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Teks -- Luke 10:1-42 (NET)

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Konteks
The Mission of the Seventy-Two
10:1 After this the Lord appointed seventy-two others and sent them on ahead of him two by two into every town and place where he himself was about to go. 10:2 He said to them, “The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out workers into his harvest. 10:3 Go! I am sending you out like lambs surrounded by wolves. 10:4 Do not carry a money bag, a traveler’s bag, or sandals, and greet no one on the road. 10:5 Whenever you enter a house, first say, ‘May peace be on this house!’ 10:6 And if a peace-loving person is there, your peace will remain on him, but if not, it will return to you. 10:7 Stay in that same house, eating and drinking what they give you, for the worker deserves his pay. Do not move around from house to house. 10:8 Whenever you enter a town and the people welcome you, eat what is set before you. 10:9 Heal the sick in that town and say to them, ‘The kingdom of God has come upon you!’ 10:10 But whenever you enter a town and the people do not welcome you, go into its streets and say, 10:11 ‘Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet we wipe off against you. Nevertheless know this: The kingdom of God has come.’ 10:12 I tell you, it will be more bearable on that day for Sodom than for that town! 10:13 “Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the miracles done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes. 10:14 But it will be more bearable for Tyre and Sidon in the judgment than for you! 10:15 And you, Capernaum, will you be exalted to heaven? No, you will be thrown down to Hades! 10:16 “The one who listens to you listens to me, and the one who rejects you rejects me, and the one who rejects me rejects the one who sent me.” 10:17 Then the seventy-two returned with joy, saying, “Lord, even the demons submit to us in your name!” 10:18 So he said to them, “I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven. 10:19 Look, I have given you authority to tread on snakes and scorpions and on the full force of the enemy, and nothing will hurt you. 10:20 Nevertheless, do not rejoice that the spirits submit to you, but rejoice that your names stand written in heaven.” 10:21 On that same occasion Jesus rejoiced in the Holy Spirit and said, “I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and intelligent, and revealed them to little children. Yes, Father, for this was your gracious will. 10:22 All things have been given to me by my Father. No one knows who the Son is except the Father, or who the Father is except the Son and anyone to whom the Son decides to reveal him.” 10:23 Then Jesus turned to his disciples and said privately, “Blessed are the eyes that see what you see! 10:24 For I tell you that many prophets and kings longed to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it.”
The Parable of the Good Samaritan
10:25 Now an expert in religious law stood up to test Jesus, saying, “Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” 10:26 He said to him, “What is written in the law? How do you understand it?” 10:27 The expert answered, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, and with all your mind, and love your neighbor as yourself.” 10:28 Jesus said to him, “You have answered correctly; do this, and you will live.” 10:29 But the expert, wanting to justify himself, said to Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?” 10:30 Jesus replied, “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell into the hands of robbers, who stripped him, beat him up, and went off, leaving him half dead. 10:31 Now by chance a priest was going down that road, but when he saw the injured man he passed by on the other side. 10:32 So too a Levite, when he came up to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. 10:33 But a Samaritan who was traveling came to where the injured man was, and when he saw him, he felt compassion for him. 10:34 He went up to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring oil and wine on them. Then he put him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of him. 10:35 The next day he took out two silver coins and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, ‘Take care of him, and whatever else you spend, I will repay you when I come back this way.’ 10:36 Which of these three do you think became a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers?” 10:37 The expert in religious law said, “The one who showed mercy to him.” So Jesus said to him, “Go and do the same.”
Jesus and Martha
10:38 Now as they went on their way, Jesus entered a certain village where a woman named Martha welcomed him as a guest. 10:39 She had a sister named Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet and listened to what he said. 10:40 But Martha was distracted with all the preparations she had to make, so she came up to him and said, “Lord, don’t you care that my sister has left me to do all the work alone? Tell her to help me.” 10:41 But the Lord answered her, “Martha, Martha, you are worried and troubled about many things, 10:42 but one thing is needed. Mary has chosen the best part; it will not be taken away from her.”
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Nama Orang, Nama Tempat, Topik/Tema Kamus

Nama Orang dan Nama Tempat:
 · Bethsaida a town located on the northeast side of the Sea of Galilee
 · Capernaum a town located on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee.
 · Chorazin a town in Galilee, 3 kilometers NNW of Capernaum
 · Hades the place of departed spirits (NIV notes); the unseen world (YC)
 · Jericho a town five miles west of the Jordan and 15 miles northeast of Jerusalem,a town of Benjamin 11 km NW of the mouth of the Jordan River
 · Jerusalem the capital city of Israel,a town; the capital of Israel near the southern border of Benjamin
 · Levites(s) men of the lowest of the three orders in Israel's priesthood
 · Martha sister of Mary and of Lazarus of Bethany
 · Mary mother of Jesus and wife of Joseph,a woman from Magdala in Galilee,the mother of James and Joses,the wife of Cleophas,the sister of Lazarus and Martha in Bethany,the mother of John Mark who was a nephew of Barnabas,a Christian woman in Rome who helped Paul
 · Samaritan inhabitant(s) of Samaria
 · Satan a person, male (evil angelic),an angel that has rebelled against God
 · Sidon residents of the town of Sidon
 · Sodom an ancient town somewhere in the region of the Dead Sea that God destroyed with burning sulphur,a town 25 km south of Gomorrah and Masada
 · Tyre a resident of the town of Tyre


Topik/Tema Kamus: JESUS CHRIST, 4C1 | SEVENTY DISCIPLES | JESUS CHRIST, 4D | LUKE, THE GOSPEL OF | Jesus, The Christ | Neighbor | Minister | Seventy | Lawyer | ADUMMIM | Love | Martha | LAW IN THE NEW TESTAMENT | Duty | RIGHTEOUSNESS | Self-righteousness | Readings, Select | Mary | Commandments | Suffering | selebihnya
Daftar Isi

Catatan Kata/Frasa
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Catatan Kata/Frasa
Poole , Lightfoot , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Catatan Ayat / Catatan Kaki
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Catatan Rentang Ayat
Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey , Lapide

Lainnya
Evidence

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Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Kata/Frasa (per frasa)

Robertson: Luk 10:1 - Appointed Appointed ( anedeixen ). First aorist active indicative of anadeiknumi , an old verb, not only common, but in lxx. In the N.T. only here and Act 1:24...

Appointed ( anedeixen ).

First aorist active indicative of anadeiknumi , an old verb, not only common, but in lxx. In the N.T. only here and Act 1:24. Cf. anadeixis in Luk 1:80. To show forth, display, proclaim, appoint.

Robertson: Luk 10:1 - Seventy others Seventy others ( heterous hebdomēkonta kai ). The "also"(kai ) and the "others"point back to the mission of the Twelve in Galilee (Luk 9:1-6). Som...

Seventy others ( heterous hebdomēkonta kai ).

The "also"(kai ) and the "others"point back to the mission of the Twelve in Galilee (Luk 9:1-6). Some critics think that Luke has confused this report of a mission in Judea with that in Galilee, but needlessly so. What earthly objection can there be to two similar missions? B D Syr. Cur. and Syr. Sin. have "seventy-two."The seventy elders were counted both ways and the Sanhedrin likewise and the nations of the earth. It is an evenly balanced point.

Robertson: Luk 10:1 - Two and two Two and two ( ana duo ). For companionship as with the Twelve though Mar 6:7 has it duo (vernacular idiom). B K have here ana duo , a combination o...

Two and two ( ana duo ).

For companionship as with the Twelve though Mar 6:7 has it duo (vernacular idiom). B K have here ana duo , a combination of the idiom in Mar 6:7 and that here.

Robertson: Luk 10:1 - He himself was about to come He himself was about to come ( ēmellen autos erchesthai ). Imperfect of mellō with present infinitive and note autos . Jesus was to follow afte...

He himself was about to come ( ēmellen autos erchesthai ).

Imperfect of mellō with present infinitive and note autos . Jesus was to follow after and investigate the work done. This was only a temporary appointment and no names are given, but they could cover a deal of territory.

Robertson: Luk 10:2 - Harvest Harvest ( therismos ). Late word for the older theros , summer, harvest. The language in this verse is verbatim what we have in Mat 9:37, Mat 9:38 to...

Harvest ( therismos ).

Late word for the older theros , summer, harvest. The language in this verse is verbatim what we have in Mat 9:37, Mat 9:38 to the Twelve. Why not? The need is the same and prayer is the answer in each case. Prayer for preachers is Christ’ s method for increasing the supply.

Robertson: Luk 10:3 - As lambs As lambs ( hōs arnas ). Here again the same language as that in Mat 10:16 except that there "sheep"(probata ) appears instead of "lambs."Pathetic ...

As lambs ( hōs arnas ).

Here again the same language as that in Mat 10:16 except that there "sheep"(probata ) appears instead of "lambs."Pathetic picture of the risks of missionaries for Christ. They take their life in their hands.

Robertson: Luk 10:4 - Purse Purse ( ballantion ). Old word for money-bag, sometimes a javelin as if from ballō . Only in Luke in the N.T. (Luk 10:4; Luk 12:33; Luk 22:35). See...

Purse ( ballantion ).

Old word for money-bag, sometimes a javelin as if from ballō . Only in Luke in the N.T. (Luk 10:4; Luk 12:33; Luk 22:35). See note on Luk 9:3; notes on Mar 6:7.; and the notes on Mat 10:9. for the other similar items.

Robertson: Luk 10:4 - Salute no man on the way Salute no man on the way ( mēdena kata tēn hodon aspasēsthe ). First aorist (ingressive) middle subjunctive with mēdena . The peril of such w...

Salute no man on the way ( mēdena kata tēn hodon aspasēsthe ).

First aorist (ingressive) middle subjunctive with mēdena . The peril of such wayside salutations was palaver and delay. The King’ s business required haste. Elisha’ s servant was not to tarry for salutations or salaams (2Ki 4:29). These oriental greetings were tedious, complicated, and often meddlesome if others were present or engaged in a bargain.

Robertson: Luk 10:5 - First say First say ( prōton legete ). Say first. The adverb prōton can be construed with "enter"(eiselthēte ), but probably with legete is right. T...

First say ( prōton legete ).

Say first. The adverb prōton can be construed with "enter"(eiselthēte ), but probably with legete is right. The word spoken is the usual oriental salutation.

Robertson: Luk 10:6 - A son of peace A son of peace ( huios eirēnēs ). A Hebraism, though some examples occur in the vernacular Koiné papyri. It means one inclined to peace, descr...

A son of peace ( huios eirēnēs ).

A Hebraism, though some examples occur in the vernacular Koiné papyri. It means one inclined to peace, describing the head of the household.

Robertson: Luk 10:6 - Shall rest Shall rest ( epanapaēsetai ). Second future passive of epanapauō , a late double compound (epi , ana ) of the common verb pauō .

Shall rest ( epanapaēsetai ).

Second future passive of epanapauō , a late double compound (epi , ana ) of the common verb pauō .

Robertson: Luk 10:6 - It shall turn to you again It shall turn to you again ( eph' humās anakampsei ). Common verb anakamptō , to bend back, return. The peace in that case will bend back with bl...

It shall turn to you again ( eph' humās anakampsei ).

Common verb anakamptō , to bend back, return. The peace in that case will bend back with blessing upon the one who spoke it.

Robertson: Luk 10:7 - In that same house In that same house ( en autēi tēi oikiāi ). Literally, in the house itself, not "in the same house"(en tēi autēi oikiāi ), a different c...

In that same house ( en autēi tēi oikiāi ).

Literally, in the house itself, not "in the same house"(en tēi autēi oikiāi ), a different construction. A free rendering of the common Lukan idiom is, "in that very house."

Robertson: Luk 10:7 - Eating Eating ( esthontes ). An old poetic verb esthō for esthiō that survives in late Greek.

Eating ( esthontes ).

An old poetic verb esthō for esthiō that survives in late Greek.

Robertson: Luk 10:7 - Such things as they give Such things as they give ( ta par' autōn ). "The things from them."

Such things as they give ( ta par' autōn ).

"The things from them."

Robertson: Luk 10:7 - For the labourer is worthy of his hire For the labourer is worthy of his hire ( axios gar ho ergatēs tou misthou autou ). In Mat 10:10 we have tēs trophēs autou (his food). 1Ti 5:1...

For the labourer is worthy of his hire ( axios gar ho ergatēs tou misthou autou ).

In Mat 10:10 we have tēs trophēs autou (his food). 1Ti 5:18 has this saying quoted as scripture. That is not impossible if Luke wrote by a.d. 62. Paul there however may quote only Deu 25:4 as scripture and get this quotation either from Luk 10:7 or from a proverbial saying of Jesus. It is certainly not a real objection against the Pauline authorship of First Timothy.

Robertson: Luk 10:7 - Go not from house to house Go not from house to house ( mē metabainete ex oikias eis oikian ). As a habit, mē and the present imperative, and so avoid waste of time with ...

Go not from house to house ( mē metabainete ex oikias eis oikian ).

As a habit, mē and the present imperative, and so avoid waste of time with such rounds of invitations as would come.

Robertson: Luk 10:8 - Such things as are set before you Such things as are set before you ( ta paratithemena humin ). The things placed before you from time to time (present passive participle, repetition)...

Such things as are set before you ( ta paratithemena humin ).

The things placed before you from time to time (present passive participle, repetition). Every preacher needs this lesson of common politeness. These directions may seem perfunctory and even commonplace, but every teacher of young preachers knows how necessary they are. Hence they were given both to the Twelve and to the Seventy.

Robertson: Luk 10:9 - Is come nigh unto you Is come nigh unto you ( ēggiken eph' humās ). Perfect active indicative of eggizō as in Mat 3:2 of the Baptist and Mar 1:15 of Jesus. Note ep...

Is come nigh unto you ( ēggiken eph' humās ).

Perfect active indicative of eggizō as in Mat 3:2 of the Baptist and Mar 1:15 of Jesus. Note eph' humās here.

Robertson: Luk 10:10 - Into the streets thereof Into the streets thereof ( eis tas plateias autēs ). Out of the inhospitable houses into the broad open streets.

Into the streets thereof ( eis tas plateias autēs ).

Out of the inhospitable houses into the broad open streets.

Robertson: Luk 10:11 - Even the dust Even the dust ( kai ton koniorton ). Old word from konis , dust, and ornumi , to stir up. We have seen it already in Mat 10:14; Luk 9:5. Dust is a pl...

Even the dust ( kai ton koniorton ).

Old word from konis , dust, and ornumi , to stir up. We have seen it already in Mat 10:14; Luk 9:5. Dust is a plague in the east. Shake off even that.

Robertson: Luk 10:11 - Cleaveth Cleaveth ( kollēthenta ). First aorist passive participle of kollaō , to cling as dust and mud do to shoes. Hence the orientals took off the sand...

Cleaveth ( kollēthenta ).

First aorist passive participle of kollaō , to cling as dust and mud do to shoes. Hence the orientals took off the sandals on entering a house.

Robertson: Luk 10:11 - We wipe off We wipe off ( apomassometha ). Middle voice of an old verb apomassō , to rub off with the hands. Nowhere else in the N.T. But ekmassō , occurs in...

We wipe off ( apomassometha ).

Middle voice of an old verb apomassō , to rub off with the hands. Nowhere else in the N.T. But ekmassō , occurs in Luk 7:38, Luk 7:44.

Robertson: Luk 10:11 - Against you Against you ( Humin ). Fine example of the dative of disadvantage (the case of personal interest, the dative).

Against you ( Humin ).

Fine example of the dative of disadvantage (the case of personal interest, the dative).

Robertson: Luk 10:12 - More tolerable More tolerable ( anektoteron ). Comparative of the verbal adjective anektos from anechomai . An old adjective, but only the comparative in the N.T....

More tolerable ( anektoteron ).

Comparative of the verbal adjective anektos from anechomai . An old adjective, but only the comparative in the N.T. and in this phrase (Mat 10:15; Mat 11:22, Mat 11:24; Luk 10:12, Luk 10:14).

Robertson: Luk 10:13 - Would have repented Would have repented ( an metenoēsan ). Conclusion (apodosis) of second-class condition, determined as unfulfilled.

Would have repented ( an metenoēsan ).

Conclusion (apodosis) of second-class condition, determined as unfulfilled.

Robertson: Luk 10:13 - Long ago Long ago ( palai ). Implies a considerable ministry in these cities of which we are not told. Chorazin not mentioned save here and Mat 11:21. Perhaps...

Long ago ( palai ).

Implies a considerable ministry in these cities of which we are not told. Chorazin not mentioned save here and Mat 11:21. Perhaps Karāzeh near Tell Hum (Capernaum).

Robertson: Luk 10:13 - Sitting in sackcloth and ashes Sitting in sackcloth and ashes ( en sakkōi kai spodoi kathēmenoi ). Pictorial and graphic. The sakkos (sackcloth) was dark coarse cloth made of...

Sitting in sackcloth and ashes ( en sakkōi kai spodoi kathēmenoi ).

Pictorial and graphic. The sakkos (sackcloth) was dark coarse cloth made of goat’ s hair and worn by penitents, mourners, suppliants. It is a Hebrew word, sag . The rough cloth was used for sacks or bags. To cover oneself with ashes was a mode of punishment as well as of voluntary humiliation.

Robertson: Luk 10:15 - Shalt thou be exalted? Shalt thou be exalted? ( mē hupsōthēsēi̱ ). Mē expects the answer No. The verb is future passive indicative second singular of hupsoō ...

Shalt thou be exalted? ( mē hupsōthēsēi̱ ).

Mē expects the answer No. The verb is future passive indicative second singular of hupsoō , to lift up, a late verb from hupsos , height. It is used by Jesus of the Cross (Joh 12:32).

Robertson: Luk 10:15 - Unto Hades Unto Hades ( heōs Haidou ). See note on Mat 16:18 for this word which is here in contrast to Heaven as in Isa 14:13-15. Hades is not Gehenna. "The ...

Unto Hades ( heōs Haidou ).

See note on Mat 16:18 for this word which is here in contrast to Heaven as in Isa 14:13-15. Hades is not Gehenna. "The desolation of the whole neighbourhood, and the difficulty of identifying even the site of these flourishing towns, is part of the fulfilment of this prophecy"(Plummer). Ragg notes the omission of Nazareth from this list of cities of neglected privilege and opportunity. "Is it the tender memories of boyhood that keep from His lips the name of the arch-rejector (Luk 4:28 sqq.) Nazareth?"

Robertson: Luk 10:16 - Rejecteth him that sent me Rejecteth him that sent me ( athetei ton aposteilanta me ). These solemn words form a fit close for this discourse to the Seventy. The fate of Choraz...

Rejecteth him that sent me ( athetei ton aposteilanta me ).

These solemn words form a fit close for this discourse to the Seventy. The fate of Chorazin, Bethsaida, Capernaum will befall those who set aside (a privative and theteō , from tithēmi ) the mission and message of these messengers of Christ. See this verb used in Luk 7:30 of the attitude of the scribes and Pharisees toward John and Jesus. It is this thought that makes it so grave a responsibility to be co-workers with Christ, high privilege as it is (Joh 9:4).

Robertson: Luk 10:17 - Returned with joy Returned with joy ( hupestrepsan meta charas ). They had profited by the directions of Jesus. Joy overflows their faces and their words.

Returned with joy ( hupestrepsan meta charas ).

They had profited by the directions of Jesus. Joy overflows their faces and their words.

Robertson: Luk 10:17 - Even the demons Even the demons ( kai ta daimonia ). This was a real test. The Twelve had been expressly endowed with this power when they were sent out (Luk 9:1), b...

Even the demons ( kai ta daimonia ).

This was a real test. The Twelve had been expressly endowed with this power when they were sent out (Luk 9:1), but the Seventy were only told to heal the sick (Luk 10:9). It was better than they expected. The Gospel worked wonders and they were happy. The demons were merely one sign of the conflict between Christ and Satan. Every preacher has to grapple with demons in his work.

Robertson: Luk 10:17 - Are subject Are subject ( hupotassetai ). Present passive indicative (repetition).

Are subject ( hupotassetai ).

Present passive indicative (repetition).

Robertson: Luk 10:18 - I beheld Satan fallen I beheld Satan fallen ( etheōroun ton Satanān pesonta ). Imperfect active (I was beholding) and second aorist (constative) active participle of p...

I beheld Satan fallen ( etheōroun ton Satanān pesonta ).

Imperfect active (I was beholding) and second aorist (constative) active participle of piptō (not fallen , peptōkota , perfect active participle, nor falling , piptonta , present active participle, but fall , pesonta ). As a flash of lightning out of heaven, quick and startling, so the victory of the Seventy over the demons, the agents of Satan, forecast his downfall and Jesus in vision pictured it as a flash of lightning.

Robertson: Luk 10:19 - And over all the power of the enemy And over all the power of the enemy ( kai epi pāsan tēn dunamin tou echthrou ). This is the heart of "the authority"(tēn exousian ) here given...

And over all the power of the enemy ( kai epi pāsan tēn dunamin tou echthrou ).

This is the heart of "the authority"(tēn exousian ) here given by Jesus which is far beyond their expectations. The victory over demons was one phase of it. The power to tread upon serpents is repeated in Mar 16:18 (the Appendix) and exemplified in Paul’ s case in Malta (Act 28:3-5). But protection from physical harm is not the main point in this struggle with Satan "the enemy"(Mat 13:25; Rom 16:20; 1Pe 5:8).

Robertson: Luk 10:19 - Nothing shall in any wise hurt you Nothing shall in any wise hurt you ( ouden humās ou mē adikēsei ). Text has future active indicative, while some MSS. read adikēsēi , aoris...

Nothing shall in any wise hurt you ( ouden humās ou mē adikēsei ).

Text has future active indicative, while some MSS. read adikēsēi , aorist active subjunctive of adikeō , common verb from adikos (a privative and dikos ), to suffer wrong, to do wrong. The triple negative here is very strong. Certainly Jesus does not mean this promise to create presumption or foolhardiness for he repelled the enemy’ s suggestion on the pinnacle of the temple.

Robertson: Luk 10:20 - Are written Are written ( engegraptai ). Perfect passive indicative, state of completion, stand written, enrolled or engraved, from engraphō , common verb. "As...

Are written ( engegraptai ).

Perfect passive indicative, state of completion, stand written, enrolled or engraved, from engraphō , common verb. "As citizens possessing the full privileges of the commonwealth"(Plummer).

Robertson: Luk 10:21 - In that same hour In that same hour ( en autēi tēi hōrāi ). Literally, "at the hour itself,"almost a demonstrative use of autos (Robertson, Grammar , p. 686...

In that same hour ( en autēi tēi hōrāi ).

Literally, "at the hour itself,"almost a demonstrative use of autos (Robertson, Grammar , p. 686) and in Luke alone in the N.T. (Luk 2:38; Luk 10:21; Luk 12:12; Luk 20:19). Mat 11:25 uses the demonstrative here, "at that time"(en ekeinōi tōi kairōi ).

Robertson: Luk 10:21 - Rejoiced in the Holy Spirit Rejoiced in the Holy Spirit ( ēgalliasato tōi pneumati tōi hagiōi ). First aorist middle of the late verb agalliaō for agallō , to exul...

Rejoiced in the Holy Spirit ( ēgalliasato tōi pneumati tōi hagiōi ).

First aorist middle of the late verb agalliaō for agallō , to exult. Always in the middle in the N.T. save Luk 1:47 in Mary’ s Magnificat. This holy joy of Jesus was directly due to the Holy Spirit. It is joy in the work of his followers, their victories over Satan, and is akin to the joy felt by Jesus in Joh 4:32-38 when the vision of the harvest of the world stirred his heart. The rest of this verse is precisely like Mat 11:25., a peculiarly Johannine passage in Matthew and Luke, but not in Mark, and so from Q (the Logia of Jesus). It has disturbed critics who are unwilling to admit the Johannine style and type of teaching as genuine, but here it is. See note on Mat 11:25 for discussion. "That God had proved his independence of the human intellect is a matter for thankfulness. Intellectual gifts, so far from being necessary, are often a hindrance"(Plummer).

Robertson: Luk 10:22 - Knoweth who the Son is Knoweth who the Son is ( ginōskei tis estin ho huios ). Knows by experience, ginōskei . Here Mat 11:27 has epiginōskei (fully knows) and simp...

Knoweth who the Son is ( ginōskei tis estin ho huios ).

Knows by experience, ginōskei . Here Mat 11:27 has epiginōskei (fully knows) and simply ton huion (the Son) instead of the "who"(tis ) clause. So also in "who the Father is"(tis estin ho pater ). But the same use and contrast of "the Father,""the Son."in both Matthew and Luke, "an aerolite from the Johannean heaven"(Hase). No sane criticism can get rid of this Johannine bit in these Gospels written long before the Fourth Gospel was composed. We are dealing here with the oldest known document about Christ (the Logia) and the picture is that drawn in the Fourth Gospel (see my The Christ of the Logia ). It is idle to try to whittle away by fantastic exegesis the high claims made by Jesus in this passage. It is an ecstatic prayer in the presence of the Seventy under the rapture of the Holy Spirit on terms of perfect equality and understanding between the Father and the Son in the tone of the priestly prayer in John 17. We are justified in saying that this prayer of supreme Fellowship with the Father in contemplation of final victory over Satan gives us a glimpse of the prayers with the Father when the Son spent whole nights on the mountain alone with the Father. Here is the Messianic consciousness in complete control and with perfect confidence in the outcome. Here as in Mat 11:27 by the use of willeth to reveal him (boulētai apokalupsai ). The Son claims the power to reveal the Father "to whomsoever he wills"(hōi an boulētai , indefinite relative and present subjunctive of boulomai , to will, not the future indicative). This is divine sovereignty most assuredly. Human free agency is also true, but it is full divine sovereignty in salvation that is here claimed along with possession (paredothē , timeless aorist passive indicative) of all power from the Father. Let that supreme claim stand.

Robertson: Luk 10:23 - Turning to the disciples Turning to the disciples ( strapheis pros tous mathētas ). Second aorist passive of strephō as in Luk 9:55. The prayer was a soliloquy though u...

Turning to the disciples ( strapheis pros tous mathētas ).

Second aorist passive of strephō as in Luk 9:55. The prayer was a soliloquy though uttered in the presence of the Seventy on their return. Now Jesus turned and spoke "privately"or to the disciples (the Twelve, apparently), whether on this same occasion or a bit later.

Robertson: Luk 10:23 - Blessed Blessed ( makarioi ). A beatitude, the same adjective as in Mat 5:3-11. A beatitude of privilege very much like that in Mat 5:13-16. Jesus often repe...

Blessed ( makarioi ).

A beatitude, the same adjective as in Mat 5:3-11. A beatitude of privilege very much like that in Mat 5:13-16. Jesus often repeated his sayings.

Robertson: Luk 10:24 - Which ye see Which ye see ( ha humeis blepete ). The expression of humeis makes "ye"very emphatic in contrast with the prophets and kings of former days.

Which ye see ( ha humeis blepete ).

The expression of humeis makes "ye"very emphatic in contrast with the prophets and kings of former days.

Robertson: Luk 10:25 - And tempted him And tempted him ( ekpeirazōn auton ). Present active participle, conative idea, trying to tempt him. There is no "and"in the Greek. He "stood up (a...

And tempted him ( ekpeirazōn auton ).

Present active participle, conative idea, trying to tempt him. There is no "and"in the Greek. He "stood up (anestē , ingressive second aorist active) trying to tempt him."Peirazō is a late form of peiraō and ekpeirazō apparently only in the lxx, and N.T. (quoted by Jesus from Deu 6:16 in Mat 4:7; Luk 4:12 against Satan). Here and 1Co 10:9. The spirit of this lawyer was evil. He wanted to entrap Jesus if possible.

Robertson: Luk 10:25 - What shall I do to inherit eternal life? What shall I do to inherit eternal life? ( Ti poiēsas zōēn aiōniou klēronomēsō̱ ). Literally, "By doing what shall I inherit eternal l...

What shall I do to inherit eternal life? ( Ti poiēsas zōēn aiōniou klēronomēsō̱ ).

Literally, "By doing what shall I inherit eternal life?"Note the emphasis on "doing"(poiēsas ). The form of his question shows a wrong idea as to how to get it.

Robertson: Luk 10:25 - Eternal life Eternal life ( zōēn aiōnion ) is endless life as in John’ s Gospel (Joh 16:9; Joh 18:18, Joh 18:30) and in Mat 25:46, which see note.

Eternal life ( zōēn aiōnion )

is endless life as in John’ s Gospel (Joh 16:9; Joh 18:18, Joh 18:30) and in Mat 25:46, which see note.

Robertson: Luk 10:26 - How readest thou? How readest thou? ( pōs anaginōskeis̱ ). As a lawyer it was his business to know the facts in the law and the proper interpretation of the law. ...

How readest thou? ( pōs anaginōskeis̱ ).

As a lawyer it was his business to know the facts in the law and the proper interpretation of the law. See note on Luk 7:30 about nomikos (lawyer). The rabbis had a formula, "What readest thou?"

Robertson: Luk 10:27 - And he answering And he answering ( ho de apokritheis ). First aorist participle, no longer passive in idea. The lawyer’ s answer is first from the Shema (Deu ...

And he answering ( ho de apokritheis ).

First aorist participle, no longer passive in idea. The lawyer’ s answer is first from the Shema (Deu 6:3; Deu 11:13) which was written on the phylacteries. The second part is from Lev 19:18 and shows that the lawyer knew the law. At a later time Jesus himself in the temple gives a like summary of the law to a lawyer (Mar 12:28-34; Mat 22:34-40) who wanted to catch Jesus by his question. There is no difficulty in the two incidents. God is to be loved with all of man’ s four powers (heart, soul, strength, mind) here as in Mar 12:30.

Robertson: Luk 10:28 - Thou hast answered right Thou hast answered right ( orthōs apekrithēs ). First aorist passive indicative second singular with the adverb orthōs . The answer was correct...

Thou hast answered right ( orthōs apekrithēs ).

First aorist passive indicative second singular with the adverb orthōs . The answer was correct so far as the words went. In Mar 12:34 Jesus commends the scribe for agreeing to his interpretation of the first and the second commandments. That scribe was "not far from the kingdom of God,"but this lawyer was "tempting"Jesus.

Robertson: Luk 10:28 - Do this and thou shalt live Do this and thou shalt live ( touto poiei kai zēsēi ). Present imperative (keep on doing this forever) and the future indicative middle as a natu...

Do this and thou shalt live ( touto poiei kai zēsēi ).

Present imperative (keep on doing this forever) and the future indicative middle as a natural result. There was only one trouble with the lawyer’ s answer. No one ever did or ever can "do"what the law lays down towards God and man always. To slip once is to fail. So Jesus put the problem squarely up to the lawyer who wanted to know by doing what. Of course, if he kept the law perfectly always , he would inherit eternal life.

Robertson: Luk 10:29 - Desiring to justify himself Desiring to justify himself ( thelōn dikaiōsai heauton ). The lawyer saw at once that he had convicted himself of asking a question that he alrea...

Desiring to justify himself ( thelōn dikaiōsai heauton ).

The lawyer saw at once that he had convicted himself of asking a question that he already knew. In his embarrassment he asks another question to show that he did have some point at first:

Robertson: Luk 10:29 - And who is my neighbour? And who is my neighbour? ( kai tis estin mou plēsioṉ ). The Jews split hairs over this question and excluded from "neighbour"Gentiles and especia...

And who is my neighbour? ( kai tis estin mou plēsioṉ ).

The Jews split hairs over this question and excluded from "neighbour"Gentiles and especially Samaritans. So here was his loop-hole. A neighbour is a nigh dweller to one, but the Jews made racial exceptions as many, alas, do today. The word plēsion here is an adverb (neuter of the adjective plēsios ) meaning ho plēsion ōn (the one who is near), but ōn was usually not expressed and the adverb is here used as if a substantive.

Robertson: Luk 10:30 - Made answer Made answer ( hupolabōn ). Second aorist active participle of hupolambanō (See note on Luk 7:43), to take up literally, and then in thought and...

Made answer ( hupolabōn ).

Second aorist active participle of hupolambanō (See note on Luk 7:43), to take up literally, and then in thought and speech, old verb, but in this sense of interrupting in talk only in the N.T.

Robertson: Luk 10:30 - Was going down Was going down ( katebainen ). Imperfect active describing the journey.

Was going down ( katebainen ).

Imperfect active describing the journey.

Robertson: Luk 10:30 - Fell among robbers Fell among robbers ( lēistais periepesen ). Second aorist ingressive active indicative of peripiptō , old verb with associative instrumental case...

Fell among robbers ( lēistais periepesen ).

Second aorist ingressive active indicative of peripiptō , old verb with associative instrumental case, to fall among and to be encompassed by (peri , around), to be surrounded by robbers. A common experience to this day on the road to Jericho. The Romans placed a fort on this "red and bloody way."These were bandits, not petty thieves.

Robertson: Luk 10:30 - Stripped Stripped ( ekdusantes ). Of his clothing as well as of his money, the meanest sort of robbers.

Stripped ( ekdusantes ).

Of his clothing as well as of his money, the meanest sort of robbers.

Robertson: Luk 10:30 - Beat him Beat him ( plēgas epithentes ). Second aorist active participle of epitithēmi , a common verb. Literally, "placing strokes or blows"(plēgas , p...

Beat him ( plēgas epithentes ).

Second aorist active participle of epitithēmi , a common verb. Literally, "placing strokes or blows"(plēgas , plagues) upon him. See Luk 12:48; Act 16:23; and Rev 15:1, Rev 15:6, and Rev 15:8 for "plagues."

Robertson: Luk 10:30 - Half-dead Half-dead ( hēmithanē ). Late word from hēmi , half, and thnēskō , to die. Only here in the N.T. Vivid picture of the robbery.

Half-dead ( hēmithanē ).

Late word from hēmi , half, and thnēskō , to die. Only here in the N.T. Vivid picture of the robbery.

Robertson: Luk 10:31 - By chance By chance ( kata sugkurian ). Here only in the N.T., meaning rather, "by way of coincidence."It is a rare word elsewhere and in late writers like Hip...

By chance ( kata sugkurian ).

Here only in the N.T., meaning rather, "by way of coincidence."It is a rare word elsewhere and in late writers like Hippocrates. It is from the verb sugkureō , though sugkurēsis is more common.

Robertson: Luk 10:31 - Was going down Was going down ( katebainen ). Imperfect active as in Luk 10:30. Passed by on the other side (antiparēlthen ). Second aorist active indicative of ...

Was going down ( katebainen ).

Imperfect active as in Luk 10:30. Passed by on the other side (antiparēlthen ). Second aorist active indicative of antiparerchomai , a late double compound here (Luk 10:31, Luk 10:32) only in the N.T., but in the papyri and late writers. It is the ingressive aorist (ēlthen ), came alongside (para ), and then he stepped over to the opposite side (anti ) of the road to avoid ceremonial contamination with a stranger. A vivid and powerful picture of the vice of Jewish ceremonial cleanliness at the cost of moral principle and duty. The Levite in Luk 10:32 behaved precisely as the priest had done and for the same reason.

Robertson: Luk 10:33 - A certain Samaritan A certain Samaritan ( Samareitēs de tis ). Of all men in the world to do a neighbourly act!

A certain Samaritan ( Samareitēs de tis ).

Of all men in the world to do a neighbourly act!

Robertson: Luk 10:33 - As he journeyed As he journeyed ( hodeuōn ). Making his way.

As he journeyed ( hodeuōn ).

Making his way.

Robertson: Luk 10:33 - Came where he was Came where he was ( ēlthen kat' auton ). Literally, "came down upon him."He did not sidestep or dodge him, but had compassion on him.

Came where he was ( ēlthen kat' auton ).

Literally, "came down upon him."He did not sidestep or dodge him, but had compassion on him.

Robertson: Luk 10:34 - Bound up his wounds Bound up his wounds ( katedēsen ta traumata ). First aorist active indicative of katadeō , old verb, but here only in the N.T. The verb means "bo...

Bound up his wounds ( katedēsen ta traumata ).

First aorist active indicative of katadeō , old verb, but here only in the N.T. The verb means "bound down."We say "bind up."Medical detail that interested Luke. The word for "wounds"(traumata ) here only in the N.T.

Robertson: Luk 10:34 - Pouring on them oil and wine Pouring on them oil and wine ( epicheōn elaion kai oinon ). Old verb again, but here only in the N.T. Oil and wine were household remedies even for...

Pouring on them oil and wine ( epicheōn elaion kai oinon ).

Old verb again, but here only in the N.T. Oil and wine were household remedies even for wounds (soothing oil, antiseptic alcohol). Hippocrates prescribed for ulcers: "Bind with soft wool, and sprinkle with wine and oil."

Robertson: Luk 10:34 - Set him Set him ( epibibasas ). An old verb epibibazō (epi , bibazō ), to cause to mount. In the N.T. only here and Act 19:35; Act 23:24, common in lx...

