![](images/minus.gif)
Text -- Matthew 18:11-35 (NET)
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/information.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson -> Mat 18:12; Mat 18:14; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:16; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:18; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:20; Mat 18:21; Mat 18:22; Mat 18:23; Mat 18:24; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:27; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:30; Mat 18:30; Mat 18:31; Mat 18:33; Mat 18:34; Mat 18:34; Mat 18:35
Robertson: Mat 18:12 - -- Leave the ninety and nine ( aphēsei ta enenēkonta ennea epi ta orē kai poreutheis zētei to planōmenoṅ ).
This is the text of Westcott and...
Leave the ninety and nine (
This is the text of Westcott and Hort after BL, etc. This text means: "Will he not leave the ninety and nine upon the mountains and going does he not seek (change to present tense) the wandering one?"On the high pastures where the sheep graze at will one has wandered afield. See this parable later in Luk 15:4-7. Our word "planet"is from
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:14 - -- The will of your Father ( thelēma emprosthen ).
Observe that Westcott and Hort read mou here rather than hūmōn after B Sahidic Coptic. Eith...
The will of your Father (
Observe that Westcott and Hort read
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:15 - -- If thy brother sin against thee ( ean hamartēsēi adelphos sou ).
Literally, commit a sin (ingressive aorist subjunctive of hamartanō ). Aleph ...
If thy brother sin against thee (
Literally, commit a sin (ingressive aorist subjunctive of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:15 - -- Shew him his fault ( elegxon ).
Such private reproof is hard to do, but it is the way of Christ.
Shew him his fault (
Such private reproof is hard to do, but it is the way of Christ.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:15 - -- Thou hast gained ( ekerdēsas ).
Aorist active indicative of kerdainō in conclusion of a third-class condition, a sort of timeless aorist, a ble...
Thou hast gained (
Aorist active indicative of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:16 - -- Take with thee ( paralabe meta sou ).
Take alone (para ) with (meta ) thee.
Take with thee (
Take alone (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:17 - -- Refuse to hear ( parakousēi ).
Like Isa 65:12. Many papyri examples for ignoring, disregarding, hearing without heeding, hearing aside (parȧ ), ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:17 - -- The church ( tēi ekklēsiāi ).
The local body, not the general as in Mat 16:18 which see for discussion. The problem here is whether Jesus has i...
The church (
The local body, not the general as in Mat 16:18 which see for discussion. The problem here is whether Jesus has in mind an actual body of believers already in existence or is speaking prophetically of the local churches that would be organized later (as in Acts). There are some who think that the Twelve Apostles constituted a local
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:18 - -- Shall be bound in heaven ( estai dedemena en ouranōi ).
Future passive periphrastic perfect indicative as in "shall be loosed"(estai lelumena ). I...
Shall be bound in heaven (
Future passive periphrastic perfect indicative as in "shall be loosed"(
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:19 - -- Shall agree ( sumphōnēsōsin ).
Our word "symphony"is this very root. It is no longer looked at as a concord of voices, a chorus in harmony, tho...
Shall agree (
Our word "symphony"is this very root. It is no longer looked at as a concord of voices, a chorus in harmony, though that would be very appropriate in a church meeting rather than the rasping discord sometimes heard even between two brethren or sisters.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Of my Father (
From the side of, "by my Father."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:20 - -- There am I ( ekei eimi ).
This blessed promise implies that those gathered together are really disciples with the spirit of Christ as well as "in his...
There am I (
This blessed promise implies that those gathered together are really disciples with the spirit of Christ as well as "in his name"(
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:21 - -- Until seven times? ( heōs heptakiṡ )
Peter thought that he was generous as the Jewish rule was three times (Amo 1:6). His question goes back to M...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:22 - -- Until seventy times seven ( heōs hebdomēkontakis hepta ).
It is not clear whether this idiom means seventy-seven or as the Revised Version has it...
Until seventy times seven (
It is not clear whether this idiom means seventy-seven or as the Revised Version has it (490 times). If
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:23 - -- Make a reckoning ( sunārai logon ).
Seen also in Mat 25:19. Perhaps a Latinism, rationes conferre . First aorist active infinitive of sunairō , ...
Make a reckoning (
Seen also in Mat 25:19. Perhaps a Latinism, rationes conferre . First aorist active infinitive of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:24 - -- Ten thousand talents ( muriōn talantōn ).
A talent was 6,000 denarii or about a thousand dollars or 240 pounds. Ten thousand times this is about ...
Ten thousand talents (
A talent was 6,000 denarii or about a thousand dollars or 240 pounds. Ten thousand times this is about ten or twelve million dollars, an enormous sum for that period. We live today in the age of national debts of billions of dollars or even of pounds sterling. The imperial taxes of Judea, Idumea, and Samaria for one year were only 600 talents while Galilee and Perea paid 200 (Josephus, Ant. xi. 4). But oriental kings were free in the use of money and in making debts like the native kings of India today.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:25 - -- Had not wherewith to pay ( mē echontos autou apodounai ).
There is no "wherewith"in the Greek. This idiom is seen in Luk 7:42; Luk 14:14; Heb 6:13....
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:25 - -- To be sold ( prathēnai ).
First aorist passive infinitive of pipraskō . This was according to the law (Exo 22:3; Lev 25:39, Lev 25:47). Wife and ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:27 - -- The debt ( to danion ).
The loan. Common in the papyri for a loan. The interest had increased the debt enormously. "This heavy oriental usury is of t...
The debt (
The loan. Common in the papyri for a loan. The interest had increased the debt enormously. "This heavy oriental usury is of the scenery of the parable"(McNeile).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:28 - -- A hundred pence ( hekaton dēnaria ).
A denarius was worth about eight and a half pence. The hundred denarii here were equal to some "fifty shilling...
A hundred pence (
A denarius was worth about eight and a half pence. The hundred denarii here were equal to some "fifty shillings"(Bruce), "about 4 pounds"(McNeile), "twenty pounds"(Moffatt), "twenty dollars"(Goodspeed), "100 shillings"(Weymouth). These are various efforts to represent in modern language the small amount of this debt compared with the big one.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:28 - -- Took him by the throat ( epnigen ).
"Held him by the throat"(Allen). It is imperfect, probably inchoative, "began to choke or throttle him."The Roman...
Took him by the throat (
"Held him by the throat"(Allen). It is imperfect, probably inchoative, "began to choke or throttle him."The Roman law allowed this indignity. Vincent quotes Livy (iv. 53) who tells how the necks were twisted ( collum torsisset ) and how Cicero ( Pro Cluentio , xxi.) says: "Lead him to the judgment seat with twisted neck ( collo obtorto )."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:28 - -- What thou owest ( ei ti opheileis ).
Literally, "if thou owest anything,"however little. He did not even know how much it was, only that he owed him ...
What thou owest (
Literally, "if thou owest anything,"however little. He did not even know how much it was, only that he owed him something. "The ‘ if’ is simply the expression of a pitiless logic"(Meyer).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:30 - -- And he would not ( ho de ouk ēthelen ).
Imperfect tense of persistent refusal.
And he would not (
Imperfect tense of persistent refusal.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:30 - -- Till he should pay ( heōs apodōi ).
This futuristic aorist subjunctive is the rule with heōs for a future goal. He was to stay in prison till...
Till he should pay (
This futuristic aorist subjunctive is the rule with
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:31 - -- Told ( diesaphēsan ).
Made wholly clear to their own lord. That is the usual result in the long run. There is a limit to what people will put up wi...
Told (
Made wholly clear to their own lord. That is the usual result in the long run. There is a limit to what people will put up with.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:33 - -- Shouldst thou not? ( ouk edei sė )
"Was it not necessary?"The king fits the cap on this wicked slave that he put on the poor debtor.
Shouldst thou not? (
"Was it not necessary?"The king fits the cap on this wicked slave that he put on the poor debtor.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:34 - -- The tormentors ( tois basanistais ).
Not to prison simply, but to terrible punishment. The papyri give various instances of the verb basanizō , to ...
The tormentors (
Not to prison simply, but to terrible punishment. The papyri give various instances of the verb
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:34 - -- Till he should pay all ( heōs [hou ] apodōi pan ).
Just as in Mat 18:30, his very words. But this is not purgatorial, but punitive, for he c...
Till he should pay all (
Just as in Mat 18:30, his very words. But this is not purgatorial, but punitive, for he could never pay back that vast debt.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Mat 18:35 - -- From your hearts ( apo tōn kardiōn hūmōn ).
No sham or lip pardon, and as often as needed. This is Christ’ s full reply to Peter’ s...
From your hearts (
No sham or lip pardon, and as often as needed. This is Christ’ s full reply to Peter’ s question in Mat 18:21. This parable of the unmerciful servant is surely needed today.
Vincent: Mat 18:12 - -- Leave upon the mountains
The text here is disputed. Both A. V. and Rev. follow a text which reads: " Doth he not, leaving the ninety and nine, go...
Leave upon the mountains
The text here is disputed. Both A. V. and Rev. follow a text which reads: " Doth he not, leaving the ninety and nine, go into the mountains?" Rather join leave with on the mountains, and read, " Will he not leave the ninety and nine upon (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:13 - -- If so be ( ἐὰν γένηται )
If it should so come to pass. God's grace is not irresistible.
If so be (
If it should so come to pass. God's grace is not irresistible.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:14 - -- The will of your Father ( θέλημα ἔμπροσθεν τοῦ πατρὸς ὑμῶν )
Though some read my Father (μοῦ ). ...
The will of your Father (
Though some read my Father (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Go (
Do not wait for him to come to you.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:15 - -- Tell him his fault ( ἔλεγξον )
Rev., shew him. The verb means, first, to test, try, search out; therefore, to cross-examine with...
Tell him his fault (
Rev., shew him. The verb means, first, to test, try, search out; therefore, to cross-examine with a view of convincing or refuting; thence to rebuke or chide . The Rev. shew is better than tell, which implies merely naming the fault; whereas the injunction is, go and prove to him how he has erred. Wyc., reprove, with snub as explanation.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:16 - -- In the mouth ( ἐπὶ στόματος )
Better Rev., " at the mouth," or on the testimony of.
In the mouth (
Better Rev., " at the mouth," or on the testimony of.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:19 - -- Shall agree ( συμφωνήσουσιν )
From σύν , together, and φωνή , sound or voice . Transcribed in our word symphony. ...
Shall agree (
From
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:19 - -- Concerning anything that they shall ask ( περὶ παντὸς πράγματος οὗ ἐὰν αἰτήσωνται )
The liter...
Concerning anything that they shall ask (
The literal rendering is, if any thing, stronger: Everything, whatever it be, for which they may have asked. Wyc., Shall consent of everything whatever they shall ask. Tynd., Shall agree in any manner thing whatsoever they shall desire. The word
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:20 - -- In my name ( εἰς τὸ ἐμὸν ὄνομα )
Lit., " into my name." When two or three are drawn together into Christ as the co...
In my name (
Lit., " into my name." When two or three are drawn together into Christ as the common centre of their desire and faith.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:22 - -- Seventy times seven ( ἑβδομηκοντάκις ἑπτά ).
It was a settled rule of Rabbinism that forgiveness should not be extended...
Seventy times seven (
It was a settled rule of Rabbinism that forgiveness should not be extended more than three times. Even so, the practice was terribly different. The Talmud relates, without blame, the conduct of a rabbi who would not forgive a very small slight of his dignity, though asked by the offender for thirteen successive years, and that on the day of atonement; the reason being that the offended rabbi had learned by a dream that his offending brother would attain the highest dignity; whereupon he feigned himself irreconcilable, to force the other to migrate from Palestine to Babylon, where, unenvied by him, he might occupy the chief place (Edersheim). It must, therefore, have seemed to Peter a stretch of charity to extend forgiveness from three to seven times. Christ is not specifying a number of times greater than the limit of seven. He means that there is to be no limit. " Forgiveness is qualitative, not quantitative. "
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:23 - -- A certain king ( ἀνθρώτῳ βασιλεῖ )
Lit., a man, a king. The kingdom of heaven is like unto a human king.
A certain king (
Lit., a man, a king. The kingdom of heaven is like unto a human king.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:23 - -- Take account of his servants ( συνᾶραι λόγον μετὰ τῶν δοούλων αὐτοῦ )
The rendering of the A. V. is ...
Take account of his servants (
The rendering of the A. V. is loose and inadequate, and might be taken to mean to reckon the number of his servants. The verb
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Which owed him (
Lit., a debtor of ten thousand talents.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Ten thousand talents
An enormous sum; about twelve millions of dollars.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:28 - -- Found
Either went in search of him, as he himself had been sought out by his lord, or came upon him accidentally in the street.
Found
Either went in search of him, as he himself had been sought out by his lord, or came upon him accidentally in the street.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:28 - -- A hundred pence ( ἑκατὸν δηνάρια )
Less than a millionth part of his own debt.
A hundred pence (
Less than a millionth part of his own debt.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:28 - -- Took him by the throat ( αὐτὸν ἔπνιγεν )
Lit., throttled. Wyc., strangled. Compare were choked, Mar 5:13. Creditors oft...
Took him by the throat (
Lit., throttled. Wyc., strangled. Compare were choked, Mar 5:13. Creditors often dragged their debtors before the judge, as the Roman law allowed them to do, holding them by the throat. Thus Livy ( 4: 53), relates how, a difficulty having arisen between the consul Valerius and one Menenius, the tribunes put an end to the contest, and the consul ordered into prison ( collum torsisset , twisted the neck ) the few who appealed. And Cicero (" Pro Cluentio," xxi.) " Lead him to the judgment-seat with twisted neck ( collo obtorto ) . " Compare Cicero, " In C. Verrem," 4:10.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:28 - -- What thou owest ( εἴ τι ὀφείλεις )
Lit., If thou owest anything. Not that the creditor is uncertain about the fact of the d...
What thou owest (
Lit., If thou owest anything. Not that the creditor is uncertain about the fact of the debt, though some uncertainty about the exact amount may be implied. This would agree with found, in the sense of coming upon accidentally. Compare Mat 13:44. He came suddenly upon him and recognized him as a debtor, though not certain as to the amount of his debt. Meyer remarks, " The if is simply the expression of a pitiless logic. If thou owest anything (as thou dost) pay!" The word pay (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Besought (
The imperfect has the force of earnestly besought.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Went (
Lit. went away: dragging the other with him to judgment.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:31 - -- Told ( διεσάφησαν )
More than merely narrated. The verb is from διά , throughout, and σαφέν , to explain. They expl...
Told (
More than merely narrated. The verb is from
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:31 - -- Their Lord ( τῷ κυρίῳ ἑαυτῶν )
Lit., " their own Lord;" as befitted their position, and as a mark of their confidence...
Their Lord (
Lit., " their own Lord;" as befitted their position, and as a mark of their confidence in him.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Mat 18:34 - -- To the tormentors ( βασανισταῖς )
Livy pictures an old centurion complaining that he was taken by his creditor, not into servitude, ...
To the tormentors (
Livy pictures an old centurion complaining that he was taken by his creditor, not into servitude, but to a workhouse and torture, and showing his back scarred with fresh wounds (ii., 23).
Wesley: Mat 18:11 - -- Another, and yet a stronger reason for your not despising them is, that I myself came into the world to save them. Luk 19:10.
Another, and yet a stronger reason for your not despising them is, that I myself came into the world to save them. Luk 19:10.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:14 - -- Neither doth my Father despise the least of them. Observe the gradation. The angels, the Son, the Father.
Neither doth my Father despise the least of them. Observe the gradation. The angels, the Son, the Father.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:15 - -- But how can we avoid giving offence to some? or being offended at others! Especially suppose they are quite in the wrong? Suppose they commit a known ...
But how can we avoid giving offence to some? or being offended at others! Especially suppose they are quite in the wrong? Suppose they commit a known sin? Our Lord here teaches us how: he lays down a sure method of avoiding all offences. Whosoever closely observes this threefold rule, will seldom offend others, and never be offended himself. If any do any thing amiss, of which thou art an eye or ear witness, thus saith the Lord, If thy brother - Any who is a member of the same religious community: Sin against thee, Go and reprove him alone - If it may be in person; if that cannot so well be done, by thy messenger; or in writing. Observe, our Lord gives no liberty to omit this; or to exchange it for either of the following steps. If this do not succeed, Take with thee one or two more - Men whom he esteems or loves, who may then confirm and enforce what thou sayest; and afterward, if need require, bear witness of what was spoken. If even this does not succeed, then, and not before, Tell it to the elders of the Church - Lay the whole matter open before those who watch over yours and his soul. If all this avail not, have no farther intercourse with him, only such as thou hast with heathens. Can any thing be plainer? Christ does here as expressly command all Christians who see a brother do evil, to take this way, not another, and to take these steps, in this order, as he does to honour their father and mother. But if so, in what land do the Christians live? If we proceed from the private carriage of man to man, to proceedings of a more public nature, in what Christian nation are Church censures conformed to this rule? Is this the form in which ecclesiastical judgments appear, in the popish, or even the Protestant world? Are these the methods used even by those who boast the most loudly of the authority of Christ to confirm their sentences? Let us earnestly pray, that this dishonour to the Christian name may be wiped away, and that common humanity may not, with such solemn mockery, be destroyed in the name of the Lord! Let him be to thee as the heathen - To whom thou still owest earnest good will, and all the offices of humanity. Luk 17:3.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
By excommunication, pronounced in the spirit and power of Christ.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:18 - -- By absolution from that sentence. In the primitive Church, absolution meant no more than a discharge from Church censure.
By absolution from that sentence. In the primitive Church, absolution meant no more than a discharge from Church censure.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:18 - -- And not only your intercession for the penitent, but all your united prayers, shall be heard.
And not only your intercession for the penitent, but all your united prayers, shall be heard.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:20 - -- By my Spirit, to quicken their prayers, guide their counsels, and answer their petitions.
By my Spirit, to quicken their prayers, guide their counsels, and answer their petitions.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:22 - -- That is, as often as there is occasion. A certain number is put for an uncertain.
That is, as often as there is occasion. A certain number is put for an uncertain.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:24 - -- According to the usual computation, if these were talents of gold, this would amount to seventy - two millions sterling. If they were talents of silve...
According to the usual computation, if these were talents of gold, this would amount to seventy - two millions sterling. If they were talents of silver, it must have been four millions, four hundred thousand pounds. Hereby our Lord intimates the vast number and weight of our offences against God, and our utter incapacity of making him any satisfaction.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:25 - -- Such was the power which creditors anciently had over their insolvent debtors in several countries.
Such was the power which creditors anciently had over their insolvent debtors in several countries.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:30 - -- Went with him before a magistrate, and cast him into prison, protesting he should lie there, till he should pay the whole debt.
Went with him before a magistrate, and cast him into prison, protesting he should lie there, till he should pay the whole debt.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:34 - -- Imprisonment is a much severer punishment in the eastern countries than in ours. State criminals, especially when condemned to it, are not only confin...
Imprisonment is a much severer punishment in the eastern countries than in ours. State criminals, especially when condemned to it, are not only confined to a very mean and scanty allowance, but are frequently loaded with clogs or heavy yokes, so that they can neither lie nor sit at ease: and by frequent scourgings and sometimes rackings are brought to an untimely end.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Mat 18:34 - -- That is, without all hope of release, for this he could never do. How observable is this whole account; as well as the great inference our Lord draws ...
That is, without all hope of release, for this he could never do. How observable is this whole account; as well as the great inference our Lord draws from it: The debtor was freely and fully forgiven; He wilfully and grievously offended; His pardon was retracted, the whole debt required, and the offender delivered to the tormentors for ever. And shall we still say, but when we are once freely and fully forgiven, our pardon can never be retracted? Verily, verily, I say unto you, So likewise will my heavenly Father do to you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses.
JFB -> Mat 18:11; Mat 18:12-13; Mat 18:14; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:18; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:20; Mat 18:20; Mat 18:21; Mat 18:21; Mat 18:22; Mat 18:23; Mat 18:23; Mat 18:24; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:26; Mat 18:26; Mat 18:27; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:29; Mat 18:30; Mat 18:32-33; Mat 18:34; Mat 18:35
JFB: Mat 18:11 - -- Or "is lost." A golden saying, once and again repeated in different forms. Here the connection seems to be, "Since the whole object and errand of the ...
Or "is lost." A golden saying, once and again repeated in different forms. Here the connection seems to be, "Since the whole object and errand of the Son of man into the world is to save the lost, take heed lest, by causing offenses, ye lose the saved." That this is the idea intended we may gather from Mat 18:14.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:12-13 - -- This is another of those pregnant sayings which our Lord uttered more than once. See on the delightful parable of the lost sheep in Luk 15:4-7. Only t...
This is another of those pregnant sayings which our Lord uttered more than once. See on the delightful parable of the lost sheep in Luk 15:4-7. Only the object there is to show what the good Shepherd will do, when even one of His sheep is lost, to find it; here the object is to show, when found, how reluctant He is to lose it. Accordingly, it is added,
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:14 - -- How, then, can He but visit for those "offenses" which endanger the souls of these little ones?
How, then, can He but visit for those "offenses" which endanger the souls of these little ones?
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:15 - -- Probably our Lord had reference still to the late dispute, Who should be the greatest? After the rebuke--so gentle and captivating, yet so dignified a...
Probably our Lord had reference still to the late dispute, Who should be the greatest? After the rebuke--so gentle and captivating, yet so dignified and divine--under which they would doubtless be smarting, perhaps each would be saying, It was not I that began it, it was not I that threw out unworthy and irritating insinuations against my brethren. Be it so, says our Lord; but as such things will often arise, I will direct you how to proceed. First, Neither harbor a grudge against your offending brother, nor break forth upon him in presence of the unbelieving; but take him aside, show him his fault, and if he own and make reparation for it, you have done more service to him than even justice to yourself. Next, If this fail, take two or three to witness how just your complaint is, and how brotherly your spirit in dealing with him. Again, If this fail, bring him before the Church or congregation to which both belong. Lastly, If even this fail, regard him as no longer a brother Christian, but as one "without"--as the Jews did Gentiles and publicans.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:18 - -- Here, what had been granted but a short time before to Peter only (see on Mat 16:19) is plainly extended to all the Twelve; so that whatever it means,...
Here, what had been granted but a short time before to Peter only (see on Mat 16:19) is plainly extended to all the Twelve; so that whatever it means, it means nothing peculiar to Peter, far less to his pretended successors at Rome. It has to do with admission to and rejection from the membership of the Church. But see on Joh 20:23.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:19 - -- Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which i...
Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:20 - -- On this passage--so full of sublime encouragement to Christian union in action and prayer--observe, first, the connection in which it stands. Our Lord...
On this passage--so full of sublime encouragement to Christian union in action and prayer--observe, first, the connection in which it stands. Our Lord had been speaking of church meetings before which the obstinate perversity of a brother was in the last resort to be brought, and whose decision was to be final--such honor does the Lord of the Church put upon its lawful assemblies. But not these assemblies only does He deign to countenance and honor. For even two uniting to bring any matter before Him shall find that they are not alone, for My Father is with them, says Jesus. Next, observe the premium here put upon union in prayer. As this cannot exist with fewer than two, so by letting it down so low as that number, He gives the utmost conceivable encouragement to union in this exercise. But what kind of union? Not an agreement merely to pray in concert, but to pray for some definite thing. "As touching anything which they shall ask," says our Lord--anything they shall agree to ask in concert. At the same time, it is plain He had certain things at that moment in His eye, as most fitting and needful subjects for such concerted prayer. The Twelve had been "falling out by the way" about the miserable question of precedence in their Master's kingdom, and this, as it stirred their corruptions, had given rise--or at least was in danger of giving rise--to "offenses" perilous to their souls. The Lord Himself had been directing them how to deal with one another about such matters. "But now shows He unto them a more excellent way." Let them bring all such matters--yea, and everything whatsoever by which either their own loving relationship to each other, or the good of His kingdom at large, might be affected--to their Father in heaven; and if they be but agreed in petitioning Him about that thing, it shall be done for them of His Father which is in heaven. But further, it is not merely union in prayer for the same thing--for that might be with very jarring ideas of the thing to be desired--but it is to symphonious prayer, the prayer by kindred spirits, members of one family, servants of one Lord, constrained by the same love, fighting under one banner, cheered by assurances of the same victory; a living and loving union, whose voice in the divine ear is as the sound of many waters. Accordingly, what they ask "on earth" is done for them, says Jesus, "of My Father which is in heaven." Not for nothing does He say, "of MY FATHER"--not "YOUR FATHER"; as is evident from what follows: "For where two or three are gathered together unto My name"--the "My" is emphatic, "there am I in the midst of them." As His name would prove a spell to draw together many clusters of His dear disciples, so if there should be but two or three, that will attract Himself down into the midst of them; and related as He is to both the parties, the petitioners and the Petitioned--to the one on earth by the tie of His assumed flesh, and to the other in heaven by the tie of His eternal Spirit--their symphonious prayers on earth would thrill upward through Him to heaven, be carried by Him into the holiest of all, and so reach the Throne. Thus will He be the living Conductor of the prayer upward, and the answer downward.
Parable of the Unmerciful Debtor (Mat 18:21-35).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:21 - -- In the recent dispute, Peter had probably been an object of special envy, and his forwardness in continually answering for all the rest would likely b...
In the recent dispute, Peter had probably been an object of special envy, and his forwardness in continually answering for all the rest would likely be cast up to him--and if so, probably by Judas--notwithstanding his Masters' commendations. And as such insinuations were perhaps made once and again, he wished to know how often and how long he was to stand it.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:21 - -- This being the sacred and complete number, perhaps his meaning was, Is there to be a limit at which the needful forbearance will be full?
This being the sacred and complete number, perhaps his meaning was, Is there to be a limit at which the needful forbearance will be full?
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:22 - -- That is, so long as it shall be needed and sought: you are never to come to the point of refusing forgiveness sincerely asked. (See on Luk 17:3-4).
That is, so long as it shall be needed and sought: you are never to come to the point of refusing forgiveness sincerely asked. (See on Luk 17:3-4).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Or, would scrutinize the accounts of his revenue collectors.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:24 - -- If Attic talents are here meant, 10,000 of them would amount to above a million and a half sterling; if Jewish talents, to a much larger sum.
If Attic talents are here meant, 10,000 of them would amount to above a million and a half sterling; if Jewish talents, to a much larger sum.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:26 - -- This was just an acknowledgment of the justice of the claim made against him, and a piteous imploration of mercy.
This was just an acknowledgment of the justice of the claim made against him, and a piteous imploration of mercy.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:27 - -- Payment being hopeless, the master is first moved with compassion; next, liberates his debtor from prison; and then cancels the debt freely.
Payment being hopeless, the master is first moved with compassion; next, liberates his debtor from prison; and then cancels the debt freely.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:28 - -- Mark the difference here. The first case is that of master and servant; in this case, both are on a footing of equality. (See Mat 18:33).
Mark the difference here. The first case is that of master and servant; in this case, both are on a footing of equality. (See Mat 18:33).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:28 - -- If Jewish money is intended, this debt was to the other less than one to a million.
If Jewish money is intended, this debt was to the other less than one to a million.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Mark the mercilessness even of the tone.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:29 - -- The same attitude, and the sam words which drew compassion from his master, are here employed towards himself by his fellow servant.
The same attitude, and the sam words which drew compassion from his master, are here employed towards himself by his fellow servant.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:30 - -- Jesus here vividly conveys the intolerable injustice and impudence which even the servants saw in this act on the part of one so recently laid under t...
Jesus here vividly conveys the intolerable injustice and impudence which even the servants saw in this act on the part of one so recently laid under the heaviest obligation to their common master.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:32-33 - -- Before bringing down his vengeance upon him, he calmly points out to him how shamefully unreasonable and heartless his conduct was; which would give t...
Before bringing down his vengeance upon him, he calmly points out to him how shamefully unreasonable and heartless his conduct was; which would give the punishment inflicted on him a double sting.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:34 - -- More than jailers; denoting the severity of the treatment which he thought such a case demanded.
till he should pay all that was due unto him.
More than jailers; denoting the severity of the treatment which he thought such a case demanded.
till he should pay all that was due unto him.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Mat 18:35 - -- In this spirit, or on this principle.
shall my heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their tres...
In this spirit, or on this principle.
shall my heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses.
Clarke -> Mat 18:11; Mat 18:11; Mat 18:12; Mat 18:13; Mat 18:14; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:16; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:18; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:20; Mat 18:20; Mat 18:20; Mat 18:21; Mat 18:22; Mat 18:23; Mat 18:24; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:26; Mat 18:26; Mat 18:27; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:29; Mat 18:29; Mat 18:30; Mat 18:31; Mat 18:32; Mat 18:33; Mat 18:34; Mat 18:35; Mat 18:35
Clarke: Mat 18:11 - -- For the Son of man, etc. - This is added as a second reason, why no injury should be done to his followers. "The Son of man has so loved them as to ...
For the Son of man, etc. - This is added as a second reason, why no injury should be done to his followers. "The Son of man has so loved them as to come into the world to lay down his life for them.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:11 - -- That which was lost - Απολωλος . In Rev 9:11, Satan is called Απολλυων, Apolluon , the destroyer, or him who lays waste. This name...
That which was lost -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:12 - -- Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains - So our common translation reads the verse; others, Doth he not leave the ninet...
Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains - So our common translation reads the verse; others, Doth he not leave the ninety and nine Upon The Mountains, and go, etc. This latter reading appears to me to be the best; because, in Luk 15:4, it is said, he leaveth the ninety and nine In The Desert. The allusion, therefore, is to a shepherd feeding his sheep on the mountains, in the desert; not seeking the lost one On the mountains
Leaving the ninety and nine, and seeking the One strayed sheep: - This was a very common form of speech among the Jews, and includes no mystery, though there are some who imagine that our Lord refers to the angels who kept not their first estate, and that they are in number, to men, as Ninety are to One. But it is likely that our Lord in this place only alludes to his constant solicitude to instruct, heal, and save those simple people of the sea coasts, country villages, etc., who were scattered abroad, as sheep without a shepherd, (Mat 9:36), the scribes and Pharisees paying no attention to their present or eternal well-being. This may be also considered as a lesson of instruction and comfort to backsliders. How hardly does Christ give them up!
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:13 - -- He rejoiceth more - It is justly observed by one, on this verse, that it is natural for a person to express unusual joy at the fortunate accomplishm...
He rejoiceth more - It is justly observed by one, on this verse, that it is natural for a person to express unusual joy at the fortunate accomplishment of an unexpected event.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:14 - -- It is not the will of your Father - If any soul be finally lost, it is not because God’ s will or counsel was against its salvation, or that a ...
It is not the will of your Father - If any soul be finally lost, it is not because God’ s will or counsel was against its salvation, or that a proper provision had not been made for it; but that, though light came into the world, it preferred darkness to light, because of its attachment to its evil deeds.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:15 - -- If thy brother - Any who is a member of the same religious society, sin against thee, 1. Go and reprove him alone, - it may be in person; if that c...
If thy brother - Any who is a member of the same religious society, sin against thee, 1. Go and reprove him alone, - it may be in person; if that cannot be so well done, by thy messenger, or in writing, (which in many cases is likely to be the most effectual). Observe, our Lord gives no liberty to omit this, or to exchange it for either of the following steps. If this do not succeed,
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:16 - -- 2. Take with thee one or two more - Men whom he esteems, who may then confirm and enforce what thou sayest; and afterwards, if need require, bear wi...
2. Take with thee one or two more - Men whom he esteems, who may then confirm and enforce what thou sayest; and afterwards, if need require, bear witness of what was spoken. If even this do not succeed, then, and not before,
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:17 - -- 3. Tell it unto the Church - Lay the whole matter before the congregation of Christian believers, in that place of which he is a member, or before t...
3. Tell it unto the Church - Lay the whole matter before the congregation of Christian believers, in that place of which he is a member, or before the minister and elders, as the representatives of the Church or assembly. If all this avail not, then
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:17 - -- Let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a publican - To whom thou art, as a Christian, to owe earnest and persevering good will, and acts of kindn...
Let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a publican - To whom thou art, as a Christian, to owe earnest and persevering good will, and acts of kindness; but have no religious communion with him, till, if he have been convicted, he acknowledge his fault. Whosoever follows this threefold rule will seldom offend others, and never be offended himself. - Rev. J. Wesley
Reproving a brother who had sinned was a positive command under the law. See Lev 19:17. And the Jews have a saying, that one of the causes of the ruin of their nation was, "No man reproved another."On the word Church, see Clarke at Mat 16:28 (note).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:18 - -- Whatsoever ye shall bind, etc. - Whatever determinations ye make, in conformity to these directions for your conduct to an offending brother, will b...
Whatsoever ye shall bind, etc. - Whatever determinations ye make, in conformity to these directions for your conduct to an offending brother, will be accounted just, and ratified by the Lord. See on Mat 16:19 (note); and, to what is there said, the following observations may be profitably added
I own myself obliged to Dr. Lightfoot for this interpretation of the true notion of binding and loosing. It is a noble one, and perfectly agrees with the ways of speaking then in use among the Jews. It is observable that these phrases, of binding and loosing, occur no where in the New Testament but in St. Matthew, who is supposed to have written his Gospel first in Hebrew, from whence it was translated into Greek, and then the force and use of the expression will better appear. Dr. Wotton’ s Miscell. Discourses, vol. i. p. 309, etc., etc
"The phrases to bind and to loose were Jewish, and most frequent in their writers. It belonged only to the teachers among the Jews to bind and to loose. When the Jews set any apart to be a preacher, they used these words, ‘ Take thou liberty to teach what is Bound and what is Loose.’ "Strype’ s preface to the Posthumous Remains of Dr. Lightfoot, p. 38.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:19 - -- Again I say unto you - The word αμην, verily, is added here, in ninety-eight MSS., (many of which are of the greatest antiquity and importance)...
Again I say unto you - The word
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:19 - -- If two of you shall agree - ΣυμφωνηϚωσιν, symphonize, or harmonize. It is a metaphor taken from a number of musical instruments set to ...
If two of you shall agree -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:19 - -- It shall be done for them - What an encouragement to pray! even to two, if there be no more disposed to join in this heavenly work.
It shall be done for them - What an encouragement to pray! even to two, if there be no more disposed to join in this heavenly work.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:20 - -- For where two - are gathered together in thy name - There are many sayings among the Jews almost exactly similar to this, such as, Wherever even two...
For where two - are gathered together in thy name - There are many sayings among the Jews almost exactly similar to this, such as, Wherever even two persons are sitting in discourse concerning the law, the Divine presence is among them. See much more in Schoettgen. And the following, among the ancient Hindoos, is like unto it: "When Brahma, the Lord of creation, had formed mankind, and at the same time appointed his worship, he spoke and said, ‘ With this worship pray for increase, and let it be that on which ye shall depend for the accomplishment of all your wishes. With this remember God, that God may remember you. Remember one another, and ye shall obtain supreme happiness. God, being remembered in worship, will grant you the enjoyment of your wishes: he who enjoyeth what hath been given unto him by God, and offereth not a portion unto him, is even as a thief. Know that good works come from Brahma, whose nature is incorruptible; wherefore, the omnipresent Brahma is Present In The Worship."See the Bagvat Geeta, p. 45, 46
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:20 - -- In my name - Seems to refer particularly to a public profession of Christ and his Gospel
In my name - Seems to refer particularly to a public profession of Christ and his Gospel
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:20 - -- There am I in the midst - None but God could say these words, to say them with truth, because God alone is every where present, and these words refe...
There am I in the midst - None but God could say these words, to say them with truth, because God alone is every where present, and these words refer to his omnipresence. Wherever - suppose millions of assemblies were collected in the same moment, in different places of the creation, (which is a very possible case), this promise states that Jesus is in each of them. Can any, therefore, say these words, except that God who fills both heaven and earth? But Jesus says these words: ergo - Jesus is God. Let it be observed, that Jesus is not among them to spy out their sins; or to mark down the imperfections of their worship; but to enlighten, strengthen, comfort, and save them.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:21 - -- Till seven times? - Though seven was a number of perfection among the Hebrews, and often meant much more than the units in it imply, yet it is evide...
Till seven times? - Though seven was a number of perfection among the Hebrews, and often meant much more than the units in it imply, yet it is evident that Peter uses it here in its plain literal sense, as our Lord’ s words sufficiently testify. It was a maxim among the Jews never to forgive more than thrice: Peter enlarges this charity more than one half; and our Lord makes even his enlargement septuple, see Mat 18:22. Revenge is natural to man, i.e. man is naturally a vindictive being, and, in consequence, nothing is more difficult to him than forgiveness of injuries.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:22 - -- Seventy times seven - There is something very remarkable in these words, especially if collated with Gen 4:24, where the very same words are used - ...
Seventy times seven - There is something very remarkable in these words, especially if collated with Gen 4:24, where the very same words are used - "If any man kill Lamech, he shall be avenged seventy times seven."The just God punishes sin in an exemplary manner. Sinful man, who is exposed to the stroke of Divine justice, should be abundant in forgiveness, especially as the merciful only shall find mercy. See the note on Mat 5:7, and on Mat 6:14, Mat 6:15 (note). The sum seventy times seven makes four hundred and ninety. Now an offense, properly such, is that which is given wantonly, maliciously, and without Any Provocation. It is my opinion, that, let a man search ever so accurately, he will not find that he has received, during the whole course of his life, four hundred and ninety such offenses. If the man who receives the offense has given any cause for it, in that case, the half of the offense, at least, towards his brother, ceases.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:23 - -- Therefore is the kingdom - In respect to sin, cruelty, and oppression, God will proceed in the kingdom of heaven (the dispensation of the Gospel) as...
Therefore is the kingdom - In respect to sin, cruelty, and oppression, God will proceed in the kingdom of heaven (the dispensation of the Gospel) as he did in former times; and every person shall give an account of himself to God. Every sin is a debt contracted with the justice of God; men are all God’ s own servants; and the day is at hand in which their Master will settle accounts with them, inquire into their work, and pay them their wages. Great Judge! what an awful time must this be, when with multitudes nothing shall be found but sin and insolvency
By servant, in the text, we are to understand, a petty king, or tributary prince; for no hired servant could possibly owe such a sum as is here mentioned.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:24 - -- Ten thousand talents - Μυριων ταλαντων, a myriad of talents, the highest number known in Greek arithmetical notation. An immense sum,...
Ten thousand talents -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:25 - -- He had not to pay - That is not being able to pay. As there could not be the smallest probability that a servant, wholly dependent on his master, wh...
He had not to pay - That is not being able to pay. As there could not be the smallest probability that a servant, wholly dependent on his master, who was now absolutely insolvent, could ever pay a debt he had contracted of more than 67 millions! - so is it impossible for a sinner, infinitely indebted to Divine justice, ever to pay a mite out of the talent
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:25 - -- Commanded him to be sold - his wife - children, etc. - Our Lord here alludes to an ancient custom among the Hebrews, of selling a man and his family...
Commanded him to be sold - his wife - children, etc. - Our Lord here alludes to an ancient custom among the Hebrews, of selling a man and his family to make payment of contracted debts. See Exo 22:3; Lev 25:30, Lev 25:47; 2Ki 4:1. This custom passed from among the Jews to the Greeks and Romans. I have already remarked (see Gen 47:19) that in the Burman empire the sale of whole families, to discharge debts, is very common.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:26 - -- Fell down and worshipped him - Προσεκυνει αυτω, crouched as a dog before him, with the greatest deference, submission, and anxiety
Fell down and worshipped him -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:26 - -- Have patience with me - Μακροθυμησον επ ’ εμοι, be long-minded towards me - give me longer space
The means which a sinner ...
Have patience with me -
The means which a sinner should use to be saved, are
1. Deep humiliation of heart - he fell down
2. Fervent prayer
3. Confidence in the mercy of God - have patience
4. A firm purpose to devote his soul and body to his Maker - I will pay thee all
A sinner may be said, according to the economy of grace, to pay all, when he brings the sacrifice of the Lord Jesus to the throne of justice, by faith; thus offering an equivalent for the pardon he seeks, and paying all he owes to Divine justice, by presenting the blood of the Lamb.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:27 - -- Moved with compassion - Or with tender pity. This is the source of salvation to a lost world, the tender pity, the eternal mercy of God.
Moved with compassion - Or with tender pity. This is the source of salvation to a lost world, the tender pity, the eternal mercy of God.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:28 - -- A hundred pence - Rather denarii. The denarius was a Roman coin, worth about seven-pence halfpenny English. The original word should be retained, as...
A hundred pence - Rather denarii. The denarius was a Roman coin, worth about seven-pence halfpenny English. The original word should be retained, as our word penny does not convey the seventh part of the meaning. A hundred denarii would amount to about 3l. 2s. 6d. British, or, if reckoned as some do, at seven-pence three farthings, the sum would be 3l. 4s. 7d
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:28 - -- Took him by the throat - Κρατησας αυτον επνιγε . There is no word I am acquainted with, which so fully expresses the meaning of ...
Took him by the throat -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:29 - -- Fell down at his feet - This clause is wanting in several ancient MSS., versions, and fathers. Several printed editions also have omitted it; Griesb...
Fell down at his feet - This clause is wanting in several ancient MSS., versions, and fathers. Several printed editions also have omitted it; Griesbach has left it out of the text
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:29 - -- Pay thee all - Παντα, all, is omitted by a multitude of MSS., versions, and fathers.
Pay thee all -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:30 - -- And he would not, etc. - To the unmerciful, God will show no mercy; this is an eternal purpose of the Lord, which never can be changed. God teaches ...
And he would not, etc. - To the unmerciful, God will show no mercy; this is an eternal purpose of the Lord, which never can be changed. God teaches us what to do to a fellow-sinner, by what He does to us. Our fellow-servant’ s debt to us, and ours to God, are as one hundred denarii to ten thousand talents! When we humble ourselves before him, God freely forgives us all this mighty sum! And shall we exact from our brother recompense for the most trifling faults? Reader, if thou art of this unmerciful, unforgiving cast, read out the chapter
"All the souls that are were forfeit once
And he who might the ‘ vantage best have took
Found out the remedy. How would you be
If He, who is the top of judgment, shoul
But judge you as you are? O! think on that
And mercy then will breathe within your lip
Like man new mad
Though justice be thy plea, consider this
That, in the course of justice, none of u
Should see salvation: we do pray for mercy
And that same prayer doth teach us all to rende
The deeds of Mercy. - "
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:31 - -- His fellow-servants saw what was done - An act of this kind is so dishonorable to all the followers of Christ, and to the spirit of his Gospel, that...
His fellow-servants saw what was done - An act of this kind is so dishonorable to all the followers of Christ, and to the spirit of his Gospel, that through the respect they owe to their Lord and Master, and through the concern they feel for the prosperity of his cause, they are obliged to plead against it at the throne of God.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:32 - -- His lord, after that he had called him - Alas! how shall he appear! Confounded. What shall he answer? He is speechless!
His lord, after that he had called him - Alas! how shall he appear! Confounded. What shall he answer? He is speechless!
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:33 - -- Shouldest not thou also have had compassion - Ουκ εδει και σε, Did it not become thee also? What a cutting reproach! It became Me to sh...
Shouldest not thou also have had compassion -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:34 - -- Delivered him to the tormentors - Not only continued captivity is here intended, but the tortures to be endured in it. If a person was suspected of ...
Delivered him to the tormentors - Not only continued captivity is here intended, but the tortures to be endured in it. If a person was suspected of fraud, as there was reason for in such a case as that mentioned here, he was put to very cruel tortures among the Asiatics, to induce him to confess. In the punishments of China, a great variety of these appear; and probably there is an allusion to such torments in this place. Before, he and all that he had, were only to be sold. Now, as he has increased his debt, so he has increased his punishment; he is delivered to the tormentors, to the horrors of a guilty conscience, and to a fearful looking for of fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries. But if this refers to the day of judgment, then the worm that dieth not, and the fire that is not quenched, are the tormentors.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:35 - -- So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also unto you - The goodness and indulgence of God towards us is the pattern we should follow in our dealing...
So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also unto you - The goodness and indulgence of God towards us is the pattern we should follow in our dealings with others. If we take man for our exemplar we shall err, because our copy is a bad one; and our lives are not likely to be better than the copy we imitate. Follow Christ; be merciful as your Father who is in heaven is merciful. You cannot complain of the fairness of your copy. Reader, hast thou a child, or servant who has offended thee, and humbly asks forgiveness? Hast thou a debtor, or a tenant, who is insolvent, and asks for a little longer time? And hast thou not forgiven that child or servant? Hast thou not given time to that debtor or tenant? How, then, canst thou ever expect to see the face of the just and merciful God? Thy child is banished, or kept at a distance; thy debtor is thrown into prison, or thy tenant sold up: yet the child offered to fall at thy feet; and the debtor or tenant, utterly insolvent, prayed for a little longer time, hoping God would enable him to pay thee all; but to these things thy stony heart and seared conscience paid no regard! O monster of ingratitude! Scandal to human nature, and reproach to God! If thou canst, go hide thyself - even in hell, from the face of the Lord
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Mat 18:35 - -- Their trespasses - These words are properly left out by Greisbach, and other eminent critics, because they are wanting in some of the very best MSS....
Their trespasses - These words are properly left out by Greisbach, and other eminent critics, because they are wanting in some of the very best MSS. most of the versions, and in some of the chief of the fathers. The words are evidently an interpolation; the construction of them is utterly improper, and the concord false
In our common method of dealing with insolvent debtors, we in some sort imitate the Asiatic customs: we put them in prison, and all their circumstances there are so many tormentors; the place, the air, the company, the provision, the accommodation, all destructive to comfort, to peace, to health, and to every thing that humanity can devise. If the person be poor, or comparatively poor, is his imprisonment likely to lead him to discharge his debt? His creditor may rest assured that he is now farther from his object than ever: the man had no other way of discharging the debt but by his labor; that is now impossible, through his confinement, and the creditor is put to a certain expense towards his maintenance. How foolish is this policy! And how much do such laws stand in need of revision and amendment! Imprisonment for debt, in such a case as that supposed above, can answer no other end than the gratification of the malice, revenge, or inhumanity of the creditor. Better sell all that he has, and, with his hands and feet untied, let him begin the world afresh. Dr. Dodd very feelingly inquires here, "Whether rigour in exacting temporal debts, in treating without mercy such as are unable to satisfy them - whether this can be allowed to a Christian, who is bound to imitate his God and Father? To a debtor, who can expect forgiveness only on the condition of forgiving others? To a servant, who should obey his Master? - and to a criminal, who is in daily expectation of his Judge and final sentence?"Little did he think, when he wrote this sentence, that himself should be a melancholy proof, not only of human weakness, but of the relentless nature of those laws by which property, or rather money, is guarded. The unfortunate Dr. Dodd was hanged for forgery, in 1777, and the above note was written only seven years before
The unbridled and extravagant appetites of men sometimes require a rigour even beyond the law to suppress them. While, then, we learn lessons of humanity from what is before us, let us also learn lessons of prudence, sobriety, and moderation. The parable of the two debtors is blessedly calculated to give this information.
Calvin: Mat 18:11 - -- Mat 18:11.For the Son of man cometh Christ now employs his own example in persuading his disciples to honor even weak and despised brethren; for he ca...
Mat 18:11.For the Son of man cometh Christ now employs his own example in persuading his disciples to honor even weak and despised brethren; for he came down from heaven to save not them only, but even the dead who were lost It is in the highest degree unreasonable that we should disdainfully reject those whom the Son of God has so highly esteemed. And even if the weak labor under imperfections which may expose them to contempt, our pride is not on that account to be excused; for we ought to esteem them not for the value of their virtues, but for the sake of Christ; and he who will not conform himself to Christ’s example is too saucy and proud.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:12 - -- 12.What think you? Luke carries the occasion of this parable still farther back, as having arisen from the murmurings of the Pharisees and scribes...
12.What think you? Luke carries the occasion of this parable still farther back, as having arisen from the murmurings of the Pharisees and scribes against our Lord, whom they saw conversing daily with sinners. Christ therefore intended to show that a good teacher ought not to labor less to recover those that are lost, than to preserve those which are in his possession; though according to Matthew the comparison proceeds farther, and teaches us not only that we ought to treat with kindness the disciples of Christ, but that we ought to bear with their imperfections, and endeavor, when they wander, to bring them back to the road. For, though they happen sometimes to wander, yet as they are sheep over which God has appointed his Son to be shepherd, so far are we from having a right to chase or drive them away roughly, that we ought to gather them from their wanderings; for the object of the discourse is to lead us to beware of losing what God wishes to be saved The narrative of Luke presents to us a somewhat different object. It is, that the whole human race belongs to God, and that therefore we ought to gather those that have gone astray, and that we ought to rejoice as much, when they that are lost return to the path of duty, as a man would do who, beyond his expectation, recovered something the loss of which had grieved him.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:15 - -- Mat 18:15.But if thy brother shall sin against thee As he had discoursed about bearing the infirmities of brethren, he now shows more clearly in what ...
Mat 18:15.But if thy brother shall sin against thee As he had discoursed about bearing the infirmities of brethren, he now shows more clearly in what manner, and for what purpose, and to what extent, we ought to bear with them. For otherwise it would have been easy to reply, that there is no other way of avoiding offenses, than by every man winking at the faults of others, and thus what is evil would be encouraged by forbearance. Christ therefore prescribes a middle course, which does not give too great offense to the weak, and yet is adapted to cure their diseases; for that severity which is employed as a medicine is profitable and worthy of praise. In short, Christ enjoins his disciples to forgive one another, but to do so in such a manner as to endeavor to correct their faults. It is necessary that this be wisely observed; for nothing is more difficult than to exercise forbearance towards men, and, at the same time, not to neglect the freedom necessary in reproving them. 552 Almost all lean to the one side or to the other, either to deceive themselves mutually by deadly flatteries, or to pursue with excessive bitterness those whom they ought to cure. But Christ recommends to his disciples a mutual love, which is widely distant from flattery; only he enjoins them to season their admonitions with moderation, lest, by excessive severity and harshness, they discourage the weak.
Now he distinctly lays down three steps of brotherly correction. The first is, to give a private advice to the person who has offended. The second is, if he shall give any sign of obstinacy, to advise him again in presence of witnesses. The third is, if no advantage shall be obtained in that way, to deliver him up to the public decision of the Church. The design of this, as I have said, is, to hinder charity from being violated under the pretence of fervent zeal. As the greater part of men are driven by ambition to publish with excessive eagerness the faults of their brethren, Christ seasonably meets this fault by enjoining us to cover the faults of brethren, as far as lies in our power; for those who take pleasure in the disgrace and infamy of brethren are unquestionably carried away by hatred and malice, since, if they were under the influence of charity, they would endeavor to prevent the shame of their brethren.
But it is asked, Ought this rule to be extended indiscriminately to every kind of offense? For there are very many who do not allow any public censures, till the offender has been privately admonished. But there is an obvious limitation in the words of Christ; for he does not simply, and without exception, order us to advise or reprove privately, and in the absence of witnesses, all who have offended, but bids us attempt this method, when we have been offended in private; by which is meant, not that it is a business of our own, but that we ought to be wounded and grieved whenever God is offended. And Christ does not now speak about bearing injuries, but teaches us in general to cultivate such meekness towards each other, as not to ruin by harsh treatment those whom we ought to save. 553
Against thee This expression, as is evident from what we have said, does not denote an injury committed against any one, but distinguishes between secret and open sins. 554 For if any man shall offend against the whole Church, Paul enjoins that he be publicly reproved, so that even elders shall not be spared; for it is in reference to them that he expressly enjoins Timothy, to
rebuke them publicly in presence of all, and thus to make them a general example to others,
(1Ti 5:20.)
And certainly it would be absurd that he who has committed a public offense, so that the disgrace of it is generally known, should be admonished by individuals; for if a thousand persons are aware of it, he ought to receive a thousand admonitions. The distinction, therefore, which Christ expressly lays down, ought to be kept in mind, that no man may bring disgrace upon his brother, by rashly, and without necessity, divulging secret offenses.
If he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother Christ confirms his doctrine by its usefulness and advantage; for it is no small matter to gain to God a soul which had been the slave of Satan. And how comes it that those who have fallen do not often repent, but because they are regarded with hatred, and treated as enemies, and thus acquire a character of hardened obstinacy? Nothing, therefore, is more appropriate than meekness, which reconciles to God those who had departed from him. On the other hand, he who inconsiderately indulges in foolish flattery willingly places in jeopardy the salvation of a brother, which he had in his hand.
According to Luke, Christ expressly enjoins us to be satisfied with a private reproof, if the brother be brought to repentance Hence, too, we infer how necessary it is that mutual freedom of reproof should subsist among believers. For, since each of us in many ways commits daily offenses, it would be outrageous cruelty to betray, by our silence and concealment, the salvation of those whom we might, by mild reproof, rescue from perdition. Though it does not always succeed, yet he is chargeable with heinous guilt, who has neglected the remedy which the Lord prescribes for promoting the salvation of the brethren. It is also worthy of notice, that the Lord, in order to render us more zealous in performing our duty, ascribes to us that honor which is his own; for to him alone, and to no other, does it belong to convert a man; and yet he bestows on us this applause, though we did not deserve it, that we gain a brother who was lost.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:16 - -- 16.But if he shall not hear thee The second step is, that he who displayed obstinacy, or refused to yield to one man, should be again admonished in p...
16.But if he shall not hear thee The second step is, that he who displayed obstinacy, or refused to yield to one man, should be again admonished in presence of witnesses Here some object, that it will serve no purpose to call witnesses, if we have to deal with an obstinate and rebellious man, because their presence will be so far from leading him to acknowledge his guilt, that he will only make a more wicked denial. But this difficulty will be speedily removed, if we distinguish between denial and evasion He who explicitly denies the fact, and declares that he is falsely and calumniously accused, must be left alone; for it would be ill vain to press him by calling witnesses But as, in most cases, men shamelessly evade, or impudently excuse, the improper and unjust actions which they have committed, till greater authority is employed, towards such persons it is useful to observe this method.
That Christ’s discourse ought to be understood in this sense is evident from the word used,
We now perceive for what purpose Christ proposes to call witnesses. It is, to give greater weight and impressiveness to the admonition. As to the slightly different meaning to which he has turned the words of Moses, it involves no absurdity. Moses forbids sentence to be pronounced on a matter that is unknown, and defines this to be the lawful mode of proving, that it be established by the testimony of
two or three witnesses. At the mouth of two witnesses, or at the mouth of three witnesses, shall the matter be established,
(Deu 19:15.)
Alluding to that law, Christ says that, when two or three witnesses shall rise up to condemn the obstinacy of the man, the case will be clear, at least till the Church be prepared to take cognizance of it; for he who refuses to hear two or three witnesses 557 will have no reason to complain that he is dragged forth to light.
Tell it to the Church It is asked, what does he mean by the term Church? For Paul orders (1Co 5:5) that the incestuous Corinthian shall be excommunicated, not by a certain chosen number, but by the whole assembly of the godly; and therefore it might appear to be probable that the power of judging is bestowed on the whole of the people. But as at that time no Church as yet was in existence, which acknowledged the authority of Christ, and no such order had been established, and as our Lord employs the ordinary and received forms of expression, there can be no doubt that he alludes to the order of the ancient Church, as in other places also he accommodates his modes of expression to what was known and customary. 558 When he commands that:
the offering, which we intend to present, shall be left at the altar, till we are reconciled to an offended brother,
(Mat 5:23,)
he unquestionably intends, by means of that form of the worship of God which was then in existence and in force, to teach us, that we cannot in a right manner either pray, or offer any thing to God, so long as we are at variance with our brethren. So then he now looked at the form of discipline which was observed among the Jews; for it would have been absurd to propose an appeal to the judgment of a Church which was not yet in existence.
Now since among the Jews the power of excommunication belonged to the elders, who held the government of the whole Church, Christ speaks appropriately when he says that they who sinned must at length be brought forward publicly to the Church, if they either despise haughtily, or ridicule and evade, the private admonitions. We know that, after the Jews returned from the Babylonish captivity, a council was formed, which they called Sanhedrim, and in Greek Synedrion, (
It will perhaps be objected that, in the time of Christ, every thing was corrupt and perverted, so that this tyranny was very far from deserving to be accounted the judgment of the Church But the reply is easy. Though the method of procedure was at that time depraved and perverted, yet Christ justly praises that order, such as it had been handed down to them from the fathers. And when, shortly afterwards, he erected a Church, while he removed the abuse, he restored the proper use of excommunication. Yet there is no reason to doubt that the form of discipline, which prevailed in the kingdom of Christ, succeeded in the room of that ancient discipline. And certainly, since even heathen nations maintained a shadowy form of excommunication, it appears that, from the beginning, this was impressed by God on the minds of men, that those who were impure and polluted ought to be excluded from religious services. 559 It would therefore have been highly disgraceful to the people of God to have been altogether destitute of that discipline, some trace of which remained among the Gentiles. But what had been preserved under the Law Christ has conveyed to us, because we hold the same rank with the ancient fathers. For it was not the intention of Christ to send his disciples to the synagogue, which, while it willingly cherished in its bosom disgraceful filth, excommunicated the true and sincere worshippers of God; but he reminded us that the order, which had been formerly established in a holy manner under the Law, must be maintained in his Church
Let him be to thee as a heathen and a publican What is here added as to heathens and publicans confirms the interpretation which I have given. For heathens and publicans having been at that time regarded by the Jews with the greatest hatred and detestation, he compares to them unholy and irreclaimable men, who yield to no admonitions. Certainly he did not intend to enjoin them to avoid the society of heathens, of whom the Church was afterwards composed; nor is there any reason at the present day why believers should shrink from associating with publicans But in order that he might be more easily understood by the ignorant, Christ borrowed a mode of expression from what was then customary among his nation; 560 and the meaning is, that we ought to have no intercourse with the despisers of the Church till they repent.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:18 - -- 18.What things soever you shall bind He now repeats the same words which he had formerly used, (Mat 16:19,) but in a different sense; for there he in...
18.What things soever you shall bind He now repeats the same words which he had formerly used, (Mat 16:19,) but in a different sense; for there he intended to maintain their authority in doctrine, but here he appoints discipline, which is an appendage to doctrine. There Christ declared that the preaching of the Gospel would not be without effect, but that the odor of it would either be life-giving or deadly, (2Co 2:15 :) here he affirms that, though wicked men ridicule the judgment of the Church, it will not be ineffectual. We must attend to this distinction, that there our Lord’s discourse relates to the preached word, but here to public censures and discipline. Let the reader go to that passage for the import of the metaphor, binding and loosin g. 561
The substance of it is this: Whoever, after committing a crime, humbly confesses his fault, and entreats the Church to forgive him, is absolved not only by men, but by God himself; and, on the other hand, whoever treats with ridicule the reproofs and threatenings of the Church, if he is condemned by her, the decision which men have given will be ratified in heaven. If it be objected, that in this way God is made a sort of petty judge, who concurs in the sentence of mortal men, the reply is at hand. For when Christ maintains the authority of his Church, he does not diminish his own power or that of his Father, but, on the contrary, supports the majesty of his word. As in the former case (Mat 16:19) he did not intend to confirm indiscriminately every kind of doctrine, but only that which had proceeded out of his mouth, so neither does he say in this place that every kind of decision will be approved and ratified, but only that in which he presides, and that too not only by his Spirit, but by his word. Hence it follows, that men do no injury to the authority of God, when they pronounce nothing but what comes from his mouth, and only endeavor faithfully to execute what he has commanded. For, though Christ alone is the Judge of the world, yet he chooses to have ministers to proclaim his word. 562 Besides, he wishes that his own decision should be pronounced by the Church; and thus he takes nothing from his own authority by employing the ministry of men, but it is Himself alone that looses and binds
But here a question arises. Since the Church endures many hypocrites, and likewise absolves (or looses) many whose professions of repentance are hypocritical, does it follow that such persons will be absolved (or loosed) in heaven? I reply, the discourse is addressed to those only who are truly and sincerely reconciled to the Church. For Christ, wishing to administer comfort to trembling consciences, and to relieve them from fear, declares that any who may have offended are freed from guilt in the sight of God, provided that they be reconciled to the Church For he has appointed this as the pledge of heavenly grace, which has no reference to hypocrites, who pervert the proper use of reconciliation, but awakens in the godly no ordinary confidence, when they hear that their sins are blotted out before God and angels, as soon as they have obtained forgiveness from the Church
In the other clause, Christ’s meaning is not at all ambiguous; for, since obstinate and haughty men are strongly inclined to despise the decision of the Church on this pretense, that they refuse to be subject to men — as wicked profligates often make bold appeals to the heavenly tribunal 563 — Christ, in order to subdue this obstinacy by terror, threatens that the condemnation, which is now despised by them, will be ratified in heaven. He encourages his followers, at the same time, to maintain proper severity, and not to yield to the wicked obstinacy of those who reject or shake off discipline. 564
Hence, too, we may see how absurdly the Papists torture this passage to cloak every species of tyranny. That the right of excommunication is granted to the Church is certain, and is acknowledged by every person of sound judgment; but does it follow that any individual, even though not called by the Church, but elected 565 by a mitered and disguised beast, shall at his own caprice throw out the useless squibs of excommunications? 566 On the contrary, it is evident that the lawful government of the Church is committed to elders, and not only to the ministers of the word, but to those also who, taken from among the people, have been added to them for the superintendence of morals. And yet, not satisfied with this impudence, they endeavor even to prove from this passage that we must bear all the burdens which they shall impose. I do not mention that the power which has been granted to the Church is basely seized and carried off by those outrageous enemies of the Church; and I only mention that, since Christ speaks only about correcting offenders, those who by their laws ensnare souls are chargeable with not less folly than wickedness in abusing this passage. Of the same stamp is their defense of their auricular confession on this pretense; for if Christ intended that those who by their own fault had been brought even to a public sentence should be reconciled to the Church, he does not therefore lay an obligations 567 on every individual to pour his sins into the ear of the priest. But their fooleries are so ridiculous, that it is unnecessary to spend any longer time in refuting them.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:19 - -- 19.Again I say to you He confirms the former statement; for not only will God bestow the spirit of wisdom and prudence on those who ask it, but he wi...
19.Again I say to you He confirms the former statement; for not only will God bestow the spirit of wisdom and prudence on those who ask it, but he will also provide that not one thing which they shall do according to his word shall want its power and effect. By uniting agreement with prayer, he reminds us with what moderation and humility believers ought to conduct themselves in all religious acts. 568 The offender must be admonished, and, if he does not receive correction, he must be excommunicated. Here it is not only necessary to ask counsel at the sacred mouth of God, so that nothing may be determined but by his word, but it is proper at the same time to begin with prayer. Hence appears more clearly what I have formerly stated, that men are not allowed the liberty of doing whatever they please, 569 but that God is declared to have the sole claim to the government of the Church, so that he approves and ratifies the decisions of which he is himself the Author. Meanwhile, when believers assemble, they are taught to unite their prayers and to pray in common, not only to testify the unity of faith, but that God may listen to the agreement of them all. So then, as God frequently promises in other passages that he will graciously listen to the private requests of each individual, so here Christ makes a remarkable promise to public prayers, in order to invite us more earnestly to the practice of them.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:20 - -- 20.For where two or three are assembled in my name This promise is more extensive than the former; for the Lord declares that he will be present, wh...
20.For where two or three are assembled in my name This promise is more extensive than the former; for the Lord declares that he will be present,
wherever two or three are met together in his name,
to guide them by his counsel, (Psa 73:24,)
and to conduct to a prosperous result whatever they shall undertake. There is therefore no reason to doubt that those who give themselves up to his direction will derive most desirable advantage from his presence. And since it is an invaluable blessing to have Christ for our director in all our affairs, to bless our deliberations and their results; and since, on the other hand, nothing can be more miserable than to be deprived of his grace, this promise ought to add no small excitement to us to unite with each other in piety and holiness. 570 For whoever either disregards the holy assemblies, or separates himself from brethren, and takes little interest in the cultivation of unity, by this alone makes it evident that he sets no value on the presence of Christ.
But we must take care, first of all, that those who are desirous to have Christ present with them shall assemble in his name; and we must likewise understand what is the meaning of this expression; for we perceive how ungodly men falsely and impudently, as well as wickedly, cover their conspiracies with his sacred name. If therefore we do not wish to expose Christ to their ridicule, and at the same time to overturn what he has here promised, we must know first of all what is meant by this phrase. It means that those who are assembled together, laying aside every thing that hinders them from approaching to Christ, shall sincerely raise their desires to him, shall yield obedience to his word, and allow themselves to be governed by the Spirit. Where this simplicity prevails, there is no reason to fear that Christ will not make it manifest that it was not in vain for the assembly to meet in his name
In this is displayed the gross ignorance of the Papists, who exclaim that Councils could not err, and that all ought to abide by their decisions, because, as often as two or three are assembled in the name of Christ, he is in the midst of them But we ought first of all to inquire whether those persons, as to whose faith, and doctrine, and dispositions, we are in doubt, were assembled in the name of Christ. When the Papists leave out or perplex this matter, who does not see that they dexteroasly confound the distinction between holy and profane assemblies, so that the power of doing any thing is taken from the Church and conveyed to the sworn enemies of Christ? Let us therefore know that none but the pious worshippers of God, who sincerely seek Christ, are encouraged to entertain the confident hope that he will never leave them. Disregarding the bastard and abortive Councils, which out of their own head have woven a web, let Christ alone, with the doctrine of his Gospel, be always exalted amongst us.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:21 - -- Mat 18:21.Lord, how often shall my brother offend against me? Peter made this objection according to the natural feelings and disposition of the flesh...
Mat 18:21.Lord, how often shall my brother offend against me? Peter made this objection according to the natural feelings and disposition of the flesh. It is natural to all men to wish to be forgiven; and, therefore, if any man does not immediately obtain forgiveness, he complains that he is treated with sternness and cruelty. But those who demand to be treated gently are far from being equally gentle towards others; and therefore, when our Lord exhorted his disciples to meekness, this doubt occurred to Peter: “If we be so strongly disposed to grant forgiveness, what will be the consequence, but that our lenity shall be an inducement to offend ?” 571 He asks, therefore, if it be proper frequently to forgive offenders; for, since the number seven is taken for a large number, the force of the adverb, (
Luke differs somewhat from Matthew; for he states the command of Christ to be simply, that we should be prepared to forgive seven times; but the meaning is the same, that we ought to be ready and prepared to grant forgiveness not once or twice, but as often as the sinner shall repent There is only this difference between them, that, according to Matthew, our Lord, in reproving Peter for taking too limited a view, employs hyperbolically a larger number, which of itself is sufficient to point out the substance of what is intended. For when Peter asked if he should forgive seven times, it was not because he did not choose to go any farther, but, by presenting the appearance of a great absurdity, to withdraw Christ from his opinion, as I have lately hinted. So then he who shall be prepared to forgive seven times will be willing to be reconciled as far as to the seventieth offense.
But the words of Luke give rise to another question; for Christ does not order us to grant forgiveness, till the offender turn to us and give evidence of repentance. 573 I reply, there are two ways in which offenses are forgiven. If a man shall do me an injury, and I, laying aside the desire of revenge, do not cease to love him, but even repay kindness in place of injury, though I entertain an unfavorable opinion of him, as he deserves, still I am said to forgive him. For when God commands us to wish well to our enemies, He does not therefore demand that we approve in them what He condemns, but only desires that our minds shall be purified from all hatred. In this kind of pardon, so far are we from having any right to wait till he who has offended shall return of his own accord to be reconciled to us, that we ought to love those who deliberately provoke us, who spurn reconciliation, and add to the load of former offenses. A second kind of forgiving is, when we receive a brother into favor, so as to think favorably respecting him, and to be convinced that the remembrance of his offense is blotted out in the sight of God. And this is what I have formerly remarked, that in this passage Christ does not speak only of injuries which have been done to us, but of every kind of offenses; for he desires that, by our compassion, we shall raise up those who have fallen. 574 This doctrine is very necessary, because naturally almost all of us are peevish beyond measure; and Satan, under the pretense of severity, drives us to cruel rigor, so that wretched men, to whom pardon is refused, are swallowed up by grief and despair.
But here another question arises. As soon as a man by words makes profession of repentance, are we bound to believe him? Were this done, we must of necessity go willingly and knowingly into mistake; for where will be discretion, if any man may freely impose on us, even to the hundredth offense? I answer, first, the discourse relates here to daily faults, in which every man, even the best, needs forgiveness. 575 Since, then, amidst such infirmity of the flesh, our road is so slippery, and snares and attacks so numerous what will be the consequence if, at the second or third fall, the hope of forgiveness is cut off? We must add, secondly, that Christ does not deprive believers of the exercise of judgment, so as to yield a foolish readiness of belief to every slight expression, but only desires us to be so candid and merciful, as to stretch out the hand to offenders, provided there be evidence that they are sincerely dissatisfied with their sins. For repentance is a sacred thing, and therefore needs careful examination; but as soon as the offender gives probable evidence of conversion, Christ desires that he shall be admitted to reconciliation, lest, on being repulsed, he lose courage and fall back.
Thirdly, It must be observed that, when any man, through his light and unsteady behavior, has exposed himself to suspicion, we may grant pardon when he asks it, and yet may do so in such a manner as to watch over his conduct for the future, that our forbearance and meekness, which proceed from the Spirit of Christ, may not become the subject of his ridicule. For we must observe the design of our Lord himself, that we ought, by our gentleness, to assist those who have fallen to rise again. And certainly we ought to imitate the goodness of our heavenly Father, who meets sinners at a distance to invite them to salvation. Besides, as repentance is a wonderful work of the Spirit, and is the creation of the new man, if we despise it, we offer an insult to God himself.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:23 - -- 23.The kingdom of heaven is compared As it is difficult to bend us to mercy, and as we are quickly seized with weariness, particularly when we have t...
23.The kingdom of heaven is compared As it is difficult to bend us to mercy, and as we are quickly seized with weariness, particularly when we have to bear with many faults of brethren, our Lord confirms this doctrine by a most appropriate parable, the substance of which is, that those who will not yield to pardon the faults of brethren judge very ill for themselves, and subject themselves to a very hard and severe law; for they will find God to be equally stern and inexorable towards themselves. There are three parts in which the resemblance mainly consists; for the master is contrasted with the servant, the large sum of money with small or ordinary sums, and extraordinary kindness with extreme cruelty. By attending to these three points, it will be easy to ascertain Christ’s meaning; for what are we, if we are compared with God? And how large is the sum which every one of us owes to God? Lastly, how inconsiderable are the offenses, with which brethren are chargeable towards us, if we take into account our obligation to God? How ill then does that man deserve the compassion of God, who, though oppressed with an immense load, implacably refuses to forgive even the smallest offenses to men like himself? So far as regards the words, the kingdom of heaven here denotes the spiritual condition of the Church; as if Christ had said, that the state of matters between God and men, in regard to the soul and the nature of spiritual life, is the same as between an ordinary or earthly master and his servants, in regard to money and the affairs of the present life.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:25 - -- 25.His master ordered him to be sold It would be an idle exercise of ingenuity to examine here every minute clause. For God does not always display s...
25.His master ordered him to be sold It would be an idle exercise of ingenuity to examine here every minute clause. For God does not always display severity at first, till, constrained to pray, we implore pardon, but rather meets us with undeserved goodness. But Christ only shows what will become of us, if God shall treat us with the utmost severity; and again, if He shall choose to demand from us what we owe, how necessary it is for us to betake ourselves to prayer, because this is the only refuge that remains for transgressors. We must also attend to the wide difference of the sums; for, since one talent is worth more than a hundred pence, what proportion will a hundred pence bear to ten thousand talents?
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:31 - -- 31.When his fellow-servants saw what was done Though we ought not to search for mystery in these words — because they contain nothing but what natu...
31.When his fellow-servants saw what was done Though we ought not to search for mystery in these words — because they contain nothing but what nature teaches, and what we learn by daily experience — we ought to know that the men who live among us will be so many witnesses against us before God; for it is impossible but that cruelty shall excite in them displeasure and hatred, more especially, since every man is afraid that what he sees done to others will fall upon his own head. As to the clause which immediately follows, it is foolish to inquire how God punishes those sins 576 which he has already forgiven; for the simple meaning is this: though he offers mercy to all, yet severe creditors, from whom no forgiveness can be obtained, are unworthy of enjoying it.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Mat 18:34 - -- 34.Delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that he owed The Papists are very ridiculous in endeavoring to light the fire of purgatory...
34.Delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that he owed The Papists are very ridiculous in endeavoring to light the fire of purgatory by the word till; for it is certain that Christ here points out not temporal death, by which the judgment of God may be satisfied, but eternal death.
Defender: Mat 18:11 - -- This is one of many times when Jesus reminded us that He came from heaven specifically to save sinners (Luk 19:10)."
This is one of many times when Jesus reminded us that He came from heaven specifically to save sinners (Luk 19:10)."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Mat 18:14 - -- God is not willing that any should perish (2Pe 3:9), but many will perish, for "the wages of sin is death" (Rom 6:23). Most people will not come to Ch...
God is not willing that any should perish (2Pe 3:9), but many will perish, for "the wages of sin is death" (Rom 6:23). Most people will not come to Christ for forgiveness and salvation. But if "little ones" die physically before they become conscious sinners, they are safe in Christ. Although they inherit the sin nature of Adam, Christ has covered their inherited sin with His own shed blood, and they have committed no other sin. Therefore, their Father in heaven will not allow them to perish spiritually if they should die physically. Note David's confidence concerning the death of his infant son (2Sa 12:23)."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Mat 18:17 - -- This is the second mention of the church (the first was Mat 16:18), and the subject is church discipline. The principles of dealing with an erring bro...
This is the second mention of the church (the first was Mat 16:18), and the subject is church discipline. The principles of dealing with an erring brother in the church are outlined in Mat 18:15-17, yet Jesus was talking only to His disciples (Mat 18:1). Evidently, He was speaking to them as if they were already, in effect, an organized local church. In fact, they had all been baptized by John the Baptist and were John's organized disciples until he directed them to Christ (compare Joh 1:35-37 to Act 1:21, Act 1:22). The church that Christ would build - or at least its first local representative - was thus already organized, but it would not be energized with the Spirit for its great mission until after His resurrection, on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2)."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Mat 18:18 - -- The commission to bind and loose was for all the disciples, not just Peter (Mat 16:19)."
The commission to bind and loose was for all the disciples, not just Peter (Mat 16:19)."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Mat 18:20 - -- In the context, this statement of Christ indicates that even two or three members, meeting in His name, can constitute a church.
In the context, this statement of Christ indicates that even two or three members, meeting in His name, can constitute a church.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Mat 18:20 - -- The seven representative churches in Revelation 2 and 3 are also shown with Christ "in the midst" (Rev 1:13)."
The seven representative churches in Revelation 2 and 3 are also shown with Christ "in the midst" (Rev 1:13)."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Mat 18:33 - -- The words "compassion" and "pity" are translations of the same Greek word, meaning "mercy." Thus we should show mercy toward others just as Christ did...
The words "compassion" and "pity" are translations of the same Greek word, meaning "mercy." Thus we should show mercy toward others just as Christ did toward us."
TSK: Mat 18:11 - -- Mat 9:12, Mat 9:13, Mat 10:6, Mat 15:24; Luk 9:56, Luk 15:24, Luk 15:32, Luk 19:10; Joh 3:17, Joh 10:10; Joh 12:47; 1Ti 1:15
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:12 - -- How : Mat 21:28, Mat 22:42; 1Co 10:15
if : Mat 12:11; Psa 119:176; Isa 53:6; Jer 50:6; Eze 34:16, Eze 34:28; Luk 15:4-7; Joh 10:11-21; 1Pe 2:25
into :...
How : Mat 21:28, Mat 22:42; 1Co 10:15
if : Mat 12:11; Psa 119:176; Isa 53:6; Jer 50:6; Eze 34:16, Eze 34:28; Luk 15:4-7; Joh 10:11-21; 1Pe 2:25
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:13 - -- he rejoiceth : Psa 147:11; Isa 53:11, Isa 62:5; Jer 32:37-41; Mic 7:18; Zep 3:17; Luk 15:5-10,Luk 15:23, Luk 15:24; Joh 4:34-36; Jam 2:13
he rejoiceth : Psa 147:11; Isa 53:11, Isa 62:5; Jer 32:37-41; Mic 7:18; Zep 3:17; Luk 15:5-10,Luk 15:23, Luk 15:24; Joh 4:34-36; Jam 2:13
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:14 - -- it is : Luk 12:32; Joh 6:39, Joh 6:40, Joh 10:27-30, Joh 17:12; Rom 8:28-39; Eph 1:5-7; 1Pe 1:3-5
your : Mat 5:16, Mat 6:9, Mat 6:32
one : Isa 40:11; ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:15 - -- if : Mat 18:35; Lev 6:2-7; Luk 17:3, Luk 17:4; 1Co 6:6-8, 1Co 8:12; 2Co 7:12; Col 3:13; 1Th 4:6
go : Lev 19:17; Psa 141:5; Pro 25:9, Pro 25:10
thou ha...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:16 - -- that in : Num 35:30; Deu 17:6, Deu 19:15; 1Ki 21:13; Joh 8:17; 2Co 13:1; 1Ti 5:19; Heb 10:28; 1Jo 5:7, 1Jo 5:8; Rev 11:3
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:17 - -- tell : Act 6:1-3, Act 15:6, Act 15:7; 1Co 5:4, 1Co 5:5, 1Co 6:1-4; 2Co 2:6, 2Co 2:7; 3Jo 1:9, 3Jo 1:10
let : Rom 16:17, Rom 16:18; 1Co 5:3-5, 1Co 5:9-...
tell : Act 6:1-3, Act 15:6, Act 15:7; 1Co 5:4, 1Co 5:5, 1Co 6:1-4; 2Co 2:6, 2Co 2:7; 3Jo 1:9, 3Jo 1:10
let : Rom 16:17, Rom 16:18; 1Co 5:3-5, 1Co 5:9-13; 2Th 3:6, 2Th 3:14, 2Th 3:15; 1Ti 6:5; 2Jo 1:10,2Jo 1:11
a heathen : Mat 6:7; Ezr 6:21; Eze 11:12; 2Co 6:14-17; Eph 4:17-19, Eph 5:11, Eph 5:12
a publican : Mat 5:46, Mat 11:19, Mat 21:31, Mat 21:32; Luk 15:1, Luk 18:11, Luk 19:2, Luk 19:3
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:18 - -- Mat 16:19; Joh 20:23; Act 15:23-31; 1Co 5:4, 1Co 5:5; 2Co 2:10; Rev 3:7, Rev 3:8
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:19 - -- That if : Mat 5:24, Mat 21:22; Mar 11:24; Joh 15:7, Joh 15:16; Act 1:14, Act 2:1, Act 2:2, Act 4:24-31, Act 6:4; Act 12:5; Eph 6:18-20; Phi 1:19; Jam ...
That if : Mat 5:24, Mat 21:22; Mar 11:24; Joh 15:7, Joh 15:16; Act 1:14, Act 2:1, Act 2:2, Act 4:24-31, Act 6:4; Act 12:5; Eph 6:18-20; Phi 1:19; Jam 5:14-16; 1Jo 3:22, 1Jo 5:14-16; Rev 11:4-6
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:20 - -- two : Gen 49:10; Joh 20:19, Joh 20:26; 1Co 5:4; 1Th 1:1; Phm 1:2
there : Mat 28:20; Exo 20:24; Zec 2:5; Joh 8:58; Rev 1:11-13, Rev 2:1, Rev 21:3
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:22 - -- but : Mat 6:11, Mat 6:12, Mat 6:14, Mat 6:15; Isa 55:7; Mic 7:19; Mar 11:25, Mar 11:26; Rom 12:21; Eph 4:26, Eph 4:31, Eph 4:32, Eph 5:1; Col 3:13; 1T...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:23 - -- is : Mat 3:2, Mat 13:24, Mat 13:31, Mat 13:33, Mat 13:44, Mat 13:45, Mat 13:47, Mat 13:52, Mat 25:1, Mat 25:14
which : Mat 25:19-30; Luk 16:1, Luk 16:...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:24 - -- owed : Luk 7:41, Luk 7:42, Luk 13:4 *marg. Luk 16:5, Luk 16:7
ten thousand : Μυριων [Strong’ s G3461], ταλαντων [Strong’...
owed : Luk 7:41, Luk 7:42, Luk 13:4 *marg. Luk 16:5, Luk 16:7
ten thousand :
talents : ""A talent is 750 ounces of silver, which after five shillings the ounce is 187£. 10s.""
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:27 - -- moved : Jdg 10:16; Neh 9:17; Psa 78:38, Psa 86:5, Psa 86:15, Psa 145:8; Hos 11:8
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:28 - -- an hundred : Rather, ""a hundred denarii,""as our penny does not convey one seventh of the meaning. This would amount to about 3£. 2s. 6d. English; ...
an hundred : Rather, ""a hundred denarii,""as our penny does not convey one seventh of the meaning. This would amount to about 3£. 2s. 6d. English; which was not one six hundred thousandth part of the 10,000 talents, even calculating them as Roman talents.
pence : ""The Roman penny is the eighth part of an ounce, which after five shillings the ounce is sevenpence halfpenny.""Mat 20:2
and took : Deu 15:2; Neh 5:7, Neh 5:10,Neh 5:11, Neh 10:31; Isa 58:3; Eze 45:9
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:31 - -- they : Psa 119:136, Psa 119:158; Jer 9:1; Mar 3:5; Luk 19:41; Rom 9:1-3, Rom 12:15; 2Co 11:21; Heb 13:3
and came : Gen 37:2; Luk 14:21; Heb 13:17
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:33 - -- even : Mat 5:44, Mat 5:45; Luk 6:35, Luk 6:36; Eph 4:32, Eph 5:1, Eph 5:2; Col 3:13
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:34 - -- and delivered : Mat 5:25, Mat 5:26; Luk 12:58, Luk 12:59; 2Th 1:8, 2Th 1:9; Rev 14:10,Rev 14:11
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Mat 18:35 - -- do : Mat 6:12, Mat 6:14, Mat 6:15, Mat 7:1, Mat 7:2; Pro 21:13; Mar 11:26; Luk 6:37, Luk 6:38; Jam 2:13
from : Pro 21:2; Jer 3:10; Zec 7:12; Luk 16:15...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Mat 18:11 - -- For the Son of man ... - This is a second reason why we should not despise Christians. That reason is, that the Son of man came to seek and sav...
For the Son of man ... - This is a second reason why we should not despise Christians. That reason is, that the Son of man came to seek and save them. He came in search of them when lost; he found them; he redeemed them. It was the great object of his life; and, though they may be obscure and little in the eye of the world, yet that cannot be an object of contempt which the Son of God sought by his toils and his death.
Son of man - See the notes at Mat 8:19-20.
That which was lost - Property is lost when it is consumed, mislaid, wasted, sunk in the ocean, etc. - when we have no longer the use of it. Friends are lost when they die - we enjoy their and happiness. He is useless to society. So all people are "lost."They are wicked, miserable wanderers from God. They are lost to piety, to happiness, to heaven. These Jesus came to save by giving his own life a ransom, and shedding his own blood that they might be recovered and saved.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:12-14 - -- To show still further the reason why we should not despise Christians, he introduced a parable showing the joy felt when a thing lost is found. A sh...
To show still further the reason why we should not despise Christians, he introduced a parable showing the joy felt when a thing lost is found. A shepherd rejoices over the recovery of one of his flock that had wandered more than over all that remained; so God rejoices that man is restored: so he seeks his salvation, and wills that not one thus found should perish. If God thus loves and preserves the redeemed, then surely man should not despise them. See this passage further explained in Luk 15:4-10.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:15 - -- Moreover, if thy brother - The word "brother,"here, evidently means a fellow-professor of religion. Christians are called brethren because they...
Moreover, if thy brother - The word "brother,"here, evidently means a fellow-professor of religion. Christians are called brethren because they belong to the same redeemed family, having a common Father - God; and because they axe united in the same feelings, objects, and destiny.
Trespass against thee - That is, injure thee in any way, by words or conduct. The original word means sin against thee. This may be done by injuring the character, person, or property.
Go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone - This was required under the law, Lev 19:17. In the original it is "go and reprove him."Seek an explanation of his conduct, and if he has done wrong, administer a friendly and brotherly reproof. This is required to be done alone:
1. That he may have an opportunity of explaining his conduct. In nine cases out of ten, where one supposes that he has been injured, a little friendly conversation would set the matter right and prevent difficulty.
2. That he may have an opportunity of acknowledging his offence or making reparation, if he has done wrong. Many would be glad of such an opportunity, and it is our duty to furnish it by calling on them.
3. That we may admonish them of their error if they have done an injury to the cause of religion. This should not be blazoned abroad. It can do no good - it does injury; it is what the enemies of religion wish. Christ is often wounded in the house of his friends; and religion, as well as an injured brother, often suffers by spreading such faults before the world.
Thou hast gained thy brother - To gain means, sometimes, to preserve or to save, 1Co 9:19. Here it means thou hast preserved him, or restored him, to be a consistent Christian. Perhaps it may include the idea, also, thou hast reconciled him to thyself - thou hast gained him as a Christian brother.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:16 - -- But if he will not hear thee ... - That is, if he spurns or abuses you, or will not be entreated by you, and will not reform. Take with th...
But if he will not hear thee ... - That is, if he spurns or abuses you, or will not be entreated by you, and will not reform.
Take with thee one or two more - The design of taking them seems to be,
1. That he might be induced to listen to them, Mat 18:17. They should be persons of influence or authority; his personal friends, or those in whom he could put confidence.
2. That they might be witnesses of his conduct before the church, Mat 18:17. The law of Moses required two or three witnesses, Deu 19:15; 2Co 13:1; Joh 8:17.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:17 - -- Tell it to the church - See the notes at Mat 16:18. The church may here mean the whole assembly of believers, or it may mean those who are auth...
Tell it to the church - See the notes at Mat 16:18. The church may here mean the whole assembly of believers, or it may mean those who are authorized to try such cases - the representatives of the church, or these who act for the church. In the Jewish synagogue there was a bench of elders before whom trials of this kind were brought. It was to be brought to the church in order that he might be admonished, entreated, and, if possible, reformed. This was, and is always to be, the first business in disciplining an offending brother.
But if he neglect to hear the church, let him be ... - The Jews gave the name "heathen"or "Gentile"to all other nations but themselves. With them they had no religious contact or communion.
Publican - See the notes at Mat 5:47. Publicans were people of abandoned character, and the Jews would have no contact with them. The meaning of this is, cease to have religious contact with him, or to acknowledge him as a Christian brother. It does not mean that we should cease to show kindness to him and aid him in affliction or trial, for that is required toward all people; but it means that we should disown him as a Christian brother, and treat him as we do other people not connected with the church. This should not be done until all these steps are taken. This is the only way of kindness. This is the only way to preserve peace and purity in the church.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:18 - -- Whatsoever ye shall bind ... - See the notes at Mat 16:19. These words were spoken to the apostles. Jesus had before addressed the same words t...
Whatsoever ye shall bind ... - See the notes at Mat 16:19. These words were spoken to the apostles. Jesus had before addressed the same words to Peter, Mat 16:19. He employs them here to signify that they all had the same power; that in ordering the affairs of the church he did not intend to give Peter any supremacy or any exclusive right to regulate it. The meaning of this verse is, whatever you shall do in the discipline of the church shall be approved by God or bound in heaven. This promise, therefore, cannot be understood as extending to all Christians or ministers, for all others but the apostles may err.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:19 - -- Again I say unto you, That if two of you ... - This is connected with the previous verses. The connection is this: The obstinate man is to be e...
Again I say unto you, That if two of you ... - This is connected with the previous verses. The connection is this: The obstinate man is to be excluded from the church, Mat 18:17. The care of the church - the power of admitting or excluding members - of organizing and establishing it - is committed to you, the apostles, Mat 18:18. Yet there is not need of the whole to give validity to the transaction. When two of you agree, or have the same mind, feelings, and opinion, about the arrangement of affairs in the church, or about things desired for its welfare, and shall ask of God, it shall be done for them. See Act 1:14-26; 15:1-29. The promise here has respect to the apostles in organizing the church. It cannot with any propriety be applied to the ordinary prayers of believers. Other promises are made to them, and it is true that the prayer of faith will be answered, but that is not the truth taught here.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:20 - -- For where two or three ... - This is a general assertion made to support the particular promise made Mat 18:19 to his apostles. He affirms that...
For where two or three ... - This is a general assertion made to support the particular promise made Mat 18:19 to his apostles. He affirms that wherever two or three are assembled together in his name, he is in the midst of them.
In my name - That is,
1. By my authority, acting for me in my church. See Joh 10:25; Joh 16:23.
2. It may mean for my service; in the place of prayer and praise, assembled in obedience to my commend, and with a desire to promote my glory.
There am I in the midst of them - Nothing could more clearly prove that Jesus must be omnipresent, and, of course, be God. Every day, perhaps every hour, two or three, or many more, may be assembled in every city or village in the United States, in England, in Greenland, in Africa, in Ceylon, in the Sandwich Islands, in Russia, and in Judea - in almost every part of the world - and in the midst of them all is Jesus the Saviour. Millions thus at the same time, in every quarter of the globe, worship in his name, and experience the truth of the promise that he is present with them. It is impossible that he should be in all these places and not be God.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:21 - -- Then came Peter ... - The mention of the duty Mat 18:15 of seeing a brother when he had offended us, implying that it was a duty to forgive him...
Then came Peter ... - The mention of the duty Mat 18:15 of seeing a brother when he had offended us, implying that it was a duty to forgive him, led Peter to ask how often this was to be done.
Forgive him - To forgive is to treat as though the offence was not committed - to declare that we will not harbor malice or treat unkindly, but that the matter shall be buried and forgotten.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:22 - -- Till seven times? - The Jews caught that a man was to forgive another three times, but not the fourth. Peter more than doubled this, and asked ...
Till seven times? - The Jews caught that a man was to forgive another three times, but not the fourth. Peter more than doubled this, and asked whether forgiveness was to be exercised to so great an extent.
I say not unto thee, Until seven times, but, Until seventy times seven - The meaning is, that we are not to limit our forgiveness to any fixed number of times. See Gen 4:24. As often as a brother injures us and asks forgiveness, we are to forgive him. It is, indeed, his duty to ask forgiveness, Luk 17:4. If he does this, it is our duty to declare that we forgive him, and to treat him accordingly. If he does not ask us to forgive him, yet we are not at liberty to follow him with revenge and malice, but are still to treat him kindly and to do him good, Luk 10:30-37.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:23 - -- Therefore is the kingdom of heaven likened ... - The phrase, "the kingdom of heaven,"here has reference to the church, or to the way in which G...
Therefore is the kingdom of heaven likened ... - The phrase, "the kingdom of heaven,"here has reference to the church, or to the way in which God will deal with his people. "It shall be in my church as it was with a certain king; or God will deal with the members of his church as a certain king did with his servants."See the notes at Mat 3:2. This parable (see Mat 13:3) is related to show the duty of forgiving others. It is not necessary to suppose that it was a true narrative, but only that it illustrated the truth which he was teaching. At the same time it may be true that such an occurrence really took place.
Would take account of his servants - To take account means to reckon, to settle up affairs. The word "servants"here means, probably, petty princes, or, more likely, collectors of the revenue or taxes. Among the ancients kings often farmed out, or sold for a certain sum, the taxes of a particular district or province. Thus, when Judea was subject to Egypt or Rome, the kings frequently sold to the high priest the taxes to be raised from Judea on condition of a much smaller sum being paid to them. This secured to them a certain sum, but it gave occasion to much oppression in the collection of the taxes. It is probable that some such persons are intended by the word servants.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:24 - -- Ten thousand talents - A talent was a sum of money, or weight of silver or gold amounting to three thousand shekels. A silver shekel was worth,...
Ten thousand talents - A talent was a sum of money, or weight of silver or gold amounting to three thousand shekels. A silver shekel was worth, after the captivity, not far from half a dollar of our money. A talent of silver was worth (circa 1880’ s) 1,519.23 =342 British pounds, 3 shillings, 9d.; of gold, 243,098.88 =5,475 British pounds. If these were silver talents, as is probable, then the sum owed by the servant was 15,180,000, or about 3,421, 875 British sterling (circa 1880’ s), a sum which proves that he was not a domestic, but some tributary prince. The sum is used to show that the debt was immensely large, and that our sins are so great that they cannot be estimated or numbered. Compare Job 22:5.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:25 - -- His lord commanded him to be sold ... - By the laws of the Hebrews they were permitted to sell debtors, with their wives and children, into ser...
His lord commanded him to be sold ... - By the laws of the Hebrews they were permitted to sell debtors, with their wives and children, into servitude for a time sufficient to pay a debt. See 2Ki 4:1; Lev 25:39-46; Amo 8:6.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:26 - -- The servant therefore fell down, and worshipped him - This does not mean that he paid him religious homage, but that in a humble, reverent, and...
The servant therefore fell down, and worshipped him - This does not mean that he paid him religious homage, but that in a humble, reverent, and earnest manner he entreated him to have patience with him. He prostrated himself before his lord, as is customary in all Eastern nations when subjects are in the presence of their king. See the notes at Mat 2:2.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:27 - -- The lord of that servant was moved with compassion ... - He had pity on him. He saw his distressed condition. He pitied his family. He forgave ...
The lord of that servant was moved with compassion ... - He had pity on him. He saw his distressed condition. He pitied his family. He forgave him the whole debt. This represents the mercy of God to people. "They have sinned."They owe to God more than can be paid. They are about to be cast off; but God has mercy on them, and, in connection with their prayers, forgives them. We are not to interpret the circumstances of a parable too strictly. The illustration taken from selling the wife and children Mat 18:25 is not to be taken literally, as if God would punish a man for the sins of his father; but it is a circumstance thrown in to keep up the story - to make it consistent - to explain the reason why the servant was so anxious to obtain a delay of the time of payment.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:28-29 - -- But the same servant went out, and found one of his fellow-servants which owed him an hundred pence - Greek, δεναριον denarion ; L...
But the same servant went out, and found one of his fellow-servants which owed him an hundred pence - Greek,
Took him by the throat - Took him in a violent and rough manner - half choked or throttled him. This was the more criminal and base, as he had himself been so kindly treated and dealt so mildly with by his lord.
Besought - Entreated, pled with him.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:31 - -- So when his fellow-servants ... - This is a mere circumstance thrown into the story for the sake of keeping, or making a consistent narrative. ...
So when his fellow-servants ... - This is a mere circumstance thrown into the story for the sake of keeping, or making a consistent narrative. It cannot be intended to teach that other Christians should go and tell God what a brother has done; for God well knows all the actions of his children, and does not need us surely to inform him of what is done. It is abusing the Bible, and departing from the design of parables, to press every circumstance, and to endeavor to extract from it some spiritual meaning. Our Saviour, in this parable, designed most clearly to exhibit only one great truth - the duty of forgiving our brethren, and the great evil of not forgiving a brother when he offends us. The circumstances of the parable are intended only to make the story consistent with itself, and thus to impress the general truth more fully on the mind.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:34 - -- Delivered him to the tormentors - The word "tormentors"here probably means keepers of the prisons. Torments were inflicted on criminals, not on...
Delivered him to the tormentors - The word "tormentors"here probably means keepers of the prisons. Torments were inflicted on criminals, not on debtors. They were inflicted by stretching the limbs, or pinching the flesh, or putting out the eyes, or taking off the skin while alive, etc. It is not probable that anything of this kind is intended, but only that the servant was punished by imprisonment until the debt should be paid.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Mat 18:35 - -- So likewise ... - This verse contains the sum or moral of the parable. When Christ has explained one of his own parables, we are to receive it ...
So likewise ... - This verse contains the sum or moral of the parable. When Christ has explained one of his own parables, we are to receive it just as he has explained it, and not attempt to draw spiritual instruction from any parts or circumstances which he has not explained. The following seems to be the particulars of the general truth which he meant to teach:
1.\caps1 t\caps0 hat our sins are great.
2.\caps1 t\caps0 hat God freely forgives them.
3.\caps1 t\caps0 hat the offences committed against us by our brethren are comparatively small.
4.\caps1 t\caps0 hat we should therefore most freely forgive them.
5.\caps1 t\caps0 hat if we do not, God will be justly angry with us, and punish us.
From your hearts - That is, not merely in words, but really and truly to feel and act toward him as if he had not offended us.
Trespasses - Offences, injuries. Words and actions designed to do us wrong.
Remarks On Matthew 18
1. We see that it is possible to make a profession of religion an occasion of ambition, Mat 18:1. The apostles at first sought honor, and expected office as a consequence of following Christ. So thousands have done since. Religion, notwithstanding all the opposition it has met with, really commands the confidence of mankind. To make a profession of it may be a way of access to that confidence. Thousands, it is to be feared, even yet enter the church merely to obtain some worldly benefit. Especially does this danger beset ministers of the gospel. There are few paths to the confidence of mankind so easily trod as to enter the ministry. Every minister, of course, if at all worthy of his office, has access to the confidence of multitudes, and is never despised but by the worst and lowest of mankind. No way is so easy to step at once to public confidence. Other people toil long to establish influence by personal character. The minister has it by virtue of his office. Those who now enter the ministry are tempted far more in this respect than were the apostles; and how should they search their own hearts, to see that no such abominable motive has induced them to seek that office!
2. It is consummate wickedness thus to prostitute the most sacred of all offices to the worst of purposes. The apostles at this time were ignorant. They expected a kingdom in which it would be right to seek distinction. But we labor under no such ignorance. We know that the kingdom of Christ is not of this world, and woe to the man that acts as though it were. Deep and awful must be the doom of him who thus seeks the honors of the world while he is professedly following the meek and lowly Jesus!
3. Humility is indispensable to religion, Mat 18:3. No man who is not humble can possibly be a Christian. He must be willing to esteem himself as he is, and to have others esteem him so also. This is humility, and humility is lovely. It is not meanness it is not cowardice - it is not want of proper self-esteem; it is a view of ourselves just as we are, and a willingness that God and all creatures should so esteem us. What can be more lovely than such an estimation of ourselves! and how foolish and wicked is it to be proud that is, to think more of ourselves, and wish others to think so, than we really deserve! To put on appearances, and to magnify our own importance, and to think that the affairs of the universe could not go on without us, and to be indignant when all the world does not bow down to do us homage this is hypocrisy as well as wickedness; and there may be, therefore, hypocrites out of the church as well as in it.
4. Humility is the best evidence of piety, Mat 18:4. The most humble man is the most eminent Christian. He is greatest in the kingdom of heaven. The effect of sin is to produce pride. Religion overcomes it by producing a just sense of ourselves, of other people, of angels, and of God. We may therefore measure the advance of piety in our own souls by the increase of humility.
5. We see the danger of despising and doing injury to real Christians, and more especially the guilt of attempting to draw them into sin, Mat 18:6. God watches over them. He loves them. In the eye of the world they may be of little importance, but not so with God. The most obscure follower of Christ is dear, infinitely dear, to him, and he will take care of him. He that attempts to injure a Christian, attempts to injure God; for God has redeemed him, and loves him.
6. People will do much to lead others into sin, Mat 18:7. In all communities there are some who seem to live for this. They have often much wealth, or learning, or accomplishment, or address, or professional influence, and they employ it for the sake of seducing the unwary and leading them into ruin. Hence, offences come, and many of the young and thoughtless are led astray. But He who has all power has pronounced woe upon them, and judgment will not always linger. No class of people have a more fearful account to render to God than they who thus lead others into vice and infidelity.
7. We must forsake our dearest sins, Mat 18:8-9. We must do this, or go to hell-fire. There is no way of avoiding it. We cannot love and cherish those sins and be saved.
8. The wicked they who will not forsake their sins - must certainly go to eternal punishment, Mat 18:8-9. So said the compassionate Saviour. The fair and obvious meaning of his words is that the sufferings of hell are eternal, and Christ did not use words without meaning. He did not mean to frighten us by bugbears or to hold up imaginary fears. If Christ speaks of hell, then there is a hell. If he says it is eternal, then it is so. Of this we may be sure, that every word which the God of mercy has spoken about the punishment of the wicked is full of meaning.
9. Christians are protected, Mat 18:10. Angels are appointed as their friends and guardians. Those friends are very near to God. They enjoy his favor, and his children shall be safe.
10. Christians are safe, Mat 18:11-14. Jesus came to save them. He left the heavens for this end. God rejoices in their salvation. He secures it at great sacrifices, and none can pluck them out of his hand. After the coming of Jesus to save them - after all that he has done for that, and that only - after the joy of God and of angels at their recovery, it is impossible that they should be wrested from him and destroyed. See Joh 10:27-28.
11. It is our duty to admonish our brethren when they injure us, Mat 18:15. We have no right to speak of the offence to anyone else, not even to our best friends, until we have given them an opportunity to explain.
12. The way to treat offending brethren is clearly pointed out, Mat 18:15-17. Nor have we a right to take any other course. Infinite Wisdom - the Prince of Peace - has declared that this is the way to treat our brethren. No other can be right; and no other, therefore, can be so well adapted to promote the peace of the church. And yet how different from this is the course commonly pursued! How few go honestly to an offending brother and tell him his fault! Instead of this, every breeze bears the report - it is magnified - mole-hills swell to mountains, and a quarrel of years often succeeds what might have been settled at once. No robber is so cruel as he who steals away the character of another. Nothing can compensate for the loss of this. Wealth, health, mansions, equipage, all are trifles compared with this. Especially is this true of a Christian. His reputation gone, he has lost his power of doing good; he has brought dishonor on the cause he most loved; he has lost his peace, and worlds cannot repay him.
"Who steals my purse, steals trash: ’ tis something, nothing:
’ Twas mine, ’ tis his, and has been slave to thousands.
But he that filches from me my good name
Robs me of that which not enriches him,
And makes me poor indeed."
13. We have every encouragement to pray, Mat 18:20. We are poor, and sinful, and dying, and none can comfort us but God. At his throne we may find all that we want. We know not which is most wonderful - that God deigns to hear our prayers, or that people are so unwilling to use so simple and easy a way of obtaining what they so much need.
14. We should never be weary of forgiving our brethren, Mat 18:22. We should do it cheerfully. We should do it always. We are never better employed than when we are doing good to those who have injured us. Thus doing, we are most like God.
15. There will be a day in which we must give up our account, Mat 18:23. It may tarry long; but God will reckon with us, and everything shall be brought into judgment.
16. We are greatly indebted to God - far, far beyond what we are able to pay, Mat 18:24. We have sinned, and in no way can we make atonement for past sins; but Jesus the Saviour has made an atonement and paid our debt, and we may be free.
17. It is right to pray to God when we feel that we have sinned, and are unable to pay the debt, Mat 18:26. We have no other way. Poor, and needy, and wretched, we must cast ourselves upon his mercy or die - die forever.
18. God will have compassion on those who do this, Mat 18:27. At his feet, in the attitude of prayer, the burdened sinner finds peace. We have nowhere else to go but to the very Being that we have offended. None but he can save us from death.
19. From the kindness of God to us we should learn not to oppress others, Mat 18:28.
20. It is our true interest, as well as duty, to forgive those that offend us, Mat 18:34. God will take vengeance, and in due time we must suffer if we do not forgive others.
21. Christians are often great sufferers for harboring malice. As a punishment, God withdraws the light of his countenance; they walk in darkness; they cannot enjoy religion; their conscience smites them, and they are wretched. No man ever did or ever can enjoy religion who did not from his heart forgive his brother his trespasses.
22. One reason why Christians ever walk in darkness is, that there is some such duty neglected. They think they have been injured, and very possibly they may have been; they think they are in the right, and possibly they are so; but mingled with a consciousness of this is an unforgiving spirit, and they cannot enjoy religion until that is subdued.
23. Forgiveness must not be in word merely, but from the heart, Mat 18:35. No other can be genuine. No other is like God.
Poole -> Mat 18:11; Mat 18:12-14; Mat 18:15-17; Mat 18:18; Mat 18:19-20; Mat 18:21-22; Mat 18:23-35; Mat 18:28
Poole: Mat 18:11 - -- We find the same in Luk 19:10 , but applied upon another occasion. Our Saviour here riseth higher in his argument against giving offence to his litt...
We find the same in Luk 19:10 , but applied upon another occasion. Our Saviour here riseth higher in his argument against giving offence to his little ones. All scandal tendeth to the ruin and destruction of him to whom it is given. Scandalum non est nisi malae rei aeidificans ad Gehennam, saith Tertullian; and a greater than he hath taught us the same lesson, Rom 14:15 1Co 8:11 Now, saith our Saviour, I am
come to save that which was lost you ought therefore to take care that you be not the causes and instruments of any being lost. Or thus; You look upon poor humble souls, that believe in me, as mean, contemptible creatures, therefore you think you may despise them: were not all those whom I came to redeem in as mean and despicable a condition? Yet I did not despise their souls. Did I come to save them, and shall it be your work to destroy them?
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Mat 18:12-14 - -- Ver. 12-14. We shall meet with the parable or similitude more fully, Luk 15:4 . To what purpose it is brought here our Lord hath told us, Mat 18:14 ,...
Ver. 12-14. We shall meet with the parable or similitude more fully, Luk 15:4 . To what purpose it is brought here our Lord hath told us, Mat 18:14 , to show us, that it is not the will of our heavenly Father that the least and meanest believer should perish. And every scandal, or offence, (as I before showed), hath a tendency to destroy that soul before whom it is laid, or to which it is given. Take heed, saith our Saviour, of giving scandals and offences to others, yea, though you should have observed them in something slipping and going astray. Will you be more uncharitable to men than you are to the beasts which you keep? You do not thus with a sheep; though it be gone astray you do not despise and neglect it, much less take courses to drive it further. No, you rather leave the rest, as being safe, and go, though it be into the mountains, to recover the sheep that is lost; and if you find it, have a greater passion of joy for that one sheep so recovered than for all the other. If you see some error in any of my sheep, if they do wander, should it not be your care rather to restore such in the spirit of meekness, as Gal 6:1 , than to lay further stumbling blocks before them, and give them occasion of further stumbling and falling? My Father hath done so for lost man: my coming to seek and to save that which is lost, is an evidence to you that it is not his will that one of my little ones should be lost.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Mat 18:15-17 - -- Ver. 15-17. Our Saviour very appositely addeth this to his former discourse concerning avoiding offences, that none might think that by the former do...
Ver. 15-17. Our Saviour very appositely addeth this to his former discourse concerning avoiding offences, that none might think that by the former doctrine he had made void the law, Lev 19:17 , which commanded all in any wise to rebuke their neighbour, and not to suffer sin upon him, pretending that it was their duty in some cases to offend any person by that law. He here telleth them that he would not be so understood, as if they might not tell offenders of their sins for fear of offending them, this had been to have withheld charity from their souls under a pretence of charity. Only in these reproofs we must keep an order, which order he here prescribes.
1. Doing it privately, between them and him alone.
2. If that had not its effect, then taking two or three with them.
3. If that also proved ineffectual, then telling it to the church.
4. If that he would not hear the church, then, let him be unto thee (saith Christ) as an heathen and a publican
If thy brother shall trespass against thee. By brother here he meaneth any Christian; for what hath the church to do to judge those that are without? 1Co 5:12 .
Trespass against thee. Some interpret this of offences done so privately, that none else knoweth them but one single person; but it is objected, that then there needed no going to him, much less were there need of any witnesses, for they could prove nothing. Others therefore understand the precept of private injuries, which are in man’ s power to forgive, Luk 17:3 . Others think such injuries are primarily intended, but yet the precept is not to be restrained to them, but to be understood of all offences, whether against God, ourselves, or our neighbours; and that our Saviour useth this term against thee only to distinguish the offences he is here speaking of from public scandals; for, 1Ti 5:20 , it appeareth to be the will of God, that public and open sinners should be rebuked before all, that others may fear. The rule therefore seemeth to be given concerning private miscarriages; not such only as are done in the sight or hearing of a single person, but such as are not the matter of public fame, nor openly committed before a multitude, but being committed more secretly, are come only to the knowledge of some particular person or persons. In such cases it is the will of God, not that we should blazon and publish them, but, being certain that any Christian hath so offended, it is our duty first to go to him, and tell him of it; that is, not only tell him what thou knowest, or hast heard in matter of fact, that he hath spoken or done, but show him also the sinfulness of it.
If he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother; that is, if he confesseth the sin, and be brought to a sight of it, a sorrow for it, and a resolution against it for the time to come, thou hast gained the soul of thy brother.
But if he will not hear thee, if he either denieth the matter of fact, that he did such a thing, or (admitting that) standeth to justify the fact, as what he might do, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established: one or two more, either such as may be of more authority with him, whose words may probably be of more weight than thine with him, or who may witness the matter of fact if it be denied, or at least witness by charitable admonition of him, and his contumacy, if he refuseth to hearken to thee, and to repent and reform. What was the law of God in civil and judicial causes, Deu 19:15 ,
God would have observed in ecclesiastical causes: One witness shall not rise up against a man for any iniquity, or for any sin, in any sin that he sinneth: at the mouth of two witnesses, or at the mouth of three witnesses, shall the matter be established. And so the words in Matthew should be translated, or at least understood; every word, that is, every matter, be confirmed.
And if he shall neglect to hear them; either refuse to speak with them, or to suffer them to speak with him; or, hearing them with his ears, if he persists to deny the fact, or to justify the fact, as if it were no sin, or go on still in the same course; (all these things are to be understood by the term of not hearing); if he shall not hear them, tell it to the church. That the term church is a noun of multitude is evident, and therefore cannot be understood of any particular person. Some would by the church here understand the political magistrate; but as this sense is embraced by very few, so it is very improbable that our Saviour should send Christians in that age to the civil magistrates, when they were all great haters and persecutors of the Christian religion, especially in cases that were not punishable by the judges; for no deliberate person will say, that the offences mentioned in this text were all of that nature as a civil judicature might take notice of them. Others say, that by the church is here meant the Jewish court called the Sanhedrim, which had a mixed cognizance, both of civil and ecclesiastical causes. There are three prejudices against this:
1. That the Jewish court was never in Scripture called
2. That it is not probable that our Saviour would direct Christians to go to the Jewish courts in such cases.
3. That the Sanhedrim was too great a court to be troubled with all scandals, though they did take cognizance of some things in religion, which were of a grand concern; such as blasphemy, idolatry, false prophets, &c.
Others therefore understand it of the Christian church. Against this opinion there is this great prejudice, that there was no such thing in being at that time; but I take this to be a lighter objection than those against the two other opinions:
a) Because we need not understand our Saviour speaking with relation to the present time, but the time to come, and giving laws which should take place and abide from the gathering of the Christian church to the end of the world.
b) Nor is it necessary that we should take the term church here in the strict sense, in which it is most generally used in the Scriptures of the New Testament for the general notion of the word is only a company of people called together; and in this sense, Tell the church, is no more than, Tell the multitude, make his crime more public: now what that multitude was which our Saviour meant, would easily be understood when the churches came to be formed.
But the next verse will make it more plain; Mat 18:18 , Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, &c. By the church then must be meant those who had power to bind and loose. Now though at this time there was no particular church formed, yet there were some who had a power to bind and loose. Christ had given such a power to his apostles. These were the present church, and at this time in being. They were afterwards to constitute particular churches, to whom, (when constituted), in force of this precept, such offences were to be told. There are yet further disputes, whether this offence and contumacy be to be told only to the rulers, or to the multitude. I say, to the whole church, but first to the rulers, then by them to the multitude, not to judge of it, but for their consent in casting a person out of the communion of the church. Thus the incestuous person was first accused to Paul, then cast out by the consent of the whole church, 1Co 5:3-5 . For it is unreasonable to think that people should deny communion to any without knowing a justifiable cause; and to no purpose for rulers in a church to cast one out of its communion with whom the members will have communion.
If he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican; that is, esteem him as a vile person, for so they esteemed all heathens and publicans. How far this could reach beyond having an intimacy of civil communion with them, and a communion with them in the sacrament, I cannot understand; for as Christians were licensed to a civil commerce with heathens and publicans, so neither were heathens and publicans ever, that we read of in holy writ, denied the benefit of their prayers, and hearing the apostles preach. I am very well satisfied, that the primitive church did not deny to persons excommunicated liberty to be present at the prayers of the church, but it was long after the apostles’ times, and whether grounded upon any practice of theirs I much doubt. Christians had a liberty to pray for any who had not sinned the sin unto death: that they might not be present at such prayers I cannot learn from any thing in holy writ.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Mat 18:18 - -- We met with this sentence, Mat 16:19 , where we observed that by binding and loosing was signified (according to the usage of the Jews of those time...
We met with this sentence, Mat 16:19 , where we observed that by binding and loosing was signified (according to the usage of the Jews of those times) declaring of propositions true or false, or judging things lawful or unlawful. Some think that it hath no further import here; but it is the opinion of Mr. Calvin, and other very judicious interpreters, that it is here to be extended to the censures of the church, the sentence of the church pronounced justly in the case of offences; and is added, lest persons justly denied the communion of the church should contemn such censures. Christ assures these persons that such censures ought not to be slighted, for God would confirm them in heaven; as also to their absolutions, or readmissions of such persons into their communion, upon their true repentance and acknowledgment of their errors. Not that our Lord by this intended to confirm all sentences of excommunication, or to patronize any cheat or hypocrisy in any, to gain an absolution, or restoration to the church. But only, as to the first, to assure stubborn and impenitent sinners that he would ratify what his church did, according to the rule he had given them to act by. It is therefore a terrible text to those who are justly and duly cut off from the communion of the church, for notorious and scandalous sins, such as whoso committeth and doth not repent of, they shall never enter into the kingdom of God. And as comfortable to those who, being so cast out, do truly repent, and are under temptations to be swallowed up of too much sorrow. If therefore any be cast out of any church for professing or standing to any truth of the gospel, or because he will not do what is sinful, we must not understand them bound in heaven, though they be bound on earth, nor have any such excommunications any terror in them. How forcible are right words! But these arguings, what do they reprove? The church is not by this text made infallible, nor is the holy God by it engaged to defend their errors.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Mat 18:19-20 - -- Ver. 19,20. Most interpreters agree there is a connection betwixt these verses and those immediately preceding, as if it were a further confirmation ...
Ver. 19,20. Most interpreters agree there is a connection betwixt these verses and those immediately preceding, as if it were a further confirmation of what God had said concerning his binding and loosing in heaven whatsoever they should bind or loose on earth; and say, the asking mentioned in this verse supposes that no church will adventure upon so grave an act as excommunication, without asking his direction or counsel; nor undertake such a thing as absolution, without the like serious asking of God pardon for the repenting sinner. Now, saith he, let the church be never so small that so joins in prayers on this occasion, what they ask of God shall be done. Whether it hath any such reference or no, or be an independent promise of Christ’ s presence with his church, I shall not determine. Those who think this text hath such a particular reference, yet do also grant it a more general promise of Christ’ s presence with his people. Whenever they are met by his authority, or upon his account or command, whether it be for counsel, or judgment, or prayer, or the celebration of any sacred institution of his, he is in the midst of them, to protect and favour them: what they ask
shall be done for them that is, provided the thing asked be good, Mat 7:11 , and for a right end, Jam 4:3 , and in a right manner, Luk 18:1 Jam 1:5-7 . Christ in this text establisheth the duty of prayer in communion with others. He doth not only require of his people secret prayer, Mat 6:6 , but also praying in company with others; the gathering together of his people for prayer, whether in private families or more public congregations.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Mat 18:21-22 - -- Ver. 21,22. Luke hath something like this Luk 17:4 , but it seemeth to have been spoken at another time, and upon some other occasion; yet the sense ...
Ver. 21,22. Luke hath something like this Luk 17:4 , but it seemeth to have been spoken at another time, and upon some other occasion; yet the sense is much the same, and there are who think that Peter’ s mention of seven times arose from our Saviour’ s command there, that we should forgive our brother offending us seven times, when our Saviour by it intended not a certain and definite number, but a number uncertain and indefinite. But it is a greater question, what sinning and what forgiveness is there meant, I cannot think that our Saviour here speaketh concerning the church’ s absolving scandalous sinners justly excommunicated, but of the private forgiveness of injuries done to us; it is not the church, but I forgive him; for although the doors of the church ought to be as open to a repenting sinner as the doors of heaven are, yet I think both the phrase of the text and the following parable (which seemeth to me a comment upon this text) seem to lead us to the interpretation of these verses as to private wrongs or injuries; they are properly sins against us, and such as it is in every single person’ s power to forgive. But it seems hard that Christians should be obliged to forgive another his private wrongs so often as he doth them, if he will go on without end multiplying affronts and injuries to us; we must therefore know, that our Saviour by this precept doth not oblige any to take his enemy into his bosom, and make him his intimate or confidant again; but only to lay aside all malice, all thoughts and desires of revenge towards him, to put on a charitable frame of spirit towards him, so as to be ready to do him any common offices of friendship. Thus far we are obliged to forgive those that do us injuries, so often as they stand in need of forgiveness. The apostle, Col 3:8 , speaks of wrath, malice, &c., as pieces of the old man, which every true Christian hath put off, and calls upon us in malice to be children.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Mat 18:23-35 - -- Ver. 23-35. All these verses (except the last) are but a parable, which (as I before showed) is a similitude brought from the usual actions of men, a...
Ver. 23-35. All these verses (except the last) are but a parable, which (as I before showed) is a similitude brought from the usual actions of men, and made use of to open or apply some spiritual doctrine. The main scope, or the proposition of truth, which our Saviour designs to open or press, is that which is first and principally to be considered and intended; and that, as I before showed, is to be known, either by the particular explication given by our Saviour, or by what went immediately before, or followeth immediately after. The scope of this parable is plainly expressed, Mat 18:35 ,
So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses Nor is it obscurely hinted to us in what went before, where our Saviour was instructing Peter in the great duty of forgiving men their trespasses. This being agreed, as we use to say, that similitudes run not on four feet, so we are not to expect that all the actions of men, mentioned in the parable, should be answered by some correspondent actions of God: As similitudes always halt, so never more than when by them God’ s actions are expressed and represented to us. The main points which this parable instructs us in are;
1. That it is our duty, especially theirs who have received forgiveness from God, to forgive their brethren.
2. That if they do not, they may justly question whether God hath forgiven them, and expect the same severity from him which they show unto their brethren.
These being the main things for instruction in which this parable is brought, and which we ought chiefly to eye as the things taught us by this parable, nothing hindereth but that it may also instruct us in some other things, though we cannot raise a proposition of truth from every branch of the parable, and some things be put in according to the passions and usual dealings of men, which possibly are in them unrighteous actions, and may follow from their ungoverned passions, which will by no means agree to the pure and holy nature of God. I will first open such terms in the parable as may be less intelligible to vulgar readers.
The kingdom of heaven my administration of my kingdom: I am come to purchase remission of sins, and to dispense out remission of sins to those who are indebted to the justice of my Father; but in the application of my blood to men and women for the remission of their sins, both my Father and myself will do as a king, that took account of his servants, &c. Men must look for pardon from my Father, and benefit from me as their Redeemer, upon the following terms: see Mat 6:15 .
Ten thousand talents a certain for an uncertain number; a very great sum. Those who have computed it, say it amounts to a million eight hundred and seventy-five thousand pounds. He
commanded him to be sold, and his wife, and children, and all that he had a thing which our law will not suffer, but in use amongst other nations, and amongst the Jews in particular, as may be learned from 2Ki 4:1 .
And delivered him to the tormentors that is, to the keepers of the prison; so the next words teach us, and the Greek word often signifieth no more, though it doth indeed sometimes.
An hundred pence Mat 18:28 , signifieth a small sum, hardly exceeding in our money fifty shillings. This parable excellently instructs us in these truths:
1. That as men, by the law of nature and God, and the laws of men, may be debtors to us, to our reputation, to our estate; so we are all debtors to the glory, honour, and justice of God.
2. That it is a vast debt we owe to God’ s honour and justice, to which no debt owing by any to us can bear any proportion.
3. That we have nothing to pay to God, in satisfaction for our debt.
4. That God hath a right to demand a full satisfaction of us.
5. That God, for Christ’ s sake, upon our application to him for mercy, will forgive us our debts.
6. That we are not so ready to forgive our brethren their little injuries, as God is to forgive us.
7. That our difficulty to forgive our brethren, after God’ s liberality in forgiving us, is a great charge, or will be a great charge against us in the court of heaven.
8. That we ought to set before us God’ s compassion towards us, and free love in forgiving us, potently to move us to forgive those who have done us injury, and to forgive them out of that consideration.
9. That we ought from our hearts to forgive men their trespasses; that is, so as not to hate them, bear them any grudge or malice, seek any private revenge upon them, or public satisfaction, beyond what they are able to give, but be ready to do them what common offices of kindness in their straits are in our power.
10. That the not doing of this will be an ill evidence to our souls, that God hath not indeed forgiven us, as well as a bar against such forgiveness; and an ill omen, that some punishment from God expects us in this life, to bring us to a temper more conformable to the gospel, and if not, this life, yet in the life which is to come.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Mat 18:28 - -- See Poole on "Mat 18:35" The Roman penny is the eighth part of an ounce, which after five shillings the ounce is seven pence half penny. (Mat 20:2 )...
Lightfoot: Mat 18:12 - -- How think ye? if a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be gone astray, doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains...
How think ye? if a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be gone astray, doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains, and seeketh that which is gone astray?  
[If one of them be gone astray, doth he not leave the ninety-and-nine, etc.] a very common form of speech: -- "In distributing some grapes and dates to the poor, although ninety-nine say, 'Scatter them'; and only one; 'Divide them': they hearken to him, because he speaks according to the tradition." "If ninety-nine die by an evil eye," that is, by bewitchings; "and but one by the hand of Heaven," that is, by the stroke of God, etc. "If ninety-nine die by reason of cold, but one by the hand of God," etc.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Lightfoot: Mat 18:15 - -- Moreover if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained...
Moreover if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother.  
[Tell him his fault between thee and him alone.] The reason of the precept is founded in that charitable law, Lev 19:17; "Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart; but thou shalt surely reprove him, and shalt not suffer sin in him."  
Here the Talmudists speak not amiss: "The Rabbins deliver, 'Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart.' Perhaps he does not beat him, he does not pull off his hair, he does not curse him: the text saith, 'in thy heart,' speaking of hatred in the heart. But whence is it proved that he that sees his brother doing some foul action is bound to reprove him? Because it is said, In reproving, thou shalt reprove. He reproves, but he heareth not; whence is it proved he is bound to a second reproof? The text saith, 'In reproving, thou shalt reprove.' " And a little after, "How long must we reprove? Rabh saith, 'Even to blows'"; that is, until he that is reproved strikes him that reproves him: "Samuel saith, 'Until he is angry.' " See also Maimonides.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Lightfoot: Mat 18:16 - -- But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established. &nbs...
But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established.  
[Take with thee one or two more, etc.] the Hebrew lawyers require the same thing of him that sins against his brother: "Samuel saith, 'Whosoever sins against his brother, he must say to him, I have sinned against thee. If he hear, it is well: if not, let him bring others, and let him appease him before them. If perhaps he die, let him appease him at his sepulchre, and say, I have sinned against thee.' "  
But our Saviour here requires a higher charity; namely, from him who is the offended party. In like manner, "The great Sanhedrim admonished a city lapsed to idols, by two disciples of the wise men. If they repented, well: if not, all Israel waged war against it." In like manner also, "The jealous husband warned his wife before two witnesses, 'Do not talk with N.'"
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Lightfoot: Mat 18:17 - -- And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a ...
And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a publican.  
[Tell it unto the church.] That which was incumbent upon him against whom the sin was committed was this, that he should deliver his soul by reproving his brother, and by not suffering sin in him. This was the reason that he had need of witnesses, for what else could they testify? They could not testify that the brother had sinned against him that reproved him; for this, perhaps, they were altogether ignorant of: but they might testify this, that he against whom the sin was committed used due reproof, and omitted nothing which was commanded by the law in that case, whereby he might admonish his brother, and, if possible, bring him back into the right way. The witnesses also added their friendly admonition: whom if the offender hearkened not unto, "let it be told the church."  
We do not here enter upon that long dispute concerning the sense of the word church in this place. However you take it, certainly the business here is not so much concerning the censure of the person sinning, as concerning the vindication of the person reproving; that it might be known to all that he discharged his duty, and freed his soul.  
It was very customary among the Jews to note those that were obstinate in this or that crime after public admonition given them in the synagogue, and to set a mark of infamy upon them.  
All these have need of public admonition in the consistory. The business there is about some shepherds, collectors, and publicans; and it is declared how incapable they are of giving evidence in any judiciary matter; but not before public admonition is gone out against them in the consistory.  
"If any deny to feed his children, they reprove him, they shame him, they urge him: if he still refuse, they make proclamation against him in the synagogue, saying, 'N. is a cruel man, and will not nourish his children: more cruel than the unclean birds themselves, for they feed their young ones,' " etc.  
"A provoking wife who saith, 'I will create vexation to my husband, because he hath done thus or thus to me, or because he hath miscalled me, or because he hath chid me,' etc. The consistory by messengers send these words to her, 'Be it known unto you, if you persist in your perverseness, although your dowry be a hundred pounds, you have lost it all.' And moreover they set forth a public proclamation against her in the synagogues, and in the divinity schools every day for four sabbaths."  
[Let him be to thee as a heathen and a publican.] He saith, Let him be to 'thee'; not, Let him be to 'the church'; because the discourse is of peculiar and private scandal against a single man; who, after three admonitions given, and they to no purpose, is freed from the law of brotherly obligation; and he who being admonished does not repent, is not to be esteemed so much for a brother to him, as for a heathen, etc.  
I. Christ does not here prescribe concerning every offender, according to the full latitude of that law, Lev 19:17; but of him that particularly offends against his brother; and he does particularly teach what is to be done to that brother.  
II. Although he, against whom the offence is committed, had a just cause, why he should be loosed from the obligation of the office of a brother towards him, who neither would make satisfaction for the wrong done, nor be admonished of it; yet to others in the church there is not the same reason.  
III. The words plainly mean this; "If, after a threefold and just reproof, he that sinned against thee still remains untractable, and neither will give thee satisfaction for the injury, nor, being admonished, doth repent, thou hast delivered thine own soul, and art free from brotherly offices towards him"; just as the Jews reckon themselves freed from friendly offices towards heathens and publicans. That of Maimonides is not much different: "A Jew that apostatizes, or breaks the sabbath presumptuously, is altogether like a heathen."  
1. They reckoned not heathens for brethren or neighbours: "If any one's ox shall gore his neighbour's ox: his neighbour's, not a heathen's; when he saith neighbour's; he excludes heathens." A quotation which we produced before.  
2. They reputed publicans to be by no means within religious society: A religious man, who becomes a publican, is to be driven out of the society of religion.  
3. Hence they ate neither with heathens nor with publicans; concerning which thing they often quarrel [with] our Saviour. Hence that of the apostle, 1Co 5:11; "With such an one no not to eat," is the same with what is spoke here, "Let him be to thee as a heathen;" etc.  
"It is forbidden a Jew to be alone with a heathen; to travel with a heathen;" etc.  
4. They denied also brotherly offices to heathens and publicans; "It is forbidden to bring home any thing of a heathen's that is lost." "It is lawful for publicans to swear that is an oblation which is not; that you are of the king's retinue when you are not," etc. that is, publicans may deceive, and that by oath.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Lightfoot: Mat 18:18 - -- Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven...
Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.  
[Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth, etc.] these words depend upon the former. He had been speaking concerning being loosed from the office of a brother in a particular case: now he speaks of the authority and power of the apostles of loosing and binding "any thing" whatsoever seemed them good, being guided in all things by the Holy Ghost. We have explained the sense of this phrase at Matthew_16; and he gives the same authority in respect of this, to all the apostles here, as he did to Peter there; who were all to be partakers of the same Spirit and of the same gifts.  
This power was built upon that noble and most self-sufficient foundation, Joh 16:13; "The Spirit of truth shall lead you into all truth." There lies an emphasis in those words, "into all truth." I deny that any one, any where, at any time, was led, or to be led, into all truth, from the ascension of Christ, unto the world's end, beside the apostles. Every holy man, certainly, is led into all truth necessary to him for salvation: but the apostles were led into all truth necessary both for themselves and the whole church; because they were to deliver a rule of faith and manners to the whole church throughout all ages. Hence, whatsoever they should confirm in the law was to be confirmed; whatsoever they should abolish was to be abolished: since they were endowed, as to all things, with a spirit of infallibility, guiding them by the hand into all truth.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Lightfoot: Mat 18:19 - -- Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father whi...
Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven.  
[That if two of you shall agree upon earth, etc.] and these words do closely agree with those that went before: there the speech was concerning the apostles' determination in all things respecting men; here, concerning their grace and power of obtaining things from God.  
I. [Two of you.] Hence Peter and John act jointly together among the Jews, Acts_2- 3; etc., and they act jointly among the Samaritans, Act 8:14; and Paul and Barnabas among the Gentiles, Act 13:2. This bond being broke by Barnabas, the Spirit is doubled as it were upon Paul.  
II. [Agree together.] That is, to obtain something from God; which appears also from the following words, touching any thing that they shall ask; suppose, concerning conferring the Spirit by the imposition of hands, of doing this or that miracle, etc.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Lightfoot: Mat 18:20 - -- For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.  [For where two or three are gathered together i...
For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.  
[For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.] The like do the Rabbins speak of two or three sitting in judgment, that the divine presence is in the midst of them.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Lightfoot: Mat 18:21 - -- Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Till seven times?  [Shall I forgiv...
Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Till seven times?  
[Shall I forgive him? Till seven times?] this question of Peter respects the words of our Saviour, Mat 18:15. "How far shall I forgive my brother before I proceed to the extremity? What! seven times?" He thought that he had measured out, by these words, a large charity, being, in a manner, double to that which was prescribed by the schools: "He that is wronged (say they) is forbidden to be difficult to pardon; for that is not the manner of the seed of Israel. But when the offender implores him once and again, and it appears he repents of his deed, let him pardon him: and whosoever is most ready to pardon is most praiseworthy." It is well; but there lies a snake under it; "For (say they) they pardon a man once, that sins against another; secondly, they pardon him; thirdly, they pardon him; fourthly, they do not pardon him," etc.
PBC: Mat 18:15 - -- " If thy brother"
The text says " IF THY BROTHER" and not someone of some other faith. Yet if the " brother" is of the SAME faith and order then go...
" If thy brother"
The text says " IF THY BROTHER" and not someone of some other faith. Yet if the " brother" is of the SAME faith and order then go to him ALONE, and this keeps it PRIVATE. If it is PUBLIC, then there is no way to follow Mt 18:15. 250
Verses 15-17 (Mt 18:15-17)
I would think the rules laid down here and in the following verses are only applicable (as rules) within the local assembly. However, I can see how the principle is applicable on a broader plain. 251
If I am offended it is me individually that is offended. Whether the brother committed the offense privately or publically, I am offended individually, not collectively. Therefore, I ought to go to him, he and I alone and explain the offense...then follow other steps if need be. If a church is offended as a whole, then I believe that the church can follow the same course of action by sending a spokesman (men) to the brother privately. If it is a sin that is the offence that is excludable, then he ought to be brought before the church, but if only a minor offense, then it should be dealt with privately. If that first time does not work, then follow the rest of the steps.
I do not see a difference. I have seen it handled differently, where men thinking men have made public offenses, therefore they slander, gossip, condemn that man publically but never go to that man. This is wrong. 252
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
PBC: Mat 18:26 - -- If you translate the amount of money this man owed, it is the equivalent of approximately 52,800,000 dollars.
We can’t imagine owing that much. Muc...
If you translate the amount of money this man owed, it is the equivalent of approximately 52,800,000 dollars.
We can’t imagine owing that much. Much less can we imagine owing it and someone forgiving the whole debt.
A common laborer could not repay such a debt in his lifetime. Although the man pledged to repay the whole debt, he promised far more than he could deliver. The greater surprise to us appears in the man’s reaction against his fellow-servant. He refused to forgive a trivial debt of 44 dollars. If you were just forgiven 53 million dollars, would you dare to hold your hand to someone’s throat who owes you 44 dollars and demand that they pay or go to jail? Jesus’ warning to this unforgiving man who had just been forgiven the unpayable debt frames the lesson for us. We cannot measure, much less repay, the full debt of our sins against our holy God. How shall we respond to the trivial debts that others occasionallly owe to us? Forgiveness is not an option for the faithful believer in Christ; it is a solemn obligation.
Haydock: Mat 18:12 - -- If a man have a hundred sheep. This is to shew the goodness and mercy of God towards sinners. By the one sheep, some understand all mankind, and ...
If a man have a hundred sheep. This is to shew the goodness and mercy of God towards sinners. By the one sheep, some understand all mankind, and by the ninety-nine, the angels in heaven. (Witham) ---
Jesus Christ manifests his tender regard and solicitude for us poor weak creatures, by becoming himself the Son of man, thus abandoning in some measure the angels who are in heaven. He is come down upon earth to save by his death what was lost, imitating thus, with regard to men, the conduct themselves observe with regard to their sheep. (Bible de Vence) ---
In the Greek, it is dubious whether the shepherd leaves the ninety-nine in the mountains, or, whether he himself goeth into the mountains in quest of the lost sheep.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:14 - -- Even so it is not. Here some may perhaps object, that since the Almighty does not wish any of his little ones to perish, he must consequently wish a...
Even so it is not. Here some may perhaps object, that since the Almighty does not wish any of his little ones to perish, he must consequently wish all to be saved, and therefore that all will be saved. Now this is not the case: the will of the Almighty is therefore sometimes frustrated in its effects, which is contrary to Scripture. To this objection, St. John Damascene replies, that in God we must distinguish two distinct wills; the one antecedent, the other consequent. A person wills a thing antecedently, when he wills it merely as considered in itself. For instance, a prince wishes his subjects to live, in as much as they are all his subjects. But a person wills a thing consequently, when he will a thing in consideration of some particular circumstance. Thus, though the king wishes all his subject to live, he nevertheless wills that some should die, if they turn traitors, or disorganize the peace of society. In the same manner, the Almighty wishes none of his little ones to perish, in as much as they are all his creatures, made to his own image, and destined for the kingdom of glory; though it is equally certain that he wills the eternal punishment of many who have turned away from his service, and followed iniquity. If we observe this distinction, it is easy to see what our Saviour meant, when he said that it was not the will of his Father that any of these little ones should perish. (St. John Damascene)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:15 - -- Offend against thee. St. John Chrysostom, St. Augustine, and St. Jerome understand from this verse, that the injured person is to go and admonish hi...
Offend against thee. St. John Chrysostom, St. Augustine, and St. Jerome understand from this verse, that the injured person is to go and admonish his brother. Other understand against thee, to mean in they presence, or to thy knowledge, because fraternal correction is a duty, not only when our brother offends us, but likewise when he offends against his neighbour, and much more when he offends God. It is moreover a duty not peculiar to the injured, but common to all. When the offence is not personal, our advice will be less interested. This precept, though positive, in only obligatory, when it is likely to profit your brother, as charity is the only motive for observing it. Therefore, it not only may, but ought to be omitted, when the contrary effect is likely to ensue, whether it be owing to the perversity of the sinner, or the circumstances of the admonisher. (Jansenius)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:17 - -- Tell the church. This not only shews the order of fraternal correction, but also every man's duty in submitting to the judgment of the Church. (With...
Tell the church. This not only shews the order of fraternal correction, but also every man's duty in submitting to the judgment of the Church. (Witham) ---
There cannot be a plainer condemnation of those who make particular creeds, and will not submit the articles of their belief to the judgment of the authority appointed by Christ. (Haydock)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:18 - -- Whatsoever you shall bind, &c. The power of binding and loosing, which in a more eminent manner was promised to St. Peter, is here promised to t...
Whatsoever you shall bind, &c. The power of binding and loosing, which in a more eminent manner was promised to St. Peter, is here promised to the other apostles and their successors, bishops and priests. (Witham) ---
The power of binding and loosing, conferred on St. Peter, excelled that granted to the other apostles, inasmuch as to St. Peter, who was head and pastor of the whole Church, was granted jurisdiction over the other apostles, while these received no power over each other, much less over St. Peter. (Tirinus) ---
Priests receive a power not only to loose, but also to bind, as St. Ambrose writeth against the Novatians, who allowed the latter, but denied the former power to priests. (Lib. i. de pœnit. chap. ii.) (Bristow)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:19 - -- That if two of you. From these words, we learn how superior is public to private prayer. The efficacy of the former is attributed to the presence o...
That if two of you. From these words, we learn how superior is public to private prayer. The efficacy of the former is attributed to the presence of Christ in those assemblies. The Father, for his Son's sake, will grant petitions thus offered. (Jansenius) ---
The fervour of one will supply for the weakness and distractions of the other.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:20 - -- There am I in the midst of them. This is understood of such assemblies only, as are gathered in the name and authority of Christ; and in unity of th...
There am I in the midst of them. This is understood of such assemblies only, as are gathered in the name and authority of Christ; and in unity of the Church of Christ. (St. Cyprian, de Unitate Ecclesiæ.) (Challoner) ---
St. John Chrysostom, Theophylactus, and Euthymius explain the words in his name, thus assembled by authority received from Christ, in the manner appointed by him, or for his sake, and seeking nothing by his glory. Hence we may see what confidence we may place in an œcumenical council lawfully assembled. (Tirinus) (St. Gregory, lib. vii. Regist. Epist. cxii.)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:21 - -- St. Peter knew the Jews to be much given to revenge; he therefore thought it a great proof of superior virtue to be able to forgive seven times. It w...
St. Peter knew the Jews to be much given to revenge; he therefore thought it a great proof of superior virtue to be able to forgive seven times. It was for this reason he proposed this question to our Lord; who, to shew how much he esteemed charity, immediately answered, not only seven times, but seventy times seven times. He does not mean to say that this number must be the bounds of our forgiving; we must forgive to the end, and never take revenge, however often our brother offend against us. There must be no end of forgiving poor culprits that sincerely repent, either in the sacrament of penance, or one man another his offences. (Bristow) ---
To recommend this great virtue more forcibly, he subjoins the parable of the king taking his accounts: and, for the great severity there exercised, he intimates how rigid will his heavenly Father be to those who forgive not their enemies. (Denis the Carthusian)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:22 - -- Till seventy times seven; i.e. 490 times; but it is put by way of an unlimited number, to signify we must pardon private injuries, though even so oft...
Till seventy times seven; i.e. 490 times; but it is put by way of an unlimited number, to signify we must pardon private injuries, though even so often done to us. (Witham) ---
When our brother sins against us, we must grieve for his sake over the evil he has committed; but for ourselves we ought greatly to rejoice, because we are thereby made like our heavenly Father, who bids the sun to shine upon the good and the bad. But if the thought of having to imitate God alarms us, though it should not seem difficult to a true lover of God, let us place before our eyes the examples of his favourite servants. Let us imitate Joseph, who though reduced to a state of the most abject servitude, by the hatred of his unnatural brethren, yet in the affliction of his heart, employed all his power to succour them in their afflictions. Let us imitate Moses, who after a thousand injuries, raised his fervent supplications in behalf of his people. Let us imitate the blessed Paul, who, though daily suffering a thousand afflictions from the Jews, still wished to become an anathema for their salvation. Let us imitate Stephen, who, when the stones of his persecutors were covering him with wounds, prayed that the Almighty would pardon their sin. Let us follow these admirable examples, then shall we extinguish the flames of anger, then will our heavenly Father grant us the forgiveness of our sins, through the merits of our Lord Jesus Christ. (St. John Chrysostom, hom. lxii.)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:24 - -- Ten thousand talents. It is put as an example for an immense sum. It is not certainly agreed what was the value of a talent. A talent of gold is s...
Ten thousand talents. It is put as an example for an immense sum. It is not certainly agreed what was the value of a talent. A talent of gold is said to be 4900 lb.; of silver 375 lb. See Walton's Prologomena, Dr. Harris's Lexicon, &c. (Witham) ---
The 10,000 talents, according to some authors, amount to £1,875,000 sterling, i.e., 740,000 times as much as his fellow-servant owed him; the hundred pence amounting to not more than £3 2s. 6d.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Mat 18:35 - -- So also shall my heavenly Father do to you. In this parable the master is said to have remitted the debt, and yet afterwards to have punished the se...
So also shall my heavenly Father do to you. In this parable the master is said to have remitted the debt, and yet afterwards to have punished the servant for it. God doth not in this manner with us. But we may here observe, once for all, that in parables, diverse things are only ornamental to the parable itself; and a caution and restriction is to be used in applying them. (Witham) ---
Not that God will revoke a pardon once granted; for this would be contrary to his infinite mercy, and his works are without repentance. It means that God will not pardon, or rather that he will severely punish the ingratitude and inhumanity of the man, who, after having received from God the most liberal pardon of his grievous transgressions, refuses to forgive the slightest offence committed against him by his neighbour, who is a member, nay a son of his God. This ingratitude may justly be compared with the 10,000 talents, as every grievous offence committed against God, exceeds, in an infinite degree, any offence against man. (Tirinus) ---
This forgiveness must be real, not pretended; from the heart, and not in word and appearance only; sacrificing all desire of revenge, all anger, hatred and resentment, at the shrine of charity.
====================
Gill: Mat 18:11 - -- For the Son of man is come to seek that which was lost. This is another, and stronger reason, why these little ones should not be despised; because Ch...
For the Son of man is come to seek that which was lost. This is another, and stronger reason, why these little ones should not be despised; because Christ, who is here meant by the Son of man, came into this world to save these persons; who were lost in Adam, and had destroyed themselves by their transgressions, and carries great force in it: for if God had so great a regard to these little ones, as to send his Son to obtain eternal salvation for them, when they were in a miserable and perishing condition; and Christ had so much love for them, as to come into this world, and endure the sorrows, sufferings, and death itself for them, who were not only little, but lost; and that to obtain righteousness and life for them, and save them with an everlasting salvation; then they must, and ought to be, far above the contempt of all mortals; and the utmost care should be taken not to despise, grieve, offend, and injure them in any form or shape whatever; see Rom 14:15. Beza observes, that this whole verse is left out in some Greek copies, but it stands in others, and in all the Oriental versions, and in Munster's Hebrew Gospel; nor can it be omitted; the following parable, which is an exemplification of it, requires it.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:12 - -- How think ye,.... Or, as the Arabic, "what do you think?" what is your opinion of this matter? what is your sense of it? how does it appear to you? It...
How think ye,.... Or, as the Arabic, "what do you think?" what is your opinion of this matter? what is your sense of it? how does it appear to you? It is a Talmudic way of speaking, the same with
If a man have an hundred sheep; who is the proprietor of them; not the hireling, who has them under his care, and whose the sheep are not; but the owner of them, to whom they belong, and who must be thought to be most concerned for anyone of them that should go astray: a hundred sheep seem to be the number of a flock; at least flocks of sheep used to be divided into hundreds. In a Maronite's will, a field is thus bequeathed l;
"the north part of it to such an one, and with it
Such a supposition, or putting such a case as this, is very proper and pertinent.
And one of them be gone astray; which sheep are very prone to; see Psa 119:176;
doth he not leave the ninety and nine, which are not gone astray, in the place where they are; it is usual so to do:
and goeth into the mountains; alluding to the mountains of Israel, where were pastures for sheep, Eze 34:13 and whither sheep are apt to wander, and go from mountain to mountain, Jer 50:6, and therefore these were proper places to go after them, and seek for them in: but the Vulgate Latin version joins the words "in" or "on the mountains", to the preceding clause, and reads,
doth he not leave the ninety and nine in the mountains; and so read all the Oriental versions, Syriac, Arabic, Ethiopic, and Persic; and in the same manner Theophylact;
and seeketh that which is gone astray? This is usual with men: no man that has a flock of sheep, and though but one strays from it, but takes this method. This parable now may be considered, either as an illustration of the Son of man's coming into this world, to seek, and to save his lost sheep, mentioned in the preceding verse; even the lost sheep of the house of Israel, the little ones that believed in him, who were despised by the Jews. And then by the "ninety and nine", we are not to understand the angels; who never went astray, never sinned, but kept their first estate, whom Christ left in the highest heavens, on the holy mountains of eternity, when he became incarnate, and came down on earth to redeem mankind: for these never go by the name of sheep; nor are they of the same nature and kind with the one that strays, and is sought out; nor is their number, with respect to men, as ninety nine to one; at least it cannot be ascertained; nor were they left by Christ, when he came on earth; for a multitude descended at his birth, and sung glory to God. Nor are the saints in heaven intended, whose state is safe; since it cannot be said of them, as in the following verse, that they went not astray; for they went astray like lost sheep, as others, and were looked up, sought out, and saved by Christ as others; but rather, by them, are meant the body of the Jewish nation, the far greater part of them, the Scribes and Pharisees, who rejected the Messiah, and despised those that believed in him: these were in sheep's clothing, of the flock of the house of Israel, of the Jewish fold; and with respect to the remnant among them, according to the election of grace, were as ninety nine to one: these were left by Christ, and taken no notice of by him, in comparison of the little ones, the lost sheep of the house of Israel he came to save: these he left on the mountains, on the barren pastures of Mount Sinai, feeding on their own works and services; or rather, he went into the mountains, or came leaping and skipping over them, Son 2:8, encountering with, and surmounting all difficulties that lay in the way of the salvation of his people; such as appearing in the likeness of sinful flesh, bearing, and carrying the griefs and sorrows of his people, obeying the law, satisfying justice, bearing their sins, and undergoing an accursed death, in order to obtain the salvation of his chosen ones, designed by the one sheep "that was gone astray"; who strayed from God, from his law, the rule of their walk, out of his way, into the ways of sin, which are of their own choosing and approving: or, the intention of this parable is, to set forth the great regard God has to persons ever so mean, that believe in Christ, whom he would not have stumbled and offended, and takes special care of them, that they shall not perish; even as the proprietor of a flock of sheep is more concerned for one straying one, than for the other ninety nine that remain.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:13 - -- And if so be that he find it,.... Which is a casual and uncertain thing with the shepherd, but not so with Christ, who certainly finds all those he go...
And if so be that he find it,.... Which is a casual and uncertain thing with the shepherd, but not so with Christ, who certainly finds all those he goes after, and seeks: for,
verily I say unto you, he rejoiceth more of that sheep; at the finding of it, whose loss greatly affected him,
than of the ninety and nine which went not astray; who seemed not to go astray, were outwardly righteous before men, and, in their own opinion, being the same with the ninety and nine just persons who needed no repentance in their own apprehension, Luk 15:7. This same parable is related in Luk 15:3, and it being there more largely expressed, and along with other parables of the same kind, I shall refer the more particular consideration of it to that place; only observe, that it seems to me that this parable was twice delivered by our Lord, and that on two different occasions; once, as here, in his discourse on offences, and upon mention of his coming into this world to save lost sinners; at another time, as there, upon the Pharisees murmuring at his receiving sinners, and eating with them.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:14 - -- Even so it is not the will of your father which is in heaven,.... This is the accommodation, or application of the parable of the lost sheep to the pr...
Even so it is not the will of your father which is in heaven,.... This is the accommodation, or application of the parable of the lost sheep to the present purpose, and is the top of the climax or gradation here made use of. First, Christ observes, in order to deter any from despising and offending any of his disciples, even the meanest, that they have angels to be their guardians, who are continually in the presence of God; and next, that he himself in human nature came to be the author of salvation to these persons; and then rises up to the sovereign will of his Father, and their's, the source and security of their everlasting happiness; which will is, not
that one of these little ones, that believe in Christ,
should perish. It is his will of command that no stumbling block should be laid in their way to cause them to stumble and fall, to the grieving of their souls, the wounding of their consciences, and the perishing, or loss of their peace and comfort; and it is his unalterable will of purpose, or his unchangeable decree, that not one of them, even the meanest, shall perish eternally: in pursuance of which will, he has chosen them in his Son, he has put them into his hands, and secured them in his covenant; and having redeemed them by Christ, and called them by grace, he keeps them by his power, through faith unto salvation. Nor shall anyone of them finally and totally fall away and perish, through the power of their own corruptions, the temptations of Satan, the reproaches and persecutions of men, the frowns or flatteries of the world, or through the errors and heresies of false teachers, or any other way. It is to be observed, that when our Lord, in Mat 18:10, is speaking of the happiness of the angels, and the honour done to the little ones by having such guardians; then the more to aggrandize this matter, he represents those as in the presence of his "Father which is in heaven"; but here, when he would express the wonderful love and grace of God, in the resolutions of his heart, and purposes of his will, to save them, then it is "your Father which is in heaven"; and this, the rather to engage them to the belief of it, since they stood in such a near relation to him, as children to a father: and therefore must be infinitely more concerned for their welfare, than a proprietor of sheep can be, for one that is lost. The Arabic and Ethiopic versions indeed read, "my father", but without any authority; for the phraseology, "the will before your Father", as in the original text; see Gill on Mat 11:26
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:15 - -- Moreover, if thy brother shall trespass against thee,.... This is said to show, that as on the one hand, if any of those that believe in Christ, shoul...
Moreover, if thy brother shall trespass against thee,.... This is said to show, that as on the one hand, if any of those that believe in Christ, should commit a trespass against his fellow Christian, his sin is not to be connived at, for fear of offending him; for what Christ has before said, is not to be taken in such sense, as to prevent private reproof, or public censures, when there is occasion for them; so on the other hand, he is not to be despised and ill used, and treated in the same injurious manner; but gentle reproofs are to be made use of, for his good. This is spoken not to the apostles as such, but as believers in Christ; and concerns everyone that stands in the relation of a brother, or church member to each other, and only such; for they that are without, do not fall under their notice, nor are they obliged to take, nor can they take altogether, the same methods with them. This rule respects sins committed by one brother against another, either in word or deed; or such as are of a private nature, and which one only, or at least but few, are acquainted with: in such cases the advice is,
go and tell him his fault between thee, and him alone; do not wait for his coming to thee, as being the aggressor, to acknowledge his fault, testify his repentance, express his sorrow for his sin, and ask pardon: but go to him, and freely and faithfully lay his sin before him; but do not aggravate it, and reproach him with it, and bear hard on him for it, but gently rebuke and reprove him: let this be done in the most private manner; let none be present, nor any know of it, even the most intimate friend and acquaintance:
if he shall hear thee; patiently, take your reproof kindly, acknowledge his offence, declare his hearty sorrow for it, and desire it might be overlooked, and reconciliation made:
thou hast gained thy brother; recovered him from the error of his ways, restored him to his duty, and secured his friendship, and interest in his favour; nor should any mention be made of this ever after, either to him, or any other, or to the church.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:16 - -- But if he will not hear thee,..... But will either deny the fact, or extenuate and excuse it, or defend it, or at least is obstinate and incorrigible,...
But if he will not hear thee,..... But will either deny the fact, or extenuate and excuse it, or defend it, or at least is obstinate and incorrigible, shows no signs of repentance, but is angry, gives hard words, and ill language:
then take with thee one or two more; members of the church, and perhaps of weight, reputation, and character, who either know some thing of the matter, and so can confirm, by their testimony, what has been alleged, in order to bring the person to conviction and acknowledgment; or if they do not, and which seems rather to be the sense, they may, by hearing what is said on both sides, judge where the truth lies, and join with the offended person in the admonition, that it may fall with the greater weight, and become more effectual:
that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established, referring to Deu 19:15. So that should the matter be brought before the whole church, these witnesses would be able to testify the truth of the case, and report the steps that had been taken, and what effect they had had; so that things being thus prepared, the case would appear plain and easy, and without difficulty. The whole of this is very agreeable to the rules and customs of the Jews, and is founded on the law, in Lev 19:17, upon which they form rules very much like to these. They represent God himself taking such a method as this, with the sons of men m:
"When the holy blessed God reproves a man, he reproves him in love, privately: if he receives it, it is well; if not, he reproves him among his friends: if he receives it, it is well; if not he reproves him openly before the eyes of all; if he receives it is well; if not, he leaves him, and reproves him no more.''
And this is an instruction to men, how they should reprove their friends. They say n, "he that sees anything in his friend that is not becoming, he ought to reprove him." And which is elsewhere more o largely expressed:
"he that seeth his friend walking in a way that is not good, he is bound to reprove him, even a disciple his master; and this he shall do for his good, and in order to bring him to the life of the world to come, or eternal life; and "if he takes it of him, it is well": but if not, he must reprove again, "a second and a third time"; and so he must reprove him many times, if, or until he hears him.''
And this they require to be done, in the most private manner:
"reproof out of love (they p say) is secret from the children of men; whoever reproves his friend in love, seeks to secrete his words from the sons of men, that he may not expose him thereby to shame and reproach.''
That is, as the gloss q on it observes,
"he seeks to reprove him in secret, so that he may not be put to shame before many.''
If this way does not succeed, they allow of a public reproof, for so it is said r;
"thou mayest not reprove him with hard words, till his countenance changes; for whoever causes the face of his friend to turn pale publicly, has no portion in the world to come; but thou mayest reprove in the words of heaven, or God; and if he does not return privately, thou mayest make him ashamed publicly, and expose his sin before him; and reproach and curse him, until he returns to do well; so did all the prophets to Israel.''
They plead also for a second reproof, from the text in Lev 19:17 s.
"From whence does it appear, that he that sees anything in his friend unbecoming, ought to reprove him? As it is said, "thou shalt in any wise rebuke", &c. if he reproves him,
The whole of this is very fully expressed in a few words, by one t of their best writers, and in great agreement with these rules of Christ:
"He that sees his friend sinning, or going in a way not good, he is commanded to cause him to return to that which is good; and to let him know, that he sins against himself by his evil works; as it is said, "thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour": he that reproveth his friend, whether for things between him and himself, or whether for things between him and God, "ought to reprove him",
Buxtorf has produced a passage out of one of their writers u, in the very language in which Christ here delivers himself:
"The wise man says, if thy friend does thee an injury, reprove him between him and thee alone: if he hears thee, thou hast already gained; if he does not hear thee, speak to him before one or two, who may hear the matter, and if he will not hear reckon him a "worthless friend".''
One would almost be ready to think, that this writer should mean Christ by the wise man, were it not for the implacable enmity they bear unto him. The above author has cited also the following passage out of the same w writer, pertinent to the present purpose:
"A friend that declares to thee thy faults, "between him and thee", whenever he meets thee, is better to thee than a friend, that whenever he meets thee, gives thee a golden penny.''
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:17 - -- And if he shall neglect to hear them,.... The one or two, in conjunction with the offended person that shall hear the ease, and admonish and reprove; ...
And if he shall neglect to hear them,.... The one or two, in conjunction with the offended person that shall hear the ease, and admonish and reprove; if he takes no notice of what they say to him, but remains stiff and impenitent, tell it unto the church: which some understand, of the
But if he neglect to hear the church: the advice they should give unto him, the reproof they should think proper for him, or the censure they should pass upon him,
let him be unto thee as an heathen man, and a publican. This is not a form of excommunication to be used among Christians, nor was there ever any such form among the Jews; nor could Heathens or publicans, especially such publicans as were Gentiles, be excommunicated, when they never were of the Jewish church.
"A religious person indeed, that becomes a collector of taxes, they first said, is to be driven from the society; but they afterwards said, all the time that he is a tax gatherer, they drive him from the society; but when he goes out of his office, lo! he is as a religious person z.''
But one that never was of a religious society, could not be driven out of it. And besides, this is given, not as a rule to the church, but as advice to the offended person, how to behave towards the offender: after he has come under the cognizance, reproof, and censure of the church, he is to look upon him as the Jews did one that disregarded both private reproof by a man's self, and that which was in the presence of one or two more,
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:18 - -- Verily I say unto you,.... To them all, what he had said before to Peter; See Gill on Mat 16:19, what is said here, refers to things and not persons, ...
Verily I say unto you,.... To them all, what he had said before to Peter; See Gill on Mat 16:19, what is said here, refers to things and not persons, as there also.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:19 - -- Again, I say unto you,.... As the words in the former verse seem to regard the whole body of the disciples, whose decisions in cases brought before th...
Again, I say unto you,.... As the words in the former verse seem to regard the whole body of the disciples, whose decisions in cases brought before them, declaring them just or unjust, are determinate and unalterable; these seem to respect the one or two, that should join the offended person in the reproof of the offender, and are spoken for their encouragement; who might think proper either to premise, or follow their engaging in such a work with prayer:
that if two of you shall agree on earth, as touching anything that they shall ask; both in the case before mentioned, and in any other thing: whether it be for themselves or others; to assist them in the ministry of the word, and give success to it, for the conversion of sinners; and in the performance of any miracle, for the confirmation of the Gospel; in the administration of ordinances, for the comfort of saints; and in laying on of censures, for the reclaiming of backsliders; or be it what it will that may be done, consistent with the glory of God, the purposes of his mind, and the declarations of his will, and the good of men, provided they agree in their requests; though they are here on earth, and at such a distance from heaven, from whence their help and assistance come:
it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven; with whom nothing is impossible; and who, as he regards the effectual fervent prayer of any righteous man, so more, of two agreed together in anyone thing; and still more, of a church and community of saints in their united requests: a great encouragement this to social prayer, though ever so few are engaged in it.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:20 - -- For where two or three are gathered together,.... This seems to be said in opposition to a Jewish notion, that a number less than ten, is not a congre...
For where two or three are gathered together,.... This seems to be said in opposition to a Jewish notion, that a number less than ten, is not a congregation a; whereas, though the number is ever so few that are met together to pray to God; or to hear his word, attend on his ordinances, or do the business of his house, or transact any affair that is for the glory of God, and the good of souls, in my name, says Christ; that is, by his authority, depending on his assistance, calling upon his name, and making use of it, and seeking the glory of it:
there am I in the midst of them; presiding over them, ruling in their hearts, directing their counsels, assisting them in all they are concerned, confirming what they do, and giving a blessing and success to all they are engaged in. The Jews, though they say there is no congregation less than ten, yet own that the divine presence may be with a lesser number, even as small an one as here mentioned b.
"Ten that sit and study in the law, the Shechaniah dwells among them, as it is said, Psa 82:1. From whence does this appear, if but five? from Amo 9:6, from whence, if but three? from Psa 82:1, from whence, if but two? from Mal 3:16, from whence, if but one? from Exo 20:24.''
And again c,
"two that sit together, and the words of the law are between them, the Shechaniah dwells among them, according to Mal 3:16, from whence does it appear, that if but one sits and studies in the law, the holy blessed God hath fixed a reward for him? from Lam 3:28.''
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:21 - -- Then came Peter unto him,.... Having heard and observed the rules Christ gave concerning offences and brotherly reproofs, he drew near to Christ, and ...
Then came Peter unto him,.... Having heard and observed the rules Christ gave concerning offences and brotherly reproofs, he drew near to Christ, and put this question to him:
and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? He instances in a brother, because it was such an one Christ had been speaking of; he makes no doubt of its being his duty to forgive him upon his repentance, and acknowledgment, but wanted to be reformed, how often this was to be done, and asks, whether
until seven times? Which was, as he might think, a large number; and especially, since it was double the number of times, that the Jewish doctors set for forgiveness: for thus they say d,
"A man that commits a sin, the "first" time they pardon him; the "second" time they pardon him; the "third" time they pardon him: the "fourth" time they do not pardon, according to Amo 2:6.''
Again,
"he that says I have sinned, and I repent, they forgive him "unto three times", and no more e.''
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:22 - -- Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee,.... Which is as if he had said, observe what I am about to say, I do not agree to what thou sayest to fix t...
Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee,.... Which is as if he had said, observe what I am about to say, I do not agree to what thou sayest to fix the number, "until seven times only", but
until seventy times seven; a certain number for an uncertain, see Gen 4:24. Christ's meaning is, that a man should be all the days, and every day of his life, forgiving those that sin against him, as often as they repent and acknowledge their fault; and that no time is to be set for the exercise of the grace of forgiveness; but as often as there are objects and occasions, though ever so many and frequent, it should be used; and which he illustrates by the following parable.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:23 - -- Therefore is the kingdom of heaven,.... The Gospel church state, or the church of Christ under the Gospel dispensation, and the methods of God's deali...
Therefore is the kingdom of heaven,.... The Gospel church state, or the church of Christ under the Gospel dispensation, and the methods of God's dealings in it;
likened unto a certain king: or "a man", "a king", pointing either to Christ, the king Messiah, who is King of kings, and Lord of lords, the King of saints and churches; who, as God, has a natural kingdom of providence, and as man and Mediator, a kingdom of grace; and will have a more visibly glorious one, both in this world and in the other; or rather, the Father of Christ, as appears from the application of the parable, in Mat 18:35, who is the living God, and everlasting King: whose is the kingdom of nature, grace, and glory:
which would take account of his servants; not all mankind, though these are all in a sense his servants, and accountable to him; nor only ministers of the Gospel, who are so in an eminent and peculiar sense, and must give an account to God of their time and talents, and souls committed to them; but all that bear the Christian name, that are professors of religion, that are either really or nominally the subjects and servants of God. These, it is sometimes the will and pleasure of God, to "take account of": not of their persons, or number, but of their conduct and behaviour; which, as it will be more fully done at death, or at judgment, so sometimes is taken in this life: God sometimes calls, and brings, professors of religion to an account, and reckons with them by afflictive dispensations of providence; when he puts them upon reflecting how they have spent their time, made use of their talents and gifts, and have behaved in their families, and in the world, and church; or by dealing roundly with men's consciences, awakening and convincing them of their sins, of omission and commission, which seems to be intended here.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:24 - -- And when he had begun to reckon,.... To open the book of conscience, and to bring to account by some awakening providence, and strong conviction: one ...
And when he had begun to reckon,.... To open the book of conscience, and to bring to account by some awakening providence, and strong conviction: one was brought unto him; whether he would or no, through the force of an awakened conscience, under guilt and terror;
which owed him ten thousand talents; which must be understood, either of gold, or silver: a talent of silver contained 3,000 shekels, as appears from Exo 38:25, and was in value of our money 375l. but a talent of gold was equal to 4,500l. of our f money. According to Dr. Prideaux g, a talent of silver was 450l. and a talent of gold, the proportion of gold to silver being reckoned as sixteen to one, was 7,200l. and according to Bishop Cumberland, a talent of silver was 353l. 11s. 10d. ob. and a talent of gold of the same weight, was 5,075l. 15s. 7d. ob. The whole, according to Dr. Hammond, was a thousand eight hundred seventy five thousand pounds, reckoning them silver talents; but if talents of gold are meant, what an immense sum must ten thousand of them be! According to some, seventy two millions sterling. The design of the phrase, is to set forth the exceeding greatness of the debt. Munster's Hebrew Gospel reads it, "ten thousand manehs", or pounds; and so the Persic version: now the value of a maneh of gold, was 75l. and of silver, 7l 10s. h take the sum in the least quantity and value, it was exceeding large. The Arabic version renders it a "sum of talents", without mentioning the number, and may mean an innumerable one. Mention is made of such a number of talents of silver, in Est 3:9, which Aben Ezra says is defective, and signifies ten thousand thousand talents. The "second" Targum on the place says, that the sum of six hundred thousand zuzim, drachms, or pence (i.e. Roman ones) is ten thousand talents of silver. These "ten thousand talents" intend sins, which are called debts, in Scripture; not that they are properly so, or owing to God, for then it would be right to pay them, but because they bind over to punishment. All men owe a debt of thankfulness to God, for their beings, the preservation of them, and all the mercies of life; and a debt of obedience to the whole law, in failure of which, they are obliged to punishment: hence every sin becomes a debt, and these are numerous; indwelling sin, and the lusts thereof, are innumerable; as are actual sins and transgressions, they are more than the hairs of a man's head, and are fitly expressed, both for the weight and quantity of them, by "ten thousand talents". In this light they appear to the conscience of an awakened sinner, who sees that he has been doing nothing but sin, all the days of his life; and that he has been continually breaking the law, one precept or another of it, in thought, word, or deed: which violations of the law, even in word and deed, are risen up to so great a sum, that he is not able to give it to any nearness, and with any exactness; he cannot understand all his errors, nor express the full number of them, or declare all their aggravated circumstances; besides the swarms of corruption of internal lusts and sins, which he observes dwelling in his heart, and are as innumerable as the motes and atoms in a sunbeam. The sins of God's people, which have been all made to meet upon Christ, have been laid upon him by his Father's imputation of them to him, with his own consent, are represented in this manner; see Psa 40:12. And indeed, if the debts of one of them amount to ten thousand talents, what must the sum of all be, put together! and how great must be the strength and power of Christ, to bear the weight of these sins, and not be broken or discouraged, and fail, as he did not! and what a rich virtue and efficacy must there be in his blood, to pay off all these debts, and make satisfaction for them, which could never have been done, if he had not done it! for, it is impossible that a person in such circumstances as here described, should ever be able to recover himself, or pay his debts, as follows.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:25 - -- But forasmuch as he had not to pay,.... Every sinner is insolvent; sinful man has run out the whole stock of nature, and is become a bankrupt, and has...
