Verse 1
Luke 16:1. And he also, &c. — To
give a further check to the
maliciousness of the Pharisees,
and the obstinacy with which
they opposed every thing that
was good, he delivered, while
they were still present, the
parable of the crafty steward,
whom he proposed as an example
of the dexterous improvement
which worldly men make of such
opportunities and advantages as
fall in their way for advancing
their interest. By this parable,
Jesus designed to excite his
disciples to improve, in like
manner, the advantages they
might enjoy for advancing their
own spiritual welfare; and
particularly to spend their time
and money in promoting the
conversion of sinners, which, of
all the offices in their power,
was the most acceptable to God,
and the most beneficial to man.
He said also to his disciples —
Not only to the scribes and
Pharisees, to whom he had been
hitherto speaking, but to all
the younger as well as the elder
brethren, to the returning
prodigals, who were now his
disciples. A certain rich man
had a steward — To whom the care
of his family, and all his
domestic concerns, were
committed: Christ here teaches
all that are now in favour with
God, particularly pardoned
penitents, to behave wisely in
what is committed to their
trust. And the same was accused
unto him, &c. — Some of the
family, who had a real concern
for their lord’s interest,
observing the steward to be both
profuse in his distributions,
and negligent in taking care of
the provisions of the family,
thought fit to inform their
lord, that he was wasting his
goods. Dr. Whitby quotes Rab. D.
Kimchi, on Isaiah 40:21,
commenting as follows, “The
fruits of the earth are like a
table spread in a house; the
owner of this house is God; man
in this world is, as it were,
the steward of the house, into
whose hands his Lord hath
delivered all his riches; if he
behave himself well, he will
find favour in the eyes of his
Lord; if ill, he will remove him
from his stewardship.” And thus,
adds the doctor, “the scope of
this parable seems to be this:
that we are to look upon
ourselves, not as lords of the
good things of this life, so as
to get and use them at our
pleasure, but only as stewards,
who must be faithful in the
administration of them.”
Verses 2-4
Luke 16:2-4. And he called him,
and said, How is it that I hear
this of thee — His lord, having
called him, told him what was
laid to his charge; and as he
did not pretend to deny the
accusation, he ordered him to
give in his accounts, because he
was determined he should occupy
his office no longer. Then the
steward said, What shall I do? —
The steward, having heard his
doom pronounced, began to
consider with himself, how he
should be supported when he was
discarded. He was of a
disposition so prodigal, that he
had laid up nothing; he thought
himself incapable of bodily
labour, (being old, perhaps,) or
could not submit to it, and to
beg he was ashamed. He was not,
however, as appears from what
follows, ashamed to cheat! This
was likewise, says Mr. Wesley, a
sense of honour! “By men called
honour, but by angels, pride.” I
am resolved what to do — So he
said within himself after a
little consideration; a lucky
thought, as he doubtless
accounted it, coming into his
mind. He was not yet turned out
of his office; he therefore
resolved to use his power in
such a manner as to make himself
friends, who would succour him
in his need. That they may
receive me into their houses —
That the tenants or debtors of
his lord, who paid their rents
or debts, not in money, but in
wheat, oil, or other produce of
the ground they rented or
possessed, might give him
entertainment in their houses,
or provide for him some other
means of subsistence.
Verses 5-7
Luke 16:5-7. So he called, &c. —
In pursuance of this scheme he
sent for all those of his lord’s
debtors whom he could hope to
oblige by so fraudulent a
proposal, determining to lower
the several articles in his
book, which stood chargeable to
the account of each of them: and
said to the first, How much
owest thou — How much hast thou
agreed to pay for the rent of
the ground thou occupiest, or of
how much hast thou acknowledged
the receipt? And he said, A
hundred measures of oil — The
word βατους, here rendered
measures, is evidently derived
from the Hebrew בתים, which we
render baths, in the Old
Testament. According to Bishop
Cumberland, a bath contained
about seven gallons two quarts
and half a pint. And he said,
Take thy bill — σου το γραμμα,
thy writing; the writing in
which thou hast promised the
payment of so many baths as
rent, or in which thou hast
acknowledged the receipt of so
many. The writing, whatever it
was, was doubtless of the
obligatory kind, and probably in
the hand-writing of the tenant,
or debtor, who thereby bound
himself to pay these baths, and
was signed by the steward, who
here ordered him to alter, or
write it over again, and make
himself liable to pay only
fifty, instead of a hundred. The
word κορους, rendered measures,
in the next verse, is the כור,
or homer, of the Hebrews,
containing about eight bushels
and a half, standard measure.
The twenty homers which he
allowed the debtors to deduct,
would contain one hundred and
seventy bushels of wheat, and
might be as valuable as fifty
baths, or three hundred and
seventy-eight gallons of oil; so
that the obligation conferred on
both those debtors might be
equal.
Verse 8-9
Luke 16:8-9. And the lord —
Rather, his lord, or master, for
it is Jesus, and not the
evangelist, who speaks this, as
is plain from both the structure
of the parable itself, and from
the application which Jesus
makes of it in the next verse;
commended the unjust steward,
because he had acted wisely —
Or, prudently for himself, as
φρωνιμως here signifies.
