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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 25:6

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 25:6

And at midnight there was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him.

6. there was a cry made ] Literally, “ there is a cry made.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

At midnight – Later than was the usual custom, and hence, they had fallen asleep.

A cry made – Of those who were coming with the bridegroom.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 6. At midnight there was a cry] The Jewish weddings were generally celebrated in the night; yet they usually began at the rising of the evening star; but in this case there was a more than ordinary delay.

Behold, the bridegroom cometh] What an awful thing to be summoned to appear before the Judge of quick and dead! The following is an affecting relation, and fas est ab hoste doceri. “When Rabbi Jochanan ben Zachai was sick, his disciples came to visit him; and when he saw them he began to weep. They say to him, Rabbi! the light of Israel, the right hand pillar, the strong hammer, wherefore dost thou weep? He answered them, If they were carrying me before a king of flesh and blood, who is here today, and to-morrow in the grave; who, if he were angry with me, his anger would not last for ever: if he put me in prison, his prison would not be everlasting; if he condemned me to death, that death would not be eternal; whom I could soothe with words or bribe with riches; yet even in these circumstances I should weep. But now I am going before the King of kings, the holy and the blessed God, who liveth and endureth for ever and for ever; who, if he be angry with me, his anger will last for ever; if he put me in prison, his bondage will be everlasting; if he condemn me to death, that death will be eternal; whom I cannot soothe with words nor bribe with riches: when, farther, there are before me two ways, the one to hell and the other to paradise, and I know not in which they are carrying me, shall I not weep?” TALMUD Beracoth, fol. 29.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

6. And at midnightthat is,the time when the Bridegroom will be least expected; for “theday of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night” (1Th5:2).

there was a cry made, Behold,the Bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet himthat is, Be readyto welcome Him.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

And at midnight there was a cry made;…. Which is no other than the following notice of the bridegroom’s coming, expressed in these words:

behold the bridegroom cometh, go ye out to meet him: which supposes that then all things will be ready for his coming: all things respecting this world; all the strange and surprising events that were to come to pass, before the coming of Christ, will now be accomplished; an end put to all the monarchies of the earth; and all the preparations in nature, for the burning of the world finished: all things respecting the ungodly of the world: they will have filled up the measure of their iniquities, and finished their persecutions of the saints: and all things respecting the elect of God, they will be all born, and born again; they will have gone through all their sufferings for Christ, and have all their graces tried and perfected; for when the bridegroom comes, he will come to espouse them openly to himself, for which they must be prepared and adorned, and to take them to himself, that they may be for ever with him. It also supposes, that his coming will be very nigh at hand; it was so represented long ago; it is greatly desired by the saints to be quickly; and it will be in a very short time after this notice: and it signifies that there will be some notice given of it, a little before he comes; and that partly for the glory of his majesty; and that his own people, the wise virgins, may be ready; and that the foolish ones may be left without excuse: and this being prefaced with a “behold”, shows the certainty of his coming, than which nothing is more certain, and to be depended on; as appears from Enoch’s prophecy, and others of the Old Testament; from Christ’s own promise; from the testimony of angels: from the words of the apostles; and from the ordinance of the Lord’s supper: and also the importance of it; for things of the greatest moment will follow on it; such as the resurrection of the dead, the judgment of the whole world, the complete happiness of the saints, and the destruction of the wicked: and likewise, that it will be wonderful and astonishing; Christ will come in amazing glory, in his own, in his Father’s, and in the glory of the holy angels, and of his power and authority, as the judge of quick and dead. And in this notice advice is given to the virgins,

go ye out to meet him; see So 3:11, and may intend either a going forth internally, as the wise virgins did in the exercise of grace, of faith in the coming of Christ, of love of his appearance, and earnest desire after it; or a going forth externally, as all the virgins did in a way of visible profession, taking up and trimming their lamps; or literally and corporeally, as the saints will, that will be found alive at Christ’s coming. Now this notice is called “a cry”; and refers not to the voice of Christ in raising the dead, for this will be before the coming of Christ, whereas that will be when he is come; and for the same reason, not to the voice of the archangel, if he can be thought to be distinct from Christ. Some think it regards a secret general impulse, that will be upon the spirits of the people of God, with respect to the bridegroom’s coming, but this does not seem to answer to a cry; rather it should intend some remarkable providence, as the earthquake in Re 11:13 when a tenth part of the city shall fall, seven thousand men of note be slain, and the rest affrighted; or the sounding of the seventh angel, Re 11:15, or, what is most likely, the voice of a great multitude, as of many waters, and of mighty thunderings, declaring, that the marriage of the Lamb was come, and the bride ready,