But forasmuch as he had not to pay,.... Every sinner is insolvent; sinful man has run out the whole stock of nature, and is become a bankrupt, and has nothing to offer by way of composition; nor has he any righteousness to answer for him, nor any works of righteousness which deserve that name: and if he had, these are nothing in point of payment: for a debt of sin cannot be discharged by a debt of obedience; since God has a prior right to the latter; and in paying it, a man does but what is his duty. Sin being committed against an infinite God, contracts the nature of an infinite debt, which cannot be paid off by a finite creature. Christ only was able to pay this debt, and he has done it for his people; and without an interest in his blood, righteousness, and satisfaction, every debtor is liable to be cast, and will be cast into the prison of hell, there to lie till the uttermost farthing of the ten thousand talents is paid, which will be to all eternity. We see what a sad condition sin has brought men into; it has stripped them of their estates and possessions; it has reduced them to want and beggary; it exposes them to a prison; to the just resentments of their creditor; to the wrath of God, and the curses of the law; and what little reason there is to think, yea, how impossible it is, that a man should be able to merit anything at the hands of God, to whom he is so greatly indebted: he must first pay his debts, which is a thing impracticable, before he can pretend to do anything deserving the notice of God; and even was he set free, and clear of all his debts, and entered upon a new life of obedience, and this strictly attended to, without contracting any debts for the future, yet all this would be but what is due to God, and could merit nothing of him; see Luk 17:10. We see also from hence, how much the saints are obliged to Christ Jesus, and how thankful they should be to him, who became a surety for such insolvent creatures; has paid all their debts for them, and procured for them every blessing of grace they stand in need of: but think, O sinner, what thou wilt be able to say and do, when God comes to reckon with thee, and thou hast nothing to pay, nor any to pay for thee, or be thy surety; a prison must be thy portion ever.
His Lord commanded him to be sold, and his wife and children, and all that he had; according to the Jewish laws, in such a case: of a man's being sold, or selling himself when poor, see Lev 25:47, for the law in Exo 22:3, referred to by some as an instance of this, respects the selling of a man for theft, and not for debt. Of the selling of a man's wife for the payment of his debts, I do not remember to have read any law concerning it, or instances of it; but of children being taken for bondmen by the creditor, for their father's debts, mention is made, 2Ki 4:1. These children, by the Jewish writers i, are said to be the children of Obadiah, who contracted the debt to feed the prophets in a cave, when they were persecuted by Jezebel; and the creditor, according to them, was Jehoram, the son of Ahab, who lent him money on usury for this purpose, in his father's time; and now Obadiah being dead, he takes his children for the debt, and makes them bondmen; see also Neh 5:5. There seems to be an allusion to this practice, in Isa 50:1, and it was not only the custom of the Jews to come upon children for the debts of parents, but of other nations: with the Athenians, if a father could not pay his debts, the son was obliged to pay, and in the mean while to be kept in bonds till he did k: and as Grotius, in 2Ki 4:1 proves from Plutarch and Dionysius Halicarnassensis, children were sold by the creditors of their parents, as in Asia, at Athens, and at Rome. Now this expresses the state of bondage, sin, as a debt, brings men into; they become slaves to their own lusts, vassals of Satan, and in bondage to the law; and also the ruin and destruction it exposes them to; as, the curse and condemnation of the law, the wrath of God, eternal death, even the destruction of body and soul in hell:
and payment to be made by punishment, which will always be making, and never finished. This order of the king was not intended to be executed, as the sequel shows; but declares the will of God, that the sad and woeful condition of man should be set before him by the ministers of the word; signifying what his state is, how deserving of vengeance, and what must be his portion, if grace prevent not: the view of which is to vindicate the rights of law and justice, to express the sinner's deserts, and move him to apply to the Lord for grace and mercy, which effect it had.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:26 - -- The servant therefore fell down,.... At his feet, upon his knees, or on his face, to the ground; not being able to stand before him, or look him in th...
The servant therefore fell down,.... At his feet, upon his knees, or on his face, to the ground; not being able to stand before him, or look him in the face, and much less to answer the demands of his law and justice; but owned the debt, and his present inability to pay,
and worshipped him: the Vulgate Latin reads it, "prayed", or entreated him,
saying, Lord have patience with me; give me but time, spare me a little longer, send me not to prison, and I will pay thee all: a very weak and foolish promise, but what is usual for men in such circumstances to make. Thus men, under guilt, and dreadful apprehensions of wrath and ruin, frequently promise, that if their lives are but spared, what they will do for God, and in a religious way; and very foolishly and ignorantly imagine, that by their humiliation and tears, their prayers and other services by their good lives and conversations, for the future, they shall be able to make compensation to God for all the iniquities they have been guilty of: which shows them to be exceeding ignorant of the nature of sin, which is committed against an infinite being, and therefore reconciliation for it cannot be made by finite creature; as also of the nature of their duties and services, which, when performed, in ever so good a manner, can never make satisfaction for past offences, these being duties they are obliged to perform; and would have been equally obliged thereunto if they had never offended; and likewise betrays great vanity, pride, boasting, and conceit of themselves, and abilities, as that they shall be able, in a little time to pay all, when they have nothing at all to pay with: and was patience to be exercised towards them ever so long, they would still be in the same condition, and in no better capacity to make payment; but, on the contrary, would still run a larger score, and be more and more in debt. Indeed, the patience and longsuffering of God to his people is salvation; not that by giving them time, and bearing with them, they discharge their debts, and work out their salvation; but waiting upon them to be gracious to them, he brings them to repentance, to a sense of themselves and sins, and to an acknowledgment of them, and leads them, by faith, to his Son for righteousness, forgiveness, salvation, and eternal life; but as for others, his patience towards them, and forbearance of them, issue in their everlasting destruction, which, by their iniquities, they are fitted for.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:27 - -- Then the Lord of that servant was moved with compassion,.... Or had compassion on him, showed pity to him, and extended mercy towards him; not that he...
Then the Lord of that servant was moved with compassion,.... Or had compassion on him, showed pity to him, and extended mercy towards him; not that he was moved hereunto by any actions of his, as his prostrating himself before him, and his worshipping him, nor by his cries and entreaties, nor by his promises, which were not at all to be depended on, but by his own goodness, and will; for not to anything that this man said, or did, nor to any deserts of his, but to the pure mercy, and free grace of God, is to be ascribed what is after related:
and loosed him; from obligation to punishment, and from a spirit of bondage, through the guilt of sin, and work of the law upon his conscience:
and forgave him the debt; the whole debt of ten thousand talents: for when God forgives sin, he forgives all sin, original and actual, secret and open, sins of omission and commission, of heart, lip, and life, of thought, word, and deed, past, present, and to come; and that freely, according to his abundant mercy, and the riches of his grace; without any regard to any merits, motives and conditions in the creature; though not without respect to the satisfaction of Christ, which no ways detracts from the grace and mercy of God, since this is owing to his gracious provision and acceptation. It was grace in God that provided, sent, and parted with his Son to be the propitiatory sacrifice for sin, and accepted the satisfaction when made, in the room, and stead of sinners: it was grace in Christ to become a surety for them, to assume their nature, to shed his precious blood, and give himself an offering, and a sacrifice for them; and it is distinguishing grace that this satisfaction should be provided, made, and accepted, not for angels, but for men; and though it is at the expense of Christ's blood and life that this satisfaction is made, and remission of sins obtained, yet the whole is entirely free to those who are partakers of it; they have it without money; and without price. So, that though the satisfaction of Christ is not expressly mentioned in this parable, and forgiveness of sin, which lies in a non-remembrance, and non-imputation of it, in a covering, and blotting it out, and in remitting the obligation to punishment for it, is ascribed to the compassion and mercy of God, yet it is implied; since these two involve each other: the special mercy of God, in the forgiveness of sins, streams only through the blood, righteousness, and sacrifice of Christ; and the sacrifice and satisfaction of Christ largely display the grace and mercy of God.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:28 - -- But the same servant went out,.... From his Lord's palace and presence, immediately, directly, after he had got his pardon and liberty:
and found o...
But the same servant went out,.... From his Lord's palace and presence, immediately, directly, after he had got his pardon and liberty:
and found one of his fellow servants; a fellow creature and Christian; not only one of the same nature and species; but of the same profession of religion, and in the service of the same kind and generous master:
which owed an hundred pence; which, if understood of Roman pence, each penny being seven pence halfpenny of our money, amounted to no more than three pounds and half-a-crown; a small sum, in comparison of the ten thousand talents which had been just now forgiven him: for so sins committed against men, against fellow creatures, or fellow Christians; are but small, when compared with those which are committed against God. All which circumstances, as that it was immediately after he had been forgiven himself; that it was a fellow servant he found: and the sum he owed him so inconsiderable, greatly aggravate his inhuman carriage, next related:
and he laid hands on him, and took him by the throat, saying, pay me that thou owest; he laid hold on him in a violent manner, and used him with great inhumanity: he took him by the collar, and shook him, and griped him so hard about the neck, that he almost throttled, and strangled, or choked him, as the word signifies, and is so rendered in most versions. It answers to the Hebrew word
This man insisted on payment of the whole debt; which expresses the rigour and severity used by some professors of religion to their fellow Christians; who, having offended them, in ever so small a matter, will not put up with the affront, nor forgive the injury, without having the most ample satisfaction, and avenging themselves upon them to the uttermost.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:29 - -- And his fellow servant fell down at his feet,.... In the most humble and submissive manner, just as he himself had done a little before at the feet of...
And his fellow servant fell down at his feet,.... In the most humble and submissive manner, just as he himself had done a little before at the feet of his Lord:
and besought him, saying, have patience with me, and I will pay thee all; using the very same words, in which he had expressed himself to his Lord, and had succeeded.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:30 - -- And he would not,.... Have patience with him, give him time for payment, and forbear severity at present, as he requested:
but went and cast him in...
And he would not,.... Have patience with him, give him time for payment, and forbear severity at present, as he requested:
but went and cast him into prison, till he should pay the debt; had him before a proper officer, and proved his debt, and got him sent to jail, there to lie till the whole debt was paid; which, as it discovered ill nature, severe usage, so, great ignorance and stupidity; for a prison will pay no debt: which sets forth the rigorous proceedings of some church members against their brethren, that have displeased them; who immediately bring the matter before the church, and will not be easy unless some censure is laid upon them, or they are cast out, until full satisfaction is given them, whereby oftentimes an useful member of a church is lost.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:31 - -- So when his fellow servants saw what was done,.... What hard usage, and ill treatment, their fellow servant met with; the Syriac reads, "their fellow ...
So when his fellow servants saw what was done,.... What hard usage, and ill treatment, their fellow servant met with; the Syriac reads, "their fellow servants", being the fellow servants both of the creditor and the debtor:
they were very sorry; they were greatly grieved and troubled at the cruelty of the one, and the unhappiness of the other; being more tenderhearted, and of a more forgiving spirit than he:
and came and told unto their Lord all that was done; to their fellow servant, by one that had so lately received such favours from him: this may be expressive of the concern of some members of churches at such conduct: who, though they may not have strength and number sufficient to oppose such measures, yet being secretly grieved at such cruel methods, go to the throne of grace, and spread the case before the Lord, tell him all that is done by way of complaint; which, is no impeachment of his omniscience, only shows their trouble for such malpractices, and the sense they have, by whom only such grievances can be redressed.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:32 - -- Then his Lord, after that he had called him,.... Or ordered him to be called, and brought before him,
said unto him, O thou wicked servant! Munster...
Then his Lord, after that he had called him,.... Or ordered him to be called, and brought before him,
said unto him, O thou wicked servant! Munster's Hebrew Gospel reads, "thou servant of Belial"; thou cruel and hard hearted man to thy fellow servant, and ungrateful creature to me, on whom my goodness to thee has not made any impression, nor taken any effect:
I forgave thee all that debt: all that vast debt of ten thousand talents, and that freely:
because thou desiredst me: not to forgive the debt, but to have patience, and give time, and therefore unasked forgave the whole sum, every farthing of it; which was such an instance of pure goodness, as was enough to have wrought upon an heart of stone, and engaged the most tender concern and pity for a fellow creature, as well as filled with thankfulness to the kind benefactor. The favour so lately bestowed on him is justly observed as an aggravation of his wickedness.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:33 - -- Shouldest not thou also have had compassion..... It is but reasonable, what ought to be, and may be expected, that such who have received mercy, shoul...
Shouldest not thou also have had compassion..... It is but reasonable, what ought to be, and may be expected, that such who have received mercy, should show mercy; and as the Lord had compassion on this man, and had forgiven him such an immense sum, and saved him, his wife and children, from being sold for bondslaves, the least he could have done after this, would have been to have followed such an example, and have had mercy, as his Lord says to him,
on thy fellow servant; between whom, and him, there was not so great a distance, as between him, and his Lord; and the sum so small that was owing to him, as not to be mentioned with his:
even as, I had pity on thee; such an instance of pity and compassion did not only set him an example, worthy of his imitation, but laid him under an obligation to have acted such a part.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:34 - -- And his Lord was wroth,.... Very angry, greatly incensed, and justly provoked at such inhuman treatment:
and delivered him to the tormentors, or ja...
And his Lord was wroth,.... Very angry, greatly incensed, and justly provoked at such inhuman treatment:
and delivered him to the tormentors, or jail keepers. The Ethiopic version renders it, "to them that judge", or the judges; Munster's Hebrew Gospel, "to the punishers", or such that inflicted punishment according to the decree of the judge: from both, the sense may be, that he was delivered over to proper judges of his case, to be treated as the nature of it required, to be cast into prison, and there endure all the severities of law and justice:
till he should pay all that was due unto him; which being so vast a sum, and he but a servant, could never be done: but inasmuch as this man was fully and freely pardoned before, how comes it to pass, that full payment of debt is yet insisted on? It is certain, that sin, once pardoned by God, he never punishes for it; for pardon with him is of all sin; he forgives all trespasses, though ever so many, and remits the whole debt, be it ever so large; which act of his grace will never be revoked: it is one of his gifts which are without repentance; it proceeds upon, and comes through a plenary satisfaction for sin made by his own Son, and therefore it would be unjust to punish for it: by this act, sin is covered out of sight; it is blotted out, and entirely done away, and that for ever. Hence some think this man had only the offer of a pardon, and not that itself; but it is not an offer of pardon, that Christ, by his blood, has procured, and is exalted to give, but that itself; and this man had his debt, his whole debt forgiven him: others think, that this was a church forgiveness, who looked upon him, judged him, and received him as one forgiven; but for his cruel usage of a fellow member, delivered him to the tormentors, passed censures on him, and excommunicated him, till he should give full satisfaction, which is more likely: others, this forgiveness was only in his own apprehensions: he presumed, and hoped he was forgiven, when he was not; but then his crime could not have been so aggravated as is: rather, this forgiveness is to be understood of averting calamities and judgments, likely to fall for his iniquities, which is sometimes the sense of this phrase: see 1Ki 8:34 and so his being delivered to the tormentors may mean, his being distressed with an accusing guilty conscience, an harassing, vexing devil, many misfortunes of life, and temporal calamities. Though after all, this is not strictly to be applied to any particular case or person, but the scope of the parable is to be attended to; which is to enforce mutual forgiveness among men, from having received full and free pardon at the hands of God; and that without the former, there is little reason to expect the latter, as appears from what follows.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Mat 18:35 - -- So likewise shall my heavenly Father,.... This is the accommodation and application of the parable, and opens the design and intent of it; showing tha...
So likewise shall my heavenly Father,.... This is the accommodation and application of the parable, and opens the design and intent of it; showing that God, who is Christ's Father, that is in heaven, will act in like manner towards all such persons, who are cruel and hard hearted to their brethren, and are of merciless and unforgiving spirits; for so it is said,
he will do also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses. The phrase, "their trespasses", is omitted by the Vulgate Latin, the Arabic, and the Ethiopic versions, but is in all the Greek copies; and designs not pecuniary debts, though these are to be forgiven, and not rigorously exacted in some cases, and circumstances; but all injuries by word or deed, all offences, though ever so justly taken, or unjustly given; these should be forgiven fully, freely, and from the heart, forgetting, as well as forgiving, not upbraiding with them, or with former offences, and aggravating them; and should also pray to God that he would forgive also. It is certainly the will of God, that we should forgive one another all trespasses and offences. The examples of God and Christ should lead and engage unto it; the pardon of sin received by ourselves from the hands of God strongly enforces it; the peace and comfort of communion in public ordinances require it; the reverse is contrary to the spirit and character of Christians, is very displeasing to our heavenly Father, greatly unlike to Christ, and grieving to the Spirit of God.
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Mat 18:11; Mat 18:12; Mat 18:12; Mat 18:12; Mat 18:13; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:15; Mat 18:16; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:17; Mat 18:18; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:19; Mat 18:21; Mat 18:22; Mat 18:23; Mat 18:24; Mat 18:24; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:25; Mat 18:26; Mat 18:26; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:28; Mat 18:29; Mat 18:31; Mat 18:32; Mat 18:34; Mat 18:35; Mat 18:35
NET Notes: Mat 18:11 The most important mss (א B L* Θ* Ë1,13 33 892* pc e ff1 sys sa) do not include 18:11 “For the Son of Man came to save the lost....
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:12 Look for the one that went astray. The parable pictures God’s pursuit of the sinner. On the image of Jesus as the Good Shepherd, see John 10:1-1...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:17 To treat him like a Gentile or a tax collector means not to associate with such a person. See the note on tax collectors in 5:46.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:19 Grk “if two of you…agree about whatever they ask, it will be done for them by my Father who is in heaven.” The passive construction ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:21 Here the term “brother” means “fellow believer” or “fellow Christian” (cf. BDAG 18 s.v. ἀδελ&...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:22 Or “seventy times seven,” i.e., an unlimited number of times. See L&N 60.74 and 60.77 for the two possible translations of the phrase.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:24 A talent was a huge sum of money, equal to 6,000 denarii. One denarius was the usual day’s wage for a worker. L&N 6.82 states, “a Gree...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:26 The majority of mss (א L W 058 0281 Ë1,13 33 Ï it syp,h co) begin the slave’s plea with “Lord” (κύρ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:28 The word “me” is not in the Greek text, but is implied. Direct objects were often omitted in Greek when clear from the context.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:29 Grk “begged him, saying.” The participle λέγων (legwn) is redundant here in contemporary English and has not been...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:32 Grk “him”; the referent (the first slave mentioned in v. 24) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:34 Grk “handed him over to the torturers,” referring specifically to guards whose job was to torture prisoners who were being questioned. Acc...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Mat 18:35 Here the term “brother” means “fellow believer” or “fellow Christian” (cf. BDAG 18 s.v. ἀδελ&...
Geneva Bible: Mat 18:15 ( 5 ) Moreover if thy brother shall trespass against ( e ) thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou has...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Mat 18:16 But if he will not hear [thee, then] take with thee one or two more, that in the ( f ) mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be ( g ) establi...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Mat 18:17 ( 6 ) And if he shall ( h ) neglect to hear them, tell [it] unto the ( i ) church: but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as ( k )...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Mat 18:19 Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall ( l ) agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Mat 18:21 ( 7 ) Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? till seven times?
( 7 ) They will find God ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Mat 18:24 And when he had begun to reckon, one was brought unto him, which owed him ( m ) ten thousand talents.
( m ) Here is set down a very great sum of six ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Mat 18:26 The servant therefore fell down, and ( n ) worshipped him, saying, Lord, ( o ) have patience with me, and I will pay thee all.
( n ) This was a polit...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Mat 18:1-35
TSK Synopsis: Mat 18:1-35 - --1 Christ warns his disciples to be humble and harmless,7 to avoid offences,10 and not to despise the little ones;15 teaches how we are to deal with ou...
Maclaren: Mat 18:1-14 - --The Law Of Precedence In The Kingdom
At the same time came the disciples unto Jesus, saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? 2. And Jes...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Maclaren: Mat 18:12 - --The Lost Sheep And The Seeking Shepherd
If a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be gone astray, doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and go...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Maclaren: Mat 18:13 - --The Persistence Of Thwarted Love
If so be that he find it.'--Matt. 18:13.
Until he find it.'--Luke 15:4.
LIKE other teachers, Jesus seems to have had...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Maclaren: Mat 18:22 - --Forgiven And Unforgiving
Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times; but, Until seventy times seven.'--Matt. 18:22.
THE disciples h...
MHCC: Mat 18:7-14 - --Considering the cunning and malice of Satan, and the weakness and depravity of men's hearts, it is not possible but that there should be offences. God...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
MHCC: Mat 18:15-20 - --If a professed Christian is wronged by another, he ought not to complain of it to others, as is often done merely upon report, but to go to the offend...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
MHCC: Mat 18:21-35 - --Though we live wholly on mercy and forgiveness, we are backward to forgive the offences of our brethren. This parable shows how much provocation God h...
Matthew Henry: Mat 18:7-14 - -- Our Savior here speaks of offences, or scandals, I. In general, Mat 18:7. Having mentioned the offending of little ones, he takes occasion to speak ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Matthew Henry: Mat 18:15-20 - -- Christ, having cautioned his disciples not to give offence, comes next to direct them what they must do in case of offences given them; which may be...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Matthew Henry: Mat 18:21-35 - -- This part of the discourse concerning offences is certainly to be understood of personal wrongs, which is in our power to forgive. Now observe, I. P...
Barclay: Mat 18:12-14 - --This is surely the simplest of all the parables of Jesus, for it is the simple story of a lost sheep and a seeking shepherd. In Judaea it was tragic...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barclay: Mat 18:15-18 - --In many ways this is one of the most difficult passages to interpret in the whole of Matthew's gospel. Its difficulty lies in the undoubted fact that...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barclay: Mat 18:19-20 - --Here is one of these sayings of Jesus, whose meaning we need to probe or we will be left with heartbreak and great disappointment. Jesus says that, ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barclay: Mat 18:21-35 - --We owe a very great deal to the fact that Peter had a quick tongue. Again and again he rushed into speech in such a way that his impetuosity drew fro...
Constable: Mat 13:54--19:3 - --V. The reactions of the King 13:54--19:2
Matthew recorded increasing polarization in this section. Jesus expande...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Mat 16:13--19:3 - --B. Jesus' instruction of His disciples around Galilee 16:13-19:2
Almost as a fugitive from His enemies, ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Mat 18:1-35 - --4. Instructions about the King's personal representatives ch. 18
Chapter 18 contains the fourth ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Mat 18:5-14 - --The seriousness of impeding the progress of a disciple 18:5-14 (cf. Mark 9:37-50; Luke 9:48-50)
The major sub-theme of this discourse is offenses (Gr....
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Mat 18:15-20 - --The restoration of a wayward disciple 18:15-20
Jesus proceeded to explain what a humble disciple should do when a brother or sister disciple has wande...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Mat 18:21-35 - --The importance of forgiving a disciple 18:21-35
From a discussion of discipline Jesus proceeded to stress the importance of forgiveness. Sometimes zea...
College -> Mat 18:1-35
College: Mat 18:1-35 - --MATTHEW 18
G. FOURTH DISCOURSE:
LIFE IN THE CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY (18:1-35)
Jesus' fourth discourse (cf. 5-7; 10; 13) builds on the general themes of...
McGarvey -> Mat 18:1-14; Mat 18:15-35
McGarvey: Mat 18:1-14 - --
LXXIII.
FALSE AMBITION VERSUS CHILDLIKENESS.
(Capernaum, Autumn, A. D. 29.)
aMATT. XVIII. 1-14; bMARK IX. 33-50; cLUKE IX. 46-50.
...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
McGarvey: Mat 18:15-35 - --
LXXIV.
SIN AND FORGIVENESS BETWEEN BRETHREN.
(Autumn, A. D. 29.)
aMATT. XVIII. 15-35.
a15 And if thy brother sin against thee, go,...
Lapide -> Mat 18:1-19; Mat 18:19-35
Lapide: Mat 18:1-19 - --1-35
CHAPTER 18
At that time came, &c. There seems to be a discrepancy here with Mar 9:31, where it is said that the disciples disputed about this m...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)