Verse 1
Matthew 4:1. Then — After the
afore-mentioned glorious
manifestation of his Father’s
love, by which he was armed for
the combat. Was Jesus led by the
Spirit — By a strong impulse of
the Spirit of God, of which he
was full; into the wilderness —
Probably, the wilderness near
Jordan, which, as Mr. Maundrell,
who travelled through it,
assures us, is a miserable and
horrid place, consisting of
high, barren mountains, so that
it looks as if nature had
suffered some violent
convulsions there. Our Lord,
probably, was assaulted in the
northern part of it, near the
sea of Galilee, because he is
said by Luke to be returning to
Nazareth, from whence he came to
be baptized. To be tempted of
the devil — That is, the chief
of the devils, Satan, the
everlasting enemy of God and
man. The proper meaning of the
original word here, and in other
places of the Old and New
Testaments, translated to tempt,
is to try. Hence we sometimes,
as Genesis 22:1, read of God’s
tempting men, as well as of the
devil’s tempting them. But there
is this difference between the
temptations, or trials, that are
immediately from God, and those
that are from Satan, by God’s
permission. We are tempted, or
tried, by God, that our
righteousness, our faith, love,
patience, and every grace and
virtue, may be manifested,
approved, and further increased:
and therefore, as James says,
Blessed is the man who, in this
sense, endureth temptation. But
the devil tempts, or tries us,
in expectation of finding us
insincere, or unstable, and with
a view to lead us into sin by
his subtlety and power; in which
sense God, who cannot be tempted
with evil, or see any thing
desirable in it, tempteth no
man. Doubtless, it must have
been for some very great and
good ends that the Holy Spirit
thus moved our Lord to repair
into the wilderness, to be
tempted of the devil. For
though, by his repairing
thither, he might partly intend
to enjoy a devout retirement,
that as man he might give vent
to those sacred passions which
the late grand occurrences of
the descent of the Spirit upon
him, and the miraculous
attestation of a voice from
heaven, had such a tendency to
inspire; yet no doubt he foresaw
that this season of intercourse
with heaven would be followed by
a violent assault from hell, and
he went into the wilderness with
a view also to meet and combat
with the grand adversary of
mankind. Probably, as
Theophylact observes, one grand
end might be to teach us that
when we have consecrated
ourselves to God’s service, and
have been favoured with peculiar
marks of divine acceptance, and
the consolations of his Spirit,
we must expect temptations; and
to teach us, by our Lord’s
example, how we may best and
most effectually resist them,
even by an unshaken faith, 1
Peter 5:9; and by the sword of
the Spirit, which is the word of
God, Ephesians 6:17. 2d, Our
Lord was tempted thus, that his
perfect holiness might be tried
and approved. 3d, That Satan
might be conquered, which he
never had perfectly been by any
man before. 4th, That Christ
might become a merciful and
faithful high priest, one who
can succour his people in time
of need, and pity them when they
happen to fall by temptation.
The apostle assigns this reason
expressly, Hebrews 2:17-18. And,
5th, That assurance might be
given to his people of an
everlasting victory over, and
deliverance from, the power of
Satan.
Verse 2
Matthew 4:2. And when he had
fasted forty days and forty
nights — As Moses, the giver,
and Elias, the restorer of the
law, had done before: he was
afterward a hungered — That is,
he was as sharply assaulted with
hunger, as any man is at any
time for want of food. Thus he
was fitted for the ensuing trial
of his trust in God. And, as an
ancient writer observes, We are
then especially to expect
temptations, when we are alone,
and when we are in straits and
exigencies, from which we see no
ordinary way of deliverance,
which was the case with Christ.
For he was hungry, and in a wild
wilderness, where was no food,
and was at last fed miraculously
by angels ministering unto him.
Verse 3
Matthew 4:3. And when the
tempter came to him — In a
visible shape and appearance, to
tempt him outwardly, as he had
done inwardly before. For it
appears from the account which
Mark and Luke have given us of
this matter, that our Lord had
been tempted by the devil
invisibly during the whole of
the above-mentioned forty days —
but now, it seems, he came to
him in a visible form, probably
in the human, as one that
desired to inquire further into
the evidences of his mission.