Re 19:6, and will be a very loud one: it will awaken all the virgins, and will be the cry, not of one, but of many; and will be very sudden and surprising, though joyful to the saints: this cry will be made, not by the virgins, for they will be asleep; nor by Christ himself, for he will not be come; nor by the angels, for they will come with him, and not before; rather by the ministers of the Gospel, who are the angels so often spoken of in the book of the Revelations, who sound the trumpets at different times, and on different occasions; who also will sound this trumpet, and give this last and general notice of Christ’s coming; who will be all at once apprized of it, and give an universal alarm of it together in all the churches: thus, as the notice of Christ’s first coming was made by the prophets, the notice of his second coming will be made by the ministers of the Gospel: and this will be at “midnight”: which expresses the state of the church a little before the coming of Christ: it will be a night season with it, a time of darkness both with respect to Gospel light, and the presence of God with his people; a time of coldness and lukewarmness, as to zeal for God, love to his people, and concern for the interest of Christ; a time of drowsiness and sleep, of insensibility and security, of indolence and inactivity: so as the coming of Christ will be later than was first expected; it will be sudden, and at unawares, and like a thief in the night; but whether it will be literally in the night season, as his first coming, is not certain. The Jews expect q, that at the end of the world Moses and Messiah will come in the night, the one from the wilderness, and the other from Rome: and they make frequent mention of God’s going into the garden of Eden, or paradise, at midnight, and there rejoicing with good men. It is said r, that R. Eliezer and R. Jose

“were sitting one night, and studying in the law, and about midnight, a man cried (or the cock crowed), bless ye the blessing; says R. Eliezer, now is, the time that the holy, blessed God goes into the garden of Eden, to rejoice with the righteous.”

q Targum Hieros. in Exod xii. 42. r Zohar in Exod. fol. 76. 4. & in Lev. fol. 21. 1. & 23. 2.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

There is a cry ( ). A cry has come. Dramatic use of the present perfect (second perfect active) indicative, not the perfect for the aorist. It is not , but which emphasizes the sudden outcry which has rent the air. The very memory of it is preserved by this tense with all the bustle and confusion, the rushing to the oil-venders.

Come ye forth to meet him ( ). Or, Go out for meeting him, dependent on whether the cry comes from outside the house or inside the house where they were sleeping because of the delay. It was a ceremonial salutation neatly expressed by the Greek phrase.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

There was a cry made [ ] . Rev., there is a cry. The verb is in the perfect tense, representing the past event as perpetuated in the present result, and hence is rendered by the English present. A great and decisive change was the result of the cry. No more sleeping, waiting, or silence. There is a cry, and behold the awaking, the bustle, the trimming of lamps and the running to the oil – vendors.

To meet him [ ] . The translation can hardly convey the meaning of the Greek phrase, which implies a custom or familiar ceremony. Come forth unto meeting.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

6. At midnight a cry arose. With respect to the cry I view it as taken metaphorically for his sudden arrival; for we know, that when any thing new and unexpected happens, men are wont to make a loud noise. True, indeed, our Lord cries daily, that he will come quickly, (Rev 22:20😉 but at that, time, the whole frame of the world will resound with the cry, and his dreadful majesty will fill heaven and earth in such a manner, as not only to awaken those who are asleep, but to bring the dead out of their graves, (Joh 5:28.)

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(6) At midnight.The hour was obviously later than the virgins had expected, and in this we may see a half-veiled suggestion of a like lateness in the coining of the true Bridegroom. The cry would be that of the companions of the bridegroom, or of the crowd that mingled with them. In the interpretation of the parable we may see in it, over and above its reference to the final Advent, that which answers to the stir and thrill that announce any coming crisis in the history of Church or people.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

6. At midnight In the very depth of the shades of time. This slumber by no means implies the unconsciousness of the souls of the dead. It implies that the day of probationary life has completely closed. Those who sleep with the oil in their lamps are happy. Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord, for they rest from their labours; and their works of faith and repentance follow them into the future, to render them blessed.