Set him ( epibibasas ).

An old verb epibibazō (epi , bibazō ), to cause to mount. In the N.T. only here and Act 19:35; Act 23:24, common in lxx.

Robertson: Luk 10:34 - Beast Beast ( ktēnos ). Old word from ktaomai , to acquire, and so property (ktēma ) especially cattle or any beast of burden.

Beast ( ktēnos ).

Old word from ktaomai , to acquire, and so property (ktēma ) especially cattle or any beast of burden.

Robertson: Luk 10:34 - An inn An inn ( pandocheion ). The old Attic form was pandokeion (from pan , all, and dechomai , to receive). A public place for receiving all comers and ...

An inn ( pandocheion ).

The old Attic form was pandokeion (from pan , all, and dechomai , to receive). A public place for receiving all comers and a more pretentious caravanserai than a kataluma like that in Luk 2:7. Here only in the N.T. There are ruins of two inns about halfway between Bethany and Jericho.

Robertson: Luk 10:35 - On the morrow On the morrow ( epi tēn aurion ). Towards the morrow as in Act 4:5. (Cf. also Act 3:1). Syriac Sinaitic has it "at dawn of the day."An unusual use ...

On the morrow ( epi tēn aurion ).

Towards the morrow as in Act 4:5. (Cf. also Act 3:1). Syriac Sinaitic has it "at dawn of the day."An unusual use of epi .

Robertson: Luk 10:35 - Took out Took out ( ekbalōn ). Second aorist active participle of ekballō . It could mean, "fling out,"but probably only means "drew out."Common verb.

Took out ( ekbalōn ).

Second aorist active participle of ekballō . It could mean, "fling out,"but probably only means "drew out."Common verb.

Robertson: Luk 10:35 - Two pence Two pence ( duo dēnaria ). About thirty-five cents, but worth more in purchasing power.

Two pence ( duo dēnaria ).

About thirty-five cents, but worth more in purchasing power.

Robertson: Luk 10:35 - To the host To the host ( tōi pandochei ). The innkeeper. Here only in the N.T.

To the host ( tōi pandochei ).

The innkeeper. Here only in the N.T.

Robertson: Luk 10:35 - Whatsoever thou spendest more Whatsoever thou spendest more ( hoti an prosdapanēsēis ). Indefinite relative clause with an and the aorist active subjunctive of prosdapanaō...

Whatsoever thou spendest more ( hoti an prosdapanēsēis ).

Indefinite relative clause with an and the aorist active subjunctive of prosdapanaō , to spend besides (pros ), a late verb for the common prosanaliskō and here only in the N.T.

Robertson: Luk 10:35 - I will repay I will repay ( ego apodōsō ). Emphatic. What he had paid was merely by way of pledge. He was a man of his word and known to the innkeeper as reli...

I will repay ( ego apodōsō ).

Emphatic. What he had paid was merely by way of pledge. He was a man of his word and known to the innkeeper as reliable.

Robertson: Luk 10:35 - When I come back again When I come back again ( en tōi epanerchesthai me ). Luke’ s favourite idiom of en and the articular infinitive with accusative of general r...

When I come back again ( en tōi epanerchesthai me ).

Luke’ s favourite idiom of en and the articular infinitive with accusative of general reference. Double compound verb epanerchomai .

Robertson: Luk 10:36 - Proved neighbour to him that fell Proved neighbour to him that fell ( plēsion gegonenai tou empesontos ). Second perfect infinitive of ginomai and second aorist active participle ...

Proved neighbour to him that fell ( plēsion gegonenai tou empesontos ).

Second perfect infinitive of ginomai and second aorist active participle of empiptō . Objective genitive, became neighbour to the one, etc. Jesus has changed the lawyer’ s standpoint and has put it up to him to decide which of "these three"(toutōn tōn triōn , priest, Levite, Samaritan) acted like a neighbour to the wounded man.

Robertson: Luk 10:37 - On him On him ( met' autou ). With him, more exactly. The lawyer saw the point and gave the correct answer, but he gulped at the word "Samaritan"and refused...

On him ( met' autou ).

With him, more exactly. The lawyer saw the point and gave the correct answer, but he gulped at the word "Samaritan"and refused to say that.

Robertson: Luk 10:37 - Do thou Do thou ( su poiei ). Emphasis on "thou."Would this Jewish lawyer act the neighbour to a Samaritan? This parable of the Good Samaritan has built the ...

Do thou ( su poiei ).

Emphasis on "thou."Would this Jewish lawyer act the neighbour to a Samaritan? This parable of the Good Samaritan has built the world’ s hospitals and, if understood and practised, will remove race prejudice, national hatred and war, class jealousy.

Robertson: Luk 10:38 - Now as they went on their way Now as they went on their way ( ēn de tōi poreuesthai autous ). Luke’ s favourite temporal clause again as in Luk 10:35.

Now as they went on their way ( ēn de tōi poreuesthai autous ).

Luke’ s favourite temporal clause again as in Luk 10:35.

Robertson: Luk 10:38 - Received him into her house Received him into her house ( hupedexato auton eis tēn oikian ). Aorist middle indicative of hupodechomai , an old verb to welcome as a guest (in t...

Received him into her house ( hupedexato auton eis tēn oikian ).

Aorist middle indicative of hupodechomai , an old verb to welcome as a guest (in the N.T. only here and Luk 19:6; Act 17:7; Jam 2:25). Martha is clearly the mistress of the home and is probably the elder sister. There is no evidence that she was the wife of Simon the leper (Joh 12:1.). It is curious that in an old cemetery at Bethany the names of Martha, Eleazar, and Simon have been found.

Robertson: Luk 10:39 - Which also sat Which also sat ( hē kai parakathestheisa ). First aorist passive participle of parakathezomai , an old verb, but only here in the N.T. It means to ...

Which also sat ( hē kai parakathestheisa ).

First aorist passive participle of parakathezomai , an old verb, but only here in the N.T. It means to sit beside (para ) and pros means right in front of the feet of Jesus. It is not clear what the point is in kai here. It may mean that Martha loved to sit here also as well as Mary.

Robertson: Luk 10:39 - Heard Heard ( ēkouen ). Imperfect active. She took her seat by the feet of Jesus and went on listening to his talk.

Heard ( ēkouen ).

Imperfect active. She took her seat by the feet of Jesus and went on listening to his talk.

Robertson: Luk 10:40 - Was cumbered Was cumbered ( periespāto ). Imperfect passive of perispaō , an old verb with vivid metaphor, to draw around. One has sometimes seen women whose ...

Was cumbered ( periespāto ).

Imperfect passive of perispaō , an old verb with vivid metaphor, to draw around. One has sometimes seen women whose faces are literally drawn round with anxiety, with a permanent twist, distracted in mind and in looks.

Robertson: Luk 10:40 - She came up to him She came up to him ( epistāsa ). Second aorist active participle of ephistēmi , an old verb to place upon, but in the N.T. only in the middle voi...

She came up to him ( epistāsa ).

Second aorist active participle of ephistēmi , an old verb to place upon, but in the N.T. only in the middle voice or the intransitive tenses of the active (perfect and second aorist as here). It is the ingressive aorist here and really means. stepping up to or bursting in or upon Jesus. It is an explosive act as is the speech of Martha.

Robertson: Luk 10:40 - Dost thou not care Dost thou not care ( ou melei soi ). This was a reproach to Jesus for monopolizing Mary to Martha’ s hurt.

Dost thou not care ( ou melei soi ).

This was a reproach to Jesus for monopolizing Mary to Martha’ s hurt.

Robertson: Luk 10:40 - Did leave me Did leave me ( me kateleipen ). Imperfect active, she kept on leaving me.

Did leave me ( me kateleipen ).

Imperfect active, she kept on leaving me.

Robertson: Luk 10:40 - Bid her Bid her ( eipon autēi ). Late form instead of eipe , second aorist active imperative, common in the papyri. Martha feels that Jesus is the key to M...

Bid her ( eipon autēi ).

Late form instead of eipe , second aorist active imperative, common in the papyri. Martha feels that Jesus is the key to Mary’ s help.

Robertson: Luk 10:40 - That she help me That she help me ( hina moi sunantilabētai ). Sub-final use of hina with second aorist middle subjunctive of sunantilambanomai , a double compoun...

That she help me ( hina moi sunantilabētai ).

Sub-final use of hina with second aorist middle subjunctive of sunantilambanomai , a double compound verb (sun , with, anti , at her end of the line, and lambanomai , middle voice of lambanō , to take hold), a late compound appearing in the lxx, Diodorus and Josephus. Deissmann ( Light from the Ancient East , p. 87) finds it in many widely scattered inscriptions "throughout the whole extent of the Hellenistic world of the Mediterranean."It appears only twice in the N.T. (here and Rom 8:26). It is a beautiful word, to take hold oneself (middle voice) at his end of the task (anti ) together with (sun ) one.

Robertson: Luk 10:41 - Art anxious Art anxious ( merimnāis ). An old verb for worry and anxiety from merizō (meris , part) to be divided, distracted. Jesus had warned against thi...

Art anxious ( merimnāis ).

An old verb for worry and anxiety from merizō (meris , part) to be divided, distracted. Jesus had warned against this in the Sermon on the Mount (Mat 6:25, Mat 6:28, Mat 6:31, Mat 6:34. See also Luk 12:11, Luk 12:22, Luk 12:26).

Robertson: Luk 10:41 - And troubled And troubled ( kai thorubazēi ). From thorubazomai , a verb found nowhere else so far. Many MSS. here have the usual form turbazēi , from turbazo...

And troubled ( kai thorubazēi ).

From thorubazomai , a verb found nowhere else so far. Many MSS. here have the usual form turbazēi , from turbazō . Apparently from thorubos , a common enough word for tumult. Martha had both inward anxiety and outward agitation.

Robertson: Luk 10:41 - But one thing is needful But one thing is needful ( henos de estin chreia ). This is the reading of A C and may be correct. A few manuscripts have: "There is need of few thin...

But one thing is needful ( henos de estin chreia ).

This is the reading of A C and may be correct. A few manuscripts have: "There is need of few things."Aleph B L (and Westcott and Hort) have: "There is need of few things or one,"which seems like a conflate reading though the readings are all old. See Robertson, Introduction to Textual Criticism of the N.T. , p. 190. Jesus seems to say to Martha that only one dish was really necessary for the meal instead of the "many"about which she was so anxious.

Robertson: Luk 10:42 - The good portion The good portion ( tēn agathēn merida ). The best dish on the table, fellowship with Jesus. This is the spiritual application of the metaphor of ...

The good portion ( tēn agathēn merida ).

The best dish on the table, fellowship with Jesus. This is the spiritual application of the metaphor of the dishes on the table. Salvation is not "the good portion"for Martha had that also.

Robertson: Luk 10:42 - From her From her ( autēs ). Ablative case after aphairēthēsetai (future passive indicative). Jesus pointedly takes Mary’ s side against Martha&#...

From her ( autēs ).

Ablative case after aphairēthēsetai (future passive indicative). Jesus pointedly takes Mary’ s side against Martha’ s fussiness.

Vincent: Luk 10:1 - Appointed Appointed ( ἀνέδειξεν ) Used by Luke only. Lit., to lift up and shew, as Act 1:24 : " Shew which one thou hast chosen." Hence...

Appointed ( ἀνέδειξεν )

Used by Luke only. Lit., to lift up and shew, as Act 1:24 : " Shew which one thou hast chosen." Hence to proclaim any one elected to an office. See on the kindred noun, shewing, Luk 1:80.

Vincent: Luk 10:1 - Other seventy Other seventy Wrong; for he had not appointed seventy previously. Rev., rightly, seventy others, with reference to the twelve.

Other seventy

Wrong; for he had not appointed seventy previously. Rev., rightly, seventy others, with reference to the twelve.

Vincent: Luk 10:2 - The harvest The harvest ( θερισμὸς ) From θέρος , summer (compare θέρομαι , to become warm ) . Harvest, that which is gathered in...

The harvest ( θερισμὸς )

From θέρος , summer (compare θέρομαι , to become warm ) . Harvest, that which is gathered in summer. Wyc., much ripe corn is, but few workmen.

Vincent: Luk 10:2 - Pray Pray See on Luk 8:38.

Pray

See on Luk 8:38.

Vincent: Luk 10:2 - Send forth Send forth ( ἐκβάλῃ ) Lit., drive or thrust forth, implying the urgency of the mission. See on Mar 1:12.

Send forth ( ἐκβάλῃ )

Lit., drive or thrust forth, implying the urgency of the mission. See on Mar 1:12.

Vincent: Luk 10:3 - I send forth I send forth ( ἀποστέλλω ) See on Mat 10:2.

I send forth ( ἀποστέλλω )

See on Mat 10:2.

Vincent: Luk 10:4 - Purse Purse ( βαλλάντιον ) Used by Luke only. For money.

Purse ( βαλλάντιον )

Used by Luke only. For money.

Vincent: Luk 10:4 - Scrip Scrip ( πήραν ) For victuals. Rev., wallet.

Scrip ( πήραν )

For victuals. Rev., wallet.

Vincent: Luk 10:4 - Shoes Shoes Not that they were to go unshod, but that they were not to carry a change of sandals. See Deu 29:5; Deu 33:25.

Shoes

Not that they were to go unshod, but that they were not to carry a change of sandals. See Deu 29:5; Deu 33:25.

Vincent: Luk 10:4 - Salute no man Salute no man Oriental salutations are tedious and complicated. The command is suited to a rapid and temporary mission. Compare 2Ki 4:29. " These...

Salute no man

Oriental salutations are tedious and complicated. The command is suited to a rapid and temporary mission. Compare 2Ki 4:29. " These instructions were also intended to reprove another propensity which an Oriental can hardly resist, no matter how urgent his business. If he meets an acquaintance, he must stop and make an endless number of inquiries, and answer as many. If they come upon men making a bargain, or discussing any other matter, they must pause and intrude their own ideas, and enter keenly into the business, though it in nowise concerns them; and, more especially, an Oriental can never resist the temptation to assist when accounts are being settled or money counted out. The clink of coin has a positive fascination to them" (Thomson, " Land and Book" ).

Vincent: Luk 10:5 - Peace to this house Peace to this house The usual oriental salutation. See Jdg 19:20.

Peace to this house

The usual oriental salutation. See Jdg 19:20.

Vincent: Luk 10:6 - If a son of peace be there If a son of peace be there So Rev. A Hebraism, referring to the character of the head of the house, and the tone of the household. Compare Job 21...

If a son of peace be there

So Rev. A Hebraism, referring to the character of the head of the house, and the tone of the household. Compare Job 21:9.

Vincent: Luk 10:7 - The workman is worthy, etc The workman is worthy, etc See on Mat 10:10.

The workman is worthy, etc

See on Mat 10:10.

Vincent: Luk 10:11 - Dust Dust ( κονιορτὸν ) From κόνις , dust, and ὄρνυμι , to stir up . Strictly, dust that is raised by walking.

Dust ( κονιορτὸν )

From κόνις , dust, and ὄρνυμι , to stir up . Strictly, dust that is raised by walking.

Vincent: Luk 10:11 - Cleaveth Cleaveth See on Mat 19:5. Frequent in medical language of the uniting of wounds.

Cleaveth

See on Mat 19:5. Frequent in medical language of the uniting of wounds.

Vincent: Luk 10:11 - Wipe off Wipe off ( ἀπομάσσομεθα ) See on Luk 5:2. Only here in New Testament.

Wipe off ( ἀπομάσσομεθα )

See on Luk 5:2. Only here in New Testament.

Vincent: Luk 10:13 - Mighty works Mighty works See on Mat 11:20.

Mighty works

See on Mat 11:20.

Vincent: Luk 10:13 - Sackcloth Sackcloth ( σάκκῳ ) From the Hebrew sak : what is knotted together; net-shaped; coarsely woven. It was made of goats' or camels' h...

Sackcloth ( σάκκῳ )

From the Hebrew sak : what is knotted together; net-shaped; coarsely woven. It was made of goats' or camels' hair (Rev 6:12), and was a material similar to that upon which Paul wrought in tent-making. The same word in Hebrew is used to describe a grain-sack, and this coarse material of which it is made (Gen 42:25; Jos 9:4). So the Greek σαγή means a pack or baggage. The same root, according to some etymologists, appears in σαγήνη , a drag-net (see Mat 13:47), and σάγος , Latin sagum, a coarse, soldier's cloak. It was employed for the rough garments for mourners (Est 4:1; 1Ki 21:27), in which latter passage the sackcloth is put next the flesh in token of extreme sorrow. Compare 2Ki 6:30; Job 16:15.

Vincent: Luk 10:13 - Ashes Ashes ( σποδῷ ) As a sign of mourning. Defiling one's self with dead things, as ashes or dirt, as a sign of sorrow, was common among the...

Ashes ( σποδῷ )

As a sign of mourning. Defiling one's self with dead things, as ashes or dirt, as a sign of sorrow, was common among the Orientals and Greeks. Thus Homer describes Achilles on hearing of the death of Patroclus:

" Grasping in both hands

The ashes of the hearth, he showered them o'er

His head, and soiled with them his noble face."

Iliad , xviii., 28.

And Priam, mourning for Hector:

" In the midst the aged man

Sat with a cloak wrapped round him, and much dust

Strewn on his head and neck, which, when he rolled

Upon the earth, he gathered with his hands."

Iliad , xxiv., 162-5.

See 1Sa 4:12; 2Sa 1:2; 2Sa 13:19; Job 2:12; Ezekiel 17:30; Rev 18:19. In Judith 4:14, 15, in the mourning over the ravages of the Assyrians, the priests minister at the altar, girded with sackcloth, and with ashes on their mitres. Sir Gardner Wilkinson, describing a funeral at Thebes, says: " Men, women, and children, with the body exposed above the waist, throw dust on their heads, or cover their faces with mud" (" Modern Egypt and Thebes" ). Stifling with ashes was a Persian mode of punishment. Compare Apocrypha, 2 Maccabees 13:5-7. Herodotus relates that Nitocris, an Egyptian queen, after having drowned the murderers of her brother, threw herself into an apartment full of ashes, in order to escape the vengeance of their friends.

Vincent: Luk 10:14 - But But ( πλὴν ) Rev., howbeit. See on Mat 11:22.

But ( πλὴν )

Rev., howbeit. See on Mat 11:22.

Vincent: Luk 10:15 - Which art exalted to heaven Which art exalted to heaven For ἡ , the article, rendered which, the best texts give μὴ , the interrogative particle; and for the partic...

Which art exalted to heaven

For ἡ , the article, rendered which, the best texts give μὴ , the interrogative particle; and for the participle having been exalted, the future shalt be exalted. Render, as Rev., Shalt thou be exalted, etc.

Vincent: Luk 10:15 - Hell Hell Rev., Hades . See on Mat 16:18.

Hell

Rev., Hades . See on Mat 16:18.

Vincent: Luk 10:16 - Despiseth Despiseth ( ἀθετεῖ ) See on Luk 7:30, and compare Gal 2:21; Gal 3:15.

Despiseth ( ἀθετεῖ )

See on Luk 7:30, and compare Gal 2:21; Gal 3:15.

Vincent: Luk 10:17 - The seventy The seventy " The fuller development of the new dispensation begins with the mission of the seventy, and not with the mission of the apostles. It...

The seventy

" The fuller development of the new dispensation begins with the mission of the seventy, and not with the mission of the apostles. Its ground-work, from Luke's point of sight, is the symbolic evangelization of every nation upon earth, and not the restoration of the twelve tribes of Israel. According to Jewish tradition, there were seventy or seventy-two different nations and tongues in the world. In Luk 10:1, some read seventy-two instead of seventy " (Westcott, " Int. to the Study of the Gospels" ).

Vincent: Luk 10:18 - I beheld I beheld ( ἐθεώρουν ) The verb denotes calm, intent, continuous contemplation of an object which remains before the spectator. So Joh...

I beheld ( ἐθεώρουν )

The verb denotes calm, intent, continuous contemplation of an object which remains before the spectator. So Joh 1:14, we beheld, implying that Jesus' stay upon earth, though brief, was such that his followers could calmly and leisurely contemplate his glory. Compare Joh 2:23 :" they beheld his miracles," thoughtfully and attentively. Here it denotes the rapt contemplation of a vision. The imperfect, was beholding, refers either to the time when the seventy were sent forth, or to the time of the triumphs which they are here relating. " While you were expelling the sub - ordinates, I was beholding the Master fall" (Godet). The Revisers do not seem to have had any settled principle in their rendering of this word throughout the New Testament. See my article on the Revised New Testament, Presbyterian Revi ew, October, 1881, p. 646 sq.

Vincent: Luk 10:18 - Satan Satan A transcription of the Hebrew word, derived from a verb to lie in wait or oppose. Hence an adversary. In this sense, of David, 1Sa 29...

Satan

A transcription of the Hebrew word, derived from a verb to lie in wait or oppose. Hence an adversary. In this sense, of David, 1Sa 29:4, and of the angel who met Balaam, Num 22:22. Compare Zec 3:1, Zec 3:2; Job 1, Job 2:1-13. Διάβλος , devil, is the more common term in the New Testament. In Rev 12:9, both terms are applied to him.

Vincent: Luk 10:18 - As lightning As lightning Describing vividly a dazzling brilliance suddenly quenched.

As lightning

Describing vividly a dazzling brilliance suddenly quenched.

Vincent: Luk 10:18 - Fall Fall ( πεσόντα ) Lit., having fallen. The aorist marks the instantaneous fall, like lightning.

Fall ( πεσόντα )

Lit., having fallen. The aorist marks the instantaneous fall, like lightning.

Vincent: Luk 10:21 - Rejoiced The best texts omit Jesus. Rejoiced See on 1Pe 1:6.

The best texts omit Jesus.

Rejoiced

See on 1Pe 1:6.

Vincent: Luk 10:21 - In spirit In spirit The best texts add τῷ ἁγίῳ , the holy, and render in the Holy Spirit.

In spirit

The best texts add τῷ ἁγίῳ , the holy, and render in the Holy Spirit.

Vincent: Luk 10:21 - I thank I thank See on Mat 11:25. From this point to Luk 10:25, compare Mat 11:25-27, and Mat 13:16, Mat 13:17.

I thank

See on Mat 11:25. From this point to Luk 10:25, compare Mat 11:25-27, and Mat 13:16, Mat 13:17.

Vincent: Luk 10:21 - Prudent Prudent See on Mat 11:25.

Prudent

See on Mat 11:25.

Vincent: Luk 10:22 - Are delivered Are delivered ( παρεδόθη ) See on Mat 11:27.

Are delivered ( παρεδόθη )

See on Mat 11:27.

Vincent: Luk 10:25 - Lawyer Lawyer See on Luk 7:30.

Lawyer

See on Luk 7:30.

Vincent: Luk 10:25 - Tempted Tempted See on temptation, Mat 6:13.

Tempted

See on temptation, Mat 6:13.

Vincent: Luk 10:25 - To inherit To inherit See on inheritance, 1Pe 1:4.

To inherit

See on inheritance, 1Pe 1:4.

Vincent: Luk 10:25 - Eternal Eternal ( εἰώνιον ) The word will be fully discussed in the second volume.

Eternal ( εἰώνιον )

The word will be fully discussed in the second volume.

Vincent: Luk 10:26 - Read Read See on Luk 4:16.

Read

See on Luk 4:16.

Vincent: Luk 10:27 - Thou shalt love, etc Thou shalt love, etc See on Mar 12:30. Luke adds strength.

Thou shalt love, etc

See on Mar 12:30. Luke adds strength.

Vincent: Luk 10:29 - Willing Willing ( θέλων ) Rev., desiring . See on Mat 1:19. I think this is stronger than desiring ; rather, determined.

Willing ( θέλων )

Rev., desiring . See on Mat 1:19. I think this is stronger than desiring ; rather, determined.

Vincent: Luk 10:29 - Neighbor Neighbor ( πλησίον ) See on Mat 5:43.

Neighbor ( πλησίον )

See on Mat 5:43.

Vincent: Luk 10:30 - Answering Answering ( ὑπολαβὼν ) Used by Luke only, and in this sense only here. See on Luk 7:43. It means, strictly, to take up; and hence...

Answering ( ὑπολαβὼν )

Used by Luke only, and in this sense only here. See on Luk 7:43. It means, strictly, to take up; and hence, of conversation, to take up another's discourse and reply.

Vincent: Luk 10:30 - Fell among Fell among See on Jam 1:2.

Fell among

See on Jam 1:2.

Vincent: Luk 10:30 - Thieves Thieves ( λῃσταῖς ) See on Mat 26:55; and Luk 23:39-43. These were not petty stealers, but men of violence, as was shown by their tr...

Thieves ( λῃσταῖς )

See on Mat 26:55; and Luk 23:39-43. These were not petty stealers, but men of violence, as was shown by their treatment of the traveller. The road from Jerusalem to Jericho passed through a wilderness (Jos 16:1), which was so notorious for robberies and murders that a portion of it was called " the red or bloody way," and was protected by a fort and a Roman garrison.

Vincent: Luk 10:30 - Stripped Stripped Not of his clothing only, but of all that he had.

Stripped

Not of his clothing only, but of all that he had.

Vincent: Luk 10:30 - Wounded Wounded ( πληγὰς ἐπιθέντες ) Lit., having laid on blows. Blows or stripes is the usual sense of the word in the New Test...

Wounded ( πληγὰς ἐπιθέντες )

Lit., having laid on blows. Blows or stripes is the usual sense of the word in the New Testament. See Luk 12:48; Act 16:23. It has the metaphorical sense of plagues in Rev 15:1, Rev 15:6, Rev 15:8, etc.

Vincent: Luk 10:30 - Half dead Half dead ( ἡμιθανῆ τυγχάνοντα ) The full force of the expression cannot be rendered into English. The word τυγχάν...

Half dead ( ἡμιθανῆ τυγχάνοντα )

The full force of the expression cannot be rendered into English. The word τυγχάνοντα throws an element of chance into the ease. Lit., happening to be half dead; or " leaving him half dead, as it chanced; " his condition being a matter of unconcern to these robbers. The word ἡμιθανῆ , half dead, occurs nowhere else in the New Testament. The best texts, however, omit τυγχάνοντα .

Vincent: Luk 10:31 - By chance By chance ( κατὰ συγκυρίαν ) Only here in New Testament. The word means, literally, a coincidence. By coincidence of circumsta...

By chance ( κατὰ συγκυρίαν )

Only here in New Testament. The word means, literally, a coincidence. By coincidence of circumstances.

Vincent: Luk 10:31 - There came down There came down Imperfect, was going down, as Rev.

There came down

Imperfect, was going down, as Rev.

Vincent: Luk 10:31 - Priest Priest The Talmudists said that there were almost as many priests at Jericho as at Jerusalem.

Priest

The Talmudists said that there were almost as many priests at Jericho as at Jerusalem.

Vincent: Luk 10:31 - Passed by on the other side Passed by on the other side ( ἀντιπαρῆλθεν ) The verb occurs only here and Luk 10:32.

Passed by on the other side ( ἀντιπαρῆλθεν )

The verb occurs only here and Luk 10:32.

Vincent: Luk 10:32 - Came and looked Came and looked Rev., saw. Seeming to imply that the Levite went farther than the priest in coming near to the wounded man, and, having observed ...

Came and looked

Rev., saw. Seeming to imply that the Levite went farther than the priest in coming near to the wounded man, and, having observed his condition, passed on.

Vincent: Luk 10:33 - Came where he was Came where he was There is a strong contrast with the other cases, and a downright heartiness in the words, κατ ' αὐτὸν , down to him...

Came where he was

There is a strong contrast with the other cases, and a downright heartiness in the words, κατ ' αὐτὸν , down to him. The Levite had come κατὰ τόπον , " down to the place."

Vincent: Luk 10:34 - Bound up Bound up ( κατέδησεν ) Only here in New Testament.

Bound up ( κατέδησεν )

Only here in New Testament.

Vincent: Luk 10:34 - Wounds Wounds ( τραύματα ) Only here in New Testament.

Wounds ( τραύματα )

Only here in New Testament.

Vincent: Luk 10:34 - Pouring in Pouring in ( ἐπιχέων ) Rather upon (ἐπί ), as Rev. Wine to cleanse, and oil to soothe. See Isa 1:6.

Pouring in ( ἐπιχέων )

Rather upon (ἐπί ), as Rev. Wine to cleanse, and oil to soothe. See Isa 1:6.

Vincent: Luk 10:34 - Oil and wine Oil and wine Usual remedies for sores, wounds, etc. Hippocrates prescribes for ulcers, " Bind with soft wool, and sprinkle with wine and oil."

Oil and wine

Usual remedies for sores, wounds, etc. Hippocrates prescribes for ulcers, " Bind with soft wool, and sprinkle with wine and oil."

Vincent: Luk 10:34 - Beast Beast ( κτῆνος ) Perhaps akin to κτῆμα , a possession ; since animals anciently constituted wealth, so that a piece of property a...

Beast ( κτῆνος )

Perhaps akin to κτῆμα , a possession ; since animals anciently constituted wealth, so that a piece of property and a beast were synonymous terms.

Vincent: Luk 10:34 - Inn Inn ( πανδοχεῖον ) Only here in New Testament. From πᾶν , all, and δέχομαι , to receive: a place of common reception. ...

Inn ( πανδοχεῖον )

Only here in New Testament. From πᾶν , all, and δέχομαι , to receive: a place of common reception. See on inn, Luk 2:7. Remains of two khans, or inns, on the road between Jericho and Jerusalem are mentioned by modern travellers. Porter (" Handbook of Syria and Palestine" ) speaks of one about a mile from Bethany, and another farther on, at the most dangerous part of the road, an extensive, ruined caravanserai, called Khan el Almah, situated on the top of a bleak ridge. Concerning the former, Hepworth Dixon (" Holy Land" ) says: " About midway in the descent from Bethany to Jericho, in a position commanding a view of the road above and below,... on the very spot where search would be made for them, if no such ruins were suspected of existing, stands a pile of stones, archways, lengths of wall, which the wandering Arabs call Khan Houdjar, and still make use of as their own resting-place for the night. These ruins are those of a noble inn; the lewan, the fountain, and the court, being plainly traceable in the ruins."

Vincent: Luk 10:35 - Two pence Two pence About thirty-five cents. See on Mat 20:2.

Two pence

About thirty-five cents. See on Mat 20:2.

Vincent: Luk 10:35 - I will repay I will repay The I is expressed (ἐγὼ ), and is emphatic. Trouble him not for the reckoning; I will repay.

I will repay

The I is expressed (ἐγὼ ), and is emphatic. Trouble him not for the reckoning; I will repay.

Vincent: Luk 10:36 - Was neighbor Was neighbor ( πλησίον γεγονέναι ) More correctly, has become neighbor. Jesus throws himself back to the time of the stor...

Was neighbor ( πλησίον γεγονέναι )

More correctly, has become neighbor. Jesus throws himself back to the time of the story. So Rev., proved neighbor. " The neighbor Jews became strangers. The stranger Samaritan became neighbor to the wounded traveller" (Alford).

Vincent: Luk 10:37 - He that shewed mercy on him He that shewed mercy on him. ( μετά ) Rather with him: (μετά ): dealt with him as with a brother. The lawyer avoids the hated wor...

He that shewed mercy on him. ( μετά )

Rather with him: (μετά ): dealt with him as with a brother. The lawyer avoids the hated word Samaritan.

Vincent: Luk 10:38 - Received Received ( ὑπεδέξατο ) From ὕπο , under, and δέχομαι , to receive. Received him under her roof. Martha is marke...

Received ( ὑπεδέξατο )

From ὕπο , under, and δέχομαι , to receive. Received him under her roof. Martha is marked as the head of the household. It was her house. She received the guest, and was chiefly busy with the preparations for his entertainment (Luk 10:40).

Vincent: Luk 10:39 - Sat Sat ( παρακαθέσθεισα ) Only here in New Testament. Lit., sat beside (παρά ) .

Sat ( παρακαθέσθεισα )

Only here in New Testament. Lit., sat beside (παρά ) .

Vincent: Luk 10:40 - Was cumbered Was cumbered ( περιεσπᾶτο ) Only here in New Testament. The Rev. might better have inserted in the text the marginal rendering, woe ...

Was cumbered ( περιεσπᾶτο )

Only here in New Testament. The Rev. might better have inserted in the text the marginal rendering, woe distracted. The verb means, literally, to draw from around (περί ). Martha's attention, instead of centring round Jesus, was drawn hither and thither. The περί , around, in composition with the verb, is followed immediately by another περί , " about much serving."

Vincent: Luk 10:40 - Came to him Came to him ( ἐπιστᾶσα ) Came up to him, as Rev., suddenly stopping in her hurry.

Came to him ( ἐπιστᾶσα )

Came up to him, as Rev., suddenly stopping in her hurry.

Vincent: Luk 10:40 - Hath left Hath left ( κατέλιπεν ) The aorist, as Rev., did leave, indicating that she had been assisting before she was drawn off by Jesus' pr...

Hath left ( κατέλιπεν )

The aorist, as Rev., did leave, indicating that she had been assisting before she was drawn off by Jesus' presence. Some read κατέλειπεν the imperfect, was leaving.

Vincent: Luk 10:40 - Help Help ( συναντιλάβηται ) The verb consists of three elements: λαμβάνω , to take hold; σύν , together with; ἀ...

Help ( συναντιλάβηται )

The verb consists of three elements: λαμβάνω , to take hold; σύν , together with; ἀντι , reciprocally - doing her part as Martha does hers. It might be paraphrased, therefore, take hold and do her part along with me. It occurs only here and Rom 8:26, of the Spirit helping our infirmities, where all the elements of the verb are strikingly exemplified.

Vincent: Luk 10:41 - Thou art anxious Thou art anxious ( μεριμνᾷς ) See on Mat 6:25.

Thou art anxious ( μεριμνᾷς )

See on Mat 6:25.

Vincent: Luk 10:41 - Troubled Troubled ( θορυβάζῃ ) From θόρυβος , tumult. Anxious denotes the inward uneasiness: troubled, the outward confusion a...

Troubled ( θορυβάζῃ )

From θόρυβος , tumult. Anxious denotes the inward uneasiness: troubled, the outward confusion and bustle.

Wesley: Luk 10:2 - Pray ye the Lord of the harvest, that he would thrust forth labourers For God alone can do this: he alone can qualify and commission men for this work. Mat 9:37.

For God alone can do this: he alone can qualify and commission men for this work. Mat 9:37.

Wesley: Luk 10:3 - -- Mat 10:16.

Wesley: Luk 10:4 - Salute no man by the way The salutations usual among the Jews took up much time. But these had so much work to do in so short a space, that they had not a moment to spare.

The salutations usual among the Jews took up much time. But these had so much work to do in so short a space, that they had not a moment to spare.

Wesley: Luk 10:6 - A son of peace That is, one worthy of it.

That is, one worthy of it.

Wesley: Luk 10:7 - -- Mat 10:11.

Wesley: Luk 10:11 - The kingdom of God is at hand Though ye will not receive it.

Though ye will not receive it.

Wesley: Luk 10:13 - Wo to thee, Chorazin The same declaration Christ had made some time before. By repeating it now, he warns the seventy not to lose time by going to those cities. Mat 11:21.

The same declaration Christ had made some time before. By repeating it now, he warns the seventy not to lose time by going to those cities. Mat 11:21.

Wesley: Luk 10:16 - -- Mat 10:40; Joh 13:20.

Wesley: Luk 10:18 - I beheld Satan That is, when ye went forth, I saw the kingdom of Satan, which was highly exalted, swiftly and suddenly cast down.

That is, when ye went forth, I saw the kingdom of Satan, which was highly exalted, swiftly and suddenly cast down.

Wesley: Luk 10:19 - I give you power That is, I continue it to you: and nothing shall hurt you - Neither the power, nor the subtilty of Satan.

That is, I continue it to you: and nothing shall hurt you - Neither the power, nor the subtilty of Satan.

Wesley: Luk 10:20 - Rejoice not so much that the devils are subject to you, as that your names are written in heaven Reader, so is thine, if thou art a true, believer. God grant it may never be blotted out!

Reader, so is thine, if thou art a true, believer. God grant it may never be blotted out!

Wesley: Luk 10:21 - Lord of heaven and earth In both of which thy kingdom stands, and that of Satan is destroyed.

In both of which thy kingdom stands, and that of Satan is destroyed.

Wesley: Luk 10:21 - That thou hast hid these things He rejoiced not in the destruction of the wise and prudent, but in the display of the riches of God's grace to others, in such a manner as reserves to...

He rejoiced not in the destruction of the wise and prudent, but in the display of the riches of God's grace to others, in such a manner as reserves to Him the entire glory of our salvation, and hides pride from man. Mat 11:25.

