Tag Archives: Lord’s Supper

MATTHEW 26(i)

MATTHEW 26(i)

It is difficult to know how to describe the way both Jews and Gentiles treated the Lord Jesus before He was crucified. There were so many illegal acts on the part of Israel, and a gross miscarriage of justice by the Gentiles, that it is flattery to call any of the proceedings a trial. The “princes of this world”, 1 Corinthians 2:8 made their decisions on the basis of prejudice, ignorance, envy and cowardice.

Prejudice, because the chief judge on the Jewish side had said a few days before, “it is expedient for us, that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not”, John 11:50. John makes it clear that he was referring to Christ. How can a trial be just when the judge believes the accused ought to die? How can it be right for those in charge of the proceedings to seek for witnesses “against Jesus to put Him to death”, Mark 14:55. Leaving aside the fact that witnesses should not be sought, but should come forward of their own will, they should come to witness impartially, not against the accused, and should certainly not come with the intention of making sure the accused is put to death. Nor should the Sanhedrin have taken counsel “to put him to death”, Matthew 27:1. They should have taken counsel to discover the truth.

They were marked by ignorance of who He really was. This was wilful ignorance, for He had given ample proof as to His person by His character as He lived before them, His works as He did miracles, and His words as He spake as none other did. As He Himself said, “If I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had sin: but now they have no cloak for their sin. He that hateth me hateth my Father also. If I had not done among them the works which none other man did, they had not had sin: but now they have seen and hated both me and my Father But this cometh to pass, that the word might be fulfilled that is written in their law, ‘They hated me without a cause'”, John 15:22-25. Such was the clarity of His teaching, the power of His works, and the holiness of His character, that to hate Him was to show themselves up as hardened and hateful sinners.

Their decisions were also on the basis of envy, as Pilate realised, for Matthew tells us that “he knew that for envy they had delivered him”, Matthew 27:18. They saw Christ as a threat to their position and power. The people flocked to hear Him, but hated them.

As for Pilate, three times he declared that Christ was without fault as far as the law was concerned, (on the third occasion after he had scourged Him, which was only done to those who were condemned), but still he decreed that He be crucified. Sadly, he put favour with Caesar before favour with God, for when the chief priests saw that he was wavering, and was seeking to release Him, they said, “If thou let this man go, thou art not Ceasar’s friend”, John 19:12. At that point he sat on his judgement seat and delivered the Lord Jesus to be crucified. This was gross injustice on the basis of cowardice.

Survey of the chapter
This is a long chapter, and it may be divided up as follows:

(a) Verses 1,2 Matthew’s time notice
(b) Verses 3-5 Consultation as to how to arrest, try, and execute Christ
(c) Verses 6-13 Mary anoints His head
(d) Verses 14-16 Judas agrees to betray Him
(e) Verses 17-25 The passover supper with Judas present
(f) Verses 26-29 Institution of the Lord’s Supper
(g) Verses 30-35 Conversation on the mount of Olives about denial
(h) Verses 36-46 Christ’s prayers in Gethsemane
(i) Verses 47-56 The betrayal and the arrest
(j) Verses 57-68 Christ before Caiaphas
(k) Verses 69-75 Peter’s three-fold denial

(a) Verses 1,2
Matthew’s time notice

26:1
And it came to pass, when Jesus had finished all these sayings, he said unto his disciples,

And it came to pass, when Jesus had finished all these sayings, he said unto his disciples- this is the fifth time that we have come across this phrase, or a similar one, and it serves to divide the Gospel into seven sections, as follows:

Section 1 1:1- 4:25
The King and His preparation.

Critical events leading up to the beginning of Christ’s ministry after the imprisonment of John the Baptist.

Section 2 5:1-7:29
The King and His precepts.

“And it came to pass, when Jesus had ended these sayings, the people were astonished at his doctrine”, 7:28.

Section 3 8:1-10:42
The King and His power.

A series of ten miracles, the “powers of the world to come”.

“And it came to pass, when Jesus had made an end of commanding his twelve disciples, he departed thence to preach and to teach in their cities”, 11:1.

Section 4 11:1-13:53
The King and His parables.

A series of seven parables about the kingdom.

“And it came to pass, that when Jesus had finished these parables, he departed thence”, 13:53.

Section 5 13:53-18:35
The King and His previews.

The preview of kingdom-glories is followed by forecasts of the building of the church.

“And it came to pass, that when Jesus had finished these sayings, he departed from Galilee, and came into the coasts of Judaea beyond Jordan”, 19:1.

Section 6 19:1-25:46
The King and His prophecy.

The King presents Himself formally to the nation as their King, and then foretells what will happen to them if they reject Him.

“And it came to pass, when Jesus had finished all these sayings”, 26:1.

Section 7 26:1-28:20
The King and His parting.

Events which take place as the King leaves His nation, having been rejected by them, and crucified. He rises from the dead, however, ready to reign over them in a day to come. God has raised up Christ to sit on the throne of His father David, Acts 2:30.

Christ’s teaching ministry as far as Matthew’s gospel is concerned, is over, and has concluded, fittingly, with the Son of man sitting on the throne of His glory when He comes to earth to reign. This brings to a close the “son of David” section of the gospel, and we embark now on the “son of Isaac” part, see Matthew 1:1. The one ended with a throne of glory, the other will end with a cross of shame, but He will rise again from the dead so that He may sit on the throne of David for ever, Acts 2:30. We now begin to be told about the events which will lead up to the crucifixion.

26:2
Ye know that after two days is the feast of the passover, and the Son of man is betrayed to be crucified.

Ye know that after two days is the feast of the passover- the first sixteen verses of the chapter are not in chronological order. Matthew puts various events together to build up a picture of what the nation’s response to their king was. He contrasts it with the attitude of His believing followers.

We know from John 12:12 that Christ’s entry into Jerusalem was on the day after Mary anointed Him, but Matthew records the anointing in connection with two things. First, the plan of the chief priests to kill Him, 26:3, and second, the agreement with Judas that he would betray Him. So the loving act of anointing Him is recounted in between these two acts of hatred. So when verse 6 says “when Jesus was in Bethany”, it refers to an event four days earlier.

And the Son of man is betrayed to be crucified- the authorities had agreed to arrest Him, but not on the feast day, verse 5, but the Lord knows that their plans will be frustrated. Everything is working to God’s timetable, not man’s, for the four hundred and eighty three years of Daniel’s vision are about to come to an end, and Messiah will be cut off, Daniel 9:25,26.

(b) Verses 3-5
Consultation as to how to arrest, try, and execute Christ

26:3
Then assembled together the chief priests, and the scribes, and the elders of the people, unto the palace of the high priest, who was called Caiaphas,

Then assembled together the chief priests, and the scribes, and the elders of the people, unto the palace of the high priest, who was called Caiaphas- these are the three categories of ruler in Israel, with the chief priests continuing the Aaronic priesthood, the scribes substituting for the prophets, and the elders ruling instead of the kings in Israel. The whole of the hierarchy of the nation is ranged against Christ, who is their true prophet, priest and king, if they only received Him.

When on his deathbed, Jacob looked down the years to what would befall his sons in the last days, Genesis 49:1. When he spoke of Levi and Simeon, who had murdered men to avenge their sister, he said, “Simeon and Levi are brethren; instruments of cruelty are in their habitations. O my soul, come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly, mine honour, be not thou united: for in their anger they slew a man, and in their selfwill they digged down a wall”, verses 5,6. This is now coming to pass, and Levi’s representatives are holding a secret counsel. (the idea behind Jacob’s word “secret”), and are having their assembly. Soon it will be evident that instruments of cruelty are in the houses of the high priest Caiaphas and Annas, for Christ will be ill-treated there.

26:4
And consulted that they might take Jesus by subtilty, and kill him.

And consulted that they might take Jesus by subtilty, and kill him- it had been way back in Matthew 12:14 that “the Pharisees went out, and held a council against him, how they might destroy him”, and now their plans are being finalised.

Note the word “subtilty”. If the ideas of secret counsel and assembly remind us of the end of the book of Genesis, then this word reminds of the beginning, where we read that the “serpent was more subtil”, 3:1. Behind the serpent was the Ancient Serpent himself, plotting against God, and using subtlety to try to accomplish it. Now he is at work again, using those whom both John and Christ had called the generation of vipers.

Notice the purpose of the consultation; not to discuss His claims and assess His ministry, but simply to kill Him. Just as daring and callous as that.

26:5
But they said, Not on the feast day, lest there be an uproar among the people.

But they said, Not on the feast day, lest there be an uproar among the people- they were afraid of public opinion, and “the fear of man bringeth a snare”. Jerusalem was crowded with tens of thousands of pilgrims from around the known world, who would be very curious if a fellow Israelite was crucified. They would want to know why. The rulers must have viewed with dismay the crowds that lined the roadside when He rode into Jerusalem. They knew that popular feeling was on His side. They are not so much afraid of an uproar, (although Pilate would take a very unfavourable view if one happened), but they feared the damage to their prestige and position in Israel.

(c) Verses 6-13
Mary anoints His head

26:6
Now when Jesus was in Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper,

Now when Jesus was in Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper- it is against the dark background of the scheme to kill Christ, and thus totally reject His claim to be King and Messiah, that Matthew puts his account of the anointing of Christ. The authorities should have been preparing to anoint Him as their Messiah, but it is left to Mary to do this on the eve of His entry into Jerusalem, when He was formally presented to Israel as their King-Messiah. The title “Anointed One” is used sparingly in the Old Testament, but one of its occurrences is in Daniel 9:25, where the angel speaks of “Messiah the Prince”, and His subsequent cutting off in death. Mary is hailing Him as such at the very end of the period of time that was predicted to elapse before He presented Himself to the nation as their king.

How typical of Him to be found in the house of a leper! If Bethany was a small community, they may have agreed together to honour the one they had got to know through His lodging in the house of Martha. It is very likely that Simon had been healed by Christ, and this is one way of thanking Him. He would hardly be likely to hold a feast in his house if he was not cured, and there was only one way to get cured at that time, namely through Christ. No doubt healed by him at some point, Simon now repays in some little measure the favour showed to him. Would John have told us Lazarus was one of them that sat at the table if it was his house, and he was head of it?

After he had seen a vision of the holiness of the Lord of hosts, Isaiah thought of himself as a man of unclean lips, and as one who dwelt in the midst of a people of unclean lips. This may simply mean, of course, that what they said was tainted by sin. But on the other hand, the leper in Israel was to have a covering on his upper lip, and cry “Unclean! Unclean!” How significant that the anointing of Christ should be done in the house of one who had been a leper, but was now cleansed, a token of what the nation could have experienced if they had recognised Him as the King.

Matthew does not tell us who else was at this supper, but John does. There is Lazarus, the resurrected man having communion with Christ, sitting at the table with Him; Martha, the serving saint, no doubt helping out, especially if Simon was unmarried or a widower; and there was Mary, the worshipper and anointer, John 12:1-9. Of course, the twelve apostles were there as well.

John emphasises that the supper was at Bethany, “where Lazarus was, which had been dead, whom he raised from the dead”, and the sequel is given by John as “Much people of the Jews…came not for Jesus’ sake only, but that they might see Lazarus also, whom he had raised from the dead”. So the three-fold mention of the raising of Lazarus emphasises the work that is the climax to Christ’s miracle-ministry.

Matthew names no-one but the healed leper, a figure of what the nation could have been if they had allowed Him His rightful place.

26:7
There came unto him a woman having an alabaster box of very precious ointment, and poured it on his head, as he sat at meat.

There came unto him a woman having an alabaster box of very precious ointment- the fact that she came would confirm that she did not live in the house. We know from John’s account that this is Mary of Bethany. We also know from John that the ointment was spikenard. Spikenard is a pleasant perfume obtained from a type of Valerian shrub found in the Himalayas, The “spike” part of the word is from the Greek word “pistikos”, meaning faithful, trustworthy, and genuine. This was true of Mary’s ointment, for it was genuine nard, but it is so appropriate for the one upon whom it was poured, for this was His character too.

It had cost Mary a lot of money to purchase this ointment, and John appreciates the fact that she had expended it upon the Lord and not herself. Sadly, however, another disciple knew its value, but thought only in terms of how he might have gained an advantage from it.

And poured it on his head, as he sat at meat- Matthew and Mark say she anointed His feet, and the Lord said she anointed His body, for she had anointed Him from head to toe. It is not her place to anoint Him with oil officially, for the Father had anointed Him, not with literal oil, but with what the oil symbolised, the Holy Spirit. He could say “the Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, for He hath anointed Me”, Luke 4:18.

She anointed His head because she believed Him to be the Messiah, God’s anointed, Daniel 9:25. She anointed His feet because she believed Him to be Messiah the prince, and her proper place was worshipping low before Him. The authorities, by conspiring against Him, rejected Him on both counts.

Mark tells us she brake the box, so it would never be filled with ointment to pour upon another, for Christ has no rival.

John tells us that Mary wiped His feet with her hair. Spikenard was often used to give the hair a fragrance and an attraction, but Mary uses her hair, (which is her glory, 1 Corinthians 11:15), to wipe His feet. She is prepared to let her glory be a towel, such is her devotion to Him.

