1~4절 카드 ↗
The Evangelist's Preface. 1 Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to set forth in order a declaration of those things which are most surely believed among us, 2 Even as they delivered them unto us, which from the beginning were eyewitnesses, and ministers of the word; 3 It seemed good to me also, having had perfect understanding of all things from the very first, to write unto thee in order, most excellent Theophilus, 4 That thou mightest know the certainty of those things, wherein thou hast been instructed. Complimental prefaces and dedications, the language of flattery and the food and fuel of pride, are justly condemned by the wise and good; but it doth not therefore follow, that such as are useful and instructive are to be run down; such is this, in which St. Luke dedicates his gospel to his friend Theophilus, not as to his patron, though he was a man of honour, to protect it, but as to his pupil, to learn it, and hold it fast. It is not certain who this Theophilus was; the name signifies a friend of God; some think that it does not mean any particular person, but every one that is a lover of God; Dr. Hammond quotes some of the ancients understanding it so: and then it teaches us, that those who are truly lovers of God, will heartily welcome the gospel of Christ, the design and tendency of which are, to bring us to God. But it is rather to be understood of some particular person, probably a magistrate; because Luke gives him here the same title of respect which St. Paul gave to Festus the governor, kratiste ( Acts 26:25 ), which we there translate most noble Festus, and here most excellent Theophilus. Note, Religion does not destroy civility and good manners, but teaches us, according to the usages of our country, to give honour to them to whom honour is due. Now observe here, I. Why St. Luke wrote this gospel. It is certain that he was moved by the Holy Ghost, not only to the writing, but in the writing of it; but in both he was moved as a reasonable creature, and not as a mere machine; and he was made to consider, 1. That the things he wrote of were things that were most surely believed among all Christians, and therefore things which they ought to be instructed in, that they may know what they believe, and things which ought to be transmitted to posterity (who are as much concerned in them as we are); and, in order to that, to be committed to writing, which is the surest way of conveyance to the ages to come. He will not write about things of doubtful disputation, things about which Christians may safely differ from one another and hesitate within themselves; but the things which are, and ought to be, most surely believed, pragmata peplerophoremena -- the things which were performed (so some), which Christ and his apostles did, and did with such circumstances as gave a full assurance that they were really done, so that they have gained an established lasting credit. Note, Though it is not the foundation of our faith, yet it is a support to it, that the articles of our creed are things that have been long most surely believed. The doctrine of Christ is what thousands of the wisest and best of men have ventured their souls upon with the greatest assurance and satisfaction. 2. That it was requisite there should be a declaration made in order of those things; that the history of the life of Christ should be methodized, and committed to writing, for the greater certainty of the conveyance. When things are put in order, we know the better where to find them for our own use, and how to keep them for the benefit of others. 3. That there were many who had undertaken to publish narratives of the life of Christ, many well-meaning people, who designed well, and did well, and what they published had done good, though not done by divine inspiration, nor so well done as might be, nor intended for perpetuity. Note, (1.) The labours of others in the gospel of Christ, if faithful and honest, we ought to commend and encourage, and not to despise, though chargeable with many deficiencies. (2.) Others' services to Christ must not be reckoned to supersede ours, but rather to quicken them. 4. That the truth of the things he had to write was confirmed by the concurring testimony of those who were competent and unexceptionable witnesses of them; what had been published in writing already, and what he was now about to publish, agreed with that which had been delivered by word of mouth, over and over, by those who from the beginning were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word, Luke 1:2 ; Luke 1:2 . Note, (1.) The apostles were ministers of the word of Christ, who is the Word (so some understand it), or of the doctrine of Christ; they, having received it themselves, ministered it to others, 1 John 1:1 . They had not a gospel to make as masters, but a gospel to preach as ministers. (2.) The ministers of the word were eye-witnesses of the things which they preached, and, which is also included, ear-witnesses. They did themselves hear the doctrine of Christ, and see his miracles, and had them not by report, at second hand; and therefore they could not but speak, with the greatest assurance, the things which they had seen and heard, Acts 4:20 . (3.) They were so from the beginning of Christ's ministry, Luke 1:2 ; Luke 1:2 . He had his disciples with him when he wrought his first miracle, John 2:11 . They companied with him all the time he went in and out among them ( Acts 1:21 ), so that they not only heard and saw all that which was sufficient to confirm their faith, but, if there had been any thing to shock it, they had opportunity to discover it. (4.) The written gospel, which we have to this day, exactly agrees with the gospel which was preached in the first days of the church. (5.) That he himself had a perfect understanding of the things he wrote of, from the first, Luke 1:3 ; Luke 1:3 . Some think that here is a tacit reflection upon those who had written before him, that they had not a perfect understanding of what they wrote, and therefore, Here am I, send me (--facit indignatio versum--my wrath impels my pen ); or rather, without reflecting on them, he asserts his own ability for this undertaking: "It seemed good to me, having attained to the exact knowledge of all things, anothen -- from above; " so I think it should be rendered; for if he meant the same with from the beginning ( Luke 1:2 ; Luke 1:2 ), as our translation intimates, he would have used the same word. [1.] He had diligently searched into these things, had followed after them (so the word is), as the Old-Testament prophets are said to have enquired and searched diligently, 1 Peter 1:10 . He had not taken things so easily and superficially as others who had written before him, but made it his business to inform himself concerning particulars. [2.] He had received his intelligence, not only by tradition, as others had done, but by revelation, confirming that tradition, and securing him from any error or mistake in the recording of it. He sought it from above (so the word intimates), and from thence he had it; thus, like Elihu, he fetched his knowledge from afar. He wrote his history as Moses wrote his, of things reported by tradition, but ratified by inspiration. [3.] He could therefore say that he had a perfect understanding of these things. He knew them, akribos -- accurately, exactly. "Now, having received this from above, it seemed good to me to communicate it;" for such a talent as this ought not to be buried. II. Observe why he sent it to Theophilus: "I wrote unto thee these things in order, not that thou mayest give reputation to the work, but that thou mayest be edified by it ( Luke 1:4 ; Luke 1:4 ); that thou mayest know the certainty of those things wherein thou has been instructed. " 1. It is implied, that he had been instructed in these things either before his baptism, or since, or both, according to the rule, Matthew 28:19 ; Matthew 28:20 . Probably, Luke had baptized him, and knew how well instructed he was; peri hon katechethes -- concerning which thou hast been catechized; so the word is; the most knowing Christians began with being catechized. Theophilus was a person of quality, perhaps of noble birth; and so much the more pains should be taken with such when they are young, to teach them the principles of the oracles of God, that they may be fortified against temptations, and furnished for the opportunities, of a high condition in the world. 2. It was intended that he should know the certainty of those things, should understand them more clearly and believe more firmly. There is a certainty in the gospel of Christ, there is that therein which we may build upon; and those who have been well instructed in the things of God when they were young should afterwards give diligence to know the certainty of those things, to know not only what we believe, but why we believe it, that we may be able to give a reason of the hope that is in us. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-5-25" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
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pericope/per-luk-1-001
절 (explains)
bible-text/luk-1-1, bible-text/luk-1-2, bible-text/luk-1-3, bible-text/luk-1-4
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 많은 사람이 우리 가운데서 이루어진 그 일들에 관하여 이야기를 차례대로 엮어 내려고 시도하였습니다. 그것은 처음부터 직접 눈으로 보고 말씀을 섬긴 사람들이 우리에게 전해 준 그대로입니다. 그래서 저도 모든 일을 처음부터 자세히 살펴본 후에, 존귀하신 데오빌로 님께 차례대로 써 드리는 것이 좋겠다고 생각하였습니다. 이는 당신이 배운 그 일들이 확실하다는 것을 알게 하려는 것입니다. (눅 1:1-4)
아첨으로 가득 찬 현란한 헌정사는 교만을 부추기는 것으로 마땅히 비판받아야 하지만, 그렇다고 유익하고 교훈적인 헌정사까지 배격할 이유는 없다. 누가는 이 서문에서 자신의 복음서를 친구 데오빌로에게 헌정하는데, 그것도 보호자로서가 아니라 제자로서—즉 배우고 붙들 사람으로서—헌정한다. 데오빌로가 어떤 인물인지 정확히는 알 수 없다. "데오빌로"라는 이름은 "하나님을 사랑하는 자"라는 뜻이므로, 일부 교부들은 이것이 특정 인물이 아니라 하나님을 사랑하는 모든 사람을 가리킨다고 보기도 했다. 그러나 누가가 여기서 "존귀하신"이라는 칭호를 붙이는 것을 보면, 이것은 바울이 총독 베스도를 "존귀하신 베스도 각하"(행 26:25)라고 부른 것과 같은 존칭이므로, 데오빌로는 실제 고위직 인물이었을 가능성이 높다. 주목하라. 종교는 예절과 공손함을 파괴하지 않고 오히려 가르친다. 우리는 존경받아야 할 사람에게 합당한 존경을 표해야 한다.
이제 누가가 이 복음서를 쓴 이유를 살펴보자.
**첫째, 그가 기록한 내용이 신자들 사이에서 굳게 믿어지는 사실들이기 때문이다.** 이것들은 모든 그리스도인이 마땅히 배워야 할 사항이며, 후대에 전달하기 위해 기록으로 남겨야 할 내용이다. 그는 논쟁적인 주제나 신자들이 서로 다른 견해를 가져도 무방한 사안에 대해서는 쓰지 않는다. 그가 쓰는 것은 가장 확실하게 믿어지는 일들, 즉 그리스도와 그의 사도들이 행하신 일들로서 그 상황 자체가 충분한 증거를 지니는 것들이다. 오랫동안 확실하게 믿어져 온 복음의 교리는 그것만으로도 큰 지지를 받는다. 수많은 지혜롭고 선한 사람들이 이 신조를 토대로 자신의 영혼을 맡겨 왔다.
**둘째, 이 내용들을 순서 있게 선포하는 것이 필요하기 때문이다.** 사실이 정리되면 우리가 필요할 때 찾기 쉽고, 다른 이들을 위해 보존하기도 쉽다.
**셋째, 이미 이 이야기를 기록하려 한 사람들이 많이 있었기 때문이다.** 그들은 선한 뜻으로 잘 해냈지만, 신성한 영감을 받지는 않았으므로 완전할 수 없었고 오래 전해질 수도 없었다. 주목하라. 복음 안에서 다른 이들의 수고가 충실하고 정직했다면 격려하고 비난하지 말아야 한다. 또한 다른 이들의 섬김이 우리의 섬김을 대체한다고 여겨서는 안 되며, 오히려 그것이 우리의 섬김을 자극해야 한다.
**넷째, 그가 기록하는 진실이 이것들을 직접 목격한 신뢰할 만한 증인들의 증언으로 확인되기 때문이다.** 이미 출판된 것들과 그가 이제 쓰려는 것들이, 처음부터 눈으로 보고 말씀을 섬긴 사람들이 전해 준 것과 일치한다(눅 1:2). 주목하라. 사도들은 말씀의 일꾼으로서 자기들이 전한 복음의 주인이 아니라 종이었다. 그들은 이것을 직접 보고 들었으므로, 가장 확실한 확신을 가지고 말하지 않을 수 없었다(행 4:20). 그들은 그리스도의 사역 처음부터 끝까지 함께한 사람들이었다(행 1:21).
**다섯째, 누가 자신이 처음부터 모든 것을 정확하게 파악했기 때문이다(눅 1:3).** "처음부터 자세히"라고 번역된 원문에서 "위로부터"(anothen)라는 표현을 주목할 만하다. 그가 단순히 전통을 따라 받은 것이 아니라 위로부터 계시를 받아 이 사실들을 확인받았음을 의미할 수 있다. 엘리후가 지식을 멀리서 구하였다고 했듯이, 누가도 그것을 위에서 구했고 거기서 얻었다. 이처럼 그는 인간의 전통뿐 아니라 영감으로 확인되었으므로, 완전한 이해에 도달했다고 말할 수 있다.
이 복음서를 데오빌로에게 보낸 목적은 자신에게 명성을 얻거나 데오빌로에게 명예를 주려는 것이 아니라, 데오빌로가 가르침을 받은 그 일들의 확실성을 알게 하려는 것이었다(눅 1:4). 그는 이미 그 일들을 배웠다. 아마도 세례를 받을 때나 그 후에 교리 교육을 받았을 것이다. 그러나 더 분명히 알고 더 굳게 믿어야 한다. 복음 안에는 우리가 의지할 수 있는 확실성이 있다. 우리는 믿는 바를 알 뿐 아니라 왜 믿는지도 알아야 하며, 그 소망의 이유를 제시할 수 있어야 한다.
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원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-luk-1-1-4(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
1~80절 카드 ↗
L U K E. CHAP. I. The narrative which this evangelist gives us (or rather God by him) of the life of Christ begins earlier than either Matthew or Mark. We have reason to thank God for them all, as we have for all the gifts and graces of Christ's ministers, which in one make up what is wanting in the other, while all put together make a harmony. In this chapter we have, I. Luke's preface to his gospel, or his epistle dedicatory to his friend Theophilus, Luke 1:1-4 . II. The prophecy and history of the conception of John Baptist, who was Christ's forerunner, Luke 1:5-25 . The annunciation of the virgin Mary, or the notice given to her that she should be the mother of the Messiah, Luke 1:26-38 . IV. The interview between Mary the mother of Jesus and Elisabeth the mother of John, when they were both with child of those pregnant births, and the prophecies they both uttered upon that occasion, Luke 1:39-56 . V. The birth and circumcision of John Baptist, six months before the birth of Christ, Luke 1:57-66 . VI. Zacharias's song of praise, in thankfulness for the birth of John, and in prospect of the birth of Jesus, Luke 1:67-79 . VII. A short account of John Baptist's infancy, Luke 1:80 . And these do more than give us an entertaining narrative; they will lead us into the understanding of the mystery of godliness, God manifest in the flesh. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-1-4" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
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pericope/per-luk-1-008 - part_of
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pericope/per-luk-1-010
절 (explains)
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
누가복음은 다른 복음서들보다 더 이른 시점, 곧 그리스도의 탄생 이전부터 이야기를 시작한다. 마태와 마가가 요한의 세례와 사역에서 복음을 시작하는 반면, 누가는 더 거슬러 올라가 세례 요한의 잉태까지 이야기를 이어 간다. 하나님께서 이 모든 복음서 기자들을 세우셨으니, 우리는 그 모두를 감사히 여겨야 한다. 그들이 서로를 보완하여 온전한 조화를 이루기 때문이다. 이 장은 일곱 부분으로 이루어진다. 첫째, 누가가 자기 복음서를 데오빌로에게 헌정하는 서문(1-4절). 둘째, 그리스도의 선구자인 세례 요한의 잉태에 관한 예언과 역사(5-25절). 셋째, 처녀 마리아가 메시아의 어머니가 될 것임을 알리는 수태고지(26-38절). 넷째, 두 사람이 모두 아이를 가진 상태에서 예수의 어머니 마리아와 요한의 어머니 엘리사벳이 나누는 만남, 그리고 그 자리에서 두 여인이 선포하는 예언(39-56절). 다섯째, 그리스도 탄생 6개월 전에 태어난 세례 요한의 출생과 할례(57-66절). 여섯째, 요한의 탄생에 대한 감사와 예수의 탄생에 대한 기대를 담은 사가랴의 찬가(67-79절). 일곱째, 세례 요한의 유년 시절에 대한 간략한 기록(80절). 이 모든 내용은 흥미로운 이야기를 넘어, 육신으로 나타나신 하나님이라는 경건의 신비를 이해하도록 우리를 이끌어 준다.
