Verses 1-4
Luke 11:1-4. As he was praying
in a certain place — Our Lord’s
whole time was occupied, either
in instructing his numerous
followers, or in confirming his
doctrine by miracles of mercy,
wrought for the relief of the
afflicted, or in the exercises
of devotion. This evangelist has
mentioned Christ’s praying much
more frequently than any of the
other evangelists. He tells us,
Luke 3:21, when he was baptized
he was praying; Luke 5:16, that
he withdrew into the wilderness
and prayed; Luke 6:12, that he
went out into a mountain to
pray, and continued all night in
prayer; Luke 9:18, that he was
alone, praying; and soon after,
that he went up into a mountain,
and as he prayed was
transfigured, Luke 9:28-29; and
here, that he was praying in a
certain place. Whether he was
now praying alone, and the
disciples only knew that he was
so, or whether he prayed with
them, is uncertain; it is most
probable they were joining with
him. One of his disciples said,
Lord, teach us to pray — Inform
us what we ought especially to
desire and pray for, and in what
words we ought to express our
desires and petitions. It seems
this disciple had not been
present when our Lord, in the
beginning of his ministry, gave
his hearers directions
concerning their devotions; or,
if he was present, he had
forgotten what had then been
said. As John also taught his
disciples — The Jewish masters
used to give their followers
some short form of prayer, as a
peculiar badge of their relation
to them. This, it is probable,
John the Baptist had done. And
in this sense it seems to be,
that the disciples now asked
Jesus, to teach them to pray.
Accordingly he here repeats that
form which he had before given
them in his sermon on the Mount,
and likewise enlarges on the
same head, though still speaking
the same things in substance.
And this prayer, uttered from
the heart, and in its true and
full meaning, is indeed the
badge of a real Christian: for
is not he such whose first and
most ardent desire is the glory
of God, and the happiness of
man, by the coming of his
kingdom? who asks for no more of
this world than his daily bread,
longing meantime for the bread
that cometh down from heaven?
and whose only desires for
himself are forgiveness of sins
(as he heartily forgives others)
and sanctification? When ye
pray, say — And what he said to
them is undoubtedly said to us
also. We are therefore here
directed not only to imitate
this in all our prayers, but
frequently, at least, to use
this very form of prayer. For an
explanation of this prayer, see
the notes on Matthew 6:9-13.
There are some differences
between the form in Matthew and
this recorded here; by which it
appears it was not the design of
Christ that we should be always
confined to the very words of
either form; for then there
would have been no difference
between them. One difference,
indeed, which the reader will
probably notice, is in the
translation only, which ought
not to have been, where there is
none in the original; and that
is in the third petition, as in
heaven, so in earth; whereas the
words are the very same, and in
the same order, as in Matthew;
but there is a difference in the
fourth petition: in Matthew we
pray, Give us daily bread this
day; here, give it us [ καθ’
ημεραν] day by day: that is,
Give us each day the bread which
our bodies require, as they call
for it; not, Give us this day
bread for many days to come;
but, as the Israelites had
manna, let us have bread, to-day
for to-day, and to-morrow for
to- morrow; that thus we may be
kept in a state of continual
dependance upon God, as children
upon their parents, and may have
our mercies fresh from his hand
daily; and may find ourselves
under fresh obligations to do
the work of every day in the
day, according as the duty of
the day requires, because we
have from God the supplies of
every day in the day, according
as the necessity of the day
requires. Here is, likewise,
some difference in the fifth
petition. In Matthew it is,
Forgive us our debts, as we
forgive; here it is, Forgive us
our sins, (which proves that our
sins are our debts,)
for we forgive; not that our
forgiving those that have
offended us can merit pardon
from God, or be an inducement to
him to forgive us; he forgives
for his own name’s sake, and his
Son’s sake: but this is a very
necessary qualification for
forgiveness: and if God have
wrought it in us, we may plead
the work of his grace, for the
enforcing of our petitions for
the pardon of our sins; Lord,
forgive us, for thou hast
thyself inclined us to forgive
others. There is another
addition here; we plead not only
in general, we forgive our
debtors, but in particular we
profess to forgive every one
that is indebted to us, without
exception. We so forgive our
