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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
[1] [2]
[3] [4]
[5] [6]
[7] [8]
[9] [10]
[11] [12]
[13] [14]
[15] [16]
[17] [18]
[19] [20]
[21] [22]
[23] [24]
[25] [26]
[27] [28]
INTRODUCTION
THE author of this Gospel was a publican or
tax gatherer, residing at Capernaum, on the western shore of the Sea of
Galilee. As to his identity with the "Levi" of the second and third
Gospels, and other particulars, see on
Mt 9:9.
Hardly anything is known of his apostolic labors. That, after preaching
to his countrymen in Palestine, he went to the East, is the general
testimony of antiquity; but the precise scene or scenes of his ministry
cannot be determined. That he died a natural death may be concluded
from the belief of the best-informed of the Fathers--that of the
apostles only three, James the Greater, Peter, and Paul, suffered
martyrdom. That the first Gospel was written by this apostle is the
testimony of all antiquity.
For the date of this Gospel we have only internal evidence, and
that far from decisive. Accordingly, opinion is much divided. That it
was the first issued of all the Gospels was universally believed.
Hence, although in the order of the Gospels, those by the two apostles
were placed first in the oldest manuscripts of the Old Latin
version, while in all the Greek manuscripts, with scarcely an
exception, the order is the same as in our Bibles, the Gospel according
to Matthew is in every case placed first. And as this Gospel is
of all the four the one which bears the most evident marks of having
been prepared and constructed with a special view to the Jews--who
certainly first required a written Gospel, and would be the first to
make use of it--there can be no doubt that it was issued before any of
the others. That it was written before the destruction of Jerusalem is
equally certain; for as HUG observes
[Introduction to the New Testament, p. 316, FOSDICK'S translation], when he reports our Lord's
prophecy of that awful event, on coming to the warning about "the
abomination of desolation" which they should "see standing in the holy
place," he interposes (contrary to his invariable practice, which is to
relate without remark) a call to his readers to read
intelligently--"Whoso readeth, let him understand"
(Mt 24:15)
--a call to attend to the divine signal for flight which could be
intended only for those who lived before the event. But how long before
that event this Gospel was written is not so clear. Some internal
evidences seem to imply a very early date. Since the Jewish Christians
were, for five or six years, exposed to persecution from their own
countrymen--until the Jews, being persecuted by the Romans, had to look
to themselves--it is not likely (it is argued) that they should be left
so long without some written Gospel to reassure and sustain them, and
Matthew's Gospel was eminently fitted for that purpose. But the digests
to which Luke refers in his Introduction (see on
Lu 1:1)
would be sufficient for a time, especially as the living voice of the
"eye-witnesses and ministers of the Word" was yet sounding abroad.
Other considerations in favor of a very early date--such as the tender
way in which the author seems studiously to speak of Herod Antipas, as
if still reigning, and his writing of Pilate apparently as if still in
power--seem to have no foundation in fact, and cannot therefore be made
the ground of reasoning as to the date of this Gospel. Its Hebraic
structure and hue, though they prove, as we think, that this Gospel
must have been published at a period considerably anterior to the
destruction of Jerusalem, are no evidence in favor of so early a date
as A.D. 37 or 38--according to some of the
Fathers, and, of the moderns, TILLEMONT, TOWNSON, OWEN, BIRKS, TREGELLES. On the other hand,
the date suggested by the statement of IRENÆUS [Against Heresies, 3.1], that
Matthew put forth his Gospel while Peter and Paul were at Rome
preaching and founding the Church--or after A.D.
60--though probably the majority of critics are in favor of it, would
seem rather too late, especially as the second and third Gospels, which
were doubtless published, as well as this one, before the destruction
of Jerusalem, had still to be issued. Certainly, such statements as the
following, "Wherefore that field is called the field of blood unto
this day"
(Mt 27:8);
"And this saying is commonly reported among the Jews until this
day"
(Mt 28:15),
bespeak a date considerably later than the events recorded. We incline,
therefore, to a date intermediate between the earlier and the later
dates assigned to this Gospel, without pretending to greater
precision.
We have adverted to the strikingly Jewish character and coloring of
this Gospel. The facts which it selects, the points to which it gives
prominence, the cast of thought and phraseology, all bespeak the Jewish
point of view from which it was written and to which it was
directed. This has been noticed from the beginning, and is universally
acknowledged. It is of the greatest consequence to the right
interpretation of it; but the tendency among some even of the best of
the Germans to infer, from this special design of the first Gospel, a
certain laxity on the part of the Evangelist in the treatment of his
facts, must be guarded against.
But by far the most interesting and important point connected with
this Gospel is the language in which it was written. It is believed
by a formidable number of critics that this Gospel was originally
written in what is loosely called Hebrew, but more correctly
Aramaic, or Syro-Chaldaic, the native tongue of the country at
the time of our Lord; and that the Greek Matthew which we now
possess is a translation of that work, either by the Evangelist himself
or some unknown hand. The evidence on which this opinion is grounded
is wholly external, but it has been deemed conclusive by
GROTIUS,
MICHAELIS (and his translator),
MARSH,
TOWNSON,
CAMPBELL,
OLSHAUSEN,
CRESWELL,
MEYER,
EBRARD,
LANGE,
DAVIDSON,
CURETON,
TREGELLES,
WEBSTER
and WILKINSON, &c. The evidence referred to cannot
be given here, but will be found, with remarks on its unsatisfactory
character, in the Introduction to the Gospels prefixed to our
larger Commentary, pp. 28-31.
But how stand the facts as to our Greek Gospel? We have not a tittle
of historical evidence that it is a translation, either by Matthew
himself or anyone else. All antiquity refers to it as the work of
Matthew the publican and apostle, just as the other Gospels are
ascribed to their respective authors. This Greek Gospel was from the
first received by the Church as an integral part of the one quadriform
Gospel. And while the Fathers often advert to the two Gospels which
we have from apostles, and the two which we have from men not
apostles--in order to show that as that of Mark leans so entirely on
Peter, and that of Luke on Paul, these are really no less apostolical
than the other two--though we attach less weight to this circumstance
than they did, we cannot but think it striking that, in thus speaking,
they never drop a hint that the full apostolic authority of the Greek
Matthew had ever been questioned on the ground of its not being the
original. Further, not a trace can be discovered in this Gospel itself
of its being a translation. MICHAELIS
tried to detect, and fancied that
he had succeeded in detecting, one or two such. Other Germans since,
and DAVIDSON and
CURETON among ourselves, have made the same attempt.
But the entire failure of all such attempts is now generally admitted,
and candid advocates of a Hebrew original are quite ready to own that
none such are to be found, and that but for external testimony no one
would have imagined that the Greek was not the original. This they
regard as showing how perfectly the translation has been executed; but
those who know best what translating from one language into another is
will be the readiest to own that this is tantamount to giving up the
question. This Gospel proclaims its own originality in a number of
striking points; such as its manner of quoting from the Old Testament,
and its phraseology in some peculiar cases. But the close
verbal coincidences of our Greek Matthew with the next two Gospels
must not be quite passed over. There are but two possible ways of
explaining this. Either the translator, sacrificing verbal fidelity in
his version, intentionally conformed certain parts of his author's work
to the second and third Gospels--in which case it can hardly be called
Matthew's Gospel at all--or our Greek Matthew is itself the
original.
Moved by these considerations, some advocates of a Hebrew original
have adopted the theory of a double original; the external testimony,
they think, requiring us to believe in a Hebrew original, while
internal evidence is decisive in favor of the originality of the Greek.
This theory is espoused by GUERICKS,
OLSHAUSEN,
THIERSCH,
TOWNSON,
TREGELLES, &c. But, besides that this looks too like an artificial
theory, invented to solve a difficulty, it is utterly void of
historical support. There is not a vestige of testimony to support it
in Christian antiquity. This ought to be decisive against it.
It remains, then, that our Greek Matthew is the original of that
Gospel, and that no other original ever existed. It is greatly to the
credit of Dean ALFORD, that after maintaining, in the first edition of
his Greek Testament the theory of a Hebrew original, he thus
expresses himself in the second and subsequent editions: "On the whole,
then, I find myself constrained to abandon the view maintained in my
first edition, and to adopt that of a Greek original."
One argument has been adduced on the other side, on which not a little
reliance has been placed; but the determination of the main question
does not, in our opinion, depend upon the point which it raises. It has
been very confidently affirmed that the Greek language was not
sufficiently understood by the Jews of Palestine when Matthew published
his Gospel to make it at all probable that he would write a Gospel, for
their benefit in the first instance, in that language. Now, as this
merely alleges the improbability of a Greek original, it is
enough to place against it the evidence already adduced, which is
positive, in favor of the sole originality of our Greek Matthew.
It is indeed a question how far the Greek language was
understood in Palestine at the time referred to. But we advise the
reader not to be drawn into that question as essential to the
settlement of the other one. It is an element in it, no doubt, but not
an essential element. There are extremes on both sides of it. The old
idea, that our Lord hardly ever spoke anything but
Syro-Chaldaic, is now pretty nearly exploded. Many, however,
will not go the length, on the other side, of HUG
(in his Introduction to the New Testament, pp. 326, &c.) and
ROBERTS ("Discussions of the Gospels," &c., pp.
25, &c.). For ourselves, though we believe that our Lord, in all the
more public scenes of His ministry, spoke in Greek, all we think
it necessary here to say is that there is no ground to believe that
Greek was so little understood in Palestine as to make it
improbable that Matthew would write his Gospel exclusively in that
language--so improbable as to outweigh the evidence that he did so. And
when we think of the number of digests or short narratives of the
principal facts of our Lord's history which we know from Luke
(Lu 1:1-4)
were floating about for some time before he wrote his Gospel, of which
he speaks by no means disrespectfully, and nearly all of which would be
in the mother tongue, we can have no doubt that the Jewish Christians
and the Jews of Palestine generally would have from the first reliable
written matter sufficient to supply every necessary requirement until
the publican-apostle should leisurely draw up the first of the four
Gospels in a language to them not a strange tongue, while to the rest
of the world it was the language in which the entire quadriform
Gospel was to be for all time enshrined. The following among others
hold to this view of the sole originality of the Greek Matthew:
ERASMUS, CALVIN, BEZA, LIGHTFOOT, WETSTEIN, LARDNER, HUG, FRITZSCHE, CREDNER, DE WETTE, STUART, DA COSTA, FAIRBAIRN, ROBERTS.