The fragrance excluded everything else in the room, according to John, just as the sweet savour of Christ’s life had filled the heart of the Father during His movements in this polluted world. In the previous chapter there was the stench of death, (for it was said of Lazareth that “he stinketh”, for he was corrupting in a grave), but here is the fragrance of a special life. All the disciples would have this fragrance clinging to them as well, such is the effect of the worshipful exercise of this woman. It is good that believers convey the savour of Christ, as the apostle Paul did, for he could write, “Now thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ, and maketh manifest the savour of His knowledge by us in every place. For we are unto God a sweet savour of Christ, in them that are saved, and in them that perish”, 2 Corithians 2:14,15.

26:8
But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this waste?

But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this waste? Matthew speaks of all the disciples making this comment, whereas John tells us that Judas was the spokesman. His cynical attitude to Mary’s action began to affect the way the other eleven thought of it, for “evil communications corrupt good manners”, 1 Corinthians 15:33. The writer to the Hebrews warned them against letting roots of bitterness spring up and trouble them, for thereby many would be defiled, Hebrews 12:15.

It is a sad thing when believers think that an act of devotion involving a costly perfume is a waste. If they had had Mary’s appreciation even in small measure, they would not have spoken like this, for it was contrary to Christ’s evaluation of what she had done.

26:9
For this ointment might have been sold for much, and given to the poor.

For this ointment might have been sold for much- this ointment was very precious, and therefore very costly, being worth three hundred pence, as John tells us, and by thinking this he shows he appreciated Mary’s sacrifice. Judas thought of it too, but saw it as a lost opportunity to add to the communal bag, from which he stole, being a thief. A penny was the wage of a labourer for a day in those times, as we know from the parable of the workers in the vineyard, Matthew 20:2. So leaving aside visits to the temple, a man could work for six days a week for fifty weeks of the year, and earn three hundred pence. A man working for three hundred days in the United Kingdom can earn at least twenty five thousand pounds. This gives us some idea of the greatness of Mary’s gift. Although it must be remembered that it is how much is left after we have given that is the critical thing. The Lord valued the widow’s mite because she gave of her penury, and cast into the treasury all her living, whereas others who gave of their abundance had plenty left over to spend on themselves, Luke 21:1-4.

And given to the poor- it was customary at passover time to give to the poor so that they could purchase a passover lamb. We see an example of this when the disciples thought that when Judas went out from the upper room that he was going to give something to the poor, John 13:29.

The objection began with Judas, who was a thief, and did not care for the poor, John 12:6, for those who steal show clearly that they are only interested in themselves, and care not if others suffer as a result of their crimes. We know from the next chapter that when Judas went out from the upper room the other disciples thought he might be going to give something to the poor, 13:29. This shows that Christ and the true apostles had no interest in gaining for themselves. Peter could say a few weeks later, “Silver and gold have I none”, Acts 3:6.

Contact with Christ, the one who became poor, who sought not His own things, who went about doing good, should have been an influence on Judas. Alas! it was not so.

The apostle Paul wrote, “Let him that stole steal no more: but rather let him labour, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth”, Ephesians 4:28. So the one-time thief, when he is converted, has a responsibility not just to cease from stealing, but also to make amends for the wrong he has done to others. He may not be able to repay the particular people he robbed, but he must make a special effort to give to the needy over and above what would normally be expected. We see this worked out in practice in Zaccheus, who vowed to give half of his goods to the poor, and to repay fourfold any he had defrauded, Luke 19:8. Far from having this attitude, Judas saw in his position of trust an opportunity to make gain at the expense of others.

26:10
When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the woman? for she hath wrought a good work upon me.

When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the woman? The Lord moves to defend Mary from the charge of not spending money wisely. He deals with two matters. First, in this verse, the hurt caused by the words of the disciples, and the implication in the word “waste” that they used to describe her action, suggesting that Mary had a faulty assessment of things. The needs of the poor are dealt with in the next verse.

Perhaps this rebuke was the last thing that caused Judas to switch sides, and go out from this incident and make his bargain with the chief priests. As suggested in connection with the feeding of the five thousand, and Christ’s refusal to be made king, Judas began to think it his duty to replace Christ with someone more in harmony with his nationalistic thinking. This is hinted at by John when he concludes the incident by writing, “Judas Iscariot the son of Simon: for he it was that should betray him”, John 6:71.

Yet the command to not trouble Mary was perfectly justified, and it was directed at the other disciples who had complained as much as Judas. The giving of believers is not to be subject to the dictates of others. Suggestions as to worthy causes may be given, and collections may be arranged, but it is up to the individual before the Lord as to what and where to give.

For she hath wrought a good work upon me- Matthew emphasises that what Mary did was a good work, for she virtually anointed Israel’s king, and it is Matthew’s purpose in his gospel to get us to see that Christ is the king. Mark in his gospel of the Servant highlights that Mary had learnt to serve by doing good works. He joins with John to emphasise that it was done in view of His burying. So there is no discrepancy between the idea of an anointed Messiah and a Messiah in a grave, for He will rise again from the grave to die no more, so that His kingdom can be an everlasting kingdom, never interrupted by death.

26:11
For ye have the poor always with you; but me ye have not always.

For ye have the poor always with you- sadly, there are always those who, through no fault of their own, are poor, and those who are able should love their neighbours as themselves and seek to relieve their poverty. It is a Christian thing to remember the poor, Galatians 2:10. A reading of 2 Corinthians chapters 8 and 9 should convince us of the importance of doing this.

But me ye have not always- He would soon be back in heaven, It is important to not delay helping those in need, for in various ways the opportunity might be lost. Think of the regret Mary would have had if she had delayed, and the Lord had gone back to heaven. Of course, she could have then given to the poor, but it was important that the believing remnant should anoint Him, and this Mary did. Some might argue that Judas was right, that the pouring out of it was a waste, but the spiritual mind discerned that just as Mary chose the better part by sitting at His feet, so she also decided that the better thing was to anoint Him. Who can tell what encouragement came to Christ even on the cross when He remembered her devotion?

From 1 Timothy 6:18 we learn that we should be ready to distribute, where the word “ready” has the idea of being liberal. A scant and miserly response to God’s rich giving to us is hardly appropriate. We should be like those of Macedonia, who, although poor, gave out of their deep poverty, so that Paul can commend them for the riches of their liberality, 2 Corinthians 8:2. They had clearly appreciated the way in which the Lord Jesus, although rich, had become poor for them. The Corinthians, on the other hand, although full of promises and good intentions, had failed to contribute as they should and could. Would it not be a good exercise to ask ourselves whether we are Macedonian or Corinthian in our giving? There are third-world evangelists in desperate need of bicycles to take them to preach in outlying villages, so do we really need such luxurious limousines? Christian parents in Pakistan whose children have to make bricks all day to help the family finances, so do we really need that expensive holiday? Destitute children on the streets of many a city who could be enjoying the care of a Christian orphanage, so is our extravagant lifestyle justified?

Not only should we be ready or liberal in our distribution, but willing also. This involves being alert to the needs of others, and prompt in our response to those needs. Is there anything we meant to support but never did? It is not too late to make amends in some way.

The end result of obeying these injunctions is that we shall lay up in store for ourselves, for, paradoxically, those who become poor become rich, those who empty their barns, fill them. And moreover, the emptying only lasts for time, the filling lasts for eternity. In 2 Corinthians 9:9 the apostle quotes from Psalm 112:9 in connection with the giving of a righteous man. “He hath dispersed abroad; he hath given to the poor: his righteousness remaineth for ever”. Righteous actions performed now will remain in the memory of God, and be to the praise of God, for all eternity.

Let us remember the exhortation given to the apostle Paul, “Remember the poor”. Let us remember, and imitate, his response, “The same which I also was forward to do”, Galatians 2:10.

26:12
For in that she hath poured this ointment on my body, she did it for my burial.

For in that she hath poured this ointment on my body- she did not break the box to anoint her brother when he died, and she did not keep it to sell when she became old, but had a higher view of things, and performed a spiritually delightful act which was much appreciated by the Lord. Sadly, however, the disciples by their reaction showed their carnality.

Note that the anointing was not just of His head, but His feet, too, John 12:3, justifying the use of the expression “my body”. The anointing of His feet would suggest an appreciation of His pathway on earth at His first coming; the anointing of His head anticipates Him coming again to reign.

She did it for my burial- Mary had sat at His feet and learned of Him, so knew that He would be crucified. But she also knew that He would rise again, so she neither went to the sepulchre with the others to anoint Him, nor to the sepulchre to see that He was risen. Her faith had laid hold of His word, and she did the better thing by anointing Him, not when He was dead in the tomb, but in view of His burial, when He was alive to appreciate it. Perhaps she also knew that, being sinless, His body would not corrupt anyway, so the stench of death did not need to be counteracted.

26:13
Verily I say unto you, Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also this, that this woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her.

Verily I say unto you, Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also this, that this woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her- so her action becomes a constant reminder to us of how we should order our priorities. Note that in preaching the gospel, such incidents as this are to be made known, for they emphasise the preciousness of Christ as to His person, and His death, burial and resurrection, as to His work. It is a memorial of her, but a reminder of Him.

(d) Verses 14-16
Judas agrees to betray Him

26:14
Then one of the twelve, called Judas Iscariot, went unto the chief priests,

Then one of the twelve, called Judas Iscariot, went unto the chief priests- how hard this man’s heart must be, going straight out of a setting where Christ is owned and appreciated, into the presence of those who hate Him.

26:15
And said unto them, What will ye give me, and I will deliver him unto you? And they covenanted with him for thirty pieces of silver.

And said unto them, What will ye give me, and I will deliver him unto you? No name is mentioned, but the priests know exactly who Judas means. He has gone out from a place where a very costly box of ointment has been lavished upon Christ, where Mary said in effect, “How much can I give Him?” But Judas is saying “What will you give me?” As his namesake said, “What profit is it if we slay our brother…come, and let us sell him”, Genesis 37:26,27. The profit motive has always been strong with the Jew, (which name comes from the word “Judah”). The betrayer and the chief priests are combining together to form a picture of the state of the nation. Later, Matthew will interweave the suicide of Judas with the betrayal of Christ by handing Him over to the Gentiles.

And they covenanted with him for thirty pieces of silver- this was the valuation put upon a wounded slave under the law, Exodus 21:32. The word push used in that verse means to butt or gore, indicating some harm had come to the slave rendering him unable to work. A wounded slave was a useless slave, and this is the value that Israel put upon Jehovah’s Servant. Zechariah referred to this when he spoke of Israel valuing his prophetic ministry as worth only thirty pieces of silver. God’s verdict was that it was a “goodly price”, pouring scorn on their estimate of Zechariah’s labours. But worse still, it was the valuation they put upon Jehovah Himself, Zechariah 11:12,13. History is repeating itself, for He who is God manifest in flesh is being valued at the same price, even though His ministry was far more meaningful even than Zechariah’s.

26:16
And from that time he sought opportunity to betray him.

And from that time he sought opportunity to betray him- the passover lamb was to be watched for four days prior to the passover, in order to make sure it was suitable to be sacrificed. Judas, however, is watching Christ so as to betray Him.

(e) Verses 17-25
The passover supper with Judas present

26:17
Now the first day of the feast of unleavened bread the disciples came to Jesus, saying unto him, Where wilt thou that we prepare for thee to eat the passover?

Now the first day of the feast of unleavened bread the disciples came to Jesus, saying unto him- there are those who believe that the Lord Jesus partook of the passover supper the evening before the passover, so that it could be said that He died at the same time as the passover lambs were being slain in the temple. But the death of Christ also fulfilled the Day of Atonement, as the Epistle to the Hebrews makes clear, but He did not die in the seventh month. It is clear that the disciples do not think there is anything irregular about this passover supper, such as would be the case if it was being celebrated early.

We see from this verse that “the passover” can mean the passover supper. In Mark 14:1 we read, “And the first day of unleavened bread, when they killed the passover”. So the passover can mean the passover lamb.

In Luke 22:1 we read, “Now the feast of unleavened bread drew nigh, which is called the passover”. So it can mean the festival of passover, including the connected festival of unleavened bread. This is confirmed by the words of Pilate, when he said, “But ye have a custom, that I should release unto you one at the passover”, John 18:39, so it was ongoing at that point.

Certainly the Lord would have eaten the passover meal the evening before, for He would have obeyed the instruction, “they shall eat the flesh in that night”, and “ye shall let nothing of it remain until the morning”, Exodus 12:8,10. The Hebrew day had two evenings, the first was when the sun began to decline at about the ninth hour, and the second was when it was possible to see three stars in the sky, about the twelfth hour. It was between those two points that the Passover lamb was to be killed. The command was “the whole congregation of the congregation of Israel shall kill it in the evening”, Exodus 12:6. In the evening meant in the period from 3pm to 6pm.

The passover was to be eaten that night, and nothing left till the morning. Hence in Deuteronomy 16:6 the instruction is to eat the passover “at the going down of the sun”, And “at the season thou camest forth out of Egypt”. Then they were told to “turn in in the morning, and go unto thy tents”, verse 7. Far from doing this, the chief priests turned out in the morning, in order to condemn the True Passover Lamb.

