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Matthew 12

CamGreek

Matthew 12:1

  1. ἐπορεύθη. St Luke has the less classical ἐγένετοδιαπορεύεσθαι.

τοῖςσάββασιν. For the form as if from a sing. σάββας -ατος see Winer 73. τὸσάββατον and τὰσάββατα, whether in singular or plural, mean (1) the sabbath, ἐντῷσαββάτῳ, Luke 6:7. ὄψεδὲσαββάτων, Matthew 28:1. (2) The week, πρώτησαββἀτου, Mark 16:9. εἰςμίανσαββάτων, Matthew 28:1.

ἐπείνασαν. A late form for ἐπείνησαν. So πεινᾶν and πεινᾷ for Attic πεινῆν and πεινῇ.

ἤρξαντοτίλλεινστάχυας. The Pharisees, who seem to have been watching their opportunity, make the objection as soon as the disciples began what by Pharisaic rules was an unlawful act.

Matthew 12:2

  1. ὃοὐκἔξεστινποιεῖνἐνσαββάτῳ. This prohibition is a Pharisaic rule not found in the Mosaic Law. It was a principle with the Pharisees to extend the provisions of the Law and make minute regulations over and beyond what Moses commanded, in order to avoid the possibility of transgression. To pluck ears of corn was in a sense, the Pharisees said, to reap, and to reap on the Sabbath day was forbidden and punishable by death. These regulations did in fact make void the Law; e.g. the result of this particular prohibition was to contravene the intention or motive of the Sabbath. If sabbatical observances prevented men from satisfying hunger, the Sabbath was no longer a blessing but an injury to man.

Matthew 12:3

  1. Ahimelech, the priest at Nob, gave David and his companions five loaves of the shewbread (1 Samuel 21:1-7). ‘It is no improbable conjecture that David came to Nob either on the Sabbath itself, or when the Sabbath was but newly gone.’ Lightfoot, Hor. Heb. ad loc.

Matthew 12:4

  1. τοὺςἄρτουςτῆςπροθέσεως. Literally, ‘loaves of the setting forth,’ i.e. the bread that was set forth in the sanctuary. It was also called ‘continual bread’ as being set forth perpetually before the Lord, hence the Hebrew name, ‘bread of the presence.’ Twelve loaves or cakes were placed in two ‘piles’ (rather than ‘rows,’ Leviticus 24:6) on the ‘pure table’ every Sabbath. On each pile was put a golden cup of frankincense. See Exodus 25:30; Leviticus 24:6-8; Josephus, Ant. III. 10. 7.

τῆςπροθέσεως. This use of the attribute genitive is very frequent in the Hebrew language, which has few adjectives in proportion to the substantives. Adjectives of material are almost entirely wanting (Rödiger’s Gesenius Hebr. Gram. p. 236). The construction however belongs also to Greek syntax, μέλαιναδʼ ἄστρων … εὐφρόνη ‘starry night.’ Soph. El. 19. λευκῆςχιόνοςπτέρυγι. Ant. 114. ‘a snowy wing.’ See Donaldson, Grk. Gr. 454.

ἐξὸνἦν. A late analytic form for ἐξῆν.

Matthew 12:5

  1. ἀνέγνωτε. For the aor. see ch. Matthew 5:21 and Matthew 11:27.

βεβηλοῦσιν. By labour in removing the shewbread, preparing fire for the sacrifice, and performing the whole temple service. ‘Not merely does the sacred history relate exceptional instances of necessity, but the Law itself ordains labour on the Sabbath as a duty’ (Stier).

βεβηλοῦσιν. The verb is late. βέβηλος (βάω, βαίνω, βηλός, ‘a threshold’) lit. = ‘allowable for all to tread,’ so common, profane.

Matthew 12:6

  1. μεῖζον. The neuter gives the sense of indefinite greatness; cp. Luke 11:32, πλεῖονΣολομῶνοςὧδε, and Eur. Ion, 973, καὶπῶςτὰκρείσσωθνητὸςοὖσʼ ὑπερδράμω, where τὰκρείσσω is equivalent to τὸνθεόν.