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원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-luk-1-intro(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
5~25절 카드 ↗
The Appearance of an Angel to Zacharias; The Birth of John Foretold; The Unbelief of Zacharias. 5 There was in the days of Herod, the king of Judæa, a certain priest named Zacharias, of the course of Abia: and his wife was of the daughters of Aaron, and her name was Elisabeth. 6 And they were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless. 7 And they had no child, because that Elisabeth was barren, and they both were now well stricken in years. 8 And it came to pass, that while he executed the priest's office before God in the order of his course, 9 According to the custom of the priest's office, his lot was to burn incense when he went into the temple of the Lord. 10 And the whole multitude of the people were praying without at the time of incense. 11 And there appeared unto him an angel of the Lord standing on the right side of the altar of incense. 12 And when Zacharias saw him, he was troubled, and fear fell upon him. 13 But the angel said unto him, Fear not, Zacharias: for thy prayer is heard; and thy wife Elisabeth shall bear thee a son, and thou shalt call his name John. 14 And thou shalt have joy and gladness; and many shall rejoice at his birth. 15 For he shall be great in the sight of the Lord, and shall drink neither wine nor strong drink; and he shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb. 16 And many of the children of Israel shall he turn to the Lord their God. 17 And he shall go before him in the spirit and power of Elias, to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; to make ready a people prepared for the Lord. 18 And Zacharias said unto the angel, Whereby shall I know this? for I am an old man, and my wife well stricken in years. 19 And the angel answering said unto him, I am Gabriel, that stand in the presence of God; and am sent to speak unto thee, and to show thee these glad tidings. 20 And, behold, thou shalt be dumb, and not able to speak, until the day that these things shall be performed, because thou believest not my words, which shall be fulfilled in their season. 21 And the people waited for Zacharias, and marvelled that he tarried so long in the temple. 22 And when he came out, he could not speak unto them: and they perceived that he had seen a vision in the temple: for he beckoned unto them, and remained speechless. 23 And it came to pass, that, as soon as the days of his ministration were accomplished, he departed to his own house. 24 And after those days his wife Elisabeth conceived, and hid herself five months, saying, 25 Thus hath the Lord dealt with me in the days wherein he looked on me, to take away my reproach among men. The two preceding evangelists had agreed to begin the gospel with the baptism of John and his ministry, which commenced about six months before our Saviour's public ministry (and now, things being near a crisis, six months was a deal of time, which before was but a little ), and therefore this evangelist, designing to give a more particular account than had been given of our Saviour's conception and birth, determines to do so of John Baptist, who in both was his harbinger and forerunner, the morning-star to the Sun of righteousness. The evangelist determines thus, not only because it is commonly reckoned a satisfaction and entertainment to know something of the original extraction and early days of those who afterwards prove great men, but because in the beginning of these there were many things miraculous, and presages of what they afterwards proved. In these verses our inspired historian begins as early as the conception of John Baptist. Now observe here, I. The account given of his parents ( Luke 1:5 ; Luke 1:5 ): They lived in the days of Herod the king, who was a foreigner, and a deputy for the Romans, who had lately made Judea a province of the empire. This is taken notice of to show that the sceptre was quite departed from Judah, and therefore that now was the time for Shiloh to come, according to Jacob's prophecy, Genesis 49:10 . The family of David was now sunk, when it was to rise, and flourish again, in the Messiah. Note, None ought to despair of the reviving and flourishing of religion, even when civil liberties are lost. Israel enslaved, yet then comes the glory of Israel. Now the father of John Baptist was a priest, a son of Aaron; his name Zacharias. No families in the world were ever so honoured of God as those of Aaron and David; with one was made the covenant of priesthood, with the other that of royalty; they had both forfeited their honour, yet the gospel again puts honour upon both in their latter days, on that of Aaron in John Baptist, on that of David in Christ, and then they were both extinguished and lost. Christ was of David's house, his forerunner of Aaron's; for his priestly agency and influence opened the way to his kingly authority and dignity. This Zacharias was of the course of Abia. When in David's time the family of Aaron was multiplied, he divided them into twenty-four courses, for the more regular performances of their office, that it might never be either neglected for want of hands or engrossed by a few. The eighth of those was that of Abia ( 1 Chronicles 24:10 ), who was descended from Eleazar, Aaron's eldest son; but Dr. Lightfoot suggests that many of the families of the priests were lost in the captivity, so that after their return they took in those of other families, retaining the names of the heads of the respective courses. The wife of this Zacharias was of the daughters of Aaron too, and her name was Elisabeth, the very same name with Elisheba the wife of Aaron, Exodus 6:23 . The priests (Josephus saith) was very careful to marry within their own family, that they might maintain the dignity of the priesthood and keep it without mixture. Now that which is observed concerning Zacharias and Elisabeth is, 1. That they were a very religious couple ( Luke 1:6 ; Luke 1:6 ): They were both righteous before God; they were so in his sight whose judgment, we are sure, is according to truth; they were sincerely and really so. They are righteous indeed that are so before God, as Noah in his generation, Genesis 7:1 . They approved themselves to him, and he was graciously pleased to accept them. It is a happy thing when those who are joined to each other in marriage are both joined to the Lord; and it is especially requisite that the priests, the Lord's ministers, should with their yoke-fellows be righteous before God, that they may be examples to the flock, and rejoice their hearts. They walked in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord, blameless. (1.) Their being righteous before God was evidenced by the course and tenour of their conversations; they showed it, not by their talk, but by their works; by the way they walked in and the rule they walked by. (2.) They were of a piece with themselves; for their devotions and their conversations agreed. They walked not only in the ordinances of the Lord, which related to divine worship, but in the commandments of the Lord, which have reference to all the instances of a good conversation, and must be regarded. (3.) They were universal in their obedience; not that they never did in any thing come short of their duty, but it was their constant care and endeavor to come up to it. (4.) Herein, though they were not sinless, yet they were blameless; nobody could charge them with any open scandalous sin; they lived honestly and inoffensively, as ministers and their families are in a special manner concerned to do, that the ministry be not blamed in their blame. 2. That they had been long childless, Luke 1:7 ; Luke 1:7 . Children are a heritage of the Lord. But there are many of his heirs in a married state, that yet are denied this heritage; they are valuable desirable blessings; yet many there are, who are righteous before God, and, if they had children, would bring them up in his fear, who yet are not thus blessed, while the men of this world are full of children ( Psalms 17:14 ), and send forth their little ones like a flock, Job 21:11 . Elisabeth was barren, and they began to despair of ever having children, for they were both now well stricken in years, when the women that have been most fruitful leave off bearing. Many eminent persons were born of mothers that had been long childless, as Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Samson, Samuel, and so here John Baptist, to make their birth the more remarkable and the blessing of it the more valuable to their parents, and to show that when God keeps his people long waiting for mercy he sometimes is pleased to recompense them for their patience by doubling the worth of it when it comes. II. The appearing of an angel to his father Zacharias, as he was ministering in the temple, Luke 1:8-11 ; Luke 1:8-11 . Zechariah the prophet was the last of the Old Testament that was conversant with angels, and Zacharias the priest the first in the New Testament. Observe, 1. How Zacharias was employed in the service of God ( Luke 1:8 ; Luke 1:8 ): He executed the priest's office, before God, in the order of his course; it was his week of waiting, and he was upon duty. Though his family was not built up, or made to grow, yet he made conscience of doing the work of his own place and day. Though we have not desired mercies, yet we must keep close to enjoined services; and, in our diligent and constant attendance on them, we may hope that mercy and comfort will come at last. Now it fell to Zacharias's lot to burn incense morning and evening for that week of his waiting, as other services fell to other priests by lot likewise. The services were directed by lot, that some might not decline them and others engross them, and that, the disposal of the lot being from the Lord, they might have the satisfaction of a divine call to the work. This was not the high priest burning incense on the day of atonement, as some have fondly imagined, who have thought by that to find out the time of our Saviour's birth; but it is plain that it was the burning of the daily incense at the altar of incense ( Luke 1:11 ; Luke 1:11 ), which was in the temple ( Luke 1:9 ; Luke 1:9 ), not in the most holy place, into which the high priest entered. The Jews say that one and the same priest burned not incense twice in all his days (there were such a multitude of them), at least never more than one week. It is very probable that this was upon the sabbath day, because there was a multitude of people attending ( Luke 1:10 ; Luke 1:10 ), which ordinarily was not on a week day; and thus God usually puts honour upon his own day. And then if Dr. Lightfoot reckon, with the help of the Jewish calendars, that this course of Abia fell on the seventeenth day of the third month, the month Sivan, answering to part of May and part of June, it is worth observing that the portions of the law and the prophets which were read this day in synagogues were very agreeable to that which was doing in the temple; namely, the law of the Nazarites ( Numbers 6:1-27 ), and the conception of Samson, Judges 13:1-25 While Zacharias was burning incense in the temple, the whole multitude of the people were praying without, Luke 1:10 ; Luke 1:10 . Dr. Lightfoot says that there were constantly in the temple, at the hour of prayer, the priests of the course that then served, and, if it were the sabbath day, those of that course also that had been in waiting the week before, and the Levites that served under the priests, and the men of the station, as the Rabbin call them, who were the representatives of the people, in putting their hands upon the head of the sacrifices, and many besides, who, moved by devotion, left their employments, for that time, to be present at the service of God; and those would make up a great multitude, especially on sabbaths and feast-days: now these all addressed themselves to their devotions (in mental prayer, for their voice was not heard), when by the tinkling of a bell they had notice that the priest was gone in to burn incense. Now observe here, (1.) That the true Israel of God always were a praying people; and prayer is the great and principal piece of service by which we give honour to God, fetch in favours from him, and keep up our communion with him. (2.) That then, when ritual and ceremonial appointments were in full force, as this of burning incense, yet moral and spiritual duties were required to go along with them, and were principally looked at. David knew that when he was at a distance from the altar his prayer might be heard without incense, for it might be directed before God as incense, Psalms 141:2 . But, when he was compassing the altar, the incense could not be accepted without prayer, any more than the shell without the kernel. (3.) That is not enough for us to be where God is worshipped, if our hearts do not join in the worship, and go along with the minister, in all the parts of it. If he burn the incense ever so well, in the most pertinent, judicious, lively prayer, if we be not at the same time praying in concurrence with him, what will it avail us? (4.) All the prayers we offer up to God here in his courts are acceptable and successful only in virtue of the incense of Christ's intercession in the temple of God above. To this usage in the temple-service there seems to be an allusion ( Revelation 8:1 ; Revelation 8:3 ; Revelation 8:4 ), where we find that there was silence in heaven, as there was in the temple, for half an hour, while the people were silently lifting up their hearts to God in prayer; and that there was an angel, the angel of the covenant, who offered up much incense with the prayers of all saints before the throne. We cannot expect an interest in Christ's intercession if we do not pray, and pray with our spirits, and continue instant in prayer. Nor can we expect that the best of our prayers should gain acceptance, and bring in an answer of peace, but through the mediation of Christ, who ever lives, making intercession. 2. How, when he was thus employed, he was honoured with a messenger, a special messenger sent from heaven to him ( Luke 1:11 ; Luke 1:11 ): There appeared unto him an angel of the Lord. Some observe, that we never read of an angel appearing in the temple, with a message from God, but only this one to Zacharias, because there God had other ways of making known his mind, as the Urim and Thummim, and by a still small voice from between the cherubim; but the ark and the oracle were wanting in the second temple, and therefore, when an express was to be sent to a priest in the temple, an angel was to be employed in it, and thereby the gospel was to be introduced, for that, as the law, was given at first very much by the ministry of angels, the appearance of which we often read of in the Gospels and the Acts, though the design both of the law and of the gospel, when brought to perfection, was to settle another way of correspondence, more spiritual, between God and man. This angel stood on the right side of the altar of incense, the north side of it, saith Dr. Lightfoot, on Zacharias's right hand; compare this with Zechariah 3:1 , where Satan stands at the right hand of Joshua the priest, to resist him; but Zacharias had a good angel standing at his right hand, to encourage him. Some think that this angel appeared coming out of the most holy place, which led him to stand at the right side of the altar. 3. What impression this made upon Zacharias ( Luke 1:12 ; Luke 1:12 ): When Zacharias saw him, it was a surprise upon him, even to a degree of terror, for he was troubled, and fear fell upon him, Luke 1:12 ; Luke 1:12 . Though he was righteous before God, and blameless in his conversation, yet he could not be without some apprehensions at the sight of one whose visage and surrounding lustre bespoke him more than human. Ever since man sinned, his mind has been unable to bear the glory of such revelations and his conscience afraid of evil tidings brought by them; even Daniel himself could not bear it, Daniel 10:8 . And for this reason God chooses to speak to us by men like ourselves, whose terror shall not make us afraid. III. The message which the angel had to deliver to him, Luke 1:13 ; Luke 1:13 . He began his message, as angels generally did, with, Fear not. Perhaps it had never been Zacharias's lot to burn incense before; and, being a very serious conscientious man, we may suppose him full of care to do it well, and perhaps when he saw the angel he was afraid lest he came to rebuke him for some mistake or miscarriage; "No," saith the angel, " fear not; I have no ill tidings to bring thee from heaven. Fear not, but compose thyself, that thou mayest with a sedate and even spirit receive the message I have to deliver thee." Let us see what that is. 1. The prayers he has often made shall now receive an answer of peace: Fear not, Zacharias, for thy prayer is heard. (1.) If he means his particular prayer for a son to build up his family, it must be the prayers he had formerly made for that mercy, when he was likely to have children; but we may suppose, now that he and his wife were both well stricken in years, as they had done expecting it, so they had done praying for it: like Moses, it sufficeth them, and they speak no more to God of that matter, Deuteronomy 3:26 . But God will now, in giving this mercy, look a great way back to the prayers that he had made long since for and with his wife, as Isaac for and with his, Genesis 25:21 . Note, Prayers of faith are filed in heaven, and are not forgotten, though the thing prayed for is not presently given in. Prayers made when we were young and coming into the world may be answered when we are old and going out of the world. But, (2.) If he means the prayers he was now making, and offering up with his incense, we may suppose that those were according to the duty of his place, for the Israel of God and their welfare, and the performance of the promises made to them concerning the Messiah and the coming of his kingdom: "This prayer of thine is now heard: for thy wife shall shortly conceive him that is to be the Messiah's forerunner." Some of the Jewish writers themselves say that the priest, when he burnt incense, prayed for the salvation of the whole world; and now that prayer shall be heard. Or, (3.) In general, "The prayers thou now makest, and all thy prayers, are accepted of God, and come up for a memorial before him" (as the angel said to Cornelius, when he visited him at prayer, Acts 10:30 ; Acts 10:31 ); "and this shall be the sign that thou are accepted of God, Elisabeth shall bear thee a son. " Note, it is very comfortable to praying people to know that their prayers are heard; and those mercies are doubly sweet that are given in answer to prayer. 2. He shall have a son in his old age, by Elisabeth his wife, who had been long barren, that by his birth, which was next to miraculous, people might be prepared to receive and believe a virgin's bringing forth of a son, which was perfectly miraculous. He is directed what name to give his son: Call him John, in Hebrew Johanan, a name we often meet in the Old Testament: it signifies gracious. The priests must beseech God that he will be gracious ( Malachi 1:9 ), and must so bless the people, Numbers 6:25 . Zacharias was now praying thus, and the angel tells him that his prayer is heard, and he shall have a son, whom, in token of an answer to his prayer, he shall call Gracious, or, The Lord will be gracious, Isaiah 30:18 ; Isaiah 30:19 . 3. This son shall be the joy of his family and of all his relations, Luke 1:14 ; Luke 1:14 . He shall be another Isaac, thy laughter; and some think that is partly intended in his name, John. He shall be a welcome child. Thou for thy part shall have joy and gladness. Note, Mercies that have been long waited for, when they come at last, are the more acceptable. "He shall be such a son as thou shalt have reason to rejoice in; many parents, if they could foresee what their children will prove, instead of rejoicing at their birth, would wish they had never been; but I will tell thee what thy son will be, and then thou wilt not need to rejoice with trembling at his birth, as the best must do, but mayest rejoice with triumph at it." Nay, and many shall rejoice at his birth; all the relations of the family will rejoice in it, and all its well-wishers, because it is for the honour and comfort of the family, Luke 1:58 ; Luke 1:58 . All good people will rejoice that such a religious couple as Zacharias and Elisabeth have a son, because they will give him a good education, such as, it may be hoped, will make him a public blessing to his generation. Yea, and perhaps many shall rejoice by an unaccountable instinct, as a presage of the joyous days the gospel will introduce. 