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The Gospel According To
St Matthew
See Explanatory


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Chapter Two




Matthew 2:1-12; KJB

1     Listen to this chapter     Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judaea in the days of (4) Herod the (b1)king ( 1a ), behold, there came wise men from the east to Jerusalem,
2     Saying, Where is he that is born (1) King ( 2a ) of the Jews? for we have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him.
3     When Herod the king had heard these things, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him.
4     And when he had gathered all the chief priests and (2)scribes ( 3a ) of the people together, he demanded of them where Christ should be born.
5     And they said unto him, In Bethlehem of Judaea: for thus it is written by the prophet ,
6    And thou Bethlehem, in the land of Juda, art not the least among the princes of Juda: for out of thee shall come a Governor, that shall rule, my people Israel.
7     Then Herod*Note, when he had privily called the wise men, enquired of them diligently what time the star appeared.
8     And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said, Go and search diligently for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring me word again, that I may come and worship him also.
9     When they had heard the king, they departed; and, lo, the star, which they saw in the east, went before them, till it came and stood over where the young child was.
10    When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy.
11    And when they were come into the house, they saw the young child with Mary his mother, and fell down, and worshipped him: and when they had opened their treasures, they presented unto him gifts; gold, and frankincense and myrrh.
12     And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to Herod, they departed into their own country another way.




Matthew 2:13-15; KJB

13     And when they were departed, behold, the angel of the Lord appeareth to Joseph in a dream, saying, Arise, and take the young child and his mother, and flee into Egypt, and be thou there until I bring thee word: for Herod will seek the young child to destroy him.
14     When he arose, he took the young child and his mother by night, and departed into Egypt:
15     And was there until the death of Herod: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying, Out of Egypt ( 4a ) have I called my son.




Matthew 2:16-18; KJB

16     Then Herod, when he saw that he was mocked of the wise men, was exceeding wroth, and sent forth, and slew all the children that were in Bethlehem, and in all the coasts thereof, from two years old and under, according to the time which he had diligently inquired of the wise men.
17     Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the prophet, saying,
18     In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not.




Matthew 2:19-23; KJB

19     But when Herod was dead, behold, an (1) angel ( 5a ) of the Lord appeareth in a dream to Joseph in Egypt,
20     Saying, Arise, and take the young child and his mother, and go into the land of Israel: for they are dead which sought the young child's life.
21     And he arose, and took the young child and his mother, and came into the land of Israel.
22     But when he heard that (H1) Archelaus ( 6a ) did reign in Judaea* in the room of his father Herod, he was afraid to go thither: notwithstanding, being warned of God in a dream, he turned aside into the parts of Galilee:
23     And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets, He shall be called ( 7a ) a Nazarene*3.




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The Gospel According To
St Matthew


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Scofield Referenced Notes






Scofield References


 Key




2:1  Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judaea in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came wise men from the east to Jerusalem,

4 Herod the king

Called Herod the Great, son of Antipater, an Idumean Genesis 36:1 (See Scofield "Genesis 36:1") and Cypros, an Arabian woman. Antipater was appointed procurator of Judea by Julius Caesar, B.C. 47. At the age of fifteen Herod was appointed to the government of Galilee. B.C. 40 the Roman senate made him king of Judea. An able, strong, and cruel man, he increased greatly the splendour of Jerusalem, erecting the temple which was the centre of Jewish worship in the time of our Lord.





2:2  Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? for we have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him.

King

"The King" is one of the divine titles Psalms 10:16 and so used in the worship of the Church 1 Timothy 1:17 but Christ is never called "King of the Church." He is "King of the Jews" Matthew 2:2 and Lord and "Head of the Church" Ephesians 1:22,23 (See Scofield "Matthew 16:18") See Scofield "Hebrews 12:23" ; Matthew 16:18; Hebrews 12:23





2:4  And when he had gathered all the chief priests and scribes of the people together, he demanded of them where Christ should be born.

Scribes

(Greek - apollumi [a)po/llumi] ," = "writer)." Heb. "spherim," "to write," "set in order," "count." The scribes were so called because it was their office to make copies of the Scriptures; to classify and teach the precepts of oral law (See Scofield "Matthew 3:7") and to keep careful count of every letter in the O.T. writings. Such an office was necessary in a religion of law and precept, and was an O.T. function 2 Samuel 8:17; 20:25; 1 Kings 4:3; Jeremiah 8:8; 36:10,12,26. To this legitimate work the scribes added a record of rabbinical decisions on questions of ritual (Halachoth); the new code resulting from those decisions (Mishna); the Hebrew sacred legends (Gemara, forming with the Mishna the Talmud); commentaries on the O.T. (Midrashim); reasonings upon these (Hagada); and finally, mystical interpretations which found in Scripture meanings other than the grammatical, lexical, and obvious ones (the Kabbala); not unlike the allegorical method of Origen, or the modern Protestant "spiritualizing" interpretation. In our Lord's time, to receive this mass of writing superposed upon the Scriptures was to be orthodox; to return to the Scriptures themselves was heterodoxy--our Lord's most serious offence.





2:15  And was there until the death of Herod: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying, Out of Egypt have I called my son.

Out of Egypt

The words quoted are in Hosea 11:1 and the passage illustrates the truth that prophetic utterances often have a latent and deeper meaning than at first appears. Israel, nationally, was a "Song of Solomon 1:1" Exodus 4:22 but Christ was the greater "Song of Solomon 1:1" ; Romans 9:4,5; Isaiah 41:8; 42:1-4; 52:13,14 where the servant-nation and the Servant-Son are both in view.





2:19  But when Herod was dead, behold, an angel of the Lord appeareth in a dream to Joseph in Egypt,

angel

(See Scofield "Hebrews 1:4")





2:22  But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judaea in the room of his father Herod, he was afraid to go thither: notwithstanding, being warned of God in a dream, he turned aside into the parts of Galilee:

Archelaus

Son of Herod the Great, Matthew 2:1 and Malthace, a Samaritan woman. Deposed A.D. 6.





2:23  And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets, He shall be called a Nazarene.

He shall be called

Probably referring to Isaiah 11:1 where Christ is spoken of as "a netzer (or, 'rod') out of the stem of Jesse."






  • Uzziah, Also called Azariah, 2 Chr. 22:6




  • Zerubbabel




  • Mary ~ See footnote #1, six Marys . . .




  • of whom was born Jesus, who is called Christ.




  • Footnote #3: Christ = Greek - Christos Anointed




    Christ First Advent read Matthew 2:1-6; Genesis 3:15; Acts 1:9




    Holy Spirit (N.T.) Mat 1:18-20; Mat. 3:11-16; Mat 1:18; Acts 2:4).








    NOTE: See Romans 1:16




    See: Romans 3:23 Note




    Literally "the virgin"




    Gospel




    Literally "by the Lord through the prophet"




    The Greek form of the Hebrew, Jehoshua, meaning Savior.




    Matthew closes with a promise, Lo, I Am with you alway Emmanuel
    .




    See note: Hebrews 1:4 - angel note




    * Herod
    See Matthew Outline Detail on Herod

    Verse 7




    See Note 1 ~ King: a. Kingdom in the New Testament see Matthew 2:6; Luke 1:31-33; 1 Cor 12:24




    Scribes, grammateis




    Lit. the Christ




    Christ First Advent ~ Matthew 4:15-16; Genesis 3:15; Acts 1:9




    Kingdom (N.T.)




    Read: Matthew 4:15-16">4:15-16; Luke 1:31-33; 1 Cor 15:28




    Lit. by the Lord through the prophet




    "Out of Egypt have I called my Son" Read: See Note 3




    Slew all the children* See children




    *See Numbers 8:17




    *1 I find it more than interesting that there are three times in recorded history when children were and are now targeted for death. 1st when Moses was born, 2nd when Jesus was born, and 3rd, today when it is of no great significance in society to kill the unborn and partial born.
    Return to verse 16





  • * 2
    Son of Herod the Great: (See Matthew 2:1) and Malthance, a Samaritan woman Deposed A.D. 6.

    Return to verse 22




    * Likely this is a reference to Isaiah 11:1, where Christ is spoken of as "a netzer (or, 'rod) out of the stem of Jesse."




    Isaiah Chapter 11 is thought to be a prophetic prediction or image of the future kingdom. This is the kingdom announced by John The Baptist as being "at hand." It was, as we now know, rejected, but as we today are anticipating, the Son of David shall return in glory. (See Luke 1:31-32 and Acts 15:15-16).

    Return to verse 23




    A personal note: Shortly after your entrance into this Study of the Bible you'll notice I am stuck on the Authorized version, what I call the KJB, or King James Bible. You may snicker at this. However, I would ask you to read November 15th, 2004 Guidelines. One of my reasons for staying with the Old KJB is that in my youth so much of it was committed to memory. Reading anything else, much less the study of, is like one that enjoys Shakspere but would rather hear a drunk read it in today's english. Please read the Guidelines article and see if you don't agree that there are times we may find ourselves a more complete understanding of God's Word by sticking to the Old!

    Read this article: URL http://www.craigpages3.100megsfree5.com/news1.html#Good








     Key




    Copyright Statement
    These files are considered public domain and are a derivative of an electronic edition that is available in the Online Bible Software Library.

    Bibliography Information
    Scofield, C. I. "Scofield Reference Notes on Matthew 1". "Scofield Reference Notes (1917 Edition)". <http://www.studylight.org/com/srn/view.cgi?book=mt&chapter=001>. 1917.  






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    Exposition Of St. Matthew



    CHAPTER 2



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    VISIT OF THE MAGI TO JERUSALEM AND BETHLEHEM.
    Matthew 2:1-12.


