Verse 1
Matthew 10:1. And when he had
called his twelve disciples —
From the evangelist’s naming
them the twelve, it appears that
he considered them as elected
before this, though he has given
no account of it in his gospel.
The number seems to have
relation to the twelve
patriarchs and the twelve tribes
of Israel. He gave them power
against unclean spirits — Evil
spirits are called unclean,
because they are wicked, and
delight in wickedness; which is
the only pollution of a
spiritual being. And to heal all
manner of sickness, &c. — By
this power of working miracles
the apostles, though men of low
degree and illiterate, were
enabled to draw the attention of
their countrymen, and to gain
credit to the before unheard-of
doctrine which they were to
preach; and by our Lord’s giving
them this power he gave a
striking proof of his Deity, for
who but God can communicate any
such power to man?
Verses 2-4
Matthew 10:2-4. The first, Simon
— The first who was called to a
constant attendance on Christ:
although Andrew had seen him
before Simon, John 1:41. James
the son of Zebedee — The
fisherman, and John his brother
— The beloved disciple; who were
also called at the same time
with the two former, as they
were fishing at the sea of
Galilee, Mark 1:19. The word
ιακωβος, which we translate
James, is the same name with
that of the patriarch; but
immemorial custom has
appropriated, in our language,
the name James to the two
apostles, and Jacob to the
patriarch. Lebbeus, who was also
called Judas, or Jude, the
brother of James. Simon the
Canaanite — So called, it seems,
because he was a native of Cana.
And Judas, named Iscariot, from
Iscarioth, the place of his
birth, a town of the tribe of
Ephraim, near the city of
Samaria.
Verse 5-6
Matthew 10:5-6. These twelve
Jesus sent forth — Namely, to
preach the gospel and to work
miracles; exercising therein his
supreme authority over his
Church. And commanded, Go not
into the way of the Gentiles —
That is, into their country.
Their commission was thus
confined now, because the
calling of the Gentiles was
deferred till after the more
plentiful effusion of the Holy
Ghost on the day of pentecost.
And into any city of the
Samaritans enter ye not — In
travelling through Palestine the
apostles would often have
occasion to go into Samaria; but
they were not to enter the
cities thereof with a design to
preach. It is true, in the
beginning of his ministry, our
Lord himself preached to the
Samaritans with great success,
John 4:41-42; and therefore, had
he sent his apostles among them,
numbers, in all probability,
would have been induced to
believe; but the inveterate
enmity which the Jews bore to
the Samaritans made the
conversion of the latter
improper at this time, as it
would have laid a great
stumbling-block in the way of
the conversion of the Jews: as
preaching now to the Gentiles
would also have done. But go
rather to the lost sheep of the
house of Israel — He calls the
Jews lost sheep, because, as he
had told his disciples, Matthew
9:36, they fainted, and were
scattered abroad, as sheep
having no shepherd, and so were
in danger of perishing. See
Isaiah 49.
Verse 7-8
Matthew 10:7-8. And as ye go,
preach — κηρυσσετε, proclaim,
namely, with ardour and zeal, as
becomes my heralds. The word is
derived from κηρυξ, a herald.
“Probably,” says Doddridge,
“they were to make this
proclamation with a loud voice,
as they passed through the
streets of the towns they went
to, as Jonah delivered his
message to Nineveh.” The kingdom
of heaven is at hand — ηγγικεν,
hath approached. Publish
everywhere the glad tidings of
the approach of the Messiah’s
kingdom, promised by the
prophets. Properly speaking, the
kingdom of heaven, or gospel
kingdom, did not begin till the
Jewish dispensation was
abolished, and therefore the
apostles, in our Lord’s time,
and even our Lord himself,
preached the approach only, and
not the actual existence of that
kingdom. But though the apostles
were directed to preach the
approach of this kingdom, they
did not yet fully understand its
nature, that it was not to be a
temporal, but a spiritual
kingdom, consisting in the
dominion of truth and grace, of
righteousness, peace, and joy
within men. Heal the sick,
cleanse the lepers, &c. —
Perform all these miraculous
cures in confirmation of your
mission, to prove to men the
certain truth and unspeakable
importance of your message.