Wesley: Luk 10:22 - Who the Son is Essentially one with the Father: who the Father is - How great, how wise, how good!

Essentially one with the Father: who the Father is - How great, how wise, how good!

Wesley: Luk 10:23 - -- Mat 13:16.

Wesley: Luk 10:25 - -- Mat 22:35; Mar 12:28.

Wesley: Luk 10:27 - Thou shalt love the Lord thy God That is, thou shalt unite all the faculties of thy soul to render him the most intelligent and sincere, the most affectionate and resolute service. We...

That is, thou shalt unite all the faculties of thy soul to render him the most intelligent and sincere, the most affectionate and resolute service. We may safely rest in this general sense of these important words, if we are not able to fix the particular meaning of every single word. If we desire to do this, perhaps the heart, which is a general expression, may be explained by the three following, With all thy soul, with the warmest affection, with all thy strength, the most vigorous efforts of thy will, and with all thy mind or understanding, in the most wise and reasonable manner thou canst; thy understanding guiding thy will and affections. Deu 6:5; Lev 19:18.

Wesley: Luk 10:28 - Thou hast answered right; this do, and thou shalt live Here is no irony, but a deep and weighty truth. He, and he alone, shall live for ever, who thus loves God and his neighbour in the present life.

Here is no irony, but a deep and weighty truth. He, and he alone, shall live for ever, who thus loves God and his neighbour in the present life.

Wesley: Luk 10:29 - To justify himself That is, to show he had done this. Lev 18:5.

That is, to show he had done this. Lev 18:5.

Wesley: Luk 10:30 - From Jerusalem to Jericho The road from Jerusalem to Jericho (about eighteen miles from it) lay through desert and rocky places: so many robberies and murders were committed th...

The road from Jerusalem to Jericho (about eighteen miles from it) lay through desert and rocky places: so many robberies and murders were committed therein, that it was called the bloody way. Jericho was situated in the valley: hence the phrase of going down to it. About twelve thousand priests and Levites dwelt there, who all attended the service of the temple.

Wesley: Luk 10:31 - The common translation is, by chance Which is full of gross improprieties. For if we speak strictly, there is no such thing in the universe as either chance or fortune. A certain priest c...

Which is full of gross improprieties. For if we speak strictly, there is no such thing in the universe as either chance or fortune. A certain priest came down that way, and passed by on the other side - And both he and the Levite no doubt could find an excuse for passing over on the other side, and might perhaps gravely thank God for their own deliverance, while they left their brother bleeding to death. Is it not an emblem of many living characters, perhaps of some who bear the sacred office? O house of Levi and of Aaron, is not the day coming, when the virtues of heathens and Samaritans will rise up in judgment against you?

Wesley: Luk 10:33 - But a certain Samaritan came where he was It was admirably well judged to represent the distress on the side of the Jew, and the mercy on that of the Samaritan. For the case being thus propose...

It was admirably well judged to represent the distress on the side of the Jew, and the mercy on that of the Samaritan. For the case being thus proposed, self interest would make the very scribe sensible, how amiable such a conduct was, and would lay him open to our Lord's inference. Had it been put the other way, prejudice might more easily have interposed, before the heart could have been affected.

Wesley: Luk 10:34 - Pouring in oil and wine Which when well beaten together are one of the best balsams that can be applied to a fresh wound.

Which when well beaten together are one of the best balsams that can be applied to a fresh wound.

Wesley: Luk 10:36 - Which of these was the neighbour to him that fell among the robbers Which acted the part of a neighbour?

Which acted the part of a neighbour?

Wesley: Luk 10:37 - And he said, He that showed mercy on him He could not for shame say otherwise, though he thereby condemned himself and overthrew his own false notion of the neighbour to whom our love is due.

He could not for shame say otherwise, though he thereby condemned himself and overthrew his own false notion of the neighbour to whom our love is due.

Wesley: Luk 10:37 - Go and do thou in like manner Let us go and do likewise, regarding every man as our neighbour who needs our assistance. Let us renounce that bigotry and party zeal which would cont...

Let us go and do likewise, regarding every man as our neighbour who needs our assistance. Let us renounce that bigotry and party zeal which would contract our hearts into an insensibility for all the human race, but a small number whose sentiments and practices are so much our own, that our love to them is but self love reflected. With an honest openness of mind let us always remember that kindred between man and man, and cultivate that happy instinct whereby, in the original constitution of our nature, God has strongly bound us to each other.

Wesley: Luk 10:40 - Martha was encumbered The Greek word properly signifies to be drawn different ways at the same time, and admirably expresses the situation of a mind, surrounded (as Martha'...

The Greek word properly signifies to be drawn different ways at the same time, and admirably expresses the situation of a mind, surrounded (as Martha's then was) with so many objects of care, that it hardly knows which to attend to first.

Wesley: Luk 10:41 - Martha, Martha There is a peculiar spirit and tenderness in the repetition of the word: thou art careful, inwardly, and hurried, outwardly.

There is a peculiar spirit and tenderness in the repetition of the word: thou art careful, inwardly, and hurried, outwardly.

Wesley: Luk 10:42 - Mary hath chosen the good part To save her soul. Reader, hast thou?

To save her soul. Reader, hast thou?

JFB: Luk 10:1 - the Lord A becoming title here, as this appointment was an act truly lordly [BENGEL].

A becoming title here, as this appointment was an act truly lordly [BENGEL].

JFB: Luk 10:1 - other seventy also Rather, "others (also in number), seventy"; probably with allusion to the seventy elders of Israel on whom the Spirit descended in the wilderness (Num...

Rather, "others (also in number), seventy"; probably with allusion to the seventy elders of Israel on whom the Spirit descended in the wilderness (Num 11:24-25). The mission, unlike that of the Twelve, was evidently quite temporary. All the instructions are in keeping with a brief and hasty pioneering mission, intended to supply what of general preparation for coming events the Lord's own visit afterwards to the same "cities and places" (Luk 10:1) would not, from want of time, now suffice to accomplish; whereas the instructions to the Twelve, besides embracing all those to the Seventy, contemplate world-wide and permanent effects. Accordingly, after their return from this single missionary tour, we never again read of the Seventy.

JFB: Luk 10:2 - The harvest, &c. (See on Mat 9:37).

(See on Mat 9:37).

JFB: Luk 10:2 - pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he would send forth labourers into his harvest (See on Mat 9:38).|| 25367||1||10||0||(See on Mat 10:7-16).

(See on Mat 9:38).|| 25367||1||10||0||(See on Mat 10:7-16).

JFB: Luk 10:10 - son of peace Inwardly prepared to embrace your message of peace. See note on "worthy," (see on Mat 10:13).

Inwardly prepared to embrace your message of peace. See note on "worthy," (see on Mat 10:13).

JFB: Luk 10:12-15 - -- (See on Mat 11:20-24).

(See on Mat 11:20-24).

JFB: Luk 10:12-15 - for Sodom Tyre and Sidon were ruined by commercial prosperity; Sodom sank through its vile pollutions: but the doom of otherwise correct persons who, amidst a b...

Tyre and Sidon were ruined by commercial prosperity; Sodom sank through its vile pollutions: but the doom of otherwise correct persons who, amidst a blaze of light, reject the Saviour, shall be less endurable than that of any of these.

JFB: Luk 10:16 - He that, &c. (See on Mat 10:40).

(See on Mat 10:40).

JFB: Luk 10:17 - returned Evidently not long away.

Evidently not long away.

JFB: Luk 10:17 - Lord, &c. "Thou hast exceeded Thy promise, for 'even the devils,'" &c. The possession of such power, not being expressly in their commission, as in that to the ...

"Thou hast exceeded Thy promise, for 'even the devils,'" &c. The possession of such power, not being expressly in their commission, as in that to the Twelve (Luk 9:1), filled them with more astonishment and joy than all else.

JFB: Luk 10:17 - through thy name Taking no credit to themselves, but feeling lifted into a region of unimagined superiority to the powers of evil simply through their connection with ...

Taking no credit to themselves, but feeling lifted into a region of unimagined superiority to the powers of evil simply through their connection with Christ.

JFB: Luk 10:18 - I beheld As much of the force of this glorious statement depends on the nice shade of sense indicated by the imperfect tense in the original, it should be brou...

As much of the force of this glorious statement depends on the nice shade of sense indicated by the imperfect tense in the original, it should be brought out in the translation: "I was beholding Satan as lightning falling from heaven"; that is, "I followed you on your mission, and watched its triumphs; while you were wondering at the subjection to you of devils in My name, a grander spectacle was opening to My view; sudden as the darting of lightning from heaven to earth, lo! Satan was beheld falling from heaven!" How remarkable is this, that by that law of association which connects a part with the whole, those feeble triumphs of the Seventy seem to have not only brought vividly before the Redeemer the whole ultimate result of His mission, but compressed it into a moment and quickened it into the rapidity of lightning! Note.--The word rendered "devils," is always used for those spiritual agents employed in demoniacal possessions--never for the ordinary agency of Satan in rational men. When therefore the Seventy say, "the devils [demons] are subject to us," and Jesus replies, "Mine eye was beholding Satan falling," it is plain that He meant to raise their minds not only from the particular to the general, but from a very temporary form of satanic operation to the entire kingdom of evil. (See Joh 12:31; and compare Isa 14:12).

JFB: Luk 10:19 - Behold, I give you, &c. Not for any renewal of their mission, though probably many of them afterwards became ministers of Christ; but simply as disciples.

Not for any renewal of their mission, though probably many of them afterwards became ministers of Christ; but simply as disciples.

JFB: Luk 10:19 - serpents and scorpions The latter more venomous than the former: literally, in the first instance (Mar 16:17-18; Act 28:5); but the next words, "and over all the power of th...

The latter more venomous than the former: literally, in the first instance (Mar 16:17-18; Act 28:5); but the next words, "and over all the power of the enemy, and nothing shall by any means hurt you," show that the glorious power of faith to "overcome the world" and "quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one," by the communication and maintenance of which to His people He makes them innocuous, is what is meant (1Jo 5:4; Eph 6:16).

JFB: Luk 10:20 - rejoice not, &c. That is, not so much. So far from forbidding it, He takes occasion from it to tell them what had been passing in His own mind. But as power over demon...

That is, not so much. So far from forbidding it, He takes occasion from it to tell them what had been passing in His own mind. But as power over demons was after all intoxicating, He gives them a higher joy to balance it, the joy of having their names in Heaven's register (Phi 4:3).

JFB: Luk 10:21-22 - Jesus . . . said, &c. The very same sublime words were uttered by our Lord on a former similar occasion (see on Mat 11:25-27); but (1) There we are merely told that He "ans...

The very same sublime words were uttered by our Lord on a former similar occasion (see on Mat 11:25-27); but (1) There we are merely told that He "answered and said" thus; here, He "rejoiced in spirit and said," &c. (2) There it was merely "at that time" (or season) that He spoke thus, meaning with a general reference to the rejection of His gospel by the self-sufficient; here, "In that hour Jesus said," with express reference probably to the humble class from which He had to draw the Seventy, and the similar class that had chiefly welcomed their message. "Rejoice" is too weak a word. It is "exulted in spirit"--evidently giving visible expression to His unusual emotions; while, at the same time, the words "in spirit" are meant to convey to the reader the depth of them. This is one of those rare cases in which the veil is lifted from off the Redeemer's inner man, that, angel-like, we may "look into it" for a moment (1Pe 1:12). Let us gaze on it with reverential wonder, and as we perceive what it was that produced that mysterious ecstasy, we shall find rising in our hearts a still rapture--"Oh, the depths!"

JFB: Luk 10:23-24 - -- (See on Mat 13:16-17).

(See on Mat 13:16-17).

JFB: Luk 10:25 - tempted him "tested him"; in no hostile spirit, yet with no tender anxiety for light on that question of questions, but just to see what insight this great Galile...

"tested him"; in no hostile spirit, yet with no tender anxiety for light on that question of questions, but just to see what insight this great Galilean teacher had.

JFB: Luk 10:26 - What is written in the law Apposite question to a doctor of the law, and putting him in turn to the test [BENGEL].

Apposite question to a doctor of the law, and putting him in turn to the test [BENGEL].

JFB: Luk 10:27 - Thou shalt, &c. The answer Christ Himself gave to another lawyer. (See on Mar 12:29-33).

The answer Christ Himself gave to another lawyer. (See on Mar 12:29-33).

JFB: Luk 10:28 - he said, &c. "Right; THIS do, and life is thine"--laying such emphasis on "this" as to indicate, without expressing it, where the real difficulty to a sinner lay, ...

"Right; THIS do, and life is thine"--laying such emphasis on "this" as to indicate, without expressing it, where the real difficulty to a sinner lay, and thus nonplussing the questioner himself.

JFB: Luk 10:29 - willing "wishing," to get himself out of the difficulty, by throwing on Jesus the definition of "neighbor," which the Jews interpreted very narrowly and techn...

"wishing," to get himself out of the difficulty, by throwing on Jesus the definition of "neighbor," which the Jews interpreted very narrowly and technically, as excluding Samaritans and Gentiles [ALFORD].

JFB: Luk 10:30 - A certain man A Jew.

A Jew.

JFB: Luk 10:30 - from Jerusalem to Jericho A distance of nineteen miles northeast, a deep and very fertile hollow--"the Temple of Judea" [TRENCH].

A distance of nineteen miles northeast, a deep and very fertile hollow--"the Temple of Judea" [TRENCH].

JFB: Luk 10:30 - thieves "robbers." The road, being rocky and desolate, was a notorious haunt of robbers, then and for ages after, and even to this day.

"robbers." The road, being rocky and desolate, was a notorious haunt of robbers, then and for ages after, and even to this day.

JFB: Luk 10:31-32 - came down a . . . priest . . . and a Levite Jericho, the second city of Judea, was a city of the priests and Levites, and thousands of them lived there. The two here mentioned are supposed, appa...

Jericho, the second city of Judea, was a city of the priests and Levites, and thousands of them lived there. The two here mentioned are supposed, apparently, to be returning from temple duties, but they had not learnt what that meaneth, 'I will have mercy and not sacrifice' [TRENCH].

JFB: Luk 10:31-32 - saw him It was not inadvertently that he acted.

It was not inadvertently that he acted.

JFB: Luk 10:31-32 - came and looked A further aggravation.

A further aggravation.

JFB: Luk 10:31-32 - passed by Although the law expressly required the opposite treatment even of the beast not only of their brethren, but of their enemy (Deu 22:4; Exo 23:4-5; com...

Although the law expressly required the opposite treatment even of the beast not only of their brethren, but of their enemy (Deu 22:4; Exo 23:4-5; compare Isa 58:7).

JFB: Luk 10:33 - Samaritan One excommunicated by the Jews, a byword among them, synonymous with heretic and devil (Joh 8:48; see on Luk 17:18).

One excommunicated by the Jews, a byword among them, synonymous with heretic and devil (Joh 8:48; see on Luk 17:18).

JFB: Luk 10:33 - had compassion His best is mentioned first; for "He who gives outward things gives something external to himself, but he who imparts compassion and tears gives him s...

His best is mentioned first; for "He who gives outward things gives something external to himself, but he who imparts compassion and tears gives him something from his very self" [GREGORY THE GREAT, in TRENCH]. No doubt the priest and Levite had their excuses--It is not safe to be lingering here; besides, he's past recovery; and then, may not suspicion rest upon ourselves? So might the Samaritan have reasoned, but did not [TRENCH]. Nor did he say, He's a Jew, who would have had no dealings with me (Joh 4:9), and why should I with him?

JFB: Luk 10:34 - oil and wine The remedies used in such cases all over the East (Isa 1:6), and elsewhere; the wine to cleanse the wounds, the oil to assuage their smartings.

The remedies used in such cases all over the East (Isa 1:6), and elsewhere; the wine to cleanse the wounds, the oil to assuage their smartings.

JFB: Luk 10:34 - on his own beast Himself going on foot.

Himself going on foot.

JFB: Luk 10:35 - two pence Equal to two day's wages of a laborer, and enough for several days' support.

Equal to two day's wages of a laborer, and enough for several days' support.

JFB: Luk 10:36 - Which . . . was neighbour? A most dexterous way of putting the question: (1) Turning the question from, "Whom am I to love as my neighbour?" to "Who is the man that shows that l...

A most dexterous way of putting the question: (1) Turning the question from, "Whom am I to love as my neighbour?" to "Who is the man that shows that love?" (2) Compelling the lawyer to give a reply very different from what he would like--not only condemning his own nation, but those of them who should be the most exemplary. (3) Making him commend one of a deeply hated race. And he does it, but it is almost extorted. For he does not answer, "The Samaritan"--that would have sounded heterodox, heretical--but "He that showed mercy on him." It comes to the same thing, no doubt, but the circumlocution is significant.

JFB: Luk 10:37 - Go, &c. O exquisite, matchless teaching! What new fountains of charity has not this opened up in the human spirit--rivers in the wilderness, streams in the de...

O exquisite, matchless teaching! What new fountains of charity has not this opened up in the human spirit--rivers in the wilderness, streams in the desert! What noble Christian institutions have not such words founded, all undreamed of till that wondrous One came to bless this heartless world of ours with His incomparable love--first in words, and then in deeds which have translated His words into flesh and blood, and poured the life of them through that humanity which He made His own! Was this parable, now, designed to magnify the law of love, and to show who fulfils it and who not? And who did this as never man did it, as our Brother Man, "our Neighbor?" The priests and Levites had not strengthened the diseased, nor bound up the broken (Eze 34:4), while He bound up the brokenhearted (Isa 61:1), and poured into all wounded spirits the balm of sweetest consolation. All the Fathers saw through the thin veil of this noblest of stories, the Story of love, and never wearied of tracing the analogy (though sometimes fancifully enough) [TRENCH]. Exclaims GREGORY NAZIANZEN (in the fourth century), "He hungered, but He fed thousands; He was weary, but He is the Rest of the weary; He is saluted 'Samaritan' and 'Demoniac,' but He saves him that went down from Jerusalem and fell among thieves," &c.

JFB: Luk 10:38 - certain village Bethany (Joh 11:1), which Luke so speaks of, having no farther occasion to notice it.

Bethany (Joh 11:1), which Luke so speaks of, having no farther occasion to notice it.

JFB: Luk 10:38 - received him . . . her house The house belonged to her, and she appears throughout to be the older sister.

The house belonged to her, and she appears throughout to be the older sister.

JFB: Luk 10:39 - which also "who for her part," in contrast with Martha.

"who for her part," in contrast with Martha.

JFB: Luk 10:39 - sat "seated herself." From the custom of sitting beneath an instructor, the phrase "sitting at one's feet" came to mean being a disciple of any one (Act 2...

"seated herself." From the custom of sitting beneath an instructor, the phrase "sitting at one's feet" came to mean being a disciple of any one (Act 22:3).

JFB: Luk 10:39 - heard Rather, "kept listening" to His word.

Rather, "kept listening" to His word.

JFB: Luk 10:40 - cumbered "distracted."

"distracted."

JFB: Luk 10:40 - came to him "presented herself before Him," as from another apartment, in which her sister had "left her to serve (or make preparation) alone."

"presented herself before Him," as from another apartment, in which her sister had "left her to serve (or make preparation) alone."

JFB: Luk 10:40 - carest thou not . . . my sister, &c. "Lord, here am I with everything to do, and this sister of mine will not lay a hand to anything; thus I miss something from Thy lips, and Thou from ou...

"Lord, here am I with everything to do, and this sister of mine will not lay a hand to anything; thus I miss something from Thy lips, and Thou from our hands."

JFB: Luk 10:40 - bid her, &c. She presumes not to stop Christ's teaching by calling her sister away, and thus leaving Him without His one auditor, nor did she hope perhaps to succe...

She presumes not to stop Christ's teaching by calling her sister away, and thus leaving Him without His one auditor, nor did she hope perhaps to succeed if she had tried.

JFB: Luk 10:41 - Martha, Martha Emphatically redoubling upon the name.

Emphatically redoubling upon the name.

JFB: Luk 10:41 - careful and cumbered The one word expressing the inward worrying anxiety that her preparations should be worthy of her Lord; the other, the outward bustle of those prepara...

The one word expressing the inward worrying anxiety that her preparations should be worthy of her Lord; the other, the outward bustle of those preparations.

JFB: Luk 10:41 - many things "much service" (Luk 10:40); too elaborate preparation, which so engrossed her attention that she missed her Lord's teaching.

"much service" (Luk 10:40); too elaborate preparation, which so engrossed her attention that she missed her Lord's teaching.

JFB: Luk 10:42 - one thing, &c. The idea of "Short work and little of it suffices for Me" is not so much the lower sense of these weighty words, as supposed in them, as the basis of ...

The idea of "Short work and little of it suffices for Me" is not so much the lower sense of these weighty words, as supposed in them, as the basis of something far loftier than any precept on economy. Underneath that idea is couched another, as to the littleness both of elaborate preparation for the present life and of that life itself, compared with another.

JFB: Luk 10:42 - chosen the good part Not in the general sense of Moses' choice (Heb 11:25), and Joshua's (Jos 24:15), and David's (Psa 119:30); that is, of good in opposition to bad; but,...

Not in the general sense of Moses' choice (Heb 11:25), and Joshua's (Jos 24:15), and David's (Psa 119:30); that is, of good in opposition to bad; but, of two good ways of serving and pleasing the Lord, choosing the better. Wherein, then, was Mary's better than Martha's? Hear what follows.

JFB: Luk 10:42 - not be taken away Martha's choice would be taken from her, for her services would die with her; Mary's never, being spiritual and eternal. Both were true-hearted discip...

Martha's choice would be taken from her, for her services would die with her; Mary's never, being spiritual and eternal. Both were true-hearted disciples, but the one was absorbed in the higher, the other in the lower of two ways of honoring their common Lord. Yet neither despised, or would willingly neglect, the other's occupation. The one represents the contemplative, the other the active style of the Christian character. A Church full of Marys would perhaps be as great an evil as a Church full of Marthas. Both are needed, each to be the complement of the other.

Clarke: Luk 10:1 - The Lord appointed other seventy The Lord appointed other seventy - Rather, seventy others, not other seventy, as our translation has it, which seems to intimate that he had appoint...

The Lord appointed other seventy - Rather, seventy others, not other seventy, as our translation has it, which seems to intimate that he had appointed seventy before this time, though, probably, the word other has a reference to the twelve chosen first: he not only chose twelve disciples to be constantly with him; but he chose seventy others to go before him. Our blessed Lord formed every thing in his Church on the model of the Jewish Church; and why? Because it was the pattern shown by God himself, the Divine form, which pointed out the heavenly substance which now began to be established in its place. As he before had chosen twelve apostles, in reference to the twelve patriarchs, who were the chiefs of the twelve tribes, and the heads of the Jewish Church, he now publicly appointed (for so the word ανεδειξεν means) seventy others, as Moses did the seventy elders whom he associated with himself to assist him in the government of the people. Exo 18:19; Exo 24:1-9. These Christ sent by two and two

1.    To teach them the necessity of concord among the ministers of righteousness

2.    That in the mouths of two witnesses every thing might be established. And

3.    That they might comfort and support each other in their difficult labor. See on Mar 6:7 (note)

Several MSS. and versions have seventy-two. Sometimes the Jews chose six out of each tribe: this was the number of the great Sanhedrin. The names of these seventy disciples are found in the margin of some ancient MSS., but this authority is questionable.

Clarke: Luk 10:2 - That he would send forth That he would send forth - Εκβαλῃ . There seems to be an allusion here to the case of reapers, who, though the harvest was perfectly ripe, ...

That he would send forth - Εκβαλῃ . There seems to be an allusion here to the case of reapers, who, though the harvest was perfectly ripe, yet were in no hurry to cut it down. News of this is brought to the Lord of the harvest the farmer, and he is entreated to exert his authority, and hurry them out; and this he does because the harvest is spoiling for want of being reaped and gathered in. See the notes on Mat 9:37, Mat 9:38.

Clarke: Luk 10:3 - Lambs among wolves Lambs among wolves - See on Mat 10:16 (note).

Lambs among wolves - See on Mat 10:16 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:4 - Carry neither purse nor scrip Carry neither purse nor scrip - See on Mat 10:9 (note), etc., and Mar 6:8 (note), etc

Carry neither purse nor scrip - See on Mat 10:9 (note), etc., and Mar 6:8 (note), etc

Clarke: Luk 10:4 - Salute no man by the way Salute no man by the way - According to a canon of the Jews, a man who was about any sacred work was exempted from all civil obligations for the tim...

Salute no man by the way - According to a canon of the Jews, a man who was about any sacred work was exempted from all civil obligations for the time; forasmuch as obedience to God was of infinitely greater consequence than the cultivation of private friendships, or the returning of civil compliments.

Clarke: Luk 10:5 - Peace be to this house Peace be to this house - See on Mat 10:12 (note).

Peace be to this house - See on Mat 10:12 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:6 - The son of peace The son of peace - In the Jewish style, a man who has any good or bad quality is called the son of it. Thus, wise men are called the children of wis...

The son of peace - In the Jewish style, a man who has any good or bad quality is called the son of it. Thus, wise men are called the children of wisdom, Mat 11:19; Luk 7:35. So, likewise, what a man is doomed to, he is called the son of, as in Eph 2:3, wicked men are styled the children of wrath: so Judas is called the son of perdition, Joh 17:12; and a man who deserves to die is called, 2Sa 12:5, a son of death. Son of peace in the text not only means a peaceable, quiet man, but one also of good report for his uprightness and benevolence. It would have been a dishonor to this mission, had the missionaries taken up their lodgings with those who had not a good report among them who were without.

Clarke: Luk 10:7 - The laborer is worthy The laborer is worthy - See on Mat 10:8, Mat 10:12 (note)

The laborer is worthy - See on Mat 10:8, Mat 10:12 (note)

Clarke: Luk 10:7 - Go not from house to house Go not from house to house - See on Mat 10:11 (note). It would be a great offense among the Hindoos if a guest, after being made welcome at a house,...

Go not from house to house - See on Mat 10:11 (note). It would be a great offense among the Hindoos if a guest, after being made welcome at a house, were to leave it and go to another.

Clarke: Luk 10:9 - The kingdom of God is come nigh unto you The kingdom of God is come nigh unto you - Εφ ὑμας, is just upon you. This was the general text on which they were to preach all their serm...

The kingdom of God is come nigh unto you - Εφ ὑμας, is just upon you. This was the general text on which they were to preach all their sermons. See it explained, Mat 3:2 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:11 - Even the very dust of your city Even the very dust of your city - See on Mat 10:14, Mat 10:15 (note).

Even the very dust of your city - See on Mat 10:14, Mat 10:15 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:13 - Wo unto thee, Chorazin! Wo unto thee, Chorazin! - See on Mat 11:21-24 (note).

Wo unto thee, Chorazin! - See on Mat 11:21-24 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:15 - To hell To hell - To hades. See this explained, Mat 11:23 (note).

To hell - To hades. See this explained, Mat 11:23 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:16 - He that despiseth you, despiseth me He that despiseth you, despiseth me - " The holy, blessed God said: ‘ Honor my statutes, for they are my ambassadors: and a man’ s ambassa...

He that despiseth you, despiseth me - " The holy, blessed God said: ‘ Honor my statutes, for they are my ambassadors: and a man’ s ambassador is like to himself. If thou honor my precepts, it is the same as if thou didst honor me; and if thou despise them, thou despisest me."R. Tancum. "He that murmurs against his teacher is the same as if he had murmured against the Divine Shekinah."Sanhedrin, fol. 110.

Clarke: Luk 10:17 - The seventy returned again with joy The seventy returned again with joy - Bishop Pearce thinks they returned while our Lord was on his slow journey to Jerusalem, and that they had been...

The seventy returned again with joy - Bishop Pearce thinks they returned while our Lord was on his slow journey to Jerusalem, and that they had been absent only a few days.

Clarke: Luk 10:18 - I beheld Satan I beheld Satan - Or, Satan himself, τον Σαταναν, the very Satan, the supreme adversary, falling as lightning, with the utmost suddenness,...

I beheld Satan - Or, Satan himself, τον Σαταναν, the very Satan, the supreme adversary, falling as lightning, with the utmost suddenness, as a flash of lightning falls from the clouds, and at the same time in the most observable manner. The fall was both very sudden and very apparent. Thus should the fall of the corrupt Jewish state be, and thus was the fall of idolatry in the Gentile world.

Clarke: Luk 10:19 - To tread on serpents, etc. To tread on serpents, etc. - It is possible that by serpents and scorpions our Lord means the scribes and Pharisees, whom he calls serpents and a br...

To tread on serpents, etc. - It is possible that by serpents and scorpions our Lord means the scribes and Pharisees, whom he calls serpents and a brood of vipers, Mat 23:33, (see the note there), because, through the subtilty and venom of the old serpent, the devil, they opposed him and his doctrine; and, by trampling on these, it is likely that he means, they should get a complete victory over such: as it was an ancient custom to trample on the kings and generals who had been taken in battle, to signify the complete conquest which had been gained over them. See Jos 10:24. See also Rom 16:20. See the notes on Mar 16:17, Mar 16:18.

Clarke: Luk 10:20 - Because your names are written in heaven Because your names are written in heaven - This form of speech is taken from the ancient custom of writing the names of all the citizens in a public...

Because your names are written in heaven - This form of speech is taken from the ancient custom of writing the names of all the citizens in a public register, that the several families might be known, and the inheritances properly preserved. This custom is still observed even in these kingdoms, though not particularly noticed. Every child that is born in the land is ordered to be registered, with the names of its parents, and the time when born, baptized, or registered; and this register is generally kept in the parish church, or in some public place of safety. Such a register as this is called in Phi 4:3; Rev 3:5, etc., the book of life, i.e. the book or register where the persons were enrolled as they came into life. It appears also probable, that when any person died, or behaved improperly, his name was sought out and erased from the book, to prevent any confusion that might happen in consequence of improper persons laying claim to an estate, and to cut off the unworthy from the rights and privileges of the peaceable, upright citizens. To this custom of blotting the names of deceased and disorderly persons out of the public registers, there appear to be allusions, Exo 32:32, where see the note; and Rev 3:5; Deu 9:14; Deu 25:19; Deu 29:20; 2Ki 14:27; Psa 69:28; Psa 109:13, and in other places.

Clarke: Luk 10:21 - Rejoiced in spirit Rejoiced in spirit - Was truly and heartily joyous: felt an inward triumph. But τῳ πνευματι, τῳ ἁγιῳ, the Holy Spirit, is t...

Rejoiced in spirit - Was truly and heartily joyous: felt an inward triumph. But τῳ πνευματι, τῳ ἁγιῳ, the Holy Spirit, is the reading here of BCDKL, six others; the three Syriac, later Persic, Coptic, Ethiopic, Armenian, Vulgate, all the Itala except one, and Augustin and Bede. These might be considered sufficient authority to admit the word into the text

Clarke: Luk 10:21 - I thank thee I thank thee - Bishop Pearce justly observes, the thanks are meant to be given to God for revealing them to babes, not for hiding them from the othe...

I thank thee - Bishop Pearce justly observes, the thanks are meant to be given to God for revealing them to babes, not for hiding them from the others. See on Mat 11:25 (note)

Clarke: Luk 10:21 - Thou hast hid Thou hast hid - That is, thou hast not revealed them to the scribes and Pharisees, who idolized their own wisdom; but thou hast revealed them to the...

Thou hast hid - That is, thou hast not revealed them to the scribes and Pharisees, who idolized their own wisdom; but thou hast revealed them to the simple and humble of heart.

Clarke: Luk 10:22 - All things are delivered to me All things are delivered to me - See on Mat 11:27 (note).

All things are delivered to me - See on Mat 11:27 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:23 - Blessed are the eyes which see the things that ye see Blessed are the eyes which see the things that ye see - There is a similar saying to this among the rabbins, in Sohar. Genes., where it is said, "Bl...

Blessed are the eyes which see the things that ye see - There is a similar saying to this among the rabbins, in Sohar. Genes., where it is said, "Blessed is that generation which the earth shall bear, when the King Messiah cometh."

Clarke: Luk 10:24 - Many prophets Many prophets - See on Mat 13:11, Mat 13:17 (note).

Many prophets - See on Mat 13:11, Mat 13:17 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:25 - A certain lawyer A certain lawyer - See on Mat 22:35 (note).

A certain lawyer - See on Mat 22:35 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:27 - Thou shalt love the Lord Thou shalt love the Lord - See this important subject explained at large, on Mat 22:37-40 (note)

Thou shalt love the Lord - See this important subject explained at large, on Mat 22:37-40 (note)

Clarke: Luk 10:27 - Thy neighbor as thyself Thy neighbor as thyself - See the nature of self-love explained, on Mat 19:19 (note).

Thy neighbor as thyself - See the nature of self-love explained, on Mat 19:19 (note).

Clarke: Luk 10:29 - Willing to justify himself Willing to justify himself - Wishing to make it appear that he was a righteous man, and that consequently he was in the straight road to the kingdom...

Willing to justify himself - Wishing to make it appear that he was a righteous man, and that consequently he was in the straight road to the kingdom of God, said, Who is my neighbor? supposing our Lord would have at once answered, "Every Jew is to be considered as such, and the Jews only."Now as he imagined he had never been deficient in his conduct to any person of his own nation, he thought he had amply fulfilled the law. This is the sense in which the Jews understood the word neighbor, as may be seen from Lev 19:15-18. But our Lord shows here, that the acts of kindness which a man is bound to perform to his neighbor when in distress, he should perform to any person, of whatever nation, religion, or kindred, whom he finds in necessity. As the word πλησιον signifies one who is near, Anglo Saxon, he that is next, this very circumstance makes any person our neighbor whom we know; and, if in distress, an object of our most compassionate regards. If a man came from the most distant part of the earth, the moment he is near you he has a claim upon your mercy and kindness, as you would have on his, were your dwelling-place transferred to his native country. It is evident that our Lord uses the word πλησιον (very properly translated neighbor, from nae or naer , near, and buer , to dwell) in its plain, literal sense. Any person whom you know, who dwells hard by, or who passes near you, is your neighbor while within your reach.

Clarke: Luk 10:30 - And Jesus answering And Jesus answering - Rather, Then Jesus took him up. This I believe to be the meaning of the word ὑπολαβων ; he threw out a challenge, a...

And Jesus answering - Rather, Then Jesus took him up. This I believe to be the meaning of the word ὑπολαβων ; he threw out a challenge, and our Lord took him up on his own ground. See Wakefield’ s Testament

Clarke: Luk 10:30 - A certain man went down from Jerusalem A certain man went down from Jerusalem - Or, A certain man of Jerusalem going down to Jericho. This was the most public road in all Judea, as it was...

A certain man went down from Jerusalem - Or, A certain man of Jerusalem going down to Jericho. This was the most public road in all Judea, as it was the grand thoroughfare between these two cities for the courses of priests, twelve thousand of whom are said to have resided at Jericho. See Lightfoot

Clarke: Luk 10:30 - Fell among thieves Fell among thieves - At this time the whole land of Judea was much infested with hordes of banditti; and it is not unlikely that many robberies migh...

Fell among thieves - At this time the whole land of Judea was much infested with hordes of banditti; and it is not unlikely that many robberies might have been committed on that very road to which our Lord refers.

Clarke: Luk 10:31 - And by chance And by chance - Κατα συγκυριαν properly means the coincidence of time and circumstance. At the time in which the poor Jew was half de...

And by chance - Κατα συγκυριαν properly means the coincidence of time and circumstance. At the time in which the poor Jew was half dead, through the wounds which he had received, a priest came where he was. So the priest’ s coming while the man was in that state is the coincidence marked out by the original words.

Clarke: Luk 10:31-32 - -- Priest and Levite are mentioned here, partly because they were the most frequent travelers on this road, and partly to show that these were the person...

Priest and Levite are mentioned here, partly because they were the most frequent travelers on this road, and partly to show that these were the persons who, from the nature of their office, were most obliged to perform works of mercy; and from whom a person in distress had a right to expect immediate succor and comfort; and their inhuman conduct here was a flat breach of the law, Deu 22:1-4.

Clarke: Luk 10:33 - -- Samaritan is mentioned merely to show that he was a person from whom a Jew had no right to expect any help or relief, because of the enmity which subs...

Samaritan is mentioned merely to show that he was a person from whom a Jew had no right to expect any help or relief, because of the enmity which subsisted between the two nations.

Clarke: Luk 10:34 - Pouring in oil and wine Pouring in oil and wine - These, beaten together, appear to have been used formerly as a common medicine for fresh wounds. Bind up a fresh cut immed...

Pouring in oil and wine - These, beaten together, appear to have been used formerly as a common medicine for fresh wounds. Bind up a fresh cut immediately in a soft rag or lint, moistened with pure olive oil, and the parts will heal by what is called the first intention, and more speedily than by any other means

Clarke: Luk 10:34 - An inn An inn - Πανδοχειον, from παν, all, and δεχομαι, I receive; because it receives all comers.

