Verse 1
Matthew 12:1. Jesus went on the
sabbath day through the corn —
The cornfields near Jerusalem,
attended by his disciples and
some of the Pharisees, whose
curiosity, it is probable,
prompted them to mix with the
crowd on this occasion, in
expectation of seeing more
miracles. His disciples began to
pluck [and rub in their hands,
Luke 6:1] the ears of corn, and
to eat — Just what sufficed for
present necessity. The word
σταχυας, here used, may
indifferently signify ears of
any kind of grain; but probably
barley is here intended, that
being first ripe in those parts.
Dried corn was a common food
among the Jews.
Verses 2-4
Matthew 12:2-4. The Pharisees
said, Thy disciples do what is
not lawful — The law of Moses so
expressly allowed the plucking
ears of corn as one passed
through a field, that, malignant
as they were, they pretended not
to find fault with the action
itself, (see Deuteronomy 23:25,)
but they were perverse enough to
think this to be a kind of
reaping and dressing the grain,
which was indeed forbidden on
the sabbath. But he said — Have
ye not read what, in a case of
like necessity, David did, and
his followers? and his necessity
was a sufficient plea for his
transgressing the law in a
higher instance. How he entered
into the house of God — Into the
tabernacle: the temple not being
yet built. The meaning cannot
be, that David himself went into
the very tabernacle, for none
but priests could go in thither:
but it was into the house or
chamber of the high-priest that
he entered, situated beside the
tabernacle, and called the house
of God on that account. See note
on 1 Samuel 21:3-6. Thus the
apartment in which the
High-priest Eli and his servant
Samuel slept, is called the
house of the Lord, 1 Samuel
3:15. And did eat the show-bread
— Gr. τους αρτους της προθεσεως,
the bread of exhibition, or, the
bread set forth. The Hebrew
expression,
לחם פנים, is literally, the
bread of the face, or, of the
presence, so called, because it
stood continually before the
face, (so to speak,) of Jehovah;
that is, before the ark, where
God was peculiarly present. It
consisted of twelve loaves,
representing the twelve tribes
of Israel, and was set every
sabbath day, by the priest who
served that week, on the golden
table that was in the holy place
of the tabernacle or temple.
When the new loaves were
brought, the stale ones were
taken away, but were to be eaten
by the priests only. See notes
on Exodus 25:30; Leviticus
24:6-9.
Verse 5-6
Matthew 12:5-6. Have ye not read
in the law, &c. — He does not
mean that the words following
were to be found in the law, but
only that they might read in the
law, how the priests were
obliged, on the sabbath days, to
perform such servile work in the
temple as, considered separately
from the end of it, would have
been a profanation of the
sabbath, but really was not so,
because it was necessary to the
public worship of God, on
account of which the sabbath was
instituted. If it be asked what
servile work the priests
performed on the sabbath, the
answer is obvious. On that day,
as well as on other days, they
made up the fires, killed,
flayed, and dressed the
sacrifices, and performed other
pieces of manual labour
necessary to the religious
service which God had
established among them. Nay,
besides the continual burnt
offering, the priests were
obliged, on the sabbaths, to
sacrifice two lambs
extraordinary, by which their
servile work was that day double
of what it was on the other days
of the week. See Numbers 28:9.
But in this place is one greater
than the temple — As if he had
said, “If you reply that the
priests were not culpable in
those actions, because they were
undertaken for the temple
service, I acknowledge it; but
at the same time I must observe,
that if the temple, with its
service, is of such importance
as to merit a particular
dispensation from the law of the
sabbath, I and my disciples,
whose business of promoting the
salvation of men is a matter of
more importance, may, on that
account, with more reason take
the same liberty in a case of
the like necessity. According to
this interpretation, the reading
μειζον, a greater work, instead
of μειζων, a greater person,
which is authorized by many
manuscripts, will have a
peculiar elegance. Then the
sense will be, ‘There is here a
much more noble work carrying on
than the temple service.’” —
Macknight.
Verse 7-8
Matthew 12:7-8. But if ye had
known what that meaneth — If ye
had known the intent of that
scripture, Hosea 6:6, I will
have mercy, &c. — That is, I
always prefer acts of mercy
before matters of positive
institution, when in any
instance they interfere with
each other; and even before all
ceremonial institutions
whatever; because these being
only means of religion, are
suspended, of course, if
circumstances occur wherein they
clash with love, which is the
end of it: ye would not have
condemned the guiltless — As you
have now done, merely for
rubbing out a handful of corn to
refresh themselves in my
service. For the Son of man is
Lord even of the sabbath day —
The law enjoining the
observation of every seventh day
as a day of holy rest, as all
other laws, is in my power, and
may be altered, enforced, or
dispensed with, as I see good.
My disciples, therefore, are
guiltless, were it only on this
account, that they act by my
authority, and attend on me in
my ministry, as the priests
attended on God in the temple.
