Matthew
24
An
exposition by Bishop
J.C.
Ryle
MATTHEW 24:1-14
Jesus
went
out from the temple, and was going on his way. His disciples
came to him to show him the buildings of the temple. But he
answered them, "Don't you see all of these things? Most
certainly I tell you, there will not be left here one stone on
another, that will not be thrown down."
As he sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him
privately, saying, "Tell us, when will these things be? What is the
sign of your coming, and of the end of the age?"
Jesus answered them, "Be careful that no one leads you astray. For
many will come in my name, saying, 'I am the Christ,' and will lead
many astray. You will hear of wars and rumors of wars. See that you
aren't troubled, for all this must happen, but the end is not yet.
For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom;
and there will be famines, plagues, and earthquakes in various
places. But all these things are the beginning of birth pains. Then
they will deliver you up to oppression, and will kill you. You will
be hated by all of the nations for my name's sake. Then many will
stumble, and will deliver up one another, and will hate one another.
Many false prophets will arise, and will lead many astray. Because
iniquity will be multiplied, the love of many will grow cold. But he
who endures to the end, the same will be saved. This Good News of
the Kingdom will be preached in the whole world for a testimony to
all the nations, and then the end will come.
These verses begin a chapter full of prophecy--prophecy of which a
large portion is unfulfilled--prophecy which ought to be deeply
interesting to all true Christians. It is a subject to which the
Holy Spirit says, we "do well to take heed." (2 Peter 1:19.)
All portions of Scripture like this, ought to be approached with
deep humility, and earnest prayer for the teaching of the Spirit. On
no point have good men so entirely disagreed as on the
interpretation of prophecy. On no point have the prejudices of one
class, the dogmatism of a second, and the extravagance of a third,
done so much to rob the church of truths, which God intended to be a
blessing. Well says Olshausen, "What does not man see, or fail to
see, when it serves to establish his own favorite opinions?"
To understand the drift of the whole chapter, we must carefully keep
in view the question which gave rise to our Lord's discourse. On
leaving the temple for the last time, the disciples, with the
natural feeling of Jews, had called their Master's attention to the
splendid buildings of which it was composed. To their surprise and
amazement, He tells them that the whole was about to be destroyed.
These words appear to have sunk deeply into the minds of the
disciples. They came to Him, as He sat upon the Mount of Olives, and
asked Him with evident anxiety, "Tell us, when will these things be?
What is the sign of your coming, and of the end of the age?''--In
these words we see the clue to the subject of the prophecy now
before us. It embraces three points--one, the destruction of
Jerusalem--another, the second personal advent of Christ--and a
third, the end of the world. These three points are undoubtedly in
some parts of the chapter so entwined together, that it is difficult
to separate and disentangle them. But all these points appear
distinctly in the chapter, and without them it cannot be fairly
explained.
The first fourteen verses of the prophecy are taken up with general
lessons of wide range and application. They seem to apply with equal
force to the close of both Jewish and Christian dispensations, the
one event being strikingly typical of the other. They certainly
demand special notice from us, on whom the latter ends of the world
are come. Let us now see what those lessons are.
The first general lesson before us, is a warning against deception.
The very first words of the discourse are, "Be careful that no one
leads you astray."
A more needful warning than this cannot be conceived. Satan knows
well the value of prophecy, and has ever labored to bring the
subject into contempt. How many false Christs and false prophets
arose before the destruction of Jerusalem, the works of Josephus
abundantly prove. In how many ways the eyes of man are continually
blinded in the present day, as to things to come, it might easily be
shown. Irvingism and Mormonism have been only too successfully used
as arguments for rejecting the whole doctrine of the second advent
of Christ. Let us watch, and be on our guard.
Let no man deceive us as to the leading facts of unfulfilled
prophecy, by telling us they are impossible--or as to the manner in
which they will be brought to pass, by telling us it is improbable
and contrary to past experience. Let no man deceive us as to the
time when unfulfilled prophecies will be accomplished, either by
fixing dates on the one hand, or bidding us wait for the conversion
of the world on the other. On all these points let the plain meaning
of Scripture be our only guide, and not the traditional
interpretations of men. Let us not be ashamed to say that we expect
a literal fulfillment of unfulfilled prophecy. Let us frankly allow
that there are many things we do not understand, but still hold our
ground tenaciously, believe much--wait long, and not doubt that all
will one day be made clear. Above all, let us remember that the
first coming of Messiah to suffer, was the most improbable event
that could have been conceived, and let us not doubt that as He
literally came in person to suffer, so He will literally come again
in person to reign.
