Verse 1
Matthew 24:1. And Jesus went out
— For the last time; and
departed from the temple — Which
he never entered afterward; and
his disciples came to him — As
he was going away; to show him
the buildings of the temple — To
call his attention to the
splendid buildings and sumptuous
decorations of the place,
saying, according to Mark,
Master, see what manner of
stones and buildings are here!
intending to intimate, probably,
what a pitiable calamity they
thought it that such a grand
structure should be destroyed.
Indeed, as the whole temple was
built with the greatest cost and
magnificence, so nothing was
more stupendous than the
uncommon measure of the stones,
some of which, particularly
those employed in the
foundations, were in magnitude
forty cubits, that is, above 60
feet; and the superstructure was
worthy of such foundations. And
some of the stones were of the
whitest marble, forty-five
cubits long, five cubits high,
and six broad. Indeed, the
marble of the temple was so
white that, according to
Josephus, it appeared at a
distance like a mountain of
snow; while the gilding of
several of its external parts,
especially when the sun shone
upon it, rendered it a most
splendid and beautiful
spectacle. See Bishop Newton,
from whose admirable work on the
prophecies most of the notes on
this chapter are extracted.
Verse 2
Matthew 24:2. Jesus said — There
shall not be left one stone upon
another — A proverbial and
figurative expression to denote
an utter destruction; and the
prophecy would have been amply
fulfilled, if the city and
temple had been utterly ruined,
though every single stone had
not been overturned. But it
happened that the words were
almost literally fulfilled: for
after the temple was burned,
Titus, the Roman general,
ordered the very foundations of
it to be dug up; after which the
ground on which it stood was
ploughed up by Turnus Rufus. It
is true, Titus was very desirous
of preserving it, and the city
too, and sent Josephus and other
Jews again and again to persuade
them to a surrender, but one
greater than Titus had
determined it otherwise. The
Jews themselves first set fire
to the porticoes of the temple,
and then the Romans. One of the
soldiers, neither waiting for
any command, nor trembling at
such an attempt, but urged by a
certain divine impulse, says
Josephus, mounted the shoulder
of his companion, thrust a
burning brand in at the golden
window, and thereby set fire to
the building of the temple
itself. Titus ran immediately to
the temple, and commanded the
soldiers to extinguish the
flame; but neither exhortations
nor threatenings could restrain
their violence; they either
could not, or would not hear,
those behind encouraging those
before to set fire to the
temple. Titus was still for
preserving the holy place, and
commanded his soldiers to be
beaten for disobeying him. But
their anger and hatred of the
Jews, and a certain warlike and
vehement fury, overcame their
reverence for their general, and
their dread of his commands. A
soldier, in the dark, set fire
to the doors; and thus, as
Josephus says, the temple was
burned against the will of
Cesar. The city also shared the
same fate, and was burned and
destroyed, as well as the
temple. The Romans burned the
extremest parts of the city, and
demolished the walls; three
towers only and some part of the
wall were left standing, for the
better encampment of the
soldiers, and to show to
posterity what a city, and how
fortified, the valour of the
Romans had taken. All the rest
of the city was so demolished
and levelled with the ground,
that they who came to see it
could not believe it had ever
been inhabited.
Verses 3-5
Matthew 24:3-5. And as he sat
upon the mount of Olives, the
disciples came unto him — The
disciples were desirous to know
more of these events, when they
should be, and how they should
be; but thought it not proper to
ask him at present, the
multitude probably still
crowding about him, and
therefore they take an
opportunity of coming unto him
privately, as he was sitting
upon the mount of Olives, from
whence they had a full view of
the city and temple, and there
they prefer their request to
him. Tell us, when shall these
things be? And what shall be the
sign of thy coming, and of the
end of the world? — These seem
to be only different expressions
to denote the same period with
the destruction of Jerusalem,
the disciples supposing, that
when the destruction of
Jerusalem should take place,
then would be the coming of
Christ and the end of the world,
or, the conclusion of the age,
as συντελεια του αιωνος should
rather be translated here, and
often signifies. See especially
Hebrews 9:36; and 1 Corinthians
10:11. Accordingly, in the
parallel place of Mark 13:4,
their question is expressed
thus, When shall these things
be, and what shall be the sign
when all these things shall be
fulfilled? And in that of Luke
21:7, thus, When shall these
things be? and what sign will
there be when these things shall
come to pass? The disciples
therefore inquire concerning two
things; 1st, the time of the
destruction of Jerusalem; and,
2d, the signs of it. The latter
part of the question our Lord
answers first, and treats of the
signs of his coming from the 4th
to the 31st verse, inclusive;
and then passes on to the other
part of the question, concerning
the time of his coming. Jesus
answered, Take heed that no man
deceive you — The caution was
more particularly designed for
the succeeding Christians, whom
the apostles then represented.
For many shall come in my name —
That is, as Doctor Campbell
renders it, many will assume my
character; a reading which
expresses our Lord’s meaning
more precisely than ours. For to
come in any one’s name signifies
more properly with us, to come
by one’s authority or order,
real or pretended; in which
sense the Messiah came in the
name of God, the apostles came
in the name of Christ. But this
is far from being the sense of
the phrase in this passage;
where it plainly signifies that
many would usurp his title, make
pretensions to his office and
character, and thereby lead
their followers into the most
fatal delusion, saying, I am
Christ — Our Lord begins with
this, according to all the
evangelists, and they all
represent him as using almost
the same words: only in Luke
21:8, he adds, the time draweth
near; and indeed within a very
little time this part of the
prophecy began to be fulfilled.
