So then, whoever breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do likewise will be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever practices and teaches them will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. Sermons
I. THE OLD TESTAMENT HAS A PLACE IN THE CHRISTIAN ECONOMY. The grounds on which this is established are worthy of consideration. 1. Its origin. The Old Testament was inspired by God. It records his words spoken to Moses and the prophets. Words of God are not to be lightly set aside, however ancient they may be. 2. Its truth. Although it is only a preliminary revelation, it.is not the less a real revelation. The truth it contains is partial, and represents an early stage in the development of Divine ideas among men; yet all truth has an eternal element in it which we may discover when we strip off the husk of its temporary form. 3. Its moral character. The Old Testament is a grand testimony to righteousness. We can never dispense with the Ten Commandments. The stern protests of the prophets against national sin stand good to-day as the utterances of an undying conscience. 4. Its spiritual life. It is difficult for a Christian to get beyond the devotional spirit of the Psalms. Private piety is revealed in the Old Testament so as to be the example and stimulus for all ages. II. THE OLD TESTAMENT IS NOT A SUFFICIENT REVELATION. It was defective by omission. It could not contain all truth, because when it was written the Jews were not capable of receiving all truth. Its limitations are those of an early stage of revelation. These are not reasons for condemning and repudiating the book. The child is not to be blamed because he is not a man. The adult man cannot afford to neglect the child even on his own account, for the child is a prophet from whom much may be learnt. Still, it cannot be denied that he lacks the man's larger wisdom and more enduring strength. The law of righteousness is not sufficient for us. It cannot create goodness. Its directions are formal and external. The deeper, more spiritual righteousness can only be realized when the Law is written on the heart, and this is done, as Jeremiah predicted, only under the new covenant (Jeremiah 31:33). III. CHRIST FILLS UP THE DEFICIENCIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT REVELATION. In this sense he fulfils it. He does not only fulfil prophecy by doing what is therein predicted, but he makes the whole revelation of God perfect by filling up the lacunae that appear in the Old Testament. 1. By leading from the letter to the spirit. The Law is not perfected till its inner meaning is discovered and its living spirit brought forth. 2. By exhibiting in life what the Old Testament reveals in word. The Law had never been perfectly kept till Christ came. Then he was absolutely faithful to it, and thus he satisfied its claims. 3. By giving men power to keep the Law. Not in the letter, which is superfluous, but in the spirit, which is essential. 4. By including the inferior older revelation in his new and most perfect revelation. The acorn disappears that the oak may be seen; but it is not destroyed, it is only developed, and its glorification is accomplished by the larger growth which abolishes its own peculiar form and structure. - W.F.A.
Break one of these least commandments. Man is set free from the curse of the law, but not from its authority.I. Let us consider these minor violations of the moral law as they are considered IN RELATION TO THE LAWGIVER HIMSELF. The least commandment has the same authority as the greatest. Little sins will soon acquire all the gigantic proportions of the greatest. It is no paradox to say, that little sins are peculiarly offending in the sight of God, because they are little; in other words, because we run the risk of offending Him for what on our own showing we care very little about, and from which we only expect an insignificant return. It would aggravate the venality of a Judge that the bribe was so paltry. The least sin is aggravated by the small degree of temptation by which it is accompanied. II. THE AWFUL DANGER OF THESE LITTLE SINS IN REGARD TO OURSELVES. Little sins leave men hardly conscious float they have broken God's law; great sins stir up piercing thoughts. See the peril of little sins, as they are sure to draw greater ones after them. It is fool's sport to play with firebrands. The multiplication of little sins show how we need the merit of an infinite atonement. (D. Moore, M. A.) I. That all the law of God is binding on Christians (James 2:10).II. That all the commands of God should be preached in their proper place by Christian ministers. III. That they who pretend that there are any laws of God so small that they need not obey them, are unworthy of His kingdom. IV. That true piety has respect to all the commands of God, and keeps them (Psalm 119:64). (Dr. A. Barnes.) I. Christ does not hereby authorise us to suppose any of His commandments to be little. The meaning is — anything contained under or included in them, though seemingly small to us; as anger, scornful speaking, and reviling is the sin of murder. II. As little in it, as he accounts of them; that is nothing; they shall be excluded. (1) (2) (3) (Thomas Adam.) That an act in itself inconsiderable, may indicate the existing state of feeling, as clearly as one that is more palpable. As the motion of a leaf shows the quarter from which the wind blows as certainly as the agitated branches of an oak, so you may gather any one's dislike, though he does not strike you, or abuse you, or attempt insidiously to destroy your reputation. Only let him receive you with coldness, and his disaffection is as indisputable as if it were manifest in angry assault .... Is it not evident that the man who has brought himself to the perpetration of one fraud, has broken down the only security against the perpetration of a score, lie who can be the oppressor of a few, wants only the means to become the despot of an empire.(C. Williams.) If we would save the big ship, let us stop the small leak. If we would save the palace from flames, let us put out the spark.(Newman Hall.) I. What is meant by the "LEAST COMMANDMENT." It must not be understood as if one commandment were less necessary to be obeyed than another; God's commands are all alike necessary.1. They are all enjoined by the same authority. 