Lectionary Calendar
Friday, July 18th, 2025
the Week of Proper 10 / Ordinary 15
the Week of Proper 10 / Ordinary 15
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Bible Commentaries
The Church Pulpit Commentary Church Pulpit Commentary
Copyright Statement
These files are public domain.
Text Courtesy of BibleSupport.com. Used by Permission.
These files are public domain.
Text Courtesy of BibleSupport.com. Used by Permission.
Bibliographical Information
Nisbet, James. "Commentary on Matthew 26". The Church Pulpit Commentary. https://studylight.org/commentaries/eng/cpc/matthew-26.html. 1876.
Nisbet, James. "Commentary on Matthew 26". The Church Pulpit Commentary. https://studylight.org/
Whole Bible (43)New Testament (15)Gospels Only (5)Individual Books (11)
Verses 6-7
THE DISCIPLESHIP OF LOVE
âNow when Jesus was in Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper, there came unto Him a woman having an alabaster box of very precious ointment, and poured it on His head.â
Matthew 26:6-7
This incident of the anointing by Mary represents the type of discipleship which shows supreme love to Christ.
I. The discipleship of love sacrifices its best for Christ.â
( a) Maryâs alabaster cruse of exceeding precious ointment was the best thing in her possession. The bargaining faculty of Judas saw in it âabove three hundred penceâ=£10 12s. 6d.
( b) But she poured infinitely more than this. It was the symbol and expression of love and communion (Psalms 133). Wealth is in the heart rather than in the alabaster cruse.
( c) Noble love seeks out an object worthy of itself. Christ was to Mary that âone thing needfulâ (St. Luke 10:41).
II. It has its reward in His commendation.â
( a) âWhy trouble ye the woman?â The conduct of the disciples was uncivil towards the Lord Himself.
( b) âShe hath wrought a good work upon Me.â A work of love to Christ is a âgood workâ in the highest sense.
( c) âFor ye have the poor always with you; but Me ye have not always.â The highest form of love to our neighbour comes through love to Christ.
( d) âShe did it for My burial.â Great expense was by custom allowed in funeral rites (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:14; St. Luke 23:56).
Deeds of Christian love have deeper meaning than love comprehends. Jesus comprehends the deepest meaning. In due time He will reveal it.
III. There is an immortality in goodness.â
( a) Maryâs was an âeverlasting deed.â It is a âmemorial of her,â i.e. to bring to mind her amiable and devout character.
( b) Only God can guarantee the immortality of any action. Here there is a prophecy which proves the divinity of Christ.
( c) Note here a tacit intimation that Christ intended that a written record of His life should accompany the preaching of His religion.
( d) The memorial of this âgood deedâ is more widespread as it is more enduring than the fame of the deeds of the Cæsars.
Verse 8
THE BEST IS NOT TOO GOOD
âTo what purpose is this waste?â
Matthew 26:8
I. The origin of the question.âHow do these words emerge again and again from the deep of menâs hearts and find utterance more or less distinct from their lips! Sometimes they are words of disciples spoken in simplicity and good faith. Sometimes they spring out of a far more bitter root.
II. The odour of the ointment.âHow much time, for instance, the Christian man must seem to the votary of this world to be throwing away in meditation and prayer. The world grudges and resents any signal outbursts of feeling and passion, any manifest warmth and heat of the affections, in any of the services offered to God. To be drunk with wine it can understand and pardon, but not to be âfilled with the Spirit.â And not otherwise is it when the inner devotion of heart finds utterance in some costly offering of the hands. While the Church is filled with the odour of the ointment, there will not be wanting some to exclaim, âTo what purpose is this waste?â
III. The best demanded.âBut see how our Lord silenced the murmurers, allowed and accepted the gift. âShe hath wrought a good work upon Me.â No cold utilitarianism is to reign in Christâs Churchâno niggard calculation of the cheapest rate at which He may be served. The best which any man can bring to Him is not too good, the richest and the rarest is not too rich and rare for Him.
âArchbishop Trench.
Illustration
âA Christian gentleman, when blamed by his partner for doing so much for the cause of God, replied, âYour foxhounds cost more in one year, than my religion ever cost in two.â â
Verses 21-22
IS IT I?
âAnd as they did eat, He said, Verily I say unto you, that one of you shall betray Me. And they were exceeding sorrowful, and began every one of them to say unto Him, Lord, is it I?â
Matthew 26:21-22
It was a moment of dismay among the disciples of Jesus. Each manâs anxiety is turned towards himself, and they ask one after another, âLord, is it I?â There are times in the lives of us all when that comes to us which came here to Christâs disciples, occasions when our self-complacency is shaken and the sense of our own possibilities of sin awakened. Let us consider some of them:â
I. When other men sin frequently.âThe act is repugnant, but yet the act is human. Just as the goodness of the best men makes that goodness seem not impossible to us, so the wickedness of the worst stirs up the sense of the human power of sinfulness which we too possess.