An inn - Πανδοχειον, from παν, all, and δεχομαι, I receive; because it receives all comers.

Clarke: Luk 10:35 - Two pence Two pence - Two denarii, about fifteen pence, English; and which, probably, were at that time of ten times more value there than so much is with us ...

Two pence - Two denarii, about fifteen pence, English; and which, probably, were at that time of ten times more value there than so much is with us now.

Clarke: Luk 10:36 - Which - was neighbor Which - was neighbor - Which fulfilled the duty which one neighbor owes to another?

Which - was neighbor - Which fulfilled the duty which one neighbor owes to another?

Clarke: Luk 10:37 - He that showed mercy He that showed mercy - Or, so much mercy. His prejudice would not permit him to name the Samaritan, yet his conscience obliged him to acknowledge th...

He that showed mercy - Or, so much mercy. His prejudice would not permit him to name the Samaritan, yet his conscience obliged him to acknowledge that he was the only righteous person of the three

Clarke: Luk 10:37 - Go, and do thou likewise Go, and do thou likewise - Be even to thy enemy in distress as kind, humane, and merciful, as this Samaritan was. As the distress was on the part of...

Go, and do thou likewise - Be even to thy enemy in distress as kind, humane, and merciful, as this Samaritan was. As the distress was on the part of a Jew, and the relief was afforded by a Samaritan, the lawyer, to be consistent with the decision he had already given, must feel the force of our Lord’ s inference, that it was his duty to act to any person, of whatever nation or religion he might be, as this Samaritan had acted toward his countryman. It is very likely that what our Lord relates here was a real matter of fact, and not a parable; otherwise the captious lawyer might have objected that no such case had ever existed, and that any inference drawn from it was only begging the question; but as he was, in all probability, in possession of the fact himself, he was forced to acknowledge the propriety of our Lord’ s inference and advice

Those who are determined to find something allegorical, even in the plainest portions of Scripture, affirm that the whole of this relation is to be allegorically considered; and, according to them, the following is the true exposition of the text

The certain man means Adam - went down, his fall - from Jerusalem, יראה שלום yorih shalom , he shall see peace, perfection, etc., meaning his state of primitive innocence and excellence - to Jericho, ( ירחי yareacho , his moon), the transitory and changeable state of existence in this world - thieves, sin and Satan - stripped, took away his righteousness, which was the clothing of the soul - wounded, infected his heart with all evil and hurtful desires, which are the wounds of the spirit - half dead, possessing a living body, carrying about a soul dead in sin

The priest, the moral law - the Levite, the ceremonial law - passed by, either could not or would not afford any relief, because by the law is the knowledge of sin, not the cure of it. A certain Samaritan, Christ; for so he was called by the Jews, Joh 8:48 - as he journeyed, meaning his coming from heaven to earth; his being incarnated - came where he was, put himself in man’ s place, and bore the punishment due to his sins - had compassion, it is through the love and compassion of Christ that the work of redemption was accomplished - went to him, Christ first seeks the sinner, who, through his miserable estate, is incapable of seeking or going to Christ - bound up his wounds, gives him comfortable promises, and draws him by his love - pouring in oil, pardoning mercy - wine, the consolations of the Holy Ghost - set him on his own beast, supported him entirely by his grace and goodness, so that he no longer lives, but Christ lives in him - took him to an inn, his Church, uniting him with his people - took care of him, placed him under the continual notice of his providence and love - when he departed, when he left the world and ascended to the Father - took out two pence, or denarii, the law and the Gospel; the one to convince of sin, the other to show how it is to be removed - gave them to the host, the ministers of the Gospel for the edification of the Church of Christ - take care of him, as they are Gods watchmen and God’ s stewards, they are to watch over the flock of Christ, and give to each his portion of meat in due season. What thou spendest more, if thou shouldst lose thy health and life in this work - when I come again, to judge the world, I will repay thee, I will reward thee with an eternity of glory

Several primitive and modern fathers treat the text in this way. What I have given before is, I believe, the meaning of our blessed Lord. What I have given here is generally true in itself, but certainly does not follow from the text. Mr. Baxter’ s note here is good: "They who make the wounded man Adam, and the good Samaritan Christ, abuse the passage."A practice of this kind cannot be too strongly reprehended. Men may take that advantage of the circumstances of the case to illustrate the above facts and doctrines; but let no man say this is the meaning of the relation; no: but he may say, we may make this use of it. Though I cannot recommend this kind of preaching, yet I know that some simple upright souls have been edified by it. I dare not forbid a man to work by whom God may choose to work a miracle, because he follows not with us. But such a mode of interpretation I can never recommend.

Clarke: Luk 10:38 - A certain village A certain village - If this village was Bethany, where Martha and Mary lived, at less than two miles’ distance from Jerusalem, see Joh 11:1, J...

A certain village - If this village was Bethany, where Martha and Mary lived, at less than two miles’ distance from Jerusalem, see Joh 11:1, Joh 11:18; Joh 12:2, then this must have happened later than Luke places it; because, in Luk 19:29, he represents Jesus as having arrived after this at Bethany; and what is said in Luk 13:22, and Luk 17:11, seems to confirm that this visit of Jesus to Martha and Mary ought to be placed later. Bishop Pearce

Clarke: Luk 10:38 - Received him Received him - Kindly received, ὑπεδεξατο, she received him in a friendly manner, under her roof; and entertained him hospitably. So the...

Received him - Kindly received, ὑπεδεξατο, she received him in a friendly manner, under her roof; and entertained him hospitably. So the word is used in the best Greek writers. Martha is supposed by some to have been a widow, with whom her brother Lazarus and sister Mary lodged.

Clarke: Luk 10:39 - Sat at Jesus’ feet Sat at Jesus’ feet - This was the posture of the Jewish scholars, while listening to the instructions of the rabbins. It is in this sense that...

Sat at Jesus’ feet - This was the posture of the Jewish scholars, while listening to the instructions of the rabbins. It is in this sense that St. Paul says he was brought up at the Feet of Gamaliel, Act 22:3.

Clarke: Luk 10:40 - Martha was cumbered Martha was cumbered - Περιεσπατο, perplexed, from περι, about, and σπαω, I draw. She was harassed with different cares and empl...

Martha was cumbered - Περιεσπατο, perplexed, from περι, about, and σπαω, I draw. She was harassed with different cares and employments at the same time; one drawing one way, and another, another: a proper description of a worldly mind. But in Martha’ s favor it may be justly said, that all her anxiety was to provide suitable and timely entertainment for our Lord and his disciples; for this is the sense in which the word διακονιαν, serving, should be taken. And we should not, on the merest supposition, attribute earthly-mindedness to a woman whose character stands unimpeachable in the Gospel; and who, by entertaining Christ and his disciples, and providing liberally for them, gave the highest proof that she was influenced by liberality and benevolence, and not by parsimony or covetousness

Clarke: Luk 10:40 - Dost thou not care Dost thou not care - Dost thou not think it wrong, that my sister thus leaves me to provide and prepare this supper, alone

Dost thou not care - Dost thou not think it wrong, that my sister thus leaves me to provide and prepare this supper, alone

Clarke: Luk 10:40 - Help me Help me - Συναντιλαβηται, from συν, together, and αντιλαμβανομαι, to support. The idea is taken from two pillars m...

Help me - Συναντιλαβηται, from συν, together, and αντιλαμβανομαι, to support. The idea is taken from two pillars meeting together at the top, exactly over the center of the distance between their bases, and thus mutually supporting each other. Order her to unite her skill and strength with mine, that the present business may be done with that speed and in that order which the necessity and importance of the case demand.

Clarke: Luk 10:41 - Thou art careful and troubled Thou art careful and troubled - Thou art distracted, μεριμνας, thy mind is divided, (see on Mat 13:22 (note)), in consequence of which, τ...

Thou art careful and troubled - Thou art distracted, μεριμνας, thy mind is divided, (see on Mat 13:22 (note)), in consequence of which, τυρβαζῃ, thou art disturbed, thy spirit is thrown into a tumult

Clarke: Luk 10:41 - About many things About many things - Getting a variety of things ready for this entertainment, much more than are necessary on such an occasion.

About many things - Getting a variety of things ready for this entertainment, much more than are necessary on such an occasion.

Clarke: Luk 10:42 - One thing is needful One thing is needful - This is the end of the sentence, according to Bengel. "Now Mary hath chosen, etc.,"begins a new one. One single dish, the sim...

One thing is needful - This is the end of the sentence, according to Bengel. "Now Mary hath chosen, etc.,"begins a new one. One single dish, the simplest and plainest possible, is such as best suits me and my disciples, whose meat and drink it is to do the will of our heavenly Father

Clarke: Luk 10:42 - Mary hath chosen that good part Mary hath chosen that good part - That is, of hearing my word, of which she shall not be deprived; it being at present of infinitely greater importa...

Mary hath chosen that good part - That is, of hearing my word, of which she shall not be deprived; it being at present of infinitely greater importance to attend to my teaching than to attend to any domestic concerns. While thou art busily employed in providing that portion of perishing food for perishing bodies, Mary has chosen that spiritual portion which endures for ever, and which shall not be taken away from her; therefore I cannot command her to leave her present employment, and go and help thee to bring forward a variety of matters, which are by no means necessary at this time. Our Lord both preached and practised the doctrine of self-denial; he and his disciples were contented with a little, and sumptuous entertainments are condemned by the spirit and design of his Gospel

Multos morbos, multa fercula fecerunt

Seneca

"Many dishes, many diseases.

Bishop Pearce remarks that the word χρεια, needful, is used after the same manner for want of food in Mar 2:25, where of David it is said, χρειαν εσχε, he had need, when it means he was hungry. I believe the above to be the true meaning of these verses; but others have taken a somewhat different sense from them: especially when they suppose that by one thing needful our Lord means the salvation of the soul. To attend to this is undoubtedly the most necessary of all things, and should be the first, the grand concern of every human spirit; but in my opinion it is not the meaning of the words in the text. It is only prejudice from the common use of the words in this way that could make such an interpretation tolerable. Kypke in loc. has several methods of interpreting this passage. Many eminent commentators, both ancient and modern, consider the text in the same way I have done. But this is termed by some, "a frigid method of explaining the passage;"well, so let it be; but he that fears God will sacrifice every thing at the shrine of Truth. I believe this alone to be the true meaning o£ the place, and I dare not give it any other. Bengelius points the whole passage thus: Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things: but one thing is needful. Now, Mary hath chosen that good portion, which shall not be taken away from her

That the salvation of the soul is the first and greatest of all human concerns, every man must acknowledge who feels that he has a soul; and in humility of mind to hear Jesus, is the only way of getting that acquaintance with the doctrine of salvation without which how can he be saved? While we fancy we are in no spiritual necessity, the things which concern salvation will not appear needful to us! A conviction that we are spiritually poor must precede our application for the true riches. The whole, says Christ, need not the physician, but those who are sick. Martha has been blamed, by incautious people, as possessing a carnal, worldly spirit; and as Mary Magdalene has been made the chief of all prostitutes, so has Martha of all the worldly-minded. Through her affectionate respect for our Lord and his disciples, and through that alone, she erred. There is not the slightest intimation that she was either worldly-minded or careless about her soul; nor was she at this time improperly employed, only so far as the abundance of her affection led her to make a greater provision than was necessary on the occasion. Nor are our Lord’ s words to be understood as a reproof; they are a kind and tender expostulation, tending to vindicate the conduct of Mary. The utmost that can be said on the subject is, Martha was well employed, but Mary, on this occasion, better

If we attend to the punctuation of the original text, the subject will appear more plain. I shall transcribe the text from Bengel’ s own edition, Stutgardiae, 1734, 12 mo. Luk 10:41, Luk 10:42. Luk 10:41, αποκριθεις δε ειπεν αυτῃ ὁ Ιησους, Μαρθα, Μαρθα, μεριμνᾳς και τυρβαζῃ περι πολλα· ἑνος δε εϚι χρεια. Μαρια δε την αγαθην μεριδα εξελεξατο, ἡτις ουκ αφαιρεθησεται απ αυτης . "Then Jesus answered her, Martha, Martha, thou art anxiously careful and disturbed about many things; but one thing is necessary. But Mary hath chosen that good portion which shall not be taken away from her."I have shown, in my notes, that Martha was making a greater provision for her guests than was needful; that it was in consequence of this that she required her sister’ s help; that Jesus tenderly reproved her for her unnecessary anxiety and superabundant provision, and asserted that but one thing, call it course or dish, was necessary on the occasion, yet she had provided many; and that this needless provision was the cause of the anxiety and extra labor. Then, taking occasion, from the circumstances of the case, to vindicate Mary’ s conduct, and to direct his loving reproof more pointedly at Martha’ s heart, he adds, Mary hath chosen a good portion; that is, she avails herself of the present opportunity to hear my teaching, and inform herself in those things which are essential to the salvation of the soul. I cannot, therefore, order her to leave my teaching, to serve in what I know to be an unnecessary service, however kindly designed: for it would be as unjust to deprive her of this bread of life, after which she so earnestly hungers, as to deprive thee, or thy guests, of that measure of common food necessary to sustain life. All earthly portions are perishing: "Meats for the belly, and the belly for meats, but God will destroy both it and then; but the work of the Lord abideth for ever;"her portion, therefore, shall not be taken away from her. This is my view of the whole subject; and all the terms in the original, not only countenance this meaning, but necessarily require it. The words, one thing is needful, on which we lay so much stress, are wanting in some of the most ancient MSS., and are omitted by some of the fathers, who quote all the rest of the passage: a plain proof that the meaning which we take out of them was not thought of in very ancient times; and in other MSS., versions, and fathers, there is an unusual variety of readings where even the thing, or something like it, is retained. Some have it thus; Martha, Martha, thou labourest much, and yet a little is sufficient, yea, one thing only. Others: And only one thing is required. Others: Thou art curious and embarrassed about many things, when that which is needful is very small. Others: But here there need only a few things. Others: But a few things, or one only, is necessary. Now these are the readings of almost all the ancient versions; and we plainly perceive, by them, that what we term the one thing needful, is not understood by one of them as referring to the salvation of the soul, but to the provision Then to be made. It would be easy to multiply authorities, but I spare both my own time and that of my reader. In short, I wonder how the present most exceptionable mode of interpretation ever obtained; as having no countenance in the text, ancient MSS. or versions, and as being false in itself; for even Christ himself could not say, that sitting at his feet, and hearing his word, was the One thing Needful. Repentance, faith, prayer, obedience, and a thousand other things are necessary to our salvation, besides merely hearing the doctrines of Christ, even with the humblest heart.

Calvin: Luk 10:1 - And after these things the Lord appointed Luk 10:1.And after these things the Lord appointed That the Apostles had returned to Christ before these seventy were substituted in their room, may...

Luk 10:1.And after these things the Lord appointed That the Apostles had returned to Christ before these seventy were substituted in their room, may be inferred from many circumstances. The twelve, therefore, were sent to awaken in the Jews the hope of an approaching salvation. After their return, as it was necessary that higher expectation should be excited, others were sent in greater numbers, as secondary heralds, to spread universally in every place the report of Christ’s coming. Strictly speaking, they received no commission, but were only sent by Christ as heralds, to prepare the minds of the people for receiving his doctrine. As to the number seventy, he appears to have followed that order to which the people had already been long accustomed. We must bear in mind what has been already said about the twelve Apostles, 30 that as this was the number of the tribes when the people were in a flourishing condition, so an equal number of apostles or patriarchs was chosen, to reassemble the members of the lacerated body, that the restoration of the Church might thus be complete.

There was a similar reason for these seventy. We know that Moses, finding himself insufficient for the burden, took seventy judges to be associated with him in governing the people, ( Exo 18:22.) But when the Jews returned from the Babylonish captivity, they had a council or συνέδριον —which was corrupted into Sanedrin 31 —consisting of seventy-two judges. As usually happens with such numbers, when they spoke of the council, they called them only the seventy judges; and Philo assures us, that they were chosen out of the posterity of David, that there might be some remaining authority in the royal line. After various calamities, this was the finishing stroke, when Herod abolished that council, and thus deprived the people of a legitimate share in the government. Now as the return from Babylon prefigured a true and complete redemption, the reason why our Lord chooses seventy heralds of his coming appears to be, to hold out the restoration of their fallen state; and as the people were to be united under one head, he does not give them authority as judges, but only commands them to go before him, that he may possess the sole power. And sent them by two and two. H e appears to have done so on account of their weakness. There was reason to fear, that individually they would not have the boldness necessary for the vigorous discharge of their office; and therefore, that they may encourage one another, they are sent by two and two

Calvin: Luk 10:2 - The harvest is indeed abundant 2.The harvest is indeed abundant I have explained this passage under the ninth chapter of Matthew; 32 but it was proper to insert it again in this pl...

2.The harvest is indeed abundant I have explained this passage under the ninth chapter of Matthew; 32 but it was proper to insert it again in this place, because it is related for a different purpose. In order to stimulate his disciples the more powerfully to apply with diligence to their work, he declares that the harvest is abundant: and hence it follows, that their labor will not be fruitless, but that they will find, in abundance, opportunities of employment, and means of usefulness. He afterwards reminds them of dangers, contests, and annoyances, and bids them go and prepare themselves for traversing with speed the whole of Judea. 33 In short, he repeats the same injunctions which he had given to the Apostles; and, therefore, it would serve no good purpose to trouble the reader here with many words, since a full exposition of all these matters may be found in the passage already quoted. We may notice briefly, however, the meaning of that expression, salute no man by the way. It indicates extreme haste, when, on meeting a person in the way, we pass on without speaking to him, lest he should detain us even for a short time. Thus, when Elisha sent his servant to the Shunamite woman, he charged him not to salute any person whom he met:

if thou meet any man, salute him not;
and if any salute thee, answer not again, (2Kg 4:31.)

Christ does not intend that his disciples shall be so unkind 34 as not to deign to salute persons whom they meet, but bids them hasten forward, so as to pass by every thing that would detain them.

Calvin: Luk 10:7 - Eating and drinking those things which they shall give you 7.Eating and drinking those things which they shall give you This is another circumstance expressly mentioned by Luke. By these words Christ not only...

7.Eating and drinking those things which they shall give you This is another circumstance expressly mentioned by Luke. By these words Christ not only enjoins them to be satisfied with ordinary and plain food, but allows them to eat at another man’s table. Their plain and natural meaning is: “you will be at liberty to live at the expense of others, so long as you shall be on this journey; for it is proper that those for whose benefit you labor should supply you with food.” Some think that they were intended to remove scruples of conscience, that the disciples might not find fault with any kind of food. 35 But nothing of this kind was intended, and it was not even his object to enjoin frugality, but merely to permit them to accept of a reward, by living, during this commission, at the expense of those by whom they were entertained.

Calvin: Luk 10:16 - He that heareth you heareth me // He that despiseth you despiseth me; and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me Luk 10:16.He that heareth you heareth me It is a mistake to suppose that this passage is a repetition of what we formerly met with in the Gospel of Ma...

Luk 10:16.He that heareth you heareth me It is a mistake to suppose that this passage is a repetition of what we formerly met with in the Gospel of Mat 10:40 he that receiveth you receiveth me 47 Then, Christ was speaking of persons, but now, of doctrine. The former receiving had a reference to offices of kindness; but now he recommends faith, which receives God in his Word. The general meaning is, that the godliness of men is ascertained by the obedience of faith; 48 and that those who reject the Gospel, though they may boast of being the most eminent of the worshippers of God, give evidence that they wickedly despise him.

We must now attend to the design of Christ. As a considerable portion of the world foolishly estimates the Gospel according to the rank of men, and despises it because it is professed by persons of mean and despicable condition, our Lord here contradicts so perverse a judgment. Again, almost all are so proud, that they do not willingly submit to their equals, or to those whom they look down upon as inferior to them. God has determined, on the other hand, to govern his Church by the ministry of men, and indeed frequently selects the ministers of the Word from among the lowest dregs of the people. It was, therefore, necessary to support the majesty of the Gospel, that it might not appear to be degraded by proceeding from the lips of men.

This is a remarkable commendation 49 of the outward ministry, when Christ declares, that whatever honor and respect is rendered to the preaching of men, provided that the preaching be faithful, God acknowledges as done to Himself. In two points of view, this recommendation is useful. Nothing ought to be a stronger encouragement to us to embrace the doctrine of the Gospel, than to learn that this is the highest worship of God, and a sacrifice of the sweetest odor, to hear him speaking by human lips, and to yield subjection to his word, which is brought to us by men, in the same manner as if he were descending from heaven or making known his will to us by angels. Again, our confidence is established, and all doubt is removed, when we learn, that the testimony of our salvation, when delivered to us by men whom God has sent, is not less worthy of credit, than if His voice resounded from heaven. To deter us, on the other hand, from despising the Gospel, he adds a severe threatening:

He that despiseth you despiseth me; and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me Those who disdain to listen to ministers, however mean and contemptible they may be, offer an insult, not to men only, but to Christ himself, and to God the Father. While a magnificent eulogium is here pronounced on the rank of pastors, who honestly and faithfully discharge their office, it is absurd in the Pope and his clergy to take this as a pretense for cloaking their tyranny. Assuredly, Christ does not speak in such a manner, as to surrender into the hands of men the power which the Father has given him, but only to protect his Gospel against contempt. Hence it follows, that he does not transfer to the persons of men the honor which is due to himself, but only maintains that it cannot be separated from his Word. If the Pope wishes to be received, let him bring forward the doctrine by which he may be recognized as a minister of Christ; but so long as he continues to be what he now is, a mortal enemy of Christ, and destitute of all resemblance to the Apostles, let him cease to deck himself with borrowed feathers.

Calvin: Luk 10:17 - And the seventy returned 17.And the seventy returned It is evident, that the faith of the seventy disciples in the words of Christ had not been full and complete, when they...

17.And the seventy returned It is evident, that the faith of the seventy disciples in the words of Christ had not been full and complete, when they returned, exulting over it as a thing new and unexpected, that they had cast out devils by the power of Christ. Nay, they had received this power accompanied by a command. At the same time, I have no doubt that, when they departed, they were convinced that nothing which the Master had said to them would fail of its accomplishment; but afterwards, when the matter proceeded to an extent which surpassed their expectations, they were astonished at the sight. 51 And this is frequently the case with believers, that they receive from the word but a slight perception of the Divine power, and are afterwards excited to admiration by actual experience. What was the nature of that joy will more clearly appear from Christ’s reply.

Calvin: Luk 10:18 - I beheld Satan 18.I beheld Satan From one instance Christ leads them to the whole class; for he commanded his Gospel to be published for the very purpose of overtur...

18.I beheld Satan From one instance Christ leads them to the whole class; for he commanded his Gospel to be published for the very purpose of overturning Satan’s kingdom. 52 So then, while the disciples rested solely on that demonstration which they had obtained from experience, Christ reminds them, that the power and efficacy of their doctrine extends farther, and that its tendency is to extirpate the tyranny which Satan exercises over the whole human race. We have now ascertained the meaning of the words. When Christ commanded that his Gospel should be preached, he did not at all attempt a matter of doubtful result, but foresaw the approaching ruin of Satan. 53 Now since the Son of God cannot be deceived, and this exercise of his foresight relates to the whole course of the Gospel, we have no reason to doubt, that whenever he raises up faithful teachers, he will crown their labor with prosperous success.

Hence we infer, that our deliverance from the bondage of Satan is effected in no other way than through the Gospel; and that those only make actual proficiency in the Gospel, in whom Satan loses his power, so that sin is destroyed, and they begin to live to the righteousness of God. We ought also to attend to the comparison which he employs, that the thunder of the Gospel makes Satan fall like lightning; for it expresses the divine and astonishing power of the doctrine, which throws down, in a manner so sudden and violent, the prince of the world armed with such abundant forces. It expresses also the wretched condition of men, on whose heads fall the darts of Satan, who rules in the air, and holds the world in subjection under his feet, till Christ appear as a Deliverer.

Calvin: Luk 10:19 - Lo, I give you power 19.Lo, I give you power This is said by way of admission. Christ does not affirm that the gift of which they now boast is not illustrious, but remind...

19.Lo, I give you power This is said by way of admission. Christ does not affirm that the gift of which they now boast is not illustrious, but reminds them, that they ought to keep their eye chiefly on something loftier still, and not remain satisfied with outward miracles. He does not altogether condemn their joy, as if it were groundless, but shows it to be faulty in this respect, that they were immoderately delighted with a temporal favor, and did not elevate their minds higher. To this disease even the godly are almost all liable. Though the goodness of God is received by them with gratitude, yet the acts of the Divine kindness do not assist them, as they ought to do, by becoming ladders for ascending to heaven. This makes it necessary that the Lord should, as it were, stretch out his hand to raise them up, that they may not rest satisfied with the earth, but may aspire to heavenly renovation. The power of the enemy is the name given by him to every kind of annoyance; for all that is hostile to us is wielded against us by Satan. I do not mean that every thing which tends to injure men is placed at his disposal; but that, being armed with the curse of God, he endeavors to turn to our destruction all his chastisements, and seizes them as weapons for the purpose of wounding us.

Calvin: Luk 10:20 - Your names are written 20.Your names are written As it was the design of Christ to withdraw his disciples from a transitory joy, that they might glory in eternal life, he l...

20.Your names are written As it was the design of Christ to withdraw his disciples from a transitory joy, that they might glory in eternal life, he leads them to its origin and source, which is, that they were chosen by God and adopted as his children. He might indeed have commanded them to rejoice that they had been regenerated by the Spirit of God, ( Titus 3:5,) and become new creatures in Christ, (2Co 5:17;) that they had been enlightened (Eph 1:18) in the hope of salvation, and had received the earnest of the inheritance, (Eph 1:14.) But he intended to point out, that the source from which all these benefits had flowed was the free election of God, that they might not claim any thing for themselves. Reasons for praising God are no doubt furnished by those acts of his kindness which we feel within us; but eternal election, which is without us, shows more clearly that our salvation rests on the pure goodness 54 of God. The metaphorical expression, your names are written in heaven, means, that they were acknowledged by God as His children and heirs, as if they had been inscribed in a register. 55

Calvin: Luk 10:24 - Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see Luk 10:24.Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see The condition of the Church, at the present day, is justly pronounced to be preferable to that o...

Luk 10:24.Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see The condition of the Church, at the present day, is justly pronounced to be preferable to that of the holy fathers, who lived under the Law; because to them was exhibited, under shadows and figures only, what is now openly manifested in the shining face of Christ. The vail of the temple being rent, (Mat 27:51,) we enter by faith into the heavenly sanctuary, and are freely permitted to approach to God. Although the fathers were satisfied with their lot, and enjoyed a blessed peace in their own minds, yet this did not prevent their desires from extending farther. Thus, Abraham saw the day of Christ afar off, and rejoice, (Joh 8:56,) and yet longed to enjoy a nearer view, but did not obtain his wish. Simeon spoke the sentiments of all, 191 when he said, Now thou sendest thy servant away in peace, (Luk 2:29.) And indeed it was impossible that, under the burden of that curse by which the human race is crushed, they should be otherwise than altogether inflamed with the desire of a promised deliverance. 192 Let us therefore learn, that they breathed after Christ, like hungry persons, and yet possessed a serene faith; so that they did not murmur against God, but kept their minds in patient expectation till the full time of revelation.

Calvin: Luk 10:26 - What is written in the law? Luk 10:26.What is written in the law? He receives from Christ a reply different from what he had expected. And, indeed, no other rule of a holy and ri...

Luk 10:26.What is written in the law? He receives from Christ a reply different from what he had expected. And, indeed, no other rule of a holy and righteous life was prescribed by Christ than what had been laid down by the Law of Moses; for the perfect love of God and of our neighbors comprehends the utmost perfection of righteousness. Yet it must be observed, that Christ speaks here about obtaining salvation, in agreement with the question which had been put to him; for he does not teach absolutely, as in other passages, how men may arrive at eternal life, but how they ought to live, in order to be accounted righteous in the sight of God. Now it is certain that in the Law there is prescribed to men a rule by which they ought to regulate their life, so as to obtain salvation in the sight of God. That the Law can do nothing else than condemn, and is therefore called the doctrine of death, and is said by Paul to increase transgressions, (Rom 7:13,) arises not from any fault of its doctrine, but because it is impossible for us to perform what it enjoins. Therefore, though no man is justified by the Law yet the Law itself contains the highest righteousness, because it does not falsely hold out salvation to its followers, if any one fully observed all that it commands. 72 Nor ought we to look upon this as a strange manner of teaching, that God first demands the righteousness of works, and next offers a gratuitous righteousness without works; for it is necessary that men should be convinced of their righteous condemnation, that they may betake themselves to the mercy of God. Accordingly, Paul (Rom 10:5) compares both kinds of righteousness, in order to inform us that the reason why we are freely justified by God is, that we have no righteousness of our own. Now Christ in this reply accommodated himself to the lawyer, and attended to the nature of his question; for he had inquired not how salvation must be sought, but by what works it must be obtained.

Calvin: Luk 10:28 - Do this, and thou shalt live Luk 10:28.Do this, and thou shalt live I have explained a little before, how this promise agrees with freely bestowed justification by faith; for the ...

Luk 10:28.Do this, and thou shalt live I have explained a little before, how this promise agrees with freely bestowed justification by faith; for the reason why God justifies us freely is, not that the Law does not point out perfect righteousness, but because we fail in keeping it, and the reason why it is declared to be impossible for us to obtain life by it is, that

it is weak through our flesh, (Rom 8:3.)

So then these two statements are perfectly consistent with each other, that the Law teaches how men may obtain righteousness by works, and yet that no man is justified by works, because the fault lies not in the doctrine of the Law, but in men. It was the intention of Christ, in the meantime, to vindicate himself from the calumny which, he knew, was brought against him by the unlearned and ignorant, that he set aside the Law, so far as it is a perpetual rule of righteousness.

Calvin: Luk 10:29 - But he wishing to justify himself 29.But he wishing to justify himself This question might appear to be of no importance for justifying a man. But if we recollect what was formerly ...

29.But he wishing to justify himself This question might appear to be of no importance for justifying a man. But if we recollect what was formerly stated, that the hypocrisy of men is elderly detected by means of the second table—for, while they pretend to be eminent worshippers of God, they openly violate charity towards their neighbors—it will be easy to infer from this, that the Pharisee practiced this evasion, in order that, concealed under the false mask of holiness, he might not be brought forth to light. So then, aware that the test of charity would prove unfavorable to him, he seeks concealment under the word neighbor, that he may not be discovered to be a transgressor of the Law. But we have already seen, that on this subject the Law was corrupted by the scribes, because they reckoned none to be their neighbors but those who were worthy of it. Hence, too, this principle was received among them, that we have a right to hate our enemies, (Mat 5:43.) For the only method to which hypocrites can resort for avoiding the condemnation of themselves, is to turn away as far as they are able, that their life may not be tried by the judgment of the Law.

Calvin: Luk 10:30 - And Jesus answering said 30.And Jesus answering said Christ might have stated simply, that the word neighbor extends indiscriminately to every man, because the whole human ...

30.And Jesus answering said Christ might have stated simply, that the word neighbor extends indiscriminately to every man, because the whole human race is united by a sacred bond of fellowship. And, indeed, the Lord employed this word in the Law, for no other reason than to draw us sweetly to mutual kindness. The commandment would have run more clearly thus: Love every man as thyself. But as men are blinded by their pride, so that every man is satisfied with himself, scarcely deigns to admit others to an equal rank, and withholds from them the duties he owes them, the Lord purposely declares that all are neighbors that the very relationship may produce mutual love. To make any person our neighbor, therefore, it is enough that he be, a man; for it is not in our power to blot out our common nature.

But Christ intended to draw the reply from the Pharisee, that he might condemn himself. For in consequence of the authoritative decision being generally received among them, that no man is our neighbor unless he is our friend, if Christ had put a direct question to him, he would never have made an explicit acknowledgment, that under the word neighbor all men are included, which the comparison brought forward forces him to confess. The general truth conveyed is, that the greatest stranger is our neighbor, because God has bound all men together, for the purpose of assisting each other. He glances briefly, however, at the Jews, and especially at the priests; because, while they boasted of being the children of the same Father, and of being separated by the privilege of adoption from the rest of the nations, so as to be God’s sacred heritage, yet, with barbarous and unfeeling contempt, they despised each other, as if no relationship had subsisted between them. For there is no doubt that Christ describes the cruel neglect of brotherly kindness, with which they knew that they were chargeable. But here, as I have said, the chief design is to show that the neighborhood, which lays us under obligation to mutual offices of kindness, is not confined to friends or relatives, but extends to the whole human race.

To prove this, Christ compares a Samaritan to a priest and a Levite. It is well known what deadly hatred the Jews bore to the Samaritans, so that, notwithstanding their living close beside them, they were always at the greatest variance. Christ now says, that a Jew, an inhabitant of Jericho, on his journey from Jerusalem, having been wounded by robbers, received no assistance either from a Levite or from a priest, both of whom met with him lying on the road, and half-dead, but that a Samaritan showed him great kindness, and then asks, Which of these three was neighbor to the Jew? This subtle doctor could not escape from preferring the Samaritan to the other two. For here, as in a mirror, we behold that common relationship of men, which the scribes endeavored to blot out by their wicked sophistry; 77 and the compassion, which an enemy showed to a Jew, demonstrates that the guidance and teaching of nature are sufficient to show that man was created for the sake of man. Hence it is inferred that there is a mutual obligation between all men.

The allegory which is here contrived by the advocates of free will is too absurd to deserve refutation. According to them, under the figure of a wounded man is described the condition of Adam after the fall; from which they infer that the power of acting well was not wholly extinguished in him; because he is said to be only half-dead. As if it had been the design of Christ, in this passage, to speak of the corruption of human nature, and to inquire whether the wound which Satan inflicted on Adam were deadly or curable; nay, as if he had not plainly, and without a figure, declared in another passage, that all are dead, but those whom he quickens by his voice, (Joh 5:25.) As little plausibility belongs to another allegory, which, however, has been so highly satisfactory, that it has been admitted by almost universal consent, as if it had been a revelation from heaven. This Samaritan they imagine to be Christ, because he is our guardian; and they tell us that wine was poured, along with oil, into the wound, because Christ cures us by repentance and by a promise of grace. They have contrived a third subtlety, that Christ does not immediately restore health, but sends us to the Church, as an innkeeper, to be gradually cured. I acknowledge that I have no liking for any of these interpretations; but we ought to have a deeper reverence for Scripture than to reckon ourselves at liberty to disguise its natural meaning. And, indeed, any one may see that the curiosity of certain men has led them to contrive these speculations, contrary to the intention of Christ.

Calvin: Luk 10:38 - And it happened that he entered into a certain village 38.And it happened that he entered into a certain village This narrative shows, that Christ, wherever he came, did not devote himself to his private ...

38.And it happened that he entered into a certain village This narrative shows, that Christ, wherever he came, did not devote himself to his private concerns, or consult his own ease or comfort; but that the single object which he kept in view was, to do good to others, and to discharge the office which had been committed to him by the Father. Luke relates that, having been hospitably received by Martha, as soon as he entered the house, he began to teach and exhort. As this passage has been basely distorted into the commendation of what is called a Contemplative life, we must inquire into its true meaning, from which it will appear, that nothing was farther from the design of Christ, than to encourage his disciples to indulge in indolence, or in useless speculations. It is, no doubt, an old error 253, that those who withdraw from business, and devote themselves entirely to a contemplative, lead an Angelical life. For the absurdities which the Sorbonnists 254 utter on this subject they appear to have been indebted to Aristotle, who places the highest good, and ultimate end, of human life in contemplation, which, according to him, is the enjoyment of virtue. When some men were driven by ambition to withdraw from the ordinary intercourse of life, or when peevish men gave themselves up to solitude and indolence, the resolution to adopt that course was followed by such pride, that they imagined themselves to be like the angels, because they did nothing; for they entertained as great a contempt for active life, as if it had kept them back from heaven. On the contrary, we know that men were created for the express purpose of being employed in labor of various kinds, and that no sacrifice is more pleasing to God, than when every man applies diligently to his own calling, and endeavors to live in such a manner as to contribute to the general advantage. 255

How absurdly they have perverted the words of Christ to support their own contrivance, will appear manifest when we have ascertained the natural meaning. Luke says that Mary sat at the feet of Jesus Does he mean that she did nothing else throughout her whole life? On the contrary, the Lord enjoins his followers to make such a distribution of their time, that he who desires to make proficiency in the school of Christ shall not always be an idle hearer but shall put in practice what he has learned; for there is a time to hear, and a time to act. 256 It is, therefore, a foolish attempt of the monks to take hold of this passage, as if Christ were drawing a comparison between a contemplative and an active life, while Christ simply informs us for what end, and in what manner, he wishes to be received.