Very soon after our Saviour’s
decease appeared Simon Magus,
who boasted himself among the
Jews as the Son of God, and gave
out among the Samaritans, that
he was some great one, Acts
8:9-10. Of the same stamp and
character was Dositheus, the
Samaritan, who pretended that he
was the Christ foretold by
Moses. In the reign of Claudius,
about twelve years after the
death of our Saviour, when
Cuspius Fadus was procurator of
Judea, an impostor, named
Theudas, persuaded a great
multitude to follow him, with
their best effects, to the river
Jordan, for he said that he was
a prophet, and promised to
divide the river for their
passage; and saying these
things, he deceived many, says
Josephus. But Fadus sent a troop
of horse against them, who,
falling unexpectedly upon them,
killed many, and made many
prisoners; and having taken
Theudas himself alive, they cut
off his head and brought it to
Jerusalem. A few years
afterward, in the reign of Nero,
when Felix was procurator of
Judea, such a number of these
impostors made their appearance,
that many of them were
apprehended and killed every
day. They seduced great numbers
of the people still expecting
the Messiah. Our Saviour might
well, therefore, caution his
disciples against them.
Verses 6-8
Matthew 24:6-8. And ye shall
hear of wars, &c. — This is the
second sign. That there were
wars and rumours of wars,
appears by all the historians of
those times, and above all by
Josephus. To relate the
particulars would be to
transcribe a great part of his
history of the Jewish wars.
There were more especially
rumours of wars when Caligula,
the Roman emperor, ordered his
statue to be set up in the
temple at Jerusalem, which the
Jews refused to suffer, and
persisted in their refusal: and
having therefore reason to
apprehend a war from the Romans,
were in such a consternation,
that they omitted even the
tilling of their lands. But this
storm was soon blown over, and
their fear dissipated by the
timely death of that emperor.
For nation shall rise against
nation, &c. — Here Christ
declares that greater
disturbances than those which
happened under Caligula, should
fall out in the latter times of
Claudius, and in the reign of
Nero. The rising of nation
against nation portended the
dissensions, insurrections, and
mutual slaughters of the Jews,
and those of other nations, who
dwelt in the same cities
together; as particularly at
Cesarea, where the Jews and
Syrians contended about the
right of the city, which
contention at length proceeded
so far that above twenty
thousand Jews were slain, and
the city was cleared of the
Jewish inhabitants. At this blow
the whole nation of the Jews was
exasperated; and, dividing
themselves into parties, they
burned and plundered the
neighbouring cities and villages
of the Syrians, and made an
immense slaughter of the people.
The Syrians, in revenge,
destroyed not a less number of
Jews, and every city was divided
into two armies. At Scythopolis
the inhabitants compelled the
Jews who resided among them to
fight against their own
countrymen, and, after the
victory, basely setting upon
them by night, murdered above
thirteen thousand of them, and
spoiled their goods. At Ascalon
they killed two thousand five
hundred; at Ptolemais two
thousand, and made not a few
prisoners. The Tyrians put many
to death, and imprisoned more.
The people of Gadara did
likewise; and all the other
cities of Syria, in proportion
as they hated or feared the
Jews. At Alexandria the old
enmity was revived between the
Jews and heathen, and many fell
on both sides, but of the Jews
to the number of fifty thousand.
The people of Damascus, too,
conspired against the Jews of
the same city, and, assaulting
them unarmed, killed ten
thousand of them. The rising of
kingdom against kingdom
portended the open wars of
different tetrarchies and
provinces against one another:
as that of the Jews who dwelt in
Peræa against the people of
Philadelphia, concerning their
bounds, while Cuspius Fadus was
procurator; and that of the Jews
and Galileans against the
Samaritans, for the murder of
some Galileans going up to the
feast at Jerusalem, while
Cumanus was procurator; and that
of the whole nation of the Jews
against the Romans and Agrippa,
and other allies of the Roman
empire. But there was not only
sedition and civil war
throughout Judea, but likewise
in Italy, Otho and Vitellius
contending for the empire. There
shall be famines and pestilences
— The third sign. There were
famines, as particularly that
prophesied of by Agabus, and
mentioned Acts 11:28; and by
Suetonius, and other profane
historians referred to by
Eusebius, which came to pass in
the days of Claudius Cesar, and
was so severe at Jerusalem, that
many perished for want of
victuals — And pestilences, the
usual attendants upon famine.
Scarcity and badness of
provisions almost always end in
some epidemical distemper. Many
died by reason of the famine in
the reign of Claudius: and when
Niger was killed by the Jewish
zealots, he imprecated, besides
other calamities, famine and
pestilence upon them, ( λιμοντε
και λοιμον, the very words used
by the evangelist,) all which,
says Josephus, God ratified and
brought to pass against the
ungodly — And earthquakes in
divers places — The fourth sign.
In the time of Claudius and Nero
there were great earthquakes at
Smyrna, Miletus, Chios, Samos,
Laodicea, Hierapolis, and
Colosse; in Crete also and
Campania, and one at Rome in the
reign of Galba. In Judea,
likewise, there were judgments
of the same kind. For Josephus
tells us, Bell., 4. cap. 4,
“There happened a most terrible
tempest and violent winds, with
the most vehement showers, and
continual lightnings, and horrid
thunderings, and prodigious
bellowings of the shaken earth;”
so that many were led to believe
that these things portended no
common calamity. St. Luke
mentions a fifth sign, namely,
Fearful sights and great signs
from heaven, Luke 21:11; where
see the notes, as also on Isaiah
66:6. All these are the
beginning of sorrows — Gr.
ωδινων, a word which is properly
used of the pains of travailing
women. As if he had said, All
these are only the first pangs
and throes; and are nothing to
that hard labour that shall
follow.