    ~Exposition by Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown~
    The Wise Men Reach Jerusalem The Sanhedrim, on Herod's Demand, Pronounce Bethlehem to Be Messiah's Predicted Birthplace
    (Matthew 2:1-6).

      JFB Top  AC
    Verse 1. Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea so called to distinguish it from another Bethlehem in the tribe of Zebulun, near the Sea of Galilee (Joshua 19:15); called also Beth-lehem-judah, as being in that tribe (Judges 17:7); and Ephrath (Genesis 35:16); and combining both, Beth-lehem Ephratah (Micah 5:2). It lay about six miles southwest of Jerusalem. But how came Joseph and Mary to remove thither from Nazareth, the place of their residence? Not of their own accord, and certainly not with the view of fulfilling the prophecy regarding Messiah's birthplace; nay, they stayed at Nazareth till it was almost too late for Mary to travel with safety; nor would they have stirred from it at all, had not an order which left them no choice forced them to the appointed place. A high hand was in all these movements. (See on Luke 2:1-6).
    in the days of Herod the king styled the Great; son of Antipater, an Edomite, made king by the Romans. Thus was "the sceptre departing from Judah" (Genesis 49:10), a sign that Messiah was now at hand. As Herod is known to have died in the year of Rome 750, in the fourth year before the commencement of our Christian era, the birth of Christ must be dated four years before the date usually assigned to it, even if He was born within the year of Herod's death, as it is next to certain that He was.
    there came wise men literally, "Magi" or "Magians," probably of the learned class who cultivated astrology and kindred sciences. Balaam's prophecy (Numbers 24:17), and perhaps Daniel's (Daniel 9:24.), might have come down to them by tradition; but nothing definite is known of them.
    from the east but whether from Arabia, Persia, or Mesopotamia is uncertain.
    to Jerusalem as the Jewish metropolis.

      JFB Top  AC
    Verse 2. Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? From this it would seem they were not themselves Jews. (Compare the language of the Roman governor, John 18:33, and of the Roman soldiers, Matthew 27:29, with the very different language of the Jews themselves, Matthew 27:42.). The Roman historians, SUETONIUS and TACITUS, bear witness to an expectation, prevalent in the East, that out of Judea should arise a sovereign of the world.
    for we have seen his star in the east Much has been written on the subject of this star; but from all that is here said it is perhaps safest to regard it as simply a luminous meteor, which appeared under special laws and for a special purpose.
    and are come to worship him to do Him homage, as the word signifies; the nature of that homage depending on the circumstances of the case. That not civil but religious homage is meant here is plain from the whole strain of the narrative, and particularly Matthew 2:11. Doubtless these simple strangers expected all Jerusalem to be full of its new-born King, and the time, place, and circumstances of His birth to be familiar to every one. Little would they think that the first announcement of His birth would come from themselves, and still less could they anticipate the startling, instead of transporting, effect which it would produce else they would probably have sought their information regarding His birthplace in some other quarter. But God overruled it to draw forth a noble testimony to the predicted birthplace of Messiah from the highest ecclesiastical authority in the nation.

      JFB Top  AC
    3. When Herod the king had heard these things, he was troubled viewing this as a danger to his own throne: perhaps his guilty conscience also suggested other grounds of fear.
    and all Jerusalem with him from a dread of revolutionary commotions, and perhaps also of Herod's rage.

      JFB Top  AC
    Verse 4. And when he had gathered all the chief priests and scribes of the people together The class of the "chief priests" included the high priest for the time being, together with all who had previously filled this office; for though the then head of the Aaronic family was the only rightful high priest, the Romans removed them at pleasure, to make way for creatures of their own. In this class probably were included also the heads of the four and twenty courses of the priests. The "scribes" were at first merely transcribers of the law and synagogue readers; afterwards interpreters of the law, both civil and religious, and so both lawyers and divines. The first of these classes, a proportion of the second, and "the elders" that is, as LIGHTFOOT thinks, "those elders of the laity that were not of the Levitical tribe" constituted the supreme council of the nation, called the Sanhedrim, the members of which, at their full complement, numbered seventy-two. That this was the council which Herod now convened is most probable, from the solemnity of the occasion; for though the elders are not mentioned, we find a similar omission where all three were certainly meant (compare Matthew 26:59; 27:1). As MEYER says, it was all the theologians of the nation whom Herod convened, because it was a theological response that he wanted.
    he demanded of them as the authorized interpreters of Scripture.
    where Christ the Messiah.
    should be born according to prophecy.

      JFB Top  AC
    5. And they said unto him, In Bethlehem of Judea a prompt and involuntary testimony from the highest tribunal; which yet at length condemned Him to die.
    for thus it is written by the prophet (Micah 5:2).

      JFB Top  AC
    6. And thou, Bethlehem, in the land of Juda the "in" being familiarly left out, as we say, "London, Middlesex."
    art not the least among the princes of Judah: for out of thee shall come a Governor. This quotation, though differing verbally, agrees substantially with the Hebrew and the Septuagint. For says the prophet, "Though thou be little, yet out of thee shall come the Ruler" this honor more than compensating for its natural insignificance; while our Evangelist, by a lively turn, makes him say, "Thou art not the least: for out of thee shall come a Governor" this distinction lifting it from the lowest to the highest rank. The "thousands of Juda," in the prophet, mean the subordinate divisions of the tribe: our Evangelist, instead of these, merely names the "princes" or heads of these families, including the districts which they occupied.
    that shall rule or "feed," as in the Margin.
    my people Israel In the Old Testament, kings are, by a beautiful figure, styled "shepherds" (Ezekiel 34:1-10.). The classical writers use the same figure. The pastoral rule of Jehovah and Messiah over His people is a representation pervading all Scripture, and rich in import. (See Psalms 23:1-6; Isaiah 40:11; Ezekiel 37:24; John 10:11; Revelation 7:17). That this prophecy of Micah referred to the Messiah, was admitted by the ancient Rabbins.

    7-12

    The Wise Men Despatched to Bethlehem by Herod to See the Babe, and Bring Him Word, Make a Religious Offering to the Infant King, but Divinely Warned, Return Home by Another Way
    (Matthew 2:7-12).

      JFB Top  AC
    7. Then Herod, when he had privily called the wise men Herod has so far succeeded in his murderous design: he has tracked the spot where lies his victim, an unconscious babe. But he has another point to fix the date of His birth without which he might still miss his mark. The one he had got from the Sanhedrim; the other he will have from the sages; but secretly, lest his object should be suspected and defeated. So he
    inquired of them diligently rather, "precisely."
    what time the star appeared presuming that this would be the best clue to the age of the child. The unsuspecting strangers tell him all. And now he thinks he is succeeding to a wish, and shall speedily clutch his victim; for at so early an age as they indicate, He would not likely have been removed from the place of His birth. Yet he is wary. He sends them as messengers from himself, and bids them come to him, that he may follow their pious example.

      JFB Top  AC
    8. And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said, Go and search diligently "Search out carefully."
    for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring me word again, that I may come and worship him also The cunning and bloody hypocrite! Yet this royal mandate would meantime serve as a safe conduct to the strangers.

      JFB Top  AC
    9. When they had heard the king, they departed But where were ye, O Jewish ecclesiastics, ye chief priests and scribes of the people? Ye could tell Herod where Christ should be born, and could hear of these strangers from the far East that the Desire of all nations had actually come; but I do not see you trooping to Bethlehem I find these devout strangers journeying thither all alone. Yet God ordered this too, lest the news should be blabbed, and reach the tyrant's ears, before the Babe could be placed beyond his reach. Thus are the very errors and crimes and cold indifferences of men all overruled.
    and, lo, the star, which they saw in the east implying apparently that it had disappeared in the interval.
    went before them, and stood over where the young child was Surely this could hardly be but by a luminous meteor, and not very high.

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    10. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy The language is very strong, expressing exuberant transport.

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    11. And when they were come into the house not the stable; for as soon as Bethlehem was emptied of its strangers, they would have no difficulty in finding a dwelling-house.
    they saw The received text has "found"; but here our translators rightly depart from it, for it has no authority.
    the young child with Mary his mother The blessed Babe is naturally mentioned first, then the mother; but Joseph, though doubtless present, is not noticed, as being but the head of the house.
    and fell down and worshipped him Clearly this was no civil homage to a petty Jewish king, whom these star-guided strangers came so far, and inquired so eagerly, and rejoiced with such exceeding joy, to pay, but a lofty spiritual homage. The next clause confirms this.
    and when they had opened their treasures they presented rather, "offered."
    unto him gifts This expression, used frequently in the Old Testament of the oblations presented to God, is in the New Testament employed seven times, and always in a religious sense of offerings to God. Beyond doubt, therefore, we are to understand the presentation of these gifts by the Magi as a religious offering.
    gold, frankincense, and myrrh Visits were seldom paid to sovereigns without a present (1 Kings 10:2.; compare Psalms 72:10, 11, 15; Isaiah 60:3, 6). "Frankincense" was an aromatic used in sacrificial offerings; "myrrh" was used in perfuming ointments. These, with the "gold" which they presented, seem to show that the offerers were persons in affluent circumstances. That the gold was presented to the infant King in token of His royalty; the frankincense in token of His divinity, and the myrrh, of His sufferings; or that they were designed to express His divine and human natures; or that the prophetical, priestly, and kingly offices of Christ are to be seen in these gifts; or that they were the offerings of three individuals respectively, each of them kings, the very names of whom tradition has handed down all these are, at the best, precarious suppositions. But that the feelings of these devout givers are to be seen in the richness of their gifts, and that the gold, at least, would be highly serviceable to the parents of the blessed Babe in their unexpected journey to Egypt and stay there that much at least admits of no dispute.

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    12. And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to Herod, they departed or, "withdrew."
    to their own country another way What a surprise would this vision be to the sages, just as they were preparing to carry the glad news of what they had seen to the pious king! But the Lord knew the bloody old tyrant better than to let him see their face again.

    THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT
    THE MASSACRE AT BETHLEHEM
    THE RETURN OF JOSEPH AND MARY WITH THE BABE,
    AFTER HEROD'S DEATH,
    AND THEIR SETTLEMENT AT NAZARETH.

    Matthew 2:13-23.

    The Flight into Egypt
    (Matthew 2:13-15; Luke 2:39).

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    13. And when they were departed, behold, the angel of the Lord appeareth to Joseph in a dream, saying, Arise, and take the young child and his mother Observe this form of expression, repeated in Matthew 2:14 another indirect hint that Joseph was no more than the Child's guardian. Indeed, personally considered, Joseph has no spiritual significance, and very little place at all, in the Gospel history.
    and flee into Egypt which, being near, as ALFORD says, and a Roman province independent of Herod, and much inhabited by Jews, was an easy and convenient refuge. Ah! blessed Saviour, on what a checkered career hast Thou entered here below! At Thy birth there was no room for Thee in the inn; and now all Judea is too hot for Thee. How soon has the sword begun to pierce through the Virgin's soul (Luke 2:35)! How early does she taste the reception which this mysterious Child of hers is to meet with in the world! And whither is He sent? To "the house of bondage?" Well, it once was that. But Egypt was a house of refuge before it was a house of bondage, and now it has but returned to its first use.
    and be thou there until I bring thee word; for Herod will seek the young child to destroy him Herod's murderous purpose was formed before the Magi had reached Bethlehem.

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    14. When he arose, he took the young child and his mother by night, and departed into Egypt doubtless the same night.

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    15. And was there until the death of Herod which took place not very long after this of a horrible disease; the details of which will be found in JOSEPHUS [Antiquities, 17.6.1,5,7,8]. Out of Egypt have I called my son Our Evangelist here quotes directly from the Hebrew, warily departing from the Septuagint, which renders the words, "From Egypt have I recalled his children," meaning Israel's children. The prophet is reminding his people how dear Israel was to God in the days of his youth; how Moses was bidden to say to Pharaoh, "Thus saith the Lord, Israel is My son, My first-born; and I say unto thee, Let My son go, that he may serve Me; and if thou refuse to let him go, behold, I will slay thy son, even thy first-born" (Exodus 4:22,23); how, when Pharaoh refused, God having slain all his first-born, "called His own son out of Egypt," by a stroke of high-handed power and love. Viewing the words in this light, even if our Evangelist had not applied them to the recall from Egypt of God's own beloved, Only-begotten Son, the application would have been irresistibly made by all who have learnt to pierce beneath the surface to the deeper relations which Christ bears to His people, and both to God; and who are accustomed to trace the analogy of God's treatment of each respectively.

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    16. Then Herod, &c. As Deborah sang of the mother of Sisera: "She looked out at a window, and cried through the lattice, Why is his chariot so long in coming? why tarry the wheels of his chariots? Have they not sped?" so Herod wonders that his messengers, with pious zeal, are not hastening with the news that all is ready to receive him as a worshipper. What can be keeping them? Have they missed their way? Has any disaster befallen them? At length his patience is exhausted. He makes his inquiries and finds they are already far beyond his reach on their way home.
    when he saw that he was mocked was trifled with.
    of the wise men No, Herod, thou art not mocked of the wise men, but of a Higher than they. He that sitteth in the heavens doth laugh at thee; the Lord hath thee in derision. He disappointeth the devices of the crafty, so that their hands cannot perform their enterprise. He taketh the wise in their own craftiness, and the counsel of the froward is carried headlong (Psalm 2:4; Job 5:12,13). That blessed Babe shall die indeed, but not by thy hand. As He afterwards told that son of thine--as cunning and as unscrupulous as thyself--when the Pharisees warned Him to depart, for Herod would seek to kill Him--"Go ye, and tell that fox, Behold, I cast out devils, and I do cures to-day and to-morrow, and the third day I shall be perfected. Nevertheless I must walk to-day, and to-morrow, and the day following: for it cannot be that a prophet perish out of Jerusalem" (Luke 13:32,33). Bitter satire!
    was exceeding wroth To be made a fool of is what none like, and proud kings cannot stand. Herod burns with rage and is like a wild bull in a net. So he
    sent forth a band of hired murderers.
    and slew all the children male children.
    that were in Bethlehem, and in all the coasts thereof environs.
    from two years old and under, according to the time which he had diligently carefully.
    inquired of the wise men In this ferocious step Herod was like himself--as crafty as cruel. He takes a large sweep, not to miss his mark. He thinks this will surely embrace his victim. And so it had, if He had been there. But He is gone. Heaven and earth shall sooner pass away than thou shalt have that Babe into thy hands. Therefore, Herod, thou must be content to want Him: to fill up the cup of thy bitter mortifications, already full enough--until thou die not less of a broken heart than of a loathsome and excruciating disease. Why, ask skeptics and skeptical critics, is not this massacre, if it really occurred, recorded by JOSEPHUS, who is minute enough in detailing the cruelties of Herod? To this the answer is not difficult. If we consider how small a town Bethlehem was, it is not likely there would be many male children in it from two years old and under; and when we think of the number of fouler atrocities which JOSEPHUS has recorded of him, it is unreasonable to make anything of his silence on this.

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    17. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the prophet, saying (Jeremiah 31:15, from which the quotation differs but verbally).

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    18. In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not These words, as they stand in Jeremiah, undoubtedly relate to the Babylonish captivity. Rachel, the mother of Joseph and Benjamin, was buried in the neighborhood of Bethlehem (Genesis 35:19), where her sepulchre is still shown. She is figuratively represented as rising from the tomb and uttering a double lament for the loss of her children--first, by a bitter captivity, and now by a bloody death. And a foul deed it was. O ye mothers of Bethlehem! methinks I hear you asking why your innocent babes should be the ram caught in the thicket, while Isaac escapes. I cannot tell you, but one thing I know, that ye shall, some of you, live to see a day when that Babe of Bethlehem shall be Himself the Ram, caught in another sort of thicket, in order that your babes may escape a worse doom than they now endure. And if these babes of yours be now in glory, through the dear might of that blessed Babe, will they not deem it their honor that the tyrant's rage was exhausted upon themselves instead of their infant Lord?

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    19. But when Herod was dead Miserable Herod! Thou thoughtest thyself safe from a dreaded Rival; but it was He only that was safe from thee; and thou hast not long enjoyed even this fancied security. See on Matthew 2:15.
    behold, an angel of the Lord appeareth in a dream to Joseph in Egypt Our translators, somewhat capriciously, render the same expression "the angel of the Lord," Mattthew 1:20; 2:13; and "an angel of the Lord," as here. As the same angel appears to have been employed on all these high occasions--and most likely he to whom in Luke is given the name of "Gabriel," Luke 1:19,26 --perhaps it should in every instance except the first, be rendered "the angel."

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    20. Saying, Arise, and take the young child and his mother, and go into the land of Israel not to the land of Judea, for he was afterward expressly warned not to settle there, nor to Galilee, for he only went thither when he found it unsafe to settle in Judea but to "the land of Israel," in its most general sense; meaning the Holy Land at large--the particular province being not as yet indicated. So Joseph and the Virgin had, like Abraham, to "go out, not knowing whither they went," till they should receive further direction.
    for they are dead which sought the young child's life a common expression in most languages where only one is meant, who here is Herod. But the words are taken from the strikingly analogous case in Exodus 4:19, which probably suggested the plural here; and where the command is given to Moses to return to Egypt for the same reason that the greater than Moses was now ordered to be brought back from it--the death of him who sought his life. Herod died in the seventieth year of his age, and thirty-seventh of his reign.

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    21. And he arose, and took the young child and his mother, and came into the land of Israel intending, as is plain from what follows, to return to Bethlehem of Judea, there, no doubt, to rear the Infant King, as at His own royal city, until the time should come when they would expect Him to occupy Jerusalem, "the city of the Great King."

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    22. But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judea in the room of his father Herod Archelaus succeeded to Judea, Samaria, and Idumea; but Augustus refused him the title of king till it should be seen how he conducted himself; giving him only the title of ethnarch [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 17.11,4]. Above this, however, he never rose. The people, indeed, recognized him as his father's successor; and so it is here said that he "reigned in the room of his father Herod." But, after ten years' defiance of the Jewish law and cruel tyranny, the people lodged heavy complaints against him, and the emperor banished him to Vienne in Gaul, reducing Judea again to a Roman province. Then the "scepter" clean "departed from Judah."
    he was afraid to go thither and no wonder, for the reason just mentioned.
    notwithstanding or more simply, "but."
    being warned of God in a dream, he turned aside withdrew.
    into the parts of Galilee or the Galilean parts. The whole country west of the Jordan was at this time, as is well known, divided into three provinces--GALILEE being the northern, JUDEA the southern, and SAMARIA the central province. The province of Galilee was under the jurisdiction of Herod Antipas, the brother of Archelaus, his father having left him that and Perea, on the east side of the Jordan, as his share of the kingdom, with the title of tetrarch, which Augustus confirmed. Though crafty and licentious, according to JOSEPHUS--precisely what the Gospel history shows him to be (see on Mark 6:14-30; Luke 13:31-35)--he was of a less cruel disposition than Archelaus; and Nazareth being a good way off from the seat of government, and considerably secluded, it was safer to settle there.

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    23. And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth a small town in Lower Galilee, lying in the territory of the tribe of Zebulun, and about equally distant from the Mediterranean Sea on the west and the Sea of Galilee on the east. Note--If, from Luke 2:39, one would conclude that the parents of Jesus brought Him straight back to Nazareth after His presentation in the temple--as if there had been no visit of the Magi, no flight to Egypt, no stay there, and no purpose on returning to settle again at Bethlehem--one might, from our Evangelist's way of speaking here, equally conclude that the parents of our Lord had never been at Nazareth until now. Did we know exactly the sources from which the matter of each of the Gospels was drawn up, or the mode in which these were used, this apparent discrepancy would probably disappear at once. In neither case is there any inaccuracy. At the same time it is difficult, with these facts before us, to conceive that either of these two Evangelists wrote his Gospel with that of the other before him--though many think this a precarious inference.
    that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets, He shall be called a Nazarene better, perhaps, "Nazarene." The best explanation of the origin of this name appears to be that which traces it to the word netzer in Isaiah 11:1 --the small twig, sprout, or sucker, which the prophet there says, "shall come forth from the stem (or rather, 'stump') of Jesse, the branch which should fructify from his roots." The little town of Nazareth, mentioned neither in the Old Testament nor in JOSEPHUS, was probably so called from its insignificance: a weak twig in contrast to a stately tree; and a special contempt seemed to rest upon it--"Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" (John 1:46) --over and above the general contempt in which all Galilee was held, from the number of Gentiles that settled in the upper territories of it, and, in the estimation of the Jews, debased it. Thus, in the providential arrangement by which our Lord was brought up at the insignificant and opprobrious town called Nazareth, there was involved, first, a local humiliation; next, an allusion to Isaiah's prediction of His lowly, twig-like upspringing from the branchless, dried-up stump of Jesse; and yet further, a standing memorial of that humiliation which "the prophets," in a number of the most striking predictions, had attached to the Messiah.

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      Copyright Statement
      These files are a derivative of an electronic edition prepared from text scanned by Woodside Bible Fellowship.

      This expanded edition of the Jameison-Faussett-Brown Commentary is in the public domain and may be freely used and distributed.

      Bibliography Information
      Jamieson, Robert, D.D. "Commentary on Matthew 2". "Commentary Critical and Explanatory
      on the Whole Bible". <http://www.studylight.org/com/jfb/view.cgi?book=mt&chapter=002>. 1871.  




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      Clarke's Exposition



      MATTHEW 2

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      Chapter 2

      • Wise men come from the east to worship Christ, 1,2.

      • Herod, hearing of the birth of our Lord, is greatly troubled, 3;

      • and makes inquiry of the chief priests and scribes, where the Christ should be born, 4.

      • They inform him of the prophecy relative to Bethlehem, 5,6.

      • The wise men, going to Bethlehem, are desired by Herod to bring him word when they have found the child, pretending that he wished to do him homage, 7, 8.

      • The wise men are directed by a star to the place where the young child lay, adore him, and offer him gifts, 9-11.

      • Being warned of God not to return to Herod, they depart into their own country another way, 12.

      • Joseph and Mary are divinely warned to escape into Egypt, because Herod sought to destroy Jesus, 13,14.

      • They obey, and continue in Egypt till the death of Herod, 15.

      • Herod, finding that the wise men did not return, is enraged, and orders all the young children in Bethlehem, under two years of age, to be massacred, 16-18.

      • Herod dies, and Joseph is divinely warned to return to the land of Israel, 19-21.

      • Finding that Archelaus reigned in Judea in place of his father Herod, he goes to Galilee, and takes up his residence at Nazareth, 22,23.


      Notes on Chapter 2



        
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        AC Top  JFB
      Verse 1. Bethlehem of Judea
      This city is mentioned in Judges 17:7, and must be distinguished from another of the same name in the tribe of Zebulon, Joshua 19:15. It is likewise called Ephrath, Genesis 48:7, or Ephratah, Micah 5:2, and its inhabitants Ephrathites, ; Ruth 1:2; 1 Samuel 17:12. It is situated on the declivity of a hill, about six miles from Jerusalem. Beth-lechem, in Hebrew, signifies the house of bread. And the name may be considered as very properly applied to that place where Jesus, the Messiah, the true bread that came down from heaven, was manifested, to give life to the world. But lehem also signifies flesh, and is applied to that part of the sacrifice which was burnt upon the altar. See Leviticus 3:11-16;; 21:6. The word is also used to signify a carcass, Zephaniah 1:17. The Arabic version has [Arabic] Beet lehem, and the Persic {Persic} Beet allehem: but [Arabic] lehem, in Arabic, never signifies bread, but always means flesh. Hence it is more proper to consider the name as signifying the house of flesh, or, as some might suppose, the house of the incarnation, i.e. the place where God was manifested in the flesh for the salvation of a lost world.

      In the days of Herod the king
      This was HEROD, improperly denominated the GREAT, the son of Antipater, an Idumean: he reigned 37 years in Judea, reckoning from the-time he was created-king of that country by the Romans. Our blessed Lord was born in the last year of his reign; and, at this time, the sceptre had literally departed from Judah, a foreigner being now upon the throne.

      As there are several princes of this name mentioned in the New Testament, it may be well to give a list of them here, together with their genealogy.

      Herod, the Great, married ten wives, by whom he had several children, Euseb. l. i. c. 9. p. 27. The first was Doris, thought to be an Idumean, whom he married when but a private individual; by her he had Antipater, the eldest of all his sons, whom he caused to be executed five days before his own death.

      His second wife was Mariamne, daughter to Hircanus, the sole surviving person of the Asmonean, or Maccabean, race. Herod put her to death. She was the mother of Alexander and Aristobulus, whom Herod had executed at Sebastia, (Joseph. Antiq. l. xvi. c. 13.-De Bello, l. i. c. 17,) on an accusation of having entered into a conspiracy against him. Aristobulus left three children, whom I shall notice hereafter.

      His third wife was Mariamne, the daughter of Simon, a person of some note in Jerusalem, whom Herod made high priest, in order to obtain his daughter. She was the mother of Herod Philippus, or Herod Philip, and Salome. Herod or Philip married Herodias, mother to Salome, the famous dancer, who demanded the head of John the Baptist, Mark 6:22. Salome had been placed, in the will of Herod the Great, as second heir after Antipater; but her name was erased, when it was discovered that Mariamne, her mother, was an accomplice in the crimes of Antipater, son of Herod the Great. Joseph de Bello, lib. i. c. 18,19,20.

      His fourth wife was Malthake, a Samaritan, whose sons were Archelaus and Philip. The first enjoyed half his father's kingdom under the name of tetrarch, viz. Idumea, Judea, and Samaria: Joseph. Antiq. l. xvii. c. 11. He reigned nine years; but, being accused and arraigned before the Emperor Augustus, he was banished to Vienna, where he died: Joseph. Antiq. l. xvii. c. 15. This is the Archelaus mentioned in Matthew 2:22.

      His brother Philip married Salome, the famous dancer, the daughter of Herodias; he died without children, and she was afterwards married to Aristobulus.

      The fifth wife of Herod the Great was Cleopatra of Jerusalem. She was the mother of Herod surnamed Antipas, who married Herodias, the wife of his brother Philip, while he was still living. Being reproved for this act by John the Baptist, Matthew 14:3; ; Mark 6:17; ; Luke 3:19, and having imprisoned this holy man, he caused him to be beheaded, agreeable to the promise he had rashly made to the daughter of his wife Herodias, who had pleased him with her dancing. He attempted to seize the person of Jesus Christ, and to put him to death. It was to this prince that Pilate sent our Lord, Luke 13:31,32. He was banished to Lyons, and then to Spain, where both he and his wife Herodias died. Joseph. Antiq. l. xv. c. 14.-De Bello, l. ii. c. 8.

      The sixth wife of Herod the Great was Pallas, by whom he had Phasaelus: his history is no ways connected with the New Testament.

      The seventh was named Phoedra, the mother of Roxana, who married the son of Pheroras.

      The eighth was Elpida, mother of Salome, who married another son of Pheroras.

      With the names of two other wives of Herod we are not acquainted; but they are not connected with our history, any more than are Pallas, Phoedra, and Elpida, whose names I merely notice to avoid the accusation of inaccuracy.

      ARISTOBULUS, the son of Herod the Great by Mariamne, a descendant of the Asmoneans, left two sons and a daughter, viz. Agrippa, Herod, and Herodias, so famous for her incestuous marriage with Antipas, in the life-time of his brother Philip.

      AGRIPPA, otherwise named Herod, who was imprisoned by Tiberius for something he had inconsiderately said against him, was released from prison by Caligula, who made him king of Judea: Joseph. Antiq. l. xviii. c. 8. It was this prince who put St. James to death, and imprisoned Peter, as mentioned in xii. of Acts. He died at Caesarea, in the way mentioned in the Acts, as well as by Josephus, Antiq. l. xix. c. 7. He left a son named Agrippa, who is mentioned below.

      HEROD, the second son of Aristobulus, was king of Chalcis, and, after the death of his brother, obtained permission of the emperor to keep the ornaments belonging to the high priest, and to nominate whom he pleased to that office: Joseph. Antiq. l. xx. c. 1. He had a son named Aristobulus, to whom Nero gave Armenia the lesser, and who married Salome, the famous dancer, daughter to Herodias.

      AGRIPPA, son of Herod Agrippa, king of Judea, and grandson to Aristobulus and Mariamne; he was at first king of Chalcis, and afterwards tetrarch of Galilee, in the room of his uncle Philip: Joseph. Antiq. l. xx. c. 5. It was before him, his sister Berenice, and Felix, who had married Drusilla, Agrippa's second daughter, that St. Paul pleaded his cause, as mentioned Acts 26.

      HERODIAS, the daughter of Mariamne and Aristobulus, is the person of whom we have already spoken, who married successively the two brothers Philip and Antipas, her uncles, and who occasioned the death of John the Baptist. By her first husband she had Salome, the dancer, who was married to Philip, tetrarch of the Trachonitis, the son of Herod the Great. Salome having had no children by him, she was married to Aristobulus, her cousin-german, son of Herod, king of Chalcis, and brother to Agrippa and Herodias: she had by this husband several children.

