Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 11:5
The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them.
5. Comp. Isa 35:5; Isa 61:1. The first passage describes the work of God, who “ will come and save you.”
the poor have the gospel preached to them ] In earthly kingdoms envoys are sent to the rich and great. Compare the thought implied in the disciple’s words, “Who then can be saved?” If it is difficult for the rich to enter the kingdom, how much more for the poor?
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Mat 11:5
And the poor have the gospel preached to them.
The right of the poor
I. Let us state the sentiment of the text. We understand it to intend the poor in condition, and not the poor in spirit.
1. The gospel is not preached to the poor in order to mix itself with the questions of civil distinctions.
2. It is not that the gospel regards social distinctions as chiefly important.
3. It is not that the gospel takes the same view of these respective classifications which we are accustomed to entertain.
4. It is not that the gospel is merely adapted to the humble spheres and employments of life.
5. It is not that the gospel is unworthy the attention of the most educated minds.
6. This announcement is not only declarative but predictive.
II. Why is the gospel especially preached to the poor?
1. To demonstrate the Divine independence,
2. To explain the apparent inequalities of Providence. If the poor are denied worldly wealth; they can have durable riches.
3. To establish the necessity of a Divine revelation. The poor show the perplexity of other systems; Christianity commenced where they failed.
4. To exhibit the true importance of man.
6. To relieve the heaviest severity of present trouble. The gospel is the tender mercy of our God.
6. To unfold the true genius of the Christian faith.
7. To intimate the spirituality of Christian blessings and rewards.
8. To place before us the value of predispositions in the reception of Christianity.
9. To bind the institutions of the gospel with the perpetuity of an inevitable human condition-The poor ye have always with you.
III. The demonstration of the truth of christianity, arising out of this fact, remains to be established.
1. It was the accomplishment of prophecy.
2. It distinguished it from all other systems of philosophy and religion.
3. It took a survey of human nature profound as it was new.
4. It reflects most amiably on the character of the Christian Founder.
5. Its Divine efficacy is proved to be complete.
6. The truth of Christianity borrows new evidence from its operations on the poor, when we remember the nature of the principles which it has inculcated.
7. In this progress of the gospel we must seek an adequate cause. (R. W. Hamilton, D. D.)
The gospel of the poor
We shall more clearly see how it is that Christs gospel is for the poor, if we contrast it with some of the many human schemes which we are assured are an excellent substitute for the gospel of Christ.
1. There is that parody of the gospel of Christ which I will call the gospel of philanthropy. This gospel says educate the poor, refine their tastes, open your museums on the Sunday. These things have softening and humanising influence, so long as they are not made substitutes for religion. But there is a refined sensuousness as well as a brutal. These things will not save man.
2. There is the gospel of science. This gospel says to the poor man, Your condition is the result of inevitable laws. It is the rule of nature that in the struggle for existence the weakest shall go to the wall. If therefore you are weak you must submit to the common lot. This gospel gives no comfort.
3. There is the gospel of socialism. This says All men have equal rights. The rich are your oppressors your poverty is the result of cruel laws made by the rich for their benefit. Wreck these and you will soon correct the inequality. This is a gospel of hate. But the gospel of Jesus Christ is the gospel of power, for it is the gospel of good tidings; of Him who was poor. And what makes this gospel so strong and attractive is that it is a gospel of sympathy. It is also a gospel of hope, because it is the gospel of the resurrection. It is a gospel of brotherhood. (Dean Perowne, D. D.)
Poverty and the gospel
Christs gospel was one of mercy to the poor. His conduct fortified His words. His earliest life was of poverty. His miracles were not philosophical enigmas; but of mercy to helpless sufferers. Thus Christ represented the best spirit of the Old Testament. The genius of the Jewish Scriptures is that of mercy to the poor; the prophets denounced avarice. This view of the gospel also fits in with the order of the unfolding of human life and human society. It takes sides with the poor, and so the universal tendency of Providence and of history, slowly unfolded, is, nevertheless, on the whole, going from low to high, from worse to better, and from good toward the perfect. When we consider, we tee that man begins as a helpless thing, a baby zero without a figure before it; and every step in life adds a figure to it and gives it more and more worth. On the whole, the law of unfolding throughout the world is from lower to higher, and though, when applied to the population of the globe, it is almost inconceivable; still, with many back-sets and reactions, the tendency of the universe is thus from lower to higher. Why? Let any man consider whether there is not of necessity a benevolent intelligence somewhere, that is drawing up from the crude toward the ripe, from the rough toward the smooth, from bad to good, and from good through better toward best; and the tendency upward runs like a golden thread through the history of the whole world, both in the unfolding of human life and in the unfolding of the race itself. Thus the tendency of nature is in accordance with the tendency of the gospel as declared by Jesus Christ-namely, that it is a ministry of mercy to the needy. The causes of poverty are worthy consideration.
