Chapter 11:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Mark John
Luke 11
Verse 1. Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his disciples - The
Jewish masters used to give their followers some short form of
prayer, as a peculiar badge of their relation to them. This it is
probable John the Baptist had done. And in this sense it seems to
be that the disciples now asked Jesus, to teach them to pray.
Accordingly he here repeats that form, which he had before given
them in his sermon on the mount, and likewise enlarges on the
same head, though still speaking the same things in substance.
And this prayer uttered from the heart, and in its true and full
meaning, is indeed the badge of a real Christian: for is not he such
whose first and most ardent desire is the glory of God, and the
happiness of man by the coming of his kingdom? Who asks for no
more of this world than his daily bread, longing meantime for the
bread that came down from heaven? And whose only desires for
himself are forgiveness of sins, (as he heartily forgives others, )
and sanctification.
Verse
2. When ye pray, say - And what he said to them is undoubtedly
said to us also. We are therefore here directed, not only to imitate
this in all our prayers, but to use this very form of prayer. Matt. vi,
9.
Verse
4. Forgive us; for we forgive them - Not once, but continually.
This does not denote the meritorious cause of our pardon; but the
removal of that hindrance which otherwise would render it
impossible.
Verse
5. At midnight - The most unseasonable time: but no time is
unseasonable with God, either for hearing or answering prayer.
Verse
9. Matt. vii, 7.
Verse
13. How much more shall your heavenly Father - How beautiful is
the gradation! A friend: a father: God! Give the Holy Spirit - The
best of gifts, and that which includes every good gift.
Verse
14. It was dumb - That is, it made the man so. Matt. xii, 22.
Verse
15. But some said, He casteth out devils by Beelzebub - These he
answers, ver. 17. Others, to try whether it were so or no, sought a
sign from heaven. These he reproves in ver. 29 and following
verses. Beelzebub signifies the Lord of flies, a title which the
heathens gave to Jupiter, whom they accounted the chief of their
gods, and yet supposed him to be employed in driving away flies
from their temple and sacrifices. The Philistines worshipped a
deity under this name, as the God of Ekron: from hence the Jews
took the name, and applied it to the chief of the devils. Mark iii,
22.
Verse
16. Matt. xii, 38.
Verse
17. A house - That is, a family.
Verse
20. If I cast out devils by the finger of God - That is, by a power
manifestly Divine. Perhaps the expression intimates farther, that it
was done without any labour: then the kingdom of God is come
upon you - Unawares, unexpected: so the Greek word implies.
Verse
21. The strong one armed - The devil, strong in himself, and
armed with the pride, obstinacy, and security of him in whom he
dwells.
Verse
26. The last state of that man becometh worse than the first -
Whoever reads the sad account Josephus gives of the temple and
conduct of the Jews, after the ascension of Christ and before their
final destruction by the Romans, must acknowledge that no
emblem could have been more proper to describe them. Their
characters were the vilest that can be conceived, and they pressed
on to their own ruin, as if they had been possessed by legions of
devils, and wrought up to the last degree of madness. But this also
is fulfilled in all who totally and finally apostatize from true faith.
Verse
27. Blessed is the womb that bare thee, and the paps which thou
hast sucked! - How natural was the thought for a woman! And
how gently does our Lord reprove her!
Verse
28. Yea, rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and
keep it - For if even she that bare him had not done this, she
would have forfeited all her blessedness.
Verse
29. It seeketh - The original word implies seeking more, or over
and above what one has already.
Verse
32. They repented at the preaching of Jonah - But it was only for a
season. Afterward they relapsed into wickedness, till (after about
forty years) they were destroyed. It is remarkable, that in this also
the comparison held. God reprieved the Jews for about forty
years; but they still advanced in wickedness, till having filled up
their measure, they were destroyed with an utter destruction.
Verse
33. The meaning is, God gives you this Gospel light, that you may
repent. Let your eye be singly fixed on him, aim only at pleasing
God; and while you do this, your whole soul will be full of
wisdom, holiness, and happiness. Matt. v, 15; Mark iv, 21; Luke
viii, 16.
Verse
34. But when thine eye is evil - When thou aimest at any thing
else, thou wilt be full of folly, sin, and misery. On the contrary,
Matt. vi, 22.
Verse
36. If thy whole body be full of light - If thou art filled with holy
wisdom, having no part dark, giving way to no sin or folly, then
that heavenly principle will, like the clear flame of a lamp in a
room that was dark before, shed its light into all thy powers and
faculties.
Verse
39. Now ye Pharisees - Probably many of them were present at
the Pharisee's house. Matt. xxiii, 25.
Verse
41. Give what is in them - The vessels which ye clean, in alms,
and all things are clean to you. As if he had said, By acts directly
contrary to rapine and wickedness, show that your hearts are
cleansed, and these outward washings are needless.
Verse
42. Wo to you - That is, miserable are you. In the same manner is
the phrase to be understood throughout the chapter.
Verse
44. For ye are as graves which appear not - Probably in speaking
this our Lord fixed his eyes on the scribes. As graves which
appear not, being overgrown with grass, so that men are not
aware, till they stumble upon them, and either hurt themselves, or
at least are defiled by touching them. On another occasion Christ
compared them to whited sepulchres, fair without, but foul within;
Matt. xxiii, 27.
Verse
45. One of the lawyers - That is scribes; expounders of the law.
Verse
48. Whom they killed, ye build their sepulchres - Just like them
pretending great reverence for the ancient prophets, while ye
destroy those whom God sends to yourselves. Ye therefore bear
witness by this deep hypocrisy that ye are of the very same spirit
with them.
Verse
49. The wisdom of God, agreeably to this, hath said - In many
places of Scripture, though not in these very words, I will send
them prophets - Chiefly under the Old Testament: and apostles -
Under the New. Matt. xxiii, 34.
Verse
50. The blood of all shall be required of this generation - That is,
shall be visibly and terribly punished upon it.
Verse
51. And so it was within forty years, in a most astonishing
manner, by the dreadful destruction of the temple, the city, and
the whole nation. Between the temple and the altar - In the court
of the temple.
Verse
52. Ye have taken away the key of knowledge - Ye have obscured
and destroyed the knowledge of the Messiah, which is the key of
both the present and the future kingdom of heaven; the kingdom
of grace and glory. Ye have not entered in - Into the present
kingdom of heaven.
Chapter 11:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Mark John
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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