Verses 1-4
Luke 14:1-4. And it came to pass
— About this time, probably just
as our Lord was finishing his
journey through Herod’s
dominions; he went into the
house of one of the chief
Pharisees — τινος των αρχοντων
φαρισαιων, of a certain one of
the ruling Pharisees, that is,
of a magistrate, or a member of
the great council, called the
sanhedrim. This person probably
resided generally in Jerusalem,
but had a country-seat in Perĉa;
and happening to meet with Jesus
while he abode there, he carried
him home to dinner. The
invitation, however, it appears
was insidious; for we are told
they watched him — That is, the
chief Pharisee and others of his
sect, who were gathered together
for this very end, watched all
his words and actions, in order
that they might find something
to blame in them, whereby they
hoped to blast his reputation as
a prophet. And behold, there was
a certain man before him which
had the dropsy — Who, having
heard that Jesus was to dine
there, had got himself conveyed
thither, in hopes of receiving a
cure. And Jesus — Answering the
thoughts which he saw arising in
their hearts; spake unto the
lawyers — The doctors of the
law; and other Pharisees who
were then present. Is it lawful
to heal on the sabbath day — Can
there be any thing in so
benevolent an action, as healing
a distempered person,
inconsistent with the sacred
rest required on that day? And
they held their peace — Not
being able, with any face, to
deny the lawfulness of the
action, and yet being unwilling
to say any thing which might
seem to authorize or countenance
those cures which Christ
performed on sabbath days, as
well as at other times, and
which in general they had been
well known to censure. And he
took him — επιλαβομενος, taking
him by the hand, or laying his
hand on him, he healed him and
let him go — απελυσε, sent him
away. The moment that Jesus laid
his hand on the man, his
complexion returned, and his
body was reduced to its ordinary
size; becoming, at the same
time, vigorous and fit for
action, as appeared by the
manner in which he went out of
the room. Doubtless our Lord
could have accomplished this
cure as well by a secret
volition, and so might have cut
off all matter of cavilling. But
he chose rather to produce it by
an action, in which there was
the very least degree of bodily
labour that could be, because
that thus he had an opportunity
of reproving the reigning
superstition of the times.
Verse 5-6
Luke 14:5-6. And answered them —
Accordingly, while the Pharisees
were considering with themselves
how to turn the miracle against
him, he disconcerted them by
proving the lawfulness of what
he had done from their own
practice. Which of you shall
have an ass, &c., fallen into a
pit on the sabbath day — Will
you, for fear of breaking the
sabbath, let it pass before ye
attempt to draw the beast out?
and not rather make all the
haste you can to save its life,
though it should cost you a
great deal of work? But the
labour of this cure was barely
that Jesus laid his hand on the
man. His argument, therefore,
was what the grossest stupidity
could not overlook, nor the most
virulent malice contradict. Our
Lord had used the same reasoning
before, almost in the same
words, when vindicating the cure
of the man whose hand was
withered, Matthew 12:14; and at
another time had urged an
argument in effect the same,
with regard to the cure of the
crooked woman, Luke 13:15. Which
may serve, among a variety of
other instances, to vindicate
several repetitions which must
be supposed, if we desire to
assert the exact and
circumstantial truth of the
sacred historians. And they
could not answer him again —
What he said was so consonant to
common sense, and common
practice, that they had not a
word to reply. They were much
ashamed, therefore, and vexed at
their disappointment, having
gathered themselves together,
and invited him in with a design
to insnare him.