debtors, as not to bear malice
or ill-will to any, but true
love to all, without any
exception whatsoever. Here also
the doxology in the close is
wholly omitted, and the Amen;
for Christ would leave his
disciples at liberty to use
that, or any other doxology,
fetched out of David’s Psalms;
or rather, he left a space here
to be filled up by a doxology
more peculiar to the Christian
institutes, ascribing glory to
the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
Verses 5-8
Luke 11:5-8. And he said, &c. —
“Having, by a short form, taught
his disciples that they were not
in prayer to use a multiplicity
of words, with vain repetitions;
he proceeded to caution them, on
the other hand, against
coldness, indifference, and
slackness in their
supplications. The evil of this,
and the necessity of asking
affectionately, with importunity
and perseverance, he taught them
by a parable; in which he showed
them, that importunity, that is,
earnestness and frequency in
asking, are the proper, natural
expressions of strong desires,
and, by consequence, that God
very properly requires these
things in men, before he bestows
on them such favours as they
stand in need of, just as he
requires them to be earnestly
desirous of these favours before
he blesses them therewith.” —
Macknight. Which of you shall
have a friend, &c. — As if he
had said, Who is there of you
that has not observed the
efficacy of importunate
requests? If, for instance, he
shall have a friend, and shall
go to him at midnight — The most
unseasonable time imaginable for
asking a favour; and say unto
him, Friend, lend me three
loaves — Do me this favour on
account of our mutual
friendship; for a friend of mine
— One to whom I am particularly
indebted; in his journey is come
to me — Having travelled so late
and long, my friend is both
weary and hungry; and I have
nothing to set before him — A
case certainly very urgent. And
he from within — Being of a
churlish disposition; shall
answer and say, Trouble me not —
Do not disturb me thus at so
late an hour; what you ask will
put me to a great deal of
trouble: the door is now shut —
And must have its locks and
bolts opened, and my children
are with me in bed — Or as τα
παιδια μου μετ’ εμου εις την
κοιτην εισιν, may be rendered,
my servants, together with me,
are in bed. My servants are in
bed as well as myself, and
probably they are fast asleep,
so that there is nobody at hand
to give you what you want. I
cannot rise and give thee — You
cannot expect that I will rise
and give you the loaves. I say
unto you, Though he will not
rise, &c. — This man, though he
would not yield to the calls and
influence of friendship, yet
will he be prevailed upon by the
force of importunity; because it
shows both the greatness of the
supplicant’s distress, and the
earnestness of his desire.
Verse 9-10
Luke 11:9-10. I say unto you,
Ask, &c. — Pray frequently, and
be most earnest and importunate
in your prayers, because thus
you shall obtain whatsoever you
ask agreeably to the will of
God. For if importunity would
prevail thus with a man that was
displeased at it, much more will
it prevail with God, who is
infinitely more kind and ready
to do good to us than we are one
to another; and is not
displeased at our importunity,
but accepts it, especially when
the object of it is spiritual
mercies. If he do not answer our
prayers, and grant our requests
presently, yet he will answer
them in due time, if we continue
to pray and exercise faith in
his power, love, and
faithfulness. Ask, therefore,
what God in his word authorizes
you to ask, and what you are
persuaded it would be for God’s
glory that you should receive,
and it shall be given you —
Either the thing itself which
you ask, or that which is
equivalent; either the removal
of the thorn in the flesh, or
grace sufficient to enable you
to bear it. Of this we have an
assurance from Christ’s own
mouth, who knows his Father’s
mind, and in whom all the
promises of God are yea and
amen. But we must not only ask,
we must also seek, in the use of
means; must second our prayers
with our endeavours; and in
asking and seeking, we must
continue urgent, still knocking
at the same door, and we shall
at length prevail. For every one
that asketh receiveth — Even the
meanest saint shall have his
petition granted, that asks
earnestly, importunately, and in
faith. This poor man cried, and
the Lord heard him, Psalms 34:6.
When we ask of God those things
which Christ, in the above
prayer, has directed us to ask,
namely, that his name may be
sanctified; that his kingdom may
come, and his will be done; — in
these requests we must be
importunate, and must never hold
our peace day or night. See on
Matthew 7:7-8; where the same
passage occurs.