The second grand lesson before us, is a warning against
over-optimistic and extravagant expectations as to things which are
to happen before the end comes. It is a warning as deeply important
as the preceding one. Happy would it have been for the Church, if it
had not been so much neglected.
We are not to expect a reign of universal peace, happiness, and
prosperity, before the end comes. If we do, we shall be greatly
deceived. Our Lord bids us look for "wars, famines, pestilence," and
persecution. It is vain to expect peace until the Prince of Peace
returns. Then, and not until then, the swords shall be beaten into
ploughshares, and nations learn war no more. Then, and not until
then, the earth shall bring forth her increase. (Isaiah, 2:4 Psalm.
68:6.)
We are not to expect a time of universal purity of doctrine and
practice in the Church of Christ, before the end comes. If we do, we
shall be greatly mistaken. Our Lord bids us look for the rising of
"false prophets," the "abounding of iniquity," and the "waxing cold
of the love of many." The truth will never be received by all
professing Christians, and holiness be the rule among men, until the
great Head of the Church returns, and Satan is bound. Then, and not
until then, there will be a glorious Church, without spot or
blemish. (Ephes. 5:27.)
We are not to expect that all the world will be converted before the
end comes. If we do, we shall be greatly mistaken. "The Gospel is to
be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations," but we
must not think that we shall see it universally believed. It will
"take out a people," wherever it is faithfully preached, as
witnesses to Christ, but the full gathering of the nations shall
never take place until Christ comes. Then, and not until then, shall
the earth be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover
the sea. (Acts 15:14; Habak. 2:14.)
Let us lay these things to heart, and remember them well. They are
eminently truths for the present times. Let us learn to be moderate
in our expectations from any existing machinery in the Church of
Christ, and we shall be spared much disappointment. Let us make
haste to spread the Gospel in the world, for the time is short, not
long. The night comes when no man can work. Troublous times are
ahead. Heresies and persecutions may soon weaken and distract the
churches. A fierce war of principles may soon convulse the nations.
The doors now open to do good may soon be shut forever. Our eyes may
yet see the sun of Christianity go down like the sun of Judaism, in
clouds and storms. Above all, let us long for our Lord's return. Oh!
for a heart to pray daily, "Come, Lord Jesus!"
MATTHEW 24:15-28
"When,
therefore,
you see the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of
through Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place (let the
reader understand), then let those who are in Judea flee to the
mountains. Let him who is on the housetop not go down to take
out things that are in his house. Let him who is in the field
not return back to get his clothes. But woe to those who are
with child and to nursing mothers in those days! Pray that your
flight will not be in the winter, nor on a Sabbath, for then
there will be great oppression, such as has not been from the
beginning of the world until now, no, nor ever will be. Unless
those days had been shortened, no flesh would have been saved.
But for the sake of the chosen ones, those days will be
shortened.
"Then if any man tells you, 'Behold, here is the Christ,' or,
'There,' don't believe it. For there will arise false christs, and
false prophets, and they will show great signs and wonders, so as to
lead astray, if possible, even the chosen ones.
"Behold, I have told you beforehand. If therefore they tell you,
'Behold, he is in the wilderness,' don't go out; 'Behold, he is in
the inner chambers,' don't believe it. For as the lightning flashes
from the east, and is seen even to the west, so will be the coming
of the Son of Man. For wherever the carcass is, there is where the
vultures gather together.
One main subject of this part of our Lord's prophecy, is the taking
of Jerusalem by the Romans. That great event took place about forty
years after the words we have now read were spoken. A full account
of it is to be found in the writings of the historian Josephus.
Those writings are the best comment on our Lord's words. They are a
striking proof of the accuracy of every tittle of His predictions.
The horrors and miseries which the Jews endured throughout the siege
of their city exceed anything on record. It was truly a time of
"oppression, such as has not been since the beginning of the world."
It surprises some to find so much importance attached to the taking
of Jerusalem. They would rather regard the whole chapter as
unfulfilled.
Such people forget that Jerusalem and the temple were the heart of
the old Jewish dispensation. When they were destroyed, the old
Mosaic system came to an end. The daily sacrifice, the yearly
feasts, the altar, the holy of holies, the priesthood, were all
essential parts of revealed religion, until Christ came, but no
longer. When He died upon the cross, their work was done. They were
dead, and it only remained that they should be buried. But it was
not fitting that this thing should be done quietly. The ending of a
dispensation given with so much solemnity at Mount Sinai, might well
be expected to be marked with peculiar solemnity. The destruction of
the holy temple, where so many old saints had seen "shadows of good
things to come," might well be expected to form a subject of
prophecy. And so it was. The Lord Jesus specially predicts the
desolation of "the holy place." The great High Priest describes the
end of the dispensation which had been a schoolmaster to bring men
to Himself.
But we must not suppose that this part of our Lord's prophecy is
exhausted by the first taking of Jerusalem. It is more than probable
that our Lord's words have a further and deeper application still.
It is more than probable that they apply to a second siege of
Jerusalem, which is yet to take place, when Israel has returned to
their own land--and to a second tribulation on the inhabitants
thereof, which shall only be stopped by the advent of our Lord Jesus
Christ. Such a view of this passage may sound startling to some. But
those who doubt its correctness would do well to study the last
chapter of the prophet Zechariah, and the last chapter of Daniel.
These two chapters contain solemn things. They throw great light on
the verses we are now reading, and their connection with the verses
which immediately follow.
It now remains for us to consider the lessons which this passage
contains for our own personal edification. These lessons are plain
and unmistakable. In them at least there is no darkness at all.
For one thing, we see that flight from danger may sometimes be the
positive duty of a Christian. Our Lord Himself commanded his people
under certain circumstances "to flee."
The servant of Christ undoubtedly is not to be a coward. He is to
confess his master before men. He is to be willing to die, if
needful, for the truth. But the servant of Christ is not required to
run into danger, unless it comes in the line of duty. He is not to
be ashamed to use reasonable means to provide for his personal
safety, when no good is to be done by dying at his post. There is
deep wisdom in this lesson. The true martyrs are not always those
who court death, and are in a hurry to be beheaded or burned. There
are times when it shows more grace to be quiet, and wait, and pray,
and watch for opportunities, than to defy our adversaries, and rush
into the battle. May we have wisdom to know how to act in time of
persecution! It is possible to be rash, as well as to be a
coward--and to stop our own usefulness by being over hot, as well as
by being over cold.
We see, for another thing, that in delivering this prophecy, our
Lord makes special mention of the Sabbath. "Pray," he says, "that
your flight be not on the Sabbath day."
This is a fact that deserves special notice. We live in times when
the obligation of the Sabbath upon Christians is frequently denied
by good men. They tell us that it is no more binding on us than the
ceremonial law. It is difficult to see how such a view can be
reconciled with our Lord's words on this solemn occasion. He seems
intentionally to mention the Sabbath, when He is foretelling the
final destruction of the temple and the Mosaic ceremonies, as if to
mark the day with honor. He seems to hint that, although His people
would be absolved from the yoke of sacrifices and ordinances, there
would yet remain the keeping of a Sabbath for them. (Heb. 4:9.) The
friends of a holy Sunday ought carefully to remember this text. It
is one which will bear much weight.
We see for another thing, that God's elect are always special
objects of God's care. Twice in this passage our Lord mentions them.
"For the elect's sake the days of tribulation are to be shortened."
It will not be possible to deceive the "elect."
Those whom God has chosen to salvation by Christ, are those whom God
specially loves in this world. They are the jewels among mankind. He
cares more for them than for kings on their thrones, if kings are
not converted. He hears their prayers. He orders all the events of
nations and the issues of wars for their good, and their
sanctification. He keeps them by His Spirit. He allows neither man
nor devil to pluck them out of His hand. Whatever tribulation comes
on the world, God's elect are safe. May we never rest until we know
that we are of this blessed number! There breathes not the man or
woman who can prove that he is not one. The promises of the Gospel
are open to all. May we give diligence to make our calling and
election sure! God's elect are a people who cry unto Him night and
day. When Paul saw the faith, and hope, and love of the
Thessalonians, then he knew "their election of God." (1 Thess. 1:4;
Luke 18:7.)
