언어
챗봇 KG 근거 인용 · draft

주석[매튜 헨리] — 마태복음 24장 · 종말의 징조

요약
매튜 헨리 주석 · 섹션 4개 · 한국어 번역 있음(한국어 우선) · 본문 보기
아래 주석은 원문(및 번역문) 그대로입니다.

1~3절 카드 ↗

Awful Predictions. 1 And Jesus went out, and departed from the temple: and his disciples came to him for to show him the buildings of the temple. 2 And Jesus said unto them, See ye not all these things? verily I say unto you, There shall not be left here one stone upon another, that shall not be thrown down. 3 And as he sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came unto him privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world? Here is, I. Christ's quitting the temple, and his public work there. He had said, in the close of the foregoing chapter, Your house is left unto you desolate; and here he made his words good; He went out, and departed from the temple. The manner of expression is observable; he not only went out of the temple, but departed from it, took his final farewell of it; he departed from it, never to return to it any more; and then immediately follows a prediction of its ruin. Note, That house is left desolate indeed, which Christ leaves. Woe unto them when I depart, Hosea 9:12 ; Jeremiah 6:8 . It was now time to groan out their Ichabod, The glory is departed, their defence is departed. Three days after this, the veil of the temple was rent; when Christ left it, all became common and unclean; but Christ departed not till they drove him away; did not reject them, till they first rejected him. II. His private discourse with his disciples; he left the temple, but he did not leave the twelve, who were the seed of the gospel church, which the casting off of the Jews was the enriching of. When he left the temple, his disciples left it too, and came to him. Note, It is good being where Christ is, and leaving that which he leaves. They came to him, to be instructed in private, when his public preaching was over; for the secret of the Lord is with them that fear him. He had spoken of the destruction of the Jewish church to the multitude in parables, which here, as usual, he explains to his disciples. Observe, 1. His disciples came to him, to show him the buildings of the temple, It was a stately and beautiful structure, one of the wonders of the world; no cost was spared, no art left untried, to make it sumptuous. Though it came short of Solomon's temple, and its beginning was small, yet its latter end did greatly increase. It was richly furnished with gifts and offerings, to which there were continual additions made. They showed Christ these things, and desired him to take notice of them, either, (1.) As being greatly pleased with them themselves, and expecting he should be so too. They had lived mostly in Galilee, at a distance from the temple, had seldom seen it, and therefore were the more struck with admiration at it, and thought he should admire as much as they did all this glory ( Genesis 31:1 ); and they would have him divert himself (after his preaching, and from his sorrow which they saw him perhaps almost overwhelmed with) with looking about him. Note, Even good men are apt to be too much enamoured with outward pomp and gaiety, and to overvalue it, even in the things of God; whereas we should be, as Christ was, dead to it, and look upon it with contempt. The temple was indeed glorious, but, [1.] Its glory was sullied and stained with the sin of the priests and people; that wicked doctrine of the Pharisees, which preferred the gold before the temple that sanctified it, was enough to deface the beauty of all the ornaments of the temple. [2.] Its glory was eclipsed and outdone by the presence of Christ in it, who was the glory of this latter house ( Haggai 2:9 ), so that the buildings had no glory, in comparison with that glory which excelled. Or, (2.) As grieving that this house should be left desolate; they showed him the buildings, as if they would move him to reverse the sentence; "Lord, let not this holy and beautiful house, where our fathers praised thee, be made a desolation." They forgot how many providences, concerning Solomon's temple, had manifested how little God cared for that outward glory which they had so much admired, when the people were wicked, 2 Chronicles 7:21 . This house, which is high, sin will bring low. Christ had lately looked upon the precious souls, and wept for them, Luke 19:41 . The disciples look upon the pompous buildings, and are ready to weep for them. In this, as in other things, his thoughts are not like ours. It was weakness, and meanness of spirit, in the disciples, to be so fond of fine buildings; it was a childish thing. Animo magno nihil magnum--To a great mind nothing is great. Seneca. 2. Christ, hereupon, foretels the utter ruin and destruction that were coming upon this place, Matthew 24:2 ; Matthew 24:2 . Note, A believing foresight of the defacing of all worldly glory will help to take us off from admiring it, and overvaluing it. The most beautiful body will be shortly worms' meat, and the most beautiful building a ruinous heap. And shall we then set our eyes upon that which so soon is not, and look upon that with so much admiration which ere long we shall certainly look upon with so much contempt? See ye not all these things? They would have Christ look upon them, and be as much in love with them as they were; he would have them look upon them, and be as dead to them as he was. There is such a sight of these things as will do us good; so to see them as to see through them and see to the end of them. Christ, instead of reversing the decree, ratifies it; Verily, I say unto you, there shall not be left one stone upon another. (1.) He speaks of it as a certain ruin; " I say unto you. I, that know what I say, and know how to make good what I say; take my word for it, it shall be so; I, the Amen, the true Witness, say it to you. " All judgment being committed to the Son, the threatenings, as well as the promises, are all yea, and amen, in him. Hebrews 6:17 ; Hebrews 6:18 . (2.) He speaks of it as an utter ruin. The temple shall not only be stripped, and plundered, and defaced, but utterly demolished and laid waste; Not one stone shall be left upon another. Notice is taken, in the building of the second temple, of the laying of one stone upon another ( Haggai 2:15 ); and here, in the ruin, of not leaving one stone upon another. History tells us, that this was fulfilled in the latter; for though Titus, when he took the city, did all he could to preserve the temple, yet he could not restrain the enraged soldiers from destroying it utterly; and it was done to that degree, that Turnus Rufus ploughed up the ground on which it had stood: thus that scripture was fulfilled ( Micah 3:12 ), Zion shall, for your sake, be ploughed as a field. And afterward, in Julian the Apostate's time, when the Jews were encouraged by him to rebuild their temple, in opposition to the Christian religion, what remained of the ruins was quite pulled down, to level the ground for a new foundation; but the attempt was defeated by the miraculous eruption of fire out of the ground, which destroyed the foundation they laid, and frightened away the builders. Now this prediction of the final and irreparable ruin of the temple includes a prediction of the period of the Levitical priesthood and the ceremonial law. 3. The disciples, not disputing either the truth or the equity of this sentence, nor doubting of the accomplishment of it, enquire more particularly of the time when it should come to pass, and the signs of its approach, Matthew 24:3 ; Matthew 24:3 . Observe, (1.) Where they made this enquiry; privately, as he sat upon the mount of Olives; probably, he was returning to Bethany, and there sat down by the way, to rest him; the mount of Olives directly faced the temple, and from thence he might have a full prospect of it at some distance; there he sat as a Judge upon the bench, the temple and city being before him as at the bar, and thus he passed sentence on them. We read ( Ezekiel 11:23 ) of the removing of the glory of the Lord from the temple to the mountain; so Christ, the great Shechinah, here removes to this mountain. (2.) What the enquiry itself was; When shall these things be; and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world? Here are three questions. [1.] Some think, these questions do all point at one and the same thing--the destruction of the temple, and the period of the Jewish church and nation, which Christ had himself spoken of as his coming ( Matthew 16:28 ; Matthew 16:28 ), and which would be the consummation of the age (for so it may be read), the finishing of that dispensation. Or, they thought the destruction of the temple must needs be the end of the world. If that house be laid waste, the world cannot stand; for the Rabbin used to say that the house of the sanctuary was one of the seven things for the sake of which the world was made; and they think, if so, the world will not survive the temple. [2.] Others think their question, When shall these things be? refers to the destruction of Jerusalem, and the other two to the end of the world; or Christ's coming may refer to his setting up his gospel kingdom, and the end of the world to the day of judgment. I rather incline to think that their question looked no further than the event Christ now foretold; but it appears by other passages, that they had very confused thoughts of future events; so that perhaps it is not possible to put any certain construction upon this question of theirs. But Christ, in his answer, though he does not expressly rectify the mistakes of his disciples (that must be done by the pouring out of the Spirit), yet looks further than their question, and instructs his church, not only concerning the great events of that age, the destruction of Jerusalem, but concerning his second coming at the end of time, which here he insensibly slides into a discourse of, and of that it is plain he speaks in the next chapter, which is a continuation of this sermon. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-4-31" class="com-number"

Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

bible-text/mat-24-1, bible-text/mat-24-2, bible-text/mat-24-3

Source

> 예수께서 성전을 나와 길을 가실 때에, 제자들이 다가와 성전 건물들을 가리켜 보여 드렸다. 그러나 예수께서 그들에게 대답하셨다. "너희가 이 모든 것을 보느냐? 내가 진실로 너희에게 말한다. 여기 돌 하나도 다른 돌 위에 그대로 남아 있지 못하고, 다 무너지고 말 것이다." 예수께서 올리브 산에 앉아 계실 때에, 제자들이 따로 다가와 물었다. "말씀해 주십시오. 언제 이런 일들이 일어나겠습니까? 그리고 주께서 다시 오시는 것과 세상 끝의 징조는 무엇이겠습니까?" (마 24:1-3)

여기서 살펴볼 내용은 다음과 같다.

**첫째, 그리스도께서 성전을 떠나신 것이다.** 그분은 앞 장 마지막에 "너희 집이 황폐하여 버려진 바 되리라"고 하셨다. 그리고 여기서 그 말씀을 실행에 옮기셨다. *그분은 성전을 나가 떠나셨다.* 그분이 성전을 영원히 떠나셨고 두 번 다시 돌아오지 않으셨다는 것이 이 표현의 핵심이다. 그 직후에 바로 성전 파멸 예언이 이어진다. 주목하라. 그리스도가 떠나신 집은 진정으로 황폐해진다. "내가 떠날 때 그들에게 화가 있으리로다"(호 9:12). 성전이 떠나신 그리스도와 함께 그 모든 의미를 잃었다. 사흘 후 성전 휘장이 찢어졌다. 그리스도께서 떠나시자 모든 것이 부정하고 속되게 되었다. 그러나 그리스도께서 먼저 떠나신 것이 아니라, 그들이 먼저 그분을 몰아낸 것이다.

**둘째, 제자들과의 개인적인 대화이다.** 그리스도께서 성전을 떠나셨지만, 열두 제자는 떠나지 않으셨다. 그들이 복음 교회의 씨앗이었기 때문이다. 유대인들을 내치심이 이방인들을 풍요롭게 하는 계기가 되었다. 그분이 성전을 떠나시자 제자들도 성전을 떠나 그분께 나아왔다. 주목하라. 그리스도께서 계신 곳에 있는 것이 좋고, 그분이 떠나신 곳을 우리도 떠나는 것이 마땅하다. 그들은 그분의 공적 설교가 끝난 후 개인적 가르침을 받으러 나아왔다. 주님의 비밀은 그분을 경외하는 자들과 함께한다.

제자들이 성전 건물들을 가리켜 보인 것에 주목하라. 성전은 세상의 경이로운 건축물 중 하나로, 웅장하고 아름다웠으며 아낌없는 비용과 기술이 투입되었다. 솔로몬 성전에는 미치지 못하더라도 그 후에 크게 증축되어 있었다. 제자들이 이것을 보여 드린 이유는 두 가지였을 것이다. (1) 그들 자신이 크게 감동받아서, 그분도 그렇게 느끼시기를 바랐을 것이다. 갈릴리 출신인 그들은 성전을 자주 보지 못했기에 더욱 경이로움을 느꼈을 것이다. 주목하라. 신앙에서조차 선한 사람들도 겉으로 드러나는 화려함과 웅장함에 지나치게 매료되기 쉽다. 성전은 참으로 웅장했지만, [1] 그 영광은 제사장들과 백성들의 죄로 더럽혀졌고, [2] 그 영광은 성전 안에 계신 그리스도의 임재로 가려졌다. 그분이야말로 후자의 집의 영광이시다(학 2:9). (2) 혹은 그 집이 황폐하게 버려진다는 말씀에 슬픔을 느껴, 이 거룩하고 아름다운 집을 보여 드리며 그 판결을 바꾸어 주시기를 구했을 수도 있다.

주목하라. 세상적인 모든 영광의 소멸을 믿음으로 바라보는 것이, 그것에 탄복하고 지나치게 소중히 여기는 것에서 우리를 벗어나게 한다.

**그리스도께서 성전의 완전한 멸망을 예언하셨다.** "너희가 이 모든 것을 보느냐? 내가 진실로 너희에게 말한다. 여기 돌 하나도 다른 돌 위에 그대로 남아 있지 못하고, 다 무너지고 말 것이다."

(1) 확실한 멸망을 말씀하셨다. "내가 너희에게 말한다"—무엇을 말해야 하는지 알고 그 말을 이루실 수 있는 내가. 진실한 증인이신 아멘이신 그분의 약속들과 마찬가지로 위협도 모두 그리스도 안에서 예와 아멘이다. (2) 완전한 멸망을 말씀하셨다. 성전이 단지 약탈되거나 훼손되는 것이 아니라 완전히 철거될 것이었다. 역사가 기록에 따르면 이것은 문자 그대로 성취되었다. 티투스 황제가 성전을 보존하려 했음에도 불구하고 격분한 군사들을 막을 수 없었고, 결국 성전은 완전히 파괴되었다. 그 후 배교자 율리아누스 황제 시절, 유대인들이 성전 재건을 시도했을 때 불이 솟아올라 기초를 파괴하고 건축자들을 내쫓았다는 기록이 있다.

**제자들의 질문이다.** 그들은 멸망의 확실성과 공정성을 의심하지 않고, 구체적인 시기와 징조에 대해 물었다. "언제 이런 일들이 일어나겠습니까? 그리고 주께서 다시 오시는 것과 세상 끝의 징조는 무엇이겠습니까?"

여기에는 세 가지 질문이 있다. [1] 어떤 이들은 이 질문들이 모두 하나의 사건, 곧 유대 교회와 민족의 끝을 가리킨다고 본다. 그리스도 자신이 그것을 '자신의 오심'이라 말씀하셨고(마 16:28), 그것이 시대의 완성, 곧 그 경륜의 완결이 될 것이었다. 혹은 제자들이 성전 멸망이 세상의 끝이라고 생각했을 수도 있다. 그들은 성전이 없이는 세상도 서지 못한다고 여겼을 것이다. [2] 다른 이들은 "언제 이런 일들이 있겠습니까"는 예루살렘 멸망을, 나머지 두 질문은 세상의 끝을 가리킨다고 본다.

어떻든 그리스도는 제자들의 혼란된 생각을 직접 교정하시지 않고(그것은 성령 부어 주심으로 되어야 했다), 제자들의 질문보다 더 멀리 나아가 교회에 예루살렘 멸망뿐 아니라 세상 끝의 재림에 대해서도 가르치신다. 다음 장은 이 설교의 연속이다.

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원주석

1~51절 카드 ↗

M A T T H E W. CHAP. XXIV. Christ's preaching was mostly practical; but, in this chapter, we have a prophetical discourse, a prediction of things to come; such however as had a practical tendency, and was intended, not to gratify the curiosity of his disciples, but to guide their consciences and conversations, and it is therefore concluded with a practical application. The church has always had particular prophecies, besides general promises, both for direction and for encouragement to believers; but it is observable, Christ preached this prophetical sermon in the close of his ministry, as the Apocalypse is the last book of the New Testament, and the prophetical books of the Old Testament are placed last, to intimate to us, that we must be well grounded in plain truths and duties, and those must first be well digested, before we dive into those things that are dark and difficult; many run themselves into confusion by beginning their Bible at the wrong end. Now, in this chapter, we have, I. The occasion of this discourse, Matthew 24:1-3 . II. The discourse itself, in which we have, 1. The prophecy of divers events, especially referring to the destruction of Jerusalem, and the utter ruin of the Jewish church and nation, which were not hastening on, and were completed about forty years after; the prefaces to that destruction, the concomitants and consequences of it; yet looking further, to Christ's coming at the end of time, and the consummation of all things, of which that was a type and figure, Matthew 24:4-31 . 2. The practical application of this prophecy for the awakening and quickening of his disciples to prepare for these great and awful things, Matthew 24:32-51 . return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-1-3" class="com-number"

Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

Source

마태복음 24장은 예수님의 예언 설교가 담긴 장이다. 예수님의 설교는 대부분 실천적인 내용이었으나, 이 장에서는 미래에 올 일들에 관한 예언적 강화가 펼쳐진다. 그러나 이 예언도 제자들의 호기심을 충족시키기 위한 것이 아니라, 그들의 양심과 삶을 인도하기 위한 실천적 목적을 지닌다. 그래서 이 장은 실천적 적용으로 마무리된다.

교회는 역사 속에서 일반적인 약속 외에도 구체적인 예언들을 받아 왔는데, 이는 믿는 자들에게 방향을 제시하고 용기를 북돋기 위함이었다. 주목할 점은, 그리스도께서 이 예언적 강화를 사역의 마지막 무렵에 전하셨다는 사실이다. 이는 요한계시록이 신약성경의 마지막 책이고, 구약성경의 예언서들이 맨 끝에 배치된 것과 같다. 이는 우리가 먼저 명확한 진리와 의무를 충분히 소화한 후에야 비로소 어둡고 어려운 것들을 탐구해야 함을 가르쳐 준다. 많은 사람이 성경을 잘못된 끝에서 시작함으로써 혼란에 빠진다.

이 장의 내용은 다음과 같이 구성된다.

1. **이 강화의 계기** (마 24:1-3)

2. **강화의 본론**

- 여러 사건에 관한 예언 — 특히 예루살렘 멸망과 유대 교회와 민족의 완전한 파멸(이 장에서 예언된 후 약 40년 뒤에 완성됨). 그 전조, 동반 사건, 결과. 그러나 이 사건들은 더 나아가 세상 끝에 있을 그리스도의 재림과 만물의 완성을 내다보는데, 예루살렘 멸망이 그것의 예표요 모형이다 (마 24:4-31).

- 이 예언의 실천적 적용 — 제자들이 이 크고 두려운 사건들을 대비하도록 깨우치고 분발케 함 (마 24:32-51).

