Matthew 10:15 - Exposition
Parallel passage: Luke 10:12 (the seventy). Similar words are used by our Lord in his apostrophe of Capernaum ( Matthew 11:24 , where see note). The combination in Luke 10:11 , Luke 10:12-15 of both the contexts is an instructive warning against accepting the present position of our Lord's sayings as the final indication of the occasion upon which they were delivered. Verily . (For the idea of acquiescence that always underlies this word—even in the case of so solemn a matter as the present—comp. Matthew 5:18 , note.) I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrha . Whose inhabitants were the typical example of the worst of sinners ( Deuteronomy 32:32 ; Isaiah 1:10 ; Ezekiel 16:46 ; Revelation 11:8 ). "The men of Sodom have no part in the world to come" (Mishna, 'Sanh.,' 10.3). In the day of judgment . Luke has "in that day;" cf, Matthew 7:22 . In the only two passages in the LXX . ( Proverbs 6:34 ; Isaiah 34:8 ) where, as it seems, our phrase occurs, it refers, not to the judgment of all, good and bad alike, but to that of the wicked alone. So also in 2 Peter 2:9 ; 2 Peter 3:7 ; and possibly also in Matthew 12:36 , but not in 1 John 4:17 (the only passage where it is not anarthrous). Than for that city. Observe that this verse implies that the wicked dead are still in existence, and are waiting for their final judgment; also that in the judgment of the wicked there will be degrees of punishment.
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