Finally, we see from these verses, that whenever the second advent
of Christ takes place, it will be a very SUDDEN event. It will be
"as the lightning flashes from the east, and is seen even to the
west."
This is a practical truth that we should ever keep before our minds.
That our Lord Jesus will come again in person to this world, we know
from Scripture. That He will come in a time of great tribulation, we
also know. But the precise period, the year, the month, the day, the
hour, are all hidden things. We only know that it will be a very
sudden event. Our plain duty then is to live always prepared for His
return. Let us walk by faith, and not by sight. Let us believe in
Christ, serve Christ, follow Christ, and love Christ. So living,
whenever Christ may return, we shall be ready to meet Him.
MATTHEW 24:29-35
But
immediately
after the oppression of those days, the sun will be darkened,
the moon will not give its light, the stars will fall from the
sky, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken; and then the
sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky. Then all the
tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man
coming on the clouds of the sky with power and great glory. He
will send out his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and
they will gather together his elect ones from the four winds,
from one end of the sky to the other.
"Now from the fig tree learn this parable. When its branch has now
become tender, and puts forth its leaves, you know that the summer
is near. Even so you also, when you see all these things, know that
it is near, even at the doors. Most certainly I tell you, this
generation will not pass away, until all these things are
accomplished. Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not
pass away.
In this part of our Lord's prophecy, He describes His own second
coming, to judge the world. This, at all events, seems the natural
meaning of the passage. To take any lower view appears to be a
violent straining of Scripture language. If the solemn words here
used mean nothing more than the coming of the Roman armies to
Jerusalem, we may explain away anything in the Bible. The event here
described is one of far greater moment than the march of any earthly
army. It is nothing less than the closing act of this dispensation,
the second personal advent of Jesus Christ.
These verses teach us, in the first place, that when the Lord Jesus
returns to this world, He shall come with peculiar glory and
majesty. He shall come "in the clouds of heaven with power and great
glory." Before His presence the very sun, moon, and stars shall be
darkened, and "the powers of heaven shall be shaken."
The SECOND personal coming of Christ shall be as different as
possible from the FIRST. He came the first time as a man of sorrows
and acquainted with grief. He was born in the manger of Bethlehem,
in lowliness and humiliation. He took on him the form of a servant,
and was despised and rejected of men. He was betrayed into the hands
of wicked men, condemned by an unjust judgment, mocked, scourged,
crowned with thorns, and at last crucified between two thieves. He
shall come the second time as the King of all the earth, with all
royal majesty. The princes and great men of this world shall
themselves stand before His throne to receive an eternal sentence.
Before him every mouth shall be stopped, and every knee bow, and
every tongue shall confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. May we all
remember this. Whatever ungodly men may do now, there will be no
scoffing, no jesting at Christ, no infidelity at the last day. The
servants of Jesus may well wait patiently. Their master shall one
day be acknowledged King of kings by all the world.
These verses teach us, in the second place, that when Christ returns
to this world, He will first take care of His believing people. He
shall "send his angels," and "gather together his elect."
In the day of judgment true Christians shall be perfectly safe. Not
a hair of their heads shall fall to the ground. Not one bone of
Christ's mystical body shall be broken. There was an ark for Noah,
in the day of the flood. There was a Zoar for Lot, when Sodom was
destroyed. There shall be a hiding-place for all believers in Jesus,
when the wrath of God at last bursts on this wicked world. Those
mighty angels who rejoiced in heaven when each sinner repented,
shall gladly catch up the people of Christ to meet their Lord in the
air. That day no doubt will be a dreadful day, but believers may
look forward to it without fear.
In the day of judgment true Christians shall at length be gathered
together. The saints of every age, and every tongue shall be
assembled out of every land. All shall be there, from righteous Abel
down to the last soul that is converted to God--from the oldest
patriarch down to the little infant that just breathed and died. Let
us think what a happy gathering that will be, when all the family of
God are at length together. If it has been pleasant to meet one or
two saints occasionally on earth, how much more pleasant will it be
to meet a "multitude that no man can number!" Surely we may be
content to carry the cross, and put up with partings for a few
years. We travel on towards a day, when we shall meet to part no
more.
