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Biblia Tysiąclecia

Ewangelia Mateusza 16:26

Albowiem cóż pomoże człowiekowi, choćby wszystek świat pozyskał, a na duszy swojej szkodował? albo co za zamianę da człowiek za duszę swoję?

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Ambition;   Covetousness;   Immortality;   Jesus, the Christ;   Life;   Reward;   Wicked (People);   Worldliness;   Thompson Chain Reference - Life;   Life-Death;   Profit and Loss;   Sin;   Soul;   Unprofitable, Sin;   Worldliness;   Worldliness-Unworldliness;   The Topic Concordance - Profit;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Jews, the;   Self-Denial;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Caesarea-Philippi;   Soul;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Cross;   Denial;   Disciple;   Ethics;   Humanity, humankind;   Soul;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Christ, Christology;   Soul;   Transfiguration;   World;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Hutchinsonians;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Man;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Ecclesiastes, the Book of;   Esau;   Sacrifice;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Matthew, the Gospel of;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Faith;   Man;   Parousia;   Soul;   Text of the New Testament;   World;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Atonement (2);   Body (2);   Character;   Children of God;   Common Life;   Covetousness;   Discourse;   Fall (2);   Fear ;   Gain;   Hermon;   Honour (2);   Ideal;   Ideas (Leading);   Justice (2);   Man (2);   Obedience (2);   Pleasure;   Popularity ;   Profit;   Promise (2);   Questions and Answers;   Quotations (2);   Reality;   Redemption (2);   Selfishness;   Soul;   Soul ;   Tabor, Mount;   Transfiguration (2);   Trinity (2);   Wealth (2);   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Soul, Spirit;   23 Life Living;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - World;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Caesare'a Philip'pi;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Forfeit;   Gain;   Jesus Christ (Part 2 of 2);   Justification;  

Devotionals:

- Chip Shots from the Ruff of Life - Devotion for September 30;   Daily Light on the Daily Path - Devotion for September 8;  

Parallel Translations

Biblia Gdańska (1632)
Albowiem cóż pomoże człowiekowi, choćby wszystek świat pozyskał, a na duszy swojej szkodował? albo co za zamianę da człowiek za duszę swoję?
Biblia Przekład Toruński
26 Cóż bowiem zyska człowiek, choćby cały świat zdobył, a na duszy swojej poniósł szkodę? Albo co da człowiek w zamian za swoją duszę?
Nowe Przymierze Zaremba
Bo cóż za korzyść odniósł człowiek, który zdobył cały świat, jeśli utracił własną duszę? Albo co da człowiek w zamian za swoją duszę?
Nowa Biblia Gdańska (2012)
Bowiem cóż pomoże człowiekowi, choćby cały świat pozyskał, a na swojej duszy doznał kary? Albo co da człowiek w zamian za swoją duszę?
Uwspółcześniona Biblia Gdańska
Cóż pomoże człowiekowi, choćby cały świat pozyskał, a na swojej duszy poniósł szkodę? Albo co da człowiek w zamian za swoją duszę?
Biblia Brzeska (1563)
Abowiem cóż pomoże człowiekowi, jesliby wszytek świat zyskał, a na duszy swej był karan? Abo co da człowiek czym by okupił duszę swoję?
Biblia Warszawska
Albowiem cóż pomoże człowiekowi, choćby cały świat pozyskał, a na duszy swej szkodę poniósł? Albo co da człowiek w zamian za duszę swoją?