Freely ye have received — All
things; in particular the power
of working miracles: freely give
— Exert that power wherever you
come, and that in a manner
honourable to yourselves and me:
scorn the thought of making any
gain of those for whom these
works of mercy and power are
performed. That this clause
relates to the miraculous cures
which the apostles were
empowered to perform, and not to
the stated offices of the
apostolical function, is evident
from Luke 10:7, where our Lord,
in giving a like commission to
the seventy, bid them eat and
drink what was set before them,
“because the labourer was worthy
of his hire.” Nay, in this very
charge, no sooner did he order
the apostles to give freely,
than he forbade them to provide
gold, &c., because the labourer,
says he, is worthy of his meat,
plainly insinuating that while
they were preaching the gospel,
they had a right to a
maintenance from those who
enjoyed the benefit of their
labours, and should in the
course of the divine providence
be supplied with all things
necessary.
Verse 9-10
Matthew 10:9-10. Provide neither
gold — As if he said, Though I
forbid you to take money for the
miraculous cures which you shall
perform, I do not mean that you
should beforehand lay up money
for your support during your
journey. You are not even to
provide the clothes and shoes
which you may have occasion for
before you return; because you
shall be supplied with whatever
you need by those to whom you
preach the gospel. Our Lord
forbade his disciples to provide
beforehand such things as might
be necessary during their
journey, because they would be
an encumbrance and would
incommode them in travelling. He
probably also ordered them to go
out thus unfurnished, partly
that they might be inured, in
his own lifetime, to bear the
hardships they would be exposed
to afterward, when discharging
the apostolical office; and
partly that their faith in the
providence of God might be
confirmed. For it must have
afforded them great comfort ever
after, to reflect on the
singular care that was taken of
them while out on their first
mission, wholly unprepared to
execute such an undertaking.
Accordingly this was the use
which Christ himself directed
them to make of it, Luke 22:35.
It may not be improper to
observe here, that the word
ζωναις, here rendered purses,
properly means girdles: because
the people in the East had a
custom of carrying their money
in a kind of fob-pocket, or
fold, made in the duplicate of
their girdles. The word τηρα,
rendered scrip, was a sort of
large bag, in which shepherds
and those who journeyed carried
their provisions. Thus the bag
into which David put the smooth
stones wherewith he smote
Goliah, is called both a scrip
and a shepherd’s bag. Our Lord,
in saying, Neither two coats nor
shoes, means that they were only
to take one coat and one pair of
shoes, that is, only the
articles of raiment which they
were wearing. “In the account
which Mark gives of the
repetition of these
instructions, immediately before
the disciples took their
journey, he says, they were
permitted to be shod with
sandals; ( αλλ’ υποδεδεμενους
σανδαλια, Matthew 6:9.) The
sandal was a piece of strong
leather or wood fastened to the
sole of the foot with strings,
which they tied round the foot
and ankle; but the shoe was a
kind of short boot, that covered
the foot and part of the leg,
and was a more delicate piece of
dress than the sandal.” —
Macknight. Nor yet staves —
Though in the margin we read,
Gr. a staff, which is the common
reading, many manuscripts and
versions have ραβδους, staves,
which some think reconciles this
place with Luke 9:3; and removes
the seeming contradiction from
Mark 6:8, where we read, Take
nothing save a staff only; that
is, as they explain it, he that
had a staff might take it to
walk with: but none of them were
to take any sort of rod or staff
besides, wherewith to defend
themselves, because, being the
servants of the Lord, they were
to be defended by his power as
well as supported by his bounty.
But the more probable solution
of the difficulty seems to be,
any one of them that had a staff
in his hand, might take it: but
as for those who were walking
without staves, they were not to
provide them.
Verses 11-13
Matthew 10:11-13. Into
whatsoever city, &c., ye shall
enter, inquire who is worthy —
That you should abide with him,
that is, who is of a good
character, and disposed to
receive the gospel. And there
abide — In that house, till ye
leave the town. It is of much
consequence that a preacher of
the gospel should not endanger
his reputation, by taking up his
lodging in a disreputable
family, or by removing from one
family to another, out of regard
to some little matter of
domestic convenience or
entertainment. This is more
fully expressed in the
instructions to the seventy,
Luke 10:7.
“In the same house remain,
eating and drinking such things
as they have: go not from house
to house.” Doubtless the
disciples on some occasions
might change their quarters with
decency; but our Lord absolutely
forbade them to do it for the
sake of better entertainment or
accommodation, that they might
not give mankind the least cause
of imagining that they served
their bellies, or were
particularly solicitous about
conveniences. When ye come into
a house, salute it — In the
usual Jewish form, “Peace, (that
is, all blessings,) be to this
house.” If the house be worthy —
Of it, God shall give them the
peace you wish them. If not, he
shall give you what they refuse.