Verse 9
Matthew 24:9. Then shall they
deliver you up to be afflicted,
&c. — From the calamities of the
nation in general, he passes to
those of the Christians in
particular: and indeed the
former were in a great measure
the occasion of the latter;
famines, pestilences,
earthquakes, and the like
calamities, being reckoned
judgments for the sins of the
Christians, and the poor
Christians being often
maltreated and persecuted on
that account, as we learn from
some of the earliest apologies
for the Christian religion. Now
the calamities which were to
befall the Christians were cruel
persecutions, and we need look
no further than the Acts of the
Apostles for the completion of
this prediction. But if we would
look further, we have still a
more melancholy proof of the
truth of it in the persecutions
under Nero, in which, not to
mention numberless other
Christians, those two great
champions of the Christian
faith, Peter and Paul, fell.
Indeed, as Tertullian calls it,
it was nominis prælium, a war
against the very name. For
though a man was possessed of
every human virtue, it was crime
enough if he was a Christian; so
true were our Saviour’s words,
that they should be hated of all
nations for his name’s sake.
Verses 10-13
Matthew 24:10-13. Then shall
many be offended — That is,
shall stumble and fall, or shall
be turned out of the right way.
By reason of persecution, many
apostatized from the faith,
particularly those mentioned by
Paul, 2 Timothy 1:15; and 2
Timothy 4:10. And shall betray
one another — To illustrate
this, it is sufficient to cite
one sentence out of Tacitus.
Speaking of the persecution
under Nero, he says, “At first
several were seized, who
confessed, and then by their
discovery a great multitude of
others were convicted and
barbarously executed.” And many
false prophets shall rise — Or
false teachers, namely, in the
Christian Church. Such were
Simon Magus, and his followers,
the Gnostics, who were very
numerous. Such also were the
Judaizing teachers, termed by
Paul, 2 Corinthians 11:13, false
apostles, deceitful workers,
transforming themselves into the
apostles of Christ. Such
likewise were Hymeneus and
Philetus, 2 Timothy 2:17-18. And
the love of many shall wax cold
— Because of these trials and
persecutions from without, and
these apostacies and false
teachers from within the church,
the love of many to Christ and
his doctrine, and to one
another, shall wax cold. Some
shall openly desert the faith,
as Matthew 24:10; others corrupt
it, as Matthew 24:11; and others
grow indifferent about it, as
Matthew 24:12. But he that shall
endure unto the end — He who
shall not be terrified by these
trials and persecutions; who
shall neither apostatize from
the faith himself, nor seduce
nor be seduced by others; he who
shall not be ashamed to profess
his faith in Christ, and his
love to the brethren, nor be
deterred therefrom: the same
shall be saved — Both here and
hereafter. It is very
remarkable, and was certainly a
most signal act of Providence,
that none of the Christians
perished in the destruction of
Jerusalem. See on Matthew 24:16.
So true and prophetic also was
that assertion of St. Peter upon
this same occasion, The Lord
knoweth how to deliver the godly
out of temptation, 2 Peter 2:9.
Verse 14
Matthew 24:14. This gospel of
the kingdom — Namely, of the
kingdom of God; shall be
preached in all the world — Not
universally; this is not yet
done; but in general, through
the several parts of the world,
and not only in Judea. And this
was done by St. Paul and the
other apostles, before Jerusalem
was destroyed; for a witness to
all nations that I am the
Christ. And then shall the end
come — Of the city and temple:
that is, when all nations shall,
or may be convinced, by the
preaching of the gospel, of the
crying sin of the Jews in
crucifying the Lord of glory;
then shall the justice of God
bring these dreadful judgments
upon that people. The Acts of
the Apostles, it must be
observed, contain only a small
part of the history of a small
number of the apostles, and yet
even in that history we see the
gospel was widely disseminated,
and had taken root in the most
considerable parts of the Roman
empire. As early as in the reign
of Nero, as we learn from
Tacitus, (Annal., l. 15.) the
Christians were grown so
numerous at Rome as to raise the
jealousy of the government, and
the first general persecution
was commenced against them,
under pretence of their having
set fire to the city, of which
the emperor himself was really
guilty, but wished to transfer
the blame and odium of the
action on the poor innocent
Christians. Clement, who was
contemporary and a
fellow-labourer with Paul, says
of him, (see his 1st Epistle to
the Corinthians,) that he was a
preacher both in the east and
west, and that he taught the
whole world righteousness. And
if such were the labours of one
apostle, though the chief of
them, what were the united
labours of them all? It appears
indeed from the writers of the
history of the church, that
before the destruction of
Jerusalem the gospel was not
only preached in the Lesser
Asia, Greece, and Italy, the
great theatres of action then in
the world; but likewise
propagated as far north as
Scythia; as far south as
Ethiopia; as far east as Parthia
and India; as far west as Spain
and Britain.
Verse 15
Matthew 24:15. When ye shall
see, &c. — The preceding verses
foretold the signs of the
destruction of Jerusalem, that
is, the circumstances which were
to be the forerunners and
attendants of that great event:
we now proceed to those verses
which respect what happened
during the siege, and after it.
