SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 224
JESUS WAS THE CAUSE OF MANY FALLING AND RISING
EDITED BY GLENN PEASE
LUKE 2:34 Then Simeon blessedthem and said to
Mary, his mother: “This child is destinedto cause the
fallingand rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign
that will be spoken against.
BIBLEHUB RESOURCES
The Touchstone OfTruth
Luke 2:34, 35
W. Clarkson
We do not suppose that Simeon saw the future course of the Savior and of his
gospelin clearoutline; but, taught of God, he foresaw thatthat little Child he
had been holding in his arms would be One who would prove a most powerful
factorin his country's history; and he saw that relationship to him would be a
source of the greatestblessing, orof weightiesttrouble, or of most serious
condemnation. Thus guided by this venerable saint, we will regardthe gospel
of Christ as -
I. A TOUCHSTONE.Our Lord himself was a touchstone by which the men of
his day were tried. He came not to judge the world, but to save the world, as
he said (John 12:4-7);and yet it was also true that "for judgment he came into
the world," as he also said(John 9:39). His mission was not to try, but to
redeem; yet it was a necessaryincidental consequence ofhis coming that the
characterof the men who came in contactwith him would be severelytested.
When the Truth itself appeared and moved amongstmen, then it became
clearthat those who were ignorantly supposedto be blind were the souls that
were seeing God("that they who see not might see"), and equally clearthat
those who claimed to know everything had eyes that were fastenedagainstthe
light ("that they who see might be made blind"). As Jesus lived and wrought
and spoke, the hearts of men were revealed - those who were children of
wisdom heard his voice (John 18:37), while those who loved darkness rather
than light turned awayfrom the revealing Truth. And today the gospelis the
touchstone of human character. Theywho are earnestseekersafterGod, after
wisdom, after righteousness,gladlysit at the feet of the greatTeacherto learn
of him; but they who live for pleasure, for gain, for the honor that cometh
from man only, for this passing world, pass him by, indifferent or hostile.
They who are prepared to come as little children to learn of the heavenly
Father, receive his Word and enter his kingdom (Luke 18:16); while they who
considerthemselves able to solve the greatproblems of life and destiny keep
their minds closedagainstthe truth.
II. A SWORD OF SORROW. Itwas not only Mary's heart that was pierced
by reasonof her affectionfor Jesus Christ. Loyalty to him proved to that
generation, and has proved in every age since then, a sword that has wounded
and slain. At many times and in many places it has meant violent persecution -
stripes, imprisonment, death. In every land and in every age it has exposed
men to hostility, to reproach, to temporal loss, to socialdisadvantage, to a
lowerstation, to a struggling life, to a wounded spirit (Luke 9:23; John 17:14;
2 Timothy 3:12). Our Lord invites us to regard this inevitable accompaniment
of spiritual integrity as an honor and a blessing rather than a stigma and a
curse (Matthew 5:10-12).
III. A STUMBLING-STONE. That"Child was setfor the fall... of many."
The truth which Jesus spoke, the greatwork of salvationhe wrought out, has
proved to many, not only in Israel, but in every land where it has been made
known, a rock of offense (see Luke 20:18; 1 Corinthians 1:23).
IV. A STEPPING-STONE. Notonly for the fall, but for the "rising again,"
was that Infant "set." Byplanting their feeton that safe, strong rock, the
humiliated and even the degradedrise to honor and esteem, the humble to
hopefulness, the weak to strength, the blemished to beauty, the useless to
helpfulness, the children of earth to spheres of blessednessand joy in the
heavenly world. - C.
Biblical Illustrator
Behold, this Child is setfor the fall and rising againof many.
Luke 2:34, 35
Simeon's prediction
S. Cox, D. D.
This prediction has a very gloomy aspect, and speaks witha tone of sad
foreboding in strange contrastto the riant tone of the song of thanksgiving
which immediately precedes it. But was it too gloomyfor the facts? Was not
every jot and tittle of it fulfilled within three and thirty years of its utterance?
Is it not still finding a wide and large fulfilment?
1. When the word of Christ comes home to you, whether it come to quicken
you to a new life, or to convince you of some truth which you had not
recognizedbefore, or had not reduced to practice, do not be amazed and
discouragedif you stumble at it, if it awakendoubt and contradiction in your
hearts, if you find it hard to believe, and still harder to live by. It is no strange
thing which is happening to you, but the common and normal experience of
all who believe in Him. The advent of Christ in the heart, His coming in
power, must resemble His advent into the world, must create a strife between
the goodand the evil in your nature, must disclose so much that is evil in you
as to make you fear goodness to be beyond your reach. How, but by the
conviction of sin, can you be made penitent, and driven to lay hold on the
salvationwhich takes awaysin? And the oftener Christ comes, the nearer He
draws to you, the more fully He enters into your life — the deeper will be your
conviction of sin, of a tainted and imperfect nature; till, at times, you will fear
as if a sword had been thrust it.to your very soul. This, indeed, is what He
comes to you for; to separate betweenthe evil and the good, to make you
conscious ofevils you did not suspect, so conscious that you hate and long to
be delivered from them.
2. But this is not the only comfort or encouragementwhich the prediction of
Simeon suggests. If he had not foreseenthe nearer and immediate results of
Christ's advent, we might have distrusted him when he spake of its distant
and ultimate results. If he had not told us of the conflict and sorrow, the self-
exposure and self-contempt to which a faithful receptionof Christ subjects us,
we could hardly have believed him when he speaks ofChrist as the
Consolationfor all sorrow, and the Light which is to glorify the whole dark
world. But when we find all that he said of the nearer results of Christ's
coming to be true, we can hardly help believing him when he speaks to us of
its happy ultimate results. Simeon has approved himself a faithful witness;we
have found in our own experience that Christ is a Rock of stumbling and
offence, a Signal which calls out all the oppositionof an imperfect nature, a
Sword which pierces the very soul and divides the evil in us from the good, a
Touchstone whichreveals our most secretthoughts and bents; let us also
believe that He will be our Consolation, ourLight, our Glory.
3. We may well believe it. Per augusta ad augusta, through a narrow way to a
large place, through much struggle with many difficulties to a glorious end,
through conflict to victory, seems the very motto of the Christian life. And this
thought also is containedin Simeon's prediction, which is so framed as to
imply that it was by a Divine intention, and in order to realize a gracious
Divine end, that Christ was to bring strife on the earth, to kindle an inward
war, to disclose the lurking evils of the human heart. He was set, "in order
that the thoughts of many hearts should be revealed" — set by God for this
very purpose. So that when our thoughts are exposed, whenwe have to endure
the inward conflict betweenevil and good, when the word of Christ pierces
and rends our hearts, all is according to a Divine order, a Divine intention; all
is intended to prepare and conduct us to that Divine end, the salvation of our
souls. It is all meant to prepare us for a time in which our souls shall be so
flooded and suffused with the Divine Light that there shall be no more
darkness in us, so penetrated with the Divine Glory that sin and sorrow and
shame shall for ever flee away. And if this be God's intention, if this is the end
to which He is conducting us, who will not bear the strife and pain and self-
contempt of this present imperfect life with patience, nay, with courage and
with hope?
(S. Cox, D. D.)
Christ the rising and fall of many
J. C. Hare.
This howevercannot be all that is meant by Christ's being set for the fall of
many. They who remain just as they were, and where they were, cannot be
said to fall. Falling implies some change:and they who have fallen must be in
a worse state than before they fell. Now this is dismally true. They who,
having heard of Christ, have not believed in Him, and do not believe in Him
— they who do not believe in Him in the scriptural sense of believing, that is,
with the heart and soul, as well as with the understanding — they who have
not a living faith in Him, and do not show it by living a life of faith — they
who, having heard of Christ, do not believe in Him in this sense, are indeed in
a worse state than they would have been in, had Christ never come into the
world. They are in a worse state, becausethey are in a more hopeless state.
The lastchance of salvation has been tried on them; but in vain. Everything
that could be done has been done for them, but in vain. God has poured forth
all the riches of His grace and mercy and love on them; but in vain. Their
hearts continue as hard as the nakedrock, as dry as the sandy desert.
Nothing, it has been proved, cansoften them; nothing can refresh them;
nothing can make them bear fruit. The Comforter has been sent to us. If we
refuse His comfort, if we rejectHis salvation, we must continue uncomforted
and unsaved for ever. Yet this is not all. The state of those, who, having heard
of Christ, have no living faith in Him, but continue in their sins, is not only
worse than if they had never heard of Christ, because it is more hopeless;it is
also worse, becauseit is more sinful. For the sinfulness of any actionis to be
measured, not by the nature of the action itself, but by the characterand
condition of the doer. It is in him, not in the action, that the sin lies; and its
sinfulness will always vary, in proportion as he knows it to be sinful, and as he
has had stronger motives and helps for struggling againstit. Moreoverwe all
feel that for a child to behave ill to a kind and loving father is far worse, far
more inexcusable, than if its father had been harsh and neglectful. These,
then, are the two qualities which deepen the sinfulness of sin. When it is a sin
againstknowledge, itbecomes doubly sinful; and its sinfulness increases in
proportion as that knowledge is clearand certain. And when it is also a sin
againstlove, it then becomes tenfold sinful; its sinfulness still growing worse
and worse, in proportion to the strength of the motives whereby our love has
been appealedto. These are the rules we are wont to make use of in judging
one another. It is our own rule too, in our dealings with eachother, as well as
the rule of the gospel, that to whom much is given, of him much shall be
required. They who, with the knowledge ofChrist, live like heathens, we have
already seen, are far more sinful than the heathens:and thus to them the
coming of Christ has been the occasionoffalling. They have fallen, because
they have not risen; and because, by remaining where they were, they are so
much further below what they ought to be. But the coming of Christ has also
given us new duties. We have higher motives, a higher mark setbefore us. We
are bound to strive after more heavenly aims. We are bound to seek aftera
more heavenly purity. So that the gift of the gospelis accompaniedwith a
twofold danger. If we abide in our former ways, it renders those ways more
sinful: and it imposes higher duties upon us, the neglectof which covers us
with fresh guilt. Forin this way also has the coming of Christ been a dismal
occasionoffalling to many. Many have hated the light, because their deeds
were dark, and have either tried to quench the light, or finding their efforts to
do so were vain, have wrapt themselves up in still thicker darkness. Thus was
it with the Jews. To them the coming of Christ was an occasionoffalling.
Through Christ's coming they were no longer the chosenpeople of God. They
forfeited their rank among nations, and became wanderers on the face of the
earth, wanderers still more forlorn than when they wandered under Moses in
the wilderness. So, too, was the coming of Christ an occasionoffalling even to
the heathens. Foralthough, having gods many, and lords many, they had been
ready to receive any new idol, that the folly or wickednessofman enthroned
in the heavens, yet, when the true God, as revealedin the person of His Only-
begottenSon, was made knownto them, they too tried to quench His light
with blood. And even now there are still found those who openly hate and
blaspheme God and His Christ, and thus have fallen into deeper sinfulness
through Christ's coming. Alas, it is a fearful and ghastlythought, how many
millions on millions of souls will have receivedno benefit by Christ's
atonement, how many millions on millions of souls may perhaps be among
those for whose fall that blessedChild was set. This must surely have been the
worstpart of the agonyby which Christ's spirit was rent on that awful night
in the garden, the thought of the millions of souls to whom He should only be
an occasionof falling. It is a thought the sting of which nothing can take away,
exceptwhen the soul is rapt in adoration of the perfectholiness, and perfect
justice, and perfect love of God.
(J. C. Hare.)
Christ's mission
A. Reed.
Simeon makes this declarationemphatically in reference to Israel; but he
makes it prophetically in reference to the Gentile world, and to the multitudes
which to the end of time shall come under the sound of the gospel.
I. We propose to ILLUSTRATE THIS REPRESENTATIONOF OUR
SAVIOUR'S MISSION. Illustrations may be borrowed from almostevery
circumstance in His work, and from every perfection in His personal
ministration.
1. His very appearance in the first instance illustrated forcibly, and in some
casespainfully, the truth of this declaration, that, on His entrance into our
world, and on His revealing Himself by the ministry of His word, He should
have been for the falling and for the rising againof many in Israel. But when
Christ came, and His appearance was so contraryto all their expectations had
led them to look for, they were prepared, not to receive Him, but positively to
rejectand dishonour Him. And so the appearance ofChrist in the world is a
stumbling-block to the present day. On the other hand, in reference to the
appearance ofChrist, He is setfor the rising againof many in Israel. This was
true of His temporal appearance among the people of Israel. While the princes
and the rulers of that period passedHim by with scorn, and refused to listen
to His Divine instruction, it is beautifully said that "the common people heard
Him gladly." There was something in the very humility of His circumstances,
in the poverty of His life, in the lowliness of His outward walk and
conversation, whichbrought Him near to them, and them near to Him.
2. We receive a secondillustration of the truth of this declarationfrom the
mystery of the Redeemer's person. This representationof our Saviour's
characterwas in His own time, has been in every succeeding age, and is in our
time, the occasionofthe falling and the rising againof many. There were
many in His day who made it a stumbling-stone and a rock of offence. There
was nothing in the history of the Jewishpeople which gave them such sore
offence, and excited such bitter hatred to the kind Jesus Christ, as His
announcing Himself to be the Son of God, and claiming equality with the
Father. it was on this very ground that they persecutedHim through life; and
it is very remarkable that on this very ground they at last put Him to death on
the cross. Now,onthe other hand, this very representationof our Saviour's
person is life from the dead to those who believe in His name.
3. The ministry of Jesus Christ is also anothermethod of illustrating the truth
of this declaration:"This child is setfor the fall and the rising again of many
in Israel." Our Lord's ministry on earth was remarkable for the effectit had
on those to whom it was directed. What was the falling awayof the Jews in
this instance was the gathering of the Gentiles.
4. This declarationis still further illustrated if we considerthe death which
Jesus died. Those who disbelieve, and disbelieve Him as a dying Saviour
making atonement for sin, disbelieve the only remedy for sin, and fall
fearfully from His presence. Buton the contrary, where shall we find any
representationof the Redeemerlike the representationof the Redeemer
crucified and dying, and rising againas the means of renewing our spirits,
confirming our confidence, and elevating our hope. He died, but it is for the
rising again of many.
5. Then, finally, it may be illustrated in the dispensation and economyof the
gospel. But while it is for the rising againof many, it is also for the fall of
many. The gospeldispensationhas brought everything to an extreme; there is
the extreme of mercy, and there is the extreme of judgment; God has
discoveredto us His grace, as we have never seenit; and God is discovering to
us also His righteousness andHis justice as was never shownbefore.Behold,
for it is remarkable, "this Child is setfor the fall and the rising againof many
in Israel."
1. It is remarkable if we consider the greatintention of Christ in coming into
our world. Nothing canbe more explicit than the intention of our Saviour and
of the gospelin their appearance amongstus.
2. It is the more remarkable, in the secondplace, because the evil arising to us
from the testimony of Christ is to be found in ourselves, and not in the
Saviour. If it is said that Christ in His appearance shallbe for the fall and
rising again, for the condemnation as well as the salvation, of many, it is not so
much descriptive of the intention of His coming as of the effectof His coming.
But "behold" — let it be consideredremarkable, fix your attention on it, that
this arises from their own perversity, their own unbelief, their own sin. We
are exhorted thus to behold and improve it because we have a serious concern
in it.
(A. Reed.)
The exhibition of Christ tries the human heart
N. Emmons, D. D.
This subject naturally divides itself into two branches, which require a
distinct consideration.
I. Let us consider, THAT GOD EXHIBITS CHRIST BEFORE THE MINDS
OF MEN, IS ORDER TO TRY THEIR HEARTS.
1. The truth of this observationappears from what the prophets foretold
concerning the feelings and conduct of men towards the Messiah, whenHe
should make His appearance in the flesh, and perform His mediatorial work
among them. David predicted that He would alarm the fears, and awakenthe
enmity and opposition of the world againstHim. "Why do the heathen rage,
and the people imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth set themselves,
and the rulers take counseltogether, againstthe Lord and againstHis
anointed, saying, Let us break their bands asunder, and castawaytheir cords
from us."
2. It appears from the history of Christ, that He fulfilled the predictions which
went before concerning Him, and tried the hearts of all, who either heard Him
preach, or saw His miracles, or were any way acquainted with Him. He was a
sign universally spokenagainst. Some heard Him gladly; but others heard
Him with disgust and indignation. Some admired His miracles;but others
despisedand blasphemed them.
3. The exhibition of Christ after His death, through the medium of the gospel,
tried the hearts of the whole Jewishnation.
4. Ever since the days of the apostles, the characterof Christ, displayed in the
gospel, has tried the hearts of the whole Christian world.
5. It appears from the very characterof Christ, that He cannot be exhibited to
the minds of men without trying their hearts. His character, above all others,
is adapted to draw forth the feelings of the human heart. Wherever He is
exhibited in all His excellences,offices, anddesigns, He must necessarilytry
the hearts of men in some very important respects. And, first, in regard to
God. God, therefore, by exhibiting Christ in the gospel, tries the hearts of men
in respectto Himself. He certainly made it appearthat the Jews were His
enemies, by the instrumentality of Christ. In the secondplace, the exhibition
of Christ necessarilydiscovers the secrets ofmen's hearts towards themselves,
as well as towards God. Christ, in the course of His life, and more especiallyat
His death, laid open the guilt and ill desertof sinners. Besides, thirdly, the
exhibition of Christ as a Mediator, discovers men's feelings in regard to the
terms of salvation. The next thing proposed is —
II. To show that GOD TRIES THE HEARTS OF MEN THROUGH THE
MEDIUM OF CHRIST, IN ORDER TO FIX THEIR FUTURE AND FINAL
STATE. "Behold, this Child is set for the fall and rising againof many." God
intends to make men happy or miserable for ever, according to the feelings of
their hearts towards the Son of His love. And there appears to be a propriety
in God's treating men according to their love, or hatred of Christ, because
their feelings towards Christ afford a proper criterion of their true
characters. Ifthey love Christ, they love Gad; but if they hate Christ, they
hate God. If they love Christ, they love the goodof the universe; but if they
hate Christ, they are enemies to all good. The characterofChrist is the most
infallible test of all human characters. Improvement:
1. Since it is God's design in exhibiting Christ before men, to try their hearts
and prepare them for their final state, it becomes the ministers of the gospelto
make Christ the main subject of their preaching.
2. If God means to try the hearts of men, and prepare them for their final
state through the medium of the gospel, then He has an important purpose to
answer, by sending it where He knows it will be rejected.
3. If the exhibition of Christ be designedto form men for their future and
eternal state, then they are in a very solemn situation while they are hearing
the gospel.
4. If the gospeltries the hearts and forms the charactersofthose who hear it,
then sinners may easilyand insensibly fit themselves for destruction.
5. We learn from what has been said in this discourse, that all who hear the
gospelmay know, before they leave the world, what will be their future and
final state.
(N. Emmons, D. D.)
Christianity the testof character
R. Hall, M. A.
We shall briefly considerin what respects Christianity proves itself the grand
test of men's dispositions.
1. It puts to the proof whether or not men love truth.
2. The gospelis a test of men's hearts as affectedwith regard to God.
3. In respectto humility, the gospeltries and ascertains the state of the heart.
4. A fourth respectin which the gospelis a test of your characteris whether
you are true, or not, to your own interest; whether you have wisdom to choose
the right relief for your misery, the proper supply for your wants.
5. Lastly, Christianity is a test of our obedience or disobedience to the will of
God. "If God is a Master, where is His fear? If God is a Father, where is His
honour?"A few words of improvement may appropriately conclude this
important subject.
1. Whereverthe gospelis propounded, it is a test of characterto each
individual who hears it: and whoeverdoes not receive it will hereafterstand
confessedto God as having "loved darkness rather than light, because his
deeds were evil."
2. The rejection of Christianity is entirely voluntary: it arises from the spirit
of pride, the preference of falsehood, the love of sin: but where shall we look
for criminality, if not in an evil mind?
3. The trial of characterhere is only preparatory to the last trial hereafter.
(R. Hall, M. A.)
Christ's knowledge ofman
E. P. Hood.
"Thatthe thoughts of many hearts may be revealed."
I. Yes, THAT IS THE CLAIM WHICH CHRIST HAS UPON US — THAT
HE KNOWS US. AS it is said, "He knew what was in man;" and He does not
merely know our faces andour forms, but our true selves. You know nothing
of any science orthing until you know its hidden inner secret. How different it
is to know about a thing and to know what is within a thing. Superficial
knowledge is that of the surface, ofthe skin; and profound knowledge is that
which is organic and descends to the foundation. You know every man has
within him an amazing secretrealmof thought and emotion; I may go a step
further and say, it is unknown to himself, and most men never have more than
very occasionalglimpses into the "within the veil" of their own minds; most
men are not at home within themselves;they do not dwell there. Even those
men who do suppose that they are well acquainted with their own minds,
often deceive themselves.
II. MAN HAS A GREAT HIDDEN NATURE, WAITING FOR
REVEALMENT AND DEVELOPMENT. Buthow secret. This it is which
makes the relationship of the pastor and the teacherfrequently so sacred;it is
felt that he canfathom the greatdeep of the human soul. You may illustrate it
from so poor a piece of machinery as a watch;a watchmakerdescends into
the mystery; he knows it; and if he professes to know and does not, great
mischiefs and mistakes result. Or, look at the human body and its diseases. I
had a friend who was ill; he had three doctors who attended him; they gave
him up; they lookedat symptoms and phenomena; they were ignorant of the
law; another came, touched the mainspring and restoredhim to health. Look
I and here the image is more pertinent; look at the schoolmasterand
educator, the teacher, the boy. I knew a minister in his early childhood; he
was a very wild, a strong-willed boy: his parents punished him severely, again
and again— they were pious people;at lastthey tried another method, they
took him downstairs, afterthey had closedthe shop at night, and they knelt
down on either side of him, and they prayed, they both prayed for him, and
they wept. "Oh!" said he to me, "I could not stand that, I tried, and I prayed,
and they conquered." He is an eminent minister now. They had touched the
mainspring; there is a mainspring in all of us, and we bless the man who
reveals it to us; he who cantouch it, rules us — be he general, poet, statesman,
or preacher.
III. Yes; this is Christ's claim upon us; He knows us; HE IS THE TRUE
REVEALER OF THE HIDDEN NATURE OF MAN. "He therefore taught as
one having authority, and not as the Scribes." And hence the word of the
prophecy of Simeon, which I have read as a text, is to be takenby the side of
His precious word. Christ is "a light" — "a light," says Simeon, "to lighten
the Gentiles, and to be the glory of Thy people Israel." "Thatwas the true
light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world." What do we
mean by light, but that which makes manifest the interior chambers of our
nature? Yes! to know man is the greatindispensable of all teaching. Rare
knowledge and wonderful!
IV. Yes, AND KNOWLEDGE OF HUMAN NATURE IS ESSENTIALTO
ALL TEACHING. You see the painter! he will tell you that knowledge of
anatomy is essentialto success;he needs the knowledge ofmuscular action, to
give life to his picture — a knowledge ofinternal action to external
development. Thus you see in Christ knowledge ofhumanity. His whole
teaching reveals adaptation, fitness to complete imperfect man! Hence,
because ofChrist's transcendentalknowledge, Christianity cannotbe realized
on earth. It is always overand beyond man. But a terrible thing it is to be with
one who entirely knows us, and reads us through and through like a book —
by observation, like Foster — by intuition, like Shakespeare;but to many it is
only moral anatomy or surgery. The greatestknowledgeofman is by
sympathy. And Christ knew the World of the Human Heart by sympathy.
Have you not noticedthat scarcelyany mind can cross the broad disc of our
Lord's even temporary association, without revealing, as it passes,its state? It
seems as if any mind coming into the neighbourhood of His Divine character
is compelled to yield itself up, not only to His perfectknowledge — but, in the
memorable events of His life, is illustrated bow that which is done in secretis
proclaimed on the house-tops. Amazing would seemthe attractionof our
Lord's character, by which He drew to Him most opposite beings. He held
them by their affectionto Him. He held them by their hostility to Him. He
revealedtheir love, their hatred, and their fear. Christ's characterwas like
that ancient mirror which, if held up before the face, did not reveal the face,
but the thought.
V. THE TEACHING OF OUR LORD HAD THE SAME INFLUENCE AS
HIS PERSONALCHARACTER;it revealedthe thoughts of the heart. All His
parables removed the abstractideas of the human soul into the regionof home
life. Thus Christ shows how He knows our inner nature, and speaks to the
inner world of motive and imagination.
VI.
1. He knew. Mark, His knowledge was andis absolute. We speak of many, and
say, "They know human nature by observationor by intuition." Properly,
Christ's knowledge is neither the one nor the other; the first says, I know
human nature because I look at it; the secondsays, I know human nature
because I look at myself, and find myself related to it. Christ knew it because
He made it.
2. Hence His authority over man. Man felt His knowledge.
3. He revealedour thoughts in His sympathy, he knew what was in man;
hence His sympathy with men. Yes, His sympathy with man!
VII. Christ not only revealedthe thoughts of many hearts by eliciting their
peculiar moral character, but HE SPOKE TO THE UNIVERSAL HEART
OF MAN IN ALL AGES, BOTHBY HIS NEEDS AND BY HIS WORDS;He
transformed the greatinstincts of men in all ages into absolute revelations.
Christianity has revealedand authenticatedto men what had been for ages
suspected, orhoped, or feared.
VIII.
1. He saw human nature was dark. He came to enlighten it. "I am the light of
the world."
2. He saw the hardness as well as the darkness ofman. He came to softenthe
world's heart. "He knew what was in man."
3. He consecratedhumanity. He revealedthe holy destiny of man, for "He
knew what was in man."
4. "Thatthe thoughts of many hearts might be revealed." He came to sublime
and to crownhuman nature, to revealto man His brightest, boldest thought
— Eternal life — Immortality.
(E. P. Hood.)
The detectorof the heart
H. F. Burder, D. D.
It may be profitable for us, then, to inquire:
I. IN WHAT MANNER DOES THE GOSPELBECOME ADETECTOROF
THE HEART? There are two ways in which this detectionand unveiling are
most apparent and most important.
1. By its authoritative conveyance oftruths and facts, it detects and prostrates
the pride of human reasoning.
2. By the requirement of an uncompromising decisionof character. Let us
now inquire —
II. WHAT ARE THE INSTRUCTIVE AND PRACTICAL INFERENCES
WHICH WE SHOULD DEDUCE FROM THESE VIEWS OF THE
GOSPEL.
1. That the ministry of the gospelought to be so conducted as to secure, as
much as possible, this important objectof discrimination and detection.
2. Every hearer of the gospelshould feel constrainedto bring home to his own
heart the greattest of character. 3, How greatlyto be loved and prized is that
gospel, which cangive hope to the sinner even on the detection of his guilt and
danger.
(H. F. Burder, D. D.)
The first prediction of the Cross
Canon Vernon Hutton, M. A.
I.
1. This is the first announcement that the wayof the Holy Child must be the
way of sorrows. The angelhad spokenof the throne of David; the shepherds
had brought a messageofpeace;Simeonforetells the Cross. Yet this prophecy
is calleda blessing! "He blessedthem!" Blessednessis not the same as external
prosperity. Blessedness is obedience to the will of the Father.
2. Mary has to learn that she, too, must suffer with her Child. "A swordshall
pierce through thy own soul." This is her blessing!Is it not true that the
coming of the EternalWord in human flesh has brought a blessing upon
human sufferings, which are henceforth linked with His?
3. Simeonforesees thatthe Christ must suffer because His life would be
violently opposedto the principles by which men were guiding their lives. He
is among men as the Incarnate Word, reading their inmost thoughts, and
revealing to them their true selves. Thereforemust He be for the salvationof
some and for the condemnation of others; therefore must He be a Sign that is
spokenagainst.
4. Human suffering arises from the breachof the Divine order which was
made when man chose his own will rather than God's. The Divinely-ordered
human life is lived by the Word made-flesh. Inasmuch as the Divinely-ordered
life is in direct opposition to the self-centredlives of fallen men, it must come
into collisionwith them and must suffer. At the same time, by its very
perfection, and by its hold on the true Centre — the Divine Will — it must
