Verses 1-4
Luke 21:1-4. And he looked up —
From those on whom his eyes were
fixed before; and saw the rich
men casting their gifts, &c. —
See on Mark 12:41.
Verse 5-6
Luke 21:5-6. And as some spake
of the temple, how it was
adorned with goodly stones —
Such as no engine now in use
could have brought, or even set
upon each other. Some of them
(as an eye-witness who lately
measured them writes) were
forty-five cubits long, five
high, and six broad, yet brought
thither from another country.
See this more fully elucidated
Matthew 24:1, and Mark 13:2. And
gifts — Which persons delivered
from imminent dangers, had, in
accomplishment of their vows,
hung on the walls and pillars.
The hanging up such αναθηματα,
or consecrated gifts, was common
in most of the ancient temples.
Tacitus speaks of the immense
opulence of the temple at
Jerusalem. (Hist. Luke 5:8.)
Among others of its treasures,
there was a golden table, given
by Pompey; and several golden
vines, of exquisite workmanship,
as well as immense size; which
some have thought referred to
God’s representing the Jewish
nation under the emblem of a
vine, Isaiah 5:1-7; Psalms 80:8;
Ezekiel 15:2; Ezekiel 15:6. He
said, The days will come when
there shall not be left one
stone upon another — The
accomplishment of this
prediction is proved and
illustrated, Matthew 24:2, and
Mark 13:2.
Verses 7-10
Luke 21:7-10. They asked him,
When shall these things be, &c.
— All the particulars in these
verses are noticed and
explained, Matthew 24:3-8, and
Mark 13:3-8.
Verse 11
Luke 21:11. Fearful sights and
great signs shall there be from
heaven — Of these, Josephus has
given us a particular account,
Bell., Luke 7:12. “There was a
comet in the form of a fiery
sword, which for a year together
did hang over the city. Before
the first revolt and war, the
people being gathered together
to the feast of unleavened
bread, on the 8th of April, at
the 9th hour of the night, there
was as much light about the
altar and temple as if it had
been bright day. This remained
half an hour. At the same
festival, the inner gate of the
temple on the east side, being
of massy brass, which required
at least twenty men to shut it,
was seen at midnight to open of
its own accord. Not long after
the feast-days, on the 21st of
May, before the sun set, were
seen in the air chariots and
armies in battle array, passing
along in the clouds and
investing the city. And upon the
feast of pentecost, at night,
the priests, going into the
inner temple to attend their
wonted service, said, they first
felt the place to move and
tremble: after that they heard a
voice which said, Let us depart
hence. But that which was most
wonderful of all, one Jesus, the
son of Ananus, of the common
people, four years before the
war began, when the city
flourished in peace and riches,
coming to the celebration of the
feast of tabernacles at
Jerusalem, suddenly began to cry
out thus: A voice from the east,
a voice from the west, a voice
from the four winds, a voice
against Jerusalem and the
temple, a voice against men and
women newly married, a voice
against all this people. And
thus crying, day and night, he
went about all the streets of
the city.” Josephus adds, “that
he was scourged by some of the
nobility, but, without speaking
a word for himself, he
persevered crying as before;
that he was carried before
Albinus, the Roman general, who
caused him to be beaten till his
bones appeared. But that he
neither entreated nor wept, but,
as well as he could, framing a
weeping voice, he cried at every
stroke, Wo, wo to Jerusalem:”
that he went on thus crying,
chiefly upon holydays, for the
space of seven years and five
months, till in the time of the
siege, beholding what he had
foretold, he ceased. And that
then, once again going about the
city, on the wall, “he cried
with a loud voice, Wo, wo to the
city, temple, and people; and
lastly he said, Wo also to
myself. Which words were no
sooner uttered, than a stone
thrown out of an engine smote
him, and so he yielded up the
ghost, lamenting them all.” See
note on Isaiah 66:6.