Rev 14:13. To them the judgment day will not seem distant; for it will not be tedious waiting, though that day is to be the full consummation of their bliss. Ages will be but as moments. As in some clear and beautiful atmospheres distant objects seem near at hand, so in the blessed air of the paradise of pure spirits the coming of the Judge, though it should be ages on ages distant, is, in full accordance with the phrases of Scripture, close at hand. To the restless spirits of the wicked it will be distant when their mind’s eye looks over the vast length of unrest to be endured before that day; but it will even to them seem terribly near when they contemplate the terrors of the day itself and the woes that shall follow. There was a cry made By the narrative which we have given from Mr. Ward, it may be supposed that this cry was an ordinary fact at weddings; and so may be considered no significant part of the parable. It may have been the cry of self-announcement from the bridegroom’s party, or of waiting spectators, or of the virgins rousing each other. It does not contradict the fact that the coming of the Son of man is unwarned. It is more properly to be considered as identical with the blast of the last trumpet, announcing that the day of grace is past, and that the judgment day is come. More properly still, it is the cry of conscious confession and despair echoing through the world, that THE JUDGE COMETH and we must meet our doom.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘But in the middle of the night there is a cry, “Behold, the bridegroom! Come you forth to meet him.” ’

And then while they slept the moment that they had been awaiting arrived. In the middle of the night (not necessarily midnight, but possibly even later) the cry went out, ‘the Bridegroom is coming! Come out and meet Him’. None had known when He would come, and the middle of the night was an unusual hour. He had come at a time when they did not expect (compare Mat 24:50). And that was when their readiness would be tested.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

The coming of the bridegroom:

v. 6. And at midnight there was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him.

v. 7. Then all those virgins arose and trimmed their lamps.

v. 8. And the foolish said unto the wise, Give us of your oil; for our lamps are gone out.

v. 9. But the wise answered, saying, Not so, lest there be not enough for us and you; but go ye rather to them that sell, and buy for yourselves.

v. 10. And. while they went to buy, the bridegroom came; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage; and the door was shut.

After an unusually long delay, after they had almost given up all hopes, someone, having been aroused by the noise of the approaching company of the bridegroom, gave the alarm. All of the virgins quickly jumped up and trimmed the wicks of their lamps, in order that they might be burning with full brightness as they entered into the wedding-feast. But the improvident virgins were not ready for the emergency, their lamps, whose oil had been consumed, were at the point of going out, there was a mere glimmering of a dry wick. But their appeal to the prudent virgins met with a cold reception. If their request were granted, there was danger that they all would lack oil and be refused admission to the marriage festival. This is not selfishness, but sound prudence. In the emergency of Christ’s coming to Judgment, the helpfulness of the Christian life is a thing of the past, and the bands of friendship and even of the closest relationship are torn asunder. The time of grace is at an end. The merchants, the dispensers of God’s grace, have definitely closed their shops. Everyone must stand on his own merits. “That is a clap of thunder against those that rely upon the merits of the saints and other people; since none of them has enough for himself, not to speak of having something left over to impart to others. Therefore, when they now want to come and knock, and would also like to go in to the wedding, they will have to hear, as did the foolish virgins: I know you not; those that were to come in have come in. That will be a terrible sentence. ” The frantic attempts of the imprudent virgins to provide fuel for their lamps were without avail. And, in the meantime, the festival procession reached the home of the bride. Those that were fully prepared in every respect went with the bride groom and were seated at the festival board, whereupon the door was locked. Fatal words, shutting off all hope!

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Mat 25:6. And at midnight there was a cry Perhaps the tradition which St. Jerome mentions, wherein it was asserted that Christ would come to judgment at midnight, might be borrowed from this passage; though certainly it is absurd enough, since that can be the case only under one meridian.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

6 And at midnight there was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him.

Ver. 6. There was a cry made ] By the trumpet of the archangel, a and the voice of God, say some interpreters; and Jerome reports it for an apostolic tradition that Christ shall come at midnight. But of that hour no man knoweth, saith the Judge himself. Others there are that expound this cry of the preaching of the gospel, according to that voice of the crier, “Prepare ye the way of the Lord,” &c., Mat 3:3 ; And here- clames ut stentora vincas, Cry aloud, spare not, &c.

a Recte ad Archangeli vocem referetur. Aret.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Mat 25:6 . : at length at midnight a cry is raised by some one not asleep lo! the bridegroom ; laconic, rousing, heard by all sleepers. , go forth to meeting: no words that can be dispensed with here either. Go forth whence? from the bride’s house (Goebel); from some inn, or private dwelling on the way, whither they have turned in on finding that the bridegroom tarried (Bleek, Meyer, Weiss). On this point Goebel’s view it to be preferred.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

there was a cry made = there arose a cry.