Accordingly he said, If thou be
the Son of God — In such an
extraordinary sense as thou hast
been declared to be, and if thou
art indeed the promised Messiah,
expected under that character,
command that these stones be
made bread — To relieve thy
hunger, for in such
circumstances it will
undoubtedly be done. Thus Satan
took advantage of our Lord’s
distress to tempt him to doubt
his being the Son of God in the
sense in which he had just been
declared to be so; and it seems
the object of this first
temptation was, to excite in his
mind a distrust of the care and
kindness of his heavenly Father,
and to induce him to use
unwarranted means to relieve his
hunger. But it is objected here,
If Christ were God, why should
he be tempted? Was it to show
that God was able to overcome
the temptations of the devil?
Could there be any doubt of
this? We answer, he was man,
very man, as well as God, “of a
reasonable soul, and human flesh
subsisting,” and it was only as
man that he was tempted. If it
be replied, that seeing his
human nature was personally
united to the divine, it must
still be superfluous to show
that even his human nature, thus
influenced, should be able to
baffle the assaults of Satan:
Irenĉus, an eminent father of
the second century, answering
this very objection, then made
by the Ebionites, (the elder
brethren of the Photinians and
Socinians,) observes that, as he
was man, that he might be
tempted, so he was the Word,
that he might be glorified; the
Word, (or Godhead,) being
quiescent in his temptation,
crucifixion, and death. These
words being preserved and cited,
says Dr. Whitby, by Theodoret,
show that the latter fathers
approved of this solution of
this difficulty. Among the
reasons assigned of our Lord’s
temptation, one is, the
consolation of his members
conflicting with the adversary
of their souls. For, in that he
suffered, being tempted, he can
sympathize with, and succour
those that are tempted;
affording them the same Spirit
that was in him, that they may
resist the devil with the same
weapons, and overcome him with
the same assistance, by which
he, in his human nature,
combated and conquered. Now this
ground of comfort would be
wholly taken from us, if Christ
overcame Satan merely by virtue
of that nature, by which he was
απειραστος κακων, James 1:13,
incapable of being overcome by
temptation. But if, with
Irenĉus, we affirm that the
divinity was then quiescent in
him, and that he overcame Satan
by virtue of the Spirit given to
him, we, who have the same
unction from the Holy One, may
also hope to do it by his aid.
Verse 4
Matthew 4:4. It is written —
There is no better way of
answering the tempter, than by
opposing the word of God to his
temptations. This is that sword
of the Spirit that must put him
to flight. The Church of Rome,
therefore, by taking from the
people the word of God, disarm
them as to the spiritual combat.
Man shall not live by bread
alone — These words are quoted
from Deuteronomy 8:3, and
signify that bread, or ordinary
sustenance, is not necessary to
support the life of man; that
God can feed and sustain him by
other means: but by every word
that proceedeth out of the mouth
of God shall man live — That is,
by whatsoever he shall appoint
for his sustenance; or even by
his bare word. Therefore, it is
not needful that I should work a
miracle to procure bread,
without any intimation of my
Father’s will. He can support me
without bread, as he fed the
Israelites in the wilderness;
and, on the other hand, even
bread itself, if these stones
were turned into it, could not
nourish me without his blessing;
which I could not expect, were I
to attempt a miracle of this
kind merely in compliance with
thy suggestions. Here we are
taught, in imitation of Christ,
always to maintain such an
humble dependance on the divine
blessing, as never to venture
out of the way of it, be our
necessity ever so urgent.