II. When we commit a venial sin.âWe recognise the deep power of sinfulness by which we do it. The least impurity, with some hideous spectre of lust rising before you, makes you cry out: âOh, is it I? Can I come to that?â
III. When men suspect us.âThe charge or insinuation may be utterly unwarrantable and false, but the mere fastening of the sin and our name together must turn our eyes in upon ourselves and set us to asking, âIs it impossible?â
IV. When men praise us.âThis should awaken within us the sense of how bad we have the power to be. No true man is ever so humble and so afraid of himself as when others are praising him most loudly.
V. When we are tempted.âTo resist temptation is never an exhilarating experience. We remember too vividly how near we came to yielding. The man who dares to laugh at a temptation which he has felt and resisted is not yet wholly safe out of its power. What is all this but saying that in every serious moment of life the possibility of sinning stands before us. Is this calculated to help or harm? Turn and study the Bible picture of human life portrayed in the scene before us. âLord, is it I?â We compare it with our own human life, and it explains everything. In the doubters of themselves we see the weakness which comes of self-knowledge, and the distressed cry, âLord, is it I?â as one hears the announcement of some dreadful sin; in the faithful believers in Christ we see that wondering faith which cries âLord, is it I?ââbut it is the cry of those who âare strong in the Lord and in the power of His might.â
âBishop Phillips Brooks.
Illustration
âBetter lose sight of the mysterious capacity of life altogether than to see one side onlyâbetter forget that you are a sinner, and never dare to realise what a sinner you are, or may be, if there be no Saviour to save you from sin; but if there is, and you see Him, then feel the depth below you, and let it make you cling to Him more closely; realise the power of sinfulness, even in its worst forms, that you may realise also the power of holiness in all its beauty; know what a sinner you might have been, that you may know more deeply the salvation which has saved you,â
Verse 33
OVER-CONFIDENCE
âPeter answered and said unto Him, Though all men shall be offended because of Thee, yet will I never be offended.â
Matthew 26:33
No other apostle makes us feel so much at home with him as St. Peter. He is one of the three or four of whom we know most. We know his sad history as related in this chapter. What was the secret of it all?
I. The confidence of inexperience.âSt. Peterâs over-confidence was first of all the confidence of inexperience, aided by lack of imagination. It is repeated again and again under our eyes at the present day. Castles in the air are built by inexperienced virtue to be demolished, alas, at the first touch of the realities of vice.
II. Reliance upon natural temperament.âAnd once more St. Peterâs over-confidence would seem to have been due in part to his natural temperament and to his reliance on it. Impetuosity was the basis of his character; it had stood him in good stead; it had, no doubt, been strengthened by exercise during his earlier years as a fisherman of the Galilean lake. Godâs grace does not destroy the natural character; it purifies, it raises, it sanctifies character.
III. A warning note to ourselves.âWhat this episode really teaches us is to measure well, if possible, our religious language, especially the language of fervour and devotion. When religious language outruns practice or conviction, the general character is weakened; it is weakened by any insincerity; it is especially weakened by insincerity addressed to the All-true. Let us be sparing of free professions of our own.
âCanon Liddon.
Illustration
âThe country lad who has been brought up in a Christian home, and is coming up to some great business house in London, makes vigorous protestations of what he will and will not do in a sphere of life of the surroundings of which he can as yet form no true idea whatever. The emigrant who is looking forward to spend his days in a young colony where the whole apparatus of Christian and civilised life is yet in its infancy or is altogether wanting, makes plans, leaving the nature of a situation of which he cannot at all as yet from the nature of the case take the measure, altogether out of account. The candidate for holy orders who anticipates his responsibilities from afar, gathering them from books, gathering them from occasional intercourse with clergymen, makes resolutions which he finds have to be revised by the light of altogether unforeseen experiences. St. Peter never knew what it was to be the only human being loyal to Christ, until he sat in that outer court of the high priestâs palace, and the terrible isolation was too much for him.â
Verse 38
FELLOWSHIP WITH CHRIST
âThen saith He unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death: tarry ye here, and watch with Me.â
Matthew 26:38
The subject of our thoughts is our Lordâs appeal to the sympathy of His disciples in this the hour of His soul-sorrow.
I. Fellowship with Christ.âFrom whom did He ask this sympathy? Was it from the world? Oh no! He had never received aught from the world but a thorn-crown and a cross! It was to His beloved disciples. None but the holy were admitted to share the loneliness, the solitude, the sorrow of that hour. And still He permits us to have âfellowship with Him in His sufferings,â and to feel the âpower of His resurrection.â If this be so, see that you cultivate a tender, holy sympathy with Christ in His soul-sorrow for your sins.
