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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 5:24

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Matthew 5:24

Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.

24. before the altar ] Stay the sacrifice, though begun, for God will not accept it unless the heart be free from anger, and the conscience from offence. It is an application of the great principle summed up in “I will have mercy and not sacrifice.” Cp. also Psa 26:6, “I will wash my hands in innocency, O Lord, and so will I go to thine altar.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Verse 24. Leave there thy gift before the altar] This is as much as to say, “Do not attempt to bring any offering to God while thou art in a spirit of enmity against any person; or hast any difference with thy neighbour, which thou hast not used thy diligence to get adjusted.” It is our duty and interest, both to bring our gift, and offer it too; but God will not accept of any act of religious worship from us, while any enmity subsists in our hearts towards any soul of man; or while any subsists in our neighbour’s heart towards us, which we have not used the proper means to remove. A religion, the very essence of which is love, cannot suffer at its altars a heart that is revengeful and uncharitable, or which does not use its utmost endeavours to revive love in the heart of another. The original word, , which we translate gift, is used by the rabbins in Hebrew letters doron, which signifies not only a gift, but a sacrifice offered to God. See several proofs in Schoettgen.

Then come and offer thy gift.] Then, when either thy brother is reconciled to thee, or thou hast done all in thy power to effect this reconciliation. My own obstinacy and uncharitableness must render me utterly unfit to receive any good from God’s hands, or to worship him in an acceptable manner; bat the wickedness of another can be no hinderance to me, when I have endeavoured earnestly to get it removed, though without effect.

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

24. Leave there thy gift before thealtar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brotherThemeaning evidently isnot, “dismiss from thine own breast allill feeling,” but “get thy brother to dismiss from his mindall grudge against thee.”

and then come and offer thygift“The picture,” says THOLUCK,”is drawn from life. It transports us to the moment when theIsraelite, having brought his sacrifice to the court of theIsraelites, awaited the instant when the priest would approach toreceive it at his hands. He waits with his gift at the rails whichseparate the place where he stands from the court of the priests,into which his offering will presently be taken, there to be slain bythe priest, and by him presented upon the altar of sacrifice.”It is at this solemn moment, when about to cast himself upon divinemercy, and seek in his offering a seal of divine forgiveness, thatthe offerer is supposed, all at once, to remember that some brotherhas a just cause of complaint against him through breach of thiscommandment in one or other of the ways just indicated. What then? Ishe to say, As soon as I have offered this gift I will go straight tomy brother, and make it up with him? Nay; but before another step istakeneven before the offering is presentedthis reconciliationis to be sought, though the gift have to be left unoffered before thealtar. The converse of the truth here taught is very strikinglyexpressed in Mar 11:25; Mar 11:26:”And when ye stand praying (in the very act), forgive, ifye have aught (of just complaint) against any; that your Father alsowhich is in heaven may forgive you your trespasses. But if ye do notforgive, neither will your Father which is in heaven forgive you,”c. Hence the beautiful practice of the early Church, to see that alldifferences amongst brethren and sisters in Christ were made up, inthe spirit of love, before going to the Holy Communion and the Churchof England has a rubrical direction to this effect in her Communionservice. Certainly, if this be the highest act of worship on earth,such reconciliation though obligatory on all other occasions ofworshipmust be peculiarly so then.

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

Leave there thy gift before the altar,…. This might easily be done, and the business soon dispatched, at some seasons; particularly, at their public feasts, as the passover, pentecost, and feast of tabernacles, when all the Israelites were together:

and go thy way; make what haste thou canst,

first be reconciled to thy brother: use all means to reconcile him; acknowledge the offence; ask his pardon; assure him that thou wishest well to him, and not ill;

and then come and offer thy gift, by putting it on the altar, before which it was left. This shows, that acts of love and friendship are preferable to sacrifices; and that sacrifices offered up in wrath, and whilst unreconciled to others, are unacceptable to God, and of no avail: and so much the Jews themselves seem to acknowledge; when they say e:

“that transgressions, which are between a man and God, the day of atonement expiates; the transgressions which are between a man and his neighbour, the day of atonement does not expiate, , “until he hath reconciled his neighbour.””

Which is enlarged upon, and explained by Maimonides f, after this manner:

“the day of atonement does not expiate any transgressions, but those that are between a man and God, as when one eats anything that is forbidden, and lies with anything that is forbidden, or the like; but transgressions which are between a man and his neighbour, as he that hurts his neighbour, or curses his neighbour, or steals from him, and the like, are never forgiven, until he has given his neighbour what he owed him, and has “reconciled” him; yea, though he has returned to him the money he owed him, he ought to “reconcile” him, and desire him to forgive him; yea, even though “he has only provoked him by words”, (which is the very case in the text before us,)

, “he ought to reconcile him”, and to meet him until he forgives him: if his neighbour will not forgive, he must bring with him three of his friends, and meet him, and entreat him; and if he will not be reconciled by them, he must bring them a second, and a third time.”