Verse 11-12
Luke 11:11-12. If a son shall
ask bread of any of you —
Further to assist your faith on
these occasions, reflect upon
the workings of your own hearts
toward your offspring. Let any
of you, that is a father, and
knows the heart of a father, a
father’s affection to, and care
for, a child, say, if his son
ask bread to satisfy his hunger,
will he give him a stone — In
the shape of a loaf? or, If he
ask a fish, will he give him a
serpent — Which has some
resemblance of a fish; or if he
ask an egg, will he offer him a
scorpion — Which, instead of
nourishing him, might sting him
to death?
Naturalists tell us, that the
body of a scorpion is very like
an egg, especially if the
scorpion be of the white kind,
which is the first species
mentioned by Ælian, Avicenna,
and others. Bochart has produced
testimonies to prove that the
scorpions in Judea were about
the bigness of an egg; and
therefore there, a white
scorpion being very like an egg,
might to children, who were not
capable of distinguishing the
one from the other, be offered
in place thereof, if the person
so doing meant that it should
sting and destroy them. These
different instances are
mentioned by Jesus, in order
that the doctrine which he is
here inculcating might make the
stronger impression upon his
hearers. See on Matthew 7:9-11.
Verse 13
Luke 11:13. If ye then, being
evil — If ye, who are, at least,
comparatively evil, and perhaps
inclined to a penurious and
morose temper, yet know how to
give good gifts to your children
— And find your hearts disposed
to relieve their returning
necessities, by a variety of
daily provisions; — if earthly
parents, though evil, be yet so
kind; if they, though weak, be
yet so knowing, that they give
with discretion, give what is
best, in the best manner and
time; much more shall your
heavenly Father — Who has
wrought these dispositions in
you, and who infinitely excels
the fathers of our flesh, as in
power, so also in wisdom and
goodness, be ready to bestow
every necessary good, and even
to give the best and most
excellent gift of all, his Holy
Spirit, to them that sincerely
and earnestly ask him; a gift,
inclusive of, or followed by,
all the good things we ought to
pray for; more than which, with
its effects and consequences, we
do not need, to make us wise,
holy, happy, and useful; the
Holy Spirit being the source of
spiritual life to and in us
here, and the earnest of eternal
life hereafter; a gift which,
therefore, it concerns us all
earnestly, constantly, and
perseveringly to pray for.
Observe well, then, reader, both
that it is our indispensable
duty to ask this gift, and that
we have all possible
encouragement to believe that,
if we ask aright, we shall not
ask in vain. For as certainly as
God’s power enables him, so
certainly does his goodness
incline him, and his promise
bind him, to give it, and that
to all those that ask as they
are here directed.
Verses 14-23
Luke 11:14-23. And he was
casting out a devil — See on
Matthew 9:32-34; and Matthew
12:22-23. Some said, He casteth
out devils through Beelzebub —
These he answers, Luke 11:17.
Others, to try whether it were
so or not, sought a sign from
heaven — These he reproves, in
the 29th and following verses.
Beelzebub signifies the lord of
flies, a title which the heathen
gave to Jupiter, whom they
accounted the chief of their
gods, and yet supposed him to be
employed in driving away flies
from their temples and
sacrifices. The Philistines
worshipped a deity under this
name as the god of Ekron: from
hence the Jews took the name,
and applied it to the chief of
the devils. He, knowing their
thoughts, &c. — See this whole
paragraph explained, on Matthew
12:25-30. A house divided
against a house — That is, one
part of a family divided
against, and contending with, an
other part, falleth, cometh to
inevitable ruin. If I cast out
devils by the finger of God —
That is, by a power manifestly
divine. Perhaps the expression
intimates further that it was
done without any labour: no
doubt the kingdom of God is come
upon you — Unawares,
unexpectedly; so the expression,
εφθασεν εφ’ υμας, implies. When
a strong man armed — Alluding to
Satan, strong in himself, and
armed with the pride, obstinacy,
and security of him in whom he
dwells.
Verses 24-26
Luke 11:24-26. When the unclean
spirit — See notes on Matthew
12:43-45.
