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But they said, “Not during the feast, so that there won’t be a riot among the people.”[a]

Jesus’ Anointing

Now while Jesus was in Bethany at the house of Simon the leper,[b] a woman came to him with an alabaster jar[c] of expensive perfumed oil,[d] and she poured it on his head as he was at the table.[e]

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Footnotes

  1. Matthew 26:5 sn The suggestion here is that Jesus was too popular to openly arrest him.
  2. Matthew 26:6 sn See the note on leper in Matt 8:2.
  3. Matthew 26:7 sn A jar made of alabaster stone was normally used for very precious substances like perfumes. It normally had a long neck which was sealed and had to be broken off so the contents could be used.
  4. Matthew 26:7 tn Μύρον (muron) was usually made of myrrh (from which the English word is derived) but here it is used in the sense of ointment or perfumed oil (L&N 6.205).sn Mark specifies that the perfumed oil was Nard or spikenard, which is a fragrant oil from the root and spike of the nard plant of northern India (Mark 14:3). This perfumed oil, if made of something like nard, would have been extremely expensive, costing up to a year’s pay for an average laborer.
  5. Matthew 26:7 tn Grk “as he was reclining.”sn 1st century middle eastern meals were not eaten while sitting at a table, but while reclining on one’s side on the floor with the head closest to the low table and the feet farthest away.