Verse 12
Luke 21:12. But before all these
— Before the appearing of the
false Christs — before the
rumours of wars — the
earthquakes, famines, and
pestilences that were to be in
divers places; they shall lay
their hands on you, &c. — “How
fully the particulars foretold
in this verse were accomplished,
we learn from the Roman
historians, Tacitus and
Suetonius, who have given an
account of the persecution
raised against the Christians by
Nero. But the history of the
Acts will throw the greatest
light on this passage. For there
we are told, that immediately
after our Lord’s ascension,
Peter and John were called
before the Jewish senate, and
beaten; (Acts 4:6-7; Acts 5:40;)
that Stephen was brought before
the same court; (Acts 6:12;) and
put to death; (Acts 7:58;) that
Saul made havoc of the church,
entering into every house, and
haling men and women, committed
them to prison; (Acts 8:3;) and
punished them oft in every
synagogue, and compelled them to
blaspheme; and being exceedingly
mad against them, persecuted
them unto strange cities; (Acts
26:11;) that James was brought
before Herod, and by him put to
death; who also laid Peter in
prison, intending to kill him
likewise; (Acts 12:2; Acts
12:4;) that Paul, formerly
himself a persecutor, but now
converted, was, in his turn,
frequently persecuted; that he
and Silas were imprisoned and
beaten in the synagogue at
Philippi; (Acts 16:23;) that he
was brought before the great
synagogue of the Jews in
Jerusalem; (Acts 22:30;) before
King Agrippa and his wife,
before the Roman governors,
Gallio, Felix, and Festus; and
last of all, before the Emperor
Nero, in Rome, and his prefect,
Helius Cęsariensis.” —
Macknight.
Verses 13-19
Luke 21:13-19. It shall turn to
you for a testimony — The
persecutions which you suffer
shall become a glorious proof
both of your innocence and of
their guilt in rejecting the
gospel. Settle it, therefore, in
your hearts, &c. — As the Holy
Ghost will assist you in your
defences, let it be a fixed
point with you, not to meditate
before what ye shall answer. See
on Matthew 10:19, and Mark
13:11. I will give you a mouth
and wisdom, &c. — “I will
suggest to you such sentiments,
and enable you to deliver them
with such eloquence, that your
defences shall be unanswerable;
and your adversaries shall be
struck with them, especially
when they find by your manner
that you have spoken without
premeditation.” Of the
fulfilment of this promise, we
have evident examples in the
defences made by the proto-
martyr, Stephen, and by the
Apostle Paul, especially before
King Agrippa and the Roman
governors. But there is no need
to insist upon particulars. The
prevalency of the gospel,
wherever it was preached,
demonstrates, beyond all doubt,
that the defences made by the
preachers thereof were
unanswerable. Ye shall be
betrayed by parents and
brethren, &c. — See on Matthew
10:22, and Mark 13:12-13. There
shall not a hair of your head
perish — A proverbial expression
denoting absolute safety. The
special providence of God shall
watch over you for your
preservation, and you shall not
suffer before the time appointed
by God, nor without a full
reward. But the promise seems to
refer especially to their
preservation during the siege of
Jerusalem; of which, see on Luke
21:20. Thus Jesus encouraged all
to steadfastness in the midst of
the fiery trial that was to try
them. In patience possess ye
your souls — Be calm and serene,
masters of yourselves, and
superior to all irrational and
disquieting passions. By keeping
the government of your spirits,
you will both avoid much misery,
and guard the better against all
dangers.
Verse 20-21
Luke 21:20-21. And when ye shall
see Jerusalem encompassed with
armies, &c. — The admonition
here given to them who were in
the midst of Jerusalem to depart
out of it, and to them who were
in the countries not to enter
thereinto, shows that the
encompassing of Jerusalem with
armies, spoken of in the
prophecy, was such as would
permit the inhabitants to flee
out of it, and those who were in
the countries to enter into it.
Behold here the wonderful
prescience of Jesus! Cestius
Gallus, in the beginning of the
war, invested Jerusalem, and
took Betheza, or the lower town.