The same will be the case when
we pray for them that are not
worthy.
Verse 14-15
Matthew 10:14-15. Whosoever
shall not receive you — That is,
entertain you kindly; nor, in an
obedient manner, hearken to your
words, when you depart, &c.,
shake off the dust of your feet
— The Jews thought the land of
Israel so peculiarly holy, that
when they came home from any
heathen country they stopped at
the borders, and shook or wiped
off the dust of it from their
feet, that the holy land might
not be polluted with it.
Therefore the action here
enjoined was a lively
intimation, that those Jews who
had rejected the gospel were
holy no longer, but were on a
level with heathen and
idolaters. Verily, It shall be
more tolerable, &c. — As if he
had said, And indeed you have
reason to shake off the dust of
your feet in such a case, for
whatever profession such Jews
may make of their regard to the
true God, and however they may
continue to boast of their
national privileges, their
punishment at the day of final
judgment shall not only be
greater than that of the
generality of Gentile sinners,
but even than that of those
monsters of unnatural wickedness
who formerly inhabited Sodom and
Gomorrah, and were consumed with
fire and brimstone from heaven.
For the people of those cities
never sinned against such
extraordinary light and such
singular favours as they will do
who reject the gospel now to be
preached to them, with great
plainness and power, by you, and
attested by such miracles as I
shall enable you to perform.
Verse 16
Matthew 10:16. Behold, I send
you forth as sheep in the midst
of wolves — I now send you forth
weak and defenceless among a
wicked, cruel, and persecuting
people. “Considering the nature
of the tidings which the
apostles were now sent out to
publish, namely, that the
kingdom of heaven was at hand —
considering, also, the number
and variety of the miraculous
cures which they were to be
enabled to perform in
confirmation of their doctrine,
together with the greatness of
the benefits they were to confer
upon the families who should
entertain them kindly, it is
reasonable to think that they
were flattering themselves with
the hopes of great honour and
acceptance wherever they came.
In the meantime, the event was
by no means to answer their
expectation. They were
everywhere to be despised,
persecuted, delivered up into
the hands of public justice, and
punished as evil doers. Our
Lord, therefore, who thought fit
to forewarn them of these
things, made them large promises
of the divine aid, and gave them
directions with respect to their
conduct in every circumstance.”
— Macknight. Be ye therefore
wise as serpents — On the one
hand, be so prudent as not to
irritate the wicked, and those
who shall oppose you, either by
your behaviour or your doctrine,
unnecessarily, and avoid all
unnecessary dangers: and
harmless as doves — On the other
hand, let not your prudence
degenerate into craft, lest it
lead you to betray the truth, or
to encourage or countenance men
in their evil practices;
maintain at all times a holy
simplicity of soul; and to your
prudence join a harmless and
inoffensive behaviour, rendering
yourselves remarkable for
integrity amid the greatest
temptations, and for meekness
amid the greatest provocations.
Verse 17-18
Matthew 10:17-18. Beware of men
— That is, be on your guard
against the men of the world
with whom you converse, that you
do not, by any inadvertency,
give them advantage against you:
and think not that all your
innocence and all your wisdom
united can screen you from
persecution. For they will
deliver you up to the councils —
They will seek all occasions of
mischief against you, and
deliver you up to the sanhedrim,
and other inferior courts of
judicature: and they will
scourge you in their synagogues
— A sort of discipline which was
used in their synagogues, where
they held their courts about
both civil and ecclesiastical
affairs. Comp. Matthew 23:34,
and Acts 22:19. And ye shall be
brought before governors —
Namely, to be punished by them
as malefactors, not for any
crimes wherewith they can charge
you, but for my sake. Although
these things did not happen
while the apostles were out on
their first mission, yet they
came to pass after Christ’s
ascension, when Peter and John
were called before the
sanhedrim, Acts 4:6-7, and
beaten, Acts 5:40 : also when
James and Peter were brought
before Herod, Acts 12:3; Paul
before Agrippa and his wife, and
the Roman governors, Gallio,
Felix, Festus; and, last of all,
before the Emperor Nero, and his
prefect, Helius Cęsarianus. For
a testimony against them and the
Gentiles — All these things will
be permitted to befall you, that
your innocence may be
manifested, the truth of the
gospel demonstrated, and an
opportunity afforded you of
testifying it with greater
solemnity both to Jews and
Gentiles. “The patience which
the apostles showed under
continual persecutions, and the
courage wherewith they went to
death, in confirmation of their
doctrine, became strong proofs
of their innocence and of the
truth of the gospel. Moreover,
if the apostles had never been
brought before the supreme
powers, nor defended their cause
in the presence of kings and
governors, it might have been
said that because Christianity
could not bear a strict
examination from able judges, it
was preached to none but men of
vulgar understanding, who were
not capable of detecting it.