This expression, is Lord even of
the sabbath, evidently implies,
that the sabbath was an
institution of great and
distinguished importance. It
may, perhaps, also refer to that
signal act of authority which
Christ afterward exerted over
it, in changing it from the
seventh to the first day of the
week. If we suppose here a
transposition of the seventh and
eighth verses, then the eighth
verse is a proof of the sixth.
Verse 10
Matthew 12:10. There was a man
which had his hand withered —
The nerves and sinews of it
being shrunk up, so that it was
entirely useless. And they —
Namely, the scribes and
Pharisees, who had either mixed
with the crowd that followed
Jesus, or were in the synagogue
before he came; asked him,
saying, Is it lawful to heal on
the sabbath day? — They made
this inquiry merely that they
might find matter whereon to
ground an accusation against
him. For they fully expected he
would say that it was lawful, in
opposition to the doctrine of
their learned men, who accounted
performing cures on the sabbath
a violation of the holy rest of
that day. Accordingly Mark says,
They watched him whether he
would heal, &c. — So gross was
their hypocrisy, that they
resolved to raise an outcry
against him, if on the sabbath
he should give a lame man the
use of his hand, while they
themselves were profaning it by
an action which would have
polluted any day; were seeking
an opportunity to murder one who
had never done them any harm,
but had been and was incessantly
doing them good!
Verses 11-13
Matthew 12:11-13. And he said —
That he might show their
unreasonableness, and confute
them by their own practice: What
man — that shall have —
Or, Who, if he have but one
sheep, that on the sabbath day
shall fall into a pit, and it be
in danger of perishing there,
will not lay hold on it, &c. —
The stress of the question does
not lie on supposing a man to
have only one sheep, but on one
only falling into a pit; and
yet, for the comparatively small
value of that one, his not
scrupling to undertake the
labour of helping it out on the
sabbath day. How much then is a
man better than a sheep? As if
he had said, If the regard you
have for the life of your cattle
leads you to do servile work on
the sabbath, for the
preservation of a single sheep,
charity should much rather
induce you to labour for the
preservation of a
fellow-creature, though the good
office is to be done on the
sabbath day. Wherefore it is
lawful to do well — To save a
beast, much more a man, or to
perform any of the lovely acts
of mercy and charity on the
sabbath day. Our Lord, having
spoken as above, according to
St. Mark 3:5, looked round about
upon them with anger, with a
holy indignation at their
wickedness, being grieved for
the hardness of their hearts,
for their stupidity and
impenitence, and for that
condemnation and ruin which he
knew they were thus bringing on
themselves, as well as for the
pernicious effect which their
conduct would have on others.
But at the same time that he
testified his displeasure at the
Pharisees, he relieved and
comforted the infirm man, saying
to him, Stretch forth thy hand,
and, a divine power accompanying
the word, he immediately
stretched it out, and, in an
instant, it was made sound as
the other. The evangelists say
no more; but leave their readers
to imagine the wonder and
astonishment of the numerous
spectators, and the joy of the
man who had recovered the use of
so necessary a member.
Verse 14-15
Matthew 12:14-15. Then the
Pharisees went out, and held a
council against him — They were
so incensed at the affront which
they imagined they had received,
in our Lord’s neglecting their
censure, and intimating his
knowledge of the evil purposes
of their hearts, (Luke 6:8,)
that they were no longer able to
bear the place, and therefore
withdrew. Luke says, They were
filled with madness, and
communed with one another what
they might do to Jesus; or, as
Matthew and Mark express it, how
they might destroy him. Being as
little able to find fault with
the miracle, as they had been to
answer the argument by which
Jesus justified his performing
it on the sabbath day, they were
filled with such diabolical
rage, that they acted like
downright madmen. They could not
but be sensible of the greatness
of the miracle, and, perhaps,
were convinced of the truth of
his mission who had performed
it; but their wrath, on account
of his having violated their
precepts concerning the sabbath,
and their other evil passions,
pushed them on to such a pitch
of extravagance, that they went
away and joined counsel with
their inveterate enemies, the
Herodians, or Sadducees, (Mark
3:6,) in order to have him taken
out of the way; for they found
it was not in their power
otherwise to keep the people
from being impressed with his
doctrine and miracles. This, it
must be observed, is the first
time that mention is made of a
design on our Saviour’s life.
Thus, “while the eyes of
distressed multitudes were
turned to Christ as their only
physician and most valuable
friend, the eyes of these
Pharisees were continually upon
him for evil: and they beheld
his miracles, not for their own
conviction, but that they might,
if possible, turn them into the
means of his destruction. So
ineffectual are the most obvious
and demonstrative arguments,
till divine grace conquer men’s
natural aversion to the
Redeemer’s kingdom, and
captivate their hearts to the
obedience of the faith! To have
reviled and dishonoured Christ,
and to have endeavoured to
prevent the success of his
ministry, would have been a
daring crime: but these
desperate wretches conspire
against his life; and, different
as their principles and
interests were, form a transient
friendship, to be cemented by
his blood. Blessed Jesus! well
mightest thou say, Many good
works have I shown you, and for
which of them would you murder
me?” — Doddridge. But, when
Jesus knew it — Or rather,
Jesus, knowing it, withdrew
himself from thence, in order
that nothing might hinder him
from fulfilling his ministry. It
appears from Mark 3. that he
retired into Galilee, where he
preached and wrought miracles as
privately as possible, that he
might avoid giving offence. His
fame, however, was now so great
that vast multitudes gathered
round him there, among whom were
many who, having seen or heard
of the miracle on the infirm man
at Bethesda, (John 5.,) and on
the withered hand in the
synagogue, followed him from
Jerusalem and Judea. And he
healed them all — That is, all
that had need of healing. By
this it appears, that it was not
mere curiosity that drew
together this immense multitude.
Many, no doubt, were moved by
that principle, but others came
to him to be healed of their
infirmities and diseases, and
others again to hear and be
instructed by his divine
discourses.
Verses 16-21
Matthew 12:16-21. And charged
them that they should not make
him known — Partly that he might
avoid the envy and rage of his
persecutors, and partly because
the time was not yet come for
him to declare himself openly to
be the Messiah. That it might be
fulfilled, &c. — Here the
evangelist assigns another
reason why the Lord Jesus
prosecuted his ministry in this
humble, meek, quiet, and
unostentatious way: it was, that
he might fulfil Isaiah’s
prophecy, Isaiah 42:1-4, in
which it was foretold that he
should conduct himself in this
manner. It must be observed,
that the passage here referred
to is not quoted exactly
according to the Hebrew
original, the evangelist
contenting himself with giving
us the substance of it in a
contracted form: nor is it
quoted according to the version
of the LXX., who have given but
a very indifferent
interpretation of it. He shall
show judgment — The word κρισις,
judgment, here used by Matthew,
answers to משּׁפט, in the
prophet, a word which, in the
Old Testament, is often put for
the laws of God in general. And
by Christ’s showing judgment to
the Gentiles, is evidently meant
his declaring the laws of
religion, the eternal rules of
righteousness, or the will of
his heavenly Father, not only to
the single nation of the Jews,
but also, and especially, to the
Gentile nation. He shall not
strive, nor cry, &c. — He shall
not be contentious, noisy, or
ostentatious; but gentle, quiet,
and lowly. A bruised reed shall
he not break — Such as are
convinced of their sinfulness
and guilt, and bruised under the
weight thereof. Smoking flax
shall he not quench — The least
good desire, the faintest spark
of grace. He alludes to the wick
of a lamp when it is first
beginning to kindle, and is put
out by any little motion. Till
he send forth judgment unto
victory — Till he make
righteousness completely
victorious over all its enemies.
And in his name, that is, in
him, shall the Gentiles trust,
for salvation, present and
eternal. See notes on Isaiah
42:1; where the original passage
is explained at large.
Verses 22-24
Matthew 12:22-24. Then was
brought unto him — Namely, By
the person’s friends, one
possessed with a devil, blind
and dumb — Many, no doubt,
supposed these defects to be
merely natural: but the Spirit
of God saw otherwise, and gives
the true account, both of the
disorder and the cure. How many
other disorders, seemingly
natural, may even now be owing
to the same cause! And he healed
him — He immediately expelled
the evil spirit, and in an
instant removed the effects of
his diabolical influence: And
all the people were amazed — At
so extraordinary a miracle, by
which the noblest sense, and
likewise the most useful faculty
of the human body, were restored
together: and said, Is not this
the Son of David? — that is, The
Messiah. But when the Pharisees
— Who were present, and the
scribes, who had come down from
Jerusalem, heard it, that is,
heard this natural reflection of
the people, and observed that
they were beginning to infer,
from the wonderful miracles
which they saw Jesus perform,
that he was the expected
Messiah; fearing lest such a
belief, if it should gain
ground, would put an end to
their credit with, and authority
over, the people, they said,
This fellow doth not cast out
devils but by Beelzebub, &c. —
Thus giving the most malicious
and unreasonable turn to the
matter which could be imagined.
Verse 25-26
Matthew 12:25-26. And Jesus knew
their thoughts — “It often
happens, that through ignorance
or weakness men form wrong
judgments of things;” a conduct
which, though censurable, admits
of some excuse: “but when wrong
judgments proceed from evil
dispositions, then, indeed, do
they become highly culpable.
Therefore, to show that the
judgment which the Pharisees
passed at this time upon our
Lord’s miracles was of the
latter kind, the evangelist
observes, that Jesus knew their
thoughts: he knew that the
wickedness of their hearts, and
not the weakness of their
understandings, had led them to
form the opinion they had
uttered, if it was their real
opinion; or rather, to affirm it
contrary to the conviction of
their minds, which was the
reason that, at the conclusion
of his defence, he reprimanded
them in the sharpest manner.”
And said, Every kingdom divided
against itself &c. — He proceeds
to demonstrate the absurdity of
their calumny, by an argument
drawn from the common affairs of
life: —
As if he had said, “If evil
spirits assist me in working
miracles for the confirmation of
my doctrine, they do what they
can to promote the spiritual
worship and ardent love of the
true God, and, as effectually as
possible, excite men to the
practice of universal justice,
benevolence, temperance, and
self-government; all these
virtues being powerfully
recommended by my doctrine. But
thus to make the evil spirits
fight against themselves, is
evidently to make them ruin
their own interest; unless it
can be thought that the strength
and welfare of a society is
advanced by jarring discord and
destructive civil wars. Your
judgment, therefore, of my
conduct, is palpably malicious
and absurd.” — Macknight. The
word Beelzebub signifies the
lord or master of flies. This
was the great idol of the
Ekronites; and from his name we
may infer that they considered
him as having the command of the
various insects wherewith, in
those warm climates, they were
infested, and which ofttimes
gathered into such swarms as
proved both a noisome and a
deadly plague. The Greeks,
likewise, had a god, whose title
was μυιαργος, Muscarum venator,
The destroyer of flies. But he
was in no great reputation among
them, their country not being
subject to this sort of
calamity. The Ekronites being
near neighbours to the Jews, the
great veneration which they had
for this idol made him the
object both of the horror and
detestation of the devout
worshippers of the true God.
Accordingly, to express in what
detestation they held him, they
appropriated his name to the
most hateful being in the
universe, calling the devil, or
the prince of the evil angels.
Beelzebub; for the next verse
shows, that Beelzebub and Satan
are different names of the same
person; and consequently that
Satan was considered as the
prince of those demons who were
cast out by Christ, and who are
elsewhere represented as his
angels. The word in the Greek is
Beelzebul, which signifies, the
lord of a dunghill, and seems to
be a contemptuous change of the
former name, by which it was
intimated, that the noblest of
the heathen deities were more
fit to dwell on a dunghill than
to be worshipped in a
magnificent temple.
Verse 27-28
Matthew 12:27-28. And if I by
Beelzebub, &c. — This is the
second argument made use of by
Jesus for confuting the calumny
of the Pharisees; by whom do
your children cast them out? —
As if he had said, “For the same
reason that you attribute my
miracles to the devil, you may
attribute all the miracles that
ever were wrought in the world
to the devil, and particularly
the miracles of your own
prophets which, nevertheless,
you acknowledge to be divine.”
To this purpose Dr. Chandler
paraphrases the verse, “Ye do
not impute the miracles of your
prophets to Beelzebub, but on
the evidence of these miracles
ye receive them as the
messengers of God. Nevertheless,
ye reject me, who work greater
and more numerous miracles than
they, and impute them to the
power of evil spirits. Is this
conduct of a piece? Wherefore
these prophets shall be your
judges; they shall condemn you.”
It seems, however, more probable
that, by your children, is meant
your disciples, or your
countrymen in general, for “that
many of the Jews did, at this
time, attempt to cast out
devils, is plain from Mark 9:38;
Luke 9:49; Acts 19:13; Josephus,
Antiq., Matthew 8:2. Calvin
thinks that God conferred power
of this kind on some particular
persons among the Jews
anciently, that by thus proving
his presence among them he might
retain the nation in the faith
of his covenant; and that the
people, having experienced God’s
power in those instances, came
foolishly to institute for
themselves the office of an
exorcist. Agreeably to this it
may be observed, that our Lord’s
argument does not require that
the demons were actually
expelled by these exorcists. It
is sufficient that the Jews
thought they were expelled, and
did not find fault with those
pretended miracles, as they did
with Christ’s real ones.”
Therefore they shall be your
judges — Ask them, if Satan will
cast out Satan; let even them be
judges in this matter. And they
shall convict you of obstinacy
and partiality, who impute that
in me to Beelzebub, which in
them you impute to God. But if I
cast out devils by the Spirit of
God — As it is evident, and you
cannot reasonably deny that I
do; then the kingdom of God is
come nigh unto you — The time is
certainly come which God has
appointed for taking the power
out of the hands of the devil,
in order that he may himself
rule, both in the bodies and
souls of men. The word εφθασεν,
rendered is come, implies, is
come unawares; before you
expected it. In other words, the
Messiah’s kingdom is come, and
you ought with joy to enter it.
Verse 29-30
Matthew 12:29-30. How can one
enter, &c. — How could I cast
out Satan, and destroy his
works, if I did not first
overcome him? “The house of the
strong man (or, strong one, as
του ισχυρου should rather be
rendered) into which Christ
entered, was the world, fitly
called Beelzebub’s house, or
palace, because there he is
served by luxury, lust,
covetousness, pride, anger, and
the other evil passions of men.
