24. Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be
reconciled to thy brother--The meaning evidently is--not, "dismiss
from thine own breast all ill feeling," but "get thy brother to dismiss
from his mind all grudge against thee."
and then come and offer thy gift--"The picture," says
THOLUCK, "is drawn from life. It transports us to
the moment when the Israelite, having brought his sacrifice to the
court of the Israelites, awaited the instant when the priest would
approach to receive it at his hands. He waits with his gift at the
rails which separate the place where he stands from the court of the
priests, into which his offering will presently be taken, there to be
slain by the priest, and by him presented upon the altar of sacrifice."
It is at this solemn moment, when about to cast himself upon divine
mercy, and seek in his offering a seal of divine forgiveness, that the
offerer is supposed, all at once, to remember that some brother has a
just cause of complaint against him through breach of this commandment
in one or other of the ways just indicated. What then? Is he to say, As
soon as I have offered this gift I will go straight to my brother, and
make it up with him? Nay; but before another step is taken--even before
the offering is presented--this reconciliation is to be sought, though
the gift have to be left unoffered before the altar. The converse of
the truth here taught is very strikingly expressed in
Mr 11:25, 26:
"And when ye stand praying (in the very act), forgive, if ye
have aught (of just complaint) against any; that your Father also which
is in heaven may forgive you your trespasses. But if ye do not forgive,
neither will your Father which is in heaven forgive you," &c. Hence the
beautiful practice of the early Church, to see that all differences
amongst brethren and sisters in Christ were made up, in the spirit of
love, before going to the Holy Communion; and the Church of England has
a rubrical direction to this effect in her Communion service.
Certainly, if this be the highest act of worship on earth, such
reconciliation though obligatory on all other occasions of
worship--must be peculiarly so then.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible