Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 16:8
[Which] when Jesus perceived, he said unto them, O ye of little faith, why reason ye among yourselves, because ye have brought no bread?
Verse 8. When Jesus perceived, he said] , unto them, is wanting in BDKLMS, and twenty others; one of the Syriac, the Armenian, Ethiopic, Vulgate, and most of the Itala; also in Origen, Theophylact, and Lucifer Calaritanus. Mill approves of the omission, and Griesbach has left it out of the text.
O ye of little faith] There are degrees in faith, as well as in the other graces of the Spirit. Little faith may be the seed of great faith, and therefore is not to be despised. But many who should be strong in faith have but a small measure of it, because they either give way to sin, or are not careful to improve what God has already given.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Mark, giving us an account of this passage, Mar 8:17-19, useth some harsher expressions: And when Jesus knew it, he saith unto them, Why reason ye, because ye have no bread? Perceive ye not yet, neither understand? Have ye your eyes yet hardened? Having eyes, see ye not? And having ears, hear ye not? And do ye not remember? When I brake the five loaves among five thousand, how many baskets full of fragments took ye up? They say unto him, Twelve. And when the seven among four thousand, how many baskets full of fragments took ye up? And they said, Seven. And he said unto them, How is it that ye do not understand? Our Saviour here charges them with three things, ignorance, unbelief, forgetfulness.
1. Ignorance, in that they did not understand that his usual way was to discourse spiritual things to them under earthly similitudes, and so by leaven he must understand something else than leaven with which men use to leaven their bread.
2. Unbelief, that they having seen the power and goodness of the Lord and Master, to feed four thousand with seven loaves, and five thousand with five loaves, leaving a great remainder, and that he did this for a mixed multitude, out of a mere compassion to the wants and cravings of human nature, should not judge that he was able to provide for them, although they had brought no bread; or doubt whether he would do it or no for them, who were much dearer to him.
3. Forgetfulness, which is often in Scripture made the mother of unbelief and disobedience. Deu 4:9,23; 25:19; Psa 78:11.
There is nothing of difficulty in the terms, only from this history we may learn these things:
1. That God expects that we should not only hear and see, but understand.
2. That he looks we should not only hear for the present time, but for the time to come. Christ expected that his disciples should have learned from his doctrine about washing of hands, that he could not mean the leaven of bread, but something else, which might defile them.
3. That he is much displeased with his own people, when he discerns blindness and ignorance in them, after their more than ordinary means of knowledge.
4. That former experiences of Gods power and goodness manifested for us, or to us, ought to strengthen our faith in him when we come under the like circumstances; and a disputing or doubting after such experiences argues but a little and very weak faith, and a hardness of heart, that the mercies of God have not made a just impression on our souls.
Then understood they how that he bade them not beware of the leaven of bread, but of the doctrine of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees. Mark, instead of and of the Sadducees, hath, and of the leaven of Herod, which hath made some think that Herod was a Sadducee. The doctrine of the Pharisees is reducible to two heads:
1. Justification by the works of the law, and those works too according to that imperfect sense of the law they gave.
2. The obligation of the tradition of the elders; whose traditions were also (as we have heard) some of them of that nature, that they made the law of God of no effect.
The doctrine of the Sadducees we are in part told, Act 23:8. They said there was no resurrection, nor angel, nor spirit: these were principles excellently suited to men of atheistical hearts and lives, and it is more than probable that Herod and his courtiers, and some of his lords and great captains, had sucked in some of these principles, and these were the Herodians mentioned, Mat 22:16; Mar 3:6.