Behold. Figure of speech Asterismos.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Mat 25:6. , but at midnight) i.e. during the deep sleep of even these virgins.-, a cry) sc. to arouse them, accompanied by the blast of a trumpet.[1081]

[1081] Far louder than earths loudest artillery: see 1Th 4:16.-B. G. V.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

at: Mat 24:44, Mar 13:33-37, Luk 12:20, Luk 12:38-40, Luk 12:46, 1Th 5:1-3, Rev 16:15

a cry: Mat 24:31, Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29, 1Th 4:16, 2Pe 3:10

Behold: Mat 25:31, Psa 50:3-6, Psa 96:13, Psa 98:9, 2Th 1:7-10, Jud 1:14, Jud 1:15

go: Mat 25:1, Isa 25:9, Amo 4:12, Mal 3:1, Mal 3:2, Rev 19:7-9

Reciprocal: Exo 11:4 – About Exo 12:30 – and there was a great cry Jos 8:3 – by night Jdg 7:19 – in the beginning Job 34:20 – troubled Ecc 8:7 – he knoweth Mat 13:30 – both Mat 25:10 – the bridegroom Mar 13:32 – of Joh 11:20 – as soon

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

25:6

This cry was a strong sound for the original is defined in the lexicon, “a crying, outcry, clamor.” That was made necessary by the lateness of the hour and the sleeping state of the virgins.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Mat 25:6. But at midnight. At a late, dark season, the most unsuitable too for the foolish virgins to make good their lack.

A cry is made, Behold the bridegroom! This was usual. A sign of the coming of Christ (chap. Mat 24:30). For the individual, that cry may come at any time.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

At midnight, that is, at the most dismal and unseasonable time, when all the virgins were fast asleep; and, when awakened in great affrightment, could not on a sudden consider what to do. Such is the case of those who put off their repentance and preparation for another world, till they are surprised by death and judgment.

Lord, how will the midnight cry of the Bridegroom’s coming terrify and amaze the unprepared soul! What a surprising word will this be, Behold, the Bridegroom cometh!

Learn hence, That the Bridegroom will certainly come, though at his own time; and then all shall be called upon, both prepared and unprepared, to go forth to meet him. Reason says he may come, because there is a just God, that will render to every one according to his deeds, and reward both body and soul for all the services they have done for God. The body shall not always remain like a solitary widow in the dust, but shall meet its old companion, the soul, again.

And as reason says he may come, faith says he will come, and argues from the promise of Christ, Joh 14:3, and from the purchase of Christ, from Christ’s affection to us, and from our affection to him: faith has seen him upon the cross, and determines she shall see him in the clouds. The Bridegroom will certainly come at his own time: happy they that are ready to go forth to meet him.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

Mat 25:6-8. And at midnight In an hour quite unthought of, and the most alarming. Perhaps the tradition mentioned by Jerome, which asserted that Christ would come to judgment at midnight, might be borrowed from hence; though certainly it is a very absurd one, since that can be the case only under one meridian at a time. There was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh As Christs coming to judge the world will be at a time the least expected; so then a great cry will be made, for the apostle assures us, he will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God, 1Th 4:16. At this great cry, which will be heard to the ends of the earth, these virgins all awake, and begin to trim their lamps, to examine themselves, and prepare to meet their God: and now the foolish first perceive their folly: they find their lamps extinguished, and they have no oil wherewith to supply them: they find themselves destitute of vital religion, of union with Christ, and the graces of his Spirit, and that they have only a name to live while they are dead. Thus the hypocrites hope shall perish. And the foolish said unto the wise Whom before, perhaps, they had despised and derided as needlessly provident; Give us of your oil, for our lamps are gone out They were therefore once lighted and burning. As if they had said, The light that was in us has become darkness, and the warmth of our love and zeal has become cold and dead, and we are utterly unprepared to meet the bridegroom. What a time was this to make such a discovery! whether the time of being overtaken with some unexpected judgment, the time of death, or that of Christs second coming be intended. Reader, Unto which of the saints wilt thou turn? Who can help thee at such a season?

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Verse 6

There was a cry made; that is, it was announced.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

Midnight probably also has significance since it is often the time of judgment in Scripture (e.g., Exo 11:4). When someone announced the arrival of the groom, the virgins all woke up and trimmed their lamps. However the lamps of the foolish soon began to go out (present tense in the Greek text). The preparations of the wise virgins did the unwise no good. The time to prepare had passed.

Though Jesus did not go into this, the bride in the parable must be the church, the bride of Christ (cf. 2Co 11:2). The church will be in heaven with Jesus during the Tribulation having gone there at the Rapture (1Th 4:13-17). Christians will return to earth with Jesus at His second coming and will evidently have some part in the judgment that will begin the kingdom (Mat 25:31-46; cf. 1Co 6:2).

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)