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- THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW Chapter 5 - Verse 25
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW - Chapter 5 - Verse 25
There is no propriety in the use sometimes made of this verse, in regarding God as the "adversary" of the sinner, and urging him to be reconciled to God while in the way to judgment. Nor does the phrase, "thou shalt by no means come out thence till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing," refer to the eternity of future punishment. It is language taken from courts of justice, to illustrate the truth that God will punish men according to justice, for not being reconciled. It will be eternal, indeed, but this passage does not prove it.
Thine adversary. A man that is opposed to us in law. It here means a creditor; a man who has a just claim on us.
In the way with him. While you are going before the court. Before the trial comes on.
The officer. The executioner; or, as we should say, the sheriff.
The uttermost farthing. The last farthing. All that is due. The farthing was a small coin used in Judea, equal to two mites. It was equal to about seven mills of our money, [three halfpence.]
{u} "deliver thee" Pr 25:8; Lu 12:58,59