Matthew 8:16

Wednesday, 12 March 2025

When evening had come, they brought to Him many who were demon-possessed. And He cast out the spirits with a word, and healed all who were sick, Matthew 8:16

Note: You can listen to today’s commentary courtesy of our friends at “Bible in Ten” podcast. (Click Here to listen)

You can also read this commentary, scrolling with music, courtesy of our friends at “Discern the Bible” on YouTube. (Click Here to listen), or at Rumble (Click Here to listen).

“And having become evening, they presented to Him many demon-possessings, and He ejected the spirits – a word. And all those being sickly, He healed” (CG).

In the previous verse, Jesus touched the hand of Peter’s mother and her fever left her. From there, she arose and served them. Now, the ongoing narrative of events continues with, “And having become evening.”

The word opsios, evening, is introduced here. It signifies late, afternoon, or nightfall, meaning evening. The context will provide an understanding of the proper meaning.

In this case, the reason for these words isn’t stated here in Matthew, but it becomes clear in Mark’s parallel account. In Mark 1:21, it notes that it was the Sabbath. In Mark 1:29-31, Jesus healed Peter’s mother. Only then in Mark 1:32 does it say, “At evening, when the sun had set, they brought to Him all who were sick and those who were demon-possessed.”

The same is true in Luke’s gospel where the sequence of events is confirmed to be on the Sabbath. In his narrative, the account now begins with, “When the sun was setting.” The reason for this is that the new day in Israel begins at evening. Once the sun is setting, the new day begins. So, to avoid any hint of breaking the Sabbath, the people brought their sick to Him only at this time. As it next says, “they presented to Him many demon-possessings.”

It is the same word found in Matthew 4:24, daimonizomai. It is a present participle, thus, “demon-possessings.” These people were brought forward, “and He ejected the spirits – a word.”

As with the healing of the servant, Jesus merely spoke a word, and the demons were ejected. There is no hint of argumentation from the demons, and no difficulty with the process where Jesus had to hold some type of ritual or cast holy water on the people. The thought is similar to that of Acts 16 –

“Now it happened, as we went to prayer, that a certain slave girl possessed with a spirit of divination met us, who brought her masters much profit by fortune-telling. 17 This girl followed Paul and us, and cried out, saying, ‘These men are the servants of the Most High God, who proclaim to us the way of salvation.’ 18 And this she did for many days.
But Paul, greatly annoyed, turned and said to the spirit, ‘I command you in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her.’ And he came out that very hour.” Acts 16:16-18

One can see how ridiculous the supposed casting out of demons has become in the Roman Catholic Church and elsewhere as people go through long shows, carrying on with rites, rituals, and formulas to supposedly cast out demons. Today, all that is needed for a person to be rid of demons is for them to accept the gospel. When Jesus moves in, all demons must move out.

Next, the narrative says, “And all those being sickly, He healed.” Jesus had a long day of teaching in the synagogue as indicated in the other gospels, and yet, He accommodated those who came by, filling the evening with their needs and desires to be met.

Life application: The reason why it says above that when Jesus moves in, all demons must move out, is because there is nothing in the New Testament epistles to explain demon-possessings nor how to cure them. The narratives in the gospels and Acts are not prescriptive for our time. They simply describe what occurred and are recorded for our understanding concerning Jesus’ work and authority, and concerning the establishment of the church under the authority of Christ.

As there is nothing directive in nature concerning demon-possessings, it tells us that we do not need to worry about them. If we did, it would mean –

  • That we have a spiritual event in the church that has no response to and, thus,
  • We have a void in our dealing with matters that otherwise would affect the church and the salvation of those who interact with the church.

As this is so, and as God has done everything necessary to bring man to a state of salvation through the completed work of Christ, we can know that receiving Christ is sufficient to overcome any demon. This doesn’t mean that Satan or the demons cannot still afflict believers. The epistles indicate otherwise, but the power of God unto salvation has been realized in any person who has come to Him through Jesus.

These are truths that are evident and certain as detailed in verses of the New Testament epistles. Therefore, all of the hoopla that people display concerning demon-possessings is unnecessary, untrue. It is a distraction from giving a person the gospel and allowing him to choose Jesus and receive the path to salvation.