Matthew 12:7

  1. εἰδὲἐγνώκειτε. This form of the conditional sentence implies that the action of the protasis did not take place. The Pharisees did not recognise the true meaning of the prophet.

Ἔλεοςθέλωκαὶοὐθυσίαν. Quoted a second time, see ch. Matthew 9:13. There is something more binding than the Law, and that is the principle which underlies the Law. The law rightly understood is the expression of God’s love to man. That love allowed the act of David, and the labour of the priests; ‘Shall it not permit my disciples to satisfy their hunger?’

The MSS. vary between ἔλεος and ἔλεον. In the classics ἔλεος is always masc., in Hellenistic Greek generally neuter, similar instances are πλοῦτος neut. 2 Corinthians 8:2; Philippians 4:19 alibi, and ζῆλος neut. Philippians 3:6 (Lachmann and Tischendorf).

Matthew 12:10

  1. χεῖραἔχωνξηράν, i.e. paralysed or affected by atrophy. St Luke has ἡχεὶραὐτοῦἡδεξιά.

εἰ does not introduce direct questions in Attic Greek. For this later use, compare Latin an and even si. The construction is probably due to an ellipse. Winer, 639.

Matthew 12:11

  1. In the other Synoptic Gospels the argument is different. ‘Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath days, or to do evil? to save life or to kill?’ St Matthew states the argument that bears specially on the Jewish Law. St Luke, however, mentions the application of the same argument by our Lord on a different occasion, ch. Matthew 14:5. Our Lord’s answer is thrown into the form of a syllogism, the minor premiss and conclusion of which are left to be inferred in St Luke loc. cit.

Matthew 12:12

  1. διαφέρει. Cp. ch. Matthew 10:31, πολλῶνστρουθίωνδιαφέρετεὑμεῖς.

Matthew 12:13

  1. ἀπεκατεστάθη. For the double augment see Winer, P. ii., xii. 7.

Matthew 12:14

  1. συμβούλιονἔλαβονκατʼ αὐτοῦ. St Mark adds that the Herodians joined the Pharisees.

ὅπωςαὐτὸνἀπολέσωσιν. This sequence of the subjunctive on the historic tenses is the established usage in Hellenistic Greek. For instances in the Classics see note, ch. Matthew 14:36. The use of the subjunctive gradually displaced the optative mood, which does not exist in Modern Greek. In the N.T. it is somewhat rare. It occurs, (1) in conditional sentences; as, ἀλλʼ εἰκαὶπάσχοιτεδιὰδικαιοσύνην, μακάριοι, 1 Peter 3:14. (2) In the expression of a wish; as, μηδεὶςκαρπὸνφάγοι, Mark 11:14, and the formula, μὴγένοιτο. (3) In indirect questions; as, ἤρξαντοσυζητεῖν … τὸτίςἄραεἴηἐξαὐτῶν, Luke 22:23. (4) In a temporal sentence; once only, in oratio obliqua, Acts 25:16. (5) With ἄν, ‘when subjective possibility is connected with a condition’ (Winer), as Acts 17:18. (6) In strictly final sentences it does not occur; on the apparent instances, (α) Mark 9:30; Mark 14:10, where there are strong reasons for regarding γνοῖ and παραδοῖ as subjunctive forms; and (β) Ephesians 1:17, where the sentence introduced by ἵνα expresses the object of the prayer or wish; see Winer. p. 360, note 2, and p. 363.

Matthew 12:15

  1. ἀνεχώρησενἐκεῖθεν. See ch. Matthew 10:23. Jesus follows the principle which He laid down for his disciples’ guidance.

Matthew 12:17

  1. τὸῥηθὲνδιὰἩσαΐου. Isaiah 42:1-4. The quotation follows the Hebr. with slight variation. After ἕωςἂνἐκβάλῃ … κρίσιν a clause follows, expanding the thought of those words: ‘His force shall not be abated nor broken. Until he hath firmly seated judgment in the earth’ (Lowth’s trans.). In the LXX., Ἰακὼβ and Ἰσραὴλ are inserted as subjects in the first clauses, and there are many verbal discrepancies.

