Chapter 5:
| 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 5
Verse 1. And seeing the multitudes - At some distance, as they were
coming to him from every quarter. He went up into the mountain -
Which was near: where there was room for them all. His disciples
- not only his twelve disciples, but all who desired to learn of him.
Verse
2. And he opened his mouth - A phrase which always denotes a
set and solemn discourse; and taught them - To bless men; to
make men happy, was the great business for which our Lord came
into the world. And accordingly he here pronounces eight
blessings together, annexing them to so many steps in
Christianity. Knowing that happiness is our common aim, and that
an innate instinct continually urges us to the pursuit of it, he in the
kindest manner applies to that instinct, and directs it to its proper
object. Though all men desire, yet few attain, happiness, because
they seek it where it is not to be found. Our Lord therefore begins
his Divine institution, which is the complete art of happiness, by
laying down before all that have ears to hear, the true and only
true method of acquiring it. Observe the benevolent
condescension of our Lord. He seems, as it were, to lay aside his
supreme authority as our legislator, that he may the better act the
part of: our friend and saviour. Instead of using the lofty style, in
positive commands, he, in a more gentle and engaging way,
insinuates his will and our duty, by pronouncing those happy who
comply with it.
Verse
3. Happy are the poor - In the following discourse there is,
1. A sweet invitation to true holiness and happiness, ver. 3-12.
2. A persuasive to impart it to others, ver. 13-16.
3. A description of true Christian holiness, ver. 17; chap.vii, 12.
(in which it is easy to observe, the latter part exactly answers the
former.)
4. The conclusion: giving a sure mark of the true way, warning
against false prophets, exhorting to follow after holiness. The poor
in spirit - They who are unfeignedly penitent, they who are truly
convinced of sin; who see and feel the state they are in by nature,
being deeply sensible of their sinfulness, guiltiness, helplessness.
For theirs is the kingdom of heaven - The present inward
kingdom: righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost, as
well as the eternal kingdom, if they endure to the end. Luke vi, 20.
Verse
4. They that mourn - Either for their own sins, or for other men's,
and are steadily and habitually serious. They shall be comforted -
More solidly and deeply even in this world, and eternally in
heaven.
Verse
5. Happy are the meek - They that hold all their passions and
affections evenly balanced. They shall inherit the earth - They
shall have all things really necessary for life and godliness. They
shall enjoy whatever portion God hath given them here, and shall
hereafter possess the new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness.
Verse
6. They that hunger and thirst after righteousness - After the
holiness here described. They shall be satisfied with it.
Verse
7. The merciful - The tender-hearted: they who love all men as
themselves: They shall obtain mercy - Whatever mercy therefore
we desire from God, the same let us show to our brethren. He will
repay us a thousand fold, the love we bear to any for his sake.
Verse
8. The pure in heart - The sanctified: they who love God with all
their hearts. They shall see God - In all things here; hereafter in
glory.
Verse
9. The peace makers - They that out of love to God and man do all
possible good to all men. Peace in the Scripture sense implies all
blessings temporal and eternal. They shall be called the children
of God - Shall be acknowledged such by God and man. One
would imagine a person of this amiable temper and behaviour
would be the darling of mankind. But our Lord well knew it
would not be so, as long as Satan was the prince of this world. He
therefore warns them before of the treatment all were to expect,
who were determined thus to tread in his steps, by immediately
subjoining, Happy are they who are persecuted for righteousness'
sake. Through this whole discourse we cannot but observe the
most exact method which can possibly be conceived. Every
paragraph, every sentence, is closely connected both with that
which precedes, and that which follows it. And is not this the
pattern for every Christian preacher? If any then are able to follow
it without any premeditation, well: if not, let them not dare to
preach without it. No rhapsody, no incoherency, whether the
things spoken be true or false, comes of the Spirit of Christ.
Verse
10. For righteousness' sake - That is, because they have, or follow
after, the righteousness here described. He that is truly a righteous
man, he that mourns, and he that is pure in heart, yea, all that will
live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution, 2 Tim. iii, 12.
The world will always say, Away with such fellows from the
earth. They are made to reprove our thoughts. They are grievous
to us even to behold. Their lives are not like other men's; their
ways are of another fashion.
Verse
11. Revile - When present: say all evil - When you are absent.
Verse
12. Your reward - Even over and above the happiness that
naturally and directly results from holiness.
