29. And if thy right eye--the readier and the dearer of the two.
offend thee--be a "trap spring," or as in the New Testament, be "an
occasion of stumbling" to thee.
pluck it out and cast it from thee--implying a certain indignant
promptitude, heedless of whatever cost to feeling the act may involve.
Of course, it is not the eye simply of which our Lord speaks--as if
execution were to be done upon the bodily organ--though there have been
fanatical ascetics who have both advocated and practiced this, showing a
very low apprehension of spiritual things--but the offending eye, or
the eye considered as the occasion of sin; and consequently, only the
sinful exercise of the organ which is meant. For as one might put
out his eyes without in the least quenching the lust to which they
ministered, so, "if thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
light," and, when directed by a holy mind, becomes an "instrument of
righteousness unto God." At the same time, just as by cutting off a
hand, or plucking out an eye, the power of acting and of seeing
would be destroyed, our Lord certainly means that we are to
strike at the root of such unholy dispositions, as well as cut off
the occasions which tend to stimulate them.
for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish,
and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell--He who despises
the warning to cast from him, with indignant promptitude, an offending
member, will find his whole body "cast," with a retributive promptitude
of indignation, "into hell." Sharp language, this, from the lips of Love
incarnate!
JFB.
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