Verses 7-11
Luke 14:7-11. And he put forth a
parable — The ensuing discourse
is so termed, because several
parts of it are not to be
understood literally. To those
which were bidden — From this
circumstance, that the guests
were bidden, and from what is
said, Luke 14:12, it appears
that this was a great
entertainment, to which many
were invited: which renders it
still more probable that the
meeting was concerted, and the
company chosen with a view to
insnare Jesus. When he marked
how they chose out the chief
rooms — πρωτοκλισιας, the chief
seats. The pride of the
Pharisees discovered itself in
the anxiety which each of them
had manifested to get the chief
places at table. Jesus had taken
notice of it, and now showed
them both the evil and the folly
of their behaviour, by its
consequences. He mentioned this
in particular, that pride
exposes a man to many affronts,
every one being desirous to
mortify a vain person; whereas
humility is the surest way to
respect. The general scope of
what our Lord here says is, (not
only at a marriage-feast, but on
every occasion,) He that
exalteth himself shall be
abased, and he that humbleth
himself shall be exalted.
Verses 12-14
Luke 14:12-14. Then said he also
to him that bade him — In the
time of dinner, Jesus directed
his discourse to the person who
had invited him, and showed him
what sort of people he should
bid to his feasts. When thou
makest a dinner, &c., call not
thy friends — That is, I do not
bid thee call thy friends, or
thy rich neighbours. Our Lord
leaves these offices of courtesy
and humanity as they were, and
teaches a higher duty. Or, “by
no means confine thy hospitality
to thy rich relations,
acquaintance, and neighbours,
lest the whole of thy reward be
an invitation from them to a
like entertainment.” So
Macknight: but surely it is also
implied in this precept of our
Lord, that we should be sparing
in entertaining those that need
it not, in order that we may
assist those that do need, with
what is saved from those
needless entertainments. Lest a
recompense be made thee — This
fear is as much unknown to the
world as even the fear of
riches. But when thou makest a
feast, call the poor — Have
tables also for the poor, that
they may partake of thy
entertainments. Dr. Whitby’s
observations on this passage are
worthy of attention. 1st,
“Christ doth not absolutely
forbid us to invite our friends,
our brethren, or kinsfolk, to
testify our mutual charity and
friendship, and how dear our
relations are to us; only he
would not have us invite them
out of a prospect of a
compensation from them again,
but to prefer the exercising of
our charity to them who cannot
recompense us. As comparative
particles are sometimes in sense
negative, so negative particles
are often in sense only
comparative: as Proverbs 8:10,
Receive my instructions, and not
(that is, rather than) silver;
Joel 2:18, Rend your hearts, and
not (that is, rather than) your
garments; John 6:27, Labour not
for the meat that perisheth, but
for that which endureth, &c. So
here, Be not so much concerned
to call thy friends as to call
the poor. 2d, Nor does he lay
upon us a necessity, by this
precept, to call the lame, the
blind, or the maimed to our
tables; but either to do this,
or what is equivalent to us in
respect of charge, and more
advantageous to them and their
families, namely, to send them
meat or money, to refresh them
at home.” And thou shalt be
blessed — ΄ακαριος, happy. This
will afford thee a much nobler
satisfaction than banquets can
give: for, though they cannot
make thee any recompense in the
same way, their prayers shall
descend in blessings on thy
head; and besides all the
pleasure thou wilt find in the
exercise of such beneficence,
thou shalt be abundantly
recompensed at the resurrection
of the just, if thy bounties
proceed from a principle of
faith and piety.
Verse 15
Luke 14:15. When one of them
that sat at meat heard these
things, being touched therewith,
he said, Blessed is he that
shall eat bread in the kingdom
of God — Blessed is the man who
shall live in the time of the
Messiah, and share the
entertainments he will prepare
for his people, when these
virtues of humility,
condescension, and charity shall
flourish in all their glory. To
eat bread, is a well-known
Hebrew phrase for sharing in a
repast, whether it be at a
common meal or at a sumptuous
feast. The word bread is not
understood as suggesting either
the scantiness or the meanness
of the fare. “The kingdom of
God, here, does not signify the
kingdom of heaven in the highest
sense, but only the kingdom of
the Messiah, of which the carnal
Jew here speaks, according to
the received sense of his
nation, as of a glorious
temporal kingdom, in which the
Jews should lord it over the
Gentile world, enjoy their
wealth and be provided with all
temporal blessings and delights,
in which they placed their
happiness.” — Whitby. Thus also
Dr. Campbell, who assigns the
following reasons for
understanding the expression in
the same light: “1st, This way
of speaking of the happiness of
the Messiah’s administration
suits entirely the hopes and
wishes which seem to have been
long entertained by the nation
concerning it. 2d, The parable
which, in answer to the remark,
was spoken by our Lord, is on
all hands understood to
represent the Christian
dispensation. 3d, The obvious
intention of that parable is, to
suggest the prejudices which,
from notions of secular felicity
and grandeur, the nation in
general entertained on that
subject; in consequence of which
prejudices, what in prospect
they fancied so blessed a
period, would, when present, be
exceedingly neglected and
despised; and, in this view,
nothing could be more apposite,
whereas there appears no
appositeness in the parable on
the other interpretation;” that
is, on understanding the kingdom
of God, in the preceding remark,
as signifying the kingdom of
future glory.
Verse 16-17
Luke 14:16-17. Then said he, A
certain man, &c. — He delivered
the following parable to show
the person who made the remark,
and others, that how great
soever the happiness would be of
those who should share the
blessings of the Messiah’s
kingdom, yet that many, who,
under mistaken notions of it,
professed to desire it, were
under the force of such carnal
prejudices that, though it would
be offered to them with every
circumstance that would
recommend it, they would in fact
slight, yea, and reject it, and
that with disdain, preferring
carnal to spiritual blessings, a
kingdom of this world to one
related to another; while, in
the mean time, the Gentiles
would embrace the gospel with
cheerfulness, and thereby be
prepared to sit down with
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in
the abodes of the blessed. The
parable of the marriage-feast,
recorded Matthew 22:1-14, (where
see the note,) was evidently
spoken with the same view,
though on a different occasion.
Made a great supper — By this is
evidently meant the rich and
abundant provision which God has
made in his gospel for the
spiritual wants of mankind,
termed a feast of fat things,
Isaiah 25:6, (where see the
notes, as also on Isaiah
55:1-2;) a feast of truth and
information for the
understanding, of pardon and
peace for the conscience, of
love, hope, and joy for the
affections; bread to nourish and
strengthen, wine to cheer and
exhilarate the soul and all its
powers and faculties. Observe,
reader, there is in Christ, and
in the truth and grace displayed
in, and communicated by his
gospel, what will be food, nay,
and a feast, a rich and
agreeable feast, for the soul of
man that knows its own
capacities, for the soul of a
sinner that knows its own
necessities and miseries. This
provision is called a supper,
because in those countries
supper-time was the chief time
for feasts and entertainments of
all kinds, when the business of
the day was finished. The
manifestation of gospel grace to
the world was made in the
evening of the world’s day, and
the fruition of the fulness of
that grace in heaven is reserved
for the evening of our day. And
bade many — To this feast, which
is prepared for all people,
Isaiah 25:6, God had given a
general invitation by the light
of reason and conscience, by the
secret influences of his Spirit,
and the dispensations of his
providence; and the whole nation
of the Jews he had especially
and particularly invited by his
servants the prophets. And at
supper-time he sent his servant
— At the opening of the gospel
dispensation, he sent the
harbinger of the Messiah, John
the Baptist, the Messiah
himself, his Son and servant,
with his servants, the apostles:
first twelve, and then seventy,
he sent through all parts of the
country, during the time of
Christ’s personal ministry. And
when the Christian mysteries
were finished; when sin was
expiated by the death of Christ,
death overcome by his
resurrection, and the truth of
the gospel sealed and confirmed
by both; when a way into heaven
was opened by his ascension, and
the Holy Ghost, in his gifts and
graces, obtained for his
followers, by his intercession:
when the gospel church was
planted, and this rich provision
was ready to be served up on a
gospel table, — those who before
had been invited were more
closely and earnestly pressed to
come in immediately, and partake
of the bounty of their great
Master. Such was the call given
to the Jews in Jerusalem and
Judea, at and after the day of
pentecost, by the apostles and
other Christian ministers; such
was that which was afterward
given to the Gentile nations,
and such is the call now given
to us. Its language is, all
things are now ready, therefore
come to the feast; to come to
which, in the gospel language,
is to repent of sin, and believe
in Christ. Thus John the
Baptist, and thus our Lord and
his apostles, invited men to the
gospel feast, saying, The
kingdom of God is at hand,
ηγγικε, hath approached, or is
come: Repent ye, and believe the
gospel.