Lord God, help us to always be about the business of sharing Your word. May we make it a point to be bold in our witness for the gospel. If all we can do in our interactions is leave a tract, may we do so, knowing that it may have an eternity-changing effect in the life of another. Give us the heart and desire to do these things, O God. Amen.

 

Matthew 8:15

Tuesday, 11 March 2025

So He touched her hand, and the fever left her. And she arose and served them. Matthew 8:15

Note: You can listen to today’s commentary courtesy of our friends at “Bible in Ten” podcast. (Click Here to listen)

You can also read this commentary, scrolling with music, courtesy of our friends at “Discern the Bible” on YouTube. (Click Here to listen), or at Rumble (Click Here to listen).

“And He touched her hand and it left her, the fever, and she arose and she ministered to them.” (CG).

In the previous verse it noted that Jesus saw Peter’s mother-in-law having been cast and fevering. Now, the words immediately turn to the response to this, saying, “And He touched her hand and it left her, the fever.”

The word puretos, inflamed, is introduced. In this case, it signifies being feverish. It is derived from pur, fire, and is akin to the verb puressó found in the previous verse. The fact that it says He touched her hand does not reflect a lack of faith on her part as some claim, thus contrasting this miracle to the last where He healed with just a word.

Rather, Jesus was going to go to the centurion’s servant and heal him there. However, at the request of the centurion, that didn’t take place. The touching of her hand shows attendant care for her while, at the same time, it demonstrates no timidity in having contact with the sick, just as with the healing of the leper in verse 3.

Jesus was able to touch the sick without becoming sick Himself. At the same time, He was able to cure another without ever having seen him or been near him. The contrasting accounts are intended to show us that no matter what situation arose, Jesus was fully capable of attending to it in a caring and complete way. That is seen in the next words, “and she arose and she ministered to them.”

There is a change in the tense from aorist to imperfect. She was healed and arose, but then she ministered and continued to minister to Jesus and those with Him. She had no ill effects, no lethargy, etc. She was healed completely and immediately got about tending to the guests.

Life application: The healing brought about by Jesus was always complete. In one instance, it came in stages though –

“Then He came to Bethsaida; and they brought a blind man to Him, and begged Him to touch him. 23 So He took the blind man by the hand and led him out of the town. And when He had spit on his eyes and put His hands on him, He asked him if he saw anything.
24 And he looked up and said, ‘I see men like trees, walking.’
25 Then He put His hands on his eyes again and made him look up. And he was restored and saw everyone clearly. 26 Then He sent him away to his house, saying, ‘Neither go into the town, nor tell anyone in the town.’” Mark 8:22-26

Jesus’ two-stage healing of this man served its own purpose. The final stage demonstrated that the healing, however, was complete. As for Peter’s mother-in-law, there is nothing later said about her. She may have gotten a fever again in her life or not. But the healing at this time was complete and that is what the narrative focuses on.

What Jesus does is never incomplete. The physical manifestations of healing by Him, and later by the apostles in His name, are no different than the spiritual healing that is provided by Jesus.

We are not just partially healed from sin where we need to then work to complete the task. Nor are we healed from sin in a manner that secures us from hell but which does not secure us for heaven. In other words, the Roman Catholic doctrine of purgatory.

Instead, we are saved (spiritually healed) and immediately seated in the heavenlies in Christ Jesus, as recorded in Ephesians 2:6. If this were not the case, there would be no such doctrine as the rapture where believers are immediately converted from corruptible to incorruptible bodies as noted in 1 Corinthians 15. Regardless of how those verses are interpreted in relation to how the event takes place, the fact that there is an immediate change is indisputable.

When we are saved, it is a done deal. The healing is immediate, it is guaranteed, and it is eternal.

“But God, who is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast. 10 For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.” Ephesians 2:4-10

Lord God, not only are we saved by grace and not by any works of our own, but Your word reveals to us that the spiritual change in us is immediate in its effect and eternal in its scope. Thank You that we don’t have to add to our salvation in order to complete or maintain it. You have done it all! Now, may we be obedient to produce good works in response to Your healing. Amen.

