2. Judas . . . knew the place, for Jesus ofttimes--see
Joh 8:1;
Lu 21:37.
resorted thither with his disciples--The baseness of this abuse of
knowledge in Judas, derived from admission to the closest privacies of
his Master, is most touchingly conveyed here, though nothing beyond bare
narrative is expressed. Jesus, however, knowing that in this spot Judas
would expect to find Him, instead of avoiding it, hies Him thither, as a
Lamb to the slaughter. "No man taketh My life from Me, but I lay it
down of Myself"
(Joh 10:18).
Besides, the scene which was to fill up the little breathing-time, the
awful interval, between the Supper and the Apprehension--like the
"silence in heaven for about the space of half an hour" between the
breaking of the Apocalyptic Seals and the peal of the Trumpets of war
(Re 8:1)
--the AGONY--would have been too terrible for the
upper room; nor would He cloud the delightful associations of the
last Passover and the first Supper by pouring out the
anguish of His soul there. The garden, however, with its amplitude, its
shady olives, its endeared associations, would be congenial to His
heart. Here He had room enough to retire--first, from eight of them,
and then from the more favored three; and here, when that mysterious
scene was over, the stillness would only be broken by the tread of the
traitor.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible