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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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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 Juda: 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
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