The goods or vessels belonging
to the strong one are the
wicked, called Satan’s vessels
metaphorically, as Paul is
called Christ’s chosen vessel,
Acts 9:15. Or, by the vessels,
or furniture of Beelzebub’s
house, we may understand the
lusts and passions of men’s
hearts, the instruments by which
he keeps possession of them.” He
that is not with me is against
me — He that does not unite and
co- operate with me, who am
contending against Satan and his
kingdom, is against me, as being
unwilling that his kingdom
should be destroyed. And he that
gathereth not with me — That
does not set himself, according
to his ability, to gather
subjects into my kingdom, and
promote the cause of truth and
grace among men, scattereth
abroad — Hinders the work of God
upon earth, and either prevents
men from entering upon a life of
piety and virtue, or obstructs
their progress therein. In other
words, there are no neuters in
this war: every one must be
either with Christ or against
him; either a loyal subject or a
rebel; and there are none upon
earth who neither promote nor
obstruct his kingdom. For every
one does either one or the other
daily. Much more criminal and
fatal, then, must the character
and conduct of those be, who,
with deliberate, implacable
malice, oppose Christ’s cause,
and are resolved, at all
adventures, to do their utmost
to bring it down, as the
Pharisees were now attempting to
do by these vile suggestions,
whereby they endeavoured to
represent Christ, who came to
save men, as an accomplice with
Satan, who was labouring to
destroy them.
Verse 31
Matthew 12:31. All manner of sin
and blasphemy — The word
rendered blasphemy: denotes
injurious expressions, whether
against God or man. When God is
the object, it is properly
rendered blasphemy. It is
evident that, in this passage,
both are included, as the
different kinds are compared
together: consequently the
general term detraction, or
injurious speech, ought to be
employed, which is applicable
alike to both; whereas the term
blasphemy, with us, is not used
of any verbal injury that is not
aimed directly against God.
Shall be forgiven unto men —
That is, on condition of true
repentance, and faith in the
mercy of God through Christ; or,
as the words evidently mean, may
be forgiven unto men; for we are
not to understand our Lord as
asserting that every such sin
shall actually be pardoned, but
that it is, in the divine
economy, capable of being
pardoned. But the blasphemy
against the Holy Ghost shall not
be forgiven unto men — By the
blasphemy here spoken of, we are
evidently to understand
injurious or impious speaking
against the Spirit of God, such
as the Pharisees were now guilty
of; that is, attributing to the
devil those miracles which
Christ gave full proof that he
wrought by the Holy Spirit. That
this, and nothing but this, is
the sin here intended, is
manifest from the connection in
which the words stand in this
place; and more especially still
from the parallel passage, Mark
3:28-30, in which the
evangelist, assigning the reason
of our Lord’s making this
declaration, adds, Because they
said, He hath an unclean spirit;
that is, “hath Beelzebub, and by
the prince of devils casteth out
devils.” This, then, and this
only, is the sin, or blasphemy,
as it should rather be called,
(and as the Scriptures always
call it,) against the Holy
Ghost. It is an offence of the
tongue; it is committed not by
thinking, but by speaking, by
evil-speaking, by belying,
slandering, or reviling the
Divine Spirit, by which our Lord
wrought his miracles, ascribing
them to the devil: which in fact
was calling the Holy Ghost, or
the Spirit of the one living and
true God, the devil: a more
heinous crime than which is not
to be conceived.
Verse 32
Matthew 12:32. Whosoever
speaketh a word against the Son
of man — In any other respect,
it shall be forgiven him — Upon
his true repentance: But
whosoever speaketh, namely, in
this manner, against the Holy
Ghost — and most unreasonably
ascribes his extraordinary and
beneficent operations to the
grand enemy of God and man, it
shall not be forgiven him,
neither in this world, neither
in the world to come — The
original words, ουτε εν τουτω τω
αιωνι, ουτε εν τω μελλοντι, may
be rendered, neither in this
age, or dispensation, (namely,
the Jewish,) nor in the age, or
dispensation, to come, namely,
the Christian. Thus the clause
is understood by Macknight, who
considers it as importing, that
“no expiation was provided for
the blasphemy against the Holy
Spirit, either under the Jewish
or Christian dispensations.” But
it seems rather to have been a
mere proverbial expression among
the Jews, for a thing that would
never be done. Accordingly, in
the parallel passage in Mark, we
read, He that shall blaspheme
against the Holy Ghost hath
never forgiveness, but is in
danger of, or rather, is liable
to, eternal damnation. It is
well known, that the Papists
argue from this passage, for the
remission of some sins in
purgatory, after this life is
ended, which are not remitted by
God here. But “the Scripture,”
says Whitby, “knows only two
times for the remission of sins:
one here upon earth, Mark 9:6,
to the penitent and believing;
and the other at the day of
judgment, when the great Judge
shall pronounce the sentence of
absolution to all his faithful
servants; Christ, therefore,
here signifies, that this
blasphemy shall neither obtain
forgiveness now, nor at the
great day of final accounts:
that is, shall never be
forgiven. It may be proper to
observe here, that as no one
call be pardoned for any sins
but through Christ, and in
consequence of faith in him, as
the Son of God and Saviour of
the world; and as none can
believe in him as such that
supposes he wrought his miracles
by the aid of the devil; and as
his miracles, united with his
holy life, were the chief proofs
of his divine mission;
therefore, those who attributed
them to Satan, were of course
thereby precluded from believing
on him, and of consequence from
obtaining pardon.” Mr. Baxter’s
paraphrase on the passage is to
nearly the same purpose — thus:
“All other sin and blasphemy
against me, as I appear in my
human nature, hath some excuse,
and may be cured, and so
pardoned: but seeing the great
works of the Holy Ghost done by
me, and to be done by my
disciples, in miracles and
sanctification, are the greatest
evidences that God will give the
world to convince them of the
truth of my gospel; he that is
convinced of the fact, that all
these miracles and this holiness
is wrought, and yet will deny it
to be God’s attestation, and
blasphemously insist that it is
the work of the devil; this man
rejects the greatest evidences,
and shall have no greater, and
so his infidelity is incurable,
and aggravated with blasphemy
and obstinacy, and will never be
repented of, nor forgiven.”
