Verses 1-8
Luke 20:1-8. And on one of those
days the chief priests, scribes,
and elders — That is, some of
the first men of the nation;
came — By appointment of the
senate, to Jesus; and spake,
saying, Tell us by what
authority, &c. — See on Matthew
21:23-27, and Mark 11:27-33.
Verses 9-19
Luke 20:9-19. A certain man
planted a vineyard, &c. — See
this paragraph explained on
Matthew 21:33-46, and Mark
12:1-12. And went into a far
country for a long time — It was
a long time from the entrance of
the Israelites into Canaan to
the birth of Christ. He shall
destroy those husbandmen —
Probably he pointed to the
scribes, chief priests, and
elders; who allowed, He will
miserably destroy those wicked
men, Matthew 21:41, but could
not bear that this should be
applied to themselves. They
might also mean, God forbid that
we should be guilty of such a
crime as your parable seems to
charge us with, namely,
rejecting and killing the heir.
Our Saviour means, But yet ye
will do it, as is prophesied of
you. He looked on them — To
sharpen their attention.
Verses 20-26
Luke 20:20-26. And they watched
him — For an elucidation of this
paragraph, see on Matthew
22:16-22, and Mark 12:13-17; and
sent spies, which should feign
themselves just men — Men
scrupulously conscientious in
every point: that they might
take hold of his words — If he
answered as they hoped he would.
Master, we know then sayest, &c.
— Speakest in private, and
teachest in public; the way of
God truly — The true path of
duty. They could not take hold
of his words before the people —
As they did afterward before the
sanhedrim, in the absence of the
people, chap. Luke 22:67, &c.
Verses 27-40
Luke 20:27-40. Then came to him
certain of the Sadducees — These
verses are explained at large,
on Matthew 22:23-33, and Mark
12:18-26. The children of this
world — The inhabitants of
earth; marry and are given in
marriage — As being all subject
to the law of mortality, so that
the species is in need of being
continually repaired. But they
which obtain that world — The
world which holy souls enter
into at death; namely, paradise;
and the resurrection from the
dead — It must be observed, our
Lord, agreeably to the Jewish
style of that period, calls that
only the resurrection which is a
resurrection to glory. They are
the children of God — In a more
eminent sense when they rise
again, having then received that
public manifestation of their
adoption, mentioned Romans 8:23;
the redemption of their body.
Now that the dead are raised,
even Moses — As well as the
other prophets; showed, when he
calleth, &c. — That is, when he
recites the words which God
spoke of himself, I am the God
of Abraham, &c. — It cannot
properly be said, that God is
the God of any who are totally
perished. He is not a God of the
dead, &c. — Or, as the clause
may be properly rendered, There
is not a God of the dead, but of
the living — That is, the term
God implies such a relation as
cannot possibly subsist between
him and the dead; who, in the
Sadducees’ sense, are
extinguished spirits, who could
neither worship him nor receive
good from him. For all live unto
him — All who have him for their
God, live to, and enjoy him.
This sentence is not an argument
for what went before; but the
very proposition which was to be
proved. And the consequence is
apparently just. For, as all the
faithful are the children of
Abraham, and the divine promise,
of being a God to him and his
seed, is entailed upon them, it
implies their continued
existence and happiness in a
future state, as much as
Abraham’s. And as the body is an
essential part of man, it
implies both his resurrection
and theirs; and so overthrows
the entire scheme of the
Sadducean doctrine. They durst
not ask him any question — The
Sadducees durst not. One of the
scribes did presently after.
Verses 41-47
Luke 20:41-47. How say they that
Christ is David’s son, &c. — For
an elucidation of these verses,
see on Matthew 22:41-46; Matthew
23:5-7; Matthew 23:14; and Mark
12:35-40. David therefore
calleth him Lord: how is he then
his son — “This implies both the
existence of David in a future
state, and the authority of the
Messiah over that invisible
world into which that prince was
removed by death. Else, how
great a monarch soever the
Messiah might have been, he
could not have been properly
called David’s Lord; any more
than Julius Cesar could have
been called the lord of Romulus,
because he reigned in Rome seven
hundred years after his death,
and vastly extended the bounds
of that empire which Romulus
founded. Munster’s note on this
text shows, in a very forcible
manner, the wretched expedients
of some modern Jews to evade the
force of that interpretation of
the one hundred and tenth Psalm,
which refers it to the Messiah.”
— Doddridge. |