condemn all that falls short of it or opposes it.
II.
1. Contemplate in the Child here presented to the Father, the One Perfect
Human Life, unfolding itself amidst the evil antagonisms ofselfish human
nature.
2. Learn that it follows that all who will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer
persecution(2 Timothy 3:12).
(Canon Vernon Hutton, M. A.)
Fall and rise
J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D.
Christ is setfor the fall of some and the rising of others.
1. It is not otherwise.
2. It cannotbe otherwise.
3. It ought not to be otherwise.
4. It will not be otherwise.
(J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D.)
Struggle and triumph
J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D.
The sign spokenagainst.
1. In its continual struggle.
2. In its certain triumph.
(J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D.)
Dual aspectof Christ's Advent
Canon Liddon.
Simeon added this probably as an explanation of an expressionhe had just
used in his burst of inspired song. "The glory of Israel" was a phrase already
consecratedin religious language. It commonly meant the SacredPresenceor
Shekinahbetweenthe cherubim over the ark of the covenant. Israel, as St.
Paul in later years pointed out, had indeed many a prerogative among the
nations. Israel was God's adopted family; Israelinherited the covenants —
those early understandings betweenearth and heaven, of which the great
patriarchs had been the favoured recipients; to IsraelGod had revived in its
completeness the moral law; Israel offeredto Goda worship, the nature and
details of which had been Divinely ordered; Israel, so rich in the past, was also
the people of the future; the promises were its endowment for the coming
ages, andin the fathers or patriarchs Israelhad not merely a store of precious
memories, but a lasting possession. The patriarchs were the property of their
descendents to the end of time; but the true glory of Israel was this, that of its
stock and blood "as concerning the flesh, Christ" — whose Incarnation the
SacredPresenceoverthe ark prefigured — "Christ came, who is all over all,
God blessedfor ever." All else that Israelwas or had — its sacredbooks, its
typical ritual, its ideal of righteousness in the moral law, its greatsaints and
heroes — all else pointed on and up to this its supreme prerogative But what
would it mean in fact, in history? Would all Israelites hastento recognize their
true title as a race to greatness?Wouldall hearts join in one outburst of
thankful praise when the glory of Israelpresented Himself to His
countrymen? Simeon feels it his duty to check unwarranted expectations
which his earlierwords might have seemedto raise.
1. Christ's coming into the world was not to have a uniform effectupon
human souls. It would act on one soul in one way, and on another in another:
it would actdifferently on the same soul at different periods of its history. It is
Christ's wish to bless every one with whom He comes in contact;but His
goodwillis limited by the free actionof men, who are left at liberty to accept
or reject Him as they choose.The spiritual world is not ruled mechanically.
The truth and grace ofGod only act upon men with goodresults so far as they
are willing that they should so act. That Christ's Advent should have great
results was inevitable. It actedas a moral shock upon the existing fabric of
thought and life, dispelling illusions, and making men think and choose.None
could regard Christ with indifference. He stirred the emotions of all.
2. Of the two effects of Christ's Advent, Simeon mentions first the fall of many
in Israel. Bold paradox — to associateHis blessedname, who came to be the
health and Saviour of men, with spiritual failure. Yet this was what prophecy
had led men to expect. And it is what actually happened. When Christ
appearedas a public teacher, He was "despisedand rejected" by the great
majority of the Jewishpeople. Even such as heard Him gladly at first, joined
the priests and rulers at lastin the cry, "Crucify Him." Only a few clung
firmly to Him through it all.
3. When our Lord had His own way with souls, it was to raise them to newness
of life. To come into contactwith Him — sympathetic contact — was to touch
a life so intrinsically buoyant and vigorous that it transfused itself forthwith
into the attracted soul, and bore it onwards and upwards. The "rising again"
of which Simeonspeaks is not the future resurrectionof the body, but the
present moral and spiritual resurrectionof believers' souls.
(Canon Liddon.)
Use and abuse of God's gifts
James Foote, M. A.
Everything that comes from God is naturally fitted and originally intended for
good. But His gifts are often perverted, and become, though not the cause, yet
the occasion, ofevil.
I. IT IS SO WITH COMMON TEMPORALBLESSINGS. They are all good
things in themselves, but they prove advantages ordisadvantages according to
our use of them.
1. Riches. Whenproperly receivedand used to the glory of God and goodof
men, riches are a greatblessing;but when coveted, or restedin as the chief
good, or abused in extravagance andprofligacy, they become the root of all
evil, and drown men in destruction.
2. Greatness.In God's hand it is to make great, to give power and honour to
men; and those greatmen who conduct themselves in a manner becoming
their exalted station, are honourable and happy indeed; but the more pre-
eminent in station men are, the more sinful and ruinous is their misconduct.
3. Learning is justly accountedhonourable and valuable; and it actually not
only promotes a man's worldly distinction, but proves a blessing in the highest
sense ofthe word, when consecratedto God, and possessedin humility and
virtue; but there are few greatercurses than learning misapplied, usurping
the place of the wisdomwhich is from above, or co-existing with habits of
immorality.
4. Health is a blessing, without which all other earthly blessings are of little
avail; and when spent in piety and usefulness, it enables men to rise to a high
degree of credit and success, andeven moral excellence;but when its stability
is presumed on to encourage men to proceedin a careerof dissipation, and its
vigour wastedon crimes, or on trifles, it becomes the occasionof multiplied
evils and of deep degradation.
5. Affliction is kindly sent for the benefit of transgressors;and when its voice
is listened to, it recalls them from their wanderings;but when it is
unimproved, it only hardens men more and more, and sinks them deeperand
deeper in misery.
6. Noris it otherwise with life itself. "Skin upon skin," one piece of valuable
property after another — nay, "all that man hath, will he give for his life."
Every man is bound to praise the Almighty Author and Preserverof his life;
and the life that now is, when rightly improved, is the means of rising to the
happiness of the endless life which is to come; but life spent and closedin
nature's guilt and depravity, is to all who so spend it and so close it, the
forerunner of the seconddeath, so that it would have been better for them
never to have lived at all.
II. THE SAME PRINCIPLE APPLIES WITH RESPECTTO CHRIST'S
COMING INTO THE WORLD. He came to bless all mankind; but His
coming may only increase ourcondemnation.
(James Foote, M. A.)
Treatment of Christ and the gospel
James Foote, M. A.
1. Rememberthat the gospelmust prove the means either of your rise or of
your fall. It is, then, a matter of infinite moment, involving all that is
important in your endless characterand destiny.
2. Speak not againstChrist, but for Him. Beware ofspeaking lightly of Him,
or His ordinances, doctrines, people. On the contrary, espouse His cause, and
embrace every opportunity of remembering Him to others.
3. Let all the sufferings and indignities of the Redeemerbe matter of grief to
you. Your sins made them necessary.
4. Suffer the gospelto have its proper heart-searching effecton you. That "the
thoughts of many hearts shall be revealed," is a result not to be deprecated,
but desired; in order that what is right and pleasantmay be cherished, and
what is wrong corrected. Godsees allnow, and one day He will revealall. It
will then be too late to think of amendment. The presentis the time for any
salutary discovery.
(James Foote, M. A.)
Christ -- the fall and rise of many
C. H. Spurgeon.
Wherever Christ Jesus comes, withwhomsoeverHe may come in contact, He
is never without influence, never inoperative, but in every case a weighty
result is produced. There is about the holy Child Jesus a power which is
always in operation. He is not set to be an unobserved, inactive, slumbering
personage in the midst of Israelbut He is set for the falling or for the rise of
the many to whom He is known Neverdoes a man hear the gospel, but he
either rises or falls under that hearing. Observe, then, the two sides of the
truth — Jesus always working upon men with marked effect; and, on the
other hand, man treating the Lord Jesus with warmth either of affectionor
opposition; an action and a reactionbeing evermore produced. Why is this?
1. Becauseofthe energy which dwells in the Lord's Christ, and in the gospel
which now represents Him among men. The gospelis all life and energy; like
leavenit heaves and ferments with inward energy, it cannot rest till it leavens
all around it. It may be compared to salt which must permeate, penetrate, and
seasonthatwhich is subject to its influence. It is no more possible for you to
restrain the working of the gospelthan to forbid the action of fire. Stand
before the fire, it shall warm and comfort you; thrust your hand into it, it
shall burn you. It must work, because it is fire. And so with yonder sun.
Though clouds may hide it from our sight at this moment, yet for ever does it
pour forth, as from a furnace mouth, its heat and light. Nor could it cease to
burn and shine, unless it ceasedto be a sun. As long as it is a sun, it must
permeate surrounding space with its influence and splendour. Do you wonder
that the Sun of Righteousness is of yet Diviner energy?
2. Jesus Christand His gospelare matters of such prime necessityto mankind,
that from this cause also there must always be an effectproduced by Christ.
He is as necessaryto our souls as the air is to our bodies. If we receive Him,
we live; if we will not receive Him, we must die. It is unavoidable that it
should be so. You cannotreject the Saviour, and be a little damagedthereby;
there is no alternative but that you utterly perish.
3. The position in which Jesus Christ meets men makes it inevitable that He
must have an effectupon them. He stands right in men's way. They must
decide about Him one way or the other.
4. He was appointed for this very thing. "Set." It was for this very end He
came. See the husbandman take the fan. You observe the heap of mingled
wheatand chaff lying on the floor. He begins to move the fan to and fro till he
has createda breeze of wind. What happens? The chaff flies to the further end
of the threshing floor, and there it lies by itself; the wheat, more weighty,
remains purified and cleansed, a goldenheap of grain. Such is the preaching
of the gospel. Suchis Christ: he is the separaterof those who will perish from
those who shall be saved. The fan discerns and discovers, it reveals the
worthless and manifests the precious. Thus hath Christ the fan in his hand!
Or, take another metaphor, which we find in the prophets, "Who may abide
the day of His coming? and who shall stand when He appeareth? for He is like
a refiner's fire, and like fuller's soap." You see the refiner's fire. Notice how it
burns and blazes. Now, it turns to a white heat; you cannotbear to look on it.
What has happened? Why, the dross is divided from the silver and the alloy
from the gold. The refiner's fire separatesthe precious from the vile. And so
the gospelreveals the electof God, and leaves to hardness of heart the finally
impenitent. Where it is preached, the men who acceptit are precious ones of
God, His elect, His chosen;the men who rejectit are the reprobate silver. So
shall men call them, for God hath rejectedthem. Mark too, the fuller's soap.
The fuller takes his soap, and exercising his craft upon yonder piece of linen
marked with many stains and colours, you see how these foul things fly before
the soap, and the fair fabric alone remains. Both spots and linen feelthe
powerof the soap. So cloth the gospeltake the polluted fabric of humanity
and cleanse it: the filth departs and flies before it, and the fair linen remains.
Such are the saints of God; when the gospelcomes to them they are purified
thereby, while the wicked, as foul spots, are driven awayin their wickedness.
Having thus setforth the greattruth of the text, I purpose now to answer
briefly one or two questions.
I. WHO ARE THOSE THAT FALL BY CHRIST. In Christ's day the
question was not difficult to answer. Those thatfell by Christ were —
1. The holders of tradition, who gave men's sayings higher authority than
God's commands.
2. The externalists.
3. The self-righteous.
4. The wiseacres.
5. The sceptical. Very much the same sort of people as fell by Christ then fall
by Christ now.
II. TO WHOM WILL THE LORD JESUS BE A RISING AGAIN? He will be
a rising again to those who have fallen. Dostthou confess, "Ihave fallen"?
Dostthou acknowledge,"Ipossessa fallen nature"? Dostthou lament thou
hast fallen into sin? O my brother, He will be thy rising. He cannotuplift
those who are not brought low. Note, again, those that rise in Him are those
who are now willing to rise m Him. Jesus is set to raise you up.
III. There are SOME WHO SHALL BOTH FALL AND RISE, AGAIN IN
CHRIST;to whom Christ shall give such a fall as they never had before, and
such a rise as shall be to their eternalresurrection. But what a fall was there
when I learned that if salvationwas of works, it could not be of grace, andif it
was of grace it could not be of works;the two could not be mixed together.
Then I said I would hope in the performance of the duties which the gospel
inculcates;I thought I had power to do this; I would repent, and believe, and
so win heaven. But what a fall I had, and how eachbone seemedbrokenwhen
He declared to me, "without Me, ye can do nothing." Ah, this is how Christ
saves souls. He gives them a fall first, and afterwards He makes them rise.
You cannot fill the vesseltill it is empty. There must be room made for mercy
by the pouring out of human merit. You cannot clothe the man who is clothed
already, or feed him who has no hunger. But this fall which Jesus gives us is a
blessedfall. He never did throw a man down without lifting him up
afterwards. "I kill and I make alive; I wound and I heal," these are attributes
of JehovahJesus.
IV. We shall conclude with a few words upon the lastpart of the text. The text
tells us that the Lord Jesus is "A SIGN THAT SHALL BE SPOKEN
AGAINST."
1. Christ was a sign of Divine love. In Him God reaches the climax of
benevolence, and man exhibits the climax of deadly hate. The greatestgift
provokes the greatesthostility, and the loftiestsign brings forth the most
virulent opposition.
2. Christ was a sign of Divine justice. A bleeding Saviour, the Son of God
desertedby His Father, the thunderbolts of vengeance finding a targetin the
Personof the Well-beloved, herein is justice revealedmost fully. I hear not
that other signs of vengeance have been spokenagainst. Menhave trembled,
but have not railed. Sodom and Gomorrahwith bowed head confessedthe
justice of their doom. Egypt engulphed in the Red Sea saithnothing of it; none
of her records containa single blasphemy againstJehovahfor having swept
awaythe nation's chivalry. The judgments of God, as a rule, strikes men
dumb with awe!But this, which was the greatestdisplay of Divine hatred of
sin, where the Son of God was made to descendinto the lowestdepths as our
substitute, this provokes to-day man's uttermost wrath. Know you not how
many are continually railing at the Cross? The Crucified is still abhorred.
How matchless is the perversity of human nature, that when God displays His
justice most, but blends it sweetlywith His love, the sign is everywhere spoken
against!
3. Christ was the signof man's communion with God, and of God's fellowship
with man. A ladder reaching from earth to heaven; a connecting bridge
betweencreature and Creator. But alas!man does not want to be near his
Maker, and hence he rails at the means provided for communion.
4. Christ is the sign of the electseed, the representative of the holy, the
newborn, the spiritual; and hence, as soonas the carnalmind, that knoweth
not God nor loveth Him, perceives Christ and His gospel, it at once stirs up
the depth of its malevolence to put down Christ if it be possible. But they shall
never put Him down. They may speak againstthe gospel, but here is our joy,
that Christ will raise up His people, and will certainly give the fall to His
enemies. The ark of the Lord can never fall before Dagon;but Dagonmust
fall down before the Lord's ark.
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
Christ reveals hearts
Sunday SchoolTimes.
Easternfable tells of a magic mirror that remained clearand unsullied when
the pure-hearted lookedinto it, but became troubled and obscure when the
glance of the guilty fell upon it. So the ownerof that mirror could always tell
the characterofthose who lookedinto it. Such a testwe have in Jesus. We can
tell a man's nature by knowing what he thinks of Christ, and thus "the
thoughts of many hearts" are "revealed."
(Sunday SchoolTimes.)
Christ spokenagainst
J. Wells.
There are four reasons why they speak againstHim; that is, as the true Christ
of God.
I. Ignorance, men not knowing their need of Him; many of the relations he
bears therefore appearto the natural man to be superfluous; he does not
know his need, and therefore speaksagainstit in ignorance.
II. The native enmity of the mind. "The carnalmind is enmity againstGod;"
men will naturally speak againstthat that they have an antipathy to.
III. Becausethey are too much taken up with the world, and they do not like
to be interrupted. Now we must pursue the world, must enjoy the world; to
become one of these religious mopes would be to spoil all our pleasures. Thus
they have an idea that there is something very gloomy about religion, and so
they speak againstit, especiallythe truth.
IV. The natural man has a vague idea that the threatenings of God are mere
words; that" whoeverthe Lord may send to hell," says the natural man, "I
can't believe He will send me there."
(J. Wells.)
This Child
E. Mellor, D. D.
These are the words of Simeon. A beautiful picture — age and childhood
meeting together, a gentle shootand the full ripe corn in the ear, a sapling and
a full-grown oak ready for transplantation into that realm where the saints of
God flourish with an immortal life and glory.
I. A CHILD. A wonderful thing. A seedcontaining a world of unknown
possibilities. It makes parents glad. It should do so. A gift of God, a pledge and
proof of the gracious tenderness whichrules the world. But a child should also
make parents thoughtful. Children are not mere play-things — ornaments,
but undeveloped powers — slumbering volcanoes,which may burst out with
desolating eruptions; or shrouded lights, that shall emerge in fuller and
brighter radiance from year to year, shedding gladness and blessing all
around.
II. "BEHOLD THIS CHILD." Have we not sometimes wished that some
Simeon could have takena child of ours in his arms and become prophetic
with respectto his destiny? But it is not permitted — graciouslyso. We know,
however, that the future of children is not a thing of chance, nor is it
determined only by what the child is in itself. Otherwise the parental
relationship would be largely nullified. A child has its ownnative powers and
tendencies, but they are capable of regulationor perversion. The doctrine of
Scripture is that the child will be much what the parent makes him.
III. THE HISTORY OF THIS CHILD WAS TO BE ONE OF A
CHEQUERED NATURE, AND THE MOTHER WAS TO ENDURE SAD
WOE. "A swordshall pierce," dec. This not uncommon for mothers. Simeon,
however, blessedthe parents in spite of the sorrow that would be mingled with
the lot of Jesus and their own. Blessednessnotthe same as continuous
happiness or pleasure. A pathway of uninterrupted joy may not be a blessing.
"Blessedare they that mourn," dec. Christ's life was blessedwhen He was
tempted, had not where to lay His head, was alone upon the mountain, was
robed in mock royalty, beaten, spit upon, agonizedin the garden, died upon
the cross. No one could callHim happy, hut He was blessed.
IV. THIS CHILD WAS SET FOR THE FALL AND RISING AGAIN OF
MANY IN ISRAEL: The effect different in different persons. Not, however,
intended to be different. The purpose of God is goodand gracious. All His
gifts are intended for benefit — health, prosperity, afflictions. How differently
are we affectedby the same things! Children in the same house, under the
same training, &c.
1. Falling —
(1)In aggravateddegradation;
(2)augmented guilt;
(3)humiliation and repentance.
2. Rising again.
(1)Faith.
(2)Forgiveness.
(3)Holiness.
(4)Heaven.The words of Simeon are for this day, for this nation, for you. This
Child which was setforth then is still setforth, until in the counsels ofheaven
the lastday shall break upon the world, and the throne of judgment shall be
erectedwhere now stands the throne of grace. This Child is still the turning-
point upon which are centred the destinies of the world. This Child is not for a
race, but for the world; not for an age, but for all time. This Child you have
heard of from your infancy. You have not heard so much of any child as this.
This child runs as a golden thread through the history of the world. You may
neglectHim, but you cannotescape Him. You may despise Him, but you
cannot escapeHim. You may hate Him, but you cannot escape Him. It cannot
be with you as it is with a heathen who has never heard of His name, and upon
whom the glory of His brightness has never risen.
(E. Mellor, D. D.)
Christ is setfor the ruin of many
JosephSchuen.
I. How TRUE IS THIS PROPHECY. Undoubtedly the Son of Man came not
to destroy souls, but to save. In boundless love He has sacrificedHimself for
the world, and opened heaven by His cruel death. Nevertheless,he is set to the
ruin of many.
1. Many are destitute of holy faith, which is the gate of life and the ground of
eternal salvation.
2. Many are destitute of Divine charity, which we must possessin addition to
faith, if we would be saved.
II. HOW TERRIBLE IS THIS PROPHECY. Dreadfulare the consequences
to those for the ruin of whom Christ is set.
1. They forfeit the price of their redemption.
2. They lose the eternal happiness destined for them.
(JosephSchuen.)
What Christ was to be to different people
G. Brooks.
I. What this Child was to be to His enemies — an objectof opposition and an
occasionofruin,
II. What He was to be to His mother — a cause ofacute suffering (by
sympathy).
III. What He was to be to His people — the Author of their recoveryor
restoration.
IV. What He was to be to all man. kind — a testor touchstone of their moral
and spiritual state.
(G. Brooks.)
The prophecy of Simeon
DeanVaughan.
While Josephand the mother were still marvelling at the words spokenby the
old man concerning Jesus, he turned to them, and with a solemn blessing first
pronounced upon those who were privileged to have so near a place on earth
to the Saviour of mankind, spoke these words to His mother only, "Behold
this Child," &c. He is placed, or laid, as a firmly-planted rock, with a twofold
result and purpose — the fall of some, the rising of others. Two passagesof
the prophet Isaiah, the one from the eighth and the other from the twenty-
eighth chapter, seemto be here brought together;as also in the ninth chapter
of the Epistle to the Romans, and in the secondchapterof the First Epistle of
St. Peter. God places this Child in Zion as a precious corner-stone, a sure
foundation. Whosoeverwill may build upon Him the house of his habitation,
and rise into a holy temple, safe from the storms of time and the devastations
of judgment. He is setfor the rising of many. But if men will not thus use Him,
as the foundation-stone of a safe and sure dwelling, then (according to the
other passage)they will find Him a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence.
He will be like an obstructing rock in their path — even to them who stumble
at the word, being disobedient. Godwill not move Christ out of the way
because men are perverse enoughto stumble over Him. This Child is set, by a
hand not of man, to be either for the rising (if they will have it so), or else for
the fall (if they will have it so) of many in Israel. A solemnresponsibility! We
must either rise by Christ or fall — which we will. "And for a sign spoken
against." A sign, in the Scripture use, denotes something or some one pointing
to God, to God's being, to God's working. Christ is a sign. He came upon
earth to point to God. But this sign, like every other, may be, and commonly
is, gainsaid, or spokenagainst. Forone who accepts it, for one who, because of
Christ, sees and believes in and lives for God — many cavil, many reject, and
many neglectthe gospel. This in all times. But most of all when He was
Himself amongstmen. Then indeed gainsaying ran on into open violence.
Such is the warning uttered in the ears of His mother, over the little Infant
lying still and helpless in the arms of the agedsaint. "Yea," he adds, "a sword
shall pierce through thy own soul also." She who is now rejoicing in the
blessednessofbeing her Lord's mother, must learn that no one comes so near
Christ without partaking in His sufferings. For us the prophecy of Simeon is
recorded. Let us try and judge ourselves by it, that we be not judged of the
Lord. To which purpose, in our case, is this child set? To which of two
purposes? for our fall, or for our rising?
1. Forour fall, if we let the word come to us unheeded, to be snatched awayby
the tempter; if we receive the word for a moment with joy, but take no heed to
its watering by the Spirit's grace, to its growthby the sunshine of God's
presence, by the dew of God's blessing;if we allow the word to become choked
in us by cares and riches and pleasures of this life, so that it brings no fruit to
perfection; if we continue in sin that grace may abound. This Child is set for
the fall of many. And, oh, my friends, perhaps we have scarcelyyet said of
how many. It is not only the utterly hardened, not only the avowedunbeliever,
not only the scoffer, the dishonest, or the impure, who stumble at the great
stumbling-stone; it is quite as often the mere neglecter, the mere
procrastinator, the merely undecided, the almostChristian, who shows what
he is by his treatment of the Saviour and the greatsalvation. Not to be with
Christ is, He says it Himself, to be (in His judgment) againstHim.
2. Let us listen, in this day of opportunity and of blessing, to the alternative
here setbefore us. This Child is set for the rising of many. What is this
"rising"? and in whom is it verified? It is a rising out of darkness, outof the
low, misty valley of sense and worldliness, into the clearlight and pure
knowledge ofHim whom truly to know is eternal life. It is a rising out of
misery and sin. "Setfor the rising of many," the text says. Who, then, are
these? They are those who feel their need of Christ. And which of us has not
cause to do so?
(DeanVaughan.)
Man savedor destroyedby the truth
A. Maclaren, D. D.
Every man who has heard the word of salvationhas some kind of connection
with Christ. Christ is offeredto eachof us, in goodfaith on God's part, as a
means of salvation, a foundation on which we may build. A man is free to
acceptor rejectthat offer. If he rejectit, he has not thereby cut himself off
from all contactand connectionwith that rejectedSaviour, but he still
sustains a relation to Him; and the messagethathe has refused to believe is
exercising an influence upon his characterand his destiny. The smallest
particle of light falling on the sensitive plate produces a chemicalchange that
can never be undone again, and the light of Christ's love once brought to the
knowledge and presentedfor the acceptanceofa soul, stamps on it an
ineffaceable signof its having been there. The gospelonce heard is always the
gospelwhich has been heard. Nothing canalter that. Once heard, it is
henceforwarda perpetual element in the whole condition, character, and
destiny of the hearer. Christ does something to every one of us. His gospelwill
tell upon you. It is telling upon you. If you disbelieve it, it is not the same as if
you had never heard it. Neveris the box of ointment opened without some
savour from it abiding in every nostril to which its odour has been wafted.
Only the alternative, the awful "either, or," is open for each — the "savourof
life unto life, or of death unto death."
(A. Maclaren, D. D.)
The dual aspectofChrist's advent
Canon Liddon.
St. Paul experienced, in his own person, the double effectof the advent of
Christ into the world set forth in Simeon's language — first, the repulsion
which made him so bitter a persecutor, and next the attractionwhich made
him so glorious an apostle. And of this double experience was a secondgreat
example. There are many in our modern world who are thinking and
speaking and living in oppositionto the eternal Christ. It may be, as in the
case ofPaul, in the case ofAugustine, in their earlier days they have, from
whatevercause, takena fright at religion; they have been repelled by some
caricature of it, or some inconsistencyon the part of its professors, orby
taking only one aspectof its doctrines and claims into consideration;or by a
sense oftheir present inability to comply with its demand upon the conscience
and upon the heart; but it is a happiness to think that Christ is still there in
the firmament of the heavens, in the midst of the Church, among the golden
candlesticks, setnot merely for the fall, but for the rising againof many a soul
in Israel. It is to be hoped that brighter days await those wanderers, many of
whom are most assuredlychildren of the kingdom who have losttheir way,
but will not lose it for ever. A nearer sight, a constraining sense ofthe Divine
Redeemer's claims, will come when men see that He can, and does, give by His
Spirit, love, joy, peace, patience, to those who ask Him. When they take into
accountthe works which He did of old, the words which He spake, the
impression which He made when He was upon the earth; when they see the
societywhich He founded, the creedwhich radiates from and centres in His
person, and which is more widely acceptednow, eighteencenturies after His
death, than ever before, they may reconsidertheir prejudices:they may say
less than they mean when they admit that there is something to be saidfor
Christianity after all; they may rise from the tomb into which they had fallen-
the tomb of doubt, the tomb of care, the tomb of evil living — into the glorious
liberty of the children of God.
(Canon Liddon.)
Christ setfor our fall an upraising
Stopford A. Brooke.
How is He setfor our fall? That seems very strange. It is not God's purpose
that the revelation of goodproduces fall. We must seek anyexplanation rather
than one which shakes the central pillar of the universe, and turns God into a
Masterof evil. No, the real explanation lies in ourselves, in what we know and
see men do of their own will. Good and evil lie before men, and they choose
evil. There is a state of heart which naturally turns awayfrom or hates the life
of Christ and the spirit of its work. There is no kinship betweenHim and it.
When His goodness is flashedupon such men, it sends them into violent
hatred of it. He is set for their fall. But it is their own deeds that have brought
them to that condition — not God's will. This is the condemnation, that men
loved darkness rather than light. Why? Becausetheir deeds were evil. Plainly,
then, if we wish to rise into a new life and a higher one when the revelation of
goodness is made to us, if we wish Christ to be set for our rising, the first thing
to do is to love light; and in order to love it, to make our deeds good. Never
mind having, high ideals, until you have got your daily actions and thoughts
right. It is a simple promise, but it is eternally true and sure: "To him that
ordereth his conversationarightwill I show the salvationof God." We must
be akin to Christ before we tan receive Christ. To such, when He comes home
to the heart, when we feel Him rushing on us, He comes in resurrection-
power, sot for our rising. And we rise, shaking off our sins, our dark thoughts,
the burden of our sorrow, the besetting of self, the curse of indifference,
impatience, and sloth into a new life. It is like the unbinding of the earth in