Verses 33-35
Matthew 12:33-35. Either make
the tree good, and his fruit
good, &c. — That is, you must
allow they are both good, or
both bad: for if the fruit be
good, so is the tree; if the
fruit be evil, so is the tree
also. “Judge, therefore, by my
works, of the power by which I
work: if it be not a good work
to heal the sick, and blind, and
lame, and cast out devils, and
preach repentance and
forgiveness of sins, to convert
and save souls, then God is not
the author of them. If they be
bad works, they have a bad
cause; if they be good works,
they have a good author: either
say plainly, (you that ascribe
them to the devil,) that the
works are good and the devil is
good; or else that the devil is
bad and the works are bad: or,
if you confess that the works
are good, confess that they are
done by the Spirit of God.” —
Baxter. O generation of vipers —
Perverse, venomous, deceitful
creatures; how can ye, being
evil — Being envious and
malicious, speak good things —
It is surely a force upon nature
whenever you do so; and you will
easily return to such
uncharitable and impious
language as we have now been
hearing from you; the thoughts
of your hearts showing
themselves by the words of your
mouths. For out of the abundance
of the heart — The overflowing
pride, envy, and malice thereof,
the mouth speaketh — Utters
words of the same nature with
the corrupt source from whence
they flow. A good man, out of
the good treasure of the heart —
The wisdom and piety, the truth
and grace lodged there, bringeth
forth good things. — Freely and
abundantly, to the edification
of all with whom he converses.
And an evil man — A man full of
corrupt affections and
dispositions; a man of an
earthly, sensual, and devilish
mind, out of the evil treasure —
The corrupt principles and
inclinations which are within
him, bringeth forth evil things
— Wicked words and actions, and
that naturally and readily: “and
even when he labours most
artfully to disguise himself and
his character, breaks out, like
you, in some unguarded moment,
into such language as betrays
the shame he would conceal.”
Verse 36-37
Matthew 12:36-37. But I say unto
you — You may perhaps think God
does not much regard your words,
but I assure you, that not only
for blasphemous and profane,
malicious, false, slanderous,
and reviling words, but for
every idle word which men shall
speak: for all light, vain,
trifling expressions; for all
useless, unprofitable
conversation, and all discourse
uttered without seriousness and
caution, and which does not
conduce to the glory of God and
the good of mankind; that men
shall speak — At any time, or on
any occasion, they shall give an
account in the day of judgment —
“I cannot think,” says Dr.
Doddridge, “that our Lord here
uses αργον, idle, merely to
signify mischievous. We are
certainly accountable for
useless as well as wicked
discourses, and they will be
taken into that last survey
which is to determine our
character and state: which they
whose life is one continued
scene of whim, or sneering
raillery, would do well
seriously to consider. And it
was to our Lord’s purpose to
observe it here, as it inferred,
by the strongest consequence,
the danger of such vile and
criminal discourses as those of
the Pharisees in this case. But
discourse tending to exhilarate
the spirits is not idle
discourse; as the time spent in
necessary recreation is not idle
time; nor does a wise and
gracious God expect from men the
life of angels. If any are
dissatisfied with the account of
things here given, I would beg
leave to ask them whether
unprofitable talk be not a
sinful wasting of time? and
whether that must not render a
man in some degree criminal
before God?” For by thy words —
That is, by the evidence of thy
words, as well as of thy tempers
and works, thou shall be
justified, &c. — Shalt be either
acquitted or condemned; since by
the tenor of these the
disposition of thy heart is
shown, and thy true character
discovered. Therefore these
shall be produced in evidence
for or against thee at the great
day, and by this evidence thou
shalt then stand or fall.