Verses 18-20
Luke 14:18-20. And they all with
one consent — απο μιας is all
that is in the original. It
seems most natural to supply the
ellipsis by the word γνωμης,
consent, as our translators have
done, an interpretation
maintained by Beza and Wolfius.
Began to make excuse — As if by
mutual agreement they had all
contrived to put a slight upon
the entertainment, and to
affront him that had kindly
provided it, and invited them to
partake of it. The first said, I
have bought a piece of ground,
&c., and another, I have bought
five yoke of oxen — “It is a
beautiful circumstance that our
Lord here represents both these
bargains as already made; so
that going to see the farm and
to prove the oxen that evening,
rather than the next morning,
was merely the effect of
rudeness on the one hand, and of
a foolish, impatient humour on
the other; and could never have
been urged, had they esteemed
the inviter, or his
entertainment. Accordingly, it
is commonly found in fact, that
men neglect the blessings and
demands of the gospel, not for
the most important affairs in
life, with which they seldom
interfere; but to indulge the
caprice and folly of their own
tempers, and to gratify the
impulse of present passions,
sometimes excited on very low
occasions.” — Doddridge. Another
said, I have married a wife,
&c., I cannot come — “As the
process of the parable
represents a wise and good man
offended with this excuse among
the rest, we must suppose
something either in the
circumstance of receiving the
message, or of appointing the
time for entertaining company on
his marriage, which implied a
rude contempt of the inviter,
and made the reply indecent. It
was not necessary to descend to
such particulars.” “If the first
of the persons here invited had
had so important an affair to
transact as the purchasing of a
farm, or the second the buying
of five yoke of oxen, or the
third the marrying of a wife,
and if these affairs had come
upon them unexpectedly, the very
evening they had promised to
spend at their rich neighbour’s
house; but especially if these
affairs could not have been
delayed without missing the
opportunity of doing them, their
excuses would have been
reasonable. But none of all
these was the case. The farm and
the oxen were already purchased,
and the wife was married; so
that the seeing of the farm, and
the proving of the oxen, were
pieces of unreasonable
curiosity, which might easily
have been deferred till next
morning. And with respect to the
new-married man’s pretending
that he could not leave his wife
for a few hours, it was such an
excess of fondness as was
perfectly ridiculous; not to
mention that he ought to have
thought of this, when the
invitation was sent him the
preceding day. Wherefore, their
refusing so late to come to
their rich friend’s supper, on
such trifling pretences, was the
height of rudeness, inasmuch as
it implied the greatest
disrespect to their friend, and
contempt of his entertainment.