 

Matthew 8:14

Monday, 10 March 2025

Now when Jesus had come into Peter’s house, He saw his wife’s mother lying sick with a fever. Matthew 8:14

Note: You can listen to today’s commentary courtesy of our friends at “Bible in Ten” podcast. (Click Here to listen).

You can also read this commentary, scrolling with music, courtesy of our friends at “Discern the Bible” on YouTube. (Click Here to listen), or at Rumble (Click Here to listen).

“And Jesus, having come, into the house of Peter, He saw the mother-in-law of him, having been cast and fevering” (CG).

In the previous verse, Jesus healed the centurion’s servant by simply speaking the word. Now, with that event recorded, Matthew turns to another need for healing, beginning with, “And Jesus, having come, into the house of Peter.”

Peter’s house is located in Capernaum. Archaeologists believe they uncovered it in 1968. Since then, it has been made into a national landmark. Of the house, a Google search says the following:

Discovery:
In 1968, archaeologists found the ruins of a large house in Capernaum
The house was part of a cluster of about a dozen houses from the 1st century AD
The house was simple, with coarse walls and an earth and straw roof
The house had a few small rooms around two open courtyards
Evidence:
The house’s walls were plastered and painted with stylized flowers, pomegranates, figs, geometric figures, and hundreds of crosses
The house’s limestone floor had many fragments of votive lamps
The house’s walls had graffiti in many languages, including “Lord Jesus Christ, Help” and “Christ Have Mercy”

Once Jesus had entered the house, it next says, “He saw the mother-in-law of him.” Here the word penthera, mother-in-law, is introduced. It is a feminine Greek noun derived from pentheros, father-in-law. Of her, the next words say, “having been cast.”

As seen before, the idea of being cast means onto a bed of sickness. Hence, most translations just go with that. As for her state when she had been cast, it says, “and fevering.”

This is another new word, puressó. It is derived from pur or pura, both nouns indicating fire. As such, it is a burning fever. The word will only be used one more time, in Mark 1:30 when it details this same account.

Life application: Catholic tradition, without any substantiation from the Bible, says that Peter was the first “pope.” Not only can this not be gleaned from Scripture, but it also rather argues against it in various ways.

Popes are not supposed to be married. It is a tenet of Roman Catholicism. Priests are to remain celibate and unmarried. To cover up the point about Peter being married, Catholics claim, without any justification at all, that Peter was likely a widower when he became an apostle.

In this passage, it mentions Peter’s mother-in-law but not his wife. Because of this, they claim that she was already dead… Well, obviously! Because the Bible doesn’t say anything about her tending to her mother! This is known as an argument from silence. The Bible is not focusing on Peter’s wife, it is focusing on her sick mother.

In all three synoptic gospels, a boy is healed after the transfiguration. There is no mother mentioned in any of the accounts. Using Roman Catholic logic, it is obvious that this boy had no mother and his father had no wife.

Other Catholics claim that Peter and his wife separated by mutual consent so that he could minister with Jesus. That is called eisegesis, inserting a presupposition into the text. There is nothing to even hint at this.

Catholic doctrine holds that Jesus and Paul both encouraged celibacy in the service of the kingdom of God. It is true that Jesus was never married, however the exact opposite is true with Peter. He refers to marriage and makes no limitations on ministers of the gospel.

Some Catholics claim that Peter was never married. A man would be a blithering idiot to have a mother-in-law and never have a wife. In fact, he would be laughed out of the Galilee. People would still be talking to this day about the numbskull who decided to have a mother-in-law without a wife.

The point of this life application is that Roman Catholicism is a cult. Stay away from this ridiculous expression of Christianity. In doing so, you will do well.

*A man with a mother-in-law who never got married… ha!

Lord God, may we carefully handle Your word, never inserting what isn’t in it and never making idle speculations or even doctrines about what it doesn’t say. An argument from silence is damaging when it is intended to support something already nonsensical. Help us, O God, not to treat Your word the way that Roman Catholicism does. Amen.