spring. Thus is Christ setfor our rise and fall. It is a solemnthing to watch a
man when that testing comes to him. The hour strikes whenhe is calledon to
choose betweentwo ways of acting, and he knows Godis in one and the devil
in the other. What is this? It is Christ setbefore him for his rise or fall; Christ
come to reveal his inward thoughts, his inward strength or weakness. It is a
judgment-hour; and years of evil fall, or of righteous growth rest upon the
hour. And still more grave is it when Christ is setbefore a nation for its fall or
rising again. All greatideas are setfor the rise and falling of men, for life and
for death. Of this law the strongestinstance in history is that which
accompaniedthe coming el Christ. His ideas made the world into two camps.
Nor has the powerof Christ's spiritual thoughts ceasedto do this kind of
work. Through the solitarycontestin eachman's soul, and his ownchoice of
goodor evil; through the contestin every community, in every nation, in the
whole world, men and nations rise and fall, and the silent separationever
going on accumulates the materials for the last greatjudgment when this
dispensationof time is over and another shall begin. That day is not what has
been pictured in poetry. It will be the magnificent indications of God's ways to
men; the clear, unmistakable revelation of the holiness and justice and truth
of God. Men shall see then. The time of doubt and casuistryand shadow will
be over; all thoughts shall be revealed, and we shall know ourselves and know
God. Once more Christ will be openly set for the rise and fall of men. By the
revelation of His holiness alone the goodshall be irresistibly attracted; the
evil, till they find out their evil, irresistibly repelled. There will be no caprice.
In accordance withinevitable law, in accordancewith the voice in men's own
hearts, will the judgment-sentence of the Son of Man be given.
(Stopford A. Brooke.)
By their treatment of Christ Himself men will show what they are
DeanVaughan., Stopford A. Brooke.
The veil will be stripped off from them — such is the figure — by their own
language, and their own conduct towards Christ. By their estimate of His
character, by their appreciationor disparagementof His holy life, and mighty
works and Divine doctrine — by their acceptance orrejectionof Him whose
appeal was everto the conscienceofman, as in the sight of a heart-searching
God — men will disclose their true disposition; will show whether they love
the world, whether they echo its lying voice, whether they desire darkness lest
their deeds should be reproved, or whether, on the other hand, they are brave
to see, and bold to confess the truth, whether they have an earto hear the
voice of God, and a will to follow Him whithersoeverHe goeth. But, most of
all, as the end draws nigh, and the life of holiness is closing in the death of
martyrdom. Then, evenmore than in earlierdays, were the feelings of men
tested, the thoughts of hearts revealed, by their dealing with the Suffering and
the Crucified. The high priests plot and blaspheme, Pilate vacillates and gives
way, the soldiers part among them the garments, the people stand beholding,
Judas despairs, Peterrepents, Josephof Arimathaea becomes courageous,
Nicodemus comes by day, the centurion confesses,one thief blasphemes, the
other prays, men faint and flee. women out of weaknessare made strong, a
swordpierces the heart of the mother, that the thoughts of many hearts may
be revealed. Even thus has it been in all time. For all time the words were
uttered; it is by their treatment of Jesus, in Himself and in His people, in His
word, in His church, in His sacraments, in His Spirit, that men show decisively
before God, before one another, before themselves (if they will behold it) what
manner of spirit they are of.
(DeanVaughan.)Before these words were spokenMary was full of happiness.
She had come into the Temple trembling with the deep pleasure of young
motherhood, her soul filled full of natural piety, her heart leaping with joy.
And when, moved still more by the old religious rite, she heard the hymn of
Simeon over her boy, all her joy rose to spring-tide in her. Her face glowed.
Joy and triumph filled her soul. Simeon saw this lightning on her face, saw
her mien transfigured, and with the wisdom which has outlived weakness but
not sympathy, turned and touched her joy with the warning of his prophecy.
"A swordshall pierce through thine ownsoul." It was cruel, we think; it was
pitiful to dash her young delight with cold. That is our first thought, and it
might be a true one, had the sorrow she was to suffer been ordinary sorrow.
But it was so dreadful a pain that she needed to prepare herself, neededthe
warning. Her joy was too great at this moment to be destroyed by the words;
it was only chastenedby a shade of impending sorrow, so that when the pain
came it was not so greata shock. Nordid the shade make the joy really less.
Joy was only lodged deeper in the heart, made more intense — a secret, silent
possession:nay, the very dread of its loss made her handling of it tenderer,
and her love of it greater. Byboth, by joy and by the shadow of sorrow, she
was exalted, raised from the girl to the thoughtful woman who kept things in
her heart and pondered them. SoonSimeon's prophecy was fulfilled. She saw
her Songo forth from the quiet of the village with high hopes, and at His first
return to His home the people tried to kill Him. For a time things seemed
bright, but as she followedHis ministry with the passionate love which
motherhood has for a son who claims also by his characterdeep reverence,
she saw Him despisedand rejectedof men, a man of sorrows and acquainted
with grief, hated and driven to death. Day by day the swordpierced her soul;
day by day its sharp edge was whettedby love and fruitless indignation. Can
we ira, gin, how that must have worn life away? And then the end, the hour by
the cross whenshe knelt apart, silent to the last, seeing Him die so cruelly —
the mother's heart pierced in twain. No wonder she died early. No wonder
Christiandom has sung to her, painted and gravenher, as the Mother of
Sorrows. We, looking ather life and her Son's, know of a truth that out of
suffering nobly borne for love of man, goodcomes to all. Involved in our pain,
we know nothing but that we suffer. Yet the history of Mary's sorrow is the
history of all sorrow. Goodflows from it to the whole, and when we see that
goodwe shall rejoice that we have suffered. No swordpierces the human
heart, but the blood that streams from it heals the nations.
(Stopford A. Brooke.)
On the advantages ofaffliction
B. Murphy.
To the prophecies which Simeon addresses to Mary concerning her Divine
Son, he adds one relative to herself. The very moment after filling her heart
with joy by announcing the future glory of Jesus, he announces also the many
sufferings she must endure. Such is the ordinary conduct of Providence,
towards the just and elect. He chequers prosperity with reverses, so that they
may be induced to transfer still more and more their affections to things
above, and to elevate their hearts to those mansions where alone true joy is to
be found.
I. THERE IS NO REAL CAUSE WHY BELIEVERS SHOULD FAINT
UNDER THE CHASTISEMENTSOF THEIR HEAVENLY FATHER.
1. God's corrections are tokens ofHis love, and the means which He often uses
for bringing His children into glory. Amos 3:2; Hebrews 12:5-7. Prosperity is
not the field where virtue flourishes; the soil is too rich; a luxuriance of
baleful weeds chokesthe goodplants and makes them unfruitful. Adam's fall
was in paradise. Noah's abundance proved a snare and temptation to him.
David, in the midst of happiness, became an adulterer and a murderer.
Solomon, in the midst of His opulence, apostatisedfrom his God. Such has
been the opinion of some of the wisestmen concerning an uninterrupted
course of prosperity, that they have even shunned the company, and broken
off all connectionwith those who enjoyed it. It is written of St. , that being
upon a journey, and coming to an inn, he heard the landlord boast, that
through his whole life he had never knownwhat it was to be under trouble or
affliction; upon which, that father would not so much as lodge for a night in
his house, but foretold a sudden destruction to him and his, which soonafter
came to pass. Thus the children of God, insteadof repining, or sinking under
pressure of affliction, ought to thank their heavenly Father for it, and esteem
it one of the most precious blessings He bestows on them.
2. The ways of God are frequently dark and obscure;and we may not for a
long time perceive the cause of our affliction.
3. It is common for us to place our affections on trifles, whilst we despise
things of the greatestvalue. So long as things go well with us in this world, we
look no further. Then God, in order to weanus from these snares, embitters
them to us; and in proportion as our love of this earth diminishes, our desire
of heaven will increase.
II. ADVICE TO THOSE WHO ARE UNDER THE CHASTENING AND
CORRECTING HAND OF GOD.
1. Use every possible means to acquire just notions, worthy and becoming
sentiments, of the Omnipotent Creatorand supreme Governor of the world.
ConsiderHim as merciful as well as just; of infinite goodness,as wellas
incomprehensible wisdom and power; as One who hates nothing that He has
made, and whose kindness to His children is unlimited.
2. Make as speedyand strict an inquiry as possible into your present
condition, and try to find out what are the causes and motives of the Lord's
thus dealing with you; and at the same time considerwhat improvements you
ought to make of His dispensations. Were you to meet with no trials, where
would be your fortitude? If no temptations, where would be your virtue? If no
afflictions, where your resignation? If no disappointments in your worldly
pleasures, whatwould become of your attention to heavenly realities?
(B. Murphy.)
COMMENTARIES
Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers
(34) This child is setfor the fall and rising again.—The words startfrom the
thought of Isaiah 8:14-15. The Christ is seenby Simeon as the stone on which
some fall and are bruised (Luke 20:18), while others plant their feet upon it
and rise to a higher life. Primarily the clause speaksofthe contrastbetween
the two classes;but there is nothing to exclude the thought that some may first
fall, and then, though sorely “bruised,” may rise again. (Comp. Romans
11:11.)
For a sign which shall be spokenagainst.—Better, “a signthat is spoken
against.” In the choice ofthe phrase, we have againan echo from Isaiah
(Isaiah 7:14). The child Immanuel was to be Himself a sign, even as Isaiahand
his children were (Isaiah8:18), but the sign was not to win acceptance.He was
to endure the “contradiction” of sinners (Hebrews 12:3). There is probably a
reference also to the words of Jehovah(Isaiah65:2) stretching forth his hands
to a “gainsaying” people. The whole history of our Lord’s ministry—one
might almost say, of His whole after-work in the history of Christendom—is
more or less the recordof the fulfilment of Simeon’s prediction.
BensonCommentary
Luke 2:34-35. And Simeonblessedthem — Namely, Josephand Mary. He
pronounced them blessedwho had the honour to be relatedto this child, and
were intrusted with the bringing him up. He prayed for them, that God would
bless them, and, doubtless, wished others to do the same. Behold, this child is
setfor the fall and rising againof many in Israel — As he shall, in fact, be the
means of bringing aggravatedruin upon some through their rejecting him; as
well as of procuring salvationand recoveryto others, on their believing on
him. In other words, He will be a savourof death to some, to unbelievers: a
savour of life to others, to believers. Simeon here alludes to Isaiah8:14; and
Isaiah28:16; which passagesPaulhas joined in one citation. Behold, I lay in
Zion a stumbling-stone, and a rock of offence, and whosoeverbelievethon
him shall not be ashamed. And for a sign which shall be spokenagainst — A
sign from God, yet rejectedof men; or a mark to be shot at; the butt of the
malice of wickedmen. Yea, a sword — Ρομφαια, a javelin, or dart; shall
pierce through thy own soul also — The darts that are shot at thy son shall
pierce thee to the heart; the calumnies, persecutions, and sufferings which he
shall be exposedto, especiallyin his death, shall prove matter of the greatest
affliction to thee, and shall sting thee with the bitterest griefs; that the
thoughts of many hearts may be revealed — All these things are orderedby
Providence, that the real characters ofmen may be discovered, and the
sincerity of those who are approved may be made manifest; while the
hypocrisy and earthly- mindedness of those who intend only their own secular
advantage, under the specious pretence of waiting for the Messiah’skingdom,
shall be exposed; for they will soonbe offended at the obscure form of his
appearance, andat the persecutions which will attend him and his cause.
Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
2:25-35 The same Spirit that provided for the support of Simeon's hope,
provided for his joy. Those who would see Christ must go to his temple. Here
is a confessionofhis faith, that this Child in his arms was the Saviour, the
salvationitself, the salvationof God's appointing. He bids farewellto this
world. How poor does this world look to one that has Christ in his arms, and
salvationin his view! See here, how comfortable is the death of a goodman;
he departs in peace with God, peace with his own conscience, inpeace with
death. Those that have welcomedChrist, may welcome death. Josephand
Mary marvelled at the things which were spokenof this Child. Simeon shows
them likewise, whatreasonthey had to rejoice with trembling. And Jesus, his
doctrine, and people, are still spokenagainst;his truth and holiness are still
denied and blasphemed; his preached word is still the touchstone of men's
characters. The secretgoodaffections in the minds of some, will be revealed
by their embracing Christ; the secretcorruptions of others will be revealedby
their enmity to Christ. Men will be judged by the thoughts of their hearts
concerning Christ. He shall be a suffering Jesus;his mother shall suffer with
him, because of the nearness of her relation and affection.
Barnes'Notes on the Bible
Simeon blessedthem - Josephand Mary. On them he sought the blessing of
God.
Is set - Is appointed or constitutedfor that, or such will be the effect of his
coming.
The fall - The word "fall" here denotes "misery, suffering, disappointment,"
or "ruin." There is a plain reference to the passage where it is said that he
should be "a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence," Isaiah8:14-15. Many
expecteda temporal prince, and in this they were disappointed. They loved
darkness rather than light, and rejectedhim, and fell unto destruction. Many
that were proud were brought low by his preaching. They fell from the vain
and giddy height of their own self-righteousness,and were humbled before
God, and then, through him, rose again to a better righteousness and to better
hopes. The nation also rejectedhim and put him to death, and, as a judgment,
"fell" into the hands of the Romans. Thousands were led into captivity, and
thousands perished. The nation rushed into ruin, the temple was destroyed,
and the people were scatteredinto all the nations. See Romans 9:32-33;1
Peter2:8; 1 Corinthians 1:23-24.
And rising again - The word "again" is not expressedin the Greek. It seems to
be supposed, in our translation, that the "same persons would fall and rise
again;but this is not the meaning of the passage. It denotes that many would
be ruined by his coming, and that many "others" would be made happy or be
saved. Many of the poor and humble, that were willing to receive him, would
obtain pardon of sin and peace - would "rise" from their sins and sorrows
here, and finally ascendto eternallife.
And for a sign ... - The word "sign" here denotes a conspicuous or
distinguished object, and the Lord Jesus was suchan object of contempt and
rejectionby all the people. He was despised, and his religion has been the
common "mark" or "sign" for all the wicked, the profligate, and the profane,
to curse, and ridicule, and oppose. Compare Isaiah8:18, and Acts 28:22.
Neverwas a prophecy more exactlyfulfilled than this. Thousands have
rejectedthe gospeland fallen into ruin; thousands are still falling of those who
are ashamedof Jesus;thousands blaspheme him, deny him, speak all manner
of evil againsthim, and would crucify him againif he were in their hands; but
thousands also "by" him are renewed, justified, and raised up to life and
peace.
Jamieson-Fausset-BrownBible Commentary
34, 35. set—appointed.
fall and rising againof many in Israel, and for a sign spokenagainst—
Perhaps the former of these phrases expressesthe two stages oftemporary
"fall of many in Israel" through unbelief, during our Lord's earthly career,
and the subsequent "rising again" of the same persons afterthe effusion of the
Spirit at pentecostthrew a new light to them on the whole subject; while the
latter clause describes the determined enemies of the Lord Jesus. Such
opposite views of Christ are takenfrom age to age.
Matthew Poole's Commentary
Ver. 34,35. Simeonblessedthem: some may question how it was that Simeon
blessedChrist, whereas the apostle tells us, The less is blessedof the better,
Hebrews 7:7. But we must distinguish between:
1. A prophetical blessing, as Jacobblessedhis sons, which was nothing but a
prediction how Godwould bless them.
2. An authoritative blessing, as the priests blessedthe people in the name of
the Lord, Numbers 6:1-27;which is nothing but a pronouncing them blessed
by authority from God, whom God hath blessed.
3. A charitable or precatoryblessing;praying God to bless them.
Thus inferiors may bless superiors, as wellas superiors may bless inferiors.
The first or last, or both those, is to be understood here, not the second.
And said unto Mary his mother; not to Joseph, who he knew was not his
natural, but legaland reputed, father.
Behold, this child is set for the fall and rising againof many in Israel. That by
the fall and rising again is here meant the salvationand damnation of many is
doubted by no valuable interpreters. The apostle so applies Isaiah 8:14,15,
where he is said to be for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of offence to
both the houses ofIsrael, for a gin and for a snare to the inhabitants of
Jerusalem. And many among them shall stumble, and fall, and be broken, and
be snared, and be taken. So doth Peter, 1 Peter2:8. Neither is it more than
Christ telleth us, John 9:39, Forjudgment I am come into this world, that they
which see not might see;and that they which see might be made blind.
Accordingly the apostle saith, 2 Corinthians 2:16, that they were to some the
savour of death unto death, to others the savour of life unto life. The reasonis,
because they that believe in him shall be saved, they that believe not shall be
damned, Mark 16:16 John 3:18,36. This is now granted on all hands, that
Christ will be the occasionofmany people’s damnation, even all that reject
and oppose him, and believe not in him; and the cause ofmany people’s
salvation, even all that shall be saved:for there is no other name given under
heaven, by which any can be saved, Acts 4:12: see Matthew 21:44 1 Peter
2:4,5. And it is observable, that the salvationof souls by Christ is expressedby
the term rising; so as all are, fallen, Ephesians 2:1, and have need of the
application of a greaterpowerto them for their salvation, than an under
propping of the innate powerof their wills. But the greatquestion is about
ceitai, is set, whether it signifieth only an event, or some counseland
ordination of God. Let us compare it with other texts where the same word is
used, Philippians 1:17 1 Thessalonians 3:3. How such greatissues of
providence should happen without the foreknowledgeofGod, or how God
should have any such foreknowledge withouta previous act of his will
determining the thing, let any one consider; in the mean time it is freely
granted, that the intervening of men’s unbelief, and malice, and opposition to
Christ and his gospel, is the proximate meritorious cause of the fall of any soul
by occasionof him.
It follows, and for a sign which shall be spokenagainst;such a mark as Job
speaks of, Job16:12; or such a sign as Isaiah speaks of, Isaiah8:18. Simeon
here prophesieth, that Christ, and his ministers and people, should be
ridiculed, and all the arrows of ungodly men should be shot againsthim;
which proved true in that age as to Christ and his apostles, andin succeeding
ages as to all that derive from him, and will so hold to the end of the world.
Yea, a sword shall pierce through thy own soul also;as the irons entered into
the soulof Joseph, Psalm105:18. He tells the virgin her soulshould be
wounded with the reproaches andindignities which should be offeredto this
blessedbabe, as it proved afterwards, whenshe heard him reviled, and saw
him crucified.
That the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed. The gospeltimes,
especiallytimes of persecution, will discoverwhom God hath chosen, and
whom he hath not, by discovering the thoughts of their hearts; it will then be
seenwho will receive and who will rejectthe Messias,who is on his side and
who will be againsthim. The term that doth denote the consequent, not the
effect. The preaching of the gospelis the Lord’s fan, by which he purgeth his
floor. Persecutionis the Lord’s sieve, by which he winnoweth churches, and
separateththe dirt, and darnel, and tares from the wheat. Gospeltimes and
times of persecutionare both of them times which make greatdiscovery of
men’s spirits.
Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible
And Simeon blessedthem,.... Pronouncedthem blessedpersons, on accountof
their relation to Christ as man; and more especially, becauseoftheir interest
in him, as the, Saviour and Redeemerof them; and wished them all happiness
and prosperity inward and outward, temporal, spiritual, and eternal; and so
the Arabic version renders it, confining it to Josephand Mary; "and Simeon
blessedthem both"; though this blessing of his may take in also the young
child Jesus;whom he might pronounce blessed, as Elizabeth before had done,
Luke 1:42 since he was the promised seed, in whom all nations of the earth
should be blessed;and to whom, and to whose undertakings, interest, and
kingdom, he might wish all prosperous success. The Persic versionreads, "old
Simeon: and said unto Mary his mother": he directed his discourse to her,
because she was the only real parent of this child he had in his arms, and had
said so much of, and was about to say more; and because part of what follows,
personally concernedher:
behold, this child is set for the fall and rising againof many in Israel. The
word "child", is not in the original text; where it is only, "this is set, &c."
Simeon seeming to be, as it were, at a loss, what name to call this greatand
illustrious personby, and therefore it is left to be supplied. The Persic version
supplies it thus, behold, "this Holy One is set, &c." The sense is, that this
child, who is the stone of Israel, is set, or put, or lies, both as a stone of
stumbling, and rock of offence, for many of the Jews to stumble at, and fail
and perish; and as a precious cornerand foundation stone, for the erection
and elevationof others of them, to the highesthonour and dignity, that shall
believe on him: for these words are not to be understood of the same, but of
different persons among the Jews;though it may be true, that some, who first
stumbled at him, might be raisedup again, and brought to believe in him; and
that many, who for his sake, andthe Gospel, fell under greatdisgrace and
reproach, and into greatafflictions and persecutions, were raisedup to the
enjoyment of greatcomfort and honour: but they are not the same persons
that Christ is set for the fall of, that he is setfor the rising of; nor the same he
is set for the rising of, he is set for the fall of; the one designs the electof God
among the Jews, who became true believers in Christ; and the other, the
reprobate, who died in impenitence and unbelief: the words, so far as they
concernChrist, "being setfor the fall of many of the Jews";have a manifest
reference to Isaiah8:14 where the Messiahis spokenof as a stone, and as a
stone of stumbling, and rock of offence;at which, many of the Jews should
stumble, and fail, and be broken. And so the text is applied in the Talmud (m),
where it is said, that "the son of David will not come, until both houses of the
fathers, fail out of Israel;and they are these, the head of the captivity in
Babylon, and the prince in the land of Israel;as it is said, Isaiah 8:14 "he shall
be for a sanctuary; but for a stone of stumbling and rock of offence", to both
the houses ofIsrael.
Accordingly the Jews did stumble at his birth, parentage, and education; at
the meanness ofhis person, and the obscurity of his kingdom; at the company
he kept, and the audience that attended him; at his doctrine and miracles, and
at his sufferings and death: they fell, through their unbelief and rejectionof
him, as the Messiah;and not only from their outward privileges, civil, and
religious;the Gospelwas takenawayfrom them, the national covenant
betweenGod and them was broken, and they ceased to be his people, their
temple and city were destroyed, and wrath came upon their nation to the
uttermost; but they also fell into everlasting perdition, dying in their sins,
through their disbelief of Jesus as the Messiah:this indeed was not the case of
all of them; there was a seed, a remnant, according to the electionof grace but
it was the case ofmany, and of the far greaterpart but then this same stone
that was laid in Zion, was also
setfor the rising againof many of them; meaning not for their resurrectionin
a literal sense, though this is a truth: for as all God's elect, whetherJews or
Gentiles, rose in him representatively, when he rose from the dead; so many of
them rose personally after his resurrection, and all of them, at the last day,
will rise again, in consequenceoftheir union to him: and indeed, all the
wickedwill be raisedagain, by virtue of his power;but not this, but their
resurrectionin a spiritual sense, is here meant; and it supposes the persons
raisedto have been in a low estate, as allGod's electby nature are:they are in
a hopeless and helpless condition in themselves:they are in a state of thraldom
and bondage, to sin, Satan, and the law; they are filled with diseases,
nauseous, mortal, and incurable; they are clothed in rags, and are beggars on
the dunghill; they are deep in debt, and have nothing to pay; and are dead in
trespassesandsins. Christ is now provided and appointed, for the raising
them up out of their low estate, and he does do it; he is the resurrectionand
the life unto them; he raises from the death of sin, to a life of grace and
holiness from him, to a life of faith on him, and communion with him here,
and to eternal life hereafter: he pays all their debts clothes them with his
righteousness, heals alltheir diseases, redeems them from the slavery of sin,
the captivity of Satan, and the bondage and curse of the law; brings them into
a hopeful and comfortable condition; raises them to the possessionofa large
estate, aneternal inheritance; and gives them both a right unto it, and
ineptness for it; sets them among princes, makes them kings, places them on a
throne of glory, yea, on his own throne, and sets a crown of righteousness, life,
and glory, on their heads; and will cause them to reign with him, first on
earth, for a thousand years, and then in heavento all eternity: and this was to
be the case ofmany in Israel, though not of all; for all did not obey the Gospel,
some did, three thousand under one sermon; and more will in the latter day,
when all Israelshall be saved. This privilege of rising again, in this sense, by
Christ, though it is here spokenof with respectto many of the Jews, yetnot to
the exclusionof the Gentiles;for this honour have all the saints, be they of
what nation they will. Now when Christ is said to be "set" for these different
things, the meaning is, that he was foreappointed, preordained, and setforth
in God's counsel, purposes, and decrees, as a stone at which some should
stumble, through their own wickednessandunbelief, and fall and perish, and
be eternally lost;and as a foundation stone for others, to build their faith and
hope upon, which should be given them, and so rise up to everlasting life; and
that he was setforth in the prophecies of the Old Testament, as in that here
referred to, for the same ends; and that he was now exhibited in human
nature with the same views, and should be held forth in the everlasting
Gospel, for the like purposes; and which eventually is the savour of life unto
life to some, and the savour of death unto death to others:to all this, a behold
is prefixed, as expressing what is wonderful and surprising, and not to be
accountedfor, but to be resolvedinto the secretand sovereignwill of God: it
is added, that he is also set
for a signwhich shall be spokenagainst:referring to Isaiah 8:18. Christ is the
sign of God's everlasting love to his people, the greatproof, evidence, and
demonstration of it; and in this respect, is spokenagainstby many: and he is
setup in the Gospel, as an ensignof the people to look at, and gather to, for
comfort, peace, righteousness, salvation, andeternal life; but is by many
contradicted, opposed, and treated with contempt and abhorrence;so that he
appears rather to be setas a mark and butt to shootat: he was spokenagainst
by the Scribes and Pharisees, andthe greaterpart of the people of the Jews,
and contradicted, as the Messiah, because ofhis mean appearance among
them; his proper deity was denied, his divine sonshipwas gainsayed;he was
contemned in all his offices, kingly, priestly, and prophetic; his works of
mercy, both to the bodies and souls of men, his miracles, and the whole series
of his life and actions, were traduced as sinful and criminal: this was the
contradiction of sinners againsthimself, which he endured, Hebrews 12:3 and
for which he was setand appointed; and still the contradiction continues, and
will, as long as the Gospelis preached,
(m) T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 33. 1.
Geneva Study Bible
And Simeon blessedthem, and said unto Mary his mother, Behold, this child
is {q} setfor the {r} fall and rising againof many in Israel;and for a {s} sign
which shall be spokenagainst;
(q) Is appointed and set by God for a mark.
(r) Fall of the reprobate who perishes because of their ownfault: and for the
rising of the elect, unto whom God will give faith to believe.
(s) That is, a mark, which all men will strive earnestlyto hit.
EXEGETICAL(ORIGINAL LANGUAGES)
Meyer's NT Commentary
Luke 2:34. Αὐτούς]the parents, Luke 2:33.
After he has blessedthem (has in prayer promised them God’s grace and
salvation), he againspeciallyaddresses the mother, whose marvellous relation
to the new-born infant he has, according to Luke, recognisedἐν πνεύματι.
καῖται]He is placedthere, i.e. He has the destination, see on Php 1:16.
εἰς πτῶσιν κ.τ.λ.]designates,in reference to Isaiah8:14 (comp. Matthew
21:22;Matthew 21:44;Acts 4:11; Romans 9:33; 1 Peter 2:6), the moral
judgment (John 3:19 ff.), which is to set in by means of the appearance and
the ministry of the Messiah. According to divine decree many must take
offence at Him and fall—namely, through unbelief—into obduracy and moral
ruin; many others must arise, inasmuch as they raise themselves—namely,
through faith in Him—to true spiritual life. The fulfilment of both is
abundantly attestedin the evangelic history; as, for example, in the case ofthe
Pharisees andscribes the falling, in that of the publicans and sinners the
rising, in that of Paul both; comp. Romans 11:11 ff.
καὶ εἰς σημεῖονἀντιλεγόμ.]What was previously affirmed was His destination
for others;now follows the specialpersonalexperience, which is destined for
Him. His manifestation is to be a sign, a marvellous token(signal) of the
divine counsel, which experiences contradictionfrom the world (see on
Romans 10:21). The fulfilment of this prediction attained its culmination in
the crucifixion; hence Luke 2:35. Comp. Hebrews 12:3. But it continues
onward even to the lastday, 1 Corinthians 15:25.
Expositor's Greek Testament
Luke 2:34. εὐλόγησεν: “the less is blessedof the better”. Age, however
humble, may bless youth. JacobblessedPharaoh.—κεῖται, is appointed—εἰς
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising
Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising

More Related Content

What's hot

Jesus was being silent to a woman
Jesus was being silent to a womanJesus was being silent to a woman
Jesus was being silent to a womanGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was hurt by the unwilling
Jesus was hurt by the unwillingJesus was hurt by the unwilling
Jesus was hurt by the unwillingGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was bringing insult on believers
Jesus was bringing insult on believersJesus was bringing insult on believers
Jesus was bringing insult on believersGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was a light and a glory
Jesus was a light and a gloryJesus was a light and a glory
Jesus was a light and a gloryGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was encouraging charity
Jesus was encouraging charityJesus was encouraging charity
Jesus was encouraging charityGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was one of immense patience
Jesus was one of immense patienceJesus was one of immense patience
Jesus was one of immense patienceGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was a problem
Jesus was a problemJesus was a problem
Jesus was a problemGLENN PEASE
 
The holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favor
The holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favorThe holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favor
The holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favorGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was perfumed
Jesus was perfumedJesus was perfumed
Jesus was perfumedGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was serious about darkness
Jesus was serious about darknessJesus was serious about darkness
Jesus was serious about darknessGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was anointed by women
Jesus was anointed by womenJesus was anointed by women
Jesus was anointed by womenGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was seeing satan fall from heaven
Jesus was seeing satan fall from heavenJesus was seeing satan fall from heaven
Jesus was seeing satan fall from heavenGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was blessing the giver
Jesus was blessing the giverJesus was blessing the giver
Jesus was blessing the giverGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the most blessed of men
Jesus was the most blessed of menJesus was the most blessed of men
Jesus was the most blessed of menGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the source of great joy
Jesus was the source of great joyJesus was the source of great joy
Jesus was the source of great joyGLENN PEASE
 
The holy spirit and hope
The holy spirit and hopeThe holy spirit and hope
The holy spirit and hopeGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was negative yet hopeful for the rich
Jesus was negative yet hopeful for the richJesus was negative yet hopeful for the rich
Jesus was negative yet hopeful for the richGLENN PEASE
 
14. the knowledge of god through jesus christ
14. the knowledge of god through jesus christ14. the knowledge of god through jesus christ
14. the knowledge of god through jesus christSami Wilberforce
 
Jesus was appearing once to fulfill all
Jesus was appearing once to fulfill allJesus was appearing once to fulfill all
Jesus was appearing once to fulfill allGLENN PEASE
 

What's hot (20)

Jesus was being silent to a woman
Jesus was being silent to a womanJesus was being silent to a woman
Jesus was being silent to a woman
 
Jesus was hurt by the unwilling
Jesus was hurt by the unwillingJesus was hurt by the unwilling
Jesus was hurt by the unwilling
 
Jesus was bringing insult on believers
Jesus was bringing insult on believersJesus was bringing insult on believers
Jesus was bringing insult on believers
 
Jesus was a light and a glory
Jesus was a light and a gloryJesus was a light and a glory
Jesus was a light and a glory
 
Jesus was encouraging charity
Jesus was encouraging charityJesus was encouraging charity
Jesus was encouraging charity
 
Jesus was one of immense patience
Jesus was one of immense patienceJesus was one of immense patience
Jesus was one of immense patience
 
Jesus was a problem
Jesus was a problemJesus was a problem
Jesus was a problem
 
The holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favor
The holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favorThe holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favor
The holy spirit proclaims the year of the lord's favor
 
Jesus was perfumed
Jesus was perfumedJesus was perfumed
Jesus was perfumed
 
Jesus was serious about darkness
Jesus was serious about darknessJesus was serious about darkness
Jesus was serious about darkness
 
Jesus was anointed by women
Jesus was anointed by womenJesus was anointed by women
Jesus was anointed by women
 
Jesus was seeing satan fall from heaven
Jesus was seeing satan fall from heavenJesus was seeing satan fall from heaven
Jesus was seeing satan fall from heaven
 
Jesus was blessing the giver
Jesus was blessing the giverJesus was blessing the giver
Jesus was blessing the giver
 
Jesus was the most blessed of men
Jesus was the most blessed of menJesus was the most blessed of men
Jesus was the most blessed of men
 
Jesus was the source of great joy
Jesus was the source of great joyJesus was the source of great joy
Jesus was the source of great joy
 
The New Creation
The New CreationThe New Creation
The New Creation
 
The holy spirit and hope
The holy spirit and hopeThe holy spirit and hope
The holy spirit and hope
 
Jesus was negative yet hopeful for the rich
Jesus was negative yet hopeful for the richJesus was negative yet hopeful for the rich
Jesus was negative yet hopeful for the rich
 
14. the knowledge of god through jesus christ
14. the knowledge of god through jesus christ14. the knowledge of god through jesus christ
14. the knowledge of god through jesus christ
 
Jesus was appearing once to fulfill all
Jesus was appearing once to fulfill allJesus was appearing once to fulfill all
Jesus was appearing once to fulfill all
 

Similar to Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising

Jesus was warning of false messiahs and prophets
Jesus was warning of false messiahs and prophetsJesus was warning of false messiahs and prophets
Jesus was warning of false messiahs and prophetsGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the crossJesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the crossGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the crossJesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the crossGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the richest person ever
Jesus was the richest person everJesus was the richest person ever
Jesus was the richest person everGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was a man of optimism
Jesus was a man of optimismJesus was a man of optimism
Jesus was a man of optimismGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was honoring those who confess him
Jesus was honoring those who confess himJesus was honoring those who confess him
Jesus was honoring those who confess himGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the captain of our salvation
Jesus was the captain of our salvationJesus was the captain of our salvation
Jesus was the captain of our salvationGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was god's yes
Jesus was god's yesJesus was god's yes
Jesus was god's yesGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was all and in all
Jesus was all and in allJesus was all and in all
Jesus was all and in allGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the son of the most high
Jesus was the son of the most highJesus was the son of the most high
Jesus was the son of the most highGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the king of glory
Jesus was the king of gloryJesus was the king of glory
Jesus was the king of gloryGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was a sanctuary
Jesus was a sanctuaryJesus was a sanctuary
Jesus was a sanctuaryGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was tasteing death for everyone
Jesus was tasteing death for everyoneJesus was tasteing death for everyone
Jesus was tasteing death for everyoneGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was being seen
Jesus was being seenJesus was being seen
Jesus was being seenGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was to be the basis for universal unity
Jesus was to be the basis for universal unityJesus was to be the basis for universal unity
Jesus was to be the basis for universal unityGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the one and only
Jesus was the one and onlyJesus was the one and only
Jesus was the one and onlyGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was and is our all
Jesus was and is our allJesus was and is our all
Jesus was and is our allGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was able to quiet a storm
Jesus was able to quiet a stormJesus was able to quiet a storm
Jesus was able to quiet a stormGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was near but unrecognized
Jesus was near but unrecognizedJesus was near but unrecognized
Jesus was near but unrecognizedGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was choosing paul for the gentiles
Jesus was choosing paul for the gentilesJesus was choosing paul for the gentiles
Jesus was choosing paul for the gentilesGLENN PEASE
 

Similar to Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising (20)

Jesus was warning of false messiahs and prophets
Jesus was warning of false messiahs and prophetsJesus was warning of false messiahs and prophets
Jesus was warning of false messiahs and prophets
 
Jesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the crossJesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the cross
 
Jesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the crossJesus was demanding we carry the cross
Jesus was demanding we carry the cross
 
Jesus was the richest person ever
Jesus was the richest person everJesus was the richest person ever
Jesus was the richest person ever
 
Jesus was a man of optimism
Jesus was a man of optimismJesus was a man of optimism
Jesus was a man of optimism
 
Jesus was honoring those who confess him
Jesus was honoring those who confess himJesus was honoring those who confess him
Jesus was honoring those who confess him
 