Verses 5-7
Matthew 4:5-7. Then the devil
taketh him up into the holy city
— That is, the city Jerusalem,
frequently called the holy city
in Scripture, see Nehemiah 11:1;
Isaiah 52:1; Daniel 9:24; and
that with great propriety, as
being for ages the place of the
special residence of Jehovah. It
has been supposed by many, that
Satan transported our Lord
through the air, but whether he
did or not cannot be determined
from this passage, the original
word, παραλαμβανει, signifying
no more than that he took him
along with him. And setteth him
on a pinnacle of the temple —
That is, one of the battlements,
for it is not to be supposed
that our Lord stood on the point
of a spire. The roof of the
temple, like that of their
houses, was flat, and had a kind
of balustrade round it, to
prevent people falling off, and
somewhere on the edge of this we
may suppose that Satan placed
Christ, in his attacking him
with this temptation. This, in
some parts of it, and
particularly over the porch, was
so exceedingly high that one
could hardly bear to look down
from it. And saith, If thou be
the Son of God, cast thyself
down — Thereby to show to all
the people about the temple,
that thou art indeed the Son of
God; which they will fully
believe when they shall see thee
fly without falling, or fall
without being hurt. As in the
former assault, Satan tempted
Christ to distrust the care of
divine providence, so he now
tries to persuade him to presume
upon it, and to expose himself
to danger unnecessarily; nay, in
effect, to take the direct
course to destroy himself, and
try whether God would preserve
him as his Son. For it is
written, &c. — In the former
temptation the devil did not
quote Scripture, but having been
repelled in that assault by the
sword of the Spirit, which is
the word of God, he here takes
up the same weapon. He shall
give his angels charge
concerning thee — As if he had
said, Since thou trustest so
much in providence as to expect
to be sustained by it, even
without food, now throw thyself
down, to give more undoubted
evidence of thy dependance upon
it: and, as the miracle will be
a full proof that thou art the
Son of God, and will undeniably
convince the people of it, so
thou canst have no room to doubt
of thy safety, the Scripture
having declared that his angels
shall take care of thee. Jerome,
and many after him, have well
observed here, that though Satan
quotes Scripture, he does it
falsely. He artfully leaves out
the words, In all thy ways. To
throw himself down, and fly
through the air, was none of our
Lord’s ways. He had no call, no
warrant, from God, to decline
the stairs by which he might go
down from the top of the temple,
and precipitate himself from the
battlements thereof. God had
never granted, nor even promised
to any, the protection of angels
in sinful and forbidden ways;
nor adjudged that his special
providence should watch over and
preserve them, who should
voluntarily throw themselves
into dangers which they might
lawfully avoid. Add to this,
that Satan seems to mock our
Saviour’s true use of Scripture
by this abuse of applying it,
not to instruct but to deceive,
separating the protection of
God’s providence from man’s
duty, and extending the promise
of the former to those who
neglected the latter; and
putting God upon working a
miracle, to declare that which
he had already made sufficiently
evident. We learn from our
Lord’s example here, that it is
never right to expose ourselves
to unnecessary danger in
expectation of an extraordinary
deliverance. And we learn, too,
that it is not only necessary
that we should take the sword of
the Spirit, the word of God, and
make ourselves familiarly
acquainted with it, that we may
be furnished for the combat with
the prince of darkness, but that
we should enter into the design
and meaning of it, in order
that, if Satan attempt to draw
his artillery from thence, we
may be able to guard against
that most dangerous stratagem,
and to answer perverted passages
of Holy Writ by others more
justly applicable. Jesus said,
It is written again — Viz.,
Deuteronomy 6:16, to prevent the
ungrateful abuse of such
promises as these, Thou shalt
not tempt the Lord thy God — By
demanding further evidence of
what is already made
sufficiently plain, as my being
the Son of God is, by the
miraculous and glorious
testimony he has so lately given
me. I shall not, therefore,
require any more signs to prove
it, nor express any doubt of
God’s power or goodness toward
me; nor shall I act as the
Israelites did, when they said,
Exodus 17:7, Is the Lord among
us or not? when he had given
them ample proof that he was
present with them, and had
taken, and would take care of
them, and provide for them. It
is to be observed that the above
precept, respecting tempting
God, does not forbid too much,
but too little confidence in
God, and the calling in question
his presence with, and care over
his people. But in the general,
to make an undue and
unwarrantable trial of God, is
to tempt him, whether the trial
respect his power or goodness.
See Numbers 14:22; Psalms 78:18;
Isaiah 7:12; Matthew 16:1.
Verse 8-9
Matthew 4:8-9. Again the devil
taketh him up — In what way is
not said; into an exceeding high
mountain — Probably one of the
mountains in the wilderness, and
from that eminence, partly by
the advantage of the place, from
which he might behold many
magnificent buildings, rich
fields, pleasant meadows, hills
covered with wood and cattle,
rivers rolling through the
fertile valleys, and washing the
cities as they passed along; and
partly by an artful visionary
representation, showeth him all
the kingdoms of the world, and
the glory of them — Whatsoever
was gay, splendid, or glorious,
either in respect of the
honours, riches, or pleasures of
the world; their great and
opulent cities, sumptuous
edifices, costly attire,
equipage, pomp, and splendour;
displaying to his view one of
the finest prospects that the
most pleasurable and triumphant
scenes could furnish out; and
all this, not one after another,
but in a moment of time, that so
they might amaze and affect him
the more with their splendour,
and on a sudden prevail upon
him, which otherwise they would
not have been so likely to do.
