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 XXXII
the return of the seventy. the
narrow-hearted lawyer and the
good Samaritan
(Luk 10:17-37)
The Evangelist Luke has given
the account of the return of the
Seventy in immediate connection
with his account of their
sending forth. We therefore
cannot be sure when or where
they again joined Jesus. The
probability is, that they did so
in Perea, or even perhaps
earlier, as He was crossing the
Jordan. At all events, according
to Matthew and Mark, Jesus seems
to have made His appearance in
Perea, attended at once by a
large train of followers. This
train, however, for the most
part at least, consisted of
crowds flocking after Him, on
whom He was working miracles of
healing.
In respect to the result of the
mission of these Seventy, we
have a more particular account
of it than in reference to the
first mission of the twelve
apostles. They came back with
minds full of joy. Jesus had
only in general imparted to them
the gift of healing the sick;
but they had made bold to
undertake to deal also with
those possessed with devils; and
now in joyful excitement they
were able to report, ‘Lord, even
the devils are subject to us in
Thy name!’ This, in their own
private opinion, appeared the
most important point of all.
The Lord allays their great
excitement of mind in reference
to the small cures of demoniacs
which they had been able to
accomplish, by beginning to tell
them, which He does with
profound calmness, of the great
expulsion of demons which long
before He had Himself achieved
without any loud expressions of
exultation on the occasion. Even
now, however, He speaks of it in
so mysterious a manner, that it
hardly transpires what part He
had Himself taken in the
achievement, although it was
just that great victory over the
prince of darkness to which they
owed the little successes which
they were able to gain in
contending against the rabble
spirits of that kingdom. ‘I saw
Satan like lightning fall from
heaven.’ This mysterious word
cannot be referred to any one
particular vision accorded to
Jesus; for the whole character
of His life was marked by His
having a continuous insight into
the nature of things, which His
eye evermore looked into as into
a deep, before Him perfectly
transparent and clear.1 Neither
can it refer to the antemundane
punishment of Satan, his fall
and expulsion from the angelic
kingdom; for therewith Satan as
the tempter of man was not yet
stricken and overcome. Rather it
relates to that victory of
Christ which had completely
unmasked him and, for what
concerns spiritual relations,
already stricken him. The
spiritual crisis of Christ’s
victory over Satan is formed by
the fact that Christ withstood
his temptation in the
wilderness. When Satan
approached Him, he had entered
into the heaven of Christ’s
spiritual exaltation; into that
sphere in which Christ’s
consciousness and spiritual
objects without Him were
influencing each other; into the
circle of heavenly spirits. In
order to tempt the first man,
Satan had behoved to creep into
paradise; for the first man was
in paradise. But in order to
tempt the Second Man, he had
behoved to creep into heaven,
and to assume the form of an
angel in light; for the Second
Man was in heaven (Joh 3:13). He
had appropriated the world’s
ideal of the Messiah, the
world’s noblest forms of
heavenly things, and made the
same a temptation of Christ.
But with Christ’s word of
rebuke, ‘Get thee away from Me,
Satan!’ Satan had been cast
forth from that heavenly sphere
to which Christ and Christ’s
people belong. Like lightning
had he fallen to the earth,
towards the bottomless abyss,
judged and annihilated in his
highest power, in the
enchantments of his sham
ideality. And ever since, he
continues only in his judged
being as dragon of the earth, as
prince of unmasked wickedness,
and in the brood of spiritual
snakes and scorpions. The
lightning of snakelike light, at
its fall to the earth, dissolved
into dark gloomy snakes with
lightning-like darting and with
sinister gleam,2 into scorpions
which suddenly spring forward
and slily wound, into a brood of
evil, whose bites and stings are
dangerous lightnings of death,
and which finds the truest
expression of its nature in the
poisonous reptiles of the earth.
And on this account, because
Jesus has thus, in the great
spiritual conflict, vanquished
and judged the great demon, the
disciples are enabled in the
superior might of His name to
overcome the lesser demons, as
they in their prince are
stricken with him. That Christ
in this sense grounds their
successes upon His work; that in
the words, I saw Satan like
lightning fall from heaven, He
speaks of a victory which He had
achieved; appears also from the
continuation of His discourse:
‘Behold, I give you power to
trample upon serpents and
scorpions, and upon all the
might of the enemy; and nothing
shall in any wise hurt you.’3 In
faith they shall have this world
of Satan, with all its brood, as
a conquered world beneath them,
and tread down their old fears
and terrors in the confidence
that they shall do them no hurt.