But, when persons of the highest
distinction for birth, fortune,
capacity, and learning, had the
gospel laid before them in the
defences which the apostles were
obliged to make, at the public
tribunals of every country, its
standing such a trial was
certainly a great confirmation
of its truth to persons of
inferior note.” — Macknight.
Verse 19
Matthew 10:19. But take no
thought how or what ye shall
speak — When you are compelled
to appear before such personages
be not anxiously careful about
your defence there, or how you
shall answer for yourselves, but
cheerfully confide in the divine
direction, which shall certainly
be given you, and shall be
abundantly sufficient for you.
The apostles being, in general,
persons of a low education, and
wholly unacquainted with the
laws of the different countries
whither they were to go, and
with the forms of their courts,
might have been much terrified
at the thought of appearing
before kings, governors, and
other persons of distinction,
and might have feared lest, in
the hurry of their spirits, they
should be betrayed into some
impropriety of language or
behaviour, by which the cause of
the gospel might be injured.
Nothing, therefore, could have
been more proper, or better
suited to the circumstances in
which they were placed, than the
promise which our Lord here
makes them, which, if received
in faith, was sufficient to
prevent a thousand anxious
apprehensions. Observe, reader,
neither at such a time as is
here referred to, nor on any
sudden call, need the true
disciples of Jesus be careful
what or how to answer.
Verse 21
Matthew 10:21. And the brother,
who believeth not, shall deliver
up the believing brother to
death, and the father the child,
&c. — As if he had said, All the
wisdom and justice of your
apologies, though divinely
inspired, will not disarm the
malice of your unreasonable
enemies, which shall prevail to
such a degree as even to triumph
over natural affection, and
break asunder the strictest
bonds of social life: for the
nearest relations shall betray
one another, not only to some
slighter punishments, but even
to violent and tormenting
deaths. And fathers shall thus
become the murderers, instead of
being the guardians and
protectors, of their children:
and children, on the other hand,
forgetting all the obligations
of filial duty and affection,
shall rise up, as witnesses,
against their own parents, and
cause them to be put to death.
And ye shall be hated of all men
— Namely, of all that know not
God. You, my apostles,
notwithstanding all the humanity
of your character, and
benevolent design of your
office, shall be the objects of
general aversion, censure, and
persecution, and all this for my
name’s sake — That is, for your
attachment to me and my cause,
though it be the cause of
righteousness and truth, of the
redemption and salvation of the
human race. But he that endureth
to the end shall be saved — But
be not discouraged at the
prospect of these trials, for he
that perseveres in the faith and
practice of the gospel, and who
bears constantly and with
invincible patience these
persecutions, (which my grace is
sufficient to enable you all to
do,) shall be finally and
eternally saved from all sin and
misery, into the kingdom and
glory of God: whatever
extremities he may be called to
suffer in this world, God will
not only deliver him from the
destruction which shall come
upon the wicked, but will repay
his fidelity with unspeakable
and everlasting felicity in the
next.
Verse 23
Matthew 10:23. But, &c. — As if
he had said, I do not say this
with a view to encourage you to
rush upon martyrdom before you
have a plain and lawful call to
it; on the other hand, it will
rather be your duty to prolong
your useful lives to the utmost
limits you lawfully may.
Therefore, when they persecute
you in one city, flee to another
— And though this may contract
the time of your abode in each,
be not discouraged at that,
which may, on the whole, be no
inconvenience: for ye shall not
have gone over the cities of
Israel — To preach the gospel in
each of them, make what haste
you will, until the Son of man
shall come — To destroy their
capital city, temple, and
nation. The destruction of
Jerusalem by Titus is often
called the coming of the Son of
man. See Matthew 24:27; Matthew
24:37; Matthew 24:39; Matthew
24:44; Luke 18:5.