No wonder, therefore, that he
was very angry when his servant
returned and brought him their
answer.” — Macknight. We may
observe, further, respecting
these excuses, that the things
which were the matter of them
were not only little things, and
of small concern, comparatively
speaking, and things which might
have been easily done at another
time, which would not have
interfered with this important
invitation; but they, were
lawful things. Each of the
actions here alleged, in behalf
of the refusal of these persons
to attend the feast, was wholly
lawful: there was nothing
criminal in any of them. They
were such as might well be, and
are constantly done, in perfect
consistency with embracing the
gospel and its blessings. But
these men rendered the things
which were otherwise lawful and
innocent, criminal and
destructive by their abuse. And,
while they were kept by means of
them from the royal feast, they
became the cause of their utter
ruin. It was a wise saying of
Judge Hale’s (see his Life) that
“we are ruined by things
allowed.” People’s trades and
families, and the necessary
avocations of life, by the too
great anxiety wherewith they are
pursued and regarded, become as
powerful obstacles to the
experience and practice of true
religion, and as much prevent
men’s eternal salvation, as
grosser sins. We have proof of
this every day: while men,
engaged in pursuits otherwise
laudable, by their too close
attachment to them, withdraw
their minds totally from God,
and from heaven, and neglect
that which to regard duly would
forward and advantage even their
temporal concerns. To provide
for a family, to prosecute
industriously and honestly the
business of a man’s calling, to
be faithful to his wife, and to
take care of his children, are
certainly high and commendable
duties, enjoined by God, and
amiable in the sight of men. But
when these, or any of them, are
loved and pursued with such
attachment and intenseness as to
prevent our complying with the
gracious invitations of God; to
alienate our minds from Christ
and the gospel; to keep us from
the due and regular discharge of
our duly to our God and
Redeemer; — then, how laudable
soever our pursuits may be, how
honest and upright soever our
employments, truth it is, they
will as certainly exclude us
from the joys of our Lord, and
his eternal feast; will as
certainly draw down his wrath
upon us, as if our neglect of
him proceeded from any cause
more criminal.
Verses 21-24
Luke 14:21-24. So that servant
came, and showed his lord these
things — So ministers ought to
lay before the Lord in prayer
the obedience or disobedience of
their hearers. Then the master
of the house — Who had made the
entertainment; being angry — As
he reasonably might be, to see
such an affront put upon his
splendid preparations, and such
an ungrateful return made for
the peculiar kindness and
respect he had shown, in sending
for these guests; said to his
servant, Go out quickly into the
streets, &c. — Being of a
benevolent and generous
disposition, he determined that
preparations so great should not
be made in vain: and since those
for whom they were first
intended slighted the favour, he
resolved that a great number
still should be made happy with
his supper, though they were of
the poorer sort, nay, and
diseased too; and the rather,
because the persons of this
class, upon whom he proposed to
bestow his supper, had never
partaken of such a meal before.
He therefore ordered his servant
to go as fast as he could into
the streets and lanes of the
city — Where the poor used to
be, and to bring them all in,
however maimed, or halt, or
blind they might be. The servant
readily went as directed, and
quickly returned, saying, Lord,
it is done as thou hast
commanded — These poor,
distressed people, are come in,
and have sat down at the table.
Many of the Jews were obedient
to the gospel call, and were
brought to God, and became
members of the Church of Christ;
but not the scribes and
Pharisees, and such as Christ
was now at dinner with, but such
as are here mentioned, the poor
of this world, and the
afflicted; or such as were
figuratively represented by
them, the publicans and sinners.
And yet there is room — The
supper being great, and the hall
of entertainment spacious, all
those whom the servant happened
to find in the streets and lanes
of the city did not fill the
tables. Wherefore, knowing that
his lord’s intention was to make
as many happy with this feast as
possible, he came and told him
there was still room for more.
The lord said, Go out into the
highways and hedges, &c. — The
benevolence and generosity of
this great lord were such, that
he could not be easy till as
many people were brought in to
partake of his supper as his
house, with all the apartments
where tables could be placed,
would contain. Wherefore he
ordered his servant to go even
out of the city, to the highways
and hedges leading into it,
where beggars usually had their
stations; and to use the most
earnest entreaties with those
who showed any unwillingness, in
order that his house might be
filled with guests. Thus the
apostles, and first preachers of
the gospel, were not to confine
their labours to the towns and
cities of Judea, but extend them
to all parts of the country, and
invite to the gospel feast
persons of all descriptions: or
rather, being rejected by the
Jews, they are here commanded to
turn, as Paul expresses it, to
the Gentiles, and to offer them
the blessings of the gospel,
though as unlikely to be called
into the Church of Christ, as
vagrants in the highways are to
be invited to a feast at a
nobleman’s house. As to the
clause, Compel them to come in,
“How vainly,” says Whitby,
“these words are brought to
prove, that men may be compelled
by the secular arm to embrace
the true faith, appears, 1st,
From the nature of a banquet, to
which no man is compelled by
force, but only by the
importunity of persuasion: 2d,
From the scope of the parable,
which respects the calling of
the Gentiles, whom only
Mohammedans think fit by force
of arms to compel to the faith.”
