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Text -- Luke 5:36-39 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Luk 5:36 - -- Also a parable ( kai parabolēn ).
There are three parables here in the answer of Jesus (the bridegroom, the patch on the garment, the wineskin). Th...
Also a parable (
There are three parables here in the answer of Jesus (the bridegroom, the patch on the garment, the wineskin). They are not called parables save here, but they are parables and Luke’ s language means that.
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Robertson: Luk 5:36 - -- Rendeth ( schisas ).
This in Luke alone. Common verb. Used of splitting rocks (Mat 27:51). Our word schism comes from it.
Rendeth (
This in Luke alone. Common verb. Used of splitting rocks (Mat 27:51). Our word schism comes from it.
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Robertson: Luk 5:36 - -- Putteth it ( epiballei ).
So Mat 9:16 when Mar 2:21 has epiraptei (sews on). The word for "piece"or "patch"(epiblēma ) in all the three Gospels ...
Putteth it (
So Mat 9:16 when Mar 2:21 has
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Robertson: Luk 5:36 - -- He will rend the new ( kai to kainon schisei ).
Future active indicative. So the best MSS.
He will rend the new (
Future active indicative. So the best MSS.
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Robertson: Luk 5:36 - -- Will not agree ( ou sumphōnēsei ).
Future active indicative. So the best manuscripts again.
Will not agree (
Future active indicative. So the best manuscripts again.
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Robertson: Luk 5:36 - -- With the old ( tōi palaiōi ).
Associative instrumental case. Instead of this phrase in Luke, Mar 2:21; Mat 9:16 have "a worse rent"(cheiron schis...
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Robertson: Luk 5:38 - -- Must be put ( blēteon ).
This verbal adjective in -teos rather than -tos appears here alone in the N.T. though it is common enough in Attic Gre...
Must be put (
This verbal adjective in -
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Robertson: Luk 5:39 - -- The old is good ( Ho palaios chrēstos estin ).
So the best MSS. rather that chrēstoteros , comparative (better). Westcott and Hort wrongly bracke...
The old is good (
So the best MSS. rather that
Vincent: Luk 5:36 - -- A parable
" From a garment and from wine, especially appropriate at a banquet" (Bengel).
A parable
" From a garment and from wine, especially appropriate at a banquet" (Bengel).
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Vincent: Luk 5:36 - -- Putteth a piece of a new garment upon an old ( ἐπίβλημα ἱματίου καινοῦ ἐπιβάλλει ἐπὶ ἱμάτ...
Putteth a piece of a new garment upon an old (
The best texts, however, insert
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Vincent: Luk 5:36 - -- The new maketh a rent ( τὸ καινὸν σχίζει )
The best texts read σχίσει , will rend, governing the new, instead of b...
The new maketh a rent (
The best texts read
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Vincent: Luk 5:36 - -- Agreeth not ( οὐ συμφωνεῖ )
The best texts read συμφωνήσει , the future; will not agree. So Rev.
In Matthew and Mar...
Agreeth not (
The best texts read
In Matthew and Mark there is only a single damage, that, namely, to the old garment, the rent in which is enlarged. In Luke the damage is twofold; first, in injuring the new garment by cutting out a piece; and second, in making the old garment appear patched, instead of widening the rent, as in Matthew and Mark.
Taken from clothes and wine; therefore peculiarly proper at a feast.
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And beside, men are not wont to be immediately freed from old prejudices.
Clarke: Luk 5:37 - -- The new wine will burst the bottles - These old bottles would not be able to stand the fermentation of the new wine, as the old sewing would be apt ...
The new wine will burst the bottles - These old bottles would not be able to stand the fermentation of the new wine, as the old sewing would be apt to give way. It is scarcely necessary to remark, that the eastern bottles are made of skins; generally those of goats.
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Clarke: Luk 5:39 - -- The old is better - ΧρηϚοτερος - Is more agreeable to the taste or palate. Herodotus, the scholiast on Aristophanes, and Homer, use the ...
The old is better -
1. The miraculous draught of fishes, the cleansing of the leper, the healing of the paralytic person, the calling of Levi, and the parable of the old and new bottles, and the old and new wine - all related in this chapter, make it not only very entertaining, but highly instructive. There are few chapters in the New Testament from which a preacher of the Gospel can derive more lessons of instruction; and the reader would naturally expect a more particular explanation of its several parts, had not this been anticipated in the notes and observations on Matthew 9, to which chapter it will be well to refer
2. The conduct as well as the preaching of our Lord is highly edifying. His manner of teaching made every thing he spoke interesting and impressive. He had many prejudices to remove, and he used admirable address in order to meet and take them out of the way. There is as much to be observed in the manner of speaking the truth, as in the truth itself, in order to make it effectual to the salvation of them who hear it. A harsh, unfeeling method of preaching the promises of the Gospel, and a smiling manner of producing the terrors of the Lord, are equally reprehensible. Some preachers are always severe and magisterial: others are always mild and insinuating: neither of these can do God’ s work; and it would take two such to make one Preacher.
