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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 9
@Mt
9:1-8. HEALING A PARALYTIC. ( = @Mr
2:1-12 Lu 5:17-26).
This incident appears to follow next in order of time to
the cure of the leper (@Mt
8:1-4). For the exposition, see on Mr
2:1-12.
@Mt
9:9-13. MATTHEW'S CALL AND FEAST. ( = @Mr
2:14-17 Lu 5:27-32).
The Call of Matthew (@Mt
9:9).
9. And as Jesus passed forth from thence--that is,
from the scene of the paralytic's cure in Capernaum,
towards the shore of the Sea of Galilee, on which that
town lay. Mark, as usual, pictures the scene more in
detail, thus (@Mr
2:13): "And He went forth again by the seaside;
and all the multitude resorted unto Him, and He taught
them"--or, "kept teaching them." "And
as He passed by"
he saw a man, named
Matthew--the writer of this precious Gospel, who here,
with singular modesty and brevity, relates the story of
his own calling. In Mark and Luke he is called Levi,
which seems to have been his family name. In their lists
of the twelve apostles, however, Mark and Luke give him
the name of Matthew, which seems to have been the name by
which he was known as a disciple. While he himself sinks
his family name, he is careful not to sink his occupation,
the obnoxious associations with which he would place over
against the grace that called him from it, and made him an
apostle. (See on Mt
10:3). Mark alone tells us (@Mr
2:14) that he was "the son of Alphæus"--the
same, probably, with the father of James the Less. From
this and other considerations it is pretty certain that he
must at least have heard of our Lord before this meeting.
Unnecessary doubts, even from an early period, have been
raised about the identity of Levi and Matthew. No capable
jury, with the evidence before them which we have in the
Gospels, would hesitate in giving a unanimous verdict of
identity.
sitting at the receipt
of custom--as a publican, which Luke (@Lu
5:27) calls him. It means the place of receipt, the
toll house or booth in which the collector sat. Being in
this case by the seaside, it might be the ferry tax for
the transit of persons and goods across the lake, which he
collected. (See on Mt
5:46).
and he saith unto him,
Follow me--Witching words these, from the lips of Him
who never employed them without giving them resistless
efficacy in the hearts of those they were spoken to.
And he--"left
all" (@Lu
5:28), "arose and followed him."
The Feast (@Mt
9:10-13).
10. And it came to pass, as Jesus sat at meat in the
house--The modesty of our Evangelist signally appears
here. Luke says (@Lu
5:29) that "Levi made Him a great feast,"
or "reception," while Matthew merely says,
"He sat at meat"; and Mark and Luke say that it
was in Levi's "own house," while Matthew merely
says, "He sat at meat in the house."
Whether this feast was made now, or not till afterwards,
is a point of some importance in the order of events, and
not agreed among harmonists. The probability is that it
did not take place till a considerable time afterwards.
For Matthew, who ought surely to know what took place
while his Lord was speaking at his own table, tells us
that the visit of Jairus, the ruler of the synagogue,
occurred at that moment (@Mt
9:18). But we know from Mark and Luke that this visit
of Jairus did not take place till after our Lord's return,
at a later period from the country of the Gadarenes. (See
@Mr
5:21, &c., and @Lu
8:40, &c.). We conclude, therefore, that the feast
was not made in the novelty of his discipleship, but after
Matthew had had time to be somewhat established in the
faith; when returning to Capernaum, his compassion for old
friends, of his own calling and character, led him to
gather them together that they might have an opportunity
of hearing the gracious words which proceeded out of His
Master's mouth, if haply they might experience a like
change.
behold, many publicans
and sinners--Luke says, "a great company" (@Lu
5:29)--came and sat down with him and his disciples.
In all such cases the word rendered "sat" is
"reclined," in allusion to the ancient mode of
lying on couches at meals.
11. And when the Pharisees--"and
scribes," add Mark and Luke (@Mr
2:6 Lu 5:21).
saw it, they said--"murmured"
or "muttered," says Luke (@Lu
5:30).
unto his disciples--not
venturing to put their question to Jesus Himself.
