'BEGINNING AT JERUSALEM.'—LUKE 24:47.
From these words,
therefore, thus explained, we gain this observation: —That Jesus Christ. would
have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners.
That these Jerusalem
sinners were the biggest sinners that ever were in the world, I think none will
deny, that believe that Christ was the best man that ever was in the world,
and also was their Lord God. And that they were to have the first offer of his
grace, the text is as clear as the sun; for it saith, 'Beginning at Jerusalem.'
'Preach,' saith he, 'repentance and remission of sins' to the Jerusalem
sinners: to the Jerusalem sinners in the first place. One would a-thought since the Jerusalem sinners were the worst and greatest sinners, Christ's
greatest enemies, and those that not only despised his person, doctrine, and
miracles, but that, a little before, had had their hands up to the elbows in
his heart's blood, that he should rather have said, Go into all the world, and
preach repentance and remission of sins among all nations; and, after that,
offer the same to Jerusalem; yea, it had been infinite grace if he had said so.
But what grace is this, or what name shall we give it, when he commands that
this repentance and remission of sins, which is designed to be preached in all
nations, should first be offered to Jerusalem; in the first place to the worst
of sinners!
Nor was this the
first time that the grace, which was in the heart of Christ, thus showed itself
to the world. For while he was yet alive, even while he was yet in Jerusalem,
and perceived, even among these Jerusalem sinners, which was the vilest among
them, he still, in his preaching, did signify that he had a desire that the
worst of these worst should, in the first place, come unto him. The which he showed,
where he saith to the better sort of them, 'The publicans and the harlots go
into the kingdom of God before you' (Matt 21:31). Also, when he compared
Jerusalem with the sinners of the nations, then he commands that the Jerusalem
sinners should have the gospel at present confined to them. 'Go not,' saith he,
'into the way of the Gentiles, and into any of the cities of the Samaritans
enter ye not; but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel' (Matt
10:5,6; 23:37). But go rather to them, for they were in the most fearful
plight. These, therefore, must have the cream of the gospel, namely, the first
offer thereof, in his lifetime; yea, when he departed out of the world, he left
this as part of his last will with his preachers, that they also should offer
it first to Jerusalem. He had a mind, a careful mind, as it seems, to privilege
the worst of sinners with the fist offer of mercy, and to take from among them
a people, to be the first fruits unto God and to the Lamb.
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