1. Climate and soil have much to do with it. Men whose winters last nine months, as in extreme north, cannot be rich. Some live on borders of deserts.
2. Bad government is a public source of poverty. Property is insecure.
3. Ignorance or undevelopedness of mind is a great cause of poverty. All property is matter that has been shaped to uses by intelligent skill. It is the husbandman who thinks, foresees, and calls on natural laws to serve Him whose farm brings forth one hundred fold.
4. The appetites and passions of men are the causes of poverty. The men of animalism are always at the bottom of society. All these causes indicate that the poor need moral and intellectual culture. To preach the gospel to the poor is to awaken the mind of the poor. It is a gospel of prosperity. Its primary result is to develop the man himself; to give him such qualities that he will not need relief. The gospel changed from a spirit of humanity into a philosophical system of doctrine, is perverted. Churches organized upon elective affinities are contrary to the spirit of the gospel. Art and intellectual communion right; but must not abandon humanity. The church needs poor men; it needs familiarity with universal human nature. (H. W. Beecher.)
Tendency of the gospel to level up
So, make the common people grow, and there is nobody tall enough to be much higher. When you cross the continent on the Union Pacific Railway and reach the Rocky Mountains, you do not know it. You have been running up at a rate that seemed as if you were in a valley almost. It simply was because the grade was so easy on this side that when you got up to the top of the mountains they do not seem any higher than the plains below, and it is rising so gradually that first made them seem so low. But when you begin to go on the other side, and plunge down the gorges and canons, the mountains seem very high from those low points. The general tendency of Christian democratic institutions is to raise the average of mankind, and as the average goes up it becomes harder and harder for single men to stand as much above the level of their fellow-men as they did formerly. (H. W. Beecher.)
Preaching for the Poor
1. That the gospel must be preached where the poor can come and hear it.
2. It must be preached attractively before the poor will come to hear it.
3. It must be preached simply. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The climax of wonders
1. That the tendency of the gospel is to raise society.
2. That the gospel dignifies man independently of his outward circumstances.
3. The great simplicity of the gospel.
4. The freeness of the gospel.
5. The inherent power of the gospel.
(1) The gospel is the only system adapted to man.
(2) It is the most favourable system to the working class.
(3) That it is by the influence of the gospel alone that the world can be reformed.
(4) That those only who believe the gospel can enjoy its blessings. (H. E. Thomas.)
The gospel preached to the poor
The law.
I. Its excellency. This provision of the gospel for the poor was a new thing; it was a charity unknown before. The excellency of its effects. What exaltation of hope and character it substitutes for cheerless poverty. It cultivates the moral wilderness.
II. The obligation it lays upon us. Iii. The means of fulfilling it. (N. Paterson.)
The gospel preached to the poor
I. The salvation of God as brought before us in the text-the gospel.
II. The mode of its announcement-preached.
1. Clearly.
2. Fully.
3. Affectionately.
4. Faithfully.
5. As the Word of God.
III. The objects which are especially brought before us in the text-the poor. The gospel knows no partiality. The poor in spirit also have the gospel preached to them. (H. Allen, M. A )
The gospel especially addressed to the poor
1. Because it is peculiarly adapted to their capacities.
2. Also to their means. It is not a costly purchase.
3. It is suited to their opportunities, It is not limited to time or place, but is a thing of the heart, and can be professed consistently with daily toil.
The gospel is glad tidings to the poor.
1. It elevates in rank.
2. It promotes the terrestrial happiness.
3. It lights up the hope of immortality. (H. Stowell, M. A.)
The gospel kindles noble principles within the heart of the poor
Let me here state a simple fact relative to Sunday School instruction by way of illustration. The earliest Sunday School which was instituted, as far as I have been able to collect, was in a valley in Gloucestershire, by a manufacturer, who, though not a man of piety himself, was moved by the state of ignorance of the little ones released on the day of rest from their labours in the factory, and from all restraint; he built a school, and employed a holy old man to bring them into this fold, where they were fostered in simplicity and security. Years rolled on, and that rich manufacturer was reduced by vicissitudes in trade to great distress; and as he was walking in the streets in the midst of his poverty, he was accosted by a man in the garb of soldier, who said, How glad am I to see you. The manufacturer replied, I know you not. The man rejoined, Ah! but I know you, sir; it was in your school that I was taught to read the Word of God, which has been my comfort in all my wanderings. It cheers me, said the man of sorrows, changed as you see me; I was then rich, but am now poor. Say you so? exclaimed the soldier, I have just received a pension; you cannot work for your broad, but I can work for mine, and that pension shall be yours. He pressed upon him his little all, for which he had toiled and bled in his countrys defence. Never, said the afflicted man, when relating this incident, did I before comprehend the meaning of that promise, Cast thy bread upon the waters, and it shall be found after many days. Oh, what a sublime description-or rather, what a sublime action! It is worth ten thousand sentiments. There was the magnificent character and majesty of soul, which nothing but Christian principle can give, and compared with which, all the deeds of ordinary philanthropy are but the glow-worms light to the splendour of the mid-day. That poor man had no learning but what he derived from the gospel; but see how it elevated his soul. (H. Stowell, M. A.)