Jesus was the captain of our salvation
Jesus was the captain of our salvationJesus was the captain of our salvation
Jesus was the captain of our salvation
 
Jesus was god's yes
Jesus was god's yesJesus was god's yes
Jesus was god's yes
 
Jesus was all and in all
Jesus was all and in allJesus was all and in all
Jesus was all and in all
 
Jesus was the son of the most high
Jesus was the son of the most highJesus was the son of the most high
Jesus was the son of the most high
 
Jesus was the king of glory
Jesus was the king of gloryJesus was the king of glory
Jesus was the king of glory
 
Jesus was a sanctuary
Jesus was a sanctuaryJesus was a sanctuary
Jesus was a sanctuary
 
Jesus was tasteing death for everyone
Jesus was tasteing death for everyoneJesus was tasteing death for everyone
Jesus was tasteing death for everyone
 
Jesus was being seen
Jesus was being seenJesus was being seen
Jesus was being seen
 
Jesus was to be the basis for universal unity
Jesus was to be the basis for universal unityJesus was to be the basis for universal unity
Jesus was to be the basis for universal unity
 
Jesus was the one and only
Jesus was the one and onlyJesus was the one and only
Jesus was the one and only
 
Jesus was and is our all
Jesus was and is our allJesus was and is our all
Jesus was and is our all
 
Jesus was able to quiet a storm
Jesus was able to quiet a stormJesus was able to quiet a storm
Jesus was able to quiet a storm
 
Jesus was near but unrecognized
Jesus was near but unrecognizedJesus was near but unrecognized
Jesus was near but unrecognized
 
Jesus was choosing paul for the gentiles
Jesus was choosing paul for the gentilesJesus was choosing paul for the gentiles
Jesus was choosing paul for the gentiles
 

More from GLENN PEASE

Jesus was urging us to pray and never give up
Jesus was urging us to pray and never give upJesus was urging us to pray and never give up
Jesus was urging us to pray and never give upGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was questioned about fasting
Jesus was questioned about fastingJesus was questioned about fasting
Jesus was questioned about fastingGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was scoffed at by the pharisees
Jesus was scoffed at by the phariseesJesus was scoffed at by the pharisees
Jesus was scoffed at by the phariseesGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was clear you cannot serve two masters
Jesus was clear you cannot serve two mastersJesus was clear you cannot serve two masters
Jesus was clear you cannot serve two mastersGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was saying what the kingdom is like
Jesus was saying what the kingdom is likeJesus was saying what the kingdom is like
Jesus was saying what the kingdom is likeGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was telling a story of good fish and bad
Jesus was telling a story of good fish and badJesus was telling a story of good fish and bad
Jesus was telling a story of good fish and badGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeast
Jesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeastJesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeast
Jesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeastGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was telling a shocking parable
Jesus was telling a shocking parableJesus was telling a shocking parable
Jesus was telling a shocking parableGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was telling the parable of the talents
Jesus was telling the parable of the talentsJesus was telling the parable of the talents
Jesus was telling the parable of the talentsGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sower
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sowerJesus was explaining the parable of the sower
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sowerGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was warning against covetousness
Jesus was warning against covetousnessJesus was warning against covetousness
Jesus was warning against covetousnessGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weedsJesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weedsGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was radical
Jesus was radicalJesus was radical
Jesus was radicalGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was laughing
Jesus was laughingJesus was laughing
Jesus was laughingGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was and is our protector
Jesus was and is our protectorJesus was and is our protector
Jesus was and is our protectorGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was not a self pleaser
Jesus was not a self pleaserJesus was not a self pleaser
Jesus was not a self pleaserGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was to be our clothing
Jesus was to be our clothingJesus was to be our clothing
Jesus was to be our clothingGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was the source of unity
Jesus was the source of unityJesus was the source of unity
Jesus was the source of unityGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was love unending
Jesus was love unendingJesus was love unending
Jesus was love unendingGLENN PEASE
 
Jesus was our liberator
Jesus was our liberatorJesus was our liberator
Jesus was our liberatorGLENN PEASE
 

More from GLENN PEASE (20)

Jesus was urging us to pray and never give up
Jesus was urging us to pray and never give upJesus was urging us to pray and never give up
Jesus was urging us to pray and never give up
 
Jesus was questioned about fasting
Jesus was questioned about fastingJesus was questioned about fasting
Jesus was questioned about fasting
 
Jesus was scoffed at by the pharisees
Jesus was scoffed at by the phariseesJesus was scoffed at by the pharisees
Jesus was scoffed at by the pharisees
 
Jesus was clear you cannot serve two masters
Jesus was clear you cannot serve two mastersJesus was clear you cannot serve two masters
Jesus was clear you cannot serve two masters
 
Jesus was saying what the kingdom is like
Jesus was saying what the kingdom is likeJesus was saying what the kingdom is like
Jesus was saying what the kingdom is like
 
Jesus was telling a story of good fish and bad
Jesus was telling a story of good fish and badJesus was telling a story of good fish and bad
Jesus was telling a story of good fish and bad
 
Jesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeast
Jesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeastJesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeast
Jesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeast
 
Jesus was telling a shocking parable
Jesus was telling a shocking parableJesus was telling a shocking parable
Jesus was telling a shocking parable
 
Jesus was telling the parable of the talents
Jesus was telling the parable of the talentsJesus was telling the parable of the talents
Jesus was telling the parable of the talents
 
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sower
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sowerJesus was explaining the parable of the sower
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sower
 
Jesus was warning against covetousness
Jesus was warning against covetousnessJesus was warning against covetousness
Jesus was warning against covetousness
 
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weedsJesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
 
Jesus was radical
Jesus was radicalJesus was radical
Jesus was radical
 
Jesus was laughing
Jesus was laughingJesus was laughing
Jesus was laughing
 
Jesus was and is our protector
Jesus was and is our protectorJesus was and is our protector
Jesus was and is our protector
 
Jesus was not a self pleaser
Jesus was not a self pleaserJesus was not a self pleaser
Jesus was not a self pleaser
 
Jesus was to be our clothing
Jesus was to be our clothingJesus was to be our clothing
Jesus was to be our clothing
 
Jesus was the source of unity
Jesus was the source of unityJesus was the source of unity
Jesus was the source of unity
 
Jesus was love unending
Jesus was love unendingJesus was love unending
Jesus was love unending
 
Jesus was our liberator
Jesus was our liberatorJesus was our liberator
Jesus was our liberator
 

Recently uploaded

Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...
Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...
Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...Amil Baba Naveed Bangali
 
The King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptx
The King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptxThe King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptx
The King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptxOH TEIK BIN
 
No.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in Karachi
No.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in KarachiNo.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in Karachi
No.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in KarachiAmil Baba Naveed Bangali
 
(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...
(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...
(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...Sanjna Singh
 
The_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_Us
The_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_UsThe_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_Us
The_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_UsNetwork Bible Fellowship
 
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCRElite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCRDelhi Call girls
 
Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...
Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...
Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...Amil Baba Naveed Bangali
 
Dgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptx
Dgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptxDgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptx
Dgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptxsantosem70
 
VIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service Thane
VIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service ThaneVIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service Thane
VIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service ThaneCall girls in Ahmedabad High profile
 
Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️
Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️
Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️soniya singh
 
Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...
Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...
Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...anilsa9823
 
Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝soniya singh
 
CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...
CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...
CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...anilsa9823
 
FULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | Delhi
FULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | DelhiFULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | Delhi
FULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | Delhisoniya singh
 
Codex Singularity: Search for the Prisca Sapientia
Codex Singularity: Search for the Prisca SapientiaCodex Singularity: Search for the Prisca Sapientia
Codex Singularity: Search for the Prisca Sapientiajfrenchau
 
Study of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wanderean
Study of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wandereanStudy of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wanderean
Study of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wandereanmaricelcanoynuay
 
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCRElite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCRDelhi Call girls
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...
Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...
Amil baba contact number Amil baba Kala jadu Best Amil baba Amil baba ki loca...
 
The King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptx
The King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptxThe King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptx
The King Great Goodness Part 2 ~ Mahasilava Jataka (Eng. & Chi.).pptx
 
No.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in Karachi
No.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in KarachiNo.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in Karachi
No.1 Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba in Lahore amil baba in Karachi
 
(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...
(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...
(NISHA) Call Girls Sanath Nagar ✔️Just Call 7001035870✔️ HI-Fi Hyderabad Esco...
 
The_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_Us
The_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_UsThe_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_Us
The_Chronological_Life_of_Christ_Part_98_Jesus_Frees_Us
 
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCRElite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Naraina Delhi NCR
 
Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...
Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...
Top Astrologer in UK Best Vashikaran Specialist in England Amil baba Contact ...
 
Dgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptx
Dgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptxDgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptx
Dgital-Self-UTS-exploring-the-digital-self.pptx
 
VIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service Thane
VIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service ThaneVIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service Thane
VIP Call Girls Thane Vani 8617697112 Independent Escort Service Thane
 
Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️
Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️
Call Girls in sarojini nagar Delhi 8264348440 ✅ call girls ❤️
 
Call Girls In Nehru Place 📱 9999965857 🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICE
Call Girls In Nehru Place 📱  9999965857  🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICECall Girls In Nehru Place 📱  9999965857  🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICE
Call Girls In Nehru Place 📱 9999965857 🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICE
 
Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...
Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...
Lucknow 💋 (Call Girls) in Lucknow | Book 8923113531 Extreme Naughty Call Girl...
 
Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Greater Kailash Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
 
CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...
CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...
CALL ON ➥8923113531 🔝Call Girls Indira Nagar Lucknow Lucknow best Night Fun s...
 
FULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | Delhi
FULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | DelhiFULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | Delhi
FULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Chirag Delhi | Delhi
 
Codex Singularity: Search for the Prisca Sapientia
Codex Singularity: Search for the Prisca SapientiaCodex Singularity: Search for the Prisca Sapientia
Codex Singularity: Search for the Prisca Sapientia
 
Rohini Sector 21 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No Advance
Rohini Sector 21 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No AdvanceRohini Sector 21 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No Advance
Rohini Sector 21 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No Advance
 
Study of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wanderean
Study of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wandereanStudy of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wanderean
Study of the Psalms Chapter 1 verse 2 - wanderean
 
🔝9953056974 🔝young Delhi Escort service Vinay Nagar
🔝9953056974 🔝young Delhi Escort service Vinay Nagar🔝9953056974 🔝young Delhi Escort service Vinay Nagar
🔝9953056974 🔝young Delhi Escort service Vinay Nagar
 
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCRElite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCR
Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCR
 