Where wilt thou that we prepare for thee to eat the passover? They take it for granted that they will eat with Him, and that He will act as the head of the household. And this despite the fact that some, if not all of them, would be head of their own houses. The arrangements for the eating of the passover lamb were precise, and the correct food and wine must be set on the table in readiness.

26:18
And he said, Go into the city to such a man, and say unto him, The Master saith, My time is at hand; I will keep the passover at thy house with my disciples.

And he said, Go into the city to such a man, and say unto him, The Master saith, My time is at hand; I will keep the passover at thy house with my disciples- there is no information in this instruction that Judas might use to arrange Christ’s arrest. This disposes of the notion that Christ arranged His own betrayal so as to appear to fulfil scripture.

Luke gives us more details: “And he sent Peter and John, saying, Go and prepare us the passover, that we may eat. And they said unto him, Where wilt thou that we prepare? And he said unto them, Behold, when ye are entered into the city, there shall a man meet you, bearing a pitcher of water; follow him into the house where he entereth in. And ye shall say unto the goodman of the house, The Master saith unto thee, Where is the guestchamber, where I shall eat the passover with my disciples? And he shall shew you a large upper room furnished: there make ready. And they went, and found as he had said unto them: and they made ready the passover”, Luke 22:8-13.

It is good to know that there were a few in Jerusalem who were sympathetic to Christ, even to the extent of giving up their guestchamber for Him, when there were so many other pilgrims in the city at passover season.

26:19
And the disciples did as Jesus had appointed them; and they made ready the passover.

And the disciples did as Jesus had appointed them- we are not told when the lamb was purchased and taken to the temple to be slaughtered, no doubt to preserve the uniquenss of the Lamb of God Himself. But if Peter and John were given this task, they would have first bathed all over in the pool outside the temple walls, and then when they entered the temple courts would have washed their feet in the stone troughs provided for the purpose. They would have understood the teaching of Christ given later that evening about being washed all over, and only afterwards needing to wash the feet.

And they made ready the passover- this would involve preparing the lamb and cooking it, providing the spices and unleavened bread for the meal, and ensuring that the four cups of the supper were filled with wine. They would also ensure that there was a bason for water, and a towel, so that the guests might have their feet washed. Perhaps they did no realise at this point that the water, the bread and the wine were soon to take on fresh meaning

26:20
Now when the even was come, he sat down with the twelve.

Now when the even was come, he sat down with the twelve- the second evening of the day has arrived, and the first three stars have appeared in the sky. Whilst He sat down with the twelve, we know that when they left the upper room, He went with only eleven, for Judas had left. He was present, no doubt, for the passover meal, but not for the institution of the Lord’s Supper. We know this is the case because the ones who partook of the Lord’s Supper were the ones who would be in the kingdom, verse 29, and Judas will not be in the kingdom, but in perdition.

26:21

And as they did eat, he said, Verily I say unto you, that one of you shall betray me.

And as they did eat, he said, Verily I say unto you, that one of you shall betray me- this must have been a shock to all of them. To the eleven, that one of their number should do such a thing; to Judas, that the Lord knew he was the betrayer.

Disloyalty is dealt with first here, and defilement first in John’s account. Both are in view in 1 Corinthians 11 where the reminder of the betrayal and the need for self-examination are both indicated, if the Lord’s Supper is going to be eaten worthily, 1 Corinthians 1:23,28.

26:22
And they were exceeding sorrowful, and began every one of them to say unto him, Lord, is it I?

And they were exceeding sorrowful, and began every one of them to say unto him, Lord, is it I? If Judas is included in the “every one of them”, then he must have hypocritically used the word Lord. In fact he did not recognise Christ as Lord. Perhaps the others do not realise the seriousness of betraying Him, or else they would have hesitated in thinking that they were capable of such an evil deed. Satan had to enter into Judas before he could carry out the deed. But the Lord said, “one of you is a devil” a year before, John 6:70, anticipating what would happen.

26:23
And he answered and said, He that dippeth his hand with me in the dish, the same shall betray me.

And he answered and said, He that dippeth his hand with me in the dish, the same shall betray me- in John’s account the Lord quotes the words of a psalm, “He that eateth bread with me hath lifted up his heel against me”, John 13:18, a quotation from Psalm 41:9.

This statement does not identify Judas to the other disciples, but indicates that the traitor was having fellowship with Christ by eating out of the same dish, yet was in fact partaking of the table of demons, 1 Corinthians 10:

From John we learn that Christ gave “the sop” to Judas, and he then went out of the upper room, John 13:26,27. The sop was a piece of the lamb wrapped in unleavened bread, and with bitter herbs, dipped in the bowl of vinegar that was on the table, and handed to a favoured guest. This is yet another appeal from Christ to Judas to draw back from what he intended, and to assure him that there was a return to faithfulness was possible. Sadly, he rejected this overture, and immediately Satan entered into him, to enable him to do his evil deed.

26:24
The Son of man goeth as it is written of him: but woe unto that man by whom the Son of man is betrayed! it had been good for that man if he had not been born.

The Son of man goeth as it is written of him- so it is not Satan and Judas who are controlling the agenda. The scriptures had foretold that the Messiah would be betrayed by one who could be described as “his own familiar friend”, Psalm 41:9. The scriptures themselves were inspired by the Spirit of God, equal with the Father and the Son in the Godhead, and therefore privy to the eternal and determinate counsel of God which ordained Christ’s betrayal.

It was after He had taught in the treasury, that the Lord said, “I go my way”, John 8:21. The significance of the treasury was that it was that part of the temple courts that had the council room of the Sanhedrin nearby. They might plot His death there, but He could say “I go my way”.

But woe unto that man by whom the Son of man is betrayed! The Old Testament does not name Judas as the traitor, so it was not inevitable that it should be Judas. The woe consists not only of the place of perdition to which he went, but also the infamy attached to his name ever after.

It had been good for that man if he had not been born- does this not show that Judas was a real person before he was actually born, since it was a man that was born? Scripture does not entertain the idea that a baby in the womb is not a real person.

26:25
Then Judas, which betrayed him, answered and said, Master, is it I? He said unto him, Thou hast said.

Then Judas, which betrayed him, answered and said, Master, is it I? Note that the hypocritical “Lord” of verse 22 is now replaced by “Master”, or “Rabbi”, a title which did not signify that Christ was uniquely Lord. No man can genuinely say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost, 1 Corinthians 12:3. Judas is asking the question to find out if the Lord really knows what he is intending to do. A low estimate of Christ’s Lordship will tend towards betrayal.

He said unto him, Thou hast said- this is not an evasive answer. When Christ was asked if He was the Christ, the Son of God, He replied “Thou hast said”, in Matthew, but Mark gives the equivalent to this in the words, “I am”, Mark 14:61.

Judas now knows that the Lord is fully aware he is the traitor. Should not this fact, showing as it did Divine insight, have been a check to Judas? Will he really go ahead and betray one who is God? Only if he allows Satan to enter into him can he do this.

(f) Verses 26-29
Institution of the Lord’s Supper

26:26
And as they were eating, Jesus took bread, and blessed it, and brake it, and gave it to the disciples, and said, Take, eat; this is my body.

And as they were eating- that is, during the eating of the passover supper. We shall see from verse 29 that Judas was not present at the institution of the Lord’s Supper, for it is reserved for believers. Whilst John does not tell us about the Supper in his account, he does show that Judas went out immediately after the sop had been given to him, John 13:26-30, and Matthew has already told us about this in verse 23.

Jesus took bread, and blessed it, and brake it, and gave it to the disciples- this is a re-enactment of the Lord’s life. He took bread, just as He had taken a body in incarnation, Hebrews 10:5. He lived a life of deep thankfulness to God for all His goodness to Him, and blessed God at all times. He suffered Himself to be crucified, and His body, soul and spirit were separated in death, just as the bread was broken. This separation in death was so that those who believe on Him could have a share in the benefits of what He did at Calvary, just as He gave the loaf to the disciples.

And said, Take, eat; this is my body- we should remember that the Lord Jesus held the loaf that He described as His body in His hands as He spoke these words. We should also remember that He described the cup of wine as the fruit of the vine after He had said that it was the new covenant in His blood, Matthew 26:27,28. If, on the night of the institution of the Supper, and with the Lord Jesus officiating, the bread and wine did not change, why should it be thought they change when mere mortals officiate?

There is a grammar rule in the Greek language to indicate when a statement is to be taken literally or figuratively. The rule is as follows: “When a pronoun is used instead of one of the nouns, and the two nouns are of different genders, (Greek words are either masculine, feminine, or neuter), the pronoun is always made to agree with that noun to which it is carried, and not to the noun from which it is carried, and to which it properly belongs”.

The nouns in this instance are ‘bread’ and ‘body’, and ‘this’ replaces the noun ‘bread’. The pronoun ‘this’ is neuter. The noun ‘bread’ is masculine. The noun ‘body’ is neuter. If the statement were literal, then the pronoun would be masculine. As the pronoun is neuter, and agrees with the word body, which is neuter, then the statement is figurative and not literal.

These words have been mis-interpreted and mis-used to make them mean that the physical elements of the bread are changed into the actual body of Christ during the service of the Catholic Mass. This is called transubstantiation, and is a device used to gain power over the souls of the superstitious and unthinking, seeking to convince them that the priest, who alone has the supposed power to change bread into flesh, has their eternal destiny in his hands.

The language of Pope Pius the 10th is as follows:

“The sacrifice of the mass is substantially that of the cross, in as far as the same Jesus Christ who offered Himself on the cross is He who offers Himself by the hands of the priests His ministers on our altars”.

Be in no doubt that this is wicked blasphemy.

Their belief is that “Through the priestly act of consecration, the substance of the bread and wine are changed into the body and blood of Christ, so that what lies upon the altar is no longer bread and wine but Christ, and what the priest offers to God is nothing less than Christ Himself”.

These statements are in direct and flagrant conflict with the Epistle to the Hebrews, especially chapters 9 and 10, which insist that the sacrifice of Christ is once-for-all in character. Is it significant that these chapters are missing from the Codex Vaticanus, the manuscript found in the Vatican library?

This use of the words priest and altar betrays a failure to appreciate that when the Lord Jesus died He rendered obsolete the Old Testament rituals, together with their sacrificing priests and altars. Those who have not grasped this simple and important truth forfeit their right to instruct others on the matter. To claim that “The sacrifice of the Mass is substantially that of the Cross”, comes perilously close to “Crucifying afresh the Son of God”, of which Hebrews 6:6 speaks.

The application of the teaching of John 6 to the Lord’s Supper is wrong. The “bread which is his flesh” John 6:51 is not the bread with which the multitudes were fed the previous day, but rather the Bread which came down from heaven, even Himself. The whole passage is to be interpreted in the light of the Lord’s words in verse 63, “The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life”. In other words, He definitely warns against taking His words literally. In confirmation of this, verse 57 says, “As the Living Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father: so he that eateth me, shall live by me”. If we say that eating Christ means eating a piece of literal bread, then we shall have to say also that Christ literally ate His Father. Quite clearly, what He in fact did was nourish His soul on His Father’s will. He Himself said to His disciples, “I have meat to eat that ye know not of”, John 4:32. The teaching of chapter six had obviously not been given at that point. When the disciples queried His remark He replied, “My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work”, verse 34. When He was physically hungry in the wilderness, He was spiritually full, as He fed upon God as revealed in His Word, for He quoted the words of Deuteronomy 8:3 which read, “man doth not live by bread only, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God doth man live”. The true believer does this too.

The apostle Paul made no reference to any supposed change in the loaf and the cup, but he did write about “discerning the Lord’s body”, 1 Corinthians 11:29. So although the bread and wine do not change, such is the power of the symbol, that as we think upon them we are given vivid and true-to-life impressions of Christ.

It is interesting to note that the Jews referred to the flesh of the roast lamb on passover night as “the body of the lamb”. And also, that after AD 70 and the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of the temple services, they began calling the loaf “the lamb”.

26:27
And he took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, Drink ye all of it;

And he took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them- just as He took a body in incarnation, so He became a partaker in flesh and blood, Hebrews 2:14. The wine was already poured into the cup at the start of the proceedings, for the life or soul of the flesh is in the blood, Leviticus 17:11, and Christ poured out His soul unto death, Isaiah 53:12.

Saying, Drink ye all of it- by this is meant that all the eleven apostles present had a right to drink of the cup. They were not expected to drink all of the wine in the cup, for Mark’s account is, “and they all drank of it”, Mark 14:23. The point is that they all shared the same cup in fellowship with one another. As the apostle Paul will write later, “The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ?” 1 Corinthians 10:16. “The cup of blessing” was one of the four cups at the passover supper.

When reinforcing these things to the Corinthians, the apostle writes, “Likewise the cup after supper”, thus emphasising that the Lord’s Supper and the passover supper are distinct. But it does raise the question as to whether the Lord used the cup that was left undrunk at the passover to institute the new Supper. That cup was called the “Cup of wrath”, which was why it was left untouched. But He would drink the cup of wrath, and turn it into a cup of blessing for His people. Either that, or He used the cup of blessing of the passover supper.