4. This son shall be a distinguished favourite of Heaven, and a distinguished blessing to the earth. The honour of having a son is nothing to the honour of having such a son. (1.) He shall be great in the sight of the Lord; those are great indeed that are so in God's sight, not those that are so in the eye of a vain and carnal world. God will set him before his face continually, will employ him in his work and send him on his errands; and that shall make him truly great and honourable. He shall be a prophet, yea more than a prophet, and upon that account as great as any that every were born of women, Matthew 11:11 . He shall live very much retired from the world, out of men's sight, and, when he makes a public appearance, it will be very mean; but he shall be much, he shall be great, in the sight of the Lord. (2.) He shall be a Nazarite, set apart to God from every thing that is polluting; in token of this, according to the law of Nazariteship, he shall drink neither wine nor strong drink, --or, rather, neither old wine nor new; for most think that the word here translated strong drink signifies some sort of wine, perhaps those that we call made wines, or any thing that is intoxicating. He shall be, as Samson was by the divine precept ( Judges 13:7 ), and Samuel by his mother's vow ( 1 Samuel 1:11 ), a Nazarite for life. It is spoken of as a great instance of God's favour to his people that he raised up of their sons for prophets, and their young men for Nazarites ( Amos 2:11 ), as if those that were designed for prophets were trained up under the discipline of the Nazarites; Samuel and John Baptist were; which intimates that those that would be eminent servants of God, and employed in eminent services, must learn to live a life of self-denial and mortification, must be dead to the pleasures of sense, and keep their minds from every thing that is darkening and disturbing to them. (3.) He shall be abundantly fitted and qualified for those great and eminent services to which in due time he shall be called: He shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb, and as soon as it is possible he shall appear to have been so. Observe, [1.] Those that would be filled with the Holy Ghost must be sober and temperate, and very moderate in the use of wine and strong drink; for that is it that fits him for this. Be not drunk with wine, but be filled with the Spirit, with which that is not consistent, Ephesians 5:18 . [2.] It is possible that infants may be wrought upon by the Holy Ghost, even from their mother's womb; for John Baptist even then was filled with the Holy Ghost, who took possession of his heart betimes; and an early specimen was given of it, when he leaped in his mother's womb for joy, at the approach of the Saviour; and afterwards it appeared very early that he was sanctified. God had promised to pour out his Spirit upon the seed of believers ( Isaiah 44:3 ), and their first springing up in a dedication of themselves betimes to God is the fruit of it, Luke 1:4 ; Luke 1:5 . Who then can forbid water, that they should not be baptized who for aught we know (and we can say no more of the adult, witness Simon Magus) have received the Holy Ghost as well as we, and have the seeds of grace sown in their hearts? Acts 10:47 . (4.) He shall be instrumental for the conversion of many souls to God, and the preparing of them to receive and entertain the gospel of Christ, Luke 1:16 ; Luke 1:17 . [1.] He shall be sent to the children of Israel, to the nation of the Jews, to whom the Messiah also was first sent, and not to the Gentiles; to the whole nation, and not the family of the priests only, with which, though he was himself of that family, we do not find he had any particular intimacy or influence. [2.] He shall go before the Lord their God, that is, before the Messiah, whom they must expect to be, not their king, in the sense wherein they commonly take it, a temporal prince to their nation, but their Lord and their God, to rule and defend, and serve them in a spiritual way by his influence on their hearts. Thomas knew this, when he said to Christ, My Lord and my God, better than Nathanael did, when he said, Rabbi, thou are the king of Israel. John shall go before him, a little before him, to give notice of his approach, and to prepare people to receive him. [3.] He shall go in the spirit and power of Elias. That is, First, He shall be such a man as Elias was, and do such work as Elias did,--shall, like him, preach the necessity of repentance and reformation to a very corrupt and degenerate age,--shall, like him, be bold and zealous in reproving sin and witnessing against it even in the greatest, and be hated and persecuted for it by a Herod and his Herodias, as Elijah was by an Ahab and his Jezebel. He shall be carried on in his work, as Elijah was, by a divine spirit and power, which shall crown his ministry with wonderful success. As Elias went before the writing prophets of the Old Testament, and did as it were usher in that signal period of the Old-Testament dispensation by a little writing of his own ( 2 Chronicles 21:12 ), so John Baptist went before Christ and his apostles, and introduced the gospel dispensation by preaching the substance of the gospel doctrine and duty, Repent, with an eye to the kingdom of heaven. Secondly, He shall be that very person who was prophesied of by Malachi under the name of Elijah ( Malachi 4:5 ), who should be sent before the coming of the day of the Lord. Behold, I send you a prophet, even Elias, not Elias the Tishbite (as the LXX. has corruptly read it, to favour the Jews' traditions), but a prophet in the spirit and power of Elias, as the angel here expounds it. [4.] He shall turn many of the children of Israel to the Lord their God, shall incline their hearts to receive the Messiah, and bid him welcome, by awakening them to a sense of sin and a desire of righteousness. Whatever has a tendency to turn us from iniquity, as John's preaching and baptism had, will turn us to Christ as our Lord and our God; for those who through grace are wrought upon to shake off the yoke of sin, that is, the dominion of the world and the flesh, will soon be persuaded to take upon them the yoke of the Lord Jesus. [5.] Hereby he shall turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, that is, of the Jews to the Gentiles; shall help to conquer the rooted prejudices which the Jews have against the Gentiles, which was done by the gospel, as far as it prevailed, and was begun to be done by John Baptist, who came for a witness, that all through him might believe, who baptized and taught Roman soldiers as well as Jewish Pharisees, and who cured the pride and confidence of those Jews who gloried in their having Abraham to their father, and told them that God would out of stones raise up children unto Abraham ( Matthew 3:9 ), which would tend to cure their enmity to the Gentiles. Dr. Lightfoot observes, It is the constant usage of the prophets to speak of the church of the Gentiles as children to the Jewish church, Isaiah 54:5 ; Isaiah 54:6 ; Isaiah 54:13 ; Isaiah 60:4 ; Isaiah 60:9 ; Isaiah 62:5 ; Isaiah 66:12 . When the Jews that embraced the faith of Christ were brought to join in communion with the Gentiles that did so too, then the heart of the fathers was turned to the children. And he shall turn the disobedient to the wisdom of the just, that is, he shall introduce the gospel, by which the Gentiles, who are now disobedient, shall be turned, no so much to their fathers the Jews, but to the faith of Christ, here called the wisdom of the just, in communion with the believing Jews; or thus, He shall turn the hearts of the fathers with the children, that is, the hearts of old and young, shall be instrumental to bring some of every age to be religious, to work a great reformation in the Jewish nation, to bring them off from a ritual traditional religion which that had rested in, and to bring them up to substantial serious godliness: and the effect of this will be, that enmities will be slain and discord made to cease; and they are at variance, being united in his baptism, will be better reconciled one to another. This agrees with the account Josephus gives of John Baptist, Antiq. 18. 117-118. "That he was a good man, and taught the Jews the exercise of virtue, in piety towards God, and righteous towards one another, and that they should convene and knit together in baptism." And he saith, "The people flocked after him, and were exceedingly delighted in his doctrine." Thus he turned the hearts of fathers and children to God and to one another, by turning the disobedient to the wisdom of the just. Observe, First, True religion is the wisdom of just men, in distinction from the wisdom of the world. It is both our wisdom and our duty to be religious; there is both equity and prudence in it. Secondly, It is not possible but that those who have been unbelieving and disobedient may be turned to the wisdom of the just; divine grace can conquer the greatest ignorance and prejudice. Thirdly, The great design of the gospel is to bring people home to God, and to bring them nearer to one another; and on this errand John Baptist is sent. In the mention that is twice made of his turning people, there seems to be an allusion to the name of the Tishbite, which is given to Elijah, which, some think, does not denote the country or city he was of, but has an appellative signification, and therefore the render it Elijah the converter, one that was much employed, and very successful, in conversion-work. The Elias of the New Testament is therefore said to turn or convert many to the Lord their God. [6.] Hereby he shall make ready a people prepared for the Lord, shall dispose the minds of people to receive the doctrine of Christ, that thereby they may be prepared for the comforts of his coming. Note, First, All that are to be devoted to the Lord, and made happy in him, must first be prepared and made ready for him. We must be prepared by grace in this world for the glory in the other, by the terrors of the law for the comforts of the gospel, by the spirit of bondage for the Spirit of adoption. Secondly, Nothing has a more direct tendency to prepare people for Christ than the doctrine of repentance received and submitted to. When sin is thereby made grievous, Christ will become very precious. IV. Zacharias's unbelief of the angel's prediction, and the rebuke he was laid under for that unbelief. He heard all that the angel had to say, and should have bowed his head, and worshipped the Lord, saying, Be it unto thy servant according to the word which thou hast spoken; but it was not so. We are here told, 1. What his unbelief spoke, Luke 1:18 ; Luke 1:18 . He said to the angel, Whereby shall I know this? This was not a humble petition for the confirming of his faith, but a peevish objection against what was said to him as altogether incredible; as if he should say, "I can never be made to believe this." He could not but perceive that it was an angel that spoke to him; the message delivered, having reference to the Old-Testament prophecies, carried much of its own evidence along with it. There are many instances in the Old Testament of those that had children when they were old, yet he cannot believe that he shall have this child of promise: " For I am an old man, and my wife hath not only been all her days barren, but is now well stricken in years, and not likely ever to have children." Therefore he must have a sign given him, or he will not believe. Though the appearance of an angel, which had long been disused in the church, was sign enough,--though he had this notice given him in the temple, the place of God's oracles, where he had reason to think no evil angel would be permitted to come,--though it was given him when he was praying, and burning incense,--and though a firm belief of that great principle of religion that God has an almighty power, and with him nothing is impossible, which we ought not only to know, but to teach others, was enough to silence all objections,--yet, considering his own body and his wife's too much, unlike a son of Abraham, he staggered at the promise, Romans 4:19 ; Romans 4:20 . 2. How his unbelief was silenced, and he silenced for it. (1.) The angel stops his mouth, by asserting his authority. Doth he ask, Whereby shall I know this? Let him know it by this, I am Gabriel, Luke 1:19 ; Luke 1:19 . He puts his name to his prophecy, doth as it were sign it with his own hand, teste meipso--take my word for it. Angels have sometimes refused to tell their names, as to Manoah and his wife; but his angel readily saith, I am Gabriel, which signifies the power of God, or the mighty one of God, intimating that the God who bade him say this was able to make it good. He also makes himself known by this name to put him in mind of the notices of the Messiah's coming sent to Daniel by the man Gabriel, Daniel 8:16 ; Daniel 9:21 . " I am the same that was sent then, and am sent now in pursuance of the same intention." He is Gabriel, who stands in the presence of God, an immediate attendant upon the throne of God. The prime ministers of state in the Persian court are described by this, that they saw the king's face, Esther 1:14 . "Though I am now talking with thee here, yet I stand in the presence of God. I know his eye is upon me, and I dare not say any more than I have warrant to say. But I declare I am sent to speak to thee, sent on purpose to show thee these glad tidings, which, being so well worthy of all acceptation, thou oughtest to have received cheerfully." (2.) The angel stops his mouth indeed, by exerting his power: "That thou mayest object no more, behold thou shalt be dumb, Luke 1:20 ; Luke 1:20 . If thou wilt have a sign for the support of thy faith, it shall be such a one as shall be also the punishment of thine unbelief; thou shalt not be able to speak till the day that these things shall be performed, " Luke 1:20 ; Luke 1:20 . Thou shalt be both dumb and deaf; the same word signifies both, and it is plain that he lost his hearing as well as his speech, for his friends made signs to him ( Luke 1:62 ; Luke 1:62 ), as well as he to them, Luke 1:22 ; Luke 1:22 . Now, in striking him dumb, [1.] God dealt justly with him, because he had objected against God's word. Hence we may take occasion to admire the patience of God and his forbearance toward us, that we, who have often spoken to his dishonour, have not been struck dumb, as Zacharias was, and as we had been if God had dealt with us according to our sins. [2.] God dealt kindly with him, and very tenderly and graciously. For, First, Thus he prevented his speaking any more such distrustful unbelieving words. If he has thought evil, and will not himself lay his hands upon his mouth, nor keep it as with a bridle, God will. It is better not to speak at all than to speak wickedly. Secondly, Thus he confirmed his faith; and, by his being disabled to speak, he is enabled to think the better. If by the rebukes we are under for our sin we be brought to give more credit to the word of God, we have no reason to complain of them. Thirdly, Thus he was kept from divulging the vision, and boasting of it, which otherwise he would have been apt to do, whereas it was designed for the present to be lodged as a secret with him. Fourthly, It was a great mercy that God's words should be fulfilled in their season, notwithstanding his sinful distrust. The unbelief of man shall not make the promises of God of no effect, they shall be fulfilled in their season, and he shall not be for ever dumb, but only till the day that these things shall be performed, and then thy lips shall be opened, that thy mouth may show forth God's praise. Thus, though God chastens the iniquity of his people with the rod, yet his loving kindness he will not take away. V. The return of Zacharias to the people, and at length to his family, and the conception of this child of promise, the son of his old age. 1. The people staid, expecting Zacharias to come out of the temple, because he was to pronounce the blessing upon them in the name of the Lord; and, though he staid beyond the usual time, yet they did not, as is too common in Christian congregations, hurry away without the blessing, but waited for him, marvelling that he tarried so long in the temple, and afraid let something was amiss, Luke 1:21 ; Luke 1:21 . 2. When he came out, he was speechless, Luke 1:22 ; Luke 1:22 . He was now to have dismissed the congregation with a blessing, but was dumb and not able to do it, that the people may be minded to expect the Messiah, who can command the blessing, who blesseth indeed, and in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed. Aaron's priesthood is now shortly to be silenced and set aside, to make way for the bringing in of a better hope. 3. He made a shift to give them to understand that he had seen a vision, by some awful signs he made, for he beckoned to them, and remained speechless, Luke 1:22 ; Luke 1:22 . This represents to us the weakness and deficiency of the Levitical priesthood, in comparison with Christ's priesthood and the dispensation of the gospel. The Old Testament speaks by signs, gives us some intimations of divine and heavenly things, but imperfect and uncertain; it beckons to us, but remains speechless. It is the gospel that speaks to us articulately, and gives us a clear view of that which the Old Testament was seen through a glass darkly. 4. He staid out the days of his ministration; for, his lot being to burn incense, he could do that, though he was dumb and deaf. When we cannot perform the service of God so well as we would, yet, if we perform it as well as we can, God will accept of us in it. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-26-38" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
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pericope/per-luk-1-002 - part_of
pericope/per-luk-1-003 - part_of
pericope/per-luk-1-004
절 (explains)
bible-text/luk-1-5, bible-text/luk-1-6, bible-text/luk-1-7, bible-text/luk-1-8, bible-text/luk-1-9, bible-text/luk-1-10, bible-text/luk-1-11, bible-text/luk-1-12, bible-text/luk-1-13, bible-text/luk-1-14, bible-text/luk-1-15, bible-text/luk-1-16, bible-text/luk-1-17, bible-text/luk-1-18, bible-text/luk-1-19, bible-text/luk-1-20, bible-text/luk-1-21, bible-text/luk-1-22, bible-text/luk-1-23, bible-text/luk-1-24, bible-text/luk-1-25
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 유대 왕 헤롯 시대에, 아비야 반열에 속한 사가랴라는 제사장이 있었습니다. 그의 아내는 아론의 자손이었고, 이름은 엘리사벳이었습니다. 두 사람은 모두 하나님 앞에 의로운 사람이었고, 주의 모든 계명과 규례를 흠 없이 지키며 살았습니다. 그러나 그들에게는 자녀가 없었습니다. 엘리사벳이 임신하지 못하는 몸이었고, 두 사람 다 나이가 많았기 때문입니다. (눅 1:5-7)
두 앞선 복음서 기자들은 요한의 세례와 사역에서 복음을 시작했는데, 요한의 공적 사역은 예수님의 공적 사역보다 약 6개월 앞선다. 이 복음서 기자는 더 앞으로 거슬러 올라가 예수님의 잉태와 탄생을 더 상세히 기록하려 하므로, 그 선구자인 요한의 잉태부터 이야기를 시작하려는 것이다. 이것은 단순히 위대한 사람의 출신 배경이 궁금하기 때문만이 아니라, 요한의 출생 자체가 기적적인 것들로 가득하여 그리스도의 탄생에 대한 예표가 되기 때문이다.
**I. 요한의 부모에 대한 소개(눅 1:5).**
그들은 헤롯 왕 시대에 살았다. 헤롯은 외국인으로서 로마의 속령이 된 유대를 다스리는 부왕이었다. 이는 야곱의 예언대로 홀이 유다에서 떠난 것을 의미하므로, 실로가 오실 때가 되었음을 알리는 신호였다(창 49:10). 다윗 왕가는 지금 밑바닥까지 낮아졌지만, 바로 그때 메시아 안에서 다시 일어나고 꽃피게 될 것이다. 주목하라. 세상의 자유를 잃었을 때도 종교의 부흥을 포기해서는 안 된다. 이스라엘이 억눌린 그때에 이스라엘의 영광이 온다.
요한의 아버지는 제사장이요 아론의 아들로서, 그 이름은 사가랴이다. 아론 가문과 다윗 가문은 세상에서 하나님께 가장 큰 영예를 받은 가문들이었다. 하나는 제사장직의 언약을, 다른 하나는 왕권의 언약을 받았다. 두 가문 모두 자신들의 명예를 더럽혔지만, 복음은 두 가문 모두에게 그 마지막 날에 다시 영예를 준다. 아론 가문에는 세례 요한으로, 다윗 가문에는 그리스도로. 그리스도의 어머니는 다윗 가문이었고, 그의 선구자는 아론 가문이었다. 이는 제사장의 섬김과 영향력이 왕의 권위와 위엄으로 가는 길을 열기 때문이다.
사가랴는 아비야 반열에 속해 있었다. 다윗 시대에 아론 가문이 번성하자, 더 질서 있는 직무 수행을 위해 24개 반열로 나뉘었다. 그중 여덟 번째 반열이 아비야의 반열이었다(대상 24:10). 사가랴의 아내 이름은 엘리사벳으로, 이는 아론의 아내 엘리세바(출 6:23)와 같은 이름이다.
**II. 부부의 인품과 처지(눅 1:6-7).**
첫째, 매우 경건한 부부였다(눅 1:6). "두 사람은 모두 하나님 앞에 의로운 사람이었다." 그들의 판단은 틀림없는 하나님의 판단대로였으며, 그들은 성실하고 참으로 의로웠다. 주목하라. 결혼으로 맺어진 두 사람이 모두 주님께 연합되어 있다면 참으로 복된 일이다. 제사장과 그 아내가 하나님 앞에 의롭다면 더욱 그렇다. 그들은 "주의 모든 계명과 규례를 흠 없이 지키며 살았다." (1) 그들의 하나님 앞에서의 의로움은 말이 아닌 삶으로 증명되었다. (2) 그들의 경건과 행실이 일치했다. 주님의 규례뿐 아니라 계명도 지켰다. (3) 그들은 순종에 있어 전면적이었다. (4) 흠이 없었다. 흠 없이 살았다는 것은 죄가 없다는 것이 아니라, 공개적으로 드러나는 수치스러운 죄가 없었다는 뜻이다.
둘째, 오래도록 자녀가 없었다(눅 1:7). 자녀는 주의 선물이다. 그러나 하나님 앞에 의로운 많은 사람이 이 선물을 받지 못한다. 반면 세상 사람들은 자녀가 많아 "그들의 어린 자녀들을 양 떼같이 내보낸다"(욥 21:11). 엘리사벳은 임신하지 못하는 몸이었고 두 사람 다 이제 나이가 많았다. 눈에 띄는 많은 인물들—이삭, 야곱, 요셉, 삼손, 사무엘, 세례 요한—이 오랫동안 불임이었던 어머니에게서 태어났다. 이는 그들의 탄생을 더 주목할 만하게 하고, 마침내 그 은혜가 왔을 때 더 소중한 것이 되게 하기 위함이었다. 하나님의 백성은 오래 기다리게 하실 때 결국 배로 갚아 주신다.
**III. 성전에서 천사가 사가랴에게 나타나다(눅 1:8-11).**
스가랴 선지자는 구약의 마지막으로 천사와 대화했고, 제사장 사가랴는 신약에서 처음으로 천사를 만났다. 주목할 점들이 있다.
1. 사가랴는 하나님의 일을 충실히 하고 있었다(눅 1:8). 그의 반열이 당번인 주간에 그는 하나님 앞에서 제사장 직무를 수행하고 있었다. 자녀가 없어도 그는 자기 자리에서 맡은 일을 충실히 했다. 원하는 자비를 아직 받지 못했다 해도 명령받은 섬김은 계속해야 한다. 각 직무는 제비 뽑기로 배정되었는데, 분향하는 일이 사가랴에게 돌아왔다(눅 1:9). 제비 뽑기의 처분이 주께로부터 나오므로, 그들은 자기 일에 대한 신성한 부르심을 받은 것으로 여길 수 있었다.
2. 분향하는 시간에 온 백성이 밖에서 기도하고 있었다(눅 1:10). 주목하라. (1) 참 이스라엘은 언제나 기도하는 백성이었다. (2) 제사 의식이 완전한 효력을 발하던 때에도 그것들과 함께 도덕적이고 영적인 의무가 요구되었다. 다윗은 멀리서도 제단 없이 기도가 들릴 수 있음을 알았지만(시 141:2), 제단 가까이 있을 때는 기도 없이는 분향도 받아들여질 수 없었다. (3) 우리가 예배를 드리는 장소에 있는 것만으로는 충분하지 않다. 마음이 함께 따라가야 한다. (4) 우리의 모든 기도는 하나님의 전에서 위의 그리스도의 중보라는 향로를 통해서만 받아들여질 수 있다.
3. 사가랴가 이렇게 섬기는 동안 하늘에서 특별한 사자가 그에게 보내졌다(눅 1:11). 분향단 오른쪽에 주의 천사가 서 있었다. 구약의 후기 선지자 스가랴가 신약의 천사와 마지막으로 대화했고, 이제 제사장 사가랴가 첫 번째로 천사를 만난다. 제2성전에는 법궤와 신탁이 없어서, 하나님이 제사장에게 직접 전할 말씀이 있을 때 천사를 보내셨다.
4. 사가랴가 천사를 보고 놀랐다(눅 1:12). 의로운 사람도 천사를 보면 두려움에 사로잡혔다. 이것은 인간이 죄를 지은 이래로, 그 영광이 인간 이상임을 나타내는 계시 앞에서 마음이 불안하고 양심이 악한 소식을 두려워하는 것이다. 그러므로 하나님은 우리에게 인간의 모습을 한 사람들을 통해 말씀하시기를 기뻐하신다.
**IV. 천사의 메시지(눅 1:13).**
천사는 보통 그러하듯 "두려워하지 마라"는 말로 시작한다. 아마도 사가랴는 분향 일을 처음 맡아서 매우 신중하게 임하고 있었을 것이고, 천사를 보자 어떤 실수에 대해 책망받는 것이 아닐까 두려워했을 것이다. 그러나 천사는 말한다. "두려워하지 마라. 나는 하늘에서 나쁜 소식을 가지고 온 것이 아니다."
1. 그가 오랫동안 드린 기도가 이제 응답을 받는다. "네 간구가 들렸다." 만약 이것이 아들을 위해 드렸던 특별한 기도를 말하는 것이라면, 두 사람이 이제 아이를 기대할 나이가 지났으니 그 기도는 이미 오래 전에 멈추었을 것이다. 그러나 하나님은 믿음으로 드린 기도들을 하늘에 보관해 두신다. 젊었을 때 드린 기도가 늙어서 응답받을 수 있다. 또는 이것이 그가 지금 드리고 있는 기도, 곧 메시아의 오심과 그 나라의 성취를 위한 제사장의 중보 기도를 말하는 것일 수도 있다. 어떤 유대 기록에 따르면 제사장은 분향할 때 온 세상의 구원을 위해 기도했다고 하는데, 그렇다면 "그 기도가 이제 이루어진다. 네 아내가 곧 메시아의 선구자를 임신하게 될 것이다"라는 말이 된다. 주목하라. 기도하는 사람에게는 그 기도가 들렸다는 말을 듣는 것이 큰 위로가 된다.
2. 그에게 아들이 태어날 것이다. 나이 든 부부에게 아들을 주심은, 처녀가 아들을 낳는 것을 사람들이 믿고 받아들이도록 준비시키기 위함이었다. 아들의 이름은 요한이라 해야 하는데, 히브리어로 요하난은 "은혜롭다"는 뜻이다. 제사장들은 주께서 은혜로우시기를 구해야 했고(말 1:9), 백성을 향해서도 그리 축복해야 했다(민 6:25). 사가랴가 그렇게 기도하는 중에 천사가 그에게 말한다. "네 기도가 들렸다. 요청한 은혜를 얻을 것이라는 증표로, 너는 아들을 낳을 것이니 그 이름을 '여호와는 은혜로우시다'를 의미하는 요한이라 하라."
3. 이 아들은 가정과 모든 친족의 기쁨이 될 것이다(눅 1:14). 오래 기다려 얻은 은혜는 마침내 왔을 때 더 반갑다. 그는 사가랴에게만 아니라 많은 사람에게 기쁨과 즐거움이 될 것이다. 모든 친척들이 이 경건한 부부에게 아들이 생겼다는 사실에 기뻐할 것이다.
4. 이 아들은 하늘의 특별한 총애를 받고 땅에 특별한 복이 될 것이다(눅 1:15-17). (1) 그는 주님 보시기에 위대한 사람이 될 것이다. 주님 보시기에 위대한 사람이야말로 참으로 위대한 사람이다. 외적으로는 보잘것없어 보여도 하나님께서 늘 그를 앞에 두실 것이다. (2) 그는 나실인이 될 것이다. 하나님께 구별된 사람으로서 더럽히는 모든 것을 멀리한다. 그는 삼손처럼 하나님의 명령으로, 사무엘처럼 어머니의 서원으로 평생 나실인이 될 것이다. 주목하라. 위대한 섬김을 위해 부르심을 받는 사람들은 감각적 쾌락을 죽이는 삶을 배워야 하고, 마음을 흐리게 하고 어지럽히는 모든 것으로부터 정신을 지켜야 한다. (3) 그는 어머니 태에서부터 성령으로 충만하게 될 것이다. 주목하라. 영아들도 성령의 역사를 받을 수 있다. 그가 어머니 태 속에서 기뻐 뛰논 것은 이것의 초기 표현이었다. 하나님은 성인에게만이 아니라 유아들의 마음도 어떻게 거룩하게 하시는지 아신다. (4) 그는 많은 이스라엘 자손을 그들의 하나님이신 주께로 돌이킬 것이다(눅 1:16-17). [1] 그는 이스라엘 자손에게 보냄을 받는다. [2] 그는 주 그들의 하나님보다 앞서 나아간다. 유대인들은 메시아를 일시적인 왕으로 기대했지만, 메시아는 그들의 주요 하나님이 되실 것이다. [3] 그는 엘리야의 영과 능력으로 나아간다. 즉 엘리야와 같은 사람이 되어 엘리야와 같은 일을 할 것이다. 그는 매우 타락하고 부패한 시대에 회개와 개혁의 필요성을 담대히 외칠 것이며, 아합과 이세벨에게 미움과 박해를 당했던 엘리야처럼, 그도 헤롯과 헤로디아에게 미움을 받을 것이다. 그는 말라기 4:5에서 엘리야라는 이름으로 예언된 바로 그 사람이다. [4] 그는 아버지들의 마음을 자녀들에게 돌이킬 것이다. 즉 유대인들을 이방 사람들에게 돌이키는 것인데, 유대인들이 이방 사람들에 대해 깊이 뿌리 박혀 있던 편견을 극복하도록 도울 것이다. 세례 요한은 유대인 바리새인들과 로마 군인들에게 동일하게 세례를 주고 가르쳤으며, 아브라함의 자녀됨을 자랑하는 자들에게 "하나님이 이 돌들로도 아브라함의 자손이 되게 하실 수 있다"(마 3:9)고 말함으로써 이방 사람들에 대한 그들의 우월감을 고쳐 주었다. 또한 그는 거역하는 사람들을 의인의 지혜로 돌이켜 주님을 위하여 준비된 백성을 마련할 것이다. 주목하라. 사람들이 그리스도를 받아들이도록 준비되려면 먼저 회개가 있어야 한다. 죄가 괴로운 것이 되면 그리스도가 보배로운 분이 되신다.
**V. 사가랴의 불신앙과 그에 대한 징계(눅 1:18-25).**
천사의 말을 다 듣고 사가랴는 머리를 숙이고 경배하며 "당신의 말씀대로 이 종에게 이루어지기를 원합니다"라고 해야 했다. 그러나 그렇지 않았다.
1. 사가랴의 불신앙이 말에 드러났다(눅 1:18). "내가 무엇으로 이 일을 확신할 수 있겠습니까? 나는 늙은 사람이고, 내 아내도 나이가 많습니다." 이것은 겸손히 믿음의 확신을 구하는 것이 아니라, 너무 믿을 수 없다는 식의 까다로운 이의였다. 자신들의 몸의 노쇠함을 너무 지나치게 생각하여 아브라함처럼 믿음이 흔들렸다(롬 4:19-20).
2. 불신앙이 잠잠케 되었다. (1) 천사가 권위를 내세워 그의 입을 막는다(눅 1:19). "나는 하나님 앞에 서 있는 가브리엘이다." 그는 자기 예언에 서명한다. 천사들이 때로는 자기 이름을 밝히기를 거부했지만(마노아와 그의 아내에게), 이 천사는 기꺼이 말한다. "나는 가브리엘이다." 이 이름은 "하나님의 능력" 혹은 "하나님의 강한 자"를 의미한다. 그는 또한 다니엘에게 메시아의 오심을 알렸던 바로 그 천사이다(단 8:16; 9:21). "나는 이 목적을 위해 그때 보냄을 받았던 것과 같이 지금도 보냄을 받았다." (2) 천사가 실제로 그의 입을 막는다(눅 1:20). "보아라, 이 일이 이루어지는 날까지 너는 말을 못하는 벙어리가 될 것이다." 그는 말을 못할 뿐 아니라 듣지도 못하게 되었는데, 사람들이 그에게 손짓으로 표시했기 때문이다(눅 1:62). 주목하라. [1] 하나님은 정의롭게 대하셨다. 그는 하나님의 말씀에 이의를 제기했으므로 말을 못하게 된다. [2] 그러나 하나님은 또한 친절하게도 은혜롭게 대하셨다. 첫째, 이렇게 하여 그가 더 이상 불신앙적인 말을 하지 못하도록 막으셨다. 둘째, 이것이 그의 믿음을 확증하여 주었다. 말을 못하게 된 재앙을 통해 하나님의 말씀을 더 믿게 된다면 불평할 이유가 없다. 셋째, 이것이 환상을 비밀로 지키게 하여 당분간 은밀히 보관되게 하였다.
