to be forming His new
kingdom of heaven! It is these
ill-natured criticisms that we
have to thank for those noble
parables, in which Jesus
illustrated the power of divine
grace seeking the recovery of
sinners.
Stroke after stroke these
parables followed one another,
for the purpose of beating down
to the very dust the spirit of
self-righteousness, of spiritual
haughtiness, and of unloving
contempt for sinners; and of
unveiling from every side the
glory of redeeming grace. First,
Jesus set forth the parable of
the lost sheep, then that of the
lost piece of silver, and
lastly, that of the lost son.
These great exhibitions of
redeeming mercy we have
considered already.
These parables, however, were
not merely directed against the
uncompassionate spirit of the
Pharisees in itself, but also
against the way in which they,
in this spirit, carried out
church discipline,—the way in
which they loaded for ever
fallen sinners, publicans and
such like people, at least with
the excommunication of contempt
and of exclusion from all
intercourse in private life. And
as these representations were
designed to portray the
redeeming grace of God and the
compassions of the great
Shepherd, so were they also
meant to impress upon the
disciples their highest duty
viewed as members of the
congregation, namely, the active
exercise of this compassion. The
disciples were to learn to
follow this spirit of compassion
in carrying out the jurisdiction
of the Christian society, the
discipline of the Church, with a
view to the salvation of souls.
For verily grace will fain
operate not merely outside and
over the Church, but most
especially also through the
medium of the Church. She will,
however, do her redeeming work
and build her kingdom through
the Church, as she does also in
the leading of men’s destinies
in general, in a twofold form:
on the one hand, through the
discipline of punishment; and on
the other, through compassion
which seeks to raise up the
fallen. For where discipline is
wanting, there compassion
degenerates into carnal and
corrupting indifference; and
where compassion is wanting,
there discipline becomes a
condemning severity which works
no salvation.
The Gospel of Matthew (18:12,
&c.) makes it quite clear to our
mind that the principles which
Jesus laid down on this subject
were immediately connected with
the three parables above
mentioned; although in Luke they
appear separated from them by
other matters.
Jesus, then, will not have His
disciples imagine that the
loving-kindness which He puts
into contrast with the
censorious and excommunicating
spirit of Pharisaism excludes
all church discipline. He
therefore, immediately after
those parables, indicates in a
particular and distinct manner
the principles of action which
they should follow in such
discipline. We are not, it is
true, to regard these rules as
definite prescriptions of law;
but surely, on the other hand,
we are to look upon them as
outlines instinct with the
spirit of life, according to
which the Church has to direct
its proceedings. With an utter
misconception of the real
circumstances under which Christ
spoke these words, some have set
up the view, that what is here
said is in no way intended to
regulate the proceedings of the
Christian congregation, and that
the Church to which Christ here
refers is the synagogue; and
that He is only directing His
hearers how, as members of the
synagogue, they should comport
themselves in the case which is
here specified. We have seen
that the disciples of Christ
were already forming a Church of
Christ, and had already acquired
a church-consciousness, namely,
from the time of Peter’s
confession that Jesus was the
Christ. Further, we must not
overlook the fact, that Jesus is
here speaking of a new
church-life, which His disciples
were to actualize in contrast
with that olden church-life
which the Pharisees had the
management of. Moreover, Jesus
Himself was, beyond doubt,
already labouring under the
excommunication of the synagogue
of the first degree;
excommunication had already been
threatened against His adherents
in general, and been carried out
in individual instances; and
Jesus was even now on His way to
Jerusalem with the foresight
that there He should be put to
death without the camp (Heb
13:13), that is, under the
heaviest form of
excommunication. How could it
then occur to Him just now to
set about pouring His new wine
into the old bottle of the
Jewish synagogue-system, or
patching the rent garment of
that old system with His
regulations? But, in fact, these
would be strange regulations for
Christ to lay down, of which it
should be said, They are adapted
for the synagogue of the Jews,
not for the congregation of
Christians.
We have, therefore, here
outlines of the Christian
church-system. First and
foremost, a healthy church-life
must be based upon pure
brotherly fidelity subsisting
among Christians in their
private intercourse. The
Christian is to ‘rebuke his
brother who has sinned against
him;’ that is, in any sin of his
brother which especially gives
him offence, he must exercise
faithfulness towards him by
calling him to account when no
one else is present; and be
sincerely glad if by these means
he rescues him, if he again
gains the brother in him. But if
the other will not remove the
offence, then a second measure
must be adopted: he must rebuke
him before one or two witnesses.
And not till the offender has
also shown his contempt for
these witnesses of his bad
conduct, is information thereof
to be laid before the Church.