Calvin -> Luk 5:39
Calvin: Luk 5:39 - -- Luk 5:39.And no person who has drunk old wine This statement is given by Luke alone, and is undoubtedly connected with the preceding discourse. Though...
Luk 5:39.And no person who has drunk old wine This statement is given by Luke alone, and is undoubtedly connected with the preceding discourse. Though commentators have tortured it in a variety of ways, I take it simply as a warning to the Pharisees not to attach undue importance to a received custom. For how comes it that wine, the taste of which remains unaltered, is not equally agreeable to every palate, but because custom and habit form the taste? Hence it follows, that Christ’s manner of acting towards his disciples is not less worthy of approbation, because it has less show and splendor: as old wine, though it does not foam with the sharpness of n ew wine, is not less agreeable on that account, or less fitted for the nourishment of the body.
Defender -> Luk 5:39
Defender: Luk 5:39 - -- This is a statement of fact, not a commendation of drinking intoxicating (old) wine. The new, unfermented wine is much better for one's health and con...
This is a statement of fact, not a commendation of drinking intoxicating (old) wine. The new, unfermented wine is much better for one's health and conduct, but the half-intoxicated man will not say so. The same holds true with the Pharisees, who preferred their old economy and traditions to the new and better way brought by Christ."
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Luk 5:33-39
Barnes: Luk 5:33-39 - -- See this passage illustrated in the notes at Mat 9:14-17. Luk 5:39 Having drunk old wine ... - Wine increases its strength and flavor, an...
See this passage illustrated in the notes at Mat 9:14-17.
Having drunk old wine ... - Wine increases its strength and flavor, and its mildness and mellowness, by age, and the old is therefore preferable. They who had tasted such mild and mellow wine would not readily drink the comparatively sour and astringent juice of the grape as it came from the press. The meaning of this proverb in this place seems to be this: You Pharisees wish to draw my disciples to the "austere"and "rigid"duties of the ceremonial law - to fasting and painful rites; but they have come under a milder system. They have tasted the gentle and tender blessings of the gospel; they have no "relish"for your stern and harsh requirements. To insist now on their observing them would be like telling a man who had tasted of good, ripe, and mild wine to partake of that which is sour and unpalatable. At the proper time all the sterner duties of religion will be properly regarded; but "at present,"to teach them to fast when they see "no occasion"for it - when they are full of joy at the presence of their Master - would be like putting a piece of new cloth on an old garment, or new wine into old bottles, or drinking unpleasant wine after one had tasted that which was more pleasant. It would be ill-timed, inappropriate, and incongruous.
Poole -> Luk 5:33-39
Poole: Luk 5:33-39 - -- Ver. 33-39. We have also both in Matthew and Mark met with this piece of history. See Poole on "Mat 9:14" , and following verses to Mat 9:17 ; See ...
Ver. 33-39. We have also both in Matthew and Mark met with this piece of history. See Poole on "Mat 9:14" , and following verses to Mat 9:17 ; See Poole on "Mar 2:18" , and following verses to Mar 2:22 . Both Matthew and Mark say, that they were the disciples of John who came, and thus said to our Saviour. In our notes upon the two former evangelists, we have fully opened this piece of history. John the Baptist was of a more severe deportment than our Saviour thought fit to show himself; and complying more with the practices of the Pharisees (though in much more sincerity) in their exercises of discipline, the Pharisees did more easily get his disciples to join with them in this address to our Saviour; though probably John’ s disciples did it more out of infirmity, and the Pharisees out of malice, that they might have whereby to lessen Christ’ s reputation amongst the people: thus weak, though good, men are often drawn in by those who are more subtle and malicious to promote their designs. Besides, we naturally desire to be the standard to all, and that others should take their measures from us, and possibly John’ s disciples might have a little of that envy for their master’ s sake, which we find them sick of, Joh 3:26 . Our Lord, who might have told them that he was to be their exemplar, and not they his, dealeth more gently with them, and gives them sufficient reason why, as yet, he did not inure his disciples to those severer acts of religion:
1. Because this was all the rejoicing time they were like to have. He was now with them; when he should be gone from them, before which it would not be long, they should have time to mourn.
2. That they were but newly entered into his discipleship, and therefore not at first to be discouraged, that they might not have a temptation upon them to leave off as soon as they began. But see the notes more fully upon the same history in Matthew and Mark.
Lightfoot -> Luk 5:39
Lightfoot: Luk 5:39 - -- No man also having drunk old wine straightway desireth new: for he saith, The old is better.  [The old is better.] Is not the old bett...
No man also having drunk old wine straightway desireth new: for he saith, The old is better.  
[The old is better.] Is not the old better? The Gloss is, Old wine: that is, of three years old.  
Wine of three leaves. The Gloss is, "Of three years: because from the time that the vine had produced that wine, it had put forth its leaves three times."
Gill: Luk 5:36 - -- And he spake also a parable unto them,.... The Scribes and Pharisees; illustrating what he had just now said:
no man putteth a piece of a new garme...
And he spake also a parable unto them,.... The Scribes and Pharisees; illustrating what he had just now said:
no man putteth a piece of a new garment upon an old; by "a piece of a new garment" meaning the new and upstart notions and traditions of the elders, which were so in comparison of the law of Moses; and by the "old", the robe of their own righteousness, wrought out in obedience to the moral and ceremonial law: and Christ suggests, that to join these together, in order to patch up a garment of righteousness, to appear in before God, was equally as weak and ridiculous, as to put a piece of new and undressed cloth into a garment that was old, and wore threadbare.
If otherwise, then both the new, maketh the rent; that is, much worse than it was, as it is expressed both in Matthew and Mark; the old and new cloth being unsuitable, and not of equal strength to hold together: by this Christ intimates, that the Jews, by being directed to the observance of the traditions of the elders, were drawn off from a regard to the commandments of God; so that instead of having a better righteousness, they had one much the worse, a ragged, and a rent one.
And the piece that was taken out of the new, agreeth not with the old; and so the statutes of men, and the ordinances of God, or the traditions of the elders, and the commands of God, are no more like one another, than the piece of a new and an old garment, and as unlike is obedience to the one, and to the other;
See Gill on Mat 9:16. See Gill on Mat 9:17. See Gill on Mar 2:21.
See Gill on Mar 2:22 where this, and the following parable, are more largely explained.
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Gill: Luk 5:37 - -- And no man putteth new wine into old bottles,.... To which the Scribes and Pharisees are here compared, into whose hearts the new wine of Gospel grace...
And no man putteth new wine into old bottles,.... To which the Scribes and Pharisees are here compared, into whose hearts the new wine of Gospel grace was not put; or to whom was not made known the love of God Comparable to new wine; nor the blessings of the new covenant of grace, now exhibited; nor the truths of the Gospel now more clearly and newly revealed.
Else the new wine will burst the bottles, and be spilled; they not being able to receive and bear these things, no, not the relation of them: these were hard sayings to them, of which they said, who can hear them? they could not hear them with patience, much less receive them in the love of them; but were at once filled with wrath and indignation, and rejected them.
And the bottles shall perish; their condemnation shall be the greater.
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Gill: Luk 5:38 - -- But new wine must be put into new bottles,.... Such as the disciples of Christ were, and sinners called to repentance are, who are renewed by the Spir...
But new wine must be put into new bottles,.... Such as the disciples of Christ were, and sinners called to repentance are, who are renewed by the Spirit and grace of God: and these are filled with spiritual joy and comfort, as with new wine, arising from discoveries of the love of God, a view of interest in the blessings of the covenant, and an application of Gospel truths and promises.
And both are preserved; both these renewed ones, who are preserved unto the kingdom and glory of Christ; and the grace that is put into them, which is a well of living water, springing up to everlasting life; as well as the Gospel, and its blessings.
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Gill: Luk 5:39 - -- No man also having drunk old wine,.... "Wine", though not in the text, is rightly supplied by our translators, as it is by the Syriac and Persic versi...
No man also having drunk old wine,.... "Wine", though not in the text, is rightly supplied by our translators, as it is by the Syriac and Persic versions:
straightway desireth new; new wine:
for he saith, the old is better; old wine is more grateful, more generous, and more reviving to the spirits, than new wine is. This is a proverbial expression, and which Luke only records; which may be applied to natural men, who having drunk the old wine of their carnal lusts and pleasures, do not desire the new wine of the Gospel, and of the grace of God, and of spiritual things, but prefer their old sins and lusts unto them: carnal lusts may be signified by old wine, both for the antiquity of them, being as old as men themselves, and therefore called the old man, and for the gratefulness of them to them; and who may be said to drink of them, as they do drink iniquity like water; which is expressive of their great desire and thirst after it, and delight in it: now whilst they are such, they cannot desire the new wine of the Gospel, which is insipid and ungrateful to them; nor the grace of God, to which their carnal minds are enmity; nor any thing that is evangelical and spiritual, at least, not straightway, or immediately; not until they are regenerated by the Spirit of God, and their taste is changed, but will prefer their old lusts and former course of life unto them: or it may be accommodated to legalists, and men of a "pharisaical spirit", to whom spiritual and evangelical things are very disagreeable: Scribes and Pharisees, who have drank of the old wine of the law, and the traditions of the elders, do not desire the new wine of the Gospel, but prefer the former to it: the ceremonial law may be expressed by old wine, being originally instituted of God, and acceptable to him; and one part of which lay in libations of wine, and was of long standing, but now waxen old, and ready to vanish away; and likewise the traditions of the elders, which were highly pleasing to the Pharisees, and which pretended to great antiquity: and of these they might be said to drink, being inured to them from their youth, and therefore could not like the new dispensation of the Gospel, neither its doctrines, nor its ordinances; but preferred their old laws and traditions to them: or rather this proverb, as used by Christ here, may be considered as intimating the reason why the disciples did not give into the practices of the Pharisees, because they had drank of the old wine of the Gospel; which, as upon some account it may be called new, because of the new dispensation, fresh discovery and clearer revelation of it; in other respects it may be said to be old, being what was prepared and ordained before the world began; and what Adam drank of, in the first hint and promise of the Messiah; and after him Noah, the preacher of righteousness; and Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to whom the Gospel was preached before; and even Moses, who wrote and testified of Christ; and David, and Solomon, and Isaiah, and all the prophets of the former dispensation: and now the disciples having more largely drank of it, under the ministry of Christ, could not easily desire the new wine of the fastings and prayers of the Pharisees, and John's disciples; for the old wine of the Gospel was much better in their esteem, more grateful to the taste, more refreshing to their spirits, and more salutary and healthful, being the wholesome words of our Lord Jesus Christ. Old wine, with the Jews h was wine of three years old, and was always by them preferred to new: so they descant on those words in Deu 15:16 "because he is well with thee i, (i.e. the servant,)"
"with thee in food, with thee in drink; for thou shalt not eat bread of fine flour, and he eat bread of bran; or thou drink,
And sometimes they use this distinction of old and new wine proverbially and parabolically, as here k.
"Rabbi Jose bar Juda, a man of a village in Babylon, used to say, he that learns of young men, to what is he like? to him that eateth unripe grapes, and drinks wine out of the fat: but he; that learns of old men, to what is he like? to him that eats ripe grapes, and drinks,
signifying, that the knowledge of old men is more solid, and mature, and unmixed, and free from dregs of ignorance, than that of young men: though it follows, that
"Ribbi had used to say, do not look upon the tankard, but on what is in it; for sometimes there is a new tankard full of old wine, and an old one in which there is not so much as new in it:''
signifying, that sometimes young men are full of wisdom and knowledge, when old men are entirely devoid of them.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Luk 5:36 The piece from the new will not match the old. The imagery in this saying looks at the fact that what Jesus brings is so new that it cannot simply be ...
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NET Notes: Luk 5:37 Wineskins were bags made of skin or leather, used for storing wine in NT times. As the new wine fermented and expanded, it would stretch the new wines...
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NET Notes: Luk 5:38 The meaning of the saying new wine…into new skins is that the presence and teaching of Jesus was something new and signaled the passing of the o...
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NET Notes: Luk 5:39 The third illustration points out that those already satisfied with what they have will not seek the new (The old is good enough).
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Luk 5:1-39
TSK Synopsis: Luk 5:1-39 - --1 Christ teaches the people out of Peter's ship;4 in a miraculous taking of fishes, shows how he will make him and his partners fishers of men;12 clea...
MHCC -> Luk 5:27-39
MHCC: Luk 5:27-39 - --It was a wonder of Christ's grace, that he would call a publican to be his disciple and follower. It was a wonder of his grace, that the call was made...
Matthew Henry -> Luk 5:27-39
Matthew Henry: Luk 5:27-39 - -- All this, except the last verse, we had before in Matthew and Mark; it is not the story of any miracle in nature wrought by our Lord Jesus, but it...
Barclay -> Luk 5:36-39
Barclay: Luk 5:36-39 - --There is in religious people a kind of passion for the old. Nothing moves more slowly than a church. The trouble with the Pharisees was that the who...
Constable: Luk 4:14--9:51 - --IV. Jesus' ministry in and around Galilee 4:14--9:50
Luke commenced Jesus' public ministry with His return to Ga...
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Constable: Luk 5:12--6:12 - --B. The beginning of controversy with the Pharisees 5:12-6:11
One of Luke's purposes in his Gospel and in...
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