Matthew 24:28 - Sermon Bible Commentary

Bible Comments

Matthew 24:28

The Law of Divine Judgment.

I. When a wild beast falls in the desert, or a beast of burden on the highway, there is no stir in the heavens for a time. But, far above human ken, the vulture is floating poised on his wings; and looking downwards his eye soon distinguishes the motionless thing for he hunts by an eyesight unequalled in power among all living things, and like a stone he drops through miles of air. Others floating in the same upper region, see their brother's descent and know its meaning. One dark speck after another grows swiftly from the horizon, and in a few minutes fifty vultures are round the carrion. That illustrates and with astonishing power and sharpness for the disciples had often witnessed such a scene the suddenness, the usefulness and the necessity of judgment. Inevitable, swift, unerring, as the vulture's descent on the carcase is the judgment-coming of the Son of Man to corrupt communities and corrupted men.

II. From all this we now infer the law of judgment. It is this: Wherever there is entire moral corruption then there is final punishment; wherever there is partial corruption, there is remedial punishment. God in His capacity as Governor of the world, as Educator of mankind, is bound to destroy corruption. It is necessary that the vultures should devour the carcase, lest it pollute the air and breed a pestilence. It is necessary that corrupted nations should be blotted out, lest they infect the world with evil which may delay the whole progress of mankind. And our own sense of justice goes with the destruction. Nor, when we are wise, do we think that such justice shows want of love. We know that the weak man who shrinks from exacting deserved punishment is often the most cruel when his own interests are touched; and we can trust ourselves in the hour of our trouble best to One whose justice we are so sure of, that we know that if our trouble was caused by wrong-doing He would make us feel that wrongness before He would relieve the trouble.

S. A. Brooke, The Spirit of the Christian Life,p. 57.

References: Matthew 24:28. Clergyman's Magazine,vol. i., p. 223; vol. ix., p. 97; D. Fraser, The Metaphors of the Gospels,p. 233.Matthew 24:29. R. Tuck, Christian World Pulpit,vol. xiii., p. 347. Matthew 24:29-34. E. C. Gibson, Expositor,2nd series, vol. i., p. 292.

Matthew 24:28

28 For wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together.