The gospel for the poor
It is the high-born chiefly that approach the person of the sovereign, enjoy the honours of the palace, and fill the chief offices of the state. Royal favours seldom descend so low as humble life. The grace of our King, however, is like those blessed dews that, while the mountain tops remain dry, lie thick in the valleys; and, leaving the proud and stately trees to stand without a gem, hang the lowly bush with diamonds, and sow the sward broadcast with orient pearl. This is the kingdom for the mean, and the meek, and the poor, and the humble! (Dr. Guthrie.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 5. The blind receive their sight, c.] , look upwards, contemplating the heavens which their Lord hath made.
The lame walk] , they walk about to give the fullest proof to the multitude that their cure was real. These miracles were not only the most convincing proofs of the supreme power of Christ, but were also emblematic of that work of salvation which he effects in the souls of men.
1. Sinners are blind; their understanding is so darkened by sin that they see not the way of truth and salvation.
2. They are lame – not able to walk in the path of righteousness.
3. They are leprous, their souls are defiled with sin, the most loathsome and inveterate disease; deepening in themselves, and infecting others.
4. They are deaf to the voice of God, his word, and their own conscience.
5. They are dead in trespasses and sins; God, who is the life of the soul, being separated from it by iniquity.
Nothing less than the power of Christ can redeem from all this; and, from all this, that power of Christ actually does redeem every penitent believing soul. Giving sight to the blind, and raising the dead, are allowed by the ancient rabbins to be works which the Messiah should perform, when he should manifest himself in Israel.
The poor have the Gospel preached to them.] And what was this Gospel? Why, the glad tidings that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners: that he opens the eyes of the blind; enables the lame to walk with an even, steady, and constant pace in the way of holiness; cleanses the lepers from all the defilement of their sins; opens the ears of the deaf to hear his pardoning words; and raises those who were dead in trespasses and sins to live in union with himself to all eternity.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The blind receive their sight,…. Our Lord here, has reference to several prophecies concerning the Messiah, in Isa 35:6 and which having their accomplishment in him, John and his disciples might easily and strongly conclude, that he was he that was to come, and that they should not look for another. The several things here mentioned, were not all done at this time, but were what these disciples had sufficient and authentic evidence of; sight was restored to the blind before them then; and no doubt they were informed of the two blind men, that had their eyes opened, Mt 9:30
and the lame walk; as did the man sick of the palsy, who was brought to him on a bed, carried by four men, but went away himself, with his bed upon his shoulders, Mt 9:2
the lepers are cleansed: as the poor man was, that was full of leprosy, and who was cured by Christ, by touching him, Mt 8:3
and the deaf hear; as did the man, into whose ears Christ put his fingers and said, Ephphatha, be opened, Mr 7:33
and the dead are raised: as were Jairus’s daughter, Mt 9:18 and the widow’s son of Nain, Lu 7:15
and the poor have the Gospel preached them; by “the poor” are meant, either the preachers of the Gospel; for so the words may be rendered, “the poor preach the Gospel”: and such were the apostles of Christ; they were poor with respect to the things of this world; they were chiefly fishermen; and, with respect to human literature, they were unlearned men, had no stock or furniture of acquired learning, and were mean, abject, and contemptible, in the sight and opinion of men; and yet Christ called, qualified, and sent them forth to preach the Gospel. Or else, the hearers of it are designed; who were also the poor of this world, made a very low figure in life, and had but a small share of knowledge and understanding, and so were despised, and reckoned as cursed by the Scribes and Pharisees: or they were such, who were poor in spirit, or spiritually poor; who saw their spiritual poverty, bewailed and acknowledged it, and sought after the true riches of grace, and glory in Christ. Now these, as they had the Gospel preached to them more fully and clearly, with more power and authority, and so as it never was before or since, so they “received” it, as Tremellius from the Syriac reads the text, readily and willingly, joyfully and gladly, with faith and love; and were, as it may be also rendered, “evangelized” by it, or thrown into a gospel mould and frame: which may be said to be done, when a man has a spirit of liberty, in opposition to a spirit of bondage; when he lives by faith on Christ alone; when his comforts do not spring from his works, but from Christ; when the love and grace of God influence his repentance and obedience; when a man has a spirit of meekness and of love to the saints, is of a forbearing and forgiving spirit: when he is desirous of performing all duties both to God and man, and yet depends upon none of them, but upon Christ alone, for salvation.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
And the dead are raised up ( ). Like that of the son of the widow of Nain. Did he raise the dead also on this occasion? “Tell John your story over again and remind him of these prophetic texts, Isa 35:5; Isa 61:1” (Bruce). The items were convincing enough and clearer than mere eschatological symbolism. “The poor” in particular have the gospel, a climax.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
The lame walk. Tynd., The halt go.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “The blind receive their sight,” (tuphloi anablepousin) “That blind may see again,” or receive their sight, a matter you two have personally witnessed, Luk 7:21.