On two other questions regarding this Gospel it would have been
desirable to say something, had not our available space been already
exhausted: The characteristics, both in language and matter, by which
it is distinguished from the other three, and its
relation to the second and third Gospels. On the latter of these
topics--whether one or more of the Evangelists made use of the
materials of the other Gospels, and, if so, which of the Evangelists
drew from which--the opinions are just as numerous as the possibilities
of the case, every conceivable way of it having one or more who plead
for it. The most popular opinion until recently--and perhaps the most
popular still--is that the second Evangelist availed himself more or
less of the materials of the first Gospel, and the third of the
materials of both the first and second Gospels. Here we can but state
our own belief, that each of the first three Evangelists wrote
independently of both the others; while the fourth, familiar with the
first three, wrote to supplement them, and, even where he travels along
the same line, wrote quite independently of them. This judgment we
express, with all deference for those who think otherwise, as the
result of a close study of each of the Gospels in immediate
juxtaposition and comparison with the others. On the former of the two
topics noticed, the linguistic peculiarities of each of the Gospels
have been handled most closely and ably by CREDNER
[Einleitung (Introduction to the New Testament)], of whose
results a good summary
will be found in DAVIDSON'S
Introduction to the New Testament. The
other peculiarities of the Gospels have been most felicitously and
beautifully brought out by
DA
COSTA in his Four Witnesses, to which
we must simply refer the reader, though it contains a few things in
which we cannot concur.
CHAPTER 1
Mt 1:1-17.
GENEALOGY OF
CHRIST.
( =
Lu 3:23-38).
1. The book of the generation--an expression purely Jewish; meaning,
"table of the genealogy." In
Ge 5:1
the same expression occurs in this sense. We have here, then, the
title, not of this whole Gospel of Matthew, but only of the first
seventeen verses.
of Jesus Christ--For the meaning of these glorious words, see on
Mt 1:16;
Mt 1:21.
"Jesus," the name given to our Lord at His circumcision
(Lu 2:21),
was that by which He was familiarly known while on earth. The word
"Christ"--though applied to Him as a proper name by the angel who
announced His birth to the shepherds
(Lu 2:11),
and once or twice used in this sense by our Lord Himself
(Mt 23:8, 10;
Mr 9:41)
--only began to be so used by others about the very close of His
earthly career
(Mt 26:68; 27:17).
The full form, "Jesus Christ," though once used by Himself in His
Intercessory Prayer
(Joh 17:3),
was never used by others till after His ascension and the formation of
churches in His name. Its use, then, in the opening words of this
Gospel (and in
Mt 1:17, 18)
is in the style of the late period when our Evangelist wrote, rather
than of the events he was going to record.
the son of David, the son of Abraham--As Abraham was the first
from whose family it was predicted that Messiah should spring
(Ge 22:18),
so David was the last. To a Jewish reader, accordingly, these
behooved to be the two great starting-points of any true genealogy of
the promised Messiah; and thus this opening verse, as it stamps the
first Gospel as one peculiarly Jewish, would at once tend to conciliate
the writer's people. From the nearest of those two fathers came that
familiar name of the promised Messiah, "the son of David"
(Lu 20:41),
which was applied to Jesus, either in devout acknowledgment of His
rightful claim to it
(Mt 9:27; 20:31),
or in the way of insinuating inquiry whether such were the case (see on
Joh 4:29;
Mt 12:23).
2. Abraham begat Isaac; and Isaac begat Jacob; and Jacob begat Judas
and his brethren--Only the fourth son of Jacob is here named, as it
was from his loins that Messiah was to spring
(Ge 49:10).
3-6. And Judas begat Phares and Zara of Thamar; and Phares begat Esrom;
and Esrom begat Aram; 4. And Aram begat Aminadab; and Aminadab begat
Naasson; and Naasson begat Salmon; 5. And Salmon begat Booz of Rachab;
and Booz begat Obed of Ruth; and Obed begat Jesse; 6. And Jesse begat
David the king; and David the king begat Solomon of her of Urias--Four
women are here introduced; two of them Gentiles by birth--Rachab and
Ruth; and three of them with a blot at their names in the Old
Testament--Thamar, Rachab, and Bath-sheba. This feature in
the present genealogy--herein differing from that given by Luke--comes
well from him who styles himself in his list of the Twelve, what none of
the other lists do, "Matthew the publican"; as if thereby to hold
forth, at the very outset, the unsearchable riches of that grace which
could not only fetch in "them that are afar off," but teach down even to
"publicans and harlots," and raise them to "sit with the princes of his
people." David is here twice emphatically styled "David the king," as
not only the first of that royal line from which Messiah was to descend,
but the one king of all that line from which the throne that Messiah was
to occupy took its name--"the throne of David." The angel Gabriel, in
announcing Him to His virgin-mother, calls it "the throne of David His
father," sinking all the intermediate kings of that line, as having no
importance save as links to connect the first and the last king of
Israel as father and son. It will be observed that Rachab is here
represented as the great-grandmother of David (see
Ru 4:20-22;
1Ch 2:11-15)
--a thing not beyond possibility indeed, but extremely improbable,
there being about four centuries between them. There can hardly be a
doubt that one or two intermediate links are omitted.
7-8. And Solomon begat Roboam; and Roboam begat Abia; and Abia begat
Asa; 8. And Asa begat Josaphat; and Josaphat begat Joram; and Joram
begat Ozias--or Uzziah. Three kings are here
omitted--Ahaziah, Joash, and Amaziah
(1Ch 3:11, 12).
Some omissions behooved to be made, to compress the whole into three
fourteens
(Mt 1:17).
The reason why these, rather than other names, are omitted, must be
sought in religious considerations--either in the connection of
those kings with the house of Ahab (as LIGHTFOOT,
EBRARD, and ALFORD view it);
in their slender right to be regarded as true links in the theocratic
chain (as LANGE takes it); or in some similar
disqualification.
11. And Josias begat Jechonias and his brethren--Jeconiah was Josiah's
grandson, being the son of Jehoiakim, Josiah's second son
(1Ch 3:15);
but Jehoiakim might well be sunk in such a catalogue, being a mere
puppet in the hands of the king of Egypt
(2Ch 36:4).
The "brethren" of Jechonias here evidently mean his uncles--the chief
of whom, Mattaniah or Zedekiah, who came to the throne
(2Ki 24:17),
is, in
2Ch 36:10,
as well as here, called "his brother."
about the time they were carried away to Babylon--literally, "of their
migration," for the Jews avoided the word "captivity" as too bitter a
recollection, and our Evangelist studiously respects the national
feeling.
12. And after they were brought to Babylon--after the migration of
Babylon.
Jechonias begat Salathiel--So
1Ch 3:17.
Nor does this contradict
Jer 22:30,
"Thus saith the Lord, Write ye this man (Coniah, or Jeconiah)
childless"; for what follows explains in what sense this was
meant--"for no man of his seed shall prosper, sitting upon the throne
of David." He was to have seed, but no reigning child.
and Salathiel--or Shealtiel.
begat Zorobabel--So
Ezr 3:2;
Ne 12:1;
Hag 1:1.
But it would appear from
1Ch 3:19
that Zerubbabel was Salathiel's grandson, being the son of Pedaiah,
whose name, for some reason unknown, is omitted.
13-15. And Zorobabel begat Abiud, &c.--None of these names are found
in the Old Testament; but they were doubtless taken from the public or
family registers, which the Jews carefully kept, and their accuracy was
never challenged.
16. And Jacob begat Joseph, the husband of Mary, of whom was born
Jesus--From this it is clear that the genealogy here given is not
that of Mary, but of Joseph; nor has this ever been questioned. And yet
it is here studiously proclaimed that Joseph was not the natural, but
only the legal father of our Lord. His birth of a virgin was known only
to a few; but the acknowledged descent of his legal father from David
secured that the descent of Jesus Himself from David should never be
questioned. See on
Mt 1:20.
who is called Christ--signifying "anointed." It is applied in the Old
Testament to the kings
(1Sa 24:6, 10);
to the priests
(Le 4:5, 16,
&c.); and to the prophets
(1Ki 19:16)
--these all being anointed with oil, the symbol of the needful
spiritual gifts to consecrate them to their respective offices; and it
was applied, in its most sublime and comprehensive sense, to the
promised Deliverer, inasmuch as He was to be consecrated to an office
embracing all three by the immeasurable anointing of the Holy Ghost
(Isa 61:1;
compare
Joh 3:34).
17. So all the generations from Abraham to David are fourteen
generations; and from David until the carrying away--or migration.
into Babylon are fourteen generations; and from the carrying away into
Babylon--the migration of Babylon.
unto Christ are fourteen generations--that is, the whole may be
conveniently divided into three fourteens, each embracing one marked
era, and each ending with a notable event, in the Israelitish annals.
Such artificial aids to memory were familiar to the Jews, and much
larger gaps than those here are found in some of the Old Testament
genealogies. In
Ezr 7:1-5
no fewer than six generations of the priesthood are omitted, as will
appear by comparing it with
1Ch 6:3-15.
It will be observed that the last of the three divisions of fourteen
appears to contain only thirteen distinct names, including Jesus as the
last. LANGE thinks that this was meant as a tacit
hint that Mary was to be supplied, as the thirteenth link of the
last chain, as it is impossible to conceive that the Evangelist could
have made any mistake in the matter. But there is a simpler way of
accounting for it. As the Evangelist himself
(Mt 1:17)
reckons David twice--as the last of the first fourteen and the first of
the second--so, if we reckon the second fourteen to end with Josiah,
who was coeval with the "carrying away into captivity"
(Mt 1:11),
and third to begin with Jeconiah, it will be found that the last
division, as well as the other two, embraces fourteen names, including
that of our Lord.
