25. At that time Jesus answered and said--We are not to understand
by this, that the previous discourse had been concluded, and that this
is a record only of something said about the same period. For the
connection is most close, and the word "answered"--which, when there is
no one to answer, refers to something just before said, or rising in the
mind of the speaker in consequence of something said--confirms this.
What Jesus here "answered" evidently was the melancholy results of His
ministry, lamented over in the foregoing verses. It is as if He had
said, "Yes; but there is a brighter side to the picture; even in those
who have rejected the message of eternal life, it is the pride of their
own hearts only which has blinded them, and the glory of the truth does
but the more appear in their inability to receive it. Nor have all
rejected it even here; souls thirsting for salvation have drawn water
with joy from the wells of salvation; the weary have found rest; the
hungry have been filled with good things, while the rich have been sent
empty away."
I thank thee--rather, "I assent to thee." But this is not strong
enough. The idea of "full" or "cordial" concurrence is conveyed
by the preposition. The thing expressed is adoring acquiescence, holy
satisfaction with that law of the divine procedure about to be
mentioned. And as, when He afterwards uttered the same words, He
"exulted in spirit" (see on
Lu 10:21),
probably He did the same now, though not recorded.
O Father, Lord of heaven and earth--He so styles His Father here, to
signify that from Him of right emanates all such high arrangements.
because thou hast hid these things--the knowledge of these saving
truths.
from the wise and prudent--The former of these terms points to the
men who pride themselves upon their speculative or philosophical
attainments; the latter to the men of worldly shrewdness--the clever,
the sharp-witted, the men of affairs. The distinction is a natural one,
and was well understood. (See
1Co 1:19,
&c.). But why had the Father hid from such the things that belonged to
their peace, and why did Jesus so emphatically set His seal to this
arrangement? Because it is not for the offending and revolted to speak
or to speculate, but to listen to Him from whom we have broken loose,
that we may learn whether there be any recovery for us at all; and if
there be, on what principles--of what nature--to what ends. To bring
our own "wisdom and prudence" to such questions is impertinent and
presumptuous; and if the truth regarding them, or the glory of it, be
"hid" from us, it is but a fitting retribution, to which all the
right-minded will set their seal along with Jesus.
hast revealed them unto babes--to babe-like men; men of unassuming
docility, men who, conscious that they know nothing, and have no right
to sit in judgment on the things that belong to their peace, determine
simply to "hear what God the Lord will speak." Such are well called
"babes." (See
Heb 5:13;
1Co 13:11; 14:20,
&c.).
JFB.
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