Therefore also it was not in
these successful exorcisms that
they should find the proper
source of their joy. And that
for two reasons. In the first
place, because He Himself had
with the archdemon conquered
also the lesser demons; because
they therefore were in danger of
arrogating to themselves an
honour which did not belong to
them; and because as His
disciples they already had this
world of dark tricks and
mischiefs subject and under
their feet. And in the second
place, because the joy on
account of the trampling under
of serpents and scorpions does
not carry with it that substance
of heavenly blessedness which
men needs, and which is actually
assigned to the disciple. This
real blessing is rather found in
knowing himself to have been
drawn up into the kingdom of
love, in knowing himself in the
eternal faithfulness of God
eternally beloved, rescued, and
reconciled. To this source of
joy which properly belongs to
the Christian, the realization
of which does not excite, but
calms—does not puff up, but
humbles and sanctifies—does not
intoxicate and imperil, but
gives sobriety and safety,—to
this Christ points the attention
of His excited disciples by
adding: ‘Howbeit in this rejoice
not, that the devils are subject
unto you; but rather rejoice
because your names are written
in heaven.’4 Before all things
they are inscribed upon the hand
of God, upon the memory of
Christ; but they are inscribed
also upon the fellowship and
love of all good spirits in all
the realms of blessedness. And
this heavenly friendship of God
and of all good spirits behoves
to be their proper blessedness,
and not their triumph over the
unblessed spirits of the pit.
The excitement of this latter
triumph might perhaps gradually
make themselves again unblest;
whilst it is the peace which
belongs to this fellowship of
love which establishes their
victory over the brood of
darkness, and makes it
everlasting.
Although Jesus found cause for
warning the Seventy against
self-exaltation and false
self-bewilderment in estimating
their relations to demons, yet
in the exultation with which
they returned for the victories
which they had achieved, He
Himself found a great occasion
for joy. The freshness and
simplicity of faith with which
these weaker disciples had set
themselves to work in their
calling, and its noble results,
opened to His foreseeing eye a
great vista in all those
victories which His kingdom was
destined to win, first in the
hearts of the simple, the
little, and the babes, and then
through them in the world. The
foresight of this gave Him an
hour of festal rejoicing. ‘His
soul sprung aloft’ (ἠγαλλιάσατο),
says the Evangelist. It might be
heard in His prayer, how richly
these new exhilarating
experiences comforted Him for
those sorrowful ones which He
had at last had in Galilee; and
this reference, as we learn from
the intimation of Matthew which
has been mentioned, got to be so
important in the eyes of the
disciples, that they regarded
the words which their Master now
uttered as an answer to all the
questions raised by the sorrow
which in the closing period of
His ministry had stirred their
hearts. ‘I hail it with
acceptance, and praise to Thee,
Father, Lord of heaven and
earth, that Thou hast hid these
things’ (the word and power of
the Gospel) ‘from the wise and
understanding, and hast revealed
them to babes. Even so, Father,
for so it seemed good before
Thee.’ What presents itself to
the spirit of the Father as
well-pleasing, that Christ will
also proclaim as well-pleasing
to His own heart; even though it
infer the deepest sufferings for
Him. It is, however, thoroughly
clear to Him why the Father so
disposes things. First, He is
speaking of men who are wise and
understanding apart from Him, to
His face, and in opposition to
Him; and therewith is their
wisdom judged; for them the
Father has veiled the divine
wisdom of Christ with the
appearance of folly. Next, He is
speaking of babes, who feel and
comfort themselves as such in
the presence of the riches of
Christ’s grace and truth: to
them the Father has manifested
the meaning of the lofty
mysteries which belong to His
heaven as intelligible truths
which the understanding of
children can make their own.