26:28
For this is my blood of the new testament, which is shed for many for the remission of sins.

For this is my blood of the new testament- as godly Jews, the apostles were forbidden to eat or drink blood, Leviticus 317, and this ban extended into the present age, as we see from Acts 15:29. To suggest, then, that the wine becomes blood, and is then drunk, is to disobey God. But in this scenario, it is Christ who is commanding to drink! Does Christ command what God prohibits? The answer is obviously in the negative.

The apostles would be familiar with the terms of the new covenant as set out in Jeremiah 31:31-34. This covenant will be with the nation of Israel in the future, but since the institution of the Supper is reaffirmed by the apostle Paul to a mainly-Gentile assembly, and the Lord’s words about the new testament are included, we learn that in principle the blessings of the new covenant are available to all believers. The apostle described himself and Timothy to that same assembly as “able ministers of the new testament”, 2 Corinthians 3:6. A reading of the quotation of Jeremiah 31 found in Hebrews 8 will show that the main features of the new covenant blessings are as follows: grace, not law; a real relationship with God as His people; the knowledge of God, which is the essence of eternal life, and the remission of sins on the basis of the work of propitiation. These are gospel blessings, and believers of this age already possess them.

Which is shed for many for the remission of sins- in Mark it is simply “shed for many”. In Luke it is “shed for you”. Matthew is the governmental gospel, and the remission of sins is an exercise of God’s governmental dealings with men. Mark is the ministerial gospel, and he emphasises the greatness of the task that Jehovah’s Perfect Servant undertook at Calvary. Luke is the personal gospel, so he emphasises the fact that the blood is shed for individual people. In Paul’s account the emphasis is not on sins, but on the remembrance of Christ.

26:29
But I say unto you, I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine, until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom.

But I say unto you, I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine- from this we learn what “the cup” consisted of, even the fruit of the vine. This is appropriate, for we read of “the pure blood of the grape”, Deuteronomy 32:14. Couple this with the fact that the Lord Jesus is the True Vine, we have a fit picture of His precious blood. We are nowhere told that the cup of the Lord’s Supper was fermented wine as such, simply that it was the fruit of the grape vine.

This statement by the Lord shows that even though He ate and drank with the apostles after His resurrection, Acts 10:41, He did not keep the Lord’s Supper with them, for that is reserved for the time of His absence, which is implied in the “till he come” of 1 Corinthians 11:26. Note He says “this fruit of the vine”, meaning the fruit of the vine in connection with the Supper, not “the fruit of the vine”, meaning wine generally.

Until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom- a reference to the kingdom that He will set up on earth when He comes again to reign. That this is a literal kingdom is proved by many things, not least by the fact that He speaks of drinking literal new wine in that day of joy and gladness. As Isaiah wrote, “And in this mountain shall the Lord of hosts make unto all people a feast of fat things, a feast of wines on the lees, of fat things full of marrow, of wines on the lees well refined”, Isaiah 25:6. In that day believers will not have a sinful nature, so there will be no drunkenness.

Note that the coming kingdom of Christ on earth is His Father’s kingdom too, for Christ shall reign on behalf of His Father, and then hand over the kingdom to God, His work done, 1 Corinthians 15:24,28. The kingdom will then extend into eternity.

It is only Luke that tells us the Lord said, “this do in remembrance of me”, Luke 22:19. In the three gospels that record the institution of the Supper, the Lord referred to the coming kingdom. But whereas Matthew and Mark record it in connection with the Lord’s Supper, Luke puts the words after the finish of the passover supper, Luke 22:14-18. So where Matthew and Mark put a mention of the future kingdom, Luke puts the appeal of Christ that we remember Him. Remembrance of Him necessarily involves thinking of the past. This is repeated by the apostle Paul when he is writing of these matters. He says nothing about the kingdom, but he does add that when we eat the bread and drink the cup, we “do shew the Lord’s death till he come”, 1 Corinthians 11:26.

(g) Verses 30-35
Conversation on the mount of Olives about denial

26:30
And when they had sung an hymn, they went out into the mount of Olives.

And when they had sung an hymn- this would refer to Psalm 118, which was not only sung publicly whilst the passover lambs were being slain in the temple, but was sung privately at the end of the passover supper, as if those in private houses were at one with those in the temple. How significant are the words at the end of that psalm, “bind the sacrifice with cords, even unto the horns of the altar”, verse 27. It is true that the Lord is about to be bound by men at His arrest and trial, but in a real sense He was bound by His devotion to His Father’s interests.

They went out into the mount of Olives- Matthew mentions seven mountains in his gospel, in 4:8; 5:1; 14:23; 15:29; 17:1; 26:30 and 28:16. It is appropriate that Matthew’s kingdom gospel should mention seven mountains, for in scripture seven is the number of perfection and completeness, and a mountain is a symbol of a kingdom. Moreover, Matthew does not simply mention seven mountains as if he is describing the scenery, but tells us that the King went up into those mountains Himself, for He is the rightful king.

While it is true that Matthew mentions seven mountains, he only tells us the name of one of them, the mount of Olives. (The word mount is the same as mountain). Matthew always links his gospel with the Old Testament, and the mount of Olives features in Zechariah’s prophecy of the return of Christ to reign. He writes, “And his feet shall stand in that day upon the mount of Olives, which is before Jerusalem on the east…and the Lord shall be king over all the earth”, Zechariah 14:4,9.

Matthew, Mark and Luke do not give us the prayer that John records in his chapter 17. Nor are we told where that prayer was uttered. We know that during His upper room ministry the Lord said, “Arise, let us go hence”, John 14:31. We are not told by John where the Lord was located until, after He had spoken the words of His prayer, He crossed the brook Cedron, 18:1. This is entirely appropriate, for the Lord said in His prayer, “And now I am no more in the world”, John 17:11. For John to tell us where he was in the world would not suit that statement.

26:31
Then saith Jesus unto them, All ye shall be offended because of me this night: for it is written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep of the flock shall be scattered abroad.

Then saith Jesus unto them, All ye shall be offended because of me this night- when they saw their Lord arrested and taken away, their hopes that He was the mighty King who would defeat His enemies would be dashed, and they would rush to distance themselves from Him.

For it is written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep of the flock shall be scattered abroad- this is a reference to the words of Zechariah 13:7. The earlier part of the verse reads, “Awake, O sword, against my shepherd, and against the man that is my fellow, saith the Lord of hosts”. This is often taken to refer to God dealing with His Son in judgement at the cross, and the sword of Divine justice being unsheathed to smite Him on account of our sins. But bearing in mind the context in which the Lord quotes the second half of the verse, the reference must surely be to something that happened prior to the scattering of the flock.

God has placed a sword of justice in the hands of the rulers of this world. The apostle Paul wrote, “Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? Do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same: for he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil”, Romans 13:4. Couple with this the words of the Lord to Pilate, when he claimed to have power to crucify Him or to release Him, “Thou couldest have no power at all against me, except it were given thee from above”, John 19:11. Pilate three times over said that he found no fault in Christ. If he uses the sword in his hand aright, then he will release Christ, for He “did that which was good”. Also, if he uses that sword aright, he will crucify Barabbas, for Pilate was supposed to “execute wrath upon him that doeth evil”, and Barabbas did evil. But Pilate put good for evil and evil for good, and used his sword unjustly. But the point is that he did it only by Divine permission. Pilate had not been given the sword God to execute Christ, but God allowed him to do so to work out His purpose.

So, coming back to Matthew 26:31, we are learning that the Lord, being privy to the Divine conversation, knows that permission has just been granted by heaven for the authorities to set in motion a process which will end in Him being unjustly crucified. We know from Daniel 4:17 that Nebuchadnezzar’s period of madness was “by the decree of the watchers, and the demand by the word of the holy ones”, this being “the decree of the Most High”, verse 24. Political events are controlled and restrained by holy watchers in heaven. Later the Lord will tell Pilate that the power to crucify Him was given him from above, John 19:11.

Perhaps it is at this point that the arrest party is setting out. The sword of human justice is being allowed to awake, to stir into action, and it will smite the one who is God’s equal. It is in this context we should read the words, “I will smite the shepherd”, for what God allows to happen can be said to be what He does.

God’s ideal king is a shepherd king, and He was born at Bethlehem, and the scribes rightly applied the prophecy to Him which spoke of the one who would rule God’s people, Matthew 2:6, (where the word means “rule as a shepherd”), The “powers that be” were not allowed to touch Him at His birth, but now the purpose of God is that He should be arrested, tried and executed. When this process begins, it is no surprise to find that the disciples will forsake Him and flee, for they feared for their own lives too. They were scattered to their own homes. Still obsessed with the idea that He would defeat His enemies and immediately set up His kingdom, (an idea that persisted with them even after His resurrection, Acts 1:6), they showed their disillusionment by fleeing from Him.

26:32
But after I am risen again, I will go before you into Galilee.

But after I am risen again, I will go before you into Galilee- far from being defeated by His enemies, the Lord would triumph over them in the most decisive way, routing the unseen forces of evil, and rising to exercise His Lordship in new ways. This should have strengthened the disciples, even if it did not, in the short-term, stop them from fleeing.

As we see from John 20, the apostles remained in Jerusalem for over a week. Then we find that they met up with Him on the shores of Galilee, for He had gone before them into Galilee. The true shepherd always goes before his sheep, to search out a safe place for them, and to feed them. Jerusalem was not a safe place for the disciples, and the Lord ensures they go to Galilee. Later He will send them back to Jerusalem to wait for the coming of the Spirit, for if the Lord directs His people to go to a certain place, they can count on Him to watch over them there.

Zechariah had gone on to write, “And I will turn mine hand upon the little ones”, meaning that God would enclose His vulnerable and frightened sheep of the flock with His protecting hand, and this He did when He went before them into the safety of a mountain in Galilee. He called them “children” in John 21:5, and perhaps this would correspond to “the little ones” of Zechariah’s prophecy.

26:33
Peter answered and said unto him, Though all men shall be offended because of thee, yet will I never be offended.

Peter answered and said unto him, Though all men shall be offended because of thee, yet will I never be offended- these are strong statements, and the words of the apostle Paul come to our minds, “let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall, 1 Corinthians 10:12.

It seems that Peter vowed three times to be faithful to his Lord, and three times he was warned that he was about to deny Him. He said he was ready to go both into prison, and to death, Luke 22:33. He said he would lay down his life for the Lord’s sake, John 13:37. And here he is vowing to never be offended. Each time he was warned about denying the Lord three times.

26:34
Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, That this night, before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice.

Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, That this night, before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice- we should distinguish between the actual cock crowing, and the end of the watch which was called “the cock crow”. Cocks often crow in the dead of night, and then crow to signal the end of the watch called “The cock-crow”.

26:35
Peter said unto him, Though I should die with thee, yet will I not deny thee. Likewise also said all the disciples.

Peter said unto him, Though I should die with thee, yet will I not deny thee. Likewise also said all the disciples- Peter takes the situation to the extreme length, and asserts that even if he was about to be put to death for Christ’s sake, he would not deny Him. It is said that Peter suffered death by crucifixion, and insisted that he be crucified upside down, so as not to be confused with His Lord. So despite his denial, he made good his word eventually.

Likewise also said all the disciples- so all of the eleven remaining apostles said they would not deny Him, but only Peter did, which is why, on the shores of Galilee, (and by a fire the Lord had kindled and not the men of the world), the Lord asked him if he loved Him “more than these”, for they had not denied Him, but he had, John 21:15-17.

(h) Verses 36-46
Christ’s prayers in Gethsemane

26:36
Then cometh Jesus with them unto a place called Gethsemane, and saith unto the disciples, Sit ye here, while I go and pray yonder.

Then cometh Jesus with them unto a place called Gethsemane- John does not mention the name of this place, which means “the place of olive presses”. John is more concerned about Christ’s prayer to His Father as the Son, than His prayers to His Father as the man crushed by circumstances. Nonetheless the olive press yielded the fresh olive oil, figurative of the “spirit of Jesus Christ”, Philippians 1:9, who enables adverse circumstances to be overcome.

And saith unto the disciples, Sit ye here, while I go and pray yonder- there is no mention of disciples being with Him when He prayed in John 17, for they could not share His experience. Here, His own are not far away, so that Peter as an old man can describe himself as a witness of the sufferings of Christ, even though he did not stand by the cross, 1 Peter 5:1.

26:37
And he took with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, and began to be sorrowful and very heavy.

And he took with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee- these three have indicated their determination to follow the Lord and suffer for His sake. James and John said they could drink His cup of martyr sufferings, and Peter said he would follow Him, even unto prison and death. They are now being prepared for those experiences by seeing the agony of Christ. They cannot say they were not forewarned. Perhaps to strengthen their faith in Him so that they did not deny Him, it was these three who were shown His power to raise the dead, Luke 8:51-56, and His coming kingdom-glory, Luke 9:28-36.

And began to be sorrowful and very heavy- the sorrows He is about to experience, and the weight of suffering He is about to endure, whether from men or from His God, bear down upon Him.

26:38
Then saith he unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death: tarry ye here, and watch with me.

