Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| 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 25 26 27 28 Malachi Mark
Matthew 8
Then, in chapter 8, the Lord begins in the midst of Israel His patient life
of testimony, which closed with His rejection by the people whom God had so
long preserved for Him, and for their own blessing.
He had proclaimed the kingdom, displayed His power throughout the land, and
declared His character, as well as the spirit of those who should enter the
kingdom.
But His miracles,
[
24] as well as the whole Gospel, are always
characterised by His position among the Jews and God's dealings with them,
till He was rejected. Jehovah, yetthe man obedient to the law, foreshewing
the entrance of the Gentiles into the kingdom (its establishment in mystery
in the world), predicting the building of the church or assembly on the
recognition of His being Son of the living God, and the kingdom in glory;
and, while detecting as the effect of His presence the perversity of the
people, yet bearing on His heart with perfect patience the burden of
Israel.
[
25] It is Jehovah present in goodness, outwardly one of
themselves: wondrous truth!
First of all, we find the healing of a leper. Jehovah alone, in His
sovereign goodness, could heal the leper; here Jesus does so. "If thou
wilt," says the leper, "thou canst." "I will," replies the Lord. But at the
same time, while He shews forth in His own Person that which repels all
possibility of defilement-that which is above sin-He shews the most perfect
condescension towards the defiled one. He touches the leper, saying, "I
will, be thou clean." We see the grace, the power, the undefilable holiness
of Jehovah, come down in the Person of Jesus to the closest proximity to
the sinner, touching him so to speak. It was indeed "the Lord that healeth
thee."
[
26] At the same time He conceals Himself, and commands the man,
who had been healed, to go to the priest according to the ordinances of the
law and offer his gift. He does not go out of the place of the Jew in
subjection to the law; but Jehovah was there in goodness.
But in the next case we see a Gentile, who by faith enjoys the full effect
of that power which his faith ascribed to Jesus giving the Lord occasion to
bring out the solemn truth, that many of these poor Gentiles should come
and sit down in the kingdom of heaven with the fathers who were honoured by
the Jewish nation as the first parents of the heirs of promise, while the
children of the kingdom should be in outer darkness. In fact the faith of
this centurion acknowledged a divine power in Jesus, which, by the glory of
Him that possessed it, would (not forsake Israel, but) open the door to the
Gentiles, and graft into the olive-tree of promise branches of the wild
olive-tree in the place of those which should be cut off. The manner in
which this should take place in the assembly was not now the question.
He does not however yet forsake Israel. He goes into Peter's house, and
heals his wife's mother. He does the same to all the sick who crowd around
the house at even, when the sabbath was over. They are healed, the devils
are cast out, so that the prophecy of Isaiah was being fulfilled: "Himself
took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses." Jesus put Himself in heart
under the weight of all the sorrows that oppressed Israel, in order to
relieve and heal them. It is still Emmanuel, who feels for their misery and
is afflicted in all their affliction, but who has come in with the power
that shews Him capable of delivering them.
These three cases shew this character of His ministry in a clear and
striking manner. He hides Himself; for, until the moment when He would shew
judgment to the Gentiles, He does not lift up His voice in the streets. It
is the dove that rests upon Him. These manifestations of power attract men
to Him; but this does not deceive Him: He never departs in spirit from the
place He has taken. He is the despised and the rejected of men; He has
nowhere to lay His head. The earth had more room for the foxes and the
birds than for Him, whom we have seen appear a moment before as the Lord,
acknowledged at least by the necessities which He never refused to relieve.
Therefore, if any man would follow Him, he must forsake all to be the
companion of the Lord, who would not have come down to the earth if
everything had not been in question; nor without an absolute right,
although it was at the same time in a love which could only be occupied by
its mission, and by the necessity that brought Him there.
The Lord on earth was everything or nothing. This, it is true, was to be
felt morally in its effects, in the grace which, acting by faith, attached
the believer to Him by an ineffable bond. Without this, the heart would not
have been morally put to the test. But this did not make it the less true.
accordingly the proofs of this were present: the winds and waves, to which
in the eye of man He seemed to be exposed, obeyed His voice at once-a
striking reproof to the unbelief that woke Him from His sleep, and had
supposed it possible for the waves to engulf Him, and with Him the counsels
and the power of Him who had created the winds and waves. It is evident
that this storm was permitted in order to try their faith and manifest the
dignity of His Person. If the enemy was the instrument who produced it, he
only succeeded in making the Lord display His glory. Such indeed is always
the case as to Christ, and for us, where faith is.
Now the reality of this power, and the manner of its operation, are
forcibly proved by that which follows.
