11. Then said Jesus--"Suffer ye thus far"
(Lu 22:51).
Put up thy sword into the sheath: the cup which my Father hath given
me, shall I not drink it?--This expresses both the feelings
which struggled in the Lord's breast during the Agony in the
garden--aversion to the cup viewed in itself, but, in
the light of the Father's will, perfect preparedness to drink
it. (See on
Lu 22:39-46).
Matthew adds to the address to Peter the following:--"For all they that
take the sword shall perish by the sword"
(Mt 26:52)
--that is, 'Those who take the sword must run all the risks of human
warfare; but Mine is a warfare whose weapons, as they are not carnal,
are attended with no such hazards, but carry certain victory.'
"Thinkest thou that I cannot now"--even after things have proceeded so
far--"pray to My Father, and He shall presently give Me"--rather,
"place at My disposal"--"more than twelve legions of angels"; with
allusion, possibly, to the one angel who had, in His agony, "appeared
to Him from heaven strengthening Him"
(Lu 22:43);
and in the precise number, alluding to the twelve who needed the
help, Himself and His eleven disciples. (The full complement of a
legion of Roman soldiers was six thousand). "But how then shall the
scripture be fulfilled that thus it must be?"
(Mt 26:53, 54).
He could not suffer, according to the Scripture, if He allowed Himself
to be delivered from the predicted death. "And He touched his ear and
healed him"
(Lu 22:51);
for "the Son of man came not to destroy men's lives, but to save them"
(Lu 9:56),
and, even while they were destroying His, to save theirs.
JFB.
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