These doctrines are by our Saviour compared to leaven, not only because of the sour nature of it, but also because heretics words (as the apostle saith) eat as doth a canker, and are of a contagious nature; as leaven doth diffuse its quality into the whole mass of meat. Our Saviour had upon this account compared the gospel to leaven, Mat 13:33, because by his blessing upon it it should influence the world, as we heard, in Mat 13:1-58.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
Which when Jesus perceived,…. Without hearing any of their debates, but by his omniscience; for he knew the doubts and unbelief, and anxious solicitude of their minds, as well as their private reasonings one with another:
he said unto them, O ye of little faith; a phrase used upon a like occasion, when he would dissuade his disciples from an anxious distressing care about a livelihood, Mt 6:30
See Gill “Mt 6:30”:
why reason ye among yourselves, because ye have brought no bread? blaming one another for your negligence and forgetfulness in this matter; distressing your minds, as if you should be famished and starved, because ye have not brought a quantity of bread, as you used to do with you.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Jesus asks four pungent questions about the intellectual dulness, refers to the feeding of the five thousand and uses the word (14:20) for it and for the four thousand (15:37), and repeats his warning (16:11). Every teacher understands this strain upon the patience of this Teacher of teachers.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
8. Why do you think within yourselves, etc.? The disciples again show how little they had profited by the instructions of their Master, and by his wonderful works. What he had said about being on their guard against the leaven is rashly interpreted by them as if Christ intended only to withdraw them from outward intercourse. As it was customary among the Jews not to take food in company with irreligious men, the disciples imagine that the Pharisees were classed with such persons. This ignorance might perhaps have been endured; but they are forgetful of a favor which they lately received, and do not consider that Christ has the remedy his power to hinder them from being compelled to pollute themselves by meat and drink, and therefore he reproves them sharply, as they deserved. And certainly it was shameful ingratitude that, after having seen bread created out of nothing, and in such abundance as to satisfy many thousands of men, and after having seen this done twice, they are now anxious about bread, as if their Master did not always possess the same power. From these words we infer that all who have once or twice experienced the power of God, and distrust it for the future are convicted of unbelief; for it is faith that cherishes in our hearts the remembrance of the gifts of God, and faith must have been laid asleep, if we allow them to be forgotten.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(8) O ye of little faith.Our Lord reproves not the want of discernment which made them slow to receive the meaning of the similitude, but their want of faith. The discernment depended (in part, at least) on imaginative power, or acquired culture, for the lack of which they were not responsible. But their memory of the manner in which their wants had been twice supplied might at least have taught them that no such case of extreme necessity, such as they pictured to themselves, was likely to arise while He was with them, and therefore that their gross carnal interpretation of His words could not possibly be the true one. Memory in this case should have been an aid to faith, and faith, in its turn, would have quickened spiritual discernment.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
8. O ye of little faith By the grossness of their mistake our Lord intends to impress the lesson on their minds.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘And Jesus perceiving it said, “O you of little faith, why do you reason among yourselves, because you have no bread?”
Jesus is concerned both at their anxiety about shortage of bread and at their inability to discern His meaning, for to Him it reveals their little faith (compared with what it should by now have been). But He is especially concerned about their anxiety about lack of physical bread. It betrayed that they did not yet trust their heavenly Father for their daily bread (Mat 6:25-26; Mat 6:32).
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
The reproof and explanation:
v. 8. Which when Jesus perceived, He said unto them, O ye of little faith, why reason ye among yourselves because ye have brought no bread?
v. 9. Do ye not yet understand, neither remember the five loaves of the five thousand, and how many baskets ye took up?
v. 10. Neither the seven loaves of the four thousand, and how many baskets ye took up?
v. 11. How is it that ye do not understand that I speak it not to you concerning bread, that ye should beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees?
v. 12. Then understood they how that He bade them not beware of the leaven of bread, but of the doctrine of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees. Jesus could not help but notice their lack of understanding. Even if their conversation was carried on in voices too low for Him to hear, He read what went on in their minds. His reproach is sad, almost stern: He charges them with little understanding, with hardness of heart. Mar 8:17-18, with little faith. That they are concerned about, and gravely discuss, a question of bodily food, when dangers are confronting their faith! He challenges their understanding, their memory, in the matter of the feeding of the five thousand and, shortly after that, of the four thousand. He wants them to recall how many baskets of fragments they picked up in either case: Are ye still too dull to draw conclusions? The question of a sufficient supply of bread had in no way entered into the situation. It was a matter solely of their imagination and their care for the body that prompted them to think as they had. “Here we see that Christ deals in a most loving manner with those that do not tempt Him, but are ready, absolutely and simply to be instructed of Him. For, behold, how much patience He has with the ignorance of the apostles in the Word and with their weakness in the faith. He did not go away and leave them, as He did the Pharisees; but He bears and heals their foolishness in a most kindly manner and is obliged to explain Himself over against them as against children with clear words in regard to that which He had said, and accommodate Himself to their ability. And they also do not cast away the love, the trust, and the respect toward Him, but they, as true disciples, gladly bear His reproof and become better through it. ” Their understanding having thus been opened, they were no longer at a loss as to the meaning of the word “leaven. ” As the yeast, or leaven, which is added to the meal, though it may be small in amount, yet exerts its power upon the whole mass, so it is with false doctrine. It may be an apparently small matter, a doubt as to the validity of a Scripture-passage, a false understanding of a fundamental truth; and the entire structure of faith is liable to be undermined. The disciples now understood that He warned them against the false doctrine of the Pharisees, including their hypocrisy, pride, envy, self-righteousness, and arrogance, and that of the Sadducees in denying the existence of the spiritual world, the immortality of the soul, the resurrection of the body, and the providence of God. “He reminded them that they must hold the Word and faith firmly against the doctrine of the Pharisees and Sadducees. As though He would say: Why are ye worried on account of the bread for the body? Strive to be concerned for the bread of the spirit, for the Word and faith, against false doctrine and faith. Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, that ye may not, through false teachers, be misled into the kingdom of the devil and error. For this true bread ye must be concerned.”
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
8 Which when Jesus perceived, he said unto them, O ye of little faith, why reason ye among yourselves, because ye have brought no bread?
Ver. 8. O ye of little faith ] Fides famem non formidat. It was want of faith that made them fear they should perish in the wilderness for lack of bread: God was better to them than their fears. He makes the best living of it that lives by faith. Feed on faith; so Tremellius reads that, Psa 37:3 .
