Lost sheep of Israel – Matthew 15:24
lost sheep of the
house of
Israel. This same phrase was used by Jesus in 10:6 when he sent his disciples out to preach the gospel to the Jewish people. This phrase comes from Jeremiah 50:6 where Jeremiah spoke of a future time when the people of Israel and Judah would come together to seek the Lord because their leaders had failed them and not led them to God. Jesus used this phrase to pronounce judgment on the Jewish leadership for failing to shepherd God's people (cf. Matt. 9:35-38). See
BC 16.
Great faith – Matthew 15:28
Woman,
great is your faith. Jesus drew out this woman's faith to make sure she understood who he was. Once again, having faith in Jesus' authority and compassion is commended and honored as more important than ethnic or religious heritage (Matt. 3:8-10; 8:10-13).
A Gentile Sermon on the Mount and Healing Ministry – Matthew 15:29-31
These verses intentionally recall chapters 5–9 where Jesus sat near the Sea of Galilee, taught the message of the Sermon and then healed many people, resulting in praise to God. At this point in Jesus' ministry Matthew is showing that Jesus performed the same ministry among the Gentiles that he did among the Jews, including a miraculous wilderness feeding (Matt. 15:32-39). These Gentiles responded by praising "the God of Israel" (Matt. 15:31).
Gentile Wilderness Feeding - Matthew 15:32-39
This story parallels the wilderness feeding in 14:13-21 except this time Jesus performs the same miracle for a group of Gentiles (see note on Matt. 15:29-31). This is the point of emphasizing the twelve baskets leftover in the first story and seven baskets leftover in the second story (cf. Matt. 16:9-10). Twelve is the number associated with Israel (tribes) and seven with the world in general (creation).
Pharisees and Sadducees - Matthew 16:1
The
Pharisees and
Sadducees came and
tested him. In this time period the Pharisees and Sadducees were two distinct groups of Jewish people, the Pharisees being a more conservative and stricter group of rabbis than the Sadducees who did not follow many of the Jewish traditions that had developed in the preceding centuries. Since Matt. 12:14 the Jewish leaders have sought to entrap and discredit Jesus. Here they join forces because they saw in Jesus a dangerous, common enemy.
You interpret the sky – Matthew 16:3
You
know how to
interpret the
appearance of the
sky. It was typical for people in the ancient world (like many places throughout the world today) to have traditional knowledge about how to predict the weather based on generations of observations. Jesus used this to critique them for their hardness of heart and inability to discern that God has sent Jesus.
The sign of Jonah – Matthew 16:4
No
sign will be
given …
except the
sign of
Jonah. This is the second of three times that the OT prophet Jonah was mentioned by Jesus. Later in Matthew 16 Jonah's name will be used in referring to Peter as "
Simon son of
Jonah" (Matt. 16:17). Earlier in 12:39-42 Jesus used the story of Jonah in the belly of the great fish to refer to his future death and burial. Jesus also claimed that he is greater than Jonah. Matt. 12:39 described his time in burial before his resurrection as "the
sign of
Jonah" and this must be the same sign Jesus was referring to here.
Related Resources
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0
International License.