17. Jesus saith unto her, Touch me not, for I am not yet ascended to
my Father--Old familiarities must now give place to new and more awful
yet sweeter approaches; but for these the time has not come yet. This
seems the spirit, at least, of these mysterious words, on which much
difference of opinion has obtained, and not much that is satisfactory
said.
but go to my brethren--(Compare
Mt 28:10;
Heb 2:11, 17).
That He had still our Humanity, and therefore "is not ashamed to
call us brethren," is indeed grandly evidenced by these words. But
it is worthy of most reverential notice, that we nowhere read of
anyone who presumed to call Him Brother. "My brethren: Blessed
Jesus, who are these? Were they not Thy followers? yea, Thy forsakers?
How dost Thou raise these titles with Thyself! At first they were Thy
servants; then disciples; a little before Thy death, they
were Thy friends; now, after Thy resurrection, they were Thy
brethren. But oh, mercy without measure! how wilt Thou, how
canst Thou call them brethren whom, in Thy last parting, Thou
foundest fugitives? Did they not run from Thee? Did not one of them
rather leave his inmost coat behind him than not be quit of Thee? And
yet Thou sayest, 'Go, tell My brethren! It is not in the power of the
sins of our infirmity to unbrother us'" [BISHOP
HALL].
I ascend unto my Father and your Father, and to my God and your
God--words of incomparable glory! Jesus had called God habitually
His Father, and on one occasion, in His darkest moment, His
God. But both are here united, expressing that full-orbed
relationship which
embraces in its vast sweep at once Himself and His redeemed. Yet, note
well, He says not, Our Father and our God. All the deepest of
the Church fathers were wont to call attention to this, as expressly
designed to distinguish between what God is to Him and to us--His Father
essentially, ours not so: our God essentially, His not so: His God only
in connection with us: our God only in connection with Him.
JFB.
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