      This is nearly all that is necessary to be known relative to the race of the Herods, in order to distinguish the particular persons of this family mentioned in the New Testament. See Basnage, Calmet, and Josephus.

      There came wise men from the east
      Or, Magi came from the eastern countries. "The Jews believed that there were prophets in the kingdom of Saba and Arabia, who were of the posterity of Abraham by Keturah; and that they taught in the name of God, what they had received in tradition from the mouth of Abraham."-WHITBY. That many Jews were mixed with this people there is little doubt; and that these eastern magi, or philosophers, astrologers, or whatever else they were, might have been originally of that class, there is room to believe. These, knowing the promise of the Messiah, were now, probably, like other believing Jews, waiting for the consolation of Israel. The Persic translator renders the Greek μαγοι by {Persic} mejooseean, which properly signifies a worshipper of fire; and from which we have our word magician. It is very probable that the ancient Persians, who were considered as worshippers of fire, only honoured it as the symbolical representation of the Deity; and, seeing this unusual appearance, might consider it as a sign that the God they worshipped was about to manifest himself among men. Therefore they say, We have seen his star-and are come to worship him; but it is most likely that the Greeks made their μαγοι magi, which we translate wise men, from the Persian {Persian} mogh, and {Persian} moghan, which the Kushuf ul Loghat, a very eminent Persian lexicon, explains by {Persian} atush perest, a worshipper of fire; which the Persians suppose all the inhabitants of Ur in Chaldea were, among whom the Prophet Abraham was brought up. The Mohammedans apply this title by way of derision to Christian monks in their associate capacity; and by a yet stronger catachresis, they apply it to a tavern, and the people that frequent it. Also, to ridicule in the most forcible manner the Christian priesthood, they call the tavern-keeper [Arabic], peeri Mughan, the priest, or chief of the idolaters. It is very probable that the persons mentioned by the evangelist were a sort of astrologers, probably of Jewish extraction, that they lived in Arabia-Felix, and, for the reasons above given, came to worship their new-born sovereign. It is worthy of remark, that the Anglo-saxon translates the word μαγοι by {Anglo-Saxon}, which signifies astrologers, from {Anglo-Saxon} a star or planet, and {Anglo-Saxon}, to know or understand.

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      Verse 2. We have seen his star
      Having discovered an unusual luminous appearance or meteor in the heavens, supposing these persons to have been Jews, and knowing the prophecies relative to the redemption of Israel, they probably considered this to be the star mentioned by Balaam, Numbers 24:17. See the note there.

      In the east
      (οιςCLICK HERE), , At its rise. ανατολη and δυσην are used in the New Testament for east and west.

      To worship him.
      Or, To do him homage; προσκυνησαιαυτω. The word προσκυνεω, which is compounded of προς, to, and κυων, a dog, signifies to crouch and fawn like a dog at his master's feet. It means, to prostrate oneself to another, according to the eastern custom, which is still in use. In this act, the person kneels, and puts his head between his knees, his forehead at the same time touching the ground. It was used to express both civil and religious reverence. In Hindostan, religious homage is paid by prostrating the body at full length, so that the two knees, the two hands, forehead, nose, and cheeks all touch the earth at the same time. This kind of homage is paid also to great men. AYEEN AKBERY, vol. iii. p. 227.

      As to what is here called a star, some make it a meteor, others a luminous appearance like an Aurora Borealis; others a comet! There is no doubt, the appearance was very striking: but it seems to have been a simple meteor provided for the occasion. See Clarke on Matthew 2:9.

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      Verse 3. When Herod-heard these things, he was troubled
      Herod's consternation was probably occasioned by the agreement of the account of the magi, with an opinion predominant throughout the east, and particularly in Judea, that some great personage would soon make his appearance, for the deliverance of Israel from their enemies; and would take upon himself universal empire.

      SUETONIUS and TACITUS, two Roman historians, mention this. Their words are very remarkable:-

      \@Percrebuerat Oriente toto, vetus et constans opinio, esse in fatis, ut eo tempore Judaea profecti rerum potirentur. Id de imperatare Romano, quantum eventu postea predictum patuit, Judaei ad se trahentes, rebellarunt\@. SUETON. VESP. "An ancient and settled persuasion prevailed throughout the east, that the fates had decreed some to proceed from Judea, who should attain universal empire. This persuasion, which the event proved to respect the Roman emperor, the Jews applied to themselves, and therefore rebelled."

      The words of Tacitus are nearly similar:-

      \@Pluribus persuasio inerat, antiquis sacerdotum literis contineri, eo ipso tempore fore, ut valesceret Oriens, profectique Judaea rerum potirentur. Quae ambages Vespasianum ac Titum praedixerant\@.

      "Many were persuaded, that it was contained in the ancient books of their priests, that at that very time the east should prevail: and that some should proceed from Judea and possess the dominion. It was Vespasian and Titus that these ambiguous prophecies predicted." Histor. v.

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      Verse 4. The chief priests
      Not only the high priest for the time being, called cohen ha-rosh, 2 Kings 25:18, and his deputy, called cohen mishneh, with those who had formerly borne the high priest's office; but also, the chiefs or heads of the twenty four sacerdotal families, which David distributed into so many courses, 1Ch 24. These latter are styled sarey ha-cohanim, chief of the priests, 2 Chronicles 36:14; Ezra 8:24; and roshey ha-cohanim, heads of the priests, Nehemiah 12:7. Josephus calls them by the same name as the writers of the New Testament. In his Life, sect. 8, he mentions MANY of the chief priests. The word is used in the singular in this last sense, for a chief of the priests, Acts 19:14.

      Scribes
      The word (οιςCLICK HERE), , in the Septuagint, is used for a political officer, whose business it was to assist kings and civil magistrates, and to keep an account in writing of public acts and occurrences. Such an officer is called in Hebrew seper hamelech, (οιςCLICK HERE), , the king's scribe, or secretary. See LXX. 2 Kings 12:10.

      The word is often used by the LXX. for a man of learning, especially for one skilled in the Mosaic law: and, in the same sense, it is used by the New Testament writers. γραμματευς is therefore to be understood as always implying a man of letters, or learning, capable of instructing the people. The derivation of the names proves this to be the genuine meaning of the word γραμμα: a letter, or character, in writing: or γραμματα, letters, learning, erudition, and especially that gained from books. The Hebrew or sopher, from saphar, to tell, count, cypher, signifies both a book, volume, roll, a notary, recorder, or historian; and always signifies a man of learning. We often term such a person a man of letters.

      The word is used Acts 19:35, for a civil magistrate at Ephesus, probably such a one as we would term recorder. It appears that Herod at this time gathered the whole Sanhedrin, in order to get the fullest information on a subject by which all his jealous fears had been alarmed.

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      Verse 5. In Bethlehem of Judea: for thus it is written by the prophet
      As there have been several confused notions among the Jews, relative not only to the Messiah, and his character, but also to the time of his birth, it may be necessary to add, to what has already been said on this subject, the following extracts from the Talmudists and Gemarists, quoted by LIGHTFOOT. At the close of a long dissertation on the year of our Lord's birth, (which he places in the 35th of the reign of Herod, not the last or 37th as above,) he says: "It will not be improper here to produce the Gemarists themselves openly confessing that the Messias had been born, a good while ago before their times. For so they write: After this the children of Israel shall be converted, and shall inquire after the Lord their God, and David their king: Hosea 3:5. Our rabbins say, That is King Messias, If he be among the living, his name is David, or if dead, David is his name. R. Tanchum said, Thus I prove it: He showeth mercy to David his Messiah. 18:50.) R. Joshua ben Levi saith, His name is tsemach, a Branch. 3:8.) R. Juban bar Arbu saith, His name is Menahem. (That is, (οιςCLICK HERE), , the Comforter.) 'And that which happened to a certain Jew, as he was ploughing, agreeth with this business. A certain Arabian travelling, and hearing the ox bellow, said to the Jew at plough, O Jew, loose thy oxen, and loose thy ploughs, for behold! The temple is laid waste. The ox belloweth the second time; the Arabian saith to him, O Jew, Jew, yoke thy oxen, and fit thy ploughs: For behold! King Messiah is born. But, saith the Jew, What is his name? Menahem, saith he (i.e. the Comforter.) And what is the name of his Father? Hezekiah, saith the Arabian. To whom the Jew, But whence is He? The other answered, From the palace of the king of Bethlehem Judah. Away he went, and sold his oxen and his ploughs, and became a seller of infants' swaddling clothes, going about from town to town. When he came to that city, (Bethlehem,) all the women bought of him, but the mother of Menahem bought nothing. He heard the voice of the women saying, O thou mother of Menahem, thou mother of Menahem, carry thy son the things that are here sold. But she replied, May the enemies of Israel be strangled, because on the day that he was born, the temple was laid waste. To whom he said, But we hoped, that as it was laid waste at his feet, so at his feet it would be built again. She saith, I have no money. To whom he replied, But why should this be prejudicial to him? Carry him what you buy here, and if you have no money today, after some days I will come back and receive it. After some days, he returned to that city, and saith to her, How does the little infant? And she said, From the time you saw me last, spirits and tempests came, and snatched him away out of my hands. R. Bon saith, What need have we to learn from an Arabian? Is it not plainly written, And Lebanon shall fall before the powerful one? 10:34.) And what follows after? A branch shall come out of the root of Jesse. 11:1.)