Mt 1:18-25.
BIRTH OF
CHRIST.
18. Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this wise--or, "thus."
When as his mother Mary was espoused--rather, "betrothed."
to Joseph, before they came together, she was found--discovered to be.
with child of the Holy Ghost--It was, of course, the fact only that
was discovered; the explanation of the fact here given is the
Evangelist's own. That the Holy Ghost is a living conscious Person is
plainly implied here, and is elsewhere clearly taught
(Ac 5:3, 4,
&c.): and that, in the unity of the Godhead, He is distinct both from
the Father and the Son, is taught with equal distinctness
(Mt 28:19;
2Co 13:14).
On the miraculous conception of our Lord, see on
Lu 1:35.
19. Then Joseph her husband--Compare
Mt 1:20,
"Mary, thy wife." Betrothal was, in Jewish law, valid marriage. In
giving Mary up, therefore, Joseph had to take legal steps to effect the
separation.
being a just man, and not willing to make her a public example--to
expose her (see
De 22:23, 24)
was minded to put her away privily--that is, privately by giving her
the required writing of divorcement
(De 24:1),
in presence of only two or three witnesses, and without cause assigned,
instead of having her before a magistrate. That some communication had
passed between him and his betrothed, directly or indirectly, on the
subject, after she returned from her three months' visit to Elizabeth,
can hardly be doubted. Nor does the purpose to divorce her necessarily
imply disbelief, on Joseph's part, of the explanation given him. Even
supposing him to have yielded to it some reverential assent--and the
Evangelist seems to convey as much, by ascribing the proposal to screen
her to the justice of his character--he might think it
altogether unsuitable and incongruous in such circumstances to follow
out the marriage.
20. But while he thought on these things--Who would not feel for him
after receiving such intelligence, and before receiving any light from
above? As he brooded over the matter alone, in the stillness of the
night, his domestic prospects darkened and his happiness blasted for
life, his mind slowly making itself up to the painful step, yet planning
how to do it in the way least offensive--at the last extremity the Lord
Himself interposes.
behold, the angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream, saying,
Joseph thou son of David--This style of address was doubtless advisedly
chosen to remind him of what all the families of David's line so early
coveted, and thus it would prepare him for the marvellous announcement
which was to follow.
fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for that which is conceived
in her is of the Holy Ghost--Though a dark cloud now overhangs this
relationship, it is unsullied still.
21. And she shall bring forth a son--Observe, it is not said, "she
shall bear thee a son," as was said to Zacharias of his wife Elizabeth
(Lu 1:13).
and thou--as his legal father.
shalt call his name JESUS--from the Hebrew meaning "Jehovah the
Saviour"; in Greek
JESUS--to the awakened and anxious sinner sweetest
and most fragrant of all names, expressing so melodiously and briefly
His whole saving office and work!
for he shall save--The "He" is here emphatic--He it is that shall save;
He personally, and by personal acts (as
WEBSTER and
WILKINSON express it).
his people--the lost sheep of the house of Israel, in the first
instance; for they were the only people He then had. But, on the
breaking down of the middle wall of partition, the saved people embraced
the "redeemed unto God by His blood out of every kindred and people and
tongue and nation."
from their sins--in the most comprehensive sense of salvation from sin
(Re 1:5;
Eph 5:25-27).
22. Now all this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken
of the Lord by the prophet--
(Isa 7:14).
saying--as follows.
23. Behold, a virgin--It should be "the virgin" meaning that
particular virgin destined to this unparalleled distinction.
shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they shall call
his name Emmanuel, which, being interpreted, is, God with us--Not that
He was to have this for a proper name (like "Jesus"), but that He should
come to be known in this character, as God manifested in the flesh,
and the living bond of holy and most intimate fellowship between God and
men from henceforth and for ever.
24. Then Joseph, being raised from sleep--and all his difficulties now
removed.
did as the angel of the Lord had bidden him, and took unto him his
wife--With what deep and reverential joy would this now be done on his
part; and what balm would this minister to his betrothed one, who had
till now lain under suspicions of all others the most trying to a chaste
and holy woman--suspicions, too, arising from what, though to her an
honor unparalleled, was to all around her wholly unknown!
25. And knew her not till she had brought forth her first-born son:
and he called his name JESUS--The word "till" does not necessarily
imply that they lived on a different footing afterwards (as will be
evident from the use of the same word in
1Sa 15:35;
2Sa 6:23;
Mt 12:20);
nor does the word "first-born" decide the much-disputed question,
whether Mary had any children to Joseph after the birth of Christ; for,
as LIGHTFOOT says, "The law, in speaking of the
first-born, regarded not whether any were born after or no, but
only that none were born before." (See on
Mt 13:55, 56).
CHAPTER 2
Mt 2:1-12.
VISIT OF THE
MAGI TO
JERUSALEM AND
BETHLEHEM.
The Wise Men Reach Jerusalem--The Sanhedrim, on Herod's Demand,
Pronounce Bethlehem to Be Messiah's Predicted Birthplace
(Mt 2:1-6).
1. Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea--so called to
distinguish it from another Bethlehem in the tribe of Zebulun, near the
Sea of Galilee
(Jos 19:15);
called also Beth-lehem-judah, as being in that tribe
(Jud 17:7);
and Ephrath
(Ge 35:16);
and combining both, Beth-lehem Ephratah
(Mic 5:2).
It lay about six miles southwest of Jerusalem. But how came Joseph and
Mary to remove thither from Nazareth, the place of their residence? Not
of their own accord, and certainly not with the view of fulfilling the
prophecy regarding Messiah's birthplace; nay, they stayed at Nazareth
till it was almost too late for Mary to travel with safety; nor would
they have stirred from it at all, had not an order which left them no
choice forced them to the appointed place. A high hand was in all these
movements. (See on
Lu 2:1-6).
in the days of Herod the king--styled the Great; son of Antipater, an
Edomite, made king by the Romans. Thus was "the sceptre departing
from Judah"
(Ge 49:10),
a sign that Messiah was now at hand. As Herod is known to have died in
the year of Rome 750, in the fourth year before the commencement of our
Christian era, the birth of Christ must be dated four years before the
date usually assigned to it, even if He was born within the year of
Herod's death, as it is next to certain that He was.
there came wise men--literally, "Magi" or "Magians," probably of the
learned class who cultivated astrology and kindred sciences. Balaam's
prophecy
(Nu 24:17),
and perhaps Daniel's
(Da 9:24,
&c.), might have come down to them by tradition; but nothing definite
is known of them.
from the east--but whether from Arabia, Persia, or Mesopotamia is
uncertain.
to Jerusalem--as the Jewish metropolis.
2. Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews?--From this it
would seem they were not themselves Jews. (Compare the language of the
Roman governor,
Joh 18:33,
and of the Roman soldiers,
Mt 27:29,
with the very different language of the Jews themselves,
Mt 27:42,
&c.). The Roman historians, SUETONIUS and TACITUS, bear witness to an expectation, prevalent in the
East, that out of Judea should arise a sovereign of the world.
for we have seen his star in the east--Much has been written on the
subject of this star; but from all that is here said it is perhaps
safest to regard it as simply a luminous meteor, which appeared under
special laws and for a special purpose.
and are come to worship him--to do Him homage, as the word signifies;
the nature of that homage depending on the circumstances of the case.
That not civil but religious homage is meant here is plain from the
whole strain of the narrative, and particularly
Mt 2:11.
Doubtless these simple strangers expected all Jerusalem to be full of
its new-born King, and the time, place, and circumstances of His birth
to be familiar to every one. Little would they think that the first
announcement of His birth would come from themselves, and still less
could they anticipate the startling, instead of transporting, effect
which it would produce--else they would probably have sought their
information regarding His birthplace in some other quarter. But God
overruled it to draw forth a noble testimony to the predicted
birthplace of Messiah from the highest ecclesiastical authority in the
nation.
3. When Herod the king had heard these things, he was troubled--viewing
this as a danger to his own throne: perhaps his guilty conscience also
suggested other grounds of fear.
and all Jerusalem with him--from a dread of revolutionary commotions,
and perhaps also of Herod's rage.
4. And when he had gathered all the chief priests and scribes of the
people together--The class of the "chief priests" included the high
priest for the time being, together with all who had previously filled
this office; for though the then head of the Aaronic family was the only
rightful high priest, the Romans removed them at pleasure, to make way
for creatures of their own. In this class probably were included also
the heads of the four and twenty courses of the priests. The "scribes"
were at first merely transcribers of the law and synagogue readers;
afterwards interpreters of the law, both civil and religious, and so
both lawyers and divines. The first of these classes, a proportion of
the second, and "the elders"--that is, as
LIGHTFOOT thinks, "those
elders of the laity that were not of the Levitical tribe"--constituted
the supreme council of the nation, called the Sanhedrim, the members
of which, at their full complement, numbered seventy-two. That this was
the council which Herod now convened is most probable, from the
solemnity of the occasion; for though the elders are not mentioned, we
find a similar omission where all three were certainly meant (compare
Mt 26:59; 27:1).
As MEYER says, it was all the theologians of the
nation whom Herod convened, because it was a theological response that
he wanted.
he demanded of them--as the authorized interpreters of Scripture.
where Christ--the Messiah.
should be born--according to prophecy.
5. And they said unto him, In Bethlehem of Judea--a prompt and
involuntary testimony from the highest tribunal; which yet at length
condemned Him to die.
for thus it is written by the prophet--
(Mic 5:2).
6. And thou, Bethlehem, in the land of Juda--the "in" being
familiarly left out, as we say, "London, Middlesex."
art not the least among the princes of Judah: for out of thee shall
come a Governor, &c.--This quotation, though differing verbally,
agrees substantially with the Hebrew and the Septuagint.