Though the hospitality of Martha deserved commendation, and is commended, yet there were two faults in it which are pointed out by Christ. The first is, that Martha carried her activity beyond proper bounds; for Christ would rather have chosen to be entertained in a frugal manner, and at moderate expense, than that the holy woman should have submitted to so much toil. The second fault was, that Martha, by distracting her attention, and undertaking more labor than was necessary, deprived herself of the advantage of Christ’s visit. The excess is pointed out by Luke, when he speaks of much serving; for Christ was satisfied with little. It was just as if one were to give a magnificent reception to a prophet, and yet not to care about hearing him, but, on the contrary, to make so great and unnecessary preparations as to bury all the instruction. But the true way of receiving prophets is, to accept the advantage which God presents and offers to us through their agency.

We now see that the kind attention of Martha, though it deserved praise, was not without its blemishes. There was this additional evil, that Martha was so delighted with her own bustling operations, as to despise her sister’s pious eagerness to receive instruction. 257 This example warns us, that, in doing what is right, we must take care not to think more highly of ourselves than of others.

Calvin: Luk 10:42 - But one thing is necessary // Mary hath chosen the good part 42.But one thing is necessary Some give a very meager interpretation of these words, as if they meant that one sort of dish is enough. 258 Others mak...

42.But one thing is necessary Some give a very meager interpretation of these words, as if they meant that one sort of dish is enough. 258 Others make ingenious inquiries, but beside the purpose, about Unity. 259 But Christ had quite another design, which was, that whatever believers may undertake to do, and in whatever employments they may engage, there is one object to which every thing ought to be referred. In a word, we do but wander to no purpose, if we do not direct all our actions to a fixed object. The hospitality of Martha was faulty in this respect, that she neglected the main business, and devoted herself entirely to household affairs. And yet Christ does not mean that every thing else, with the exception of this one thing, is of no importance, but that we must pay a proper attention to order, lest what is accessory as the phrase is—become our chief concern.

Mary hath chosen the good part There is no comparison here, as unskillful and mistaken interpreters dream. Christ only declares, that Mary is engaged in a holy and profitable employment, in which she ought not to be disturbed. “You would have a good right,” he says, “to blame your sister, if she indulged in ease, or gave herself up to trifling occupations, or aimed at something unsuitable to her station, and left to you the whole charge of the household affairs. But now, when she is properly and usefully employed in hearing, it would be an act of injustice to withdraw her from it; for an opportunity so favorable is not always in her power.” There are some, indeed, who give a different interpretation to the latter clause, which shall not be taken away from her, as if Christ intended to say, that Mary hath chosen the good part, because the fruit of heavenly doctrine can never perish. For my own part, I have no objection to that opinion, but have followed the view which appeared to me to be more in accordance with Christ’s design. 260

Defender: Luk 10:1 - other seventy also The parallel accounts in Mat 10:5-15 and Mar 6:7-13 indicate that only the twelve disciples were sent on this mission with no mention of the "other se...

The parallel accounts in Mat 10:5-15 and Mar 6:7-13 indicate that only the twelve disciples were sent on this mission with no mention of the "other seventy." It was possibly a different mission indicating that, by this time, Jesus had many disciples following Him in addition to the twelve; He was concerned with training and using them as well. Possibly He selected seventy of them as symbolic of the "seventy elders" of Israel (Exo 24:1), just as the twelve apostles similarly represented the twelve tribes."

Defender: Luk 10:2 - labourers are few Even with the additional seventy, the laborers were few in comparison to the multitudes in "every city and place" where He wanted to come. It has rema...

Even with the additional seventy, the laborers were few in comparison to the multitudes in "every city and place" where He wanted to come. It has remained so ever since, and He would still exhort us to pray for more to labor in the great world field."

Defender: Luk 10:7 - worthy of his hire This statement is quoted by Paul in 1Ti 5:18, the only place where a New Testament writer quotes another New Testament passage as "Scripture." This gi...

This statement is quoted by Paul in 1Ti 5:18, the only place where a New Testament writer quotes another New Testament passage as "Scripture." This gives incidental confirmation of the New Testament - Luke in particular - as being on a par with the Old Testament Scriptures."

Defender: Luk 10:17 - even the devils Evidently the "devils" (demons or evil spirits) were especially active while Christ was on earth (at least in Israel) and God took special measures ag...

Evidently the "devils" (demons or evil spirits) were especially active while Christ was on earth (at least in Israel) and God took special measures against them in response to prayer in the name of His Son, who had come to destroy the works of Satan (Heb 2:14)."

Defender: Luk 10:18 - fall from heaven This vision received by Christ was both a retrospective assurance that Satan had already been cast out of heaven when "iniquity was found" in him (Eze...

This vision received by Christ was both a retrospective assurance that Satan had already been cast out of heaven when "iniquity was found" in him (Eze 28:15, Eze 28:17) and also the renewed promise that he will eventually be cast completely out of any access to God at all (Rev 12:7-10) and ultimately down to his eternal fate in hell (Isa 14:12-15; Rev 20:10). The power of His disciples over the spirits was a token of this."

Defender: Luk 10:19 - serpents and scorpions Serpents and scorpions have always symbolized the devil, and God has promised that Christ will ultimately crush Satan (Gen 3:15). Thus, in His name, t...

Serpents and scorpions have always symbolized the devil, and God has promised that Christ will ultimately crush Satan (Gen 3:15). Thus, in His name, the followers of Christ can also be delivered spiritually from Satan's venom and crush his power over their lives (Psa 91:13; Rom 16:20)."

Defender: Luk 10:20 - rejoice not The miraculous signs accompanying the seventy on this mission, as well as the apostles and others in the early church, were a special and temporary pr...

The miraculous signs accompanying the seventy on this mission, as well as the apostles and others in the early church, were a special and temporary privilege, given for a special purpose (1Co 13:8), not to be compared at all to the far greater and everlasting gift of salvation."

Defender: Luk 10:29 - who is my neighbor The famous parable of the good Samaritan, given in response to this question, yields the following answer: my "neighbor" is anyone who has a special n...

The famous parable of the good Samaritan, given in response to this question, yields the following answer: my "neighbor" is anyone who has a special need that I am able to meet and who is brought to my particular attention by crossing my path."

Defender: Luk 10:42 - that good part Today, we can only sit at Jesus' feet and hear His word by reading and meditating on the Scriptures. Important as our daily responsibilities may be to...

Today, we can only sit at Jesus' feet and hear His word by reading and meditating on the Scriptures. Important as our daily responsibilities may be to meet our material needs, we should somehow make time for this "good part." The Lord assures us that if this is our desire, He will provide the time, as He did with Mary."

TSK: Luk 10:1 - these // other seventy // two and // whither these : Mat 10:1-4; Mar 6:7-13 other seventy : Rather, seventy others, as Dr. Campbell renders; for the expression other seventy implies that there we...

these : Mat 10:1-4; Mar 6:7-13

other seventy : Rather, seventy others, as Dr. Campbell renders; for the expression other seventy implies that there were seventy sent before, which was not the casecaps1 . icaps0 t seems to refer to the twelve apostles whom our Lord had previously chosen. Num 11:16, Num 11:24-26

two and : Act 13:2-4; Rev 11:3-10

whither : Luk 1:17, Luk 1:76, Luk 3:4-6, Luk 9:52

TSK: Luk 10:2 - The harvest // the labourers // are // pray // the Lord The harvest : Mat 9:37, Mat 9:38; Joh 4:35-38; 1Co 3:6-9 the labourers : Mat 20:1; Mar 13:34; 1Co 15:10; 2Co 6:1; Phi 2:25, Phi 2:30; Col 1:29, Col 4:...

TSK: Luk 10:3 - I send // wolves I send : Psa 22:12-16, Psa 22:21; Eze 2:3-6; Mat 10:16, Mat 10:22; Joh 15:20, Joh 16:2; Act 9:2, Act 9:16 wolves : Zep 3:3; Mat 7:15; Joh 10:12; Act 2...

TSK: Luk 10:4 - neither // and neither : Luk 9:3-6, Luk 22:35; Mat 10:9, Mat 10:10; Mar 6:8, Mar 6:9 and : Luk 9:59, Luk 9:60; Gen 24:33, Gen 24:56; 1Sa 21:8; 2Ki 4:24, 2Ki 4:29; Pr...

TSK: Luk 10:5 - -- Luk 19:9; 1Sa 25:6; Isa 57:19; Mat 10:12, Mat 10:13; Act 10:36; 2Co 5:18-20; Eph 2:17

TSK: Luk 10:6 - the Son // it shall the Son : 1Sa 25:17; Isa 9:6; Eph 2:2, Eph 2:3, Eph 5:6; 2Th 3:16; 1Pe 1:14 *Gr: Jam 3:18 it shall : Psa 35:13; 2Co 2:15, 2Co 2:16

TSK: Luk 10:7 - in // for // Go in : Luk 9:4; Mat 10:11; Mar 6:10; Act 16:15, Act 16:34, Act 16:40 for : Deu 12:12, Deu 12:18, Deu 12:19; Mat 10:10; 1Co 9:4-15; Gal 6:6; Phi 4:17, Ph...

TSK: Luk 10:8 - and // eat and : Luk 10:10, Luk 9:48; Mat 10:40; Joh 13:20 eat : 1Co 10:27

TSK: Luk 10:9 - heal // The kingdom heal : Luk 9:2; Mat 10:8; Mar 6:13; Act 28:7-10 The kingdom : Luk 10:11, Luk 17:20,Luk 17:21; Dan 2:44; Mat 3:2, Mat 4:17, Mat 10:7; Mar 4:30; Joh 3:3...

TSK: Luk 10:10 - go go : Luk 9:5; Mat 10:14; Act 13:51, Act 18:6

TSK: Luk 10:11 - notwithstanding notwithstanding : Luk 10:9; Deu 30:11-14; Act 13:26, Act 13:40,Act 13:46; Rom 10:8, Rom 10:21; Heb 1:3

TSK: Luk 10:12 - that that : Lam 4:6; Eze 16:48-50; Mat 10:15, Mat 11:24; Mar 6:11

TSK: Luk 10:13 - unto // for // Tyre // which // repented unto : Mat 11:20-22 for : Eze 3:6, Eze 3:7; Act 28:25-28; Rom 9:29-33, Rom 11:8-11; 1Ti 4:2 Tyre : Isa. 23:1-18; Ezek. 26:1-28:26 which : Luk 9:10-17;...

unto : Mat 11:20-22

for : Eze 3:6, Eze 3:7; Act 28:25-28; Rom 9:29-33, Rom 11:8-11; 1Ti 4:2

Tyre : Isa. 23:1-18; Ezek. 26:1-28:26

which : Luk 9:10-17; Mar 8:22-26

repented : Job 42:6; Isa 61:3; Dan 9:3; Joh 3:5, Joh 3:6

TSK: Luk 10:14 - -- Luk 12:47, Luk 12:48; Amo 3:2; Joh 3:19, Joh 15:22-25; Rom 2:1, Rom 2:27

TSK: Luk 10:15 - Capernaum // which // thrust Capernaum : Luk 7:1, Luk 7:2; Mat 4:13 which : Gen 11:4; Deu 1:28; Isa 14:13-15; Jer 51:53; Eze 28:12-14; Amo 9:2, Amo 9:3; Oba 1:4; Mat 11:23 thrust ...

TSK: Luk 10:16 - heareth you // despiseth you // despiseth him heareth you : Luk 9:48; Mat 10:40, Mat 18:5; Mar 9:37; Joh 12:44, Joh 12:48, Joh 13:20; 1Th 4:8 despiseth you : Exo 16:7; Num 14:2, Num 14:11, Num 16:...

TSK: Luk 10:17 - -- Luk 10:1, Luk 10:9, Luk 9:1; Rom 16:20

TSK: Luk 10:18 - I beheld Satan I beheld Satan : Joh 12:31, Joh 16:11; Heb 2:14; 1Jo 3:8; Rev 9:1, Rev 12:7-9, Rev 20:2

TSK: Luk 10:19 - I give // and nothing I give : Psa 91:13; Isa 11:8; Eze 2:6; Mar 16:18; Act 28:5; Rom 16:20 and nothing : Luk 21:17, Luk 21:18; Rom 8:31-39; Heb 13:5, Heb 13:6; Rev 11:5

TSK: Luk 10:20 - in this // your in this : Mat 7:22, Mat 7:23, Mat 10:1, Mat 26:24, Mat 27:5; 1Co 13:2, 1Co 13:3 your : Exo 32:32; Psa 69:28; Isa 4:3; Dan 12:1; Phi 4:3; Heb 12:23; Re...

TSK: Luk 10:21 - Jesus // I thank // Lord // thou hast // revealed // even Jesus : Luk 15:5, Luk 15:9; Isa 53:11, Isa 62:5; Zep 3:17 I thank : Mat 11:25, Mat 11:26; Joh 11:41, Joh 17:24-26 Lord : Psa 24:1; Isa 66:1 thou hast ...

TSK: Luk 10:22 - All things // and no All things : ""Many ancient copies add, And turning to his disciples he said.""Mat 11:27, Mat 28:18; Joh 3:35, Joh 5:22-27, Joh 13:3, Joh 17:2, Joh 17...

All things : ""Many ancient copies add, And turning to his disciples he said.""Mat 11:27, Mat 28:18; Joh 3:35, Joh 5:22-27, Joh 13:3, Joh 17:2, Joh 17:10; 1Co 15:24; Eph 1:21; Phi 2:9-11; Heb 2:8

and no : Joh 1:18, Joh 6:44-46, Joh 10:15, Joh 17:5, Joh 17:26; 2Co 4:6; 1Jo 5:20; 2Jo 1:9

TSK: Luk 10:23 - Blessed Blessed : Mat 13:16, Mat 13:17

Blessed : Mat 13:16, Mat 13:17

TSK: Luk 10:24 - many many : Joh 8:56; Heb 11:13, Heb 11:39; 1Pe 1:10,1Pe 1:11

TSK: Luk 10:25 - a certain // Master // to a certain : Luk 7:30, Luk 11:45, Luk 11:46; Mat 22:35 Master : Luk 18:18; Mat 19:16; Act 16:30,Act 16:31 to : Gal 3:18

TSK: Luk 10:26 - -- Isa 8:20; Rom 3:19, Rom 4:14-16, Rom 10:5; Gal 3:12, Gal 3:13, Gal 3:21, Gal 3:22

TSK: Luk 10:27 - Thou // and thy Thou : Deu 6:5, Deu 10:12, Deu 30:6; Mat 22:37-40; Mar 12:30,Mar 12:31, Mar 12:33, Mar 12:34; Heb 8:10 and thy : Lev 19:18; Mat 19:19; Rom 13:9; Gal 5...

TSK: Luk 10:28 - Thou hast // this Thou hast : Luk 7:43; Mar 12:34 this : Lev 18:5; Neh 9:29; Eze 20:11, Eze 20:13, Eze 20:21; Mat 19:17; Rom 3:19, Rom 10:4; Gal 3:12

TSK: Luk 10:29 - willing // And willing : Luk 16:15, Luk 18:9-11; Lev 19:34; Job 32:2; Rom 4:2, Rom 10:3; Gal 3:11; Jam 2:24 And : Luk 10:36; Mat 5:43, Mat 5:44

TSK: Luk 10:30 - wounded wounded : Psa 88:4; Jer 51:52; Lam 2:12; Eze 30:24

TSK: Luk 10:31 - by // priest // he passed by : Rth 2:3 *marg. 2Sa 1:6; Ecc 9:11 priest : Jer 5:31; Hos 5:1, Hos 6:9; Mal 1:10 he passed : Job 6:14-21; Psa 38:10,Psa 38:11, Psa 69:20, Psa 142:4...

TSK: Luk 10:32 - -- Psa 109:25; Pro 27:10; Act 18:17; 2Ti 3:2

TSK: Luk 10:33 - Samaritan // he had Samaritan : Luk 9:52, Luk 9:53, Luk 17:16-18; Pro 27:10; Jer 38:7-13, Jer 39:16-18; Joh 4:9, Joh 8:48 he had : Luk 7:13; Exo 2:6; 1Ki 8:50; Mat 18:33

TSK: Luk 10:34 - went // bound // an inn went : Luk 10:34; Exo 23:4, Exo 23:5; Pro 24:17, Pro 24:18, Pro 25:21, Pro 25:22; Mat 5:43-45; Rom 12:20; 1Th 5:15 bound : Psa 147:3; Isa 1:5, Isa 1:6...

TSK: Luk 10:35 - two pence // the host // whatsoever two pence : Mat 20:2 the host : Rom 16:23 whatsoever : Luk 14:13; Pro 19:17

two pence : Mat 20:2

the host : Rom 16:23

whatsoever : Luk 14:13; Pro 19:17

TSK: Luk 10:36 - thinkest // was thinkest : Luk 7:42; Mat 17:25, Mat 21:28-31, Mat 22:42 was : Luk 10:29

TSK: Luk 10:37 - He that // Go He that : Pro 14:21; Hos 6:6; Mic 6:8; Mat 20:28, Mat 23:23; 2Co 8:9; Eph 3:18, Eph 3:19, Eph 5:2; Heb 2:9-15; Rev 1:5 Go : Luk 6:32-36; Joh 13:15-17;...

TSK: Luk 10:38 - a certain // received a certain : Joh 11:1-5, Joh 12:1-3 received : Luk 8:2, Luk 8:3; Act 16:15; 2Jo 1:10

a certain : Joh 11:1-5, Joh 12:1-3

received : Luk 8:2, Luk 8:3; Act 16:15; 2Jo 1:10

TSK: Luk 10:39 - which which : Luk 2:46, Luk 8:35; Deu 33:3; Pro 8:34; Act 22:3; 1Co 7:32-40

TSK: Luk 10:40 - cumbered // dost // my cumbered : Luk 12:29; Joh 6:27 dost : Mat 14:15, Mat 16:22; Mar 3:21 my : Luk 9:55; Jon 4:1-4

TSK: Luk 10:41 - thou // many thou : Luk 8:14, Luk 21:34; Mar 4:19; 1Co 7:32-35; Phi 4:6 many : Ecc 6:11; Mat 6:25-34

TSK: Luk 10:42 - one // chosen // good // which one : Luk 18:22; Psa 27:4, Psa 73:25; Ecc 12:13; Mar 8:36; Joh 17:3; 1Co 13:3; Gal 5:6; Col 2:10-19; 1Jo 5:11, 1Jo 5:12 chosen : Deu 30:19; Jos 24:15,...

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Poole: Luk 10:1 - two and two Luk 10:1-12 Christ sendeth out the seventy disciples to work miracles and to preach. Luk 10:13-16 He pronounces a woe against Chorazin, Bethsaida, ...

Luk 10:1-12 Christ sendeth out the seventy disciples to work

miracles and to preach.

Luk 10:13-16 He pronounces a woe against Chorazin, Bethsaida, and

Capernaum.

Luk 10:17-20 The seventy return with joy; Christ showeth them

wherein to rejoice.

Luk 10:21,22 He thanks his Father for having revealed his gospel

to the simple only.

Luk 10:23,24 He showeth the blessedness of those that were called

into his church.

Luk 10:25-37 He teacheth a lawyer how to attain eternal life; and

by the parable of the good Samaritan showeth whom we

are to consider as our neighbour.

Luk 10:38-42 He commendeth Mary’ s attention to his doctrine in

preference to Martha’ s busy care to entertain him.

We heard before of Christ’ s first electing, then sending out, twelve, Luk 6:13-16 9:1-6 ; and we heard of their return, and giving an account of their trust to their Lord, Luk 10:10 . What their particular account was we no where read, but it was such as our Saviour judged the harvest too great for the hands of the labourers. He therefore now resolves to send out seventy more. The names of these we have not in the evangelist, only that Christ sent them out, and that he sent them

two and two which might be for their better mutual assistance of each other, and also for their mutual testimony one for another. When God sent out the first conductors, and governors of his people, he sent two, Moses and Aaron. John Baptist sent two of his disciples to Christ. Christ sent two of his disciples to prepare the passover, Luk 22:8 . There seemeth to be nothing mysterious in this. Man is a sociable creature, and it is not good for him to be alone. We cannot determine that our Saviour had any regard to the numbers of twelve and seventy; though it is certain that both those numbers amongst the Jews seem to have had a more than ordinary character, twelve being the number of the tribes of Israel, according to the promise, Gen 17:20 49:28 ; at Elim they found twelve wells of water, Exo 15:27 ; according to the number of the tribes were the twelve pillars, Exo 24:4 , and the twelve stones in the breastplate of judgment, Exo 28:21 ; and the number of the cakes for the shew bread was to be twelve, Lev 24:5 . The princes of Israel were twelve, Num 1:44 ; and twelve men were sent to spy out the land of Canaan, Deu 1:23 . So we shall observe that in a multitude of things they kept to the number of twelve: John in his description of the new Jerusalem, which he saw in his vision, says, it had twelve gates, and at the gates twelve angels, and on the gates were the names of the twelve tribes, Rev 21:12 . And the wall had twelve foundations, &c., Luk 10:14 . And for the number of seventy: Jacob’ s family, when they went down into Egypt, were seventy souls, Gen 46:27 ; they mourned for Jacob seventy days, Gen 50:3 ; at Elim they met with seventy palm trees, Num 33:9 ; the posterity of Jacob was in Babylon seventy years. The Jewish sanhedrim, or great court chosen upon the advice of Jethro, is said to have consisted first of seventy, then of seventy-two persons. So as the numbers of twelve and seventy seem to have been numbers to which the Jews had some respect. Whether our Saviour, in the choice of those whom he first sent to preach the gospel, had any respect or not to the Jewish value for those numbers, or designed by it to show them, that he was about to set up a new kingdom and government, which, though differing from what they had exercised formerly, yet in some little things should have some conformity to them, we cannot determine. We shall find the same powers and authority given to these seventy as to the twelve, and the same instructions: how some come to imagine a difference of order betwixt them I cannot tell; no such thing appeareth from the instructions given the one or the other upon their first sending out.

Poole: Luk 10:2 - See Poole on "Mat 9:37" See Poole on "Mat 9:37" and See Poole on "Mat 9:38" , where these words are put immediately before the sending out of the twelve. Both the twelve a...

See Poole on "Mat 9:37" and See Poole on "Mat 9:38" , where these words are put immediately before the sending out of the twelve. Both the twelve and the seventy, all that Christ ever sent out, were to be labourers in the Lord’ s harvest.

Poole: Luk 10:3-4 - and salute no man by the way Ver. 3,4. We met with these instructions before, and opened them in our notes. See Poole on "Mat 10:9" , See Poole on "Mat 10:10" and See Poole o...

Ver. 3,4. We met with these instructions before, and opened them in our notes. See Poole on "Mat 10:9" , See Poole on "Mat 10:10" and See Poole on "Mat 10:16" , only there we had not those words,

and salute no man by the way The meaning of that is no more than, make all possible speed: see 2Ki 4:29 .

Poole: Luk 10:5-7 - -- Ver. 5-7. See Poole on "Mat 10:11" , and See Poole on "Mar 6:10" . The instructions, as to the substance of them, are the same here as there, thoug...

Ver. 5-7. See Poole on "Mat 10:11" , and See Poole on "Mar 6:10" . The instructions, as to the substance of them, are the same here as there, though a little differing in the terms.

Poole: Luk 10:7 - -- Ver. 7 See Poole on "Luk 10:5"

Ver. 7 See Poole on "Luk 10:5"

Poole: Luk 10:8-12 - if the house be worthy // if the son of peace be there Ver. 8-12. We have met with the same instructions before in Matthew and Mark. See Poole on "Mat 10:11" , and following verses to Mat 10:15 . See Po...

Ver. 8-12. We have met with the same instructions before in Matthew and Mark. See Poole on "Mat 10:11" , and following verses to Mat 10:15 . See Poole on "Mar 6:10" , See Poole on "Mar 6:11" . There is some difference in words. Matthew saith, — inquire who in the city is worthy, and, Luk 10:13 ,

if the house be worthy Luke saith,

if the son of peace be there they both mean the same thing: if there be any in it, that belong to God’ s election of grace, any whom God intends by you to call, and make partakers of the peace of the gospel. For other things relating to the opening of the words, see the notes before mentioned. Only we may from hence observe for our instruction,

1. That it is the will of Christ, that his ministers should not be too solicitous for a livelihood. As the labourer is worthy of his hire, so he that sends them into his harvest will see they shall be fed. Let them look to their calling, and to the fulfilling of their ministry; God will see they shall be fed.

2. That the society of ministers of the gospel, in cities and houses, should not be with debauchees, but with those that are worthy, so far as man can judge; such as are their Master’ s friends and servants should be their companions.

3. Those are most worthy in places amongst whom the Son of peace is, men and women that have the most knowledge of and love for Christ.

4. The ministers of Christ ought to carry themselves with all imaginable civility, wishing good to all, and doing good to all.

5. Christ’ s ministers ought not to make their bellies their gods, — eat such things as are set before you.

6. They have a Divine licence to take and use for their necessities such things as men give them.

7. Christ expects that his people should maintain his ministers, not depriving the labourers of their hire, nor muzzling the mouths of the oxen which tread out the corn, 1Co 9:9,10 , nor preferring their servants for their worldly occasions before such as labour for their souls, and in that work are God’ s messengers to them, and his servants in the first place, though employed in watching for people’ s souls.

8. The not giving a livelihood to ministers, is a not receiving them, that is, provided the people be able.

9. People by not receiving the gospel of peace brought them by faithful ministers shall do them no hurt, their peace shall return unto them. They shall be a sweet savour unto God, even as to them that perish. Their judgment is with the Lord, and their work with their God, though they labour in vain; though Israel be not gathered, they shall be glorified. Men proportion their rewards according to successes of servants. God more justly proportions his rewards to men’ s sincerity and diligence in their labour.

10. If men refuse the gospel, yet they shall know the kingdom of God is come nigh unto them. If they will not be subject to his kingdom of grace, yet they shall be subdued by the kingdom of his power and justice.

11. There will come a day when men that have the offers of the gospel of peace, and refuse them, slighting and despising his ministers and their message, will find that they had better have lived in Sodom when it was burnt with fire and brimstone; their portion of wrath in the day of judgment will be larger and bitterer than the portion of the men of Sodom. Let all who live in our days hear and fear, and in time break off their sins by a true repentance, lest they go to hell at the highest disadvantage.

Poole: Luk 10:13-15 - -- Ver. 13-15 See Poole on "Mat 11:21" , and following verses to Mat 11:24 .

Ver. 13-15 See Poole on "Mat 11:21" , and following verses to Mat 11:24 .

Poole: Luk 10:17 - -- As we before read of the twelve coming back to give Christ an account of their success, so we here have the same of the seventy. Whether this joy of...

As we before read of the twelve coming back to give Christ an account of their success, so we here have the same of the seventy. Whether this joy of the seventy was more carnal than it ought, they rather rejoicing in that new power which they had received from Christ, than in the demonstration of Christ’ s Divine power, and the confirmation of the doctrine of the gospel by these miraculous operations, is hard to determine; for though Christ’ s reply seemeth to have a check in it, yet it is so qualified by the term rather , Luk 10:20 , that we cannot from thence absolutely conclude any such thing from it. Here is a difference to be observed between Christ’ s and his disciples’ casting out of devils. Christ did it in his own name, by his own word of command, power, and authority; the disciples did it in Christ’ s name, and by a power and authority derived from him.

Poole: Luk 10:18 - -- Lightning comes suddenly, and with thunder. The thunder of the gospel brought down the devil as lightning: and indeed this is observable, the devil ...

Lightning comes suddenly, and with thunder. The thunder of the gospel brought down the devil as lightning: and indeed this is observable, the devil is so busy in no places where the gospel prevails, as in places where that joyful sound is not come, whether we consider his power with reference to men’ s bodies or souls. This is one general advantage of gospel preaching, the devil will not endure the sound of it, so as to impose upon mankind, at that rate which he doth upon ignorant persons, that are heathens, or only differing from them in that they are baptized, and call themselves Christians. Christ saw this, as God, for the devil is not visible to human senses, as neither are any spirits; which showed the impudence of that popish impostor in Germany, who selling indulgences, (by which he pretended souls were delivered from purgatory), called to the people to look up and see them fly away. But Christ could see it as God, for he certainly knew that it would be, and that it already was, the blessed effect of the gospel.

Poole: Luk 10:19 - -- Christ doth here: 1. Confirm the power before given to these seventy for working miracles, that they might not think that it ceased upon the determ...

Christ doth here:

1. Confirm the power before given to these seventy for working miracles, that they might not think that it ceased upon the determination of their first mission.

2. He confirmeth his promise to them for his presence with them, and protection of them.

Interpreters think here is a manifest allusion to Psa 91:13 , Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder: the young lion and the dragon shalt thou trample under thy feet: which must be understood figuratively, the sense being, that nothing should hurt them. This promise was more specially verified for some years in God’ s protection of time first ministers of the gospel, until they had done their work; and shall be fulfilled in a sense to the end of the world, according to the promise in Psa 91:13 . Nothing shall hurt their souls, as to the favour of God and their eternal happiness, nor their bodies, so far forth as, or so long as, God in his wisdom shall judge fit. They have a further power also given them more common to all the ministers of the gospel sent by Christ, yea, and to all Christians. They have a power over all the power of the enemy; God will not be wanting to them in a power to resist the devil, and they have a promise that, being resisted, he shall flee from them.

Poole: Luk 10:20 - -- It is a usual thing in holy writ, to have prohibitions delivered in general terms, which must be understood in a restrained sense. That it is so her...

It is a usual thing in holy writ, to have prohibitions delivered in general terms, which must be understood in a restrained sense. That it is so here, appeareth plainly by the word

rather prefixed to rejoice in the latter part of the sentence. For it was doubtless a just cause of joy and rejoicing to them that Christ had honoured them with such an extraordinary gift and power, but not of so much joy as to know that their names were written in the book of life; for as the good was infinitely greater, so a proportionable joy was requisite upon the assurance of it.

The expression written in heaven, is equivalent to the being written in the book of life, whereby is signified, either the certain designation of some to eternal life, or effectual calling. We read of this book of life, Rev 3:5 20:12,15 21:27 22:19 . It is called the Lamb’ s book, Rev 13:8 , and it is said it was written from the foundation of the world; which will justify those divines who understand it of a particular election from eternity; whereas it is objected that when amongst the twelve there was a son of perdition, it is unreasonable to think that all the seventy were elect vessels. It is easily answered, that our Saviour’ s words were true according to the usual phrase of speaking, if the generality of them only were such. Nor need our Saviour be understood as asserting all their names were so written, but only asserting the greatest cause of joy to be, if men can by their calling find that their election is sure. From our Saviour’ s words we may infer,

1. That there is a book of life, an election of grace.

2. That there are names written in this book; it is an election of persons.

3. That men may know that their names are written in that book, otherwise they could not rejoice; no man rejoiceth but in a good with which he hath some degree of union.

4. That this is a greater cause of joy, than for a man to know that he hath a power to cast out devils.

Men may be made use of to cast out devils in Christ’ s name, who yet may go to the devil at last, Mat 7:22,23 ; so cannot those whose names are written in the book of life. But I cannot understand that our Saviour in these words asserts that all the names of the seventy were written in that book. The tendency of his discourse is rather to quicken them to give all diligence to make sure of this cause of joy and rejoicing.

Poole: Luk 10:21-22 - -- Ver. 21,22. See Poole on "Mat 11:25" , and following verses to, Mat 11:27 , where we met with these words of our Saviour.

Ver. 21,22. See Poole on "Mat 11:25" , and following verses to, Mat 11:27 , where we met with these words of our Saviour.

Poole: Luk 10:22 - -- Ver. 22 . See Poole on "Lu 10:21 "

Ver. 22 . See Poole on "Lu 10:21 "

Poole: Luk 10:23-24 - -- Ver. 23,24. See Poole on "Mat 13:16" , and See Poole on "Mat 13:17" .

Ver. 23,24. See Poole on "Mat 13:16" , and See Poole on "Mat 13:17" .

Poole: Luk 10:25-28 - -- Ver. 25-28. These four verses would incline one to think that Luke here records the same piece of history which we met with in Mat 22:35-40 , and Mar...

Ver. 25-28. These four verses would incline one to think that Luke here records the same piece of history which we met with in Mat 22:35-40 , and Mar 12:28-34 ; See Poole on "Mat 22:35" and following verses to Mat 22:40 , See Poole on "Mar 12:28" and following verses to Mar 12:34 ; but neither of those evangelists have the following part of this discourse, which makes me doubtful whether Luke speaks of the same person coming to Christ which the others mention. A lawyer he was, who came to our Saviour upon a design to tempt, that is, to make a trial of him, whether he would deliver any doctrine contrary to the law of Moses. It is plain that he fancied that the eternal life which Christ preached was to be obtained by wing what the law required. Our Saviour agreeth it, that if he did what the law required, according as he himself had given an account of it, he should live. I apprehend no absurdity, to affirm that our Saviour speaks here of living eternally. It is rather absurd to fancy that our Saviour did not answer ad idem , to the thing about which the question was propounded. Neither is salvation impossible because the law in itself could not give life, but because of the weakness of our flesh, so as we cannot fulfil it. So that considering our infirmity, the law serveth to us only as a schoolmaster, to bring us to Christ; and as a mark which we ought to shoot at, though we cannot shoot home; a rule to direct us in our duty, though we cannot perform or fulfil it.

Poole: Luk 10:29 - Who is my neighbour? This lawyer’ s desire to justify himself spake him a hypocrite. The reason of that question, Who is my neighbour? was the notion of the neigh...

This lawyer’ s desire to justify himself spake him a hypocrite. The reason of that question,

Who is my neighbour? was the notion of the neighbour (mentioned in the law) which the scribes and Pharisees had, who counted none their neighbours but their friends and benefactors, at least none but those that were of their own nation or particular sect; and had taught their people, that they might hate their enemies. Our Saviour (this being but a captious question, considering the received interpretation amongst them of the law of God) doth not think fit to answer his question directly, but telling him a story, maketh him answer himself.

Poole: Luk 10:30-37 - -- Ver. 30-37. It is certain that the principal scope of our Saviour in this history, or parable, was to convince the lawyer, that every one is our neig...

Ver. 30-37. It is certain that the principal scope of our Saviour in this history, or parable, was to convince the lawyer, that every one is our neighbour to whom God offereth us an opportunity of doing good, whether he be of our nation or region or not. Every object of our mercy is our neighbour, whom God requireth us to love as ourselves. This was quite contrary to the common doctrine of the scribes’ and Pharisees’ interpreting the law, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself, and excellently served our Saviour’ s design, to show this lawyer that he understood not, much less observed, the law of God in that manner, as that he could justify himself from the violation of it. He also by the by showeth him, that the Samaritans, whom the Jews so much abhorred, better understood the law of God, than the ecclesiastical guides of those times, who yet pretended to be teachers of it to others; for some of them by the light of nature discerned themselves obliged to do good to every one that stood in need of their help, or if not by the light of nature, yet by the light of revelation in the law of Moses; but the scribes and Pharisees, by their false interpretation of the Divine law, had taught people to omit a great part of their duty required by the Divine law, and so could not hope to be justified, or to obtain eternal life and salvation, from the observation of it.

Poole: Luk 10:38-39 - -- Ver. 38,39. Interpreters think this village was Bethany, and that this Martha and Mary were the same which are mentioned Joh 11:2 . Inns probably wer...

Ver. 38,39. Interpreters think this village was Bethany, and that this Martha and Mary were the same which are mentioned Joh 11:2 . Inns probably were not so frequent then, and in those places, as they are now, so as strangers were often received in private houses. Christ loseth no opportunity of preaching the gospel; while they were preparing supper, he was entertaining the family with the glad tidings of the gospel, the feast of fat things made upon the mountain, Isa 25:6 . The lips of the righteous feed many, Pro 10:21 . It was their fashion to have disciples sit at their doctors’ feet, to hear their word; there Mary fixes herself.

Poole: Luk 10:40 - -- Two things are blameable in Martha: 1. That she made too much ado about the entertainment of our Saviour. That she entertained our Saviour she did ...

Two things are blameable in Martha:

1. That she made too much ado about the entertainment of our Saviour. That she entertained our Saviour she did well; but herein she erred, that she made her entertainment of him so troublesome, as it would not give her leave to take that advantage, which she might, or ought to have done, from the entertainment of a prophet.

2. That she is displeased with her sister because she would not lend her hand, but chose rather to sit at Christ’ s feet and hear his word, and desireth Christ to send her away to her assistance.

Poole: Luk 10:41-42 - one thing // good part Ver. 41,42. Our Saviour plainly blames Martha for her too great solicitude and trouble to provide a dinner, or supper, for him, who had meat to eat w...