Verse
13. Ye - Not the apostles, not ministers only; but all ye who are
thus holy, are the salt of the earth - Are to season others. Mark ix,
50; Luke xiv, 34.
Verse
14. Ye are the light of the world - If ye are thus holy, you can no
more be hid than the sun in the firmament: no more than a city on
a mountain - Probably pointing to that on the brow of the opposite
hill.
Verse
15. Nay, the very design of God in giving you this light was, that
it might shine. Mark iv, 21; Luke viii, 16; xi, 33.
Verse
16. That they may see - and glorify - That is, that seeing your
good works, they may be moved to love and serve God likewise.
Verse
17. Think not - Do not imagine, fear, hope, that I am come - Like
your teachers, to destroy the law or the prophets. I am not come to
destroy - The moral law, but to fulfil - To establish, illustrate, and
explain its highest meaning, both by my life and doctrine.
Verse
18. Till all things shall be effected - Which it either requires or
foretells. For the law has its effect, when the rewards are given,
and the punishments annexed to it inflicted, as well as when its
precepts are obeyed. Luke xvi, 17; xxi, 33.
Verse
19. One of the least - So accounted by men; and shall teach -
Either by word or example; shall be the least - That is, shall have
no part therein.
Verse
20. The righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees - Described in
the sequel of this discourse.
Verse
21. Ye have heard - From the scribes reciting the law; Thou shalt
do no murder - And they interpreted this, as all the other
commandments, barely of the outward act. The judgement - The
Jews had in every city a court of twenty-three men, who could
sentence a criminal to be strangled. But the sanhedrim only (the
great council which sat at Jerusalem, consisting of seventy-two
men, ) could sentence to the more terrible death of stoning. That
was called the judgment, this the council. Exod. xx, 13.
Verse
22. But I say unto you - Which of the prophets ever spake thus?
Their language is, Thus saith the Lord. Who hath authority to use
this language, but the one lawgiver, who is able to save and to
destroy. Whosoever is angry with his brother - Some copies add,
without a cause - But this is utterly foreign to the whole scope and
tenor of our Lord's discourse. If he had only forbidden the being
angry without a cause, there was no manner of need of that
solemn declaration, I say unto you; for the scribes and Pharisees
themselves said as much as this. Even they taught, men ought not
to be angry without a cause. So that this righteousness does not
exceed theirs. But Christ teaches, that we ought not, for any cause,
to be so angry as to call any man Raca, or fool. We ought not, for
any cause, to be angry at the person of the sinner, but at his sins
only. Happy world, were this plain and necessary distinction
thoroughly understood, remembered, practiced! Raca means, a
silly man, a trifler. Whosoever shall say, Thou fool - Shall revile,
or seriously reproach any man. Our Lord specified three degrees
of murder, each liable to a sorer punishment than the other: not
indeed from men, but from God. Hell fire - In the valley of
Hinnom (whence the word in the original is taken) the children
were used to be burnt alive to Moloch. It was afterward made a
receptacle for the filth of the city, where continual fires were kept
to consume it. And it is probable, if any criminals were burnt
alive, it was in this accursed and horrible place. Therefore both as
to its former and latter state, it was a fit emblem of hell. It must
here signify a degree of future punishment, as much more
dreadful than those incurred in the two former cases, as burning
alive is more dreadful than either strangling or stoning.
Verse
23. Thy brother hath aught against thee - On any of the preceding
accounts: for any unkind thought or word: any that did not spring
from love.
Verse
24. Leaving thy gift, go - For neither thy gift nor thy prayer will
atone for thy want of love: but this will make them both an
abomination before God.
Verse
25. Agree with thine adversary - With any against whom thou hast
thus offended: while thou art in the way - Instantly, on the spot;
before you part. Lest the adversary deliver thee to the judge - Lest
he commit his cause to God. Luke xii, 58.
Verse
26. Till thou hast paid the last farthing - That is, for ever, since
thou canst never do this. What has been hitherto said refers to
meekness: what follows, to purity of heart.
Verse
27. Thou shalt not commit adultery - And this, as well as the sixth
commandment, the scribes and Pharisees interpreted barely of the
outward act. Exod. xx, 14.
Verses
29, 30. If a person as dear as a right eye, or as useful as a right
hand, cause thee thus to offend, though but in heart. Perhaps here
may be an instance of a kind of transposition which is frequently
found in the sacred writings: so that the 29th verse may refer to
27, 28; and the 30th to ver. 21, 22. As if he had said, Part with any
thing, however dear to you, or otherwise useful, if you cannot
avoid sin while you keep it. Even cut off your right hand, if you
are of so passionate a temper, that you cannot otherwise be
restrained from hurting your brother. Pull out your eyes, if you
can no otherwise be restrained from lusting after women. Chap.
xviii, 8; Mark ix, 43.