Jesus was the cause of many falling and rising

  • 1. JESUS WAS THE CAUSE OF MANY FALLING AND RISING EDITED BY GLENN PEASE LUKE 2:34 Then Simeon blessedthem and said to Mary, his mother: “This child is destinedto cause the fallingand rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be spoken against. BIBLEHUB RESOURCES The Touchstone OfTruth Luke 2:34, 35 W. Clarkson We do not suppose that Simeon saw the future course of the Savior and of his gospelin clearoutline; but, taught of God, he foresaw thatthat little Child he had been holding in his arms would be One who would prove a most powerful factorin his country's history; and he saw that relationship to him would be a source of the greatestblessing, orof weightiesttrouble, or of most serious condemnation. Thus guided by this venerable saint, we will regardthe gospel of Christ as - I. A TOUCHSTONE.Our Lord himself was a touchstone by which the men of his day were tried. He came not to judge the world, but to save the world, as he said (John 12:4-7);and yet it was also true that "for judgment he came into the world," as he also said(John 9:39). His mission was not to try, but to redeem; yet it was a necessaryincidental consequence ofhis coming that the characterof the men who came in contactwith him would be severelytested.
  • 2. When the Truth itself appeared and moved amongstmen, then it became clearthat those who were ignorantly supposedto be blind were the souls that were seeing God("that they who see not might see"), and equally clearthat those who claimed to know everything had eyes that were fastenedagainstthe light ("that they who see might be made blind"). As Jesus lived and wrought and spoke, the hearts of men were revealed - those who were children of wisdom heard his voice (John 18:37), while those who loved darkness rather than light turned awayfrom the revealing Truth. And today the gospelis the touchstone of human character. Theywho are earnestseekersafterGod, after wisdom, after righteousness,gladlysit at the feet of the greatTeacherto learn of him; but they who live for pleasure, for gain, for the honor that cometh from man only, for this passing world, pass him by, indifferent or hostile. They who are prepared to come as little children to learn of the heavenly Father, receive his Word and enter his kingdom (Luke 18:16); while they who considerthemselves able to solve the greatproblems of life and destiny keep their minds closedagainstthe truth. II. A SWORD OF SORROW. Itwas not only Mary's heart that was pierced by reasonof her affectionfor Jesus Christ. Loyalty to him proved to that generation, and has proved in every age since then, a sword that has wounded and slain. At many times and in many places it has meant violent persecution - stripes, imprisonment, death. In every land and in every age it has exposed men to hostility, to reproach, to temporal loss, to socialdisadvantage, to a lowerstation, to a struggling life, to a wounded spirit (Luke 9:23; John 17:14; 2 Timothy 3:12). Our Lord invites us to regard this inevitable accompaniment of spiritual integrity as an honor and a blessing rather than a stigma and a curse (Matthew 5:10-12). III. A STUMBLING-STONE. That"Child was setfor the fall... of many." The truth which Jesus spoke, the greatwork of salvationhe wrought out, has proved to many, not only in Israel, but in every land where it has been made known, a rock of offense (see Luke 20:18; 1 Corinthians 1:23).
  • 3. IV. A STEPPING-STONE. Notonly for the fall, but for the "rising again," was that Infant "set." Byplanting their feeton that safe, strong rock, the humiliated and even the degradedrise to honor and esteem, the humble to hopefulness, the weak to strength, the blemished to beauty, the useless to helpfulness, the children of earth to spheres of blessednessand joy in the heavenly world. - C. Biblical Illustrator Behold, this Child is setfor the fall and rising againof many. Luke 2:34, 35 Simeon's prediction S. Cox, D. D. This prediction has a very gloomy aspect, and speaks witha tone of sad foreboding in strange contrastto the riant tone of the song of thanksgiving which immediately precedes it. But was it too gloomyfor the facts? Was not every jot and tittle of it fulfilled within three and thirty years of its utterance? Is it not still finding a wide and large fulfilment? 1. When the word of Christ comes home to you, whether it come to quicken you to a new life, or to convince you of some truth which you had not recognizedbefore, or had not reduced to practice, do not be amazed and discouragedif you stumble at it, if it awakendoubt and contradiction in your hearts, if you find it hard to believe, and still harder to live by. It is no strange thing which is happening to you, but the common and normal experience of all who believe in Him. The advent of Christ in the heart, His coming in power, must resemble His advent into the world, must create a strife between the goodand the evil in your nature, must disclose so much that is evil in you as to make you fear goodness to be beyond your reach. How, but by the
  • 4. conviction of sin, can you be made penitent, and driven to lay hold on the salvationwhich takes awaysin? And the oftener Christ comes, the nearer He draws to you, the more fully He enters into your life — the deeper will be your conviction of sin, of a tainted and imperfect nature; till, at times, you will fear as if a sword had been thrust it.to your very soul. This, indeed, is what He comes to you for; to separate betweenthe evil and the good, to make you conscious ofevils you did not suspect, so conscious that you hate and long to be delivered from them. 2. But this is not the only comfort or encouragementwhich the prediction of Simeon suggests. If he had not foreseenthe nearer and immediate results of Christ's advent, we might have distrusted him when he spake of its distant and ultimate results. If he had not told us of the conflict and sorrow, the self- exposure and self-contempt to which a faithful receptionof Christ subjects us, we could hardly have believed him when he speaks ofChrist as the Consolationfor all sorrow, and the Light which is to glorify the whole dark world. But when we find all that he said of the nearer results of Christ's coming to be true, we can hardly help believing him when he speaks to us of its happy ultimate results. Simeon has approved himself a faithful witness;we have found in our own experience that Christ is a Rock of stumbling and offence, a Signal which calls out all the oppositionof an imperfect nature, a Sword which pierces the very soul and divides the evil in us from the good, a Touchstone whichreveals our most secretthoughts and bents; let us also believe that He will be our Consolation, ourLight, our Glory. 3. We may well believe it. Per augusta ad augusta, through a narrow way to a large place, through much struggle with many difficulties to a glorious end, through conflict to victory, seems the very motto of the Christian life. And this thought also is containedin Simeon's prediction, which is so framed as to imply that it was by a Divine intention, and in order to realize a gracious Divine end, that Christ was to bring strife on the earth, to kindle an inward war, to disclose the lurking evils of the human heart. He was set, "in order
  • 5. that the thoughts of many hearts should be revealed" — set by God for this very purpose. So that when our thoughts are exposed, whenwe have to endure the inward conflict betweenevil and good, when the word of Christ pierces and rends our hearts, all is according to a Divine order, a Divine intention; all is intended to prepare and conduct us to that Divine end, the salvation of our souls. It is all meant to prepare us for a time in which our souls shall be so flooded and suffused with the Divine Light that there shall be no more darkness in us, so penetrated with the Divine Glory that sin and sorrow and shame shall for ever flee away. And if this be God's intention, if this is the end to which He is conducting us, who will not bear the strife and pain and self- contempt of this present imperfect life with patience, nay, with courage and with hope? (S. Cox, D. D.) Christ the rising and fall of many J. C. Hare. This howevercannot be all that is meant by Christ's being set for the fall of many. They who remain just as they were, and where they were, cannot be said to fall. Falling implies some change:and they who have fallen must be in a worse state than before they fell. Now this is dismally true. They who, having heard of Christ, have not believed in Him, and do not believe in Him — they who do not believe in Him in the scriptural sense of believing, that is, with the heart and soul, as well as with the understanding — they who have not a living faith in Him, and do not show it by living a life of faith — they who, having heard of Christ, do not believe in Him in this sense, are indeed in a worse state than they would have been in, had Christ never come into the world. They are in a worse state, becausethey are in a more hopeless state. The lastchance of salvation has been tried on them; but in vain. Everything that could be done has been done for them, but in vain. God has poured forth all the riches of His grace and mercy and love on them; but in vain. Their
  • 6. hearts continue as hard as the nakedrock, as dry as the sandy desert. Nothing, it has been proved, cansoften them; nothing can refresh them; nothing can make them bear fruit. The Comforter has been sent to us. If we refuse His comfort, if we rejectHis salvation, we must continue uncomforted and unsaved for ever. Yet this is not all. The state of those, who, having heard of Christ, have no living faith in Him, but continue in their sins, is not only worse than if they had never heard of Christ, because it is more hopeless;it is also worse, becauseit is more sinful. For the sinfulness of any actionis to be measured, not by the nature of the action itself, but by the characterand condition of the doer. It is in him, not in the action, that the sin lies; and its sinfulness will always vary, in proportion as he knows it to be sinful, and as he has had stronger motives and helps for struggling againstit. Moreoverwe all feel that for a child to behave ill to a kind and loving father is far worse, far more inexcusable, than if its father had been harsh and neglectful. These, then, are the two qualities which deepen the sinfulness of sin. When it is a sin againstknowledge, itbecomes doubly sinful; and its sinfulness increases in proportion as that knowledge is clearand certain. And when it is also a sin againstlove, it then becomes tenfold sinful; its sinfulness still growing worse and worse, in proportion to the strength of the motives whereby our love has been appealedto. These are the rules we are wont to make use of in judging one another. It is our own rule too, in our dealings with eachother, as well as the rule of the gospel, that to whom much is given, of him much shall be required. They who, with the knowledge ofChrist, live like heathens, we have already seen, are far more sinful than the heathens:and thus to them the coming of Christ has been the occasionoffalling. They have fallen, because they have not risen; and because, by remaining where they were, they are so much further below what they ought to be. But the coming of Christ has also given us new duties. We have higher motives, a higher mark setbefore us. We are bound to strive after more heavenly aims. We are bound to seek aftera more heavenly purity. So that the gift of the gospelis accompaniedwith a twofold danger. If we abide in our former ways, it renders those ways more sinful: and it imposes higher duties upon us, the neglectof which covers us with fresh guilt. Forin this way also has the coming of Christ been a dismal occasionoffalling to many. Many have hated the light, because their deeds were dark, and have either tried to quench the light, or finding their efforts to
  • 7. do so were vain, have wrapt themselves up in still thicker darkness. Thus was it with the Jews. To them the coming of Christ was an occasionoffalling. Through Christ's coming they were no longer the chosenpeople of God. They forfeited their rank among nations, and became wanderers on the face of the earth, wanderers still more forlorn than when they wandered under Moses in the wilderness. So, too, was the coming of Christ an occasionoffalling even to the heathens. Foralthough, having gods many, and lords many, they had been ready to receive any new idol, that the folly or wickednessofman enthroned in the heavens, yet, when the true God, as revealedin the person of His Only- begottenSon, was made knownto them, they too tried to quench His light with blood. And even now there are still found those who openly hate and blaspheme God and His Christ, and thus have fallen into deeper sinfulness through Christ's coming. Alas, it is a fearful and ghastlythought, how many millions on millions of souls will have receivedno benefit by Christ's atonement, how many millions on millions of souls may perhaps be among those for whose fall that blessedChild was set. This must surely have been the worstpart of the agonyby which Christ's spirit was rent on that awful night in the garden, the thought of the millions of souls to whom He should only be an occasionof falling. It is a thought the sting of which nothing can take away, exceptwhen the soul is rapt in adoration of the perfectholiness, and perfect justice, and perfect love of God. (J. C. Hare.) Christ's mission A. Reed. Simeon makes this declarationemphatically in reference to Israel; but he makes it prophetically in reference to the Gentile world, and to the multitudes which to the end of time shall come under the sound of the gospel. I. We propose to ILLUSTRATE THIS REPRESENTATIONOF OUR SAVIOUR'S MISSION. Illustrations may be borrowed from almostevery
  • 8. circumstance in His work, and from every perfection in His personal ministration. 1. His very appearance in the first instance illustrated forcibly, and in some casespainfully, the truth of this declaration, that, on His entrance into our world, and on His revealing Himself by the ministry of His word, He should have been for the falling and for the rising againof many in Israel. But when Christ came, and His appearance was so contraryto all their expectations had led them to look for, they were prepared, not to receive Him, but positively to rejectand dishonour Him. And so the appearance ofChrist in the world is a stumbling-block to the present day. On the other hand, in reference to the appearance ofChrist, He is setfor the rising againof many in Israel. This was true of His temporal appearance among the people of Israel. While the princes and the rulers of that period passedHim by with scorn, and refused to listen to His Divine instruction, it is beautifully said that "the common people heard Him gladly." There was something in the very humility of His circumstances, in the poverty of His life, in the lowliness of His outward walk and conversation, whichbrought Him near to them, and them near to Him. 2. We receive a secondillustration of the truth of this declarationfrom the mystery of the Redeemer's person. This representationof our Saviour's characterwas in His own time, has been in every succeeding age, and is in our time, the occasionofthe falling and the rising againof many. There were many in His day who made it a stumbling-stone and a rock of offence. There was nothing in the history of the Jewishpeople which gave them such sore offence, and excited such bitter hatred to the kind Jesus Christ, as His announcing Himself to be the Son of God, and claiming equality with the Father. it was on this very ground that they persecutedHim through life; and it is very remarkable that on this very ground they at last put Him to death on the cross. Now,onthe other hand, this very representationof our Saviour's person is life from the dead to those who believe in His name.
  • 9. 3. The ministry of Jesus Christ is also anothermethod of illustrating the truth of this declaration:"This child is setfor the fall and the rising again of many in Israel." Our Lord's ministry on earth was remarkable for the effectit had on those to whom it was directed. What was the falling awayof the Jews in this instance was the gathering of the Gentiles. 4. This declarationis still further illustrated if we considerthe death which Jesus died. Those who disbelieve, and disbelieve Him as a dying Saviour making atonement for sin, disbelieve the only remedy for sin, and fall fearfully from His presence. Buton the contrary, where shall we find any representationof the Redeemerlike the representationof the Redeemer crucified and dying, and rising againas the means of renewing our spirits, confirming our confidence, and elevating our hope. He died, but it is for the rising again of many. 5. Then, finally, it may be illustrated in the dispensation and economyof the gospel. But while it is for the rising againof many, it is also for the fall of many. The gospeldispensationhas brought everything to an extreme; there is the extreme of mercy, and there is the extreme of judgment; God has discoveredto us His grace, as we have never seenit; and God is discovering to us also His righteousness andHis justice as was never shownbefore.Behold, for it is remarkable, "this Child is setfor the fall and the rising againof many in Israel." 1. It is remarkable if we consider the greatintention of Christ in coming into our world. Nothing canbe more explicit than the intention of our Saviour and of the gospelin their appearance amongstus. 2. It is the more remarkable, in the secondplace, because the evil arising to us from the testimony of Christ is to be found in ourselves, and not in the
  • 10. Saviour. If it is said that Christ in His appearance shallbe for the fall and rising again, for the condemnation as well as the salvation, of many, it is not so much descriptive of the intention of His coming as of the effectof His coming. But "behold" — let it be consideredremarkable, fix your attention on it, that this arises from their own perversity, their own unbelief, their own sin. We are exhorted thus to behold and improve it because we have a serious concern in it. (A. Reed.) The exhibition of Christ tries the human heart N. Emmons, D. D. This subject naturally divides itself into two branches, which require a distinct consideration. I. Let us consider, THAT GOD EXHIBITS CHRIST BEFORE THE MINDS OF MEN, IS ORDER TO TRY THEIR HEARTS. 1. The truth of this observationappears from what the prophets foretold concerning the feelings and conduct of men towards the Messiah, whenHe should make His appearance in the flesh, and perform His mediatorial work among them. David predicted that He would alarm the fears, and awakenthe enmity and opposition of the world againstHim. "Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counseltogether, againstthe Lord and againstHis anointed, saying, Let us break their bands asunder, and castawaytheir cords from us." 2. It appears from the history of Christ, that He fulfilled the predictions which went before concerning Him, and tried the hearts of all, who either heard Him
  • 11. preach, or saw His miracles, or were any way acquainted with Him. He was a sign universally spokenagainst. Some heard Him gladly; but others heard Him with disgust and indignation. Some admired His miracles;but others despisedand blasphemed them. 3. The exhibition of Christ after His death, through the medium of the gospel, tried the hearts of the whole Jewishnation. 4. Ever since the days of the apostles, the characterof Christ, displayed in the gospel, has tried the hearts of the whole Christian world. 5. It appears from the very characterof Christ, that He cannot be exhibited to the minds of men without trying their hearts. His character, above all others, is adapted to draw forth the feelings of the human heart. Wherever He is exhibited in all His excellences,offices, anddesigns, He must necessarilytry the hearts of men in some very important respects. And, first, in regard to God. God, therefore, by exhibiting Christ in the gospel, tries the hearts of men in respectto Himself. He certainly made it appearthat the Jews were His enemies, by the instrumentality of Christ. In the secondplace, the exhibition of Christ necessarilydiscovers the secrets ofmen's hearts towards themselves, as well as towards God. Christ, in the course of His life, and more especiallyat His death, laid open the guilt and ill desertof sinners. Besides, thirdly, the exhibition of Christ as a Mediator, discovers men's feelings in regard to the terms of salvation. The next thing proposed is — II. To show that GOD TRIES THE HEARTS OF MEN THROUGH THE MEDIUM OF CHRIST, IN ORDER TO FIX THEIR FUTURE AND FINAL STATE. "Behold, this Child is set for the fall and rising againof many." God intends to make men happy or miserable for ever, according to the feelings of their hearts towards the Son of His love. And there appears to be a propriety
  • 12. in God's treating men according to their love, or hatred of Christ, because their feelings towards Christ afford a proper criterion of their true characters. Ifthey love Christ, they love Gad; but if they hate Christ, they hate God. If they love Christ, they love the goodof the universe; but if they hate Christ, they are enemies to all good. The characterofChrist is the most infallible test of all human characters. Improvement: 1. Since it is God's design in exhibiting Christ before men, to try their hearts and prepare them for their final state, it becomes the ministers of the gospelto make Christ the main subject of their preaching. 2. If God means to try the hearts of men, and prepare them for their final state through the medium of the gospel, then He has an important purpose to answer, by sending it where He knows it will be rejected. 3. If the exhibition of Christ be designedto form men for their future and eternal state, then they are in a very solemn situation while they are hearing the gospel. 4. If the gospeltries the hearts and forms the charactersofthose who hear it, then sinners may easilyand insensibly fit themselves for destruction. 5. We learn from what has been said in this discourse, that all who hear the gospelmay know, before they leave the world, what will be their future and final state. (N. Emmons, D. D.)
  • 13. Christianity the testof character R. Hall, M. A. We shall briefly considerin what respects Christianity proves itself the grand test of men's dispositions. 1. It puts to the proof whether or not men love truth. 2. The gospelis a test of men's hearts as affectedwith regard to God. 3. In respectto humility, the gospeltries and ascertains the state of the heart. 4. A fourth respectin which the gospelis a test of your characteris whether you are true, or not, to your own interest; whether you have wisdom to choose the right relief for your misery, the proper supply for your wants. 5. Lastly, Christianity is a test of our obedience or disobedience to the will of God. "If God is a Master, where is His fear? If God is a Father, where is His honour?"A few words of improvement may appropriately conclude this important subject. 1. Whereverthe gospelis propounded, it is a test of characterto each individual who hears it: and whoeverdoes not receive it will hereafterstand confessedto God as having "loved darkness rather than light, because his deeds were evil." 2. The rejection of Christianity is entirely voluntary: it arises from the spirit of pride, the preference of falsehood, the love of sin: but where shall we look for criminality, if not in an evil mind?
  • 14. 3. The trial of characterhere is only preparatory to the last trial hereafter. (R. Hall, M. A.) Christ's knowledge ofman E. P. Hood. "Thatthe thoughts of many hearts may be revealed." I. Yes, THAT IS THE CLAIM WHICH CHRIST HAS UPON US — THAT HE KNOWS US. AS it is said, "He knew what was in man;" and He does not merely know our faces andour forms, but our true selves. You know nothing of any science orthing until you know its hidden inner secret. How different it is to know about a thing and to know what is within a thing. Superficial knowledge is that of the surface, ofthe skin; and profound knowledge is that which is organic and descends to the foundation. You know every man has within him an amazing secretrealmof thought and emotion; I may go a step further and say, it is unknown to himself, and most men never have more than very occasionalglimpses into the "within the veil" of their own minds; most men are not at home within themselves;they do not dwell there. Even those men who do suppose that they are well acquainted with their own minds, often deceive themselves. II. MAN HAS A GREAT HIDDEN NATURE, WAITING FOR REVEALMENT AND DEVELOPMENT. Buthow secret. This it is which makes the relationship of the pastor and the teacherfrequently so sacred;it is felt that he canfathom the greatdeep of the human soul. You may illustrate it from so poor a piece of machinery as a watch;a watchmakerdescends into the mystery; he knows it; and if he professes to know and does not, great mischiefs and mistakes result. Or, look at the human body and its diseases. I
  • 15. had a friend who was ill; he had three doctors who attended him; they gave him up; they lookedat symptoms and phenomena; they were ignorant of the law; another came, touched the mainspring and restoredhim to health. Look I and here the image is more pertinent; look at the schoolmasterand educator, the teacher, the boy. I knew a minister in his early childhood; he was a very wild, a strong-willed boy: his parents punished him severely, again and again— they were pious people;at lastthey tried another method, they took him downstairs, afterthey had closedthe shop at night, and they knelt down on either side of him, and they prayed, they both prayed for him, and they wept. "Oh!" said he to me, "I could not stand that, I tried, and I prayed, and they conquered." He is an eminent minister now. They had touched the mainspring; there is a mainspring in all of us, and we bless the man who reveals it to us; he who cantouch it, rules us — be he general, poet, statesman, or preacher. III. Yes; this is Christ's claim upon us; He knows us; HE IS THE TRUE REVEALER OF THE HIDDEN NATURE OF MAN. "He therefore taught as one having authority, and not as the Scribes." And hence the word of the prophecy of Simeon, which I have read as a text, is to be takenby the side of His precious word. Christ is "a light" — "a light," says Simeon, "to lighten the Gentiles, and to be the glory of Thy people Israel." "Thatwas the true light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world." What do we mean by light, but that which makes manifest the interior chambers of our nature? Yes! to know man is the greatindispensable of all teaching. Rare knowledge and wonderful! IV. Yes, AND KNOWLEDGE OF HUMAN NATURE IS ESSENTIALTO ALL TEACHING. You see the painter! he will tell you that knowledge of anatomy is essentialto success;he needs the knowledge ofmuscular action, to give life to his picture — a knowledge ofinternal action to external development. Thus you see in Christ knowledge ofhumanity. His whole teaching reveals adaptation, fitness to complete imperfect man! Hence,
  • 16. because ofChrist's transcendentalknowledge, Christianity cannotbe realized on earth. It is always overand beyond man. But a terrible thing it is to be with one who entirely knows us, and reads us through and through like a book — by observation, like Foster — by intuition, like Shakespeare;but to many it is only moral anatomy or surgery. The greatestknowledgeofman is by sympathy. And Christ knew the World of the Human Heart by sympathy. Have you not noticedthat scarcelyany mind can cross the broad disc of our Lord's even temporary association, without revealing, as it passes,its state? It seems as if any mind coming into the neighbourhood of His Divine character is compelled to yield itself up, not only to His perfectknowledge — but, in the memorable events of His life, is illustrated bow that which is done in secretis proclaimed on the house-tops. Amazing would seemthe attractionof our Lord's character, by which He drew to Him most opposite beings. He held them by their affectionto Him. He held them by their hostility to Him. He revealedtheir love, their hatred, and their fear. Christ's characterwas like that ancient mirror which, if held up before the face, did not reveal the face, but the thought. V. THE TEACHING OF OUR LORD HAD THE SAME INFLUENCE AS HIS PERSONALCHARACTER;it revealedthe thoughts of the heart. All His parables removed the abstractideas of the human soul into the regionof home life. Thus Christ shows how He knows our inner nature, and speaks to the inner world of motive and imagination. VI. 1. He knew. Mark, His knowledge was andis absolute. We speak of many, and say, "They know human nature by observationor by intuition." Properly, Christ's knowledge is neither the one nor the other; the first says, I know human nature because I look at it; the secondsays, I know human nature
  • 17. because I look at myself, and find myself related to it. Christ knew it because He made it. 2. Hence His authority over man. Man felt His knowledge. 3. He revealedour thoughts in His sympathy, he knew what was in man; hence His sympathy with men. Yes, His sympathy with man! VII. Christ not only revealedthe thoughts of many hearts by eliciting their peculiar moral character, but HE SPOKE TO THE UNIVERSAL HEART OF MAN IN ALL AGES, BOTHBY HIS NEEDS AND BY HIS WORDS;He transformed the greatinstincts of men in all ages into absolute revelations. Christianity has revealedand authenticatedto men what had been for ages suspected, orhoped, or feared. VIII. 1. He saw human nature was dark. He came to enlighten it. "I am the light of the world." 2. He saw the hardness as well as the darkness ofman. He came to softenthe world's heart. "He knew what was in man." 3. He consecratedhumanity. He revealedthe holy destiny of man, for "He knew what was in man."
  • 18. 4. "Thatthe thoughts of many hearts might be revealed." He came to sublime and to crownhuman nature, to revealto man His brightest, boldest thought — Eternal life — Immortality. (E. P. Hood.) The detectorof the heart H. F. Burder, D. D. It may be profitable for us, then, to inquire: I. IN WHAT MANNER DOES THE GOSPELBECOME ADETECTOROF THE HEART? There are two ways in which this detectionand unveiling are most apparent and most important. 1. By its authoritative conveyance oftruths and facts, it detects and prostrates the pride of human reasoning. 2. By the requirement of an uncompromising decisionof character. Let us now inquire — II. WHAT ARE THE INSTRUCTIVE AND PRACTICAL INFERENCES WHICH WE SHOULD DEDUCE FROM THESE VIEWS OF THE GOSPEL. 1. That the ministry of the gospelought to be so conducted as to secure, as much as possible, this important objectof discrimination and detection.
  • 19. 2. Every hearer of the gospelshould feel constrainedto bring home to his own heart the greattest of character. 3, How greatlyto be loved and prized is that gospel, which cangive hope to the sinner even on the detection of his guilt and danger. (H. F. Burder, D. D.) The first prediction of the Cross Canon Vernon Hutton, M. A. I. 1. This is the first announcement that the wayof the Holy Child must be the way of sorrows. The angelhad spokenof the throne of David; the shepherds had brought a messageofpeace;Simeonforetells the Cross. Yet this prophecy is calleda blessing! "He blessedthem!" Blessednessis not the same as external prosperity. Blessedness is obedience to the will of the Father. 2. Mary has to learn that she, too, must suffer with her Child. "A swordshall pierce through thy own soul." This is her blessing!Is it not true that the coming of the EternalWord in human flesh has brought a blessing upon human sufferings, which are henceforth linked with His? 3. Simeonforesees thatthe Christ must suffer because His life would be violently opposedto the principles by which men were guiding their lives. He is among men as the Incarnate Word, reading their inmost thoughts, and revealing to them their true selves. Thereforemust He be for the salvationof some and for the condemnation of others; therefore must He be a Sign that is spokenagainst.
