By Joseph Benson
ARGUMENTGOSPEL OF SAINT JOHN.
THE author of this gospel, JOHN,
the apostle and evangelist, was
a native of Bethsaida, in
Galilee, and the son of Zebedee
and Salome, as appears by
comparing Matthew 27:56, with
Mark 15:40; Mark 16:1. He was
younger brother of James the
Greater, or Elder, (there being
two apostles of that name,) with
whom he exercised the trade of a
fisherman, on the sea of
Galilee. These brothers were
among the first that became
Christ’s disciples, being called
the same day that Peter and
Andrew were chosen to that
honour. John is supposed to have
been about twenty-five years of
age when he began to follow
Christ, by whom he was
peculiarly loved, and honoured
with his most intimate
confidence, being chosen, with
his brother and Peter, exclusive
of the rest, to be a witness of
the raising of Jairus’s
daughter, of Christ’s
transfiguration, and of his
agony in the garden. And he and
his brother James, on account of
their zeal in their Master’s
service, and their fervent
manner of preaching, were
distinguished by the title of
Boanerges, or sons of thunder.
He was the only apostle who
followed Christ to Calvary, and
stood under the cross when he
was crucified; and to him Jesus
left the care of his mother, to
whom, in pursuance of the trust
thus reposed in him, he showed
all the testimonies of the
profoundest veneration and
respect, granting her, after the
death of her husband Joseph, all
the accommodations his house
afforded, John 19:27. He saw our
Lord expire on the cross, and
the soldier pierce his side with
a spear, John 19:34-35; and was
one of the first of the apostles
who visited the sepulchre after
Christ’s resurrection; and the
first of them, it seems, that
believed he was risen, John
20:8. He was present when Christ
showed himself to the disciples
on the day he rose, and likewise
eight days after, John 20:19-29;
as also when Jesus appeared as a
stranger to some of them, at the
sea of Tiberias; and was the
first that discovered, and gave
notice to the others, that the
person appearing was the Lord.
After Christ’s ascension, he
continued with the other
apostles at Jerusalem, and took
part with them in all their
transactions, till the day of
pentecost, when, with all the
others, he was endowed with the
extraordinary gifts of the Holy
Spirit, and was thereby fully
qualified for the important
offices for which God designed
him. He, in conjunction with
Peter, with whom it appears he
had contracted a very intimate
friendship, had the honour of
being made the instrument of
working the first miracle after
the day of pentecost, namely, of
curing, in a moment, a man who
had been lame from his birth;
and the still greater honour of
suffering imprisonment for
Christ and his gospel, before
any of the other apostles were
called to give that proof of
their faith in him, and
attachment to his cause, Acts
3:1-10. We find him afterward
sent with Peter to Samaria, in
order that through their
prayers, and the laying on of
their hands, the extraordinary
gifts of the Holy Ghost might be
conferred on some who had been
converted there by the preaching
of Philip the deacon, Acts
8:5-25. And some years after
this, he is mentioned by St.
Paul, (Galatians 2.,) as one of
the members of that council
which was held at Jerusalem, to
consider whether the observation
of the ceremonial law should be
required of the Gentile
converts, Acts 15. From all
which things it appears, that he
was well qualified to give to
the church and the world an
authentic and accurate history
of the life, doctrine, and
miracles of Christ; having been
an eye and ear witness of most
or of all the facts which it was
of importance he should relate.
It is thought, that after the
events referred to above, he
continued in or near Judea till
the time approached for the
accomplishment of Christ’s
predictions respecting the
destruction of Jerusalem and the
dissolution of the Jewish state;
when, according to Irenæus,
Eusebius, Origen, and others, he
went into Asia, that being his
peculiar province by allotment,
where he founded the churches of
Smyrna, Thyatira, Pergamos,
Sardis, Philadelphia, and
Laodicea. His principal place of
residence, however, was Ephesus,
of which he was bishop; though
Paul had planted a church there
long before, and constituted
Timothy the bishop thereof. Soon
after he had settled affairs to
his satisfaction in Asia Minor,
he is supposed to have removed
thence more eastward, and to
have preached the gospel among
the Parthians; to whom, as some
imagine, his first epistle was
anciently inscribed. CONCLUSION OF THE GOSPELS.