II. Watching with Christ.âAnd what was the nature of the sympathy which our Lord now asked? â Tarry ye here, and watch with me.â He only asked for their silent presence, yet how painful was His disappointment. Yet His reproof was so considerate. The Lord Jesus is not only cognisant of our shortcomings, but He remembers that we are dust.
III. Sympathy one with another.âIt cannot involve either a charge of weakness or sin, our felt reliance upon the sympathy, compassion, and help of our fellow-Christians. Yet sometimes it disappoints us. To what did Jesus resort when, sad and disappointed, He turned from this dried stream of human sympathy? He gave Himself again to prayerâHe returned a third time to His Father. O blessed lesson He would thus teach us! We shall find in prayer all, and infinitely more, than we sought, and failed to find, in the holy watchers around us.
âDr. Octavius Winslow.
Illustrations
(1) âAlexander the Great slept on the field of Arbela, and Napoleon on that of Austerlitz. Homer, in the Iliad, represents sleep as overcoming all men, even the gods, except Jupiter alone.â
(2)âOh, ask not, hope thou not, too much
Of sympathy below;
Few are the hearts whence one sure touch
Bids the sweet fountains flow;
Fewâand, by still conflicting powers,
Forbidden here to meet;
Such ties would make this life of ours
Too fair for aught so fleet.â
âYet scorn thou not, for this, the true
And steadfast love of years;
The kindly, that from childhood grew,
The faithful to thy tears!
If there he one that oâer the dead,
Hath in thy grief home part;
And watchâd through sickness by thy bed,
Call his a kindred heart.â
Verse 39
THE AGONY IN THE GARDEN
âAnd He went a little farther, and fell on His face, and prayed.⦠let this cup pass from Me.â
Matthew 26:39
Why was our Blessed Lord in such distress? It is not sufficient to say that it was because of physical fear. What was it that caused Him such anguish of heart and mind?
I. The hour and the power of darkness.âIn the first place, it was both the hour and the power of darkness. The expression âdarknessâ surely alludes to Satan and to his emissaries. The enemies of God and man were allowed to have their way for the time being. The Son of God was almost in the very grip of the devil.
II. The consciousness of manâs sin.âSecondly, there was the consciousness that the vast majority of mankind loved the things which He hated, and would not accept salvation and the holiness it carried with it.
III. âHe bare the sin of manyâ.âThirdly, the real meaning of the agony lies in the work the Messiah had to do in saving sinners. The real key to our Lordâs agony is in Isaiah 53 To apply the language of Isaiah 53. To any human being, or to any nation, as the Jews do, is out of the question. Our Blessed Master was our Substitute. âHe loved me, and gave Himself for me,â and bore this agony for my sake.
IV. What is our attitude?âAfter studying the agony, we should, as a consequence, have a horror of sin. If there is no sympathy with Jesus in his agony, sin is not understood, and if there is no sympathy with Jesus in His agony, there is no gratitude towards Him, no love for Him.
âCanon MâCormick.
Illustration
âIn one of the finest passages in the English language, Cardinal Newman, before he left the Church of England, referred to the agony in the most eloquent terms. Taking the ideas that are conveyed to us in this chapter, he said that our Blessed Lord had all the sin of the whole world laid upon Him. All the lies, all the adulteries, all the murders, all the selfishness, all the cruelty, all the sins that the human mind could imagine were heaped upon Him, until, as it were, they reached up to heaven, and that He had to bear the punishment that was due to these sins. The idea is a marvellous idea.â
Verse 41
TO STAND WHEN FLESH IS WEAK
âThe spirit ⦠is willing.â
Matthew 26:41
Appreciate St. Peterâs willing and fervent spirit. In Christâs presence brave; miscalculated powers for the conflict.
To stand when flesh is weak, we mustâ
I. Realise what we are.âAre we âwillingâ ones on Christâs side? Our position not that of enemies, or traitors, but are we wholly willing servants?
II. Realise the conflict.âThe lower nature, âflesh,â not to be yielded to. Take the decided line. Watch; pray; fight; no tampering with old sins. Get away from low levels.
III. Strengthen the spiritual nature. Use means of grace steadily.
IV. Look much at Jesus Christ.âHe enables; He will keep those who depend on Him.
âThe Rev. F. S. Legg.
Verse 63
THE HIGH PRIESTâS QUESTION
âAnd the high priest answered and said unto him, I adjure Thee by the living God, that Thou tell us whether Thou be the Christ, the Son of God.â
Matthew 26:63
It was quite in keeping with the character of Caiaphas, that he would ignore all the decencies of a judicial investigation. The false witnesses having failed to agree, Caiaphas felt sure that if Christ were solemnly appealed to on the point of His Divine pretensions, He would speak out unhesitatingly, and the result, of course, would be immediately fatal to Him.
