-
Verse Luke 18:14. _WENT DOOM TO HIS HOUSE JUSTIFIED_] His sin blotted
out; and himself accepted.
_RATHER THAN THE OTHER_] Η εκεινος: that is, the other was
_not_ accepted, because he _exalted_ himse...
-
I TELL YOU - The Pharisees would have said that the first man here was
approved. Jesus assures them that they judged erroneously. God judges
of this differently from people.
JUSTIFIED - Accepted or ap...
-
CHAPTER 18
_ 1. The Unjust Judge and the Avenging of His Elect. (Luke 18:1)_
2. The Parable of the Pharisee and the Publican. (Luke 18:9)
3. The Little Children and the Required Lowliness. (Luke 18...
-
PARABLE OF THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN (Lk. only). In Luke 18:9 we
should perhaps translate concerning those who trusted, etc. The
parable, not necessarily spoken on the same occasion as the precedi...
-
Jesus spoke this parable to some who were self-confidently sure that
they were righteous and who despised others. "Two men went up to the
Temple to pray. The one was a Pharisee, the other a tax-collec...
-
UNWEARIED IN PRAYER (Luke 18:1-8)...
-
TO. unto. Greek. _eis._ App-104.
JUSTIFIED. Reckoned as righteous.
RATHER THAN. The texts read "compared with", Greek. _para._ App-104.
THE OTHER. that one.
FOR, &c. Repeated from Luke 14:11. Comp...
-
_went down to his house justified rather than the other_ Of the
Pharisee it might be said, "His soul which is lifted up is not upright
in him but of the Tax-gatherer, "the just shall live by his faith...
-
Luke 9:51 to Luke 18:31_. Rejected by the Samaritans. A lesson of
Tolerance._
This section forms a great episode in St Luke, which may be called
the departure for the final conflict, and is identical...
-
THE DUTY OF HUMBLE PRAYER. THE PHARISEE AND THE TAX-GATHERER...
-
CHAPS. Luke 9:51 to Luke 18:31
This section forms a great episode in St Luke, which may be called the
departure for the final conflict, and is identical with the journey
(probably to the Feast of the...
-
ΠΑΡ' ἘΚΕΙ͂ΝΟΝ אBL, Copt. Sah[314] μᾶλλον παρ'
ἐκ. D. ἢ γὰρ ἐκεῖνος AE, &c. ἢ ἐκ. Elz. If this
last reading were right the ἢ must be explained as in Luke 15:7.
[314] Sah. Sahidic Version.
14. ΔΕΔΙΚΑΙΩ...
-
par
Ver 9. And he spoke this parable to certain which trusted in
themselves that they were righteous, and despised others: 10. Two men
went up into the temple to pray; the one a Pharisee, and the oth...
-
ΚΑΤΈΒΗ _aor. ind. act. от_ ΚΑΤΑΒΑΊΝΩ (G2597)
снисходить,
ΔΕΔΙΚΑΙΩΜΈΝΟΣ _perf. pass. part. от_ ΔΙΚΑΙΌΩ
(G1344) оправдывать, провозглашать
праведным. _Perf._ указывает на
завершенное состояние; то есть...
-
DISCOURSE: 1558
THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN
Luke 18:13. _And the Publican, standing afar off, would not lift up so
muck as his eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast, saying, God
be merciful t...
-
JUSTIFIED RATHER THAN THE OTHER:— _Justified, and not the other._
Heylin. The original δεδιχαιωμενος, η εκεινος is
a peculiar idiom of the Greek language, and will not admit of a
literal construction...
-
BUTLER'S COMMENTS
SECTION 2
Proud (Luke 18:9-14)
9 He also told this parable to some who trusted in themselves that
they were righteous and despised others: 10Two men went up into the
temple to pray...
-
I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the
other: for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased; and he
that humbleth himself shall be exalted.
I TELL YOU - author...
-
22-25 Compare Luk_5:35; Mat_24:23-27; Mar_13:21-23; Joh_13:33.
25 Compare Luk_9:22.
26-27 Compare Mat_24:37-39; Gen. 7.
26 The unexpected suddenness of the coming of the Son of Mankind is
further en...
-
THE UNJUST JUDGE. THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN. THE RICH RULER
1-8. The Unjust Judge (peculiar to Lk).
There is a close connexion with what precedes. The mention of the
Second Advent leads Christ to...
-
THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN AT PRAYER (peculiar to Lk). This parable
is apparently addressed not to the Pharisees themselves, but to
certain of the disciples of Jesus who were proud of their spiritu...
