38. at his feet behind him--the posture at meals being a reclining
one, with the feet out behind.
began to wash, &c.--to "water with a shower." The tears, which were
quite involuntary, poured down in a flood upon His naked feet, as
she bent down to kiss them; and deeming them rather fouled than washed
by this, she hastened to wipe them off with the only towel she had, the
long tresses of her own hair, "with which slaves were wont to wash their
masters' feet" [STIER].
kissed--The word signifies "to kiss fondly, to caress," or to "kiss
again and again," which
Lu 7:45
shows is meant here. What prompted this? Much love, springing from a
sense of much forgiveness. So says He who knew her heart
(Lu 7:47).
Where she had met with Christ before, or what words of His had brought
life to her dead heart and a sense of divine pardon to her guilty soul,
we know not. But probably she was of the crowd of "publicans and
sinners" whom Incarnate Compassion drew so often around Him, and
heard from His lips some of those words such as never man spake, "Come
unto Me, all ye that labour," &c. No personal interview had up to this
time taken place between them; but she could keep her feelings no
longer to herself, and having found her way to Him (and entered along
with him,
Lu 7:45),
they burst forth in this surpassing yet most artless style, as if her
whole soul would go out to Him.
JFB.
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