Verse 27-28
Luke 11:27-28. As he spake these
things, a certain woman, &c. —
While Jesus thus reasoned, in
confutation of the Pharisees, a
woman of the company, ravished
with his wisdom, and perhaps
believing him to be their
long-expected Messiah, expressed
her admiration of his character
in an exclamation upon the
happiness of the woman who had
the honour of giving him birth;
a thought very natural for a
woman. But he said, Yea, rather,
blessed are they that hear the
word of God and keep it — As if
he had said, The blessedness
which you prize so much, and
which could be enjoyed by one
woman only, however great, is
far inferior to a blessedness
which is in every one’s power,
namely, that which arises from
the knowledge and practice of
the will of God. If even she
that bare me had not attended to
this, she would have forfeited
all her blessedness.
Verses 29-32
Luke 11:29-32. When the people
were gathered thick together. —
It seems, on this occasion, the
multitude gathered round him in
a great crowd, and pressed upon
him, in expectation that he was
going to show them the sign from
heaven which some of them had
required from him. But he
repulsed them, by telling them
that they were an evil race of
men, who discovered a very
perverse disposition, in seeking
signs after so many miracles had
been wrought by him; for which
reason no greater sign should be
given them than those they were
daily beholding, except the sign
of the Prophet Jonas. See notes
on Matthew 12:38-42. They
repented at the preaching of
Jonas — But it was only for a
season. Afterward they relapsed
into wickedness, till (after
about forty years) they were
destroyed. It is remarkable,
that in this also the comparison
held. God reprieved the Jews for
about forty years: but they
still advanced in wickedness,
till, having filled up their
measure, they were destroyed
with an utter destruction.
Verses 33-36
Luke 11:33-36. No man, when he
hath lighted a candle — The
meaning is, God gives you this
gospel-light, that ye may
repent. Let your eye be singly
fixed on him, aim only at
pleasing God; and while ye do
this, your whole soul will be
full of wisdom, holiness, and
happiness. But when thine eye is
evil — When thou aimest at any
thing else, thou wilt be full of
folly, sin, and misery. On the
contrary, If thy whole body be
full of light — If thou art
filled with holy wisdom, having
no part dark, giving way to no
sin or folly, then that heavenly
principle will, like the clear
flame of a lamp in a room that
was dark before, shed its light
into all thy powers and
faculties. For a fuller
explanation of these verses, see
notes on Matthew 5:15; Matthew
6:22-23; Mark 4:21-22.
Verse 37
Luke 11:37. And as he spake, a
Pharisee besought him to dine
with him — Our Lord having
proved the truth of his mission,
against the malicious cavils of
his enemies, in the manner above
stated, when he had made an end
of speaking, one of the
Pharisees present invited him to
dine with him. It is not said
whether he gave him the
invitation as a mark of respect
for him, or with an insidious
design. The severity with which
Jesus reproved the superstition
of the Pharisees, while he sat
at meat with them, and the
malice which they discovered, in
urging him to say things
offensive to the magistrate or
to the people, make it probable
that the latter rather was the
case. Nevertheless, he accepted
the invitation, and went along
with the Pharisee, and sat down
at table without washing, as, it
seems, all the other guests had
done. And when the Pharisee saw
it, he marvelled, &c. —
Expressed great surprise at our
Lord’s showing such an open
contempt of their traditions.
And the Lord said, Now ye
Pharisees — Probably many of
them were present at the
Pharisee’s house; make clean the
outside of the cup, &c. — Ye are
at great pains to keep every
thing clean that touches your
food, lest your bodies should be
defiled in eating; but ye are at
no pains to keep your minds
clean from pollutions that are
incomparably worse, — the
pollutions of rapine,
covetousness, and wickedness. Ye
fools, did not he that made that
which is without, &c. — Did not
he, who made the body, make the
soul also? Wherefore ye are
grossly stupid and foolish, not
to see, that, if God requires
purity of body, because it is
his own workmanship, he will
much more insist on purity of
mind, which is the nobler part
of human nature. And therefore,
instead of that scrupulousness
with respect to meats and
washings, which engrosses so
much of your attention, you
ought to apply yourselves to the
duties of justice, mercy, and
charity, as an evidence that
your hearts are right with God,
that you love him better than
the world, and prefer the
pleasing of him to amassing
wealth, or attaining any
temporal good. It is justly
observed here, by Dr. Macknight,
that “we are not to imagine
alms-giving was particularly
mentioned by Christ, in his
exhortation to the Pharisees,
because it is of greater value
and necessity than the other
virtues. He recommended it to
that sect, because they were
generally remarkable for their
covetousness and extortion,
vices which must be repented of,
by making restitution to those
who have been injured by them.
And when these cannot be known
or found, the compensation must
be made to the poor, as having
the next right; because what is
given to them is lent to God;
but the Pharisees were of an
incorrigibly stubborn
disposition, which no
instruction, however mild or
persuasive, could influence;
wherefore our Lord, on this
occasion, wisely treated them
with a kind and wholesome
severity, denouncing most
dreadful woes against them for
being so zealous in the
ceremonial institutions of
religion, while they utterly
neglected the precepts of
morality.” Wo unto you — That
is, miserable are you. In the
same manner is the phrase to be
understood throughout the
chapter; for ye tithe, &c. — Ye
pay tithes of these things, and
pass over judgment and the love
of God — Ye show such care and
exactness in performing
ceremonial precepts, that ye do
not neglect even the least of
them; but the great duties of
godliness and righteousness, of
the love of God and all mankind,
and the duties of truth,
justice, mercy, and charity,
flowing therefrom, ye utterly
neglect, as things of no
importance in comparison.
Nevertheless, these ought ye to
have done — The duties of piety
and morality ought to have been
the principal objects of your
care, while, at the same time,
the other should not have been
left undone. See on Matthew
23:23-26.
Verse 43-44
Luke 11:43-44. Wo unto you, for
ye love the uppermost seats in
the synagogues, &c. — Here he
denounces the judgment of God
against them for their pride,
which was so excessive, that it
appeared in their carriage in
the streets, and at all public
meetings. See on Matthew 23:6-7.
Wo unto you, scribes and
Pharisees — In this wo he joins
the scribes with the Pharisees,
and condemns the hypocrisy of
both. For ye are as graves, &c.
— Under a show of humility and
contempt of the world, you are
proud, voluptuous, and
rapacious, and so resemble
concealed graves, which are apt
to pollute those who walk over
them. Or, as graves appear not
when overgrown with grass, so
that men are not aware till they
stumble upon them, and either
hurt themselves, or, at least,
are defiled by touching them, so
your deceit, hypocrisy, and
wickedness are not discovered,
being hid under the appearance
of strict sanctity which you put
on; but, nevertheless, these
your vices defile and injure
many. On another occasion Christ
compared them to whited
sepulchres, fair without, but
foul within. See on Matthew
23:27-28.
Verse 45
Luke 11:45. Then answered one of
the lawyers, &c. — A doctor, or
interpreter of the law. The
Jewish lawyers (as our
translation not very properly
terms them) were the most
considerable species of scribes,
who applied themselves
peculiarly to study and explain
the law. Probably many of them
were Pharisees, but it was no
ways essential to their office
that they should be so. What
touched the person here speaking
was, that our Lord, in his last
wo, Luke 11:44, had joined the
scribes with the Pharisees.
Master, thus saying, thou
reproachest us — The rebuke
which thou hast given the
scribes and Pharisees in so
general a way, affects us
lawyers also. And he said, Wo
unto you also, ye lawyers — The
lawyers, even of the Pharisean
denomination, had done
unspeakable mischief by their
erroneous interpretation of
Scripture, which they perverted
to favour the tradition of the
elders as much as possible, and
so bound heavy burdens on men’s
shoulders, which they themselves
would not touch with one of
their fingers. Jesus, therefore,
spake his mind freely concerning
them also, laid open their
character, and denounced further
woes against them. Wo unto you,
for ye build the sepulchres of
the prophets — He blames them
for building the sepulchres of
the prophets, because they did
it from no regard to the
murdered prophets, though in
words they pretended to venerate
their memory, but in order to
make an ostentation of their
piety. Truly ye bear witness
that ye allow the deeds of your
fathers — By all your conduct
you show that inwardly, in your
minds, you approve of the deeds
of your fathers, who persecuted
the prophets; for they killed
them, and ye build their
sepulchres — You are men of
precisely the same character and
disposition with them;
hypocrites, who covered the
grossest acts of wickedness with
the specious appearance of
piety. For like them you pretend
great reverence for the ancient
prophets, while ye destroy those
whom God sends to yourselves. Ye
therefore bear witness, by this
deep hypocrisy, that you are of
the very same spirit with them.
