Chapter 18:
| 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 18
Verse 1. Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? - Which of us
shall be thy prime minister? They still dreamed of a temporal
kingdom.
Verse
2. And Jesus calling to him a little child - This is supposed to have
been the great Ignatius, whom Trajan, the wise, the good Emperor
Trajan, condemned to be cast to the wild beasts at Rome! Mark ix,
36; Luke ix, 47.
Verse
3. Except ye be converted - The first step toward entering into the
kingdom of grace, is to become as little children: lowly in heart,
knowing yourselves utterly ignorant and helpless, and hanging
wholly on your Father who is in heaven, for a supply of all your
wants. We may farther assert, (though it is doubtful whether this
text implies so much, ) except ye be turned from darkness to light,
and from the power of Satan to God:, except ye be entirely,
inwardly changed, renewed in the image of God, ye cannot enter
into the kingdom of glory. Thus must every man be converted in
this life, or he can never enter into life eternal. Ye shall in no wise
enter - So far from being great in it. Matt. xix, 14.
Verses
5, 6. And all who are in this sense little children are unspeakably
dear to me. Therefore help them all you can, as if it were myself
in person, and see that ye offend them not; that is, that ye turn
them not out of the right way, neither hinder them in it. Matt. x,
40; Luke x, 16; John xiii, 20.
Verse
7. Wo to the world because of offenses - That is, unspeakable
misery will be in the world through them; for it must needs be that
offenses come - Such is the nature of things, and such the
weakness, folly, and wickedness of mankind, that it cannot be but
they will come; but wo to that man - That is, miserable is that
man, by whom the offense cometh. Offenses are, all things
whereby any one is turned out of, or hindered in the way of God.
Verses
8, 9. If thy hand, foot, eye, cause thee to offend - If the most dear
enjoyment, the most beloved and useful person, turn thee out of,
or hinder thee in the way Is not this a hard saying? Yes; if thou
take counsel with flesh and blood. Matt. v, 29; Mark ix, 43.
Verse
10. See that ye despise not one of these little ones - As if they
were beneath your notice. Be careful to receive and not to offend,
the very weakest believer in Christ: for as inconsiderable as some
of these may appear to thee, the very angels of God have a
peculiar charge over them: even those of the highest order, who
continually appear at the throne of the Most High. To behold the
face of God seems to signify the waiting near his throne; and to be
an allusion to the office of chief ministers in earthly courts, who
daily converse with their princes.
Verse
11. Another, and yet a stronger reason for your not despising them
is, that I myself came into the world to save them. Luke xix, 10.
Verse
12. Luke xv, 4.
Verse
14. So it is not the will of your Father - Neither doth my Father
despise the least of them. Observe the gradation. The angels, the
Son, the Father.
Verse
15. But how can we avoid giving offense to some? or being
offended at others! Especially suppose they are quite in the
wrong? Suppose they commit a known sin? Our Lord here teaches
us how: he lays down a sure method of avoiding all offenses.
Whosoever closely observes this threefold rule, will seldom
offend others, and never be offended himself. If any do any thing
amiss, of which thou art an eye or ear witness, thus saith the Lord,
If thy brother - Any who is a member of the same religious
community: Sin against thee,
1. Go and reprove him alone - If it may be in person; if that
cannot so well be done, by thy messenger; or in writing. Observe,
our Lord gives no liberty to omit this; or to exchange it for either
of the following steps. If this do not succeed,
2. Take with thee one or two more - Men whom he esteems or loves, who may then
confirm and enforce what thou sayest; and afterward, if need
require, bear witness of what was spoken. If even this does not
succeed, then, and not before,
3. Tell it to the elders of the Church
- Lay the whole matter open before those who watch over yours
and his soul. If all this avail not, have no farther intercourse with
him, only such as thou hast with heathens. Can any thing be
plainer? Christ does here as expressly command all Christians
who see a brother do evil, to take this way, not another, and to
take these steps, in this order, as he does to honour their father and
mother. But if so, in what land do the Christians live? If we
proceed from the private carriage of man to man, to proceedings
of a more public nature, in what Christian nation are Church
censures conformed to this rule? Is this the form in which
ecclesiastical judgments appear, in the popish, or even the
Protestant world? Are these the methods used even by those who
boast the most loudly of the authority of Christ to confirm their
sentences? Let us earnestly pray, that this dishonour to the
Christian name may be wiped away, and that common humanity
may not, with such solemn mockery, be destroyed in the name of
the Lord! Let him be to thee as the heathen - To whom thou still
owest earnest good will, and all the offices of humanity. Luke
xvii, 3.
Verse
18. Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth - By excommunication,
pronounced in the spirit and power of Christ. Whatsoever ye shall
loose - By absolution from that sentence. In the primitive Church,
absolution meant no more than a discharge from Church censure.
Again I say - And not only your intercession for the penitent, but
all your united prayers, shall be heard. How great then is the
power of joint prayer! If two of you - Suppose a man and his wife.
Matt. xvi, 19.
Verse
20. Where two or three are gathered together in my name - That
is, to worship me. I am in the midst of them - By my Spirit, to
quicken their prayers, guide their counsels, and answer their
petitions.
Verse
22. Till seventy times seven - That is, as often as there is
occasion. A certain number is put for an uncertain.
Verse
23. Therefore - In this respect.
Verse
24. One was brought who owed him ten thousand talents -
According to the usual computation, if these were talents of gold,
this would amount to seventy-two millions sterling. If they were
talents of silver, it must have been four millions, four hundred
thousand pounds. Hereby our Lord intimates the vast number and
weight of our offenses against God, and our utter incapacity of
making him any satisfaction.
Verse
25. As he had not to pay, his Lord commanded him to be sold -
Such was the power which creditors anciently had over their
insolvent debtors in several countries.
Verse
30. Went with him before a magistrate, and cast him into prison,
protesting he should lie there, till he should pay the whole debt.
Verse
34. His Lord delivered him to the tormentors - Imprisonment is a
much severer punishment in the eastern countries than in ours.
State criminals, especially when condemned to it, are not only
confined to a very mean and scanty allowance, but are frequently
loaded with clogs or heavy yokes, so that they can neither lie nor
sit at ease: and by frequent scourgings and sometimes rackings are
brought to an untimely end. Till he should pay all that was due to
him - That is, without all hope of release, for this he could never
do. How observable is this whole account; as well as the great
inference our Lord draws from it:
1. The debtor was freely and fully forgiven;
2. He wilfully and grievously offended;
3. His pardon was retracted, the whole debt required, and the
offender delivered to the tormentors for ever. And shall we still
say, but when we are once freely and fully forgiven, our pardon
can never be retracted? Verily, verily, I say unto you, So likewise
will my heavenly Father do to you, if ye from your hearts forgive
not every one his brother their trespasses.
Chapter 18:
| 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 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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