      "The Babylonian doctors yield us a confession not very unlike the former. R. Charinah saith: After four hundred years are passed from the destruction of the temple, if any one shall say to you, Take to thyself for one penny a field worth a thousand pence, do not take it. And again, After four thousand two hundred thirty and one years from the creation of the world, if any shall say to you, Take for a penny a field worth a thousand pence, take it not. The gloss is, For that is the time of redemption, and you shall be brought back to the holy mountain, to the inheritance of your fathers; why, therefore, should you misspend your penny?

      "You may fetch the reason of this calculation, if you have leisure, out of the tract Sanhedrin. The tradition of the school of Elias, the world is to last six thousand years, little after, Elias said to Rabh Judah, The world shall last not less than eighty-five jubilees: and in the last jubilee shall the Son of David come. He saith to him, Whether in the beginning of it, or in the end? He answered him, I know not. Whether is this whole time to be finished first, or not? He answered him, I know not. But Rabh Asher asserted, that he answered thus, Until then, expect him not, but from thence expect him. Hear your own countrymen, O Jew! How many centuries of years are passed by and gone from the eighty-fifth jubilee of the world, that is, the year MMMMCCL, and yet the Messias of your expectation is not yet come!

      "Daniel's weeks had so clearly defined the time of the true Messias, his coming, that the minds of the whole nation were raised into the expectation of him. Hence, it was doubted of the Baptist, whether he were not the Messias, Luke 3:15. Hence it was, that the Jews are gathered together from all countries unto Jerusalem, Acts 2:, expecting and coming to see, because at that time the term of revealing the Messias, that had been prefixed by Daniel, was come. Hence it was that there was so great a number of false Christs, Matthew 24:5, impostures hence, that now the time of that great expectation was at hand, and fulfilled: and in one word, They thought the kingdom of God should presently appear, Luke 19:11.

      "But when those times of expectation were past, nor did such a Messias appear as they expected, (for when they saw the true Messias, they would not see him,) they first broke out into various, and those wild, conjectures of the time; and at length, all those conjectures coming to nothing, all ended in this curse (the just cause of their eternal blindness) , May their soul be confounded who compute the times!" They were fully aware that the time foretold by the prophets must be long since fulfilled; and that their obstinacy must be confounded by their own history, and the chronology of their own Scriptures; and therefore they have pronounced an anathema on those who shall attempt to examine, by chronological computations, the prophecies that predict his coming. Who can conceive a state of wilful blindness or determined obstinacy superior to this!

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      Verse 6. And thou Bethlehem, in the land of Juda
      To distinguish it from Bethlehem, in the tribe of Zebulon. Joshua 19:15. See Clarke on Matthew 2:1.

      Art not the least
      In Micah 5:2, it is read, Though thou be little- tsair lehayoth, little to be. Houbigant, struck with the oddness of the construction of the Hebrew, by dividing the last word, and making a small change in two of the letters, makes the prophet agree with the evangelist, tsair lo hayita, thou art not the least. Several learned men are of opinion, that the copy from which St. Matthew quoted, had the text in this way. However, some MSS. of very good note, among which is the Codex Bezae, have (οιςCLICK HERE), , for ουδαμωςελαχιστηει, Art thou not the least? This reconciles the prophet and evangelist without farther trouble. See the authorities for this reading in Griesbach and Wetstein.

      Among the princes of Juda
      In Micah 5:2, it is, the thousands of Judah. There is much reason to believe that each tribe was divided into small portions called thousands, as in England certain small divisions of counties are called hundreds. For the proof of the first, the reader is referred to Judges 6:15, where, instead of my FAMILY is poor in Manasseh, the Hebrew is, my THOUSAND () is the meanest in Manasseh: and to 1 Samuel 10:19, Present yourselves before the Lord by your TRIBES and by your THOUSANDS: and to 1 Chronicles 12:20, Captains of the THOUSANDS of Manasseh. Now these THOUSANDS being petty governments, Matthew renders them by the word ηγεμοσις, because the word princes or governors was more intelligible in the Greek tongue than thousands, though, in this case, they both signify the same. See Wakefield.

      That shall rule my people Israel.
      οστιςποιμανει, Who shall FEED my people. That is as a shepherd feeds his flock. Among the Greeks, kings are called, by Homer, λαωνποιμενες, shepherds of the people. This appellation probably originated from the pastoral employment, which kings and patriarchs did not blush to exercise in the times of primitive simplicity; and it might particularly refer to the case of David, the great type of Christ, who was a keeper of his father's sheep, before he was raised to the throne of Israel. As the government of a good king was similar to the care a good shepherd has of his flock, hence ποιμην signified both shepherd and king; and ποιμαινω, to feed and to rule among the ancient Greeks.

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      Verse 8. That I may come and worship him also.
      See Matthew 2:2, and on Genesis 17:3, and ; Exodus 4:31. What exquisite hypocrisy was here! he only wished to find out the child that he might murder him; but see how that God who searches the heart prevents the designs of wicked men from being accomplished!

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      Verse 9. In the east
      Or, at its rise. See Clarke on Matthew 2:2.

      Stood over where the young child was.
      Super caput pueri, Over the head of the child, as the OPUS IMPERFECTUM, on this place, has it. See Griesbach's Var. Lect. So it appears to have been a simple luminous meteor in a star-like form, and at a very short distance from the ground, otherwise it could not have ascertained the place where the child lay. But the last quoted reading, from the Opus Imperfectum, justifies the opinion that the luminous appearance which had hitherto directed them now encompassed the head of the child; and probably this gave the first idea to the ancient painters, of representing Christ in the manger, with a glory surrounding his head. This glory, or nimbus, is usually given also to saints and eminent persons, especially in the Roman Church, by all Roman Catholic painters.

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      Verse 11. They presented unto him gifts
      The people of the east never approach the presence of kings and great personages, without a present in their hands. This custom is often noticed in the Old Testament, and still prevails in the east, and in some of the newly discovered South Sea Islands.

      Gold, and frankincense, and myrrh.
      Some will have these gifts to be emblematic of the Divinity, regal office, and manhood of Christ. "They offered him incense as their God; gold as their king; and myrrh, as united to a human body, subject to suffering and death." Aurum, thus, myrrham, regique, DEO, HOMINIQUE, dona ferunt. JUVENCUS. Rather, they offered him the things which were in most esteem among themselves; and which were productions of their own country. The gold was probably a very providential supply, as on it, it is likely, they subsisted while in Egypt.

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      Verse 13. Flee into Egypt
      Many Jews had settled in Egypt; not only those who had fled thither in the time of Jeremiah, see Jer. 48; but many others who had settled there also, on account of the temple which Onias IV. had built at Heliopolis. Those who could speak the Greek tongue enjoyed many advantages in that country: besides, they had the Greek version of the Septuagint, which had been translated nearly 300 years before this time. Egypt was now a Roman province, and the rage of Herod could not pursue the holy family to this place. There is an apocryphal work in Arabic, called the Gospel of the infancy, which pretends to relate all the acts of Jesus and Mary while in Egypt. I have taken the pains to read this through, and have found it to be a piece of gross superstition, having nothing to entitle it to a shadow of credibility.

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      Verse 15. Out of Egypt have I called my son.
      This is quoted from Hosea 11:1, where the deliverance of Israel, and that only, is referred to. But as that deliverance was extraordinary, it is very likely that it had passed into a proverb, so that "Out of Egypt have I called my son," might have been used to express any signal deliverance. I confess, I can see no other reference it can have to the case in hand, unless we suppose, which is possible, that God might have referred to this future bringing up of his son Jesus from Egypt, under the type of the past deliverance of Israel from the same land. Midrash Tehillin, on Psalms 2:7, has these remarkable words: I will publish a decree: this decree has been published in the Law, in the Prophets, and in the Hagiographia. In the Law, Israel is my first-born son: Exodus 4:22. In the Prophets, Behold, my servant shall deal prudently: Isaiah 52:13. In the Hagiographia, The Lord said unto my lord: Psalms 110:1. All these passages the Jews refer to the Messiah. See Schoetgen.

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      Verse 16. Slew all the children
      This cruelty of Herod seems alluded to in very decisive terms by Macrobius, who flourished toward the conclusion of the fourth Century. In his chapter De jocis Augusti in alios, et aliorum rursus in ipsum, he says, Cum audisset inter pueros, quos in Syria Herodes, rex Judeorum, intra bimatum jussit interfici, filium quoque ejus occisum, ait, Melius est Herodis PORCUM esse, quam FILIUM. "When he heard that among those male infants about two years old, which Herod, the king of the Jews, ordered to be slain in Syria, one of his sons was also murdered, he said: 'It is better to be Herod's HOG than his SON.'" Saturn. lib. ii. c. 4. The point of this saying consists in this, that Herod, professing Judaism, his religion forbade his killing swine, or having any thing to do with their flesh; therefore his hog would have been safe, where his son lost his life.

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      Verse 18. In Rama was there a voice heard
      These words, quoted from Jeremiah 31:15, were originally spoken concerning the captivity of the ten tribes; but are here elegantly applied to the murder of the innocents at Bethlehem. As if he had said, Bethlehem at this time resembled Rama; for as Rachel might be said to weep over her children, which were slaughtered or gone into captivity; so in Bethlehem, the mothers lamented bitterly their children, because they were slain. The word (οιςCLICK HERE), , lamentation is omitted by the Codd. Vatic. Cypr. one of Selden's MSS. the Syriac, Arabic, Persic, AEthiopic, all the Itala, (except that in the Cod. Bezae,) Vulgate, and Saxon, several of the fathers, and above all Jeremiah, Jeremiah 31:15, from which it is quoted. Griesbach leaves it in the text with a note of doubtfulness. This mourning may refer to cases far from uncommon in the east, where all the children have been massacred. The lamentations of a Hindoo mother for her child are loud and piercing; and it is almost impossible to conceive of a scene more truly heart-rending than that of a whole town of such mothers wailing over their massacred children. See WARD.

