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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 23
@Mt
23:1-39. DENUNCIATION OF THE SCRIBES AND
PHARISEES--LAMENTATION OVER JERUSALEM, AND FAREWELL TO THE
TEMPLE. ( = @Mr
12:38-40 Lu 20:45-47).
For this long and terrible discourse we are indebted, with
the exception of a few verses in Mark and Luke, to Matthew
alone. But as it is only an extended repetition of
denunciations uttered not long before at the table of a
Pharisee, and recorded by Luke (@Lu
11:37-54), we may take both together in the
exposition.
Denunciation of the Scribes and Pharisees (@Mt
23:1-36).
The first twelve verses were addressed more immediately to
the disciples, the rest to the scribes and Pharisees.
1. Then spake Jesus to the multitude--to the
multitudes, "and to his disciples."
2. Saying, The scribes and the Pharisees sit--The
Jewish teachers stood to read, but sat to
expound the Scriptures, as will be seen by comparing @Lu
4:16 with @Mt
23:20.
in Moses' seat--that
is, as interpreters of the law given by Moses.
3. All therefore--that is, all which, as sitting
in that seat and teaching out of that law.
they bid you observe,
that observe and do--The word "therefore" is
thus, it will be seen, of great importance, as limiting
those injunctions which He would have them obey to what
they fetched from the law itself. In requiring implicit
obedience to such injunctions, He would have them to
recognize the authority with which they taught over and
above the obligations of the law itself--an important
principle truly; but He who denounced the traditions of
such teachers (@Mt
15:3) cannot have meant here to throw His shield over
these. It is remarked by WEBSTER and WILKINSON that the
warning to beware of the scribes is given by Mark
and Luke (@Mr
12:38 Lu 20:46) without any qualification: the charge
to respect and obey them being reported by
Matthew alone, indicating for whom this Gospel was
especially written, and the writer's desire to conciliate
the Jews.
4. For they bind heavy burdens and grievous to be
borne, and lay them on men's shoulders; but they
themselves will not move them--"touch them
not" (@Lu
11:46).
with one of their
fingers--referring not so much to the irksomeness of
the legal rites, though they were irksome enough (@Ac
15:10), as to the heartless rigor with which they were
enforced, and by men of shameless inconsistency.
5. But all their works they do for to be seen of men--Whatever
good they do, or zeal they show, has but one motive--human
applause.
they make broad their
phylacteries--strips of parchment with
Scripture--texts on them, worn on the forehead, arm, and
side, in time of prayer.
and enlarge the borders
of their garments--fringes of their upper garments (@Nu
15:37-40).
6. And love the uppermost rooms at feasts--The word
"room" is now obsolete in the sense here
intended. It should be "the uppermost place,"
that is, the place of highest honor.
and the chief seats in
the synagogues. See on Lu
14:7,8.
7. And greetings in the markets, and to be called of
men, Rabbi, Rabbi--It is the spirit rather than the letter
of this that must be pressed; though the violation of the
letter, springing from spiritual pride, has done
incalculable evil in the Church of Christ. The reiteration
of the word "Rabbi" shows how it tickled the ear
and fed the spiritual pride of those ecclesiastics.
8. But be not ye called Rabbi; for one is your Master--your
Guide, your Teacher.
9. And call no man your father upon the earth: for one
is your Father, which is in heaven, &c.--To
construe these injunctions into a condemnation of every
title by which Church rulers may be distinguished from the
flock which they rule, is virtually to condemn that rule
itself; and accordingly the same persons do both--but
against the whole strain of the New Testament and sound
Christian judgment. But when we have guarded ourselves
against these extremes, let us see to it that we retain
the full spirit of this warning against that itch for
ecclesiastical superiority which has been the bane and the
scandal of Christ's ministers in every age. (On the use of
the word "Christ" here, see on Mt
1:1).
11. But he that is greatest among you shall be your
servant--This plainly means, "shall show that he
is so by becoming your servant"; as in @Mt
20:27, compared with @Mr
10:44.
12. And whosoever shall exalt himself shall be abased--See
on Lu
18:14. What follows was addressed more immediately to
the scribes and Pharisees.
13. But woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees,
hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against
men--Here they are charged with shutting heaven
against men: in @Lu
11:52 they are charged with what was worse, taking
away the key--"the key of knowledge"--which
means, not the key to open knowledge, but knowledge as the
only key to open heaven. A right knowledge of God's
revealed word is eternal life, as our Lord says (@Joh
17:3 5:39); but this they took away from the people,
substituting for it their wretched traditions.
14. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
for ye devour widows' houses, &c.--Taking
advantage of the helpless condition and confiding
character of "widows," they contrived to obtain
possession of their property, while by their "long
prayers" they made them believe they were raised far
above "filthy lucre." So much "the greater
damnation" awaits them. What a lifelike description
of the Romish clergy, the true successors of those
scribes!
15. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
for ye compass sea and land to make one proselyte--from
heathenism. We have evidence of this in JOSEPHUS.
and when he is made, ye
make him twofold more the child of hell than yourselves--condemned,
for the hypocrisy he would learn to practice, both by the
religion he left and that he embraced.
16. Woe unto you, ye blind guides--Striking
expression this of the ruinous effects of erroneous
teaching. Our Lord, here and in some following verses,
condemns the subtle distinctions they made as to the
sanctity of oaths--distinctions invented only to promote
their own avaricious purposes.
which say, Whosoever
shall swear by the temple, it is nothing--He has
incurred no debt.
but whosoever shall
swear by the gold of the temple--meaning not the gold
that adorned the temple itself, but the Corban, set
apart for sacred uses (see on Mt
15:5).
he is a debtor!--that
is, it is no longer his own, even though the necessities
of the parent might require it. We know who the successors
of these men are.
but whosoever sweareth
by the gift that is upon it, he is guilty--It should
have been rendered, "he is a debtor," as in @Mt
23:16.
19. Ye fools, and blind! for whether is greater, the
gift, or the altar that sanctifieth the gift?--(See @Ex
29:37).
20-22. Whose therefore shall swear by the altar,
&c.--See on Mt
5:33-37.
23. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
for ye pay tithe of mint and anise--rather,
"dill," as in Margin.
and cummin--In Luke
(@Lu
11:42) it is "and rue, and all manner of
herbs." They grounded this practice on @Le
27:30, which they interpreted rigidly. Our Lord
purposely names. the most trifling products of the earth
as examples of what they punctiliously exacted the tenth
of.
and have omitted the
weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith--In
Luke (@Lu
11:42) it is "judgment, mercy, and the love of
God"--the expression being probably varied by our
Lord Himself on the two different occasions. In both His
reference is to @Mic
6:6-8, where the prophet makes all acceptable religion
to consist of three elements--"doing justly, loving
mercy, and walking humbly with our God"; which third
element presupposes and comprehends both the
"faith" of Matthew and the "love" of
Luke. See on Mr
12:29; Mr
12:32,33. The same tendency to merge greater duties in
less besets even the children of God; but it is the
characteristic of hypocrites.
these ought ye to have
done, and not to leave the other undone--There is no
need for one set of duties to jostle out another; but it
is to be carefully noted that of the greater duties
our Lord says, "Ye ought to have done" them,
while of the lesser He merely says, "Ye ought
not to leave them undone."
24. Ye blind guides, which strain at a gnat--The
proper rendering--as in the older English translations,
and perhaps our own as it came from the translators'
hands--evidently is, "strain out." It was the
custom, says TRENCH, of the stricter Jews to strain their
wine, vinegar, and other potables through linen or gauze,
lest unawares they should drink down some little unclean
insect therein and thus transgress (@Le
11:20,23,41,42)--just as the Buddhists do now in
Ceylon and Hindustan--and to this custom of theirs our
Lord here refers.
and swallow a camel--the
largest animal the Jews knew, as the "gnat" was
the smallest; both were by the law unclean.
25. within they are full of extortion--In Luke (@Lu
11:39) the same word is rendered "ravening,"
that is, "rapacity."
26. Thou blind Pharisee, cleanse first that which is
within the cup and platter, that the outside of them may
be clean also--In Luke (@Lu
11:40) it is, "Ye fools, did not He that made
that which is without make that which is within
also?"--"He to whom belongs the outer life, and
of right demands its subjection to Himself, is the inner
man less His?" A remarkable example this of our
Lord's power of drawing the most striking illustrations of
great truths from the most familiar objects and incidents
in life. To these words, recorded by Luke, He adds the
following, involving a principle of immense value:
"But rather give alms of such things as ye have, and
behold, all things are clean unto you" (@Lu
11:41). As the greed of these hypocrites was one of
the most prominent features of their character (@Lu
16:14), our Lord bids them exemplify the opposite
character, and then their outside, ruled by this,
would be beautiful in the eye of God, and their meals
would be eaten with clean hands, though much fouled with
the business of this everyday world. (See @Ec
9:7).
27. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
for ye are like whited sepulchres--or, whitewashed
sepulchres. (Compare @Ac
23:3). The process of whitewashing the sepulchres, as
LIGHTFOOT says, was performed on a certain day every year,
not for ceremonial cleansing, but., as the following words
seem rather to imply, to beautify them.
which indeed appear
beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's
bones, and of all uncleanness--What a powerful way of
conveying the charge, that with all their fair show their
hearts were full of corruption! (Compare @Ps
5:9 Ro 3:13). But our Lord, stripping off the figure,
next holds up their iniquity in naked colors.
Wherefore ye be
witnesses unto yourselves, that ye are the children of
them which killed the prophets--that is "ye be
witnesses that ye have inherited, and voluntarily served
yourselves heirs to, the truth-hating, prophet-killing,
spirit of your fathers." Out of pretended respect and
honor, they repaired and beautified the sepulchres of the
prophets, and with whining hypocrisy said, "If we had
been in their days, how differently should we have treated
these prophets?" While all the time they were
witnesses to themselves that they were the children of
them that killed the prophets, convicting themselves daily
of as exact a resemblance in spirit and character to the
very classes over whose deeds they pretended to mourn, as
child to parent. In @Lu
11:44 our Lord gives another turn to this figure of a
grave: "Ye are as graves which appear not, and the
men that walk over them are not aware of them." As
one might unconsciously walk over a grave concealed from
view, and thus contract ceremonial defilement, so the
plausible exterior of the Pharisees kept people from
perceiving the pollution they contracted frown coming in
contact with such corrupt characters.
33. Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye
escape the damnation of hell?--In thus, at the end of
His ministry, recalling the words of the Baptist at the
outset of his, our Lord would seem to intimate that the
only difference between their condemnation now and then
was, that now they were ripe for their doom, which they
were not then.
34. Wherefore, behold, I send unto you prophets, and
wise men, and scribes--The I here is emphatic: "I
am sending," that is, "am about to send."
In @Lu
11:49 the variation is remarkable: "Therefore
also, said the wisdom of God, I will send them,"
&c. What precisely is meant by "the wisdom of
God" here, is somewhat difficult to determine. To us
it appears to be simply an announcement of a purpose of
the Divine Wisdom, in the high style of ancient prophecy,
to send a last set of messengers whom the people would
reject, and rejecting, would fill up the cup of their
iniquity. But, whereas in Luke it is "I, the Wisdom
of God, will send them," in Matthew it is "I,
Jesus, am sending them"; language only befitting the
one sender of all the prophets, the Lord God of Israel now
in the flesh. They are evidently evangelical messengers,
but called by the familiar Jewish names of "prophets,
wise men, and scribes," whose counterparts were the
inspired and gifted servants of the Lord Jesus; for in
Luke (@Lu
11:49) it is "prophets and apostles."
unto the blood of
Zacharias son of Barachias, whom ye slew between the
temple and the altar--As there is no record of any
fresh murder answering to this description, probably the
allusion is not to any recent murder, but to @2Ch
24:20-22, as the last recorded and most
suitable case for illustration. And as Zacharias' last
words were, "The Lord require it," so
they are here warned that of that generation it should be required.
36. Verily I say unto you, All these things shall come
upon this generation--As it was only in the last
generation of them that "the iniquity of the Amorites
was full" (@Ge
15:16), and then the abominations of ages were at once
completely and awfully avenged, so the iniquity of Israel
was allowed to accumulate from age to age till in that
generation it came to the full, and the whole collected
vengeance of heaven broke at once over its devoted head.
In the first French Revolution the same awful principle
was exemplified, and Christendom has not done with it
yet.
Lamentation over Jerusalem and Farewell to the Temple
(@Mt
23:37-39).
37. O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the
prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee,
&c.--How ineffably grand and melting is this
apostrophe! It is the very heart of God pouring itself
forth through human flesh and speech. It is this
incarnation of the innermost life and love of Deity,
pleading with men, bleeding for them, and ascending only
to open His arms to them and win them back by the power of
this story of matchless love, that has conquered the
world, that will yet "draw all men unto Him,"
and beautify and ennoble Humanity itself!