Verses 38-40
Matthew 12:38-40. Then certain
of the scribes, &c. — Now
present, upon hearing how
plainly Christ admonished, and
how severely he rebuked them,
answered — Probably with a view
to divert the discourse to
another topic, We would see a
sign from thee — As if they had
said, Otherwise we will not
believe this doctrine. Thus they
insinuated that the ejection of
devils was but a trifling
miracle, which, for all he had
said to the contrary, might be
done by the help of devils, and
that no signs of that kind,
however numerous, should
convince them; for that they
would not believe unless he
would prove his mission by what
is here called a sign, and in
Luke 11:16, a sign from heaven,
meaning, probably, some such
celestial appearance as several
of the ancient prophets gave;
particularly Moses, Joshua,
Samuel, and Elijah. But he
answered, An evil and adulterous
generation — A spurious breed,
which has degenerated from the
faith and piety of their great
progenitor, Abraham; or, a
generation whose heart wanders
from God, though they profess
him to be their husband. Such
adulterers are all those who
love the world, and all who seek
the friendship of it. Seeketh a
sign — After all the signs they
have had already, which were
abundantly sufficient to have
convinced them, had not their
hearts been estranged from God,
and consequently averse to the
truth. And there shall no sign
be given to it, but [or, unless
it be] the sign of the Prophet
Jonas — Who was herein a type of
Christ. For as Jonas was three
days and three nights, &c. — It
was customary with the eastern
nations to reckon any part of a
natural day of twenty-four hours
for the whole day. Accordingly,
they used to say a thing was
done after three, or seven days,
&c., if it was done on the third
or seventh day from that last
mentioned. Instances of this may
be seen, 1 Kings 20:29; 2
Chronicles 10:5; 2 Chronicles
10:12, and in many other places.
And, as the Hebrews had no word
exactly answering to the Greek
νυχθημερον, to signify a natural
day of twenty- four hours, they
used night and day, or day and
night, for it. See also Esther
4:16; Esther 5:1; Genesis 7:4;
Genesis 7:12; Exodus 24:18;
Exodus 34:28. In the whale’s
belly — Or, in the belly of the
great fish that swallowed him.
See note on Jonah 1:17. So shall
the Son of man be — in the heart
of the earth — That is, in the
earth; for the expression does
not imply that he was to be
buried in the middle of the
earth, but in the earth simply.
Thus, in Ezekiel 28:2, Tyre is
said to be in the heart of the
sea, though it was so near the
continent, that, when Alexander
besieged it, he carried a
causeway from the land to the
city.
Verse 41
Matthew 12:41. The men of
Nineveh, &c. — “The Ninevites
being judged at the same time
with the men of that generation,
and their behaviour being
compared with theirs, should
make their guilt appear in its
true colour and condemn them.
For though they were idolaters,
they repented at the preaching
of Jonah, a stranger, a poor
person, one that continued among
them only three days, and
wrought no miracle to make them
believe him. But the men of that
generation, though worshippers
of the true God by profession,
could every day hear unmoved the
much more powerful preaching of
a prophet infinitely greater
than Jonah, even the preaching
of the eternal Son of God, who
confirmed his doctrine by the
most astonishing miracles.” —
Macknight. Of the reasons which
might induce the Ninevites to
repent, see note on Jonah 3:5-6.
Verse 42
Matthew 12:42. The queen of the
south, &c. — Of this queen, see
note on 1 Kings 10:1. She came
from the uttermost parts of the
earth — That part of Arabia from
which she came was the uttermost
part of the earth that way,
being bounded by the sea. A
greater than Solomon is here —
“Our Lord speaks of himself in
this sublime language with the
utmost reason, and with perfect
modesty and decorum. The humble
form of his appearance, and his
necessary reserve in declaring
himself the Messiah in so many
words, made it yet more
expedient, that by such phrases
as these he should sometimes
intimate it: and indeed his
saying he was greater than
Solomon, that most illustrious
of all the descendants of David,
was as plain an intimation as
could well be given.” —
Doddridge.
Verses 43-45
Matthew 12:43-45. When the
unclean spirit, &c. — In these
verses, with a view to show how
dreadful the state of the Jewish
people would be, if they
continued to reject him and his
gospel, our Lord introduces a
parable, borrowed from the late
subject of his dispute with the
Pharisees. He compares their
condition to that of a man, who,
after having had an evil spirit
expelled out of him, is again,
through God’s permission, as a
punishment of his continuing in
sin, taken possession of by that
spirit, with seven others still
more wicked, and is thereby
brought into a worse condition
than ever. The parable evidently
supposes the existence of
demoniacal possessions, for if
there had been no reality in
them, the comparison would have
meant nothing; and it supposes,
also, that the Pharisees allowed
their existence, otherwise our
Lord’s words, instead of
convincing or instructing them,
must have been treated by them
with contempt. When the unclean
spirit is gone out of a man —
Not of his own accord, or
willingly, but compelled by one
that is stronger than he; he
walketh — Wanders up and down,
through dry places — Barren,
dreary, desolate; or places not
yet watered with the gospel. The
words contain a plain allusion
to the common notion, that evil
demons had their haunts in
deserts and desolate places.