The matter is therefore to be
kept for a long while as a
painful secret among small
parties of brethren, and only in
the third instance to be brought
before the Church. The Church
itself, further, shall not at
once exclude the offending
member, but shall first give him
a hearing and exhort him: not
till he has also despised the
voice of the Church is he to be
excluded. He is to be excluded
by having church privileges
withdrawn from him, and by being
put into the category of
heathens and publicans; that is,
no doubt, in the present case,
of those who have not yet been
received into the communion, and
of those who have again been
excluded from it. The
congregation’s sense of its own honour, and its
honour itself,
require that it shall not
tolerate in the midst of its
members and fellowship an
insolent gainsaying of its
doctrines, principles, and
morals; and this is required
likewise by love and
faithfulness towards him who is
guilty of this gainsaying; and
therefore, if he persists in his
course, he must be
excommunicated. But the love of
the congregation also requires
that one who is separated from
it shall not be degraded further
than by being put into that
class out of which he was
originally taken; out of which
proselytes are always gladly
received; out of which he
himself will also be gladly
received if he repents. Above
all things, however,
righteousness requires that in
this position without the Church
he shall be left alone, and not
be interfered with, just as the
publican and the heathen man is.
Therewith every kind of civil
disqualification or ill-usage of
the excluded man, on the part of
the Christian congregation, is
decidedly condemned.1 That the
words of Christ refer to church
discipline is made further plain
by the addition, ‘Verily I say
unto you, Whatever ye shall bind
upon earth shall be bound in
heaven, and whatever ye shall
loose upon earth shall be loosed
in heaven.’ We have already seen
the meaning of these words; here
we learn that the authority
which Peter first received as
being the first confessor of the
Church’s faith, Jesus has
imparted to all of His
disciples. Nay, He seems here
almost to mark it as a necessary
requirement for true church
discipline, that it shall be
carried through by a number of
persons acting in one spirit,
since He goes on to say how His
Father in heaven will grant
anything for which two of them
shall pray with complete oneness
of heart. Jesus foresaw in
spirit that the power of church
discipline which He was
imparting to His disciples might
very possibly in future times,
by less spiritually-minded
administrators of the
congregation, be very greatly
misunderstood, might be taken
away from the congregation, and
be misused in a hierarchical
spirit. Therefore, against the
external order of the
congregation viewed in its
possible one-sidedness, He
created a counterpoise by
constituting the highest freedom
for the congregation, in the
words already mentioned: ‘Again
I say unto you, If two of you in
perfect agreement shall become
one’ (therefore form a society
in this oneness) ‘in relation to
any matter which they shall pray
for, it shall be done for them
by My Father which is in
heaven.’
Perfect unanimity in two persons
is a proof that they have become
one in their relations to the
eternal world. This perfect
certainty of Christ, that it is
only in what is eternal that two
hearts can completely embrace
each other, gives evidence of
how He on this point also viewed
life to its very deepest bottom.
His eye discerns, therefore, in
all uniting together of bad men,
and in all uniting together of
men in what is bad, or what even
is only vain or fanatical, a
lurking disunion. It may be so,
that in activities connected
with some association, one man
acts for thousands, and that
thousands seem to be acting with
him, while yet there shall not
be even two individuals who are
at bottom working together in
the oneness of the spirit of
prayer or of the will of Christ.
But where perfectly pure union
really is established between
two or three in the name of
Christ, ‘there also is Christ
really in the midst of them;’
for it is only in pure organic
relation to Him, in the spirit
of His life, that they could
thus have become one. Every
Christian union, therefore,
which would fain effect some
object worthy of Christian
desire for which it can pray,
has the assurance given to it
that it shall attain its object.
Nay, not only shall free
independent associations admit
of being formed in this sense;
even every church shall be
capable of exhibiting itself as
a little union of two or three
believers. If only they are
really gathered together in His
name, in the living recognition
of His personality, and if only
they have really the true union
impulse (the genuine sentiment
of catholicity) which belongs to
genuine disciples, impelling
them to enlarge their number
from twos to threes, and not the
morose, separatists impulse to
split themselves up from threes
into twos, and so on
indefinitely, then Christ will
be in their midst. And if He is
in their midst, then there is
wanting to them neither the High
Priest, nor the Bishop, nor the
Preacher: He Himself is all that
to them in the highest sense.