Indeed, the word αναγκασον,
rendered compel, frequently, as
Elsner has shown, signifies
only, pressing persuasion. And
it certainly cannot here imply
that any external violence was
to be used with these persons;
for only a single servant was
sent out to them, who surely was
not capable of forcing so great
a multitude to come in, as was
necessary to fill his lord’s
house. The proper meaning of the
expression, therefore, here is,
Use the most powerful persuasion
with them; and so it fitly
denotes the great efficacy of
the apostle’s preaching to the
idolatrous Gentiles, whereby
vast numbers of them were
prevailed with to embrace the
gospel. Indeed, force has no
manner of influence to enlighten
men’s consciences; so that,
though one should pretend to
believe, and should actually
practise a worship contrary to
his opinion, it could never
please God, being mere
hypocrisy. Those, therefore, who
suppose that this passage of the
parable justifies the use of
external violence in matters of
religion, are grossly mistaken.
For I say unto you, that none,
&c. — This declaration of the
master of the house refers to
the commands given to his
servant, Luke 14:21; Luke 14:23.
Because he had determined to
reject and abandon those first
invited, therefore his servant
was ordered to go out and gather
guests from the streets and
lanes, and then from the
highways and hedges. None of
those men which were bidden
shall taste of my supper — This
is like that sentence which God
passed on those ungrateful
Israelites who despised the
pleasant land. He sware in his
wrath that they should not enter
into his rest — What is here
intended is, that, because the
Jews rejected Christ and his
gospel, they were given up by
God to hardness of heart, and a
reprobate mind. “Grace
despised,” says Henry, “is grace
forfeited, like Esau’s
birthright. They that will not
have Christ when they may, shall
not have him when they would.
Even those that were bidden, if
they slight the invitation,
shall be forbidden. When the
door is shut, the foolish
virgins will be denied
entrance.” Only, the reader must
remember, that not the condition
of individuals, but the general
state of the nation is here
described; in which view, the
parabolical representation is
perfectly just, notwithstanding
many individual Jews have
believed on Christ, and obtained
eternal life.
Verses 25-27
Luke 14:25-27. And there went
great multitudes with him — It
seems they accompanied him from
place to place, with eager
desire, doubtless, to have the
Messiah’s kingdom erected;
proposing to themselves all
manner of wealth and temporal
advantage therein. One day,
therefore, as they were on the
road with him, he thought fit to
show them plainly their mistake:
he turned and said, If any man
come to me, and hate not, &c. —
As all the hopes of temporal
felicity under his reign, which
his disciples entertained, were
to be blasted; as he himself was
to suffer an ignominious death;
and as they were to be exposed
unto all manner of persecutions,
he declared publicly to the
multitude, that, if they
proposed to be his disciples, it
was absolutely necessary that
they should prefer his service
to every thing in the world, and
by their conduct show that they
hated father, and mother, and
wife, and children, that is to
say, loved the dearest objects
of their affections less than
him. As in this, so in several
other passages of Scripture, the
word hatred signifies only an
inferior degree of love. Father
and mother, and other relations,
are particularly mentioned by
our Lord, because, as matters
then stood, the profession of
the gospel was apt to set a man
at variance with his nearest
relations. Whosoever doth not
bear his cross, &c. — See on
Matthew 10:37-38.
