Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Luke 9:21
And he straitly charged them, and commanded [them] to tell no man that thing;
21. commanded them to tell no man ] For these perhaps among other reasons:-1. Because His work was not yet finished. 2. Because as yet their faith was very weak and their knowledge very partial. 3. Because they had not yet received the Holy Spirit to give power to their testimony. 4. Because the public proclamation of the truth would have precipitated the workings of God’s foreordained plan ( prothesis, Eph 1:9; Eph 3:11).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And he strictly charged them, and commanded them,…. Though he highly approved of this their confession, and pronounced Peter blessed upon it; and signified that it was a discovery which flesh and blood could not make, but what was made to him his Father: yet he gave them a strict charge, and laid his commands on them,
to tell no man that thing; that he was the Messiah, and the eternal Son of God, and the true God, as well as the son of man, and really man: the reasons for this: [See comments on Mt 16:20].
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
To tell this to no man ( ). Indirect command with the negative infinitive after
commanded (). It had been necessary for Jesus to cease using the word
Messiah () about himself because of the political meaning to the Jews. Its use by the disciples would lead to revolution as was plain after the feeding of the five thousand (Joh 6:15).
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
He straitly charged [] . The word implies an emphatic, solemn charge; its meaning being, strictly, to lay a penalty upon one, and thence, to charge under penalty.
No man [] . The conditional negative : no man, whoever he might be.
22 – 27. Compare Mt 16:21 – 28; Mr 8:31 – 38; Mr 9:1.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “And he straitly charged them, and commanded them,” (ho de epitimesas autos perengeilen) “Then warning he charged them,” and directed them, Mat 16:20.
2) “To tell no man that thing:” (medeni legin toueo) “To tell no one this,” Mar 8:30, that He was (existed as) the Messiah, the anointed ruler of God, lest they hastily demand of Him that He set up the kingdom of David at once, in opposition to Roman rule, Mat 16:20.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
‘But he charged them, and commanded them to tell this to no man,’
Then Jesus commanded them not to spread around the fact that He was the Messiah. It was good that they knew, but it was better kept to themselves for it might mislead the crowds into the wrong expectations. And from now on He began to emphasise Himself as the Son of Man, and as following the path of the son of man in Daniel 7, the path of suffering that would lead to the Crown.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Luk 9:21-22 . See on Mat 16:20 f.; Mar 9:30 f. Neither the discourse of Jesus about the rock (Mat 16:17-19 ), nor His reproof of Peter as Satan (Mat 16:22 f.; Mar 8:32 f.), is found in the Pauline Luke, who did not find the former in Mark (see on Mar 8:29 ). If he had omitted the saying concerning the rock because of a tendency (Baur and others), he could not in the same interest have passed over the rebuke of Peter as Satan.
Luk 9:22 . ] argumentative. Tell no one, etc., since it is the appointment of God (Luk 24:26 ) that the Messiah, after many sufferings, etc., should attain to His Messianic attestation by the resurrection (Rom 1:4 ). Thus, for the present, the Lord quenches the ardour of that confession, that it may not interfere with that onward movement of the divine appointment which is still first of all necessary.
] on the part of . See Buttmann, Neut. Gr . p. 280 [E. T. 326].
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
Luk 9:21-27 . The cross and cross-bearing .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
straitly = strictly.
charged = charged (under penalty).
that thing = this. Thus closes the second of the four great periods of the Lord’s ministry. Enough had been said and done by Him. See App-119.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Mat 16:20, Mat 17:9, Mar 8:31
Reciprocal: Mat 17:12 – Likewise Mar 8:30 – General
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
1
This is explained in the comments at Mat 16:20.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
2 d. Luk 9:21-22. The suffering Christ.
The expression of Luke, He straitly charged and commanded them, is very energetic. The general reason for this prohibition is found in the following announcement of the rejection of the Messiah, as is proved by the participle , saying. They were to keep from proclaiming Him openly as the Christ, on account of the contradiction between the hopes which this title had awakened in the minds of the people, and the way in which this office was to be realized in Him. But this threatening prohibition had a more special nature, which appears from John’s narrative. It refers to the recent attempt of the people, after the multiplication of the loaves (Joh 6:14-15), to proclaim Him king, and the efforts which Jesus was then obliged to make to preserve His disciples from this mistaken enthusiasm, which might have seriously compromised His work. It is the recollection of this critical moment which induces Jesus to use this severe language (). It was only after the idol of the carnal Christ had been for ever nailed to the cross, that the apostolic preaching could safely connect this title Christ with the name of Jesus. See how, as Riggenbach says (Vie de Jsus, p. 318), Jesus was obliged in the very moment of self-revelation to veil Himself, when He had lighted the fire to cover it again. (Luk 9:21) is adversative: Thou sayest truly, I am the Christ; but…
Must, on account of the prophecies and of the divine purpose, of which they are the expression. The members composing the Sanhedrim consisted of three classes of members: the elders, or presidents of synagogues; the high priests, the heads of twenty-four classes of priests; and scribes, or men learned in the law. All three Syn. give here the enumeration of these official classes. This paraphrase of the technical name invests the announcement of the rejection with all its importance. What a complete reversal of the disciples’ Messianic ideas was this rejection of Jesus by the very authorities from whom they expected the recognition and proclamation of the Messiah! indicates deliberate rejection, after previous calculation.
There was a crushing contradiction between this prospect and the hopes of the disciples; but, as Klostermann truly says, the last words, And He shall rise again the third day, furnish the solution of it.
Strauss and Baur contented themselves with denying the details of the prediction in which Jesus foretold His death. Volkmar and Holsten at the present day refuse to allow that He had any knowledge of this event before the last moments. According to Holsten, He went to Jerusalem full of hope, designing to preach there as well as in Galilee, and confident, in case of need, of the interposition of God and of the swords of His adherents….The holy Supper itself was occasioned simply by a passing presentiment….His terrible mistake took Jesus by surprise at the last moment. Keim (ii. p. 556) acknowledges that it is impossible to deny the authenticity of the scene and conversation at Caesarea Philippi. According to him, Jesus could not have failed to have foreseen His violent death long before the catastrophe came. This is proved by the bold opposition of St. Peter, also by such sayings as those referring to the bridegroom who is to be taken away, to death as the way of life (Luk 9:23-24), to Jerusalem which kills the prophets; lastly, by the reply to the two sons of Zebedee. We may add Luk 9:31, Luk 12:50; Joh 2:20; Joh 3:14; Joh 6:53; Joh 12:7; Joh 12:24,words at once characteristic and inimitable. And as to the details of this prediction, have we not a number of facts which leave no room for doubt as to the supernatural knowledge of Jesus (Luk 22:10-34; Joh 1:49; Joh 4:18; Joh 6:64, etc.)? What the modern critics more generally dispute, is the announcement of the resurrection. But if Jesus foresaw His death, He must have equally foreseen His resurrection, as certainly as a prophet believing in the mission of Israel could not announce the captivity without also predicting the return. And who would ever have dreamed of putting into the mouth of Jesus the expression three days and three nights after the event, when in actual fact the time spent in the tomb did not exceed one day and two nights?
It is asked how it came to pass, if Jesus had so expressly predicted His resurrection, that this event should have been such an extraordinary surprise to his apostles? There we have a psychological problem, which the disciples themselves found it difficult to explain. Comp. the remarks of the evangelists, Luk 9:45, Luk 18:34, and parallels, which can only have come from the apostles. The explanation of this problem is perhaps this: the apostles never thought, before the facts had opened their eyes, that the expressions death and resurrection used by Jesus should be taken literally. Their Master so commonly spoke in figurative language, that up to the last moment they only saw in the first term the expression of a sad separation, a sudden disappearance; and in the second, only a sudden return, a glorious reappearing. And even after the death of Jesus, they in no way thought they should see Him appear again in His old form, and by the restoration to life of the body laid in the tomb. If they expected anything, it was His return as a heavenly King (see on Luk 23:42).
Luke has omitted here the word of approval and the severe reprimand which Jesus, according to Matthew, addressed to Peter on this occasion. If any one is determined to see in this omission of Luke’s a wilful suppression, the result of ill-will towards the Apostle Peter, or at least towards the Jewish Christians (Keim), what will he say of Mark, who, while omitting the words of praise, expressly refers to those of censure?
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
CHAPTER 36
THE CHURCH
Mat 16:18-19; Mar 8:30; Luk 9:21. Matthew And I say unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of the heavens; and whatsoever thou mayest bind on earth, shall be bound in the heavens; and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth, shall be loosed in the heavens. Then He commanded His disciples that they must tell no one that He is the Christ. It is really indispensable at this date of our Lords ministry, that His leading disciples, and especially the apostles, should have clear and positive information as to His Messiahship, only eight months of His earthly ministry still to transpire, with the exception of the forty days intervening between His resurrection and ascension. Now that He is gone away off, out of the circle of His ministry, into this temporary retirement in Sryia, He has an opportune privilege with His disciples alone. As to the multitudes, still let them solve the problem in contemplation of His mighty works, which were certainly calculated to settle the conviction of all the unprejudiced that He was truly the Christ. As He moves on in His ministry, the public proclamation of His Messiahship comes more and more to the front, the matter being in such a shape with the Jews and Romans that such an avowal would cost Him, or any one else, His life. We now reach a grand, salient epoch in our Saviors ministry, when the gospel Church is conspicuously revealed to the apostles as destined to supersede the politico-ecclesiasticism of the former dispensation. N.B. Peter is a Greek word, and means rock. Jesus gave it to Simon, indicative of his firmness. The world, however, never saw the rock in Peters character till after the fires of Pentecost had burned out all the trash of depravity, revealing to all the world the solid rock, which caused him to live a hero and die a martyr. When our Savior says to Simon, Thou art Peter i.e., Thou art rock, He used the word Petros, which means a broken rock, such as we use in a building immediately He says, Upon this rock, using the word Petra, which means the great unbroken strata, underlying the continents and oceans, and constituting the foundation of the earth. This word He applies to Himself. All Christian character, in this life, is more or less fragmentary, Jesus being the only Integer, whom we all imitate, and to whose perfection and glory we aspire, living in the hope of that coming glorification which shall make us like Him. Now what about the Church? Our Saviors word is Ekklesia, from Ek, out, and kaleo, to call. Hence it means the called out no hereditary hierarchy, nor ecclesiasticism, like Judaism; but the individual souls, in every nation, who hear the call of the Holy Ghost (and He calls all), and come out of the world, forsaking all, and identifying themselves with God for time and eternity. These, and only these, constitute the Church of God. Now He said, On this Rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against her. We must go down through all the sand, mud, soapstone, and slate, till we strike the solid rock, and there build our superstructure, if we want it to stand. The calling out by the Holy Ghost is regeneration; and the building on Christ, sanctification. Hence the instability and vacillation peculiar to unsanctified Christians; while the genuine and thorough sanctification gives you a stability which will not cower in the presence of roaring lions and martyr fires. Here, He says, I will build, i.e., edify you indefinitely. While the negative side of sanctification, going down to the deep foundation of the earth, and consciously reaching the solid rock, is definite and complete. The erection of the superstructure i.e., the building of Christian character will not only continue through this life, beautifully progressive, but through all eternity, towering into loftier heights, and broading into grander dimensions, thus accumulating the Divine similitude and glory, the wonder of redeemed humanity, and the admiration of the unfallen intelligences of the celestial universe through the flight of eternal ages. Comparatively few have any correct conception as to what the Church is. They think the carnal, worldly people, constituting the congregations in the different denominations, are the Church; whereas none but the truly regenerated ever have been or can be members of Gods Church; regeneration bringing you in, and sanctification establishing you, qualifying you for official responsibilities, such as the pastorate, the diaconate, eldership, evangelism, and teaching.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
Jesus’ prediction of His passion 9:21-22 (cf. Matthew 16:17-23; Mark 8:30-33)
Luke omitted Jesus’ prediction of the church (Mat 16:17-19), Peter’s rebuke of Jesus (Mat 16:22; Mar 8:32), and Jesus’ counter-rebuke of Peter (Mat 16:23; Mar 8:33). These omissions enabled him to stress Jesus’ prediction of His sufferings and His call to the disciples to take up their cross and follow Him. The fate of Jesus is primary in this pericope.
Evidently Jesus urged the disciples not to publicize His true identity because this would have resulted in unnecessary pressure from the Jewish multitudes. He would publicly proclaim His messiahship at the proper time, namely, in the Triumphal Entry. Next Jesus gave His first clear prediction of His passion (cf. Luk 2:35; Luk 5:35). In view of what Jesus needed to teach the disciples, they needed to hear that rejection, death, and resurrection lay ahead for Him.
Jesus’ use of the divine title "Son of Man" (Luk 9:22) supports the fact that Peter recognized Jesus’ deity. It was appropriate to use this title when speaking of His rejection since the Old Testament predicted the Son of Man’s glorious reign (Dan 7:13-14). The disciples had seen Jesus raise two people from the dead: the widow of Nain’s son and Jairus’ daughter. Their failure to understand that Jesus would rise from the dead was, therefore, not due to its actual impossibility but to its improbability since Jesus was the Son of Man.