THUS endeth the History of the
Life of Christ; a life, the
greatest and best that ever was
led by man, or ever was the
subject of any history. The
human character of Jesus, as it
results from the accounts which
the evangelists have given of
him, (for they have not formally
drawn it,) is entirely different
from that of all other men
whatsoever. For whereas they
have the selfish passions deeply
rooted in their breasts, and are
wont to be more or less
influenced by them in most of
their actions, Jesus was so
entirely free from them, that
the narrowest scrutiny cannot
furnish one single action in the
whole course of his life,
wherein he consulted his own
honour or interest. The glory of
God and happiness of mankind
were what he had only at heart.
And while his cotemporaries
followed, some one kind of
occupation, and some another,
Jesus had no other business but
that of promoting these great
ends of living. He went about
doing good. He did not wait till
he was solicited, but sought
opportunities of conferring
benefits on such as stood in
need of them, and always
reckoned it more blessed to give
than to receive; in which
respect he differed exceedingly
from the rest of mankind, and
was much more like to God than
man. In the next place, whereas
it is common, even for persons
of the most exalted faculties,
on the one hand, to be elated
with success and applause, and
on the other, to be dejected
with great disappointments, it
was not so with Jesus. He was
never more courageous than when
he met with the greatest
opposition and the worst
treatment, nor more humble than
when men fell down and
worshipped him. He came into the
world inspired with the grandest
purpose that ever was or will be
formed, even that of saving, not
a single nation only, but the
whole world; and in the
execution of it went through the
heaviest train of labours that
ever was sustained, and that
with a constancy of resolution
on which no disadvantageous
impression could be made by any
accident whatever; calumny,
threatenings, opposition, with
the other evils befalling him,
served only to quicken his
endeavours in this glorious
enterprise, which he pursued
unweariedly till he finished it
by his death. In the third
place, whereas most men are
prone to retaliate the injuries
that are done them, and all seem
to take a satisfaction in
complaining of the injuries of
those who oppress them, the
whole of Christ’s behaviour
breathed nothing but meekness,
patience, and forgiveness, even
to his bitterest enemies, and in
the midst of extreme sufferings.
The words, Father, forgive them,
for they know not what they do,
uttered by him when his enemies
were nailing him to the cross,
fitly express the temper which
he maintained through the whole
course of his life, even when
assaulted by the heaviest
provocations. The truth is, on
no occasion did he ever signify
the least resentment by speech
or action, nor indeed any
emotion of mind whatever, except
such as flowed from piety and
charity, consequently such only
as expressed the deepest concern
for the welfare of mankind. To
conclude, the greatest and best
men have had failings which
darkened the lustre of their
virtues, and showed them to have
been men. This was the case with
Noah, Abraham, Moses, Job,
Solomon, Paul, and the other
eminent men celebrated in
history. The same thing may be
said of all the greatest
geniuses in the heathen world,
who undertook to instruct and
inform mankind; for, omitting
the narrowness of their
knowledge, and the obscurity
with which they spake upon the
most important subjects, there
was not one of them who did not
fall into some gross error or
other, which dishonoured his
character as a teacher. The
accounts we have in history of
the most renowned sages of
antiquity, and the writings of
the philosophers still
remaining, are proofs of this.
It was otherwise with Jesus in
every respect. For he was
superior to all the men that
ever lived, both in the
sublimity of his doctrine, and
in the purity of his manners. He
was holy, harmless, and separate
from sinners. Whether you
consider him as a teacher or a
man, he did no sin, neither was
guile found in his mouth. His
whole life was perfectly free
from spot or weakness, at the
same time that it was remarkable
for the greatest and most
extensive exercises of virtue. |
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