Thus He makes the catholicity of
true disciple-hearts, that is,
their oneness manifesting itself
socially, under the impulse of
prayer for the realization of
objects connected with His
kingdom, to be the most
characteristic distinction of
His Church. And in this way
Christ has appointed over
against the spiritual guardians
of His nascent Church an
everlasting counterpoise of
guardianship, in the liberty
which He has given to the
genuine children of His Spirit,
whenever their fidelity to Him,
or the deliverance of their
souls in the keeping of a good
conscience, is at stake, to meet
together in His name, though it
be only in twos or in threes.
It looks almost as if Peter had
in some measure not attended to
the last words;2 for he reverts
to the command of Christ, that a
brother should be forgiven if,
upon the first step in the
manifestation of the spirit of
discipline, or in one of the
subsequent ones, when his fault
is brought before him privately,
he humbles himself to ask
forgiveness. It might perhaps
seem to the disciple as if this
command of Christ required to be
limited by some closer
prescription; because else a lax
and hypocritical Christian would
be in a condition to abuse the placability of his injured
brother by a continual renewal
of his offences or errors. As
Peter was to be the first
administrator of these
regulations which Christ was
laying down, it might seem a
laudable zeal on his part to ask
for some more exact instructions
for his guidance in
administering church discipline.
He asked whether it was not
enough if it were laid down as a
rule, that one should forgive
his brother, say, up to the
seventh time. He might think
that in such a rule he had
discovered the qualification
which would make all right; that
it contained an expression of
the largest forgiving love, of
the highest degree of kindness
in the exercise of moral
discipline.3 But what a look may
we suppose the Lord turned upon
His disciple as in this way he
sought to calculate, and by
exact law fix the measure of
forgiveness, while He answered,
‘Not, I say unto thee, unto the
seventh time, but unto the
seventy times seventh time!’ In
the schooling of compassionate
mercy He makes a great erasure
in the disciple’s figures. With
Peter’s small number He
contrasted a large one standing
as a symbol for infinity; with a
calculating love, the large
spirit of boundless compassion.
It is true, Peter with his
number of seven had
unconsciously chosen the number
which might express a perfect
work of the Spirit; a
willingness to forgive one’s
brother seven times might be an
expression denoting that the
reconcilable brother has at
least overcome himself, that he
has quelled the impulses of
revenge in his bosom. But when
the Lord bids us to forgive our
brother seventy times seven
times, He requires a victory of reconcilableness in which we are
to overcome not only ourselves
but also the world, or our
brother in his going astray.
Hereupon He gave them the
parable of the servant who took
his fellow-servant by the throat
who owed him a hundred denarii,
although his lord had remitted
to him a debt of ten thousand
talents, and of the retribution
which fell upon this
hard-hearted man; closing with
the solemn words, ‘So also will
My Father who is in heaven do
unto you, if ye forgive not each
one his brother, and that too
from the heart.’
The Evangelist Luke introduces
Christ’s direction, that we
should be ready to forgive a
brother, in another utterance
which is too significant for us
to regard it merely as another
version of that earlier one
(17:3, 4). A brother’s sin
should ever be followed by
faithful brotherly rebuke; and
his repentance by forgiveness,
even if he should need
forgiveness seven times in one
day. The disciples were greatly
humbled by this direction. They
felt that they could not forgive
thus; and they therefore prayed
the Lord to add to His command
the gift of faith also (in which
alone they would be able to fulfil it). Here certainly the
thing aimed at was the
eradication of a selfish desire
for revenge which lies
exceedingly deep in our nature;
yet they should nevertheless not
have despaired as to the
possibility of its being
eradicated. ‘If ye have faith
only (says Jesus in reply) as a
grain of mustard-seed, and say
to this mulberry-tree, Be thou
uprooted, and be thou planted in
the sea, it shall obey you.’ If
they will only in faith bring
their heart into sincere union
with God, then they shall
succeed in hurling the
deeply-rooted growth of
irreconcilableness out of their
inmost being into the sea (of
kindness) in which it must
expire. Next, however, He
appears to mean to inform them
of a very wholesome means
whereby they can greatly
facilitate their deliverance
from all fanatical harshness in
the service of the kingdom of
God. They should merely make it
quite clear to their own minds,
how very well their heavenly
Master can dispense with their
work and service. They should
look at the relation in which a
servant in earthly service
stands to his master. The
servant comes home (say) from
ploughing or from the pasture.
He has been hard at work; but
his master seems hardly to take
account of it. He is far from
receiving him with anything like
excitement or marks of
particular respect, or from
inviting him in with the words,
‘Come and sit down at table.’