For says the prophet, "Though thou be little, yet out of thee shall
come the Ruler"--this honor more than compensating for its natural
insignificance; while our Evangelist, by a lively turn, makes him say,
"Thou art not the least: for out of thee shall come a
Governor"--this distinction lifting it from the lowest to the highest
rank. The "thousands of Juda," in the prophet, mean the subordinate
divisions of the tribe: our Evangelist, instead of these, merely names
the "princes" or heads of these families, including the districts which
they occupied.
that shall rule--or "feed," as in the Margin.
my people Israel--In the Old Testament, kings are, by a beautiful
figure, styled "shepherds"
(Eze 34:1-10,
&c.). The classical writers use the same figure. The pastoral rule of
Jehovah and Messiah over His people is a representation pervading all
Scripture, and rich in import. (See
Ps 23:1-6;
Isa 40:11;
Eze 37:24;
Joh 10:11;
Re 7:17).
That this prophecy of Micah referred to the Messiah, was admitted by
the ancient Rabbins.
The Wise Men Despatched to Bethlehem by Herod to See the Babe, and
Bring Him Word, Make a Religious Offering to the Infant King, but
Divinely Warned, Return Home by Another Way
(Mt 2:7-12).
7. Then Herod, when he had privily called the wise men--Herod has so
far succeeded in his murderous design: he has tracked the spot where
lies his victim, an unconscious babe. But he has another point to
fix--the date of His birth--without which he might still miss his mark.
The one he had got from the Sanhedrim; the other he will have from the
sages; but secretly, lest his object should be suspected and defeated.
So he
inquired of them diligently--rather, "precisely."
what time the star appeared--presuming that this would be the best
clue to the age of the child. The unsuspecting strangers tell him all.
And now he thinks he is succeeding to a wish, and shall speedily clutch
his victim; for at so early an age as they indicate, He would not likely
have been removed from the place of His birth. Yet he is wary. He sends
them as messengers from himself, and bids them come to him, that he
may follow their pious example.
8. And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said, Go and search diligently--"Search out carefully."
for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring me word again,
that I may come and worship him also--The cunning and bloody hypocrite!
Yet this royal mandate would meantime serve as a safe conduct to the
strangers.
9. When they had heard the king, they departed--But where were ye, O
Jewish ecclesiastics, ye chief priests and scribes of the people? Ye
could tell Herod where Christ should be born, and could hear of these
strangers from the far East that the Desire of all nations had actually
come; but I do not see you trooping to Bethlehem--I find these devout
strangers journeying thither all alone. Yet God ordered this too, lest
the news should be blabbed, and reach the tyrant's ears, before the Babe
could be placed beyond his reach. Thus are the very errors and crimes
and cold indifferences of men all overruled.
and, lo, the star, which they saw in the east--implying apparently that
it had disappeared in the interval.
went before them, and stood over where the young child was--Surely this
could hardly be but by a luminous meteor, and not very high.
10. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy--The
language is very strong, expressing exuberant transport.
11. And when they were come into the house--not the stable; for as soon
as Bethlehem was emptied of its strangers, they would have no difficulty
in finding a dwelling-house.
they saw--The received text has "found"; but here our translators
rightly depart from it, for it has no authority.
the young child with Mary his mother--The blessed Babe is naturally
mentioned first, then the mother; but Joseph, though doubtless present,
is not noticed, as being but the head of the house.
and fell down and worshipped him--Clearly this was no civil homage to
a petty Jewish king, whom these star-guided strangers came so far, and
inquired so eagerly, and rejoiced with such exceeding joy, to pay, but a
lofty spiritual homage. The next clause confirms this.
and when they had opened their treasures they presented--rather,
"offered."
unto him gifts--This expression, used frequently in the Old Testament
of the oblations presented to God, is in the New Testament employed
seven times, and always in a religious sense of offerings to God.
Beyond doubt, therefore, we are to understand the presentation of these
gifts by the Magi as a religious offering.
gold, frankincense, and myrrh--Visits were seldom paid to sovereigns
without a present
(1Ki 10:2,
&c.; compare
Ps 72:10, 11, 15;
Isa 60:3, 6).
"Frankincense" was an aromatic used in sacrificial offerings; "myrrh"
was used in perfuming ointments. These, with the "gold" which they
presented, seem to show that the offerers were persons in affluent
circumstances. That the gold was presented to the infant King in token
of His royalty; the frankincense in token of His divinity, and the
myrrh, of His sufferings; or that they were designed to express His
divine and human natures; or that the prophetical, priestly, and kingly
offices of Christ are to be seen in these gifts; or that they were the
offerings of three individuals respectively, each of them kings, the
very names of whom tradition has handed down--all these are, at the
best, precarious suppositions. But that the feelings of these devout
givers are to be seen in the richness of their gifts, and that the
gold, at least, would be highly serviceable to the parents of the
blessed Babe in their unexpected journey to Egypt and stay there--that
much at least admits of no dispute.
12. And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to
Herod, they departed--or, "withdrew."
to their own country another way--What a surprise would this vision be
to the sages, just as they were preparing to carry the glad news of what
they had seen to the pious king! But the Lord knew the bloody old
tyrant better than to let him see their face again.
Mt 2:13-23.
THE
FLIGHT INTO
EGYPT--THE
MASSACRE AT
BETHLEHEM--THE
RETURN OF
JOSEPH AND
MARY WITH THE
BABE, AFTER
HEROD'S
DEATH, AND
THEIR
SETTLEMENT AT
NAZARETH.
( =
Lu 2:39).
The Flight into Egypt
(Mt 2:13-15).
13. And when they were departed, behold, the angel of the Lord
appeareth to Joseph in a dream, saying, Arise, and take the young child
and his mother--Observe this form of expression, repeated in
Mt 2:14
--another indirect hint that Joseph was no more than the Child's
guardian. Indeed, personally considered, Joseph has no spiritual
significance, and very little place at all, in the Gospel history.
and flee into Egypt--which, being near, as
ALFORD says, and a Roman
province independent of Herod, and much inhabited by Jews, was an easy
and convenient refuge. Ah! blessed Saviour, on what a checkered career
hast Thou entered here below! At Thy birth there was no room for Thee in
the inn; and now all Judea is too hot for Thee. How soon has the sword
begun to pierce through the Virgin's soul
(Lu 2:35)!
How early does she taste the reception which this mysterious Child of
hers is to meet with in the world! And whither is He sent? To "the
house of bondage?" Well, it once was that. But Egypt was a house of
refuge before it was a house of bondage, and now it has but returned to
its first use.
and be thou there until I bring thee word; for Herod will seek the
young child to destroy him--Herod's murderous purpose was formed before
the Magi had reached Bethlehem.
14. When he arose, he took the young child and his mother by night,
and departed into Egypt--doubtless the same night.
15. And was there until the death of Herod--which took place not very
long after this of a horrible disease; the details of which will be
found in JOSEPHUS [Antiquities, 17.6.1,5,7,8].
that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet,
saying--
(Ho 11:1).
Out of Egypt have I called my son--Our Evangelist here quotes directly
from the Hebrew, warily departing from the Septuagint, which
renders the words, "From Egypt have I recalled his children," meaning
Israel's children. The prophet is reminding his people how dear Israel
was to God in the days of his youth; how Moses was bidden to say to
Pharaoh, "Thus saith the Lord, Israel is My son, My first-born; and
I say unto thee, Let My son go, that he may serve Me; and if thou
refuse to let him go, behold, I will slay thy son, even thy
first-born"
(Ex 4:22, 23);
how, when Pharaoh refused, God having slain all his first-born,
"called His own son out of Egypt," by a stroke of high-handed power and
love. Viewing the words in this light, even if our Evangelist had not
applied them to the recall from Egypt of God's own beloved,
Only-begotten Son, the application would have been irresistibly made by
all who have learnt to pierce beneath the surface to the deeper
relations which Christ bears to His people, and both to God; and who
are accustomed to trace the analogy of God's treatment of each
respectively.
16. Then Herod, &c.--As Deborah sang of the mother of Sisera: "She
looked out at a window, and cried through the lattice, Why is his
chariot so long in coming? why tarry the wheels of his chariots? Have
they not sped?" so Herod wonders that his messengers, with pious zeal,
are not hastening with the news that all is ready to receive him as a
worshipper. What can be keeping them? Have they missed their way? Has
any disaster befallen them? At length his patience is exhausted. He
makes his inquiries and finds they are already far beyond his reach on
their way home.
when he saw that he was mocked--was trifled with.
of the wise men--No, Herod, thou art not mocked of the wise men, but
of a Higher than they. He that sitteth in the heavens doth laugh at
thee; the Lord hath thee in derision. He disappointeth the devices of
the crafty, so that their hands cannot perform their enterprise. He
taketh the wise in their own craftiness, and the counsel of the froward
is carried headlong
(Ps 2:4;
Job 5:12, 13).
That blessed Babe shall die indeed, but not by thy hand. As He
afterwards told that son of thine--as cunning and as unscrupulous as
thyself--when the Pharisees warned Him to depart, for Herod would
seek to kill Him--"Go ye, and tell that fox, Behold, I cast
out devils, and I do cures to-day and to-morrow, and the third day I
shall be perfected. Nevertheless I must walk to-day, and to-morrow, and
the day following: for it cannot be that a prophet perish out of
Jerusalem"
(Lu 13:32, 33).