Properly, indeed, his master
commended neither the actor nor
the action; but solely the
provident care about his future
interest which the action
displayed; a care worthy the
imitation of those who have in
view a nobler futurity, eternal
life. And the commendation is
here mentioned by our Lord,
merely in order that he might
recommend that precaution to our
imitation. For, though the
dishonesty of such a servant was
detestable, yet his foresight,
care, and contrivance about the
interests of this life, deserve
to be imitated by us, with
regard to the more important
concerns of another. For the
children of this world — Those
who seek no other portion than
the things of this world; are
wiser than the children of light
— Not absolutely, for they are,
one and all, egregious fools,
and must be accounted such by
all who believe there is a life
to come, a life of unspeakable
and eternal happiness or misery;
but they are more consistent
with themselves; they are truer
to their principles; they more
steadily pursue their end; they
are wiser in their generation:
that is, in their own way, and
for this present life, than the
children of God are, with
respect to the life that is
future and eternal. The latter,
though enlightened by God to see
where their true happiness lies,
seldom appear so thoughtful and
active in the great concerns of
religion, as worldly men are in
pursuit of the momentary and
precarious possessions of this
world. Make yourselves friends
of the mammon of unrighteousness
— Be good stewards even of the
lowest talents wherewith God
hath intrusted you, and
particularly of your property.
Make yourselves friends of this,
by doing all possible good with
it, particularly to the children
of God. Mammon means riches, or
money, which is here termed
mammon of unrighteousness, or of
deceit, or unfaithfulness, as
αδικιας may be rendered, because
of the manner in which it is
either used or employed; or on
account of its being so apt to
fail the expectation of the
owners; in which view it is
opposed to true riches: Luke
16:11. The phrase is plainly a
Hebraism, as οικονομος της
αδικιας, steward of
unrighteousness, or
unfaithfulness, Luke 16:8; and,
κριτης της αδικιας, judge of
unrighteousness, Luke 18:6,
which two last expressions our
translators have, with perfect
fidelity, changed into the
unjust steward, and the unjust
judge: if they had taken the
same liberty in many other
places: they would have made the
Scriptures plainer than they now
appear to be to an English
reader. It is justly observed by
Dr. Doddridge here, that
“nothing can be more contrary to
the whole genius of the
Christian religion, than to
imagine that our Lord would
exhort men to lay out their
ill-gotten goods in works of
charity, when justice so
evidently required they should
make restitution to the utmost
of their abilities.” That when
ye fail — When your flesh and
heart fail; when this earthly
tabernacle is dissolved, those
of them who are gone before, may
receive, may welcome you into
everlasting habitations — And
you may for ever enjoy the
reward of your pious charity and
love, in the friendship of all
those truly worthy persons who
have been relieved by it. Or,
this expression, they may
receive you, may be a mere
Hebraism for, ye shall be
received, namely, by God, if you
make a right use of his gifts.
Here, as it were, our Lord, with
great propriety, suggests the
thoughts of death as an antidote
against covetousness, an
unreasonable passion, to which,
however, many on the very
borders of the grave are
wretchedly enslaved. Upon the
whole, the true scope of this
parable is, to teach those who
have their views extended to
eternity, to be as active and
prudent in their schemes for the
life to come as the children of
this world are for the present;
and particularly to do all the
good to others in their power; a
duty highly incumbent on those
especially whose business it is
to reclaim sinners, not only
because sinners are in
themselves fit objects of
charity, as well as saints, but
because charitable offices done
to them, may have a happy
tendency to promote their
conversion. “That this was the
lesson which Jesus designed
particularly to inculcate by
this parable, is evident from
the application of it; and his
advice therein is worthy of the
most serious attention; the best
use we can make of our riches
being undoubtedly to employ them
in promoting the salvation of
others. For if we use our
abilities and interest in
bringing sinners to God, if we
spend our money in this
excellent service, we shall
conciliate the good-will of all
heavenly beings, who greatly
rejoice at the conversion of
sinners, as was represented in
the preceding parables; so that,
with open arms, they will
receive us into the mansions of
felicity. And therefore, while
self-seekers shall have their
possessions, and honours, and
estates torn from them, with the
utmost reluctancy, at death,
they who have devoted
themselves, and all that they
had, to the service of God,
shall find their consumed
estates to be greatly increased,
and their neglected honours
abundantly repaired, in the love
and friendship of the
inhabitants of heaven, and in
the happiness of the world to
come, and shall rejoice in
having disposed of their wealth
to such an advantage.” —
Macknight.
Verses 10-12
Luke 16:10-12. He that is
faithful in that which is least,
is faithful also in much — Here
our Lord proceeds in the
application of the parable. As
if he had said, Whether ye have
more or less, see that ye be
faithful as well as wise
stewards: for if you make that
use of your riches which I have
been recommending, you shall be
received into those everlasting
habitations, where all the
friends of goodness dwell,
because, by your fidelity in
managing the smallest trust of
temporal advantages committed to
your care, you show that you are
capable of the much greater
trust of spiritual and heavenly
employments and enjoyments,
things of a much higher nature.
And he that is unjust in the
least — He that useth these
lowest gifts unfaithfully; is
unjust also in much — Is
likewise unfaithful in spiritual
things. In other words, If you
do not use your riches, and
power, and other temporal
advantages, for the glory of
God, and the good of your
fellow- creatures, you shall be
excluded from the abodes of the
blessed, because, by behaving
unfaithfully in the small trust
committed to you now, you render
yourselves both unworthy and
incapable of a share in the
everlasting inheritance. For if
ye have not been faithful in the
unrighteous — Or rather, as the
word here signifies, the false,
the deceitful mammon — That is,
in the use of your riches, and
other temporal blessings, very
properly called the false
mammon, because they always
deceive those who confide in
them as the sovereign good; who
will commit to your trust the
true riches? — Spiritual and
eternal blessings, which alone
are true riches. “The word
riches is substituted by our
translators instead of mammon,
which was the word Christ
intended, and which, for that
reason, should find its place in
the translation of this verse.