Never was a prophecy more
punctually fulfilled: and it
will tend to confirm our faith
in the gospel to trace the
particulars. The abomination of
desolation, spoken of by Daniel
— Daniel’s expression is, The
abomination that maketh
desolate. By which term is
intended the desolating Roman
armies with their standards. To
every legion was a golden eagle
with expanded wings, grasping a
thunderbolt. These eagles, with
the standards of the cohorts,
ten in each legion, were objects
of worship among the Romans, and
therefore were an abomination to
the Jews. We learn from
Josephus, that after the city
was taken, the Romans brought
their ensigns into the temple,
and placed them over against the
eastern gate, and there
sacrificed to them. See the note
on Daniel 9:27. Stand in the
holy place — Or, as it is in
Mark, standing where it ought
not — That is, when ye shall see
these armies encamped in the
territory near Jerusalem: for,
as the city was called the holy
city, several furlongs of land
round about it were accounted
holy, particularly the mount on
which our Lord now sat, and on
which afterward the Romans
placed their ensigns: whoso
readeth, let him understand — As
if he had said, Let him who
reads that remarkable prophecy
of Daniel’s, pause seriously
upon it, and weigh well its
meaning, for it contains one of
the most eminent predictions
which can anywhere be found of
the time, purposes, and
consequences of any appearing;
or, the sense may be, Let him
understand that the end of the
city and sanctuary, with the
ceasing of the sacrifice and
oblation there predicted, is
come, and of consequence, the
end of the age mentioned in the
preceding verse. This
interpretration of the clause
supposes it to be uttered by our
Lord as a part of his discourse,
in which light it is considered
by most commentators. But,
“after the strictest
examination,” says Dr. Campbell,
(following Bengelius,) “I cannot
help concluding, that they are
not the words of our Lord, and
consequently make no part of
this memorable discourse, but
the words of the evangelist,
calling the attention of his
readers to a very important
warning and precept of his
Master, which he was then
writing, (namely, that
immediately following,) and of
which many of them would live to
see the utility, when the
completion of these predictions
should begin to take place.” The
doctor, therefore, renders the
words, Reader, attend! Let them
which be in Judea flee to the
mountains — Let them flee as
fast as they can from the
fortified cities and populous
towns into the wilderness, where
they will be secure. This
important advice the Christians
remembered and wisely followed,
and were preserved. It is
remarkable, that after the
Romans, under Cestius Gallus,
made their first advance toward
Jerusalem, they suddenly
withdrew again, in a most
unexpected and impolitic manner.
“This conduct of the Roman
general,” says Macknight, “so
contrary to all the rules of
prudence, was doubtless brought
to pass by the providence of
God, who interposed in this
manner for the deliverance of
the disciples of his Son.” For,
at this juncture, the
Christians, considering it as a
signal to retire, left
Jerusalem, and removed to Pella
and other places beyond the
river Jordan, so that they all
marvellously escaped the general
ruin of their country, and we do
not read anywhere that so much
as one of them perished. Of such
signal service was this caution
of our Lord to his followers!
Verses 17-19
Matthew 24:17-19. Let him who is
on the house-top not come down —
It is well known that the houses
of the Jews, as well as those of
the ancient Greeks and Romans,
were flat on the top, for them
to walk upon, and had usually
stairs on the outside, by which
they might ascend and descend
without coming into the house.
In the walled cities, these
flat-roofed houses usually
formed continued terraces from
one end of the city to the
other, which terraces terminated
at the gates. The meaning
therefore here is, Let not him
who is walking on the house-top
come down to take any thing out
of his house; but let him
instantly pursue his course
along the tops of houses, and
escape out of the city gate as
fast as he possibly can. Neither
let him which is in the field,
&c. — Our Saviour makes use of
these expressions to intimate,
that their flight must be as
sudden and hasty as Lot’s was
out of Sodom. And the Christians
escaping just as they did was
the more providential, because
afterward all egress from the
city was prevented. And wo unto
them that are with child, &c. —
For such will not be in a
condition to flee, neither will
they be well able to endure the
distress and hardships of the
siege. This wo was sufficiently
fulfilled in the cruel
slaughters which were made both
of the women and children, and
particularly in that grievous
famine which so miserably
afflicted Jerusalem during the
siege. See notes on Deuteronomy
28:53-57.
Verse 20-21
Matthew 24:20-21. But pray ye
that your flight be not in the
winter — For the inclemency of
the season, the badness of the
roads, the shortness of the
days, will all be great
impediments to your flight:
neither on the sabbath day —
That you may not raise the
indignation of the Jews by
travelling on that day, and so
meet with that death out of the
city which you had endeavoured
to escape by removing from it.
Besides, many of them would have
scrupled to travel far on that
day; the Jews thinking it
unlawful to walk above two
thousand paces, (two miles,) on
the sabbath day. In the parallel
place in Mark, this latter
clause, about the sabbath day,
is not mentioned. For then shall
be great tribulation — Never had
words a more sad or full
accomplishment than these: for
the miseries which befell this
people about the time of the
destruction of Jerusalem, were
such as no history can parallel.
Within the city the fury of the
opposite factions was so great
that they filled all places, and
even the temple itself, with
continual slaughters. Nay, to
such a pitch did their madness
arise, that they destroyed the
very granaries of corn which
should have sustained them, and
burned the magazines of arms
which should have defended them.
By these means, when the siege
had lasted but two months, the
famine began to rage, and at
length reduced them to such
straits, that the barbarities
which they practised are not to
be imagined; see Josephus,
Bell., Matthew 6:11. Even the
mothers ate their own children,
ibid., Matthew 7:8. In short,
from the beginning of the siege
to the taking of the city, there
were slain by faction, by
famine, by pestilence, and by
the enemy, no less than one
million one hundred thousand in
Jerusalem. So that, as Josephus
himself observes, in his preface
to his history of this war: “If
all the calamities which the
world, from the beginning, hath
seen, were compared with those
of the Jews, they would appear
inferior.” And again, in another
place he says, “To speak in
brief, no other city ever
suffered such things, as no
generation from the beginning of
the world was ever more fruitful
of wickedness.” And that the
peculiar hand of Providence was
visible in this destruction of
the nation, the same author
affirms. For, having described
the vast multitudes of people
that were in Jerusalem when it
was besieged, he says, Bell.,
Matthew 7:17, “This multitude
was assembled together from
other places, and was there, by
the providence of God, shut up.
as it were, in a prison.”
Besides, he tells us that Titus
himself took notice that the
Jews were urged on by God
himself to their destruction.
Verse 22
Matthew 24:22. Except those days
should be shortened, &c. — If
these wars and desolations were
to continue for any length of
time, none of the Jews would
escape destruction; they would
all be cut off, root and branch.