So that he was to use all means to obtain a reconciliation.

e Misn. Yoma, c. 8. sect. 9. f Hilchot Teshuba, c. 2. sect. 9. Vid. T. Bab. Yoma, fol. 87. 1.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

First be reconciled ( ). Second aorist passive imperative. Get reconciled (ingressive aorist, take the initiative). Only example of this compound in the New Testament where usually occurs. Deissmann (Light from the Ancient East, p. 187, New Ed.) gives a papyrus example second century A.D. A prodigal son, Longinus, writes to his mother Nilus: “I beseech thee, mother, be reconciled () with me.” The boy is a poor speller, but with a broken heart he uses the identical form that Jesus does. “The verb denotes mutual concession after mutual hostility, an idea absent from ” (Lightfoot). This because of (two, between two).

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

1) “Leave there thy gift before the altar,” (aphes ekei to doron sou emprosthen tou thusiasterion) “You leave out there in the presence of the altar your gift that you have brought,” for a sacrifice or for a testimony.

2) “And go thy way; first,” (kai hupage proton) “And go as a first priority,” for spiritual worship, 1Jn 1:9; Mr 11:25,26. If all church business meetings were preceded by solemn prayer and obedience here prescribed little conflict would ever arise in church business matters.

3) “Be reconciled to thy brother,” (diallagethi to adelpho sou) “Be or become reconciled to or toward your brother,” that both may be lifted to a higher spiritual plane, Gal 6:1-2; 1Jn 3:23. If there is a second sin against the Holy Spirit it is that of an unwillingness to be reconciled to a brother, Mat 6:14-15.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

(24) Leave there thy gift.The words describe an act which would appear to men as a breach of liturgical propriety. To leave the gift and the priest, the act of sacrifice unfinished, would be strange and startling, yet that, our Lord teaches, were better than to sacrifice with the sense of a wrong unconfessed and unatoned for, and, fortiori, better than the deeper evil of not being ready to forgive. The Talmud gives a curious rule, to which the words may perhaps allude: If a man is on the point of offering the Passover, and remembers that there is any leaven left in the house, let him return to his house, and remove it, and then come and finish the Passover (Pesachim, f. 49). What the scribes laid down as a duty in regard to the leaven of bread, our Lord applies to the leaven of malice and wickedness.

Be reconciled.It is not enough to see in this only a command to remove ill-will and enmity from our own mind, though that, of course, is implied. There must be also confession of wrong and the endeavour to make amends, to bring about, as far as in us lies, reconciliation, or atonement.

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

24. Before the altar Not upon the altar. Proceed not so far as to lay thy sacrifice before God. Interrupt the service and go thy way. First be reconciled By making the proper reparation. Then come and offer thy gift For not till then will thy sacrifice be holy, or thy prayer accepted.

Our Lord here implies, first, that the aught against thee is a just complaint for a real wrong. No one can be supposed unacceptable to God because a captious and slanderous man assails him with charges. And, second, the reconcilement required is not to be measured by the overbearing demands of an unreasonable person; but what we, in an exchange of cases, would justly think our rightful due.

We may here remark, 1. That the enclosure within the railing around the pulpit is properly called the chancel. But as the place where our sacred service and self-consecration are performed, it is not without Scripture reason sometimes styled the altar. 2. The advice of our Lord to clear our minds of every unholy feeling is all important. Spiritual blessings, outpourings of divine influence, revivals that do not melt away our feuds and quarrels, are of very doubtful character. 3. Yet we would caution any person from giving up the habit or form of prayer because he is conscious of not living consistently with his prayer. Let our prayers continue until they make our sins cease, and do not continue sin and let it make prayer cease.

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

24 Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.

Ver. 24. Leave there thy gift ] The fountain of love will not be laded at with uncharitable hands. God appeared not to Abraham till Lot and he were agreed. Jacob reconciled to his brother, first builds an altar, &c.

And go thy way, first be reconciled ] Unless thou wilt lose thy labour, and worse, as Saul and Judas did. God proffers mercy before sacrifice, and is content his own immediate service should be intermitted, rather than reconciliation be omitted. Confess your trespasses ( ) one to another, saith St James, Jam 5:16 your lapses and offences one against another, and then pray one for another, that ye may be healed; as Abraham, after reconciliation, prayed for Abimelech, and the Lord healed him. St Peter would have husbands and wives live lovingly together; or, if some household words occur between them at any time, to peace again that their prayers be not hindered, as else they will be, 1Pe 3:7 . Dissension and ill will will lie at the wellhead and stop the current. The spirit of grace and supplication will be grieved by bitterness, anger, clamour; yea, made thereby to stir with discontent, and to withdraw, as loathing his lodging, Eph 4:30-31 . Si quis est qui neminem in gratiam putat redire posse, non nostram is perfidiam arguit, sed indicat suam. (Cic. Epist. lib. 2. eph 17.) Menander tamen dicit, reconciliationes esse lupinas amicitias.