Verses 24-26
Matthew 10:24-26. The disciple
is not above his master — As if
he had said, As for the unkind
usage I have warned you to
expect, you have no reason to be
surprised at it, considering
what I have intimated respecting
the persecutions awaiting my
disciples for righteousness’
sake. See Matthew 5:10-12. And,
that you may bear all with a
becoming fortitude, consider
that they have calumniated,
traduced, and persecuted me your
Master, for which cause you, my
disciples, cannot think it hard
if they shall calumniate and
persecute you: for if they have
called the master, Beelzebub,
how much more, &c. — This cannot
refer to the quantity of
reproach and persecution; (for
in this the servant cannot be
above his Lord;) but only to the
certainty of it. Fear them not
therefore — Be not afraid of
their calumnies, however false
or malicious, for ye have only
the same usage that your Lord
has: and neither shall their
wickedness nor your innocence be
always concealed: both shall be
manifested, at least, in the day
of judgment. For there is
nothing covered that shall not
be revealed, &c. — “The words,”
says Whitby, “are capable of two
good senses: 1st, Let not the
dread of these persecutors deter
you from preaching the gospel,
as despairing of the success of
it; for, though at present it
seems to be hidden from the
world, and it is likely to be
obscured for a while by the
calumnies of the Jews and
others, I will cause it to shine
through all the world, and
dissipate all the clouds they
cast over it, and will render it
mighty to cast down whatever
exalts itself against the
knowledge of God, &c. Or, 2dly,
thus, Fear not the calumnies
with which they shall load you,
as they did your Master, for I
will make the innocence and the
excellence of your doctrine as
clear as the light; and your
integrity in the dispensing of
it, and your patience in
suffering for it, to redound to
your praise, honour, and glory,
throughout all ages, and
especially at my revelation from
heaven, 1 Peter 1:7.”
Verse 27-28
Matthew 10:27-28. What I tell
you in darkness, that speak ye
in light — The doctrines of the
gospel which I deliver to you in
private, and in obscure
parables, preach plainly and
openly, without the fear of man,
in the audience of all. And what
ye hear, as it were whispered,
in the ear, preach ye — Proclaim
publicly, as though you
addressed multitudes, from the
house-tops. Two customs of the
Jews seem to be alluded to here.
Their doctors used to whisper in
the ear of their disciples what
they were to pronounce aloud to
others. And as their houses were
low and flat-roofed, they
sometimes preached to the people
from thence. And, according to
Hegesippus, they carried James
the Just to the top of the
temple to preach to the people
at the passover. And fear not
them that kill the body — Be not
afraid of any thing which ye may
suffer for proclaiming it, even
though the boldness of your
testimony should at length cost
you your lives: for they who
kill the body, are not able to
kill, or hurt, the soul — The
spiritual and immaterial part of
you: this “will still survive in
all its vigour, while its
tabernacle lies in ruins.” So
Dr. Doddridge, who justly
observes, “These words contain a
certain argument to prove the
existence of the soul in a
separate state, and its
perception of that existence;
else the soul would be as
properly killed as the body.” On
this argument Dr. Whitby
enlarges as follows: “These
words contain a certain evidence
that the soul dies not with the
body, but continued afterward in
a state of sensibility: for that
which, it is allowed, men can do
to the body, it is denied that
they can do to the soul. But, if
by killing the body men could
make the soul also to perish
till the reunion and
reviviscence both of body and
soul; or, if by killing the body
they could render the soul
insensible, or deprive it of all
power of thinking or perceiving
any thing, they would kill the
soul; for it is not easy to
conceive how an intelligent,
thinking, and perceiving being
can be more killed than by
depriving it of all sensation,
thought, and perception; the
body itself being killed by a
total privation of sense and
motion. It remains, that the
soul doth not perish with the
body, nor is it reduced into an
insensible state by the death
thereof.” Add to this, our Lord
may well be supposed to speak
here as the Jews would certainly
understand his words; now they
would certainly thus understand
him, it being their received
opinion, [namely, that of the
Pharisees,] that the soul, after
the death of the body, is in
bliss or misery, and therefore
continues in a state of
sensibility. But, fear him, &c.