Why eateth your Master
with publicans and sinners?--(See on Lu
15:2).
12. But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them--to
the Pharisees and scribes; addressing Himself to them,
though they had shrunk from addressing Him.
They that be whole need
not a physician, but they that are sick--that is,
"Ye deem yourselves whole; My mission, therefore, is
not to you: The physician's business is with the sick;
therefore eat I with publicans and sinners." Oh, what
myriads of broken hearts, of sin-sick souls, have been
bound up by this matchless saying!
13. But go ye and learn what that meaneth--(@Ho
6:6),
I will have mercy, and
not sacrifice--that is, the one rather than the other.
"Sacrifice," the chief part of the ceremonial
law, is here put for a religion of literal adherence to
mere rules; while "mercy" expresses such
compassion for the fallen as seeks to lift them up. The
duty of keeping aloof from the polluted, in the sense of
"having no fellowship with the unfruitful works of
darkness," is obvious enough; but to understand this
as prohibiting such intercourse with them as is necessary
to their recovery, is to abuse it. This was what these
pharisaical religionists did, and this is what our Lord
here exposes.
for I am not come to
call the righteous, but sinners to repentance--The
italicized words are of doubtful authority here, and more
than doubtful authority in @Mr
2:17; but in @Lu
5:32 they are undisputed. We have here just the former
statement stripped of its figure. "The
righteous" are the whole; "sinners," the
sick. When Christ "called" the latter, as He did
Matthew, and probably some of those publicans and sinners
whom he had invited to meet Him, it was to heal them of
their spiritual maladies, or save their souls: "The
righteous," like those miserable self-satisfied
Pharisees, "He sent empty away."
@Mt
9:14-17. DISCOURSE ON FASTING.
See on Lu
5:33-39.
@Mt
9:18-26. THE WOMAN WITH THE ISSUE OF BLOOD
HEALED.--THE DAUGHTER OF JAIRUS RAISED TO LIFE. ( = @Lu
8:40-56 Mr 5:21-43).
For the exposition, see on Mr
5:21-43.
@Mt
9:27-34. TWO BLIND MEN AND A DUMB DEMONIAC HEALED.
These two miracles are recorded by Matthew alone.
Two Blind Men Healed (@Mt
9:27-31).
27. And when Jesus departed thence, two blind men
followed him--hearing, doubtless, as in a later case
is expressed, "that Jesus passed by" (@Mt
20:30).
crying, and saying, Thou
son of David, have mercy on us--It is remarkable that
in the only other recorded case in which the blind applied
to Jesus for their sight, and obtained it, they addressed
Him, over and over again, by this one Messianic title, so
well known--"Son of David" (@Mt
20:30). Can there be a doubt that their faith fastened
on such great Messianic promises as this, "Then the
eyes of the blind shall be opened," &c. (@Isa
35:5).9 and if so, this appeal to Him, as the
Consolation of Israel, to do His predicted office, would
fall with great weight upon the ears of Jesus.
28. And when he was come into the house--To try
their faith and patience, He seems to have made them no
answer. But
the blind men came to
Him--which, no doubt, was what He desired.
and Jesus saith unto
them, Believe ye that I am able to do this? they said unto
him, Yea, Lord--Doubtless our Lord's design was not
only to put their faith to the test by this question, but
to deepen it, to raise their expectation of a cure, and so
prepare them to receive it; and the cordial
acknowledgment, so touchingly simple, which they
immediately made to Him of His power to heal them, shows
how entirely that object was gained.
29. Then touched he their eyes, saying, According to
your faith be it unto you--not, Receive a cure proportioned
to your faith, but, Receive this cure as granted to
your faith. Thus would they carry about with them, in
their restored vision, a gracious seal of the faith which
drew it from their compassionate Lord.
30. And their eyes were opened: and Jesus straitly
charged them--The expression is very strong, denoting
great earnestness.
31. But they, when they were departed, spread abroad
his fame in all that country--(See on Mt
8:4).
A Dumb Demoniac Healed (@Mt
9:32-34).