Then saith he unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death- the prayer that John records is full of glory, with not a hint of suffering or sorrow. That is surely because it is spoken as if the cross is over, and then the suffering and sorrow will be over. This prayer is different in character, just as it was spoken in a different place. Hebrews 5:7 speaks of Him offering up “prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears”.

To be sorrowful unto death means that such was the vividness of the anticipation of the sufferings of Calvary, that they almost overwhelmed Him in death. Of course, all was under Divine control, and He laid down His life of Himself, not being forced to do so either by men or circumstances, but this does not take away from the reality of what He is suffering here in the garden.

Needless to say He is not sorrowful because sins have been laid upon Him already, as some seem to think. The apostle Peter is very clear that He “bare our sins in his own body on the tree”, 1 Peter 2:24. To say that Christ bore sins at any time before the cross is heresy, for bearing sins involves being forsaken of God, and He was not thus forsaken in His life, for He could say “the Father is with me”, John 19:32.

During His life He was the Man of Sorrows, for sorrow marked Him so much as He surveyed the ravages of sin all around Him. Now He is exceeding sorrowful, for His sorrows surpass what any other has experienced. So much so, that they produce a near-death experience in Him.

Tarry ye here, and watch with me- His true humanity is not only seen in His sorrow, but also in His wish that His three favoured disciples should be near at hand. He is the pre-eminently social man, taking solace from the company of His own. Sadly they do not afford this comfort on this occasion, but fall asleep. They had the practical task of watching out for the arrest party, but they failed in this.

26:39
And he went a little farther, and fell on his face, and prayed, saying, O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me: nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt.

And he went a little farther, and fell on his face, and prayed- in Mark 14:35 we read that He went forward a little, so He was not so far away that they could not witness His agony in prayer. In Luke He was withdrawn from them a stone’s cast, and kneeled down, and prayed, Luke 22:41. Is this so that the disciples, if they had kept awake, could alert Him of the coming of Judas and his arrest party by throwing a stone to fall near Him?

He had instructed the eleven disciples to sit and pray, Mark 14:32, so there are three postures in prayer here, sitting, (indicating calmness of spirit before God); kneeling, (speaking of reverence before God), and on the face on the ground, (the sign of total submission and surrender to the will of God). During the prayer of John 17, the Lord’s face was lifted up to heaven, which suggests He was standing whilst praying, which would indicate His consciousness of acceptance with the Father.

Saying, O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me- it is customary to think of this cup as the cup of wrath which Christ was to drink at Calvary. The psalmist said “For in the hand of the Lord there is a cup, and the wine is red; it is full of mixture; and he poureth out of the same: but the dregs thereof, all the wicked of the earth shall wring them out, and drink them”, Psalm 75:8. The trouble with applying that scripture to Calvary is that the wicked drink from the same cup, whereas the sufferings of Christ are unique.

On passover night it is said that there were four cups on the table. There was the cup of thanksgiving, the cup of blessing, the cup of the kingdom, from which three cups all at the table drank, and then there was the fourth cup, which was left untouched, for it was called the cup of wrath.

The difficulty in saying that the cup spoken of in this prayer is the cup of wrath, is that when James and John were asked if they could drink of the cup Christ would drink, they said they were able, Matthew 20:22. We might have expected the Lord to reply that they could not drink of the cup. However, His response was, “Ye shall indeed drink of my cup”, verse 23. Given that James was killed by the sword of Herod, and John was exiled on Patmos by the Roman authorities, and calls himself “companion in tribulation”, Revelation :9, it seems that the cup in this passage is the cup of physical martyr sufferings.

It is true that in Mark’s account of Gethsemane the cup and the hour appear to be the same, see Mark 14:35,36. But it could well be that the hour in question is not the hour of the crucifixion, but the hour the Lord spoke of when He was arrested, saying, “this is your hour, and the power of darkness”, Luke 22:53. The forces of evil would hold Him in their power, and He would be crucified through weakness, 2 Corinthians 13:4, meaning He was crucified after passing through a period when He was powerless to avoid the sufferings inflicted upon Him before He was crucified, such as the beatings and the scourging. They had no value as to the putting away of sin, and they were not directly prophesied in the Old Testament, unlike the actual crucifixion.

If this interpretation is correct, then it would solve the dilemma that confronts us if we say the cup was the cup of Divine wrath. How can the one who is privy to eternal counsel, who knows He is the Lamb foreordained before the foundation of the world, ask for Calvary to be removed from Him? But if the cup is the martyr sufferings inflicted by men, He might well ask to not have to endure them, since He, as perfect man, and with His senses not dulled at all by sin, would be sensitive to pain as no other is.

Nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt- the fact that He knew what was involved in the cup shows He is equal with God. The fact that in His extremity He asked for the cup to be removed shows He is truly Man, and submissive Man. No sensible person invites pain, but seeks to avoid it. As one who has, by coming into manhood, subjected Himself to the Father’s will, (for “the head of Christ is God”, 1 Corinthians 11:3), He is prepared for His inclination in this matter to be over-ruled by His Father.

26:40
And he cometh unto the disciples, and findeth them asleep, and saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch with me one hour?

And he cometh unto the disciples, and findeth them asleep- Luke tells us they were sleeping for sorrow, Luke 22:45. They really should have tried to keep awake, for their sorrow because of what He had told them in the upper room about Him going away was as nothing compared to His sorrow in the garden. In any case, He had told them in the upper room, “If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, ‘I go to the Father'”, John 14:28.

And saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch with me one hour? Peter is singled out for the rebuke because he was the one who protested most strongly that he would not fail the Lord. The rebuke was also a warning, for if he could not sit and watch one hour in the company of those who loved the Lord, what would he do when surrounded by His enemies in the high priest’s palace?

26:41
Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.

Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation- they were not only to watch for the arrest party, but also watch for themselves, lest they fail the Lord at this critical moment. They were also to be in an attitude of prayer, as He was, but for them it was prayer that they would not venture on a path that would expose them to temptation. This is especially a word for Peter, who was in danger of denying his Lord when the temptation to do so presented itself.

The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak- the Lord fully knows their hearts, that they are true to Him, and really want to please Him, but they are vulnerable, and liable to fail Him, for the flesh, meaning the material part of man, lets them down. They allow weakness of body and sorrow of soul to prevent them from watching and praying in their spirits.

26:42
He went away again the second time, and prayed, saying, O my Father, if this cup may not pass away from me, except I drink it, thy will be done.

He went away again the second time, and prayed- we know from Mark’s account that He prayed the first prayer again, Mark 14:39. He must have gone on to pray as Matthew records. In between the two parts of this second session of prayer He must have discerned that it was not His Father’s will to remove the cup from Him.

Saying, O my Father, if this cup may not pass away from me, except I drink it, thy will be done- given the foregoing insight into the Father’s will, He now submits Himself to whatever the cup of suffering contains. Understandably, we have great difficulty in reconciling the fact that, on the one hand, being equal with the Father in every Divine attribute, His will is as binding as the Father’s, and on the other hand His words, “Thy will be done”. But we must remember that He has subjected Himself to the headship of God by coming into manhood, and by definition a man is subject to the will of God. He will not allow His will as a man to over-ride the will of His Father, who is not subject to any.

This prayer of submission results in Him saying at the arrest, “The cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it”, John 18:11. It cannot be that He will refuse anything that His Father gives Him.

26:43
And he came and found them asleep again: for their eyes were heavy.

And he came and found them asleep again: for their eyes were heavy- they were neither watching nor praying. They had allowed their weakness of flesh, (“their eyes were heavy”), to prevent them displaying willingness of spirit by praying.

26:44
And he left them, and went away again, and prayed the third time, saying the same words.

And he left them, and went away again, and prayed the third time, saying the same words- so the two parts of His prayer, (His request that the cup might pass, and the submission to His Father’s will because it would not), were each repeated. Mark tells us the first part was repeated, showing us the intensity of His feeling about the matter, while Matthew tells us the second part was repeated, showing the intensity of His submission.

Characteristically, Luke presents the intense feelings of Christ as a man, and simply gives us the first part in which he sought that the cup might pass.

Luke alone gives us the information that an angel came to strengthen Him, and that His sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground, Luke 22:41-44. These are features that emphasise the reality of the manhood of the Lord Jesus, which is Luke’s theme throughout his gospel.

26:45
Then cometh he to his disciples, and saith unto them, Sleep on now, and take your rest: behold, the hour is at hand, and the Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners.

Then cometh he to his disciples, and saith unto them, Sleep on now, and take your rest- they have failed Him in this first test, so they need to be strengthened in body to be in a fit state to not fail Him next time. We should care for our bodies so that we are in a fit state to serve Christ. We are not told how long He watched over them as they slept.

Behold, the hour is at hand- so the two halves of this verse are separated by a period of time. The hour of which He had spoken in His prayer, and the hour that is the same as the cup, according to Mark 14:35,36, meaning the hour of His martyr sufferings, has arrived.

And the Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners- He knows the movements of Judas, the one who has changed sides, and who will now stand with the arrest party. As Son of Man He will have universal control when He reigns, but here He is about to be in the control of sinners. This is what He prayed about, for He, a real and sensitive man, dreaded what they might do once they had bound Him. Notice that He includes the high priests in the “sinners” category.

26:46
Rise, let us be going: behold, he is at hand that doth betray me.

Rise, let us be going- having watched over them as they slept, He now rouses them, for Judas is approaching, and they need to be alert. Needless to say He is not attempting to escape, but is going out to meet the arrest party. We know from John’s account that, far from avoiding those who had come to arrest Him, He went forth to meet them, taking the initiative, and showing His control over events, John 18:4.

Behold, he is at hand that doth betray me- no doubt the noise of the many who had come to arrest Him was evident, but the Lord’s main concern was for Judas. Even at this late stage He will seek to turn him from his evil deed.

1 CORINTHIANS 11:1-16

PURPOSE OF THE PASSAGE

In 1 Corinthians 11:2 the apostle praises the believers in the assembly at Corinth for the way in which they kept the ordinances handed down to them.  He is concerned, however, that they should do this intelligently.  In particular, He explains to them the reasons behind the requirement that the sisters should have covered heads and long hair, and that the brothers should have uncovered heads and short hair.

This chapter continues the theme of worship that was begun in chapter 8. In chapters 8-10 the apostle deals with the worship of idols, but now is preparing the way for the worship of God. This is the highest occupation of the believer, and it is important for it to be done correctly, for God is the God of order, not confusion. He has made it clear in His word what is acceptable to Him and what is not. Much of what passes for “Christian worship” today is no more than the entertainment of those present, very often with the sort of music that heathen tribes use to call up demons.
Worship is essentially giving to God. It is for His pleasure, primarily, not ours. Although of course to please God does give pleasure to the heart of the believer, but that is not the main object.
The Lord Jesus said that true worshippers worship the Father in spirit and in truth, John 4:23. They do not need material and visible objects before them in order to produce worship; they worship in spirit. Nor should they worship in an erroneous way, for the God they worship is the God of truth. They must necessarily worship in truth, therefore.
So the apostle is preparing the way for the highest expression of worship that believers engage in on the first day of the week. The remembrance of the Lord Jesus at the Lord’s Supper is certain to evoke worship in the hearts of true believers. Neglect this opportunity, and the week has started badly. If a believer does not worship at the Lord’s Supper, he is unlikely to do so at other times.
So it is that in preparation for his instruction about the Lord’s Supper in the second half of this chapter, the apostle deals with the relative positions of believing men and women, and the way they should be dressed in God’s presence. This is of great importance, and of great significance. For the apostle will refer to ordinances, and there are seven visible ordinances that the believer has to do with. They are physical things, indeed, but such is their spiritual significance that the material is lost sight of in favour of the spiritual.
Those seven things are as follows:
1. The water of baptism.
2. The uncovered head of the male believer.
3. The covered head of the female believer.
4. The short hair of the male believer.
5. The long hair of the female believer.
6. The loaf of the Lord’s Supper.
7. The cup of the Lord’s Supper.
These seven things are not sacraments, but they are each deeply significant, and we do well to take note of the meaning of all of them, for they are visible sign of invisible principles. No less than six of them will come before us in this chapter.
It is important to bear in mind that the support which sections 3 and 4 give to the teaching in section 2 is not drawn from culture local to Corinth, but is based on that which was ordained by God from the beginning of man’s life on the earth. The things which were relevant only to Corinth are not dealt with in this epistle, but were set in order by the apostle when he was personally present with the believers- they were not applicable to anywhere else, and so are not recorded. As he wrote, “And the rest will I set in order when I come”, 1 Corinthians 11:34.
The epistle is written to “All that in every place call upon the name of the Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours”, 1 Corinthians 1:2. The matters dealt with in the epistle are therefore relevant to all companies that claim to bow to the authority of Jesus Christ as Lord. The apostle states in 1 Corinthians 14:37 that the things contained in the epistle are the commandments of the Lord; all true believers will surely be ready to acknowledge that fact, and act upon it.
The subject of headship is to the fore in this passage, and in verses 2-7 the apostle draws attention to principles derived from both the subjection and headship of Christ. In verses 8-13 the principles underlying the creation account of Genesis. And in verses 14 and 15 the principles brought to our notice by natural instinct implanted by God at the beginning when He made man in his own image.