— Fear lest, being unfaithful in
so important a trust, you should
incur the displeasure of Him who
is able to destroy both body and
soul in hell — Who has power to
fill the separate spirit with
unspeakable anguish, and at the
final judgment to reunite it to
the body, and to condemn both to
everlasting misery in that
infernal prison. It must be
observed, that instead of
αποκτειναι, to kill, the word
απολεσαι, to destroy, is used in
this second clause, which also
often signifies to torment.
“What an awful verse is this
before us! How fit is it that
this eternal and almighty God
should be the object of our
humble fear! and that in
comparison of him we should fear
nothing else! All the terrors
and all the flatteries of the
world are disarmed by this! an
idea which, in every state of
life, should engage us to be
faithful to God; so shall we be
most truly faithful to
ourselves.”
Verses 29-31
Matthew 10:29-31. Are not two
sparrows sold for a farthing —
As if he had said, The
particular providence of God is
another reason for your not
fearing man. For this extends to
the very smallest things, even
to sparrows and the hairs of
your heads, which are all
numbered. In other words, the
meanest of God’s creatures are
under the protection of his
providence, insomuch that
nothing befalls them without its
direction; and therefore your
enemies cannot touch even your
bodies without your heavenly
Father’s permission. A most
consolatory doctrine this,
indeed, and a strong reason why
we should exercise a continual
dependance on God, and in all
circumstances and situations
cast our care on him who thus
careth for us. Fear ye not
therefore — Lest ye should be
overlooked or neglected, ye, my
rational and immortal creatures,
especially ye my children,
adopted and regenerated, and
above all, ye ministers of my
word, honoured with so important
an employment as that of
preaching my gospel: ye are of
more value than many sparrows —
Yea, than the whole species of
them: and therefore you may
assure yourselves that
providence will watch over you.
Verse 32-33
Matthew 10:32-33. Whosoever, &c.
— As a further encouragement to
you to cast off all unnecessary
cares and fears, to trust in
God, and arm yourselves with
courage to encounter, and
resolution to endure whatever
persecutions, injuries, or other
trials he in his providence may
permit to befall you, be
assured, whatever you may now
suffer for your fidelity to me,
it will, on the whole, be most
amply rewarded. For whosoever
shall confess me — That is,
publicly acknowledge me for the
promised Messiah, receiving my
whole doctrine for the rule of
his faith and practice, obeying
all my precepts, relying on my
promises, revering my
threatenings, and imitating my
example: him will I confess
before my Father — Him will I
own as my true disciple in the
presence of my Father at the day
of final judgment, and will
claim for him the rewards which
my Father has promised to such.
But whosoever shall deny me —
Whosoever shall be ashamed or
afraid to acknowledge his
relation to me, or shall not
confess me before men, in the
sense now mentioned, him will I
also deny, &c. — As having any
relation to me, in that awful
day. “There is an unspeakable
majesty in this article of our
Lord’s discourse. Although he
was now in the lowest state of
humanity, he declares that his
confessing us before God is the
greatest happiness, and his
denying us the greatest misery
that can possibly befall us.”
Verses 34-36
Matthew 10:34-36. Think not that
I am come, &c. — As if he had
said, Because the prophets have
spoken glorious things of the
peace and happiness of the world
under the reign of the Messiah,
whom they have named, for that
reason, the Prince of peace, you
may imagine that I am come to
put the world into that happy
state forthwith; and that
universal peace will be the
immediate consequence of my
coming. But this is far from
being the case; for, though the
nature of my government be such
as might produce abundant
felicity, inasmuch as my
religion breathes nothing but
love, men will not lay aside
their animosity, nor will they
exercise a mutual friendship
among themselves as soon as the
gospel is preached to them. No;
such is their wickedness, that
they will make the gospel itself
an occasion of such bitter
dissensions that it will look as
if I had not come to send peace,
but a sword among men. For, as I
told you before, the nearest
relations shall quarrel among
themselves, and both public and
private divisions will follow
wheresoever my gospel comes with
power. Yet, observe well,
reader, this is not the design,
though it be the event of his
coming, through the opposition
of devils and men to his truth
and the blessed effects of it.
And a man’s foes — The foes of a
man that is converted to my
religion, and loves and follows
me, shall be they of his own
household — Persons of his own
family, or such as are nearly
related to him.