Bitter satire!
was exceeding wroth--To be made a fool of is what none like, and proud
kings cannot stand. Herod burns with rage and is like a wild bull in a
net. So he
sent forth--a band of hired murderers.
and slew all the children--male children.
that were in Bethlehem, and in all the coasts thereof--environs.
from two years old and under, according to the time which he had
diligently--carefully.
inquired of the wise men--In this ferocious step Herod was like
himself--as crafty as cruel. He takes a large sweep, not to miss his
mark. He thinks this will surely embrace his victim. And so it had, if
He had been there. But He is gone. Heaven and earth shall sooner pass
away than thou shalt have that Babe into thy hands. Therefore, Herod,
thou must be content to want Him: to fill up the cup of thy bitter
mortifications, already full enough--until thou die not less of a broken
heart than of a loathsome and excruciating disease. Why, ask skeptics
and skeptical critics, is not this massacre, if it really occurred,
recorded by JOSEPHUS, who is minute enough in detailing the cruelties of
Herod? To this the answer is not difficult. If we consider how small a
town Bethlehem was, it is not likely there would be many male children
in it from two years old and under; and when we think of the number of
fouler atrocities which JOSEPHUS
has recorded of him, it is unreasonable
to make anything of his silence on this.
17. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the prophet,
saying--
(Jer 31:15,
from which the quotation differs but verbally).
18. In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and
great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be
comforted, because they are not--These words, as they stand in
Jeremiah, undoubtedly relate to the Babylonish captivity. Rachel, the
mother of Joseph and Benjamin, was buried in the neighborhood of
Bethlehem
(Ge 35:19),
where her sepulchre is still shown. She is figuratively represented as
rising from the tomb and uttering a double lament for the loss of her
children--first, by a bitter captivity, and now by a bloody death. And
a foul deed it was. O ye mothers of Bethlehem! methinks I hear you
asking why your innocent babes should be the ram caught in the thicket,
while Isaac escapes. I cannot tell you, but one thing I know, that ye
shall, some of you, live to see a day when that Babe of Bethlehem shall
be Himself the Ram, caught in another sort of thicket, in order that
your babes may escape a worse doom than they now endure. And if these
babes of yours be now in glory, through the dear might of that blessed
Babe, will they not deem it their honor that the tyrant's rage was
exhausted upon themselves instead of their infant Lord?
19. But when Herod was dead--Miserable Herod! Thou thoughtest
thyself safe from a dreaded Rival; but it was He only that was safe
from thee; and thou hast not long enjoyed even this fancied security.
See on
Mt 2:15.
behold, an angel of the Lord appeareth in a dream to Joseph in Egypt--Our translators, somewhat capriciously, render the
same expression "the angel of the Lord,"
Mt 1:20; 2:13;
and "an angel of the Lord," as here. As the same angel appears
to have been employed on all these high occasions--and most likely he
to whom in Luke is given the name of "Gabriel,"
Lu 1:19, 26
--perhaps it should in every instance except the first, be rendered
"the angel."
20. Saying, Arise, and take the young child and his mother, and go into
the land of Israel--not to the land of Judea, for he was afterward
expressly warned not to settle there, nor to Galilee, for he only went
thither when he found it unsafe to settle in Judea but to "the land of
Israel," in its most general sense; meaning the Holy Land at large--the
particular province being not as yet indicated. So Joseph and the Virgin
had, like Abraham, to "go out, not knowing whither they went," till they
should receive further direction.
for they are dead which sought the young child's life--a common
expression in most languages where only one is meant, who here is Herod.
But the words are taken from the strikingly analogous case in
Ex 4:19,
which probably suggested the plural here; and where the command is given
to Moses to return to Egypt for the same reason that the greater
than Moses was now ordered to be brought back from it--the death of
him who sought his life. Herod died in the seventieth year of his age,
and thirty-seventh of his reign.
21. And he arose, and took the young child and his mother, and came
into the land of Israel--intending, as is plain from what follows, to
return to Bethlehem of Judea, there, no doubt, to rear the Infant King,
as at His own royal city, until the time should come when they would
expect Him to occupy Jerusalem, "the city of the Great King."
22. But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judea in the room of
his father Herod--Archelaus succeeded to Judea, Samaria, and Idumea;
but Augustus refused him the title of king till it should be seen
how he conducted himself; giving him only the title of ethnarch
[JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 17.11,4]. Above this,
however, he never rose.
The people, indeed, recognized him as his father's successor; and so it
is here said that he "reigned in the room of his father Herod." But,
after ten years' defiance of the Jewish law and cruel tyranny, the
people lodged heavy complaints against him, and the emperor banished him
to Vienne in Gaul, reducing Judea again to a Roman province. Then the
"scepter" clean "departed from Judah."
he was afraid to go thither--and no wonder, for the reason just
mentioned.
notwithstanding--or more simply, "but."
being warned of God in a dream, he turned aside--withdrew.
into the parts of Galilee--or the Galilean parts. The whole
country west of the Jordan was at this time, as is well known, divided
into three provinces--GALILEE being the northern,
JUDEA the southern, and SAMARIA the central province. The province of Galilee was
under the jurisdiction of Herod Antipas, the brother of Archelaus, his
father having left him that and Perea, on the east side of the Jordan,
as his share of the kingdom, with the title of tetrarch, which
Augustus confirmed. Though crafty and licentious, according to JOSEPHUS--precisely what the Gospel history shows him to
be (see on
Mr 6:14-30;
Lu 13:31-35)
--he was of a less cruel disposition than Archelaus; and Nazareth being
a good way off from the seat of government, and considerably secluded,
it was safer to settle there.
23. And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth--a small
town in Lower Galilee, lying in the territory of the tribe of Zebulun,
and about equally distant from the Mediterranean Sea on the west and
the Sea of Galilee on the east. Note--If, from
Lu 2:39,
one would conclude that the parents of Jesus brought Him straight back
to Nazareth after His presentation in the temple--as if there had been
no visit of the Magi, no flight to Egypt, no stay there, and no purpose
on returning to settle again at Bethlehem--one might, from our
Evangelist's way of speaking here, equally conclude that the parents of
our Lord had never been at Nazareth until now. Did we know exactly the
sources from which the matter of each of the Gospels was drawn up, or
the mode in which these were used, this apparent discrepancy would
probably disappear at once. In neither case is there any inaccuracy. At
the same time it is difficult, with these facts before us, to conceive
that either of these two Evangelists wrote his Gospel with that of the
other before him--though many think this a precarious inference.
that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets, He shall
be called a Nazarene--better, perhaps, "Nazarene." The best explanation
of the origin of this name appears to be that which traces it to the
word netzer in
Isa 11:1
--the small twig, sprout, or sucker, which the prophet
there says, "shall come forth from the stem (or rather, 'stump') of
Jesse, the branch which should fructify from his roots." The little
town of Nazareth, mentioned neither in the Old Testament nor in JOSEPHUS, was probably so called from its insignificance:
a weak twig in contrast to a stately tree; and a special contempt
seemed to rest upon it--"Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?"
(Joh 1:46)
--over and above the general contempt in which all Galilee was held,
from the number of Gentiles that settled in the upper territories of
it, and, in the estimation of the Jews, debased it. Thus, in the
providential arrangement by which our Lord was brought up at the
insignificant and opprobrious town called Nazareth, there was
involved, first, a local humiliation; next, an allusion to Isaiah's
prediction of His lowly, twig-like upspringing from the branchless,
dried-up stump of Jesse; and yet further, a standing memorial of that
humiliation which "the prophets," in a number of the most striking
predictions, had attached to the Messiah.
CHAPTER 3
Mt 3:1-12.
PREACHING AND
MINISTRY OF
JOHN.
( =
Mr 1:1-8;
Lu 3:1-18).
For the proper introduction to this section, we must go to
Lu 3:1, 2.
Here, as BENGEL well observes, the curtain of the
New Testament is, as it were, drawn up, and the greatest of all epochs
of the Church commences. Even our Lord's own age is determined by it
(Lu 3:23).
No such elaborate chronological precision is to be found elsewhere in
the New Testament, and it comes fitly from him who claims it as the
peculiar recommendation of his Gospel, that "he had traced down all
things with precision from the very first"
(Mt 1:3).
Here evidently commences his proper narrative.
Lu 3:1:
Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius
Cæsar--not the fifteenth from his full accession on the
death of Augustus, but from the period when he was associated with him
in the government of the empire, three years earlier, about the end of
the year of Rome 779, or about four years before the usual reckoning.
Pontius Pilate being governor of Judea--His proper title
was procurator, but with more than the usual powers of that
office. After holding it for about ten years, he was summoned to Rome
to answer to charges brought against him; but ere he arrived, Tiberius
died (A.D. 35), and soon after miserable Pilate
committed suicide.
And Herod being tetrarch of Galilee--(See on
Mr 6:14).
and his brother Philip--a very different and very
superior Philip to the one whose name was Herod Philip, and
whose wife, Herodias, went to live with Herod Antipas (see on
Mr 6:17).
tetrarch of Ituræa--lying to the northeast of
Palestine, and so called from Itur or Jetur, Ishmael's
son
(1Ch 1:31),
and anciently belonging to the half-tribe of Manasseh.
and of the region of Trachonitis--lying farther to the northeast,
between Iturea and Damascus; a rocky district infested by robbers, and
committed by Augustus to Herod the Great to keep in order.
and Lysanias the tetrarch of Abilene--still more to the northeast;
so called, says ROBINSON,
from Abila, eighteen miles from Damascus.
Lu 3:2:
Annas and Caiaphas being the high priests--The former, though
deposed, retained much of his influence, and, probably, as sagan or
deputy, exercised much of the power of the high priesthood along with
Caiaphas, his son-in-law
(Joh 18:13;
Ac 4:6).
In David's time both Zadok and Abiathar acted as high priests
(2Sa 15:35),
and it seems to have been the fixed practice to have two
(2Ki 25:18).
the word of God came unto John the son of Zacharias in the
wilderness--Such a way of speaking is never once used when
speaking of Jesus, because He was Himself The Living Word;
whereas to all merely creature-messengers of God, the word they spoke
was a foreign element. See on
Joh 3:31.
We are now prepared for the opening words of Matthew.
1. In those days--of Christ's secluded life at Nazareth, where the last
chapter left Him.
came John the Baptist, preaching--about six months before his Master.
in the wilderness of Judea--the desert valley of the Jordan, thinly
peopled and bare in pasture, a little north of Jerusalem.
2. And saying, Repent ye--Though the word strictly denotes a
change of mind, it has respect here (and wherever it is used in
connection with salvation) primarily to that sense of sin which
leads the sinner to flee from the wrath to come, to look for relief only
from above, and eagerly to fall in with the provided remedy.
for the kingdom of heaven is at hand--This sublime phrase, used in
none of the other Gospels, occurs in this peculiarly Jewish Gospel
nearly thirty times; and being suggested by Daniel's grand vision of the
Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven to the Ancient of days, to
receive His investiture in a world-wide kingdom
(Da 7:13, 14),
it was fitted at once both to meet the national expectations and to
turn them into the right channel. A kingdom for which repentance
was the proper preparation behooved to be essentially spiritual.
Deliverance from sin, the great blessing of Christ's kingdom
(Mt 1:21),
can be valued by those only to whom sin is a burden
(Mt 9:12).
John's great work, accordingly, was to awaken this feeling and hold out
the hope of a speedy and precious remedy.
3. For this is he that was spoken of by the prophet Esaias, saying--
(Mt 11:3).
The voice of one crying in the wilderness--(See on
Lu 3:2);
the scene of his ministry corresponding to its rough nature.
Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight--This
prediction is quoted in all the four Gospels, showing that it was
regarded as a great outstanding one, and the predicted forerunner as the
connecting link between the old and the new economies. Like the great
ones of the earth, the Prince of peace was to have His immediate
approach proclaimed and His way prepared; and the call here--taking it
generally--is a call to put out of the way whatever would obstruct His
progress and hinder His complete triumph, whether those hindrances were
public or personal, outward or inward. In Luke
(Lu 3:5, 6)
the quotation is thus continued: "Every valley shall be filled, and
every mountain and hill shall be brought low; and the crooked shall be
made straight, and the rough ways shall be made smooth; and all flesh
shall see the salvation of God." Levelling and smoothing are here the
obvious figures whose sense is conveyed in the first words of the
proclamation--"Prepare ye the way of the Lord." The idea is that
every obstruction shall be so removed as to reveal to the whole world
the salvation of God in Him whose name is the "Saviour." (Compare
Ps 98:3;
Isa 11:10; 49:6; 52:10;
Lu 2:31, 32;
Ac 13:47).
4. And the same John had his raiment of camel's hair--woven of it.
and a leathern girdle about his loins--the prophetic dress of Elijah
(2Ki 1:8;
and see
Zec 13:4).
and his meat was locusts--the great, well-known Eastern locust, a food
of the poor
(Le 11:22).
and wild honey--made by wild bees
(1Sa 14:25, 26).
This dress and diet, with the shrill cry in the wilderness, would
recall the stern days of Elijah.
5. Then went out to him Jerusalem, and all Judea, and all the region
round about Jordan--From the metropolitan center to the extremities of
the Judean province the cry of this great preacher of repentance and
herald of the approaching Messiah brought trooping penitents and eager
expectants.
6. And were baptized of him in Jordan, confessing their sins--probably
confessing aloud. This baptism was at once a public seal of their felt
need of deliverance from sin, of their expectation of the coming
Deliverer, and of their readiness to welcome Him when He appeared. The
baptism itself startled, and was intended to startle, them. They were
familiar enough with the baptism of proselytes from heathenism; but
this baptism of Jews themselves was quite new and strange to them.
7. But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees come to his
baptism, he said unto them--astonished at such a spectacle.
O generation of vipers--"Viper brood," expressing the deadly influence
of both sects alike upon the community. Mutually and entirely
antagonistic as were their religious principles and spirit, the stern
prophet charges both alike with being the poisoners of the nation's
religious principles. In
Mt 12:34; 23:33,
this strong language of the Baptist is anew applied by the faithful and
true Witness to the Pharisees specifically--the only party that had
zeal enough actively to diffuse this poison.
who hath warned you--given you the hint, as the idea is.
to flee from the wrath to come?--"What can have brought you
hither?" John more than suspected it was not so much their own spiritual
anxieties as the popularity of his movement that had drawn them thither.
What an expression is this, "The wrath to come!" God's "wrath," in
Scripture, is His righteous displeasure against sin, and consequently
against all in whose skirts sin is found, arising out of the essential
and eternal opposition of His nature to all moral evil. This is called
"the coming wrath," not as being wholly future--for as a merited
sentence it lies on the sinner already, and its effects, both inward and
outward, are to some extent experienced even now--but because the
impenitent sinner will not, until "the judgment of the great day," be
concluded under it, will not have sentence publicly and irrevocably
passed upon him, will not have it discharged upon him and experience its
effects without mixture and without hope. In this view of it, it is a
wrath wholly to come, as is implied in the noticeably different form
of the expression employed by the apostle in
1Th 1:10.
Not that even true penitents came to John's baptism with all these
views of "the wrath to come." But what he says is that this was the
real import of the step itself. In this view of it, how striking
is the word he employs to express that step--fleeing from it--as
of one who, beholding a tide of fiery wrath rolling rapidly towards
him, sees in instant flight his only escape!
8. Bring forth therefore fruits--the true reading clearly is "fruit";
meet for repentance--that is, such fruit as befits a true penitent.
John now being gifted with a knowledge of the human heart, like a true
minister of righteousness and lover of souls here directs them how to
evidence and carry out their repentance, supposing it genuine; and in
the following verses warns them of their danger in case it were not.
9. And think not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our
father--that pillow on which the nation so fatally reposed, that
rock on which at length it split.
for I say unto you, that God is able of these stones to raise up
children unto Abraham--that is, "Flatter not yourselves with the
fond delusion that God stands in need of you, to make good His promise
of a seed to Abraham; for I tell you that, though you were all to
perish, God is as able to raise up a seed to Abraham out of those stones
as He was to take Abraham himself out of the rock whence he was hewn,
out of the hole of the pit whence he was digged"
(Isa 51:1).
Though the stern speaker may have pointed as he spoke to the pebbles of
the bare clay hills that lay around (so STANLEY'S
Sinai and Palestine), it was clearly the calling of the
Gentiles--at that time stone-dead in their sins, and quite as
unconscious of it--into the room of unbelieving and disinherited Israel
that he meant thus to indicate (see
Mt 21:43;
Ro 11:20, 30).
10. And now also--And even already.
the axe is laid unto--"lieth at."
the root of the trees--as it were ready to strike: an expressive
figure of impending judgment, only to be averted in the way next
described.
therefore every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down,
and cast into the fire--Language so personal and individual as this
can scarcely be understood of any national judgment like the approaching
destruction of Jerusalem, with the breaking up of the Jewish polity and
the extrusion of the chosen people from their peculiar privileges which
followed it; though this would serve as the dark shadow, cast before, of
a more terrible retribution to come. The "fire," which in another verse
is called "unquenchable," can be no other than that future "torment" of
the impenitent whose "smoke ascendeth up for ever and ever," and which
by the Judge Himself is styled "everlasting punishment"
(Mt 25:46).
What a strength, too, of just indignation is in that word "cast" or
"flung into the fire!"
The third Gospel here adds the following important particulars in
Lu 3:10-16.
Lu 3:10:
And the people--the multitudes.
asked him, saying, What shall we do then?--that is, to show the
sincerity of our repentance.
Lu 3:11:
He answereth and saith unto them, He that hath two coats, let him
impart to him that hath none; and he that hath meat--provisions,
victuals.
let him do likewise--This is directed against the reigning avarice
and selfishness. (Compare the corresponding precepts of the Sermon on
the Mount,
Mt 5:40-42).
Lu 3:12:
Then came also the publicans to be baptized, and said unto him,
Master--Teacher.
what shall we do?--In what special way is the genuineness of our
repentance to be manifested?
Lu 3:13:
And he said unto them, Exact no more than that which is appointed
you--This is directed against that extortion which made the
publicans a byword. (See on
Mt 5:46;
Lu 15:1).
Lu 3:14:
And the soldiers--rather, "And soldiers"--the word means "soldiers
on active duty."
likewise demanded--asked.
of him, saying, And what shall we do? And he said unto them, Do
violence to no man--Intimidate. The word signifies to "shake
thoroughly," and refers probably to the extorting of money or other
property.
neither accuse any falsely--by acting as informers vexatiously on
frivolous or false pretexts.
and be content with your wages--or "rations." We may take this,
say WEBSTER and
WILKINSON, as a warning against mutiny, which the
officers attempted to suppress by largesses and donations. And thus the
"fruits" which would evidence their repentance were just resistance to
the reigning sins--particularly of the class to which the penitent
belonged--and the manifestation of an opposite spirit.
Lu 3:15:
And as the people were in expectation--in a state of excitement,
looking for something new
and all men mused in their hearts of John, whether he were the
Christ, or not--rather, "whether he himself might be the Christ."
The structure of this clause implies that they could hardly think it,
but yet could not help asking themselves whether it might not be;
showing both how successful he had been in awakening the expectation of
Messiah's immediate appearing, and the high estimation and even
reverence, which his own character commanded.
Lu 3:16:
John answered--either to that deputation from Jerusalem, of which
we read in
Joh 1:19,
&c., or on some other occasion, to remove impressions derogatory to his
blessed Master, which he knew to be taking hold of the popular mind.
saying unto them all--in solemn protestation.
(We now return to the first Gospel.)
11. I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance--(See on
Mt 3:6);
but he that cometh after me is mightier than I--In Mark and Luke
this is more emphatic--"But there cometh the Mightier than I"
(Mr 1:7;
Lu 3:16).
whose shoes--sandals.
I am not worthy to bear--The sandals were tied and untied, and borne
about by the meanest servants.
he shall baptize you--the emphatic "He": "He it is," to the exclusion
of all others, "that shall baptize you."
with the Holy Ghost--"So far from entertaining such a thought as laying
claim to the honors of Messiahship, the meanest services I can render to
that 'Mightier than I that is coming after me' are too high an honor for
me; I am but the servant, but the Master is coming; I administer but the
outward symbol of purification; His it is, as His sole prerogative, to
dispense the inward reality." Beautiful spirit, distinguishing this
servant of Christ throughout!
and with fire--To take this as a distinct baptism from that of the
Spirit--a baptism of the impenitent with hell-fire--is exceedingly
unnatural. Yet this was the view of ORIGEN
among the Fathers; and among
moderns, of NEANDER,
MEYER,
DE
WETTE, and
LANGE. Nor is it much better
to refer it to the fire of the great day, by which the earth and the
works that are therein shall be burned up. Clearly, as we think, it is
but the fiery character of the Spirit's operations upon the
soul--searching, consuming, refining, sublimating--as nearly all good
interpreters understand the words. And thus, in two successive clauses,
the two most familiar emblems--water and fire--are employed to
set forth the same purifying operations of the Holy Ghost upon the soul.
12. Whose fan--winnowing fan.
is in his hand--ready for use. This is no other than the preaching
of the Gospel, even now beginning, the effect of which would be to
separate the solid from the spiritually worthless, as wheat, by the
winnowing fan, from the chaff. (Compare the similar representation in
Mal 3:1-3).
and he will throughly purge his floor--threshing-floor; that is, the
visible Church.
and gather his wheat--His true-hearted saints; so called for their
solid worth (compare
Am 9:9;
Lu 22:31).
into the garner--"the kingdom of their Father," as this "garner" or
"barn" is beautifully explained by our Lord in the parable of the wheat
and the tares
(Mt 13:30, 43).
but he will burn up the chaff--empty, worthless professors of religion,
void of all solid religious principle and character (see
Ps 1:4).
with unquenchable fire--Singular is the strength of this apparent
contradiction of figures:--to be burnt up, but with a fire that is
unquenchable; the one expressing the utter destruction of all that
constitutes one's true life, the other the
continued consciousness of existence in that awful condition.
Luke adds the following important particulars
(Lu 3:18-20):
Lu 3:18:
And many other things in his exhortation preached he unto the
people--showing that we have here but an abstract of his teaching.
Besides what we read in
Joh 1:29, 33, 34; 3:27-36,
the incidental allusion to his having taught his disciples to pray
(Lu 11:1)
--of which not a word is said elsewhere--shows how varied his teaching
was.
Lu 3:19:
But Herod the tetrarch, being reproved by him for Herodias his
brother Philip's wife, and for all the evils which Herod had
done--In this last clause we have an important fact, here only
mentioned, showing how thoroughgoing was the fidelity of the Baptist
to his royal hearer, and how strong must have been the workings of
conscience in that slave of passion when, notwithstanding such
plainness, he "did many things, and heard John gladly"
(Mr 6:20).
Lu 3:20:
Added yet this above all, that he shut up John in prison--This
imprisonment of John, however, did not take place for some time after
this; and it is here recorded merely because the Evangelist did not
intend to recur to his history till he had occasion to relate the
message which he sent to Christ from his prison at Machærus
(Lu 7:18,
&c.).
Mt 3:13-17.
BAPTISM OF
CHRIST AND
DESCENT OF THE
SPIRIT UPON
HIM
IMMEDIATELY
THEREAFTER.
( =
Mr 1:9-11;
Lu 3:21, 22;
Joh 1:31-34).
Baptism of Christ
(Mt 3:13-15).
13. Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John, to be baptized
of him--Moses rashly anticipated the divine call to deliver his
people, and for this was fain to flee the house of bondage, and wait in
obscurity for forty years more
(Ex 2:11,
&c.). Not so this greater than Moses. All but thirty years had He now
spent in privacy at Nazareth, gradually ripening for His public work,
and calmly awaiting the time appointed of the Father. Now it had
arrived; and this movement from Galilee to Jordan is the step,
doubtless, of deepest interest to all heaven since that first one which
brought Him into the world. Luke
(Lu 3:21)
has this important addition--"Now when all the people were
baptized, it came to pass, that Jesus being baptized,"
&c.--implying that Jesus waited till all other applicants for baptism
that day had been disposed of, ere He stepped forward, that He might
not seem to be merely one of the crowd. Thus, as He rode into Jerusalem
upon an ass "whereon yet never man sat"
(Lu 19:30),
and lay in a sepulchre "wherein was never man yet laid"
(Joh 19:41),
so in His baptism, too. He would be "separate from sinners."
14. But John forbade him--rather, "was (in the act of) hindering
him," or "attempting to hinder him."
saying, I have need to be baptized of thee, and comest thou to
me?--(How John came to recognize Him, when he says he knew Him not,
see on
John 1. 31-34.)
The emphasis of this most remarkable speech lies all in the pronouns:
"What! Shall the Master come for baptism to the servant--the sinless
Saviour to a sinner?" That thus much is in the Baptist's words will be
clearly seen if it be observed that he evidently regarded Jesus as
Himself needing no purification but rather qualified to
impart it to those who did. And do not all his other testimonies to
Christ fully bear out this sense of the words? But it were a pity if,
in the glory of this testimony to Christ, we should miss the beautiful
spirit in which it was borne--"Lord, must I baptize Thee?
Can I bring myself to do such a thing?"--reminding us of Peter's
exclamation at the supper table, "Lord, dost Thou wash my feet?" while
it has nothing of the false humility and presumption which dictated
Peter's next speech. "Thou shalt never wash my feet"
(Joh 13:6, 8).
15. And Jesus answering said unto him, Suffer it to be so now--"Let
it pass for the present"; that is, "Thou recoilest, and no wonder, for
the seeming incongruity is startling; but in the present case do as thou
art bidden."
for thus it becometh us--"us," not in the sense of "me and
thee," or "men in general," but as in
Joh 3:11.
to fulfil all righteousness--If this be rendered, with SCRIVENER, "every ordinance," or, with CAMPBELL, "every institution," the meaning is obvious
enough; and the same sense is brought out by "all righteousness," or
compliance with everything enjoined, baptism included. Indeed, if this
be the meaning, our version perhaps best brings out the force of the
opening word "Thus." But we incline to think that our Lord meant more
than this. The import of circumcision and of baptism seems to be
radically the same. And if our remarks on the circumcision of our Lord
(see on
Lu 2:21-24)
are well founded, He would seem to have said, "Thus do I impledge
Myself to the whole righteousness of the Law--thus symbolically do
enter on and engage to fulfil it all." Let the thoughtful reader weigh
this.
Then he suffered him--with true humility, yielding to higher authority
than his own impressions of propriety.
Descent of the Spirit upon the Baptized Redeemer
(Mt 3:16, 17).
16. And Jesus when he was baptized, went up straightway out of the
water--rather, "from the water." Mark has "out of the water"
(Mr 1:10).
"and"--adds Luke
(Lu 3:21),
"while He was praying"; a grand piece of information. Can there be a
doubt about the burden of that prayer; a prayer sent up, probably,
while yet in the water--His blessed head suffused with the baptismal
element; a prayer continued likely as He stepped out of the stream, and
again stood upon the dry ground; the work before Him, the needed and
expected Spirit to rest upon Him for it, and the glory He would then
put upon the Father that sent Him--would not these fill His breast, and
find silent vent in such form as this?--"Lo, I come; I delight to do
Thy will, O God. Father, glorify Thy name. Show Me a token for good.
Let the Spirit of the Lord God come upon Me, and I will preach the
Gospel to the poor, and heal the broken-hearted, and send forth
judgment unto victory." While He was yet speaking--
lo, the heavens were opened--Mark says, sublimely, "He saw the heavens
cleaving"
(Mr 1:10).
and he saw the Spirit of God descending--that is, He only, with the
exception of His honored servant, as he tells us himself
(Joh 1:32-34);
the by-standers apparently seeing nothing.
like a dove, and lighting upon him--Luke says, "in a bodily shape"
(Lu 3:22);
that is, the blessed Spirit, assuming the corporeal form of a dove,
descended thus upon His sacred head. But why in this form? The
Scripture use of this emblem will be our best guide here. "My dove,
my undefiled is one," says the Song of Solomon
(So 6:9).
This is chaste purity. Again, "Be ye harmless as doves," says
Christ Himself
(Mt 10:16).
This is the same thing, in the form of inoffensiveness towards men. "A
conscience void of offense toward God and toward men"
(Ac 24:16)
expresses both. Further, when we read in the Song of Solomon
(So 2:14),
"O my dove, that art in the clefts of the rocks, in the
secret places of the stairs (see
Isa 60:8),
let me see thy countenance, let me hear thy voice; for sweet is thy
voice, and thy countenance is comely"--it is shrinking modesty,
meekness, gentleness, that is thus charmingly depicted. In a word--not
to allude to the historical emblem of the dove that flew back to the
ark, bearing in its mouth the olive leaf of peace
(Ge 8:11)
--when we read
(Ps 68:13),
"Ye shall be as the wings of a dove covered with silver, and her
feathers with yellow gold," it is beauteousness that is thus
held forth. And was not such that "holy, harmless, undefiled One," the
"separate from sinners?" "Thou art fairer than the children of men;
grace is poured into Thy lips; therefore God hath blessed Thee for
ever!" But the fourth Gospel gives us one more piece of information
here, on the authority of one who saw and testified of it: "John bare
record, saying, I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove,
and IT ABODE UPON HIM." And
lest we should think that this was an accidental thing, he adds that
this last particular was expressly given him as part of the sign by
which he was to recognize and identify Him as the Son of God: "And I
knew Him not: but He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said
unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending AND REMAINING ON HIM, the same is
He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost. And I saw and bare record that
this is the Son of God"
(Joh 1:32-34).
And when with this we compare the predicted descent of the Spirit upon
Messiah
(Isa 11:2),
"And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon Him," we cannot
doubt that it was this permanent and perfect resting of the Holy Ghost
upon the Son of God--now and henceforward in His official
capacity--that was here visibly manifested.
17. And lo a voice from heaven, saying, This is--Mark and Luke give
it in the direct form, "Thou art."