These verses teach us, in the third place, that until Christ returns
to this earth, the Jews will always remain a separate people. Our
Lord tells us, "This generation shall not pass away, until all these
things are fulfilled."
The continued existence of the Jews as a distinct nation, is
undeniably a great miracle. It is one of those evidences of the
truth of the Bible which the infidel can never overthrow. Without a
land, without a king, without a government, scattered and dispersed
over the world for eighteen hundred years, the Jews are never
absorbed among the people of the countries where they live, like
Frenchmen, Englishmen, and Germans, but "dwell alone." Nothing can
account for this but the finger of God. The Jewish nation stands
before the world, a crushing answer to infidelity, and a living book
of evidence that the Bible is true. But we ought not to regard the
Jews only as witnesses of the truth of Scripture. We should see in
them a continual pledge, that the Lord Jesus is coming again one
day. Like the sacrament of the Lord's supper, they witness to the
reality of the second advent, as well as of the first. Let us
remember this. Let us see in every wandering Jew a proof that the
Bible is true, and that Christ will one day return.
Finally, these verses teach us, that our Lord's predictions will
certainly be fulfilled. He says, "heaven and earth shall pass away,
but my words shall not pass away."
Our Lord knew well the natural unbelief of human nature. He knew
that scoffers would arise in the last days, saying, where is the
promise of His coming? (2 Pet. 3:4.) He knew that when He came,
faith would be rare on the earth. He foresaw how many would
contemptuously reject the solemn predictions He had just been
delivering as improbable, unlikely, and absurd. He warns us all
against such skeptical thoughts, with a caution of peculiar
solemnity. He tells us that, whatever man may say or think, His
words shall be fulfilled in their season, and shall not "pass away,"
unaccomplished. May we all lay to heart His warning. We live in an
unbelieving age. Few believed the report of our Lord's first coming,
and few believe the report of His second. (Isaiah 53:1.) Let us
beware of this infection, and believe to the saving of our souls. We
are not reading cunningly devised fables, but deep and momentous
truths. May God give us a heart to believe them.
MATTHEW 24:36-51
"As
the
days of Noah were, so will be the coming of the Son of Man. For
as in those days which were before the flood they were eating
and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day
that Noah entered into the ark, and they didn't know until the
flood came, and took them all away, so will be the coming of the
Son of Man. Then two men will be in the field--one will be taken
and one will be left; two women grinding at the mill, one will
be taken and one will be left. Watch therefore, for you don't
know in what hour your Lord comes. But know this, that if the
master of the house had known in what watch of the night the
thief was coming, he would have watched, and would not have
allowed his house to be broken into. Therefore also be ready,
for in an hour that you don't expect, the Son of Man will come.
"Who then is the faithful and wise servant, whom his master has set
over his household, to give them their food in due season? Blessed
is that servant whom his master finds doing so when he comes. Most
certainly I tell you that he will set him over all that he has. But
if that evil servant should say in his heart, 'My master is delaying
his coming,' and begins to beat his fellow servants, and eat and
drink with the drunkards, the master of that servant will come in a
day when he doesn't expect it, and in an hour when he doesn't know
it, and will cut him in pieces, and appoint his portion with the
hypocrites. There is where the weeping and gnashing of teeth will
be.
There are verses in this passage which are often much misapplied.
"The coming of the Son of man" is often spoken of as being the same
thing as death. The texts which describe the uncertainty of His
coming are often used in epitaphs, and thought suitable to the tomb.
But there is really no solid ground for such an application of this
passage. Death is one thing, and the coming of the Son of man is
quite another. The subject of these verses is not death, but the
second advent of Jesus Christ. Let us remember this. It is a serious
thing to wrest Scripture out of its true meaning.
The first thing that demands our attention in these verses, is the
dreadful account that they give of the state of the world when the
Lord Jesus comes again.
The world will not be converted when Christ returns. It will be
found in the same condition that it was in the day of the flood.