  • 20. 4. Human suffering arises from the breachof the Divine order which was made when man chose his own will rather than God's. The Divinely-ordered human life is lived by the Word made-flesh. Inasmuch as the Divinely-ordered life is in direct opposition to the self-centredlives of fallen men, it must come into collisionwith them and must suffer. At the same time, by its very perfection, and by its hold on the true Centre — the Divine Will — it must condemn all that falls short of it or opposes it. II. 1. Contemplate in the Child here presented to the Father, the One Perfect Human Life, unfolding itself amidst the evil antagonisms ofselfish human nature. 2. Learn that it follows that all who will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution(2 Timothy 3:12). (Canon Vernon Hutton, M. A.) Fall and rise J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D. Christ is setfor the fall of some and the rising of others. 1. It is not otherwise. 2. It cannotbe otherwise.
  • 21. 3. It ought not to be otherwise. 4. It will not be otherwise. (J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D.) Struggle and triumph J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D. The sign spokenagainst. 1. In its continual struggle. 2. In its certain triumph. (J. J. Van Oosterzee, D. D.) Dual aspectof Christ's Advent Canon Liddon. Simeon added this probably as an explanation of an expressionhe had just used in his burst of inspired song. "The glory of Israel" was a phrase already consecratedin religious language. It commonly meant the SacredPresenceor Shekinahbetweenthe cherubim over the ark of the covenant. Israel, as St. Paul in later years pointed out, had indeed many a prerogative among the nations. Israel was God's adopted family; Israelinherited the covenants — those early understandings betweenearth and heaven, of which the great patriarchs had been the favoured recipients; to IsraelGod had revived in its
  • 22. completeness the moral law; Israel offeredto Goda worship, the nature and details of which had been Divinely ordered; Israel, so rich in the past, was also the people of the future; the promises were its endowment for the coming ages, andin the fathers or patriarchs Israelhad not merely a store of precious memories, but a lasting possession. The patriarchs were the property of their descendents to the end of time; but the true glory of Israel was this, that of its stock and blood "as concerning the flesh, Christ" — whose Incarnation the SacredPresenceoverthe ark prefigured — "Christ came, who is all over all, God blessedfor ever." All else that Israelwas or had — its sacredbooks, its typical ritual, its ideal of righteousness in the moral law, its greatsaints and heroes — all else pointed on and up to this its supreme prerogative But what would it mean in fact, in history? Would all Israelites hastento recognize their true title as a race to greatness?Wouldall hearts join in one outburst of thankful praise when the glory of Israelpresented Himself to His countrymen? Simeon feels it his duty to check unwarranted expectations which his earlierwords might have seemedto raise. 1. Christ's coming into the world was not to have a uniform effectupon human souls. It would act on one soul in one way, and on another in another: it would actdifferently on the same soul at different periods of its history. It is Christ's wish to bless every one with whom He comes in contact;but His goodwillis limited by the free actionof men, who are left at liberty to accept or reject Him as they choose.The spiritual world is not ruled mechanically. The truth and grace ofGod only act upon men with goodresults so far as they are willing that they should so act. That Christ's Advent should have great results was inevitable. It actedas a moral shock upon the existing fabric of thought and life, dispelling illusions, and making men think and choose.None could regard Christ with indifference. He stirred the emotions of all. 2. Of the two effects of Christ's Advent, Simeon mentions first the fall of many in Israel. Bold paradox — to associateHis blessedname, who came to be the health and Saviour of men, with spiritual failure. Yet this was what prophecy had led men to expect. And it is what actually happened. When Christ appearedas a public teacher, He was "despisedand rejected" by the great
  • 23. majority of the Jewishpeople. Even such as heard Him gladly at first, joined the priests and rulers at lastin the cry, "Crucify Him." Only a few clung firmly to Him through it all. 3. When our Lord had His own way with souls, it was to raise them to newness of life. To come into contactwith Him — sympathetic contact — was to touch a life so intrinsically buoyant and vigorous that it transfused itself forthwith into the attracted soul, and bore it onwards and upwards. The "rising again" of which Simeonspeaks is not the future resurrectionof the body, but the present moral and spiritual resurrectionof believers' souls. (Canon Liddon.) Use and abuse of God's gifts James Foote, M. A. Everything that comes from God is naturally fitted and originally intended for good. But His gifts are often perverted, and become, though not the cause, yet the occasion, ofevil. I. IT IS SO WITH COMMON TEMPORALBLESSINGS. They are all good things in themselves, but they prove advantages ordisadvantages according to our use of them. 1. Riches. Whenproperly receivedand used to the glory of God and goodof men, riches are a greatblessing;but when coveted, or restedin as the chief good, or abused in extravagance andprofligacy, they become the root of all evil, and drown men in destruction.
  • 24. 2. Greatness.In God's hand it is to make great, to give power and honour to men; and those greatmen who conduct themselves in a manner becoming their exalted station, are honourable and happy indeed; but the more pre- eminent in station men are, the more sinful and ruinous is their misconduct. 3. Learning is justly accountedhonourable and valuable; and it actually not only promotes a man's worldly distinction, but proves a blessing in the highest sense ofthe word, when consecratedto God, and possessedin humility and virtue; but there are few greatercurses than learning misapplied, usurping the place of the wisdomwhich is from above, or co-existing with habits of immorality. 4. Health is a blessing, without which all other earthly blessings are of little avail; and when spent in piety and usefulness, it enables men to rise to a high degree of credit and success, andeven moral excellence;but when its stability is presumed on to encourage men to proceedin a careerof dissipation, and its vigour wastedon crimes, or on trifles, it becomes the occasionof multiplied evils and of deep degradation. 5. Affliction is kindly sent for the benefit of transgressors;and when its voice is listened to, it recalls them from their wanderings;but when it is unimproved, it only hardens men more and more, and sinks them deeperand deeper in misery. 6. Noris it otherwise with life itself. "Skin upon skin," one piece of valuable property after another — nay, "all that man hath, will he give for his life." Every man is bound to praise the Almighty Author and Preserverof his life; and the life that now is, when rightly improved, is the means of rising to the happiness of the endless life which is to come; but life spent and closedin nature's guilt and depravity, is to all who so spend it and so close it, the
  • 25. forerunner of the seconddeath, so that it would have been better for them never to have lived at all. II. THE SAME PRINCIPLE APPLIES WITH RESPECTTO CHRIST'S COMING INTO THE WORLD. He came to bless all mankind; but His coming may only increase ourcondemnation. (James Foote, M. A.) Treatment of Christ and the gospel James Foote, M. A. 1. Rememberthat the gospelmust prove the means either of your rise or of your fall. It is, then, a matter of infinite moment, involving all that is important in your endless characterand destiny. 2. Speak not againstChrist, but for Him. Beware ofspeaking lightly of Him, or His ordinances, doctrines, people. On the contrary, espouse His cause, and embrace every opportunity of remembering Him to others. 3. Let all the sufferings and indignities of the Redeemerbe matter of grief to you. Your sins made them necessary. 4. Suffer the gospelto have its proper heart-searching effecton you. That "the thoughts of many hearts shall be revealed," is a result not to be deprecated, but desired; in order that what is right and pleasantmay be cherished, and what is wrong corrected. Godsees allnow, and one day He will revealall. It will then be too late to think of amendment. The presentis the time for any salutary discovery.
  • 26. (James Foote, M. A.) Christ -- the fall and rise of many C. H. Spurgeon. Wherever Christ Jesus comes, withwhomsoeverHe may come in contact, He is never without influence, never inoperative, but in every case a weighty result is produced. There is about the holy Child Jesus a power which is always in operation. He is not set to be an unobserved, inactive, slumbering personage in the midst of Israelbut He is set for the falling or for the rise of the many to whom He is known Neverdoes a man hear the gospel, but he either rises or falls under that hearing. Observe, then, the two sides of the truth — Jesus always working upon men with marked effect; and, on the other hand, man treating the Lord Jesus with warmth either of affectionor opposition; an action and a reactionbeing evermore produced. Why is this? 1. Becauseofthe energy which dwells in the Lord's Christ, and in the gospel which now represents Him among men. The gospelis all life and energy; like leavenit heaves and ferments with inward energy, it cannot rest till it leavens all around it. It may be compared to salt which must permeate, penetrate, and seasonthatwhich is subject to its influence. It is no more possible for you to restrain the working of the gospelthan to forbid the action of fire. Stand before the fire, it shall warm and comfort you; thrust your hand into it, it shall burn you. It must work, because it is fire. And so with yonder sun. Though clouds may hide it from our sight at this moment, yet for ever does it pour forth, as from a furnace mouth, its heat and light. Nor could it cease to burn and shine, unless it ceasedto be a sun. As long as it is a sun, it must permeate surrounding space with its influence and splendour. Do you wonder that the Sun of Righteousness is of yet Diviner energy?
  • 27. 2. Jesus Christand His gospelare matters of such prime necessityto mankind, that from this cause also there must always be an effectproduced by Christ. He is as necessaryto our souls as the air is to our bodies. If we receive Him, we live; if we will not receive Him, we must die. It is unavoidable that it should be so. You cannotreject the Saviour, and be a little damagedthereby; there is no alternative but that you utterly perish. 3. The position in which Jesus Christ meets men makes it inevitable that He must have an effectupon them. He stands right in men's way. They must decide about Him one way or the other. 4. He was appointed for this very thing. "Set." It was for this very end He came. See the husbandman take the fan. You observe the heap of mingled wheatand chaff lying on the floor. He begins to move the fan to and fro till he has createda breeze of wind. What happens? The chaff flies to the further end of the threshing floor, and there it lies by itself; the wheat, more weighty, remains purified and cleansed, a goldenheap of grain. Such is the preaching of the gospel. Suchis Christ: he is the separaterof those who will perish from those who shall be saved. The fan discerns and discovers, it reveals the worthless and manifests the precious. Thus hath Christ the fan in his hand! Or, take another metaphor, which we find in the prophets, "Who may abide the day of His coming? and who shall stand when He appeareth? for He is like a refiner's fire, and like fuller's soap." You see the refiner's fire. Notice how it burns and blazes. Now, it turns to a white heat; you cannotbear to look on it. What has happened? Why, the dross is divided from the silver and the alloy from the gold. The refiner's fire separatesthe precious from the vile. And so the gospelreveals the electof God, and leaves to hardness of heart the finally impenitent. Where it is preached, the men who acceptit are precious ones of God, His elect, His chosen;the men who rejectit are the reprobate silver. So shall men call them, for God hath rejectedthem. Mark too, the fuller's soap. The fuller takes his soap, and exercising his craft upon yonder piece of linen marked with many stains and colours, you see how these foul things fly before
  • 28. the soap, and the fair fabric alone remains. Both spots and linen feelthe powerof the soap. So cloth the gospeltake the polluted fabric of humanity and cleanse it: the filth departs and flies before it, and the fair linen remains. Such are the saints of God; when the gospelcomes to them they are purified thereby, while the wicked, as foul spots, are driven awayin their wickedness. Having thus setforth the greattruth of the text, I purpose now to answer briefly one or two questions. I. WHO ARE THOSE THAT FALL BY CHRIST. In Christ's day the question was not difficult to answer. Those thatfell by Christ were — 1. The holders of tradition, who gave men's sayings higher authority than God's commands. 2. The externalists. 3. The self-righteous. 4. The wiseacres. 5. The sceptical. Very much the same sort of people as fell by Christ then fall by Christ now. II. TO WHOM WILL THE LORD JESUS BE A RISING AGAIN? He will be a rising again to those who have fallen. Dostthou confess, "Ihave fallen"? Dostthou acknowledge,"Ipossessa fallen nature"? Dostthou lament thou hast fallen into sin? O my brother, He will be thy rising. He cannotuplift
  • 29. those who are not brought low. Note, again, those that rise in Him are those who are now willing to rise m Him. Jesus is set to raise you up. III. There are SOME WHO SHALL BOTH FALL AND RISE, AGAIN IN CHRIST;to whom Christ shall give such a fall as they never had before, and such a rise as shall be to their eternalresurrection. But what a fall was there when I learned that if salvationwas of works, it could not be of grace, andif it was of grace it could not be of works;the two could not be mixed together. Then I said I would hope in the performance of the duties which the gospel inculcates;I thought I had power to do this; I would repent, and believe, and so win heaven. But what a fall I had, and how eachbone seemedbrokenwhen He declared to me, "without Me, ye can do nothing." Ah, this is how Christ saves souls. He gives them a fall first, and afterwards He makes them rise. You cannot fill the vesseltill it is empty. There must be room made for mercy by the pouring out of human merit. You cannot clothe the man who is clothed already, or feed him who has no hunger. But this fall which Jesus gives us is a blessedfall. He never did throw a man down without lifting him up afterwards. "I kill and I make alive; I wound and I heal," these are attributes of JehovahJesus. IV. We shall conclude with a few words upon the lastpart of the text. The text tells us that the Lord Jesus is "A SIGN THAT SHALL BE SPOKEN AGAINST." 1. Christ was a sign of Divine love. In Him God reaches the climax of benevolence, and man exhibits the climax of deadly hate. The greatestgift provokes the greatesthostility, and the loftiestsign brings forth the most virulent opposition.
  • 30. 2. Christ was a sign of Divine justice. A bleeding Saviour, the Son of God desertedby His Father, the thunderbolts of vengeance finding a targetin the Personof the Well-beloved, herein is justice revealedmost fully. I hear not that other signs of vengeance have been spokenagainst. Menhave trembled, but have not railed. Sodom and Gomorrahwith bowed head confessedthe justice of their doom. Egypt engulphed in the Red Sea saithnothing of it; none of her records containa single blasphemy againstJehovahfor having swept awaythe nation's chivalry. The judgments of God, as a rule, strikes men dumb with awe!But this, which was the greatestdisplay of Divine hatred of sin, where the Son of God was made to descendinto the lowestdepths as our substitute, this provokes to-day man's uttermost wrath. Know you not how many are continually railing at the Cross? The Crucified is still abhorred. How matchless is the perversity of human nature, that when God displays His justice most, but blends it sweetlywith His love, the sign is everywhere spoken against! 3. Christ was the signof man's communion with God, and of God's fellowship with man. A ladder reaching from earth to heaven; a connecting bridge betweencreature and Creator. But alas!man does not want to be near his Maker, and hence he rails at the means provided for communion. 4. Christ is the sign of the electseed, the representative of the holy, the newborn, the spiritual; and hence, as soonas the carnalmind, that knoweth not God nor loveth Him, perceives Christ and His gospel, it at once stirs up the depth of its malevolence to put down Christ if it be possible. But they shall never put Him down. They may speak againstthe gospel, but here is our joy, that Christ will raise up His people, and will certainly give the fall to His enemies. The ark of the Lord can never fall before Dagon;but Dagonmust fall down before the Lord's ark. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
  • 31. Christ reveals hearts Sunday SchoolTimes. Easternfable tells of a magic mirror that remained clearand unsullied when the pure-hearted lookedinto it, but became troubled and obscure when the glance of the guilty fell upon it. So the ownerof that mirror could always tell the characterofthose who lookedinto it. Such a testwe have in Jesus. We can tell a man's nature by knowing what he thinks of Christ, and thus "the thoughts of many hearts" are "revealed." (Sunday SchoolTimes.) Christ spokenagainst J. Wells. There are four reasons why they speak againstHim; that is, as the true Christ of God. I. Ignorance, men not knowing their need of Him; many of the relations he bears therefore appearto the natural man to be superfluous; he does not know his need, and therefore speaksagainstit in ignorance. II. The native enmity of the mind. "The carnalmind is enmity againstGod;" men will naturally speak againstthat that they have an antipathy to. III. Becausethey are too much taken up with the world, and they do not like to be interrupted. Now we must pursue the world, must enjoy the world; to become one of these religious mopes would be to spoil all our pleasures. Thus they have an idea that there is something very gloomy about religion, and so they speak againstit, especiallythe truth.
  • 32. IV. The natural man has a vague idea that the threatenings of God are mere words; that" whoeverthe Lord may send to hell," says the natural man, "I can't believe He will send me there." (J. Wells.) This Child E. Mellor, D. D. These are the words of Simeon. A beautiful picture — age and childhood meeting together, a gentle shootand the full ripe corn in the ear, a sapling and a full-grown oak ready for transplantation into that realm where the saints of God flourish with an immortal life and glory. I. A CHILD. A wonderful thing. A seedcontaining a world of unknown possibilities. It makes parents glad. It should do so. A gift of God, a pledge and proof of the gracious tenderness whichrules the world. But a child should also make parents thoughtful. Children are not mere play-things — ornaments, but undeveloped powers — slumbering volcanoes,which may burst out with desolating eruptions; or shrouded lights, that shall emerge in fuller and brighter radiance from year to year, shedding gladness and blessing all around. II. "BEHOLD THIS CHILD." Have we not sometimes wished that some Simeon could have takena child of ours in his arms and become prophetic with respectto his destiny? But it is not permitted — graciouslyso. We know, however, that the future of children is not a thing of chance, nor is it determined only by what the child is in itself. Otherwise the parental relationship would be largely nullified. A child has its ownnative powers and
  • 33. tendencies, but they are capable of regulationor perversion. The doctrine of Scripture is that the child will be much what the parent makes him. III. THE HISTORY OF THIS CHILD WAS TO BE ONE OF A CHEQUERED NATURE, AND THE MOTHER WAS TO ENDURE SAD WOE. "A swordshall pierce," dec. This not uncommon for mothers. Simeon, however, blessedthe parents in spite of the sorrow that would be mingled with the lot of Jesus and their own. Blessednessnotthe same as continuous happiness or pleasure. A pathway of uninterrupted joy may not be a blessing. "Blessedare they that mourn," dec. Christ's life was blessedwhen He was tempted, had not where to lay His head, was alone upon the mountain, was robed in mock royalty, beaten, spit upon, agonizedin the garden, died upon the cross. No one could callHim happy, hut He was blessed. IV. THIS CHILD WAS SET FOR THE FALL AND RISING AGAIN OF MANY IN ISRAEL: The effect different in different persons. Not, however, intended to be different. The purpose of God is goodand gracious. All His gifts are intended for benefit — health, prosperity, afflictions. How differently are we affectedby the same things! Children in the same house, under the same training, &c. 1. Falling — (1)In aggravateddegradation; (2)augmented guilt; (3)humiliation and repentance.
  • 34. 2. Rising again. (1)Faith. (2)Forgiveness. (3)Holiness. (4)Heaven.The words of Simeon are for this day, for this nation, for you. This Child which was setforth then is still setforth, until in the counsels ofheaven the lastday shall break upon the world, and the throne of judgment shall be erectedwhere now stands the throne of grace. This Child is still the turning- point upon which are centred the destinies of the world. This Child is not for a race, but for the world; not for an age, but for all time. This Child you have heard of from your infancy. You have not heard so much of any child as this. This child runs as a golden thread through the history of the world. You may neglectHim, but you cannotescape Him. You may despise Him, but you cannot escapeHim. You may hate Him, but you cannot escape Him. It cannot be with you as it is with a heathen who has never heard of His name, and upon whom the glory of His brightness has never risen. (E. Mellor, D. D.) Christ is setfor the ruin of many JosephSchuen.
  • 35. I. How TRUE IS THIS PROPHECY. Undoubtedly the Son of Man came not to destroy souls, but to save. In boundless love He has sacrificedHimself for the world, and opened heaven by His cruel death. Nevertheless,he is set to the ruin of many. 1. Many are destitute of holy faith, which is the gate of life and the ground of eternal salvation. 2. Many are destitute of Divine charity, which we must possessin addition to faith, if we would be saved. II. HOW TERRIBLE IS THIS PROPHECY. Dreadfulare the consequences to those for the ruin of whom Christ is set. 1. They forfeit the price of their redemption. 2. They lose the eternal happiness destined for them. (JosephSchuen.) What Christ was to be to different people G. Brooks. I. What this Child was to be to His enemies — an objectof opposition and an occasionofruin, II. What He was to be to His mother — a cause ofacute suffering (by sympathy).
  • 36. III. What He was to be to His people — the Author of their recoveryor restoration. IV. What He was to be to all man. kind — a testor touchstone of their moral and spiritual state. (G. Brooks.) The prophecy of Simeon DeanVaughan. While Josephand the mother were still marvelling at the words spokenby the old man concerning Jesus, he turned to them, and with a solemn blessing first pronounced upon those who were privileged to have so near a place on earth to the Saviour of mankind, spoke these words to His mother only, "Behold this Child," &c. He is placed, or laid, as a firmly-planted rock, with a twofold result and purpose — the fall of some, the rising of others. Two passagesof the prophet Isaiah, the one from the eighth and the other from the twenty- eighth chapter, seemto be here brought together;as also in the ninth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and in the secondchapterof the First Epistle of St. Peter. God places this Child in Zion as a precious corner-stone, a sure foundation. Whosoeverwill may build upon Him the house of his habitation, and rise into a holy temple, safe from the storms of time and the devastations of judgment. He is setfor the rising of many. But if men will not thus use Him, as the foundation-stone of a safe and sure dwelling, then (according to the other passage)they will find Him a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence. He will be like an obstructing rock in their path — even to them who stumble at the word, being disobedient. Godwill not move Christ out of the way because men are perverse enoughto stumble over Him. This Child is set, by a hand not of man, to be either for the rising (if they will have it so), or else for
  • 37. the fall (if they will have it so) of many in Israel. A solemnresponsibility! We must either rise by Christ or fall — which we will. "And for a sign spoken against." A sign, in the Scripture use, denotes something or some one pointing to God, to God's being, to God's working. Christ is a sign. He came upon earth to point to God. But this sign, like every other, may be, and commonly is, gainsaid, or spokenagainst. Forone who accepts it, for one who, because of Christ, sees and believes in and lives for God — many cavil, many reject, and many neglectthe gospel. This in all times. But most of all when He was Himself amongstmen. Then indeed gainsaying ran on into open violence. Such is the warning uttered in the ears of His mother, over the little Infant lying still and helpless in the arms of the agedsaint. "Yea," he adds, "a sword shall pierce through thy own soul also." She who is now rejoicing in the blessednessofbeing her Lord's mother, must learn that no one comes so near Christ without partaking in His sufferings. For us the prophecy of Simeon is recorded. Let us try and judge ourselves by it, that we be not judged of the Lord. To which purpose, in our case, is this child set? To which of two purposes? for our fall, or for our rising? 1. Forour fall, if we let the word come to us unheeded, to be snatched awayby the tempter; if we receive the word for a moment with joy, but take no heed to its watering by the Spirit's grace, to its growthby the sunshine of God's presence, by the dew of God's blessing;if we allow the word to become choked in us by cares and riches and pleasures of this life, so that it brings no fruit to perfection; if we continue in sin that grace may abound. This Child is set for the fall of many. And, oh, my friends, perhaps we have scarcelyyet said of how many. It is not only the utterly hardened, not only the avowedunbeliever, not only the scoffer, the dishonest, or the impure, who stumble at the great stumbling-stone; it is quite as often the mere neglecter, the mere procrastinator, the merely undecided, the almostChristian, who shows what he is by his treatment of the Saviour and the greatsalvation. Not to be with Christ is, He says it Himself, to be (in His judgment) againstHim. 2. Let us listen, in this day of opportunity and of blessing, to the alternative here setbefore us. This Child is set for the rising of many. What is this
  • 38. "rising"? and in whom is it verified? It is a rising out of darkness, outof the low, misty valley of sense and worldliness, into the clearlight and pure knowledge ofHim whom truly to know is eternal life. It is a rising out of misery and sin. "Setfor the rising of many," the text says. Who, then, are these? They are those who feel their need of Christ. And which of us has not cause to do so? (DeanVaughan.) Man savedor destroyedby the truth A. Maclaren, D. D. Every man who has heard the word of salvationhas some kind of connection with Christ. Christ is offeredto eachof us, in goodfaith on God's part, as a means of salvation, a foundation on which we may build. A man is free to acceptor rejectthat offer. If he rejectit, he has not thereby cut himself off from all contactand connectionwith that rejectedSaviour, but he still sustains a relation to Him; and the messagethathe has refused to believe is exercising an influence upon his characterand his destiny. The smallest particle of light falling on the sensitive plate produces a chemicalchange that can never be undone again, and the light of Christ's love once brought to the knowledge and presentedfor the acceptanceofa soul, stamps on it an ineffaceable signof its having been there. The gospelonce heard is always the gospelwhich has been heard. Nothing canalter that. Once heard, it is henceforwarda perpetual element in the whole condition, character, and destiny of the hearer. Christ does something to every one of us. His gospelwill tell upon you. It is telling upon you. If you disbelieve it, it is not the same as if you had never heard it. Neveris the box of ointment opened without some savour from it abiding in every nostril to which its odour has been wafted. Only the alternative, the awful "either, or," is open for each — the "savourof life unto life, or of death unto death." (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
  • 39. The dual aspectofChrist's advent Canon Liddon. St. Paul experienced, in his own person, the double effectof the advent of Christ into the world set forth in Simeon's language — first, the repulsion which made him so bitter a persecutor, and next the attractionwhich made him so glorious an apostle. And of this double experience was a secondgreat example. There are many in our modern world who are thinking and speaking and living in oppositionto the eternal Christ. It may be, as in the case ofPaul, in the case ofAugustine, in their earlier days they have, from whatevercause, takena fright at religion; they have been repelled by some caricature of it, or some inconsistencyon the part of its professors, orby taking only one aspectof its doctrines and claims into consideration;or by a sense oftheir present inability to comply with its demand upon the conscience and upon the heart; but it is a happiness to think that Christ is still there in the firmament of the heavens, in the midst of the Church, among the golden candlesticks, setnot merely for the fall, but for the rising againof many a soul in Israel. It is to be hoped that brighter days await those wanderers, many of whom are most assuredlychildren of the kingdom who have losttheir way, but will not lose it for ever. A nearer sight, a constraining sense ofthe Divine Redeemer's claims, will come when men see that He can, and does, give by His Spirit, love, joy, peace, patience, to those who ask Him. When they take into accountthe works which He did of old, the words which He spake, the impression which He made when He was upon the earth; when they see the societywhich He founded, the creedwhich radiates from and centres in His person, and which is more widely acceptednow, eighteencenturies after His death, than ever before, they may reconsidertheir prejudices:they may say less than they mean when they admit that there is something to be saidfor Christianity after all; they may rise from the tomb into which they had fallen- the tomb of doubt, the tomb of care, the tomb of evil living — into the glorious liberty of the children of God. (Canon Liddon.)
  • 40. Christ setfor our fall an upraising Stopford A. Brooke. How is He setfor our fall? That seems very strange. It is not God's purpose that the revelation of goodproduces fall. We must seek anyexplanation rather than one which shakes the central pillar of the universe, and turns God into a Masterof evil. No, the real explanation lies in ourselves, in what we know and see men do of their own will. Good and evil lie before men, and they choose evil. There is a state of heart which naturally turns awayfrom or hates the life of Christ and the spirit of its work. There is no kinship betweenHim and it. When His goodness is flashedupon such men, it sends them into violent hatred of it. He is set for their fall. But it is their own deeds that have brought them to that condition — not God's will. This is the condemnation, that men loved darkness rather than light. Why? Becausetheir deeds were evil. Plainly, then, if we wish to rise into a new life and a higher one when the revelation of goodness is made to us, if we wish Christ to be set for our rising, the first thing to do is to love light; and in order to love it, to make our deeds good. Never mind having, high ideals, until you have got your daily actions and thoughts right. It is a simple promise, but it is eternally true and sure: "To him that ordereth his conversationarightwill I show the salvationof God." We must be akin to Christ before we tan receive Christ. To such, when He comes home to the heart, when we feel Him rushing on us, He comes in resurrection- power, sot for our rising. And we rise, shaking off our sins, our dark thoughts, the burden of our sorrow, the besetting of self, the curse of indifference, impatience, and sloth into a new life. It is like the unbinding of the earth in spring. Thus is Christ setfor our rise and fall. It is a solemnthing to watch a man when that testing comes to him. The hour strikes whenhe is calledon to choose betweentwo ways of acting, and he knows Godis in one and the devil in the other. What is this? It is Christ setbefore him for his rise or fall; Christ come to reveal his inward thoughts, his inward strength or weakness. It is a judgment-hour; and years of evil fall, or of righteous growth rest upon the hour. And still more grave is it when Christ is setbefore a nation for its fall or rising again. All greatideas are setfor the rise and falling of men, for life and
