5. When Jesus saw their faith--It is remarkable that all the three
narratives call it "their faith" which Jesus saw. That the patient
himself had faith, we know from the proclamation of his forgiveness,
which Jesus made before all; and we should have been apt to conclude
that his four friends bore him to Jesus merely out of benevolent
compliance with the urgent entreaties of the poor sufferer. But here we
learn, not only that his bearers had the same faith with himself, but
that Jesus marked it as a faith which was not to be defeated--a faith
victorious over all difficulties. This was the faith for which He was
ever on the watch, and which He never saw without marking, and, in those
who needed anything from Him, richly rewarding.
he said unto the sick of the palsy, Son--"be of good cheer"
(Mt 9:2).
thy sins be forgiven thee--By the word "be," our translators perhaps
meant "are," as in Luke
(Lu 5:20).
For it is not a command to his sins to depart, but an authoritative
proclamation of the man's pardoned state as a believer. And yet, as the
Pharisees understood our Lord to be dispensing pardon by this
saying, and Jesus not only acknowledges that they were right, but
founds His whole argument upon the correctness of it, we must regard
the saying as a royal proclamation of the man's forgiveness by Him to
whom it belonged to dispense it; nor could such a style of address be
justified on any lower supposition. (See on
Lu 7:41,
&c.).
JFB.
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