Resource > Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable) >  Matthew >  Exposition >  I. The introduction of the King 1:1--4:11 >  C. The King's childhood 2:1-23 > 
3. The prophecies about Nazareth 2:19-23 (cf. Luke 2:39) 
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Matthew concluded his selective account of the events in Jesus' childhood that demonstrated His messiahship and illustrated various reactions to Him with Jesus' return to Israel.

2:19-20 God's sovereign initiative is again the subject of Matthew's record. This is the fourth dream and the third mention of the angel of the Lord appearing to Joseph in the prologue. The phrase "the land of Israel"occurs only here in the New Testament. Evidently Matthew used it since it recalls the promises and blessings God gave to Jacob and his descendants.109

2:21-23 Joseph obediently responded to the Lord's command. However before he could do so news reached him that Herod the Great's son, Archelaus, had begun to rule as ethnarch over Judea, Samaria, and Idumea. The rest of Herod the Great's kingdom went to his sons Antipas, who ruled as tetrarch over Galilee and Perea (4 B.C. - 39 A.D.), and Philip.110Philip became tetrarch of Iturea, Trachonitis, and some other territories (4 B.C. - 34 A.D.).111

"One of the first acts of Archelaus was to murder some three thousand people in the temple because some of their number had memorialized some martyrs put to death by Herod. Like father, like son."112

Archelaus proved to be a bad ruler. Caesar Augustus banished him for his poor record in 6 A.D.113Philip was the best ruler among Herod the Great's sons.

Evidently God warned Joseph not to return to Archelaus' territory. Joseph chose to settle in Nazareth in Galilee instead, undoubtedly guided there by God. This had been his and Mary's residence before Jesus' birth (13:53-58; Luke 1:26-27; 2:39). Matthew noted that this move was another fulfillment of prophecy (v. 23).

Careful attention to the terms Matthew used to describe this fulfillment helps us understand how Jesus fulfilled Scripture. First, Matthew said the prophecy came through "prophets,"not aprophet. This is the only place in the first Gospel that he said this. Second, Matthew did not say that the prophets "said"or "wrote"the prediction. He said "what was said or spoken"through them happened. In other words, Matthew was quoting indirectly.114

There is no Old Testament passage that predicted that the Messiah would come from Nazareth or that people would call Him a Nazarene. How then could Matthew say that Jesus fulfilled Scripture by living there? The most probable explanation seems to be that Nazareth was a specially despised town in the despised region of Galilee in Jesus' day (John 1:46; 7:42, 52). Several of the Old Testament prophets predicted that people would despise the Messiah (Ps. 22:6-8, 13; 69:8, 20-21; Isa. 11:1; 42:1-4; 49:7; 53:2-3, 8; Dan. 9:26). Matthew repeatedly picked up this theme of Jesus being despised (8:20; 11:16-19; 15:7-8). The writer appears to be giving the substance of several Old Testament passages here rather than quoting any one of them. There may also be an allusion to the naser("branch") in Isaiah 11:1 that the rabbis in Jesus' day regarded as messianic. In that passage David's heir appears to be emerging from a lowly, obscure place.

"In the first century, Nazareneswere people despised and rejected and the term was used to reproach and to shame (John 1:46). The prophets did teach that the Messiah would be a despised and rejected individual (e.g.Isa 53:3) and this is summarized by the term, Nazarene."115

"Jesus is King Messiah, Son of God, Son of David; but he was a branch from a royal line hacked down to a stump and reared in surroundings guaranteed to win him scorn. Jesus the Messiah, Matthew is telling us, did not introduce his kingdom with outward show or present himself with the pomp of an earthly monarch. In accord with prophecy he came as the despised Servant of the Lord."116

Less satisfying explanations of this prophecy and its fulfillment are the following. First, some connect "Nazarene"with "Nazarite"(cf. Judg. 13:5). However, Jesus was never a Nazarite (11:19). Furthermore the etymologies of these words do not connect. Second, some believe the Hebrew word translated "branch"(naser) in Isaiah 11:1 sounds enough like Nazareth to justify a connection. The problem with this view is that the Hebrew word and the town of Nazareth have nothing in common except similar sounding names. Also naseroccurs in only one passage, but Matthew quoted the "prophets."Third, some writers have posited a pre-Christian sect and suggested that Matthew referred to this. There is no evidence to support this theory. Fourth, some believe Matthew was making a pun by connecting the names Nazareth and Nazarene. If this were true, how could he claim a fulfillment of prophecy? Fifth, some think the writer referred to prophecies not recorded in Scripture but known to and accepted by his original readers. Matthew gave no clue that this unusual meaning is what he intended. Furthermore later readers would not only reject such an authority but would charge Matthew with fabricating such a source to support his argument.

Matthew chapter 2 advances the writer's argument significantly by making three major points.

"The first relates to the Gentiles. The Magi come from the East and worship the King of the Jews. A glimmering foreview of all the nations of the earth being blessed in Abraham is seen in this act. . . . The second point Matthew makes concerns the Jews. They are shown to be unconcerned and indifferent to any report concerning Him. Finally, Matthew, by his use of the Old Testament, proves that Jesus is the promised Messiah. He is the fulfillment of all that is anticipated in their Scriptures. These three things form the basis of Matthew's Gospel. Jesus is presented as the Messiah prophesied and promised in the Old Testament. The Jews reject Him. Because of this rejection the King turns to the Gentiles and the kingdom program for the Jews is postponed.

"Chapter one declares the theanthropic character of the person of the Messiah. The reception which is to be given the claims of the Messiah is set forth in chapter two. Matthew three begins the narrative of the historical account of the presentation of Israel's Messiah to that nation."117

"Matthew 1-2 serves as a finely wrought prologue for every major theme in the Gospel."118



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