For the calamities will be so
severe that, like fire, they
would soon consume all, and
leave nothing for themselves to
prey on. But for the elect’s
sake — For the sake of those
Jews that shall embrace the
gospel; those days shall be
shortened — The elect, is a
well-known appellation in
Scripture and antiquity for the
Christians; and the Christian
Jews, partly through the fury of
the Zealots on the one hand, and
the hatred of the Romans on the
other; and partly through the
difficulty of subsisting in the
mountains without houses or
provisions; would in all
probability have been almost all
destroyed, either by sword or by
the famine, if the days had not
been shortened. But
providentially the days were
shortened. Titus himself was
desirous of putting a speedy end
to the siege, having Rome, and
the riches and pleasures there,
before his eyes. Some of his
officers proposed to him to turn
the siege into a blockade, and
since they could not take the
city by storm, to starve it into
a surrender; but he thought it
not becoming to sit still with
so great an army; he feared lest
the length of the time should
diminish the glory of his
success. The besieged, too,
helped to shorten the days, by
their divisions and mutual
slaughters; by burning their
provisions, which would have
sufficed for many years, and
fatally deserting their
strongest holds, where they
could never have been taken by
force, but by famine alone.
Indeed, Jerusalem was so well
fortified, and so well fitted to
sustain a longer siege, that it
could not have been taken in so
short a time by the enemy
without, had it not been for the
factions and seditions within.
Titus himself could not but
ascribe the success to God, as
he was viewing the
fortifications after the city
was taken. His words to his
friends were very remarkable.
“We have fought,” said he, “with
God on our side, ο θεος ην ο των
δε ερυματων ιουδαιους καθεκων,
it is God who hath pulled the
Jews out of these strong holds;
for what could the hands of men,
or machines, do against these
towers?” God, therefore, in the
opinion of Titus, as well as of
the evangelist: shortened these
days. After the destruction of
Jerusalem too, God inclined the
heart of Titus to take some pity
upon the remnant of the Jews,
and to restrain the nations from
exercising the cruelty that they
would have exercised against
them. At Antioch, particularly,
the senate importuned him to
expel the Jews from the city:
but he answered that their
country being laid waste, there
was no place to receive them.
They then requested him to
deprive the Jews of their former
privileges; but those he
permitted them to enjoy as
before. Thus, for the elect’s
sake those days of persecution
were shortened.
Verses 23-26
Matthew 24:23-26. If any man
say, Lo, here is Christ, or
there — During the terrible
calamities here foretold, the
expectations of the nation were
all turned toward their Messiah;
for they thought if ever he was
to appear, it would be then, to
deliver them from the impending
destruction. Hence many arose,
pretending to be the Messiah,
and boasting that they would
deliver the nation; the effect
of which was, that the
multitude, giving credit to
these deceivers, became
obstinate in their opposition to
the Romans, whereby their
destruction was rendered both
the more severe and the more
inevitable. Our Lord, it must be
observed, had cautioned his
disciples against false Christs
and false prophets before, (see
Matthew 24:5,) but what he here
says is not to be considered as
a repetition of that, but
relates to those impostors who
should appear during the time of
the siege. And, in fact, many
such impostors did arise about
that time, as we learn from
Josephus, (lib. 6. cap. 5, § 2,)
and promised deliverance from
God, being suborned by the
tyrants or governors, to prevent
the people and soldiers from
deserting to the Romans; and the
lower the Jews were reduced, the
more disposed were they to
listen to these deceptions, and
the more ready to follow the
deceivers. Hegesippus also,
quoted by Eusebius, mentions the
coming of false Christs and
false prophets about the same
time. And shall show great signs
— As it was to little purpose
for a man to take upon him the
character of the Christ, or even
of a prophet, without miracles
to vouch his mission; so it was
the common artifice and pretence
of these impostors to show signs
and wonders, σημεια και τερατα,
the very words used by Christ in
this prophecy, and by Josephus
in his history. Behold, I have
told you before — Behold, I have
given you sufficient warning. If
they shall say, He is in the
desert — It is surprising that
our Lord should not only foretel
the appearance of these
impostors, but also the manner
and circumstances of their
conduct. For some he mentions as
appearing in the desert, and
some in the secret chambers; and
the event, in all points,
answered to the prediction.
Josephus says (Antiq., lib. 20.
cap. 7, and Bell. Jud., lib. 2.
cap. 13,) that “many impostors
and cheats persuaded the people
to follow them into the desert,
where they promised to show
manifest wonders and signs done
by the providence of God; and
many, being persuaded, suffered
the punishment of their folly.”
And he mentions an Egyptian
false prophet, Antiq., Matthew
20:7, (spoken of also Acts
21:38,) who led out into the
desert four thousand men who
were murderers; and who were all
taken or destroyed by Felix:
another impostor is also
mentioned by the same author,
who promised deliverance to the
people if they would follow him
into the desert, but Festus sent
horse and foot against him, and
destroyed both him and his
followers. These things happened
before the destruction of
Jerusalem; and a little after,
one Jonathan, a weaver,
persuaded many to follow him
into the desert, most or all of
whom were slain or made
prisoners, and he himself taken
and burned alive, by order of
Vespasian. As several of these
impostors thus conducted their
followers into the desert, so
did others into the secret
chambers, or places of security.
One of these (according to
Josephus, Bell., Matthew 6:5)
declared to the people in the
city, that God commanded them to
go up into the temple, and there
they should receive the signs of
deliverance. A multitude of men,
women, and children went up
accordingly; but, instead of
deliverance, the place was set
on fire by the Romans, and six
thousand perished miserably in
the flames, by throwing
themselves down to escape them.
Our Saviour therefore might well
caution his disciples both
against the former and the
latter sort of these deceivers.
