Chapter 6:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Malachi Mark
Matthew 6
Verse 1. In the foregoing chapter our Lord particularly described the
nature of inward holiness. In this he describes that purity of
intention without which none of our outward actions are holy.
This chapter contains four parts,
1. The right intention and manner of giving alms, ver. 1-4.
2. The right intention, manner, form, and prerequisites of prayer,
ver. 5-15.
3. The right intention, and manner of fasting, ver. 16-18.
4. The necessity of a pure intention in all things, unmixed either
with the desire of riches, or worldly care, and fear of want, ver.
19-34. This verse is a general caution against vain glory, in any of
our good works: All these are here summed up together, in the
comprehensive word righteousness. This general caution our Lord
applies in the sequel to the three principal branches of it, relating
to our neighbour, ver. 2-iv, to God, ver. 5, vi, and to ourselves,
ver. 16-18. To be seen - Barely the being seen, while we are doing
any of these things, is a circumstance purely indifferent. But the
doing them with this view, to be seen and admired, this is what
our Lord condemns.
Verse
2. As the hypocrites do - Many of the scribes and Pharisees did
this, under a pretense of calling the poor together. They have their
reward - All they will have; for they shall have none from God.
Verse
3. Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth - A
proverbial expression for doing a thing secretly. Do it as secretly
as is consistent,
1. With the doing it at all.
2. With the doing it in the most effectual manner.
Verse
5. The synagogues - These were properly the places where the
people assembled for public prayer, and hearing the Scriptures
read and expounded. They were in every city from the time of the
Babylonish captivity, and had service in them thrice a day on
three days in the week. In every synagogue was a council of grave
and wise persons, over whom was a president, called the ruler of
the synagogue. But the word here, as well as in many other texts,
signifies any place of public concourse.
Verse
6. Enter into thy closet - That is, do it with as much secrecy as
thou canst.
Verse
7. Use not vain repetitions - To repeat any words without meaning
them, is certainly a vain repetition. Therefore we should be
extremely careful in all our prayers to mean what we say; and to
say only what we mean from the bottom of our hearts. The vain
and heathenish repetitions which we are here warned against, are
most dangerous, and yet very common; which is a principal cause
why so many, who still profess religion, are a disgrace to it.
Indeed all the words in the world are not equivalent to one holy
desire. And the very best prayers are but vain repetitions, if they
are not the language of the heart.
Verse
8. Your Father knoweth what things ye have need of - We do not
pray to inform God of our wants. Omniscient as he is, he cannot
be informed of any thing which he knew not before: and he is
always willing to relieve them. The chief thing wanting is, a fit
disposition on our part to receive his grace and blessing.
Consequently, one great office of prayer is, to produce such a
disposition in us: to exercise our dependence on God; to increase
our desire of the things we ask for; to us so sensible of our wants,
that we may never cease wrestling till we have prevailed for the
blessing.
Verse
9. Thus therefore pray ye - He who best knew what we ought to
pray for, and how we ought to pray, what matter of desire, what
manner of address would most please himself, would best become
us, has here dictated to us a most perfect and universal form of
prayer, comprehending all our real wants, expressing all our
lawful desires; a complete directory and full exercise of all our
devotions. Thus - For these things; sometimes in these words, at
least in this manner, short, close, full. This prayer consists of three
parts, the preface, the petitions, and the conclusion. The preface,
Our Father, who art in heaven, lays a general foundation for
prayer, comprising what we must first know of God, before we
can pray in confidence of being heard. It likewise points out to us
our that faith, humility, love, of God and man, with which we are
to approach God in prayer.
1. Our Father - Who art good and gracious to all, our Creator,
our Preserver; the Father of our Lord, and of us in him, thy
children by adoption and grace: not my Father only, who now cry
unto thee, but the Father of the universe, of angels and men: who
art in heaven - Beholding all things, both in heaven and earth;
knowing every creature, and all the works of every creature, and
every possible event from everlasting to everlasting: the almighty
Lord and Ruler of all, superintending and disposing all things; in
heaven - Eminently there, but not there alone, seeing thou fillest
heaven and earth.
2. Hallowed be thy name - Mayest thou, O Father, he truly known
by all intelligent beings, and with affections suitable to that
knowledge: mayest thou be duly honoured, loved, feared, by all in
heaven and in earth, by all angels and all men.
Verse
10. Thy kingdom come - May thy kingdom of grace come quickly,
and swallow up all the kingdoms of the earth: may all mankind,
receiving thee, O Christ, for their king, truly believing in thy
name, be filled with righteousness, and peace, and joy; with
holiness and happiness, till they are removed hence into thy
kingdom of glory, to reign with thee for ever and ever.
Thy will be done on earth, as it is in heaven - May all the
inhabitants of the earth do thy will as willingly as the holy angels:
may these do it continually even as they, without any interruption
of their willing service; yea, and perfectly as they: mayest thou, O
Spirit of grace, through the blood of the everlasting covenant,
make them perfect in every good work to do thy will, and work in
them all that is well pleasing in thy sight.
Verse
11. Give us - O Father (for we claim nothing of right, but only of
thy free mercy) this day - (for we take no thought for the morrow)
our daily bread - All things needful for our souls and bodies: not
only the meat that perisheth, but the sacramental bread, and thy
grace, the food which endureth to everlasting life.