Mammon, coming from the Hebrew
אמן, signifies whatever one is
apt to confide in; and because
men put their trust generally in
external advantages, such as
riches, authority, honour,
power, knowledge, the word
mammon is used to denote every
thing of that kind, and
particularly riches, by way of
eminence.” — Macknight. See note
on Matthew 6:24. And if ye have
not been faithful in that which
is another man’s — The word man
is not in the original, and is
improperly supplied in the
translation, for it is not man
but God who is intended; to whom
the riches, and other advantages
in our possession, do properly
belong; who has committed them
to us only as stewards, to be
laid out for the good of his
family, and who may any moment
call us to give an account of
our management. Observe well,
reader, none of these temporal
things are ours; we are only
stewards of them, not
proprietors: God is the
proprietor of all: he lodges
them in our hands for a season,
but still they are his property.
“Rich men,” says a late writer,
“understand and consider this!
If your steward uses any part of
your estate, (so called in the
language of men,) any further,
or any otherwise than you
direct, he is a knave: he has
neither conscience nor honour.
Neither have you either the one
or the other, if you use any
part of that estate which is in
truth God’s, not yours, any
otherwise than he directs.” Who
shall give you that which is
your own — That which, when it
is conferred upon you, shall be
perpetually in your possession,
shall be your own for ever. Our
Lord’s meaning, therefore, is,
“Since you have dared to be
unfaithful in that which was
only a trust committed to you by
God for a short time, and of
which you knew you were to give
him an account, it is evident
you are not fit to be intrusted
by him with the riches of
heaven; these being treasures
which, if he bestowed them on
you, would be so fully your own,
that you should have them
perpetually in your possession,
and never be called to an
account for your management of
them.”
Verse 13
Luke 16:13. No servant can serve
two masters — See note on
Matthew 6:24. As if he had said,
You cannot be faithful to God,
if you trim between him and the
world; if you do not serve him
alone. Beware, therefore, of
indulging, even in the least
degree, the love of the world,
for it is absolutely
inconsistent with piety:
“insomuch that a man may as well
undertake, at one and the same
time, to serve two masters of
contrary dispositions and
opposite interests, as pretend
to please God while he is
anxiously pursuing the world for
its own sake. In this manner did
Jesus recommend the true use of
riches, power, knowledge, and
the other advantages of the
present life, from the
consideration that they are not
our own, but God’s; that they
are only committed to us as
stewards, to be employed for the
honour of God and the good of
men: that we are accountable to
the proprietor for the use we
make of them, who will reward or
punish us accordingly; and that
every degree of covetousness is
such a serving of mammon as is
really idolatrous, and
altogether inconsistent with the
duty we owe to God.” —
Macknight.
Verse 14-15
Luke 16:14-15. The Pharisees,
who were covetous — Of a very
worldly spirit; heard all these
things — Namely, concerning the
true use of riches, and the
impossibility of men’s serving
God and mammon at the same time;
and they derided him — As a
visionary, who despised the
riches, honours, and pleasures
of life for no other reason but
because he could not procure
them. The original word,
εξεμυκτηριζον, is very
emphatical, signifying, they
mocked him, by a scornful motion
of the mouth and nose, as well
as by what they spake to him.
The word might properly be
rendered, they sneered. “There
was a gravity and dignity in our
Lord’s discourse which, insolent
as they were, would not permit
them to laugh out; but by some
scornful air they hinted to each
other their mutual contempt.” —
Doddridge. And he said, Ye are
they which justify yourselves
before men — By shunning the
company of sinners, and your
care of external appearances,
you make specious pretences to
extraordinary sanctity before
the world, and you seldom fail
to acquire a great reputation
for it. Or, the meaning may be,
You think yourselves righteous,
and persuade others to think you
so. But God knoweth your hearts
— You cannot justify yourselves
before him, who knows you to be
so far from being righteous,
that you are very wicked. For
though you may have covered the
foulness of your crimes with the
painted cloak of hypocrisy, and
by going about, thus adorned,
have cheated those who look no
further than the outside, into a
high admiration of you, you
cannot screen yourselves from
the detection of God, whose eye
penetrates through every
covering, and who judges of
things not by their appearances,
but according to truth. For that
which is highly esteemed among
men, &c. — In consequence of
which it comes to pass that he
often abhors both men and things
that are held in the highest
estimation.
Verses 16-18
Luke 16:16-18. The law and the
prophets were in force until
John: since that time the
kingdom of God is preached — The
gospel dispensation takes place,
and humble, upright men, receive
it with inexpressible
earnestness. Dr. Whitby’s
paraphrase on this passage shows
its connection with the
preceding paragraph, thus: “It
is not to be wondered that you
now hear from John and me higher
precepts of charity and contempt
of the world, than you find in
the law or prophets, which moved
you to your duty by promises of
temporal blessings in the land
of Canaan; since now the kingdom
of heaven is preached, and every
one that enters into it forces
his way by breaking through the
love of temporal concerns and
sensual pleasures. For, to give
you another instance (see Luke
16:18) of a like nature, whereas
the law admitted of divorces at
the pleasure of the husband, by
reason of the hardness of your
hearts, the gospel forbids this
now on any other score than that
of fornication, which, from the
nature of the sin, dissolves the
marriage. Yet, that you may not
cavil at me as a dissolver of
the law, I declare that all the
moral precepts of it shall
obtain and be of perpetual
obligation under the gospel
dispensation.” Every man
presseth into it — The intention
of this clause, says Dr.