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원주석

4~31절 카드 ↗

Awful Predictions. 4 And Jesus answered and said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you. 5 For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many. 6 And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. 7 For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. 8 All these are the beginning of sorrows. 9 Then shall they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill you: and ye shall be hated of all nations for my name's sake. 10 And then shall many be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate one another. 11 And many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many. 12 And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold. 13 But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved. 14 And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come. 15 When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place, (whoso readeth, let him understand:) 16 Then let them which be in Judea flee into the mountains: 17 Let him which is on the housetop not come down to take any thing out of his house: 18 Neither let him which is in the field return back to take his clothes. 19 And woe unto them that are with child, and to them that give suck in those days! 20 But pray ye that your flight be not in the winter, neither on the sabbath day: 21 For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be. 22 And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect's sake those days shall be shortened. 23 Then if any man shall say unto you, Lo, here is Christ, or there; believe it not. 24 For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect. 25 Behold, I have told you before. 26 Wherefore if they shall say unto you, Behold, he is in the desert; go not forth: behold, he is in the secret chambers; believe it not. 27 For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. 28 For wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together. 29 Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken: 30 And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. 31 And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other. The disciples had asked concerning the times, When shall these things be? Christ gives them no answer to that, after what number of days and years his prediction should be accomplished, for it is not for us to know the times ( Acts 1:7 ); but they had asked, What shall be the sign? That question he answers fully, for we are concerned to understand the signs of the times, Matthew 16:3 ; Matthew 16:3 . Now the prophecy primarily respects the events near at hand--the destruction of Jerusalem, the period of the Jewish church and state, the calling of the Gentiles, and the setting up of Christ's kingdom in the world; but as the prophecies of the Old Testament, which have an immediate reference to the affairs of the Jews and the revolutions of their state, under the figure of them do certainly look further, to the gospel church and the kingdom of the Messiah, and are so expounded in the New Testament, and such expressions are found in those predictions as are peculiar thereto and not applicable otherwise; so this prophecy, under the type of Jerusalem's destruction, looks as far forward as the general judgment; and, as is usual in prophecies, some passages are most applicable to the type, and others to the antitype; and toward the close, as usual, it points more particularly to the latter. It is observable, that what Christ here saith to his disciples tends more to engage their caution than to satisfy their curiosity; more to prepare them for the events that should happen than to give them a distinct idea of the events themselves. This is that good understanding of the time which we should all covet, thence to infer what Israel ought to do: and so this prophecy is of standing lasting use to the church, and will be so to the end of time; for the thing that hath been, is that which shall be ( Ecclesiastes 1:5 ; Ecclesiastes 1:6 ; Ecclesiastes 1:7 ; Ecclesiastes 1:9 ), and the series, connection, and presages, of events, are much the same still that they were then; so that upon the prophecy of this chapter, pointing at that event, moral prognostications may be made, and such constructions of the signs of the times as the wise man's heart will know how to improve. I. Christ here foretels the going forth of deceivers; he begins with a caution, Take heed that no man deceive you. They expected to be told when these things should be, to be let into that secret; but this caution is a check to their curiosity, " What is that to you? Mind you your duty, follow me, and be not seduced from following me." Those that are most inquisitive concerning the secret things which belong not to them are most easily imposed upon by seducers, 2 Thessalonians 2:3 . The disciples, when they heard that the Jews, their most inveterate enemies, should be destroyed, might be in danger of falling into security; "Nay," saith Christ, "you are more exposed other ways." Seducers are more dangerous enemies to the church than persecutors. Three times in this discourse he mentions the appearing of false prophets, which was, 1. A presage of Jerusalem's ruin. Justly were they who killed the true prophets, left to be ensnared by false prophets; and they who crucified the true Messiah, left to be deceived and broken by false Christs and pretended Messiahs. The appearing of these was the occasion of dividing that people into parties and factions, which made their ruin the more easy and speedy; and the sin of the many that were led aside by them, helped to fill the measure. 2. It was a trial to the disciples of Christ, and therefore agreeable to their state of probation, that they which are perfect, may be made manifest. Now concerning these deceivers, observe here, (1.) The pretences they should come under. Satan acts most mischievously, when he appears as an angel of light: the colour of the greatest good is often the cover of the greatest evil. [1.] There should appear false prophets ( Matthew 24:11-24 ; Matthew 24:11-24 ); the deceivers would pretend to divine inspiration, an immediate mission, and a spirit of prophecy, when it was all a lie. Such they had been formerly ( Jeremiah 23:16 ; Ezekiel 13:6 ), as was foretold, Deuteronomy 13:3 . Some think, the seducers here pointed to were such as had been settled teachers in the church, and had gained reputation as such, but afterward betrayed the truth they had taught, and revolted to error; and from such the danger is the greater, because least suspected. One false traitor in the garrison may do more mischief than a thousand avowed enemies without. [2.] There should appear false Christs, coming in Christ's name ( Matthew 24:5 ; Matthew 24:5 ), assuming to themselves the name peculiar to him, and saying, I am Christ, pseudo-christs, Matthew 24:24 ; Matthew 24:24 . There was at that time a general expectation of the appearing of the Messiah; they spoke of him; as he that should come; but when he did come, the body of the nation rejected him; which those who were ambitious of making themselves a name, took advantage of, and set up for Christ. Josephus speaks of several such impostors between this and the destruction of Jerusalem; one Theudas, that was defeated by Cospius Fadus; another by Felix, another by Festus. Dosetheus said he was the Christ foretold by Moses. Origen adversus Celsum. See Acts 5:36 ; Acts 5:37 . Simon Magus pretended to be the great power of God, Acts 8:10 . In after-ages there have been such pretenders; one about a hundred years after Christ, that called himself Bar-cochobas--The son of a star, but proved Bar-cosba--The son of a lie. About fifty years ago Sabbati-Levi set up for a Messiah in the Turkish empire, and was greatly caressed by the Jews; but in a short time his folly was made manifest. See Sir Paul Rycaut's History. The popish religion doth, in effect, set up a false Christ; the Pope comes, in Christ's name, as his vicar, but invades and usurps all his offices, and so is a rival with him, and, as such, an enemy to him, a deceiver, and an antichrist. [3.] These false Christs and false prophets would have their agents and emissaries busy in all places to draw people in to them, Matthew 24:23 ; Matthew 24:23 . Then when public troubles are great and threatening, and people will be catching at any thing that looks like deliverance, then Satan will take the advantage of imposing on them; they will say, Lo, here is a Christ, or there is one; but do not mind them: the true Christ did not strive, nor cry; nor was it said of him, Lo, here! or Lo, there! ( Luke 17:21 ), therefore if any man say so concerning him, look upon it as a temptation. The hermits, who place religion in a monastical life, say, He is in the desert; the priests, who made the consecrated wafer to be Christ, say, "He is en tois tameiois -- in the cupboards, in the secret chambers: lo, he is in this shrine, in that image." Thus some appropriate Christ's spiritual presence to one party or persuasion, as if they had the monopoly of Christ and Christianity; and the kingdom of Christ must stand and fall, must live and die, with them; "Lo, he is in this church, in that council:" whereas Christ is All in all, not here or there, but meets his people with a blessing in every place where he records his name. (2.) The proof they should offer for the making good of these pretences; They shall show great signs and wonders ( Matthew 24:24 ; Matthew 24:24 ), not true miracles, those are a divine seal, and with those the doctrine of Christ stands confirmed; and therefore if any offer to draw us from that by signs and wonders, we must have recourse to that rule given of old ( Deuteronomy 13:1-3 ), If the sign or wonder come to pass, yet follow not him that would draw you to serve other gods, or believe in other Christs, for the Lord your God proveth you. But these were lying wonders ( 2 Thessalonians 2:9 ), wrought by Satan (God permitting him), who is the prince of the power of the air. It is not said, They shall work miracles, but, They shall show great signs; they are but a show; either they impose upon men's credulity by false narratives, or deceive their senses by tricks of legerdemain, or arts of divination, as the magicians of Egypt by their enchantments. (3.) The success they should have in these attempts, [1.] They shall deceive many ( Matthew 24:5 ; Matthew 24:5 ), and again, Matthew 24:11 ; Matthew 24:11 . Note, The devil and his instruments may prevail far in deceiving poor souls; few find the strait gate, but many are drawn into the broad way; many will be imposed upon by their signs and wonders, and many drawn in by the hopes of deliverance from their oppressions. Note, Neither miracles nor multitudes are certain signs of a true church; for all the world wonders after the beast, Revelation 13:3 . [2.] They shall deceive, if it were possible, the very elect, Matthew 24:24 ; Matthew 24:24 . This bespeaks, First, The strength of the delusion; it is such as many shall be carried away by (so strong shall the stream be), even those that were thought to stand fast. Men's knowledge, gifts, learning, eminent station, and long profession, will not secure them; but, notwithstanding these, many will be deceived; nothing but the almighty grace of God, pursuant to his eternal purpose, will be a protection. Secondly, The safety of the elect in the midst of this danger, which is taken for granted in that parenthesis, If it were possible, plainly implying that it is not possible, for they are kept by the power of God, that the purpose of God, according to the election, may stand. It is possible for those that have been enlightened to fall away ( Hebrews 6:4 ; Hebrews 6:5 ; Hebrews 6:6 ), but not for those that were elected. If God's chosen ones should be deceived, God's choice would be defeated, which is not to be imagined, for whom he did predestinate, he called, justified, and glorified, Romans 8:30 . They were given to Christ; and of all that were given to him, he will lose none, John 10:28 . Grotius will have this to be meant of the great difficulty of drawing the primitive Christians from their religion, and quotes it as used proverbially by Galen; when he would express a thing very difficult and morally impossible, he saith, "You may sooner draw away a Christian from Christ." (4.) The repeated cautions which our Saviour gives to his disciples to stand upon their guard against them; therefore he gave them warning, that they might watch ( Matthew 24:25 ; Matthew 24:25 ); Behold, I have told you before. He that is told before where he will be assaulted, may save himself, as the king of Israel did, 2 Kings 6:9 ; 2 Kings 6:10 . Note, Christ's warnings are designed to engage our watchfulness; and though the elect shall be preserved from delusion, yet they shall be preserved by the use of appointed means, and a due regard to the cautions of the word; we are kept through faith, faith in Christ's word, which he has told us before. [1.] We must not believe those who say, Lo, here is Christ; or, Lo, he is there, Matthew 24:23 ; Matthew 24:23 . We believe that the true Christ is at the right hand of God, and that his spiritual presence is where two or three are gathered together in his name; believe not those therefore who would draw you off from a Christ in heaven, by telling you he is any where on earth; or draw you off from the catholic church on earth, by telling you he is here, or he is there; believe it not. Note, There is not a greater enemy to true faith than vain credulity. The simple believeth every word, and runs after every cry. Memneso apistein -- Beware of believing. [2.] We must not go forth after those that say, He is in the desert, or, He is in the secret chambers, Matthew 24:26 ; Matthew 24:26 . We must not hearken to every empiric and pretender, nor follow every one that puts up the finger to point us to a new Christ, and a new gospel; "Go not forth, for if you do, you are in danger of being taken by them; therefore keep out of harm's way, be not carried about with every wind; many a man's vain curiosity to go forth hath led him into a fatal apostasy; your strength at such a time is to sit still, to have the heart established with grace." II. He foretels wars and great commotions among the nations, Matthew 24:6 ; Matthew 24:7 . When Christ was born, there was a universal peace in the empire, the temple of Janus was shut; but think not that Christ came to send, or continue such a peace ( Luke 12:51 ); no, his city and his wall are to be built even in troublesome times, and even wars shall forward his work. From the time that the Jews rejected Christ, and he left their house desolate, the sword did never depart from their house, the sword of the Lord was never quiet, because he had given it a charge against a hypocritical nation and the people of his wrath, and by it brought ruin upon them. Here is, 1. A prediction of the event of the day; You will now shortly hear of wars, and rumours of wars. When wars are, they will be heard; for every battle of the warrior is with confused noise, Isaiah 9:5 . See how terrible it is ( Jeremiah 4:19 ), Thou hast heard, O my soul, the alarm of war! Even the quiet in the land, and the least inquisitive after new things, cannot but hear the rumours of war. See what comes of refusing the gospel! Those that will not hear the messengers of peace, shall be made to hear the messengers of war. God has a sword ready to avenge the quarrel of his covenant, his new covenant. Nation shall rise up against nation, that is, one part or province of the Jewish nation against another, one city against another ( 2 Chronicles 15:5 ; 2 Chronicles 15:6 ); and in the same province and city one party or faction shall rise up against another, so that they shall be devoured by, and dashed in pieces against one another, Isaiah 9:19-21 . 2. A prescription of the duty of the day; See that ye be not troubled. Is it possible to hear such sad news, and not be troubled? Yet, where the heart is fixed, trusting in God, it is kept in peace, and is not afraid, no not of the evil tidings of wars, and rumours of wars; no not the noise of Arm, arm. Be not troubled; Me throeithe -- Be not put into confusion or commotion; not put into throes, as a woman with child by a fright; see that ye be not orate . Note, There is need of constant care and watchfulness to keep trouble from the heart when there are wars abroad; and it is against the mind of Christ, that his people should have troubled hearts even in troublous times. We must not be troubled, for two reasons. (1.) Because we are bid to expect this: the Jews must be punished, ruin must be brought upon them; by this the justice of God and the honour of the Redeemer must be asserted; and therefore all those things must come to pass; the word is gone out of God's mouth, and it shall be accomplished in its season. Note, The consideration of the unchangeableness of the divine counsels, which govern all events, should compose and quiet our spirits, whatever happens. God is but performing the thing that is appointed for us, and our inordinate trouble is an interpretative quarrel with that appointment. Let us therefore acquiesce, because these things must come to pass; not only necessitate decreti--as the product of the divine counsel, but necessitate medii--as a means in order to a further end. The old house must be taken down (though it cannot be done without noise, and dust, and danger), ere the new fabric can be erected: the things that are shaken (and ill shaken they were) must be removed, that the things which cannot be shaken may remain, Hebrews 12:27 . (2.) Because we are still to expect worse; The end is not yet; the end of time is not, and, while time lasts, we must expect trouble, and that the end of one affliction will be but the beginning of another; or, "The end of these troubles is not yet; there must be more judgments that one made use of to bring down the Jewish power; more vials of wrath must yet be poured out; there is but one woe past, more woes are yet to come, more arrows are yet to be spent upon them out of God's quiver; therefore be not troubled, do not give way to fear and trouble, sink not under the present burthen, but rather gather in all the strength and spirit you have, to encounter what is yet before you. Be not troubled to hear of wars and rumours of wars; for then what will become of you when the famines and pestilences come?" If it be to us a vexation but to understand the report ( Isaiah 28:19 ), what will it be to feel the stroke when it toucheth the bone and the flesh? If running with the footmen weary us, how shall we contend with horses? And if we be frightened at a little brook in our way, what shall we do in the swellings of Jordan? Jeremiah 12:5 . III. He foretels other judgments more immediately sent of God-- famines, pestilences, and earthquakes. Famine is often the effect of war, and pestilence of famine. These were the three judgments which David was to choose one out of; and he was in a great strait, for he knew not which was the worst: but what dreadful desolations will they make, when they all pour in together upon a people! Beside war (and that is enough), there shall be, 1. Famine, signified by the black horse under the third seal, Revelation 6:5 , Revelation 6:6 . We read of a famine in Judea, not long after Christ's time, which was very impoverishing ( Acts 11:28 ); but the sorest famine was in Jerusalem during the siege. See Lamentations 4:9 , Lamentations 4:10 . 2. Pestilences, signified by the pale horse, and death upon him, and the grave at his heels, under the fourth seal, Revelation 6:7 , Revelation 6:8 . This destroys without distinction, and in a little time lays heaps upon heaps. 3. Earthquakes in divers places, or from place to place, pursuing those that flee from them, as they did from the earthquake in the days of Uzziah, Zechariah 14:5 . Great desolations have sometimes been made by earthquakes, of late and formerly; they have been the death of many, and the terror of more. In the apocalyptic visions, it is observable, that earthquakes bode good, and no evil, to the church, Revelation 6:12 . Compare Revelation 6:15 ; Revelation 11:12 , Revelation 11:13 , Revelation 11:19 ; Revelation 16:17-19 . When God shakes terribly the earth ( Isaiah 2:21 ), it is to shake the wicked out of it ( Job 38:13 ), and to introduce the desire of all nations, Haggai 2:6 , Haggai 2:7 . But here they are spoken of as dreadful judgments, and yet but the beginning of sorrows, ōdinōn - of travailing pains, quick, violent, yet tedious too. Note, When God judgeth, he will overcome; when he begins in wrath, he will make a full end, 1 Samuel 3:12 . When we look forward to the eternity of misery that is before the obstinate refusers of Christ and his gospel, we may truly say, concerning the greatest temporal judgments, “They are but the beginning of sorrows; bad as things are with them, there are worse behind.” IV. He foretels the persecution of his own people and ministers, and a general apostasy and decay in religion thereupon, Matthew 24:9 , Matthew 24:10 , Matthew 24:12 . Observe, 1. The cross itself foretold, Matthew 24:9 . Note, Of all future events we are as much concerned, though commonly as little desirous, to know of our own sufferings as of any thing else. Then, when famines and pestilences prevail, then they shall impute them to the Christians, and make that a pretence for persecuting them; Christianos ad leones - Away with Christians to the lions. Christ had told his disciples, when he first sent them out, what hard things they should suffer; but they had hitherto experienced little of it, and therefore he reminds them again, that the less they had suffered, the more there was behind to be filled up, Colossians 1:24 . (1.) They shall be afflicted with bonds and imprisonments, cruel mockings and scourgings, as blessed Paul ( 2 Corinthians 11:23-25 ); not killed outright, but killed all the day long, in deaths often, killed so as to feel themselves die, made a spectacle to the world, 1 Corinthians 4:9 , 1 Corinthians 4:11 . (2.) They shall be killed; so cruel are the church's enemies, that nothing less will satisfy them than the blood of the saints, which they thirst after, suck, and shed, like water. (3.) They shall be hated of all nations for Christ's name's sake, as he had told them before, Matthew 10:22 . The world was generally leavened with enmity and malignity to Christians: the Jews, though spiteful to the Heathen, were never persecuted by them as the Christians were; they were hated by the Jews that were dispersed among the nations, were the common butt of the world's malice. What shall we think of this world, when the best men had the worst usage in it? It is the cause that makes the martyr, and comforts him; it was for Christ's sake that they were thus hated; their professing and preaching his name incensed the nations so much against them; the devil, finding a fatal shock thereby given to his kingdom, and that his time was likely to be short, came down, having great wrath. 2. The offence of the cross, Matthew 24:10-12 . Satan thus carries on his interest by force of arms, though Christ, at length, will bring glory to himself out of the sufferings of his people and ministers. Three ill effects of persecution are here foretold. (1.) The apostasy of some. When the profession of Christianity begins to cost men dear, then shall many be offended, shall first fall out with, and then fall off fRom. their profession; they will begin to pick quarrels with their religion, sit loose to it, grow weary of it, and at length revolt from it. Note, [1.] It is no new thing (though it is a strange thing) for those that have known the way of righteousness, to turn aside out of it. Paul often complains of deserters, who began well, but something hindered them. They were with us, but went out from us, because never truly of us, 1 John 2:19 . We are told of it before. [2.] Suffering times are shaking times; and those fall in the storm, that stood in fair weather, like the stony ground hearers, Matthew 13:21 . Many will follow Christ in the sunshine, who will shift for themselves, and leave him to do so to, in the cloudy dark day. They like their religion while they can have it cheap, and sleep with it in a whole skin; but, if their profession cost them any thing, they quit it presently. (2.) The malignity of others. When persecution is in fashion, envy, enmity, and malice, are strangely diffused into the minds of men by contagion: and charity, tenderness, and moderation, are looked upon as singularities, which make a man like a speckled bird. Then they shall betray one another, that is,”Those that have treacherously deserted their religion, shall hate and betray those who adhere to it, for whom they have pretended friendship.” Apostates have commonly been the most bitter and violent persecutors. Note, Persecuting times are discovering times. Wolves in sheep's clothing will then throw off their disguise, and appear wolves: they shall betray one another, and hate one another. The times must needs be perilous, when treachery and hatred, two of the worst things that can be, because directly contrary to two of the best (truth and love), shall have the ascendant. This seems to refer to the barbarous treatment which the several contending factions among the Jews gave to one another; and justly were they who ate up God's people as they ate bread, left thus to bite and devour one another till they were consumed one of another; or, it may refer to the mischiefs done to Christ's disciples by those that were nearest to them, as Matthew 10:21 . The brother shall deliver up the brother to death. (3.) The general declining and cooling of most, Matthew 24:12 . In seducing times, when false prophets arise, in persecuting times, when the saints are hated, expect these two things, [1.] The abounding of iniquity; though the world always lies in wickedness, yet there are some times in which it may be said, that iniquity doth in a special manner abound; as when it is more extensive than ordinary, as in the old world, when all flesh had corrupted their way; and when it is more excessive than ordinary, when violence is risen up to a rod of wickedness ( Ezekiel 7:11 ), so that hell seems to be broke loose in blasphemies against God, and enmities to the saints. [2.] The abating of love; this is the consequence of the former; Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold. Understand it in general of true serious godliness, which is all summed up in love; it is too common for professors of religion to grow cool in their profession, when the wicked are hot in their wickedness; as the church of Ephesus in bad times left her first love, Revelation 2:2-4 . Or, it may be understood more particularly of brotherly love. When iniquity abounds, seducing iniquity, persecuting iniquity, this grace commonly waxes cold. Christians begin to be shy and suspicious one of another, affections are alienated, distances created, parties made, and so love comes to nothing. The devil is the accuser of the brethren, not only to their enemies, which makes persecuting iniquity abound, but one to another, which makes the love of many to wax cold. This gives a melancholy prospect of the times, that there shall be such a great decay of love; but, First, It is of the love of many, not of all. In the worst of times, God has his remnant that hold fast their integrity, and retain their zeal, as in Elijah's days, when he thought himself left alone. Secondly, This love is grown cold, but not dead; it abates, but is not quite cast off. There is life in the root, which will show itself when the winter is past. The new nature may wax cold, but shall not wax old, for then it would decay and vanish away. 3. Comfort administered in reference to this offence of the cross, for the support of the Lord's people under it ( Matthew 24:13 ); He that endures to the end, shall be saved. (1.) It is comfortable to those who wish well to the cause of Christ in general, that, though many are offended, yet some shall endure to the end. When we see so many drawing back, we are ready to fear that the cause of Christ will sink for want of supporters, and his name be left and forgotten for want of some to make profession of it; but even at this time there is a remnant according to the election of grace, Romans 11:5 . It is spoken of the same time that this prophecy has reference to; a remnant who are not of them that draw back unto perdition, but believe and persevere to the saving of the soul; they endure to the end, to the end of their lives, to the end of their present state of probation, or to the end of these suffering trying times, to the last encounter, though they should be called to resist unto blood. (2.) It is comfortable to those who do thus endure to the end, and suffer for their constancy, that they shall be saved. Perseverance wins the crown, through free grace, and shall wear it. They shall be saved: perhaps they may be delivered out of their troubles, and comfortably survive them in this world; but it is eternal salvation that is here intended. They that endure to the end of their days, shall then receive the end of their faith and hope, even the salvation of their souls, 1 Peter 1:9 ; Romans 2:7 ; Revelation 3:20 . The crown of glory will make amends for all; and a believing regard to that will enable us to choose rather to die at a stake with the persecuted, than to live in a palace with the persecutors. V. He foretels the preaching of the gospel in all the world ( Matthew 24:14 ); This gospel shall be preached, and then shall the end come. Observe here, 1. It is called the gospel of the kingdom, because it reveals the kingdom of grace, which leads to the kingdom of glory; sets up Christ's kingdom in this world; and secures ours in the other world. 2. This gospel, sooner or later, is to be preached in all the world, to every creature, and all nations are to be discipled by it; for in it Christ is to be Salvation to the ends of the earth; for this end the gift of tongues was the first-fruits of the Spirit. 3. The gospel is preached for a witness to all nations, that is, a faithful declaration of the mind and will of God concerning the duty which God requires from man, and the recompence which man may expect from God. It is a record ( 1 John 5:11 ), it is a witness, for those who believe, that they shall be saved, and against those who persist in unbelief, that they shall be damned. See Mark 16:16 . But how does this come in here? (1.) It is intimated that the gospel should be, if not heard, yet at least heard of, throughout the then known world, before the destruction of Jerusalem; that the Old Testament church should not be quite dissolved till the New Testament was pretty well settled, had got considerable footing, and began to make some figure. Better is the face of a corrupt degenerate church than none at all. Within forty years after Christ's death, the sound of the gospel was gone forth to the ends of the earth, Romans 10:18 . St. Paul fully preached the gospel from Jerusalem, and round about unto Illyricum; and the other apostles were not idle. The persecuting of the saints at Jerusalem helped to disperse them, so that they went every where, preaching the word, Acts 8:1-4 . And when the tidings of the Redeemer are sent over all parts of the world, then shall come the end of the Jewish state. Thus, that which they thought to prevent, by putting Christ to death, they thereby procured; all men believed on him, and the Romans came, and took away their place and nation, John 11:48 . Paul speaks of the gospel being come to all the world, and preached to every creature, Colossians 1:6-23 . (2.) It is likewise intimated that even in times of temptation, trouble, and persecution, the gospel of the kingdom shall be preached and propagated, and shall force its way through the greatest opposition. Though the enemies of the church grow very hot, and many of her friends very cool, yet the gospel shall be preached. And even then, when many fall by the sword and by flame, and many do wickedly, and are corrupted by flatteries, yet then the people that do know their God, shall be strengthened to do the greatest exploits of all, in instructing many; see Daniel 11:32 , Daniel 11:33 ; and see an instance, Philippians 1:12-14 . (3.) That which seems chiefly intended here, is, that the end of the world shall be then, and not till then, when the gospel has done its work in the world. The gospel shall be preached, and that work carried on, when you are dead; so that all nations, first or last, shall have either the enjoyment, or the refusal, of the gospel; and then cometh the end, when the kingdom shall be delivered up to God, even the Father; when the mystery of God shall be finished, the mystical body completed, and the nations either converted and saved, or convicted and silenced, by the gospel; then shall the end come, of which he had said before ( Matthew 24:6 , Matthew 24:7 ), not yet, not till those intermediate counsels be fulfilled. The world shall stand as long as any of God's chosen ones remain uncalled; but, when they are all gathered in, it will be set on fire immediately. VI. He foretels more particularly the ruin that was coming upon the people of the Jews, their city, temple, and nation, Matthew 24:15 , etc. Here he comes more closely to answer their questions concerning the desolation of the temple; and what he said here, would be of use to his disciples, both for their conduct and for their comfort, in reference to that great event; he describes the several steps of that calamity, such as are usual in war. 1. The Romans setting up the abomination of desolation in the holy place, Matthew 24:15 . Now, (1.) Some understand by this an image, or statue, set up in the temple by some of the Roman governors, which was very offensive to the Jews, provoked them to rebel, and so brought the desolation upon them. The image of Jupiter Olympius, which Antiochus caused to be set upon the altar of God, is called Bdelugma erēmōseōs - The abomination of desolation, the very word here used by the historian, 1 Macc. 1:54. Since the captivity in Babylon, nothing was, nor could be, more distasteful to the Jews than an image in the holy place, as appeared by the mighty opposition they made when Caligula offered to set up his statue there, which had been of fatal consequence, if it had not been prevented, and the matter accommodated, by the conduct of Petronius; but Herod did set up an eagle over the temple-gate; and, some say, the statue of Titus was set up in the temple. (2.) Others choose to expound it by the parallel place ( Luke 21:20 ), when ye shall see Jerusalem compassed with armies. Jerusalem was the holy city, Canaan the holy land, the Mount Moriah, which lay about Jerusalem, for its nearness to the temple was, they thought in a particular manner holy ground; on the country lying round about Jerusalem the Roman army was encamped, that was the abomination that made desolate. The land of an enemy is said to be the land which thou abhorrest ( Isaiah 7:16 ); so an enemy's army to a weak but wilful people may well be called the abomination. Now this is said to be spoken of by Daniel, the prophet, who spoke more plainly of the Messiah and his kingdom than any of the Old Testament prophets did. He speaks of an abomination making desolate, which should be set up by Antiochus ( Daniel 11:31 ; Daniel 12:11 ); but this that our Saviour refers to, we have in the message that the angel brought him ( Daniel 9:27 ), of what should come at the end of seventy weeks, long after the former; for the overspreading of abominations, or, as the margin reads it, with the abominable armies (which comes home to the prophecy here), he shall make it desolate. Armies of idolaters may well be called abominable armies; and some think, the tumults, insurrections, and abominable factions and seditions, in the city and temple, may at least be taken in as part of the abomination making desolate. Christ refers them to that prophecy of Daniel, that they might see how the ruin of their city and temple was spoken of in the Old Testament, which would both confirm his prediction, and take off the odium of it. They might likewise from thence gather the time of it - soon after the cutting off of Messiah the prince; the sin that procured it - their rejecting him, and the certainty of it - it is a desolation determined. As Christ by his precepts confirmed the law, so by his predictions he confirmed the prophecies of the Old Testament, and it will be of good use to compare both together. Reference being here had to a prophecy, which is commonly dark and obscure, Christ inserts this memorandum, “ Whoso readeth, let him understand; whoso readeth the prophecy of Daniel, let him understand that it is to have its accomplishment now shortly in the desolations of Jerusalem.” Note, Those that read the scriptures, should labour to understand the scriptures, else their reading is to little purpose; we cannot use that which we do not understand. See John 5:39 ; Acts 8:30 . The angel that delivered this prophecy to Daniel, stirred him up to know and understand, Daniel 9:25 . And we must not despair of understanding even dark prophecies; the great New Testament prophecy is called a revelation, not a secret. Now things revealed belong to us, and therefore must be humbly and diligently searched into. Or, Let him understand, not only the scriptures which speak of those things, but by the scriptures let him understand the times, 1 Chronicles 12:32 . Let him observe, and take notice; so some read it; let him be assured, that, notwithstanding the vain hopes with which the deluded people feed themselves, the abominable armies will make desolate. 2. The means of preservation which thinking men should betake themselves to ( Matthew 24:16 , Matthew 24:20 ); Then let them which are in Judea, flee. Then conclude there is no other way to help yourselves than by flying for the same. We may take this, (1.) As a prediction of the ruin itself; that it should be irresistible; that it would be impossible for the stoutest hearts to make head against it, or contend with it, but they must have recourse to the last shift, getting out of the way. It bespeaks that which Jeremiah so much insisted upon, but in vain, when Jerusalem was besieged by the Chaldeans, that it would be to no purpose to resist, but that it was their wisdom to yield and capitulate; so Christ here, to show how fruitless it would be to stand it out, bids every one make the best of his way. (2.) We may take it as a direction to the followers of Christ what to do, not to say, A confederacy with those who fought and warred against the Romans for the preservation of their city and nation, only that they might consume the wealth of both upon their lusts (for to this very affair, the struggles of the Jews against the Roman power, some years before their final overthrow, the apostle refers, James 4:1-3 ); but let them acquiesce in the decree that was gone forth, and with all speed quit the city and country, as they would quit a falling house or a sinking ship, as Lot quitted Sodom, and Israel the tents of Dathan and Abiram; he shows them, [1.] Whither they must flee - from Judea to the mountains; not the mountains round about Jerusalem, but those in the remote corners of the land, which would be some shelter to them, not so much by their strength as by their secrecy. Israel is said to be scattered upon the mountains ( 2 Chronicles 18:16 ); and see Hebrews 11:38 . It would be safer among the lions' dens, and the mountains of the leopards, than among the seditious Jews or the enraged Romans. Note, In times of imminent peril and danger, it is not only lawful, but our duty, to seek our own preservation by all good and honest means; and if God opens a door of escape, we ought to make our escape, otherwise we do not trust God but tempt him. There may be a time when even those that are in Judea, where God is known, and his name is great, must flee to the mountains; and while we only go out of the way of danger, not out of the way of duty, we may trust God to provide a dwelling for his outcasts, Isaiah 16:4 , Isaiah 16:5 . In times of public calamity, when it is manifest that we cannot be serviceable at home and may be safe abroad, Providence calls us to make our escape. He that flees, may fight again. [2.] What haste they must make, Matthew 24:17 , Matthew 24:18 . The life will be in danger, in imminent danger, the scourge will slay suddenly; and therefore he that is on the house-top, when the alarm comes, let him not come down into the house, to look after his effects there, but go the nearest way down, to make his escape; and so he that shall be in the field, will find it his wisest course to run immediately, and not return to fetch his clothes or the wealth of his house, for two reasons, First, Because the time which would be taken up in packing up his things, would delay his flight. Note, When death is at the door, delays are dangerous; it was the charge to Lot, Look not behind thee. Those that are convinced of the misery of a sinful state, and the ruin that attends them in that state, and, consequently, of the necessity of their fleeing to Christ, must take heed, lest, after all these convictions, they perish eternally by delays. Secondly, Because the carrying of his clothes, and his other movables and valuables with him, would but burthen him, and clog his flight. The Syrians, in their flight, cast away their garments, 2 Kings 7:15 . At such a time, we must be thankful if our lives be given us for a prey, though we can save nothing, Jeremiah 45:4 , Jeremiah 45:5 . For the life is more than meat, Matthew 6:25 . Those who carried off least, were safest in their flight. Cantabit vacuus coram latrone viator - The pennyless traveller can lose nothing by robbers. It was to his own disciples that Christ recommended this forgetfulness of their house and clothes, who had a habitation in heaven, treasure there, and durable clothing, which the enemy could not plunder them of. Omnia mea mecum porto - I have all my property with me, said Bias the philosopher in his flight, empty-handed. He that has grace in his heart carries his all along with him, when tripped of all. Now those to whom Christ said this immediately, did not live to see this dismal day, none of all the twelve but John only; they needed not to be hidden in the mountains (Christ hid them in heaven), but they left the direction to their successors in profession, who pursued it, and it was of use to them; for when the Christians in Jerusalem and Judea saw the ruin coming on, they all retired to a town called Pella, on the other side Jordan, where they were safe; so that of the many thousands that perished in the destruction of Jerusalem, there was not so much as one Christian. See Euseb. Eccl. Hist. lib. 3, cap. 5. Thus the prudent man foresees the evil, and hides himself, Proverbs 22:3 ; Hebrews 11:7 . This warning was not kept private. St. Matthew's gospel was published long before that destruction, so that others might have taken the advantage of it; but their perishing through their unbelief of this, was a figure of their eternal perishing through their unbelief of the warnings Christ gave concerning the wrath to come. [3.] Whom it would go hard with at that time ( Matthew 24:19 ); Woe to them that are with child, and to them that give suck. To this same event that saying of Christ at his death refers ( Luke 23:29 ), They shall say, Blessed are the wombs that never bare, and the paps that never gave suck. Happy are they that have no children to see the murder of; but most unhappy they whose wombs are then bearing, their paps then giving suck: they of all others will be in the most melancholy circumstances. First, To them the famine would be most grievous, when they should see the tongue of the sucking child cleaving to the roof of his mouth for thirst, and themselves by the calamity made more cruel than the sea monsters, Lamentations 4:3 , Lamentations 4:4 . Secondly, To them the sword would be most terrible, when in the hand of worse than brutal rage. It is a direful midwifery, when the women with child come to be ripped up by the enraged conqueror ( 2 Kings 15:16 ; Hosea 13:16 ; Amos 1:13 ), or the children brought forth to their murderer, Hosea 9:13 . Thirdly, To them also the flight would be most afflictive,; the women with child cannot make haste, or go far; the sucking child cannot be left behind, or, if it should, can a woman forget it, that she should not have compassion on it? If it be carried along, it retards the mother's flight, and so exposes her life, and is in danger of Mephibosheth's fate, who was lamed by a fall he got in his nurse's flight. 2 Samuel 4:4 . [4.] What they should pray against at that time - that your flight be not in the winter, nor on the sabbath day, Matthew 24:20 . Observe, in general, it becomes Christ's disciples, in times of public trouble and calamity, to be much in prayer; that is a salve for every sore, never out of season, but in a special manner seasonable when we are distressed on every side. There is no remedy but you must flee, the decree is gone forth, so that God will not be entreated to take away his wrath, no, not if Noah, Daniel, and Job, stood before him. Let it suffice thee, speak no more of that matter, but labour to make the best of that which is; and when you cannot in faith pray that you may not be forced to flee, yet pray that the circumstances of it may be graciously ordered, that, though the cup may not pass from you, yet the extremity of the judgment may be prevented. Note, God has the disposing of the circumstances of events, which sometimes make a great alteration one way or other; and therefore in those our eyes must be ever toward him. Christ's bidding them pray for this favour, intimates his purpose of granting it to them; and in a general calamity we must not overlook a circumstantial kindness, but see and own wherein it might have been worse. Christ still bids his disciples to pray for themselves and their friends, that, whenever they were forced to flee, it might be in the most convenient time. Note, When trouble is in prospect, at a great distance, it is good to lay in a stock of prayers beforehand; they must pray, First, That their flight, if it were the will of God, might not be in the winter, when the days are short, the weather cold, the ways dirty, and therefore travelling very uncomfortable, especially for whole families. Paul hastens Timothy to come to him before winter, 2 Timothy 4:21 . Note, Though the ease of the body is not to be mainly consulted, it ought to be duly considered; though we must take what God sends, and when he sends it, yet we may pray against bodily inconveniences, and are encouraged to do so, in that the Lord is for the body. Secondly, That it might not be on the sabbath day; not on the Jewish sabbath, because travelling then would give offence to them who were angry with the disciples for plucking the ears of corn on the day; not on the Christian sabbath, because being forced to travel on the day would be a grief to themselves. This intimates Christ's design, that a weekly sabbath should be observed in his church after the preaching of the gospel to all the world. We read not of any of the ordinances of the Jewish church, which were purely ceremonial, that Christ ever expressed any care about, because they were all to vanish; but for the sabbath he often showed a concern. It intimates likewise that the sabbath is ordinarily to be observed as a day of rest from travel and worldly labour; but that, according to his own explication of the fourth commandment, works of necessity were lawful on the sabbath day, as this of fleeing from an enemy to save our lives: had it not been lawful, he would have said, “Whatever becomes of you, do not flee on the sabbath day, but abide by it, though you die by it.” For we must not commit the least sin, to escape the greatest trouble. But it intimates, likewise, that it is very uneasy and uncomfortable to a good man, to be taken off by any work of necessity from the solemn service and worship of God on the sabbath day. We should pray that we may have quiet undisturbed sabbaths, and may have no other work than sabbath work to do on sabbath days; that we may attend upon the Lord without distraction. It was desirable, that, if they must flee, they might have the benefit and comfort of one sabbath more to help to bear their charges. To flee in the winter is uncomfortable to the body; but to flee on the sabbath day is so to the soul, and the more so when it remembers former sabbaths, as Psalms 42:4 . 3. The greatness of the troubles which should immediately ensue ( Matthew 24:21 ); Then shall be great tribulation; then when the measure of iniquity is full; then when the servants of God are sealed and secured, then come the troubles; nothing can be done against Sodom till Lot is entered into Zoar, and then look for fire and brimstone immediately. There shall be great tribulation. Great, indeed, when within the city plague and famine raged, and (worse than either) faction and division, so that every man's sword was against his fellow; then and there it was that the hands of the pitiful women flayed their own children. Without the city was the Roman army ready to swallow them up, with a particular rage against them, not only as Jews, but as rebellious Jews. War was the only one of the three sore judgments that David excepted against; but that was it by which the Jews were ruined; and there were famine and pestilence in extremity besides. Josephus's History of the Wars of the Jews, has in it more tragical passages than perhaps any history whatsoever. (1.) It was a desolation unparalleled, such as was not since the beginning of the world, nor ever shall be. Many a city and kingdom has been made desolate, but never any with a desolation like this. Let not daring sinners think that God has done his worst, he can heat the furnace seven times and yet seven times hotter, and will, when he sees greater and still greater abominations. The Romans, when they destroyed Jerusalem, were degenerated from the honour and virtue of their ancestors, which had made even their victories easy to the vanquished. And the wilfulness and obstinacy of the Jews themselves contributed much to the increase of the tribulation. No wonder that the ruin of Jerusalem was an unparalleled ruin, when the sin of Jerusalem was an unparalleled sin - even their crucifying Christ. The nearer any people are to God in profession and privileges, the greater and heavier will his judgments be upon them, if they abuse those privileges, and be false to that profession, Amos 3:2 . (2.) It was a desolation which, if it should continue long, would be intolerable, so that no flesh should be saved, Matthew 24:22 . So triumphantly would death ride, in so many dismal shapes, and with such attendants, that there would be no escaping, but, first or last, all would be cut off. He that escaped one sword, would fall by another, Isaiah 24:17 , Isaiah 24:18 . The computation which Josephus makes of those that were slain in several places, amounts to above two millions. No flesh shall be saved; he doth not say, “No soul shall be saved,” for the destruction of the flesh may be for the saving of the spirit in the day of the Lord Jesus; but temporal lives will be sacrificed so profusely, that one would think, if it last awhile, it would make a full end. But here is one word of comfort in the midst of all this terror - that for the elects' sake these days shall be shortened, not made shorter than what God had determined (for that which is determined, shall be poured upon the desolate, Daniel 9:27 ), but shorter than what he might have decreed, if he had dealt with them according to their sins; shorter than what the enemy designed, who would have cut all off, if God who made use of them to serve his own purpose, had not set bounds to their wrath; shorter than one who judged by human probabilities would have imagined. Note, [1.] In times of common calamity God manifests his favour to the elect remnant; his jewels, which he will then make up; his peculiar treasure, which he will secure when the lumber is abandoned to the spoiler. [2.] The shortening of calamities is a kindness God often grants for the elects' sake. Instead of complaining that our afflictions last so long, if we consider our defects, we shall see reason to be thankful that they do not last always; when it is bad with us, it becomes us to say, “Blessed be God that it is no worse; blessed be God that it is not hell, endless and remediless misery.” It was a lamenting church that said, It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed; and it is for the sake of the elect, lest their spirit should fail before them, if he should contend for ever, and lest they should be tempted to put forth, if not their heart, yet their hand, to iniquity. And now comes in the repeated caution, which was opened before, to take heed of being ensnared by false Christs, and false prophets; ( Matthew 24:23 , etc.), who would promise them deliverance, as the lying prophets in Jeremiah's time ( Jeremiah 14:13 ; Jeremiah 23:16 , Jeremiah 23:17 ; Jeremiah 27:16 ; Jeremiah 28:2 ), but would delude them. Times of great trouble are times of great temptation, and therefore we have need to double our guard then. If they shall say, Here is a Christ, or there is one, that shall deliver us from the Romans, do not heed them, it is all but talk; such a deliverance is not to be expected, and therefore not such a deliverer. VII. He foretels the sudden spreading of the gospel in the world, about the time of these great events ( Matthew 24:27 , Matthew 24:28 ); As the lightning comes out of the east, so shall the coming of the Son of man be. It comes in here as an antidote against the poison of those seducers, that said, Lo, here is Christ, or, Lo, he is there; compare Luke 17:23 , Luke 17:24 . Hearken not to them, for the coming of the Son of man will be as the lightning. 1. It seems primarily to be meant of his coming to set up his spiritual kingdom in the world; where the gospel came in its light and power, there the Son of man came, and in a way quite contrary to the fashion of the seducers and false Christs, who came creeping in the desert, or the secret chambers ( 2 Timothy 3:6 ); whereas Christ comes not with such a spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind. The gospel would be remarkable for two things. (1.) Its swift spreading; it shall fly as the lightning; so shall the gospel be preached and propagated. The gospel is light ( John 3:19 ); and it is not in this as the lightning, that it is a sudden flash, and away, for it is sun-light, and day-light; but it is as lightning in these respects: [1.] It is light from heaven, as the lightning. It is God, and not man, that sends the lightnings, and summons them, that they may go, and say, Here we are, Job 38:35 . It is God that directs it ( Job 37:3 ); to man it is one of nature's miracles, above his power to effect, and of nature's mysteries, above his skill to account for: but it is from above; his lightnings enlightened the world, Psalms 97:4 . [2.] It is visible and conspicuous as the lightning. The seducers carried on their depths of Satan in the desert and the secret chambers, shunning the light; heretics were called lucifugae - light-shunners. But truth seeks no corners, however it may sometimes be forced into them, as the woman in the wilderness, though clothed with the sun, Revelation 12:1 , Revelation 12:6 . Christ preached his gospel openly ( John 18:20 ), and his apostles on the housetop ( Matthew 10:27 ), not in a corner, Acts 26:26 . See Psalms 98:2 . [3.] It was sudden and surprising to the world as the lightning; the Jews indeed had predictions of it, but to the Gentiles it was altogether unlooked for, and came upon them with unaccountable energy, or ever they were aware. It was light out of darkness, Matthew 4:16 ; 2 Corinthians 4:6 . We read of the discomfiting of armies by lightning, 2 Samuel 22:15 ; Psalms 144:6 . The powers of darkness were dispersed and vanquished by the gospel lightning. [4.] It spread far and wide, and that quickly and irresistibly, like the lightning, which comes, suppose, out of the east (Christ is said to ascend from the east, Revelation 7:2 ; Isaiah 41:2 ), and lighteneth to the west. The propagating of Christianity to so many distant countries, of divers languages, by such unlikely instruments, destitute of all secular advantages, and in the face of so much opposition, and this in so short a time, was one of the greatest miracles that was ever wrought for the confirmation of it; here was Christ upon his white horse, denoting speed as well as strength, and going on conquering and to conquer, Revelation 6:2 . Gospel light rose with the sun, and went with the same, so that the beams of it reached to the ends of the earth, Romans 10:18 . Compare with Psalms 19:3 , Psalms 19:4 . Though it was fought against, it could never be cooped up in a desert, or in a secret place, as the seducers were; but by this, according to Gamaliel's rule, proved itself to be of God, that it could not be overthrown, Acts 5:38 , Acts 5:39 . Christ speaks of shining into the west, because it spread most effectually into those countries which lay west from Jerusalem, as Mr. Herbert observes in his Church-militant. How soon did the gospel lightning reach this island of Great Britain! Tertullian, who wrote in the second century, takes notice of it, Britannorum in accessa Romanis loca, Christo tamen subdita - The fastnesses of Britain, though inaccessible to the Romans, were occupied by Jesus Christ. This was the Lord's doing. (2.) Another thing remarkable concerning the gospel, was, its strange success in those places to which is was spread; it gathered in multitudes, not by external compulsion, but as it were by such a natural instinct and inclination, as brings the birds of prey to their prey; for wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together ( Matthew 24:28 ), where Christ is preached, souls will be gathered in to him. The lifting up of Christ from the earth, that is, the preaching of Christ crucified, which, one would think, should drive all men from him, will draw all men to him ( John 12:32 ), according to Jacob's prophecy, that to him shall the gathering of the people be, Genesis 49:10 . See Isaiah 60:8 . The eagles will be where the carcase is, for it is food for them, it is a feast for them; where the slain are, there is she, Job 39:30 . Eagles are said to have a strange sagacity and quickness of scent to find out the prey, and they fly swiftly to it, Job 9:26 . So those whose spirits God shall stir up, will be effectually drawn to Jesus Christ, to feed upon him; whither should the eagle go but to the prey? Whither should the soul go but to Jesus Christ, who has the words of eternal life? The eagles will distinguish what is proper for them from that which is not; so those who have spiritual senses exercised, will know the voice of the good Shepherd from that of a thief and a robber. Saints will be where the true Christ is, not the false Christs. This is applicable to the desires that are wrought in every gracious soul after Christ, and communion with him. Where he is in his ordinances, there will his servants choose to be. A living principle of grace is a kind of natural instinct in all the saints, drawing them to Christ to live upon him. 2. Some understand these verses of the coming of the Son of man to destroy Jerusalem, Malachi 3:1 , Malachi 3:2 , Malachi 3:5 . So much was there of an extraordinary display of divine power and justice in that event, that it is called the coming of Christ. Now here are two things intimated concerning it. (1.) That to the most it would be as unexpected as a flash of lightning, which indeed gives warning of the clap of thunder which follows, but is itself surprising. The seducers say, Lo, here is Christ to deliver us; or there is one, a creature of their own fancies; but ere they are aware, the wrath of the Lamb, the true Christ, will arrest them, and they shall not escape. (2.) That it might be as justly expected as that the eagle should fly to the carcases; though they put far from them the evil day, yet the desolation will come as certainly as the birds of prey to a dead carcase, that lies exposed in the open field. [1.] The Jews were so corrupt and degenerate, so vile and vicious, that they were become a carcase, obnoxious to the righteous judgment of God; they were also so factious and seditious, and every way so provoking to the Romans, that they had made themselves obnoxious to their resentments, and an inviting prey to them. [2.] The Romans were as an eagle, and the ensign of their armies was an eagle. The army of the Chaldeans is said to fly as the eagle that hasteth to eat, Habakkuk 1:8 . The ruin of the New Testament Babylon is represented by a call to the birds of prey to come and feast upon the slain, Revelation 19:17 , Revelation 19:18 . Notorious malefactors have their eyes eaten out by the young eagles ( Proverbs 30:17 ); the Jews were hung up in chains, Jeremiah 7:33 ; Jeremiah 16:4 . [3.] The Jews can no more preserve themselves from the Romans than the carcase can secure itself from the eagles. [4.] The destruction shall find out the Jews wherever they are, as the eagle scents the prey. Note, When a people do by their sin make themselves carcases, putrid and loathsome, nothing can be expected but that God should send eagles among them, to devour and destroy them. 3. It is very applicable to the day of judgment, the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ in that day, and our gathering together unto him, 2 Thessalonians 2:1 . Now see here, (1.) How he shall come; as the lightning, The time was now at hand, when he should depart out of the world, to go to the Father. Therefore those that enquire after Christ must not go into the desert or the secret place, nor listen to every one that will put up the finger to invite them to a sight of Christ; but let them look upward, for the heavens must contain him, and thence we look for the Saviour ( Philippians 3:20 ); he shall come in the clouds, as the lightning doth, and every eye shall see him, as they say it is natural for all living creatures to turn their faces towards the lightning, Revelation 1:7 . Christ will appear to all the world, from one end of heaven to the other; nor shall any thing be hid from the light and heat of that day. (2.) How the saints shall be gathered to him; as the eagles are to the carcase by natural instinct, and with the greatest swiftness and alacrity imaginable. Saints, when they shall be fetched to glory, will be carried as on eagles' wings ( Exodus 19:4 ), as on angels' wings. They shall mount up with wings, like eagles, and like them renew their youth. VIII. He foretels his second coming at the end of time, Matthew 24:29-31 . The sun shall be darkened, etc. 1. Some think this is to be understood only of the destruction of Jerusalem and the Jewish nation; the darkening of the sun, moon, and stars, denotes the eclipse of the glory of that state, its convulsions, and the general confusion that attended that desolation. Great slaughter and devastation are in the Old Testament thus set forth (as Isaiah 13:10 ; Isaiah 34:4 ; Ezekiel 32:7 ; Joel 2:31 ); or by the sun, moon, and stars, may be meant the temple, Jerusalem, and the cities of Judah, which should all come to ruin. The sign of the Son of man ( Matthew 24:30 ) means a signal appearance of the power and justice of the Lord Jesus in it, avenging his own blood on them that imprecated the guilt of it upon themselves and their children; and the gathering of his elect ( Matthew 24:31 ) signifies the delivering of a remnant from this sin and ruin. 2. It seems rather to refer to Christ's second coming. The destruction of the particular enemies of the church was typical of the complete conquest of them all; and therefore what will be done really at the great day, may be applied metaphorically to those destructions: but still we must attend to the principal scope of them; and while we are all agreed to expect Christ's second coming, what need is there to put such strained constructions as some do, upon these verses, which speak of it so clearly, and so agreeably to other scriptures, especially when Christ is here answering an enquiry concerning his coming at the end of the world, which Christ was never shy of speaking of to his disciples? The only objection against this, is, that it is said to be immediately after the tribulation of those days; but as to that, (1.) It is usual in the prophetical style to speak of things great and certain as near and just at hand, only to express the greatness and certainty of them. Enoch spoke of Christ's second coming as within ken, Behold, the Lord cometh, Jude 1:14 . (2.) A thousand years are in God's sight but as one day, 2 Peter 3:8 . It is there urged, with reference to this very thing, and so it might be said to be immediately after. The tribulation of those days includes not only the destruction of Jerusalem, but all the other tribulations which the church must pass through; not only its share in the calamities of the nations, but the tribulations peculiar to itself; while the nations are torn with wars, and the church with schisms, delusions, and persecutions, we cannot say that the tribulation of those days is over; the whole state of the church on earth is militant, we must count upon that; but when the church's tribulation is over, her warfare accomplished, and what is behind of the sufferings of Christ filled up, then look for the end. Now concerning Christ's second coming, it is here foretold, [1.] That there shall be then a great and amazing change of the creatures, and particularly the heavenly bodies ( Matthew 24:29 ). The sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light. The moon shines with a borrowed light, and therefore if the sun, from whom she borrows her light, is turned into darkness, she must fail of course, and become bankrupt. The stars shall fall; they shall lose their light, and disappear, and be as if they were fallen; and the powers of heaven shall be shaken. This intimates, First, That there shall be a great change, in order to the making of all things new. Then shall be the restitution of all things, when the heavens shall not be cast away as a rag, but changed as a vesture, to be worn in a better fashion, Psalms 102:26 . They shall pass away with a great noise, that there may be new heavens, 2 Peter 3:10-13 . Secondly, It shall be a visible change, and such as all the world must take notice of; for such the darkening of the sun and moon cannot but be: and it would be an amazing change; for the heavenly bodies are not so liable to alteration as the creatures of this lower world are. The days of heaven, and the continuance of the sun and moon, are used to express that which is lasting and unchangeable (As Psalms 89:29 , Psalms 89:36 , Psalms 89:37 ); yet they shall thus be shaken. Thirdly, It shall be a universal change. If the sun be turned into darkness, and the powers of heaven be shaken, the earth cannot but be turned into a dungeon, and its foundation made to tremble. Howl, fir trees, if the cedars be shaken. When the stars of heaven drop, no marvel if the everlasting mountains melt, and the perpetual hills bow. Nature shall sustain a general shock and convulsion, which yet shall be no hindrance to the joy and rejoicing of heaven and earth before the Lord, when he cometh to judge the world ( Psalms 96:11 , Psalms 96:13 ); they shall as it were glory in the tribulation. Fourthly, The darkening of the sun, moon, and stars, which were made to rule over the day, and over the night (which is the first dominion we find of any creature, Genesis 1:16-18 ), signifies the putting down of all rule, authority, and power (even that which seems of the greatest antiquity and usefulness), that the kingdom may be delivered up to God, even the Father, and he may be All in all, 1 Corinthians 15:24 , 1 Corinthians 15:28 . The sun was darkened at the death of Christ, for then was in one sense the judgment of this world ( John 12:31 ), an indication of what would be at the general judgment. Fifthly, The glorious appearance of our Lord Jesus, who will then show himself as the Brightness of his Father's glory, and the express Image of his person, will darken the sun and moon, as a candle is darkened in the beams of the noon-day sun; they will have no glory, by reason of the glory that excelleth, 2 Corinthians 3:10 . Then the sun shall be ashamed, and the moon confounded, when God shall appear, Isaiah 24:23 . Sixthly, The sun and moon shall be then darkened, because there will be no more occasion for them. To sinners, that choose their portion in this life, all comfort will be eternally denied; as they shall not have a drop of water, so not a ray of light. Now God causeth his sun to rise on the earth, but then Interdico tib sole et luna - I forbid thee the light of the sun and the moon. Darkness must be their portion. To the saints that had their treasure above, such light of joy and comfort will be given as shall supersede that of the sun and moon, and render it useless. What need is there of vessels of light, when we come to the Fountain and Father of light ? See Isaiah 60:19 ; Revelation 22:5 . [2.] That then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven ( Matthew 24:30 ), the Son of man himself, as it follows here, They shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds. At his first coming, he was set for a Sign that should be spoken against ( Luke 2:34 ), but at his second coming, a sign that should be admired. Ezekiel was a son of man set for a sign, Ezekiel 12:6 . Some make this a prediction of the harbingers and forerunners of his coming, giving notice of his approach; a light shining before him, and the fire devouring ( Psalms 50:3 ; 1 Kings 19:11 , 1 Kings 19:12 ), the beams coming out of his hand, where had long been the hiding of his power, Habakkuk 3:4 . It is a groundless conceit of some of the ancients, that this sign of the Son of man, will be the sign of the cross displayed as a banner. It will certainly be such a clear convincing sign as will dash infidelity quite out of countenance, and fill their faces with shame, who said, Where is the promise of his coming? [3.] That then all the tribes of the earth shall mourn, Matthew 24:30 . See Revelation 1:7 . All the kindreds of the earth shall then wail because of him; some of all the tribes and kindreds of the earth shall mourn; for the greater part will tremble at his approach, while the chosen remnant, one of a family and two of a tribe, shall lift up their heads with joy, knowing that their redemption draws nigh, and their Redeemer. Note, Sooner or later, all sinners will be mourners; penitent sinners look to Christ, and mourn after a godly sort; and they who sow in those tears, shall shortly reap in joy; impenitent sinners shall look unto him whom they have pierced, and, though they laugh now, shall mourn and weep after a devilish sort, in endless horror and despair. [4.] That then they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory. Note, First, The judgment of the great day will be committed to the Son of man, both in pursuance and in recompence of his great undertaking for us as Mediator, John 5:22 , John 5:27 . Secondly, The Son of man will at that day come in the clouds of heaven. Much of the sensible intercourse between heaven and earth is by the clouds; they are betwixt them, as it were, the medium participationis - the medium of participation, drawn by heaven from the earth, distilled by heaven upon the earth. Christ went to heaven in a cloud, and will in like manner come again, Acts 1:9 , Acts 1:11 . Behold, he cometh in the clouds, Revelation 1:7 . A cloud will be the Judge's chariot ( Psalms 104:3 ), his robe ( Revelation 10:1 ), his pavilion ( Psalms 18:11 ), his throne, Revelation 14:14 . When the world was destroyed by water, the judgment came in the clouds of heaven, for the windows of heaven were opened; so shall it be when it shall be destroyed by fire. Christ went before Israel in a cloud, which had a bright side and a dark side; so will the cloud have in which Christ will come at the great day, it will bring both comfort and terror. Thirdly, He will come with power and great glory: his first coming was in weakness and great meanness ( 2 Corinthians 13:4 ); but his second coming will be with power and glory, agreeable both to the dignity of his person and to the purposes of his coming. Fourthly, He will be seen with bodily eyes in his coming: therefore the Son of man will be the Judge, that he may be seen, that sinners thereby may be the more confounded, who shall see him as Balaam did, but not nigh ( Numbers 24:17 ), see him, but not as theirs. It added to the torment of that damned sinner, that he saw Abraham afar off. “Is this he whom we have slighted, and rejected, and rebelled against; whom we have crucified to ourselves afresh; who might have been our Saviour, but is our Judge, and will be our enemy for ever?” The Desire of all nations will then be their dread. [5.] That he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, Matthew 24:31 . Note, First, The angels shall be attendants upon Christ at his second coming; they are called his angels, which proves him to be God, and Lord of the angels; they shall be obliged to wait upon him. Secondly, These attendants shall be employed by him as officers of the court in the judgment of that day; they are now ministering spirits sent forth by him ( Hebrews 1:14 ), and will be so then. Thirdly, Their ministration will be ushered in with a great sound of a trumpet, to awaken and alarm a sleeping world. This trumpet is spoken of, 1 Corinthians 15:52 , and 1 Thessalonians 4:16 . At the giving of the law on mount Sinai, the sound of the trumpet was remarkably terrible ( Exodus 19:13 , Exodus 19:16 ); but much more will it be so in the great day. By the law, trumpets were to be sounded for the calling of assemblies ( Numbers 10:2 ), in praising God ( Psalms 81:3 ), in offering sacrifices ( Numbers 10:10 ), and in proclaiming the year of jubilee, Leviticus 25:9 . Very fitly therefore shall there be the sound of a trumpet at the last day, when the general assembly shall be called, when the praises of God shall be gloriously celebrated, when sinners shall fall as sacrifices to divine justice, and when the saints shall enter upon their eternal jubilee. [6.] That they shall gather together his elect from the four winds. Note, At the second coming of Jesus Christ, there will be a general meeting of all the saints. First, The elect only will be gathered, the chosen remnant, who are but few in comparison with the many that are only called. This is the foundation of the saints' eternal happiness, that they are God's elect. The gifts of love to eternity follow the thought of love from eternity; and the Lord knows them that are his. Secondly, The angels shall be employed to bring them together, as Christ's servants, and as the saints' friends; we have the commission given them, Psalms 50:5 Gather my saints together unto me; nay, it will be said to them, Habetis fratres - These are your brethren; for the elect will then be equal to the angels, Luke 20:36 . Thirdly, They shall be gathered from one end of heaven to the other; the elect of God are scattered abroad ( John 11:52 ), there are some in all places, in all nations ( Revelation 7:9 ); but when that great gathering day comes, there shall not one of them be missing; distance of place shall keep none out of heaven, if distance of affection do not. Undique ad coelos tantundem est viae - Heaven is equally accessible from every place. See Luke 8:11 ; Isaiah 43:6 ; Isaiah 49:12 . return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-32-51" class="com-number"

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> 예수께서 그들에게 대답하셨다. "아무에게도 미혹을 당하지 않도록 조심하여라. 많은 사람이 내 이름으로 와서 '내가 그리스도다' 하며 많은 사람을 미혹할 것이다. 너희는 전쟁이 일어났다는 소문과 전쟁의 소문을 듣게 될 것이다. 그러나 동요하지 않도록 조심하여라. 이런 일은 반드시 일어나야 하지만, 아직 끝은 아니다. 민족이 민족을 대적하여 일어나고, 나라가 나라를 대적하여 일어날 것이며, 곳곳에 기근과 전염병과 지진이 있을 것이다. 그러나 이 모든 것은 해산의 고통이 시작되는 것일 뿐이다. 그때에 사람들이 너희를 환난에 넘겨주고 죽일 것이며, 너희가 내 이름 때문에 모든 민족에게 미움을 받을 것이다..." (마 24:4-31)

제자들은 '언제 이런 일들이 있겠습니까'라고 물었지만, 그리스도는 그 연수를 알려 주지 않으셨다. 때를 아는 것은 우리의 몫이 아니기 때문이다(행 1:7). 그러나 '징조가 무엇입니까'라는 질문에는 충분히 대답하셨다. 우리는 시대의 징조를 이해할 의무가 있기 때문이다(마 16:3).

이 예언은 일차적으로 가까운 사건—예루살렘 멸망, 유대 교회와 국가의 종말, 이방인의 부름, 세상에서 그리스도 나라의 세워짐—을 가리킨다. 그러나 구약의 예언들이 유대인의 역사를 직접 다루면서도 더 나아가 복음 교회와 메시아의 나라를 바라보듯이, 이 예언도 예루살렘 멸망이라는 예표 아래 최후 심판까지를 내다본다. 그러므로 이 예언은 교회에 지속적이고 영속적인 가치를 지닌다.

주목할 점은, 그리스도께서 여기서 제자들에게 하신 말씀이 그들의 호기심을 충족시키기보다는 주의를 촉구하는 것이었다는 사실이다. 사건들을 선명하게 그려 주기보다는, 그 사건들을 대비하도록 준비시키는 것이 목적이었다.

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**I. 거짓 미혹자들의 출현 예고**

그리스도는 경고로 시작하신다. "아무에게도 미혹을 당하지 않도록 조심하여라." 이것은 그들의 호기심에 대한 제지이기도 하다. "그것이 너희에게 무슨 상관이냐? 나를 따르고, 유혹에 속지 않도록 하여라." 비밀스러운 것들에 가장 호기심이 많은 자들이 유혹자들에게 가장 쉽게 속는다(살후 2:3).

이 설교에서 거짓 선지자들의 등장을 세 번 언급하신다는 것은 주목할 만하다.

1. **그것이 예루살렘 멸망의 전조였다.** 진정한 선지자들을 죽인 이들이 거짓 선지자들에게 미혹당하게 된 것은 당연한 보응이었다. 거짓 그리스도들과 거짓 메시아들의 등장이 그 민족을 여러 당파로 분열시켜 멸망을 더 빠르고 쉽게 만들었다.

2. **그것은 그리스도의 제자들에게 시험이었다.**

이 유혹자들에 대해 살펴보면,

**(1) 그들이 내세울 명분들이다.**

[1] **거짓 선지자들이 등장할 것이다** (마 24:11, 24). 그들은 신성한 영감과 사명과 예언의 은사를 주장할 것이나 모두 거짓이다. 다른 이들의 신뢰를 얻었다가 나중에 진리를 배반하고 이단으로 떨어진 정착 교사들일 수도 있다. 아군 속의 배신자가 성 밖의 천 명의 적보다 더 큰 해를 끼친다.

[2] **거짓 그리스도들이 등장할 것이다** (마 24:5), "내가 그리스도다"라 말하며. 당시 메시아에 대한 기대가 매우 높았는데, 민족이 그분을 거부하자 야심찬 자들이 그 틈을 노렸다. 요세푸스는 예루살렘 멸망 전에 이런 여러 사람들을 기록하고 있다. 그 후로도 그런 자들이 여럿 나타났다.

[3] **이 거짓 그리스도들과 거짓 선지자들은 모든 곳에서 사람들을 미혹하려 할 것이다** (마 24:23). 공적 환난이 크고 위협적일 때, 구원을 갈망하는 사람들이 미혹자들에게 쉽게 속는다. "보아라, 여기 그리스도가 있다" 혹은 "저기 있다"—이런 말에 주목하지 말라. 진정한 그리스도는 다투지도, 외치지도 않으셨다. "그분이 광야에 있다"—은둔자들이 수도원 생활에 종교를 가두는 방식이다. "그분이 골방에 있다"—제사장들이 떡을 그리스도라 주장하는 방식이다. 이처럼 어떤 이들은 그리스도의 임재를 자기 집단이 독점한다고 주장한다. 그러나 그리스도는 만유 안의 만유이시며, 여기나 저기에 국한되지 않으시고, 자신의 이름을 기억하게 하는 모든 곳에서 복으로 만나 주신다.

**(2) 그들이 내세울 증거들이다.** "큰 표적과 기이한 일을 보여 줄 것이다" (마 24:24). 참된 이적들과 달리, 이것들은 거짓 이적들이다(살후 2:9). 이집트 술사들이 요술로 그러했듯이. 그러므로 신명기 13:1-3의 원칙을 기억하라. 표적이 이루어진다 해도, 다른 신들이나 다른 그리스도에게로 이끌려 한다면 따르지 말라.

**(3) 그들이 거둘 성공이다.**

[1] "많은 사람을 미혹할 것이다"(마 24:5, 11). 마귀와 그 도구들이 가련한 영혼들을 미혹하는 데 얼마나 멀리 나아갈 수 있는지! 좁은 문을 찾는 자는 적고 넓은 길로 이끌리는 자는 많다.