The Lord disembarks in the country of the Gergesenes. There the power of
the enemy shews itself in all its horrors. If man, to whom the Lord was
come in grace, did not know Him, the devils knew their Judge in the Person
of the Son of God. The man was possessed by them. The fear they had of torme
nt at the judgment of the last day is applied in the man's mind to the
immediate presence of the Lord: "Art thou come to torment us before the
time?" Wicked spirits act on men by the dread of their power; they have
none unless they are feared. But faith only can take this fear from man. I
am not speaking of the lusts on which they act, nor of the wiles of the
enemy; I speak of the power of the enemy. Resist the devil and he will flee
from thee. Here the devils wished to manifest the reality of this power.
The Lord permits it in order to make it plain, that in this world it is not
merely man that is in question whether good or bad, but that also which is
stronger than man. The devils enter into the swine, which perish in the
waters. Sorrowful reality plainly demonstrated that it was no question of
mere disease or of sinful lusts, but of wicked spirits! However, thanks be
to God, it was a question also of One who, although a man on earth, was
more powerful than they. They are compelled to acknowledge this power, and
they appeal to it. There is no idea of resistance. In the temptation in the
wilderness Satan had been overcome. Jesus completely delivers the man whom
they had oppressed with their evil power. The power of the devils was
nothing before Him. He could have delivered the world from all the power of
the enemy, if that only had been in question, and from all the ills of
humanity. The strong man was bound, and the Lord spoiled his goods. But the
presence of God, of Jehovah, troubles the world even more than the power of
the enemy degrades and domineers over mind and body. The control of the
enemy over the heart-too peaceful, and alas! too little perceived-is more
mighty than his strength. This succumbs before the word of Jesus; but the
will of man accepts the world as it is, governed by the influence of Satan.
The whole city, who had witnessed the deliverance of the demoniac and the
power of Jesus present among them, entreat Him to depart. Sad history of
the world! The Lord came down with power to deliver the world-man-from all
the power of the enemy; but they would not. Their distance from God was
moral, and not merely bondage to the enemy's power. They submitted to his
yoke, they had become used to it, and they would not have the presence of
God.
I doubt not that that which happened to the swine is a figure of that which
happened to the impious and profane Jews who rejected the Lord Jesus.
Nothing can be more striking than the way in which a divine Person,
Emmanuel, though a man in grace, is manifested in this chapter.
[
24] The miracles of Christ had a peculiar character. They were not
merely acts of power, but all of them of the power of God visiting this
world in goodness. The power of God had been often shewn specially, from
Moses, but often in judgment. But Christ's were all the deliverance of men
from the evil consequences sin had brought in. There was one exception, the
cursing the fig tree, but this was a judicial sentence on Israel, that is,
man under the old covenant when there was great appearance but no fruit.
[
25] I subjoin here some notes, made since this was
written, as throwing, I think, light on the structure of this Gospel.
Matthew 51 gives the character required for entrance into the kingdom, the
character which was to mark the accepted remnant, Jehovah being now in the
way with the nation to judgment. Chapters 8, 9 give the other side-grace
and goodness come in, God manifest, His character and actings, that new
thing which could not be put into the old bottles-still goodness in power,
but rejected, the Son of man (not Messiah) who had not where to lay His
head. Chapter 8 gives present intervention in temporal goodness with power.
Hence, as goodness, it goes beyond Israel, as it deals in grace with what
was excluded from God's camp in Israel. It includes power over all Satan's
power and sickness and the elements, and that in taking the burden on
Himself, but in conscious rejection. Chapter 8: 17-20 leads us to Isaiah
53: 3, 4, and the state of things calling for the wholly following Him,
giving up all. This leads to the sad testimony that, if divine power expels
Satan's, the divine presence manifest in it is insupportable to the world.
The swine figure Israel thereupon. Chapter 9 furnishes the religious side
of His presence in grace, forgiveness, and the testimony that Jehovah was
there according to Psalm 103, but there to call sinners, not the righteous;
and this was especially what could not suit the old bottles. Finally, this
chapter practically, save the patience of goodness, closes the history. He
came to save Israel's life. It was really death when He came: only,
wherever there was faith in the midst of the surrounding crowd, there was
healing. The Pharisees shew the blasphemy of the leaders: only the patience
of grace still subsists, carried out towards Israel in chapter 10, but all
found to be of no avail in chapter 11. The Son was revealing the Father,
and this abides and gives rest. Chapter 12 develops fully the judgment and
rejection of Israel. Chapter 13 brings Christ as a sower, not seeking fruit
in His vineyard, and the actual form of the kingdom of heaven.
[
26] One who touched a leper became himself unclean, but the blessed One
did come thus close to man, but removed the defilement without contracting
it. The leper knew His power, but was not sure of His goodness. "I will"
declared it, but with a title which God only has to.
Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| 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 25 26 27 28 Malachi Mark
This version of Darby's Synopsis of the New Testament is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1995 by L. Hodgett. Used by permission. This material may be freely copied for private use or for distribution without charge but must not be used commercially without written permission from the compiler--L. Hodgett. A special thanks to L. Hodgett for permission to create and post this version of Darby's Synopsis of the New Testament.
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