Rather, he forthwith uses the
farm-servant as also a
house-servant. The other must
get his meal for him, must gird
himself, and wait upon him at
table; and then, when the master
has himself eat and drunk, the
servant may also eat and drink,
without having further to expect
from his master any especial
thanks for his service. In these
relations of earthly service is
mirrored the truth, that the
Eternal God receives the
faithful services of His
servants with heavenly calmness,
as something which is their
absolute duty. The disciples
must look upwards to their
Master in heaven, that they may
be struck by the infinitely calm
aspect with which He looks down
upon their services. Then will
the spirit of that divine aspect
calm them in their work even to
their innermost soul, will
humble them, and purify their
zeal from the unclean elements
of fanaticism. The result,
however, of this will be that,
with the most perfect calmness
of spirit, they will work on.
Yet their joy in God’s service
will not in consequence
diminish, but be made perfect.
And in the same measure as they
approach the goal of doing their
whole duty, will the humility
increase with which they will be
able to say, We are unprofitable
servants! We have done that
which we were bound to do! That
will be the very perfection of
their service, that they
acknowledge how wholly all their
powers belong to the Lord, how
absolutely their work belongs to
the very existence of their
lives, and how fully He can
dispense with their service, and
replace it by that of others.
The more, however, that they
find that He can dispense with
them as servants, so much the
more will they gain the
assurance that they are
indispensable to Him as
children.
But the disciples of Jesus
needed, at this time, not merely
to be helped forward in
readiness to exercise Christian
compassion, shown in receiving
into their society their
penitent brethren (so many of
whom were now approaching them
in the persons of publicans and
sinners); the Lord also now
found it necessary to train them
in more decided terms to
cheerfulness in devoting their
possessions to the need of their
poorer partners and companions.
They now behoved to begin, in
the spirit of the kingdom of
heaven, to step forth out of the
old stiff world of locked-up
gains and possessions, and in
free-hearted love to admit their
brethren to share in that which
the Lord had given to
themselves. No doubt this
transition into the new world of
love could only be accomplished
gradually, in a cautious
following out of genuine
spontaneous impulse: a community
of goods enforced by law was a
thing to which the Lord could
not, and would not bind them;
for such a community of property
would necessarily, in the most
glaring manner, contradict the
spirit of freedom and of
personal rights. Nevertheless it
behoved them now to make a
decided move forward towards
that elevated position on which,
as we learn from the Acts, they
afterwards stood, when every one
held all that he possessed as
available for the Church in
general. For as, on the one
hand, through the greater
numbers that were travelling in
the train of Jesus, many
occasions would arise requiring
the use of means, so, on the
other, it was necessary also
that the disciples should, in
some measure, be loosened from
their old possessions, in order
that they might be more
completely girded for their
apostolic wandering through the
wide world. They should,
therefore, in the management of
their property, at once begin to
be unfaithful to the old
World-and-Money Lord, Mammon,
whose stewards even they had
more or less been,—in other
words, to abandon the principle
of employing their property in
the interests of
selfishness,—and thenceforward
employ their old possessions in subserviency to the new
tendency, which was prompting
them fully to pass over into the
kingdom of compassionate love
even in their outward
activities. With this meaning,
Jesus delivered to them the
parable of the Unjust Steward.
They themselves, as unjust
stewards in the service of
Mammon, the genius of worldly
gain, should prove unfaithful to
their master, and should begin
to lay out their substance for
the advantage of their poorer
brethren, in order that they
might be admitted by these
poorer brethren to a
participation in those houses
which stand ready prepared for
these in that other world, the
new world of the kingdom of God,
of love, of heaven. They should
gain for themselves the
privileges of citizens in the
kingdom of mercifulness, and,
with a view thereto, should
cheerfully sacrifice any
particular claims which they
might possess in the kingdom of
self-interest. (See above, vol.
i. p. 504.)
The Lord shows to His disciples
that the children of this world
are, in this matter of caring
for their future welfare, wiser
in their way than the children
of light, since they manage to
secure for themselves
friendships against the time of
need.
And then He lays down the maxim:
‘He that is faithful in that
which is least, is faithful also
in that which is important; and
he that is unrighteous in that
which is least, is unrighteous
in that which is important.’
This little thing in which they
behove to become faithful to
God, in the very act of their
becoming unfaithful to Mammon,
is earthly property; the thing
of moment, wherein they shall
thereafter prove their fidelity,
is their heavenly inheritance.