Verse 27-28
Matthew 24:27-28. For as the
lightning cometh out of the
east, &c. — The coming of the
Son of man shall be in a very
different manner, and for very
different ends from what you are
imagining. It shall be like
lightning, swift, unexpected,
and destructive. His appearance
will be as distinguishable from
that of every false Christ, as
lightning, which shines all
round the hemisphere, is from a
blaze of straw. What Bishop
Pearce observes from Josephus is
very memorable, that “the Roman
army entered into Judea on the
east side of it, and carried on
their conquests westward, as if
not only the extensiveness of
the ruin, but the very route
which the army would take, was
intended in the comparison of
the lightning coming out of the
east, and shining even unto the
west.” For wheresoever the
carcass is, &c. — For though the
coming of the Son of man shall
be like lightning, swift,
spreading, and destructive, yet
he will not come personally; his
servants only shall come, the
Roman armies, who by his command
shall destroy this nation as
eagles devour their prey. Thus
our Lord, after his usual
manner, applies a proverbial
expression with a particular
meaning; and the Romans are very
properly compared to eagles,
both because eagles are the
fiercest birds of prey, and
because the Roman ensign was an
eagle, to which probably our
Lord alluded in this passage.
Verse 29
Matthew 24:29. Immediately
after, &c. — We are now come to
the last act of this dismal
tragedy, the destruction of
Jerusalem, and the final
dissolution of the Jewish polity
in church and state, which our
Lord, for several reasons, might
not think fit to declare nakedly
and plainly, and therefore chose
to clothe his discourse in
figurative language.
Commentators, indeed, have
generally understood this, and
what follows, of the end of the
world, and of Christ’s coming to
judgment: but the words,
immediately after the
tribulation of those days, show
evidently that he is not
speaking of any distant event,
but of something immediately
consequent upon the tribulation
before mentioned, and that must
be the destruction of the temple
and city of Jerusalem, and the
abolition of the Jewish polity,
civil and religious. It is true,
his figures are very strong, but
not stronger than those used by
the ancient prophets upon
similar occasions. The Prophet
Isaiah speaks in the same manner
of the destruction of Babylon,
Isaiah 13:10, The stars of
heaven and the constellations
thereof shall not give their
light; the sun shall be darkened
in his going forth, and the moon
shall not cause her light to
shine. The Prophet Ezekiel
describes in similar terms the
destruction coming on Egypt,
Ezekiel 32:7-8. When I shall put
thee out I will cover the
heaven, and make the stars
thereof dark; I will cover the
sun with a cloud, and the moon
shall not give her light. The
Prophet Daniel also uses similar
language, when speaking of the
slaughter of the Jews by the
little horn, meaning probably
Antiochus Epiphanes: And it
waxed great even unto the host
of heaven; and cast down some of
the host and of the stars to the
ground, and stamped upon them.
And lastly, God, by Joel,
foretelling this very same
destruction of Jerusalem, Joel
2:30-31, says, I will show
wonders in heaven and in the
earth, blood, and fire, and
pillars of smoke. The sun shall
be turned into darkness, and the
moon into blood. So that great
commotions and revolutions upon
earth are often represented by
commotions and changes in the
heavens.
Verse 30-31
Matthew 24:30-31. Then shall
appear the sign of the Son of
man in heaven — Christ proceeds
here in the same figurative
style, and the plain meaning of
his words is, that the
destruction of Jerusalem and of
the Jewish state, civil and
religious, would be such a
remarkable instance of divine
vengeance, and such a signal
manifestation of Christ’s power
and glory, that all the Jewish
tribes should mourn, and many
should be led from thence to
acknowledge him for the true
Messiah. To explain this further
it may be observed, “The sign
from heaven, which both the
disciples and Pharisees
expected, was some visible
appearance of the Messiah in the
clouds, and some miraculous
interposition of his power, by
which the Romans, the masters of
the world, were to be destroyed,
and a universal empire over all
nations erected in behalf of the
Jews. This sign they were led to
expect, because Daniel had said
prophetically, of the Son of
man, (Daniel 7:13,) that he saw
him coming in the clouds of
heaven, and that there was given
him dominion, and glory, and a
kingdom, &c. Nevertheless, by
the coming of the Son of man in
the clouds, Daniel meant his
interposing for the destruction
of his enemies, particularly the
unbelieving Jews; and the
erection of his own kingdom over
all nations; a spiritual
kingdom, a new dispensation of
religion, which should
comprehend the whole world
within its pale. Therefore, to
show the disciples that they had
mistaken the prophecy, which
referred wholly to the
destruction of Jerusalem, and to
the conversion of the Gentiles,
he adopted it into his
prediction of these events, and
thereby settled its true
meaning.” — Macknight. The
figurative expression, Coming in
the clouds of heaven, in several
other passages of Scripture,
signifies God’s interposing
evidently and irresistibly, to
execute vengeance on a wicked
generation, and to assert his
own government over the world.
See 2 Samuel 22:10-12; Psalms
97:2; Isaiah 19:1. He shall send
his angels with a great sound of
a trumpet, &c. — This also is in
the style of the prophets, and,
stripped of its figures, means
only that after the destruction
of Jerusalem, Christ by his
angels, or ministers, going
forth with their powerful
preaching, termed here the great
sound of a trumpet, should
gather to himself a glorious
church, out of all the nations
under heaven: that the Jews
being thrust out, as he
expresses it, Luke 13:28, &c.,
believers should come from the
east and from the west, from the
north and from the south, and
should sit down in the kingdom,
of God. Agreeably to this
interpretation, we find the name
αγγελους, angels, used of common
messengers, James 2:25; and of
the ministers of the Asian
churches, Revelation 2:3.; of
prophets, 2 Chronicles 36:16;
and of priests, Malachi 2:7. And
the preaching of the messengers
of God is compared to the sound
of a trumpet, Isaiah 58:1;
Jeremiah 6:17; Ezekiel 33:3-6.