2. They are all necessary to be performed in order to eternal life. But when Christ speaks of the least commandment, He alludes(1) to the corrupt doctrine of the Scribes distinguishing God's commands into small and great.(2) Those commandments which are great in respect of the Lawgiver, may yet be least in comparison with other commands of the same law, which are indeed thought greatest. This inequality arises from the inequality of the objects about which they are concerned, our duty to God or man. Sometimes it arises from the latitude that any command hath in it, to our thoughts, words, or actions; a thought is said to be less than an action. II. What is meant by "BEING LEAST IN THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN." Either the kingdom of grace, the Church, heaven. Little sins carry great guilt and bring heavy condemnation. 1. This appears in that the least sin is a most high affront and provocation of the great God. 2. It is a violation of a holy and strict law. 3. What a complicated evil every sin is, that the commission of the least makes you guilty of the greatest. 4. The authority of the great God seems more to be despised by the commission of small sins than by the commission of great. 5. Little sins do greatly deface the image of God in the soul. In curious pictures, a little scratch is a great deformity. 6. Little sins have in them ordinarily of temptation, and therefore more of wilfulness. 7. Little sins do maintain the trade and course of sinning. III. The evil and danger of little sins hath been made apparent: I shall add farther proofs of their AGGRAVATED GUILT. 1. Little sins usually are the destroying sins. 2. Small sins — what they want in weight, usually make up in number. A ship may have a heavy burden of sands, as well as of millstones; and may be as soon sunk with them. 3. It is very difficult to convince men of the great evil and danger of little sins. 4. The allowance of the least sin is a certain sign of a rotten heart. 5. Little sins usually make way for the vilest. (1) (2) 6. Little sins are the greatest provocations; murder is a reproach to all; unbelief does not provoke public scandal. 7. Damnation for little sins will be most intolerable — here for such little sins! IV. APPLICATION: 1. If little sins have so much danger, what shall we think of great impieties? 2. Then behold a fearful shipwreck of all the hopes of formalists. 3. What absolute need we stand in of Christ. 4. What cause we have to bemoan and humble ourselves before God. 5. Pray for a tender conscience. 6. Keep alive reverent thoughts of God. 7. Get a more thorough sense of the spirituality of the law. (Bp. Hopkins.) The devil cannot expect always to receive such returns of great and crying impieties: but yet, when he keeps the stock of corruption going, and drives on the trade of sinning by lesser sins, believe it, corruption will be on the thriving hand, and you may grow rich in guilt, and treasure up to yourselves wrath against the day of wrath, by adding those that you call little sins unto the heap.(Bp. Hopkins.) If Satan prevails with us to go with him one step out of our way, we axe in danger to stop nowhere till we come to the height of all profaneness: he will make us take a second, and a third, and so to travel on to destruction; for each of these is but one step: the last step of sin is but one step, as well as the first; and if the devil prevail with us to take one step, why should he not prevail with us to take the last step as well as the first step, seeing it is but one? Your second sin no more exceeds your first, than your first doth your duty; and so of the rest.(Bp. Hopkins.) As you see in rivers, the natural course of them tends to the sea; but the tide, joining with them, makes the current run the swifter and the more forcibly: so is it with sin. Little sins are the natural stream of a man's life; that do of themselves tend hell-ward, and are of themselves enough to carry the soul down silently and calmly to destruction: but, when greater and grosser sins join with them, they make a violent tide, that hurries the soul away with a more swift and rampant motion down to hell, than little sins would or could do of themselves.(Bp. Hopkins.) A tender conscience is like the apple of a man's eye: the least dust that gets into it afflicts it.(Bp. Hopkins.) People JesusPlaces Galilee, JerusalemTopics Acknowledged, Annuls, Break, Breaks, Commandments, Commands, Goes, Heaven, Heavens, Keeps, Kingdom, Laws, Least, Loose, Named, Practices, Practise, Practises, Reign, Relaxes, Smallest, Teach, Teaches, TeachingOutline 1. Jesus' sermon on the mount:3. The Beattitudes; 13. the salt of the earth; 14. the light of the world. 17. He came to fulfill the law. 21. What it is to kill; 27. to commit adultery; 33. to swear. 38. He exhorts to forgive wrong, 43. to love our enemies; 48. and to labor after perfection. Dictionary of Bible Themes Matthew 5:19 2378 kingdom of God, characteristics 1611 Scripture, inspiration and authority 2333 Christ, attitude to OT Library Agree with Thine AdversaryEversley, 1861. Windsor Castle, 1867. St. Matthew v. 25, 26. "Agree with thine adversary quickly, whiles thou art in the way with him; lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the judge, and the judge deliver thee to the officer, and thou be cast into prison. Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing." This parable our Lord seems to have spoken at least twice, as He did several others. For we find it also in the 12th … Charles Kingsley—All Saints' Day and Other Sermons June 9. "Ye are the Light of the World" (Matt. v. 14). The Eighth Beatitude Salt Without Savour The First Beatitude The Second Beatitude The Fourth Beatitude The Fifth Beatitude The Sixth Beatitude The Seventh Beatitude The New Sinai The Lamp and the Bushel The New Form of the Old Law 'Swear not at All' Non-Resistance The Law of Love Redemption On that which is Written in the Gospel, Matt. v. 16, "Even So Let Your Light Shine Before Men, that they May See Your Good Works, On the Words of the Gospel, Matt. v. 22, "Whosoever Shall Say to his Brother, Thou Fool, Shall be in Danger of the Hell of Fire. " Upon Our Lord's SermonOn the Mount The Christian Aim and Motive. A Call to Holy Living Persistency in Wrong Doing. 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