Josephus, (Bell., Luke 2:24,)
says, “If he had continued the
siege but a little longer, he
would have taken the city. But,
I think, God being angry with
the wicked, would not suffer the
war to end at that time. For
Cestius removed his army, and
having received no loss, very
unadvisedly departed from the
city.” And, chap. 25. of the
same book, he further informs
us, that “immediately after
Cestius’s departure, many of the
principal Jews daily fled from
the city as from a sinking
ship.” Among these, we may
believe there were numbers of
the Christians, who, remembering
their Master’s admonition, and
foreseeing what was to happen,
embraced the opportunity thus
afforded them of fleeing out of
Judea, and so escaped the
general ruin, as their Master
had promised them, Matthew
24:13; Luke 21:18. To this
agrees what Eusebius tells us,
(Hist., Luke 3:5,) “That the
people of the church in
Jerusalem, being ordered by an
oracle, given to the faithful in
that place, left the city before
the war, and dwelt in a city of
Perea, the name of which was
Pella.” This oracle, of which he
speaks, seems to have been our
Lord’s prophecy and admonition,
to which every circumstance of
the history perfectly agrees.
Verse 24
Luke 21:24. And they shall fall
by the edge of the sword, and
shall be led away captive into
all nations — The fulfilment of
this part of the prophecy, we
have Bell., Luke 7:16, where
Josephus describes the sacking
of the city. “And now, rushing
into every lane, they slew
whomsoever they found without
distinction, and burned the
houses, and all the people who
had fled into them. And when
they entered for the sake of
plunder, they found whole
families of dead persons, and
houses full of carcasses
destroyed by famine; then they
came out with their hands empty.
And though they thus pitied the
dead, they did not feel the same
emotion for the living, but
killed all they met, whereby
they filled the lanes with dead
bodies. The whole city ran with
blood, insomuch that many things
which were burning were
extinguished by the blood.” Thus
were the inhabitants of
Jerusalem slain with the sword:
thus was she laid even with the
ground, and her children with
her. Ibid. — “The soldiers being
now wearied with killing the
Jews, and yet a great number
remaining alive, Cesar commanded
that only the armed and they who
resisted should be slain. But
the soldiers killed also the old
and infirm; and taking the young
and strong prisoners, carried
them into the women’s court in
the temple. Cesar appointed one
Fronto, his freedman and friend,
to guard them, and to determine
the fate of each. All the
robbers and seditious he slew,
one of them betraying another.
But picking out such youths as
were remarkable for stature and
beauty, he reserved them for the
triumph. All the rest that were
above seventeen years old he
sent bound into Egypt, to be
employed in labour there. Titus
also sent many of them into the
provinces, to be slain in the
theatres by beasts and the
sword. And those who were under
seventeen years of age were
slain. And during the time
Fronto judged them, one thousand
died of hunger.” Chap. 17. —
“Now the number of the captives
that were taken during the time
of the war, was ninety-seven
thousand; and of all that died
and were slain during the siege,
was one million one hundred
thousand, the most of them Jews
by nation, though not
inhabitants of the place; for
being assembled together from
all parts to the feast of
unleavened bread, of a sudden
they were environed with war.”
Thus were the Jews led away
captive into all nations.
However, the falling by the edge
of the sword, mentioned in the
prophecy, is not to be confined
to what happened at the siege.
It comprehends all the
slaughters that were made of the
Jews in the different battles,
and sieges, and massacres, both
in their own land and out of it,
during the whole course of the
war. Such as at Alexandria,
where fifty thousand perished;
at Cesarea, ten thousand; at
Scythopolis, thirteen thousand;
at Damascus, ten thousand; at
Ascalon, ten thousand; at
Apheck, fifteen thousand; upon
Gerizim, eleven thousand; and at
Jotapa, thirty thousand. And
thus was verified what our Lord
told his disciples, the first
time he uttered his prophecy
concerning the destruction of
Jerusalem, that wherever the
carcass was, there the eagles
should be gathered together,
Luke 17:37. See notes on
Deuteronomy 28:62; Matthew
24:15-21; and Mark 13:14.