First be reconciled to thy brother ] And, as a bone once broken is stronger after well setting, so let love be after reconciliation; that if it be possible, as much as in us lieth, we may live peaceably with all men. Let it not stick on our part howsoever, but seek peace and ensue it. Though it flee from thee, follow after it, and account it an honour to be first in so good a matter. I do not see (saith one) the Levite’s father-in-law make any means for reconciliation; but when remission come to his doors, no man entertaineth it more thankfully. The nature of many men is forward to accept and negligent to sue for; they can spend secret wishes upon, that which shall cost them no endeavour. But why should men be so backward to a business of this nature? Almighty God beseecheth sinners to be reconciled unto him, 2Co 5:20 . And, as when a man goes from the sun, yet the sunbeams follow him, shine on him, warm him; so doth the mercy of God follow us all the days of our lives, Psa 23:6 . Our Saviour first sent to Peter that had denied him, and went to the rest that had forsaken him. Aristippus (though but a heathen) went of his own accord to Aeschines, his enemy, and said, Shall we not be reconciled till we become a table talk to all the country? And when Aeschines answered he would most gladly be at peace with him: Remember, therefore, said Aristippus, that although I were the elder and better man, yet I sought first unto thee. Thou art indeed, said Aeschines, a far better man than I, for I began the quarrel, but thou the reconcilement. (Laert. lib. 2.) Guiltiness is commonly clamorous and implacable, and none so averse to reconciliation as they that are most injurious; as he that wronged his brother, thrust away Moses, saying, “Who made thee a ruler?” &c. “Wilt thou kill me?” &c. Act 7:27-28 .

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

Leave. An unusual practice.

be reconciled. Greek. dialattomai. Occurs only here.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Mat 5:24. , , go thy way, first) placed antithetically to , then having come,- , be reconciled to thy brother,) that thou mayest be reconciled to God.-, coming) not returning; for the first going being in vain is not reckoned.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

there: Mat 18:15-17, Job 42:8, Pro 25:9, Mar 9:50, Rom 12:17, Rom 12:18, 1Co 6:7, 1Co 6:8, 1Ti 2:8, Jam 3:13-18, Jam 5:16, 1Pe 3:7, 1Pe 3:8

and then: Mat 23:23, 1Co 11:28

Reciprocal: Lev 6:5 – of his trespass offering Num 9:10 – yet he shall keep Deu 26:4 – before the 1Sa 15:22 – obey Psa 26:6 – so will Mat 5:22 – his brother Mat 18:19 – That if

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

5:24

One command is no more important than another, neither may one duty be made to take the place of another. But the gifts presented at the altar were expected to proceed from the heart, which would not be the case if a man would refuse to make a matter right with his brother. In other words, a ritualistic service should not be treated as a substitute for one of humility and brotherliness. Hence the man was directed to postpone his altar service until he had made. it right with his brother.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.

[Leave there thy gift before the altar.] This business was altogether unusual in gifts offered at the altar, in such a cause. We read, indeed, of the drink-offering, delayed after the sacrifice was offered: “For the wise men say, That a man is not held in his sin, when the drink-offering is put off by some delay; because one may offer his sacrifice to-day, but his drink-offering twenty days hence.” We read also that the oblation of a sacrifice presented even at the altar, in some cases hath not only been delayed, but the sacrifice itself hath been rejected; that is, if, in that instant, discovery was made, in sacrificing the best, either of a blemish, or of somewhat else, whereby it became an illegal sacrifice; or if some uncleanness or other cause appeared in the offerer, whereby he was rendered unfit for the present to offer a gift. Of which things, causing the oblation of the sacrifice already presented at the altar to be deferred, the Hebrew lawyers speak much. But among those things we do not meet at all with this whereof our Saviour is here speaking: so that he seems to enjoin some new matter, — and not new alone, but seemingly impossible. For the offended brother might perhaps be absent in the furthest parts of the land of Israel, so that he could not be spoke with, and his pardon asked in very many days after: and what shall become of the beast in the mean time, which is left at the altar? It is a wonder indeed that our Saviour, treating of the worship at the altar, should prescribe such a duty, which was both unusual (in such a case) and next to impossible. But it is answered: —

I. It was a custom and a law among the Jews, that the sacrifices of particular men should not presently, as soon as they were due, be brought to the altar, but that they should be reserved to the feast next following, whatsoever that were, whether the Passover, or Pentecost, or Tabernacles, to be then offered. “Teeming women, women that have the gonorrhea, and men that have the gonorrhea, reserve their pigeons until they go up to the feast.” — “The oblations which were devoted before the feast shall be offered at the feast: for its is said, These things shall ye do in their solemnities,” etc. But now all the Israelites were present at the feasts; and any brother, against whom one had sinned, was not then far off from the altar. Unto which time and custom of the nation it is equal to think Christ alluded.

II. He does silently chastise the curiosity used in deferring of a sacrifice brought about lesser matters, when this that was greater was unregarded. And he teacheth, that God is worshipped in vain without true charity to our brother. The same also, in effect, do the Gemarists confess.

Fuente: Lightfoot Commentary Gospels