26. Peter saith unto him, Of strangers--"of those not their children."
Jesus saith unto him, Then are the children free--By "the children"
our Lord cannot here mean Himself and the Twelve together, in some loose
sense of their near relationship to God as their common Father. For
besides that our Lord never once mixes Himself up with His disciples in
speaking of their relation to God, but ever studiously keeps His
relation and theirs apart (see, for example, on the last words of this
chapter)--this would be to teach the right of believers to exemption
from the dues required for sacred services, in the teeth of all that
Paul teaches and that He Himself indicates throughout. He can refer
here, then, only to Himself; using the word "children" evidently in
order to express the general principle observed by sovereigns, who do
not draw taxes from their own children, and thus convey the truth
respecting His own exemption the more strikingly:--namely, "If the
sovereign's own family be exempt, you know the inference in My case"; or
to express it more nakedly than Jesus thought needful and fitting: "This
is a tax for upholding My Father's House. As His Son, then, that tax is
not due by Me--I AM FREE."
JFB.
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