In two respects is earthly
property as the thing which is
least, put in contrast with
heavenly property as that which
is of moment. The former is the
deceitful (‘unrighteous’)
Mammon, the other is the real
good (τὸ ἀληθινόν); the former
is alien in character [‘another
man’s,’ ἀλλότριον], not what the
inner being of man can recognize
as its own and suited to it,
while the other is the good
which answers to his being,
which makes his inward being
rich. These contrasts form the
basis of the two great questions
of Christ, which in sense run
thus:
If ye do not remain faithful to
God and to charity in the
employment of the small change
of this world, which is so
deceptive in its character, how
can ye be entrusted with the
essential goods of the eternal
world, the treasures of the
kingdom of heaven? And if ye are
not faithful in the application
of that which is alien to your
own being, and which does not at
bottom affect your inward
nature, how can ye be intrusted
with that which answers to your
most proper nature, in which
your heavenly inheritance is to
consist?
If selfishness misuses earthly
goods in the spirit of greed, it
would certainly misuse those of
an essential character to
gratify the greed of honour. If
the property which belongs not
to his own proper being he will
yet morbidly and spasmodically
seek to incorporate with that
being, how much more will he be
inclined, in reference to the
things which really should
constitute his most proper
life—the goods of the Spirit, to
have them for himself in a false
way, with pride and with an
unloving spirit towards his
brethren, and thereby again
spoil them? Therefore the
avaricious man will not be
entrusted with real riches: he
is not recognized as a worthy
child in his Father’s house; he
comes not to the realization of
the inheritance which was
appointed for him; he does not
attain to the mastery of his
being in the free spirit of
love, but remains set under the
guardianship of coercion and
censorship.
The Lord’s discourse to His
disciples closes, according to
the Evangelist, with the
utterance which we have already
contemplated (Mat 6:24), that we
‘cannot serve God and Mammon’
together. This dictum is of a
kind that might well have been
repeated by Christ more than
once.
While Jesus was giving these
exhortations there were
Pharisees present; men who, as a
rule, were attached to money.
They thought they discovered
something ridiculous in His
words; and they gave indications
of their contempt by signs of
scorn. Without doubt, they
thought they were giving the
very best solution to the
problem, how one can lead a holy
life and at the same time
carefully keep his riches,
simply by making suitable
payments out of his treasures in
the form of temple-gifts and of
alms. But not with impunity did
they dare to gainsay the
self-sacrificing spirit of
brotherly fidelity in which
Christ had been speaking. Yes,
said Jesus, ‘ye are they who
justify yourselves before men;
but God knoweth your hearts.’
Men are dazzled by outward show;
but the glances of God pierce
through that show. ‘For what is
highly esteemed with men is
abomination before God.’ What in
the eyes of the world is highly
esteemed, that, as a rule, has
in two ways become ripe for
destruction: first, through the
internal worm of pride, which
has driven it so high aloft into
that most unsound atmosphere of
being in which it wears so
dazzling an aspect, and then,
because through the working of
its dazzling enchantments it has
become the idol of the blind
multitude. Thus it was with
Pharisaism; it had become ripe
for judgment. And the judgment
was already showing itself in
the fact, that now since the
days of John the Baptist the
Gospel had come forth into the
world. The Lord referred them to
the contrast presented by the
Gospel as compared with
Pharisaism. The Evangelist
represents Him as exhibiting, as
a proof of the greatness of this
contrast, the New Testament law
of marriage, because it stands
in such sharp opposition to
theirs.4 It is very conceivable
that in such a case, when Jesus
was seeking to exhibit the
contrast between His Gospel and
the doctrine of the Pharisees,
He may have adduced in proof
more than one example of the
kind. At last, however, in the
parable of the Rich Man and
Lazarus, He portrays to them the
judgment which in the future
world awaits the rich man who
will not have compassion upon
the poor.
───♦───
Notes
1. Schneckenburger (p. 58) again
finds in Luk 16:13, Strauss in
ver. 17 of the same chapter, an
instance of what is called
lexical connection.
2. Stier observes that Christ’s
word, that one should forgive
his brother seventy times seven
times, reminds us in a
significant manner of Lamech’s
word in Gen 4:23.
|
|
1) This prescription of Christ, by virtue of which one who is excommunicated is, as a heathen man and a publican, as a member of some other confession, religion, or irreligion, to be left alone, has been disregarded by the Roman Catholic Church in the most flagrant manner. Cp. Stier, ii. 396. 2) Cp. Stier. ii. 402. 3) ʻIn the Talmud it was determined, that a man was to be forgiven his sin up to the third time, but not to a fourth, according to Amos i. 3, ii. 6 ; Job xxxiii. 29, 30 [Hebr.]. Stier, ii. 402. [Lightfoot (Hor. Heb. in loc.) quotes, They pardon a man once that sins against another; secondly, they pardon him ; thirdly, they pardon him; fourthly, they do not pardon him. ED.] 4) On the explanations of this passage given by Olshausen and Schleiermacher, see Strauss, i. p. 609.
|