[2] "할 수만 있으면 택하신 사람들까지도 미혹하려 할 것이다"(마 24:24). 이것은 첫째로 그 미혹의 강함을 말한다—지식, 은사, 학식, 탁월한 지위, 오랜 신앙 고백도 안전을 보장하지 못하고 많은 이가 속을 것이다. 오직 전능하신 하나님의 은혜만이 보호막이 된다. 둘째로, 이 두려운 위험 속에서도 택하신 자들의 안전을 선언한다. "할 수만 있으면"이라는 말은 분명히 그것이 불가능함을 함축한다. 하나님께서 예정하신 자들은 부르시고, 의롭다 하시고, 영화롭게 하신다(롬 8:30). 그리스도는 그들 중 하나도 잃지 않으신다(요 10:28).

**(4) 우리 구주께서 이 위험에 대해 거듭 경고하심이다.** "보아라, 내가 너희에게 미리 말해 두었다"(마 24:25). 공격이 어디서 올지 미리 알려 주는 것이 방어를 가능하게 한다. 택하신 자들이 보존되는 것은 은혜로 말미암아 임명된 수단들을 통해서이다.

[1] "그가 광야에 있다 하더라도 나가지 말고, 골방에 있다 하더라도 믿지 마라"(마 24:26). 하늘에 계신 그리스도를 믿는 자들은, 누군가가 그분이 땅 어딘가에 있다고 말할 때 속지 말라.

[2] "보아라, 그가 광야에 있다... 그가 골방에 있다 하더라도"—새로운 그리스도와 새로운 복음을 가리키며 손짓하는 모든 경험주의자와 사기꾼의 말을 따르지 말라. 바깥으로 나가지 말라. 헛된 호기심으로 나갔다가 치명적인 배교에 이른 사람들이 많다.

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**II. 전쟁과 국가적 소란 예고** (마 24:6-7)

그리스도께서 나실 때 제국에는 보편적 평화가 있었다. 그러나 "내가 평화를 주러 온 것이 아니라"(눅 12:51)—그분의 성과 성벽은 어려운 시대에도 건설된다. 유대인들이 그리스도를 거부하고 그분이 그들의 집을 황폐하게 버려두신 이후로 칼이 그들의 집에서 떠나지 않았다.

1. **사건에 대한 예언이다.** "너희는 전쟁이 일어났다는 소문과 전쟁의 소문을 듣게 될 것이다." 전쟁이 있으면 소문도 있는 법이다. 복음을 듣지 않는 자들은 전쟁 소식을 들어야 한다. 하나님은 그분의 새 언약에 대한 분노를 갚을 칼을 갖고 계신다. "민족이 민족을 대적하여 일어나고"—유대 민족의 각 지방과 파벌이 서로 싸워 멸망을 더욱 빠르게 했다.

2. **그날의 의무에 대한 권면이다.** "동요하지 않도록 조심하여라." 마음이 하나님을 신뢰하며 고정된 자는 평안 가운데 있어 나쁜 소식도 두려워하지 않는다. 우리가 동요해서는 안 되는 두 가지 이유가 있다.

(1) 이런 일들이 오리라고 예비하셨기 때문이다. 하나님의 작정의 불변성을 생각하면 마음이 안정된다. 이 일들은 반드시 일어나야 한다. 낡은 집은 소음과 먼지와 위험 없이는 헐리지 않는다. 흔들려야 할 것들이 제거되어야, 흔들리지 않는 것들이 남는다(히 12:27).

(2) 더 나쁜 것들을 각오해야 하기 때문이다. "아직 끝은 아니다." 더 많은 심판의 대접이 부어져야 하기 때문이다. 지금 악한 것들도 있지만 그 뒤에 더 나쁜 것들이 있다.

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**III. 하나님이 직접 내리시는 재앙—기근, 전염병, 지진** (마 24:7)

전쟁은 종종 기근을 부르고, 기근은 전염병을 부른다. 다윗이 하나 선택해야 했던 세 가지 재앙이 함께 닥치는 것이다.

1. **기근**—요한계시록의 셋째 인의 검은 말로 표상된 것(계 6:5-6). 예루살렘 포위 중의 극심한 기근은 역사적으로 기록되어 있다(애 4:9-10).

2. **전염병**—넷째 인의 창백한 말과 뒤따르는 사망으로 표상된 것(계 6:7-8). 분별없이 파괴하며 짧은 시간에 쌓고 쌓는다.

3. **곳곳의 지진**—계시록에서 지진은 교회에 좋은 것을 예고한다(계 6:12; 11:12-13). 하나님께서 땅을 심히 진동시킬 때, 그것은 악인들을 그 안에서 흔들어 내고(욥 38:13) 만민이 사모하는 이를 오게 하기 위함이다(학 2:6-7). 그러나 여기서는 이것들이 두려운 심판으로, "해산의 고통이 시작되는 것"으로 말씀된다.

주목하라. 하나님께서 심판하실 때는 끝까지 이기신다. 진노 중에 시작하시면 완전히 끝내신다(삼상 3:12). 가장 큰 세상적 심판을 바라볼 때도 "이것은 고통의 시작일 뿐이다"라고 말해야 한다. 완고한 그리스도 거부자들 앞에는 영원한 비참이 있기 때문이다.

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**IV. 그분의 백성과 사역자들에 대한 박해, 그리고 신앙의 타락** (마 24:9-10, 12)

1. **십자가 자체** (마 24:9).

주목하라. 미래의 모든 사건 중에서 우리 자신의 고난에 대해 알기를 우리는 가장 적게 바라면서도 가장 많이 알아야 할 필요가 있다. 기근과 전염병이 번성할 때, 사람들은 그것을 그리스도인들 탓으로 돌리고 박해의 구실로 삼을 것이다. "그리스도인들을 사자에게 내던져라."

(1) 그들은 결박과 투옥, 잔인한 조롱과 채찍질로 고통당할 것이다(고후 11:23-25). 단번에 죽는 것이 아니라 날마다 죽임을 당하는 것이다. (2) 그들은 죽임을 당할 것이다. 교회의 원수들은 성도들의 피로 만족한다. (3) 그들은 그리스도의 이름 때문에 모든 민족에게 미움을 받을 것이다. 악마는 그 왕국에 치명적 타격이 가해지는 것을 보고 격분하여 내려왔다.

2. **십자가의 걸림돌** (마 24:10-12).

박해로 인한 세 가지 나쁜 결과들이 예언된다.

(1) **어떤 이들의 배교.** 신앙 고백이 큰 대가를 치르게 될 때, "많은 사람이 걸려 넘어질 것이다." 주목하라. [1] 의의 길을 알았던 자들이 그 길에서 이탈하는 것은 새로운 일이 아니다. [2] 고난의 때는 흔드는 때다. 폭풍 속에서 무너지는 자들은 맑은 날씨에는 서 있었던 자들이다. 싸게 살 수 있을 때는 신앙을 갖다가, 대가가 치러져야 할 때 즉시 포기한다.

(2) **다른 이들의 악의.** 박해가 유행할 때, 시기와 악의와 증오가 마치 전염병처럼 퍼진다. "서로를 넘겨주며, 서로를 미워할 것이다." 배교자들이 가장 심한 박해자가 된다. 늑대가 양의 탈을 벗고 자신을 드러낸다.

(3) **많은 이의 신앙 쇠퇴** (마 24:12). "불법이 점점 많아지기 때문에, 많은 사람의 사랑이 식어 갈 것이다." 이것은 일반적으로 진지한 경건함—사랑으로 집약되는—을 가리킨다. 에베소 교회가 어려운 시절에 처음 사랑을 버린 것처럼(계 2:2-4). 혹은 더 구체적으로 형제 사랑을 가리킬 수도 있다. 유혹하는 불법과 박해하는 불법이 번성할 때, 이 은혜가 흔히 식어간다. 그리스도인들은 서로를 의심하기 시작하고, 사랑은 사라져간다.

그러나 주목하라. 이것은 많은 사람의 사랑이지, 모든 사람의 사랑이 아니다. 가장 나쁜 시절에도 하나님은 자신의 남은 자를 두신다. 또한 사랑이 식어가는 것이지, 완전히 죽는 것은 아니다. 새 본성은 식어갈 수 있지만 낡아지지는 않는다.

3. **이 십자가의 걸림돌에 대한 위로** (마 24:13).

"끝까지 견디는 사람은 구원을 받을 것이다."

(1) 많은 이가 넘어지더라도 끝까지 견디는 이들이 있다는 것이 위로이다. 최악의 시절에도 은혜의 선택에 따른 남은 자가 있다(롬 11:5). (2) 끝까지 견디는 자들에게는 구원이 주어질 것이라는 것이 위로이다. 인내가 면류관을 얻는다, 자유로운 은혜를 통해. 그들이 날들의 끝까지 견디면, 그때에 믿음과 소망의 목적—영혼의 구원—을 받을 것이다(벧전 1:9; 롬 2:7; 계 3:20).

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**V. 온 세상에 복음이 전파될 것** (마 24:14)

"이 하나님 나라의 복음이 온 세상에 전파되어 모든 민족에게 증거가 될 것이며, 그제야 끝이 올 것이다."

주목하라. 1. 이것은 하나님 나라의 복음이라 불린다. 은혜의 나라를 드러내고, 세상에 그리스도의 나라를 세우고, 저 세상에서 우리의 나라를 보장하기 때문이다. 2. 이 복음은 조만간 온 세상에, 모든 족속에게 전파될 것이다. 3. 복음은 모든 민족에게 증거로 전파된다. 사람들이 믿으면 구원받는다는 충실한 선언이요(막 16:16), 불신앙으로 굳게 서면 정죄받는다는 선언이다.

어떻게 이것이 여기 들어오는가?

(1) 예루살렘 멸망 전에 복음이 적어도 알려지게 되었음을 암시한다. 구약 교회가 완전히 해소되기 전에 신약 교회가 상당한 기반을 얻었다. 그리스도 사후 40년 이내에 복음의 소리가 땅 끝까지 나갔다(롬 10:18). 바울은 예루살렘에서부터 일루리곤까지 복음을 충만히 전했고, 나머지 사도들도 게으르지 않았다.

(2) 유혹의 시절과 고난의 시절에도 복음은 전파되고 확산될 것이다. 가장 강력한 반대를 뚫고 자신의 길을 낼 것이다. 칼에 쓰러지고 불꽃 속에 타버리는 자들도 있겠지만, 하나님을 아는 자들은 많은 이를 가르치는 가장 위대한 일들을 행한다(단 11:32-33; 빌 1:12-14).

(3) 특히 여기서 의도된 것은, 복음이 세상에서 그 사역을 마칠 때까지 세상의 끝은 오지 않을 것이라는 사실이다. 복음이 전파될 것이며, 모든 민족이 먼저든 나중이든 복음을 즐기거나 거부할 기회를 갖게 된다. 그리고 나서야 끝이 온다. 나라가 하나님 아버지께 넘겨지고, 하나님의 신비가 완성되고, 신비로운 몸이 완성되고, 민족들이 복음으로 확신되거나 침묵하게 될 때. 하나님의 택하신 자들이 모두 부름을 받을 때까지 세상은 서 있을 것이고, 다 모이면 즉시 불로 태워질 것이다.

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**VI. 유대 민족의 멸망에 대한 더 구체적인 예언** (마 24:15-22)

"그러므로 선지자 다니엘이 말한 멸망의 가증한 것이 거룩한 곳에 서 있는 것을 보거든 (읽는 사람은 깨달아라), 그때에 유대에 있는 사람들은 산으로 도망하여라..." (마 24:15)

그리스도는 여기서 성전 멸망에 대한 질문에 더 직접적으로 답하신다.

1. **거룩한 곳에 서는 멸망의 가증한 것** (마 24:15).

(1) 어떤 이들은 이것이 일부 로마 총독들이 성전에 세운 우상이나 형상을 가리킨다고 본다. 이것이 유대인들을 자극하여 반란을 일으키게 했고, 멸망을 초래했다. 안티오쿠스가 하나님의 제단 위에 설치한 것이 바로 역사가가 "황폐의 가증한 것"이라 부른 것이다(마카베오상 1:54). 유배 이후 성전에 형상을 세우는 것보다 유대인들에게 더 거슬리는 것은 없었다.

(2) 다른 이들은 이것을 평행 구절인 누가복음 21:20, "예루살렘이 군대들에게 에워싸이는 것을 보거든"으로 해석한다. 예루살렘은 거룩한 성이었고, 그 주변 들판에 로마 군대가 진을 쳤으니, 그 이방 군대가 거룩한 장소를 황폐하게 하는 가증한 것이었다.

그리스도는 제자들을 다니엘의 예언으로 인도하신다. 다니엘은 구약 선지자 중 메시아와 그분의 나라에 대해 가장 명확히 말한 선지자이다. 다니엘 9:27에서 칠십 이레의 끝에 있을 일을 예언했는데, "그가 황폐하게 하는 가증한 것을 포함"하도록 할 것이라 했다. 군대들은 우상 숭배자들이므로 가증스러운 군대들이라 부를 만하다.

"읽는 사람은 깨달아라"—다니엘의 예언을 읽는 자는 이것이 곧 예루살렘의 황폐로 완성될 것임을 이해하라. 주목하라. 성경을 읽는 자들은 성경을 이해하고자 힘써야 한다. 그렇지 않으면 읽는 것이 거의 소용없다. 우리는 어두운 예언도 이해하기를 포기해서는 안 된다.

2. **생각하는 자들이 취해야 할 보존의 수단** (마 24:16-20).

"그때에 유대에 있는 사람들은 산으로 도망하여라."

이것은 두 가지로 이해할 수 있다.

(1) 멸망 자체의 예언이다. 가장 용감한 자들도 저항할 수 없어 도망칠 수밖에 없을 것이다. 예레미야가 바벨론의 포위 때 강조한 것처럼—저항은 소용없고 항복하는 것이 지혜라고.

(2) 그리스도의 추종자들이 어떻게 할지에 대한 방향이다. 거대한 위험 앞에서 급히 피하라. 그들이 이전에 반로마 유대인들의 투쟁에 동조하지 않도록. 요셉 역시 가나안에 쓰러지는 집에서 혹은 침몰하는 배에서 나온 것처럼 급히 떠나야 했다.

**어디로 도망할 것인가.** 유대에서 산들로, 즉 멀리 떨어진 외진 구석들로. 거기서는 사자들의 굴과 표범들의 산에서도 예루살렘의 선동적 유대인들이나 격분한 로마인들보다 더 안전하다.

**얼마나 서둘러야 하는가** (마 24:17-18). 지붕 위에 있는 자는 집 안의 것을 챙기러 내려가지 말고 가장 가까운 길로 내려가서 도망하라. 밭에 있는 자는 옷을 챙기러 돌아가지 말라. 두 가지 이유에서다. 첫째, 짐 싸는 시간이 도망을 지연시킨다. 주목하라. 죽음이 문 앞에 있을 때 지체는 위험하다. 뒤를 돌아보지 말라는 것이 롯에 대한 명령이었다. 죄의 비참함과 그 상태에서의 파멸을 확신한 자들은, 그 확신 이후에도 지체함으로 영원히 멸망하는 일이 없도록 주의해야 한다. 둘째, 그 물건들을 들고 가면 도망에 짐이 된다. 시리아 군대들이 도망할 때 옷을 버렸다(왕하 7:15). 이럴 때는 목숨이 노략물로 주어지면 감사해야 한다(렘 45:4-5).

**누가 힘들 것인가** (마 24:19). "임신한 여인들과 젖먹이는 어머니들에게 화가 있을 것이다!" 첫째, 기근이 그들에게 가장 참혹하다. 둘째, 칼이 그들에게 가장 무서울 것이다. 셋째, 도망이 그들에게 가장 고될 것이다—임신한 여인은 서두르거나 멀리 갈 수 없고, 젖먹이를 두고 갈 수도 없다.

**어떤 것들을 위해 기도해야 하는가** (마 24:20). "너희가 도망하는 일이 겨울이나 안식일에 일어나지 않도록 기도하여라."

일반적으로, 공적 환난의 시절에 크게 기도하는 것이 그리스도의 제자들에게 합당하다. 그것이 모든 상처의 치료약이며 결코 때를 잃지 않는다. 피해야 할 것은 기도할 수 없지만, 피할 수 없는 것들 중에서 하나님의 은혜로 상황이 최선으로 정돈되기를 기도할 수 있다. 주목하라. 하나님은 사건의 정황들을 주관하시며, 이것들이 때로 큰 차이를 만든다. 그러므로 이런 것들에서도 우리 눈이 항상 그분을 향해야 한다.

**겨울에 도망하지 않도록 기도하라.** 겨울에는 낮이 짧고 날씨가 춥고 길이 나쁘다. 온 가족이 이동하는 경우 여행이 매우 불편하다.

**안식일에 도망하지 않도록 기도하라.** 유대 안식일에는 아닌데, 그것이 그 당시에도 여행에 적용되었을 것이기 때문이다. 그리스도인 안식일에도 아닌데, 그날에 어쩔 수 없이 여행해야 하는 것이 그들에게 슬픔이 될 것이기 때문이다. 이것은 그리스도께서 복음이 모든 세상에 전파된 후에도 주간의 안식일이 지켜지기를 의도하셨음을 암시한다. 우리는 조용하고 방해받지 않는 안식일을 갖기를, 안식일에 다른 세상적 일이 없기를 기도해야 한다.

3. **뒤따를 환난의 심각성** (마 24:21-22).

"그때에는 큰 환난이 있을 것이니, 이는 세상이 시작된 이래로 지금까지 없었고 앞으로도 결코 없을 환난이다."

성 안에서는 전염병과 기근이, 그리고 그보다 더 나쁜 파벌과 분열이 맹위를 떨쳤다. 밖에서는 로마 군대가 특히 그들 중에 있던 반란적 유대인들에 대한 특별한 분노로 접근했고, 극심한 기근과 전염병도 있었다.

(1) 그것은 유례없는 황폐였다. 그런 황폐는 세상이 시작된 이래 없었고 앞으로도 없을 것이다. 예루살렘의 멸망이 유례없는 것은 예루살렘의 죄, 특히 그리스도를 십자가에 못 박은 죄가 유례없었기 때문이다. 하나님의 특권과 은총에 가까울수록, 그것을 남용하면 더 크고 무거운 심판이 따른다(암 3:2).

(2) 계속된다면 참을 수 없는 황폐였다. "만일 그날들이 줄어들지 않았더라면, 아무도 살아남지 못했을 것이다." 그렇게 많은 무서운 모습의 죽음이 그렇게 많은 시종들을 거느리고 그렇게 의기양양하게 달려올 것이어서, 피하는 자가 없을 것이다. 그러나 여기서 이 두려움 가운데 한 가지 위로의 말씀이 있다. "그러나 택하신 사람들을 위하여 그날들이 줄어들 것이다." 주목하라. [1] 공적인 재난의 시절에 하나님은 택하신 자들에 대한 특별한 호의를 나타내신다. [2] 고난의 단축은 하나님께서 종종 택하신 자들을 위해 주시는 친절이다. 고난이 왜 이렇게 오래 가는가 불평하는 대신, 자신의 결함을 생각하면 끝없이 계속되지 않는 것을 감사할 이유가 있다.

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거짓 그리스도들과 거짓 선지자들에 대한 경고가 반복된다(마 24:23 이하). 그들이 구출을 약속할 것이나 사람들을 기만할 것이다. 큰 환난의 시절은 큰 유혹의 시절이다.

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**VII. 인자의 오심—복음의 급속한 확산** (마 24:27-28)

"번개가 동쪽에서 나와 서쪽까지 번쩍이는 것처럼, 인자가 오는 것도 그러할 것이다. 주검이 있는 곳에는 독수리들이 모여드는 법이다."

이것은 거짓 미혹자들에 대한 해독제로 나온다. 광야에 있다거나 골방에 있다는 말을 듣지 말라(눅 17:23-24). 인자가 오심은 번개와 같을 것이다.

1. 이것은 일차적으로 세상에 그분의 영적 나라를 세우러 오심을 가리키는 것 같다. 복음이 그 빛과 능력으로 온 곳에 인자가 오신 것이다. 거짓 그리스도들이 광야나 골방에서 은밀히 왔던 것과는 정반대로.

복음에 대해 두 가지가 두드러진다.

**(1) 급속한 확산이다.** 복음은 번개처럼 날아다닐 것이다. 복음은 빛이다(요 3:19). 번개처럼 [1] 하늘에서 내려온 빛이다. [2] 눈에 보이고 분명하다. 유혹자들은 어두움의 깊은 곳에서 그들의 역사를 수행하며 빛을 피했다. 그러나 진리는 구석을 찾지 않는다. 그리스도는 공개적으로 복음을 전하셨고(요 18:20), 그 사도들은 지붕 위에서 전했다(마 10:27). [3] 번개처럼 세상에 갑자기 예상치 못하게 왔다. [4] 빠르고 넓게 퍼졌다. 이는 이런 불가능해 보이는 도구들에 의해, 세속적 이점도 없이 엄청난 반대를 받으면서도 그토록 많은 먼 나라에 기독교가 전파된 것이 확인의 가장 큰 기적 중 하나였다.