Campbell, “is manifestly to
inform us, not how great the
number was of those who entered
into the kingdom of God, but
what the manner was in which all
who entered obtained admission.
The import, therefore, is only,
Every one who entereth it,
entereth it by force. We know
that during our Lord’s ministry,
which was (as John’s also was)
among the Jews, both his
success, and that of the
Baptist, were comparatively
small. Christ’s flock was
literally, even to the last,
ποιμνιον μικρον, a very little
flock. It was not till after he
was lifted up upon the cross,
that, according to his own
prediction, he drew all men to
him.” See on Matthew 11:12. It
is easier for heaven and earth
to pass — For the whole system
of created nature to be
destroyed, than for one tittle
of the law to fail, or the least
precept of it to be set aside as
faulty. See note on Matthew
5:18. Whosoever putteth away his
wife, &c. — And far from doing
any thing to lessen or abate the
force of it, I rather assert it
in its utmost extent and
spirituality, forbidding all
divorces, except for the cause
of adultery, and even looking on
a woman so as to desire her. See
on Matthew 5:28; Matthew 5:32.
Verse 19
Luke 16:19. There was a certain
rich man, &c. — Our Lord, in the
last paragraph, having exposed
those parts of the character of
the Pharisees which were most
odious in the sight of God, and
the roots from whence their
other wickedness sprang, namely,
their hypocrisy and worldly
spirit, proceeds now sharply to
rebuke their voluptuousness and
love of pleasure, and set before
them the consequences thereof in
a most awakening parable, in
which he unveils before their
sight the rewards and
punishments of the eternal
world. It is the most alarming
of all Christ’s parables, and
the characters in it are drawn
in such lively colours that many
have been of opinion, in all
ages of the church, that it is
not a parable, but a real
history. But the circumstances
of the story are evidently
parabolical, and some ancient
MSS., particularly that of Beza,
at Cambridge, have, at the
beginning, — And he spake unto
them another parable. It matters
not much, however, to us, in the
application of it, whether it be
a parable or a real history,
since the important truths
contained in it are equally
clear and equally certain, in
whichever light it be
considered. Which was clothed in
purple and fine linen — And on
that account, doubtless, was
highly esteemed, and that not
only by those who sold these
articles, but by most that knew
him, as encouraging trade, and
acting according to his quality.
And fared sumptuously every day
— Taking care, not only to
gratify his vanity by the finery
and delicacy of his dress, but
his palate also with the most
exquisite meats which nature,
assisted by art, could furnish:
and consequently was esteemed
yet more, for his generosity and
hospitality in keeping so good a
table. The original expression,
ευφραινομενος καθ’ ημεραν
λαμπρως, is very expressive,
signifying that he feasted
splendidly, or, delighted and
cheered himself with luxury and
splendour every day. His tables
were loaded with the richest
dainties, the most delicate
wines delighted his taste, and
all things ministering to
sensuality were plentifully
provided. Who so blessed as he?
for every day this same delight
returned; every day presented a
new scene of bliss.
Verse 20-21
Luke 16:20-21. And there was a
certain beggar named Lazarus —
According to the Greek
pronunciation; or Eliazar,
according to the Hebrew; a name
very proper for a person in such
a condition, signifying, the
help of God; or if, as some
think, the word be derived from
לא עזר, lo azer, a helpless
person. Which was laid at his
gate full of sores — He was so
diseased and decrepit that he
could not go himself to the rich
man’s gate, but he was carried
by some compassionate hand or
other, and laid there; he was so
naked that his ulcers lay
uncovered and exposed to the
weather; and so poor, that he
desired to be fed with the
crumbs which fell from the rich
man’s table. This expression,
επιθυμων χορτασθηναι απο των
ψιχιων, as Dr. Campbell
observes, does not afford any
foundation for supposing that he
was refused the crumbs, the word
επιθυμων, rendered desiring, not
implying so much in the
Scriptural use of it, and the
other circumstances of the story
not being consistent with such
an opinion. For when the
historian says, that he was laid
at the rich man’s gate, he means
not, surely, that he was once
there, but that he was usually
so placed, which would not
probably have happened if he had
got nothing at all by being laid
there. The other circumstances
concur in heightening the
probability. Such are, the rich
man’s immediately knowing him;
his asking that he might be made
the instrument of the relief
wanted; to which may be added,
that, though the patriarch
upbraids the rich man with the
carelessness and luxury in which
he lived, he says not a word of
inhumanity; yet, if we consider
Lazarus as having experienced it
so recently, it could hardly, on
this occasion, have failed to be
taken notice of. Can we suppose
that Abraham, in the charge he
brought against him, would have
mentioned only the things of the
least moment, and omitted those
of the greatest? “Much injury,”
adds the doctor, “has been done
to our Saviour’s instructions,
by the ill-judged endeavours of
some expositors to improve and
strengthen them. Many,
dissatisfied with the simplicity
of this parable, as related by
the evangelist, and desirous,
one would think, to vindicate
the character of the Judge from
the charge of excessive
severity, in the condemnation of
the rich man, load that wretched
sinner with all the crimes which
can blacken human nature, and
for which they have no authority
from the words of inspiration.
