Add parallel Print Page Options

14 But the Pharisees[a] went out and took counsel against him to put him to death.(A)

The Chosen Servant.[b] 15 When Jesus realized this, he withdrew from that place. Many [people] followed him, and he cured them all,[c] 16 but he warned them not to make him known.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 12:14 See Mk 3:6. Here the plan to bring about Jesus’ death is attributed to the Pharisees only. This is probably due to the situation of Matthew’s church, when the sole opponents were the Pharisees.
  2. 12:15–21 Matthew follows Mk 3:7–12 but summarizes his source in two verses (Mt 12:15, 16) that pick up the withdrawal, the healings, and the command for silence. To this he adds a fulfillment citation from the first Servant Song (Is 42:1–4) that does not correspond exactly to either the Hebrew or the LXX of that passage. It is the longest Old Testament citation in this gospel, emphasizing the meekness of Jesus, the Servant of the Lord, and foretelling the extension of his mission to the Gentiles.
  3. 12:15 Jesus’ knowledge of the Pharisees’ plot and his healing all are peculiar to Matthew.