STRUCTURE OF VERSES 1-1

Section 1 Verse 2 Loyal recognition
Section 2 Verses 3-6 Methodical instruction
Section 3 Verses 7-12 Original creation
Section 4 Verses 13-15 Natural constitution
Section 5 Verse 16 Universal recognition

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 11, VERSES 1 TO 6:

11:1 Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.
11:2 Now I praise you, brethren, that ye remember me in all things, and keep the ordinances, as I delivered them to you.
11:3 But I would have you know, that the head of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God.
11:4 Every man praying or prophesying, having his head covered, dishonoureth his head.
11:5 But every woman that prayeth or prophesieth with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head: for that is even all one as if she were shaven.
11:6 For if the woman be not covered, let her also be shorn: but if it be a shame for a woman to be shorn or shaven, let her be covered.

Section 1     Verses 1,2      Loyal recognition

11:1 Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.

Be ye followers of me- there is a strong case for thinking that this verse goes best with chapter 10, where the apostle closes the chapter with his testimony in verse 33 that he pleased all men in all things, not seeking his own profit. It is fitting that he should encourage the Corinthians to follow his example. Of course he is not trying to form a sect of followers. He has said in verse that we should do all to the glory of God, and forming a sect would certainly not glorify God. What he means is that they should follow his example.
Even as I also am of Christ- the apostle immediately makes it clear that this exhortation to follow him is limited. He cannot be followed in everything, for he, like all believers at present, has a sin-principle within him which results in failure. There is one who has not this sin-principle, however, and it is He, Christ, who can safely be followed. It is only as Paul followed Christ that we can follow Paul.

11:2 Now I praise you, brethren, that ye remember me in all things, and keep the ordinances, as I delivered them unto you.

Now I praise you, brethren- from Acts 18:1-11 we learn that the apostle Paul was responsible for the founding of the assembly in Corinth, and had subsequently spent a considerable time with them, “teaching the word of God among them”. He writes to them, therefore, as one who knows them, and he is able to praise them for not forgetting what he had taught them. There were many things at Corinth that needed correction, as we learn from the two epistles Paul wrote to them, but he praises where he can. His praises and rebukes were God’s gracious provision for them, for they give a preview of that time when all believers shall stand before the judgement seat of Christ, and their lives, attitudes, and service are reviewed. In the goodness of God they would have encouragement from Paul’s praise, and correction from his rebukes, so they could make adjustment before the solemn day of Christ’s review came.
That ye remember me in all things- Paul’s conduct and teaching must have made a deep impression upon them, for he can say here that they remembered him in all things. They related every aspect of their conduct to what he had told them when present. When a problem confronted them they immediately thought to themselves, “What did Paul teach us about this”. So it was that he could commend them for keeping the ordinances, and doing so in just the same way as he had instructed them. They had not sought to modify them in any way, and this was commendable.
And keep the ordinances, as I delivered them unto you- an ordinance is a matter that is handed down, and might well have been translated as tradition. There are different sorts of tradition, however. The Lord Jesus spoke of Jewish tradition, by which the rulers in Israel had made the word of God of no effect, Matthew 15:6. The apostle Peter referred to a vain conversation received by tradition, 1 Peter 1:18. The traditions or ordinances that are referred to in our passage, however, are spiritual matters handed down from God to His people, through the apostles, and as such are not vain, and far from setting aside God’s word, they establish it. This means they are of supreme importance, and hence to keep them faithfully is praiseworthy. The word for keep used here means to hold firmly. The Corinthians were keeping the ordinances faithfully and resolutely. The commendation of the apostle here gives us a strong indication as to what Christ will praise at the judgement seat.
We see from this idea of tradition, or handing down, the importance of regularly rehearsing the matters dealt with in this passage. How easy it is for the years to slip by, and the subject never be raised. How easy, too, for the Scriptures to be sidelined, so that when there are those who wish to conform to them, they find they are in the minority, and probably labelled legal! The apostle exhorted Timothy in these terms, “And the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also”, 2 Timothy 2:2. In this way there will be a constant rehearsal of these important matters, and both old and young will be instructed.

Section 2      Verses 3-6      Methodical instruction

11:3 But I would have you know, that the head of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God.

But I would have you know- the fact that this verse begins in this way would indicate that whereas their keeping of the ordinances was commendable, nevertheless there was a certain lack of intelligence as to why they were keeping them. This the apostle now corrects. The word used for know is “eidon”, to discern. It is not the word for know which means “to get to know”, for they had done that when the apostle was with them. They had come to know the truth, now they were to discern its meaning. No doubt the apostle had explained it to them once, but like most of us, they needed to be told again.
It is good to obey the word of God; it is better to obey with intelligence and insight. God graciously gives us reasons why He expects us to do certain things, and in the measure we get to know what these reasons are, we discern the workings of the Divine Mind, and thereby increase in the knowledge of God, Colossians 1:10. No doubt this is one reason why the apostle put such stress in the first four chapters of the epistle on the foolishness of the world’s wisdom, and the value of Divine wisdom. Wisdom is insight into the true nature of things, and in this passage the apostle will set out the true nature of things relative to headship and subjection.
Having said that, it is expected that the brothers and sisters comply with the ordinances set out in this passage whether they understand the meaning of them or not. The Corinthians did not seem to understand the meaning until this epistle arrived to explain it to them. Nonetheless, the apostle commends them for keeping the ordinances. To comply with this passage even in ignorance is praiseworthy; to comply with it in wisdom is best of all.
The use of the word head in this verse is clearly a figure of speech. Just as the whole of the human body is controlled by its physical head, so a person’s “head”, or superior, has the authority to administrate and control. The expected response from those under the headship of another is that of subjection, just as the human body is governed by the directives of the head, and responds accordingly. The idea of headship naturally makes us think of our physical head, and this is why the ordinance has to do with the physical heads of brothers and sisters, and their covering or not covering them, or shearing their hair or not shearing it, is in view. Wives usually signify their subjection and loyalty to their husbands by wearing a ring on their finger. We do not immediately connect finger with headship, but we do connect head with headship, and this is what the apostle is emphasising.
There are those who try to avoid the ideas of subjection and authority by saying that headship has to do with source, just as the head-waters of a river are the source of water for the rest of its length. The apostle is using the specific metaphor of the human body, however, with its vital link with the head. That head does not provide resources for the body. Rather, it directs and controls the body. It is true that it has to do with resources in that way, but is not in itself the resource.
It is easy to see why the principles of this passage are dismissed by some in our day, for the time fast approaches when lawlessness, and the Lawless One, will dominate the earth, and men will cast off the bands and cords of Divine restraint, 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12; Psalm 2:3. How sad that professed believers should reject Divine authority by refusing to carry out the teaching of these verses. No doubt the protests of the women’s liberation movement of recent years have influenced worldly believers in this. For centuries there was no questioning of these matters; it is a purely modern phenomenon, which in itself should make us suspicious.
The apostle makes three statements, in which he sets out the governing principles behind the ordinance of head-coverings. By so doing, the apostle shows the Divinely-ordered relationships between brothers, sisters, Christ and God. These statements are as follows:
The head of every man is Christ.
The head of the woman is the man.
The head of Christ is God.
The first statement speaks of Christ’s headship, the third of His subjection. The first and second statements show that man is both subject and head, as Christ is, and the second statement shows that the woman is subject, as Christ is; so both man and woman have Christ as their model.
The idea of Christ being subject to God is reserved as the climax to the statement, even though it took place first, when Christ became man. Perhaps this is because subjection to a head comes hard to us, and we are reminded that Christ was subject, yet He did not find it hard, but was subject to God in willing obedience. We should take our example from this. Perhaps the apostle also puts the subjection of Christ last because both male and female are subject in this passage, whereas the male is head as well as being subject. What is common to both male and female, and which both need a perfect example of, is found in the end of the verse for emphasis.
That the head of every man is Christ- this means that every believing man has Christ as his head. Christ is his controlling authority to whom he should be subject. By His death on the cross, the Lord Jesus has set aside Adam and the things he brought in by his sin. By His resurrection He has brought in a new order of things of which He is the head. All evil forces that asserted their authority before, have been utterly defeated, as is declared in Ephesians 1:19-21; 4:8; Colossians 2:15; and Hebrews 2:14.
In other passages we learn the following:
He is head of the church which is His body, where believers are looked at corporately, Colossians 1:18.
He is head of all the angels, Colossians 2:10.
He is head, potentially, of all things, Ephesians 1:22.
He is head of the church just as the husband is the head of his wife, Ephesians 5:23.
In the passage before us, however, He is head of the individual man. Since Adam is still the head of unbelievers, this must relate only to believing men. They cannot have two heads at the same time. Furthermore, the “every man” of verse 4 is included in the “every man” of this verse. But since in that verse the man is praying to God or prophesying for God, he must be a believer.
If “every man” means every man without exception, whether believer or unbeliever, then every Christian woman is subject to an unbelieving man, which surely cannot be the apostle’s thought. See also verse 11, where the apostle takes it for granted that those he writes to are in a position to act, “in the Lord”; in other words, they are believers.
The use of the word “every” is not to make us think of all men universally, whatever their spiritual status before God, but is surely to remind us that the teaching of the passage is not confined to married men, but to all believing males. It is true that the word for “man” and “husband” is the same, but the context has to decide for us.
No doubt the headship of Christ over man is mentioned first to caution the brothers, lest they should think of their headship over the woman as an excuse to dominate. They should remember that they are subject to a head, too. The brothers must ask themselves how Christ acts as their head; does He act harshly and without feeling? The answer, of course, is obvious; then the brothers should exercise their God-given authority in regard to the sisters in a similar way. They will be helped in this by taking note of the attitude of Christ to women when He was down here. Whereas others, even disciples, may have criticised and rebuffed them, Christ ever appreciated their exercises, and was quick to defend and praise them. A study of the following passages will assure us that this is the case:- Luke 7:13,15; 7:44-50; 8:2,3; 8:48; 8:54,55; John 12:7.
And the head of the woman is the man- as we have noted, the Greek words for man and woman also mean husband and wife, but the context decides. So, for instance, in Ephesians 5:22-33 it is easily seen that the apostle is counseling married persons, since he refers to a man leaving his father and mother when he gets married. Here, however, it is the relative relationships between brothers and sisters in the Lord that is in view, for it is not marital matters, but spiritual exercises like praying and prophesying that are on the apostle’s mind. If headship only applies to married believers, then there would be a two-tiered system prevailing, with differing ordinances according to whether a believer is married or unmarried. This clearly would be confusion.
A female believer was once heard to exclaim, “I want Christ as my head!” The fact is that Christ is indeed the head of sisters, since He is head of the body, and sisters are members of the body as much as brothers. The point here, however, is how God has ordered the relative positions of the brother and the sister. In this area, He has ordained that the sister should recognise the headship of the man, who, in turn, should recognise the headship of Christ, who, again in turn, recognises the headship of God. In this way, Divine order is maintained to His glory. We may rest assured that His orderings cannot be improved upon. So in one respect the sister has Christ for her head, whereas in another, it is the brother who occupies that role. The former has to do with the eternal security which being linked to Christ guarantees, (for the life of the body is bound up with the life of the head), whereas the latter has to do with how the authority of God is put into effect in practical terms on the earth.
And the head of Christ is God- here the apostle declares by way of climax that having come into subject manhood, it can be said of Christ that His head is God. Immediately we realise that subjection is not a matter of spirituality or moral superiority, since Christ is neither less spiritual than God, nor inferior to Him. It follows that the subjection of the woman to the man does not mean that she is inferior or less spiritual. The scriptures are clear as to the equality of the Son of God with the Father, irrespective of whether He is in heaven, (John 1:1; Philippians 2:6), on earth, (John 5:17-18; John 10:30,36), or returned to heaven, (Colossians 2:9- note the present tense, “dwelleth”). By coming into manhood, however, the Son of God introduced a new feature into His person as He subjected Himself to the will of His Father, Hebrews 10:7. Involved in this is the “learning of obedience” of which Hebrews 5:8 speaks. He who previously had always commanded, now learns what it is to obey the will of God, so that He may relate to His people as they obey Him, Hebrews 5:9. See also Isaiah 50:4,5.

11:4 Every man praying or prophesying, having his head covered, dishonoureth his head.

