Matthew Henry
In this passage of story we find,
the Son of man came eating and drinking, conversing familiarly with all sorts of people; not declining the society of publicans, though they were of
ill fame, nor of Pharisees, though they bore him
ill will, but accepting the friendly invitations both of the one and the other, that, if possible, he might do good to
both. Here he
went into the house of one of the chief Pharisees, a ruler, it may be, and a magistrate in his country,
to eat bread on the sabbath day, Luke 14:1. See how favourable God is to us, that he allows us time, even on his own day, for bodily refreshments; and how careful we should be not to abuse that liberty, or turn it into licentiousness. Christ went only to
eat bread, to take such refreshment as was necessary on the sabbath day. Our sabbath meals must, with a particular care, be guarded against all manner of excess. On sabbath days we must do as Moses and Jethro did,
eat bread before God(Exod 18:12), and, as is said of the primitive Christians, on the Lord’s day, must
eat and drinkas those that must
pray again before we go to rest, that we may not be unfit for that.
went about doing good. Wherever he came he
soughtopportunities to
do good, and not only improved those that
fell in his way. Here was
a certain man before him who had the dropsy, Luke 14:2. We do not find that he offered himself, or that his friends offered him to be Christ’s patient, but Christ
prevented himwith the blessings of his goodness, and
before he calledhe answered him. Note, It is a happy thing to be where Christ is, to be present
before him, though we be not presented
to him. This man had the
dropsy, it is probable, in a high degree, and appeared much swoln with it; probably he was some relation of the Pharisee’s, that now
lodgedin his house, which is more likely than that he should be an
invited guestat the table.
endured the contradiction of sinners against himself: They watched him, Luke 14:1. The Pharisee that invited him, it should seem, did it with a design to pick some quarrel with him; if it were so, Christ
knewit, and yet
went, for he knew himself a match for the most
subtleof them, and knew how to order his steps with an eye to
his observers. Those that are
watchedhad need to be
wary. It is, as Dr. Hammond observes, contrary to all laws of hospitality to seek advantage against one that you invited to be your guest, for such a one you have taken under your protection. These lawyers and Pharisees, like the fowler that lies in wait to
ensnarethe birds,
held their peace, and acted very
silently. When Christ asked them
whetherthey thought it
lawful to heal on the sabbath day(and herein he is said to
answerthem, for it was an answer to
their thoughts, and thoughts are
wordsto Jesus Christ), they would say neither
yeanor
nay, for their design was to
inform against him, not to be
informed by him. They would not say
it was lawful to heal, for then they would preclude themselves from imputing it to him as a crime; and yet the thing was so plain and self-evident that they could not for shame say it was
not lawful. Note, Good men have often been persecuted for doing that which even their persecutors, if they would but give their consciences leave to speak out, could not but own to be lawful and good. Many a
good workChrist did, for which they
cast stonesat him and his name.
doing goodby the
oppositionand
contradictionof sinners. He
took him, and healed him, and let him go, Luke 14:4. Perhaps he
took him asideinto another room, and healed him
there, because he would neither
proclaimhimself, such was his humility, nor
provokehis adversaries, such was his wisdom, his
meekness of wisdom. Note, Though we must not be driven off from our duty by the malice of our enemies, yet we should order the circumstances of it so as to make it the least offensive. Or, He
took him, that is, he
laid handson him, to cure him;
epilabomenos,
complexus—he embraced him, took him in his arms, big and unwieldy as he was (for so dropsical people generally are), and reduced him to shape. The cure of a dropsy, as much as any disease, one would think, should be gradual; yet Christ cured even
thatdisease, perfectly cured it, in a moment. He then let him go, lest the Pharisees should fall upon him for
being healed, though he was purely passive; for what absurdities would not such men as they were be guilty of?
did nothing but what he could justify, to the conviction and confusion of those that quarrelled with him, Luke 14:5, Luke 14:6. He still answered their thoughts, and made them
hold their peace for shamewho before held their peace for
subtlety, by an appeal to their own practice, as he had been used to do upon such occasions, that he might show them how in condemning him they condemned themselves:
which of you shall have an ass or an ox fallen into a pit, by accident,
and will not pull him out on the sabbath day, and that straightway, not deferring it till the sabbath be over, lest it perish? Observe, It is not so much out of
compassion to the poor creaturethat they do it as a concern for their own interest. It is
their own ox, and
their own ass, that is worth money, and they will dispense with the law of the sabbath for the
saving of. Now this was an evidence of their hypocrisy, and that it was not out of any real regard to the sabbath that they found fault with Christ for healing on the
sabbath day(that was only the pretence), but really because they were angry at the
miraculous good workswhich Christ wrought, and the
proofhe thereby gave of his divine mission, and the interest he thereby
gainedamong the people. Many can easily dispense with that, for their own interest, which they cannot dispense with for God’s glory and the good of their brethren. This question
silencedthem:
They could not answer him again to these things, Luke 14:6. Christ will be justified when he speaks, and every mouth must be stopped before him.