-
JUSTIFIED] A favourite word of St. Paul's, employed in St. Paul's
sense, as is natural in the Pauline Gospel. 'Justify' in the NT. means
always 'to regard as just,' not 'to render just,' or 'sanctify....
-
LUKE’S GOOD NEWS
LUKE
_HILDA BRIGHT_
CHAPTER 18
TWO *PARABLES ABOUT PRAYER 18:1-14
1 THE WIDOW AND THE JUDGE 18:1-8
V1 Jesus told his *disciples a *parable. It showed that they should
continue...
-
THIS MAN WENT DOWN TO HIS HOUSE, JUSTIFIED RATHER THAN THE OTHER. —
The Greek participle is in the perfect, implying a completed and
abiding justification. There is something suggestive in the fact th...
-
Luke 18:1
CHAPTER 11
CONCERNING PRAYER.
WHEN the Greeks called man ό ανθρωπος, or the "uplooking
one," they did but crystallize in a word what is a universal fact, the
religious instinct of humanit...
-
δεδικαιωμένος, justified (here only in Gospels), a
Pauline word, but not necessarily used in a Pauline sense = pardoned.
παρʼ ἐκεῖνον (ἢ ἐκεῖνος, T.R.), in comparison
with that one (the Pharisee). The...
-
_The Pharisee and the publican_....
-
THOSE WHOM GOD ACCEPTS
Luke 18:9-17
We are taught here the spirit in which we should pray. Too many pray
“with themselves.” The only time that we may thank God for not
being as others is when we attr...
-
Two parables on prayer are here given. The first insists on its
necessity as an alternative to fainting. The second reveals the
secrets of prevailing prayer, namely, humility and a deep sense of
need....
-
If any one should ask why the Pharisee is here condemned for speaking
some few words in his own commendation, and why the like sentence was
not passed on Job, who praised himself much more; the differ...
-
HUMILITY AND PRIDE
Luke 18:9-14. _“And He spoke this parable also to certain ones,
having confidence in themselves that they are righteous, and treat
others with contempt: Two men went up into the tem...
-
3. _The Parable of the Pharisee and the Publican: Luke 18:9-14_.
VERS. 9-14. This parable is peculiar to Luke. Who are those
τινές, _certain_, to whom it is addressed? They cannot be
Pharisees. Luke w...
-
(9) And he spake this parable unto certain which trusted in
themselves, that they were righteous, and despised others: (10) Two
men went up into the temple to pray: the one a Pharisee, and the other
a...
-
The last chapter gave in the judgment of present things, another world
and eternal things in good and evil, the Lord's instruction for the
disciples after the dealings of grace in Luke 15:1-32, and th...
-
_MISCONCEPTIONS REMOVED_
‘I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than
the other: for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased; and he
that humbleth himself shall be exalt...
-
14._This man went down justified. _The comparison is not exact; for
Christ does not merely assign to _the publican _a certain degree of
superiority, as if _righteousness _had belonged alike to both, b...
-
Grace is the spring of the Christian's walk, and furnishes directions
for it. He cannot with impunity (chapter 17) despise the weak. He must
not be weary of pardoning his brother. If he have faith but...
-
I TELL YOU THAT THIS MAN,.... The publican that so freely owned
himself to be a sinner, and by his carriage acknowledged he was
unworthy of any favour; and who was treated with so much contempt by
the...
-
_And the publican, standing afar off_ 1st, Under a sense of his being
unworthy to be permitted to draw near to God, or to go up among his
people into the court of Israel, though probably a Jew, he sto...
-
JUSTIFIED; approved and accepted. Chap Luke 14:11....
-
I TELL YOU, THIS MAN WENT DOWN TO HIS HOUSE JUSTIFIED RATHER THAN THE
OTHER; FOR EVERY ONE THAT EXALTETH HIMSELF SHALL BE ABASED; AND HE
THAT HUMBLETH HIMSELF SHALL BE EXALTED.
The publican had nothin...
-
The publican:...
-
GRACE PRODUCING PERSISTENT PRAYER
(vs.1-8)
This section connects with the subjects of chapter 17. We have seen in
the four sections of that chapter that the gospel of grace produces in
the believer...
-
9-14 This parable was to convince some who trusted in themselves that
they were righteous, and despised others. God sees with what
disposition and design we come to him in holy ordinances. What the
P...
-
OLBGrk;
Justified h eceinov, we translate, RATHER THAN THE OTHER; not that the
other was at all justified by God; the other was justified by himself
only, and those of his party. The publican was just...