Jerusalem shall be trodden down
of the Gentiles — The
accomplishment of this part of
the prophecy is wonderful. For,
after the Jews were utterly
destroyed by death and
captivity, Vespasian commanded
the whole land of Judea to be
sold. Bell., Luke 7:26. — “At
that time Cesar wrote to Bassus,
and to Liberius Maximus, the
procurator, to sell the whole
land of the Jews; for he did not
build any city there, but
appropriated their country to
himself, leaving there only
eight hundred soldiers, and
giving them a place to dwell in,
called Emmaus, thirty stadia
from Jerusalem; and he imposed a
tribute upon all the Jews,
wheresoever they lived,
commanding every one of them to
bring two drachms into the
capitol, according as in former
times they were wont to pay unto
the temple of Jerusalem. And
this was the state of the Jews
at that time.” Thus was
Jerusalem in particular, with
its territory, possessed by the
Gentiles, becoming Vespasian’s
property, who sold it to such
Gentiles as chose to settle
there. That Jerusalem continued
in this desolate state we learn
from Dio: for he tells us, that
the Emperor Adrian rebuilt it,
sent a colony thither to inhabit
it, and called it Ęlia. But he
altered its situation, leaving
out Zion and Bezetha, and
enlarging it so as to comprehend
Calvary, where our Lord was
crucified. Moreover, Eusebius
informs us, that Adrian made a
law, that no Jew should come
into the region around
Jerusalem. Hist., Luke 21:6. So
that the Jews being banished,
such a number of aliens came
into Jerusalem, that it became a
city and colony of the Romans,
Hist., Luke 4:6. In later times,
when Julian apostatized to
heathenism, being sensible that
the evident accomplishment of
our Lord’s prophecy concerning
the Jewish nation made a strong
impression upon the Gentiles,
and was a principal means of
their conversion, he resolved to
deprive Christianity of this
support, by bringing the Jews to
occupy their own land, and by
allowing them the exercise of
their religion, and a form of
civil government. For this
purpose he resolved to rebuild
Jerusalem, and to rear up the
temple upon its ancient
foundations, because there only
he knew they would offer prayers
and sacrifices. In the
prosecution of this design he
wrote a letter to the community
of the Jews, which is still
extant among his other works,
inviting them to return to their
native country; for their
encouragement, he says to them,
among other things, “The holy
city, Jerusalem, which of many
years ye have desired to see
inhabited, I will rebuild by
mine own labour, and will
inhabit it,” epist. 25. And now
the emperor, having made great
preparations, began the
execution of his scheme with
rebuilding the temple; but his
workmen were soon obliged to
desist, by an immediate and
evident interposition of God.
“He resolved,” says Ammianus
Marcellinus, lib. 23., “to
build, at an immense expense, a
certain lofty temple at
Jerusalem; and gave it in charge
to Alypius of Antioch, to hasten
the work. But when Alypius, with
great earnestness, applied
himself to the execution of it,
and the governor of the province
assisted him in it, terrible
balls of fire bursting forth
near the foundation, with
frequent explosions, and divers
times burning the workmen,
rendered the place inaccessible.
Thus the fire continually
driving them away, the work
ceased.” This fact is attested,
likewise, by Zemuth David, a
Jew, who honestly confesses that
Julian was hindered by God in
this attempt. It is attested,
likewise, by Nazianzen and
Chrysostom among the Greeks, by
Ambrose and Ruffin among the
Latins, who lived at the time
when the thing happened; by
Theodoret and Sozomon, of the
orthodox persuasion; by
Philistorgius, an Arian, in the
extracts of his history made by
Photius; (lib. 7. cap. 9;) and
by Socrates, a favourer of the
Novatians, who wrote his history
within the space of fifty years
after these things happened, and
while the eye-witnesses thereof
were yet alive. Thus, while Jews
and heathen, under the direction
of a Roman emperor, united their
whole force to baffle our Lord’s
prediction, they did but still
the more conspicuously
accomplish it. See notes on
Deuteronomy 28:64-68. Until the
times of the Gentiles be
fulfilled — The time determined
in the counsel of God for the
conversion of the Gentiles. The
Apostle Paul has given us a
clear explication of this
passage, Romans 11:25. This part
of the prophecy answers to
Daniel 9:27 : He shall make it
(Jerusalem) desolate, even until
the consummation, namely, of
wrath upon this people, and that
determined be poured upon the
desolate. The meaning of both
passages is, that after the
destruction here foretold,
Jerusalem shall continue
desolate, until God has poured
upon it the whole wrath he has
determined; and this wrath will
not be finished until the
Gentiles are converted.