And saith unto him — With the
most egregious impudence,
falsehood, and pride; All these
things will I give thee — All
this glory and power, and all
these possessions, if thou wilt
fall down and worship me — The
devil now showed clearly who he
was, and therefore Christ, in
answering this suggestion, calls
him by his proper name, Satan,
which, though he undoubtedly
knew him, he had not done
before. We may learn from hence
not to conclude we are utterly
abandoned of God when we are
assaulted with horrible
temptations; Christ himself, we
see, was tempted even to worship
the devil: but in such cases let
us, like Jesus, resolutely repel
the temptation, rather than
parley with it. Dr. Doddridge
observes, that, if we suppose
Satan, in these two last
temptations, to have worn the
form of an angel of light, it
will make them both appear more
plausible; “for thus he might
pretend, in the former, to take
charge of Christ in his fall, as
one of his celestial guards; and
in this latter to resign to him
a province which God had
committed to his administration
and care.” And this, he thinks,
may not be inconsistent “with
supposing that he first appeared
as a man, (it may be as a hungry
traveller, who pretended to ask
the miracle of turning stones
into loaves for his own supply,)
for angels, under the Old
Testament, had often worn a
human form.”
Verse 10
Matthew 4:10. Then saith Jesus,
Get thee hence, Satan — The
expression, υπαγε, σατανα,
plainly expresses Christ’s
authority over Satan, as well as
his detestation of so vile a
suggestion: for it is written,
Thou shalt worship the Lord thy
God, &c. — It would therefore be
unlawful to worship thee, who
art no other than a mere
creature, even though thou wast
indeed his deputy on earth; and
how much more then must it be
so, as thou art, in reality, the
great avowed enemy of God and
man! for such, under all thy
disguise, I well know thee to
be. It appears from these words,
that religious worship, or
service, is due to God alone,
and cannot be lawfully given to
a creature. From whence we must
infer, that Christ is not a mere
creature: for all men are to
honour him, even as they honour
the Father, John 5:23. And all
the angels of God are commanded
to worship him, Hebrews 1:6 :
and it is given as the character
of all Christians, 1 Corinthians
1:2, that they call on the name
of Jesus Christ our Lord: and
Colossians 3:24, That they serve
the Lord Christ. As to the
answer made by some to this
irrefragable argument in favour
of our Lord’s divinity, it
appears from this very passage
to have no weight in it. God
alone say they, is to be
worshipped as the first and
principal cause of all things,
and the chief author of our
salvation; but yet, religious
worship and service may be paid
to Christ, as the intermediate
cause of that salvation which
God, by him, hath revealed and
brought to us. For as there are
no footsteps of this distinction
in the holy Scriptures, so it is
plain that our Lord’s reply to
Satan here entirely condemns it.
The devil, it is manifest, did
not require to be worshipped by
Jesus as the original cause and
supreme governor of the world.
He frankly owns that all the
power he had over the kingdoms
of the earth was given to him.
He claims, therefore, only a
subordinate worship; and yet our
Lord rejects his claim, not on
the ground of his being a liar
and usurper, who had no such
power, and therefore had no
right to any such worship; but
on the ground of God only having
a right to any kind of religious
worship, saying, in the words of
Moses, Thou shalt worship the
Lord thy God, and him ONLY shalt
thou serve. Christ, therefore,
cannot be worshipped lawfully,
if he be not God as well as man.