Thus the kingdom of the
fellow-heirs of Christ forms
itself out of babes who receive
illumination in the mystery of
the highest life: the kingdom of
His adversaries, out of the wise
and understanding,—those learned
in the Scriptures, and
enlightened spirits, who in all
Christ’s thoughts relative to
His kingdom find nothing but
darkness. But nevertheless, let
it not be fancied that He has
had given to Him only the
government over one part of
mankind. ‘All things,’ He says
distinctly, ‘are given to Me by
My Father.’ His authority and
power, therefore, extend over
all the world.
But yet this power of His is as
profoundly mysterious and
noiseless as His being is. No
man knows it; for ‘no man knows
who the Son is, but only the
Father.’ The Father alone is
quite acquainted with the Son,
with that most wondrous mystery
of life in which the whole world
is made and included. But yet
many believe that they know the
Father well, who misunderstand,
yea, reject the Son. Therefore
He goes on: ‘No man knows who
the Father is, but only the Son,
and he to whom the Son will
reveal it.’
Only through the Father can we
be acquainted with the being of
the Son; a truth which they
would do well to consider, who
slight the revelations of the
Father, the notices which the
Father gives, in creation, in
the fortunes of the world, and
the world’s life, and especially
in the world’s inward being. And
only through the revelations of
the Son can we become acquainted
with the Father; a truth which
they especially should take to
heart, who think they can come
to know the Father without this
revelation through the Son,
through the life and word of
Christ, through the Spirit and
Church of Christ.
This glorification of the Father
through the Son, and of the Son
through the Father, was, above
all things, now being imparted
to the circle of disciples who
surrounded Jesus. Therefore He
addressed His word to them in
especial, and proceeded to
invite them to take part in His
joy, by pronouncing His blessing
upon them: ‘Happy are the eyes
which see the things which ye
see; for I say unto you, many
prophets and kings would have
been glad to see the things
which ye see, and have not seen
them, and to hear the things
which ye hear, and have not
heard them.’
Amid this benediction did the
Seventy return into the circle
of the nascent Church which now
surrounded the Lord. This Church
was probably around Him when He
went up to the feast of
Dedication, which was now near.
Subsequently many of them may
have returned again into
Galilee. But at His last entry
into Jerusalem they no doubt are
again near Him; and after His
resurrection we find its members
forming a distinct association
(Act 1:15).
It seemed to the disciples very
strange (καὶ ἰδού), that a
lawyer, a divine learned in the
Scriptures, should stupidly and
boldly make use of the occasion
furnished by Christ’s discourse
with His disciples, to ask the
Master with a sinister purpose,
‘What he must do to inherit
eternal life?’ He put the query
to the Lord for the purpose of
tempting Him: so little was he
affected by the tokens of
eternal life which were before
his eyes. Jesus referred him to
the law. As the other stood upon
the footing of the law, his
query must be solved out of the
law. Jesus therefore required
him to state what direction he
considered himself to find on
the subject in the law. This no
doubt was His meaning in the
question, ‘What is written in
the law? How readest thou?’ In
the application of holy
Scripture, the matter hangs upon
both of these points, if we will
fain turn it to account as a
directory of salvation. The
first question is always, What
is written? The second, How is
it read? The divine knew how to
answer at once. He knew how to
state the main substance of the
law quite rightly, as it indeed
stood written upon his
phylacteries: Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy
heart, with all thy soul, with
all thy strength, and with all
thy mind;5 and thy neighbour
as thyself.6
Jesus admits that the lawyer has
stated the right way of
attaining eternal life, and
proposes to dismiss him with the
word, ‘This do, and thou shalt
live.’
This word is in all simplicity a
true one. The fundamental notion
of eternal life consists in
love: the perfection of love in
loving God above all, and your
neighbour as yourself. It must
therefore come to this, that a
man fulfil this law. And this
law stands over against him as a
law of imperative requirement,
just because in his sinfulness
he cannot fulfil it. He must
mean to do it—must be in all
earnest with this law, even unto
death; and then on the way of
the law he comes to the Gospel,
wherein that doing of it which
he strives after is bestowed
upon him in the deed of Christ;
while the Gospel again forthwith
brings him into the life of this
law. But this doing was with
this particular questioner no
real concern. And because it was
not, therefore he thought
himself already clear in respect
to the doing of this law, and
that there was an unfounded
supposition concerning him at
the bottom of Jesus’
exhortation, ‘This do!’ It was
no doubt in this sense that he
wished to justify himself, and
therefore put the further
question, ‘And who is my neighbour?’ It was not, we
imagine, that he wished to
excuse his previous question,7
but to give Jesus to understand
that he did not at all conceive
of himself as requiring
exhortations from Him as not
being yet righteous, but only
wished to enter upon a
theological discussion with Him
as to the notion of one’s
neighbour. Therewith he also
especially gave to understand,
that most particularly with the
command that we should love God
above all, he had long since
been on perfectly clear ground.
