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Quotes & Notes on:
Matthew 21:42
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John Wesley's Notes:
The builders-The scribes and priests, whose office it was to
build up the Church.
Is become the head of the corner-Or the chief corner stone: he is become
the foundation of the Church, on which the whole building rests, and is
the principal corner stone, for uniting the Gentiles to it, as the chief
corner stone of a house supports and links its two sides together. Ps
118:22.
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The Fourfold Gospel:
(No comment on this verse).
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Treasury of Scripture Knowledge:
* Did. Mt 21:16
* The stone. Ps 118:22,23; Isa 28:16; Zec 3:8,9; Mr 12:10,11; Lu
20:17,18 Ac 4:11; Ro 9:33; Eph 2:20; 1Pe 2:4-8
* and it is. Hab 1:5; Ac 13:40,41; Eph 3:3-9
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Robertson's Word Pictures:
The stone which (lithon hon). Inverse attraction of the antecedent
into the case of the relative. The builders rejected (apedokimasan hoi
oikodomountes). From Ps 118:22. A most telling quotation. These experts
in building God's temple had rejected the corner-stone chosen by God for
his own house. But God has the last word and sets aside the building
experts and puts his Son as the Head of the corner. It was a withering
indictment.
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William Burkitt's Notes:
Which words are the application that our Saviour makes of the foregoing
parable concerning the vineyard; which the chief priests and Pharisees
did not apprehend themselves to be concerned in, till he brought the
application of it home unto them. Therfore, say I unto you, the kingdom
of God shall be taken from you, &c.
Note, 1. The greatest mercy that God can bestow upon any people, is his
giving his kingdom to them; that is, all gospel ordinances, and church
privileges leading to the kingdom of heaven.
2. Observe the terms upon which God either gives or continues his
kingdom to a church and nation. And that is, upon bringing forth the
fruits thereof.
Learn, 3. That the greatest judgement which can befall a people, is the
taking away the kingdom of God from them. The kingdom of God shall be
taken from you, and given, &c.
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Family Bible Notes:
In the scriptures; Ps 118:22,1 This was a prophecy of the truths and
events represented in the parable, which were about to be fulfilled in
the crucifixion of Christ, the casting off of the Jews, and the calling
of the Gentiles into the church of God. The stone; the Lord Jesus
Christ. The builders; the Jews, and especially their leaders, the
scribes and Pharisees.
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1599 Geneva Bible Notes:
Master builders, who are chief builders of the house, that is of the
Church. (x) Began to be. (y) The chiefest stone in the corner is called
the head of the corner: which bears up the couplings or joints of the
whole building. (z) That matter (in that the stone which was cast away
is made the head) is the Lord's doing which we behold and greatly marvel
at.
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People's New Testament Commentary:
The stone which the builders rejected. "The Scripture" that speaks of
this stone is Ps 118:22,23--a psalm which the Jews applied to the
Messiah. Peter twice applied it to him (Ac 4:11; 1Pe 2:7). The figure
represents a stone rejected by the builders as worthless, and then found
to be the chief corner-stone of the building. The stone is Christ,
rejected by the Jewish nation, but "the chief corner-stone," for this is
what is meant by the "head of the corner." The "corner-stone" joined two
walls. Alford thinks this is a reference to the union of Jews and
Gentiles in the church.
Marvellous. That the rejected stone should become the "chief
corner-stone, elect and precious," on which the whole structure of the
spiritual temple rests [1Pe 2:6; Isa 28:16].
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Albert Barnes' Commentary:
Jesus saith, etc. Jesus, having led them to admit the justice of the
great principle on which God was about to act towards them, proceeds to
apply it by a text of Scripture, declaring that this very thing which
they admitted in the case of the husbandmen, had been predicted
respecting themselves. This passage is found in Ps 118:22,23. It was
first applicable to David; but no less to Jesus.
The stone. The figure is taken from building a house. The principal
stone for size and beauty is that commonly laid as the corner stone.
Which the builders rejected. On account of its want of beauty, or size,
it was laid aside, or deemed unfit to be a corner-stone. This represents
the Lord Jesus, proposed to the Jews as the foundation, or corner-stone
on which to build the church: rejected by them--the builders --on
account of his want of comeliness or beauty; i.e., of what they esteemed
to be comely or desirable, Isa 53:2,3.