Verses 28-33
Luke 14:28-33. Which of you,
intending to build a tower, (the
word πυργος here signifying the
same as the Hebrew migdol, seems
to denote any great building
whatever,) sitteth not down
first and counteth the cost — To
illustrate the necessity of
their weighing deliberately,
whether they were able and
prepared to bear all their
losses and persecutions to which
the profession of the gospel
would expose them, which indeed
was the only term on which they
could be his disciples, he
desired them to consider how
prudence would direct them to
act in other cases of
importance. The most thoughtless
person among you, as if he had
said, will not resolve on a
matter of such importance as the
building of a house, without
previously calculating the
expense; because you know that
the builder who begins without
counting the cost, being obliged
to leave off for want of money,
exposes himself to the ridicule
of all passengers who look on
the half- finished edifice. In
like manner, the king who
declares war without comparing
his forces with those of his
enemy, and considering whether
the bravery of his troops, and
the conduct of his generals,
will be able to make up what he
wants in numbers, is sure to be
ingloriously defeated, unless he
humbly sue for peace before the
matter comes to an engagement.
So likewise — Like the person
who began to build and was not
able to finish; or like the king
who, being afraid to face his
enemy, sends an embassy and
desires terms of peace;
whosoever he be of you that
forsaketh not all that he hath —
Who does not engage so earnestly
and resolutely in his Christian
warfare, as to hold all things
cheap in comparison with life
eternal, and be ready to forsake
them when I call him to it; he
cannot be my disciple — He
cannot be acknowledged by me as
such, because my disciples will
be exposed to such trials, to
such reproaches, losses,
imprisonments, tortures, and
martyrdoms, that unless they
prefer me, and the cause in
which I am engaged, to all
visible and temporal things
whatever, they certainly will
not steadily adhere to me, or
continue faithful and constant
in my service. “Christ does not
here require that we should
actually renounce these
[temporal] things, but that our
heart and our affections should
be so taken off from them, that
we always love them less than we
love him; and be always ready to
part with them when we cannot
keep them without making
shipwreck of faith and a good
conscience.” —
Whitby. To the same purpose
Baxter: “A man cannot be
Christ’s disciple if he prefer
not the kingdom of heaven before
all worldly interest, and
forsake it not all
comparatively, in esteem and
resolution now, and in act when
he is called to it.” “It was in
this sense that the apostles
understood their Master: for
though they are said to have
forsaken all and followed him,
they still retained the property
of their goods, as is evident
from the mention that is made of
John’s house, into which he took
our Lord’s mother, after the
crucifixion; and from Peter and
the other disciples prosecuting
their old trade of fishing, with
their boat and nets, after their
Master’s resurrection:
nevertheless, though they thus
retained the use and dominion of
their property, they had truly
forsaken all, in the highest
sense of their Master’s precept,
being ready, at his call, to
leave their families,
occupations, and possessions, as
often and as long as he thought
fit to employ them in the work
of the gospel. Upon the whole,
therefore, it appears, that the
renunciation and self-denial
which Christ requires, does not
consist in actually parting with
all before he calls us to do so,
but in being disposed to part
with all, that when he calls we
may do it.” See Macknight.
Verse 34-35
Luke 14:34-35. Salt is good — If
you are not my disciples indeed,
your outward profession will be
very insignificant: for, though
salt in general is a good thing,
and my servants, as I formerly
intimated (see on Matthew 5:13,)
are the salt of the earth; yet I
must again add, if the salt have
lost his savour — Or be grown
insipid, how can its saltness be
restored to it? or what can
recover those whom my gospel
will not influence and reclaim?
It is neither fit for the land,
&c. — As insipid salt is such a
vile and worthless thing, that
it is neither fit to be used of
itself, as manure for the land,
nor even to be cast upon the
dunghill, to be there mixed with
other manure; but men cast it
out — It is thrown out of doors,
and trampled under foot like
mire in the streets. So you, my
disciples, will be no less
useless and contemptible, if,
under the advantages and
obligations of a Christian
profession, you are destitute of
a true principle of integrity
and piety, of which you will
certainly be destitute if you do
not thus deny yourselves, and
stand disposed to forsake all
for my sake and the gospel’s, as
far as, and whenever, I shall
call you to it. See notes on
Mark 9:49-50. |