  • 41. for death. Of this law the strongestinstance in history is that which accompaniedthe coming el Christ. His ideas made the world into two camps. Nor has the powerof Christ's spiritual thoughts ceasedto do this kind of work. Through the solitarycontestin eachman's soul, and his ownchoice of goodor evil; through the contestin every community, in every nation, in the whole world, men and nations rise and fall, and the silent separationever going on accumulates the materials for the last greatjudgment when this dispensationof time is over and another shall begin. That day is not what has been pictured in poetry. It will be the magnificent indications of God's ways to men; the clear, unmistakable revelation of the holiness and justice and truth of God. Men shall see then. The time of doubt and casuistryand shadow will be over; all thoughts shall be revealed, and we shall know ourselves and know God. Once more Christ will be openly set for the rise and fall of men. By the revelation of His holiness alone the goodshall be irresistibly attracted; the evil, till they find out their evil, irresistibly repelled. There will be no caprice. In accordance withinevitable law, in accordancewith the voice in men's own hearts, will the judgment-sentence of the Son of Man be given. (Stopford A. Brooke.) By their treatment of Christ Himself men will show what they are DeanVaughan., Stopford A. Brooke. The veil will be stripped off from them — such is the figure — by their own language, and their own conduct towards Christ. By their estimate of His character, by their appreciationor disparagementof His holy life, and mighty works and Divine doctrine — by their acceptance orrejectionof Him whose appeal was everto the conscienceofman, as in the sight of a heart-searching God — men will disclose their true disposition; will show whether they love the world, whether they echo its lying voice, whether they desire darkness lest their deeds should be reproved, or whether, on the other hand, they are brave to see, and bold to confess the truth, whether they have an earto hear the voice of God, and a will to follow Him whithersoeverHe goeth. But, most of all, as the end draws nigh, and the life of holiness is closing in the death of
  • 42. martyrdom. Then, evenmore than in earlierdays, were the feelings of men tested, the thoughts of hearts revealed, by their dealing with the Suffering and the Crucified. The high priests plot and blaspheme, Pilate vacillates and gives way, the soldiers part among them the garments, the people stand beholding, Judas despairs, Peterrepents, Josephof Arimathaea becomes courageous, Nicodemus comes by day, the centurion confesses,one thief blasphemes, the other prays, men faint and flee. women out of weaknessare made strong, a swordpierces the heart of the mother, that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed. Even thus has it been in all time. For all time the words were uttered; it is by their treatment of Jesus, in Himself and in His people, in His word, in His church, in His sacraments, in His Spirit, that men show decisively before God, before one another, before themselves (if they will behold it) what manner of spirit they are of. (DeanVaughan.)Before these words were spokenMary was full of happiness. She had come into the Temple trembling with the deep pleasure of young motherhood, her soul filled full of natural piety, her heart leaping with joy. And when, moved still more by the old religious rite, she heard the hymn of Simeon over her boy, all her joy rose to spring-tide in her. Her face glowed. Joy and triumph filled her soul. Simeon saw this lightning on her face, saw her mien transfigured, and with the wisdom which has outlived weakness but not sympathy, turned and touched her joy with the warning of his prophecy. "A swordshall pierce through thine ownsoul." It was cruel, we think; it was pitiful to dash her young delight with cold. That is our first thought, and it might be a true one, had the sorrow she was to suffer been ordinary sorrow. But it was so dreadful a pain that she needed to prepare herself, neededthe warning. Her joy was too great at this moment to be destroyed by the words; it was only chastenedby a shade of impending sorrow, so that when the pain came it was not so greata shock. Nordid the shade make the joy really less. Joy was only lodged deeper in the heart, made more intense — a secret, silent possession:nay, the very dread of its loss made her handling of it tenderer, and her love of it greater. Byboth, by joy and by the shadow of sorrow, she was exalted, raised from the girl to the thoughtful woman who kept things in her heart and pondered them. SoonSimeon's prophecy was fulfilled. She saw her Songo forth from the quiet of the village with high hopes, and at His first
  • 43. return to His home the people tried to kill Him. For a time things seemed bright, but as she followedHis ministry with the passionate love which motherhood has for a son who claims also by his characterdeep reverence, she saw Him despisedand rejectedof men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief, hated and driven to death. Day by day the swordpierced her soul; day by day its sharp edge was whettedby love and fruitless indignation. Can we ira, gin, how that must have worn life away? And then the end, the hour by the cross whenshe knelt apart, silent to the last, seeing Him die so cruelly — the mother's heart pierced in twain. No wonder she died early. No wonder Christiandom has sung to her, painted and gravenher, as the Mother of Sorrows. We, looking ather life and her Son's, know of a truth that out of suffering nobly borne for love of man, goodcomes to all. Involved in our pain, we know nothing but that we suffer. Yet the history of Mary's sorrow is the history of all sorrow. Goodflows from it to the whole, and when we see that goodwe shall rejoice that we have suffered. No swordpierces the human heart, but the blood that streams from it heals the nations. (Stopford A. Brooke.) On the advantages ofaffliction B. Murphy. To the prophecies which Simeon addresses to Mary concerning her Divine Son, he adds one relative to herself. The very moment after filling her heart with joy by announcing the future glory of Jesus, he announces also the many sufferings she must endure. Such is the ordinary conduct of Providence, towards the just and elect. He chequers prosperity with reverses, so that they may be induced to transfer still more and more their affections to things above, and to elevate their hearts to those mansions where alone true joy is to be found. I. THERE IS NO REAL CAUSE WHY BELIEVERS SHOULD FAINT UNDER THE CHASTISEMENTSOF THEIR HEAVENLY FATHER.
  • 44. 1. God's corrections are tokens ofHis love, and the means which He often uses for bringing His children into glory. Amos 3:2; Hebrews 12:5-7. Prosperity is not the field where virtue flourishes; the soil is too rich; a luxuriance of baleful weeds chokesthe goodplants and makes them unfruitful. Adam's fall was in paradise. Noah's abundance proved a snare and temptation to him. David, in the midst of happiness, became an adulterer and a murderer. Solomon, in the midst of His opulence, apostatisedfrom his God. Such has been the opinion of some of the wisestmen concerning an uninterrupted course of prosperity, that they have even shunned the company, and broken off all connectionwith those who enjoyed it. It is written of St. , that being upon a journey, and coming to an inn, he heard the landlord boast, that through his whole life he had never knownwhat it was to be under trouble or affliction; upon which, that father would not so much as lodge for a night in his house, but foretold a sudden destruction to him and his, which soonafter came to pass. Thus the children of God, insteadof repining, or sinking under pressure of affliction, ought to thank their heavenly Father for it, and esteem it one of the most precious blessings He bestows on them. 2. The ways of God are frequently dark and obscure;and we may not for a long time perceive the cause of our affliction. 3. It is common for us to place our affections on trifles, whilst we despise things of the greatestvalue. So long as things go well with us in this world, we look no further. Then God, in order to weanus from these snares, embitters them to us; and in proportion as our love of this earth diminishes, our desire of heaven will increase. II. ADVICE TO THOSE WHO ARE UNDER THE CHASTENING AND CORRECTING HAND OF GOD.
  • 45. 1. Use every possible means to acquire just notions, worthy and becoming sentiments, of the Omnipotent Creatorand supreme Governor of the world. ConsiderHim as merciful as well as just; of infinite goodness,as wellas incomprehensible wisdom and power; as One who hates nothing that He has made, and whose kindness to His children is unlimited. 2. Make as speedyand strict an inquiry as possible into your present condition, and try to find out what are the causes and motives of the Lord's thus dealing with you; and at the same time considerwhat improvements you ought to make of His dispensations. Were you to meet with no trials, where would be your fortitude? If no temptations, where would be your virtue? If no afflictions, where your resignation? If no disappointments in your worldly pleasures, whatwould become of your attention to heavenly realities? (B. Murphy.) COMMENTARIES Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers (34) This child is setfor the fall and rising again.—The words startfrom the thought of Isaiah 8:14-15. The Christ is seenby Simeon as the stone on which some fall and are bruised (Luke 20:18), while others plant their feet upon it and rise to a higher life. Primarily the clause speaksofthe contrastbetween the two classes;but there is nothing to exclude the thought that some may first fall, and then, though sorely “bruised,” may rise again. (Comp. Romans 11:11.)
  • 46. For a sign which shall be spokenagainst.—Better, “a signthat is spoken against.” In the choice ofthe phrase, we have againan echo from Isaiah (Isaiah 7:14). The child Immanuel was to be Himself a sign, even as Isaiahand his children were (Isaiah8:18), but the sign was not to win acceptance.He was to endure the “contradiction” of sinners (Hebrews 12:3). There is probably a reference also to the words of Jehovah(Isaiah65:2) stretching forth his hands to a “gainsaying” people. The whole history of our Lord’s ministry—one might almost say, of His whole after-work in the history of Christendom—is more or less the recordof the fulfilment of Simeon’s prediction. BensonCommentary Luke 2:34-35. And Simeonblessedthem — Namely, Josephand Mary. He pronounced them blessedwho had the honour to be relatedto this child, and were intrusted with the bringing him up. He prayed for them, that God would bless them, and, doubtless, wished others to do the same. Behold, this child is setfor the fall and rising againof many in Israel — As he shall, in fact, be the means of bringing aggravatedruin upon some through their rejecting him; as well as of procuring salvationand recoveryto others, on their believing on him. In other words, He will be a savourof death to some, to unbelievers: a savour of life to others, to believers. Simeon here alludes to Isaiah8:14; and Isaiah28:16; which passagesPaulhas joined in one citation. Behold, I lay in Zion a stumbling-stone, and a rock of offence, and whosoeverbelievethon him shall not be ashamed. And for a sign which shall be spokenagainst — A sign from God, yet rejectedof men; or a mark to be shot at; the butt of the malice of wickedmen. Yea, a sword — Ρομφαια, a javelin, or dart; shall pierce through thy own soul also — The darts that are shot at thy son shall pierce thee to the heart; the calumnies, persecutions, and sufferings which he shall be exposedto, especiallyin his death, shall prove matter of the greatest affliction to thee, and shall sting thee with the bitterest griefs; that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed — All these things are orderedby Providence, that the real characters ofmen may be discovered, and the sincerity of those who are approved may be made manifest; while the hypocrisy and earthly- mindedness of those who intend only their own secular
  • 47. advantage, under the specious pretence of waiting for the Messiah’skingdom, shall be exposed; for they will soonbe offended at the obscure form of his appearance, andat the persecutions which will attend him and his cause. Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary 2:25-35 The same Spirit that provided for the support of Simeon's hope, provided for his joy. Those who would see Christ must go to his temple. Here is a confessionofhis faith, that this Child in his arms was the Saviour, the salvationitself, the salvationof God's appointing. He bids farewellto this world. How poor does this world look to one that has Christ in his arms, and salvationin his view! See here, how comfortable is the death of a goodman; he departs in peace with God, peace with his own conscience, inpeace with death. Those that have welcomedChrist, may welcome death. Josephand Mary marvelled at the things which were spokenof this Child. Simeon shows them likewise, whatreasonthey had to rejoice with trembling. And Jesus, his doctrine, and people, are still spokenagainst;his truth and holiness are still denied and blasphemed; his preached word is still the touchstone of men's characters. The secretgoodaffections in the minds of some, will be revealed by their embracing Christ; the secretcorruptions of others will be revealedby their enmity to Christ. Men will be judged by the thoughts of their hearts concerning Christ. He shall be a suffering Jesus;his mother shall suffer with him, because of the nearness of her relation and affection. Barnes'Notes on the Bible Simeon blessedthem - Josephand Mary. On them he sought the blessing of God. Is set - Is appointed or constitutedfor that, or such will be the effect of his coming. The fall - The word "fall" here denotes "misery, suffering, disappointment," or "ruin." There is a plain reference to the passage where it is said that he should be "a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence," Isaiah8:14-15. Many expecteda temporal prince, and in this they were disappointed. They loved
  • 48. darkness rather than light, and rejectedhim, and fell unto destruction. Many that were proud were brought low by his preaching. They fell from the vain and giddy height of their own self-righteousness,and were humbled before God, and then, through him, rose again to a better righteousness and to better hopes. The nation also rejectedhim and put him to death, and, as a judgment, "fell" into the hands of the Romans. Thousands were led into captivity, and thousands perished. The nation rushed into ruin, the temple was destroyed, and the people were scatteredinto all the nations. See Romans 9:32-33;1 Peter2:8; 1 Corinthians 1:23-24. And rising again - The word "again" is not expressedin the Greek. It seems to be supposed, in our translation, that the "same persons would fall and rise again;but this is not the meaning of the passage. It denotes that many would be ruined by his coming, and that many "others" would be made happy or be saved. Many of the poor and humble, that were willing to receive him, would obtain pardon of sin and peace - would "rise" from their sins and sorrows here, and finally ascendto eternallife. And for a sign ... - The word "sign" here denotes a conspicuous or distinguished object, and the Lord Jesus was suchan object of contempt and rejectionby all the people. He was despised, and his religion has been the common "mark" or "sign" for all the wicked, the profligate, and the profane, to curse, and ridicule, and oppose. Compare Isaiah8:18, and Acts 28:22. Neverwas a prophecy more exactlyfulfilled than this. Thousands have rejectedthe gospeland fallen into ruin; thousands are still falling of those who are ashamedof Jesus;thousands blaspheme him, deny him, speak all manner of evil againsthim, and would crucify him againif he were in their hands; but thousands also "by" him are renewed, justified, and raised up to life and peace. Jamieson-Fausset-BrownBible Commentary
  • 49. 34, 35. set—appointed. fall and rising againof many in Israel, and for a sign spokenagainst— Perhaps the former of these phrases expressesthe two stages oftemporary "fall of many in Israel" through unbelief, during our Lord's earthly career, and the subsequent "rising again" of the same persons afterthe effusion of the Spirit at pentecostthrew a new light to them on the whole subject; while the latter clause describes the determined enemies of the Lord Jesus. Such opposite views of Christ are takenfrom age to age. Matthew Poole's Commentary Ver. 34,35. Simeonblessedthem: some may question how it was that Simeon blessedChrist, whereas the apostle tells us, The less is blessedof the better, Hebrews 7:7. But we must distinguish between: 1. A prophetical blessing, as Jacobblessedhis sons, which was nothing but a prediction how Godwould bless them. 2. An authoritative blessing, as the priests blessedthe people in the name of the Lord, Numbers 6:1-27;which is nothing but a pronouncing them blessed by authority from God, whom God hath blessed. 3. A charitable or precatoryblessing;praying God to bless them. Thus inferiors may bless superiors, as wellas superiors may bless inferiors. The first or last, or both those, is to be understood here, not the second.
  • 50. And said unto Mary his mother; not to Joseph, who he knew was not his natural, but legaland reputed, father. Behold, this child is set for the fall and rising againof many in Israel. That by the fall and rising again is here meant the salvationand damnation of many is doubted by no valuable interpreters. The apostle so applies Isaiah 8:14,15, where he is said to be for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of offence to both the houses ofIsrael, for a gin and for a snare to the inhabitants of Jerusalem. And many among them shall stumble, and fall, and be broken, and be snared, and be taken. So doth Peter, 1 Peter2:8. Neither is it more than Christ telleth us, John 9:39, Forjudgment I am come into this world, that they which see not might see;and that they which see might be made blind. Accordingly the apostle saith, 2 Corinthians 2:16, that they were to some the savour of death unto death, to others the savour of life unto life. The reasonis, because they that believe in him shall be saved, they that believe not shall be damned, Mark 16:16 John 3:18,36. This is now granted on all hands, that Christ will be the occasionofmany people’s damnation, even all that reject and oppose him, and believe not in him; and the cause ofmany people’s salvation, even all that shall be saved:for there is no other name given under heaven, by which any can be saved, Acts 4:12: see Matthew 21:44 1 Peter 2:4,5. And it is observable, that the salvationof souls by Christ is expressedby the term rising; so as all are, fallen, Ephesians 2:1, and have need of the application of a greaterpowerto them for their salvation, than an under propping of the innate powerof their wills. But the greatquestion is about ceitai, is set, whether it signifieth only an event, or some counseland ordination of God. Let us compare it with other texts where the same word is used, Philippians 1:17 1 Thessalonians 3:3. How such greatissues of providence should happen without the foreknowledgeofGod, or how God should have any such foreknowledge withouta previous act of his will determining the thing, let any one consider; in the mean time it is freely granted, that the intervening of men’s unbelief, and malice, and opposition to Christ and his gospel, is the proximate meritorious cause of the fall of any soul by occasionof him.
  • 51. It follows, and for a sign which shall be spokenagainst;such a mark as Job speaks of, Job16:12; or such a sign as Isaiah speaks of, Isaiah8:18. Simeon here prophesieth, that Christ, and his ministers and people, should be ridiculed, and all the arrows of ungodly men should be shot againsthim; which proved true in that age as to Christ and his apostles, andin succeeding ages as to all that derive from him, and will so hold to the end of the world. Yea, a sword shall pierce through thy own soul also;as the irons entered into the soulof Joseph, Psalm105:18. He tells the virgin her soulshould be wounded with the reproaches andindignities which should be offeredto this blessedbabe, as it proved afterwards, whenshe heard him reviled, and saw him crucified. That the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed. The gospeltimes, especiallytimes of persecution, will discoverwhom God hath chosen, and whom he hath not, by discovering the thoughts of their hearts; it will then be seenwho will receive and who will rejectthe Messias,who is on his side and who will be againsthim. The term that doth denote the consequent, not the effect. The preaching of the gospelis the Lord’s fan, by which he purgeth his floor. Persecutionis the Lord’s sieve, by which he winnoweth churches, and separateththe dirt, and darnel, and tares from the wheat. Gospeltimes and times of persecutionare both of them times which make greatdiscovery of men’s spirits. Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible And Simeon blessedthem,.... Pronouncedthem blessedpersons, on accountof their relation to Christ as man; and more especially, becauseoftheir interest in him, as the, Saviour and Redeemerof them; and wished them all happiness and prosperity inward and outward, temporal, spiritual, and eternal; and so the Arabic version renders it, confining it to Josephand Mary; "and Simeon blessedthem both"; though this blessing of his may take in also the young
  • 52. child Jesus;whom he might pronounce blessed, as Elizabeth before had done, Luke 1:42 since he was the promised seed, in whom all nations of the earth should be blessed;and to whom, and to whose undertakings, interest, and kingdom, he might wish all prosperous success. The Persic versionreads, "old Simeon: and said unto Mary his mother": he directed his discourse to her, because she was the only real parent of this child he had in his arms, and had said so much of, and was about to say more; and because part of what follows, personally concernedher: behold, this child is set for the fall and rising againof many in Israel. The word "child", is not in the original text; where it is only, "this is set, &c." Simeon seeming to be, as it were, at a loss, what name to call this greatand illustrious personby, and therefore it is left to be supplied. The Persic version supplies it thus, behold, "this Holy One is set, &c." The sense is, that this child, who is the stone of Israel, is set, or put, or lies, both as a stone of stumbling, and rock of offence, for many of the Jews to stumble at, and fail and perish; and as a precious cornerand foundation stone, for the erection and elevationof others of them, to the highesthonour and dignity, that shall believe on him: for these words are not to be understood of the same, but of different persons among the Jews;though it may be true, that some, who first stumbled at him, might be raisedup again, and brought to believe in him; and that many, who for his sake, andthe Gospel, fell under greatdisgrace and reproach, and into greatafflictions and persecutions, were raisedup to the enjoyment of greatcomfort and honour: but they are not the same persons that Christ is set for the fall of, that he is setfor the rising of; nor the same he is set for the rising of, he is set for the fall of; the one designs the electof God among the Jews, who became true believers in Christ; and the other, the reprobate, who died in impenitence and unbelief: the words, so far as they concernChrist, "being setfor the fall of many of the Jews";have a manifest reference to Isaiah8:14 where the Messiahis spokenof as a stone, and as a stone of stumbling, and rock of offence;at which, many of the Jews should stumble, and fail, and be broken. And so the text is applied in the Talmud (m), where it is said, that "the son of David will not come, until both houses of the fathers, fail out of Israel;and they are these, the head of the captivity in Babylon, and the prince in the land of Israel;as it is said, Isaiah 8:14 "he shall
  • 53. be for a sanctuary; but for a stone of stumbling and rock of offence", to both the houses ofIsrael. Accordingly the Jews did stumble at his birth, parentage, and education; at the meanness ofhis person, and the obscurity of his kingdom; at the company he kept, and the audience that attended him; at his doctrine and miracles, and at his sufferings and death: they fell, through their unbelief and rejectionof him, as the Messiah;and not only from their outward privileges, civil, and religious;the Gospelwas takenawayfrom them, the national covenant betweenGod and them was broken, and they ceased to be his people, their temple and city were destroyed, and wrath came upon their nation to the uttermost; but they also fell into everlasting perdition, dying in their sins, through their disbelief of Jesus as the Messiah:this indeed was not the case of all of them; there was a seed, a remnant, according to the electionof grace but it was the case ofmany, and of the far greaterpart but then this same stone that was laid in Zion, was also setfor the rising againof many of them; meaning not for their resurrectionin a literal sense, though this is a truth: for as all God's elect, whetherJews or Gentiles, rose in him representatively, when he rose from the dead; so many of them rose personally after his resurrection, and all of them, at the last day, will rise again, in consequenceoftheir union to him: and indeed, all the wickedwill be raisedagain, by virtue of his power;but not this, but their resurrectionin a spiritual sense, is here meant; and it supposes the persons raisedto have been in a low estate, as allGod's electby nature are:they are in a hopeless and helpless condition in themselves:they are in a state of thraldom and bondage, to sin, Satan, and the law; they are filled with diseases, nauseous, mortal, and incurable; they are clothed in rags, and are beggars on the dunghill; they are deep in debt, and have nothing to pay; and are dead in trespassesandsins. Christ is now provided and appointed, for the raising them up out of their low estate, and he does do it; he is the resurrectionand the life unto them; he raises from the death of sin, to a life of grace and
  • 54. holiness from him, to a life of faith on him, and communion with him here, and to eternal life hereafter: he pays all their debts clothes them with his righteousness, heals alltheir diseases, redeems them from the slavery of sin, the captivity of Satan, and the bondage and curse of the law; brings them into a hopeful and comfortable condition; raises them to the possessionofa large estate, aneternal inheritance; and gives them both a right unto it, and ineptness for it; sets them among princes, makes them kings, places them on a throne of glory, yea, on his own throne, and sets a crown of righteousness, life, and glory, on their heads; and will cause them to reign with him, first on earth, for a thousand years, and then in heavento all eternity: and this was to be the case ofmany in Israel, though not of all; for all did not obey the Gospel, some did, three thousand under one sermon; and more will in the latter day, when all Israelshall be saved. This privilege of rising again, in this sense, by Christ, though it is here spokenof with respectto many of the Jews, yetnot to the exclusionof the Gentiles;for this honour have all the saints, be they of what nation they will. Now when Christ is said to be "set" for these different things, the meaning is, that he was foreappointed, preordained, and setforth in God's counsel, purposes, and decrees, as a stone at which some should stumble, through their own wickednessandunbelief, and fall and perish, and be eternally lost;and as a foundation stone for others, to build their faith and hope upon, which should be given them, and so rise up to everlasting life; and that he was setforth in the prophecies of the Old Testament, as in that here referred to, for the same ends; and that he was now exhibited in human nature with the same views, and should be held forth in the everlasting Gospel, for the like purposes; and which eventually is the savour of life unto life to some, and the savour of death unto death to others:to all this, a behold is prefixed, as expressing what is wonderful and surprising, and not to be accountedfor, but to be resolvedinto the secretand sovereignwill of God: it is added, that he is also set for a signwhich shall be spokenagainst:referring to Isaiah 8:18. Christ is the sign of God's everlasting love to his people, the greatproof, evidence, and demonstration of it; and in this respect, is spokenagainstby many: and he is setup in the Gospel, as an ensignof the people to look at, and gather to, for
  • 55. comfort, peace, righteousness, salvation, andeternal life; but is by many contradicted, opposed, and treated with contempt and abhorrence;so that he appears rather to be setas a mark and butt to shootat: he was spokenagainst by the Scribes and Pharisees, andthe greaterpart of the people of the Jews, and contradicted, as the Messiah, because ofhis mean appearance among them; his proper deity was denied, his divine sonshipwas gainsayed;he was contemned in all his offices, kingly, priestly, and prophetic; his works of mercy, both to the bodies and souls of men, his miracles, and the whole series of his life and actions, were traduced as sinful and criminal: this was the contradiction of sinners againsthimself, which he endured, Hebrews 12:3 and for which he was setand appointed; and still the contradiction continues, and will, as long as the Gospelis preached, (m) T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 33. 1. Geneva Study Bible And Simeon blessedthem, and said unto Mary his mother, Behold, this child is {q} setfor the {r} fall and rising againof many in Israel;and for a {s} sign which shall be spokenagainst; (q) Is appointed and set by God for a mark. (r) Fall of the reprobate who perishes because of their ownfault: and for the rising of the elect, unto whom God will give faith to believe. (s) That is, a mark, which all men will strive earnestlyto hit. EXEGETICAL(ORIGINAL LANGUAGES) Meyer's NT Commentary
  • 56. Luke 2:34. Αὐτούς]the parents, Luke 2:33. After he has blessedthem (has in prayer promised them God’s grace and salvation), he againspeciallyaddresses the mother, whose marvellous relation to the new-born infant he has, according to Luke, recognisedἐν πνεύματι. καῖται]He is placedthere, i.e. He has the destination, see on Php 1:16. εἰς πτῶσιν κ.τ.λ.]designates,in reference to Isaiah8:14 (comp. Matthew 21:22;Matthew 21:44;Acts 4:11; Romans 9:33; 1 Peter 2:6), the moral judgment (John 3:19 ff.), which is to set in by means of the appearance and the ministry of the Messiah. According to divine decree many must take offence at Him and fall—namely, through unbelief—into obduracy and moral ruin; many others must arise, inasmuch as they raise themselves—namely, through faith in Him—to true spiritual life. The fulfilment of both is abundantly attestedin the evangelic history; as, for example, in the case ofthe Pharisees andscribes the falling, in that of the publicans and sinners the rising, in that of Paul both; comp. Romans 11:11 ff. καὶ εἰς σημεῖονἀντιλεγόμ.]What was previously affirmed was His destination for others;now follows the specialpersonalexperience, which is destined for Him. His manifestation is to be a sign, a marvellous token(signal) of the divine counsel, which experiences contradictionfrom the world (see on Romans 10:21). The fulfilment of this prediction attained its culmination in the crucifixion; hence Luke 2:35. Comp. Hebrews 12:3. But it continues onward even to the lastday, 1 Corinthians 15:25. Expositor's Greek Testament Luke 2:34. εὐλόγησεν: “the less is blessedof the better”. Age, however humble, may bless youth. JacobblessedPharaoh.—κεῖται, is appointed—εἰς