Verse 11
Matthew 4:11. Then the devil —
Being so baffled and confounded
as not to be able to present any
other temptation which seemed
more likely to prevail, leaveth
him — Namely, for a season, as
Luke observes meditating no
doubt some future assault, and
especially designing, by and by,
to use all stratagems to take
away his life. And, behold,
angels came and ministered unto
him — Not only furnishing him
with proper supplies for his
hunger, but also congratulating
him on so illustrious a victory
over the prince of darkness; and
doing him honour by the
appearance of a number of them,
(for one of them would nave
sufficed to bring him food,)
after this horrible combat with
Satan, to which, for wise and
gracious reasons, he was pleased
to condescend. And it may
encourage us in all our
temptations to remember, that if
our conflict be thus maintained,
the struggle will, ere long, be
over; and angels, who are now
spectators of the combat, will
at length congratulate our
victory. God teaches us, by all
this, that our lives are to have
their vicissitudes of temptation
and consolation, and that our
temptation shall have a happy
issue, and that when ordinary
means fail we may expect
extraordinary helps.
Verse 12
Matthew 4:12. Now when Jesus had
heard that John was cast into
prison — Namely, for reproving
Herod Antipas, tetrarch of
Galilee, for taking his brother
Philip’s wife, and for other
evils, Matthew 14:3-4 : he
departed into Galilee — Viz.,
from Judea. This it seems he
did, partly to avoid the envy of
the Pharisees, John 4:3, and
partly to encourage John’s
disciples, and to continue the
preaching interrupted by his
confinement, being desirous to
improve those good impressions
which the ministry of John had
made on the minds of the people,
and which would not be erased
but deepened by the injurious
things they saw him suffer. Thus
it becomes one messenger of God
to carry on the work begun by
another. But it is to be
observed, that this was not the
first, but the second time of
Jesus’s going into Galilee. Nor
did he take this journey
immediately upon his temptation;
but at some distance of time:
viz., after the events had taken
place which are recorded in the
latter part of the first, and in
the second and third chapters of
John’s gospel. His first journey
from Judea into Galilee is
mentioned John 1:43; John 2:1.
Then he went into Judea again,
and celebrated the passover at
Jerusalem, John 2:13. He
baptized in Judea, while John
was baptizing at Enon, John
3:22-23. All this time John was
at liberty. But the Pharisees
being offended, chap. Matthew
4:1, and John put in prison, he
then took this journey into
Galilee.
Verse 13
Matthew 4:13. Leaving Nazareth —
Namely, when they had rejected
his word, and even attempted to
kill him, as is described Luke
4:29 : he came and dwelt in
Capernaum, upon the sea-coast —
“Capernaum is nowhere mentioned
in the Old Testament, either by
its own name or by any other.
Probably it was one of those
towns which the Jews built after
their return from Babylon. Its
exact situation has not, as yet,
been determined with certainty
by geographers: only, from its
being on the confines of the two
tribes, Reland and others
conjecture that it stood
somewhere on the north- west
shore of the lake of
Gennesareth. According to
Josephus, Bell., 3:18, the
length of this lake was one
hundred furlongs, or twelve
miles and a half, and its
breadth forty furlongs, or five
miles. Pliny says it was sixteen
miles long, and six broad.
Anciently, the lake of
Gennesareth was called the sea
of Chinneroth, Numbers 34:11;
but in later times, it was named
the sea of Galilee, because that
country formed part of its
shore, and the sea of Tiberias:
from the city Tiberias, lying on
the south-west coast thereof.
Its bottom is gravel, which
gives its waters both a good
colour and taste. The river
Jordan runs through the middle
of it, and stocks it with a
variety of excellent fish. In
the countries round this lake,
our Lord spent a great part of
the two former years of his
public life; and though he
afterward enlarged the compass
of his journeys, yet they always
enjoyed a considerable share of
his blessed company and divine
instructions.” — Macknight.
Verse 14-15
Matthew 4:14-15. That it might
be fulfilled. — Or, whereby was
fulfilled, that which was spoken
by Esaias — Namely, Isaiah
9:1-2, where see the notes. The
land of Zabulon, and the land of
Nephthalim, &c. — Isaiah, in
this passage, comforts the
Jewish Church of his time
against the desolation about to
be made through the Assyrian
invasion, by foretelling that
they who should have the
greatest share in that calamity
should afterward enjoy, in the
greatest plenty, the means of
salvation through Christ’s abode
and preaching among them: By the
way of the sea — That is, on the
coasts of the lake of
Gennesareth, commonly called a
sea: Galilee of the Gentiles —
Or nations; that is, Galilee in
the confines of, or encompassed
by, the heathen nations. Or,
perhaps the reason of the name
may rather be, that many
Gentiles were early settled
there, and had filled the
country with a variety of
superstitions, in consequence of
Solomon’s giving a tract of land
here to Hiram. See 1 Kings
9:11-13. Hence it was soon
filled with foreigners, and
peopled with a mixture of
Phœnicians, Egyptians, and
Arabians, as we learn from
Strabo, an ancient writer.