Ver. 41,42. Our Saviour plainly blames Martha for her too great solicitude and trouble to provide a dinner, or supper, for him, who had meat to eat which she was not aware of, it being his meat and drink to do the will of his Father, and to preach the gospel. Interpreters much trouble themselves in determining what that

one thing is, which our Saviour here saith is needful Some think our Saviour meaneth no more than, one dish is enough; but this certainly is too low a sense. Others would have this one thing to be a life of meditation and contemplation, and that this was that

good part Mary had chosen If Mary had thus spent her whole life they might have said something for this. But certainly Mary’ s choosing to take advantage of Christ’ s company, rather to spend an hour or two in hearing of him, than in preparing a supper for him, will prove no such thing. I should interpret it generally, concerning the care of the soul with reference to eternity. That is certainly the one thing necessary, that was the better part, which Mary had chosen, as to which Christ would not discourage her, nor any way blunt the edge of those holy desires he had kindled in her, an effect of which study and care was her sitting at the feet of Christ to hear his word.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:1 - Seventy After these things the Lord appointed other seventy also, and sent them two and two before his face into every city and place, whither he himself w...

After these things the Lord appointed other seventy also, and sent them two and two before his face into every city and place, whither he himself would come.   

[Seventy.] Why the Vulgar should have seventy-and-two; they themselves, I suppose, are able to give no very good reason: much less the interpreter of Titus Bostrensis, when in the Greek copy before him he saw only seventy; why he should render it seventy-two.  

Aben Ezra upon the story of Eldad and Medad hath this passage: "The wise men say, That Moses took six out of every tribe, and the whole number amounted to seventy-and-two: but whereas the Lord had commanded only seventy, the odd two were laid aside." Now if God laid aside two of those who had been enrolled, and endowed with the Holy Spirit, that so there might be the just number of seventy only, we can hardly imagine why our Saviour should add two, to make it seventy-two and not seventy. "It was said to Moses at Mount Sinai, Go up, thou and Aaron, and Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel: so will the holy blessed God ordain to himself in the world to come a council of elders of his own people." Now the number of this consistory, the doctors determine to be no other than seventy. A council of seventy-two was never heard of amongst the Jews, but once only at Jabneh.  

"R. Simeon Ben Azzai saith, I received it from the mouths of the seventy-two elders; on the day when they made R. Eliezer Ben Azariah one of the Sanhedrim." Nor did they then remove Rabban Gamaliel, although he had displeased them.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:3 - As lambs among wolves Go your ways: behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves.   [As lambs among wolves.] It is added in another evangelist, "Be ye wise ...

Go your ways: behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves.   

[As lambs among wolves.] It is added in another evangelist, "Be ye wise as serpents," etc.: with which we may compare that in Midrash Schir; "The holy blessed God saith concerning Israel those that belong to me are simple as doves, but amongst the nations of the world, they are subtle as serpents."

Lightfoot: Luk 10:4 - Salute no man by the way Carry neither purse, nor scrip, nor shoes: and salute no man by the way.   [Salute no man by the way.] I. We have a passage something l...

Carry neither purse, nor scrip, nor shoes: and salute no man by the way.   

[Salute no man by the way.] I. We have a passage something like this elsewhere; "If thou meet any man, salute him not"; that is (as is commonly expounded), do not hinder thy journey by discoursing with any in the way. But the same reason doth not hold in this place; the business of these disciples not requiring such mighty expedition. They were commanded out two by two; to this or the other place or city where Christ himself was to come in person; nor was it necessary they should run in so great haste, that they should make no stay in the way. Only having appointed them to such and such places, their business indeed lay nowhere but in those very places to which they had been particularly sent, to proclaim the coming of Christ there, and not to be telling it in the way. The twelve apostles that were sent, their business was to declare the coming of the 'kingdom of heaven'; these the coming of the 'King himself.' No wonder, therefore, if the apostles were not forbidden to salute any in the way; for their province was, wherever they came, to tell the world that the kingdom of heaven was come: but these were only to give notice that the Messiah was coming: and that in those places only to which he was to come, and not to any whom they should meet cursorily in the way.  

II. It was a very usual thing in that nation, upon some accounts, not to salute any in the way, no, not any person at all. "He that is mourning for the dead, let him not salute any person for the first seven days of his mourning." If thirteen fasts had been celebrated by order of the Sanhedrim for the imploring of rain, and yet no rain had fallen, then they "diminish from their business, and from building, and from planting, and from espousals and marriage, and from saluting each other as men under the rebukes of Heaven": that is, they abstained from all these things. " The religious do not use to salute one another; but if any of the common people do at any time salute them, they return it in a very low voice with all gravity; veiling themselves, and sitting in the posture of mourners or excommunicate persons."   

Whether that of the apostle, " Salute one another with a holy kiss," might not have some reference to this usage, might be a matter for our inquiry, if there were place for it; but I forbear.  

What therefore doth our Saviour intend by this prohibition, Salute no man by the way? would he imitate this Jewish custom, that he would have them taken for mourners everywhere?  

I. He would have all that belonged to him conformable to himself, that every one from the quality of the messengers might, in some measure, judge what he was that sent them; as we have already hinted concerning the twelve apostles, He himself was "a man of sorrows"; and if his messengers do represent some such thing, either in their looks or behaviour, the people might the more easily guess what kind of person he was that commissioned them.  

II. Christ had a twofold end in designing them to the places to which he in his own person had determined to come; namely, that thither all persons should assemble themselves to his doctrine for the healing of their souls: and that those that were diseased might be gathered thither in order to a cure. Now it was very fit and convenient that the behaviour of those that were to assemble the people to these ends should be mournful and solemn, to testify the fellow-feeling they had with the afflicted and miserable.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:8 - Eat such things as are set before you And into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you, eat such things as are set before you:   [Eat such things as are set before you.]...

And into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you, eat such things as are set before you:   

[Eat such things as are set before you.] The traditional canons were so very precise and curious about not eating unless what were clean, what had been duly tithed, and from which the Trumah had been duly separated, that it might be almost a wonder the strict traditionists should not be famished if they lived and fed only by canon. "Let not the religious serve at the table of a laic, unless all things be rightly prepared and decimated."  

From the irksomeness and perplexity of this niceness doth our Saviour acquit and absolve his followers; partly that he might introduce the gospel liberty; partly also consulting the necessity of his disciples, who if they had been bound up to that strictness in meats, what could they do when their converse was to lie chiefly amongst persons perfectly unknown to them?

Lightfoot: Luk 10:18 - I beheld Satan, etc. And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven.   [I beheld Satan, etc.] "Lucifer falling from heaven," Isa 14:12; ...

And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven.   

[I beheld Satan, etc.] "Lucifer falling from heaven," Isa 14:12; is the king of Babylon divested of his throne and dominion. So is Satan in this place. The word I beheld; I would refer to this very time: "When I sent you forth I saw Satan's fall at hand, that he should be immediately despoiled of his power and tyranny." For when the Messiah had determined to exhibit himself, and, in order thereunto, to send out so numerous a multitude of persons that should publish his appearance, it was absolutely necessary, and it could not otherwise be, but that the power of Satan should sink, and his government be shaken.  

It is probable these seventy disciples were sent out upon the approach of the feast of Tabernacles, and when there now remained about half a year to the death of Christ. In which interval of time Christ shewed himself more openly, both by the preaching of these persons, and also in his own personal exhibition of himself, than before he had done. All which things determining in his death, whose death was also the death of Satan, might give him a very just occasion of saying, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven; thrown out of his throne and kingdom. Compare Rev 12:8; where 'heaven' is to be interpreted 'the church.'

Lightfoot: Luk 10:25 - Behold, a certain lawyer stood up And, behold, a certain lawyer stood up, and tempted him, saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?   [Behold, a certai...

And, behold, a certain lawyer stood up, and tempted him, saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?   

[Behold, a certain lawyer stood up.]  

Some few Notes concerning the Jewish Doctors.   

The word lawyer we meet with in Mat 22:35; where the Syriac hath it a scribe. So Luk 7:30; as also in this place, and Luk 11:45. Nor without reason, when he in St. Matthew, one of them which was a lawyer; is said to be, Mar 12:28; one of the scribes.  

However there seems some difficulty from a passage in our evangelist, where woe unto you scribes; and Then answered one of the lawyers; seems to make some distinction betwixt them. As to this, we shall make some remarks in its proper place. In the mean time let it not seem tedious to the reader, if we discourse some things concerning the doctors of the law, with the various classes and orders of them, that we may the better judge of that sort of men of which we have so frequent mention in the holy Scriptures. And,  

I. It is not unknown how the name scribe was a general title given to all the learned part of that nation, as it is opposed to the rude and illiterate person. "If two persons eat together, and are both scribes; they each of them say grace singly for themselves: but if one of them be a scribe, and the other an illiterate person; the scribe saith grace, and it sufficeth for the other that is unlearned."  

Indeed, the first original of the word scribes did more peculiarly signify the numberers. "The ancients were called numberers; because they numbered all the letters of the law..." The Gloss gives another reason out of the Jerusalem Talmud; namely, "because they numbered all the points and contents of the law, as the forty principal servile works save one," etc.  

Should we indeed grant that the first original of the word had such narrow bounds as this, yet does not this hinder but that it afterward enlarged itself so far as to denote any person learned in the law, and every doctor of it; nay, that it extended itself even to the schoolmasters that taught children; if not to the very libellarii; those whose business it was to write out bills of divorce and forms of contracts, etc. Of which two there is mention made amongst the ten sorts, whereof if none should happen to be in a city, it was not fit for any disciple of the wise to abide in it.  

II. That the fathers of the Sanhedrim were more emphatically called the scribes is so well known that it needs no confirmation. That passage in the evangelist sufficiently shews it; "The scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses' seat": that is, on the legislative bench, or in the Sanhedrim: where also the Sadducees that were of that council are called scribes; and the scribes are distinguished there from the Pharisees; not that they were not scribes; but because all the scribes there were not Pharisees.  

III. There was a certain degree of doctors or scribes that were in the Sanhedrim, but were not members of it: these are commonly called those who gave judgment in the presence of the wise men, fit for the office of legislators; but not yet admitted. Such were Simeon Ben Azzai, and Simeon Ben Zumah. Such also was Simeon the Temanite, of whom we have made mention elsewhere, (out of Sanhedrin; folio 17. 2) He judged in the presence of the Sanhderim, sitting upon the ground. He did not sit on the bench with the fathers, as not being one of their number, but on the seats below, nearer the ground: him the fathers consulted in difficult matters. A shadow of which we have in England of the judges, men learned in the laws, who have their seats in our house of lords.  

Whether he that was particularly called the wise man was of the number of the fathers, or only of this kind of judges, I shall not at present dispute, but leave the reader to judge from this story: "Rabban Simeon Ben Gamliel was the president of the Sanhedrim: R. Meir was chacam; or the wise man; and R. Nathan, the vice-governor." Now when Rabban Simeon had decreed something that disparaged R. Meir and R. Nathan, "Saith R. Meir to R. Nathan, I am the chacam [or the wise man], and thou art the vice-president. Let us remove Rabban Simeon from the presidency, then thou wilt be the president, and I the vice-president."  

There is nothing more common, and yet nothing more difficult than that saying, "The school of Hillel saith so and so, and the school of Shammai so: but the wise men say otherwise." It is very obscure who these wise men should be. If we should say the Sanhedrim, it is plain that one part of it consisted of the Shammaeans, and another part of the Hillelites. If so, then it should seem that these wise men are those judges of whom we have spoken: unless you will assign a third part to the Sadducees, to whom you will hardly attribute the determination of the thing, and much less the emphatical title of the wise men. But this we leave undecided.  

IV. Let us a little inquire out of the Sanhedrim; we shall find variety of scribes and doctors of the law, according to the variety of the law itself, and the variety of teaching it. Hence those various treatises amongst the Rabbins; the Micra, Misna, Midras, Talmud, Agadah; etc.  

1. Micra; is the text of the Bible itself: its reading and literal explication.  

2. Misna; the doctrine of traditions and their explication.  

3. Midras; the mystic and allegorical doctrine and exposition of the Scriptures: "For Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him, being read in the synagogues every sabbath day." Now these were the ways and methods of preaching him:  

I. As to the written law (for every one knows they had a twofold law, written and oral; as they call it), they had a twofold way of declaring it, viz., explaining and applying it according to the literal sense of it, for edification, exhortation, and comfort; as the apostle hath it; or else by drawing allegories, mysteries, and far-fetched notions out of it. As to the former way, the rulers of the synagogue seem to have respect to it in what they said to Paul and Barnabas: If ye have any word of exhortation for the people, say on. As to the latter, the instances are endless in the Jewish writings every where; so far, that they have even melted down the whole volume of the Scriptures into tradition and allegory.  

It is not easily determined whether those preachers were so of a different order, that one should wholly addict himself to the plain and literal exposition and application of the Scriptures, the other only to the mystical and more abstruse way of teaching. There is no question but both these did frequently meet both in one preacher, and that in one and the same sermon: and indeed I cannot tell but that the word Agadah may sometimes denote both these ways of expounding and interpreting the law. When a certain person, being interrogated about certain traditions, could give no answer, the standers by said, Perhaps he is not skilled in the [traditional] doctrine: but he may be able to expound. And so they propound to him Dan 10:21 to explain. To which that also agrees well enough, "The masters of the Agada or expositions, because they are 'Darshanin' [or profound searchers of the Scriptures], are honoured of all men, for they draw away the hearts of their auditors." Nor does that sound very differently as to the thing itself: On the sabbath day they discussed discussions [i.e. In the Scriptures, searching the Scriptures] "to the masters of families, who had been employed in their occasions all the week; and while they were expounding, they taught them the articles about things forbidden and things permitted them," etc.  

To these kind of mystic and allegorical expositions of Scripture (if at least it be proper to call them expositions) they were so strangely bewitched, that they valued nothing more than a skill in tickling or rubbing the itching ears of their auditors with such trifles. Hence that passage, "R. Joshua said to R. Jochanan Ben Bruchah, and to R. Eleazar the blind, What new thing have you met with today in 'Beth Midras'? They answered and said, 'We are all thy disciples, and drink wholly at thy waters.' To whom he; 'It is impossible but you should meet with something novel every day in Beth Midras.' "   

II. As to the oral law, there was also a twofold way of explaining it, as they had for the written law:  

1. The former way we have intimated to us in these words: "The book of the Law, when it grows old, they lay up with one of the disciples of the wise men, even although he teach the traditions." The passage seems very obscure, but it is thus explained by the Gloss: "Albeit it doth not any way help the disciples of the wise men in Talmud and Gemara, but in Misnaioth and Beriathoth;" that is, he that would only read the body of the traditional law, and render the literal sense of it, -- and not he that would dispute scholastically, and comment upon it. For,  

2. There were doctors that would inquire more deeply into the traditions, would give some accounts (such as they were), of them, would discuss difficulties, solve doubts, etc.; a specimen of which is the Talmudic Gemara throughout.  

Lastly, amongst the learned, and doctors of that nation, there were the Agadici; who would expound the written law in a more profound way than ordinary, even to what was cabalistical. These were more rare, and (as it should seem) not so acceptable amongst the people. Whether these are concerned in what follows, let the reader judge: "R. Joshua Ben Levi saith, So and so let it happen to me; if in all my life I ever saw the book Agada above once; and then I found a hundred seventy-and-five sections of the law, where it is written, 'The Lord hath said, hath spoken, hath commanded.' They are according to the number of the years of our father Abraham, as it is said, To receive gifts for men; etc. A hundred forty-and-seven Psalms, which are in the Book of Psalms [mark the number] are according to the number of the years of our father Jacob; as it is written, 'Thou art holy, and inhabitest the praises of Israel.' A hundred twenty-and-three turns, wherein Israel answereth Hallelujah [to him that repeats the Hallel], are according to the number of the years of Aaron," etc. And as a coronis; let me add that passage in Sanhedrim, "If they be masters of the textual reading; they shall be conversant in the Law, the Prophets, and the Hagiographa. If they be masters of the Misna; they shall be conversant in Misna Halacoth and Haggadoth. And if they be masters of the Talmud; they shall be conversant in the traditions of the Passover, in the Passover: in the traditions of Pentecost, in Pentecost: in the traditions of the feast of Tabernacles, in the feast of Tabernacles."  

These all, whom we have mentioned, were scribes and doctors and expounders of the law; but which of these may properly and peculiarly challenge to themselves the title of lawyers; whether all, or any particular class of them? The latter is most probable: but then, what class will you choose? Or will you distinguish betwixt the lawyer and the teacher of the law? I had rather the reader would frame his own judgment here. And yet, that I might not dismiss this question wholly untouched, and at the same time not weary the reader with too long a digression, I have referred what is to be alleged in this matter to my notes upon Luk 11:45.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:26 - How readest thou He said unto him, What is written in the law? how readest thou?   [How readest thou?] an expression very common in the schools, What re...

He said unto him, What is written in the law? how readest thou?   

[How readest thou?] an expression very common in the schools, What readest thou? when any person brought a text of Scripture for the proof of any thing. The Rabbins have a tradition, that the disease of the squinancy came into the world upon the account of tithes. (The Gloss hath it: "For eating of fruits that had not been tithed.") "R. Eliezer Ben R. Jose saith, 'It was for an evil tongue.' Rabba saith, and it is the saying also of R. Joshua Ben Levi, What readest thou? The king shall rejoice in God; every one that sweareth by himself shall glory: for the mouth of them that speak lies shall be stopped." And a little after, upon another subject: "R. Simeon Ben Gezirah saith, What or how readest thou? If thou know not, O thou fairest among women, go thy way forth by the footsteps of the flock": Canticles 1:8.  

We will not be very curious in inquiring whether our Saviour used the very same form of speech, or any other. In this only he departs from their common use of speech, in that he calls to another to allege some text of Scripture; whereas it was usual in the schools that he that spoke that would allege some place himself.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:27 - And with all thy mind And he answering said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mi...

And he answering said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbour as thyself.   

[And with all thy mind.] In this answer of the man there are these two things observable:  

I. That our Saviour brings in this clause, which in so many terms is not in Moses, where the rest are: where the Greek both of the Roman and Alexandrian edition render with all thy might. But wherein is mind? I pass by other copies, wherein though there is some varying, yet there is not this which is now before us.  

Our Saviour hath the same clause elsewhere, but not in the same order; with all thy mind, and with all thy strength; here it is, with all thy strength, and with all thy mind. What shall we say therefore? Shall we suppose it writ to this sense in the Hebrew in their phylacteries? This we can hardly think. Was it added by the Greek interpreters, and so the evangelists take it from thence? We see it is not so. What then? Doth might signify both strength and mind? Here, indeed, the hinge of the question turns. That it denotes strength; no one doubts; yea, and the Rabbins suppose it denotes Mammon too, with whom the Syriac and Targumist agree: but still, where doth it signify the mind?  

1. Take such a Gloss as is frequently in use amongst the allegorizing doctors: With what measure he shall mete to thee, do thou praise him exceedingly. Where we see they play with the sound of words, which is a very common thing with them to do...  

2. To this we may add, if we think fit, what they commonly require in all religious services; viz. the preparation and the intention of the mind...Moses' words, therefore, are rendered by the evangelists not strictly and according to the letter, as they are in him, or were in the parchments in the phylacteries; but both according to their full sense and tenour, as also according to the common and received interpretation of that nation.  

"R. Levi Bar Chajothah went to Caesarea, and heard them reciting their 'Shemaa' [or their phylacteries] Hellenistically [i.e. in Greek] " etc. Now, whether the clause we are now handling was inserted there, it would be in vain to inquire, because not possible to find...  

The second thing observable in this man's answer, is, that he adds, "And thy neighbour as thyself": which indeed was not written in the schedules of their phylacteries: otherwise I should have thought the man had understood those words of our Saviour, How readest thou? as if he had said, "How dost thou repeat the sentences of the phylacteries?" for he reciteth the sentence as it was in their phylacteries, only adding this clause, "And thy neighbour," etc. Now the usual expression for the recitation of their phylacteries was They read the 'Shemaa'; which also is so rendered by some when indeed they commonly repeat them without book. He that read the Book [of Esther] orally; i.e. as the Gemara explains it, "Without book," or "by heart." It is queried, "Why they repeat those two sections every day? R. Levi saith, Because the ten commandments [of the decalogue] are comprehended therein." And he shews further how they are comprehended, saving only (which is very observable) the second commandment. Afterward indeed they confess, "It was very fitting they should every day repeat the very decalogue itself; but they did not repeat it, lest the heretics should say, that only those commandments were given to Moses on Mount Sinai." However, they did repeat those passages wherein they supposed the decalogue was summed up.  

Whether, therefore, this lawyer of ours understood the words of our Saviour as having respect to that usage of repeating their phylacteries; or whether he of his own accord, and according to his own opinion, would be giving the whole sum of the decalogue, he shews himself rather a textual than a traditional doctor, although the word lawyer; seems to point out the latter rather.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:29 - And who is my neighbour But he, willing to justify himself, said unto Jesus, And who is my neighbour?   [And who is my neighbour?] this doubt and form of questi...

But he, willing to justify himself, said unto Jesus, And who is my neighbour?   

[And who is my neighbour?] this doubt and form of questioning he had learned out of the common school, where it is thus taught in Aruch. He excepts all Gentiles when he saith, His neighbour.   

"An Israelite killing a stranger inhabitant; he doth not die for it by the Sanhedrim; because it is said, If any one lift up himself against his neighbour. And it is not necessary to say, He does not die upon the account of a Gentile: for they are not esteemed by them for their neighbour."  

"The Gentiles, amongst whom and us there is no war, and so those that are keepers of sheep amongst the Israelites, and the like, we are not to contrive their death: but if they be in any danger of death, we are not bound to deliver them: e.g. If any of them fall into the sea, you shall not need to take him out: for it is said, Thou shalt not rise up against the blood of thy neighbour; but such a one is not thy neighbour."

Lightfoot: Luk 10:30 - A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho. // He fell among thieves. // Half dead And Jesus answering said, A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves, which stripped him of his raiment, and woun...

And Jesus answering said, A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves, which stripped him of his raiment, and wounded him; and departed, leaving him half dead.   

[A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho.] This was the most beaten and frequented road in the whole land of Israel, and that, not only as it led to Perea, but also upon the account of that great traffic that was between these two cities, especially because of the courses that were as well in Jericho as Jerusalem. Of which we have discoursed elsewhere. To which I shall superadd this passage out of Jerusalem Taanith; "The former prophets instituted four-and-twenty courses; and for every course there was a stationary class of priests, Levites, and Israelites in Jerusalem. It is a tradition: Four-and-twenty thousand was the stationary number out of Jerusalem, and half that station out of Jericho. Jericho could indeed have produced an entire station; but that it would give the preference to Jerusalem; and therefore it produced but half."  

Here, therefore, you may see in this historical parable why there is such particular mention made of a priest and Levite travelling that way, because there was very frequent intercourse of this sort of men between these towns; and that upon the account of the stations above mentioned.  

[He fell among thieves.] It is with great confidence I see, but upon what foundation I cannot see, that the commentators generally make Adummim the scene of this robbery above all other places. It is true, the road betwixt Jerusalem and Jericho was dangerous enough; and for that reason (as is commonly believed) there was placed a band of soldiers "betwixt Aelia and Jericho," for the safeguard of passengers: but whereas it is said that the place is called Adummim; i.e. a place of redness; from the blood that was spilt by robbers there, this seems to have very little force in it: because the place had that name of Adummim even in Joshua's days, when we can hardly suppose the times to have been so pestered with robberies as they were when our Saviour uttered this parable: see Jos 15:7; where if we consider the situation of 'the going up to Adummim;' it will appear it was not very distant from Jericho.  

[Half dead.] The Rabbins term it next to death; beyond which condition, on this side death, was only one just expiring.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:31 - When he saw him, he passed by on the other side And by chance there came down a certain priest that way: and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side.   [When he saw him, he pass...

And by chance there came down a certain priest that way: and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side.   

[When he saw him, he passed by on the other side.] And why, I pray, priest and Levite, do ye thus pass by a man in such a miserable condition? Was he not an Israelite? It is true, ye had learned out of your own schools not to succour a Gentile, no, nor a keeper of sheep, though he was an Israelite: now was this wounded man such a one? or did ye think ye should have contracted some pollution by touching one half dead? The word passed by on the other side; seems to hint as if they passed by him, keeping their distance from him: let them tell the reason themselves. For my part, I would impute it wholly to the mere want of charity.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:33 - But a certain Samaritan But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was: and when he saw him, he had compassion on him.   [But a certain Samaritan....

But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was: and when he saw him, he had compassion on him.   

[But a certain Samaritan.] The Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans; that is, so as to be obliged by them for any courtesy done to them. But would this Jew, half dead, reject the kindness of the Samaritan at this time? This person being of a nation than which the Jews hated nothing more, is brought in shewing this kindness to the Jew, on purpose to give the plainer instance, who is our neighbour. It might seem more proper to have said, that the Samaritan acknowledged the wounded man for his neighbour in being so kind to him: but our Saviour intimates that he was the wounded man's neighbour; thereby teaching us that even a stranger, yea, an enemy (against the doctrine of their own schools), is no other than our neighbour.

Lightfoot: Luk 10:34 - Pouring in oil and wine And went to him; and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine, and set him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn, and took care of hi...

And went to him; and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine, and set him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn, and took care of him.   

[Pouring in oil and wine.] It is a tradition. " They spread a plaster for the sick on the sabbath day; that is, upon condition they had mingled it with wine and oil on the evening of the sabbath. But if they have not mixed it on the sabbath, it is forbidden. A tradition. R. Simeon Ben Eliezer saith, That it is allowed by R. Meir, both to mingle the oil and the wine, and also to anoint the sick on the sabbath day."

Lightfoot: Luk 10:35 - He took out two pence. // And gave them to the host And on the morrow when he departed, he took out two pence, and gave them to the host, and said unto him, Take care of him; and whatsoever thou ...

And on the morrow when he departed, he took out two pence, and gave them to the host, and said unto him, Take care of him; and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I come again, I will repay thee.   

[He took out two pence.] Aruch; "A shekel of the law is selaa; and is of the value of four pence." So that the half shekel is two pence; a price that was to be paid yearly by every one as a ransom for his soul or life. Whence, not unfitly, we see two pence are paid down for the recovery of this man's life that had been wounded and half dead.  

[And gave them to the host.] The Rabbins retain this Greek word, however the author of Aruch calls it Ismaelitic; or Arabic. A tavern or inn (saith he), in the Ismaelitish language, is called 'pondak.' It is true, indeed, the Arabic version useth this word in this place; but it is well known whence it takes its original. "Two men went into an inn; one a just, the other a wicked man. They sat down apart. The wicked man saith to the host; 'Let me have one pheasant; and let me have conditum or hippocras.' The just man said to the host, 'Let me have a piece of bread and a dish of lentils.' The wicked man laughed the just man to scorn, 'See how this fool calls for lentils when he may have dainties.' On the contrary, the just man, 'See how this fool eateth, when his teeth are to be immediately dashed out.' The just man saith to the host; 'Give me two cups of wine, that I may bless them': he gave them him, and he blessed them, and rising up gave to the host a piece of money for the portion that he had eaten, and departed in peace. But there was a falling out betwixt the wicked man and his host about the reckoning, and the host dashed out his teeth."

Lightfoot: Luk 10:38 - Martha received him, etc. Now it came to pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha received him into her house.  &nb...

Now it came to pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha received him into her house.   

[Martha received him, etc.] our Saviour is now at the feast of Tabernacles: and visits Bethany, where there had grown a friendship betwixt himself and Lazarus' family, upon his having cast out so many devils out of Mary his sister. For it is no foreign thing to suppose she was that Mary that was called Magdalene; because Bethany itself was called Magdala. As to the name Martha, see notes upon John_11: and as to the name Magdala, see notes upon John_12.

PBC: Luk 10:42 - -- See WebbSr: ONE THING NEEDFUL see WebbSr: THE LITTLE THINGS  (Hit your F3 key and type in "I think just now of Mary" without the quotes and click on...

See WebbSr: ONE THING NEEDFUL

see WebbSr: THE LITTLE THINGS  (Hit your F3 key and type in "I think just now of Mary" without the quotes and click on "Find first")

Haydock: Luk 10:1 - Other seventy-two // Two and two Other seventy-two. Most Greek copies, and the Syriac version, have seventy, as in the Protestant translation. Yet there seems no doubt but the true...

Other seventy-two. Most Greek copies, and the Syriac version, have seventy, as in the Protestant translation. Yet there seems no doubt but the true number was seventy-two. For seventy-two may be called seventy; but had they been only seventy, they could never have been called seventy-two. This was also the exact number of the judges chosen to assist Moses; (Exodus xxiv. 1.) though called seventy, (Numbers xi. 16.) as it is evident, because there were six chosen out of every one of the twelve tribes. In like manner the exact number of the interpreters called the Septuagint must have been seventy-two; and also the just number of the Sanhedrim. ---

Two and two, that one might be a help and comfort to the other; as also a witness of the carriage and behaviour of his companion. (Witham)

Haydock: Luk 10:4 - Salute no man As Moses formerly chose twelve elders as princes and fathers of the twelve tribes of Israel, and afterwards gave to each of these elders six others, t...

As Moses formerly chose twelve elders as princes and fathers of the twelve tribes of Israel, and afterwards gave to each of these elders six others, to assist them in the arduous work of governing the people, so our divine Saviour chose twelve apostles to govern his Church. He likewise afterwards gave six disciples to each apostle, which makes 72, to serve as priests, and assist in governing the Church. (Tirinus) ---

Salute no man, i.e. go forwards promptly, and do not stay to amuse yourselves with vain compliments and useless civilities towards those whom you meet. This was a proverb. Eliseus said the same to Giezi, when he sent him to restore life to the child of the widow of Sunamis. If any man meet you, salute him not; think of nothing but of executing the orders I give you. (Calmet)

Haydock: Luk 10:15 - And thou, Capharnaum And thou, Capharnaum, &c. Capharnaum is situated on the western coast of the sea of Tiberias. Christ having left Nazareth, made the former city the...

And thou, Capharnaum, &c. Capharnaum is situated on the western coast of the sea of Tiberias. Christ having left Nazareth, made the former city the usual place of his abode. There was no city in which he had preached so much, or wrought so many miracles. On this account, he said it was exalted to the heavens; but for its incredulity he threatens it shall be cast down even unto hell. (Calmet)

Haydock: Luk 10:18 - I saw Satan as lightning I saw Satan as lightning, &c. Many expound it in this manner: I, who am from eternity, saw Satan with all the rebellious angels, as glorious as they...

I saw Satan as lightning, &c. Many expound it in this manner: I, who am from eternity, saw Satan with all the rebellious angels, as glorious as they were, fall from heaven; fear then, and tremble, though you have received such favours from God. Others take it in this sense, that Christ, by his incarnation, hath seen the power of the devils lessened and confounded, according to what he also said, (John xii. 31.) Now shall the prince of this world be cast out. (Witham) ---

What connexion have these words with what goes before? Some understand them thus: the reign of the devil is near at an end; this prince of darkness is going to be overturned; he will fall from the air, where he reigns, with the same precipitation as lightning, which cuts the clouds and presently disappears. It is almost the same things he says in other places. "The prince of this world is already judged; behold now is the judgment of this world; behold now the prince of this world shall be cast forth! When I sent you to preach the gospel to the poor, I saw Satan fall; I saw his empire overturned. The last effort which this empire of darkness shall make is the death of our Saviour, as he himself says: This is your hour, and the power of darkness. Since his resurrection he has bound the dragon in the abyss for a thousand years; he has shut up the entrance, and sealed it with his seal." (Apocalypse xii. 9. and xx. 2.) Others think that Jesus speaks here of the fall of Lucifer, at the beginning of the creation. Wishing to give his disciples a lesson in humility, on account of the vain complacency which he saw they took in the miracles they wrought, he says to them: Beware of pride, that precipitated the first angel from heaven: I have seen him in the glory with which he was surrounded, and I have seen him hurried into the abyss. Fear, lest the same should happen to you. The former explanation appears to us more simple and literal. (Calmet)

Haydock: Luk 10:19 - Given you power Given you power, &c. By these words our Saviour seems to insinuate, that the venom of serpents, and the other noxious qualities of some animals, pro...

Given you power, &c. By these words our Saviour seems to insinuate, that the venom of serpents, and the other noxious qualities of some animals, proceed from the malice of the devil. These are the arms and the instruments he makes us of to kill us, being the prince of death and a murderer from the beginning, as the Scripture styles him. The Jews attributed sickness, poisons, and every thing of the same kind to evil spirits.

Haydock: Luk 10:21 - He rejoiced in the Holy Ghost // I give thanks He rejoiced in the Holy Ghost. In almost all Greek copies, we read in spirit, without holy. And it is expounded of Christ's own spirit. (Witham...

He rejoiced in the Holy Ghost. In almost all Greek copies, we read in spirit, without holy. And it is expounded of Christ's own spirit. (Witham) ---

I give thanks, &c. In this verse we see plainly refuted the heretical Marcion, and his follower Manicheus, who asserted that God was not the creator of the earth, or of any thing existing on the earth. St. Epiphanius says, that in a gospel written by Marcion, the words Father and earth were entirely omitted. Who does not here deplore the blindness of heretics, who, in order to spread their errors, do not hesitate thus to corrupt the original Scripture received by the whole Christian world!!! (Denis the Carthusian)

Haydock: Luk 10:25 - Eternal life? Eternal life? The law of Moses does not expressly promise eternal life to the observers of it, but confines its promises to temporal blessings durin...

Eternal life? The law of Moses does not expressly promise eternal life to the observers of it, but confines its promises to temporal blessings during this life. Still we always find that the Jews hoped in another life after this. This opinion is clearly observable in the books of Scripture, written both before and after the captivity, and in Josephus and Philo. (Calmet)

Haydock: Luk 10:29 - Neighbour? Neighbour? It appears this was a celebrated controversy among the doctors of the law; some probably affirming, that the Jews only were so; while oth...

Neighbour? It appears this was a celebrated controversy among the doctors of the law; some probably affirming, that the Jews only were so; while others maintained that their friends alone were their neighbours. (Maldonatus)

Haydock: Luk 10:30 - A certain man A certain man, &c. This some would have to be a history: others rather judge it spoken by way of parable, to teach us to perform offices of charity ...

A certain man, &c. This some would have to be a history: others rather judge it spoken by way of parable, to teach us to perform offices of charity towards all men without exception. (Witham) ---

Were we to adhere to the mere words of this parable, it would seem to follow, that only those who do us good were to be esteemed our neighbours; for the context seems to intimate, that the Levite and the priest were not neighbours to the man who fell among the robbers, because they did not assist him. But according to the opinion of most fathers, the intent of this parable is the shew, that every person who has need of our assistance is our neighbour. (Maldonatus)

Haydock: Luk 10:31 - -- Our Saviour here shews the Jewish priests how preposterous was their behaviour, who, though scrupulously exact in performing all external acts of reli...

Our Saviour here shews the Jewish priests how preposterous was their behaviour, who, though scrupulously exact in performing all external acts of religion, entirely neglected piety, mercy, and other more essential duties. The Jews despised the Samaritans as wicked and irreligious men; but our Saviour here tells them that they were less exact in works of charity towards their neighbours than the very Samaritans. (Tirinus)

Haydock: Luk 10:34 - -- This is the allegorical meaning of the parable: The man that fell among robbers, represents Adam and his posterity; Jerusalem, the state of peac...

This is the allegorical meaning of the parable: The man that fell among robbers, represents Adam and his posterity; Jerusalem, the state of peace and innocence, which man leaves by going down to Jericho, which means to moon, the state of trouble and sin: the robbers represent the devil, who stripped him of his supernatural gifts, and wounded him in his natural faculties: the priest and Levite represent the old law: the Samaritan, Christ; and the beast, his humanity. The inn means the Church; wine, the blood of Christ; oil, his mercy; whilst the host signifies St. Peter and his successors, the bishops and priests of the Church. (Origen, St. Jerome, St. Ambrose, St. Augustine, and others)

Haydock: Luk 10:40 - -- Calvin here ridicules the professors of evangelical poverty, because they gather from this place that there are two states of life, viz. the active an...

Calvin here ridicules the professors of evangelical poverty, because they gather from this place that there are two states of life, viz. the active and the contemplative, figured by Martha and Mary. But what will he answer, when he is informed, that this is the opinion not merely of monks, but even of a St. Augustine, (Serm. xxvii. De verbis Domini,) of a St. Jerome, (Com. 3 cap. of Jeremiah,) of a St. Gregory, and many others? Not that they were ignorant that there was another more natural explanation; but they were of opinion that nothing could be found more proper for the illustration of these different states of life. (Maldonatus)

Haydock: Luk 10:42 - One thing is necessary One thing is necessary. Some think that Christ's meaning was, that Martha was preparing many dishes, when one was sufficient. But others, that this...