Verse 25-26
Luke 21:25-26. There shall be
signs in the sun, and in the
moon, &c. — These seem to be
highly figurative expressions,
signifying the decaying of all
the glory, excellence, and
prosperity of the nation; and
the prevalence of universal
sadness, misery, and confusion.
And upon the earth — Or, upon
the land, as the words may be
rendered; distress of nations
with perplexity — The Jewish
tetrarchies shall be distressed
and perplexed: the sea and the
waves roaring — The roaring of
the sea and the waves may be a
metaphorical expression; for, in
the first clause of this verse,
the signs in the sun and the
moon and the stars are plainly
so, answering to what by Mark is
expressed thus: The sun shall be
darkened, and the moon shall not
give her light, and the stars of
heaven shall fall. For, though
the darkening of the sun and the
moon may be intepreted literally
of eclipses, no reader can
understand the falling of the
stars literally. See on Mark
13:24-26, and Matthew 24:29-31.
Men’s hearts failing them for
fear — Greek, αποψυχοντων
ανθρωπων απο φοβου, literally,
men expiring through fear; and
for looking after those things —
Those dreadful calamities; which
are coming on the earth — Or, on
the land. For the powers of
heaven shall be shaken — For
this shall not be like former
invasions, or captivities, which
only produced some transient
disorders in the state, or at
most an interruption in the
government for a few years; but
it shall be attended with a
total subversion of it; even of
the whole Jewish polity, laws,
and religion, which were the
work of heaven, or which,
containing in them the light of
truth, are signified by the sun,
moon, and stars in the preceding
verse; and therefore might in
this be called the powers of
heaven. The consequence shall be
such vast, extensive, and
lasting ruin, that it shall be a
most lively emblem of the
desolation of the whole world at
the last day. The above is the
exposition commonly given of
these verses, compared with the
parallel passages in Matthew and
Mark. And in consistency
therewith, επι της γης, which
our translation renders, upon
the earth, is thought to be only
intended of the land of Judea
and Samaria. But Dr. Campbell
thinks the prophecy is not to be
confined to that country, and
therefore he prefers the common
version, for which he assigns
the following reasons: “First,
though what preceded seems
peculiarly to concern the Jews,
what follows appears to have a
more extensive object, and to
relate to the nations and the
inhabitable earth in general.
There we hear of συνοχη εθνων,
distress, or anguish of nations,
and of the things, επερχομενων
τη οικουμενη, coming upon the
habitable world; not to mention
what immediately follows, to
wit, that the Son of man shall
be seen coming in a cloud, with
great glory and power. Nor is it
all probable that, by the term,
εθνων, nations, used thrice in
the preceding verse, manifestly
for Gentiles, are meant in this
verse only Jews and Samaritans.
Secondly, the prediction which
the verse under examination
introduces, is accurately
distinguished by the historian,
as not commencing till after the
completion of the former. It was
not till after the calamities
which were to befall the Jews
should be ended; after their
capital and temple, their last
resource, should be invested and
taken, and the wretched
inhabitants destroyed, or
carried captive into all
nations; after Jerusalem should
be trodden by the Gentiles; nay,
and after the triumph of the
Gentiles should be brought to a
period; that the prophecy
contained in this and the two
subsequent verses should begin
to take effect. The judicious
reader, to be convinced of this,
needs only give the passage an
attentive perusal.”