Verse
31. Let him give her a writing of divorce - Which the scribes and
Pharisees allowed men to do on any trifling occasion. Deut. xxiv,
1; Matt. xix, 7; Mark x, 2; Luke xvi, 18.
Verse
32. Causeth her to commit adultery - If she marry again.
Verse
33. Our Lord here refers to the promise made to the pure in heart
of seeing God in all things, and points out a false doctrine of the
scribes, which arose from their not thus seeing God. What he
forbids is, the swearing at all, 1, by any creature, 2, in our
ordinary conversation: both of which the scribes and Pharisees
taught to be perfectly innocent. Exod. xx, 7.
Verse
36. For thou canst not make one hair white or black - Whereby it
appears, that this also is not thine but God's.
Verse
37. Let your conversation be yea, yea; nay, nay - That is, in your
common discourse, barely affirm or deny.
Verse
38. Ye have heard - Our Lord proceeds to enforce such meekness
and love on those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake
(which he pursues to the end of the chapter) as were utterly
unknown to the scribes and Pharisees. It hath been said - In the
law, as a direction to Judges, in ease of violent and barbarous
assaults. An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth - And this has
been interpreted, as encouraging bitter and rigorous revenge.
Deut. xix, 21.
Verse
39. But I say unto you, that ye resist not the evil man - Thus; the
Greek word translated resist signifies standing in battle array,
striving for victory. If a man smite thee on the right cheek -
Return not evil for evil: yea, turn to him the other - Rather than
revenge thyself.
Verses
40, 41. Where the damage is not great, choose rather to suffer it,
though possibly it may on that account be repeated, than to
demand an eye for an eye, to enter into a rigorous prosecution of
the offender. The meaning of the whole passage seems to be,
rather than return evil for evil, when the wrong is purely personal,
submit to one bodily wrong after another, give up one part of your
goods after another, submit to one instance of compulsion after
another. That the words are not literally to be understood, appears
from the behaviour of our Lord himself, John xviii, 22.
Verse
42. Thus much for your behaviour toward the violent. As for those
who use milder methods, Give to him that asketh thee - Give and
lend to any so far, (but no further, for God never contradicts
himself) as is consistent with thy engagements to thy creditors,
thy family, and the household of faith. Luke vi, 30.
Verse
43. Thou shalt love thy neighbour; And hate thy enemy - God
spoke the former part; the scribes added the latter. Lev. xix, 18.
Verse
44. Bless them that curse you - Speak all the good you can to and
of them, who speak all evil to and of you. Repay love in thought,
word, and deed, to those who hate you, and show it both in word
and deed. Luke vi, 27, 35.
Verse
45. That ye may be the children - That is, that ye may continue
and appear such before men and angels. For he maketh his sun to
rise - He gives them such blessings as they will receive at his
hands. Spiritual blessings they will not receive.
Verse
46. The publicans - were officers of the revenue, farmers, or
receivers of the public money: men employed by the Roman to
gather the taxes and customs, which they exacted of the nations
they had conquered. These were generally odious for their
extortion and oppression, and were reckoned by the Jews as the
very scum of the earth.
Verse
47. And if ye salute your friends only - Our Lord probably glances
at those prejudices, which different sects had against each other,
and intimates, that he would not have his followers imbibe that
narrow spirit. Would to God this had been more attended to
among the unhappy divisions and subdivisions, into which his
Church has been crumbled! And that we might at least advance so
far, as cordially to embrace our brethren in Christ, of whatever
party or denomination they are!
Verse
48. Therefore ye shall be perfect; as your Father who is in heaven
is perfect - So the original runs, referring to all that holiness which
is described in the foregoing verses, which our Lord in the
beginning of the chapter recommends as happiness, and in the
close of it as perfection. And how wise and gracious is this, to
sum up, and, as it were, seal all his commandments with a
promise! Even the proper promise of the Gospel! That he will put
those laws in our minds, and write them in our hearts! He well
knew how ready our unbelief would be to cry out, this is
impossible! And therefore stakes upon it all the power, truth, and
faithfulness of him to whom all things are possible.
Chapter 5:
| 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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