8. Peter saith unto him, Thou shalt never wash, &c.--more
emphatically, "Never shalt Thou wash my feet": that is, "That is an
incongruity to which I can never submit." How like the man!
If I wash thee not, thou hast no part with me--What Peter could
not submit to was, that the Master should serve His servant. But the
whole saving work of Christ was one continued series of such services,
ending with and consummated by the most self-sacrificing and
transcendent of all services: THE SON OF MAN CAME not to be
ministered unto, but TO MINISTER, AND TO GIVE
HIS LIFE A RANSOM FOR MANY. (See on
Mr 10:45).
If Peter then could not submit to let his Master go down so low as to
wash his feet, how should he suffer himself to be served by Him at
all? This is couched under the one pregnant word "wash," which
though applicable to the lower operation which Peter resisted,
is the familiar scriptural symbol of that higher cleansing,
which Peter little thought he was at the same time virtually putting
from him. It is not humility to refuse what the Lord deigns to do
for us, or to deny what He has done, but it is self-willed
presumption--not rare, however, in those inner circles of lofty
religious profession and traditional spirituality, which are found
wherever Christian truth has enjoyed long and undisturbed
possession. The truest humility is to receive reverentially, and
thankfully to own, the gifts of grace.
JFB.
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