Verse 27-28
Luke 21:27-28. Then shall they
see the Son of man coming in a
cloud — They shall see the
accomplishment of what Daniel
foretold, by the figurative
expression of, “the Son of man
coming in the clouds of heaven;”
for the destruction of the
Jewish nation by the Roman
armies, and, in after ages, of
other persecuting and
antichristian powers, and the
spreading of my gospel in
consequence thereof, according
to this my prediction, shall
demonstrate to all unprejudiced
persons, that I am the Son of
man, prophesied of by Daniel,
and that the conversion of the
world to Christianity is the
glorious universal kingdom which
Daniel foretold was to be given
to the Son of man; and this is
the true sign from heaven, about
which the Jews have been so
solicitous. See note on Matthew
24:30-31. With regard to the
destruction of the Jewish
nation, and the consequent
downfall of their religious
institutions, which they all
along opposed to Christianity,
it may be observed, that no
events whatever could have
contributed so effectually to
the conversion of both Jews and
Gentiles.
“For it is a known fact, that
while the Jewish constitution
subsisted, the spreading of the
gospel was hindered, both by the
believing and unbelieving Jews;
the former disgusting the
Gentiles, by endeavouring to
subject them to the law of
Moses; and the latter,
terrifying them by the
persecutions which they raised
against the disciples, even in
heathen countries. But the
abolition of the Mosaical
institutions confuted the error
of the one, and the destruction
of the nation brake the power of
the other. The success,
therefore, of the gospel,
depending in a great measure
upon the downfall of the Jewish
state, was very properly
predicted as the natural
consequence thereof. Moreover,
as this prophecy described so
minutely the catastrophe of the
Jewish state, its accomplishment
could not but make a strong
impression upon the minds of the
Gentiles, as we know in fact it
did bring over many of them to
Christianity.” When these things
begin to come to pass — The
things I have been predicting;
then look up — With firm faith;
and lift up your heads — With
joy; for your redemption — Out
of many troubles; draweth nigh —
By God’s destroying your
implacable enemies.
Verses 29-33
Luke 21:29-33. Behold the
fig-tree — Christ spake this in
the spring, just before the
passover; when all the trees
were budding on the mount of
Olives, where they then were.
When they now shoot forth, ye
know of your own selves — Though
none teach you; that summer is
now nigh at hand — See note on
Matthew 24:32-35. So when ye see
these things, know that the
kingdom of God is nigh — The
destruction of the Jewish city,
temple, and religion, to make
way for the establishment of the
gospel dispensation, and the
advancement of my kingdom.
Verily, this generation shall
not pass, &c., till all be
fulfilled — Greek, εως αν παντα
γενηται, till all things be
effected, all that has been
spoken of the destruction of
Jerusalem, and the overthrow of
the Jewish constitution in
church and state, to which
things the question, Luke 21:7,
relates; and which is treated of
from the eighth to the
twenty-fourth verse; in other
words, till every article of
this prophecy is accomplished.
Our Lord, on other occasions,
spake of his own coming, as what
was to happen in that age. See
Mark 9:1; and Matthew 26:64.
Heaven and earth shall pass
away, but my words shall not
pass away — You may expect a
dissolution of the frame of
nature sooner than the least
iota of this prophecy to fail of
being fulfilled, within the time
I have just now mentioned. This
is the most astonishing part of
the whole, for it determines the
time of the completion of all
the particulars mentioned, to
the lives of the men of the age
then in being; and it determines
this, not simply, but with an
asseveration, both to make the
disciples attentive, and to
strike future ages with
admiration, when they should
read this prophecy, and see
every circumstance of the
destruction of Jerusalem and the
Jewish state, with its
consequences, even in the
remotest ages, clearly foretold,
and the time in which it was to
happen precisely marked. Thus
our Lord, in the fullest manner,
showed the greatness of his own
foreknowledge, and, by
consequence, demonstrated the
divinity of his mission. For, as
the Jewish nation was at this
time in the most flourishing
state, the events here foretold
were altogether improbable.