Matthew 12:18

  1. ὁπαῖςμου. ‘My servant.’ In Isaiah’s prophecy, either (1) ‘the chosen one,’ whom Jehovah raised ‘from the north’ (Isaiah 41:25) to do his will, and bring about His people’s deliverance from the Babylonish Captivity, or (2) the nation of Israel the worker out of Jehovah’s purposes, in either case in an ultimate sense the Messiah.

κρίσιν. The Hebrew word (mishpat) is used in a wider sense than κρίσις denoting ‘rule,’ ‘plan,’ ‘ordinance,’ &c. Adhering, however, to the strict force of the Greek, we may regard κρίσις as the ‘divine sentence or decree,’ so the ‘purpose’ of God in the Gospel.

τοῖςἔθνεσιν. Possibly our Lord in His retirement addressed Himself more especially to the Gentiles—the Greeks, Phœnicians, and others, settled near the lake. ‘They about Tyre and Sidon, a great multitude, … came unto Him,’ Mark 3:8.

Matthew 12:19

  1. ἐρίσει. Here, only in N.T., it may be noted that in this citation there are three ἅπαξλεγόμενα in N.T. αἱρετίζειν—ἐρίζειν—τύφομαι, none of which occur in the LXX. version of the prophecy; the fut. κατεάξει is extremely rare, and the construction of ἐλπίζειν is found here only in N.T. The divergence from the LXX. points to an independent version, and the divergence from St Matthew’s vocabulary points to some translator other than the Evangelist.

ἀκούσει. Late for middle form ἀκούσεται.

ἐνταῖςπλατείαις. ‘In the open spaces’ of the city. Jesus had retired to the desert.

Matthew 12:20

  1. ἕωςἂνἐκβάλῃεἰςνῖκοςτὴνκρίσιν, i.e. ‘until he makes his judgment triumph—until he brings it to victory.’ ἐκβάλλειν denotes the impulse of enthusiasm. See ch. Matthew 9:38.

For εἰςνῖκος the lit. rendering of the Hebr. is ‘to truth.’ Maldonatus suggests as an explanation of the discrepancy, a corruption in the Chaldæan text. But, on the other hand, εἰςνῖκος expresses the general sense of the omitted words.

Matthew 12:21

  1. τῷὀνόματιαὐτοῦ. The LXX. reading, ἐπὶτῷὀνόματι, nearly agrees with this. The Hebrew text has ‘for his law.’ It is hardly probable that the mistake should have arisen, as Maldonatus suggests, from the similarity of νόμῳ and ὀνόματι.

Matthew 12:22-23

22, 23. CURE OF A MAN WHO WAS BLIND AND DUMB

Luke 11:14-16

St Luke omits to mention that the man was blind as well as dumb.

Matthew 12:23

  1. μήτιοὗτόςἐστινὁυἱὸςΔαυείς; This form of interrogation implies a negative answer. Those who can scarcely hope for an affirmative reply, naturally give a negative cast to their question. ‘Can this possibly (τι) be the son of David?’ But the question itself implies a hope. See Winer, p. 641, note 3, and p. 642; Jelf, § 873. 4, and Goodwin, Moods and Tenses, p. 84.

Matthew 12:24

  1. Βεελζεβούλ. See ch. Matthew 10:25.

Matthew 12:25

  1. πᾶσαβασιλείαμερισθεῖσακ.τ.λ. Not that civil disputes destroy a nation, but a nation disunited, rent by factions, in the presence of a common enemy must fall. Here Satan’s kingdom is regarded as warring against the kingdom of God.

Observe the gradation of βασιλεία—πόλις—οἰκία—Σατανᾶς; it is a climax; the smaller the community the more fatal the division. Division in an individual is a contradiction in terms.

Matthew 12:27

  1. οἱυἱοὶὑμῶνἐντίνιἐκβάλλουσιν; The children are the disciples of the Pharisees, who either really possessed the power of casting out evil spirits, or pretended to have that power. In either case the argument of Jesus was unanswerable.

Matthew 12:28

  1. ἐνπνεύματιθεοῦ. ἐνδακτύλῳθεοῦ (Luke).