 

Matthew 8:13

Sunday, 9 March 2025

Then Jesus said to the centurion, “Go your way; and as you have believed, so let it be done for you.” And his servant was healed that same hour. Matthew 8:13

Note: You can listen to today’s commentary courtesy of our friends at “Bible in Ten” podcast. (Click Here to listen).

You can also read this commentary, scrolling with music, courtesy of our friends at “Discern the Bible” on YouTube. (Click Here to listen), or at Rumble (Click Here to listen).

“And Jesus, He said to the centurion, ‘And you, withdraw! As you believed, it became to you.’ And his servant, he was cured in that hour” (CG).

In the previous verse, Jesus noted that the sons of the kingdom would be cast into outer darkness, where there will be lamentation and the gnash of the teeth. Having completed that thought, He now returns His words to the faithful centurion. As it next says, “And Jesus, He said to the centurion, ‘And you, withdraw!’”

He had asked for healing for his servant. However, he felt unworthy to have Jesus even come to his house, so he asked Him to speak the word knowing his servant would be healed. Therefore, Jesus now instructs him to withdraw. Because of his great faith, Jesus next says, “As you believed, it became to you.”

Jesus places the response to the healing on the faith of the centurion. This is not unique in the gospels. Another example which takes the opposite turn is found in Luke 9 –

“Now it happened on the next day, when they had come down from the mountain, that a great multitude met Him. 38 Suddenly a man from the multitude cried out, saying, ‘Teacher, I implore You, look on my son, for he is my only child. 39 And behold, a spirit seizes him, and he suddenly cries out; it convulses him so that he foams at the mouth; and it departs from him with great difficulty, bruising him. 40 So I implored Your disciples to cast it out, but they could not.’
41 Then Jesus answered and said, ‘O faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you and bear with you? Bring your son here.’ 42 And as he was still coming, the demon threw him down and convulsed him. Then Jesus rebuked the unclean spirit, healed the child, and gave him back to his father.” Luke 9:37-42

Jesus’ words imply that the faith of the people was lacking, causing the healing to not take place. This is just the opposite of the centurion. He had faith that Jesus could perform and the response is spoken based on that. Understanding this, Matthew next records, “And his servant, he was cured in that hour.”

By the spoken word alone, just as the centurion had anticipated, the servant was restored. Thus, there is a validation in the narrative that Jesus has the authority over the very state of another human without even being in physical contact with him. And more, He was able to direct the healing to a particular person in the house, identifying him apart from anyone else.

Further, He was able to identify the exact cause of the affliction, isolate it, and cure it, all without ever having seen the person. These and certainly many other details provide us with the knowledge that Jesus’ spoken authority displays omniscience concerning the matter at hand. It also displays an omnipotent ability concerning it as well.

How else can it be explained that He could identify a place, a person, the exact cause of the affliction, the perfectly delivered remedy to it, and so forth? Jesus’ ability is perfectly in accord with the power of God because He is fully God. This is the lesson that we see in this account.

Life application: It needs to be remembered that the healings done by Jesus and the apostles served a particular purpose. They identified the power of God in Christ, validating His ministry and His authority, even after His departure. They helped establish the church until the word of God was completed and available to the church.

It should not be thought that miraculous healings do not occur today. We are told to pray. The very fact that we are demonstrates that the avenue for what we pray for is still open. However, the healing is to be in accord with the will of God.

If God responded favorably to every prayer for healing, there would be no need for faith. It would be an expectation. If that was the case, the purpose of salvation by grace through faith would no longer be valid. Further, it would make healing subject to our prayers. The entire thought is convoluted and inappropriate.

When God determines He will heal to provide a demonstration of His power, it is done so that we still have to have faith that it is so. Therefore, it is both presumptuous and sinful to claim healing in Jesus’ name. To do so usurps God’s authority and His right to withhold healing. Further, when the healing doesn’t come, people’s faith is harmed by that fact.

Be responsible in your thinking in regard to such things. God can heal. We must have faith that it is so. This is because the Bible says it is possible. But it is not a blanket approval for those in the church for it to come about.