One thing is necessary. Some think that Christ's meaning was, that Martha was preparing many dishes, when one was sufficient. But others, that this one thing necessary, was to learn, and comply with the will of God; which Mary was employed about. (Witham)

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Gill: Luk 10:1 - After these things // the Lord appointed other seventy also // and sent them two and two before his face // into every city and place, whither he himself would come After these things,.... After the calling and mission of the twelve apostles, and giving them their powers, commissions, and instructions, with other ...

After these things,.... After the calling and mission of the twelve apostles, and giving them their powers, commissions, and instructions, with other things that followed thereon; Luk 9:1

the Lord appointed other seventy also; not that he had appointed before seventy, and now made an appointment of seventy more; but as the Syriac version renders it, "Jesus separated out of his disciples, seventy others" that is, besides the twelve, whom he chose and called out, from among the multitude of the disciples, and ordained them apostles, he selected and ordained seventy others, in allusion to the seventy elders of Israel, Num 11:16. The Vulgate Latin and Persic versions read, "seventy two", and so does Epiphanius x. The Jewish sanhedrim is sometimes said to consist of seventy one y, and sometimes of seventy two z; though commonly said to be of the round number seventy, as these disciples might be. The above mentioned ancient writer gives the names of some of them, as the seven deacons; Stephen, Philip, Prochorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, and Nicolas; together with Matthias, Mark, Luke, Justus, Barnabas, Apelies, Rufus, and Niger. The names of all these disciples, according to ancient traditions, though not to be depended on, are given in an alphabetical order, with the places where they afterwards presided as bishops, or pastors, by a late learned writer a, and are as follow, viz. Agabus, the prophet; Amphias, of Odyssus, sometimes called Amphiatus; Ananias, who baptized Paul, bishop of Damascus; Andronicus, of Pannonia, or Spain; Apelies, of Smyrna, or, according to others, of Heraclea; Apollo, of Caesarea; Aristarchus, of Apamea; Aristobulus, of Britain; Artemas, of Lustra; Asyncritus, of Hyrcania; Barnabas, of Milgin; Barnabas, of Heraclea; Caesar, of Dyrrachium; Caius, of Ephesus; Carpus, of Berytus, in Thracia; Cephas, bishop of Konia; Clemens, of Sardinia; Cleophas, of Jerusalem; Crescens, of Chalcedon, in Galatia; Demas, a priest of idols; Epaenetus, of Carthage; Epaphroditus, of Andriace; Erastus, of Paneas, or, according to others, of the Philippians; Evodus, of Antioch; Hermas, of Philippi, or Philippolls; Hermes, of Dalmatia; Hermogenus and Phygellus, who followed Simon Magus; Hermogenus, bishop of the Megarenes; Herodion, of Tarsus; James, the brother of our Lord, of Jerusalem; Jason, of Tarsus; Jesus Justus, bishop of Eleutheropolis: Linus, of Rome; Luke, the evangelist: Lucius, of Laodicea, in Syria; Mark, who is also John, of Biblopohs, or Byblus; Mark the evangelist, bishop of Alexandna; Mark, the sister's son of Barnabas, bishop of Apolloma; Matthias, added to the apostles; Narcissus, of Athens; Nicanor, he died when Stephen suffered martyrdom; Nicolaus, of Samaria; Olympius, a martyr at Rome; Onesiphorus, bishop of Corone; Parmenas, of the Soli, Patrobulus, the same with Patrobas, in Rom 16:14 of Puteoli, or as others, of Naples; Philemon, of Gaza; Philemon (in the Acts he is called Philip), by whom the eunuch of the queen of Ethiopia was baptized, of Trallium, of Asia; Philologus, of Sinope; Phlegon, bishop of Marathon; Phygellus, of Ephesus; Prochorus, of Nicomedia, in Bithynia; Pudens; Quartus, of Berytus; Rhodion, a martyr at Rome; Rufus, of Thebes; Silas, of Corinth; Sylvanus, of Thessalonica; Sosipater, of Iconium; Sosthenes, of Colophon; Stachys, of Byzantium; Stephen, the first martyr; Tertius, of Iconium; Thaddaeus, who carried the epistle of Jesus to Edessa, to Abgarus; Timon, of Bostra, of the Arabians; Trophimus, who suffered martyrdora with the Apostle Paul; Tychicus, bishop of Chalcedon, of Bithynia; Tychicus, of Colophon; Urbanus, of Macedonm; and, Zenas, of Diospolis. According both to this account, and Epiphanius, Luke was one of these seventy, and he is the only evangelist that makes mention of the appointment of them:

and sent them two and two before his face: as he did the twelve before, to be his harbingers and forerunners:

into every city and place, whither he himself would come: which he intended to visit: he sent them beforehand to acquaint the inhabitants of it; and prepare them by their ministry, for the reception of him; as John the Baptist, who was in a more eminent sense the harbinger and forerunner of Christ, went before him in his ministry, and prepared the way for him.

Gill: Luk 10:2 - Therefore said he unto them // the harvest truly is great, but the labourers are few, pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that he would send forth labourers into his harvest Therefore said he unto them,.... That is, the "Lord Jesus", as the Ethiopic version expresses it; he said to the seventy disciples, what he had before...

Therefore said he unto them,.... That is, the "Lord Jesus", as the Ethiopic version expresses it; he said to the seventy disciples, what he had before said to the twelve apostles in Mat 9:37 where are the same words as here:

the harvest truly is great, but the labourers are few, pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that he would send forth labourers into his harvest; for though there was such a number of disciples called to the ministerial work, and sent out, there was still need of more; so great was the harvest of souls, or number of hearers, that the labourers were yet but few; and therefore the Lord of the harvest and whose all souls are, was to be prayed unto to send forth more laborious preachers; See Gill on Mat 9:37. See Gill on Mat 9:38.

Gill: Luk 10:3 - Go your ways // Behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves Go your ways,.... Into all the villages, towns, cities, and places, where he directed them to go, to make ready for him. Behold, I send you forth a...

Go your ways,.... Into all the villages, towns, cities, and places, where he directed them to go, to make ready for him.

Behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves; as harmless, innocent, profitable, and defenceless creatures, among spiteful, malicious, cunning, and cruel men; See Gill on Mat 10:16.

Gill: Luk 10:4 - Carry neither purse // nor scrip // Nor shoes Carry neither purse,.... The Syriac version reads, "purses, "to put money, gold, silver, and brass in; and the prohibition regards the money in the pu...

Carry neither purse,.... The Syriac version reads, "purses, "to put money, gold, silver, and brass in; and the prohibition regards the money in the purse chiefly:

nor scrip; the Syriac version here also reads in the plural number, "scrips", to put victuals in, provisions or any sort for their journey, which they were not to carry with them, any more than money, to buy food with

Nor shoes; any more than those they had upon their feet; See Gill on Mat 10:9, Mat 10:10 and salute no man by the way; that they might not be retarded, and hindered in their journey by tedious ceremonies, and long inquiries into the health of persons and friends, and the business they were going about, and places where; and by discourses and confabulations, drawn out to great length, as was often the case at meeting on the road: and, for the same reason, a like charge is given to Gehazi, 2Ki 4:29, and which, as the Jewish commentators on the place observe a, was, that he might not multiply words with persons he met with, and might not be stopped by the way; and that his intention might be in his work, and his mind might not turn to any other thing, either by word or deed. So our Lord's intention, by this order was, not to teach them incivility, or to be morose and uncourteous; but that they might dispatch their business with the utmost expedition, and rather forego some common civilities and ceremonies, than to neglect, or, in the least, to hinder a work of so much importance they were sent about: and this was the more necessary, since, according to the Jewish maxim b,

"prevent every man with a salutation;''

they saluted all that they met, which took up time, and hindered business. Some sorts of persons indeed were excused, as those who were mourners c for the dead, and such as kept fasts for rain d: but such were not these disciples; they neither mourned, nor fasted, nor could they, so long as the bridegroom was with them.

Gill: Luk 10:5 - And into whatsoever house ye enter // first say, peace be to this house And into whatsoever house ye enter,.... When ye come into any city, town, or village, first say, peace be to this house: salute the inhabitants in ...

And into whatsoever house ye enter,.... When ye come into any city, town, or village,

first say, peace be to this house: salute the inhabitants in the usual form, saying, peace be to you; wishing them all happiness and prosperity, temporal, spiritual, and eternal. This shows our Lord did not disapprove of civil salutations.

Gill: Luk 10:6 - And if the son of peace be there // your peace shall rest upon it // if not, it shall turn to you again And if the son of peace be there,.... If there be any elect person or persons in the house, whom God has chosen to partake of peace by the blood of Ch...

And if the son of peace be there,.... If there be any elect person or persons in the house, whom God has chosen to partake of peace by the blood of Christ, and the benefits arising from it; and of a conscience peace in their souls, upon the best foundation; and of eternal peace in the world to come, though yet in a state of nature; and which may be known by this sign;

your peace shall rest upon it: the salutation, or wish of peace, shall be well taken, and gratefully received; and upon this you will be kindly invited into the house, and used well by, those of the family;

if not, it shall turn to you again: if there are no sons of peace, no elect persons there, your salutation, or wish of peace and prosperity to the family, will be despised and rejected, and will return to you without any good effect upon them.

Gill: Luk 10:7 - And in the same house remain // eating and drinking such things as they give // for the labourer is worthy of his hire // go not from house to house And in the same house remain,.... Where the sons of peace are, and the peace rests, and into which you are invited, and kindly received and used: e...

And in the same house remain,.... Where the sons of peace are, and the peace rests, and into which you are invited, and kindly received and used:

eating and drinking such things as they give; or rather, "such things as are with them", as the Vulgate Latin renders it; or "of that which is theirs", as the Syriac version; all one, and with as much freedom, as if they were your own; the reason follows,

for the labourer is worthy of his hire; what you eat and drink is your due; what you ought to have; your diet is a debt, and not a gratuity; See Gill on Mat 10:10.

go not from house to house; as if fickle and inconstant, as if not satisfied with your lodging and entertainment, and as seeking out for other and better, or as if burdensome where they were; See Gill on Mat 10:11. The Jews have a proverb, expressing the inconvenience and expensiveness, and the danger of moving from place to place:

"he that goes, מבית לבית, "from house to house", (loses his) shirt, (i.e. comes to distress and poverty,) from place to place (his) life e;''

or he is in great danger of losing his life.

Gill: Luk 10:8 - And into whatsoever city ye enter // and they receive you // eat such things as are set before you And into whatsoever city ye enter,.... Into whatsoever house in it ye go, and apply to for lodging and entertainment, and they receive you, readily...

And into whatsoever city ye enter,.... Into whatsoever house in it ye go, and apply to for lodging and entertainment,

and they receive you, readily and cheerfully,

eat such things as are set before you; though ever so mean, accept of them, and do not object to them on that account, lest it should be thought you serve your own bellies, and seek to gratify your appetites; nor, on the other hand, do not think anything too good for you, or that you are burdensome and chargeable, but eat as if it were your own; nor ask questions about the cleanness and uncleanness of it, or whether it has been tithed or not; but feed upon it without any scruple.

Gill: Luk 10:9 - And heal the sick that are therein // and say unto them // the kingdom of God is come nigh unto you And heal the sick that are therein,.... Of all their bodily diseases, which would not only show their power and warrant, theft mission and commission,...

And heal the sick that are therein,.... Of all their bodily diseases, which would not only show their power and warrant, theft mission and commission, but also their goodness and beneficence to men; and would be a sufficient return for what they ate and drank:

and say unto them; not only to the sick that are healed, and those in the house in which they were, but to all the inhabitants of the city;

the kingdom of God is come nigh unto you: the Gospel dispensation, the kingdom of the Messiah, and even the Messiah himself, as might be concluded from the miracles they wrought; and thus by their ministry and works, were they to go before Christ, and prepare his way.

Gill: Luk 10:10 - But into whatsoever city ye enter // and they receive you not // go your ways out into the streets of the same But into whatsoever city ye enter,.... On the other hand Christ here directs how to behave towards other cities they should come to, and be rejected: ...

But into whatsoever city ye enter,.... On the other hand Christ here directs how to behave towards other cities they should come to, and be rejected:

and they receive you not; refuse to admit them into their houses, or provide in any shape for them, nor hear their message:

go your ways out into the streets of the same. The Ethiopic version reads, "cast the dust off your feet into the streets of it: and say"; aloud, in the most public manner, in the ears of all the people, as follows.

Gill: Luk 10:11 - Even the very dust of your city, which cleaveth on us // we do wipe against you // notwithstanding be ye sure of this // that the kingdom of God is come nigh unto you Even the very dust of your city, which cleaveth on us,.... The Syriac version adds, "to our feet"; and so in Beza's most ancient copy, and the Arabic ...

Even the very dust of your city, which cleaveth on us,.... The Syriac version adds, "to our feet"; and so in Beza's most ancient copy, and the Arabic and Persic versions read, "which cleaves to our feet"; which agrees with Mat 10:14.

we do wipe against you: for a testimony against them, that they had been with them, and were rejected by them; See Gill on Mat 10:14, Mar 6:11.

notwithstanding be ye sure of this; they might assure themselves of this, and which will be an aggravation of their guilt, and increase their punishment another day:

that the kingdom of God is come nigh unto you; was at their very doors, since the ministers of it, of the Gospel dispensation, the harbingers of the Messiah, who were sent to publish his Gospel, to proclaim him as king, and de clare that his kingdom was at hand, had been with them, and they had despised them.

Gill: Luk 10:12 - But I say unto you // that it shall be more tolerable in that day for Sodom than for that city But I say unto you,.... The same that he said to the twelve apostles, when he sent them out, Mat 10:15, that it shall be more tolerable in that day...

But I say unto you,.... The same that he said to the twelve apostles, when he sent them out, Mat 10:15,

that it shall be more tolerable in that day for Sodom than for that city. By "that day" is meant, the famous day to come, the last day; the day of judgment, as it is expressed in Matthew; and so the Ethiopic version reads here, "it shall be better in the day of judgment". Sodom was a very wicked city, and was destroyed by fire from heaven for its iniquity, and its inhabitants suffer the vengeance of eternal fire: and there was also Gomorrha, a neighbouring city, guilty of the same crimes, and shared the same fate; and which is mentioned along with Sodom in Matthew; and is here read in the Persic version. And the sense of the whole is, that though the iniquities of Sodom and Gomorrha were very great, and their punishment very exemplary; yet, as there will be degrees of torment in hell, the case of such a city, which has been favoured with the Gospel, and has despised and rejected it, will be much worse than the case of those cities, which were devoured by fire from heaven; and than that of the inhabitants of them in the future judgment, and to all eternity; See Gill on Mat 10:15.

Gill: Luk 10:13 - Woe unto thee Chorazin // Woe unto thee Bethsaida // for if the mighty works had been done in Tyre and Sidon, which have been done in you // they had a great while ago repented // sitting in sackcloth and ashes Woe unto thee Chorazin,.... See Gill on Mat 11:21. Woe unto thee Bethsaida; a city of Galilee, a fishing town, from whence it has its name, and was...

Woe unto thee Chorazin,.... See Gill on Mat 11:21.

Woe unto thee Bethsaida; a city of Galilee, a fishing town, from whence it has its name, and was the native place of those two fishermen, Peter and Andrew: very likely Chorazin was near it, since they are here, and in Matthew, mentioned together; and woe is pronounced upon them both for their impenitence and unbelief, which were attended with aggravating circumstances:

for if the mighty works had been done in Tyre and Sidon, which have been done in you; meaning both the ministry of the word by Christ, which was with power and authority, and the miracles of Christ, which were the works of almighty power, and showed him to be the mighty God: these were not done in Tyre and Sidon, cities in Phoenicia; for though our Lord was on the borders of those places, yet not in them, they being Gentile cities, to which he was not sent, and in which he did not preach, nor do miracles; but he did both in Bethsaida and Chorazin, and they repented not of their sins; nor did they embrace his doctrine, though confirmed by miracles; whereas, in all likelihood, humanly speaking, had the inhabitants of Tyre and Sidon had the like advantages,

they had a great while ago repented: they would have repented immediately, it would have been soon visible in them, of which they would have given proof, by

sitting in sackcloth and ashes; which was an outward token of repentance, used by penitent sinners, as by the Ninevites, and others. The same things are said at another time, and on another occasion, as here; See Gill on Mat 11:21, Mat 11:22, Mat 11:23, Mat 11:24

Gill: Luk 10:14 - But it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the judgment // than for you But it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the judgment,.... Or "in the day of judgment", as read the Syriac, Persic, Ethiopic, and Gothic v...

But it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the judgment,.... Or "in the day of judgment", as read the Syriac, Persic, Ethiopic, and Gothic versions; and as it is in Mat 11:22

than for you; the inhabitants of Chorazin and Bethsaida, who will be more severely punished than these Gentile cities; for by how much greater were their light, privileges, and advantages against which they sinned, by so much will be their severer punishment.

Gill: Luk 10:15 - And thou Capernaum, which art exalted to heaven // Shalt be thrust down into hell And thou Capernaum, which art exalted to heaven,.... Referring either to the situation of it, which was on a very high hill; or to its privileges, thr...

And thou Capernaum, which art exalted to heaven,.... Referring either to the situation of it, which was on a very high hill; or to its privileges, through the ministry and miracles of Christ; or the phrase may be expressive of the pride and loftiness of the inhabitants of it, who were elated with the mercies they enjoyed, it being a most delightful, pleasant, and comfortable place to live in, as its name signifies. It was a famous port, commodiously situated by the sea of Tiberias; and, as Josephus f says, was in an excellent temperament of the air, and watered with a most choice fountain, called by the same name.

Shalt be thrust down into hell; meaning either the low condition to which it was to be, and has been reduced in a temporal sense, and continues in to this day; there being nothing of it now remaining, as travellers, who have been eyewitnesses of it, say g, but a few little houses and cottages; or else the sad and miserable condition of the inhabitants of it hereafter: and so it is, that such who have lived in great plenty and pleasure in this life, and have thought themselves to be the favourites of heaven, and that they should enter there, shall be thrust down to hell by the arm of vengeance, with the utmost indignation in God, and shame to themselves: it follows in Matthew, "for if the mighty works which have been done in thee, had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day; but I say unto you, it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom, in the day of judgment, than for thee".

Gill: Luk 10:16 - He that heareth you, heareth me // and he that despiseth you, despiseth me // And he that despiseth me, despiseth him that sent me He that heareth you, heareth me,.... This is said for the encouragement of the seventy disciples, that though they would be rejected by some, they wou...

He that heareth you, heareth me,.... This is said for the encouragement of the seventy disciples, that though they would be rejected by some, they would be received by others, who would hear them, and embrace their doctrine, as if the Messiah himself had been among them; they looking upon them as representing him: and so Christ himself considers them as ambassadors in his name, and as representing his person, taking what is done to them, as done to himself; See Gill on Mat 10:40.

and he that despiseth you, despiseth me: every degree of contempt cast upon them by words or actions, Christ looked upon as cast on himself, and will resent it another day, and punish for it. The despising of wise men, or doctors, and their disciples or scholars, was accounted with the Jews a very heinous crime, and was severely punished both by excommunication and fines: for thus it is said h,

"a great iniquity it is to despise the wise men, or to hate them. Jerusalem was not destroyed until the disciples of the wise men were despised in it, as it is said, 2Ch 36:16 "but they mocked the messengers of God, and despised his words, and misused his prophets": as if he should say, they despised those that taught his words: and thus saith the law, "if ye despise my statutes"; they that teach my statutes ye will despise; and every one that despiseth the wise men, hath no part in the world to come; and lo! this is included in that general rule, "for he hath despised the word of the Lord". Although he that despiseth the wise men hath no part in the world to come, if witnesses come (and depose) that he hath despised them even in words, he is guilty of excommunication: and the sanhedrim excommunicate him publicly, and fine him a pound of gold in every place, and give it to the wise men: and he that despiseth a wise man by words, even after his (the wise man's) death, the sanhedrim excommunicate him; and they free him when he returns by repentance: but if the wise man is alive, they do not free him till he pleases.''

And he that despiseth me, despiseth him that sent me: this is said to aggravate the sin of the despisers of Christ's ministers, and to deter from it; since the contempt does not terminate in them, nor even in Christ, but reaches his Father also. The Ethiopic version adds, "and he that heareth me, heareth him that sent me": but is not supported by any copy, or any other version.

Gill: Luk 10:17 - And the seventy returned again // with joy // saying, Lord, even the devils are subject unto us through thy name And the seventy returned again,.... The Syriac version adds, "whom he had sent": these disciples having received orders and instructions from Christ, ...

And the seventy returned again,.... The Syriac version adds, "whom he had sent": these disciples having received orders and instructions from Christ, went as he directed them; and when they had finished their embassy, they returned again to him, and gave him an account of their journey and success. The Vulgate Latin and Persic versions read here, "the seventy two", as they do in Luk 10:1

with joy; with great joy, as read the Syriac and Persic versions; notwithstanding the difficulties that had attended them, reproaches cast upon them, the ill treatment they might have met with in some places, and the labours and fatigues of their journey, and the dangers they had been exposed to:

saying, Lord, even the devils are subject unto us through thy name: they found the miraculous power conferred on them was greater than they at first imagined, or could collect from what Christ said to them, who only bid them heal the sick, Luk 10:9, but when they came to make use of it they found they had a power of casting out devils; not in their own name and strength, but in the name, and through the power, and by the authority of Christ; and this had thrown them into an ecstasy of joy, and in a sort of a rapture: they express themselves as men astonished at the powers bestowed on them.

Gill: Luk 10:18 - And he said unto them // I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven And he said unto them,.... In order to abate their surprise, and reduce their transport of mind: I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven; mean...

And he said unto them,.... In order to abate their surprise, and reduce their transport of mind:

I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven; meaning, that this was no news to him, nor any surprising event, that devils should be cast out of men, and be in a state of subjection; for as he existed as the eternal Son of God before his incarnation, he was present, and saw him and his angels fall from heaven, from their first estate, their habitation of bliss and glory, down to hell, upon their sin and rebellion, as violently, swiftly, and suddenly, as the lightning falls from heaven to earth; and when he sent out these his disciples, as soon as they began their work, and all along in it, he, by his divine omniscience, saw the powers of darkness falling before their ministry and miracles; and he also foresaw how Satan hereafter, in a more conspicuous manner, would fall before the preaching of his Gospel by his apostles, not only in Judea, but especially among the Gentiles, where he, the prince of this world, would be cast down from his throne, and out of his kingdom; so that what they related, as it was what he knew before, it was but little in comparison of what he himself had seen long ago, and of what he foresaw would be; and even he would give them power to do other miraculous works besides these.

Gill: Luk 10:19 - Behold, I give you power to tread on serpents and scorpions // and over all the power of the enemy // and nothing shall by any means, hurt you Behold, I give you power to tread on serpents and scorpions,.... Which may be literally understood, as in Mar 16:18, or figuratively of the devil, and...

Behold, I give you power to tread on serpents and scorpions,.... Which may be literally understood, as in Mar 16:18, or figuratively of the devil, and his principalities and powers, and all his emissaries, who, for their craft and cunning, and for their poisonous and hurtful nature and influence, may be compared to serpents and scorpions:

and over all the power of the enemy; of mankind in general, and of the seed of the woman, Christ and his people in particular, Christ has a power over all his power, his whole posse of devils, even the power of the air, of which he is prince; and he communicated this power to his disciples, even to the seventy: adding,

and nothing shall by any means, hurt you; not the most hurtful and poisonous animals, nor the most malicious persecutors on earth, nor all the devils in hell: as the former venomous creatures, when took up in their hands, should not hurt, their bodies; so the other, whatever they might be permitted to do with respect to their lives, and outward estate, should never hurt their souls, and the eternal welfare of them; nor even hinder the work of God prospering in their hands.

Gill: Luk 10:20 - Notwithstanding in this rejoice not // that the spirits // but rather rejoice, because your names are written in heaven Notwithstanding in this rejoice not,.... That their power was enlarged, or that they had, the same as before: that the spirits, evil spirits, devil...

Notwithstanding in this rejoice not,.... That their power was enlarged, or that they had, the same as before:

that the spirits, evil spirits, devils, are subject unto you; and come out of men at your command; rejoice not so much in this, or chiefly and principally; not but that it was matter of joy both with respect to the gift bestowed upon them, and the benefits men received by it, and the glory that was brought to Christ through it;

but rather rejoice, because your names are written in heaven; in the book of life, called the Lamb's book of life, written from the foundation of the world: in divine predestination to everlasting glory and happiness: which shows that God's election to eternal life is of particular persons, of persons by name; that it is sure, and certain, and immutable, being in opposition to what is written in earth, Jer 17:13, that the knowledge of this may be attained to, through the grace of God, the revelation of Christ, and the witnessings of his Spirit; and that this is matter of the greatest job, since it is the foundation and security of all the blessings of grace and glory.

Gill: Luk 10:21 - In that hour Jesus rejoiced in Spirit // and said, I thank thee, O Father In that hour Jesus rejoiced in Spirit,.... In his human soul: his heart was filled with joy, not so much at the success of the seventy disciples, and ...

In that hour Jesus rejoiced in Spirit,.... In his human soul: his heart was filled with joy, not so much at the success of the seventy disciples, and the subjection of the devils to them, as in the view he had of the spread of the Gospel, and of the revelation and application of the truths of it to multitudes of mean and despicable persons, while it was rejected by the wise and learned; and particularly at the sovereign and distinguishing grace of God towards the elect, whose names are written in heaven; upon the mention of which his soul was so affected, that he broke out in, an exulting strain, into thanksgivings to God, in the following manner,

and said, I thank thee, O Father,.... In three ancient copies of Beza's, and in the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions it is read, "in the Holy Spirit"; and the Persic version reads, "he spake, or confabulated with the Holy Spirit": but the former reading and sense are best. See Gill on Mat 11:25, Mat 11:26

Gill: Luk 10:22 - All things are delivered to me of my Father // and no man knoweth who the Son is // but the Father // and who the Father is // but the Son // and he to whom the Son will reveal him All things are delivered to me of my Father,.... In some ancient copies, and in the Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions, before these words, are rea...

All things are delivered to me of my Father,.... In some ancient copies, and in the Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions, before these words, are read, "and turning to his disciples he said, all things", &c.

and no man knoweth who the Son is; what is his name, his nature, his perfections and glory; and how he is the Son of God, his only begotten Son:

but the Father; who begat him, and whose own, and proper Son he is:

and who the Father is; what are his perfections, purposes, grace, greatness, mind, and will:

but the Son; who is of him, and lay in his bosom:

and he to whom the Son will reveal him: in himself, by his Spirit; See Gill on Mat 11:27.

Gill: Luk 10:23 - And he turned him unto his disciples // and said privately // blessed are the eyes that see the things that ye see And he turned him unto his disciples,.... Both to the twelve apostles, and seventy disciples; and said privately; or to them apart: the phrase "pri...

And he turned him unto his disciples,.... Both to the twelve apostles, and seventy disciples;

and said privately; or to them apart: the phrase "privately" is wanting in the Vulgate Latin version:

blessed are the eyes that see the things that ye see; the person of the Messiah, his kingdom setting up in the world, miracles wrought by him, and Satan falling before him; See Gill on Mat 13:16.

Gill: Luk 10:24 - For I tell you that many prophets and kings // have desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them, and to hear those things which ye hear, and have not heard them For I tell you that many prophets and kings,.... As Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, who were prophets, as well as patriarchs, and David, Solomon, and others: ...

For I tell you that many prophets and kings,.... As Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, who were prophets, as well as patriarchs, and David, Solomon, and others:

have desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them, and to hear those things which ye hear, and have not heard them, meaning himself, doctrines, and miracles; See Gill on Mat 13:17.

Gill: Luk 10:25 - And behold a certain lawyer stood up // and tempted him; // saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life // he said unto him And behold a certain lawyer stood up,.... From his seat, having been hearing Christ preach, very likely, in some synagogue; when and where this was, i...

And behold a certain lawyer stood up,.... From his seat, having been hearing Christ preach, very likely, in some synagogue; when and where this was, is not certain. The Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions call this man a Scribe; and a lawyer and a Scribe were the same, as appears from Mat 22:35 compared with Mar 12:28

and tempted him; or tried him whether he understood the law, or whether he would say any thing contrary to it, and see if he could gain any advantage against him, and expose him, and get credit and applause to himself:

saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? the same question as was put by the young ruler in Mar 10:17 for they were both of the same complexion, and upon the same foundation, seeking eternal life by their own works: See Gill on Mat 19:16.

he said unto him; that is, Jesus, as all the Oriental versions express it.

Gill: Luk 10:26 - What is written in the law? // how readest thou What is written in the law?.... Christ, with great propriety, sends him to the law, to see and observe what was written there, what are the terms and ...

What is written in the law?.... Christ, with great propriety, sends him to the law, to see and observe what was written there, what are the terms and conditions of life, as fixed there; partly, because this man, by his office and character, was an interpreter of the law; and partly, because his question was, what shall I do?

how readest thou? in the law, every day; referring to the "Keriat Shema", the reading of the Shema, i.e. those words in Deu 6:4, &c, "Hear, O Israel, &c." morning and evening i as appears by his answer

Gill: Luk 10:27 - And he answering said, thou shalt love the Lord thy God And he answering said, thou shalt love the Lord thy God,.... This was part of their phylacteries, which they recited every day; See Gill on Mat 22:37,...

And he answering said, thou shalt love the Lord thy God,.... This was part of their phylacteries, which they recited every day; See Gill on Mat 22:37, Mat 22:39, Mar 12:28, Mar 12:29

Gill: Luk 10:28 - And he said unto him, thou hast answered right // do this, and thou shalt live And he said unto him, thou hast answered right,.... It is so written, and read; and this, as if he should say, is the sum and substance of the law, an...

And he said unto him, thou hast answered right,.... It is so written, and read; and this, as if he should say, is the sum and substance of the law, and what that requires men should do; wherefore,

do this, and thou shalt live; for the bare reading of it was not sufficient; though these men placed great confidence in reading this passage, or in reciting their phylacteries, of which this was a part, morning and night. Our Lord intimates by this, that, according to the tenor of the law, eternal life was not to be had without a complete and perfect performance of the duties of love to God, and to the neighbour, contained in these words; and this he suggests, in order to convict him of the impossibility of obtaining life by the works of the law, since such a performance cannot be made by man.

Gill: Luk 10:29 - But he willing to justify himself // he said, and who is my neighbour But he willing to justify himself,.... Upon the foot of his own righteousness, and to make himself appear to be righteous to others; for this the Jews...

But he willing to justify himself,.... Upon the foot of his own righteousness, and to make himself appear to be righteous to others; for this the Jews thought themselves able to do, both to justify themselves before God by their own works, and make it out to men, that they were truly righteous persons; and it is a maxim with them, that

"every one המצדיק את עצמו that justifies himself, below (on earth), they justify him above (or in heaven) k.''

No wonder then that this man was desirous of justifying himself; and in order to which

he said, and who is my neighbour? he takes no notice of God, and love to him, as coming into the account of his justification, only of his neighbour; thinking when this question was answered, he should be very able to make it out, that he was not wanting neither in doing justice between himself and his neighbour, nor in showing kindness and beneficence to him; for by his neighbour he meant only an Israelite; one of the same nation and religion with him. So the Jews commonly interpret the word neighbour, either of one that is related to them in nature, קרובו, that is, near akin to them in blood l; or that professes the same religion as they do, and whom they call a neighbour in the law; and so they explain the passage now cited, "and thou shall love thy neighbour as thyself", שהוא רעך בתורה; "that is, who is thy neighbour in the law" m: for they will not allow a Gentile, no, not even a proselyte of the gate to be a neighbour: for thus they say n,

"an Israelite that slays a proselyte of the gate, or the stranger that dwells with him, is not slain for him by the sanhedrim; for it is said, Exo 21:14 but if a man comes presumptuously upon his neighbour to slay him, &c. and there is no need to say he is not slain for a Gentile.''

And again o,

"when a man sees one of them (the Gentiles) fall into the sea, he need not take him up; as it is said, Lev 19:16 "neither shalt thou stand against the blood of thy neighbour", ואין זה רעך "but this is not thy neighbour."''

This notion Christ opposes and disproves in the following parable, which is an answer to the lawyer's question.

Gill: Luk 10:30 - And Jesus answering, said // a certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho // and fell among thieves // which stripped him of his raiment // and wounded him // and departed, leaving him half dead And Jesus answering, said,.... The following things; which may either be considered as a narrative of matter of fact, or as a supposed case, and deliv...

And Jesus answering, said,.... The following things; which may either be considered as a narrative of matter of fact, or as a supposed case, and delivered by way of parable; and in either way, though the general design of it is in answer to the lawyer's question, to show who may be called a neighbour; and that a man who is a stranger, and accounted an enemy, yet doing acts of mercy, kindness, and beneficence, to one in distress, ought to be accounted a neighbour: and has a much better title to such a character, than one of the same nation and religion, who takes no notice of a distressed object; yet it may be considered, as representing the sad estate and condition of mankind by the fall, and their recovery by Christ; whereby he shows himself to be their best neighbour, and truest friend:

a certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho. The distance between these two places, the Jews say p, was ten "parsas", that is, forty miles; for every "parsa" was four miles, and ten "parsas" are expressly said q to be forty miles; which must be understood of the lesser miles, otherwise a parsa itself was but a mile: the Jews had two sorts of miles, the greater was 2000 cubits, the lesser 1000 cubits: the man is said to go down from the one to the other, because Jerusalem stood on high ground, and Jericho in a valley. This "certain man", may represent mankind failing in Adam, from a state of happiness, into misery: human nature was originally in one man, but one man was created at first, and he had all human nature in him, and was the representative of mankind; he was made upright, but sinned, and fell from his uprightness, and all mankind in him: he may be said to go down, from Jerusalem, which signifies peace, and the vision of it; and was a city compact together, beautiful and well situated; where were the worship of God, and his Shekinah, or divine presence; to Jericho, a city accursed by Joshua, and a very wicked place in the days of Christ: since man by sinning against God, departed from his happy and peaceful state, from a state of peace and tranquillity with God, with the holy angels, and even with the beasts of the field; and also from peace and serenity in his own conscience, as well as from communion with God; and from his pure worship and service, to a sensual, earthly, worldly, wicked, and accursed state:

and fell among thieves: in the way to Jericho, was a place called Adomim, which signifies "bloods", because much blood was shed there, by the frequent incursions of thieves and robbers, as Jerom observes r; and was about four hours journey from Jericho s: and by the man's falling among thieves, may be expressed mankind coming into the hands of sin and Satan, which are as robbers, that steal, kill, and destroy; since these have robbed man of his honour, defaced the image of God in him, and deprived him of the glory of God, and were murderers of him from the beginning:

which stripped him of his raiment; as thieves and robbers are used to do; signifying the loss of original righteousness, by sin, which was a covering to man, in which he could appear before God; and was very ornamental to him, being pure and perfect in its kind, though only a creature's righteousness, and a created one; and which was natural and loseable, as the event has shown: hence man is become a naked creature, has nothing to cover himself with, but stands exposed to the law, justice, and wrath of God; is destitute of a righteousness, nor can he work out one that will stand him in any stead, or justify him before God:

and wounded him: which is the common usage of such men; and may set forth the morbid and diseased condition that sin has brought man into; being from the crown of the head, to the sole of the foot, full of wounds, bruises, and putrefying sores; and such as are in themselves mortal, and incurable by any, but the great physician of souls, the Lord Jesus Christ; and yet men are naturally insensible of them, and unconcerned about there:

and departed, leaving him half dead; or "near death", as the Arabic version renders it; which may be applied to death natural, spiritual, and eternal: to death natural, which comes by sin, seeing it is but one part, or half of the man that dies this death, namely, his body; and to a spiritual death, or the death of the soul, which is dead in trespasses and sins, whilst the body is alive; and to eternal death, to which men are exposed for sin, and are under the sentence of it, though not executed; and in each of these senses may be said to be "half dead": and which is no ways to the advantage of the doctrine of man's freewill, and the powers and abilities of; as if man was not in a spiritual sense so dead, that he can do nothing in a spiritual manner; but the phrase is used, to show the power of sin, and the malice of Satan, and yet that man is still recoverable by the grace of God.

Gill: Luk 10:31 - And by chance there came down a certain priest that way // and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side And by chance there came down a certain priest that way,.... Who had been at Jerusalem, to take his turn in the courses, and was now returning to Jeri...

And by chance there came down a certain priest that way,.... Who had been at Jerusalem, to take his turn in the courses, and was now returning to Jericho, where the stationary men were, to which he belonged: for it is said t, that

"the former prophets appointed twenty and four courses; and for every course there was a station at Jerusalem, of priests, and of Levites, and of Israelites; and when the time of the course came to go up, the priests and Levites went up to Jerusalem. The Rabbins teach, that there were twenty four courses in the land of Israel, and there were twelve at Jericho.''