ἔφθασενἐφʼ ὑμᾶς. ‘Came upon you,’ surprised you; aorist of immediate past. φθάνειν, from its classical force of ‘anticipating,’ or ‘coming before others,’ passes to that of simply coming and arriving at a place. This was indeed probably the original meaning of the word (Geldart, Mod. Greek, p. 206). It is also the modern meaning; προφθάνειν being used in the sense of ‘to anticipate.’ But in such a phrase as ἔφθασατὸἀτμόπλοιον, ‘I caught the steamer,’ a trace of the prevailing classical use is discerned. Both senses are found in N.T. For the first, 1 Thessalonians 4:15, οὐμὴφθάσωμεντοὺςκοιμηθέντας, for the second, Romans 9:31, Ἰσραὴλδὲδιώκωννόμονδικαιοσύνηςεἰςνόμονοὐκἔφθασεν. In 2 Corinthians 10:14, φθάνειν is synonymous with ἐφικνεῖσθαι.

Matthew 12:29

  1. Not only is Satan not an ally, but he is an enemy and a vanquished enemy.

τὰσκεύη. Including τὴνπανοπλίανἐφʼ ᾗἐπεποίθει, as well as the τὰὑπάρχοντα of St Luke—his goods and furniture, his armour and equipment generally. Cp. Isaiah 53:12, τῶνἰσχυρῶνμεριεῖσκῦλα (LXX).

Matthew 12:30

  1. ὁμὴὢνμετʼ ἐμοῦκατʼ ἐμοῦἐστίν] The thought of the contest between Christ and Satan is continued. Satan is not divided against himself, neither can Christ be. Neutrality is impossible in the Christian life. It must be for Christ or against Christ. The metaphor of gathering and scattering may be from collecting and scattering a flock of sheep, as καὶὁλύκοςἁρπάζειαὐτὰκαὶσκορπίζειτὰπρόβατα (John 10:12), or from gathering and squandering wealth, money, &c., the resources given by God to his stewards to spend for him: cp. Luke 16:1, διεβλήθηαὐτῷὡςδιασκορπίζωντὰὑπάρχοντααὐτοῦ.

σκορπίζειν, an Ionic word for the Attic σκεδάννυμι. It is found in Lucian, Strabo and other late writers (Lob. Phryn. 218).

Matthew 12:31

  1. διὰτοῦτο. The conclusion of the whole is—you are on Satan’s side, and knowingly on Satan’s side, in this decisive struggle between the two kingdoms, and this is blasphemy against the Holy Ghost—an unpardonable sin.

This answer is thrown into a poetical form, often observable in the more solemn, or (in human language) the more studied utterances of Christ. Two couplets are followed by a fifth line (οὔτεἐντούτῳ … μέλλοντι) which affects each one of the preceding lines.

This charge was not brought forward for the first time. For a while it may have been passed over in silence. When the season for utterance came the manner as well as the meaning of the words would fix themselves for ever in the memory of the listeners.

Matthew 12:32

  1. ὃςδʼ ἂνεἴπῃκατὰτοῦπνεύματοςτοῦἁγίου. To speak against the Holy Ghost is to speak against the clear voice of conscience, to call good evil and light darkness, to pursue goodness as such with malignity and hatred. Such sin, or sinful state, cannot be forgiven since from its very nature it excludes the idea of repentance. Jesus, who saw the heart, knew that the Pharisees were insincere in the charge which they brought against Him. They were attributing to Satan what they knew to be the work of God. Their former attacks against the Son of man had excuse; for instance, they might have differed conscientiously on the question of sabbath observance, now they have no excuse.

Matthew 12:33

  1. ἢποιήσατετὸδένδρονκαλόνκ.τ.λ. The meaning and connection are; ‘Be honest for once; represent the tree as good, and its fruit as good, or the tree as evil and its fruit as evil; either say that I am evil and that my works are evil, or, if you admit that my works are good, admit that I am good also and not in league with Beelzebub.’

Matthew 12:34

  1. γεννήματαἐχιδνῶν. Cp. ch. Matthew 3:7. Here the argument is turned round against the Pharisees: ‘your words and works are evil, and spring from an evil source.’

The burst of indignation after an argument calmly stated resembles the turn in St Stephen’s speech (Acts 7:51) σκληροτράχηλοι, καὶἀπερίτμητοικ.τ.λ.

