Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and
I will give you rest. (Matt. 11:28)
Christ now kindly invites to himself those whom he
acknowledges to be fit for becoming his disciples. Though he is ready to reveal
the Father to all, yet the greater part are careless about coming to him,
because they are not affected by a conviction of their necessities.
Hypocrites give themselves no concern about Christ, because
they are intoxicated with their own righteousness, and neither hunger nor
thirst (Matthew 5:6) for his grace. Those who are devoted to the world
set no value on heavenly life. It would be in vain, therefore, for Christ to
invite either of these classes, and therefore he turns to the wretched and
afflicted. He speaks of them as laboring, or groaning under a burden,
and does not mean generally those who are oppressed with grief and
vexations, but those who are overwhelmed by their sins, who are filled with
alarm at the wrath of God, and are ready to sink under so weighty a burden.
There are various methods, indeed, by which God humbles his
elect; but as the greater part of those who are loaded with afflictions still
remain obstinate and rebellious, Christ means by persons laboring and
burdened, those whose consciences are distressed by their exposure to
eternal death, and who are inwardly so pressed down by their miseries that they
faint; for this very fainting prepares them for receiving his grace. He tells
us that the reason why most men despise his grace is, that they are not
sensible of their poverty; but that there is no reason why their pride or folly
should keep back afflicted souls that long for relief. (Commentaries)
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