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      Verse 20. They are dead
      Both Herod and Antipater his son; though some think the plural is here used for the singular, and that the death of Herod alone is here intended. But as Herod's son Antipater was at this time heir apparent to the throne, and he had cleared his way to it by procuring the death of both his elder brothers, he is probably alluded to here, as doubtless he entered into his father's designs. THEY are dead-Antipater was put to death by his father's command, five days before this execrable tyrant went to his own place. See Josephus, Antiq. xvi. 11; xvii. 9.

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      Verse 22. When he heard that Archelaus did reign
      Herod, having put Antipater his eldest son to death, altered his will, and thus disposed of his dominions: he gave the tetrarchy of Galilee and Petrea to his son Antipas; the tetrarchy of Gaulonitis, Trachonitis, Batanea, and Paneadis, to his son Philip; and left the kingdom of Judea to his eldest remaining son, Archelaus. This son partook of the cruel and blood-thirsty disposition of his father: at one of the passovers, he caused three thousand of the people to be put to death in the temple and city. For his tyranny and cruelty, Augustus deprived him of the government, and banished him. His character considered, Joseph, with great propriety, forbore to settle under his jurisdiction.

      He turned aside into the parts of Galilee
      Here Antipas governed, who is allowed to have been of a comparatively mild disposition: and, being intent on building two cities, Julias and Tiberias, he endeavoured, by a mild carriage and promises of considerable immunities, to entice people from other provinces to come and settle in them. He was besides in a state of enmity with his brother Archelaus: this was a most favourable circumstance to the holy family; and though God did not permit them to go to any of the new cities, yet they dwelt in peace, safety, and comfort at Nazareth.

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      Verse 23. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets
      It is difficult to ascertain by what prophets this was spoken. The margin usually refers to Judges 13:5, where the angel, foretelling the birth of Samson, says, No razor shall come upon his head; for the child shall be a NAZARITE ( nezir) unto God from the womb. The second passage usually referred to is Isaiah 11:1: There shall come forth a rod from the stem of Jesse, and a BRANCH ( netser) shall grow out of his roots. That this refers to Christ, there is no doubt. Jeremiah, Jeremiah 23:5, is supposed to speak in the same language-I will raise unto David a righteous BRANCH: but here the word is tsemach, not netser; and it is the same in the parallel place, Zechariah 3:8;; 6:12; therefore, these two prophets cannot be referred to; but the passages in Judges and Isaiah may have been in the eye of the evangelist, as well as the whole institution relative to the Nazarite ( nezir) delivered at large, Num. 6:, where see the notes. As the Nazarite was the most pure and perfect institution under the law, it is possible that God intended to point out by it, not only the perfection of our Lord, but also the purity of his followers. And it is likely that, before St. Matthew wrote this Gospel, those afterwards called Christians bore the appellation of Nazarites, or Nazoreans, for so the Greek word, ναζωραιος, should be written. Leaving the spiritual reference out of the question, the Nazarene or Nazorean here may mean simply an inhabitant or person of Nazareth; as Galilean does a person or inhabitant of Galilee. The evangelist evidently designed to state, that neither the sojourning at Nazareth, nor our Lord being called a Nazarene, were fortuitous events, but were wisely determined and provided for in the providence of God; and therefore foretold by inspired men, or fore-represented by significant institutions.

      But how shall we account for the manner in which St. Matthew and others apply this, and various other circumstances, to the fulfilment of ancient traditions? This question has greatly agitated divines and critics for more than a century. Surenhusius, Hebrew professor at Amsterdam, and editor of a very splendid and useful edition of the Mishna, in six vols. fol. published an express treatise on this subject, in 1713, full of deep research and sound criticism. He remarks great difference in the mode of quoting used in the Sacred Writings: as, It hath been said-it is written-that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets-the Scripture says-see what is said-the Scripture foreseeing-he saith-is it not written?-the saying that is written, ten rules out of the Talmud and the rabbins, to explain and justify all the quotations made from the Old Testament in the New.

      • RULE I. Reading the words, not according to the regular vowel points, but to others substituted for them. He thinks this is done by Peter, Acts 3:22,23; by Stephen, Acts 7:42, and by Paul, 1 Corinthians 15:54; ; 2 Corinthians 8:15.

      • RULE II. Changing the letters, as done by St. Paul, Romans 9:33; 1 Corinthians 9:9, ; Hebrews 8:9., ; 10:5.

      • RULE III. Changing both letters and vowel points, as he supposes is done by St. Paul, Acts 13:40,41; ; 2 Corinthians 8:15.

      • RULE IV. Adding some letters, and retrenching others.

      • RULE V. Transposing words and letters.

      • RULE VI. Dividing one word into two.

      • RULE VII. Adding other words to make the sense more clear.

      • RULE VIII. Changing the original order of the words.

      • RULE IX. Changing the original order, and adding other words.

      • RULE X. Changing the original order, and adding and retrenching words, which he maintains is a method often used by St. Paul.

      Let it be observed, that although all these rules are used by the rabbins, yet, as far as they are employed by the sacred writers of the New Testament, they never, in any case, contradict what they quote from the Old, which cannot be said of the rabbins: they only explain what they quote, or accommodate the passage to the facts then in question. And who will venture to say that the Holy Spirit has not a right, in any subsequent period, to explain and illustrate his own meaning, by showing that it had a greater extension in the Divine mind than could have been then perceived by men? And has HE not a right to add to what he has formerly said, if it seem right in his own sight? Is not the whole of the New Testament, an addition to the Old, as the apostolic epistles are to the narrative of our Lord's life and acts, as given by the evangelists?

      Gusset, Wolf, Rosenmuller, and others, give four rules, according to which, the phrase, that it might be fulfilled, may be applied in the New Testament.

      • RULE I. When the thing predicted is literally accomplished.

      • RULE II. When that is done, of which the Scripture has spoken, not in a literal sense, but in a spiritual sense.

      • RULE III. When a thing is done neither in a literal nor spiritual sense, according to the fact referred to in the Scripture; but is similar to that fact.

      • RULE IV. When that which has been mentioned in the Old Testament as formerly done, is accomplished in a larger and more extensive sense in the New Testament.

      St. Matthew seems to quote according to all these rules; and it will be useful to the reader to keep them constantly in view. I may add here, that the writers of the New Testament seem often to differ from those of the Old, because they appear uniformly to quote from some copy of the Septuagint version; and most of their quotations agree verbally, and often even literally, with one or other of the copies of that version which subsist to the present day. Want of attention to the difference of copies, in the Septuagint version, has led some divines and critics into strange and even ridiculous mistakes, as they have taken that for THE SEPTUAGINT which existed in the printed copy before them; which sometimes happened not to be the most correct.

      ON the birth-place of our Lord, a pious and sensible man has made the following observations:-

      "At the first sight, it seems of little consequence to know the place of Christ's nativity; for we should consider him as our Redeemer, whatever the circumstances might be which attended his mortal life. But, seeing it has pleased God to announce, beforehand, the place where the Saviour of the world should be born, it became necessary that it should happen precisely in that place; and that this should be one of the characteristics whereby Jesus Christ should be known to be the true Messiah.

      "It is also a matter of small importance to us where we may live, provided we find genuine happiness. There is no place on earth, however poor and despicable, but may have better and more happy inhabitants than many of those are who dwell in the largest and most celebrated cities. Do we know a single place on the whole globe where the works of God do not appear under a thousand different forms, and where a person may not feel that blessed satisfaction which arises from a holy and Christian life? For an individual, that place is preferable to all others where he can get and do most good. For a number of people, that place is best where they can find the greatest number of wise and pious men. Every nation declines, in proportion as virtue and religion lose their influence on the minds of the inhabitants. The place where a young man first beheld the dawn and the beauty of renewed nature, and with most lively sensations of joy and gratitude adored his God, with all the veneration and love his heart was capable of; the place where a virtuous couple first met, and got acquainted; or where two friends gave each other the noblest proofs of their most tender affection; the village where one may have given, or seen, the most remarkable example of goodness, uprightness, and patience; such places, I say, must be dear to their hearts.

      "Bethlehem was, according to this rule, notwithstanding its smallness, a most venerable place; seeing that there so many pious people had their abode, and that acts of peculiar piety had often been performed in it. First, the patriarch Jacob stopped some time in it, to erect a monument to his well-beloved Rachel. It was at Bethlehem that honest Naomi, and her modest daughter-in-law, Ruth, gave such proofs of their faith and holiness; and in it Boaz, the generous benefactor, had his abode and his possessions. At Bethlehem the humble Jesse sojourned, the happy father of so many sons; the youngest of whom rose from the pastoral life to the throne of Israel. It was in this country that David formed the resolution of building a house for the Lord, and in which he showed himself the true shepherd and father of his subjects, when, at the sight of the destroying angel, whose sword spread consternation and death on all hands, he made intercession for his people. It was in Bethlehem that Zerubbabel the prince was born, this descendant of David, who was the type of that Ruler and Shepherd under whose empire Israel is one day to assemble, in order to enjoy uninterrupted happiness. Lastly, in this city the Son of God appeared; who, by his birth, laid the foundation of that salvation, which, as Redeemer, he was to purchase by his death for the whole world. Thus, in places which from their smallness are entitled to little notice, men sometimes spring, who become the benefactors of the human race. Often, an inconsiderable village has given birth to a man, who, by his wisdom, uprightness, and heroism, has been a blessing to whole kingdoms."

      Sturm's Reflections, translated by A. C. vol. iv.





       Key




      Copyright Statement
      The Adam Clarke Commentary is a derivative of an electronic edition prepared by GodRules.net.