Verse
12. And forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors - Give
us, O Lord, redemption in thy blood, even the forgiveness of sins:
as thou enablest us freely and fully to forgive every man, so do
thou forgive all our trespasses.
Verse
13. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil -
Whenever we are tempted, O thou that helpest our infirmities,
suffer us not to enter into temptation; to be overcome or suffer
loss thereby; but make a way for us to escape, so that we may be
more than conquerors, through thy love, over sin and all the
consequences of it. Now the principal desire of a Christian's heart
being the glory of God, (ver. 9, 10) and all he wants for himself
or his brethren being the daily bread of soul and body, (or the
support of life, animal and spiritual, ) pardon of sin, and
deliverance from the power of it and of the devil, (ver. 11, 12, 13,) there is nothing beside that a Christian can wish for; therefore
this prayer comprehends all his desires. Eternal life is the certain
consequence, or rather completion of holiness.
For thine is the kingdom - The sovereign right of all things
that are or ever were created: The power - the executive power,
whereby thou governest all things in thy everlasting kingdom:
And the glory - The praise due from every creature, for thy power,
and all thy wondrous works, and the mightiness of thy kingdom,
which endureth through all ages, even for ever and ever. It is
observable, that though the doxology, as well as the petitions of
this prayer, is threefold, and is directed to the Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost distinctly, yet is the whole fully applicable both to
every person, and to the ever - blessed and undivided trinity. Luke
xi, 2.
Verse
14. Mark xi, 25.
Verse
16. When ye fast? - Our Lord does not enjoin either fasting, alms-
deeds, or prayer: all these being duties which were before fully
established in the Church of God. Disfigure - By the dust and
ashes which they put upon their heads, as was usual at the times
of solemn humiliation.
Verse
17. Anoint thy head - So the Jews frequently did. Dress thyself as
usual.
Verse
19. Lay not up for yourselves - Our Lord here makes a transition
from religious to common actions, and warns us of another snare,
the love of money, as inconsistent with purity of intention as the
love of praise. Where rust and moth consume - Where all things
are perishable and transient. He may likewise have a farther view
in these words, even to guard us against making any thing on
earth our treasure. For then a thing properly becomes our treasure,
when we set our affections upon it. Luke xii, 33.
Verse
21. Luke xi, 34.
Verse
22. The eye is the lamp of the body - And what the eye is to the
body, the intention is to the soul. We may observe with what
exact propriety our Lord places purity of intention between
worldly desires and worldly cares, either of which directly tend to
destroy. If thine eye be single - Singly fixed on God and heaven,
thy whole soul will be full of holiness and happiness. If thine eye
be evil - Not single, aiming at any thing else.
Verse
24. Mammon - Riches, money; any thing loved or sought, without
reference to God. Luke xvi, 13.
Verse
25. And if you serve God, you need be careful for nothing.
Therefore take not thought - That is, be not anxiously careful.
Beware of worldly cares; for these are as inconsistent with the
true service of God as worldly desires. Is not the life more than
meat? - And if God give the greater gift, will he deny the smaller?
Luke xii, 22.
Verse
27. And which of you - If you are ever so careful, can even add a
moment to your own life thereby? This seems to be far the most
easy and natural sense of the words.
Verse
29. Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these -
Not in garments of so pure a white. The eastern monarchs were
often clothed in white robes.
Verse
30. The grass of the field - is a general expression, including both
herbs and flowers. Into the still - This is the natural sense of the
passage. For it can hardly be supposed that grass or flowers
should be thrown into the oven the day after they were cut down.
Neither is it the custom in the hottest countries, where they dry
fastest, to heat ovens with them. If God so clothe - The word
properly implies, the putting on a complete dress, that surrounds
the body on all sides; and beautifully expresses that external
membrane, which (like the skin in a human body) at once adorns
the tender fabric of the vegetable, and guards it from the injuries
of the weather. Every microscope in which a flower is viewed
gives a lively comment on this text.
Verse
31. Therefore take not thought - How kind are these precepts! The
substance of which is only this, Do thyself no harm! Let us not be
so ungrateful to him, nor so injurious to ourselves, as to harass
and oppress our minds with that burden of anxiety, which he has
so graciously taken off. Every verse speaks at once to the
understanding, and to the heart. We will not therefore indulge
these unnecessary, these useless, these mischievous cares. We will
not borrow the anxieties and distresses of the morrow, to
aggravate those of the present day. Rather we will cheerfully
repose ourselves on that heavenly Father, who knows we have
need of these things; who has given us the life, which is more than
meat, and the body, which is more than raiment. And thus
instructed in the philosophy of our heavenly Master, we will learn
a lesson of faith and cheer. fulness from every bird of the air, and
every flower of the field.
Verse
33. Seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness - Singly aim
at this, that God, reigning in your heart, may fill it with the
righteousness above described. And indeed whosoever seeks this
first, will soon come to seek this only.
Verse
34. The morrow shall take thought for itself - That is, he careful
for the morrow when it comes. The evil thereof - Speaking after
the manner of men. But all trouble is, upon the whole, a real good.
It is good physic which God dispenses daily to his children,
according to the need and the strength of each.
Chapter 6:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Malachi Mark
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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