No person, versed at all in
ecclesiastical history, needs to
be told that the Christian
religion spread and prevailed
mightily after this period; and
that hardly any one thing
contributed more to this success
of the gospel than the
destruction of Jerusalem and the
ruin of the Jewish nation,
falling out in the very manner
and with the very circumstances
so particularly foretold by our
Lord.
Verses 32-35
Matthew 24:32-35. Now learn a
parable of the fig-tree — Our
Lord proceeds to declare that
the signs which he had given
would be as certain an
indication of the time of his
coming, as the fig-tree’s
putting forth its leaves is of
the approach of summer; and that
the time of his coming was at no
great distance. For he adds,
This generation shall not pass
till all these things be
fulfilled, — Hereby evidently
showing that he had been
speaking all this while only of
the calamities coming on the
Jews, and the destruction of
Jerusalem. “It is to me a
wonder,” says Bishop Newton,
“how any man can refer part of
the foregoing discourse to the
destruction of Jerusalem, and
part to the end of the world, or
any other distant event, when it
is said so positively here in
the conclusion, All these things
shall be fulfilled in this
generation. And it seems as if
our Lord had been aware of some
such misapplication of his
words, by adding yet greater
force and emphasis to his
affirmation, Matthew 24:35,
Heaven and earth shall pass
away, but my words shall not
pass away — That is, heaven and
earth shall sooner, or more
easily pass away than my words;
the frame of the universe shall
sooner, or more easily pass away
than my words shall not be
fulfilled. In another place,
(Matthew 16:28,) he says, There
are some standing here which
shall not taste of death till
they see, the Son of man coming
in his kingdom, intimating that
the event would not take place
immediately, and yet not at such
a distance of time but that some
then living would be spectators
of the calamities coming upon
the nation. In like manner, he
says to the women who bewailed
him as he was going to be
crucified, Luke 23:28, Daughters
of Jerusalem, weep not for me,
but weep for yourselves and for
your children; which words
sufficiently implied that the
days of distress and misery were
coming, and would fall on them
and their children. But at that
time there was not any
appearance of such an immediate
ruin. The wisest politician
could not have inferred any such
thing from the then present
state of affairs. Nothing less
than divine prescience could
have foreseen and foretold it.”
Verse 36
Matthew 24:36. But of that day
and hour knoweth no man, &c. — I
consider ωρα, hour, here, says
Grotius, as denoting, not a part
of a day, but a larger portion
of time. So also Bishop Newton,
who observes, “It would seem
improper to say, Of that day and
hour knoweth no man; for if the
day was not known, certainly the
hour was not, and it was
superfluous to make such an
addition. I conceive, therefore,
that the passage should be
rendered, Of that day and season
knoweth no man, as the word is
frequently used in the best
authors, both sacred and
profane. It is true, our Saviour
declares, ‘All these things
shall be fulfilled in this
generation;’ it is true also,
the Prophet Daniel hath given
some intimation of the time in
his famous prophecy of the 70
weeks; but though this great
revolution was to happen toward
the conclusion of 70 weeks, or
490 years, to be computed from a
certain date that is not easy to
be fixed; yet the particular
day, the particular season in
which it was to happen, might
still remain a secret to men and
angels: and our Lord had before,
(Matthew 24:20,) advised his
disciples to pray, that their
flight might not be in the
winter, nor on the sabbath day;
the day not being known, they
were to pray that their flight
might not be on the sabbath day;
the season not being known, they
were to pray that it might not
be in the winter.”
Verses 37-41
Matthew 24:37-41. But as the
days of Noe were, &c. — As then
they were eating and drinking,
marrying and giving in marriage,
till they were surprised by the
flood, notwithstanding the
frequent warnings and
admonitions of that preacher of
righteousness: so now, they
shall be engaged in the business
and pleasures of the world,
little expecting, little
thinking of this universal ruin,
till it come upon them,
notwithstanding the express
predictions and declarations of
Christ and his apostles. Then
shall two be in the field, &c. —
That is, Providence will then
make a distinction between such
as are not at all distinguished
now. Some shall be rescued from
the destruction of Jerusalem,
like Lot out of the burning of
Sodom; while others, nowise
different in outward
circumstances, shall be left to
perish in it. Two women shall be
grinding at the mill — A passage
in Dr. E. Daniel Clarke’s
Travels in Greece, Egypt, and
the Holy Land, published in
1812, (p. 428,) may fitly be
quoted here. “Scarcely had we
reached the apartment prepared
for our reception,” (namely, in
Nazareth,) “when, looking from
the window into the court-yard
belonging to the house, we
beheld two women grinding at the
mill in a manner most forcibly
illustrating a saying of our
Saviour’s. In the centre of the
upper stone was a cavity for
pouring in the corn, and by the
side of this an upright wooden
handle for moving the stone. As
the operation began, one of the
women, with her right hand,
pushed this handle to the woman
opposite, who again sent it to
her companion; thus
communicating a rotatory and
very rapid motion to the upper
stone, their left hands being
all the while employed in
supplying fresh corn, as fast as
the bran and flour escaped from
the sides of the machine.”