**(2) 이상한 성공이다.** "주검이 있는 곳에는 독수리들이 모여드는 법이다"(마 24:28). 그리스도가 전파되는 곳에 영혼들이 그분께로 모여들 것이다. 땅에서 들린 그리스도, 곧 십자가에 달리신 그리스도의 전파가 당연히 모든 이를 그분으로부터 몰아낼 것 같지만, 오히려 모든 이를 그분께로 이끌 것이다(요 12:32). 야곱의 예언대로 그분께 모든 민족이 모일 것이다(창 49:10).

독수리는 먹이를 향한 이상한 예민함과 민첩함을 가졌다고 한다. 하나님께서 그 영을 감동시킨 자들이 예수 그리스도께로 효과적으로 이끌릴 것이다. 그분에게서 어디로 가겠는가? 영원한 생명의 말씀을 가지신 그분에게로 영혼이 가는 것은 당연하다. 독수리가 자기에게 합당한 것과 그렇지 않은 것을 구별하듯, 영적 감각이 훈련된 자들은 선한 목자의 음성을 도둑과 강도의 음성과 구별할 것이다. 성도들은 진정한 그리스도가 계신 곳에 있기를 원하지 거짓 그리스도 곁에 있기를 원하지 않는다.

2. 어떤 이들은 이 절들을 예루살렘을 멸망시키러 오시는 인자의 오심으로 이해한다(말 3:1-2, 5). 그 사건에는 신성한 능력과 정의가 비범하게 나타났으므로, 그것이 그리스도의 오심이라 불린다.

(1) 대부분에게는 번개 같이 예상치 못한 것일 것이다. 유혹자들은 "그리스도가 우리를 구출하러 오신다"고 하지만, 자신들이 인식하기도 전에 어린 양의 진노가 그들을 덮칠 것이다.

(2) 그것은 독수리가 주검에 날아오듯 예상될 수 있었다. 유대인들은 너무 타락하고 방탕하여, 하나님의 의로운 심판에 공정하게 노출된 주검이 되었다. 로마인들은 독수리 같아서, 그들 군대의 휘장이 독수리였다.

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**VIII. 인자의 오심을 알리는 우주적 징조** (마 24:29-31)

"그날들의 환난이 지난 뒤에 곧, 해가 어두워지고 달이 빛을 내지 않으며, 별들이 하늘에서 떨어지고, 하늘의 권능들이 흔들릴 것이다. 그때에 인자의 징조가 하늘에 나타날 것이며, 땅의 모든 족속이 슬피 울 것이다. 그리고 그들은 인자가 권능과 큰 영광으로 하늘 구름을 타고 오는 것을 볼 것이다. 인자가 큰 나팔 소리와 함께 자기 천사들을 보낼 것이며, 그들이 하늘 이 끝에서 저 끝까지 사방에서 그의 택하신 사람들을 모을 것이다." (마 24:29-31)

이 구절들은 예루살렘 멸망 이후 그리스도의 영적 나라 확립과 더 나아가 세상 끝에 있을 그분의 재림 모두에 해당한다. 예언들에서 가까운 예형이 먼 실체로 흘러가는 것은 일반적인 방식이다.

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원주석

32~51절 카드 ↗

Parable of the Fig-Tree; Awful Predictions; The Duty of Watchfulness; The Good and Evil Steward. 32 Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When his branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves, ye know that summer is nigh: 33 So likewise ye, when ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors. 34 Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled. 35 Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away. 36 But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only. 37 But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. 38 For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark, 39 And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. 40 Then shall two be in the field; the one shall be taken, and the other left. 41 Two women shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken, and the other left. 42 Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come. 43 But know this, that if the goodman of the house had known in what watch the thief would come, he would have watched, and would not have suffered his house to be broken up. 44 Therefore be ye also ready: for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh. 45 Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his lord hath made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due season? 46 Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he cometh shall find so doing. 47 Verily I say unto you, That he shall make him ruler over all his goods. 48 But and if that evil servant shall say in his heart, My lord delayeth his coming; 49 And shall begin to smite his fellow-servants, and to eat and drink with the drunken; 50 The lord of that servant shall come in a day when he looketh not for him, and in an hour that he is not aware of, 51 And shall cut him asunder, and appoint him his portion with the hypocrites: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. We have here the practical application of the foregoing prediction; in general, we must expect and prepare for the events here foretold. I. We must expect them; " Now learn a parable of the fig-tree, Matthew 24:32 ; Matthew 24:33 . Now learn what use to make of the things you have heard; so observe and understand the signs of the times, and compare them with the predictions of the word, as from thence to foresee what is at the door, that you may provide accordingly." The parable of the fig-tree is no more than this, that its budding and blossoming are a presage of summer; for as the stork in the heaven, so the trees of the field, know their appointed time. The beginning of the working of second causes assures us of the progress and perfection of it. Thus when God begins to fulfil prophecies, he will make an end. There is a certain series in the works of providence, as there is in the works of nature. The signs of the times are compared with the prognostics of the face of the sky ( Matthew 16:3 ; Matthew 16:3 ), so here with those of the face of the earth; when that is renewed, we foresee that summer is coming, not immediately, but at some distance; after the branch grows tender, we expect the March winds, and the April showers, before the summer comes; however, we are sure it is coming; "so likewise ye, when the gospel day shall dawn, count upon it, that through this variety of events which I have told you of, the perfect day will come. The things revealed must shortly come to pass ( Revelation 1:1 ); they must come in their own order, in the order appointed for them. Know that it is near. " He does not here say what, but it is that which the hearts of his disciples are upon, and which they are inquisitive after, and long for; the kingdom of God is near, so it is expressed in the parallel place, Luke 21:31 . Note, When the trees of righteousness begin to bud and blossom, when God's people promise faithfulness, it is a happy presage of good times. In them God begins his work, first prepares their heart, and then he will go on with it; for, as for God, his work is perfect; and he will revive it in the midst of their years. Now touching the events foretold here, which we are to expect, 1. Christ here assures us of the certainty of them ( Matthew 24:35 ; Matthew 24:35 ); Heaven and earth shall pass away; they continue this day indeed, according to God's ordinance, but they shall not continue for ever ( Psalms 102:25 ; Psalms 102:26 ; 2 Peter 3:10 ); but my words shall not pass away. Note, The word of Christ is more sure and lasting than heaven and earth. Hath he spoken? And shall he not do it? We may build with more assurance upon the word of Christ than we can upon the pillars of heaven, or the strong foundations of the earth; for, when they shall be made to tremble and totter, and shall be no more, the word of Christ shall remain, and be in full force, power, and virtue. See 1 Peter 1:24 ; 1 Peter 1:25 . It is easier for heaven and earth to pass, than the word of Christ; so it is expressed, Luke 16:17 . Compare Isaiah 54:10 . The accomplishment of these prophecies might seem to be delayed, and intervening events might seem to disagree with them, but do not think that therefore the word of Christ is fallen to the ground, for that shall never pass away: though it be not fulfilled, either in the time or in the way that we have prescribed; yet, in God's time, which is the best time, and in God's way, which is the best way, it shall certainly be fulfilled. Every word of Christ is very pure, and therefore very sure. 2. He here instructs us as to the time of them, Matthew 24:34 ; Matthew 24:36 . As to this, it is well observed by the learned Grotius, that there is a manifest distinction made between the tauta ( Matthew 24:34 ; Matthew 24:34 ), and the ekeine ( Matthew 24:36 ; Matthew 24:36 ), these things, and that day and hour; which will help to clear this prophecy. (1.) As to these things, the wars, seductions, and persecutions, here foretold, and especially the ruin of the Jewish nation; " This generation shall not pass away, till all these things be fulfilled ( Matthew 24:34 ; Matthew 24:34 ); there are those now alive, that shall see Jerusalem destroyed, and the Jewish church brought to an end." Because it might seem strange, he backs it with a solemn asseveration; " Verily, I say unto you. You may take my word for it, these things are at the door." Christ often speaks of the nearness of that desolation, the more to affect people, and quicken them to prepare for it. Note, There may be greater trials and troubles yet before us, in our own day, than we are aware of. They that are old, know not what sons of Anak may be reserved for their last encounters. (2.) But as to that day and hour which will put a period to time, that knoweth no man, Matthew 24:36 ; Matthew 24:36 . Therefore take heed of confounding these two, as they did, who, from the words of Christ and the apostles; letters, inferred that the day of Christ was at hand, 2 Thessalonians 2:2 . No, it was not; this generation, and many another, shall pass, before that day and hour come. Note, [1.] There is a certain day and hour fixed for the judgment to come; it is called the day of the Lord, because so unalterably fixed. None of God's judgments are adjourned sine die--without the appointment of a certain day. [2.] That day and hour are a great secret. Prudens futuri temporis exitum Caliginosa nocte premit Deus. But Heaven has wisely hid from human sight The dark decrees of future fate, And sown their seeds in depth of nights.--H ORACE . No man knows it; not the wisest by their sagacity, not the best by any divine discovery. We all know that there shall be such a day; but none knows when it shall be, no, not the angels; though their capacities for knowledge are great, and their opportunities of knowing this advantageous (they dwell at the fountain-head of light), and though they are to be employed in the solemnity of that day, yet they are not told when it shall be: none knows but my Father only. This is one of those secret things which belong to the Lord our God. The uncertainty of the time of Christ's coming, is, to those who are watchful, a savour of life unto life, and makes them more watchful; but to those who are careless, it is a savour of death unto death, and makes them more careless. II. To this end we must expect these events, that we may prepare for them; and here we have a caution against security and sensuality, which will make it a dismal day indeed to us, Matthew 24:37-41 ; Matthew 24:37-41 . In these verses we have such an idea given us of the judgment day, as may serve to startle and awaken us, that we may not sleep as others do. It will be a surprising day, and a separating day. 1. It will be a surprising day, as the deluge was to the old world, Matthew 24:37-39 ; Matthew 24:37-39 . That which he here intends to describe, is, the posture of the world at the coming of the Son of man; besides his first coming, to save, he has other comings to judge. He saith ( John 9:39 ), For judgment I am come; and for judgment he will come; for all judgment is committed to him, both that of the word, and that of the sword. Now this here is applicable, (1.) To temporal judgments, particularly that which was now hastening upon the nation and people of the Jews; though they had fair warning given them of it, and there were many prodigies that were presages of it, yet it found them secure, crying, Peace and safety, 1 Thessalonians 5:3 . The siege was laid to Jerusalem by Titus Vespasian, when they were met at the passover in the midst of their mirth; like the men of Laish, they dwelt careless when the ruin arrested them, Judges 18:7 ; Judges 18:27 . The destruction of Babylon, both that in the Old Testament and that in the New, comes when she saith, I shall be a lady for ever, Isaiah 47:7-9 ; Revelation 18:7 . Therefore the plagues come in a moment, in one day. Note, Men's unbelief shall not make God's threatenings of no effect. (2.) To the eternal judgment; so the judgment of the great day is called, Hebrews 6:2 . Though notice has been given of it from Enoch, yet, when it comes, it will be unlooked for by the most of men; the latter days, which are nearest to that day, will produce scoffers, that say, Where is the promise of his coming? 2 Peter 3:3 ; 2 Peter 3:4 ; Luke 18:8 . Thus it will be when the world that now is shall be destroyed by fire; for thus it was when the old world, being overflowed by water, perished, 2 Peter 3:6 ; 2 Peter 3:7 . Now Christ here shows what were the temper and posture of the old world when the deluge came. [1.] They were sensual and worldly; they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage. It is not said, They were killing and stealing, and whoring and swearing (these were indeed the horrid crimes of some of the worst of them; the earth was full of violence ); but they were all of them, except Noah, over head and ears in the world, and regardless of the word of God, and this ruined them. Note, Universal neglect of religion is a more dangerous symptom to any people than particular instances here and there of daring irreligion. Eating and drinking are necessary to the preservation of man's life; marrying and giving in marriage are necessary to the preservation of mankind; but, Licitus perimus omnes--These lawful things undo us, unlawfully managed. First, They were unreasonable in it, inordinate and entire in the pursuit of the delights of sense, and the gains of the world; they were wholly taken up with these things, esan trogontes -- they were eating; they were in these things as in their element, as if they had their being for no other end than to eat and drink, Isaiah 56:12 . Secondly, They were unreasonable in it; they were entire and intent upon the world and the flesh, when the destruction was at the door, which they had had such fair warning of. They were eating and drinking, when they should have been repenting and praying; when God, by the ministry of Noah, called to weeping and mourning, then joy and gladness. This was to them, as it was to Israel afterwards, the unpardonable sin ( Isaiah 22:12 ; Isaiah 22:14 ), especially, because it was in defiance of those warnings by which they should have been awakened. " Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die; if it must be a short life, let it be a merry one." The apostle James speaks of this as the general practice of the wealthy Jews before the destruction of Jerusalem; when they should have been weeping for the miseries that were coming upon them, they were living in pleasure, and nourishing their hearts as in a day of slaughter, James 5:1 ; James 5:5 . [2.] They were secure and careless; they knew not, until the flood came, Matthew 24:39 ; Matthew 24:39 . Knew not! Surely they could not but know. Did not God, by Noah, give them fair warning of it? Did he not call them to repentance, while his long-suffering waited? 1 Peter 3:19 ; 1 Peter 3:20 . But they knew not, that is, they believed not; they might have known, but would not know. Note, What we know of the things that belong to our everlasting peace, if we do not mix faith with it, and improve it, is all one as if we did not know it at all. Their not knowing is joined with their eating, and drinking, and marrying; for, First, Therefore they were sensual, because they were secure. Note, the reason why people are so eager in the pursuit, and so entangled in the pleasures of this world, is, because they do not know, and believe, and consider, the eternity which they are upon the brink of. Did we know aright that all these things must shortly be dissolved, and we must certainly survive them, we should not set our eyes and hearts so much upon them as we do. Secondly, Therefore they were secure, because they were sensual; therefore they knew not that the flood was coming, because they were eating and drinking; were so taken up with things seen and present, that they had neither time nor heart to mind the things not seen as yet, which they were warned of. Note, As security bolsters men up in their brutal sensuality; so sensuality rocks them asleep in their carnal security. The knew not, until the flood came. 1. The flood did come, though they would not foresee it. Note, Those that will not know by faith, shall be made to know by feeling, the wrath of God revealed from heaven against their ungodliness and unrighteousness. The evil day is never the further off for men's putting it far off from them. 2. They did not know it till it was too late to prevent it, as they might have done if they had known it in time, which made it so much the more grievous. Judgments are most terrible and amazing to the secure, and those that have made a jest of them. The application of this, concerning the old world, we have in these words; So shall the coming of the Son of man be; that is, (1.) In such a posture shall he find people, eating and drinking, and not expecting him. Note, Security and sensuality are likely to be the epidemical diseases of the latter days. All slumber and sleep, and at midnight the bridegroom comes. All are off their watch, and at their ease. (2.) With such a power, and for such a purpose, will he come upon them. As the flood took away the sinners of the old world, irresistibly and irrecoverably; so shall secure sinners, that mocked at Christ and his coming, be taken away by the wrath of the Lamb, when the great day of his wrath comes, which will be like the coming of the deluge, a destruction which there is no fleeing from. 2. It will be a separating day ( Matthew 24:40 ; Matthew 24:41 ); Then shall two be in the field. Two ways this may be applied. (1.) We may apply it to the success of the gospel, especially at the first preaching of it; it divided the world; some believed the things which were spoken, and were taken to Christ; others believed not, and were left to perish in their unbelief. Those of the same age, place, capacity, employment, and condition, in the world, grinding in the same mill, those of the same family, nay, those that were joined in the same bond of marriage, were, one effectually called, the other passed by, and left in the gall of bitterness. This is that division, that separating fire, which Christ came to send, Luke 12:49 ; Luke 12:51 . This renders free grace the more obliging, that it is distinguishing; to us, and not to the world ( John 14:22 ), nay to us, and not to those in the same field, the same mill, the same house. When ruin came upon Jerusalem, a distinction was made by Divine Providence, according to that which had been before made by divine grace; for all the Christians among them were saved from perishing in that calamity, by the special care of Heaven. If two were at work in the field together, and one of them was a Christian, he was taken into a place of shelter, and had his life given him for a prey, while the other was left to the sword of the enemy. Nay, if but two women were grinding at the mill, if one of them belonged to Christ, though but a woman, a poor woman, a servant, she was taken to a place of safety, and the other abandoned. Thus the meek of the earth are hid in the day of the Lord's anger ( Zephaniah 2:3 ), either in heaven, or under heaven. Note, Distinguishing preservations, in times of general destruction, are special tokens of God's favour, and ought so to be acknowledged. If we are safe when thousands fall on our right hand and our left, are not consumed when others are consumed round about us, so that we are as brands plucked out of the fire, we have reason to say, It is of the Lord's mercies, and it is a great mercy. (2.) We may apply it to the second coming of Jesus Christ, and the separation which will be made in that day. He had said before ( Matthew 24:31 ; Matthew 24:31 ), that the elect will be gathered together. Here he tells us, that, in order to that, they will be distinguished from those who were nearest to them in this world; the choice and chosen ones taken to glory, the other left to perish eternally. Those who sleep in the dust of the earth, two in the same grave, their ashed mixed, shall yet arise, one to be taken to everlasting life, the other left to shame and everlasting contempt, Daniel 12:2 . Here it is applied to them who shall be found alive. Christ will come unlooked for, will find people busy at their usual occupations, in the field, at the mill; and then, according as they are vessels of mercy prepared for glory, or vessels of wrath prepared for ruin, accordingly it will be with them; the one taken to meet the Lord and his angels in the air, to be for ever with him and them; the other left to the devil and his angels, who, when Christ has gathered out his own, will sweep up the residue. This will aggravate the condemnation of sinners that others shall be taken from the midst of them to glory, and they left behind. And it speaks abundance of comfort to the Lord's people. [1.] Are they mean and despised in the world, as the man-servant in the field, or the maid at the mill ( Exodus 11:5 )? Yet they shall not be forgotten or overlooked in that day. The poor in the world, if rich in faith, are heirs of the kingdom. [2.] Are they dispersed in distant and unlikely places, where one would not expect to find the heirs of glory, in the field, at the mill? Yet the angels will find them there (hidden as Saul among the stuff, when they are to be enthroned), and fetch them thence; and well may they be said to be changed, for a very great change it will be to go to heaven from ploughing and grinding. [3.] Are they weak, and unable of themselves to move heavenward? They shall be taken, or laid hold of, as Lot was taken out of Sodom by a gracious violence, Genesis 19:16 . Those whom Christ has once apprehended and laid hold on, he will never lose his hold of. [4.] Are they intermixed with others, linked with them in the same habitations, societies, employments? Let not that discourage any true Christian; God knows how to separate between the precious and the vile, the gold and dross in the same lump, the wheat and chaff in the same floor. III. Here is a general exhortation to us, to watch, and be ready against that day comes, enforced by divers weighty considerations, Matthew 24:42 ; Matthew 24:42 , c. Observe, 1. The duty required Watch, and be ready, Matthew 24:42 ; Matthew 24:44 . (1.) Watch therefore, Matthew 24:42 ; Matthew 24:42 . Note, It is the great duty and interest of all the disciples of Christ to watch, to be awake and keep awake, that they may mind their business. As a sinful state or way is compared to sleep, senseless and inactive ( 1 Thessalonians 5:6 ), so a gracious state or way is compared to watching and waking. We must watch for our Lord's coming, to us in particular at our death, after which is the judgment, that is the great day with us, the end of our time; and his coming at the end of all time to judge the world, the great day with all mankind. To watch implies not only to believe that our Lord will come, but to desire that he would come, to be often thinking of his coming, and always looking for it as sure and near, and the time of it uncertain. To watch for Christ's coming, is to maintain that gracious temper and disposition of mind which we should be willing that our Lord, when he comes, should find us in. To watch is to be aware of the first notices of his approach, that we may immediately attend his motions, and address ourselves to the duty of meeting him. Watching is supposed to be in the night, which is sleeping time; while we are in this world, it is night with us, and we must take pains to keep ourselves awake. (2.) Be ye also ready. We wake in vain, if we do not get ready. It is not enough to look for such things; but we must therefore give diligence, 2 Peter 3:11 ; 2 Peter 3:14 . We have then our Lord to attend upon, and we must have our lamps ready trimmed; a cause to be tried, and we must have our plea ready drawn and signed by our Advocate; a reckoning to make up, and we must have our accounts ready stated and balanced; there is an inheritance which we then hope to enter upon, and we must have ourselves ready, made meet to partake of it, Colossians 1:12 . 2. The reasons to induce us to this watchfulness and diligent preparation for that day; which are two. (1.) Because the time of our Lord's coming is very uncertain. This is the reason immediately annexed to the double exhortation ( Matthew 24:42 ; Matthew 24:44 ); and it is illustrated by a comparison, Matthew 24:43 ; Matthew 24:43 . Let us consider then, [1.] That we know not what hour he will come, Matthew 24:42 ; Matthew 24:42 . We know not the day of our death, Genesis 27:2 . We may know that we have but a little time to live (The time of my departure is at hand, 2 Timothy 4:6 ); but we cannot know that we have a long time to live, for our souls are continually in our hands; nor can we know how little a time we have to live, for it may prove less than we expect; much less do we know the time fixed for the general judgment. Concerning both we are kept at uncertainty, that we may, every day, expect that which may come any day; may never boast of a year's continuance ( James 4:13 ), no, nor of tomorrow's return, as if it were ours, Proverbs 27:1 ; Luke 12:20 . [2.] That he may come at such an hour as we think not, Matthew 24:44 ; Matthew 24:44 . Though there be such uncertainty in the time, there is none in the thing itself: though we know not when he will come, we are sure he will come. His parting word was, Surely I come quickly; his saying, "I come surely, " obliges us to expect him: his saying "I come quickly. " obliges us to be always expecting him; for it keeps us in a state of expectancy. In such an hour as you think not, that is, such an hour as they who are unready and unprepared, think not ( Matthew 24:50 ; Matthew 24:50 ); nay, such an hour as the most lively expectants perhaps thought least likely. The bridegroom came when the wise were slumbering. It is agreeable to our present state, that we should be under the influence of a constant and general expectation, rather than that of particular presages and prognostications, which we are sometimes tempted vainly to desire and wish for. [3.] That the children of this world are thus wise in their generation, that, when they know of a danger approaching, they will keep awake, and stand on their guard against it. This he shows in a particular instance, Matthew 24:43 ; Matthew 24:43 . If the master of a house had notice that a thief would come such a night, and such a watch of the night (for they divided the night into four watches, allowing three hours to each), and would make an attempt upon his house, though it were the midnight-watch, when he was most sleepy, yet he would be up, and listen to every noise in every corner, and be ready to give him a warm reception. Now, though we know not just when our Lord will come, yet, knowing that he will come, and come quickly, and without any other warning than what he hath given in his word, it concerns us to watch always. Note, First, We have every one of us a house to keep, which lies exposed, in which all we are worth is laid up: that house is our own souls, which we must keep with all diligence. Secondly, The day of the Lord comes by surprise, as a thief in the night. Christ chooses to come when he is least expected, that the triumphs of his enemies may be turned into the greater shame, and the fears of his friends into the greater joy. Thirdly, If Christ, when he comes, finds us asleep and unready, our house will be broken up, and we shall lose all we are worth, not as by a thief unjustly, but as by a just and legal process; death and judgment will seize upon all we have, to our irreparable damage and utter undoing. Therefore be ready, be ye also ready; as ready at all times as the good man of the house would be at the hour when he expected the thief: we must put on the armour of God, that we may not only stand in that evil day, but, as more than conquerors, may divide the spoil. (2.) Because the issue of our Lord's coming will be very happy and comfortable to those that shall be found ready, but very dismal and dreadful to those that shall not, Matthew 24:45 ; Matthew 24:45 , c. This is represented by the different state of good and bad servants, when their lord comes to reckon with them. It is likely to be well or ill with us to eternity, according as we are found ready or unready at that day for Christ comes to render to every man according to his works. Now this parable, with which the chapter closes, is applicable to all Christians, who are in profession and obligation God's servants; but it seems especially intended as a warning to ministers; for the servant spoken of is a steward. Now observe what Christ here saith, [1.] Concerning the good servant; he shows here what he is-- a ruler of the household; what, being so, he should be-- faithful and wise; and what, if he be so, he shall be eternally- blessed. Here are good instructions and encouragements to the ministers of Christ. First, We have here his place and office. He is one whom the Lord has made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due season. Note, 1. The church of Christ is his household, or family, standing in relation to him as the Father and Master of it. It is the household of God, a family named from Christ, Ephesians 3:15 . 2. Gospel ministers are appointed rulers in this household; not at princes (Christ has entered a caveat against that), but as stewards, or other subordinate officers; not as lords, but as guides; not to prescribe new ways, but to show and lead in the ways that Christ has appointed: that is the signification of the hegoumenoi , which we translate, having rule over you ( Hebrews 13:17 ); as overseers, not to cut out new work, but to direct in, and quicken to, the work which Christ has ordered; that is the signification of episkopoi -- bishops. They are rulers by Christ; what power they have is derived from him, and none may take it from them, or abridge it to them; he is one whom the Lord has made ruler; Christ has the making of ministers. They are rulers under Christ, and act in subordination to him; and rulers for Christ, for the advancement of his kingdom. 3. The work of gospel ministers is to give to Christ's household their meat in due season, as stewards, and therefore they have the keys delivered to them. (1.) Their work is to give, not take to themselves ( Ezekiel 34:8 ), but give to the family what the Master has bought, to dispense what Christ has purchased. And to ministers it is said, that it is more blessed to give than to receive, Acts 20:35 . (2.) It is to give meat; not to give law (that is Christ's work), but to deliver those doctrines to the church which, if duly digested, will be nourishment to souls. They must give, not the poison of false doctrines, not the stones of hard and unprofitable doctrines, but the meat that is sound and wholesome. (3.) It must be given in due season, en kairo -- while there is time for it; when eternity comes, it will be too late; we must work while it is day: or in time, that is, whenever any opportunity offers itself; or in the stated time, time after time, according as the duty of every day requires. Secondly, His right discharge of this office. The good servant, if thus preferred, will be a good steward; for, 1. He is faithful; stewards must be so, 1 Corinthians 4:2 . He that is trusted, must be trusty; and the greater the trust is, the more is expected from them. It is a great good thing that is committed to ministers ( 2 Timothy 1:14 ); and they must be faithful, as Moses was, Hebrews 3:2 . Christ counts those ministers, and those only, that are faithful, 1 Timothy 1:12 . A faithful minister of Jesus Christ is one that sincerely designs his master's honour, not his own; delivers the whole counsel of God, not his own fancies and conceits; follows Christ's institutions and adheres to them; regards the meanest, reproves the greatest, and doth not respect persons. 2. He is wise to understand his duty and the proper season of it; and in guiding of the flock there is need, not only of the integrity of the heart, but the skilfulness of the hands. Honesty may suffice for a good servant, but wisdom is necessary to a good steward; for it is profitable to direct. 3. He is doing; so doing as his office requires. The ministry is a good work, and they whose office it is, have always something to do; they must not indulge themselves in ease, nor leave the work undone, or carelessly turn it off to others, but be doing, and doing to the purpose-- so doing, giving meat to the household, minding their own business, and not meddling with that which is foreign; so doing as the Master has appointed, as the office imports, and as the case of the family requires; not talking, but doing. It was the motto Mr. Perkins used, Minister verbi es--You are a minister of the word. Not only Age--Be doing; but Hoc age--Be so doing. 4. He is found doing when his Master comes; which intimates, (1.) Constancy at his work. At what hour soever his Master comes, he is found busy at the work of the day. Ministers should not leave empty spaces in their time, lest their Lord should come in one of those empty spaces. As with a good God the end of one mercy is the beginning of another, so with a good man, a good minister, the end of one duty is the beginning of another. When Calvin was persuaded to remit his ministerial labours, he answered, with some resentment, "What, would you have my Master find me idle?" (2.) Perseverance in his work till the Lord come. Hold fast till then, Revelation 2:25 . Continue in these things, 1 Timothy 4:16 ; 1 Timothy 6:14 . Endure to the end. Thirdly, The recompence of reward intended him for this, in three things. 1. He shall be taken notice of. This is intimated in these words, Who then is that faithful and wise servant? Which supposes that there are but few who answer this character; such an interpreter is one of a thousand, such a faithful and wise steward. Those who thus distinguish themselves now by humility, diligence, and sincerity in their work, Christ will in the great day both dignify and distinguish by the glory conferred on them. 2. He shall be blessed? Blessed is that servant; and Christ's pronouncing him blessed makes him so. All the dead that die n the Lord are blessed, Revelation 14:13 . But there is a peculiar blessedness secured to them that approve themselves faithful stewards, and are found so doing. Next to the honour of those who die in the field of battle, suffering for Christ as the martyrs, is the honour of those that die in the field of service, ploughing, and sowing, and reaping, for Christ. 3. He shall be preferred ( Matthew 24:47 ; Matthew 24:47 ); He shall make him ruler over all his goods. The allusion is to the way of great men, who, if the stewards of their house conduct themselves well in that place, commonly prefer them to be the managers of their estates; thus Joseph was preferred in the house of Potiphar, Genesis 29:4 ; Genesis 29:6 . But the greatest honour which the kindest master ever did to his most tried servants in this world, is nothing to that weight of glory which the Lord Jesus will confer upon his faithful watchful servants in the world to come. What is here said by a similitude, is the same that is said more plainly, John 11:26 , Him will my Father honour. And God's servants, when thus preferred; shall be perfect in wisdom and holiness to bear that weight of glory, so that there is no danger from these servants when they reign. [2.] Concerning the evil servant. Here we have, First, His description given ( Matthew 24:48 ; Matthew 24:49 ); where we have the wretch drawn in his own colours. The vilest of creatures is a wicked man, the vilest of men is a wicked Christian, and the vilest of them a wicked minister. Corruptio optimi est pessima--What is best, when corrupted, becomes the worst. Wickedness in the prophets of Jerusalem is a horrible thing indeed, Jeremiah 23:14 . Here is, 1. The cause of his wickedness; and that is, a practical disbelief of Christ's second coming; He hath said in his heart, My Lord delays his coming; and therefore he begins to think he will never come, but has quite forsaken his church. Observe, (1.) Christ knows that they say in their hearts, who with their lips cry, Lord, Lord, as this servant here. (2.) The delay of Christ's coming, though it is a gracious instance of his patience, is greatly abused by wicked people, whose hearts are thereby hardened in their wicked ways. When Christ's coming is looked upon as doubtful, or a thing at an immense distance, the hearts of men are fully set to do evil, Ecclesiastes 8:11 . See Ezekiel 12:27 . They that walk by sense, are ready to say of the unseen Jesus, as the people did of Moses when he tarried in the mount upon their errand, We wot not what is become of him, and therefore up, make us gods, the world a god, the belly a god, any thing but him that should be. 2. The particulars of his wickedness; and they are sins of the first magnitude; he is a slave to his passions and his appetites. (1.) Persecution is here charged upon him. He begins to smite his fellow servants. Note, [1.] Even the stewards of the house are to look upon all the servants of the house as their fellow servants, and therefore are forbidden to lord it over them. If the angel call himself fellow servant to John ( Revelation 19:10 ), no marvel if John have learned to call himself brother to the Christians of the churches of Asia, Revelation 1:9 . [2.] It is no new thing to see evil servants smiting their fellow servants; both private Christians and faithful ministers. He smites them, either because they reprove him, or because they will not bow, and do him reverence; will not say as he saith, and do as he doeth, against their consciences: he smites them with the tongue, as they smote the prophet, Jeremiah 18:18 . And if he get power into his hand, or can press those into his service that have, as the ten horns upon the head of the beast, it goes further. Pashur the priest smote Jeremiah, and put him in the stocks, Jeremiah 20:2 . The revolters have often been of all others most profound to make slaughter, Hosea 5:2 . The steward, when he smites his fellow servants, does it under colour of his Master's authority, and in his name; he says, Let the Lord be glorified ( Isaiah 66:5 ); but he shall know that he could not put a greater affront upon his Master. (2.) Profaneness and immorality; He begins to eat and drink with the drunken. [1.] He associates with the worst of sinners, has fellowship with them, is intimate with them; he walks in their counsel, stands in their way, sits in their seat, and sings their songs. The drunken are the merry and jovial company, and those he is for, and thus he hardens them in their wickedness. [2.] He does like them; eats, and drinks, and is drunken; so it is in Luke. This is an inlet to all manner of sin. Drunkenness is a leading wickedness; they who are slaves to that, are never masters of themselves in any thing else. The persecutors of God's people have commonly been the most vicious and immoral men. Persecuting consciences, whatever the pretensions be, are commonly the most profligate and debauched consciences. What will not they be drunk with, that will be drunk with the blood of the saints? Well, this is the description of a wicked minister, who yet may have the common gifts of learning and utterance above others; and, as hath been said of some, may preach so well in the pulpit, that it is a pity he should ever come out, and yet live so ill out of the pulpit, that it is a pity he should ever come in. Secondly, His doom read, Matthew 24:50 ; Matthew 24:51 . The coat and character of wicked ministers will not only not secure them from condemnation, but will greatly aggravate it. They can plead no exemption from Christ's jurisdiction, whatever they pretend to, in the church of Rome, from that of the civil magistrate; there is no benefit of clergy at Christ's bar. Observe, 1. The surprise that will accompany his doom ( Matthew 24:50 ; Matthew 24:50 ); The Lord of that servant will come. Note, (1.) Our putting off the thoughts of Christ's coming will not put off his coming. Whatever fancy he deludes himself with, his Lord will come. The unbelief of man shall not make that great promise, or threatening (call it which you will), of no effect. (2.) The coming of Christ will be a most dreadful surprise to secure and careless sinners, especially to wicked ministers; He shall come in a day when he looketh not for him. Note, Those that have slighted the warnings of the word, and silenced those of their own consciences concerning the judgment to come, cannot expect any other warnings; these will be adjudged sufficient legal notice given, whether taken or no; and no unfairness can be charged on Christ, if he come suddenly, without giving other notice. Behold, he has told us before. 2. The severity of his doom, Matthew 24:51 ; Matthew 24:51 . It is not more severe than righteous, but it is a doom that carries in it utter ruin, wrapt up in two dreadful words, death and damnation. (1.) Death. His Lord shall cut him asunder, dikotomesei auton , "he shall cut him off from the land of the living," from the congregation of the righteous, shall separate him unto evil; which is the definition of a curse ( Deuteronomy 29:21 ), shall cut him down, as a tree that cumbers the ground; perhaps it alludes to the sentence often used in the law, That soul shall be cut off from his people; denoting an utter extirpation. Death cuts off a good man, as a choice imp is cut off to be grafted in a better stock; but it cuts off a wicked man, as a withered branch is cut off for the fire-cuts him off from this world, which he set his heart so much upon, and was, as it were, one with. Or, as we read it, shall cut him asunder, that is, part body and soul, send the body to the grave to be a prey for worms, and the soul to hell to be a prey for devils, and there is the sinner cut asunder. The soul and body of a godly man at death part fairly, the one cheerfully lifted up to God, the other left to the dust; but the soul and body of a wicked man at death are cut asunder, torn asunder, for to them death is the king of terrors, Job 18:14 . The wicked servant divided himself between God and the world, Christ and Belial, his profession and his lusts, justly therefore will he thus be divided. return to ' Top of Page ' Matthew Mat 23 Matthew Mat Matthew Mat 25 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 Matthew 24". 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origPath=window.location.pathname;var parts=origPath.split('/');var noVerse=(reason==='reference-noverse');var inputIsPerVerse=_ts_isPerVerseUrl(origPath);if(parts[1]==='interlinear-study-bible'){parts=parts.slice(0,5);parts[3]=book_data[book].url;parts[4]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else if(parts[1]==='commentary'){parts=parts.slice(0,4);parts[2]=book_data[book].url;parts[3]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else if(parts[1]==='commentaries'){parts[2]=comlang;parts[3]=comabbr;if(inputIsPerVerse){parts=parts.slice(0,6);parts[4]=book_data[book].url;parts[5]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else{parts=parts.slice(0,5);parts[4]=book_data[book].url+'-'+chapter+'.html';}}else if(parts[1]==='bible'){parts=parts.slice(0,6);parts[2]=translang;parts[3]=transabbr;parts[4]=book_data[book].url;parts[5]=(verse duction ","Verses 1-3","Verses 4-31","Verses 32-51"]; function

Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

bible-text/mat-24-32, bible-text/mat-24-33, bible-text/mat-24-34, bible-text/mat-24-35, bible-text/mat-24-36, bible-text/mat-24-37, bible-text/mat-24-38, bible-text/mat-24-39, bible-text/mat-24-40, bible-text/mat-24-41, bible-text/mat-24-42, bible-text/mat-24-43, bible-text/mat-24-44, bible-text/mat-24-45, bible-text/mat-24-46, bible-text/mat-24-47, bible-text/mat-24-48, bible-text/mat-24-49, bible-text/mat-24-50, bible-text/mat-24-51

Source

> "무화과나무의 비유에서 이것을 배워라. 그 가지가 부드러워지고 잎이 돋으면, 너희는 여름이 가까운 줄 안다. 이와 같이 너희도 이 모든 일을 보거든, 인자가 가까이, 곧 문 앞에 이른 줄 알아라..." (마 24:32-51)

앞선 예언에 대한 실천적 적용이다. 일반적으로, 우리는 예언된 사건들을 기대하고 준비해야 한다.

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**I. 예언된 사건들을 기대하라** (마 24:32-35)

"무화과나무의 비유에서 이것을 배워라." 들은 것에서 어떻게 유익을 얻는지 배우라. 사건들을 주의 깊게 관찰하고 성경의 예언들과 비교하여 앞에 있는 것을 내다보고 그에 따라 준비하라.

무화과나무의 비유는 이것이다. 그 가지가 부드러워지고 잎이 돋으면 여름이 가까운 것을 안다. 이처럼 섭리의 역사에는 자연의 역사에서와 마찬가지로 일정한 연속성이 있다. 하나님이 예언의 성취를 시작하시면 끝까지 이루실 것이다.

"이와 같이 너희도 이 모든 일을 보거든, 인자가 가까이, 곧 문 앞에 이른 줄 알아라." 무엇인지 직접 말씀하지 않으시지만, 그것은 제자들이 마음에 두고 있는 것—하나님의 나라가 가까웠다는 것이다(눅 21:31). 주목하라. 의의 나무들이 싹을 틔우고 꽃을 피울 때, 하나님의 백성이 신실함을 약속할 때, 그것은 좋은 시절의 복된 전조이다. 하나님은 먼저 마음을 준비시키시고 그 후에 역사하신다.

이 예언된 사건들과 관련하여,

1. **그것들의 확실성** (마 24:35). "하늘과 땅은 없어지겠으나, 내 말은 결코 없어지지 않을 것이다." 그리스도의 말씀은 하늘과 땅보다 더 확실하고 오래 간다. 하늘의 기둥이나 땅의 강한 기초보다 그리스도의 말씀 위에 더 확실하게 건축할 수 있다. 이 예언들의 성취가 지연될 수도 있고, 끼어드는 사건들이 예언과 맞지 않아 보일 수도 있다. 그러나 그리스도의 말씀이 무너졌다고 생각하지 말라. 하나님의 때에, 최선의 방법으로 반드시 성취될 것이다. 그리스도의 모든 말씀은 매우 순수하므로 매우 확실하다.

2. **그것들의 시기** (마 24:34, 36).

(1) **이런 일들에 관하여—예루살렘의 멸망**. "이 세대가 지나가기 전에 이 모든 일이 다 이루어질 것이다." 지금 살아 있는 자들 중에 예루살렘이 멸망하는 것을 볼 자들이 있다. 이것을 엄중한 선언으로 확인하신다. "내가 진실로 너희에게 말한다." 주목하라. 아직 우리 앞에는 우리가 모르는, 우리 날에 올 더 큰 시험과 환난이 있을 수 있다. 늙은 사람들도 마지막 싸움에서 어떤 아낙 자손이 기다리고 있는지 모른다.

(2) **그날과 그 시각에 관하여—시대의 끝을 가져올 것**. "그러나 그날과 그 시각은 아무도 알지 못하니, 하늘의 천사들도 모르고 오직 내 아버지만 아신다" (마 24:36). 이 둘을 혼동하지 않도록 하라(살후 2:2). 이 세대가, 그리고 많은 세대가 지나가야 한다. 주목하라.

[1] 심판이 올 특정한 날과 시각이 정해져 있다. 하나님의 심판들 중에 날 없이 무기한 연기된 것은 없다.

[2] 그날과 시각은 큰 비밀이다. 천사들도 모른다—그들의 지식 능력이 크고, 그것을 알 기회가 유리하고(그들은 빛의 원천에 거주한다), 그날의 엄숙함에서 사용될 것임에도—"오직 내 아버지만 아신다." 이것은 우리 하나님께 속한 비밀한 것들 중 하나이다. 그리스도 오심의 불확실한 시기는, 준비된 자들에게는 생명의 향기이며 그들을 더욱 깨어 있게 만든다. 그러나 부주의한 자들에게는 사망의 향기이며 그들을 더욱 부주의하게 만든다.

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**II. 이 사건들을 기대하고 대비하라**—안전과 감각적 방종에 대한 경고 (마 24:37-41)

이 절들에서 심판의 날에 대한 그림이 우리를 놀라게 하고 깨우도록 주어진다. 그날은 놀라운 날이요 분리하는 날이 될 것이다.

1. **놀라운 날이 될 것이다.** 홍수가 옛 세상에게 그러했던 것처럼 (마 24:37-39).

그리스도는 인자가 오실 때 세상의 상태를 묘사하신다. 심판을 받으실 그리스도의 오심 외에, 그분은 심판하러 오시는 다른 오심들도 갖고 계신다. 이것은 다음에 적용할 수 있다.

(1) **세상적 심판들에, 특히 유대 민족에게 임박한 것에.** 그들은 공정한 경고를 받았지만 안전하다고 말하며 그것을 무시했다(살전 5:3). 예루살렘 포위는 유월절 한가운데, 그들이 흥청망청 즐기고 있을 때 가해졌다.

(2) **영원한 심판에.** 그날에 대한 소식은 에녹 때부터 주어졌다. 그러나 올 때는 대부분의 사람에게 전혀 예상치 못한 것으로 올 것이다. 말세에는 조롱하는 자들이 있을 것이다(벧후 3:3-4). 지금 있는 세상이 불로 멸망받는 것도 그러할 것이다. 옛 세상이 물로 멸망했던 것처럼(벧후 3:6-7).

옛 세상 사람들의 기질과 자세는 이러했다.