3. 사가랴가 백성에게 돌아왔다(눅 1:21-25). (1) 백성이 사가랴를 기다리고 있었다. 그가 성전 안에 너무 오래 있었기 때문이다(눅 1:21). 그들은 축복을 받지 않은 채 떠나지 않았다. 우리도 예배가 끝날 때 복을 받지 않은 채 서둘러 자리를 뜨는 나쁜 습관을 피해야 한다. (2) 그가 나왔을 때 말을 할 수 없었다(눅 1:22). 이것은 레위인의 제사장직이 침묵 속에 폐지될 것임을 상징한다. 아론의 제사장직은 이제 더 나은 제사장직을 위해 물러날 것이다. (3) 그는 손짓으로 사람들에게 환상을 보았음을 알렸다. 이것은 구약의 말씀 방식처럼, 어렴풋이 신호를 보내지만 여전히 말이 없는 것이다. 복음이 되어서야 분명한 말씀이 온다. (4) 그는 직무 기간을 마칠 때까지 성전에서 자기 자리를 지켰다. 말을 못해도 분향은 할 수 있었다. 우리가 원하는 만큼 잘 하나님의 일을 할 수 없을 때에도, 최선을 다하면 하나님은 받아 주신다.
5. 직무 기간이 끝나고 집으로 돌아간 후, 엘리사벳이 임신하였다. 그녀는 다섯 달 동안 숨어 지내며 말했다(눅 1:24-25). "주께서 나를 돌아보시던 날에 이렇게 하시어, 사람들 가운데서 내 부끄러움을 없애 주셨다." 자녀 없음이 큰 수치로 여겨지던 시대에, 하나님께서 그녀의 수치를 제하신 것이다.
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원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-luk-1-5-25(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
26~38절 카드 ↗
The Birth of Christ Foretold. 26 And in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a city of Galilee, named Nazareth, 27 To a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David; and the virgin's name was Mary. 28 And the angel came in unto her, and said, Hail, thou that art highly favoured, the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou among women. 29 And when she saw him, she was troubled at his saying, and cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be. 30 And the angel said unto her, Fear not, Mary: for thou hast found favour with God. 31 And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name JESUS. 32 He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David: 33 And he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end. 34 Then said Mary unto the angel, How shall this be, seeing I know not a man? 35 And the angel answered and said unto her, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God. 36 And, behold, thy cousin Elisabeth, she hath also conceived a son in her old age: and this is the sixth month with her, who was called barren. 37 For with God nothing shall be impossible. 38 And Mary said, Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word. And the angel departed from her. We have here notice given us of all that it was fit we should know concerning the incarnation and conception of our blessed Saviour, six months after the conception of John. The same angel, Gabriel, that was employed in making known to Zacharias God's purpose concerning his son, is employed in this also; for in this, the same glorious work of redemption, which was begun in that, is carried on. As bad angels are none of the redeemed, so good angels are none of the redeemers; yet they are employed by the Redeemer as his messengers, and they go cheerfully on his errands, because they are his Father's humble servants, and his children's hearty friends and well-wishers. I. We have here an account given of the mother of our Lord, of whom he was to be born, whom, though we are not to pray to, yet we ought to praise God for. 1. Her name was Mary, the same name with Miriam, the sister of Moses and Aaron; the name signifies exalted, and a great elevation it was to her indeed to be thus favoured above all the daughters of the house of David. 2. She was a daughter of the royal family, lineally descended from David, and she herself and all her friends knew it, for she went under the title and character of the house of David, though she was poor and low in the world; and she was enabled by God's providence, and the care of the Jews, to preserve their genealogies, to make it out, and as long as the promise of the Messiah was to be fulfilled it was worth keeping; but for those now, who are brought low in the world, to have descended from persons of honour, is not worth mentioning. 3. She was a virgin, a pure unspotted one, but espoused to one of the same royal stock, like her, however, of low estate; so that upon both accounts there was (as it was fit there should be) an equality between them; his name was Joseph; he also was of the house of David, Matthew 1:20 . Christ's mother was a virgin, because he was not to be born by ordinary generation, but miraculously; it was necessary that he should be so, that, though he must partake of the nature of man, yet not of the corruption of that nature: but he was born of a virgin espoused, made up to be married, and contracted, to put honour upon the married state, that that might not be brought into contempt (which was an ordinance in innocency) by the Redeemer's being born of a virgin. 4. She lived in Nazareth, a city of Galilee, a remote corner of the country, and in no reputation for religion or learning, but which bordered upon the heathen, and therefore was called Galilee of the Gentiles. Christ's having his relations resident there intimates favour in reserve for the Gentile world. And Dr. Lightfoot observes that Jonah was by birth a Galilean, and Elijah and Elisha very much conversant in Galilee, who were all famous prophets of the Gentiles. The angel was sent to her from Nazareth. Note, No distance or disadvantage of place shall be a prejudice to those for whom God has favours in store. The angel Gabriel carries his message as cheerfully to Mary and Nazareth in Galilee as to Zacharias in the temple at Jerusalem. II. The address of the angel to her, Luke 1:28 ; Luke 1:28 . We are not told what she was doing, or how employed, when the angel came unto her; but he surprised her with this salutation, Hail, thou art highly favoured. This was intended to raise in her, 1. A value for herself; and, though it is very rare that any need to have any sparks struck into their breast with such design, yet in some, who like Mary pore only on their low estate, there is occasion for it. 2. An expectation of great news, not from abroad, but from above. Heaven designs, no doubt, uncommon favours for one whom an angel makes court to with such respect, Hail thou, chaire -- rejoice thou; it was the usual form of salutation; it expresses an esteem of her, and good-will to her and her prosperity. (1.) She is dignified: "Thou art highly favoured. God, in his choice of thee to be the mother of the Messiah, has put an honour upon thee peculiar to thyself, above that of Eve, who was the mother of all living. " The vulgar Latin translates this gratiá plena--full of grace, and thence gathers that she had more of the inherent graces of the Spirit than ever any had; whereas it is certain that this bespeaks no other than the singular favour done her in preferring her to conceive and bear our blessed Lord, an honour which, since he was to be the seed of the woman, some woman must have, not for personal merit, but purely for the sake of free grace, and she is pitched upon. Even so, Father, because it seemed good unto thee. (2.) She has the presence of God with her: " The Lord is with thee, though poor and mean, and perhaps now forecasting how to get a livelihood and maintain a family in the married state." The angel with this word raised the faith of Gideon ( Judges 6:12 ): The Lord is with thee. Nothing is to be despaired of, not the performance of any service, not the obtaining of any favour, though ever so great, if we have God with us. This word might put her in mind of the Immanuel, God with us, which a virgin shall conceive and bear ( Isaiah 7:14 ), and why not she? (3.) She has the blessing of God upon her: " Blessed art thou among women; not only thou shalt be accounted so by men, but thou shalt be so. Thou that art so highly favoured in this instance mayest expect in other things to be blessed. " She explains this herself ( Luke 1:48 ; Luke 1:48 ), All generations shall call me blessed. Compare it with that which Deborah saith of Jael, another that was the glory of her sex ( Judges 5:24 ), Blessed shall she be above women in the tent. III. The consternation she was in, upon this address ( Luke 1:29 ; Luke 1:29 ). When she saw him, and the glories with which he was surrounded, she was troubled at the sight of him, and much more at his saying. Had she been a proud ambitious young woman, that aimed high, and flattered herself with the expectation of great things in the world, she would have been pleased at his saying, would have been puffed up with it, and (as we have reason to think she was a young woman of very good sense) would have had an answer ready, signifying so much: but, instead of that, she is confounded at it, as not conscious to herself of any thing that either merited or promised such great things; and she cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be. Was it from heaven or of men? Was it to amuse her? was it to ensnare her? was it to banter her? or was there something substantial and weighty in it? But, of all the thoughts she had as to what manner of salutation it should be, I believe she had not the least idea of its being ever intended or used for a prayer, as it is, and has been, for many ages, by the corrupt, degenerate, and anti-christian ages of the church, and to be ten times repeated for the Lord's prayer once; so it is in the church of Rome. But her thoughtfulness upon this occasion gives a very useful intimation to young people of her sex, when addresses are made to them, to consider and cast in their minds what manner of salutations they are, whence they come, and what their tendency is, that they may receive them accordingly, and may always stand on their guard. IV. The message itself which the angel had to deliver to her. Some time the angel gives her to pause; but, observing that this did but increase her perplexity, he went on with his errand, Luke 1:30 ; Luke 1:30 . To what he had said she made no reply; he therefore confirms it: " Fear not, Mary, I have no other design than to assure thee that thou hast found favour with God more than thou thinkest of, as there are many who think they are more favoured with God than they really are." Note, Those that have found favour with God should not give way to disquieting distrustful fears. Doth God favour thee? Fear not, though the world frown upon thee. Is he for thee? No matter who is against thee. 1. Though she is a virgin, she shall have the honour of being a mother: " Thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and thou shalt have the naming of him; thou shalt call his name Jesus, " Luke 1:31 ; Luke 1:31 . It was the sentence upon Eve, that, though she should have the honour to be the mother of all living, yet this mortification shall be an allay to that honour, that her desire shall be to her husband, and he shall rule over her, Genesis 3:16 . But Mary has the honour without the allay. 2. Though she lives in poverty and obscurity, yet she shall have the honour to be the mother of the Messiah; her son shall be named Jesus--a Saviour, such a one as the world needs, rather than such one as the Jews expect. (1.) He will be very nearly allied to the upper world. He shall be great, truly great, incontestably great; for he shall be called the Son of the Highest, the Son of God who is the Highest; of the same nature, as the son is of the same nature with the father; and very dear to him, as the son is to the father. He shall be called, and not miscalled, the Son of the Highest; for he is himself God over all, blessed for evermore, Romans 9:5 . Note, Those who are the children of God, though but by adoption and regeneration, are truly great, and therefore are concerned to be very good, 1 John 3:1 ; 1 John 3:2 . (2.) He will be very highly preferred in the lower world; for, though born under the most disadvantageous circumstances possible, and appearing in the form of a servant, yet the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David, Luke 1:32 ; Luke 1:32 . He puts her in mind that she was of the house of David; and that therefore, since neither the Salique law, nor the right of primogeniture, took place in the entail of his throne, it was not impossible but that she might bring forth an heir to it, and therefore might the more easily believe it when she was told by an angel from heaven that she should do so, that after the sceptre had been long departed from that ancient and honourable family it should now at length return to it again, to remain in it, not by succession, but in the same hand to eternity. His people will not give him that throne, will not acknowledge his right to rule them; but the Lord God shall give him a right to rule them, and set him as his king upon the holy hill of Zion. He assures her, [1.] That his kingdom shall be spiritual: he shall reign over the house of Jacob, not Israel according to the flesh, for they neither came into his interests nor did they continue long a people; it must therefore be a spiritual kingdom, the house of Israel according to the promise, that he must rule over. [2.] That it shall be eternal: he shall reign for ever, and of his kingdom there shall be no end, as there had been long since of the temporal reign of David's house, and would shortly be of the state of Israel. Other crowns endure not to every generation, but Christ's doth, Proverbs 27:24 . The gospel is the last dispensation, we are to look for no other. V. The further information given her, upon her enquiry concerning the birth of this prince. 1. It is a just enquiry which she makes: " How shall this be? Luke 1:34 ; Luke 1:34 . How can I now presently conceive a child" (for so the angel meant) "when I know not a man; must it therefore be otherwise than by ordinary generation? If so, let me now how? " She knew that the Messiah must be born of a virgin; and, if she must be his mother, she desires to know how. This was not the language of her distrust, or any doubt of what the angel said, but of a desire to be further instructed. 2. It is a satisfactory answer that is given to it, Luke 1:35 ; Luke 1:35 . (1.) She shall conceive by the power of the Holy Ghost, whose proper work and office is to sanctify, and therefore to sanctify the virgin for this purpose. The Holy Ghost is called the power of the Highest. Doth she ask how this shall be? This is enough to help her over all the difficulty there appears in it; a divine power will undertake it, not the power of an angel employed in it, as in other works of wonder, but the power of the Holy Ghost himself. (2.) She must ask no questions concerning the way and manner how it shall be wrought; for the Holy Ghost, as the power of the Highest, shall overshadow her, as the cloud covered the tabernacle when the glory of God took possession of it, to conceal it from those that would too curiously observe the motions of it, and pry into the mystery of it. The formation of every babe in the womb, and the entrance of the spirit of life into it, is a mystery in nature; none knows the way of the spirit, nor how the bones are formed in the womb of her that is with child, Ecclesiastes 11:5 . We were made in secret, Psalms 139:15 ; Psalms 139:16 . Much more was the formation of the child Jesus a mystery; without controversy, great was the mystery of godliness, God manifest in the flesh, 1 Timothy 3:16 . It is a new thing created in the earth ( Jeremiah 31:22 ), concerning which we must not covet to be wise above what is written. (3.) The child she shall conceive is a holy thing, and therefore must not be conceived by ordinary generation, because he must not share in the common corruption and pollution of the human nature. He is spoken of emphatically, That Holy Thing, such as never was; and he shall be called the Son of God, as the Son of the Father by eternal generation, as an indication of which he shall now be formed by the Holy Ghost in the present conception. His human nature must be so produced, as it was fit that should be which was to be taken into union with the divine nature. 3. It was a further encouragement to her faith to be told that her cousin Elisabeth, though stricken in years, was with child, Luke 1:36 ; Luke 1:36 . Here is an age of wonders beginning, and therefore be not surprised: here is one among thy own relations truly great, though not altogether so great as this; it is usual with God to advance in working wonders. Greater works than these shall ye do. Though Elisabeth was, on the father's side, of the daughters of Aaron ( Luke 1:5 ; Luke 1:5 ), yet on the mother's side she might be of the house of David, for those two families often intermarried, as an earnest of the uniting of the royalty and the priesthood of the Messiah. This is the sixth month with her that was called barren. This intimates, as Dr. Lightfoot thinks, that all the instances in the Old Testament of those having children that had been long barren, which was above nature, were designed to prepare the world for the belief of a virgin's bearing a son, which was against nature. And therefore, even in the birth of Isaac, Abraham saw Christ's day, foresaw such a miracle in the birth of Christ. The angel assures Mary of this, to encourage her faith, and concludes with that great truth, of undoubted certainty and universal use, For with God nothing shall be impossible ( Luke 1:37 ; Luke 1:37 ), and, if nothing, then not this. Abraham therefore staggered not at the belief of the divine promise, because he was strong in his belief of the divine power, Romans 4:20 ; Romans 4:21 . No word of God must be incredible to us, as long as no work of God is impossible to him. VI. Her acquiescence in the will of God concerning her, Luke 1:38 ; Luke 1:38 . She owns herself, 1. A believing subject to the divine authority: " Behold, the handmaid of the Lord. Lord, I am at thy service, at thy disposal, to do what thou commandest me." She objects not the danger of spoiling her marriage, and blemishing her reputation, but leaves the issue with God, and submits entirely to his will. 2. A believing expectant of the divine favour. She is not only content that it should be so, but humbly desires that it may be so: Be it unto me according to thy word. Such a favour as this it was not for her to slight, or be indifferent to; and for what God has promised he will be sought unto; by prayer we must put our amen, or so be it, to the promise. Remember, and perform thy word unto thy servant, upon which thou has caused me to hope. We must, as Mary here, guide our desires by the word of God, and ground our hopes upon it. Be it unto me according to thy word; just so, and no otherwise. Hereupon, the angel departed from her; having completed the errand he was sent upon, he returned, to give an account of it, and receive new instructions. Converse with angels was always a transient thing, and soon over; it will be constant and permanent in the future state. It is generally supposed that just at this instant the virgin conceived, by the overshadowing power of the Holy Ghost: but, the scripture being decently silent concerning it, it doth not become us to be inquisitive, much less positive. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-39-56" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-luk-1-005
절 (explains)
bible-text/luk-1-26, bible-text/luk-1-27, bible-text/luk-1-28, bible-text/luk-1-29, bible-text/luk-1-30, bible-text/luk-1-31, bible-text/luk-1-32, bible-text/luk-1-33, bible-text/luk-1-34, bible-text/luk-1-35, bible-text/luk-1-36, bible-text/luk-1-37, bible-text/luk-1-38
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 여섯째 달에 천사 가브리엘이 하나님께로부터 갈릴리의 나사렛이라는 마을로 보냄을 받았습니다. 그는 다윗의 집안에 속한 요셉이라는 사람과 약혼한 처녀에게 갔는데, 그 처녀의 이름은 마리아였습니다. (눅 1:26-27)
요한의 잉태 6개월 후에 우리 복되신 구주의 잉태에 대한 소식이 전달된다. 같은 천사 가브리엘이 사가랴에게 보내졌던 것처럼 이 일에도 보냄을 받는다. 악한 천사들은 구속받지 못했지만, 선한 천사들은 구속하는 분의 종으로 기꺼이 그의 심부름을 하고, 그분의 아버지의 겸손한 종이자 그분의 자녀들의 진실한 친구이자 후원자로 자처한다.
**I. 우리 주님의 어머니에 대한 소개(눅 1:26-27).**
1. 그녀의 이름은 마리아였다. 이는 모세와 아론의 누이인 미리암과 같은 이름으로, "높임을 받은 자"를 의미한다. 그리고 메시아의 어머니로 선택된 것은 다윗의 모든 딸들 중에서 그녀에게 주어진 지극히 높은 고양이었다.
2. 그녀는 왕가의 딸이었다. 다윗의 혈통으로, 세상에서는 가난하고 낮은 처지였지만 그 계보는 보존되어 있었다.
3. 그녀는 처녀로, 다윗 가문의 요셉이라는 사람과 약혼한 상태였다. 그리스도의 어머니가 처녀여야 했던 것은 그가 통상적인 방식이 아닌 기적적인 방식으로 태어나야 했기 때문이다. 그러나 약혼한 처녀였다는 것은 결혼 상태를 존중하기 위함이었다.
4. 그녀는 갈릴리의 나사렛이라는 마을에 살았다. 갈릴리는 이방 사람들에 인접한 변두리 지역으로 종교나 학문에서 평판이 없는 곳이었다. 그리스도의 친척들이 거기 사는 것은 이방 세계를 위한 은혜의 예비를 의미한다. 주목하라. 거리나 장소의 불이익이 하나님께서 은혜를 베푸실 사람에게 방해가 되지 않는다.
**II. 천사의 문안(눅 1:28).**
그녀가 무엇을 하고 있었는지는 알 수 없지만, 천사가 그녀를 깜짝 놀라게 하며 말했다. "기뻐하여라, 은혜를 입은 자여! 주께서 너와 함께 계신다." (1) 그녀는 존귀함을 받았다. "은혜를 입은 자여." 하나님께서 메시아의 어머니로 그녀를 선택하심으로 말미암아, 이브가 모든 살아 있는 자의 어머니가 된 것보다 더 독특한 영예를 그녀에게 주셨다. 라틴어 성경은 이것을 "은혜가 충만한 자"라고 번역했는데, 이로부터 그녀가 다른 어떤 사람보다 더 많은 내재적 은혜를 가졌다는 주장이 나왔다. 그러나 이것이 의미하는 것은 메시아의 어머니가 되는 특별한 은혜를 받았다는 것뿐이다. 어떤 여인이 이 특별한 은혜를 받아야 했다면, 그것은 개인적 공로가 아니라 순전히 하나님의 선하신 뜻에 따른 것이었다. (2) 하나님이 그녀와 함께 계신다. 가난하고 낮은 처지에 있어도, 아마도 결혼 생계를 걱정하고 있었을 때에도. 주목하라. 아무것도 포기해서는 안 된다. 어떤 섬김도, 어떤 은혜도, 하나님이 우리와 함께 계시다면. (3) 그녀는 여자들 가운데 복을 받았다. 그녀 자신이 나중에 이것을 설명한다(눅 1:48). "이제부터는 모든 세대가 나를 복되다 할 것입니다."
**III. 마리아의 당혹(눅 1:29).**
"마리아는 천사를 보고 그 말에 몹시 당황하여, 이것이 무슨 인사인가 하고 곰곰이 생각하였습니다." 만약 그녀가 교만하고 야망이 큰 젊은 여자였다면 기뻐하며 좋아했겠지만, 그 대신 당황하고 생각에 잠겼다. 이것이 천국에서 온 것인지 사람에게서 온 것인지, 자신을 어리둥절하게 하려는 것인지, 혹은 실질적이고 중요한 내용이 있는 것인지 생각했다. 이것을 기도로 사용하는 것—로마 교회에서 하는 것처럼—은 이 마리아가 전혀 생각하지 못했던 일이다. 그녀의 신중함은 청소년들, 특히 그녀의 성에게 유익한 암시를 준다. 말을 걸어 오는 사람들이 있을 때, 어떤 종류의 말인지, 어디서 오는 것인지, 의도가 무엇인지 생각하고 그에 맞게 받아들여야 한다.