When the flood came, men were found "eating and drinking, marrying
and given in marriage," absorbed in their worldly pursuits, and
utterly regardless of Noah's repeated warnings. They saw no
likelihood of a flood. They would not believe there was any danger.
But at last the flood came suddenly and "took them all away." All
that were not with Noah in the ark were drowned. They were all swept
away to their last account, unpardoned, unconverted, and unprepared
to meet God. And our Lord says, "so will be the coming of the Son of
Man."
Let us mark this text, and store it up in our minds. There are many
strange opinions current on this subject, even among good men. Let
us not flatter ourselves that the heathen will all be converted, and
the earth filled with the knowledge of God, before the Lord comes.
Let us not dream that the end of all things cannot be at hand,
because there is yet much wickedness both in the Church and in the
world. Such views receive a flat contradiction in the passage now
before us. The days of Noah are the true type of the days when
Christ shall return. Millions of professing Christians will be found
thoughtless, unbelieving, godless, Christless, worldly, and unfit to
meet their Judge. Let us take heed that we are not found among them.
The second thing that demands our attention, is the dreadful
SEPARATION that will take place when the Lord Jesus comes again. We
read twice over, that "one shall be taken and the other left."
The godly and the ungodly, at present, are all mingled together. In
the congregation and in the place of worship--in the city and in the
field--the children of God and the children of the world are all
side by side. But it shall not be so always. In the day of our
Lord's return, there shall at length be a complete division. In a
moment, in the twinkling of an eye; at the last trumpet, each party
shall be separated from the other forever more. Wives shall be
separated from husbands--parents from children--brothers from
sisters--masters from servants--preachers from hearers. There shall
be no time for parting words, or a change of mind, when the Lord
appears. All shall be taken as they are, and reap according as they
have sown. Believers shall be caught up to glory, honor, and eternal
life. Unbelievers shall be left behind to shame and everlasting
contempt. Blessed and happy are they who are of one heart in
following Christ! Their union alone shall never be broken. It shall
last for evermore. Who can describe the happiness of those who are
taken, when the Lord returns? Who can imagine the misery of those
who are left behind? May we think on these things and consider our
ways.
The last thing that demands our attention in these verses, is the
practical duty of watchfulness in the prospect of Christ's second
coming. "WATCH," says our Lord, "for you don't know in what hour
your Lord comes." "BE READY, for in an hour that you don't expect,
the Son of Man will come."
This is a point which our blessed Master frequently presses upon our
notice. We hardly ever find Him dwelling on the second advent
without adding an injunction to "watch." He knows the sleepiness of
our nature. He knows how soon we forget the most solemn subjects in
religion. He knows how unceasingly Satan labors to obscure the
glorious doctrine of His coming again. He arms us with
heart-searching exhortations to keep awake, if we would not be
ruined for evermore. May we all have an ear to hear them.
True Christians ought to live like WATCHMEN. The day of the Lord so
comes as a thief in the night. They should strive to be always on
their guard. They should behave like the sentinel of an army in an
enemy's land.
They should resolve by God's grace not to sleep at their post. That
text of Paul deserves many a thought--"let us not sleep, as the rest
do, but let us watch and be sober." (1 Thess. 5:6.)
True Christians ought to live like GOOD SERVANTS, whose master is
not at home. They should strive to be always ready for their
master's return. They should never give way to the feeling, "my Lord
is delaying his coming." They should seek to keep their hearts in
such a frame, that whenever Christ appears, they may at once give
Him a warm and loving reception. There is a vast depth in that
saying, "Blessed is that servant whom his master finds doing so when
he comes." We may well doubt whether we are true believers in Jesus,
if we are not ready at any time to have our faith changed into
sight.
Let us close the chapter with solemn feelings. The things we have
just been reading call loudly for great searchings of heart. Let us
seek to make sure that we are in Christ, and have an ark of safety
when the day of wrath breaks on the world. Let us strive to live
that we may be pronounced "blessed" at the last, and not cast off
for evermore. Not least, let us dismiss from our minds the common
idea that unfulfilled prophecy is a speculative and not a practical
thing. If the things we have been considering are not practical,
there is no such thing as practical religion at all. Well might John
say, "Everyone who has this hope set on him purifies himself, even
as he is pure." (1 John 3:3.)