27. And then shall he send his angels--"with a great sound of a
trumpet"
(Mt 24:31).
and shall gather together his elect, &c.--As the tribes of Israel
were anciently gathered together by sound of trumpet
(Ex 19:13, 16, 19;
Le 23:24;
Ps 81:3-5),
so any mighty gathering of God's people, by divine command, is
represented as collected by sound of trumpet
(Isa 27:13;
compare
Re 11:15);
and the ministry of angels, employed in all the great operations of
Providence, is here held forth as the agency by which the present
assembling of the elect is to be accomplished. LIGHTFOOT thus explains it: "When Jerusalem shall be
reduced to ashes, and that wicked nation cut off and rejected, then
shall the Son of man send His ministers with the trumpet of the Gospel,
and they shall gather His elect of the several nations, from the four
corners of heaven: so that God shall not want a Church, although that
ancient people of His be rejected and cast off: but that ancient Jewish
Church being destroyed, a new Church shall be called out of the
Gentiles." But though something like this appears to be the primary
sense of the verse, in relation to the destruction of Jerusalem, no one
can fail to see that the language swells beyond any gathering of a
human family into a Church upon earth, and forces the thoughts onward
to that gathering of the Church "at the last trump," to meet the Lord
in the air, which is to wind up the present scene. Still, this is not,
in our judgment, the direct subject of the prediction; for
Mr 13:28
limits the whole prediction to the generation then existing.
JFB.
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