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But if that servant says in his heart, `My lord delays his coming,` and begins to beat the menservants and the maidservants, and to eat and drink, and to be drunken,
Verse Takeaways
1
The Heart's Dangerous Thought
Commentators like Gill and Spurgeon pinpoint the servant's downfall beginning with a single thought: "My lord delayeth his coming." This internal belief that Christ's return is not imminent leads directly to a life of sin. It shows that a loss of hopeful expectation can corrupt one's character and actions from the inside out.
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Luke
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8
Shall say (ειπη). Second aorist subjunctive, with εαν, condition of the third class, undetermined, but with prospect of being dete…
19th Century
Bishop
Who then is that faithful and wise steward?—See Notes on Matthew 24:45-51. Here the words come as an answer to Peter’s qu…
Preacher
Of a truth I say unto you, that he will make him ruler over all that he hath. But and if that servant say in his heart, ‘My lord delayeth his c…
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These verses clearly imply that Jesus himself would not return immediately but that there would be an interval of waiting and serving (cf. 18:7; 19…
17th Century
Pastor
But and if that servant say in his heart Not the same servant before spoken of as a wise and faithful steward, that …
Minister
All are to apply to themselves what Christ says in His word and to inquire about it. No one is left so ignorant that they do not know many things t…
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