32. As they went out, behold, they brought to him a
dumb man possessed with a devil--"demonized."
The dumbness was not natural, but was the effect of the
possession.
33. And when the devil--demon.
was cast out, the dumb
spake--The particulars in this case are not given; the
object being simply to record the instantaneous
restoration of the natural faculties on the removal of the
malignant oppression of them, the form which the popular
astonishment took, and the very different effect of it
upon another class.
and the multitudes
marvelled, saying, It was never so seen in Israel--referring,
probably, not to this case only, but to all those
miraculous displays of healing power which seemed to
promise a new era in the history of Israel. Probably they
meant by this language to indicate, as far as they thought
it safe to do so, their inclination to regard Him as the
promised Messiah.
34. But the Pharisees said, He casteth out devils
through the prince of the devils--"the demons
through the prince of the demons." This seems to be
the first muttering of a theory of such miracles which
soon became a fixed mode of calumniating them--a theory
which would be ridiculous if it were not melancholy as an
outburst of the darkest malignity. (See on Mt
12:24, &c.).
@Mt
9:35-10:5. THIRD GALILEAN CIRCUIT--MISSION OF THE
TWELVE APOSTLES.
As the Mission of the Twelve supposes the previous choice
of them--of which our Evangelist gives no account, and
which did not take place till a later stage of our Lord's
public life--it is introduced here out of its proper
place, which is after what is recorded in @Lu
6:12-19.
Third Galilean Circuit (@Mt
9:35)--and probably the last.
35. And Jesus went about all the cities and villages,
teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of
the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among
the people--The italicized words are of more than
doubtful authority here, and were probably introduced here
from @Mt
4:23. The language here is so identical with that used
in describing the first circuit (@Mt
4:23), that we may presume the work done on both
occasions was much the same. It was just a further
preparation of the soil, and a fresh sowing of the
precious seed. (See on Mt
4:23). To these fruitful journeyings of the Redeemer,
"with healing in His wings," Peter no doubt
alludes, when, in his address to the household of
Cornelius, he spoke of "How God anointed Jesus of
Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power: who went
about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed of
the devil: for God was with Him" (@Ac
10:38).
Jesus Compassionating the Multitudes, Asks Prayer for
Help (@Mt
9:36-38). He had now returned from His preaching and
healing circuit, and the result, as at the close of the
first one, was the gathering of a vast and motley
multitude around Him. After a whole night spent in prayer,
He had called His more immediate disciples, and from them
had solemnly chosen the twelve; then, coming down from the
mountain, on which this was transacted, to the multitudes
that waited for Him below, He had addressed to them--as we
take it--that discourse which bears so strong a
resemblance to the Sermon on the Mount that many critics
take it to be the same. (See on Lu
6:12-49; and Mt
5:1, Introductory Remarks). Soon after this, it should
seem, the multitudes still hanging on Him, Jesus is
touched with their wretched and helpless condition, and
acts as is now to be described.
36. But when he saw the multitudes, he was moved with
compassion on them, because they fainted--This
reading, however, has hardly any authority at all. The
true reading doubtless is, "were harassed."
and were scattered
abroad--rather, "lying about,"
"abandoned," or "neglected."
as sheep, having no
shepherd--their pitiable condition as wearied under
bodily fatigue, a vast disorganized mass, being but a
faint picture of their wretchedness as the victims of
pharisaic guidance; their souls uncared for, yet drawn
after and hanging upon Him. This moved the Redeemer's
compassion.
37. Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly
is plenteous--His eye doubtless rested immediately on
the Jewish field, but this he saw widening into the vast
field of "the world" (@Mt
13:38), teeming with souls having to be gathered to
Him.
but the labourers--men
divinely qualified and called to gather them in.
38. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest--the
great Lord and Proprietor of all. Compare @Joh
15:1, "I am the true vine, and My Father is the
husbandman."
that he will send forth
labourers into his harvest--The word properly means
"thrust forth"; but this emphatic sense
disappears in some places, as in @Mt
9:25, and @Joh
10:4--"When He putteth forth His own
sheep." (See on Mt
4:1).
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