Besides, the circumstances of
the destruction are very
numerous and surprisingly
particular, and the language in
which the whole is conceived is
without the least ambiguity. It
is, therefore, a prophecy of
such a kind as could, not
possibly be forged by an
impostor; and every thinking
person, who compares the events
with this prediction, must do
violence to his conscience if he
do not acknowledge Jesus to be a
prophet commissioned of God. It
appears, however, that our
Lord’s disciples did not then
understand any part of this
prophecy; which is the more to
be wondered at, as it was both
plain and particular, and had
been delivered once before, Luke
17:20. Probably they applied all
the dreadful passages of it to
the heathen nations, especially
the Romans, whose ambition they
thought would lead them to
oppose the erection of their
Master’s kingdom, with all the
forces of their empire. See
Macknight. An observation of Mr.
West’s, relating to the authors
by whom this prophecy, so plain
and circumstantial, is recorded,
is worthy of the reader’s
particular attention, namely,
that Matthew and Mark were
incontestably dead before the
events here predicted took
place, as Luke also probably
might be; and as for John, the
only evangelist who survived
them, it is remarkable that he
says nothing of them, lest any
should say the prophecy was
forged after the events
happened. See West on the
Resurrection, p. 393.
Verses 34-36
Luke 21:34-36. Take heed, &c. —
Here our Lord cautions them
against the security and
sensuality, to which, if they
should yield, they would unfit
themselves for the trying times
that were approaching, and would
render those times a great
surprise and terror to them;
nay, and involve themselves in
the ruin about to come on others
of their countrymen. By this we
learn, 1st, That Christ’s
promises of deliverance to his
disciples and the first
Christians were conditional, and
only to be fulfilled, provided
that, through divine grace, they
made it their care to guard
against those sins which would
have exposed them to God’s
judgments: and, 2d, That there
is a close connection between
our duty and safety; between our
obedience to God and the divine
aid and providence, for our
preservation, whether temporal
or spiritual: and that we are
not to expect preservation
immediately from his hand,
without the use of those means
which he has put it into our
power to use in order to it.
Lest at any time your hearts be
overcharged, &c. — The original
word βαρυνθωσιν, here rendered
overcharged, properly signifies
burdened, or, pressed down, and
so very elegantly and strongly
expresses the hateful
consequences of intemperance;
and the load which it brings on
those rational faculties, which
are the glory of the human
nature. Thus Horace, — corpus
onustum Hesternis vitiis animum
quoque pręgravat uną, Atque
affigit humo divinę particulam
aurę. SAT. 2. lib. 2. lin. 77.
The immoderate use of meat and
drink not only burdens the mind
with the guilt thereby
contracted, but it renders it
dull, stupid, and lifeless in
duty, and indeed unfit for
prayer and praise, for the
exercise of any grace, and the
practice of any virtue: nay, it
stupifies the conscience, and
renders the heart unaffected
with those things that are most
affecting. And cares of this
life — Anxious cares about
visible and temporal things, and
the inordinate pursuit of them.
The former is the snare of those
that are given to their
pleasures; this is the snare of
the men of business that will be
rich. Observe, reader, we have
need to guard against both, also
against all other temptations,
lest at any time our hearts
should be thus overcharged. Our
caution against sin, and our
care of our own souls, must be
constant. But was there need to
warn the apostles themselves
against such sins as these? Then
surely there is need to warn
even strong Christians against
the very grossest sins. Neither
are we wise if we think
ourselves out of the reach of
any sin. And so that day — That
awful and important time, of
which he had been speaking, when
these dreadful calamities should
come upon that nation; and
overwhelm the unwary and
carnally secure. For as a snare,
&c. — For the character of the
generality of people in the
Jewish nation, at that time,
would be such that this ruin
would come on all — Or on the
greatest part of all; that dwelt
on the face of the whole earth —
Or, of the whole land, as a
snare upon a thoughtless bird,
which, in the midst of its
security, finds itself
inextricably taken. Thus should
we take heed, lest either the
hour of death or day of judgment
should come upon us, when we
neither expect nor are prepared
for such awful events. Watch ye,
therefore — This is the general
conclusion of all that precedes.