They will have him to have been
a glutton and a drunkard,
rapacious and unjust, cruel and
hard-hearted, one who spent in
intemperance what he had
acquired by extortion and fraud.
Now, I must be allowed to remark
that, by so doing, they totally
pervert the design of this most
instructive lesson, which is, to
admonish us, not that a monster
of wickedness, who has, as it
were, devoted his life to the
service of Satan, shall be
punished in the other world; but
that the man, who, though not
chargeable with doing much ill,
does little or no good, and
lives, though not perhaps an
intemperate, a sensual life;
who, careless about the
situation of others, exists only
for the gratification of
himself, the indulgence of his
own appetites, and his own
vanity, shall not escape
punishment. It is to show the
danger of living in the neglect
of duties, though not chargeable
with the commission of crimes;
and particularly the danger of
considering the gifts of
Providence as our own property,
and not as a trust from our
Creator, to be employed in his
service, and for which we are
accountable to him. These appear
to be the reasons for which our
Lord has here shown the evil of
a life, which, so far from being
universally detested, is at this
day but too much admired,
envied, and imitated.” Thus also
Henry: “It is not said that the
rich man abused Lazarus, forbid
him his gate, or did him any
harm; but it is intimated that
he slighted him, was under no
concern for him, took no care
about him. Here was a real
object of charity, and a very
moving one, which spoke for
itself, and was presented to him
at his own gate. The poor man
had a good character, and a good
carriage, and every thing that
could recommend him. A little
thing done for him would have
been considered as a great
kindness; and yet the rich man
took no cognizance of his case;
did not order him to be taken in
and lodged in his barn, or one
of his outbuildings, but let him
lie there. Observe, reader, it
is not sufficient not to oppress
and trample upon the poor: we
shall be found unfaithful
stewards of our Lord’s goods, in
the great day, if we do not
succour and relieve them. The
reason given for the most
fearful doom is, I was hungry,
and ye gave me no meat. I wonder
how those rich people, that have
read the gospel of Christ, and
say they believe it, can be so
unconcerned, as they often are,
in the necessities and miseries
of the poor and afflicted.”
Moreover — Or rather, yea even,
as αλλα και should be rendered,
(for the circumstance is
undoubtedly mentioned as an
aggravation of the poor man’s
distress,) the dogs came and
licked his sores — In this
manner did Lazarus, a child of
God, and an heir of heaven, laid
at the rich man’s gate, drag out
an afflicted life, pining away
with hunger, and cold, and
painful disease; while the great
man within, though a child of
wrath, and an heir of hell,
spent every day in the highest
luxury of dress and table: the
former, according to the opinion
of the world, being a remarkable
instance of the greatest misery,
and the other of the most
consummate felicity.
Verse 22
Luke 16:22. And it came to pass
— In a little time; that the
beggar died — Worn out with
hunger, and pain, and want of
all things; and was carried by
angels (amazing change of the
scene!) into Abraham’s bosom —
So the Jews styled paradise; the
place or state where the souls
of good men remain from death to
the resurrection. The expression
alludes to the way of
representing the felicities of
heaven, by sharing a magnificent
banquet with Abraham and the
other patriarchs; (see Matthew
8:11; Luke 22:30;) and nothing
could better describe the honour
and happiness of Lazarus, who
had lain in so wretched a
condition before the rich man’s
gate, than telling us that he
was placed next to Abraham, and
so, as the Jews expressed
themselves, lay in his bosom,
John 13:23. The rich man also
died — For death knocks with
equal boldness at the sumptuous
mansion of the rich, or even at
the palace of the prince, and at
the cottage of the peasant. This
rich man’s purple and fine
linen, and his faring
sumptuously every day, could not
keep death from him: nay,
probably these things served to
hasten its approach: for various
diseases, and even those of a
very dreadful and tormenting
kind, are frequently the certain
consequences of luxury and high
living. And was buried —
Doubtless with pomp enough,
though we do not read of his
lying in state: that stupid,
senseless pageantry, that
shocking insult on a poor
putrifying carcass, was reserved
for our enlightened age! We read
nothing of poor Lazarus’s
funeral: and indeed, this is one
advantage which the rich have
over the poor, their wealth will
provide for them a costly
funeral! Their clay-cold corpse
shall be enclosed in a coffin
covered with velvet, many
mourners shall be hired to put
on a melancholy aspect, a cloak
for a glad heart, and horses
decked with nodding plumes,
shall bear their wretched
remains to the cold, senseless
tomb! But alas! what is all this
pomp to the soul, which, the
moment it leaves the body,
enters on an eternal scene of
bliss or wo! Nay, and even
before it leaves it, has views
and feelings very different,
according to the difference of
the state it finds itself to be
in, and the apprehensions of
coming misery, or expectations
of approaching happiness which
it entertains. How great was the
difference in these respects
between the feelings of the rich
man and those of Lazarus, when
on the verge of eternity! the
approach of death being very
terrible to the former, while
the latter descried the goal
with inexpressible joy. And from
the moment of their departure,
how utterly were all things
respecting them reversed! the
beggar, being a pious man, finds
himself, after being wafted by
guardian angels through the
unknown regions, laid in
Abraham’s bosom; whereas the man
that was in high life, having
probably always pleased himself
with the thought that there
would be no future state, is
amazed beyond what can be
expressed, when he finds himself
plunged in the torments of hell.