**IV. 천사의 본 메시지(눅 1:30-33).**
천사는 잠시 그녀가 생각하게 두었다가, 그것이 오히려 당혹감을 더하는 것을 보고 말을 이어 나갔다(눅 1:30). "마리아야, 두려워하지 마라. 너는 하나님께 은혜를 입었다." 주목하라. 하나님의 은혜를 입은 사람은 불안하고 두려워하는 마음을 갖지 않아야 한다.
1. 처녀지만 어머니가 되는 영예를 얻을 것이다(눅 1:31). "네가 임신하여 아들을 낳을 것이니, 그 이름을 예수라고 하여라." 이브에게 내린 선고, 즉 그녀의 욕구가 남편에게로 향하고 남편이 그녀를 다스릴 것이라는 것이 마리아에게는 없다(창 3:16). 마리아는 그 모욕 없이 영예를 가진다.
2. 가난하고 낮은 처지에 있어도 메시아의 어머니가 되는 영예를 얻을 것이다(눅 1:32-33). (1) 그는 위에서 큰 영예를 얻을 것이다. "지극히 높으신 분의 아들이라 불릴 것이다." 아들로서 아버지와 같은 본성을 가지며, 아들로서 아버지에게 지극히 사랑받는다. 주목하라. 하나님의 자녀들은—비록 입양과 중생을 통해서지만—참으로 위대하므로 선한 사람이 되어야 할 이유가 있다(요일 3:1-2). (2) 그는 아래 세상에서도 높임을 받을 것이다. "주 하나님께서 그에게 그의 조상 다윗의 왕좌를 주실 것이다"(눅 1:32). 하나님은 그에게 그 왕좌에 앉을 권리를 주실 것이다. 백성은 그에게 그 왕좌를 주지 않을 것이고, 주님도 인정하지 않을 것이지만, 주 하나님은 그에게 권리를 주신다. 그의 나라는 영적인 것이다. "야곱의 집을 영원히 다스릴 것이다"는 육체적 이스라엘이 아니라 약속의 이스라엘을 뜻한다. 그의 나라는 또한 영원하다. "그의 나라는 끝이 없을 것이다."
**V. 마리아의 질문과 그에 대한 답(눅 1:34-37).**
1. 그녀의 질문은 정당한 것이었다(눅 1:34). "나는 남자를 알지 못하는데, 어떻게 이런 일이 있을 수 있습니까?" 메시아는 처녀에게서 태어나야 했다. 그녀가 메시아의 어머니가 된다면, 어떻게 그런 일이 일어날 수 있는지 알고 싶어한다. 이것은 사가랴의 불신앙과 달리 더 많이 알고자 하는 겸손한 질문이었다.
2. 답이 만족스럽게 주어졌다(눅 1:35). (1) 그녀는 성령의 능력으로 잉태하게 될 것이다. 성령은 거룩하게 하는 분이므로, 이 목적을 위해 처녀를 거룩하게 하신다. 이 일이 어떻게 이루어질지 더 이상 묻지 않아도 된다. 하나님의 능력이 이 일을 맡으실 것이기 때문이다. (2) 그녀는 그 방법과 방식에 대해 더 물어서는 안 된다. 지극히 높으신 분의 능력이 그녀를 덮으실 것이다. 마치 하나님의 영광이 성막을 덮었던 구름처럼 그 신비를 가리신다. 모든 아기의 형성은 자연에서도 신비이다(전 11:5). 예수 그리스도의 형성은 더욱 그러하다. "경건의 신비는 크다. 하나님이 육신으로 나타나셨다"(딤전 3:16). (3) 그녀에게서 태어날 분은 거룩한 분이며 하나님의 아들이라 불릴 것이다.
3. 친척 엘리사벳이 아이를 임신했다는 소식이 추가적인 격려가 된다(눅 1:36). 기적의 시대가 시작되고 있다. 하나님은 종종 기적에서 기적으로 나아가신다. 엘리사벳의 임신—이것도 본성 이상의 일이지만—이 처녀의 임신, 곧 본성에 어긋나는 일을 믿도록 돕는다. 천사는 확신을 주는 결론으로 마무리한다(눅 1:37). "하나님께서 하신 말씀은 무엇이든 능치 못한 것이 없기 때문이다."
**VI. 마리아의 순복(눅 1:38).**
마리아는 두 가지를 나타낸다. 1. 신성한 권위에 대한 믿음의 순종. "보십시오, 나는 주의 여종입니다." 그녀는 결혼이 망가질 수 있고 명예가 손상될 수 있다는 것을 반박하지 않는다. 그 결과를 하나님께 맡기고 전적으로 그분의 뜻에 복종한다. 2. 신성한 은혜에 대한 믿는 기대. "당신의 말씀대로 내게 이루어지기를 바랍니다." 그녀는 이 은혜를 소홀히 여기거나 무관심하게 대하지 않는다. 하나님께서 약속하신 것을 위해 우리는 기도로 아멘을 해야 한다. 이렇게 천사는 그에게 맡겨진 일을 마치고 떠났다.
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원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-luk-1-26-38(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
39~56절 카드 ↗
The Interview of Mary and Elisabeth; The Song of Mary. 39 And Mary arose in those days, and went into the hill country with haste, into a city of Juda; 40 And entered into the house of Zacharias, and saluted Elisabeth. 41 And it came to pass, that, when Elisabeth heard the salutation of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb; and Elisabeth was filled with the Holy Ghost: 42 And she spake out with a loud voice, and said, Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb. 43 And whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me? 44 For, lo, as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded in mine ears, the babe leaped in my womb for joy. 45 And blessed is she that believed: for there shall be a performance of those things which were told her from the Lord. 46 And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord, 47 And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour. 48 For he hath regarded the low estate of his handmaiden: for, behold, from henceforth all generations shall call me blessed. 49 For he that is mighty hath done to me great things; and holy is his name. 50 And his mercy is on them that fear him from generation to generation. 51 He hath showed strength with his arm; he hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts. 52 He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree. 53 He hath filled the hungry with good things; and the rich he hath sent empty away. 54 He hath holpen his servant Israel, in remembrance of his mercy; 55 As he spake to our fathers, to Abraham, and to his seed for ever. 56 And Mary abode with her about three months, and returned to her own house. We have here an interview between the two happy mothers, Elisabeth and Mary: the angel, by intimating to Mary the favour bestowed on her cousin Elisabeth ( Luke 1:36 ; Luke 1:36 ), gave occasion for it; and sometimes it may prove a better piece of service that we think to bring good people together, to compare notes. Here is, I. The visit which Mary made to Elisabeth. Mary was the younger, and younger with child; and therefore, if they must come together, it was fittest that Mary should take the journey, not insisting on the preference which the greater dignity of her conception gave her, Luke 1:39 ; Luke 1:39 . She arose, and left her affairs, to attend this greater matter: in those days, at that time (as it is commonly explained, Jeremiah 33:15 ; Jeremiah 50:4 ), in a day or two after the angel had visited her, taking some time first, as it is supposed, for her devotion, or rather hastening away to her cousin's, where she would have more leisure, and better help, in the family of a priest. She went, meta spoudes -- with care, diligence, and expedition; not as young people commonly go abroad and visit their friends, to divert herself, but to inform herself: she went to a city of Judah in the hill-country; it is not named, but by comparing the description of it here with Joshua 21:10 ; Joshua 21:11 , it appears to be Hebron, for that is there said to be in the hill-country of Judah, and to belong to the priests, the sons of Aaron; thither Mary hastened, though it was a long journey, some scores of miles. 1. Dr. Lightfoot offers a conjecture that she was to conceive our Saviour there at Hebron, and perhaps had so much intimated to her by the angel, or some other way; and therefore she made such haste thither. He thinks it probable that Shiloh, of the tribe of Judah, and the seed of David, should be conceived in a city of Judah and of David, as he was to be born in Bethlehem, another city which belonged to them both. In Hebron the promise was given to Isaac, circumcision was instituted. Here (saith he) Abraham had his first land, and David his first crown: here lay interred the three couples, Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebecca, Jacob and Leah, and, as antiquity has held, Adam and Eve. He therefore thinks that it suits singularly with the harmony and consent which God uses in his works that the promise should begin to take place by the conception of the Messias, even among those patriarchs to whom it was given. I see no improbability in the conjecture, but add this for the support of it, that Elisabeth said ( Luke 1:45 ; Luke 1:45 ), There shall be a performance; as if it were not performed yet, but was to be performed there. 2. It is generally supposed that she went thither for the confirming of her faith by the sign which the angel had given her, her cousin's being with child, and to rejoice with her sister-favourite. And, besides, she went thither, perhaps, that she might be more retired from company, or else might have more agreeable company than she could have in Nazareth. We may suppose that she did not acquaint any of her neighbours at Nazareth with the message she had received from heaven, yet longed to talk over a thing she had a thousand time thought over, and knew no person in the world with whom she could freely converse concerning it but her cousin Elisabeth, and therefore she hastened to her. Note, it is very beneficial and comfortable for those that have a good work of grace begun in their souls, and Christ in the forming there, to consult those who are in the same case, that they may communicate experiences one to another; and they will find that, as in water face answers to face, so doth the heart of man to man, of Christian to Christian. II. The meeting between Mary and Elisabeth. Mary entered into the house of Zacharias; but he, being dumb and deaf, kept his chamber, it is probable, and saw no company; and therefore she saluted Elisabeth ( Luke 1:40 ; Luke 1:40 ), told her she was come to make her a visit, to know her state, and rejoice with her in her joy. Now, at their first coming together, for the confirmation of the faith of both of them, there was something very extraordinary. Mary knew that Elisabeth was with child, but it does not appear that Elisabeth had been told any thing of her cousin Mary's being designed for the mother of the Messiah; and therefore what knowledge she appears to have had of it must have come by a revelation, which would be a great encouragement to Mary. 1. The babe leaped in her womb, Luke 1:41 ; Luke 1:41 . It is very probable that she had been several weeks quick (for she was six months gone), and that she had often felt the child stir; but this was a more than ordinary motion of the child, which alarmed her to expect something very extraordinary, eskirtese . It is the same word that is used by the LXX. ( Genesis 25:22 ) for the struggling of Jacob and Esau in Rebecca's womb, and the mountains skipping, Psalms 114:4 . The babe leaped as it were to give a signal to his mother that he was now at had whose forerunner he was to be, about six months in ministry, as he was in being; or, it was the effect of some strong impression made upon the mother. Now began to be fulfilled what the angel said to his father ( Luke 1:15 ; Luke 1:15 ), that he should be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb; and perhaps he himself had some reference to this, when he said ( John 3:29 ), The friend of the Bridegroom rejoiceth greatly, because of the Bridegroom's voice, heard, though not by him, yet by his mother. 2. Elisabeth was herself filled with the Holy Ghost, or a Spirit of prophecy, by which, as well as by the particular suggestions of the Holy Ghost she was filled with, she was given to understand that the Messiah was at hand, in whom prophecy should revive, and by whom the Holy Ghost should be more plentifully poured out than ever, according to the expectations of those who waited for the consolation of Israel. The uncommon motion of the babe in her womb was a token of extraordinary emotion of her spirit under a divine impulse. Note, Those whom Christ graciously visits may know it by their being filled with the Holy Ghost; for, if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his. III. The welcome which Elisabeth, by the Spirit of prophecy, gave to Mary, the mother of our Lord; not as to a common friend making a common visit, but as to one of whom the Messiah was to be born. 1. She congratulates her on her honour, and, though perhaps she knew not of it till just now, she acknowledges it with the greatest assurance and satisfaction. She spoke with a loud voice, which does not at all intimate (as some think) that there was a floor or a wall between them, but that she was in a transport or exultation of joy, and said what she cared not who knew. She said, Blessed art thou among women, the same word that the angels had said ( Luke 1:28 ; Luke 1:28 ); for thus this will of God, concerning honouring the Son, should be done on earth as it is done in heaven. But Elisabeth adds a reason, Therefore blessed art thou because blessed is the fruit of thy womb; thence it was that she derived this excelling dignity. Elisabeth was the wife of a priest, and in years, yet she grudges not that her kinswoman, who was many years younger than she, and every way her inferior, should have the honour of conceiving in her virginity, and being the mother of the Messiah, whereas the honour put upon her was much less; she rejoices in it, and is well pleased, as her son was afterwards, that she who cometh after her is preferred before her, John 1:27 . Note, While we cannot but own that we are more favoured of God than we deserve, let us by no means envy that others are more highly favoured than we are. 2. She acknowledges her condescension, in making her this visit ( Luke 1:43 ; Luke 1:43 ): Whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me? Observe, (1.) She calls the virgin Mary the mother of her Lord (as David in spirit, called the Messiah Lord, his Lord ), for she knew he was to be Lord of all. (2.) She not only bids her welcome to her house, though perhaps she came in mean circumstances, but reckons this visit a great favour, which she thought herself unworthy of. Whence is this to me? It is in reality, and not in compliment, that she saith, "This was a greater favour than I could have expected." Note, Those that are filled with the Holy Ghost have low thoughts of their own merits, and high thoughts of God's favours. Her son the Baptist spoke to the same purport with this, when he said, Comest thou to me? Matthew 3:14 . 3. She acquaints her with the concurrence of the babe in her womb, in this welcome to her ( Luke 1:44 ; Luke 1:44 ): "Thou certainly bringest some extraordinary tidings, some extraordinary blessing, with thee; for as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded in my ears, not only my heart leaped for joy, though I knew not immediately why or wherefore, but the babe in my womb, who was not capable of knowing, did so too." He leaped as it were for joy that the Messiah, whose harbinger he was to be, would himself come soon after him. This would serve very much to strengthen the faith of the virgin, that there were such assurances as these given to others; and it would be in part the accomplishment of what had been so often foretold, that there should be universal joy before the Lord, when he cometh, Psalms 98:8 ; Psalms 98:9 . 4. She commends her faith, and encourages it ( Luke 1:45 ; Luke 1:45 ): Blessed is she that believed. Believing souls are blessed souls, and will be found so at last; this blessedness cometh through faith, even the blessedness of being related to Christ, and having him formed in the soul. They are blessed who believe the word of God, for that Word will not fail them; there shall, without doubt, be a performance of those things which are told her from the Lord. Note, The inviolable certainty of the promise is the undoubted felicity of those that build upon it and expect their all from it. The faithfulness of God is the blessedness of the faith of the saints. Those that have experienced the performance of God's promises themselves should encourage others to hope that he will be as good as his word to them also: I will tell you what God has done for my soul. IV. Mary's song of praise, upon this occasion. Elisabeth's prophecy was an echo to the virgin Mary's salutation, and this song is yet a stronger echo to that prophecy, and shows her to be no less filled with the Holy Ghost than Elisabeth was. We may suppose the blessed virgin to come in, very much fatigued with her journey; yet she forgets that, and is inspired with new life, and vigour, and joy, upon the confirmation she here meets with of her faith; and since, by the sudden inspiration and transport, she finds that this was designed to be her errand hither, weary as she is, like Abraham's servant, she would neither eat nor drink till she had told her errand. 1. Here are the expressions of joy and praise, and God alone the object of the praise and centre of the joy. Some compare this song with that which her name-sake Miriam, the sister of Moses, sung, upon the triumphant departure of Israel out of Egypt, and their triumphant passage through the Red Sea; others think it better compared with the song of Hannah, upon the birth of Samuel, which, like this, passes from a family mercy to a public and general one. This begins, like that, My heart rejoiceth in the Lord, 1 Samuel 2:1 . Observe how Mary here speaks of God. (1.) With great reverence of him, as the Lord: " My soul doth magnify the Lord; I never saw him so great as now I find him so good. " Note, Those, and those only, are advanced in mercy, who are thereby brought to think the more highly and honourably of God; whereas there are those whose prosperity and preferment make them say, What is the Almighty, that we should serve him? The more honour God has any way put upon us, the more honour we must study to give to him; and then only are we accepted in magnifying the Lord, when our souls magnify him, and all that is within us. Praising work must be soul work. (2.) With great complacency in him as her Saviour: My spirit rejoiceth in God my Saviour. This seems to have reference to the Messiah, whom she was to be the mother of. She calls him God her Saviour; for the angel had told her that he should be the Son of the Highest, and that his name should be Jesus, a Saviour; this she fastened upon, with application to herself: He is God my Saviour. Even the mother of our Lord had need of an interest in him as her Saviour, and would have been undone without it: and she glories more in that happiness which she had in common with all believers than in being his mother, which was an honour peculiar to herself, and this agrees with the preference Christ have to obedient believers above his mother and brethren; see Matthew 12:50 ; Luke 11:27 ; Luke 11:28 . Note, Those that have Christ for their God and Saviour have a great deal of reason to rejoice, to rejoice in spirit, that is rejoicing as Christ did ( Luke 10:21 ), with spiritual joy. 2. Here are just causes assigned for this joy and praise. (1.) Upon her own account, Luke 1:48 ; Luke 1:49 . [1.] Her spirit rejoiced in the Lord, because of the kind things he had done for her: his condescension and compassion to her. He has regarded the low estate of his handmaiden; that is, he has looked upon her with pity, for so the word is commonly used. "He has chosen me to this honour, notwithstanding my great meanness, poverty, and obscurity." Nay, the expression seems to intimate, not only (to allude to that of Gideon, Judges 6:15 ) that her family was poor in Judah, but that she was