-
Clement of Alexandria The Instructor Book III "For he that humbleth
himself shall be exalted, and he that exalteth himself shall be
humbled."[193]
Origen de Principiis Book III
and thus was fulfille...
-
Luke 18:14 tell G3004 (G5719) you G5213 man G3778 down G2597 (G5627)
to G1519 his G846 house...
-
“I say to you, This man went down to his house accounted as
righteous rather than the other.'
Then Jesus pointed out to His listeners that it was the public servant
rather than the Pharisee who went a...
-
THE PARABLE OF THE ONE WHO TRUSTED IN HIMSELF THAT HE WAS SUPREMELY
ACCEPTABLE TO GOD, AND WAS NOT, AND THE ONE WHO WAS DOUBTFUL ABOUT HIS
ACCEPTABILITY WITH GOD WHO WAS MADE FULLY ACCEPTABLE (18:9-14...
-
Luke 18:14. I SAY UNTO YOU. Solemn application.
THIS MAN, the publican, WENT DOWN TO HIS HOUSE, returned home,
JUSTIFIED, _i.e.,_ accepted by God as righteous, in the very sense in
which Paul uses th...
-
THIS division of the Gospel of Luke, embracing nearly one third of the
whole, contains for the most part matter peculiar to this Evangelist.
A number of the incidents probably belong to an earlier per...
-
CONNECTION. This section belongs to the same period as the preceding
one; the first parable has a close connection of thought with the
predictions concerning the coming of the Son of man, while the se...
-
THIS MAN
(ουτος). This despised publican referred to contemptuously in
verse Luke 18:11 as "this" (ουτος) publican.RATHER THAN THE OTHER
(παρ' εκεινον). In comparison with (placed beside) that on...
-
Luke 18:14
Self-Righteousness.
I. We are not saved from the danger of self-righteousness by our full
knowledge and hearty recognition of the doctrines of grace. The
Pharisee did not dream of taking t...
-
Luke 18:1. _And he spake a parable unto them to this end, that men
ought always to pray, and not to faint;_
Especially, not to faint in prayer, not to become disheartened, or
weary, even if their pra...
-
Luke 18:1. And he spake a parable unto them to this end, that men
ought always to pray, and not to faint; saying, There was in a city a
judge, which feared not God, neither regarded man: and there was...
-
CONTENTS: Parable of the unjust judge. Parable of Pharisee and
publican. Little children blessed. Rich young ruler. Death and
resurrection foretold. Blind man healed near Jericho.
CHARACTERS: God, Je...
-
Luke 18:1. _Men ought always to pray, and not to faint._ We have
continual wants, and God is always ready to hear. And as we must
always be thinking of good or of evil, it is best to set the Lord
alwa...
-
THIS MAN, AND NOT THE OTHER. This is the "punch line." The tax
collector was forgiven and made right with God. [He was already a
_child of God,_ but had sinned.] This parable teaches us that the
_righ...
-
_Two men went up into the temple to pray._
WHOM THE LORD RECEIVES
Observe, from the parable--
I. HOW GOD LOOKS UPON THE HEART, RATHER THAN UPON THE OUTWARD
APPEARANCE. It is not the spoken service...
-
LUKE—NOTE ON LUKE 18:14 Jesus pronounces a shocking reversal of
common expectations (see Luke 14:11 and Introduction: Key Themes). The
Pharisee thought he was “righteous” ...
-
CHAPTER 18 VER. 1. _He spake a parable unto them to the end that._
Christ had said, at the end of the last chapter, that the Apostles and
the faithful should suffer persecutions, in which they should...
-
_CRITICAL NOTES_
Luke 18:9. UNTO CERTAIN.—This parable is not addressed to Pharisees,
but to some of His own followers who were Pharisaical at heart.
DESPISED.—Or “set at nought” (R.V.). OTHERS.—Rath...
-
EXPOSITION
LUKE 18:1
_The Lord speaks the two parables on prayer_—_the importunate widow,
and the Pharisee and publican._
LUKE 18:1
AND HE SPAKE A PARABLE UNTO THEM TO THIS END, THAT MEN OUGHT ALW...
-
Shall we turn tonight to Luke, chapter 18.
Luke tells us that Jesus now
spoke a parable to them to this end (Luke 18:1),
In other words, the purpose of the parable was to encourage people to
pray an...
-
1 Peter 5:5; 1 Peter 5:6; 1 Samuel 1:18; Daniel 4:37; Ecclesiastes
9:7;
-
This man went down — From the hill on which the temple stood,
justified rather than the other — That is, and not the other....