Verse 23
Luke 16:23. And in hell — εν τω
αδη, in hades; that is, in the
unseen, or invisible world. It
must be observed, that both the
rich man and Lazarus were in
hades, though in different
regions of it: he lifted up his
eyes, being in torments — Our
Saviour adapts this circumstance
of the parable, says Lightfoot,
to the popular opinion of the
Jews. The rabbins say, that the
place of torment and paradise
are so situated, that what is
done in the one may be seen from
the other. “Because the
opinions, as well as the
language, of the Greeks,” says
Dr. Macknight, “had by this time
made their way into Judea, some
imagine that our Lord had their
fictions about the abodes of
departed souls in his eye when
he formed this parable: but the
argument is not conclusive. At
the same time it must be
acknowledged, that his
descriptions of those things are
not drawn from the writings of
the Old Testament; but have a
remarkable affinity to the
descriptions which the Grecian
poets have given of them. They,
as well as our Lord, represent
the abodes of the blessed as
lying contiguous to the regions
of the damned, and separated
only by a great impassable
river, or deep gulf, in such a
sort that the ghosts could talk
with one another from its
opposite banks. In the parable,
souls, whose bodies were buried,
know each other, and converse
together, as if they had been
imbodied. In like manner, the
Pagans introduce departed souls
talking together, and represent
them as having pains and
pleasures analogous to what we
feel in this life. It seems,
they thought the shades
[spirits] of the dead had an
exact resemblance to their
bodies. The parable says, the
souls of wicked men are
tormented in flames; the Grecian
mythologists tell us they lie in
a river of fire, where they
suffer the same torments they
would have suffered while alive
had their bodies been burned.”
It will not, however, at all
follow from these resemblances,
that the parable is formed on
the Grecian mythology, or that
our Lord approved of what the
common people thought or spake
concerning those matters,
agreeably to the notions and
language of the Greeks. “In
parabolical discourses provided
the doctrines inculcated are
strictly true, the terms in
which they are inculcated may be
such as are most familiar to the
ears of mankind, and the images
made use of such as they are
best acquainted with.” What we
are here taught with certainty
is, that as the souls of the
faithful, immediately after they
are delivered from the burden of
the flesh, are in joy and
felicity; so, unholy and
unsanctified souls, immediately
after they are forced from the
pleasures of the flesh by death,
are in misery and torment,
ceaseless, remediless, and
endless torment, to be much
increased and completed at the
general resurrection. And seeth
Abraham afar off — And yet knew
him at that distance; and shall
not Abraham’s children, when
they are together in paradise,
know each other? and Lazarus in
his bosom — Having a view of the
seats of the blessed at a
distance, the first object that
he beheld was Lazarus, the
beggar, (who had so often been
laid naked, and hungry, and
covered with sores, at his
gate,) sitting next to Abraham,
in the chief place of felicity.
In consequence of which,
doubtless, the stings of his
conscience were greatly
multiplied, and he was racked
with envy and self-accusing
reproaches.
Verse 24-25
Luke 16:24-25. He cried, Father
Abraham, have mercy on me —
Being in an agony of pain, by
reason of the flames, and the
anguish felt in his conscience,
he cried to Abraham to take pity
on him, his son, and send
Lazarus to give him, if it were
but the very least degree of
relief, by dipping the tip of
his finger in water to cool his
tongue, for his torment was
intolerable. Abraham might have
replied, Thou art not my son, I
disown thee; what has become of
thy purple and fine linen, thy
perfumes, thy feastings, thy
dancings? Where are thy
delicious wines, now that thou
art so earnestly begging a drop
of water to cool thy tongue?