Verse 16
Matthew 4:16. The people who sat
in darkness — They whose
predecessors were afflicted by
the Assyrians, and who, before
Christ visited them, were
captives of Satan, and had lived
in gross ignorance of God and
religion, being far from
Jerusalem, the place of worship,
and intermixed with the Tyrians,
Sidonians, and other wicked
heathen: saw a great light —
This is spoken by Isaiah in the
prophetic style, which
represents things future as
already accomplished, because
certainly to be accomplished.
This whole country had been
overspread with spiritual
darkness, but, by the example
and preaching of Christ, the
day-spring from on high visited
it, diffusing among its
inhabitants knowledge and
holiness, and guiding their feet
into the way of peace. “There
were several reasons,” says Dr.
Macknight, “which might
determine Jesus to be so much
about the sea of Galilee. 1st,
The countries which surrounded
this sea were large, fertile,
and populous, especially the two
Galilees. For, according to
Josephus, Bell., Matthew 3:2,
they alone had many towns, and a
multitude of villages, the least
of which contained above 15,000
souls. On the east side of the
lake were Chorazin, Gadara, and
Hippon; on the west, Capernaum,
Tiberias, Bethsaida, and
Tarrichea, with other places of
inferior note. Wherefore, as it
was agreeable to the end of
Christ’s coming that his
doctrine should be spread
extensively, and his miracles
wrought publicly, no country
could be a fitter scene for his
ministry than this. Besides its
numerous inhabitants, there were
at all times many strangers
resorting to the trading towns
on the lake, who, after hearing
Jesus preach, could carry home
with them the glad tidings of
salvation which were the
subjects of his sermons.
Capernaum, chosen by Christ as
the place of his residence, was
a town of this kind, and much
frequented. 2d, The countries
round the lake were remote from
Jerusalem, the seat of the
scribes and Pharisees, who would
not have borne with patience the
presence of a teacher held in
such estimation as Jesus
deservedly was. We know this by
what happened in the beginning
of his ministry, when he made
and baptized many disciples in
Judea. They took such offence at
it, that he was obliged to leave
the country. Wherefore, as it
was necessary that he should
spend a considerable time in
preaching and working miracles,
both for the confirmation of his
mission, and for the instruction
of his disciples in the
doctrines they were afterward to
preach, these countries were, of
all others, the most proper for
him to reside in, or rather,
they were the only places where
he could be with safety for any
time.”
Verse 17
Matthew 4:17. From that time
Jesus began to preach — He had
preached before, both to Jews
and Samaritans, John 4:41; John
4:45, but from this time he
began to preach publicly and
statedly, and to insist on the
same doctrine that John had
done: and with good reason, for
the repentance which John
taught, still was and ever will
be, the necessary preparation
for that inward kingdom of
heaven, or, of God, which is
righteousness, peace, and joy in
the Holy Ghost. The phrase,
however, is not only used with
regard to individuals, in whom
that kingdom is to be
established, but also with
regard to the Christian Church,
the whole body of believers. In
the former sense, it is opposed
to repentance, by which it is
preceded; in the latter, to the
Mosaic dispensation. Our Lord
now properly and fully entered
upon his prophetic office; which
consisted of three things:
preaching, or making known the
will of God; gathering
disciples; and working miracles.
The first of these he does here,
and more largely chap. 5., 6.,
7., and in his many parables and
other discourses. The second,
Matthew 4:18-22. The third, as
being necessary to confirm his
doctrine, on all occasions, from
time to time, till his departure
hence.
