Mt 25:1-13. PARABLE OF THE TEN VIRGINS.
This and the following parable are in Matthew alone.
1. Then--at the time referred to at the close of the preceding chapter,
the time of the Lord's Second Coming to reward His faithful servants and
take vengeance on the faithless. Then
shall the kingdom of heaven be likened unto ten virgins, which took
their lamps, and went forth to meet the bridegroom--This supplies a
key to the parable, whose object is, in the main, the same as that of
the last parable--to illustrate
the vigilant and expectant attitude of faith, in respect of which
believers are described as "they that look for Him"
(Heb 9:28),
and "love His appearing"
(2Ti 4:8).
In the last parable it was that of servants waiting for their absent
Lord; in this it is that of virgin attendants on a Bride, whose duty it
was to go forth at night with lamps, and be ready on the appearance of
the Bridegroom to conduct the Bride to his house, and go in with him to
the marriage. This entire and beautiful change of figure brings out the
lesson of the former parable in quite a new light. But let it be
observed that, just as in the parable of the Marriage Supper
(Lu 14:15-24),
so in this--the Bride does not come into view at all in this
parable; the Virgins and the Bridegroom holding forth all
the intended instruction: nor could believers be represented both as
Bride and Bridal Attendants without incongruity.
JFB.
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