Instead of thy stately palace,
thou art shut up in hell;
instead of pleasure, thou art
filled with pain; instead of
music and mirth, nothing is
heard but wailing and gnashing
of teeth. No: such speeches,
however just, would not have
been suitable to the humanity of
blessed Abraham; for which
reason that good patriarch did
not so much as put this wicked
man in mind of his ill-spent
life; only, being to justify God
for having made so sudden and so
remarkable a change in his
state, he called him his son,
and spake of his past debauched
way of living in the softest
manner possible, showing us the
sweet disposition of the blessed
in heaven. It cannot be denied,
that there is one precedent here
in Scripture, of praying to a
departed saint: but who is he
that prays? and with what
success? Will any one who
considers this be inclined to
imitate him? And Abraham said,
Son — That is, according to the
flesh; remember, &c. — Is it not
worthy of observation, that
Abraham will not revile, even a
damned soul? And shall living
men revile one another? That
thou in thy lifetime receivedst
thy good things — He bade him
consider, that in his lifetime
he chose and accepted of worldly
things, as his good, his
happiness, despising heaven, and
valuing, and seeking nothing but
the riches, pleasures, and
honours of earth. And can any be
at a loss then to know why he
was in torments? This damnable
idolatry, had there been nothing
else, was enough to sink him to
the nethermost hell. But Abraham
further intimates to him, that
having enjoyed the good things
of this world in the greatest
perfection, he could not think
it hard if, by the sentence of
God, in the open violation of
whose laws he had lived,
especially of the great law
enjoining sincere and fervent
love to God and man, he was
deprived of that heaven, and of
those spiritual and eternal
blessings, which he had always
despised. And likewise Lazarus
evil things — He reminded him
that Lazarus, on the other hand,
had borne the miseries of life
with patience, had trusted in
God, and looked forward to a
better state: but now he is
comforted — His afflictions are
all brought to an end, and he is
refreshed with eternal joys,
which know neither hunger, nor
cold, nor pain. He who had no
house in which to hide his head,
is now a free citizen, and
blessed inhabitant of heaven:
immortal joys and everlasting
love refresh his soul, who
lately desired the crumbs from
thy table. Glory is his splendid
robe for ever, health and
gladness attend him always, who
was covered only with sores and
ulcers upon earth; and he is
delighted with the sweet society
of God, of angels, and of all
the saints, whom no man regarded
upon earth, and whose sores the
dogs licked, more compassionate
than his fellow-creatures. And
thou art tormented — Instead of
thy purple robe and fine linen,
thou art invested with a robe of
fiery flame: instead of
sumptuous fare, art fed with
bitter tears, and gnawed
continually by a condemning
conscience; instead of thy past
elegancies and comforts, nothing
but torment and anguish
surrounds thee. Observe well,
reader, it is not the merely
being in a state of poverty and
affliction on the one hand, or
of wealth, affluence, and ease
on the other, that causes this
difference in the future
conditions of men, that in
itself saves or destroys their
souls: but it is the right or
wrong use of either state. When
a man considers the good things
of this life as his chief good;
when his heart is taken up by
them, and he is so intent on the
gaining, the retaining, the
increasing, or the enjoyment of
them, as to neglect making his
peace with God, and giving his
heart to him in holy love, and
his life in uniform obedience;
or, when he makes his riches the
instruments of pride, luxury,
and uncharitableness; of impiety
toward God, and inhumanity
toward his fellow-creatures; —
then he so receives his good
things here as to give up all
right to the good things
hereafter; and having been here
comforted by the enjoyment of
temporal goods, will hereafter
be tormented by the suffering of
eternal evils. “For,” as an able
writer well observes, and as is
intimated in the note on Luke
16:21, “our Lord’s principal
view in this discourse most
evidently was, to warn men of
the danger of that worldly-
mindedness, neglect of religion,
and devotedness to pleasure and
profit, which is not so much any
one vice, as it is the
foundation and source of all
vices. It is that which makes
men regardless of futurity, and
not to have God in all their
thoughts. It is that
deceitfulness of riches,
ambition, and voluptuousness,
and the care of things temporal,
which stifle all sense of
religion, choke the word, and it
becomes unfruitful.”
Verses 26-29
Luke 16:26-29. Besides all this
— As to the favour thou desirest
from the hand of Lazarus, it is
a thing impossible to be
granted; for between us and you
there is a great gulf fixed —
χασμα μεγα εστηρικται, a great
chasm, or void, is established.
Dr. Campbell renders the clause,
There lieth a huge gulf betwixt
us and you, so that they who
would pass hence to you cannot.
If any should be so
compassionate as to desire to
help you, they are not able:
neither can they pass to us who
would come thence — But we must
still continue in an
unapproachable distance from
each other: the passage is for
ever closed: the great gulf is
for ever fixed: and whether a
person be happy or miserable in
a future state, each is
unchangeable! Each, O solemn
thought! each is eternal! Then
he said, I pray that thou
wouldest send him to my father’s
house — The rich man, finding
that nothing could be done for
himself, and that his own case
was irretrievable, began to be
in pain about his relations. He
had five brethren alive, who, it
seems, were living in pride and
luxury, and either entertaining
the Sadducean opinion concerning
a future state, or living in
forgetfulness and neglect of it;
therefore, that he might prevent
their ruin, and, if possible,
ease himself of the painful
reflections which he felt for
having been instrumental in
corrupting them, he entreated
Abraham to send Lazarus unto
them, in hopes it would reclaim
them: for he supposed, if those
in paradise could not pass to
those in torment, there might be
a passage from paradise to the
earth, as it was evident there
was from the earth thither. By
making this request, the man
acknowledged both his own
wickedness and the principle
from which it proceeded: he had
either disbelieved the doctrine
of a future state, or had
disregarded it, had set his
affections on the present world,
and chosen it for his portion;
and by his example, at least,
had seduced his brethren into
the same destructive courses.
That he may testify unto them —
The certain truth of the
immortality of the soul, and of
a future state of rewards and
punishments, and the infinite
importance thereof; lest they
also come into this place of
torment — He might justly fear
lest their reproaches should add
to his own misery. Abraham
saith, They have Moses, &c. —
Abraham replied, that they had
the books of Moses and the
prophets, from which they might
learn the certainty and
importance of these things, if
they would be at the pains to
read and consider them: let them
hear them — Let them hearken to
the warnings and instructions
given them in those divine
records, and they will have
means sufficient to prevent
their damnation.
Verse 30-31
Luke 16:30-31. And he said, Nay,
father Abraham, &c. — He
answered, that the writings of
Moses and the prophets had
proved ineffectual to himself,
and he feared would be so to his
brethren; but that they would
certainly change their
sentiments, and reform their
lives, if one actually appeared
to them from the dead. “It is
uncertain,” says Dr. Macknight,
“whether the rich man, by one
from the dead, meant an
apparition, or a resurrection.