"Jerusalem" here does not mean the mere city or
its inhabitants; nor is it to be viewed merely as the
metropolis of the nation, but as the center of
their religious life--"the city of their
solemnities, whither the tribes went up, to give thanks
unto the name of the Lord"; and at this moment it was
full of them. It is the whole family of God, then, which
is here apostrophized by a name dear to every Jew,
recalling to him all that was distinctive and precious in
his religion. The intense feeling that sought vent in this
utterance comes out first in the redoubling of the opening
word--"Jerusalem, Jerusalem!" but, next, in the
picture of it which He draws--"that killest the
prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto
thee!"--not content with spurning God's messages of
mercy, that canst not suffer even the messengers to live!
When He adds, "How often would I have gathered
thee!" He refers surely to something beyond the six
or seven times that He visited and taught in Jerusalem
while on earth. No doubt it points to "the
prophets," whom they "killed," to
"them that were sent unto her," whom they
"stoned." But whom would He have gathered so
often? "Thee," truth-hating, mercy-spurning,
prophet-killing Jerusalem--how often would I have gathered
thee! Compare with this that affecting clause in
the great ministerial commission, "that repentance
and remission of sins should be preached in His name among
all nations, beginning at Jerusalem!" (@Lu
24:47). What encouragement to the heartbroken at their
own long-continued and obstinate rebellion! But we have
not yet got at the whole heart of this outburst. I would
have gathered thee, He says, "even as a hen gathereth
her chickens under her wings." Was ever imagery so
homely invested with such grace and such sublimity as
this, at our Lord's touch? And yet how exquisite the
figure itself--of protection, rest, warmth, and all manner
of conscious well-being in those poor, defenseless,
dependent little creatures, as they creep under and feel
themselves overshadowed by the capacious and kindly wing
of the mother bird! If, wandering beyond hearing of her
peculiar call, they are overtaken by a storm or attacked
by an enemy, what can they do but in the one case droop
and die, and in the other submit to be torn in pieces? But
if they can reach in time their place of safety, under the
mother's wing, in vain will any enemy try to drag them
thence. For rising into strength, kindling into fury, and
forgetting herself entirely in her young, she will let the
last drop of her blood be shed out and perish in defense
of her precious charge, rather than yield them to an
enemy's talons. How significant all this of what Jesus is
and does for men! Under His great Mediatorial wing would
He have "gathered" Israel. For the figure, see @De
32:10-12 Ru 2:12 Ps 17:8 36:7 61:4 63:7 91:4 Isa 31:5 Mal
4:2. The ancient rabbins had a beautiful expression
for proselytes from the heathen--that they had "come
under the wings of the Shekinah." For this last word,
see on Mt
23:38. But what was the result of all this tender and
mighty love? The answer is, "And ye would not."
O mysterious word! mysterious the resistance of such
patient Love-mysterious the liberty of self-undoing! The
awful dignity of the will, as here expressed, might
make the ears to tingle.
38. Behold, your house--the temple, beyond all
doubt; but their house now, not the Lord's.
See on Mt
22:7.
is left unto you
desolate--deserted, that is, of its Divine Inhabitant.
But who is that? Hear the next words:
39. For I say unto you--and these were His last
words to the impenitent nation, see on Mr
13:1, opening remarks.
Ye shall not see me
henceforth--What? Does Jesus mean that He was Himself
the Lord of the temple, and that it became
"deserted" when HE finally left it? It is even
so. Now is thy fate sealed, O Jerusalem, for the glory is
departed from thee! That glory, once visible in the holy
of holies, over the mercy seat, when on the day of
atonement the blood of typical expiation was sprinkled on
it and in front of it--called by the Jews the Shekinah,
or the Dwelling, as being the visible pavilion of
Jehovah--that glory, which Isaiah (@Isa
6:1-13) saw in vision, the beloved disciple says was the
glory of Christ (@Joh
12:41). Though it was never visible in the second
temple, Haggai foretold that "the glory of that
latter house should be greater than of the former"
(@Hag
2:9) because "the Lord whom they sought was
suddenly to come to His temple" (@Mal
3:1), not in a mere bright cloud, but enshrined in
living humanity! Yet brief as well as "sudden"
was the manifestation to be: for the words He was now
uttering were to be HIS VERY LAST within its precincts.
till ye shall say,
Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord--that
is, till those "Hosannas to the Son of David"
with which the multitude had welcomed Him into the
city--instead of "sore displeasing the chief priests
and scribes" (@Mt
21:15)--should break forth from the whole nation, as
their glad acclaim to their once pierced, but now
acknowledged, Messiah. That such a time will come is clear
from @Zec
12:10 Ro 11:26 2Co 3:15,16, &c. In what sense they
shall then "see Him" may be gathered from @Zec
2:10-13 Eze 37:23-28 39:28,29, &c.
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