2) “And the lame walk,” (kai choloi peripatousin) “And that lame men walk,” are caused to walk, as the palsied man, Mr 2:1-12; and the centurion’s servant, Mat 8:5-13.
3) “The lepers are cleansed,” (leproi katharizontai) “Lepers are made clean,” cleansed from their contagious infections, as recounted Mat 8:1-4.
4) “And the deaf ones are caused to hear,” (kai kophoi akouousin) “And the deaf ones are caused to hear,” as prophesied, Isa 35:5-6; Mat 9:32-33.
5) “The dead ones are raised up,” (kai nekroi egeirontai) “And that dead men are raised,” from the dead, as many have testified to you, Luk 7:22; To wit, the widow’s son of Nain, Luk 7:1-16.
6) “And the poor have the gospel preached to them.” (kai ptochoi euangelizontai) “And that the poor, the impoverished, are evangelized,” have the gospel preached to them, which upon receiving, caused changes in their lives and testimonies, Joh 2:5; Luk 9:6; Mr 1:14,15; Mat 9:35.
The Gospel to the poor is: 1) Plain for the uneducated, 2) Sympathetic, so the lowly can appreciate it, 3) Free, that all needy may have it, 4) Elevating, that all may be raised by it, and 5) Compensating, all are blessed by it.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
5. The poor receive the message of the Gospel By the poor are undoubtedly meant those whose condition is wretched and despicable, and who are held in no estimation. However mean any person may be, his poverty is so far from being a ground of despair, that it ought rather to animate him with courage to seek Christ. But let us remember that none are accounted poor but those who are really such, or, in other words, who lie low and overwhelmed by a conviction of their poverty.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(5) The blind receive their sight.Apparently no facts were stated which might not have already come to the ears of the Baptist. At least one instance of each class of miracle has already been recorded by St. Matthew, the blind (Mat. 9:27), the lame (Mat. 9:6), the leper (Mat. 8:2), the dead (Mat. 9:25). The raising of the widows son at Nain, which in St. Luke follows closely upon the healing of the centurions servant, must also have preceded what is here narrated. What the Baptist needed was, not the knowledge of fresh facts, but a different way of looking at those he already knew. Where these works were done, there were tokens that the coming One had indeed come. But above all signs and wonders, there was another spiritual note of the kingdom, which our Lord reserves as the last and greatest: Poor men have the good news proclaimed to them. They are invited to the kingdom, and told of peace and pardon. It is as though our Lord knew that the Baptist, whose heart was with the poor, would feel that One who thus united power and tenderness could be none other than the expected King.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
5. The blind receive their sight Our Lord here refers to Isa 29:18, and other passages where these works are made the proofs of the Messiah.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
“The blind receive their sight and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the dead are raised up, and the poor have good tidings preached to them.”
We have already noted how all these ‘signs’ have been fulfilled in the ministry of Jesus as outlined in Mat 8:1 to Mat 9:35. See introduction to Mat 8:1. Jesus is here thus recounting to John the details of His ministry. They are also the signs that His Apostles will perform, something which stresses their importance in the Messianic ministry (Mat 10:8). And He words His reply so as to make clear that it has in mind the prophecies of Isaiah, and are also a reminder of the ministries of Elijah and Elisha. For ‘the blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, — and the deaf hear’ we can compare Isa 35:5-6, ‘the eyes of the blind will be opened, and the ears of the deaf will be unstopped, then will the lame man leap like a deer, and the tongue of the dumb will sing.’ We can also note Isa 29:18-19, ‘and in that day shall the deaf hear — and the eyes of the blind will see –’, where he is speaking of spiritual truth, the verbal similarity thus being a direct hint to John that like those of whom Isaiah was speaking he is to see and understand. And these were events which were to take place at the time of the restoration of Israel, and would accompany the fact that God would also judge His people (Isa 35:4). They were therefore very relevant to John’s view of the Coming One, This connection between these Isaianic promises and the Messiah is also found at Qumran. Note also in Jesus’ words ‘the dead are raised up’ which echoes Isa 26:19 ‘your dead shall live’.