Every man praying or prophesying- the apostle now begins to apply the principle of verse three. We ought to note that he does not specifically link the spiritual exercises of praying and prophesying with assembly gatherings. It is true that the apostle has been speaking of the breaking of the bread and the drinking of the cup in 10:16, and these are distinctively assembly actions, but he speaks of them in the reverse order to which they are taken at the Lord’s Supper. He is simply drawing an illustration from them which serves his purpose in that chapter. It is not until 11:17,18 that coming together in the assembly is in view.
Whenever a believer deliberately sets out to engage in spiritual exercises, then the principles of this passage apply. The apostle speaks in four places of what he prayed for when he was “at his prayers”, as the words literally mean; see Romans 1:9; Ephesians 1:16; 1 Thessalonians 1:2; and Philemon 4. So the idea is that headship and subjection should come to mind as we set ourselves to engage in spiritual exercises, even when at home alone. After all, the apostle will imply in verse 10 that the angels have an interest in the conduct of believers; but they do not limit their interest to assembly gatherings.
Having his head covered- this expression is literally, “having (anything) on his head”. The man is to have no covering of any sort or of any size on his head. The Jewish prayer shawl and the Jewish skull-cap are alike excluded.
For the males to be engaged in spiritual exercises with an uncovered head, is clearly a departure from the Old Testament mode, for in the tabernacle the priests wore bonnets or turbans. But Christ has now come into manhood, consequently there is a new situation prevailing. The priests wore a head-covering to signify that the nation they represented was subject to God. After all, Israel was symbolically the wife of Jehovah, Jeremiah 33:32. Now, however, Christ is the representative of the people of God, hence the believing man no longer fills the role of representative of those who are subject, and therefore is not required to cover his head. He is the head of the woman who is subject, it is true, but he does not represent her before God, as Aaron represented Israel before God. It is Christ alone who represents the people of God before God, whether they are male or female, but this is not the subject of the passage.
Dishonoureth his head- if the man does cover his head, then he brings dishonour onto his head, for he has rejected Divine order, ignored the headship of Christ, and failed to take his proper place as head of the woman.
There are those who believe that by “his head” the apostle means the man’s spiritual head, even Christ. We should bear in mind, however, that when the apostle is addressing the sisters in verses 5 and 6, and explaining the significance of their action if they disobey God’s commands, he declares that a woman dishonours her head by not covering it, and he explains that dishonour by saying it is the same as if she had a shaved head. Now a shaved head does not dishonour a man directly, but does dishonour the woman who has it done. There is no doubt indirect dishonour done to the man, however. So transferring this principle, to verse 4 in connection with the man, it is the man’s own head that is dishonoured, just as it is the woman’s own head that she dishonours. But indirectly, Christ as head is dishonoured too.
The covering or not covering of the head does not simply serve to distinguish male from female, because the short hair of the man and the long hair of the woman do this. The head-covering is needed as well to signify that the ideas of subjection and headship are accepted. So when the male cuts his hair, he is endorsing the difference that God has made between male and female. Likewise, when the woman does not cut her hair, she is recognising the same truth. When a man uncovers his head, he indicates that he is recognising the responsibilities he has as head of the woman, and also as subject to Christ. When the woman covers her head, she consciously takes her proper subject place as a woman, and as such is subject to the man, even if the man is not present. Indeed, the absence of the man mAkes it all the more imperative to coveer her head, lest it be thought she is rebellious in his absence.
The apostle reserves the reason for the man’s uncovered head until verse seven, so that he may there deal with the man and woman together in relation to the truth of Genesis chapter one.

11:5 But every woman that prayeth or prophesieth with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head: for that is even all one as if she were shaven.

But every woman that prayeth or prophesieth with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head- prayer is the expression of the mind of a believer, in the ear of God. Prophesying, however, is the expression of the mind of God, in the ear of believers. The full range of spiritual exercises is indicated. At the time of writing, there were prophetesses, but the gift of prophecy has been withdrawn, so the apostle is no doubt using that gift as being the highest one possible. Even having the best gift of all does not exempt any from the requirements of this passage.
An instance of women prophesying is given in Acts 21:9 in connection with Philip’s four daughters, no doubt in fulfillment of the words of Joel quoted by Peter in Acts 2:17, “your sons and daughters shall prophesy”. Since this activity comes close to appearing to usurp the place of the man, then the sister in question is to be especially careful to signify her subjection by having a covered head. This particular ministry is no longer in operation, for prophecies have ceased with the completion of the canon of Scripture, but the principle remains. Just as the brother dishonours his head by ignoring divine order, so does the sister.
The question as to whether the woman is praying and prophesying in the assembly does not arise in this passage, since it is not specifically concerned with assembly gatherings. The apostle’s teaching with regard to these is very clear from what he writes in 1 Corinthians 14:34, where prophesying is being dealt with, and 1 Timothy 2:8, where prayer is the subject. The seven-fold mention of “coming together” from verse 17 of this chapter onwards would strongly indicate that the apostle is regulating there in full for assembly gatherings. The number seven speaks of fulness and completeness.
The verse begins with the word “but”, which presents an alternative. Clearly, the alternative is not the dishonouring of the head, because that is true of both male and female when they fail to obey. The word “but” therefore serves to emphasise the word uncovered, in contrast to the word covered in relation to the male.
For that is even all one as if she were shaven- the reason why the uncovered woman dishonours her head is now given. It is assumed by the apostle in this passage that the sister will have long hair. Only those of low repute had shorn heads. But confusion reigns if a sister with long hair like a woman, prays or prophesies with head uncovered like a man. It would be, declares the apostle, as if she had no hair on her head at all, having shaved it off. Since the length of a person’s hair enables us to distinguish between male and female, no-one would be able to tell whether she was a woman or not if she had no hair. This is confusion. To introduce confusion into the things of God is serious indeed, and hence the dishonour on the woman’s head.
For a woman to cut her hair is disobedience, but to shave it all off is an extreme example of rebellion. Her hair is her glory, and she has despised God’s gift to her entirely, and hence is dishonoured.

11:6 For if the woman be not covered, let her also be shorn: but if it be a shame for a woman to be shorn or shaven, let her be covered.

For if the woman be not covered, let her also be shorn- consistency must be the rule, or else all is confusion. If a woman has no head-covering, then she is in a position of headship, (for the man has an uncovered head to signify headship). But headship is vested in the male, so she is occupying the place of a male- let her then be shorn like a male. She cannot be like a woman and like a man at the same time.
But if it be a shame for a woman to be shorn or shaven, let her be covered- the grammar of the expression “if it be a shame” indicates that the shame is not just a possibility, but a reality- “if, as is the case, that it is a shame.” The apostle is not saying that if there are those who see no shame in a woman being shaved or shorn, then they need not cover their heads. “If it be a shame” does not mean “if it is a pity”, but “if it be a dishonour”. So as it is the case that it is a shame for a woman to be either shorn, (having taken the scissors to her hair, as a man does), or shaven, (having taken a razor to her hair to shave it all off, so that whether she is male or female is not discernible), let her be covered.
A shaven woman has abandoned all attempt at distinguishing between male and female, and this dishonours God, and by extension, is a dishonour to herself, and women in general. Note again that the apostle assumes that the sister has long hair, for he says to put the scissors to it is a shame to her, and no Christian woman should want to be in a shameful state. His argument in verses 13 and 14 falls down if he cannot start with the premise that a woman has long hair. Since the apostle’s words are inspired, then his argument does not fall down, so the woman is to have long hair as a matter of course, let alone for any other reason.
We should note that the woman’s covering is to be a veil, (such is the meaning of the word), and therefore is to cover her head effectively. The word for “to cover” in verses 6 and 7, (and in the negative in verse 5), “katakalupto”, a combination of “kalupto” to cover, and “kata”, a (preposition which intensifies the verb), meaning “down”. Something like a headscarf is in view. The covering is for the head, and it should definitely cover the head, so that the hair is not visible through it, even though the hair may be visible beyond it if the hair is hanging down her back.
In the apostle’s day there would not be a great diversity of head-coverings, since a veil would not have been considered a fashion item. This very uniformity would emphasise that rich and poor have equal place before God, and would avoid the scandal of rich sisters parading their affluence by wearing elaborate head-gear. A spiritual sister will want to see to it that her head is covered in a way which fulfils the requirements of the teaching found in this passage, without ostentation and unwise expense.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 11, VERSES 7 TO 12:

11:7 For a man indeed ought not to cover his head, forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God: but the woman is the glory of the man.
11:8 For the man is not of the woman: but the woman of the man.
11:9 Neither was the man created for the woman; but the woman for the man.
11:10 For this cause ought the woman to have power on her head because of the angels.
11:11 Nevertheless neither is the man without the woman, neither the woman without the man, in the Lord.
11:12 For as the woman is of the man, even so is the man also by the woman; but all things of God.

Section 3      Verses 7-12      Original creation

11:7 For a man indeed ought not to cover his head, forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God: but the woman is the glory of the man.

For a man indeed ought not to cover his head– the apostle now proceeds to give the reason why the man should not cover his head. He has left the explanation until now so that he can instruct both males and females from the same passage in Genesis. Because he is going to base his instruction on the principles found in the Book of Genesis, we know that the matters detailed in this passage are not “cultural”, and therefore local to Corinth, as some teach.
The word “indeed” assures us that the statement that follows, although startling in view of the practice in the tabernacle and the synagogue, is in fact true. We know there was at least one synagogue at Corinth, Acts 18:4, and Luke tells us there were Jews and Greeks attending it. If some of these were saved, and subsequently formed part of the assembly at Corinth, then they would know that both males and females would have covered heads in the synagogue. The word “indeed” also refers us back to what has been said in verse 4, and reinforces it.
Forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God- this is clearly a reference to the fact that man was made in the image of God at the beginning.
The “he” of this statement is sometimes linked with Christ, so that the man covers his head because his spiritual head, Christ, is the image and glory of God. The problem with this is that the words of verse 7 in the original, (Stephens 1550), are as follows: “For man indeed ought not to have the head covered, image and glory of God being”. In other words, the second “he” in the Authorised Version has been added to make the sense. This in itself inclines us to the view that the “he” refers to the male believer, not Christ. It is indeed true that Christ is “the image of God”, 2 Corinthians 4:4, and it is also true that He is the “brightness of the glory” of God, Hebrews 1:3, but these truths are not to the fore in this passage. The underlying truth is that of headship. In any case, the words “image” and “glory” have no definite article before them, and are therefore not specific, (as they would be if the glory of Christ was in view), but characteristic. That which Christ has inherently, man has subordinately.
In Genesis 1:26 we find God communing with Himself, and purposing to make the race of man in His own image, after His likeness. The record is as follows:
“And God said, ‘Let us make man in our image, after our likeness'”, Genesis 1:26. And this He did, for in verse twenty-seven we read, “God created man in His own image, in the image of God created He him; male and female created He them”. By “man” is meant mankind, as represented by Adam and Eve. The image of God was not limited to our first parents, as we see from Genesis 9:6, where capital punishment for murderers is instituted, and the reason being, “in the image of God made He man”. To murder is to erase the image of God in a man, hence the severity of the penalty. Just as the image of Caesar on a coin represented Caesar, Matthew 22:19-21, so the impress of God on man fits him to represent God.
The sea-creatures and birds were made on the fifth day, but those animals which by their physical characteristics are most like man, were made on the sixth day, as he was. Thus God deliberately highlighted the differences between them. But no animal, however superficially like man it may be, has personality, spirituality, rationality and morality as man has. He alone, therefore, is fitted to represent God, in whom these things are found to perfection.
Note the emphasis in Genesis 1:27 on the “him”, which indicates that the man Adam represented the race, even though that race consists of male and female, “male and female created He them”. When the race is in view it is “him”, when individuals are in view, it is “them”. So there is a special sense in which Adam, and males generally, are charged with the duty of representing God to creation in the matter of headship. There are many ways in which women may represent God to others, but this is not one of them.
The Christian sister does not miss out through this however, for every believer, male or female, “is renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created him”, Colossians 3:10. In respect of spiritual relationship with God, brother and sister are equal in their opportunity to express Divine characteristics, Galatians 3:28, but in respect of Divine order and administration, the brother alone is the image or representative of God.
Man is also said to be the glory of God. It is not so much that he glorifies God, for sisters do that also, but that he is the glory of God- the majesty of God as the head of all things manifests itself in the man as he controls for God in the Christian sphere. David ascribed headship to God with the words, “Thine, O Lord, is the greatness, and the power, and the glory, and the victory, and the majesty: for all that in the heaven and in the earth is Thine; Thine is the kingdom, O Lord, and Thou art exalted as head above all”, 1 Chronicles 29:11.
In another context, we read of certain messengers as being “the glory of Christ”. Their character was of such a sort that they glorified Christ in what they did, 2 Corinthians 8:23. So should the believing man glorify Christ in the exercise of his headship, but always with humility, as subject to Christ who is his head.
But the woman is the glory of the man- we must not think that the “but” the apostle uses here indicates an inferior role. It is not that the man is the image of God, whereas the woman has to be content with merely being the glory of the man. The fact is that when the Christian sister recognises the God-given role of the man by being in subjection to him as her head, she enhances that glory. In this way she is the glory of the man in the specific way relevant to the context, namely, she enhances the man as he fulfills his role as head. She thus gains the glory that comes through obeying God’s command.
So the man is the glory of God as he controls for God, and the woman, by her subjection as expressed by her head-covering, is the glory of the man as he thus acts for God. She thus mirrors the way in which Christ in His subjection to God sought only His glory, but also, was crowned with glory and honour as He did so, (for, strictly speaking, it was when he was upon the earth that he was crowned with glory and honour, Hebrews 2:9). A covered man is a disgrace to himself, whereas a covered woman is a glory to a man with uncovered head, for her covering indicates his authority. She complements His position, not as a wife complements her husband, but as a subject person complements the one to whom she is subject. The headship of the man is pointless if there are no subject ones.

11:8 For the man is not of the woman; but the woman of the man.