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

what is: Matthew 5:29, Job 2:4, Mark 8:36, Luke 9:25

gain: Matthew 4:8, Matthew 4:9, Job 27:8, Luke 12:20, Luke 16:25

or: Psalms 49:7, Psalms 49:8, Mark 8:37

Reciprocal: Genesis 37:26 - What profit Genesis 37:27 - sell him Genesis 47:19 - buy us Numbers 22:17 - I will promote 2 Kings 1:14 - let my life 2 Kings 7:15 - had cast away Job 1:9 - Doth Job Job 20:28 - and his goods Job 33:27 - it profited Psalms 120:3 - What shall Proverbs 3:14 - General Proverbs 8:11 - wisdom Proverbs 11:4 - Riches Proverbs 13:8 - ransom Proverbs 16:16 - General Proverbs 19:1 - Better Proverbs 19:16 - keepeth his Proverbs 23:23 - sell Ecclesiastes 1:3 - profit Ecclesiastes 2:22 - and of the Ecclesiastes 3:6 - time to get Ecclesiastes 3:9 - General Isaiah 47:14 - they shall Jeremiah 2:8 - do not Jeremiah 26:21 - he was Jeremiah 41:8 - Slay Ezekiel 7:19 - shall cast Amos 4:3 - them into the palace Zephaniah 1:18 - their silver Matthew 10:39 - General Matthew 13:45 - like Matthew 18:9 - rather Matthew 19:22 - for Luke 17:31 - he which Acts 27:18 - the next Acts 27:38 - they lightened Romans 2:9 - soul 1 Corinthians 14:6 - what shall I Philippians 3:7 - General 2 Timothy 2:14 - to no

Gill's Notes on the Bible

For what is a man profited,.... Such persons, though they are only seeking their own profit, will find themselves most sadly mistaken; for of what advantage will it be to such a man,

if he shall gain the whole world; all that is precious and valuable in it; all the power, pleasures, and riches of it; if with Alexander, he had the government of the whole world, and with Solomon, all the delights of it; and was possessed with the wealth of Croesus, and Crassus,

and lose his own soul? If that should be consigned to everlasting torment and misery, be banished the divine presence, and continually feel the gnawings of the worm of conscience that never dies, and the fierceness of the fire of God's wrath, that shall never be quenched, he will have a miserable bargain of it.

Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? Or, "for the redemption" of it, as the Ethiopic version renders it: see Psalms 49:8. If he had the whole world to give, and would give it, it would not be a sufficient ransom for it; the redemption of an immortal soul requires a greater price than gold and silver, or any corruptible thing; nothing short of the blood and life of Christ, is a proper exchange, or ransom price for it. But in the other world there will be no redemption; the loss of a soul is irrecoverable: a soul once lost and damned, can never be retrieved. This passage is thought to be proverbial; what comes nearest to it, is the following x.

"If a scholar dies, we never find an exchange for him; there are four things which are the ministry or service of the world, אם אבדו יש חליפין, if they are lost, they may be changed; and they are these, gold, silver, iron, and brass, Job 28:1 but if a scholar dies, לנו תמורתו

מי מביא, who will bring us his exchange? or an exchange for him: we lost R. Simon, "who will bring us his exchange?".''

x Midrash Kohelet, fol. 72. 3, 4. T. Hieros. Beracot, fol. 5. 3.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

This discourse is also recorded in Mark 8:34-38; Mark 9:1; and Luke 9:23-27.

Let him, deny himself - That is, let him surrender to God his will, his affections, his body, and his soul. Let him not seek his own happiness as the supreme object, but be willing to renounce all, and lay down his life also, if required.

Take up his cross - See the notes at Matthew 10:38.

Matthew 16:25

Whosoever will save his life ... - See the notes at Matthew 10:39.

Matthew 16:26

For what is a man profited ... - To gain the whole world means to possess it as our own - all its riches, its honors, and its pleasures.

“To lose his own soul” means to be cast away, to be shut out from heaven, to be sent to hell. Two things are implied by Christ in these questions:

  1. That they who are striving to gain the world, and are unwilling to give it up for the sake of religion, will lose their souls; and,
  2. That if the soul is lost, nothing can be given in exchange for it, or that it can never afterward be saved. There is no redemption in hell.

Matthew 16:27

For the Son of man ... - That is, he will return to judge the world.

He will come in glory the glory of his Father the majesty with which God is accustomed to appear, and which befits God. He will be attended by angels. He will judge all people.

Reward - The word “reward” means recompense. He will deal with them according to their character. The righteous he will reward in heaven with glory and happiness. The wicked he will send to hell, as a reward or recompense for their evil works. This fact, that he will come to judgment, he gives as a reason why we should be willing to deny ourselves and follow him. Even though it should be now attended with contempt and suffering, yet then he will reward his followers for all their shame and sorrow, and receive them to his kingdom. He adds Mark 8:38, that if we are ashamed of him here, he will be ashamed of us there. That is, if we reject and disown him here, he will reject and disown us there.

Matthew 16:28

Verily I say unto you ... - To encourage them, he assured them that, though his kingdom was now obscure and despised - though he was cast out and little known - yet the time was near when he would be regarded in a different manner, and his kingdom be established with great power.

This cannot refer to the end of the world, and there is no need of referring it to the destruction of Jerusalem.

Taste of death - That is, die. Before they die they shall see this.

Son of man coming in his kingdom - Mark and Luke have explained this: Mark 9:1, “Until they have seen the kingdom of God come with power;” Luke 9:27, “Till they see the kingdom of God.” The meaning evidently is, “till they shall see my kingdom,” i. e., my church, now small, feeble, and despised, greatly enlarged, established, and spreading with great rapidity and extent. All this was accomplished. All these apostles, except Judas, lived to see the wonders of the day of Pentecost; some of them, John particularly, saw the Jewish nation scattered, the temple destroyed, the gospel established in Asia, Rome, Greece, and in a large part of the known world.

Remarks On Matthew 16:0

1. People will often judge far more correctly about natural than about spiritual things, Matthew 16:1-3. In respect to natural objects they are watchful. In them they feel a deep interest, and they watch for every sign that may affect their interest. They are too much concerned to judge falsely. But they feel no such interest in religious things. Hence, it happens that people who have good sense and much wisdom in regard to worldly concerns, are often exceedingly foolish in regard to religion. They believe reports respecting religion, revivals, and missions, which they would despise on any other subject. They read and believe newspapers and other publications, which they would hold in contempt on any other topic but religion. They give a degree of weight to arguments against the Bible, and against the doctrines of the gospel, to which they would attach little or no importance on any other subject. They sustain themselves in infidelity by arguments which they would regard as of no force if the same kind of reasoning was urged in defense of anything else.

2. It is of importance to watch the signs of the times, Matthew 16:3. In the days of Christ it was the duty of the people to look at the evidence that he was the Messiah. The proofs were clear that he was the Messiah. It is also important to look at the signs of the times in which we live. They are clear also. Much is doing; and the diffusion of the Bible, the labors among the pagan, the distribution of tracts, and perhaps, above all, the institution of Sunday schools, betoken an eventful age, and are an indication that brighter days are about to dawn on the world. We should watch these signs that we may rejoice; that we may pray with more fervor, and that we may do our part to advance the kingdom of God. Little children should grow up believing that they live in an important age; that they enjoy many special privileges, and that they may and must do much to spread the gospel through the earth. Even in childhood, they should pray, and they should give to benefit others; and, most of all, they should give themselves to Christ, that they may benefit others with a right spirit.

3. Sinners should be addressed with deep feeling and faithfulness, Mark 8:12. Jesus sighed deeply. So should we. We should not be harsh, or sour, or cold and unfeeling when we address our fellow-men about eternity. We should weep over them, and pray for them, and speak to them, not as if we were better than they, but with an earnest desire for their salvation. Compare Acts 20:31; Philippians 3:18.

4. People easily mistake plain instruction, Matthew 16:7. And especially is this the case where there is any chance of giving a worldly turn to the instruction. If people’s thoughts - even those of Christians were more off from the world, and they thought less of the supply of their temporal wants, they would understand the truths of religion much better than they do. No man can understand the doctrines of religion aright whose principal concern is what he shall eat, and drink, and wear. Hence, even Christians are often strangely ignorant of the plainest truths of religion; and hence the importance of teaching those truths to children before their thoughts become engrossed by the world; and hence, too, the importance of Sunday schools.

5. We should not have undue anxiety about the supply of our wants. Christ supplied many thousands by a word, and he can easily supply us, Matthew 16:9-12.

6. We should learn, from his past goodness, to trust him for the future, Matthew 16:9-12.

7. We should be on our guard against error, Matthew 16:11. It is sly, artful, plausible, working secretly, but effectually. We should always be cautious of what we believe, and examine it by the word of God. False doctrines are often made as much like the truth as possible, for the very purpose of deceiving. “Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light,” 2 Corinthians 11:14.

8. It is important to ascertain our views of Christ, Matthew 16:13-15. Our all depends on this. If we do not think and feel right respecting him we cannot be safe. We should often, then, ask ourselves - we should ask one another - what we think of Christ.

9. It is our duty to profess attachment to Christ. It should be done boldly, and always, Matthew 16:16. We should never be ashamed of him. And to do this, we should always, in our own hearts, believe that he is the Christ, the Son of the living God.

10. We should esteem it a great happiness and honor to be enabled thus to show our attachment to him. The world may not honor us, but God will, and He will pronounce us blessed, Matthew 16:17.