Verse 37-38
Matthew 10:37-38. He that loveth
father or mother more than me —
He that is not ready to give up
all these when they stand in
competition with his duty; is
not worthy of me — Nor shall
have any interest in my saving
benefits. And he that taketh not
his cross, &c. — Every one
condemned to crucifixion by the
Romans was compelled to carry
the cross, on which he was to be
suspended, to the place of
execution. Thus our Lord himself
was treated. Now, as this was
not a Jewish, but a Roman
punishment, the allusion to it,
on this occasion, may justly be
looked on as the first hint
given by Jesus of the kind of
death he was to suffer. And the
words express this sentiment
with great energy, that no man
is worthy of Christ, that is,
worthy to bear his name, or be
accounted a true Christian,
unless he be willing to suffer
whatever pain or inconvenience
cannot be avoided but by doing
some evil or omitting some good;
yea, and to endure the greatest
hardships, and all sorts of
persecutions, even the most
shameful and painful death,
rather than renounce his
religion and deny Christ.
Verses 39-42
Matthew 10:39-42. He that
findeth his life shall lose it —
He that saves his life by
denying me shall lose it
eternally; and he that loses his
life by confessing me shall save
it eternally. Or, as Macknight
expresses it, “He that makes
shipwreck of faith and a good
conscience to save his life,
shall lose that which is really
his life — his everlasting
happiness; whereas, he that
maintaineth integrity at the
expense of life, and all its
enjoyments, shall find what is
infinitely better — a blessed
immortality.” It is justly
observed by Campbell, that there
is a kind of a paronomasia in
the sentence, whereby the same
word is used in different
senses, in such a manner as to
convey the sentiment with
greater energy to the attentive.
“He who, by making a sacrifice
of his duty, preserves temporal
life, shall lose eternal life;
and contrariwise.” The trope has
a beauty in the original which
we cannot give it in a version:
the word ψυχη being equivocal,
and signifying both life and
soul, and consequently being
much better fitted for
exhibiting, with entire
perspicuity, the two meanings,
than the English word life. The
Syro- Chaldaic, which was the
language then spoken in
Palestine, had, in this respect,
the same advantage with the
Greek. He that receiveth you
receiveth me — And as you shall
be thus rewarded, so, in
proportion, shall they who
entertain you for my sake. He
that receiveth a prophet in the
name of a prophet — That is,
because he is such, shall
receive a prophet’s reward —
Shall have a reward like that
conferred on a prophet. It is
evident, that by a prophet here
is meant, not merely one that
foretels future events, but a
minister of God in general. And
the word δεχομαι, rendered
receive, plainly signifies here
to entertain in an hospitable
way, as it does also Hebrews
11:31; James 2:25, &c. Nor can
the gradation, in the following
words, be understood without
such an interpretation, for
Jesus descends here from a
prophet to a righteous man, and
from a righteous man to a
disciple, termed a little one,
that is, any believer, however
poor, mean, and contemptible in
the world. It must be observed,
that what renders the good works
here mentioned valuable in the
sight of God, and procures them
a recompense from him, is their
being done out of regard for him
and his blessed Son. By the
rewards here promised, Le Clerc
understands the happiness of
heaven, paraphrasing the worsts
thus: “He that showeth kindness
to a prophet, on account of his
mission and doctrine, or to a
righteous man, on account of his
righteousness, especially if by
so doing he exposes himself to
persecution, shall be as highly
rewarded as that righteous man
or prophet shall be; nay, he who
doth any good office whatever to
the meanest of my disciples,
though it should be but the
small service of handing a cup
of cold water to them, shall not
go unrewarded,” that is, if he
shall give it to him in the name
of a disciple, or with a real
affection to him, on account of
his relation to me. This seems
to be the true interpretation of
the passage. Thus also Dr.
Hammond, “How great soever your
persecutions are, and how
dangerous soever it be to
profess to be a follower of
Christ, yet shall no man have
reason to fear the entertaining
of you; for the same protection
which awaits you, and the same
reward that attends you, shall
await them that receive you. It
shall be as if they had
entertained, not only angels,
but Christ and God himself. He
that doth support, and enable a
prophet to do His work that sent
him, shall receive the same
reward that he should if himself
had been sent to prophesy.”
This, “as it is a great
incitement to others to express
their kindness to Christ’s
ministers and faithful servants,
so is it also to his ministers
to apply themselves to his
service with a ready mind, and
with the utmost diligence in the
execution of their pastoral
office.” — Whitby. |