Verse 18
Matthew 4:18. And Jesus,
walking, &c., saw two brethren —
One of the two, at least,
namely, Andrew, had been a
disciple of the Baptist. And the
Apostle John “informs us, John
1:40; John 1:42, that they had
both before been called to the
knowledge of Christ, upon the
banks of Jordan, and that the
name of Peter had been given to
Simon. And it is probable that,
from their first acquaintance
with him, they followed Jesus
for some time, and went with him
to Cana and Capernaum, John 2:3;
John 2:12; and afterward to
Jerusalem, John 2:13; John 2:17;
and tarried with him while he
continued in Judea, John 3:22.
But when the Pharisees grew
jealous of the number of his
followers, and Herod was
offended at the popularity of
John, we may suppose that Jesus,
at his return to Galilee, might
think it prudent to dismiss his
disciples for a time, till he
himself had gone about from
place to place to preach the
gospel, and had informed the
people more particularly of the
character of his person, and the
nature of his doctrine: or,
possibly, they might leave him
at the time when the Samaritans
prevailed upon him to go with
them to their city, John 4:40.
Be this as it may, we read no
more of his disciples being with
him, till he now found them at
the sea of Galilee. For they no
sooner were gone home, but they
returned again to their old
employment, and continued in it
till they were now taken off
from any further regard to their
worldly business, and were
particularly called by Christ to
a constant attendance upon him.”
— Doddridge. Casting a net into
the sea. — Namely, to wash it,
for, according to Luke 5:2, they
were washing their nets, when he
called them. For they were
fishers — He called such mean
persons to show, 1st, the
freedom of his grace, in
choosing such weak instruments;
2d, his power, in that by such
men he could subdue the world;
3d, the depth of his wisdom, in
providing thus for his own
honour, that the instruments
might not carry away the glory
of the work.
Verse 19-20
Matthew 4:19-20. He saith unto
them — Namely, after some
previous circumstances, an
account of which is given, Luke
5:1-11. Follow me — That is, not
only now and then, as you have
hitherto done, since my baptism,
John 1:37; but now leave your
ordinary employments, and become
my constant attendants; that by
continually hearing my doctrine,
and seeing my miracles, you may
be fitted, in due time, to
become my messengers to mankind.
It is observable that, when God
has called men to offices of
dignity and usefulness among his
people, or has particularly
appeared in their favour, they
have generally been engaged in
some honest employment. Saul was
seeking his father’s asses, and
David was keeping his father’s
sheep, when the Lord called them
to the kingdom. The shepherds
were feeding their flocks when
they received information from
the angel, accompanied by the
heavenly host, of the birth of
Christ. God called Amos from the
flock, Gideon from the threshing
floor, and the apostles here
from their fishing. God does not
encourage idleness, nor despise
persons in mean employments. And
I will make you fishers of men —
You shall gather men into the
gospel net, and gain them over
to the faith; and such abundant
success will I give you, that
the number of souls converted by
you, shall be greater than that
of the fishes you have been used
to catch. See notes on Ezekiel
37:6-10. Observe, reader! The
work of ministers is here set
forth. They are not to fish for
a livelihood, much less for
honour and applause to
themselves, but to win souls to
God, and are to bait their hooks
and order their nets for this
end: which, however, will never
be answered if, either by mere
general discourses, they make
the meshes so wide that sinners
will find an easy passage
through them, or, by abstract
reasonings, and fine-spun
speculations, they make the
threads so small that they can
easily break them; or, if they
neglect to close the net upon
those they have enclosed, by a
proper and pointed application
of their subject. Nor will all
our art or labour make us
fishers of men, without the
divine blessing. Without this,
like the disciples of old, we
may toil all day and all night,
but we shall catch nothing, or
nothing to purpose. And it is to
be observed further, that the
apostles were not immediately to
enter upon the work of the
ministry, but were first to
follow Jesus. And the apostles,
in the choice of one to succeed
Judas, limited themselves in
their election to those that had
companied with them all the time
the Lord Jesus had gone in and
out among them, Acts 1:21. Those
who do not observe this become
fishers for something else
rather than the souls of men.
They straightway left their nets
and followed him — Influenced by
the power of his word, and
struck with the wonderful
miracle recorded Luke 5:6-9. It
is not of indispensable
necessity that those who are
called to the ministry of the
word should have nothing else to
do. Paul’s hand ministered to
his necessities and those of his
companions. But it is very
desirable that they should be so
supported as to be able to give
themselves wholly up to the work
of the Lord.