the least in her father's house, as if she were under some particular contempt and disgraced among her relations, was unjustly neglected, and the outcast of the family, and God put this honour upon her, to balance abundantly the contempt. I the rather suggest this, for we find something toward such honour as this put upon others, on the like consideration. Because God saw that Leah was hated, he opened her womb, Genesis 29:31 . Because Hannah was provoked, and made to fret, and insulted over, by Peninnah, therefore God gave her a son, 1 Samuel 1:19 . Whom men wrongfully depress and despise God doth sometimes, in compassion to them, especially if they have borne it patiently, prefer and advance; see Judges 11:7 . So in Mary's case. And, if God regards her low estate, he not only thereby gives a specimen of his favour to the whole race of mankind, whom he remembers in their low estate, as the psalmist speaks ( Psalms 136:23 ), but secures a lasting honour to her (for such the honour is that God bestows, honour that fades not away): " From henceforth all generations shall call me blessed, shall think me a happy woman and highly advanced." All that embrace Christ and his gospel will say, Blessed was the womb that bore him and the paps which he sucked, Luke 11:27 . Elizabeth had once and again called her blessed: "But that is not all," saith she, "all generations of Gentiles as well as Jews shall call me so." [2.] Her soul magnifies the Lord, because of the wonderful things he had done for her ( Luke 1:49 ; Luke 1:49 ): He that is mighty has done to me great things. A great thing indeed, that a virgin should conceive. A great thing indeed, that Messiah, who had been so long promised to the church, and so long expected by the church, should now at length be born. It is the power of the Highest that appears in this. She adds, and holy is his name; for so Hannah saith her song, There is none holy as the Lord, which she explains in the next words, for there is none beside thee, 1 Samuel 2:2 . God is a Being by himself, and he manifests himself to be so, especially in the work of our redemption. He that is mighty, even he whose name is holy, has done to me great things. Glorious things may be expected from him that is both mighty and holy; who can do every thing, and will do every thing well and for the best. (2.) Upon the account of others. The virgin Mary, as the mother of the Messiah, is become a kind of public person, wears a public character, and is therefore immediately endued with another spirit, a more public spirit than before she had, and therefore looks abroad, looks about her, looks before her, and takes notice of God's various dealings with the children of men ( Luke 1:50 ; Luke 1:50 , c.), as Hannah ( 1 Samuel 2:3 , &c.). In this she has especially an eye to the coming of the Redeemer and God's manifesting himself therein. [1.] It is a certain truth that God has mercy in store, mercy in reserve, for all that have a reverence for his majesty, and a due regard to his sovereignty and authority. But never did this appear so as in sending his Son into the world to save us ( Luke 1:50 ; Luke 1:50 ): His mercy is on them that fear him; it has always been so; he has ever looked upon them with an eye of peculiar favour who have looked up to him with and eye of filial fear. But he hath manifested this mercy, so as never before, in sending his Son to bring in an everlasting righteousness, and work out an everlasting salvation, for them that fear him, and this from generation to generation; for there are gospel privileges transmitted by entail, and intended for perpetuity. Those that fear God, as their Creator and Judge, are encouraged to hope for mercy in him, through their Mediator and Advocate; and in him mercy is settled upon all that fear God, pardoning mercy, healing mercy, accepting mercy, crowning mercy, from generation to generation, while the world stands. In Christ he keepeth mercy for thousands. [2.] It has been a common observation that God in his providence puts contempt upon the haughty and honour upon the humble; and this he has done remarkably in the whole economy of the work of man's redemption. As God had, with his mercy to her, shown himself mighty also ( Luke 1:48 ; Luke 1:49 ), so he had, with his mercy on them that fear him, shown strength likewise with his arm. First, In the course of his providence, it is his usual method to cross the expectations of men, and proceed quite otherwise than they promise themselves. Proud men expect to carry all before them, to have their way and their will; but he scatters them in the imagination of their hearts, breaks their measures, blasts their projects, nay, and brings them low, and brings them down, by those very counsels with which they thought to advance and establish themselves. The mighty think to secure themselves by might in their seats, but he puts them down, and overturns their seats; while, on the other hand, those of low degree, who despaired of ever advancing themselves, and thought of no other than of being ever low, are wonderfully exalted. This observation concerning honour holds likewise concerning riches; many who were so poor that they had not bread for themselves and their families, by some surprising turn of Providence in favour of them, come to be filled with good things; while, on the other hand, those who were rich, and thought no other than that to-morrow should be as this day, that their mountain stood strong and should never be moved, are strangely impoverished, and sent away empty. Now this is the same observation that Hannah had made, and enlarged upon, in her song, with application to the case of herself and her adversary ( 1 Samuel 2:4-7 ), which very much illustrates this here. And compare also Psalms 107:33-41 ; Psalms 113:7-9 ; Ecclesiastes 9:11 . God takes a pleasure in disappointing their expectations who promise themselves great things in the world, and in out-doing the expectations of those who promise themselves but a little; as a righteous God, it is his glory to abase those who exalt themselves, and strike terror on the secure; and, as a good God, it is his glory to exalt those who humble themselves, and to speak comfort to those who fear before him. Secondly, This doth especially appear in the methods of gospel grace. 1. In the spiritual honours it dispenses. When the proud Pharisees were rejected, and Publicans and sinners went into the kingdom of heaven before them,--when the Jews, who followed after the law of righteousness, did not attain it, and the Gentiles, who never thought of it, attained to righteousness ( Romans 9:30 ; Romans 9:31 ),--when God chose not the wise men after the flesh, not the mighty, or the noble, to preach the gospel, and plant Christianity in the world, but the foolish and weak things of the world, and things that were despised ( 1 Corinthians 1:26 ; 1 Corinthians 1:27 )--then he scattered the proud, and put down the mighty, but exalted them of low degree. When the tyranny of the chief priests and elders were brought down, who had long lorded it over God's heritage, and hoped always to do so, and Christ's disciples, a company of poor despised fishermen, by the power they were clothed with, were made to sit on thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel,--when the power of the four monarchies was broken, and the kingdom of the Messiah, that stone cut out of the mountain without hands, is made to fill the earth, --then are the proud scattered, and those of low degree exalted. 2. In the spiritual riches it dispenses, Luke 1:53 ; Luke 1:53 . (1.) Those who see their need of Christ, and are importunately desirous of righteousness and life in him, he fills with good things, with the best things; he gives liberally to them, and they are abundantly satisfied with the blessings he gives. Those who are weary and heavy-laden shall find rest with Christ, and those who thirst are called to come to him and drink; for they only know how to value his gifts. To the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet, manna is angels' food; and to the thirsty fair water is honey out of the rock. (2.) Those who are rich, who are not hungry, who, like Laodicea, think they have need of nothing, are full of themselves and their own righteousness, and think they have a sufficiency in themselves, those he sends away from his door, they are not welcome to him, he sends them empty away, they come full of self, and are sent away empty of Christ. He sends them to the gods whom they served, to their own righteousness and strength which they trusted to. [3.] It was always expected that the Messiah should be, in a special manner, the strength and glory of his people Israel, and so he is in a peculiar manner ( Luke 1:54 ; Luke 1:54 ): He hath helped his servant Israel, antelabeto . He hath taken them by the hand, and helped them up that were fallen and could not help themselves. Those that were sunk under the burdens of a broken covenant of innocency are helped up by the blessings of a renewed covenant of grace. The sending of the Messiah, on whom help was laid for poor sinners, was the greatest kindness that could be done, the greatest help that could be provided for his people Israel, and that which magnifies it is, First, That it is in remembrance of his mercy, the mercifulness of his nature, the mercy he has in store for his servant Israel. While this blessing was deferred, his people, who waited for it, were often ready to ask, Has God forgotten to be gracious? But now he made it appear that he had not forgotten, but remembered, his mercy. He remembered his former mercy, and repeated that to them in spiritual blessings which he had done formerly to them in temporal favours. He remembered the days of old. Where is he that brought them up out of the sea, out of Egypt? Isaiah 63:11 . He will do the like again, which that was a type of. Secondly, That it is in performance of his promise. It is a mercy not only designed, but declared ( Luke 1:55 ; Luke 1:55 ); it was what he spoke to our fathers, that the Seed of the woman should break the head of the serpent; that God should dwell in the tents of Shem; and particularly to Abraham, that in his seed all the families of the earth shall be blessed, with the best of blessings, with the blessings that are for ever, and to the seed that shall be for ever; that is, his spiritual seed, for his carnal seed were cut off a little after this. Note, What God has spoken he will perform; what he hath spoken to the fathers will be performed to their seed; to their seed's seed, in blessings that shall last for ever. Lastly, Mary's return to Nazareth ( Luke 1:56 ; Luke 1:56 ), after she had continued with Elisabeth about three months, so long as to be fully satisfied concerning herself that she was with child, and to be confirmed therein by her cousin Elisabeth. Some think, though her return is here mentioned before Elisabeth's being delivered, because the evangelist would finish this passage concerning Mary before he proceeded with the story of Elisabeth, yet that Mary staid till her cousin was (as we say) down and up again; that she might attend on her, and be with her in her lying-in, and have her own faith confirmed by the full accomplishment of the promise of God concerning Elisabeth. But most bind themselves to the order of the story as it lies, and think she returned again when Elisabeth was near her time; because she still affected retirement, and therefore would not be there when the birth of this child of promise would draw a great deal of company to the house. Those in whose hearts Christ is formed take more delight than they used to do in sitting alone and keeping silence. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-57-66" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
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pericope/per-luk-1-006 - part_of
pericope/per-luk-1-007
절 (explains)
bible-text/luk-1-39, bible-text/luk-1-40, bible-text/luk-1-41, bible-text/luk-1-42, bible-text/luk-1-43, bible-text/luk-1-44, bible-text/luk-1-45, bible-text/luk-1-46, bible-text/luk-1-47, bible-text/luk-1-48, bible-text/luk-1-49, bible-text/luk-1-50, bible-text/luk-1-51, bible-text/luk-1-52, bible-text/luk-1-53, bible-text/luk-1-54, bible-text/luk-1-55, bible-text/luk-1-56
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 그 무렵 마리아가 일어나 서둘러 산골 마을, 유대의 한 동네로 갔습니다. 그녀는 사가랴의 집에 들어가 엘리사벳에게 인사하였습니다. (눅 1:39-40)
천사가 엘리사벳의 임신을 마리아에게 알려 줌으로써(눅 1:36), 두 사람이 만날 기회가 마련되었다. 선한 사람들이 함께 모여 각자의 경험을 나눌 수 있도록 인도하는 것은 생각보다 훨씬 큰 섬김이 될 수 있다.
**I. 마리아가 엘리사벳을 방문하다(눅 1:39).**
마리아는 더 젊은 사람으로 아이도 더 일찍 임신했다. 그러므로 함께 만나야 한다면 마리아가 찾아가는 것이 마땅했다. 그녀는 "서둘러" 갔다. 젊은 사람들이 보통 친구를 방문할 때처럼 놀러 가는 것이 아니라, 정보를 얻고 배우기 위해 갔다. 그녀는 유대 산골에 있는 한 마을로 갔는데, 아마도 헤브론이었을 것이다. 사실 마리아는 나사렛의 이웃들과는 이 경험을 나눌 수 없었다. 그러나 엘리사벳과는 자유롭게 대화할 수 있었고, 또 그렇게 해야 했다. 주목하라. 영혼에 좋은 역사가 시작된 사람은, 같은 처지에 있는 다른 사람과 교제하는 것이 유익하다.
**II. 마리아와 엘리사벳의 만남(눅 1:40-45).**
마리아가 사가랴의 집에 들어가 엘리사벳에게 인사했다. 사가랴는 벙어리에다 귀도 들리지 않아서 아마 방에 있었을 것이고, 엘리사벳이 마리아를 맞이했다.
1. 태 속의 아기가 뛰놀았다(눅 1:41). 이것은 여느 태동과는 다른 특별한 움직임이었다. 아기가 마치 어머니에게 신호를 주는 것 같았다. 지금 그의 선구자로서 앞서게 될 분이 가까이 왔다는 신호였다. 어쩌면 아기 자신이 이것에 어떤 영향을 받은 것일 수도 있고, 어머니에게 강한 인상이 주어진 결과일 수도 있다. 천사가 말했던 대로 "어머니의 태에서부터 성령으로 충만할 것"이 이제 실현되기 시작했다.
2. 엘리사벳이 성령으로 충만했다(눅 1:41). 성령으로 가득 찬 사람이라면 그리스도가 가까이 왔음을 안다. 주목하라. 그리스도께서 은혜로 방문하신다면, 성령으로 충만함으로 알 수 있다. 그리스도의 영이 없으면 그리스도의 사람도 아니다.
**III. 엘리사벳이 성령으로 예언하며 마리아에게 하는 인사(눅 1:42-45).**
1. 그녀는 마리아의 영예를 축하한다. 엘리사벳은 이 일을 전혀 듣지 못했지만, 계시를 통해 알게 되었다. 그녀는 큰 소리로 말했는데, 이것은 그녀가 기쁨의 기쁜 확신 속에 있었기 때문이다. "너는 여자들 가운데서 복을 받은 사람이며, 네 태의 열매도 복을 받았다!" 천사가 말한 것을(눅 1:28) 엘리사벳이 반복한다. 이렇게 하나님의 뜻이 하늘에서 이루어지듯이 땅에서도 이루어진다. 엘리사벳은 제사장의 아내로 나이도 훨씬 많았지만, 젊은 친척이 훨씬 더 큰 영예를 받는 것을 전혀 시기하지 않고 기뻐한다. 주목하라. 우리가 하나님의 은혜를 분에 넘치게 받았음을 인정하면서, 다른 이들이 우리보다 더 큰 은혜를 받는다고 시기해서는 안 된다.
2. 그녀는 마리아가 찾아와 준 것을 대단한 은혜로 여긴다(눅 1:43). "내 주님의 어머니가 내게 오시다니, 어찌 내게 이런 일이 있단 말인가?" 주목하라. (1) 그녀는 마리아를 "내 주님의 어머니"라고 부른다. 다윗이 성령으로 메시아를 "내 주"라고 불렀듯이(시 110:1), 그는 모든 사람의 주요 하나님이 될 것이다. (2) 그녀는 이 방문을 자신이 받을 자격이 없는 큰 호의로 여긴다. 주목하라. 성령으로 충만한 사람들은 자신의 공로에 대해 낮게 생각하고 하나님의 은혜에 대해 높게 생각한다.
3. 그녀는 태 속의 아기도 이 환영에 동참했음을 알린다(눅 1:44). "네 인사 소리가 내 귀에 들렸을 때, 내 태 속의 아기가 기뻐서 뛰놀았다!" 아기는 곧 나타날 신랑의 친구였다. 요한 자신도 나중에 신랑의 친구는 신랑의 목소리를 듣고 크게 기뻐한다고 말했다(요 3:29).
4. 그녀는 마리아의 믿음을 칭찬하고 격려한다(눅 1:45). "믿은 그 여인은 복이 있다. 주께서 그녀에게 하신 말씀이 이루어질 것이기 때문이다!" 믿는 사람들은 복된 사람들이며, 마침내 그것이 드러날 것이다. 하나님의 말씀의 신실함이 믿는 성도들의 복됨이다.
**IV. 마리아의 찬가(눅 1:46-55).**
엘리사벳의 예언은 마리아의 인사에 대한 화답이었고, 이 찬가는 그 예언에 대한 더 강한 화답이다. 마리아는 여정의 피로를 잊고, 믿음이 확인되어 새로운 생명과 기쁨으로 고무되어, 아브라함의 종이 주인의 심부름을 마치기 전에 먹지 않으려 했던 것처럼, 이 노래를 불러야 했다. 이 찬가는 동명인 미리암이 홍해를 건넌 후 부른 노래, 특히 사무엘의 탄생 때 한나가 부른 노래와 비교된다. 한나의 노래처럼 가족의 은혜에서 시작하여 공공적이고 일반적인 것으로 넘어간다. 이 찬가도 한나의 노래처럼 "내 마음이 여호와로 말미암아 즐거워하며"로 시작한다(삼상 2:1).
1. 기쁨과 찬양의 표현, 오직 하나님만이 그 찬양의 대상이요 기쁨의 중심이다. (1) 그녀는 주님을 크게 높이는 경건한 경외심으로 말한다. "내 영혼이 주님을 찬양하며." 그녀는 하나님이 이렇게 선하신 분임을 전에 없이 크게 깨달았다. 주목하라. 하나님의 은혜로 높임을 받는 사람은 하나님에 대해 더 높고 귀하게 생각해야 한다. 세상의 번영이 "전능자가 누구이기에 우리가 섬겨야 하느냐"(욥 21:15)고 말하게 하는 사람들과 반대로. 주님을 높이는 일은 영혼의 일이어야 한다. (2) 그녀는 자기 구주이신 하나님 안에서 크게 즐거워한다. "내 영이 내 구주이신 하나님 안에서 기뻐합니다." 이것은 메시아를 가리키는 것 같다. 그녀가 낳을 아이를 하나님 내 구주라고 부른다. 메시아의 어머니도 구주가 필요했으며, 그것 없이는 멸망할 수밖에 없었다. 그녀는 모든 신자들이 공유하는 이 행복에서 어머니라는 자신만의 독특한 특권보다 더 큰 영광을 얻는다. 그리스도께서 그의 어머니와 형제들보다 그분의 말씀에 순종하는 사람들을 더 높이신 것과 일치한다(눅 11:27-28).
2. 이 기쁨과 찬양의 정당한 이유들이 제시된다.
(1) 마리아 자신에 관하여(눅 1:48-49). [1] 영이 주 안에서 기뻐하는 이유는 주께서 그분의 여종에게 베푸신 친절과 자비 때문이다. "주께서 그분의 여종의 비천한 처지를 돌아보셨기 때문입니다." 가난과 무명이 아니라, 친척들 중에서도 경시되고 무시된 어떤 경멸까지 있었던 것 같다. 기드온의 경우처럼 유다에서 가장 가난하고 아버지 집에서 가장 어린 자였는데(삿 6:15), 하나님이 이 영예를 그녀에게 주어 그 경멸을 보상하셨다. 레아가 미움을 받았기에 하나님이 그 태를 여셨고(창 29:31), 한나가 분해하고 두려워하며 다른 이에게 조롱당했기에 하나님이 아들을 주셨다. 사람들이 부당하게 낮추고 경멸하는 사람들을 하나님이 긍휼히 여겨 높이신다. [2] 영혼이 주를 크게 높이는 이유는 그분이 행하신 놀라운 일들 때문이다(눅 1:49). "능하신 분께서 나를 위해 큰 일을 하셨기 때문입니다. 그분의 이름은 거룩합니다." 처녀가 잉태하는 것은 참으로 큰 일이다. 오래 약속된 메시아가 마침내 태어난다는 것은 참으로 큰 일이다. 전능하신 능력이 이 일에 나타난다. "그분의 이름은 거룩합니다." 한나도 "여호와처럼 거룩하신 이가 없다"고 노래했다(삼상 2:2).
(2) 다른 사람들에 관하여(눅 1:50-55). 마리아는 메시아의 어머니가 되어 일종의 공인이 되었으므로, 이제 더 공적인 정신을 부여받아 바라보고 살피며, 앞을 내다보며 하나님이 인간의 자녀들을 다루시는 다양한 방식을 주목한다.
[1] 하나님을 경외하는 사람들에게는 반드시 긍휼이 있다는 확실한 진리이다(눅 1:50). 하나님을 경외하는 사람들을 향한 하나님의 긍휼은 항상 대대로 이어진다. 복음의 특권들은 영원한 권리로 전해진다.
[2] 교만한 자들은 하나님의 섭리 안에서 낮아지고 낮은 자들은 높아진다는 일반적인 관찰이다. "그분은 그 팔로 능력을 보이셨고, 마음에 교만한 생각을 품은 자들을 흩으셨습니다." 교만한 사람들은 일들을 제 뜻대로 하려 하고, 자기 계획을 성취하려 하지만, 하나님은 그들을 흩어 버리신다. 권세 있는 자들은 자리를 지키려 하지만 하나님이 끌어내리시고, 비천한 자들은 전혀 기대하지 않던 방식으로 높아진다. 부유한 자들은 내일도 오늘처럼 될 것이라 생각하며 굶주린 사람들을 빈손으로 돌려보내지만, 하나님이 부유한 자들을 빈손으로 돌려보내고 굶주린 자들을 채우신다. 한나도 이것을 그녀의 노래에서 자세히 설명했다(삼상 2:4-7).
특히 이것은 복음의 방법에서 현저하게 나타난다. 첫째, 복음이 분배하는 영적 영예에서. 교만한 바리새인들은 거절당하고 세리들과 죄인들이 먼저 하나님 나라에 들어간다. 유대인들은 율법의 의를 추구하다 얻지 못하고, 이방 사람들이 전혀 생각하지 않다가 의를 얻는다(롬 9:30-31). 하나님은 세상의 지혜 있는 자, 능력 있는 자, 고귀한 자가 아니라 어리석고 약하고 천한 것들을 택하셨다(고전 1:26-27). 둘째, 복음이 분배하는 영적 부에서(눅 1:53). 그리스도가 필요함을 절박하게 느끼는 사람들은 최선의 것들로 가득 채우심을 받는다. 그분을 갈망하며 그 안에서 의와 생명을 사모하는 사람들은 후히 주심을 받는다. 그러나 부유한 자들, 즉 굶주리지 않는 자들, 자기 의로 충만한 자들, "아무것도 부족함이 없다"고 생각하는 라오디게아 같은 자들은 그분의 문에서 빈손으로 돌려보내진다.
[3] 메시아는 특별히 이스라엘의 힘과 영광이다(눅 1:54-55). "그분의 종 이스라엘을 도우시어, 긍휼을 기억하셨습니다." 첫째, 이것은 긍휼의 기억에서 온다. 긍휼이 지연되는 동안 하나님의 백성은 하나님이 은혜를 베푸심을 잊으셨나 의심하기도 했지만, 이제 그는 기억하셨음을 나타내신다. 그는 과거의 긍휼을 기억하시고 그것을 영적 복으로 반복하신다. 둘째, 이것은 약속의 이행에서 온다(눅 1:55). 여자의 씨가 뱀의 머리를 상하게 할 것이라는 약속, 하나님이 셈의 장막에 거하실 것이라는 약속, 특히 아브라함에게 그 씨 안에서 지상의 모든 족속이 복을 받을 것이라는 약속이다. 주목하라. 하나님이 말씀하신 것은 이행하실 것이다. 아버지들에게 말씀하신 것이 그들의 자손에게 이행될 것이다.
마지막으로, 마리아는 엘리사벳과 석 달쯤 머물다가(눅 1:56) 자기 집으로 돌아갔다. 그녀는 아이를 가졌다는 것을 스스로 충분히 확인하고 엘리사벳의 믿음으로 확증을 받기까지 머물렀다. 어떤 이는 마리아가 엘리사벳이 해산할 때까지 있었다고 생각하고, 또 어떤 이는 해산이 가까워지자 나사렛으로 돌아갔다고 생각한다. 주목하라. 마음에 그리스도가 형성되는 사람들은 전보다 고요히 홀로 지내고 침묵을 지키는 것을 더 즐기게 된다.