This healing ministry of Jesus again looks back to Mat 8:17 where ‘He bore our afflictions and carried our sicknesses’. But we may also compare it with Mat 12:17-20 where He cares for the bruised reed and the smoking flax. It is swallowed up between the two, stressing the Servanthood of Jesus
However, ‘the lepers are cleansed — and the dead are raised up’ was probably also intended to indicate that a greater than Elijah and Elisha was here. The remarkable healing of a leper by Elisha (although in his case indirectly – 2 Kings 5), and the raising of the dead by both Elijah and Elisha (1Ki 17:17-24; 2Ki 4:32-37), were seen as outstanding and memorable miracles which demonstrated their uniqueness, for they were the only examples of such miracles. So to heal lepers and raise the dead in the plural as to be greater than Elijah and Elisha. And that Jesus in other ways fulfilled even more abundantly what they had begun will later come out in the feeding of the five thousand and the four thousand, for which compare the feeding of one hundred in 2Ki 4:42-44. And they too were men of the Spirit (2Ki 2:9; 2Ki 2:15), another connection with Mat 12:17-20. So Jesus is certainly depicting Himself as greater than Elijah and Elisha combined. He sums up in Himself all the wonders of the prophets.
‘And the poor have good tidings preached to them.” This is an echo of Isa 61:1, thus identifying Jesus with the anointed Prophet in a passage which is also accompanied by a warning of coming judgment (Isa 61:2), which is again a point of contact with Mat 12:17-20. Thus Jesus’ words were to be recognised by John as indicating that Jesus really was the Coming One in three aspects, the Coming One of Isaiah, the Coming One Who was greater than Elijah, and the Coming Prophet and bearer of Good News, and their contexts would confirm to John that the judgment that he was expecting would indeed at some stage inevitably follow (notice Jesus’ certainty concerning John’s knowledge of the Scriptures).
Note how the six items are split into two pairs of healings, followed by the raising of the dead and the proclamation of Good News, each of the last two standing on its own (the split distinguished by the use of ‘and’ (kai)). He is thus the overall healer and cleanser, the raiser of the dead and the proclaimer of the Good News.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Mat 11:5. The blind receive their sight Nothing can be more apposite, natural, and convincing, than such an answer as this; which took its rise from what Christ was then doing, and rested on the most apparent testimony of God himself, in astonishing miracles, to which they knew their master made no pretences: (See Joh 10:41.) miracles of so beneficent a nature, that no austerities of a retired life were by any means comparable to them; and miracles receiving an additional lustre, from their being foretold by a prophet many ages before; even by Isaiah the prophet, by whom the Baptist was so particularly described, that as he himself had frequently referred to him (Mat 3:3. Luk 3:4-6. Joh 1:23.), so his disciples must, no doubt, have made themselves peculiarly familiar with his writings. These and many other particulars are set in the most beautiful light by the masterly hand of Bishop Atterbury, in his Posthumous Sermons, vol. 1: p. 41-50. Archbishop Tillotson also has largely shewn the correspondence between the prophesies and events here referred to. See his 117th sermon, and Dr. Thomas Jackson’s Works, vol. 2: p. 470. The last circumstance mentioned in this verse, The poor, &c. distinguished the Messiah from all the heathen philosophers and priests; for whereas they concealed the mysteries or depths of their doctrines from the poor and those who were not initiated, he opened his to every one, without distinction; to the poor as well as the rich, to the unlearned as well as the learned. It distinguished him likewise from the prophets who went before him, they being chiefly sent to monarchs; whereas Christ discovered the treasures of life to the illiterate. It distinguished him from the Scribes and doctors of the Jews, who taught none but the rich, and charged very highly for their instruction, despising and neglecting the poor, who were styled the offscouring of the earth, and holding it as a maxim, that the spirit rested upon the rich only. It might have convinced the Jews, that their ideas of the Messiah were false: they looked upon the Messiah as a temporal prince, who should subdue the world to his yoke: but he placed his glory in subduing sin, and in overcoming iniquity. It might have served to convince the Jews that he was disinterested: instead of paying his court to the great, he applied himself to the distressed; and instead of engaging the priests and Scribes for his disciples, he preached to the lower people, and chose twelve illiterate and poor men to be the propagators of his doctrine. To speak the blind to sight, to command the lame to walk, to restore the deaf to hearing by a single word, and to call the dead to life, were such miracles as plainly shewed him to be the Messiah. But these cures were only the cures of bodily diseases: his office was likewise to include in it the cure of our