Watch against every temptation
to negligence and sin, and
against every thing which might
lull you into a dangerous
security; and pray always — With
the most fervent importunity;
that ye may be accounted worthy
— Through pardoning mercy, and
the renewing, assisting grace of
God; to escape all these things
— Those calamitous and
destructive events; that shall
assuredly come to pass — In the
very manner I have described
them. And stand before the Son
of man — With courage and
acceptance, acquitted and
approved as his servants, and
may not fall before him as his
enemies in that day of awful
visitation. In Romans 14:4,
standing and falling are terms
used to signify the being
approved or condemned. Those of
our Lord’s disciples who
followed his directions, and
were faithful to the grace they
had received, not only escaped
the destruction coming on the
great body of the Jewish nation,
but were acknowledged as his
servants, and appointed to be
the ministers of his word, and
the heralds of his grace and
mercy to the Gentile nations.
The expression, καταξιωθητε,
here rendered accounted worthy,
sometimes implies an honour
conferred on a person, as when
the apostles are said to be
counted worthy to suffer shame
for Christ, Acts 5:41; some
times the being meet or fit for
any thing, or suitable thereto,
as when John the Baptist exhorts
to bring forth fruits worthy of
repentance, Luke 3:8. And so to
be accounted worthy to escape,
is, to have the honour of it,
and to be fitted, or prepared
for it. “The reader will observe
that Luke’s account of this
discourse is very short, in
comparison with that of Matthew
and Mark, for this obvious
reason, that he had given the
chief heads of it before, partly
in a discourse of our Lord’s
last coming, which was delivered
to a very numerous assembly in
Galilee, (Luke 12:35-48,) and
partly in another discourse,
relating only to the destruction
of Jerusalem, which was
delivered in his journey
thither, at the feast of
dedication, Luke 17:20, &c.
Here, therefore, he chooses to
omit what had been inserted on
either of those occasions; as
John, who probably wrote after
the accomplishment of this
prophecy, entirely omits it, as
already so largely recorded by
the former three, from whom,
considering the circumstances of
time, it came with infinitely
better grace, than it could
afterward have done from him.” —
Doddridge. See notes on Matthew
24:42-51; and Mark 13:33-37.
Verse 37-38
Luke 21:37-38. And in the
day-time he was teaching in the
temple — “His daily custom at
this, and it may be at other
passovers, was to spend the day
in the city, most commonly in
the temple, where he always
found a great concourse of
hearers, and in the evening to
retire to the mount of Olives,
where he lodged in the villages,
or in the gardens, or in the
open air among the trees. He
chose to lodge at night in such
places as these, that he might
avoid falling into the hands of
his enemies. For though they
durst not attack him in the
midst of his followers by day,
they probably would have
apprehended him during the
silence and darkness of the
night, had he lodged anywhere
within the walls of the town.
Accordingly they did not venture
to lay hands on him, till Judas
Iscariot, one of his own
disciples, betrayed him to them,
in the absence of the multitude,
by conducting an armed band to
the place of his retirement.” —
Macknight. And all the people
came early in the morning to him
in the temple — The evangelist
does not say, that the people
came and heard Jesus preach in
the temple after this time, for
Jesus himself had declared that
he never was to preach to them
any more, Matthew 23:38-39. But
having described in what manner
our Lord spent his time at this
passover, the evangelist adds,
that his ministry sustained no
damage by his leaving the city
at night, because he did not
fail to return every morning to
the temple, and because a great
number of people came thither
early to be instructed by him,
knowing that it was his custom
to be there betimes. “How much
happier,” says Dr. Doddridge,
“were his disciples in these
early lectures, than the
slumbers of the morning would
have made them on their beds!
Let us not scruple to deny
ourselves the indulgence of
unnecessary sleep, that we may,
morning after morning, place
ourselves at his feet, and lose
no opportunity of receiving the
instructions of his word, and
seeking those of his Spirit.” |