Why reason ye among yourselves ] a They likely laid the fault of forgetfulness one upon another: but none found fault with himself for his unbelief and carnal reasoning.
a , Disserere significat, ac verbis inter se disceptare.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
8 12. ] Not only had they forgotten these miracles, but the weighty lesson given them in ch. Mat 15:16-20 . The reproof is much fuller in Mark, where see note.
On and , see note, ch. Mat 15:36 .
This voyage brought them to Bethsada: i.e. Bethsada Julias, on the North-Eastern side of the lake: see Mar 8:22 , and the miracle there related.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Mat 16:8 . : always thinking about bread, bread , instead of the kingdom and its fortunes, with which alone the Master was occupied.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
O ye of little faith. See note on Mat 6:30; and Compare Mat 8:26; Mat 14:31, and Luk 12:28.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
8-12.] Not only had they forgotten these miracles, but the weighty lesson given them in ch. Mat 15:16-20. The reproof is much fuller in Mark, where see note.
On and , see note, ch. Mat 15:36.
This voyage brought them to Bethsada: i.e. Bethsada Julias, on the North-Eastern side of the lake: see Mar 8:22, and the miracle there related.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Mat 16:8. , why reason ye)[720] Man imputes more grievously to himself a defect in the care of outward things, to which God most easily accords indulgence. Faiths mode of estimating is of a higher kind.-, O ye of little faith) It is easy to fall, from want of faith, not only into doubts and fears, but also into errors of interpretation and other mistakes, and even forgetfulness.[721]
[720] Men pass a considerable part of their time, day and night, in turbulent thoughts.-V. g.
[721] By the setting forth of the caution concerning the leaven, the smallness of the faith of the disciples, who were disquieted concerning bread, was betrayed: but that faith the Lord subsequently strengthened, by reminding them of His having twice fed to the full so many thousands.-Harm., p. 347.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
when: Joh 2:24, Joh 2:25, Joh 16:30, Heb 4:13, Rev 2:23
O ye: Mat 6:30, Mat 8:26, Mat 14:31, Mar 16:14
Reciprocal: Exo 40:33 – up the court 2Ki 4:43 – They shall eat Mat 9:4 – knowing Mat 14:20 – and they took Mat 17:17 – O faithless Mar 2:6 – and reasoning Mar 4:13 – Know Mar 4:40 – no faith Mar 8:16 – General Mar 8:17 – perceive Luk 12:28 – O ye Luk 24:38 – and why Joh 6:43 – Murmur
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
16:8
Jesus accused his disciples of small faith because they were disturbed over as trival a matter as a shortage of bread. Had there been no visible prospects for food at all for the present, their general knowledge of past experiences should have given them confidence that nothing serious would be allowed to happen to them.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Mat 16:8. And Jesus knowing it said. This avoids the incorrect notion, that He took some time to discover it
O ye of little faith. Words applied to them before (chap. Mat 8:26; Mat 14:31) on occasions of great weakness. After such miracles their cares were unbelieving.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
16:8 [Which] when Jesus {d} perceived, he said unto them, O ye of little faith, why reason ye among yourselves, because ye have brought no bread?
(d) Not by others, but by virtue of his divinity.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Jesus’ rebuke probably arose from the disciples’ failure to believe that He could provide bread for them in spite of their having witnessed two feeding miracles. This was a serious mistake for them (cf. Mat 6:30).
"The miracles Jesus performs, unlike the signs the Pharisees demand, do not compel faith; but those with faith will perceive their significance." [Note: Carson, "Matthew," p. 363.]
The disciples did not perceive their significance, namely, that Jesus was the Messiah who could and would provide for His people. In this their attitude was not much different from that of the Pharisees and Sadducees.
Jesus did not explain His metaphor to the disciples, but, as a good teacher, He repeated it forcing them to think more deeply about its meaning. Matthew provided the interpretation for his readers (Mat 16:12). Though the Pharisees and Sadducees differed on several points of theology, they held certain beliefs in common. Specifically, the teaching of the Pharisees and Sadducees that Jesus warned His disciples about was the skepticism toward divine revelation that resulted in failure to accept Messiah. These critics tried to fit the King and His kingdom into their preconceptions and preferences rather than accepting Him as the Old Testament presented Him.
This section of the Gospel (Mat 13:54 to Mat 16:12) emphasizes the continuing and mounting opposition to the King. Matthew recorded Jesus withdrawing from this opposition twice (Mat 14:13; Mat 15:21). In both instances He proceeded to train His disciples. The first time He ministered to Jews, and the second time He ministered to Gentiles. This was the pattern of Jesus’ ministry that Matthew hinted at in the first verse of this Gospel. Opposition arose from the Jewish people (Mat 13:54-58), from the Romans (Mat 14:1-12), and most strongly from the religious leaders within Judaism (Mat 15:1-9; Mat 16:1-4). The rejection of this last group finally became so firm that Jesus abandoned them (Mat 16:4). From now on He concentrated on preparing His disciples for what lay ahead of them because of Israel’s rejection of Her King.