mental distempers;andthereforeourblessedLordadds,astheheighteningand distinguishing criterion of his character, that he preached the gospel to the poor. Others put a differentsense upon the clause , translating it actively, the poor preach the gospel, as if Jesus intended to insinuate, that the Baptist had no reason to be displeased with the election of twelve illiterate fishermen to preach the gospel, while he, whose gifts were far superior to theirs, was suffered to lie useless in prison,because this also was one of the characters of the Messiah’s reign, mentioned byIsaiah. According to this interpretation, our Lord’s meaning was, “Go, and tell your master, that the miracles which you have seen me perform, are the very miracles which Isaiah long ago predicted that the Messiah should perform; and that the persons I have chosen to assist me in preaching the gospel, are such as the same prophet had pointed out for that work.” See Macknight and Sherlock.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Mat 11:5-6 . In words that seem an echo of Isa 35:5 f., Isa 35:8 , Isa 61:1 ff., though, in accordance with existing circumstances, embracing some additional matters, Jesus draws His answer clearly and decidedly from the well-known facts of His ministry , which prove Him to be the foretold in prophecy. Comp. Luk 4:18 . The words of the answer form a resum of cases such as those in Mat 8:2 , Mat 9:1 ; Mat 9:23 ; Mat 9:27 ; Mat 9:32 ; therefore they cannot have been intended to be taken in the sense of spiritual redemption , which Jesus might lay claim to as regards His works (in answer to de Wette, Keim, Wittichen); comp. Schweizer in the Stud. u. Krit . 1836, p. 106 ff.; Weiss, bibl. Theol. , Exo 2 , p. 48; Hofmann, Schriftbew . II. 1, p. 181.
.] well-known passive construction, as in Heb 4:2 ; Heb 4:6 ; Gal 2:7 ; Rom 3:2 ; Heb 11:2 ; Bernhardy, p. 341 f.
] are the poor , the miserable, the friendless, the oppressed and helpless multitude (comp. on Mat 5:3 ), elsewhere compared to sheep without a shepherd (Mat 9:36 ), and likened a little further on to a bruised reed and smoking flax (Mat 12:20 ). Such people crowded about our Lord, who proclaimed to them the Messianic deliverance. And this deliverance they actually obtained when, as , Mat 5:3 , they surrendered themselves to His word under a deep heartfelt consciousness of their need of help.
. ] will have been offended in me , so as to have come to entertain false views concerning me, so as to have ceased to believe in me, to have come to distrust me; Mat 13:57 , Mat 26:31 ; Mat 26:33 ; comp. on Mat 5:29 .
REMARK.
Judging from John’s question, Mat 11:2 , and Jesus’ reply, Mat 11:6 , it is neither unwarrantable nor, as far as can be seen, incompatible with the evangelic narrative, to assume that nothing else is meant than that John was really in doubt as to the personal Messiahship of Jesus and the nature of that Messiahship altogether , a doubt, however, which, after the honourable testimony of Jesus, Mat 11:7 ff., cannot be regarded as showing a want of spirituality, nor as inconsistent with the standpoint and character of one whom God had sent as the forerunner, and who had been favoured with a divine revelation, but only as a temporary eclipse of his settled conviction, which, owing to human infirmity, had yielded to the influence of despondency. This condition is so explicable psychologically from the popular nature of the form which he expected the Messianic kingdom to assume on the one hand, as well as from his imprisonment on the other, coupled with the absence of any interposition in his favour on the part of Him who, as Messiah in the Baptist’s sense, should have given things a totally different turn by manifesting Himself in some sudden, overwhelming, and glorious crisis, and so analogous to undoubted examples of the same thing in other holy men (Moses, Elias), that there is no foundation for the view that, because of this question of the Baptist (which Strauss even regards as an expression of the first beginnings of his faith), the evangelic accounts of his earlier relation to Jesus are to be regarded as overdrawn (on the other hand, Wieseler, l.c . p. 203 ff.), a view which seems to be shared by Weizscker, p. 320, and Schenkel. Actual doubt was the cause of the question, and furnished the occasion for informing him about the works of Jesus, which, as characteristic marks of the Messiah, formed again a counterpoise to his doubts, and so awoke an internal conflict in which the desire to call upon Jesus finally to declare Himself was extremely natural; and, accordingly, there is no reason for Strauss’ wonder that, ere this, has not been substituted in Mat 11:2 as a likely reading instead of . From all this, and without importing any subjective element into the accounts, it is to be considered as settled that the Baptist’s question proceeded from real doubt as to whether Jesus was the , yea or nay; nor is it for a moment to be limited (Paulus, Olshausen, Neander, Fleck, Kuhn, Ebrard, de Wette, Wieseler, Dllinger, and several others; comp. also Hofmann, Weissag. u. Erf . II. p. 75; Lichtenstein, L. J . p. 256; Hausrath, Zeitgesch . I. p. 338; Gess, Chr. Pers. u. Werk , I. p. 352) to doubts regarding the true nature of the Messiah’s manifestation and works ; but still less is the whole narrative to be explained by supposing, in accordance with the time-honoured exegetical tradition, that John sent the message for the benefit of his own disciples , to confirm in them a belief in Jesus as the Messiah (Origen in Cramer’s Catena , Chrysostom, Augustine, Jerome, Hilary, Theophylact, Euth. Zigabenus, Mnster, Luther, Calvin, Beza, Melanchthon, Clarius, Zeger, Jansen, Maldonatus, Grotius, Calovius, Bengel), or by seeing in it an expression of impatience , and an indirect challenge to the Messiah to establish His kingdom without delay (Lightfoot, Michaelis, Schuster in Eichhorn’s Bibl . XI. p. 1001 ff.; Leopold, Joh. d. Tuf . 