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원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-luk-1-39-56(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
57~66절 카드 ↗
The Birth of John the Baptist. 57 Now Elisabeth's full time came that she should be delivered; and she brought forth a son. 58 And her neighbours and her cousins heard how the Lord had showed great mercy upon her; and they rejoiced with her. 59 And it came to pass, that on the eighth day they came to circumcise the child; and they called him Zacharias, after the name of his father. 60 And his mother answered and said, Not so; but he shall be called John. 61 And they said unto her, There is none of thy kindred that is called by this name. 62 And they made signs to his father, how he would have him called. 63 And he asked for a writing table, and wrote, saying, His name is John. And they marvelled all. 64 And his mouth was opened immediately, and his tongue loosed, and he spake, and praised God. 65 And fear came on all that dwelt round about them: and all these sayings were noised abroad throughout all the hill country of Judæa. 66 And all they that heard them laid them up in their hearts, saying, What manner of child shall this be! And the hand of the Lord was with him. In these verses, we have, I. The birth of John Baptist, Luke 1:57 ; Luke 1:57 . Though he was conceived in the womb by miracle, he continued in the womb according to the ordinary course of nature (so did our Saviour): Elisabeth's full time came, that she should be delivered, and then she brought forth a son. Promised mercies are to be expected when the full time for them is come, and not before. II. The great joy that was among all the relations of the family, upon this extraordinary occasion ( Luke 1:58 ; Luke 1:58 ): Her neighbours and her cousins heard of it; for it would be in every body's mouth, as next to miraculous. Dr. Lightfoot observes that Hebron was inhabited by priests of the family of Aaron, and that those were the cousins here spoken of; but the fields and villages about, by the children of Judah, and that those were the neighbours. Now these here discovered, 1. A pious regard to God. They acknowledged that the Lord had magnified his mercy to her, so the word is. It was a mercy to have her reproach taken away, a mercy to have her family built up, and the more being a family of priests, devoted to God, and employed for him. Many things concurred to make the mercy great --that she had been long barren, was now old, but especially that the child should be great in the sight of the Lord. 2. A friendly regard to Elisabeth. When she rejoiced, they rejoiced with her. We ought to take pleasure in the prosperity of our neighbours and friends, and to be thankful to God for their comforts as for our own. III. The dispute that was among them concerning the naming him ( Luke 1:59 ; Luke 1:59 ): On the eighth day, as God has appointed, they came together, to circumcise the child; it was here, in Hebron, that circumcision was first instituted; and Isaac, who, like John Baptist, was born by promise, was one of the first that was submitted to it, at least the chief eyed in the institution of it. They that rejoiced in the birth of the child came together to the circumcising of him. Note, The greatest comfort we can take in our children is in giving them up to God, and recognizing their covenant-relation to him. The baptism of our children should be more our joy than their birth. Now it was the custom, when they circumcised their children, to name them, because, when Abram was circumcised God gave him a new name, and called him Abraham; and it is not unfit that they should be left nameless till they are by name given up to God. Now, 1. Some proposed that he should be called by his father's name, Zacharias. We have not any instance in scripture that the child should bear the father's name; but perhaps it was of late come into use among the Jews, at it is with us, and they intended hereby to do honour to the father, who was not likely to have another child. 2. The mother opposed it, and would have called him John; having learned, either by inspiration of the Holy Ghost (as is most probable), or by information in writing from her husband, that God appointed this to be his name ( Luke 1:60 ; Luke 1:60 ); He shall be called Johanan--Gracious, because he shall introduce the gospel of Christ, wherein God's grace shines more brightly than ever. 3. The relations objected against that ( Luke 1:61 ; Luke 1:61 ): " There is none of thy kindred, none of the relations of thy family, that is called by that name; and therefore, if he may not have his father's name, yet let him have the name of some of his kindred, who will take it as a piece of respect to have such a child of wonders as this named from them." Note, As those that have friends must show themselves friendly, so those that have relations must be obliging to them in all the usual regards that are paid to kindred. 4. They appealed to the father, and would try if they could possibly get to know his mind; for it was his office to name the child, Luke 1:62 ; Luke 1:62 . They made signs to him, by which it appears that he was deaf as well as dumb; nay, it should seem, mindless of any thing, else one would think they should at first have desired him to write down his child's name, if he had ever communicated any thing by writing since he was struck. However, they would carry the matter as far as they could, and therefore gave him to understand what the dispute was which he only could determine; whereupon he made signs to them to give him a table-book, such as they then used, and with the pencil he wrote these words, His name is John, Luke 1:63 ; Luke 1:63 . Note, "It shall be so," or, "I would have it so," but "It is so." The matter is determined already; the angel had given him that name. Observe, When Zacharias could not speak, he wrote. When ministers have their mouths stopped, that they cannot preach, yet they may be doing good as long as they have not their hands tied, that they cannot write. Many of the martyrs in prison wrote letters to their friends, which were of great use; blessed Paul himself did so. Zacharias's pitching upon the same name that Elisabeth had chosen was a great surprise to the company: They marvelled all; for they knew not that, though by reason of his deafness and dumbness they could not converse together, yet they were both guided by one and the same Spirit: or perhaps they marvelled that he wrote so distinctly and intelligently, which (the stroke he was under being somewhat like that of a palsy) he had not done before. 5. He thereupon recovered the use of his speech ( Luke 1:64 ; Luke 1:64 ): His mouth was opened immediately. The time prefixed for his being silenced was till the day that these blessed things shall be fulfilled ( Luke 1:20 ; Luke 1:20 ); not all the things going before concerning John's ministry, but those which relate to his birth and name ( Luke 1:13 ; Luke 1:13 ). That time was now expired, whereupon the restraint was taken off, and God gave him the opening of the mouth again, as he did to Ezekiel, Ezekiel 3:27 ; Ezekiel 3:27 . Dr. Lightfoot compares this case of Zacharias with that of Moses, Exodus 4:24-26 . Moses, for distrust, is in danger of his life, as Zacharias, for the same fault, is struck dumb; but, upon the circumcision of his child, and recovery of his faith, there, as here, the danger is removed. Infidelity closed his mouth, and now believing opens it again; he believes, therefore he speaks. David lay under guilt from the conception of his child till a few days after its birth; then the Lord takes away his sin: upon his repentance, he shall not die. So here he shall be no longer dumb; his mouth was opened, and he spoke, and praised God. Note, When God opens our lips, our mouths must show forth his praise. As good be without our speech as not use it in praising God; for then our tongue is most our glory when it is employed for God's glory. 6. These things were told all the country over, to the great amazement of all that heard them, Luke 1:65 ; Luke 1:66 . The sentiments of the people are not to be slighted, but taken notice of. We are here told, (1.) That these sayings were discoursed of, and were the common talk all about the hill-country of Judea. It is a pity but a narrative of them had been drawn up, and published in the world, immediately. (2.) That most people who heard of these things were put into consternation by them: Fear came on all them that dwell round about there. If we have not a good hope, as we ought to have, built upon the gospel, we may expect that the tidings of it will fill us with fear. They believed and trembled, whereas they should have believed and triumphed. (3.) It raised the expectations of people concerning this child, and obliged them to have their eye upon him, to see what he would come to. They laid up these presages in their hearts, treasured them up in mind and memory, as foreseeing they should hereafter have occasion to recollect them. Note, What we hear, that may be of use to us, we should treasure up, that we may be able to bring forth, for the benefit of others, things new and old, and, when things come to perfection, may be able to look back upon the presages thereof, and to say, "It was what we might expect." They said within themselves, and said among themselves, " What manner of child shall this be? What will be the fruit when these are the buds, or rather when the root is out of such a dry ground? " Note, When children are born into the world, it is very uncertain what they will prove; yet sometimes there have been early indications of something great, as in the birth of Moses, Samson, Samuel, and here of John. And we have reason to think that there were some of those living at the time when John began his public ministry who could, and did, remember these things, and relate them to others, which contributed as much as any thing to the great flocking there was after him. Lastly, It is said, The hand of the Lord was with him; that is, he was taken under the special protection of the Almighty, from his birth, as one designed for something great and considerable, and there were many instances of it. It appeared likewise that the Spirit was at work upon his soul very early. As soon as he began to speak or go, you might perceive something in him very extraordinary. Note, God has ways of operating upon children in their infancy, which we cannot account for. God never made a soul but he knew how to sanctify it. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-67-80" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
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pericope/per-luk-1-008
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bible-text/luk-1-57, bible-text/luk-1-58, bible-text/luk-1-59, bible-text/luk-1-60, bible-text/luk-1-61, bible-text/luk-1-62, bible-text/luk-1-63, bible-text/luk-1-64, bible-text/luk-1-65, bible-text/luk-1-66
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 엘리사벳이 해산할 때가 차서 아들을 낳았습니다. (눅 1:57)
**I. 세례 요한의 탄생(눅 1:57).**
그는 기적으로 잉태되었지만 태 속에서는 자연의 통상적인 과정대로 있었다(예수님도 그렇게 하셨다). 엘리사벳의 때가 찼을 때 아들을 낳았다. 약속된 자비는 정해진 때가 되어야 기대할 수 있다.
**II. 모든 친척들의 큰 기쁨(눅 1:58).**
이웃들과 친척들이 소식을 들었다. 이 일은 거의 기적적인 것이었으므로 모든 사람의 입에 오를 것이었다. 그들은 두 가지를 나타냈다. 첫째, 하나님께 대한 경건한 태도. 그들은 주께서 그녀에게 큰 긍휼을 베푸셨다고 인정했다. 오래 임신하지 못하다가, 노인이 되어서, 그것도 하나님 보시기에 위대하게 될 자녀를 낳는 것은 참으로 큰 긍휼이었다. 둘째, 엘리사벳에 대한 친절한 태도. 그녀가 기뻐할 때 함께 기뻐했다. 우리는 이웃과 친구들의 번영을 기뻐하고 그들의 위로를 위해 하나님께 감사해야 한다.
**III. 이름을 둘러싼 분쟁(눅 1:59-63).**
여드레째 되는 날, 사람들이 아기에게 할례를 행하러 왔다. 헤브론에서 할례가 처음 제정되었고, 마찬가지로 약속으로 태어난 이삭이 최초로 할례를 받은 것도 바로 이 헤브론에서였다. 아이를 할례 받히는 것을 그들의 가장 큰 기쁨으로 여겨야 한다. 자녀들을 하나님께 드리고 그분과의 언약 관계를 인정하는 것이 자녀 탄생보다 더 큰 기쁨이어야 한다.
1. 아버지의 이름을 따서 사가랴라 하자는 제안이 있었다. 아버지의 이름을 자녀에게 주는 것은 아버지를 공경하는 방법이었다.
2. 어머니가 반대하며 요한이라 해야 한다고 했다(눅 1:60). 아마도 성령의 영감을 받았거나 남편에게 글로 배웠을 것이다. 하나님이 이 이름을 정하셨기 때문이다. 요한은 "은혜롭다"는 뜻으로, 그가 소개할 복음 안에서 하나님의 은혜가 그 어느 때보다 더 밝게 빛날 것이기 때문이다.
3. 친척들이 반대했다(눅 1:61). 친족 중에 그런 이름을 가진 사람이 없다고 했다.
4. 그들이 아버지에게 물으러 했다(눅 1:62). 그에게 손짓으로 묻는 것을 보면 그가 귀도 들리지 않았음을 알 수 있다. 그는 작은 서판을 달라고 하여 "그의 이름은 요한이다"라고 썼다(눅 1:63). "그렇게 할 것이다"가 아니라 "이미 결정되어 있다"는 것이다. 천사가 이미 그 이름을 주었다. 주목하라. 말할 수 없으면 쓸 수 있다. 입이 막힌 사교사들도 손이 묶이지 않으면 유익한 글을 쓸 수 있다. 사가랴가 엘리사벳과 같은 이름을 선택했다는 것이 사람들을 놀라게 했다. 두 사람이 벙어리에다 귀도 들리지 않아 서로 상의할 수 없었지만, 같은 성령께서 두 사람을 인도하셨다.
5. 그 즉시 말하는 능력을 회복했다(눅 1:64). 그의 침묵이 선언된 기간—이 일들이 이루어지는 날까지—이 만료되었으므로, 하나님이 그에게 입을 다시 열어 주셨다. 에스겔에게 하신 것처럼(겔 3:27). 모세가 불신앙으로 생명의 위험을 받았고, 같은 이유로 사가랴는 벙어리가 되었다. 아들의 할례와 믿음의 회복으로 그 위험도 제거되었다. 불신앙이 그의 입을 닫았고, 이제 믿음이 다시 열었다. 그는 말을 하며 하나님을 찬양했다. 주목하라. 하나님이 우리 입술을 열어 주실 때, 우리 입은 그분의 영광을 찬양해야 한다.
6. 이 모든 일이 유대 온 산골 지방에 두루 퍼졌다(눅 1:65-66). (1) 이 말들이 온 유대 산골에 이야기되었다. 이것이 즉시 기록되어 세상에 알려졌더라면 좋았겠지만. (2) 이것을 들은 대부분의 사람들이 이것으로 경외심을 갖게 되었다. "두려움이 임하였다." 복음의 기쁜 소식에 기초한 선한 소망이 없다면, 복음의 소식이 우리를 두려움으로 채울 것이다. (3) 이것이 이 아이에 대한 기대를 일깨웠다. "이 아이가 장차 어떤 사람이 될까?" 이 이른 징조들이 봉오리라면 꽃은 어떠할까? 주님의 손이 그와 함께했다고 덧붙여진다. 그는 출생 때부터 전능자의 특별한 보호 아래 있었다. 그에게는 어릴 때부터 성령이 역사하고 있었다.
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원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-luk-1-57-66(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
67~80절 카드 ↗
The Song of Zacharias. 67 And his father Zacharias was filled with the Holy Ghost, and prophesied, saying, 68 Blessed be the Lord God of Israel; for he hath visited and redeemed his people, 69 And hath raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David; 70 As he spake by the mouth of his holy prophets, which have been since the world began: 71 That we should be saved from our enemies, and from the hand of all that hate us; 72 To perform the mercy promised to our fathers, and to remember his holy covenant; 73 The oath which he sware to our father Abraham, 74 That he would grant unto us, that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies might serve him without fear, 75 In holiness and righteousness before him, all the days of our life. 76 And thou, child, shalt be called the prophet of the Highest: for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways; 77 To give knowledge of salvation unto his people by the remission of their sins, 78 Through the tender mercy of our God; whereby the dayspring from on high hath visited us, 79 To give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace. 80 And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, and was in the deserts till the day of his showing unto Israel. We have here the song wherewith Zacharias praised God when his mouth was opened; in it he is said to prophesy ( Luke 1:67 ; Luke 1:67 ), and so he did in the strictest sense of prophesying; for he foretold things to come concerning the kingdom of the Messiah, to which all the prophets bear witness. Observe, I. How he was qualified for this: He was filled with the Holy Ghost, was endued with more than ordinary measures and degrees of it, for this purpose; he was divinely inspired. God not only forgave him his unbelief and distrust (which was signified by discharging him from the punishment of it), but, as a specimen of the abounding of grace towards believers, he filled him with the Holy Ghost, and put this honour upon him, to employ him for his honour. II. What the matter of his song was. Here is nothing said of the private concerns of his own family, the rolling away of the reproach from it and putting of a reputation upon it, by the birth of this child, though, no doubt, he found a time to give thanks to God for this, with his family; but in this song he is wholly taken up with the kingdom of the Messiah, and the public blessings to be introduced by it. He could have little pleasure in this fruitfulness of his vine, and the hopefulness of his olive-plant, if herein he had not foreseen the good of Jerusalem, peace upon Israel, and blessings on both out of Zion, Psalms 128:3 ; Psalms 128:5 ; Psalms 128:6 . The Old-Testament prophesies are often expressed in praises and new songs, so is the beginning of New-Testament prophecy: Blessed be the Lord God of Israel. The God of the whole earth shall he be called; yet Zacharias, speaking of the work of redemption, called him the Lord God of Israel, because to Israel the prophecies, promises, and types, of the redemption had hitherto been given, and to them the first proffers and proposals of it were now to be made. Israel, as a chosen people, was a type of the elect of God out of all nations, whom God had a particular eye to, in sending the Saviour; and therefore he is therein called the Lord God of Israel. Now Zacharias here blesses God, 1. For the work of salvation that was to be wrought out by the Messiah himself, Luke 1:68-75 ; Luke 1:68-75 . This it is that fills him, when he is filled with the Holy Ghost, and it is that which all who have the Spirit of Christ are full of. (1.) In sending the Messiah, God has made a gracious visit to his people, whom for many ages he had seemed to neglect, and to be estranged from; he hath visited them as a friend, to take cognizance of their case. God is said to have visited his people in bondage when he delivered them ( Exodus 3:16 ; Exodus 4:31 ), to have visited his people in famine when he gave them bread, Ruth 1:6 . He had often sent to them by his prophets, and had still kept up a correspondence with them; but now he himself made them a visit. (2.) He has wrought out redemption for them: He has redeemed his people. This was the errand on which Christ came into the world, to redeem those that were sold for sin, and sold under sin; even God's own people, his Israel, his son, his first-born, his free-born, need to be redeemed, and are undone if they be not. Christ redeems them by price out of the hands of God's justice, and redeems them by power out of the hands of Satan's tyranny, as Israel out of Egypt. (3.) He has fulfilled the covenant of royalty made with the most famous Old-Testament prince, that is, David. Glorious things had been said of his family, that on him, as a mighty one, help should be laid, that his horn should be exalted, and his seed perpetuated, Psalms 89:19 ; Psalms 89:20 ; Psalms 89:24 ; Psalms 89:29 . But that family had been long in a manner cast off and abhorred, Psalms 89:38 . Now here it is glorified in, that, according to the promise, the horn of David should again be made to bud; for, Psalms 132:17 , he hath raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David ( Luke 1:69 ; Luke 1:69 ), there, where it was promised and expected to arise. David is called God's servant, not only as a good man, but as a king that ruled for God; and he was an instrument of the salvation of Israel, by being employed in the government of Israel; so Christ is the author of eternal redemption to those only that obey him. There is in Christ, and in him only, salvation for us, and it is a horn of salvation; for, [1.] It is an honourable salvation. It is raised up above all other salvations, none of which are to be compared with it: in it the glory both of the Redeemer and of the redeemed are advanced, and their horn exalted with honour. [2.] It is a plentiful salvation. It is a cornucopia--a horn of plenty, a salvation in which we are blessed with spiritual blessings, in heavenly things, abundantly. [3.] It is a powerful salvation: the strength of the beast is in his horn. He has raised up such a salvation as shall pull down our spiritual enemies, and protect us from them. In the chariots of this salvation the Redeemer shall go forth, and go on, conquering and to conquer. (4.) He has fulfilled all the precious promises made to the church by the most famous Old-Testament prophets ( Luke 1:70 ; Luke 1:70 ): As he spoke by the mouth of his holy prophets. His doctrine of salvation by the Messiah is confirmed by an appeal to the prophets, and the greatness and importance of that