Compare Isaiah 13:21; where,
instead of satyrs, the LXX. read
δαιμονια, demons. See also
Revelation 18:2. Seeking rest —
To his own malignant nature, in
observing barren wastes and
desolations, rather than such
agreeable scenes as might
present to his view the
memorials of God’s goodness to
the human race: and findeth none
— How should he find any, while
he carries with him his own
hell? And is it not the case of
his children, too? Reader, is it
thy case? Then he saith, I will
return into my house — He
resolves to make another attack
on the person out of whom he had
been expelled: whence I came out
— He speaks as if he had come
out of his own accord: see his
pride! And when he is come, he
findeth it empty — Of truth and
grace; of wisdom and piety; of
God, and Christ, and the Holy
Spirit: swept and garnished —
That is, prepared to receive
him: swept, from love,
lowliness, meekness, and all the
fruits of the Spirit, and
adorned with levity and folly,
vanity and sin. In other words,
he finds the miserable sinner
unaffected with his late
affliction and deliverance, and
still a slave to those vices
which render him an agreeable
dwelling for Satan. Then goeth
he and taketh seven other
spirits — That is, a great many,
the number seven denoting
perfection, whether of good or
bad things; more wicked than
himself — Whence it appears that
there are degrees of wickedness
among the devils themselves. And
they enter in, finding easy
access, and dwell there —
Namely, for ever, in him that is
forsaken of God. And the last
state, &c., is worse than the
first — The devils having taken
a sevenfold stronger possession
of him than they had before. So
shall it be also unto this
wicked generation — Who resist
the convictions which my
doctrine and miracles have
raised in them. Instead of
growing wiser and better, they
will become seven times more
foolish, sinful, and miserable,
“as both the natural and
judicial consequence of their
rejecting the methods used by
divine grace for their recovery;
till, as if they were possessed
by a multitude of devils, they
are madly hurried on to their
irrecoverable ruin in this world
and the next. They who have read
the sad account, given by
Josephus, of the temper and
conduct of the Jews after the
ascension of Christ, and just
before their final destruction
by the Romans, must acknowledge
that no emblem could have been
more proper to describe them.
Their characters were the vilest
that can be conceived, and they
pressed on to their own ruin, as
if they had been possessed by
legions of devils, and wrought
up to the last degrees of
madness.” — Doddridge. But this
parable is also designed to
teach men, in every age, the
danger and awful consequences of
resisting the convictions
produced in their minds by the
truth and grace of God; or of
grieving, quenching, and doing
despite to the Holy Ghost, by
breaking through their
resolutions, and relapsing into
their former sins; the effect
being commonly to render them
more obdurate and abandoned than
before.
Verses 46-50
Matthew 12:46-50. While he yet
talked with the people — While
he was uttering these solemn
truths, and giving these awful
warnings, in the audience of the
vast multitudes that were
gathered around him: behold, his
mother and his brethren — Or
near kinsmen, (namely, the sons
of Mary the wife of Cleopas, or
Alpheus, his mother’s sister,)
stood without, not being able to
come near him because of the
multitude that sat about him:
But he said, Who is my mother?
&c. — We must not suppose that
our Lord meant to put any slight
on them, especially on his
mother. He only took this
opportunity of expressing his
affection to his obedient
disciples in a peculiarly
endearing manner; which could
not but be a great comfort to
them, and a rich equivalent for
all the fatigue and expense
which their zeal for him and his
heavenly doctrine occasioned.
Stretching forth his hand toward
his disciples, he said, Behold
my mother, &c. — “This short
speech, related by the
evangelists with great
simplicity, is, without their
seeming to have designed it, one
of the finest encomiums
imaginable. Could the most
elaborate panegyric have done
Jesus Christ and his religion
half the honour which this
divine sentiment hath done them?
Whosoever shall do the will of
my Father, &c., the same is my
brother, and sister, and mother!
— A saying, this, which will
never be forgotten while there
are memories in the world to
retain it, or tongues to repeat
it.” As if he had said, “I
regard obedience to God so
highly, that I prefer the
relation it constitutes, and the
union it begets, to the
strongest ties of blood. They
who do the will of my Father,
have a much greater share of my
esteem than my kinsmen, as such.
I love them with an affection
tender and steady, like that
which subsists between the
nearest relations; nay, I reckon
them, and them only, my
brethren, my sisters, and my
mother. A high commendation
this, and not a reflection upon
our Lord’s mother, who, without
doubt, was among the chief of
those who did the will of God.
What veneration should live in
the hearts of men for Jesus and
his religion, which exhibits
such perfection in goodness!” —
Macknight. |