11. God only reveals to people right views of Christ, Matthew 16:17. This he does by his word and Spirit. We should, then search the Bible; and we should pray much that God would reveal his Son in us, and enable us boldly to confess him before people.

12. The church is safe, Matthew 16:18. It may be small - it may be feeble - it may weep much - it may be much opposed and ridiculed - it may have mighty enemies - the rich and the great may set themselves against it - but it is safe. It is founded upon a rock. Its enemies shall never be able to overcome it. Jesus has promised it, and in all ages he has shown that he has remembered his promise. It has not been suffered to become extinct. It has been persecuted, opposed, ridiculed, and almost driven from the world; but a few have been found who have loved the Lord; and soon the flame has kindled, and the church has shone forth “fair as the sun, clear as the moon, and terrible as any army with banners.” So it is still. Feeble churches may mourn much - iniquity may abound - the few pious people may weep in secret places, but Jesus hears their groans and counts their tears, and they and the church are safe. He is their friend, and all the powers of hell shall not prevail against his church.

13. The importance of prudence in delivering truth, Matthew 16:21. It should be well-timed - it should be when people are prepared to receive it. Especially is this true of young converts. They have need of milk, and not of strong meat. They should not be surprised that many doctrines of the Bible are mysterious now, but they will fully comprehend them hereafter. Peter, a young convert, did not understand the plain doctrine that Jesus must die for sin, yet it was made clear to him later, and, most cordially, he loved it.

14. It is highly wicked and improper to attempt to counsel God, or to think that we understand things better than he does, Matthew 16:22-23. God’s plan is the best plan; and though it does not fall within our views of “wisdom,” yet we should be still. It is all wise. What He does we do not know now, yet we shall know hereafter.

15. We see what religion requires, Matthew 16:24. We must deny ourselves. We must submit to trials. We must do our duty. We must welcome persecution, Matthew 5:10. We must be, in all places, among all people, and in every employment, Christians, no matter what may happen. Come poverty, disease, persecution, death, it is ours to take up the cross and do our duty. So, apostles, and martyrs, and the Saviour himself have gone before us, and we must follow in their steps:

“Shall I be carried to the skies

On flowery beds of ease,

While others fought to win the prize

And sailed through bloody seas?

“Sure I must fight if I would reign;

Increase my courage, Lord,

To bear the cross, endure the shame,

Supported by Thy Word.”

16. How foolish are the people of this world! Matthew 16:26. In a little time how worthless will be all their wealth! It is gained by anxiety, and toil, and tears. It never satisfies. It harasses them with constant care. It smooths no wrinkles on their brow, alleviates no pain when they are sick, saves no friend from death, gives no consolation in regard to the future, and may be left at any moment. Others will soon possess, and perhaps scatter in dissipation, what they have obtained by so much toil. See Psalms 39:6. And while they scatter or enjoy it, where shall the soul of him be who spent all his probation to obtain it? Alas! Lost, lost, lost - forever lost! And no wealth, no man, no devil, no angel, can redeem him, or be given for his soul. The harvest will be past, the summer ended, and he not saved. In gaining the world he made two things certain - disappointment and trouble here, and an eternity of woe hereafter. How foolish and wicked is man!

17. The righteous should rejoice that Jesus will come again to our world. He will reward them, Matthew 16:27. He will come as their friend, and they shall ascend with him to heaven.

18. The wicked should weep and wail that Jesus will come again to our world. He will punish them for their crimes, Matthew 16:27. They cannot escape. See Revelation 1:7.

19. It will not be long before he will come, Matthew 16:28. At any rate, it will not be long before we shall meet him. Death is near; and then we must stand before him, and give an account of the deeds done in the body.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Matthew 16:26. Lose his own soul — Or, lose his life, την ψυχην αυτου. On what authority many have translated the word ψυχη, in the 25th verse, life, and in this verse, soul, I know not, but am certain it means life in both places. If a man should gain the whole world, its riches, honours, and pleasures, and lose his life, what would all these profit him, seeing they can only be enjoyed during life? But if the words be applied to the soul, they show the difficulty - the necessity-and importance of salvation. The world, the devil, and a man's own heart are opposed to his salvation; therefore it is difficult. The soul was made for God, and can never be united to him, nor be happy, till saved from sin: therefore it is necessary. He who is saved from his sin, and united to God, possesses the utmost felicity that the human soul can enjoy, either in this or the coming world: therefore, this salvation is important. See also Clarke's note on "Luke 9:25".


 
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