[1] **그들은 감각적이고 세속적이었다.** "홍수 이전 그날들에 사람들은 노아가 방주에 들어가던 날까지 먹고 마시며, 장가들고 시집가고 있었다." 그들이 죽이고 훔치고 음행하고 저주했다고 말하지 않는다(물론 최악의 자들은 그러했다. 땅이 폭력으로 가득했다). 그러나 그들 모두가 노아 외에는 세상에 머리까지 잠겨 하나님의 말씀을 무시했다.

주목하라. 종교에 대한 보편적 무관심이 어느 민족에나 여기저기 나타나는 개별적인 대담한 불경건보다 더 위험한 증상이다. 먹고 마시는 것은 사람의 생명 보존에 필요하고, 장가들고 시집가는 것은 인류의 보존에 필요하다. 그러나 *허락된 것들이 우리를 망하게 한다*, 불법하게 다루어질 때. 그들은 [1] 그것들에 지나치게 탐닉했다. [2] 그것들에 지나치게 열중했다. 심판이 문 앞에 있을 때, 그들은 먹고 마시고 있었다. 하나님이 노아의 사역을 통해 울고 통곡하라고 부르실 때 기쁨과 즐거움을.

[2] **그들은 안전하고 부주의했다.** "홍수가 나서 그들을 다 휩쓸어 갈 때까지 그들은 깨닫지 못하였다"(마 24:39). 알지 못하다니! 그들이 모를 수 없었다. 하나님이 노아를 통해 공정한 경고를 주지 않으셨나? 그러나 그들은 알지 못했다, 믿지 않았기 때문이다. 주목하라. 우리 영원한 평화에 속한 것들에 대해, 믿음으로 섞지 않고 이용하지 않으면, 전혀 모르는 것과 같다.

안전했기 때문에 감각적이었고, 감각적이었기 때문에 안전했다. 눈에 보이는 현재의 것들에 너무 사로잡혀, 경고받은 보이지 않는 것들을 생각할 시간도 마음도 없었다.

1. 홍수는 그들이 예견하기를 거부했음에도 왔다. 믿음으로 알려 하지 않는 자들은 느낌으로 알게 될 것이다.

2. 그들은 막기에는 너무 늦었을 때까지 알지 못했다. 예방할 수 있었을 때 알았더라면. 심판을 비웃어 온 자들에게 심판은 가장 두렵고 놀랍다.

이것의 적용—"인자가 오는 것도 그러할 것이다."

(1) 그런 자세로 그분이 사람들을 발견할 것이다. 주목하라. 안전과 감각적 방종이 말세의 가장 만연한 질병들이 될 것이다. 모두 졸며 자고, 한밤중에 신랑이 온다. 모두 경계를 떠나 편안함을 취한다.

(2) 그런 능력으로, 그런 목적으로 그분이 오실 것이다. 홍수가 옛 세상의 죄인들을 압도적으로 회복 불가능하게 쓸어가듯, 안전한 죄인들—그리스도와 그분의 오심을 비웃은—이 어린 양의 진노로 쓸려갈 것이다(살전 5:3). 거기서 피할 수 없다.

2. **분리하는 날이 될 것이다** (마 24:40-41). "그때에 두 사람이 밭에 있겠는데, 한 사람은 데려가고 한 사람은 남겨 둘 것이다. 두 여인이 맷돌을 갈고 있겠는데, 한 사람은 데려가고 한 사람은 남겨 둘 것이다."

이것은 두 가지로 적용할 수 있다.

(1) **복음의 성공에 적용하면**, 특히 처음 전파될 때. 복음이 세상을 나누었다. 어떤 이들은 믿고 그리스도께로 데려가졌으나, 다른 이들은 믿지 않고 불신앙 가운데 남겨졌다. 같은 나이, 같은 장소, 같은 능력, 같은 직업, 같은 상황—같은 맷돌을 가는 이들 중에—같은 가족, 심지어 같은 결혼의 유대로 연결된 이들 중에도, 하나는 효과적으로 부름을 받고 다른 하나는 지나쳐지며 쓴 열매 가운데 남겨졌다. 이것이 그리스도가 보내러 오신 분리의 불이다(눅 12:49, 51). 이것이 값없는 은혜를 더욱 의무스럽게 한다. 그것이 구별되기 때문이다.

예루살렘에 멸망이 임할 때, 신성한 섭리가 이전의 신성한 은혜가 만든 구분에 따라 구분을 지었다. 밭에서 함께 일하던 두 사람 중 한 명이 그리스도인이면, 그는 피신처로 데려가지고 목숨을 건졌다. 두 여인이 맷돌을 갈고 있어도, 그 중 한 명이 그리스도께 속하면, 그 여인—불과 종일지라도 가난하고 비천한 자일지라도—은 안전한 곳으로 데려가졌고 다른 한 명은 버려졌다.

(2) **예수 그리스도의 재림에 적용하면**, 그날에 있을 분리를 가리킨다. 그분은 택하신 자들이 모일 것이라 말씀하셨다(마 24:31). 여기서 그분은 이 세상에서 가장 가까운 자들로부터 그들이 구별될 것이라고 말씀하신다. 먼지 속에 잠든 자들, 같은 무덤에 두 명이, 그 재가 섞여 있어도, 하나는 영원한 생명으로 부활하고 다른 하나는 수치와 영원한 치욕으로 부활할 것이다(단 12:2). 여기서 이것은 살아 있는 상태에 있는 자들에게 적용된다. 그리스도는 예기치 않게 오실 것이며, 사람들이 밭에서, 맷돌에서 평상시 직업에 종사하고 있을 때 발견될 것이다. 영광을 위해 예비된 긍휼의 그릇인지, 멸망을 위해 예비된 진노의 그릇인지에 따라 달라진다. 영광 중에 주님과 천사들을 맞으러 공중으로 올리어져 영원히 그들과 있게 되는 자가 있는가 하면, 마귀와 그 천사들에게 남겨지는 자가 있다.

이것이 죄인들의 정죄를 더 무겁게 한다. 다른 이들이 그들 가운데서 영광으로 데려가지고 그들만 남겨지기 때문이다. 그리고 주님의 백성에게는 큰 위로가 된다.

[1] 그들이 세상에서 낮고 천한가—밭에서의 종이나 맷돌의 하녀처럼? 그러나 그날에 잊혀지거나 간과되지 않을 것이다. 세상에서 가난한 자들도 믿음으로 부자이면 나라의 상속자이다.

[2] 그들이 흩어져 있어 영광의 후사들을 발견하리라 기대하지 못할 밭에, 맷돌에 있는가? 그러나 천사들이 거기서 그들을 찾아낼 것이다—저장물 가운데 숨겨진 사울처럼.

[3] 그들이 약하여 스스로 하늘을 향해 나아갈 수 없는가? 그들이 데려가질 것이다, 롯이 소돔에서 은혜로운 강제로 데려가졌듯(창 19:16). 그리스도가 한번 붙잡으신 자들을 결코 놓지 않으신다.

[4] 그들이 다른 사람들 사이에 섞여 있어 같은 거처, 사회, 직업에 연결되어 있는가? 그것이 진정한 그리스도인을 낙심시키지 않도록 하라. 하나님은 귀한 것과 천한 것을 구별하실 줄 아신다—같은 덩어리의 금과 찌꺼기, 같은 마당의 밀과 쭉정이.

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**III. 깨어 있고 준비되어 있어라** (마 24:42-51)

그날이 오기 전에 깨어 있고 준비하라는 일반 권면이 여러 강력한 이유와 함께 주어진다.

1. **요구되는 의무: 깨어 있고 준비되어 있어라** (마 24:42, 44).

(1) **깨어 있어라** (마 24:42). 주목하라. 깨어 있는 것이 그리스도의 모든 제자들의 큰 의무요 관심사이다. 죄 된 상태나 방식은 잠에 비교된다(살전 5:6). 은혜로운 상태나 방식은 깨어 있음과 깨어남에 비교된다. 우리는 주님의 오심을 기다려야 한다. 우리 죽음에서 우리 각자에게 오시는 것, 그 후에 심판이 있는 것, 그것이 우리와의 큰 날이다. 세상 끝에 세상을 심판하러 오시는 것. 깨어 있다는 것은 주님이 오실 것을 믿는 것뿐 아니라, 그분이 오시기를 사모하는 것이며, 그분의 오심을 자주 생각하고 그것을 확실하고 가까운 것으로 바라보는 것을 의미한다. 그리스도의 오심을 위해 깨어 있는 것은, 주님이 오실 때 찾아보시기 원하는 은혜로운 기질과 심령의 성향을 유지하는 것이다.

(2) **준비하고 있어라** (마 24:44). 헛되이 깨어 있다면 준비되지 않은 것이다. 이런 것들을 기대하는 것으로 충분하지 않다. 부지런히 해야 한다(벧후 3:11, 14). 섬겨야 할 주님이 있으니 등불을 준비해야 한다. 재판받을 소송이 있으니 변호사가 서명한 변론을 준비해야 한다. 드려야 할 결산이 있으니 계정을 준비해야 한다. 들어갈 기업이 있으니 그것을 위해 준비되어야 한다(골 1:12).

2. **이 깨어 있음과 준비에 우리를 촉구하는 이유들.**

**(1) 주님의 오시는 시간이 매우 불확실하기 때문이다.**

이것이 두 권면에 직접 붙어 있는 이유이다(마 24:42, 44). 비유로 설명된다(마 24:43). 생각해 보라.

[1] 우리 주님이 어느 시각에 오실지 알지 못한다(마 24:42). 우리는 죽는 날을 모른다(창 27:2). 시간이 얼마 남지 않았다는 것은 알 수 있지만, 오래 살 것이라는 것은 알 수 없다. 언제든 올 수 있는 것을 매일 예상해야 한다. 내년에 계속될 것이라 자랑하지 말고(약 4:13), 내일도 확실하다고 여기지 말라(잠 27:1; 눅 12:20).

[2] 우리가 생각하지 않은 시각에 오실 수도 있다(마 24:44). 시간에 대한 이런 불확실성에도, 사건 자체에는 불확실함이 없다. 언제 오실지는 모르지만, 오실 것은 확실하다. 그분의 이별의 말씀은 "내가 분명히 속히 온다"였다. "분명히 온다"는 것은 그분을 기대하게 한다. "속히 온다"는 것은 항상 그분을 기대하게 한다. 이 지속적이고 일반적인 기대의 영향 아래 있는 것이 우리의 현 상태에 적합하다.

[3] 세상 사람들도 이런 점에서 지혜롭다. 위험이 가까이 온 것을 알면 깨어 있고 경계한다. 이것을 특정한 예로 보여 주신다(마 24:43). 집주인이 도둑이 밤 어느 시간에 올지 알았다면, 비록 한밤중 경비라도 일어나 모든 구석의 모든 소음에 귀를 기울이고 그를 따뜻하게 맞이할 준비가 되었을 것이다.

주목하라. 첫째, 우리 모두는 집을 지켜야 하는데, 거기에는 모든 가진 것이 보관되어 있다. 그 집이 바로 우리 영혼으로, 온 부지런함으로 지켜야 한다. 둘째, 주님의 날이 밤의 도둑처럼 갑자기 온다. 그리스도는 가장 예상하지 못할 때 오시기를 선택하신다. 그렇게 해야 원수들의 승리가 더 큰 수치로 바뀌고 친구들의 두려움이 더 큰 기쁨으로 바뀌기 때문이다. 셋째, 그리스도가 오실 때 우리가 잠자고 준비되지 않으면, 우리 집이 뚫릴 것이다. 도둑에 의해 불공정하게가 아니라 공정하고 합법적인 절차에 의해. 죽음과 심판이 우리의 모든 것을 가져갈 것이고, 그 손해는 회복 불가능하다.

**(2) 주님이 오심의 결과가 준비된 자들에게는 매우 행복하고 위로가 되지만, 준비되지 않은 자들에게는 매우 비참하고 두렵기 때문이다** (마 24:45 이하).

이것은 주님이 오셔서 결산하실 때 좋은 종과 나쁜 종의 다른 상태로 표현된다. 각자의 행위에 따라 갚으러 오시기 때문에, 그날이 어떻게 될지는 우리가 준비되었는지 아닌지에 달려 있다. 이 비유는 약속과 의무 아래 하나님의 종으로 고백하는 모든 그리스도인에게 적용되지만, 특히 사역자들에 대한 경고로 의도된 것 같다. 여기서 말하는 종은 청지기이기 때문이다.

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**[1] 선한 종에 관하여**

**그가 어떤 자인지—집안의 관리자.** 주님이 그를 자기 집안 사람들 위에 맡겨, 때를 따라 그들에게 양식을 나누어 주게 했다. 주목하라.

1. 그리스도의 교회는 그분의 집안, 가족이다. 하나님의 가족이요, 그리스도의 이름을 따라 명명된 가족이다(엡 3:15).

2. 복음 사역자들은 이 집안에서 임명된 관리자들이다. 왕자들로서가 아니라—그리스도는 그것에 강하게 반대하셨다—청지기나 부관으로서, 주님이 아니라 안내자로서. 그들은 그리스도로부터 권한을 받은 관리자들이다. 그들의 권한은 그분으로부터 파생되며, 그분의 아래에서 그분을 위해 행사한다.

3. 복음 사역자들의 사역은 때를 따라 그리스도의 집안에 양식을 제공하는 것이다. (1) 그들의 사역은 주는 것이다—자신을 위해 취하는 것이 아니라(겔 34:8), 주인이 사신 것을 나누는 것이다. (2) 양식을 주는 것이다—율법을 주는 것이 아니라(그것은 그리스도의 사역이다), 제대로 소화되면 영혼의 영양이 될 교리들을 전달하는 것이다. 거짓 교리의 독이나 딱딱하고 유익 없는 교리의 돌이 아니라. (3) 때를 따라—영원이 왔을 때는 너무 늦다. 지금 행해야 한다.

**선한 종이라면 이렇게 해야 한다.** 그는 충성스럽고 지혜로운 자일 것이다.

1. 그는 충성스럽다. 청지기는 그래야 한다(고전 4:2). 신뢰받은 자는 신뢰할 수 있어야 한다. 충성스러운 사역자는 주인의 명예를 진정으로 목표로 삼고, 자신의 계략이 아니라 하나님의 모든 뜻을 전달하고, 그리스도의 규례를 따르고 그에 집착하며, 가장 낮은 자를 돌아보고 가장 높은 자를 꾸짖으며 사람들을 외모로 판단하지 않는다.

2. 그는 지혜롭다. 집안을 인도하는 데는 마음의 성실성뿐 아니라 손의 솜씨도 필요하다. 청지기에게는 방향을 제시할 지혜가 필요하다. 정직은 선한 종에게 충분하지만, 지혜는 선한 청지기에게 필요하다.

3. 그는 행한다. 그의 직분이 요구하는 바를 행한다. 그것을 좋아하면서 나쁜 일을 아무것도 하지 않거나 남에게 넘기거나 부주의하게 처리하지 않고, 그 목적을 위해—집안에 양식을 주고, 자기 일에 마음을 쏟아—행하는 것이다.

4. 그는 주인이 올 때 그렇게 하고 있다. 이것이 암시하는 것은, (1) 그 일에서의 항상성이다. 주인이 어느 시각에 와도, 그는 그날의 일을 바쁘게 하고 있다. (2) 주님이 올 때까지 그 일에서의 인내이다. 그때까지 굳게 잡으라(계 2:25). 이것들에 계속하라(딤전 4:16; 6:14). 끝까지 인내하라.

**그가 받을 보상.** 세 가지에서. 1. 그는 주목받을 것이다. 2. 그는 복되다. "복된 자가 그 종이다." 그리스도의 "복되다" 선언이 그를 복되게 한다. 주님 안에서 죽는 모든 죽은 자들이 복되다(계 14:13). 그러나 충성스러운 청지기임을 승인받은 자들에게는 특별한 복이 예정되어 있다. 3. 그는 승진한다(마 24:47). "그를 자기의 모든 소유를 맡겨 다스리게 할 것이다." 비유는 자신의 집에서 청지기를 잘 수행한 큰 인물들의 방식—그들을 자신의 재산을 관리하도록 승진시키는—을 암시한다. 이처럼 요셉이 보디발의 집에서 승진되었다(창 39:4, 6). 그러나 이 세상에서 가장 친절한 주인이 가장 시험받은 종들에게 한 가장 큰 영예도, 주 예수님이 충성스러운 깨어 있는 종들에게 내세에서 베풀 영광에는 비할 수 없다.

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**[2] 악한 종에 관하여**

**그에 대한 묘사** (마 24:48-49).

가장 악한 피조물은 악한 사람이고, 가장 악한 사람은 악한 그리스도인이며, 가장 악한 그들은 악한 사역자이다. 최선의 것이 타락하면 최악이 된다. 예루살렘 선지자들의 악한 행실은 참으로 무서운 것이다(렘 23:14).

1. **그 악의 원인**—그리스도의 재림에 대한 실천적 불신앙. "내 주인은 더디 오신다"고 그가 마음속으로 말한다. 그는 주님이 결코 오지 않을 것이라, 교회를 완전히 버리셨다고 생각하기 시작한다. 주목하라. (1) 그리스도는 입으로 "주여, 주여"라 부르지만 마음속으로 하는 말도 아신다. (2) 그리스도의 오심의 지연은, 비록 그분의 오래 참으심의 은혜로운 예라 해도, 악한 자들에 의해 크게 악용된다. 사람들의 마음이 악한 길을 지속하도록 굳어지기 때문이다. 그리스도의 오심이 의심스럽거나 아득히 먼 일로 여겨지면, 마음이 악을 행하는 데 방자해진다(전 8:11).

2. **그 악의 세부 내용.** 두 가지 가장 큰 죄이다. 그는 자신의 정욕과 욕구의 노예이다.

(1) **박해**—"자기 동료 종들을 때리기 시작하며." 주목하라. [1] 집안의 청지기도 집안의 모든 종들을 자기 동료로 보아야 하며, 그들을 지배하는 것이 금지된다. 천사도 자신을 요한의 동료 종이라 부른다(계 19:10). [2] 악한 종이 자기 동료 종들을 치는 것은 새로운 일이 아니다. 충실한 사역자들과 개인 그리스도인들. 그는 그들이 자신을 꾸짖기 때문에, 혹은 자신이 하는 것을 그들이 따르지 않기 때문에 그들을 친다. 혀로 치거나, 힘을 손에 넣으면 더 심하게 간다.

(2) **방종과 부도덕**—"술 취한 자들과 함께 먹고 마시면." [1] 그는 가장 나쁜 죄인들과 교제하고, 그것으로 그들을 악에서 굳게 한다. [2] 그는 그들처럼 행한다. 술 취함은 주도적인 악이다. 이것에 노예가 된 자들은 다른 것에서도 자신의 주인이 되지 못한다. 하나님의 백성을 박해한 자들이 흔히 가장 악하고 방탕한 사람들이었다. 어떤 가식이 있든, 박해하는 양심은 흔히 가장 타락하고 방탕한 양심이다.

**그의 선고** (마 24:50-51).

악한 사역자들의 외투와 성품은 그들을 심판에서 보호해 주지 않을 뿐 아니라, 오히려 크게 가중시킨다.

1. **그 선고가 동반하는 놀라움** (마 24:50). "그 종의 주인이 그가 생각하지 않은 날, 알지 못하는 시각에 와서." 주목하라. (1) 그리스도의 오심을 생각하지 않는다고 해서 그분의 오심이 늦춰지지는 않는다. 어떤 환상으로 자신을 속이든, 그의 주님은 오실 것이다. (2) 그리스도의 오심은 안전하고 부주의한 죄인들, 특히 악한 사역자들에게 가장 두려운 놀라움이 될 것이다. 그분은 그가 기대하지 않는 날에 오실 것이다. 이것이 불공정하다고 그리스도에게 책임을 돌릴 수 없다. 보라, 그분이 미리 말씀하셨다.

2. **그 선고의 엄격성** (마 24:51). 완전한 파멸로 포장되어 있다—죽음과 저주. (1) **죽음.** "그를 베어 내고"—그를 산 자들의 땅에서, 의인들의 회중에서 끊어 낼 것이다. 좋은 나무 가지가 더 좋은 줄기에 접목되기 위해 잘리는 것처럼 좋은 사람에게서 죽음이 잘라 낼 수 있지만, 마른 가지가 불에 태워지기 위해 잘리는 것처럼 악한 사람을 잘라 낸다. 혹은 우리가 읽는 것처럼, "베어 낼 것이다"—몸과 영혼을 갈라놓을 것이다. 몸은 무덤에 보내어 벌레들의 먹이가 되고, 영혼은 지옥에 보내어 마귀들의 먹이가 된다. 경건한 사람의 몸과 영혼은 죽을 때 공정하게 갈라진다—하나는 기꺼이 하나님께로 들리고 다른 하나는 흙으로 남겨진다. 그러나 악한 사람의 몸과 영혼은 죽을 때 잘려 찢겨진다. 그들에게 죽음은 공포의 왕이기 때문이다(욥 18:14). 악한 종은 하나님과 세상 사이, 그리스도와 벨리알 사이, 자신의 신앙 고백과 자신의 욕정 사이를 갈라놓았다. 그러므로 그가 이렇게 갈라지는 것은 정당하다.

(2) **저주.** "위선자들과 함께 그 몫을 정할 것이다." 이것이 사역자의 몫이다. "거기서 슬피 울며 이를 갈게 될 것이다."

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