1825, p. 96; Kuinoel, Fritzsche, Hase). The correct view was substantially given by so early a writer as Tertullian, and subsequently by Wetstein, Thies, J. E. Ch. Schmidt, Ammon, Lffler, kl. Schriften , II. p. 150 ff.; Neander, Krabbe, Bleek, Riggenbach, and several others; comp. also Ewald, Gesch. Chr . p. 420, who, however, supposes at the same time that the disciples of John may have been urging him to tell them plainly whether they ought to transfer their allegiance to Jesus or not; similarly Keim, who thinks that John, though hesitating between the alternative: He is the Messiah and He is not so, was nevertheless more disposed in favour of the affirmative view; so also Schmidt in the Jahrb. f. D. Th . 1869, p. 638 ff., who notices the way in which, as he supposes, the Baptist belies his former testimony regarding Christ.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
5 The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them.
Ver. 5. The blind receive their sight ] Our Saviour seems to say the same to John, that she did to Judah, Gen 38:25 . Discern, I pray thee, whose works are these. The end of his miracles was the proof of his majesty.
The poor have the gospel, &c. ] Gr. are gospelized ( ): they not only receive it, but are changed by it, transformed into it.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
5. ] The words . have raised some difficulty; but surely without reason. In Luke, the raising of the widow’s son at Nain immediately precedes this message; and in this Gospel we have had the ruler’s daughter raised. These miracles might be referred to by our Lord under the words . .; for it is to be observed that He bade them tell John not only what things they saw, but what things they had heard , as in Luke.
It must not be forgotten that the words here used by our Lord have an inner and spiritual sense, as betokening the blessings and miracles of divine grace on the souls of men, of which His outward and visible miracles were symbolical. The words are mostly cited from Isa 35:5 , where the same spiritual meaning is conveyed by them. They are quoted here, as the words of Isa 53:1-12 are by the Evangelist in ch. Mat 8:17 , as applicable to their partial external fulfilment, which however, like themselves, pointed onward to their greater spiritual completion.
is passive, see reff. and 2Ki 18:31 in the LXX. In ref. Luke it is also passive, but with the thing preached as its subject. Stier remarks the coupling of these miracles together, and observes that with . . is united , as being a thing hitherto unheard of and strange, and an especial fulfilment of Isa 61:1 .
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Mat 11:5 . : used also in classics to express recovery of sight. , here taken to mean deaf , though in Mat 9:32-33 , it means dumb , showing that the prophecy, Isa 35:5 , is in the speaker’s thoughts. : vague word, might mean literal poor (De W.) or spiritual poor, or the whole people in its national misery (Weiss, Matt. Evan.), best defined by such a text as Mat 9:36 , and such facts as that reported in Mat 9:10-13 . : might be middle = the poor preach, and so taken by Euthy. Zig. (also as an alternative by Theophy.), for “what can be poorer than fishing ( )?” The poor in that case = the Twelve sent out to preach the kingdom. That, too, was character istic of the movement, though not the characteristic intended, which is that the poor, the socially insignificant and neglected, are evangelised (passive, as in Heb 4:2 ).
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
The blind = Blind (no Art. in this verse, because only some of each kind are meant. Not all the blind, &c.) These were the miracles foretold of Him (Isa 35:5, Isa 35:6; Isa 61:1). No others (qua, miracles) would have sufficed as His credentials.
the dead = dead (persons). No Art. See App-139.
raised up = raised to life.
have the gospel preached to them. This is one word in the Greek (euangelizo) = are told the good news or glad tidings (Isa 61:1).
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
5.] The words . have raised some difficulty; but surely without reason. In Luke, the raising of the widows son at Nain immediately precedes this message; and in this Gospel we have had the rulers daughter raised. These miracles might be referred to by our Lord under the words . .; for it is to be observed that He bade them tell John not only what things they saw, but what things they had heard, as in Luke.