salvation thereby evidenced and magnified; it is the same that they spoke of, which therefore ought to be expected and welcomed; it is what they enquired and searched diligently after ( 1 Peter 1:10 ; 1 Peter 1:11 ), which therefore ought not to be slighted or thought meanly of. God is now doing that which he has long ago spoken of; and therefore be silent, O all flesh, before him, and attend to him. See, [1.] How sacred the prophecies of this salvation were. The prophets who delivered them were holy prophets, who durst not deceive and who aimed at promoting holiness among men; and it was the holy God himself that spoke by them. [2.] How ancient they were: ever since the world began. God having promised, when the world began, that the Seed of the woman should break the serpent's head, that promise was echoed to when Adam called his wife's name Eve-Life, for the sake of that Seed of hers; when Eve called her first son Cain, saying, I have gotten a man from the Lord, and another son, Seth, settled; when Noah was called rest, and foretold that God should dwell in the tents of Shem. And it was not long after the new world began in Noah that the promise was made to Abraham that in his Seed the nations of the earth should be blessed. [3.] What a wonderful harmony and concert we perceive among them. God spoke the same thing by them all, and therefore it is said to be dia stomatos , not by the mouths, but by the mouth, of the prophets, for they all speak of Christ as it were with one mouth. Now what is this salvation which was prophesied of? First, It is a rescue from the malice of our enemies; it is soterian ex echthron hemon -- a salvation out of our enemies, from among them, and out of the power of them that hate us ( Luke 1:71 ; Luke 1:71 ); it is a salvation from sin, and the dominion of Satan over us, both by corruptions within and temptations without. The carnal Jews expected to be delivered from under the Roman yoke, but intimation was betimes given that it should be a redemption of another nature. He shall save his people from their sins, that they may not have dominion over them, Matthew 1:21 . Secondly, It is a restoration to the favour of God; it is to perform the mercy promised to our forefathers, Luke 1:72 ; Luke 1:72 . The Redeemer shall not only break the head of the serpent that was the author of our ruin, but he shall re-instate us in the mercy of God and re-establish us in his covenant; he shall bring us as it were into a paradise again, which was signified by the promises made to the patriarchs, and the holy covenant made with them, the oath which he sware to our father Abraham, Luke 1:73 ; Luke 1:73 . Observe, 1. That which was promised to the fathers, and is performed to us, is mercy, pure mercy; nothing in it is owing to our merit (we deserve wrath and the curse), but all to the mercy of God, which designed us grace and life: ex mero motu--of his own good pleasure, he loved us because he would love us. 2. God herein had an eye to his covenant, his holy covenant, that covenant with Abraham: I will be a God to thee and thy seed. This his seed had really forfeited by their transgressions; this he seemed to have forgotten in the calamities brought upon them; but he will now remember it, will make it appear that he remembers it, for upon that are grounded all his returns of mercy: Leviticus 26:42 , Then will I remember my covenant. Thirdly, It is a qualification for, and an encouragement to, the service of God. Thus was the oath he sware to our Father Abraham, That he would give us power and grace to serve him, in an acceptable manner to him and a comfortable manner to ourselves, Luke 1:74 ; Luke 1:75 . Here seems to be an allusion to the deliverance of Israel out of Egypt, which, God tells Moses, was in pursuance of the covenant he made with Abraham ( Exodus 3:6-8 ), and that this was the design of his bringing them out of Egypt, that they might serve God upon this mountain, Exodus 3:12 . Note, The great design of gospel grace is not to discharge us from, but to engage us to, and encourage us in, the service of God. Under this notion Christianity was always to be looked upon, as intended to make us truly religious, to admit us into the service of God, to bind us to it, and to quicken us in it. We are therefore delivered from the iron yoke of sin, that our necks may be put under the sweet and easy yoke of the Lord Jesus. The very bonds which he has loosed do bind us faster unto him, Psalms 116:16 . We are hereby enabled, 1. To serve God without fear -- aphobos . We are therefore put into a state of holy safety that we might serve God with a holy security and serenity of mind, as those that are quiet from the fears of evil. God must be served with a filial fear, a reverent obedient fear, an awakening quickening fear, but not with a slavish fear, like that of the slothful servant, who represented him to himself as a hard master, and unreasonable; not with that fear that has torment and amazement in it; not with the fear of a legal spirit; a spirit of bondage, but with the boldness of an evangelical spirit, a spirit of adoption. 2. To serve him in holiness and righteousness, which includes the whole duty of man towards God and our neighbour. It is both the intention and the direct tendency of the gospel to renew upon us that image of God in which man was at first made, which consisted in righteousness and true holiness, Psalms 50:14 . 3. To serve him, before him, in the duties of his immediate worship, wherein we present ourselves before the Lord, to serve him as those that have an eye always upon him, and see his eye always upon us, upon our inward man, that is serving him before him. 4. To serve him all the days of our life. The design of the gospel is to engage us in constancy and perseverance in the service of God, by showing us how much depends upon our not drawing back, and by showing us how Christ loved us to the end, and thereby engaged us to love him to the end. 2. He blessed God for the work of preparation for this salvation, which was to be done by John Baptist ( Luke 1:76 ; Luke 1:76 ): Thou child, though now but a child of eight days' old, shalt be called the prophet of the Highest. Jesus Christ is the Highest, for he is God over all, blessed for evermore ( Romans 9:5 ), equal with the Father. John Baptist was his prophet, as Aaron was Moses's prophet ( Exodus 7:1 ); what he said was as his mouth, what he did was as his harbinger. Prophecy had now long ceased, but in John it revived, as it had done in Samuel, who was born of an aged mother, as John was, after a long cessation. John's business was, (1.) To prepare people for the salvation, by preaching repentance and reformation as great gospel duties: Thou shalt go before the face of the Lord, and but a little before him, to prepare his ways, to call people to make room for him, and get ready for his entertainment. Let every thing that may obstruct his progress, or embarrass it, or hinder people from coming to him, be taken away: see Isaiah 40:3 ; Isaiah 40:4 . Let valleys be filled, and hills be brought low. (2.) To give people a general idea of the salvation, that they might know, not only what to do, but what to expect; for the doctrine he preached was that the kingdom of heaven is at hand. There are two things in which you must know that this salvation consists:-- [1.] The forgiveness of what we have done amiss. It is salvation by the remission of sins, those sins which stand in the way of the salvation, and by which we are all become liable to ruin and condemnation, Luke 1:77 ; Luke 1:77 . John Baptist gave people to understand that, though their case was sad, by reason of sin, it was not desperate, for pardon might be obtained through the tender mercy of our God (the bowels of mercy, so the word is): there was nothing in us but a piteous case to recommend us to the divine compassion. [2.] Direction to do better for the time to come. The gospel salvation not only encourages us to hope that the works of darkness shall be forgiven us, but sets up a clear and true light, by which we may order our steps aright. In it the day-spring hath visited us from on high ( Luke 1:78 ; Luke 1:78 ); and this also is owing to the tender mercy of our God. Christ is anatole -- the morning Light, the rising Sun, Malachi 4:2 . The gospel brings light with it ( John 3:19 ), leaves us not to wander in the darkness of Pagan ignorance, or in the moonlight of the Old-Testament types or figures, but in it the day dawns; in John Baptist it began to break, but increased apace, and shone more and more to the perfect day. We have as much reason to welcome the gospel day who enjoy it as those have to welcome the morning who had long waited for it. First, The gospel is discovering; it shows us that which before we were utterly in the dark about ( Luke 1:79 ; Luke 1:79 ); it is to give light to them that sit in darkness, the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ; the day-spring visited this dark world to lighten the Gentiles, Acts 26:18 . Secondly, It is reviving; it brings light to them that sit in the shadow of death, as condemned prisoners in the dungeon, to bring them the tidings of a pardon, at least of a reprieve and opportunity of procuring a pardon; it proclaims the opening of the prison ( Isaiah 61:1 ), brings the light of life. How pleasant is that light! Thirdly, It is directing; it is to guide our feet in the way of peace, into that way which will bring us to peace at last. It is not only a light to our eyes, but a light to our feet ( Psalms 119:105 ); it guides us into the way of making our peace with God, of keeping up a comfortable communion; that way of peace which as sinners we have wandered from and have not known ( Romans 3:17 ), nor could ever have known of ourselves. In the Luke 1:80 , we have short account of the younger years of John Baptist. Though he was the son of a priest, he did not, like Samuel, go up, when he was a child, to minister before the Lord; for he was to prepare the way for a better priesthood. But we are here told, 1. Of his eminence as to the inward man: The child grew in the capacities of his mind, much more than other children; so that he waxed strong in the spirit; had a strong judgment and strong resolution. Reason and conscience (both which are the candle of the Lord) were so strong in him that he had the inferior faculties of appetite and passion in complete subjection betimes. By this it appeared that he was betimes filled with the Holy Ghost; for those that are strong in the Lord are strong in spirit. 2. Of his obscurity as to the outward man: He was in the deserts; not that he lived a hermit; cut off from the society of men. No, we have reason to think that he went up to Jerusalem at the feasts, and frequented the synagogues on the sabbath day, but his constant residence was in some of those scattered houses that were in the wilderness of Zuph or Maon, which we read of in the story of David. There he spent most of his time, in contemplation and devotion, and had not his education in the schools, or at the feet of the rabbin. Note, Many a one is qualified for great usefulness, who yet is buried alive; and many are so long buried who are designed, and are thereby in the fitting, for so much greater usefulness at last; as John Baptist, who was in the desert only till the day of his showing to Israel, when he was in the thirtieth year of his age. Note, There is a time fixed for the showing of those favours to Israel which are reserved; the vision of them is for an appointed time, and at the end it shall speak, and shall not lie. return to ' Top of Page ' Mark Mrk 16 Luke Luk Luke Luk 2 Footnotes: Copyright Statement These files are public domain and are a derivative of an electronic edition that is available on the Christian Classics Ethereal Library Website. Bibliographical Information Henry, Matthew. "Complete Commentary on Luke 1". 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Timothy",url:"2-timothy",abbr:"2Ti",sl:"2ti",ch:[1,2,3,4]},{num:55,name:"Titus",url:"titus",abbr:"Tit",sl:"tit",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:56,name:"Philemon",url:"philemon",abbr:"Phm",sl:"phm",ch:[1]},{num:57,name:"Hebrews",url:"hebrews",abbr:"Heb",sl:"heb",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]},{num:58,name:"James",url:"james",abbr:"Jas",sl:"jas",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:59,name:"1 Peter",url:"1-peter",abbr:"1Pe",sl:"1pe",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:60,name:"2 Peter",url:"2-peter",abbr:"2Pe",sl:"2pe",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:61,name:"1 John",url:"1-john",abbr:"1Jn",sl:"1jo",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:62,name:"2 John",url:"2-john",abbr:"2Jn",sl:"2jo",ch:[1]},{num:63,name:"3 John",url:"3-john",abbr:"3Jn",sl:"3jo",ch:[1]},{num:64,name:"Jude",url:"jude",abbr:"Jud",sl:"jude",ch:[1]},{num:65,name:"Revelation",url:"revelation",abbr:"Rev",sl:"re",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22]}]; var 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keys=t.split(',');keys.forEach(function(key){if(key==='com'){_ts_loadCom();}if(key==='bib'){_ts_loadBib();}});} function _ts_loadCom(){var commEl=document.querySelector('.commentary');comsec=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-sec'):'';comlang=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-lang'):'';comabbr=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-abbr'):'';var qs='bk='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_bn)+'&ch='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_cn)+'&vs='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_vs)+'&cs='+encodeURIComponent(comsec)+'&cl='+encodeURIComponent(comlang)+'&ca='+encodeURIComponent(comabbr);fetch('/cgi-bin/bible/getBible_data.cgi?'+qs).then(function(r){return r.text();}).then(function(text){var doc=new DOMParser().parseFromString(text,'text/xml');var sn=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sn');var sa=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sa');var sf=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sf');for(var i=0;i u?o(n,r,t,e,u+1):0:0==i?1:-1}(o,n,r,t,0)})} var TS_PARENT_MODE={commentary:'section',translation:'language',chapter:'book',verse:'chapter'}; function 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Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-luk-1-009 - part_of
pericope/per-luk-1-010
절 (explains)
bible-text/luk-1-67, bible-text/luk-1-68, bible-text/luk-1-69, bible-text/luk-1-70, bible-text/luk-1-71, bible-text/luk-1-72, bible-text/luk-1-73, bible-text/luk-1-74, bible-text/luk-1-75, bible-text/luk-1-76, bible-text/luk-1-77, bible-text/luk-1-78, bible-text/luk-1-79, bible-text/luk-1-80
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 그의 아버지 사가랴는 성령으로 충만하여 예언하며 말하였습니다. "이스라엘의 하나님이신 주님을 찬송합니다..." (눅 1:67-68)
**I. 사가랴가 이 예언을 말할 자격(눅 1:67).**
그는 성령으로 충만했다. 하나님은 그의 불신앙을 용서하셨을 뿐 아니라—그것이 징계의 종료로 표시되었다—믿는 자들을 향한 넘치는 은혜의 예표로서 그를 성령으로 충만케 하시고, 이 영광스러운 예언에 그를 사용하셨다.
**II. 그의 찬가의 내용.**
여기서는 자기 가족의 사사로운 일—이 출생으로 자기 가정의 수치가 없어지고 명예가 세워진 것—에 대해서는 전혀 언급하지 않는다. 그는 오로지 메시아의 나라와 그것으로 들어오는 공적 복들에 마음을 쏟는다. 그의 포도나무와 감람나무에서 기쁨을 찾을 수 없었다. 다만 예루살렘의 복이, 이스라엘의 평화가, 시온에서 오는 복이 그것을 좋게 만들어야 했다(시 128:3,5-6). 구약의 예언들은 종종 찬양과 새 노래로 표현된다. 이것이 신약 예언의 시작이다. "이스라엘의 하나님이신 주님을 찬송합니다." 온 땅의 주님이 불리셔야 하겠지만, 사가랴는 구속의 역사를 말하면서 "이스라엘의 하나님"이라고 부른다. 이는 이 약속들과 유형들이 지금까지 이스라엘에게만 주어졌고, 구주의 첫 제안도 그들에게 먼저 있기 때문이다.
사가랴는 두 부분으로 찬양을 올린다.
1. **메시아 자신이 이루실 구원의 역사에 대한 찬양(눅 1:68-75).**
(1) 메시아를 보내심으로 하나님이 자기 백성을 오랫동안 방치하신 것 같던 후에 은혜롭게 찾아오셨다(눅 1:68). 하나님은 이집트의 고난 중에 자기 백성을 찾아오셨고(출 3:16), 기근 때 백성에게 먹을 것을 주실 때 찾아오셨다(룻 1:6). 이번에는 하나님 자신이 직접 찾아오신다.
(2) 그분은 자기 백성을 위해 구속을 이루셨다(눅 1:68). 죄의 종으로 팔린 사람들, 죄 아래 팔린 사람들을 위한 구속이다. 하나님의 백성도, 하나님의 아들도, 장자도, 자유인도 구속이 필요하며, 그것이 없으면 멸망한다. 그리스도는 하나님의 공의의 손에서 값으로 구속하시고, 사탄의 폭정에서 능력으로 구속하신다.
(3) 그분은 가장 유명한 구약 왕 다윗과 맺은 왕권의 언약을 이행하셨다(눅 1:69). 다윗 가문은 오랫동안 사실상 폐위되고 버림받은 것처럼 보였다(시 89:38). 그러나 이제 약속대로 다윗의 뿔이 다시 돋아날 것이다. "그분의 종 다윗의 집에 구원의 뿔을 일으키셨습니다." 다윗은 하나님의 종으로 불린다. 이스라엘을 위해 하나님을 위한 통치에 종사했기 때문이다. 그리스도 안에는 우리를 위한 구원이 있으며, 그것은 뿔로 표현된다. [1] 영예로운 구원이다. 구속된 자들의 영광은 높아진다. [2] 풍성한 구원이다. 풍요의 뿔이다. 우리는 하늘에 속한 신령한 복들로 넘치도록 풍성하게 된다. [3] 강력한 구원이다. 짐승의 힘은 뿔에 있다. 그리스도의 구원은 우리 영적 원수들을 쓰러뜨리고 우리를 보호한다.
(4) 그분은 가장 유명한 구약 선지자들을 통해 하신 소중한 약속들을 모두 이루셨다(눅 1:70). 그분의 구원 교리는 선지자들에게 호소함으로써 확증된다. 그것은 그들이 말한 것과 같다. 그것은 오랫동안 기대되고 오랫동안 찾아 헤매던 것이다. 구약의 선지자들은 모두 그리스도에 대해 증언하며 하나의 입으로 말하는 것 같다(dia stomatos—복수 입들이 아닌 단수 입). 이 구원은 무엇인가? 첫째, 원수들에게서의 구출이다(눅 1:71). 육체적인 유대인들은 로마 멍에에서 해방되기를 기대했지만, 이것은 영적 원수들—죄와 사탄—에게서의 구원이다. 둘째, 하나님의 은혜 회복이다(눅 1:72). 구속주는 뱀의 머리를 상하게 할 뿐 아니라 우리를 하나님의 은혜 안에 다시 세우실 것이다. 그는 조상들에게 하신 긍휼과 거룩한 언약, 아브라함에게 하신 맹세를 기억하실 것이다(눅 1:73). 주목하라. 아버지들에게 약속된 것이 자손에게 이행된다. 셋째, 하나님의 섬김을 위한 자격 부여이다(눅 1:74-75). 아브라함에게 하신 맹세가 이렇게 말한다. "우리가 원수들의 손에서 건짐을 받아, 두려움 없이 그분을 섬기게 하시려는 것입니다." 이것은 이집트에서의 구출을 통해 이스라엘이 하나님을 섬기게 된 것에 대한 암시이다(출 3:6-8,12). 주목하라. 복음 은혜의 위대한 설계는 섬김으로부터 우리를 해방시키는 것이 아니라 섬김에 우리를 헌신하게 하고 격려하는 것이다. 죄의 멍에에서 해방된 것이 주 예수의 온유하고 쉬운 멍에를 더 굳게 우리 목에 묶는다(시 116:16). 우리는 이 섬김을 할 수 있게 된다. (가) 두려움 없이 섬긴다. 하나님을 자녀의 경외심으로 섬기되, 죄인의 노예적 공포가 아닌 양자의 담대함으로. (나) 거룩함과 의로움으로 섬긴다. 이것은 하나님과 이웃에 대한 인간의 전체 의무를 포함한다. 복음은 하나님께서 처음에 사람을 만드신 모습 그대로—의로움과 참된 거룩함으로(엡 4:24)—회복시키려 한다. (다) 그분 앞에서 섬긴다. 즉각적인 예배 의무에서 그분 앞에 자신을 제시하며, 우리의 내면을 늘 보시는 그분의 눈을 의식하며 섬긴다. (라) 우리의 모든 날 동안 섬긴다. 복음은 인내와 지속성으로 섬길 것을 요구한다.
2. **요한이 이 구원을 준비하는 일에 대한 찬양(눅 1:76-79).**
아들이 여덟 살 된 아이임에도 불구하고(눅 1:76). 사가랴는 그에게 말한다. "너, 아이야, 지극히 높으신 분의 선지자라 불릴 것이다." 예수 그리스도가 지극히 높으신 분이시다(롬 9:5). 요한은 모세에게 있어 아론과 같이 그분의 선지자였다. 예언은 오랫동안 끊어졌지만 요한 안에서 사무엘에게서 그랬던 것처럼 다시 살아났다. 요한의 사명은 두 가지이다.
(1) 사람들이 구원을 받도록 준비시키는 것이다. "주님보다 앞서 그분의 길을 준비하기 위해"(눅 1:76). 모든 방해물을 치우라. 골짜기마다 채우고 산마다 낮추어라(사 40:3-4). 그가 오시는 길을 막는 것들을 제거하고, 사람들이 그에게 나아오는 데 방해되는 것들을 치우라.
(2) 구원에 대한 일반적인 개념을 사람들에게 주는 것이다. 이 구원이 무엇으로 이루어지는지 알게 하기 위함이다(눅 1:77). 이 구원은 두 가지로 이루어진다.
[1] 우리가 잘못한 것의 용서이다. "죄 사함으로 말미암아 구원의 지식을 그분의 백성에게" 준다(눅 1:77). 이것들은 우리의 구원을 가로막는 죄들이며, 이것들로 인해 우리 모두가 멸망과 저주에 처해 있다. 요한은 비록 그 처지가 슬프지만 절망적이지 않으며 하나님의 자비로운 긍휼로 용서를 받을 수 있다는 것을 사람들에게 알게 하였다. "하나님의 자비로운 긍휼로"—원문의 표현은 "하나님의 긍휼의 창자들"로서, 그 안에 우리를 추천하는 것은 우리의 딱한 처지뿐이다.
[2] 미래에 더 잘 행하도록 하는 인도이다. 복음 구원은 어둠의 역사들을 용서할 뿐 아니라, 우리의 걸음을 바르게 인도하는 맑고 참된 빛을 세워 준다. 이 빛 안에서 "위에서 온 빛이 우리를 방문하셨다"(눅 1:78). 이것도 하나님의 자비로운 긍휼로 말미암는다. 그리스도는 떠오르는 해이다(말 4:2). 복음은 빛을 가져온다(요 3:19). 이교의 무지라는 어둠 속에 우리를 남겨 두지 않고, 구약 의식과 모형의 달빛 속에 있게 하지 않는다. 복음 안에서 날이 밝아 온다. 세례 요한에게서 먼저 밝아 오기 시작했고, 점점 빨라져 완전한 대낮을 향해 나아간다. 첫째, 복음은 발견하게 한다(눅 1:79). "어둠과 죽음의 그늘에 앉아 있는 자들에게 빛을" 준다. 전에는 우리가 전혀 어두웠던 것들을 보게 한다. 이방 사람들에게 빛을(행 26:18). 둘째, 복음은 살리는 것이다. "죽음의 그늘에 앉아 있는 자들에게"—사형 선고를 받은 죄수들처럼 지하 감옥에 있는 이들에게—사면의 소식을, 적어도 사면을 얻을 기회와 여유를 알린다. 셋째, 복음은 인도한다. "우리의 발을 평화의 길로 인도하기 위함이다." 죄인으로서 우리가 벗어난 그 평화의 길로—하나님과 화평을 이루는 길로, 위로 있는 교제를 유지하는 길로, 우리가 스스로 결코 알 수 없었던 그 길로.
**III. 세례 요한의 유년 시절(눅 1:80).**
아론의 아들이었지만 그는 어려서 성전에 가서 주 앞에서 봉사하지 않았다. 왜냐하면 그는 더 나은 제사장직을 예비하도록 부르심을 받았기 때문이다. 우리는 여기서 두 가지를 들을 수 있다.
1. 내면에 관한 뛰어남이다. "아이가 자라 심령이 강하여졌다." 다른 아이들보다 훨씬 더 빠르게 마음의 능력이 성장했다. 판단력과 결단력이 강했다. 이성과 양심이 그 안에서 강하게 작동하여, 어릴 때부터 식욕과 감정을 완전히 지배했다. 이것으로 그가 어릴 때부터 성령으로 충만했음이 드러났다. 주님 안에서 강한 사람은 심령이 강하다.
2. 외면에 관한 소박함이다. "그는 광야에 있었다." 그가 사람들의 사회에서 완전히 단절된 은둔자였다는 것이 아니다. 그는 분명 절기에 예루살렘에 올라가고, 안식일에 회당에 참석했을 것이다. 그러나 그의 일상적인 거주지는 랍비들의 학교가 아닌 광야의 흩어진 집들 중 어딘가였다. 거기서 그는 대부분의 시간을 묵상과 기도로 보냈다. 주목하라. 많은 사람들이 위대한 유익을 위해 준비되지만 살아 있는 동안 묻혀 있는 것같이 보인다. 그러나 오래 묻혀 있을수록 마침내 훨씬 더 큰 유익이 된다. 세례 요한이 광야에 있었던 것은 이스라엘에게 나타나는 날까지, 곧 그가 서른 살이 되었을 때뿐이었다. 주목하라. 이스라엘에 예비된 은혜들은 정해진 때에 나타나게 된다. 이 예언은 정한 때에 이루어질 것이며, 그 때가 되면 말하고 거짓이 없을 것이다.
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*번역 기준: WEB 한국어(바이블노트) 용어·문체 준수 / 해설 문어체(다체) / 성경 인용은 WEB 한국어 표현 사용.*
*source: Matthew Henry Complete Commentary, Luke 1 (Public Domain)*
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commentary-section/mhm-luk-1-67-80(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반