I. The high priestâs question.âCaiaphas, therefore, rises from his seat, and coming forward, drawing himself up to his full height, begins to examine the Prisoner at the bar. He seems to have two questions. First, was He the Christ? This was a comparatively innocuous inquiry. The Jewish people were expecting a Christ. Well, to this inquiry the Saviour replied that it was useless for Him to speak on the subject, seeing that theyâHis judgesâhad, to His certain knowledge, pre-judged the question. Then the second and more awful question is put, and we observe that the area of it is widenedâthat there is something added to the conception of the Christ, in order that the Answerer may be brought within sweep of the charge of blasphemy. âIn the name of God, tell us who you are?â or, in the exact words of Scripture, âI adjure Thee, by the Living God, that Thou tell us whether Thou be the Christ, the Son of God.â
II. Christâs reply.âWhat does this mysterious Man say about Himself? He accepts the title. He announces that He is the Son of God; and He is immediately condemned to death by the unanimous vote of the Sanhedrists on the charge of blasphemyâaye, and He deserved the condemnation, if He be not the eternal Son of God! And if He be, what are we to expect for those who reject and disown Him!
III. The Godhead of Jesus Christ lies at the very foundation of character; and without it the whole edifice is a rotten structure and collapses at a touch. And the Godhead of Jesus Christ runs like a golden thread throughout the Scriptures, from the beginning of the Old Testamentâwhere it appears in the doctrine of the angel of the covenantâdown to the very last chapter of the New. And if we wish to find a passage in which is concentrated the most striking, the most emphatic, and the most convincing teaching on the subject, we cannot do better than to repeatedly study with thankfulness and prayer the narrative of the trial of Jesus Christ before the Sanhedrists of Jerusalem.
Prebendary Gordon Calthrop.
Illustration
âIf the Godhead of Jesus Christ be a mere fiction, as some affirm it to be; if it is only the outcome of human admiration for the most remarkable character that ever appeared upon earth, what an opportunity is now presented to the Lord, of stating the truth about Himself, and stating it so clearly, so distinctly, so emphatically, so conclusively, that there shall never be any more doubt whatever resting upon the subject. Were He no more than man, He might have said soânay, He was bound to say so, if only to save you and me, and the millions of those who have professed faith in His name from the curse of idolatrous worship into which we have fallen; for idolatrous we assuredly are, if Jesus be not God from God, Light of Light, the Only-Begotten of the Father.â
Verse 64
THE ADVENTS OF CHRIST
âHenceforth ye shall see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of power, and coming on the clouds of heaven.â
Matthew 26:64, R.V
âHenceforwardââyou lose everything if you are content to read vaguely âhereafterâânay, but from this dark hour of the scourging and the crossââye shall see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of power, and coming on the clouds of heaven.â It is absolutely certain that He said this, for no man then alive could have devised it.
I. His coming to His enemies.âSee what happened. From the very first something mars the triumph of His enemies. It is spoiled by the insulting inscription which declared that the Romans are crucifying no impostor, but the very and actual King of the Jews. Do you not understand the prediction that they should very quickly know who was the real Master of events? Do you wonder that their restless terror asked for a guard to secure the only security they hadâthe corpse? This wasâ His coming to them âhenceforward.â The Church has expected, is expecting, Christ in bodily presence, but this must not blind us to her other certainties, one, that He is always present with His own; and the other, that He is continually coming into the world which denies Him.
II. His coming to the Church.âWith the earliest preaching of Christianity a new force and also a new consciousness is apparent to every careful student of history. Men are now really inspired by the sense that right is secure of triumph, and wrong certain to go down. The belief that all evil is a doomed thing, and its empire an illusion, a dream of the night, has become a vital, urgent conviction, which men will stand by, to live or die. This is what Christ announced, and this, He said, would be His own work, His own constant coming, in judgments which foreshadow the last.
III. His coming to the world.âHe came, when the hypocrisies of Jerusalem were smothered in her ashes. He came in the sack of imperial Rome; and with Luther, when the Church itself seemed to totter, so stern was His visitation of her sins. God is opening our eyes to discern that His war is declared against every social wrong, until youth and maidenhood shall not forfeit all the sweetness of life, and its loveliness, and its dignity, because their father labours with his hands, nor yet because their lot is cast in Africa or Indian darkness.
Bishop G. A. Chadwick.
Illustration
âWhen the first Napoleon fell, Rocklitz said to Goethe, whom we cannot call even a good man, âLet us give the glory to God, and acknowledge His moral government of His world.â âAcknowledge it!â said Goethe solemnly, and stopping short in his walk. âWho can help acknowledging it? But, for my part, in silence.â âAnd why in silence?â said his friend. âBecause, who can express it, save for himself; for others, who? And when one knows that he cannot utter it, it is not allowable.â â