22. But I say unto you--Mark the authoritative tone in which--as
Himself the Lawgiver and Judge--Christ now gives the true sense, and
explains the deep reach, of the commandment.
That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in
danger of the judgment; and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca!
shall be in danger of the council; but whosoever shall say, Thou fool!
shall be in danger of hell-fire--It is unreasonable to deny, as
ALEXANDER does, that three degrees of punishment are here meant to be
expressed, and to say that it is but a threefold expression of one and
the same thing. But Romish expositors greatly err in taking the first
two--"the judgment" and "the council"--to refer to degrees of temporal
punishment with which lesser sins were to be visited under the Gospel,
and only the last--"hell-fire"--to refer to the future life. All three
clearly refer to divine retribution, and that alone, for breaches of
this commandment; though this is expressed by an allusion to Jewish
tribunals. The "judgment," as already explained, was the lowest of
these; the "council," or "Sanhedrim,"--which sat at Jerusalem--was the
highest; while the word used for "hell-fire" contains an allusion to the
"valley of the son of Hinnom"
(Jos 18:16).
In this valley the Jews, when steeped in idolatry, went the length of
burning their children to Molech "on the high places of Tophet"--in
consequence of which good Josiah defiled it, to prevent the repetition
of such abominations
(2Ki 23:10);
and from that time forward, if we may believe the Jewish writers, a
fire was kept burning in it to consume the carrion and all kinds of
impurities that collected about the capital. Certain it is, that while
the final punishment of the wicked is described in the Old Testament by
allusions to this valley of Tophet or Hinnom
(Isa 30:33; 66:24),
our Lord Himself describes the same by merely quoting these terrific
descriptions of the evangelical prophet
(Mr 9:43-48).
What precise degrees of unholy feeling towards our brothers are
indicated by the words "Raca" and "fool" it would be as useless as it
is vain to inquire. Every age and every country has its modes of
expressing such things; and no doubt our Lord seized on the then
current phraseology of unholy disrespect and contempt, merely to
express and condemn the different degrees of such feeling when brought
out in words, as He had immediately before condemned the feeling
itself. In fact, so little are we to make of mere words, apart
from the feeling which they express, that as anger is expressly
said to have been borne by our Lord towards His enemies though mixed
with "grief for the hardness of their hearts"
(Mr 3:5),
and as the apostle teaches us that there is an anger which is not
sinful
(Eph 4:26);
so in the Epistle of James
(Jas 2:20)
we find the words, "O vain (or, empty) man"; and our Lord Himself
applies the very word "fools" twice in one breath to the blind guides
of the people
(Mt 23:17, 19)
--although, in both cases, it is to false reasoners rather than
persons that such words are applied. The spirit, then, of the whole
statement may be thus given: "For ages ye have been taught that the
sixth commandment, for example, is broken only by the murderer, to pass
sentence upon whom is the proper business of the recognized tribunals.
But I say unto you that it is broken even by causeless anger, which is
but hatred in the bud, as hatred is incipient murder
(1Jo 3:15);
and if by the feelings, much more by those words in which all
ill feeling, from the slightest to the most envenomed, are wont to be
cast upon a brother: and just as there are gradations in human courts
of judicature, and in the sentences which they pronounce according to
the degrees of criminality, so will the judicial treatment of all the
breakers of this commandment at the divine tribunal be according to
their real criminality before the heart-searching Judge." Oh, what holy
teaching is this!
JFB.
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