The same is become, etc. Though rejected by them, yet God chose him, and
made him the foundation of the church. Christ is often compared to a
stone, a corner-stone, a tried, i.e. a sure, firm foundation--all in
allusion to the custom of building, Ac 4:11; Ro 9:33; Eph 2:20; 1Pe 2:7.
Lord's doing. The appointment of Jesus of Nazareth to be the foundation
of the church, is by miracle and prophecy proved to be the work of God.
Marvellous in our eyes. Wonderful in the sight of his people. An object
of gratitude and admiration. That he should Select his only Son; that he
should stoop so low, be despised, rejected, and put to death; that God
should raise him up, and build a church on this foundation, embracing
the Gentile as well as the Jew, and spreading through all the world, is
a subject of wonder and praise to all the redeemed.
{c} "stone" Ps 118:22; Isa 28:16; 1Pe 2:6,7
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Jamieson-Faussett Brown:
The stone which the builders rejected, &c.--A bright Messianic prophecy,
which reappears in various forms (Isa 28:16, &c.), and was made glorious
use of by Peter before the Sanhedrim (Ac 4:11). He recurs to it in his
first epistle (1Pe 2:4-6).
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Spurgeon Commentary on
Matthew:
Our Lord reminds them of David's language in (Ps 118:22,23.) They were
professedly the builders, and they had rejected him who was the chief
corner-stone. Yet the Lord God had made the despised one to be the head
of the corner. He was the most conspicuous and honored stone in Israel's
building. Against the will of scribe and priest this had been
accomplished: for it was the Lord's doing. They might rage, but
holy minds adored, and said, "It is marvelous in our eyes." The
sufferings and glory of Christ are the wonder of the universe:" which
things the angels desire to look into" (1Pe 1:12). All that relates to
him is marvelous in the eyes of his people.
The doom of the unfaithful religious builders was the result of their
sin: "Therefore say I unto you." They were to love the blessings
of the gospel: "The kingdom of God shall be arisen from you." All
share in the honors and offices of that kingdom would be refused them.
That loss would be aggravated by their seeing it "given to a nation
bringing forth the fruits thereof." What a warning is this to our own
country! We, too, are seeing the sacrifice and deity of our Lord
questioned, and his sacred Word assailed by those who should have been
its advocates. Unless there is a speedy amendment, the Lord may take
away the candlestick out of its place, and find another race which will
prove more faithful to him and to his gospel than our own has been.
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Spurgeon Devotional
Commentary:
(No comment on this verse).
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Adam Clarke's Commentary:
The stone] R. Solom. Jarchi, on Micah 5., says, this stone means the
Messiah, : Abarbanel is of the same
opinion. This seems to have been originally spoken of David who was at
first rejected by the Jewish rulers, but was afterwards chosen by the
Lord to be the great ruler of his people Israel. The quotation is taken
from Ps 118:22.
As the Church is represented in Scripture under the name of the temple
and house of God, in allusion to the temple of Jerusalem, which was a
type of it, 1Co 3:16; Heb 3:6; 1Pe 2:5; so Jesus Christ is represented
as the foundation on which this edifice is laid, 1Co 3:11; Eph 2:20,21.
The builders] The chief priests and elders of the people, with the
doctors of the law.
Rejected] An expression borrowed from masons, who, finding a stone,
which being tried in a particular place, and appearing improper for it,
is thrown aside, and another taken; however, at last, it may happen that
the very stone which had been before rejected, may be found the most
suitable as the head stone of the corner.
This passage, as applied by our Lord to himself, contains an abridgment
of the whole doctrine of the Gospel.
1. The Lord's peculiar work is astonishingly manifested in the mission
of Jesus Christ.
2. He, being rejected and crucified by the Jews, became an atonement for
the sin of the world.
3. He was raised again from the dead, a proof of his conquest over death
and sin, and a pledge of immortality to his followers.
4. He was constituted the foundation on which the salvation of mankind
rests, and the corner stone which unites Jews and Gentiles, beautifies,
strengthens, and completes the whole building, as the head stone, or
uppermost stone in the corner does the whole edifice.
5. He is hereby rendered the object of the joy and admiration of all his
followers and the glory of man. This was done by the Lord, and is
marvellous in our eyes.
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Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary:
(No comment on this verse).
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