(Mr 1:11;
Lu 3:22).
my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased--The verb is put in the
aorist to express absolute complacency, once and for ever felt towards
Him. The English here, at least to modern ears, is scarcely strong
enough. "I delight" comes the nearest, perhaps, to that ineffable
complacency which is manifestly intended; and this is the rather to
be preferred, as it would immediately carry the thoughts back to that
august Messianic prophecy to which the voice from heaven plainly alluded
(Isa 42:1),
"Behold My Servant, whom I uphold; Mine Elect, IN
WHOM MY SOUL DELIGHTETH." Nor are the words
which follow to be overlooked, "I have put My Spirit upon Him; He shall
bring forth judgment to the Gentiles." (The Septuagint perverts
this, as it does most of the Messianic predictions, interpolating the
word "Jacob," and applying it to the Jews). Was this voice heard by the
by-standers? From Matthew's form of it, one might suppose it so
designed; but it would appear that it was not, and probably John only
heard and saw anything peculiar about that great baptism. Accordingly,
the words, "Hear ye Him," are not added, as at the Transfiguration.
CHAPTER 4
Mt 4:1-11.
TEMPTATION OF
CHRIST.
( =
Mr 1:12, 13;
Lu 4:1-13).
1. Then--an indefinite note of sequence. But Mark's word
(Mr 1:12)
fixes what we should have presumed was meant, that it was "immediately"
after His baptism; and with this agrees the statement of Luke
(Lu 4:1).
was Jesus led up--that is, from the low Jordan valley to some more
elevated spot.
of the Spirit--that blessed Spirit immediately before spoken of as
descending upon Him at His baptism, and abiding upon Him. Luke,
connecting these two scenes, as if the one were but the sequel of the
other, says, "Jesus, being full of the Holy Ghost, returned from Jordan,
and was led," &c. Mark's expression has a startling sharpness about
it--"Immediately the Spirit driveth Him"
(Mr 1:12),
"putteth," or "hurrieth Him forth," or "impelleth Him." (See the same
word in
Mr 1:43; 5:40;
Mt 9:25; 13:52;
Joh 10:4).
The thought thus strongly expressed is the mighty constraining impulse
of the Spirit under which He went; while Matthew's more gentle
expression, "was led up," intimates how purely voluntary on His own
part this action was.
into the wilderness--probably the wild Judean desert. The particular
spot which tradition has fixed upon has hence got the name of
Quarantana or Quarantaria, from the forty days--"an almost
perpendicular wall of rock twelve or fifteen hundred feet above the
plain" [ROBINSON, Palestine]. The supposition of those who incline
to place the temptation amongst the mountains of Moab is, we think, very
improbable.
to be tempted--The Greek word (peirazein) means simply to
try or make proof of; and when ascribed to God in His dealings with
men, it means, and can mean no more than this. Thus,
Ge 22:1,
"It came to pass that God did tempt Abraham," or put his faith to a
severe proof. (See
De 8:2).
But for the most part in Scripture the word is used in a bad sense, and
means to entice, solicit, or provoke to sin. Hence the name here given
to the wicked one--"the tempter"
(Mt 4:3).
Accordingly "to be tempted" here is to be understood both ways. The
Spirit conducted Him into the wilderness simply to have His faith
tried; but as the agent in this trial was to be the wicked one, whose
whole object would be to seduce Him from His allegiance to God, it was a
temptation in the bad sense of the term. The unworthy inference which
some would draw from this is energetically repelled by an apostle
(Jas 1:13-17).
of the devil--The word signifies a slanderer--one who casts
imputations upon another. Hence that other name given him
(Re 12:10),
"The accuser of the brethren, who accuseth them before our God day and
night." Mark
(Mr 1:13)
says, "He was forty days tempted of Satan," a word signifying an
adversary, one who lies in wait for, or sets himself in
opposition to another. These and other names of the same fallen spirit
point to different features in his character or operations. What was
the high design of this? First, as we judge, to give our Lord a taste
of what lay before Him in the work He had undertaken; next, to make
trial of the glorious equipment for it which He had just received;
further, to give Him encouragement, by the victory now to be won, to go
forward spoiling principalities and powers, until at length He should
make a show of them openly, triumphing over them in His cross: that the
tempter, too, might get a taste, at the very outset, of the new kind of
material in man which he would find he had here to deal with;
finally, that He might acquire experimental ability "to succor them
that are tempted"
(Heb 2:18).
The temptation evidently embraced two stages: the one continuing
throughout the forty days' fast; the other, at the conclusion of that
period.
FIRST
STAGE:
2. And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights--Luke says
"When they were quite ended"
(Lu 4:2).
he was afterward an hungered--evidently implying that the sensation
of hunger was unfelt during all the forty days; coming on only at their
close. So it was apparently with Moses
(Ex 34:28)
and Elijah
(1Ki 19:8)
for the same period. A supernatural power of endurance was of course
imparted to the body, but this probably operated through a natural
law--the absorption of the Redeemer's Spirit in the dread conflict with
the tempter. (See on
Ac 9:9).
Had we only this Gospel, we should suppose the temptation did not begin
till after this. But it is clear, from Mark's statement, that "He was
in the wilderness forty days tempted of Satan"
(Mr 1:13),
and Luke's, "being forty days tempted of the devil"
(Lu 4:2),
that there was a forty days' temptation before the three
specific temptations afterwards recorded. And this is what we have
called the First Stage. What the precise nature and object of the forty
days' temptation were is not recorded. But two things seem plain
enough. First, the tempter had utterly failed of his object, else it
had not been renewed; and the terms in which he opens his second attack
imply as much. But further, the tempter's whole object during the forty
days evidently was to get Him to distrust the heavenly testimony borne
to Him at His baptism as
THE
SON OF
GOD--to persuade Him to regard it as but a splendid
illusion--and, generally, to dislodge from His breast the consciousness
of His Sonship. With what plausibility the events of His previous
history from the beginning would be urged upon Him in support of this
temptation it is easy to imagine. And it makes much in support of this
view of the forty days' temptation that the particulars of it are not
recorded; for how the details of such a purely internal struggle could
be recorded it is hard to see. If this be correct, how naturally does
the SECOND
STAGE of the temptation open! In Mark's brief notice of the
temptation there is one expressive particular not given either by
Matthew or by Luke--that "He was with the wild beasts"
(Mr 1:12),
no doubt to add terror to solitude, and aggravate the horrors of the
whole scene.
3. And when the tempter came to him--Evidently we have here a new
scene.
he said, if thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made
bread--rather, "loaves," answering to "stones" in the plural; whereas
Luke, having said, "Command this stone," in the singular, adds, "that it
be made bread," in the singular
(Lu 4:3).
The sensation of hunger, unfelt during all the forty days, seems now to
have come on in all its keenness--no doubt to open a door to the
tempter, of which he is not slow to avail himself; "Thou still clingest
to that vainglorious confidence that Thou art the Son of God, carried
away by those illusory scenes at the Jordan. Thou wast born in a
stable; but Thou art the Son of God! hurried off to Egypt for fear of
Herod's wrath; but Thou art the Son of God! a carpenter's roof supplied
Thee with a home, and in the obscurity of a despicable town of Galilee
Thou hast spent thirty years, yet still Thou art the Son of God! and a
voice from heaven, it seems, proclaimed it in Thine ears at the Jordan!
Be it so; but after that, surely Thy days of obscurity and trial
should have an end. Why linger for weeks in this desert, wandering
among the wild beasts and craggy rocks, unhonored, unattended,
unpitied, ready to starve for want of the necessaries of life? Is this
befitting "the Son of God?" At the bidding of "the Son of God" surely
those stones shall all be turned into loaves, and in a moment present
an abundant repast."
4. But he answered and said, It is written--
(De 8:3).
Man shall not live by bread alone--more emphatically, as in the
Greek, "Not by bread alone shall man live."
but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God--Of all
passages in Old Testament Scripture, none could have been pitched upon
more apposite, perhaps not one so apposite, to our Lord's purpose. "The
Lord . . . led thee (said Moses to Israel, at the close of their
journeyings) these forty years in the wilderness, to humble thee, and to
prove thee, to know what was in thine heart, whether thou wouldest keep
His commandments, or no. And He humbled thee, and suffered thee to
hunger, and fed thee with manna, which thou knewest not, neither did thy
fathers know; that He might make thee know that man doth not live by
bread only," &c., "Now, if Israel spent, not forty days, but forty
years in a waste, howling wilderness, where there were no means of human
subsistence, not starving, but divinely provided for, on purpose to
prove to every age that human support depends not upon bread, but upon
God's unfailing word of promise and pledge of all needful providential
care, am I, distrusting this word of God, and despairing of relief, to
take the law into My own hand? True, the Son of God is able enough to
turn stones into bread: but what the Son of God is able to do is not the
present question, but what is man's duty under want of the
necessaries of life. And as Israel's condition in the wilderness did not
justify their unbelieving murmurings and frequent desperation, so
neither would Mine warrant the exercise of the power of the Son of God
in snatching despairingly at unwarranted relief. As man, therefore, I
will await divine supply, nothing doubting that at the fitting time it
will arrive." The second temptation in this Gospel is in Luke's the
third. That Matthew's order is the right one will appear, we think,
quite clearly in the sequel.
5. Then the devil taketh him up--rather, "conducteth Him."
into the holy city--so called (as in
Isa 48:2;
Ne 11:1)
from its being "the city of the Great King," the seat of the temple,
the metropolis of all Jewish worship.
and setteth him on a pinnacle of the temple--rather, "the pinnacle"--a
certain well-known projection. Whether this refers to the highest
summit of the temple, which bristled with golden spikes
[JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 5.5,6]; or whether it refers to another peak,
on Herod's royal portico, overhanging the ravine of Kedron, at the
valley of Hinnom--an immense tower built on the very edge of this
precipice, from the top of which dizzy height
JOSEPHUS says one could
not look to the bottom [Antiquities, 15.11,5]--is not certain; but
the latter is probably meant.
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