The second question brought out
clearly enough what the man
would be at. He meant
unreservedly to start the
inquiry, whether the law of
loving our neighbour was to be
applied to all men. His manner
of expressing himself indicated
that pharisaical interpretation
of the command which Jesus had
already rejected in the Sermon
on the Mount (Mat 5:43). As we
just now are on the border-land
between Galilee and Samaria, and
as the disciples were only now
returned from Samaria, we may
perhaps conjecture, that the
lawyer meant to call the Lord to
account on account of this
friendly intercourse with
Samaritans. Jesus had pronounced
the disciples as blessed in
having, among other things, seen
also in Samaria the wonders of
the kingdom of heaven. That
might shock his feelings, and
probably there lay at the bottom
of his first question the
thought, Surely that cannot
possibly be the way to eternal
life, to show love to the
Samaritans! Jesus understood his
thought afar off, and addressed
Himself to deal directly with
it. He took up the meaning of
his words (ὑπολαβών) in telling
him the parable of the good
Samaritan.
As Christ had just now been some
time on the borders of Samaria,
and had the opportunity of
receiving various information
relative to the life of its
inhabitants, it is very possible
that about this time He may have
heard of an occurrence of the
kind which He described. In that
case His communication would be
history and parable both at
once.
The lawyer seems to find a
difficulty in Jews showing mercy
to Samaritans: therefore Jesus
brings a Samaritan before his
eyes who shows mercy to a Jew.
He thus comes to the aid of his
understanding, weakened as it
was by confessional bigotry, by
exhibiting the right knowledge
of the true conception of one’s
neighbour and love to one’s
neighbour, as the Samaritan’s
conduct illustrated it; and then
leaves him to judge which was
the real neighbour of the Jew
who had fallen among robbers-the
Jewish priest, the Jewish
Levite, or the Samaritan. The
lawyer sees himself constrained
by the power of truth to place
the third in the rank of
neighbour to the suffering Jew:
nevertheless he guards against
naming him simply as the
Samaritan, but prefers the
circumlocution, ‘He who showed
mercy to him.’ Upon this Christ
at once dismisses him with the
reprimand, ‘Go and do thou
likewise.’
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Notes
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1) Neander, Life of Christ, 336, observes : We find in the case of Christ no trace whatever of a contemplation which took the form of a vision ; and the peculiar in-being of God in Him which distinguished Him from all those to whom momentary illuminations have been imparted,—that perfect oneness of the divine and human,—that uniform repose, clearness, and self-recollection of a spirit which bore in itself the original fountain of divine life,—this continuity of God-man-like consciousness in which we are not permitted to distinguish between clear and dark moments, this seems to exclude the supposition of any such vision. 2) See Stier, iii. 491. 3) Comp. Ps. xci. 13; Mark xvi. 18. 4) Cf. Exod. xxxii. 32, 33; Pa. Ixix. 29; Heb. xii. 23, &c. 5) Deut. vi. 5. This passage used to be on the phylacteries. Kuinöl conjectures that Jesus pointed with His finger to the phylactery. On the addition, with all thy mind, see Stier, iii. 179. 6) Lev. xix. 18. De Wette thinks that this passage points to an arbitrary collocation of thoughts precisely as it stands in Matt. xxii. 39 ; and that therefore it seems not an untenable supposition, that the account in Matthew lies at the bottom of the one now before us. It is, however, not to be overlooked, that all that Christ proceeds to say relative to our neighbour rests upon the second citation. This fact is decisive as showing that the passage before us is independent of that similar one in Matthew. 7) As De Wette supposes.
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