Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Luke 7:30
But the Pharisees and lawyers rejected the counsel of God against themselves, being not baptized of him.
30. rejected the counsel of God against themselves ] i.e. nullified (Gal 2:21 ; Pro 1:24 ) the purpose of God, to their own ruin, or better, ‘with reference to themselves.’ The “purpose of God” (Act 20:27) had been their salvation (1Ti 2:4).
being not baptized of him ] They seem to have gone to the ministry of John partly out of curiosity, partly as spies (Mat 3:7); and they consistently refused to recognize him as a Prophet, although they were prevented from shewing open hostility by fear of the people (Mar 11:32).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Luk 7:30
Rejected the counsel of God against themselves
The rejection of the counsel of God by the Pharisees
There they stood on the banks of Jordan, self-complacency written on their countenances, the calm peace of death upon their hearts; whispering to one another as they heard the fervid words of the preacher, Never mind; you and I know better than that; we are not to allow ourselves to be carried away by this hot-headed enthusiast; we are too intelligent people for that; we are educated people; we have a certain refinement which, of itself, precludes our being so influenced.
That is not the man for us; we will go back to our synagogue. I like to hear the calm, quiet exposition which Rabbi So-and-so gives of the Book of the Law; it is very interesting to listen to him, but this enthusiastic fanatic does us no good: come away, come away; we have had enough. He calls us a generation of vipers. You cannot listen to a man that insults you. But the Pharisees and the lawyers rejected, &c. Yes, and that very moment the axe was laid at the root of the tree. Yet another moment, and that axe should be lifted up by the hand of Divine judgment; a few short moments more, and that stroke should fall; only a few years were to pass over their heads, and the city they gloried in, and the temple they prided themselves about, were to lie strewn along the dust. Their name was to be obliterated from the roll of the nations of the earth; their national existence was to be trampled upon; their streets were to be drenched with blood; they themselves, as a den of robbers or a gang of murderers, were to be crucified round the wall of their own city, or dragged into captivity to adorn the triumphs of a foreign conqueror. All this was already in store; the edge of the axe was already sharp, and the hand of justice was already grasping it; and, all the while, these poor self-complacent men were flattering themselves that the message was not for them. We have Abraham to our father; we are the children of privilege; what have we to fear? And so they slept their sleep; and so they rejected the counsel of God against their own souls. There are plenty of Pharisees in our own day, and they are just as true to the instincts of their own life as were the Pharisees of eighteen hundred years ago. What was the characteristic of these Pharisees? Self-complacency. They were satisfied with themselves. They had not yet found out the plague of their own hearts. (W. H. M. H. Aitken, M. A.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 30. Rejected the counsel of God] Or, frustrated the will of God – . Kypke says the verb has two meanings: – 1, to disbelieve; 2, despise, or disobey: and that both senses may be properly conjoined here. The will of God was that all the inhabitants of Judea should repent at the preaching of John, be baptized, and believe in Christ Jesus. Now as they did not repent, &c., at John’s preaching, so they did not believe his testimony concerning Christ: thus the will, gracious counsel, or design of God, relative to their salvation, was annulled or frustrated. They disbelieved his promises, despised the Messiah, and disobeyed his precepts.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
But the Pharisees and lawyers,…. Or Scribes, as the Syriac and Persic versions read; for the Scribes and lawyers were the same sort of persons. The Ethiopic version calls them, “the Scribes of the city”: these “rejected the counsel of God against themselves”; against their own advantage, to their hurt and detriment; since by their impenitence and unbelief, and through their rejection of Christ and his forerunner, and the Gospel and the ordinances of it, they brought ruin and destruction, both temporal and eternal, upon themselves: or “towards themselves”, or “unto them”; that is, they “rejected the command of God unto them”, as the Arabic version renders it: for by “the counsel of God” here, is not meant his purpose, intention, and design, with respect to these persons, which was not, nor never is frustrated; but the precept of God, and so the Ethiopic version renders it,
they despised the command of God: that is, the ordinance of baptism, which was of God, and the produce of his counsel and wisdom, as the whole scheme, and all the ordinances of the Gospel are, and not the invention of men: or they rejected this “in themselves”, as it may be rendered, and is by the Syriac and Persic versions; not openly and publicly, for they were afraid of the people, but inwardly and privately, and which their actions and conduct declared:
being not baptized of him; of John: by their neglect of this ordinance, they testified their aversion to it, and rejection of it.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Rejected for themselves ( ). The first aorist active of first seen in LXX and Polybius. Occurs in the papyri. These legalistic interpreters of the law refused to admit the need of confession of sin on their part and so set aside the baptism of John. They annulled God’s purposes of grace so far as they applied to them.
Being not baptized by him ( ‘ ). First aorist passive participle. is the usual negative of the participle in the Koine.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Lawyers [] . Not legal practitioners, but interpreters and doctors of the Mosaic law.
Rejected [] . Set aside, or annulled; made it vain through their disobedience.
Against themselves [ ] . More strictly, with reference to themselves.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
JESUS EXPOSES DULLNESS OF UNBELIEVERS V. 30-35
1) “But the Pharisees and lawyers rejected the counsel of God,” (hoi de Pharisaioe kai hoi nomiloi ten boulen tou theou ethetesan) “Then the Pharisees and the lawyers rejected (turned away from) made of none effect, the counsel of God,” Gal 2:11, by John the Baptist, who counseled them to: 1) Repent, 2) to believe on Him that was coming after him, and 3) to bring forth fruit, evidence of repentance, Mat 3:2; Mat 3:8; Act 19:4; Act 20:27.
2) “Against themselves,” (eis heautous) “With reference to themselves,” treated with contempt or despised their personal needs to repent and believe on or trust in the coming Redeemer, not the law of Moses, to save them, Mat 21:23-27; Rom 2:4-5.
3) “Being not baptized of him.” (me baptisthentes hup’ autou) “Not being (having been), therefore were not, baptized or immersed by him,” because they did not repent and believe on Him, as the savior, Joh 1:11-12; Mat 3:7-8; Luk 13:3; Luk 13:5; Act 19:4; Mat 23:37.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
30. Despised the counsel of God within themselves. The counsel of God is mentioned by way of respect, as contrasted with the wicked pride of the scribes; for the term counsel carries along with it a dignity, which protects the doctrine of God against the contempt of men. Literally, Luke says, that they despised Against Themselves : and indeed I do not disapprove of the meaning which is preferred by some, that the scribes were rebellious to their own destruction. But as Luke’s narrative is simple, and as the preposition εἰς is often used in the sense of ἐν I have chosen rather to translate it, within themselves; as meaning, that although they did not openly and expressly contradict, yet as they inwardly swelled with hidden pride, they despised within themselves
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(30) Rejected the counsel of God against themselves.The English is unhappily ambiguous, admitting the construction that the counsel which the Pharisees rejected had been against them. Better, as in Gal. 2:21, frustrated for themselves the counsel of God.
Being not baptized . . .We read in Mat. 3:7 that Pharisees and Sadducees came at first to the baptism of John, but they were repelled by the sternness of his reproof, and could not bring themselves either to confess their sins or to bring forth fruits meet for repentance.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
Luk 7:30. Rejected the counsel of God against themselves, Rejected the divine offers made to them,or, despised within themselves the purpose of God.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
30 But the Pharisees and lawyers rejected the counsel of God against themselves, being not baptized of him.
Ver. 30. Rejected the counsel of God ] Being ingrati gratiae Dei, as Ambrose speaketh, and so much the further off, for having seen the people so forward.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Luke
THWARTING GOD’S PURPOSE
Luk 7:30
Our Lord has just been pouring unstinted praise on the head of John the Baptist. The eulogium was tenderly timed, for it followed, and was occasioned by the expression, through messengers, of John’s doubts of Christ’s Messiahship. Lest these should shake the people’s confidence in the Forerunner, and make them think of him as weak and shifting, Christ speaks of him in the glowing words which precede my text, and declares that he is no ‘reed shaken with the wind.’
But what John was was of less moment to Christ’s listeners than was what they had done with John’s message. So our Lord swiftly passes from His eulogium upon John to the sharp thrust of the personal application to His hearers. In the context He describes the twofold treatment which that message had received; and so describes it as, in the description, to lay bare the inmost characteristics of the reception or rejection of the message. As to the former, He says that the mass of the common people, and the outcast publicans, ‘justified God’; by which remarkable expression seems to be meant that their reception of John’s message and baptism acknowledged God’s righteousness in accusing them of sin and demanding from them penitence.
On the other hand, the official class, the cultivated people, the orthodox respectable people-that is to say, the dead formalists-’rejected the counsel of God against themselves.’
Now the word ‘rejected’ would be more adequately rendered ‘ frustrated,’ thwarted, made void, or some such expression, as indeed it is employed in other places of Scripture, where it is translated ‘disannulled,’ ‘made void,’ and the like. And if we take that meaning, there emerge from this great word of the Master’s two thoughts, that to disbelieve God’s word is to thwart God’s purpose, and that to thwart His purpose is to harm ourselves.
I. And I remark, first, that the sole purpose which God has in view in speaking to us men is our blessing.
Now, by the gospel, which, as I say, has thus one single design in the divine mind, I mean, what I think the New Testament means, the whole body of truths which underlie and flow from the fact of Christ’s Death, Resurrection, and Ascension, which in brief are these-man’s sin, man’s helplessness, the Incarnation of the Son of God, the Death of Christ as the sacrifice for the world’s sin; Faith, as the one hand by which we grasp the blessing, and the gift of a Divine Spirit which follows upon our faith, and bestows upon us sonship and likeness to God, purity of life and character, and heaven at last. That, as I take it, is in the barest outline what is meant by the gospel of Jesus Christ.
And now I want to press upon you, dear friends, that that great and sublime body of truths made known to us, as I believe, from God Himself, has one sole object in view and none beside-viz. that every man who hears it may partake of the salvation and the hope which it brings. It has a twofold effect, alas! but the twofold effect does not imply a twofold purpose. There have been schemes of so-called Christian theology which have darkened the divine character in this respect, and have obscured the great thought that God has one end in view, and one only, when He speaks to us in all good faith, desiring nothing else but only that we shall be gathered into His heart, and made partakers of His love. He is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to the knowledge of the truth.
If so, the question comes very sharp and direct to each of us, Is that gospel fulfilling its purpose in me? There are many subordinate good things flowing from the Christian revelation, such as blessings for social outward life, which are as flowers that spring up in its path; but unless it has effected its one purpose in regard to you and me, it has failed altogether. God meant His word to save your soul. Has it done so? It is a question that any man can answer if he-will be honest with himself.
Further, this single purpose of the divine speech embraces in its intention each of the hearers of that message. I want to gather the wide-flowing generality, ‘God so loved the world that He sent His Son that whosoever believeth,’ into this sharp point, ‘God so loved me , that He sent His Son that I , believing, might have life eternal.’ We shall never understand the universality of Christianity until we have appreciated the personality and the individuality of its message to each of us. God does not lose thee in the crowd, do not thou lose thyself in it, nor fail to apprehend that thou art personally meant by His broadest declarations. It is thy salvation that Christ had in view when He became man and died on the Cross; and it is thy salvation that He had in view when He said to His servants, ‘Go into all the world’-there is universality-’and preach the Gospel to every creature’-there is individuality.
Then, further, God is verily seeking to accomplish this purpose even now, by my lips, in so far as I am true to my Master and my message. The outward appearance of what we are about now is that I am trying, lamely enough, to speak to you. You may judge this service by rules of rhetoric, or anything else you like. But you have not got to the bottom of things unless you feel, as I am praying that every one of you may feel, that even with all my imperfections on my head-and I know them better than you can tell me them-I, like all true men who are repeating God’s message as they have caught it, neither more nor less, and have sunk themselves in it, may venture to say, as the Apostle said: ‘Now, then, we are ambassadors for God, as though God did beseech by us, we pray in Christ’s stead.’ John’s voice was a revelation of God’s purpose, and the voice of every true preacher of Jesus Christ is no less so.
II. Secondly, this single divine purpose, or ‘counsel,’ may be thwarted.
Now, brethren, I said that there was only one thought in the divine heart when He sent His Son, and that was to save you and me and all of us. But that thought cannot but be frustrated, and made of none effect, as far as the individual is concerned, by unbelief. For there is no way by which any human being can become participant of the spiritual blessings which are included in that great word ‘salvation,’ except by simple trust in Jesus Christ. I cannot too often and earnestly insist upon this plain truth, which, plain as it is, is often obscured, and by many people is never apprehended at all, that when the Apostle says ‘It is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth,’ he is laying down no limitation of the universality or of the adequacy of that power, but is only setting forth the plain condition, inherent in the very nature of things and in the nature of the blessings bestowed, that if a man does not trust God he cannot get them, and God cannot give him them, though His heart yearns to give him them He cannot do it. How can any man get any good out of a medicine if he locks his teeth and won’t take it? How can any truth that I refuse to believe produce any effect upon me? How is it possible for the blessings of forgiveness and cleansing to be bestowed upon men who neither know their need of forgiveness nor desire to be washed from their sins? How can there be the flowing of the Divine Spirit into a heart which is tightly barred against His entrance? In a word, how a man can be saved with the salvation that the Gospel offers, except on condition of his simple trust in Christ the Giver, I, for my part, fail to see. And so I remind you that the thwarting of God’s counsel is the awful prerogative of unbelief.
Then, note that, in accordance with the context, you do not need to put yourselves to much effort in order to bring to nought God’s gracious intention about you. ‘They thwarted the counsel of God, being not baptized of Him.’ They did not do anything. They simply did nothing, and that was enough. There is no need for violent antagonism to the counsel. Fold your hands in your lap, and the gift will not come into them. Clench them tightly, and put them behind your back, and it cannot come. A negation is enough to ruin a man. You do not need to do anything to slay yourselves. In the ocean, when the lifebelt is within reach, simply forbear to put out your hand to it, and down you will go, like a stone, to the very bottom. ‘They rejected the counsel,’ ‘being not’-and that was all.
Further, the people who are in most danger of frustrating God’s gracious purpose are not blackguards, not men and women steeped to the eyebrows in the stagnant pool of sensuous sin, but clean, respectable church-and-chapel-going, sermon-hearing, doctrine-criticising Pharisees. The man or woman who is led away by the passions that are lodged in his or her members is not so hopeless as the man into whose spiritual nature there has come the demon of self-complacent righteousness, or who, as is the case with many a man and woman sitting in these pews now, has listened to, or at all events, has heard , men preaching, as I am trying to preach, ever since childhood, and has never done anything in consequence. These are the hopeless people. The Pharisees-and there are hosts of their great-great-grandchildren in all our congregations-’the Pharisees . . . frustrated the counsel of God.’
III. Lastly, this thwarting brings self-inflicted harm.
Consider what you lose when you will have nothing to do with that divine counsel of salvation. Consider not only what you lose, but what you bring upon yourself; how you bind your sin upon your hearts; how you put out your hands, and draw disease and death nearer to yourselves; how you cannot turn away from, or be indifferent to, the gracious, sweet, pleading voice that speaks to you from the Cross and the Throne, without doing damage-in many more ways than I have time to enlarge upon now-to your own character and inward nature. And consider how there lie behind dark and solemn results about which it does not become me to speak, but which it still less becomes me-believing as I do-to suppress. ‘After death the judgment’; and what will become of the thwarters of the divine counsel then?
These wounds, many, deep, deadly as they are, are self-inflicted. There do follow, on God’s message and unbelief of it, awful consequences; but these are not His intention. They are the results of our misuse of His gracious word. ‘Oh, Israel!’ wailed the prophet, ‘thou hast destroyed thyself’ Man’s happiness or woe is his own making, and his own making only. There is no creature in heaven or earth or hell that is chargeable with your loss but yourself. We are our own betrayers, our own murderers, our own accusers, our own avengers, and-I was going to say, and it is true -our own hell.
Dear friends! this message comes to you once more now, that Jesus Christ has died for your sins, and that if you will trust Him as your Saviour, and obey Him as your Sovereign, you will he saved with an everlasting salvation. Even through my lips God speaks to you. What are you going to do with His message? Are you going to receive it, and ‘justify’ Him, or are you going to reject it, and thwart Him? You thwart Him if you treat my words now as a mere sermon to be criticised and forgotten; you thwart Him if you do anything with His message except take it to your heart and rest wholly upon it. Unless you do you are suicides; and neither God, nor man, nor devil is responsible for your destruction. He can say to you, as His servant said: ‘Your blood be upon your own heads; I am clean.’ Jesus Christ is calling to every one of us, ‘Turn ye! turn ye! Why will ye die? As I live, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked.’
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
rejected = set aside, or annulled, by the interpretation they put upon it. Compare Gal 1:2, Gal 1:21. Pro 1:24.
counsel. Greek. boule. See App-102., and p. Eph 1:9, Eph 1:11. See also Act 2:23; Act 4:28, &c.
against = as to. Greek. eis. App-104.
of = by. Greek. hupo. App-104.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Luk 7:30. , the lawyers) Luke departs further from the Hebrew idiom than Matthew and Mark; for instance, he says even for . So often he says , meaning the same persons, I imagine, as are elsewhere called , Hebr. , scribes.[75]- ) has the effect of limiting; as far as they themselves were concerned [But Engl. Vers. against themselves]: for they were not able to set aside the counsel of God itself, [however they might frustrate the loving provision of grace in their own case.]
[75] S. B. D. Crusius, Hypomn. P. I., pp. 509, 510, has given many proofs to show that these terms , , , were used indiscriminately, so as to be defined at times from the context and scope of the speaker.-E. B. Though in Mat 28:3-5, Luk 10:25, lawyer answers to , Mar 12:28, it does not follow the two are identical; for the person may have been both a lawyer and a scribe. All that is definitely known is, that the lawyers were expounders of the law, whether publicly or privately, or both.-ED. and TRANSL.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
rejected: or, frustrated, Luk 13:34, Jer 8:8, Rom 10:21, 2Co 6:1, Gal 2:21
the counsel: Act 20:27, Eph 1:11
against: or, within
Reciprocal: Psa 107:11 – contemned Pro 1:25 – ye Isa 5:24 – cast away Mat 3:7 – the Pharisees Mat 11:12 – from Mat 19:30 – General Mat 21:32 – and ye believed Mat 22:35 – a lawyer Mar 10:2 – the Pharisees Mar 10:31 – General Luk 5:17 – that there Luk 5:30 – General Luk 10:25 – a certain Luk 18:10 – a Pharisee Joh 1:24 – were of Joh 7:26 – Do Joh 10:41 – but Joh 12:48 – rejecteth Tit 3:11 – being Tit 3:13 – the lawyer
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
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To reject an ordinance of God is interpreted as rejecting Him. The lawyers were men who were acquainted with the law of Moses and interpreted it to others.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
7:30 But the Pharisees and lawyers rejected the counsel of God {d} against themselves, being not baptized of him.
(d) To their own hurt.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
However, the Pharisees and lawyers (scribes) did not submit to John’s baptism showing that they had rejected God’s purpose, namely, His plan of salvation for them.