39. And they said unto him, We can--Here we see them owning
their mother's petition for them as their own; and doubtless they were
perfectly sincere in professing their willingness to follow their
Master to any suffering He might have to endure. As for James,
he was the first of the apostles who was honored, and showed himself
able to be baptized with his Master's baptism of blood
(Ac 12:1, 2);
while John, after going through all the persecutions to which
the infant Church was exposed from the Jews, and sharing in the
struggles and sufferings occasioned by the first triumphs of the Gospel
among the Gentiles, lived to be the victim, after all the rest had got
to glory, of a bitter persecution in the evening of his days, for the
word of God and for the testimony of Jesus Christ. Yes, they were dear
believers and blessed men, in spite of this unworthy ambition, and
their Lord knew it; and perhaps the foresight of what they would have
to pass through, and the courageous testimony He would yet receive from
them, was the cause of that gentleness which we cannot but wonder at in
His reproof.
And Jesus said unto them, Ye shall indeed drink of the cup that I drink
of; and with the baptism that I am baptized withal shall ye be
baptized--No doubt this prediction, when their sufferings at length
came upon them, cheered them with the assurance, not that they would sit
on His right and left hand--for of that thought they would be heartily
ashamed--but that "if they suffered with Him, they should be also
glorified together."
JFB.
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