Or, more at large, thus: “From
your known disposition, as well
as from your open practice,
which is to trample upon the
laws of God, as often as they
stand in the way of your wicked
purposes, and particularly from
your persecuting the messengers
of God, one is obliged to think
that you build the sepulchres of
the prophets whom your fathers
killed, not from any pious
regard for God, whose messengers
they were, nor to do honour to
the prophets themselves, but to
do honour to their murderers, as
approving of their deeds, and
intending to perpetuate the
memory of them to posterity with
applause. The great men among
the Jews always possessed the
true spirit of politicians. In
the time of the prophets they
made no scruple to kill persons,
whom they knew to be the
messengers of God, because,
forsooth, the good of the state
required it. In our Saviour’s
time, Caiaphas, the high-
priest, openly avowed this
principle in a full meeting of
the grandees. For when some were
opposing the resolution of the
major part of the council, who
had determined to kill Jesus,
and urged the unlawfulness of
the action, he told them plainly
that they were a parcel of
ignorant bigots, who knew
nothing at all either of the
principles or ends of
government, which render it
necessary oft-times to sacrifice
the most innocent for the safety
of the community. Therefore also
said the wisdom of God —
Agreeably to this the wisdom of
God hath said, in many places of
Scripture, though not in these
very words, I will send them
prophets, &c. — Because you
imitate the ways of your
fathers, by persecuting the
messengers of God; because you
carry your wickedness to as
great a pitch as your fathers
did; for these reasons God hath
declared his last resolutions
concerning you: he hath said, I
will send them prophets and
apostles, yea, and my beloved
Son, notwithstanding I know they
will persecute and slay them:
That the blood of all the
prophets, &c. — That by this
last and greatest act of
rebellion, the iniquity of the
nation being completed, God may
at length testify how much he
was displeased with this people
from the beginning, for
persecuting and murdering his
prophets, and that by sending
upon the generation which
completed the iniquity of the
nation, such signal judgments as
should evidently appear to be
the punishment of that great and
accumulated wickedness,
committed by them in their
several successive generations.
Verily I say, It shall be
required of this generation —
And so it was within forty
years, in a most astonishing
manner, by the dreadful
destruction of the temple, the
city, and the nation. The
justice of such a procedure
every thinking person will
acknowledge, who considers that
sins committed by men, as
constituting a body politic, can
only be punished in the present
life; the proper punishment of
national sins being national
judgments, even such judgments
as dissolve the transgressing
state. And these the providence
of God thinks necessary for its
own vindication, always
inflicting them upon nations,
when the measure fixed upon by
God for punishment is filled up,
that the wrath of God being
revealed from heaven against all
ungodliness and unrighteousness
of men, the nations of the world
may be awed and kept in
subjection to the government of
God. See on Matthew 23:29-33.
Verse 52
Luke 11:52. Wo unto you,
lawyers! for ye have taken away
the key of knowledge — Ye have
obscured and destroyed the true
knowledge of the Messiah, which
is the key both of the present
and the future kingdom of
heaven. Or, by your wrong
interpretations of Scripture,
you have filled the people with
strong prejudices against the
gospel, so that you not only
reject it yourselves, but hinder
others from receiving it. See on
Matthew 23:13.
Verse 53-54
Luke 11:53-54. As he said these
things, the scribes and
Pharisees began to urge him —
The freedom which Jesus now took
with the Pharisee and his
guests, provoked them
exceedingly, for they were
guilty of the crimes which he
laid to their charge; and to be
revenged, they urged him to
speak upon a variety of topics
relative to religion and
government, hoping that he might
let something drop which would
render him either obnoxious to
the magistrate or to the people. |