πῶςδύνασθεἀγαθὰλαλεῖνκ.τ.λ. Closely connected with the preceding thought, but further illustrated by two figures—the overflow as of a cistern, and the abundance of a treasury.

περίσσευμα. Cp. περισσεύματακλασαάτων. Mark 8:8. Here words are regarded as the overflow of the heart.

Matthew 12:35

  1. ἐκβάλλει expresses vigorous and enthusiastic teaching and influence.

θησαυροῦ. Treasury or storehouse. Cp. ch. Matthew 2:11.

Matthew 12:36

  1. ἀργόν, without result (α and ἔργον, cp. the frequent rhetorical contrast between λόγος and ἔργον, also between ῥῆμα and ἔργον, as Soph. O. C. 873; Thuc. 12:111), so ‘useless,’ ‘ineffective,’ and by litotes ‘harmful,’ ‘pernicious.’ Cp. τοῖςἔργοιςτοῖςἀκάρποιςτοῦσκότους. Ephesians 5:11. Words must be not only not evil, but they must be actively good. The same principle rules the decision at the final judgment (ch. Matthew 25:45).

ἀποδώσουσινλόγον … ἐκγὰρτῶνλόγωνσου … ἐκτῶνλόγωνσου. Note the repeated λόγον … λόγων … λόγων. The English Version by translating ῥῆμα, ‘word,’ and ἐκτῶνλόγωνσου, ‘from thy words,’ regards ῥῆμα as synonymous with λόγος, and translates as if ἐκτῶνῥημάτων were read. But a different explanation may suggest itself if the passage be read thus: ‘every idle ῥῆμα that men shall speak, they shall render a λόγος thereof in the day of judgment; for from thy own λόγοι thou shalt be acquitted and by thy own λόγοι thou shalt be condemned.’ The sound and rhythm of the sentence almost compel the reader to refer the same meaning to λόγον and λόγων and to distinguish between ῥῆμα and λόγων. λόγος is the ‘reasoned word,’ the defence put forth by the individual in the day of judgment for this special thing—‘the idle expression;’ the plural λόγοι denotes the various points in the defence. In this view γὰρ introduces the reason for ἀποδώσουσινλόγον. Acquittal or condemnation shall be the result (ἐκ) of each man’s defence, ἐκτοῦστόματόςσουκρινῶσεπονηρὲδοῦλε, Luke 19:22.

Cp. too the description of the actual scene of judgment, Matthew 25:34-45. For the change from the generic ἄνθρωποι to the specializing 2nd person sing. in Matthew 12:37 see ch. Matthew 7:7-8.

The above interpretation harmonises better with facts, for ἔργα as well as ῥήματα will come into account on the last day.

Matthew 12:38

  1. θέλομενἀπὸσοῦσημεῖονἰδεῖν. This is the second expedient taken by the Pharisees after their resolution to destroy Jesus.

Matthew 12:39

  1. μοιχαλίς, estranged from God; a figure often used by the Prophets to express the defection of Israel from Jehovah. Cp. ch. Matthew 16:4 and Isaiah 1:21, πῶςἐγένετοπόρνηπόλιςπιστὴΣιὼνπλήρηςκρίσεως; and Isaiah 57:3.

Matthew 12:40

  1. Jonah is a sign (1) as affording a type of the Resurrection, (2) as a preacher of righteousness to a people who needed repentance as this generation needs it.

ἐντῇκοιλίᾳτοῦκήτους. The A.V. introduces a needless difficulty by translating κήτους, ‘whale.’ κῆτος (probably from a root meaning ‘cleft,’ so ‘hollow,’ &c., perhaps connected with squatus, ‘a shark’) means a ‘sea monster:’ δελφῖνάςτεκύναςτεκαὶεἴποτεμεῖζονἕληταικῆτος. Od. XII. 97.

The O.T. rendering is more accurate, ‘the fish’s belly’ (Jonah 2:1), ‘a great fish,’ (Jonah 1:17). It is scarcely needful to note that there are no whales in the Mediterranean.

Matthew 12:41

  1. ἀναστήσονταικ.τ.λ., ‘Shall stand up in the judgment, (i.e. in the day of judgment) beside.’ When on the day of judgment the Ninevites stand side by side with the men of that generation, they will by their penitence condemn the impenitent Jews.

εἰςτὸκήρυγμα. Cp. εἰςδιαταγὰςἀγγέλων, Acts 7:53. In both instances εἰς appears to be equivalent to ἐν. The two prepositions were originally identical in form and meaning -ενς. In proof of this cp. ἄμειψενἐνκοιλόπεδοννάποςθεοῦ. Pind. Pyth. Matthew 12:37. In later Greek the two forms are interchanged: ὁὢνεἰςτὸνκόλποντοῦπατρός, John 1:18. ἵνʼ αὐτὸλούσῃεἰςσκάφην, Epict. III. 22, 71. On the other hand, ἐν for εἰς, as ἐπιστρέψαιἀπειθεῖςἐνφρονήσειδικαίων, Luke 1:17. ἀπελθεῖνἐνβαλανείῳ, Epict. I. 11, 32. See Donaldson’s Greek Grammar, p. 510. Clyde’s Greek Syntax, § 83, obs. 4.

Matthew 12:42

  1. βασίλισσανότου. ‘The Queen of the South.’ So correctly and not a queen of the South as some translate. The absence of the definite article in the original is due to the influence of the Hebrew idiom. For an account of the queen of Sheba or Southern Arabia, see 1 Kings 10:1.

βασίλισσα. This form is found in all the late authors for the classical βασίλεια. See Lob. Phryn. 96.

Matthew 12:43

  1. δέ, ‘but,’ introducing the explanation of the facts stated. The connection is obscured in A.V. by the omission of the particle.

ἀνύδρωντόπων. The waterless desert uninhabited by man was regarded by the Jews as the especial abode of evil spirits.

Matthew 12:44

  1. σχολάζοντα. Properly ‘at leisure.’ There must be no leisure in the Christian life; to have cast out a sin does not make a man safe from sin. Christians are οἱσωζόμενοι not οἱσεσωσμένοι.

Matthew 12:45

  1. οὕτωςἔσταικαὶτῇγενεᾷταύτῃ. Israel had cast forth the demon of idolatry—the sin of its earlier history, but worse demons had entered in—the more insidious and dangerous sins of hypocrisy and hardness of heart.

Matthew 12:46-50

46–50. JESUS IS SOUGHT BY HIS MOTHER AND . THE TRUE MOTHER AND OF JESUS

Mark 3:31-35; Luke 8:19-21

The account is given with very slight variation by the three Synoptists. But see Mark 3:21; Mark 3:30-31, where a motive is suggested—‘When his friends heard of it, they went out to lay hold on Him: for they said, He is beside Himself’ (Matthew 12:21). It would seem that the Pharisees, on the pretext that Jesus had a demon, had persuaded His friends to secure Him. This was another device to destroy Jesus, see Matthew 12:14; Matthew 12:38.

Matthew 12:47

  1. οἱἀδελφοίσου. It is a point of controversy whether these were (1) the own brothers of Jesus, sons of Joseph and Mary, or (2) sons of Joseph by a former marriage, or (3) cousins, sons of a sister of Mary.

The names of the ‘brethren’ are given ch. Matthew 13:55, where see note.

It may be observed in regard to this question that the nearer the relationship of the ἀδελφοὶ to Jesus is held to be, the more gracious are the words of Christ, and the nearer the spiritual kinship which is compared to the human brotherhood.

Matthew 12:49

  1. ἰδοὺἡμήτηρμουκαὶοἱἀδελφοίμου. The new life subverts the old relationships. By the spiritual birth new ties of kindred are established.

Matthew 12:50

  1. ὅστιςγὰρἂνποιήσῃκ.τ.λ. ‘These which hear the word of God and do it’ (Luke 8:21).

τοῦἐνοὐρανοῖς. The addition is important. ‘Not those who do the will of my earthly father, but those who do the will of my heavenly Father are brethren.’ The essence of sonship is obedience, and obedience to God constitutes brotherhood to Jesus who came to do τὸθέληματοῦπέμψαντος. John 6:38.

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