And which is elsewhere u related thus;

"the former prophets appointed four and twenty courses, and for every course there was a station at Jerusalem, of priests, of Levites, and of Israelites; the tradition is, that four and twenty thousand were the station from Jerusalem, and half a station from Jericho; though Jericho was able to furnish out a perfect station itself; but for the sake of dividing the glory to Jerusalem, it produced but half a station.''

So that it is no wonder to hear of priests and Levites passing to and fro in this road. Nor was this a chance matter with respect to God, by whose providence all things are ordered, directed, and governed; nor any wonderful thing with respect to men, which fell out in an uncommon way, beyond expectation; the phrase only signifies, that so it came to pass:

and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side: when he saw him naked, and in such a bloody condition, he might take him for one really dead, and therefore crossed the way on purpose, lest he should any ways touch him, and be defiled by him, and so break the law, and incur the penalty of it, mentioned in Num 19:16 or to shun so horrible a sight; or rather, through hardness of heart, and want of compassion.

Gill: Luk 10:32 - And likewise a Levite, when he was at the place // came and looked on him // and passed by on the other side And likewise a Levite, when he was at the place,.... Where the poor man lay in this deplorable condition: came and looked on him; and that was all;...

And likewise a Levite, when he was at the place,.... Where the poor man lay in this deplorable condition:

came and looked on him; and that was all; but neither spoke a comfortable word, nor administered any relief to him, or in the least assisted him:

and passed by on the other side; as the priest had done before him: by the "priest" may be meant, the moral law, and by the Levite the ceremonial law; and so by both, the whole law of Moses; and intimates, that no mercy is to be expected from thence: the law makes no abatement in its demands, nor any allowance for the fall and weakness of man: nor is it become milder under the Gospel dispensation; nor will it accept of an imperfect, though sincere obedience, in the room of a perfect one; and is deaf to all repentings, cries, and tears: no relief is to be had from thence, for a naked, wounded, and dead man; no robe of righteousness to cover a naked soul; for by the law is the knowledge of sin, but not a justifying righteousness by the deeds of it: for the deeds of the law, performed by sinful men, are impure and imperfect; and were they pure and perfect, they would be unprofitable, and could not justify in the sight of God from former sins; for could they, they would establish boasting, and disannul the death of Christ, and frustrate the grace of God; and therefore righteousness cannot be by the law, that leaves a man as naked as it finds him: nor is there any healing by it to a wounded conscience; there is no pity from it, no justification by it, no pardon through it, no expiation or atonement of sin, by obedience to it; no word of comfort is spoken by it; so far from it, that when it comes with power, it opens the wounds of sin, fills the conscience with wrath and terror, destroys all the man's former hopes of happiness, and leaves him where it found him; without healing him itself, or pointing out a physician to him: much less can it give life to a dead sinner: spiritual life is not communicated by it, nor can eternal life, or any true hope of it, be attained through it; it is so far from it, that it is the killing letter, and the ministration of condemnation and death.

Gill: Luk 10:33 - But a certain Samaritan // as he journeyed // came where he was // and when he saw him // and he had compassion on him But a certain Samaritan,.... By whom Christ may be meant; not that he was really so, for he was a Jew, a son of Abraham, and of David, according to th...

But a certain Samaritan,.... By whom Christ may be meant; not that he was really so, for he was a Jew, a son of Abraham, and of David, according to the flesh, but he was so called by the Jews, Joh 8:48 and was treated as such by them: and since it is the design of the parable in general to show, that he that does acts of kindness and mercy to persons in distress, is a neighbour in the truest sense, though he is not an Israelite, but even a Samaritan, who was, above all men, hated by the Jews; why may it not be thought to be the view of Christ in particular, to prove himself the best neighbour and friend of men, though he was traduced by the Jews as a Samaritan?

as he journeyed; which may design the assumption of human nature, which is sometimes expressed, by his coming from his Father, by his descending from heaven, and coming into this world; which phrases intend his incarnation, and carry in them the idea of journeying: for as his ascent to heaven is expressed by taking a journey, Mat 25:15 so may his descent from heaven; and while he was here on earth, he was as a stranger and pilgrim, as a sojourner and traveller:

came where he was; put himself in the legal place, and stead of his people, who fell with the rest of mankind in Adam; he became their surety from eternity, and clothed himself with their nature in time; he took upon him their sins, as their representative, and fulfilled the righteousness of the law on their account, and bore the penalty of it in their room:

and when he saw him; Christ saw the elect before the fall, as they were chosen in him, and given unto him, in all the glory they were to be brought into; when he loved them, and his delight was with them: and when he came to redeem them, he saw them as follows; as lost, as weak and strengthless, as wicked, and as the worst of sinners, as ungodly, and enemies, as children of wrath by nature, as others; and he shed his blood for them, and washed them from their sins, that he might present them to himself a glorious church, without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing; just such an one he had seen them to be, in the glass of his Father's purposes, in his council and covenant; and he sees them in their blood, and in the impurity of their nature, when he comes to call them by his grace:

and he had compassion on him. The compassion of Christ on his elect, is to be seen in his eternal covenant engagements; for his tender mercies have been ever of old; and in his assumption of their nature, which was through his own, as well as the tender mercy of his Father; and in the redemption of them, which was in love and pity; and also in their regeneration and conversion, for the great things there, and then done for them by him, are owing to his compassion.

Gill: Luk 10:34 - And went to him, and bound up his wounds // pouring in oil and wine // and set him on his own beast // and brought him to an inn // and took care of him And went to him, and bound up his wounds,.... Which sin had made; it being part of the work of Christ, to bind up the broken-hearted, to heal wounded ...

And went to him, and bound up his wounds,.... Which sin had made; it being part of the work of Christ, to bind up the broken-hearted, to heal wounded sinners, and restore comforts to mourners; and which he does, by

pouring in oil and wine: by which, in general, may be designed, the blood of Christ, applied to the conscience of a wounded sinner; which cleanses from all sin, heals all the wounds and diseases of sin, cheers and revives fainting spirits, gives ease, peace, and pleasure, and is therefore exceeding valuable and precious: and in particular by "oil" may be meant, the grace of the Spirit of God; compared unto it, for its sweet smell, its cheering and refreshing virtue and efficacy, and its cooling, softening, supplying, and healing nature: and by "wine", the doctrines of the Gospel; such as free justification by Christ's righteousness, and pardon through his blood; which when applied to distressed minds, cause joy and gladness, and them to forget their sorrow, and remember their misery no more: and the pouring in of these, may denote the plentiful effusion of Christ's blood, and the riches of his grace in the application of it; and the freeness and generousness of this action, which is his own: for man cannot do it. It was usual with the Jews, to mix oil and wine together, for the healing of wounds: hence those rules and traditions w;

"they anoint a linen cloth for a sick man on the sabbath; when? when they mingle the oil and the wine on the sabbath eve, but if they do not mingle it on the sabbath eve, it is forbidden; it is a tradition, says R. Simeon ben Eleazer, R. Meir pronounced it lawful, לטרוף יין ושמן to mingle wine and oil, and to anoint the sick on the sabbath.''

So oil and wine were mingled together, and used to heal the sore occasioned by circumcision x.

and set him on his own beast; by which may be meant, either the red horse of Christ's humanity, Zec 1:8 to which he has united all his people; and in which he has bore their persons, and has represented them, and still bears them on his heart: or the white horse of the Gospel, Rev 6:2 compared to a horse for its strength, swiftness, and usefulness in battle; and to a "white" one, for the purity of its doctrines, the joy and peace it brings, and the victory it obtains: and this is Christ's own, and on which he himself rides, and shows his glory, and goes forth conquering and to conquer: and on which he sets his people, and they are carried out of the reach of men and devils to destroy them, and are caused to ride on the high places of the earth:

and brought him to an inn; a church of Christ, where the Gospel guides, directs, and carries souls: saints are not at home in their proper city and country, they are travellers here, and need refreshment by the way; and a church of Christ is as an inn, for the entertainment of such: it is large, and has room enough for as many as come to it; and is well stored with provisions of all sorts, signified by bread, and milk, and wine, a feast of fat things, a furnished table, Zion's provisions, the goodness and fatness of God's house; and has rivers of pleasure, and very good lodgings, sure dwellings, and quiet habitations; all which is agreeable to weary travellers: and hither Christ brings his people, whom he saves and calls; it is his will that they should be in a church state, and it is his own act to bring them there, and it is their great privilege to be thither brought:

and took care of him; clothed him with his righteousness, fed him with the choicest of provisions, gave him reviving cordials of love, refreshing promises, exceeding great and precious ones; and larger supplies of grace, with protection and preservation from all evils.

Gill: Luk 10:35 - And on the morrow when he departed // and he took out two peace // and gave them to the host // and said unto him, take care of him // and whatsoever thou spendest more // when I come again, I will repay thee And on the morrow when he departed,.... Having taken care of him all night, and put him into a comfortable way, leaves him, though in good hands; as C...

And on the morrow when he departed,.... Having taken care of him all night, and put him into a comfortable way, leaves him, though in good hands; as Christ does his people, to learn to live by faith upon him:

and he took out two peace; two Roman denarii, or pence; which amount to about fifteen pence of our money, and were equal to the half shekel, paid for the redemption of an Israelite: by which may be meant, not the law and Gospel; for though these both bear the image and superscription of God, and are his current coin, and are both delivered by Christ, and to be regarded and dispensed by the ministers of the word; yet they are not of equal value and use, as these two pence seem to be: wherefore, rather the two Testaments, Old ann New, may be designed, since they are both inspired by God, and dictated by the same Spirit, and bear the same impress; and are alike, and exactly agree, as two pence do; and are given to the ministers of the Gospel to handle, and make use of for the good of souls: unless the two ordinances of baptism, and the Lord's supper, should rather be thought to be intended: these bear the same stamp and authority, and are both jointly necessary to communion, and church order; and are given by Christ to his ministers, to be administered by them, for the good of his church; and are similar, as two breasts are, they being both breasts of consolation, and agree in setting forth the sufferings and death of Christ: or rather, the gifts and graces of the Spirit of God, to qualify men for the work of the ministry; which both come from the selfsame Spirit of God, and are jointly necessary to fit a man for such service; and are given for the benefit and advantage of the Lord's people, and in an eminent manner by Christ, on his departure from hence, when he ascended on high, and received gifts for men, and gave them to them:

and gave them to the host; or the keeper and master of the inn; by whom are meant, the ministers of the Gospel; who are governors, in the church, the masters of that spiritual inn; who have the provisions of God's house under their care, and whose business it is to invite travellers in, and to dress their food for them, and set it before them, and bid them welcome:

and said unto him, take care of him: which is the work of Christ's ministers to do, by feeding souls with the words of faith and sound doctrine; by ministering the Gospel to them in a faithful manner; and by a constant administration of the ordinances of it; and by keeping a diligent watch over them, both with respect to principles and practice; and by speaking a word in season to them:

and whatsoever thou spendest more: faithful ministers spend much, and are at great expense in taking care of the souls of men; in fervent and frequent prayer to God; in diligent searching the Scriptures; in the laborious ministry of the word and ordinances; and in the constant exercise and improvement of their spiritual gifts; and in the loss of reputation and credit, and of health, and sometimes of life itself:

when I come again, I will repay thee: Christ will certainly come again a second time, to judge both quick and dead; and then he will recompense his ministers, for all their toil and labour, care and expense; he will then bid them, as good and faithful servants, enter into the joy of their Lord; and when they shall every one receive the reward of his own work, in a way of grace, and shall shine as the stars in the firmament, for ever and ever.

Gill: Luk 10:36 - Which now of these three // thinkest thou, was neighbour to him that fell among the thieves Which now of these three,.... The priest, the Levite, and the Samaritan, thinkest thou, was neighbour to him that fell among the thieves? the pries...

Which now of these three,.... The priest, the Levite, and the Samaritan,

thinkest thou, was neighbour to him that fell among the thieves? the priest and Levite that passed by, and took no notice of him, and gave him no relief, neither by words nor actions; or the Samaritan, that did all the above kind and generous things to him?

Gill: Luk 10:37 - And he said, he that showed mercy to him // then said Jesus unto him, go and do thou likewise And he said, he that showed mercy to him,.... Meaning the Samaritan; which he was obliged to declare, though of another country and religion, and acco...

And he said, he that showed mercy to him,.... Meaning the Samaritan; which he was obliged to declare, though of another country and religion, and accounted as an enemy; yet the case was so plain, as put by Christ, that he could not with any honour or conscience, say otherwise:

then said Jesus unto him, go and do thou likewise; such like acts of beneficence and kindness, though to a person of a different nation and religion, and though even an enemy; and by so doing, thou wilt not only appear to be a good neighbour thyself, but to love thy neighbour as thyself.

Gill: Luk 10:38 - Now it came to pass as they went // that he entered into a certain village // and a certain woman named Martha // received him into her house Now it came to pass as they went,.... As Christ and his disciples went from Jerusalem, having been at the feast of tabernacles, Joh 7:2 or at the feas...

Now it came to pass as they went,.... As Christ and his disciples went from Jerusalem, having been at the feast of tabernacles, Joh 7:2 or at the feast of dedication, Joh 10:22 to some other parts of Judea:

that he entered into a certain village; called Bethany, which was about fifteen furlongs, or two miles from Jerusalem, Joh 11:1

and a certain woman named Martha. This is a common name with the Jews; hence we read of Samuel bar Martha y, and of Abba bar Martha z, and of Isaac bar Martha a; and of Martha, the daughter of Baithus b, who is said to be a rich widow; and this Martha here, is thought by Grotins to be a widow also, with whom her brother Lazarus, and sister Mary lived: though sometimes, this name was given to men; so we read of Martha, c the uncle of Rab, who had five brethren; and the same writer observes d, that it is not known whether Martha is, a man or a woman, but this is determined here:

received him into her house; in a very kind and courteous manner, she being mistress of it; and having known Christ before, or at least had heard much of him, and believed in him, as the true Messiah.

Gill: Luk 10:39 - And she had a sister called Mary // which also sat at Jesus' feet // and heard his word And she had a sister called Mary,.... Which also was a common name with the Jews, and is the same with Miriam; so we read of Mary, the daughter of Nic...

And she had a sister called Mary,.... Which also was a common name with the Jews, and is the same with Miriam; so we read of Mary, the daughter of Nicodemon, the same perhaps with Nicodemus; and the same person that is before called Martha, the daughter of Baithus, is sometimes called Mary, the daughter of Baithus e, though these two names are certainly distinct:

which also sat at Jesus' feet; was a disciple of his, as well as Martha; for it was usual for disciples, or the scholars of the wise men, to sit at the feet of their masters, to which the allusion is in Deu 33:3; see Gill on Act 22:3 The Vulgate Latin, Arabic, and Coptic versions, read "at the Lord's feet": so Beza's ancient copy, and one of Stephens's; and the Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions read, "at our Lord's feet". The phrase is expressive of her great affection for Christ, her humble deportment, and close attention:

and heard his word; or discourse; for as soon as he entered into the house, he began to preach to those that were in it, and that came along with him, improving every opportunity for the good of souls; and Mary heard him with great eagerness and diligence, affection, pleasure, and profit.

Gill: Luk 10:40 - But Martha was cumbered about much serving // and she came to him and said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone // bid her therefore that she help me But Martha was cumbered about much serving,.... "Or was drawn off", from hearing the word, from attending on Christ; being taken up in providing for h...

But Martha was cumbered about much serving,.... "Or was drawn off", from hearing the word, from attending on Christ; being taken up in providing for him, and those that came with him; in dressing food, or in ordering her servants, how she would have every thing done, and in overlooking them, that every thing was done in proper order; so that she had a great deal of business upon her head and hands, which distracted her thoughts, or took them off of divine things, and put her in great hurry and concern. The Ethiopic version renders it, "Martha laboured in preparing many things for him"; making a large and sumptuous entertainment: and the Persic version, which is rather a comment than a translation, renders it, "Martha was busied in preparing food, and making a feast": sparing no cost nor pains, thinking nothing too good, nor too grand, for such a guest she had in her house:

and she came to him and said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? she came to him; that is, to Jesus, as the Persic version expresses it: she came out of the room where she was getting ready the entertainment, into the room where Christ was preaching; and, as the Vulgate Latin, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions read, "she stood and said": she did not sit down at his feet, as Mary did, to hear his word, but stood as about to go away again, after she had said what she came about: she did not think fit to speak to Mary herself, though perhaps she might do that first; who, showing an unwillingness to go with her, she therefore applies to Christ, as believing that he would, with her, look upon it as a very reasonable thing that she should take her part with her; and that a word from him would go a great way with her sister. And she seems to speak, not only by way of complaint of Mary, who had left her to prepare and serve up this entertainment alone; but even of Christ himself, in some sort, as if he had not showed that care and concern in this matter, which she thought was necessary. However, she was willing to have his sense of her sister's conduct, and hoped, and even doubted not, but that he would be of the same mind with herself:

bid her therefore that she help me; that she join, assist, and put an helping hand in this service; speak but a word to her, give her orders, and she will observe and obey.

Gill: Luk 10:41 - And Jesus answered and said unto her // thou art careful and troubled about many things And Jesus answered and said unto her,.... Calling her by her name, and repeating it, Martha, Martha, which expresses great intimacy and friendship, an...

And Jesus answered and said unto her,.... Calling her by her name, and repeating it, Martha, Martha, which expresses great intimacy and friendship, and much earnestness, and, as it were, pitying her present situation and circumstances:

thou art careful and troubled about many things; intimating, that she was over anxious, and too solicitous, and more thoughtful and careful than she need be: he did not require such preparations for him, and so much attendance; she gave herself an unnecessary trouble in providing so many things for his entertainment, when less would have sufficed; so that instead of joining with her in her request, he reproves her for her over anxious care and solicitude, to have a nice and plentiful feast. The Persic version gives a sense quite contrary to the design of the text, rendering the words thus, "thou art adorned in all things, and hast the preference above many women".

Gill: Luk 10:42 - But one thing is needful // and Mary hath chosen that good part // which shall not be taken away from her But one thing is needful,.... Meaning not that one dish of meat was sufficient, and there was no need of any more, in opposition to Martha's carefulne...

But one thing is needful,.... Meaning not that one dish of meat was sufficient, and there was no need of any more, in opposition to Martha's carefulness in preparing many; for this is too low a sense of the words; which yet some ancient writers have given into: but rather the hearing of the word, the Gospel of Christ, which Mary was engaged in; and which, ordinarily speaking, is necessary to the knowledge of Christ, and salvation by him, and to faith in him, Rom 10:14 not that this is the only needful thing; nor does Christ say there is but one thing needful, but that there is one thing needful; for there are other things that are also needful, and useful, as meditation and prayer, and attendance on, and submission to the ordinances of baptism, and the Lord's supper, and all the duties of religion: but Christ's meaning seems plainly to be, that Mary hearing the word from his mouth, and at his feet, was one necessary thing, in opposition to Martha's many unnecessary ones, about which she was cumbered:

and Mary hath chosen that good part; or "the good part", or "portion"; Christ, the sum and substance of the word she heard, and eternal life and salvation by him. God himself is said to be the portion of his people, and a good one he is, and a portion that lasts for ever; and so is Christ; see Psa 73:26 where the Septuagint use the same word as here. The heavenly inheritance also, eternal glory and happiness, is the saints' portion; it is called in Col 1:12 the part, or portion of the inheritance with the saints in light. The word answers to the Hebrew word, חלק; as in that saying of the Misnic doctors f,

"all Israel have, חלק, "a part", or "portion" in the world to come.''

All the Oriental versions add, "for herself", and this choice she made, not from the natural power of her own freewill, but as directed, influenced, and assisted by the Spirit and grace of God, and in consequence of God's eternal choice of her unto salvation by Jesus Christ: and the part she chose is, that

which shall not be taken away from her; by men or devils: faith which comes by hearing of the word, and so every other grace of the Spirit is what can never be lost; nor an interest in God, as a covenant God, or in Christ as a Saviour, nor a right and title to, nor meetness for eternal life, nor that itself, can be taken away, or the believer ever be deprived thereof.

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NET Notes: Luk 10:1 Or “city.”

NET Notes: Luk 10:2 Grk “to thrust out.”

NET Notes: Luk 10:3 This imagery of wolves is found in intertestamental Judaism as well; see Pss. Sol. 8:23.

NET Notes: Luk 10:4 Or “no one along the way.”

NET Notes: Luk 10:5 The statement ‘May peace be on this house!’ is really a benediction, asking for God’s blessing. The requested shalom (peace) is unde...

NET Notes: Luk 10:6 The response to these messengers determines how God’s blessing is bestowed – if they are not welcomed with peace, their blessing will retu...

NET Notes: Luk 10:7 On the phrase the worker deserves his pay see 1 Tim 5:18 and 1 Cor 9:14.

NET Notes: Luk 10:8 Grk “and they”; the referent (the people who live in the town) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

NET Notes: Luk 10:9 Or “come near to you,” suggesting the approach (but not arrival) of the kingdom. But the combination of the perfect tense of ἐγ...

NET Notes: Luk 10:10 The term πλατεῖα (plateia) refers to the “broad street,” so this refers to the main roads of the town.

NET Notes: Luk 10:11 Or “has come near.” As in v. 9 (see above), the combination of ἐγγίζω (engizw) with the preposition ἐ...

NET Notes: Luk 10:12 Or “city.”

NET Notes: Luk 10:13 For location see Map1 A1; JP3 F3; JP4 F3.

NET Notes: Luk 10:15 In the OT, Hades was known as Sheol. It is the place where the unrighteous will reside (Matt 11:23; Luke 16:23; Rev 20:13-14).

NET Notes: Luk 10:16 The one who sent me refers to God.

NET Notes: Luk 10:17 The prepositional phrase “in your name” indicates the sphere of authority for the messengers’ work of exorcism.

NET Notes: Luk 10:18 This is probably best taken as allusion to Isa 14:12; the phrase in common is ἐκ τοῦ οὐρανο&...

NET Notes: Luk 10:19 This is an emphatic double negative in the Greek text.

NET Notes: Luk 10:20 The verb here, a perfect tense, stresses a present reality of that which was a completed action, that is, their names were etched in the heavenly ston...

NET Notes: Luk 10:21 Grk “for (to do) thus was well pleasing before you,” BDAG 325 s.v. ἔμπροσθεν 1.δ; speak...

NET Notes: Luk 10:22 Or “wishes”; or “intends”; or “plans” (cf. BDAG 182 s.v. βούλομαι 2.b). He...

NET Notes: Luk 10:23 This beatitude highlights the great honor bestowed on the disciples to share in this salvation, as v. 20 also noted. See also Luke 2:30.

NET Notes: Luk 10:24 This is what past prophets and kings had wanted very much to see, yet the fulfillment had come to the disciples. This remark is like 1 Pet 1:10-12 or ...

NET Notes: Luk 10:25 The combination of inherit with eternal life asks, in effect, “What must I do to be saved?”

NET Notes: Luk 10:26 Grk “How do you read?” The pronoun “it” is not in the Greek text, but is implied. Direct objects were frequently omitted in Gr...

NET Notes: Luk 10:27 This portion of the reply is a quotation from Lev 19:18. The verb is repeated in the translation for stylistic reasons.

NET Notes: Luk 10:28 Jesus commends the reply (you have answered correctly). What is assumed here, given the previous context, is that he will respond to Jesus’ mess...

NET Notes: Luk 10:29 The expert in religious law picked up on the remark about the neighbor and sought to limit his responsibility for loving. Some believed this obligatio...

NET Notes: Luk 10:30 That is, in a state between life and death; severely wounded.

NET Notes: Luk 10:31 The text suggests that the priest went out of his way (on the other side) not to get too close to the scene.

NET Notes: Luk 10:32 The clause containing the aorist active participle ἐλθών (elqwn) suggests that the Levite came up to the place, took a look...

NET Notes: Luk 10:33 Here is what made the Samaritan different: He felt compassion for him. In the story, compassion becomes the concrete expression of love. The next vers...

NET Notes: Luk 10:34 His own animal refers to a riding animal, presumably a donkey, but not specified.

NET Notes: Luk 10:35 Grk “when I come back”; the words “this way” are part of an English idiom used to translate the phrase.

NET Notes: Luk 10:36 Jesus reversed the question the expert in religious law asked in v. 29 to one of becoming a neighbor by loving. “Do not think about who they are...

NET Notes: Luk 10:37 This recalls the verb of the earlier reply in v. 28.

NET Notes: Luk 10:38 For the meaning “to welcome, to have as a guest” see L&N 34.53.

NET Notes: Luk 10:39 The description of Mary sitting at the Lord’s feet and listening to him makes her sound like a disciple (compare Luke 8:35).

NET Notes: Luk 10:40 The conjunction οὖν (oun, “then, therefore”) has not been translated here.

NET Notes: Luk 10:41 Or “upset.” Here the meanings of μεριμνάω (merimnaw) and θορυβάζ...

NET Notes: Luk 10:42 Or “better”; Grk “good.” This is an instance of the positive adjective used in place of the superlative adjective. According t...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:1 After ( 1 ) these things the Lord appointed other seventy also, and sent them two and two before his face into every city and place, whither he himsel...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:3 ( 2 ) Go your ways: behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves. ( 2 ) The faithful ministers of the word are in this world as lambs among wolves:...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:4 Carry neither purse, nor scrip, nor shoes: and salute ( a ) no man by the way. ( a ) This is spoken figuratively, which manner of speech men use when...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:6 And if ( b ) the son of peace be there, your peace shall rest upon it: if not, it shall turn to you again. ( b ) So say the Hebrews: that is, he that...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:7 And in the same house ( c ) remain, eating and drinking such things as they give: for the labourer is worthy of his hire. Go not from house to house. ...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:8 And into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you, ( d ) eat such things as are set before you: ( d ) Be content with the food that is set befo...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:10 ( 3 ) But into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you not, go your ways out into the streets of the same, and say, ( 3 ) God is a most severe...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:17 ( 4 ) And the seventy returned again with joy, saying, Lord, even the devils are subject unto us ( e ) through thy name. ( 4 ) Neither the gift of mi...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:18 And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning ( f ) fall from heaven. ( f ) Paul writes that the location of the devil and his angels is in the ...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:19 Behold, I give unto you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy: and nothing shall by any means ( g ) hurt you. ...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:21 ( 5 ) In that hour Jesus rejoiced in spirit, and said, I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou hast hid these things from the ( h ...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:22 ( 6 ) All things are delivered to me of my Father: and no man knoweth who the Son is, but the Father; and who the Father is, but the Son, and [he] to ...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:23 ( 7 ) And he turned him unto [his] disciples, and said privately, Blessed [are] the eyes which see the things that ye see: ( 7 ) The difference betwe...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:25 ( 8 ) And, behold, ( i ) a certain lawyer stood up, and tempted him, saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? ( 8 ) Faith does not ta...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:29 ( 9 ) But he, willing ( k ) to justify himself, said unto Jesus, And who is my neighbour? ( 9 ) The law defines our neighbour as anyone at all that w...

Geneva Bible: Luk 10:38 ( 10 ) Now it came to pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha received him into her house. ( 10 ...

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Maclaren: Luk 10:1-11 - A Libation To Jehovah Christ's Messengers: Their Equipment And Work After these things, the Lord appointed other seventy also, and sent them two and two before His face in...

MHCC: Luk 10:1-16 - --Christ sent the seventy disciples, two and two, that they might strengthen and encourage one another. The ministry of the gospel calls men to receive ...

MHCC: Luk 10:17-24 - --All our victories over Satan, are obtained by power derived from Jesus Christ, and he must have all the praise. But let us beware of spiritual pride, ...

MHCC: Luk 10:25-37 - --If we speak of eternal life, and the way to it, in a careless manner, we take the name of God in vain. No one will ever love God and his neighbour wit...

MHCC: Luk 10:38-42 - --A good sermon is not the worse for being preached in a house; and the visits of our friends should be so managed, as to make them turn to the good of ...

Matthew Henry: Luk 10:1-16 - -- We have here the sending forth of seventy disciples, two and two, into divers parts of the country, to preach the gospel, and to work miracles in th...

Matthew Henry: Luk 10:17-24 - -- Christ sent forth the seventy disciples as he was going up to Jerusalem to the feast of tabernacles, when he went up, not openly, but as it wer...

Matthew Henry: Luk 10:25-37 - -- We have here Christ's discourse with a lawyer about some points of conscience, which we are all concerned to be rightly informed in and are so here ...

Matthew Henry: Luk 10:38-42 - -- We may observe in this story, I. The entertainment which Martha gave to Christ and his disciples at her house, Luk 10:38. Observe, 1. Christ's comin...

Barclay: Luk 10:1-16 - "LABOURERS FOR THE HARVEST" This passage describes a wider mission than the first mission of the Twelve. The number seventy was to the Jews symbolic. (a) It was the number of the...

Barclay: Luk 10:17-20 - "A MAN'S TRUE GLORY" When the Seventy returned they were radiant with the triumphs which they had wrought in the name of Jesus. Jesus said to them, "I saw Satan fall lik...

Barclay: Luk 10:21-24 - "THE UNSURPASSABLE CLAIM" There are three great thoughts in this passage. (i) Luk 10:21tells us of the wisdom of simplicity. The simple mind could receive truths that learned ...

Barclay: Luk 10:25-37 - "WHO IS MY NEIGHBOUR?" First, let us look at the scene of this story. The road from Jerusalem to Jericho was a notoriously dangerous road. Jerusalem is 2,300 feet above s...

Barclay: Luk 10:38-42 - "THE CLASH OF TEMPERAMENTS" It would be hard to find more vivid character drawing in greater economy of words than we find in these verses. (i) They show us the clash of temperam...

Constable: Luk 9:51--19:28 - --V. Jesus' ministry on the way to Jerusalem 9:51--19:27 This large section of the Book of Luke has no counterpart...

Constable: Luk 9:51--10:25 - --A. The responsibilities and rewards of discipleship 9:51-10:24 This part of the new section continues to...

Constable: Luk 10:1-16 - --3. The importance of participation 10:1-16 The theme of discipleship training continues in this section of verses. The 70 disciples that Jesus sent ou...

Constable: Luk 10:17-20 - --4. The joy of participation 10:17-20 Luke stressed the joy that the Seventy experienced because they participated in God's program. As we have noted b...

Constable: Luk 10:21-24 - --5. The joy of comprehension 10:21-24 This incident followed the preceding one immediately (v. 21). The subject of joy continues, and the section on th...

Constable: Luk 10:25--11:14 - --B. The relationships of disciples 10:25-11:13 The three incidents that compose this section all concern ...

Constable: Luk 10:25-37 - --1. The relation of disciples to their neighbors 10:25-37 The question that a lawyer put to Jesus...

Constable: Luk 10:25-29 - --The lawyer's question and Jesus' answer 10:25-29 The incident that Mark recorded in Mark 12:28-34 is quite similar to this one, but the differences in...

Constable: Luk 10:30-37 - --The parable of the good Samaritan 10:30-37 Jesus told this parable to correct the lawyer's false understanding of who his neighbor was and his duty to...

Constable: Luk 10:38-42 - --2. The relation of disciples to Jesus 10:38-42 This is another incident involving women who became disciples of Jesus (cf. 8:1-3; et al.). Like the pa...

College: Luk 10:1-42 - --LUKE 10 3. Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-Two (10:1-24) 1 After this the Lord appointed seventy-two a others and sent them two by two ahead of him to e...

McGarvey: Luk 10:1-24 - -- LXXXIII. MISSION AND RETURN OF THE SEVENTY. (Probably in Judæa, October, A. D. 29.) cLUKE X. 1-24.    c1 Now after these things the ...

McGarvey: Luk 10:25-37 - -- LXXXIV. PARABLE OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN. (Probably Judæa.) cLUKE X. 25-37.    c25 And behold, a certain lawyer stood up and made trial...

McGarvey: Luk 10:38-42 - -- LXXXV. JESUS THE GUEST OF MARTHA AND MARY. (Bethany, near Jerusalem.) cLUKE X. 38-42.    c38 Now as they went on their way [he was jo...

Lapide: Luk 10:1-42 - --CHAPTER 10 Ver. 1.— After these things the Lord also. Seventy-two. Vulgate. Dorotheus and others profess to give their names, but Eusebius declare...

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Evidence: Luk 10:2 PRINCIPLES OF GROWTH FOR THE NEW AND GROWING CHRISTIAN Evangelism—Our Most Sobering Task Late in December 1996, a large family gathered for a joyou...

Evidence: Luk 10:14 The world often mocks the thought of hell, by saying that God is unjust in sending all sinners there regardless of whether their sins are menial or he...

Evidence: Luk 10:20 " The joy of heaven will arm us against the assaults of our spiritual enemies and put our mouths out of taste for those pleasures with which the tempt...

Evidence: Luk 10:26 This man was proud and self-righteous. He " stood up" and tested Jesus. He needed the Law to humble him and bring him the knowledge of sin. When the ...

Evidence: Luk 10:27 Love God with the whole heart . Three children were watching a new television set their father had just purchased for them. When their dad arrived hom...

Evidence: Luk 10:34 " When you see that men have been wounded by the Law, then it is time to pour in the gospel oil." Samuel Bolton

buka semua
Pendahuluan / Garis Besar

Robertson: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE GOSPEL OF LUKE By Way of Introduction There is not room here for a full discussion of all the interesting problems raised by Luke as the autho...

JFB: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE writer of this Gospel is universally allowed to have been Lucas (an abbreviated form of Lucanus, as Silas of Silvanus), though he is not expressly...

JFB: Luke (Garis Besar) ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE FORERUNNER. (Luke 1:5-25) ANNUNCIATION OF CHRIST. (Luk 1:26-38) VISIT OF MARY TO ELISABETH. (Luke 1:39-56) BIRTH AND CIRCUMCISION...

TSK: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) Luke, to whom this Gospel has been uniformly attributed from the earliest ages of the Christian church, is generally allowed to have been " the belove...

TSK: Luke 10 (Pendahuluan Pasal) Overview Luk 10:1, Christ sends out at once seventy disciples to work miracles, and to preach; Luk 10:13, pronounces a woe against certain cities;...

Poole: Luke 10 (Pendahuluan Pasal) CHAPTER 10

MHCC: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) This evangelist is generally supposed to have been a physician, and a companion of the apostle Paul. The style of his writings, and his acquaintance w...

MHCC: Luke 10 (Pendahuluan Pasal) (v. 1-16) Seventy disciples sent forth. (Luk 10:17-24) The blessedness of Christ's disciples. (Luk 10:25-37) The good Samaritan. (Luk 10:38-42) Jes...

Matthew Henry: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Gospel According to St. Luke We are now entering into the labours of another evangelist; his name ...

Matthew Henry: Luke 10 (Pendahuluan Pasal) In this chapter we have, I. The ample commission which Christ gave to the seventy disciples to preach the gospel, and to confirm it by miracles; a...

Barclay: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION TO THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO SAINT LUKE A Lovely Book And Its Author The gospel according to St. Luke has been called the loveliest book ...

Barclay: Luke 10 (Pendahuluan Pasal) Labourers For The Harvest (Luk_10:1-16) A Man's True Glory (Luk_10:17-20) The Unsurpassable Claim (Luk_10:21-24) Who Is My Neighbour? (Luk_10:25-...

Constable: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) Introduction Writer Several factors indicate that the writer of this Gospel was the sa...

Constable: Luke (Garis Besar) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-4 II. The birth and childhood of Jesus 1:5-2:52 ...

Constable: Luke Luke Bibliography Alford, Henry. The Greek Testament. New ed. 4 vols. London: Rivingtons, 1880. ...

Haydock: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE HOLY GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST, ACCORDING TO ST. LUKE. INTRODUCTION St. Luke was a physician, a native of Antioch, the metropolis of Syria, a...

Gill: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION TO LUKE The writer of this Gospel, Luke, has been, by some, thought, as Origen a relates, to be the same with Lucius, mentioned in Ro...

College: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) FOREWORD "Many have undertaken" to write commentaries on the Gospel of Luke, and a large number of these are very good. "It seemed good also to me" t...

College: Luke (Garis Besar) OUTLINE There is general agreement among serious students of Luke's Gospel regarding its structure. I. Prologue Luke 1:1-4 II. Infancy Narrative...

Lapide: Luke (Pendahuluan Kitab) S. LUKE'S GOSPEL Third Edition JOHN HODGES, AGAR STREET, CHARING CROSS, LONDON. 1892. INTRODUCTION. ——o—— THE Holy Gospel of Jesus Ch...

Advanced Commentary (Kamus, Lagu-Lagu Himne, Gambar, Ilustrasi Khotbah, Pertanyaan-Pertanyaan, dll)


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