His words are capable of either
sense: yet the quality of the
persons to whom this messenger
was to be sent, makes it more
probable that he meant an
apparition. For, without doubt,
the character Josephus gives us
of the Jews in high life,
namely, that they were generally
Sadducees, was applicable to
those brethren; so that,
disbelieving the existence of
souls in a separate state,
nothing more was necessary, in
the opinion of their brother, to
convince them, than that they
should see a real apparition,”
or spirit from the invisible
world. And he said, If they hear
not Moses, &c. — Abraham tells
the rich man, that if they did
not hearken to Moses and the
prophets, neither would they be
persuaded to a thorough
repentance and reformation,
though a person should come back
from the dead to visit them: for
though such an event might
indeed alarm them for a time,
the same prejudices and lusts,
which had led them to despise or
disregard those methods of
instruction which God had
afforded them, would also lead
them, ere long, to slight and
neglect such an awful appearance
as he desired they might see. If
it be objected here, that Moses
nowhere expressly asserts a
future state of rewards and
punishments, it may be replied,
that the facts recorded by him
strongly enforce the natural
arguments in proof of it; and
the prophets speak plainly of it
in many places. Bishops
Atterbury and Sherlock have
shown clearly and fully the
justness of Abraham’s assertion
here, in their excellent
discourses on this text, which
well deserve the attentive
perusal of every professor of
Christianity.” The impenitence
of many who saw another Lazarus
raised from the dead, (John
11:46,) and the wickedness of
the soldiers who were
eye-witnesses to the
resurrection of Christ, and yet,
that very day, suffered
themselves to be hired to bear a
false testimony against it,
(Matthew 28:4; Matthew 28:15,)
are most affecting and
astonishing illustrations of
this truth; for each of these
miracles was far more convincing
than such an appearance as is
here referred to would have
been.” — Doddridge. Certainly,
if men be so immersed in vice
and wickedness as to be
inattentive to the evidences of
a future state, which God has
already afforded them by the
inspired writings; or, if they
be careless about such a state,
they would, for the same
reasons, reject all other means
whatsoever, which God might make
use of for their conviction and
reformation. Reader, put thy own
heart to the trial: dost thou
really believe the awful
representation of future things
given in this parable by him who
is ordained judge of the living
and dead? Dost thou really
believe that a life of sin and
voluptuousness; of
worldly-mindedness, love of
pleasure, honour, or profit,
will assuredly bring thy soul to
the place of torment, where a
drop of water is not to be had?
If thou dost believe this, what
madness is it to continue one
moment in such a state, and to
have less regard for thy own
most precious soul, than a
damned spirit had for the souls
of his relations! But if thou
believe not, what thinkest thou
would persuade thee of the
truth? Would it convince thee,
were the request of the rich man
on behalf of his brethren
granted thee, and one came from
the dead to testify to thee
these dreadful truths? Do not
mistake the matter: if thou dost
not believe upon the abundant
evidence already given,
sufficient to convince any
reasonable thinking man, whose
eyes are not entirely blinded by
worldly lusts and pleasures,
neither wouldest thou be
persuaded though a spirit came
back from the dead to warn thee.
Abraham assures the rich man,
that if the writings of Moses
and the prophets, though far
less clear and explicit on the
subject of a future state than
the Scriptures of the New
Testament, did not convince his
brethren of the reality of it,
they world not be persuaded
though one rose from the dead;
how much more, then, may we
assert, that a person’s coming
from the dead would not persuade
those who resist the much
greater evidence with which we
are favoured since life and
immortality have been brought to
light by the gospel. If men
regard not the public
revelation, which has been
confirmed by miracles, and the
evident accomplishment of a
variety of prophecies, neither
would they be influenced by a
private testimony given to
themselves: for, 1st, A
messenger from the dead could
say no more than what is said in
the Scriptures, nor say it with
more authority. 2d, There would
be much more reason to suspect
an event of that kind to be a
delusion than to suspect the
Scriptures to be so; and those
that are infidels in the one
case would certainly be so in
the other. 3d, The same strength
of depravity that resists the
convictions of the written word,
would certainly triumph over
those produced by a witness from
the dead. 4th, The Scripture is
now God’s ordinary way of making
known his mind to us, and a way
perfectly sufficient; and it
would be presumption for us to
prescribe any other; nor have we
any ground to expect or pray for
the grace of God to accompany or
bless any other way, when that
is rejected and set aside. Let
us, then, not desire or look for
any other, but be wise, and pay
a greater deference than we have
done to the exceeding goodness
of our God, for having given us
so clear a revelation of his
will in the blessed Scriptures,
and so plainly marked out before
us the way to future felicity
and glory! Let us well consider
the foundation on which those
Scriptures stand, and take them
for our guide, assured that
their authority is divine, and
their instructions all-
sufficient. From them let us, as
reasonable men, as men
peculiarly favoured with so
inestimable a treasure from the
great King of heaven; — from
them let us weigh in the balance
of true reason the gains of time
and eternity: let us put into
one scale the enjoyment of all
our hearts could wish upon
earth, and in the other the
suffering of unutterable and
everlasting misery: and how
light will the scale of earthly
happiness be to that of endless
torment! Let us put into one
scale the denial of all our evil
affections, nay, and a life of
poverty and suffering; and in
the other the gain of
everlasting felicity; and how
light, how very light, will all
the sufferings of time be to the
exquisite joys and glories of
eternity. See Dodd’s Discourses
on the Miracles and Parables. |