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johngill
October 30th, 2009

Today's Passage: Luke 23:10-12

John Gill (23 November 1697 – 14 October 1771) was an English Baptist, biblical scholar, "Jehovist", and staunch Calvinist. Born in Kettering, Northamptonshire, he attended Kettering Grammar School where he mastered the Latin classics and learned Greek by age 11. He continued self-study in everything from logic to Hebrew, his love for the latter remaining throughout his life.This section of Luke 23:10-12 taken from John Gill's Exposition of the Bible.

Key Verse:
The chief priests and the teachers of the law were standing there, vehemently accusing him. Then Herod and his soldiers ridiculed and mocked him. Dressing him in an elegant robe, they sent him back to Pilate. That day Herod and Pilate became friends-before this they had been enemies. - Luke 23:10-12

Central Truth:
Christ unites people, but your options are either for or against Him.

John Gill’s Exposition of Luke 23:10-12

And the chief priests and Scribes… The sanhedrim that followed him from Pilate’s hall, to Herod’s palace; fearing, lest Herod should be disposed to let him go, should he gratify him by working a miracle: stood; before Herod; so witnesses, and accusers, used to do; (See Gill on Mark 14:57) and vehemently accused him; of the same things they had accused him before Pilate, with great bitterness and constancy, increasing, and aggravating the charges against him.

And Herod, with his men of war… Or his soldiers, his bodyguards that attended his person, who came with him from Galilee, and were both for his security and service, and for his pomp and magnificence: set him at nought; made nothing of him; had him in no account; treated him as a silly, and contemptible creature, that could not do any thing that was reported of him; nor able to say any thing for himself; but took him to be a mere fool and idiot; and so they used him: and mocked him; as a king, and made sport and pastime with him: and arrayed him in a gorgeous robe. The Vulgate Latin renders it, “a white robe”; a token of his innocence, though not so designed by them, but rather by way of derision, as a symbol of his simplicity and folly. The Syriac version renders it, “scarlet”; and the Arabic and Persic versions, “red”. It is very likely that it was an old worn-out robe of one of the officers, or soldiers, which they put on him; in contempt of his being a king, as the Roman soldiers afterwards did, upon the same account: and sent him again to Pilate; uncondemned, not knowing what to make of him, or the charge against him, and he might be unwilling to have any hand in his death, not having forgotten the case of John the Baptist; and therefore remits him to Pilate, to do as he thought fit with him.

And the same day Pilate and Herod were made friends together… For it pleased Herod, that Pilate should show such a regard to his authority and power, as to send one that belonged to his jurisdiction to take cognizance of his case; and especially as it was a person that was much talked of, and he had long wanted to see; and Pilate, on the other hand, was pleased with Herod, that though he was one that was under his jurisdiction, and so had a right of trying the cause, and either absolve or condemn, yet chose not to use this his power, but referred the case to the Roman governor: for before they were at enmity between themselves; it may be on account of the Galilaeans, the subjects of Herod, whom Pilate had slain, whilst they were sacrificing at Jerusalem, (Luke 13:1) , which Herod might resent, as an infringement upon his authority and power; for had they been ever so deserving of punishment, it ought to have been left to him, to have inflicted it, and not the governor of Judea, who had nothing to do with them: but now matters were made up by this step of Pilate’s, in sending Christ to him, supposed to be a Galilean, and so of Herod’s jurisdiction; which was tacitly acknowledging his former conduct to be wrong, and showed a regard to Herod’s authority: and thus they were reconciled together, and agreed in their contemptuous usage, and ill-treatment of Christ, and so fulfilled (Psalms 2:1,2) .


Discussion Questions:

2 Responses to “John Gill’s Exposition of Luke 23:10-12”

  1. penny

    The scriptures prophecy has been fullfilled Christ’s suffering didn’t take God by surprise. Our lives good and bad don’t take God by surprise. He knows and cares for every detail.

  2. Candy Lee

    Good or bad, simple or complicated, God knows it all. There is no details that he does not know about. He knows our decisions before we make them. Rest and know that he is God.

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