Lord God, we thank You that because we live by faith, we are dependent on You from moment to moment. If we had sight at this time, our attitudes toward You would be vastly different than they are now. You have established the church in a manner that causes us to continue to live by faith. Thank You for the wisdom behind this. Someday, however, our faith will be sight. May that day be soon. Amen.

 

Matthew 8:12

Saturday, 8 March 2025

But the sons of the kingdom will be cast out into outer darkness. There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.” Matthew 8:12

Note: You can listen to today’s commentary courtesy of our friends at “Bible in Ten” podcast. (Click Here to listen).

You can also read this commentary, scrolling with music, courtesy of our friends at “Discern the Bible” on YouTube. (Click Here to listen), or at Rumble (Click Here to listen).

“And the sons of the kingdom, they will be ejected into the darkness, the outer. There, it will be the lamentation and the gnash of the teeth.” (CG).

In the previous verse, Jesus noted to those who followed Him that many will come from east and west and sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of the heavens. He next contrasts that with the fate of the people of Israel, beginning with, “And the sons of the kingdom, they will be ejected.”

In these words, Jesus is specifically speaking of Israel the people. They are the sons of the kingdom, and they are the people under the Law of Moses. And so, a contrast is made between justification by faith, such as Abraham, and life under law, which epitomizes Israel. It is apparent when thought through that Israel looked at that law as a means to an end. It is not, except as it is fulfilled in Jesus.

Because of their lack of faith in Jesus when He came, He next says concerning them that their ejection will be, “into the darkness, the outer.”

Jesus uses the word exóteros, outer, it is a comparative of exó, without or outside. This word is only found three times in Matthew. Each instance is used in the same general thought, that of being ejected into outer darkness. In being so ejected, Jesus next says of them, “There, it will be the lamentation and the gnash of the teeth.”

The word translated as lamentation has already been seen in Matthew 2:18. However, the word translated as gnash, brugmos, is new. Because it is a noun, translating it as “gnashing” is incorrect. It is derived from the verb bruchó, to gnash. Being a noun, it signifies the state, not the act.

The meaning of His words could not be clearer. The woes that will come upon Israel for their rejection of Jesus will be a self-inflicted wound. While an innumerable number of Gentiles from all around the world will be invited to the good thing God is doing in Christ Jesus because of faith in Him, the people of Israel will receive eternal punishment in a darkened, tormenting place because they failed to properly check the manual.

Life application: The Bible is a book that gives instruction on how to be right with God. It is often misunderstood because so much of it deals with the period under the Law of Moses. But taking it as a whole, it is clear that God is using the law as a tool of instruction for man. Its purpose is to lead him to the grace of God in Christ.

Israel missed this and went into extended punishment for their disobedience. Israel continues to miss this point today. This is so much the case that they blame God for the mess that they got themselves into. Would the Holocaust have come upon them if they were right with God? The answer is clearly, No.

And yet, a glaring example of their attitude concerning the event has recently arisen. A man named Menachem Rosensaft wrote a book called Burning Psalms. It is a collection of 150 psalms which are set in opposition to the biblical Book of Psalms. The biblical book extols God, revealing his loving, protective hand against evil and evildoers.

On the other hand, Mr. Rosensaft’s psalms indict God for failing to act during their terrible ordeal known as the Holocaust. He blames God, shoving devotion and praise of Him right back in His face as if they deserved better treatment. But the Bible told them, in advance, all of the woes that would come upon them for what they did in rejecting His mercies through Christ.

Despite this, God has kept Israel, and He has promised to restore them to Himself as a nation. The Book of Joshua shows how this will happen in typology. Someday, they will be brought into the New Covenant, being baptized into Christ’s death and resurrection.

Until that day, many more woes lie ahead for them. We are watching the typology and prophecies of the Bible being fulfilled before our eyes. While we can pity Israel for the woes that have come upon them, we should also understand that nothing that has occurred was apart from God telling them it would happen. Today’s verse is one of many that reveals this truth.

Lord God, we know that You are just in all Your ways. Help us never to impute wrongdoing to You through our words or attitudes as they are expressed in Your presence. You have offered us life and restoration. May we accept it, understanding that when we turn from You, our judgment and punishment, no matter how severe, is justified. Help us to understand this truth. Amen.