It must not be forgotten that the words here used by our Lord have an inner and spiritual sense, as betokening the blessings and miracles of divine grace on the souls of men, of which His outward and visible miracles were symbolical. The words are mostly cited from Isa 35:5, where the same spiritual meaning is conveyed by them. They are quoted here, as the words of Isa 53:1-12 are by the Evangelist in ch. Mat 8:17, as applicable to their partial external fulfilment, which however, like themselves, pointed onward to their greater spiritual completion.
is passive,-see reff. and 2Ki 18:31 in the LXX. In ref. Luke it is also passive, but with the thing preached as its subject. Stier remarks the coupling of these miracles together, and observes that with . . is united , as being a thing hitherto unheard of and strange, and an especial fulfilment of Isa 61:1.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Mat 11:5.[512] , are evangelized) The word is passive; cf. Luk 16:16. For the works of our Lord Himself, which the disciples of John then saw and heard, are meant; cf. Luk 4:18, concerning the prediction of this work.[513] Nor did all poor men as yet preach the Gospel, but only the apostles. See Mat 10:7.
[512] ) At that very moment (period of time) such miracles were being performed (Luk 7:21), which were the very miracles reserved for the Christ. In ancient times, sinners used to be punished with blindness, leprosy, and death.- ) A miracle which had been very recently performed in the case of the young man of Nain, Luk 7:14.-V. g.
[513] Which was peculiarly a work of the Christ, who was anointed for that very purpose, Isa 61:1.-V. g. Comp. Luk 4:1.-ED.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
blind: Mat 9:30, Psa 146:8, Isa 29:18, Isa 35:4-6, Isa 42:6, Isa 42:7, Luk 4:18, Luk 7:21, Luk 7:22, Joh 2:23, Joh 3:2, Joh 5:36, Joh 10:25, Joh 10:38, Joh 14:11, Joh 14:12, Act 2:22, Act 4:9, Act 4:10
the lame: Mat 15:30, Mat 15:31, Mat 21:14, Act 3:2-8, Act 14:8-10
the lepers: Mat 8:1-4, Mat 10:8, 2Ki 5:7, 2Ki 5:14
the deaf: Isa 43:8, Mar 7:37, Mar 9:25
the dead: Mat 9:24, Mat 9:25, Luk 7:14-16, Luk 7:22, Joh 11:43, Joh 11:44
the poor: Mat 5:3, Psa 22:26, Psa 72:12, Psa 72:13, Isa 61:1-3, Isa 66:2, Zec 11:7, Luk 4:18, Jam 2:5
Reciprocal: Lev 14:3 – be healed Lev 14:32 – whose hand 2Ki 5:3 – he would Job 29:15 – eyes Psa 68:10 – thou Psa 72:4 – He shall judge Psa 140:12 – the Lord Isa 11:4 – But with Isa 29:19 – the poor Isa 35:6 – shall the lame Jer 5:4 – General Zep 3:12 – leave Mal 4:2 – healing Mat 4:23 – healing Mat 8:3 – immediately Mat 9:27 – two Mat 9:35 – General Mat 16:3 – the signs Mar 1:40 – a leper Mar 7:35 – General Mar 10:52 – he received Mar 12:37 – And the Luk 4:40 – and he Luk 5:17 – power Luk 6:5 – General Luk 6:20 – Blessed Luk 14:21 – the poor Luk 18:43 – he Joh 9:3 – but Joh 9:30 – and yet Joh 9:39 – that they Joh 10:21 – Can Joh 10:32 – Many Joh 15:24 – If Joh 21:25 – there Act 1:1 – of Act 8:7 – lame Rom 12:16 – condescend to men of low estate
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
11:5
This verse is the same account of the deeds which Luke says Jesus did “in that same hour.” They all were things that required miraculous power unless we except the preaching of the gospel to the poor. That would require the miracle of inspiration but not the physical kind that is usually meant.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Mat 11:5. The blind receive their sight, or see again. The word means this when applied to the blind. In other cases, to look up.
The dead are raised up. The raising of the daughter of Jairus probably took place afterwards, but the miracle in Nain certainly preceded.
The poor have the gospel preached to them. The poor in spirit are included. This is the climax. Spiritual deliverance was the greatest miracle. The answer (comp. Isa 35:5; Isa 61:1) means: I do great things in physical healing, but my greatest work is the spiritual healing I bring: do not then expect some wonderful temporal victory, but be content with the thought that I as Messiah am doing my appropriate and most glorious work. The reference to the Old Testament prophecy would give John both testimony and instruction. Even our Lord answers doubt out of the Scriptures.