      Bibliography Information
      Clarke, Adam. "Commentary on Matthew 2". "The Adam Clarke Commentary". <http://www.studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=mt&chapter=002>. 1832.  



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     Key

    CHAPTER TWO

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    The King Is Born: Matthew 2:1-23 *

    A. Time & Place Of His Birth: verse 1

      1. Place: Bethlehem of Judaea.

      2. Note: there were two cities called Bethlehem

      3. One was in Zebulun (See Joshua 19:15). Bethlehem [BETH-luh-hem; “house of bread”] A town of Zebulun, identified with modern Beit Lahm, 7 miles (11km) NW of Nazareth.

      4. Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judaea. Bethlehem (Judah) [BETH-luh-hem; “house of bread”] A Judean town about 6 miles (9km) SW of Jerusalem, notable as the birth place of Jesus.

       

                     In patriarchal times, it was known as Eplirath, and later became known as Bethlehem in Judah or Bethlehem Ephrathah to distinguish it from the Zebulunite city of the same name. The Amarna Letters refer to it as Bit-Lahmi, in a report of the city's capture by the Habiru in the 14th century.

       

            David was born and raised in Bethlehem, and it was here that Samuel anointed him the successor of King Saul. In accordance with Micah's prophecy, the Messiah, a descendent of David, was also born in Bethlehem. A tradition going back to the 2 century AD identifies the site of his birth with a cave that once served as the stable of an inn near Bethlehem. The Church of the Nativity now marks the ancient site, believed by many to be the authentic birthplace of the Savior. Genesis 35:19; Ruth 1:1-2; 1 Samuel 16:13-15; 2 Samuel 23:14-16; Micah 5:2; Matthew 2.

      5. Note: Jesus was born when Herod of Rome was king.

      6. Herod the Great, The Idumean king of Judea, 37-4 BC, who beautified the Jerusalem Temple, and ordered boy children in the Bethlehem area killed in an effort to destroy Jesus.

    7. BACKGROUND:

       

            Herod became governor of Galilee in 47 BC, at the age of 25. By ingratiating himself with a series of Roman rulers, through a series of bloody civil wars, and by murdering rivals, Herod achieved kingship in 37 BC. The First dozen years of Herod's rule were dedicated to consolidating his power. These years too were marked by bloodshed, including the execution of his favorite wife, Mariamne I, and all her male relatives. At the end of this period, no rivals of this cruel, paranoid ruler remained. The years 25-14 BC saw unmatched prosperity in Judea. Herod undertook great building projects. He constructed Caesarea Maritima, a retreat at Masada, and most importantly, began his project to enlarge and beautify the Jerusalem Temple. Family troubles dominated the years 14-4 BC Rumors of plots by his various wives and their children led Herod to execute many of his sons, including his two favorites born to Mariamne I. Hostile, impulsive, dominated by morbid fears, the evil Herod lived out his last years hated by family and people alike. While dying from his last illness, Herod ordered the execution of boy children in the vicinity of Bethlehem in a futile effort to destroy one he was told had been born King of the Jews. However, Joseph, warned in a dream, had taken Mary and the young Jesus to Egypt. Just five days before Herod died, he executed another son, Antipater, whom he earlier had designated as his heir. As the end drew near, Herod ordered prominent Jews from every part of the nation to appear in Jerusalem.

       

    When they arrived, he had them imprisoned, and left orders that they be killed the moment he died. Herod knew that only in this way could he ensure national mourning rather than joy Matthew 2; Cf: Luke 1:5.

    Return to Matthew 1:24

    Return to Matthew 2:7, Study; Matthew 2 Exposition.

    B. The Wise Men From The East: Verses 1 & 2: Cf: ( verse 2, Note: King)

     

    1 .Tradition calls them “kings” but the Bible does not. We will believe that God's designation is correct. They were men who were wise.

             Note: They came to worship the King.

     

    2. Notice: They were looking for the King of the Jews. We believe they were men who had heard about the Messiah from Daniel the prophet who was a captive in Babylon.

     

    3. These men knew that the birth of the King was to be marked by a star. They were looking for that star. When it appeared, they followed it to Jerusalem where the King of the Jews would be born.

     

    4. “I shall see him, but not now: I shall behold him, but not nigh: there shall come a Star out of Jacob, and a Scepter shall rise out of Israel, and shall smite the corners of Moab, and destroy all the children of Sheth.” (Numbers 24:17 KJB).

     

    5. We need to identify this Star. It was not an ordinary star you see twinkling in the night. Neither was it a combination of planets. This is all nonsense. The Bible fact. Angels are identified as “stars.”

     

    6. For example: “And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit. And he opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.” (Revelation 9:1-2 KJB).

     

    7. The Star of Matthew 2:2 was an angel of God sent to guide these men who were wise enough to be looking for the King of the Jews to be born.

     

    8. When these men saw the “star” they left the orient and started on their long journey that would take them 18 to 20 months to arrive in Jerusalem.

     

    9. By the time they arrived, Joseph, Mary and the King were at Joseph's home in Nazareth.

    Return to Matthew 2:1

    C. Herod’s Inquiry: verse 3-7

     

                   1. Herod was troubled when he heard that a King was born: verse 3

     

    2. He summoned the chief priests and scribes to learn when the Christ (Messiah) was to be born: verse 4

     

     

    3. Since the priests and scribes (scribes were those in charge of copying the Sacred Scriptures) knew Micah 5:2, and Daniel 9:25-27, they were able to inform Herod: verses 5-6.

     

    4. Herod's next move was to summons the wise men once more to inquire when the star First appeared to them: verse 7.

     

    5. Obviously, they would have given them the time of between 18 months and 22 months previously. This would involve the time it took them to get ready for the journey and then travel all of that distance after they First saw the star.

     

    6. This means that the Baby would have been 18 to 22 months before the appearance of the wise men in Jerusalem.

     

    D. Herod's Treachery: verse 8

     

    1. Under the pretense of wanting to worship the new born King, he ordered the wise men to go to Bethlehem to find the King.

     

    2. Note again: Joseph, Mary and the Baby were no longer in Bethlehem, but back home in Nazareth.

     

    E. God's Divine Intervention: verses 9-10

     

    1. After the wise men left Herod's palace, the Angel (Star) reappeared and led them, not to Bethlehem, but to Nazareth where Joseph, Mary and the Baby were now located.

     

    2. Apparently, the wise men were suspicious of Herod. When they saw the Star, they were happy to follow it to their destination.

    Return to Matthew 2:1f

    F. A Word Of Explanation.

                   1. Turn to Luke 2:21-24.

                   2. Notice that male babies were to be circumcised on the 8th day.

     

    Circumcision was a sign God gave to the Jews back in the days of Abraham (See Genesis 17:9-14). This identified the Hebrew male as being in a covenant relationship with God.

     

    3. Joseph and Mary would have taken baby Jesus to Jerusalem on the 8th day after birth to be circumcised by the Hebrew priest.

     

    4. In Luke 2:22, we are told that Mary observed the days of her purification according to the law of Moses. Next turn to the passage in Leviticus 12:1-8.

     

    5. Note we are given the truth of circumcision on the 8th day. Then the mother must wait for an additional 33 days before bring an offering to Jerusalem.

     

    6. This makes a total of 41 days from the date of birth. Next turn to Luke 2:39. After the completion of the 41 days, Joseph, Mary and the baby Jesus left for Nazareth. It takes about 5 days to travel from Jerusalem to Nazareth.

     

    7. This means that Jesus would have been 46 days old when they returned home. The wise men did not arrive until Jesus was from 18 to 22 months of age. This is why Herod had all the boy babies killed from 24 months and under. When he determined when the Child was born, he calculated that if he killed all babies 24 months and under he would be sure the Christ Child would be killed. This clarifies why the wise men did not go to Bethlehem, but to Nazareth where the Child was.

    Return to Matthew 2:1

    G. The Wise Men Arrive In Nazareth: verses 11-12:

     

     

    1. Notice, they did not find a baby, but a young child. They come to a home not a manger.

                2. Notice also, they did not worship Mary, but the Christ Child.

                   3. The wise men worship Him and give him gifts.

     

    4. In passing note, this would have enabled Joseph and Mary to have the funds to travel to Egypt and live there until after Herod would die.

     

    5. Note: How wonderful the Lord provides for us when we are doing His will.

     

    6. Note also in verse 12, we are told that the wise men returned home another way This means they did not go back to Jerusalem, but went to Syria, north to Haran and then down the fertile crescent to their home in the East.

     

                   7. How different, when we follow the Bible rather than tradition.

    Return to Matthew 2:12

    H. Joseph, Mary and Jesus Travel To Egypt: Verses 13-15

     

    1. Note once again the angel of the Lord gives instructions to travel to Egypt to protect the Christ Child: verse 13.

     

    2. Note: there was a second reason. God was going to see that prophecy was fulfilled.

     

    3. In Hosea 11:1, God had promised He would call His Son out of Egypt. This was in fulfillment of that prophecy God's Word always comes to pass as God has promised: Verse 15.; See , Note 3.

    Return to Matthew 2:13-15

     

    I. Herod's Treachery: verses 16-18

     

                1. He has all the male babies 24 months and under killed.

                    2. Notice again this was the fulfillment of prophecy.

             3. See Jeremiah 31:15.

    Return to Matthew 2:13-15

     

    J. The Family Returns Home To Nazareth: Verses 19-23.

     

    1. Note again it is under the direction of the Lord, not their own idea: verses 19-22

     

    2. Notice also that all of this was in fulfillment of the Lord's Word given in the Old Testament.

                    3. See Jeremiah 23:5-6; Zechariah 6:12; Isaiah 11:1

     

                   4. The Word, BRANCH, is also the Hebrew word for Nazareth.

     


    Return to Matthew 2:19-23









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