Hitherto we have explained the
contents of this chapter as
relating to the destruction of
Jerusalem; of which, without
doubt, it is primarily to be
understood. But though it is to
be understood of this primarily,
yet not of this only; for there
is no question that our Lord had
a further view in it. It is
usual with the prophets to frame
and express their prophecies so
as that they shall comprehend
more than one event, and have
their several periods of
completion. This every one must
have observed who has been ever
so little conversant in the
writings of the ancient
prophets, and this doubtless is
the case here; and the
destruction of Jerusalem is to
be considered as typical of the
end of the world, of which the
destruction of a great city is a
lively type and image. And we
may observe that our Saviour no
sooner begins to speak of the
destruction of Jerusalem, than
his figures are raised, his
language swelled, (The sun shall
be darkened, &c.,) and he
expresses himself in such terms
as, in a lower and figurative
sense indeed, are applicable to
that destruction; but in their
higher and literal sense, can be
meant only of the end of the
world. The same may be said of
that text, Of that day and
season knoweth no man, &c: the
consistence and connection of
the discourse oblige us to
understand it as spoken of the
time of the destruction of
Jerusalem, but in a higher sense
it may be true also of the time
of the end of the world, and of
the general judgment. All the
subsequent discourse too, we may
observe, does not relate so
properly to the destruction of
Jerusalem as to the end of the
world and the general judgment.
Our Lord loses sight, as it
were, of his former subject, and
adapts his discourse more to the
latter. And, indeed, the end of
the Jewish state was, in a
manner, the end of the world to
many of the Jews.
It appears next to impossible
that any man should duly
consider these prophecies, and
the exact completion of them,
and, if he is a believer, not be
confirmed in the faith; or, if
he is an infidel, not be
converted. Can any stronger
proof be given of a divine
revelation than the spirit of
prophecy; or of the spirit of
prophecy, than the examples now
before us, in which so many
contingencies, and we may say,
improbabilities, which human
wisdom or prudence could never
have foreseen, are so
particularly foretold, and so
punctually accomplished! At the
time when Christ pronounced
these prophecies, the Roman
governor resided at Jerusalem,
and had a force sufficient to
keep the people in obedience;
and could human prudence foresee
that the city, as well as the
country, would revolt and rebel
against the Romans? Could it
foresee pestilences, and
famines, and earthquakes in
divers places? Could it foresee
the speedy propagation of the
gospel, so contrary to all human
probability? Could human
prudence foresee such an utter
destruction of Jerusalem, with
all the circumstances preceding
and following it? It was never
the custom of the Romans
absolutely to ruin any of their
provinces. It was improbable,
therefore, that such a thing
should happen at all, and still
more improbable that it should
happen under the humane and
generous Titus who was indeed,
as he was called, the love and
delight of mankind. Yet, however
improbable this was it has
happened, and it was foreseen
and foretold by Christ; but how
was it possible for him to
foresee it, unless his foresight
was divine, and his prediction
the infallible oracle of God?
Eusebius observes well upon this
place, that, “Whoever shall
compare the words of our Saviour
with the history which Josephus
has written of the war, cannot
but admire the wisdom of Christ,
and acknowledge his prediction
to be divine.”
Verses 42-44
Matthew 24:42-44. Watch
therefore — Let your mind be
thoroughly awake to a sense of
the certainty and importance of
these things, and be on your
guard that they may not overtake
you unawares, but that you may
be prepared to meet Christ in
the way of judgment or mercy;
for ye know not what hour your
Lord cometh — Either to avenge
himself of this nation, to
require your soul of you, or to
call you and all mankind to his
bar. Be ye also ready — By being
assured of God’s favour, and
stamped with his image, and by a
holy deadness to the objects of
this uncertain and transitory
world, which you are so soon to
leave, and may be called to
leave at a moment’s warning; be
prepared to receive every event
of divine providence with
resignation to God’s will, and a
perfect acquiescence in the
wisdom of all his dispensations,
fully persuaded that all things
shall work for good to them that
love him.
Verses 45-51
Matthew 24:45-51. Who then is
the faithful and wise servant —
Which of you aspires after this
character? Wise — Every moment
retaining the clearest
conviction that all he now has
is only intrusted to him as a
steward: Faithful — Thinking,
speaking, and acting continually
in a manner suitable to that
conviction. Whom his lord hath
made ruler over his household —
This evidently chiefly concerns
the ministers of the gospel. See
notes on Luke 12:42, &c. Blessed
is that servant, &c. — “You, the
ministers of religion, ought to
be peculiarly faithful in the
discharge of your duty; for it
is not an ordinary trust that is
committed to your charge. You
are stewards, whose business it
is to take care of the whole
family, and who, because of the
influence which your example may
have upon others, ought to be
remarkably diligent. Your duty
is to be well acquainted with
the stores of evangelical
truths, and to understand how
they may be best applied. You
should know likewise the various
characters of the persons under
your charge, that you may be
able to give every one of them
his portion of meat in due
season. Verily, he shall make
him ruler over all his goods —
If when I come I find you thus
employed, I will highly reward
you with the glories and joys of
my kingdom, even as an earthly
master bestows particular marks
of respect on such servants as
have been remarkably faithful in
any important trust.” But if
that evil servant — Now become
evil, having put away faith and
a good conscience, shall say in
his heart, My lord delayeth, &c.
— “On the other hand, if you
behave like wicked stewards,
who, because their lord delays
his coming, beat their
fellow-servants and get drunk
with sots and epicures; if you
tyrannise over the consciences
of your brethren, neglect the
duties of your function, and
give yourselves up to sensual
pleasures, I will come when you
little think of it, and will
make you dreadful examples of my
indignation, by the severe
punishments which I will inflict
upon you.” And shall cut him
asunder — Tearing and cutting
persons into several pieces, was
one of the severest kinds of
punishment anciently used, and
is here put for the extreme
misery that awaits the persons
here described in the other
world. And appoint him his
portion with the hypocrites —
The worst of sinners. If
ministers are the persons here
primarily intended, there is a
peculiar propriety in the
expression. For no hypocrisy can
be baser than to call ourselves
ministers of Christ while we are
the slaves of avarice, ambition,
or sensuality. Wherever such are
found, may God reform them by
his grace, or disarm them of
that power and influence which
they continually abuse to his
dishonour, and to their own
aggravated damnation! |