For the man is not of the woman; but the woman of the man- the apostle now proceeds to give two reasons for the foregoing statement about the relative positions of the man and the woman, hence the word “for”. The first reason is in this verse, and the second in verse 9.
The preposition “of” means “out of”, and the allusion is to Genesis 2:18-23, the account of the formation of the woman, where she is expressly said in verse twenty-three to be taken “out of” the man. The words are:
And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept: and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof; And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made He a woman, and brought her unto the man. And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man”.

So we learn from Adam himself that the word woman indicates that she was taken out of him. Previously in the creation account, the word used had been “female”, establishing the distinction of gender, but now a word that tells us about suitability to Adam is used. God, of course, could have made the woman as He did the man, directly from the dust. He chose not to do so, to establish a principle.
The fact that the woman came from the man indicates that he was foremost in time, being created first, so having priority in certain areas- he had to be in existence before she could be. She came into being and found him already the head of the creation. The order in which God created establishes principles for all time. This explains the apparently strange way that woman was formed- it was symbolic as well as historic. (The apostle derives a similar lesson from the fact that Adam was made before the woman, in 1Timothy 2:12,13).
This situation does not only relate to circumstances at the beginning, for every woman is the daughter of her father, and therefore every woman in a certain sense comes out of the man. This confirms that the apostle is not speaking of husbands and wives here, for the woman, whoever she is, and whatever her status, is of the man. Not of her husband, but of her father.

11:9 Neither was the man created for the woman; but the woman for the man.

Neither was the man created for the woman; but the woman for the man- not only was the source of the woman significant, but also the reason why she was made. Having derived a lesson from the woman’s formation, the apostle now speaks of her function. The words of Genesis 2:18-20 are as follows:
“And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him. And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof. And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an help meet for him”.

The woman was to be the man’s helper, and to do this effectively she needed to be “meet” for him, or in other words, suitable for him. By bringing the animals to Adam to be named, God clearly wanted to impress upon Adam that there were none amongst the creatures that he was attracted to. He named them according to their characteristics, but to none could he give the name woman. But when Adam woke from his sleep to find the woman God had made for him beside him, he said “This is now bone of my bone, and flesh of my flesh”. The words “this is now” implying that it was not like that before, when he named the animals. There was now one who could be his helper in a special sense, even though many animals have helped man down the centuries.
The Christian wife, it is true, is to be this help for her husband, but in the wider sense dealt with here, every believing woman is to be for the help of the man in his God-given task of maintaining God’s creation rights on the earth. This is not the same as maintaining God’s rights in the world, which believers can only do in a limited way. As they engage in spiritual exercises, the believing man and woman are to uphold the order God has established.

11:10 For this cause ought the woman to have power on her head because of the angels.

For this cause ought the woman to have power on her head- because of the principle established in the doctrine of the previous verses, the woman is to respond to man’s authority by covering her head. This covering is said to be “power on her head”. In classical writings, a king’s crown was sometimes referred to as his kingdom; the symbol was called by the name of the thing symbolised. So here, the thing symbolised is the authority of the man, (his power in the sense of his authority as head), and the symbol is the woman’s headcovering, and therefore can fittingly be called power. When she covers her head before spiritual exercises, whether those exercises are private or public, the Christian woman deliberately recognises the superintending authority of the man, whether he is present or not.
Because of the angels- this is a secondary reason for the woman needing to put a sign of the man’s authority on her head, even the fact that the angels look on. We know from Scripture that angels rejoice when sinners repent, Luke 15:10. They take a great interest in the way that God’s wisdom is demonstrated in the life of the church, Ephesians 3:10. They look on to witness whether elders are treated fairly when false accusations are brought before them, 1 Timothy 5:21 They have an interest in the observance of the Lord’s Supper, with its showing or proclamation of the Lord’s death, 1 Corinthians 11:26. Daniel wrote about the “a watcher and a holy one”, clearly an angelic being, (for he was able to depose Nebuchadnezzar), who scrutinized the affairs of men, Daniel 4:13,17,23. Now it is indicated that they observe the way in which men and women act when they are engaged in spiritual exercises.
Eve overthrew the authority of Adam when she initially fell to the temptations of the Devil. (It seems clear from the sequence in Genesis 2:15-18, that Adam was given the commandment about the tree of knowledge of good and evil before the woman was formed. It was he, therefore, who told the woman of the prohibition, and by so doing established his authority over her). To reassure the holy angels, therefore, the woman is to indicate by the covering of her head, that she does not intend to make the same mistake as Eve did.
But evil angels take an interest in the church, too, seeking to undermine its doctrine and practice, as indicated in 1 Timothy 4:1-3, and 1 John 4:1-6. These evil angels have been guilty of leaving the place of subjection God had given them, and seeking a place of dominance that God had not given to them, and thus have disregarded Divine order, for “they kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, Jude 6. What a rebuke to them the godly subjection of the Christian woman is, as she accepts her role with dignity, and thus glorifies God.

11:11 Nevertheless neither is the man without the woman, neither the woman without the man, in the Lord.

Nevertheless neither is the man without the woman- the apostle now balances out the truth he has detailed, by pointing out the mutual interdependence of believers, male and female. Far from rendering the Christian woman redundant, the requirements made known here show that she has a vital part to play in the Divine scheme of things. The man is not without (“cut off from”) the woman, for he is dependent upon her for so many things as he seeks to act for God.
Neither the woman without the man, in the Lord- by the same token, the woman depends on the man. The fact that the apostle says “in the Lord” indicates that he is speaking exclusively in this passage about believing men and women, for only they are in Christ, and can therefore act “in the Lord”, under His authority as head. It is only as His authority is recognised that godly order is maintained.

11:12 For as the woman is of the man, even so is the man also by the woman; but all things of God.

For as the woman is of the man- as already explained, Eve was out of Adam at the beginning, and every female owes her existence to her father.
Even so is the man also by the woman- not only were Cain and Abel brought into the world through the agency of Eve, but every man since has come by means of his mother.
But all things of God- all these various relationships are “of God”, for He has ordained them. It is the Christian’s responsibility and privilege to act upon them in the ways detailed in this passage.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 11, VERSES 13 TO 16:

11:13 Judge in yourselves: is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered?
11:14 Doth not even nature itself teach you, that, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him?
11:15 But if a woman have long hair, it is a glory to her: for her hair is given her for a covering.
11:16 But if any man seem to be contentious, we have no such custom, neither the churches of God.

Section 4      Verses 13-15      Natural constitution

11:13 Judge in yourselves: is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered?

Judge in yourselves- the apostle now appeals to the spiritual discernment of the Corinthian believers. Endowed with wisdom from God, they should be able to decide very easily. They will do so by reference to that which God built into man’s constitution at the beginning.
Is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered? By this question the apostle raises the matter of the suitability of the woman being uncovered in the presence of God. He has taught that she ought to be covered because God requires it, (“a woman ought to have a covering on her head”, verse 10), but now as he brings his teaching on this subject to a close he will show that by giving women long hair, God has established the principle behind the head covering. So it is that those who learn the lesson of the long hair will learn the lesson of the covered head.

11:14 Doth not even nature itself teach you, that, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him?

Doth not even nature itself teach you- the fact that the apostle appeals to something that is not local to Corinth emphasises the universal application of these verses. The Scriptures are not at the mercy of the local customs and culture of earth, but are “settled in heaven”, Psalm 119:89. Nature is common to all who live on the earth. It would be ludicrous to limit it to Corinth.
The word translated “nature” is used of God in 2 Peter 1:4, so it cannot refer to local customs. In any case, what point is there asking the Corinthians what the local customs of the city taught them about the things of God?
The Greek word is “phusis” which in its basic form means to swell up so as to germinate or grow. By extension it means the sort of thing an object is as to its native disposition, constitution or usage. The apostle is referring here to the in-built capabilities that God gave man at the beginning, which constituted him a rational, moral, spiritual being with personality. In a word, in the image of God. This native sensibility as to what is right and proper is not acquired by training or education, but is the inner conviction all believers have as to whether certain things are suitable to associate with God. Unbelievers may have this to a degree, but their minds are confused, and so are no guide. So even if a false teacher came along and taught the Corinthians that it was proper for a woman to function in the presence of God uncovered, they would know he was wrong. They might not be able to explain why he was wrong, but they would have the inner conviction that he was. So when in our day even Christian teachers suggest that it does not matter if a sister does not cover her head in the presence of God, we know instinctively that they are wrong. And if they are wrong, then their teaching should be decisively resisted, refuted, and rejected.
That, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him? We instinctively recoil from the sight of a man with long hair, and rightly so, for this instinctive reaction is part of the nature God gave us. A man may be able to grow his hair as long as a woman, but this is not what God gave him his hair for. He is given it so that he may cut it short, in recognition of his place in creation. The fact that some unbelievers see no shame in a man having long hair just goes to confirm what the apostle says in Romans 1:24-27 about men and women acting against nature.

11:15 But if a woman have long hair, it is a glory to her: for her hair is given her for a covering.

But if a woman have long hair, it is a glory to her- far from being a shame, the woman’s long hair is her glory, and distinguishes her from the man. Not in the sense that she is the only one who can have long hair, but that by it her beauty is enhanced. Long hair on a man attracts attention for the wrong reason.
For her hair is given her for a covering- long hair is given to the woman by God to express the principle that has already been set out in the preceding verses. By giving the woman a covering which is becoming to her, God has indicated that she should be the covered one, rather than the man. Thus what she is by natural constitution, is an indicator of what she should be by spiritual conviction, namely, with covered head. This is why the apostle appeals to nature in verse fourteen; he is not referring to human opinion, but the lesson taught by the natural state of the woman as made by God, and our proper instinctive reaction to that state.
The Greek word for “hair” used here is “kome”, and the verb for “have long hair” is “komao”. (This is a word that gives us the English word comet, which appears like a long streamer in the heavens). It signifies hair as an ornament. It is probable that the word “komao” is connected to the word “komizo” which means “to care for”.
It is noticeable that at this point the apostle uses a different word for covering. Up till now in the passage he has consistently used a word for covering which means “veiled”. Now the word for covering is one which means “that which is thrown around”. In fact, it is the word used for vesture, or cloak, in Hebrews 1:12. Whereas the veil or head-covering is a covering for the woman’s head, her long hair is a covering for her, not just her head.
So we may gather up some indications from the apostle’s words:
1.  Long hair is God’s gift to a woman.
2.  It is a glory to her.
3. The word used for hair signifies that which is ornamental.
4. The word used for hair is probably derived from a verb meaning “to care for”.
5. The word used to describe her hair, “covering”, is used elsewhere of a cloak or mantle, and therefore suggests that which may be thrown around the shoulders, giving indication of length.  So “short hair” is hair that has been cut; “long hair” is hair that can be thrown around the shoulders.
6. It is a shame if she cuts it, except totrim the ends so as to stimulate it to grow more.
7. It is an indication from God that she needs to put on a head covering herself, as well.

Another matter needs to be noticed here. The preposition “for” in the phrase “for a covering”, is one which can, in certain contexts, mean “instead of”. This fact has led some to suggest that if a sister has long hair, she does not need to put on a head-covering; for, say they, her hair is given to her instead of that covering.
But the apostle would hardly have undermined his own teaching is such a way. Nor would he have introduced an element of confusion into his arguments just as he brings them to a close. Besides, we have only to insert this idea into the teaching of the earlier verses to see it is false, for verse six would read “For if a woman be not covered, (that is, according to this theory, not have long hair), let her be shorn, (that is, not have long hair).” Clearly this is nonsense, and therefore not the meaning of the apostle.
The preposition is adequately translated by the words “answering to”, “corresponding to”, and thus the sense is that the woman should cover her head with a veil because that corresponds to the truth that is taught by her Divinely-given long hair.

Section 5      Verse 16      Universal conviction

11:16 But if any man seem to be contentious, we have no such custom, neither the churches of God.

But if any man seem to be contentious- the apostle anticipated the false ideas that men would devise about this passage, and dealt with them in advance. The teaching found here is not set forth as a matter of debate, and about which men may contend.
We have no such custom- the apostles were in agreement on the matter, as the emphatic “we” of the verse indicates. And so should all we believers be agreed, for we are committed to the doctrine and fellowship of the apostles, sharing with them in the things they believed and taught, Acts 2:42. May we all be encouraged to put into effect the teaching of this passage, whatever the current opinion in the world.
Neither the churches of God- we learn from this that the teaching of this section was accepted by all that the apostles were prepared to acknowledge as assemblies. We could go so far as to say that if a company of professed believers does not abide by the teaching of this section, then they have no right to class themselves amongst the churches of God.

Finally, can our hearts be unmoved as we think of all that was involved in Christ’s subjection to God, as He readily submitted to His will, being obedient even to the extent of death, and that the death on a cross? Or unmoved when contemplating His present glories as head over all things? If our hearts are moved, we shall welcome the opportunity to make His grace and glory known by obeying the commandments of the Lord found here. May the Lord help His people to swallow their pride if needs be, admit they have been wrong in the past, and have the conviction and courage to begin to conform to the teaching of the apostle, knowing that the things he writes unto us are “the commandments of the Lord”, 1 Corinthians 14:37.