Verse 21-22
Matthew 4:21-22. Going on from
thence — Mark says, A little
further thence, He saw two other
brethren, James the son of
Zebedee, and John his brother —
The reader will observe, there
was another James, the son of
Alpheus, or Cleophas, commonly
called James the Less. In a
ship, with Zebedee their father
— By the sea-side, mending their
nets — Which had been broken by
the vast draught of fishes they
had taken just before. And he
called them — Not with his voice
only, but by his Spirit
affecting and drawing their
hearts, so that they immediately
left their ship and their
father, and indeed their earthly
all, and followed him.
Verse 23
Matthew 4:23. And Jesus went
about all Galilee — Accompanied,
it seems, by the four disciples
above named; teaching in their
synagogues — The word, συναγωγη,
rendered, synagogue, may either
signify the congregation, or the
place in which they assembled.
But it seems here, and
generally, to mean the latter.
Synagogues were in every city,
from the time of the Babylonish
captivity, and perhaps before
that time. For, it is certain,
the Jews neither did nor could
assemble in the temple at
Jerusalem for public worship
every sabbath day, and therefore
it is probable they had other
places throughout the country to
assemble in. This seems, indeed,
to have been absolutely
necessary, not only that the
people might join in prayer
together, but to bring them, in
some degree, acquainted with the
law of God. For, as copies of it
were very scarce, the body of
the people must, of necessity,
have remained ignorant of it,
unless it were read to them in
public, and that in other places
besides the temple, which the
women in general could not visit
at all, and the men but very
seldom. Accordingly, in the 74th
Psalm, which, by whomsoever it
was composed, plainly speaks of
the destruction of the temple,
of Jerusalem, and of the Jews,
by the Chaldeans, we read of all
the synagogues of the land being
burned up, which certainly
implies that there were
synagogues in the land before
they were thus destroyed; and
therefore before the captivity
of Babylon. After the
restoration from Babylon, they
became very frequent. Even in
Jerusalem itself, where one
would have imagined they were
less necessary, on account of
the temple being there, the
Hebrew doctors and other ancient
and learned writers inform us,
that there were above four
hundred. It was usual to have
service in them thrice a day, on
three days of the week, when
public prayer was put up, and
the Scriptures were read and
expounded. And though it
belonged chiefly to the priests,
Levites, and scribes to teach,
yet it was the custom for any
one of ability to do it.
Preaching the gospel of the
kingdom — Namely, that doctrine
whereby the kingdom of heaven,
that is, of grace here and glory
hereafter, is revealed and
offered to men, and, by
obedience to which, they come to
partake of it. Healing all
manner of sickness, and all
manner of disease among the
people — Intending by these
beneficent actions to confirm
his doctrine, at the same time
that he relieved the temporal
distresses of mankind.
Verse 24
Matthew 4:24. His fame went
through all Syria — Of which the
country of the Jews and
Samaritans was but a small part.
Pliny tells us, that Syria
contained several provinces,
Comagene to the north, Phœnicia
to the west, Cœlosyria to the
south, Palmyrene, and the
province of Seleucia, in the
middle part. If, by all Syria,
the evangelist means all these
different provinces of Syria,
our Lord’s fame must at this
time have been exceedingly
great. Nor is there any thing
incredible in the evangelist’s
affirmation, taken in the
largest sense. For considering
the number and greatness of the
miracles which he performed, it
would not have been beyond
belief, had the historian told
us that the fame of them reached
as far as the communication of
the Jews with the rest of the
world extended. And they brought
unto him those that were
possessed with devils, and those
lunatic, and those that had the
palsy — These are justly
reckoned cases of as great
misery, and of as little hope,
as any to be found among men.
The evangelist, therefore,
properly instanced these. And he
healed them, and thereby
wonderfully displayed both his
power and his love.
Verse 25
Matthew 4:25. And there followed
him great multitudes — Affected
with the sight, or fame of his
miracles, which was now very
great, from Galilee — Its many
and populous towns and villages.
See note on Matthew 4:15. From
Decapolis — A tract of land on
the east side of the sea of
Galilee, which had its name from
δεκα, ten, and πολις, a city,
because it contained only ten
cities, which were situated near
each other, and formed into a
distinct district, the
metropolis of which was
Damascus. |