How To Handle Injustice
by Nate Wilson
Gospel:
St. Matthew 17: 22-27
Translation
17:22 Then as they were returning into Galilee, Jesus said to them,
Introduction
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Christmas Carol "I heard the bells on Christmas
Day" reflects the way I feel sometimes:
"The Son of Man is about to be betrayed into the hands of men,
17:23 and they will kill Him, yet during the third day, He will be resurrected."
And they were very grieved.
17:24 Then as they came into Capernaum, the two-drachma collectors approached
Peter and said, "Yall's teacher, doesn't He fulfill the two-drachma
[ordinance]?"
17:25 He says, "Yes."
And when he entered into the house, Jesus got in front of him saying, "What do
you think, Simon? The kings of the earth, from whom do they collect income tax
or property tax – from their children or from the others?"
17:26 Peter says to Him, "From the others."
Jesus says to him, "So indeed the sons are free!
17:27 But, in order that we might not scandalize them,
go to the lake, cast a hook, and pull up the first fish that comes up,
and after you open its mouth you will find a shekel.
Once you get this, make a donation to them for me and you.
And in despair, I bowed my head; There is no peace on earth, "I said,
This, of course was written at the peak of the War between the States, when he,
as a Northerner, was worried that the South would win. What's worse, his son had
been badly wounded in the war, and Henry's second wife had died tragically in a
household fire while Henry watched and tried unsuccessfully tried to put it out.
Sadly, Longfellow was not a believer in sin or hell or the atoning death of
Christ. His Unitarian faith could not ultimately help him.
What do you do when someone has done you wrong and you have suffered loss and
injustice? How should a Christian respond to that? I want to look at two brief
stories together at the close of Matthew 17 that point us toward three Christian
responses to injustice: Grief, Suffering, and Faith.
Exposition
17:22 Then as they were returning into Galilee, Jesus said to them, "The Son of
Man is about to be betrayed into the hands of men,
"For hate is strong and mocks the song of peace on earth good-will to men."
Αναστρεφομενων[1] δε αυτων εν[2] τη Γαλιλαια ειπεν αυτοις ‘ο Ιησους μελλει ‘ο
υιος του ανθρωπου παραδιδοσθαι εις χειρας ανθρωπων
17:23 and they will kill Him, yet during the third day, He will be resurrected."
And they were very grieved.
και αποκτενουσιν αυτον και τη τριτη ημερα εγερθησεται και ελυπηθησαν σφοδρα
I am hesitant to step away from both the traditional English translations of the
King James ("abode/staying")[3] and from the modern English editions 2
("come/gathering together"), but what makes the most sense to me is [Show Map]
that Jesus was on Mt. Hermon at the Transfiguration, then He came down the
mountain and healed the demon-possessed "lunatic" boy in Caesarea Philippi at
the foot of the mountain, and then proceeded back South toward His family home
in Capernaum, and that this statement occurred some point after they had crossed
the border back into the region of Galilee but before they had arrived in
Capernaum.
Jesus reiterates what He had told His disciples the previous week during their
retreat at Caesarea Philippi when He "began to show His disciples that it was
necessary for Him to go away into Jerusalem and to suffer many things from the
elders and high priests and scribes, and to be killed, and to be resurrected
during the third day." (Matt. 16:21, NAW)
This second reminder now in 17:22 contains the new piece of information that
Jesus would be betrayed KJV,NIV/ delivered NAS,ESV over to the power of these
men to be killed.
Now, this was not because Jesus was powerless against the government of His day;
it was because God Himself first delivered Jesus up to be killed. (Romans 8:32
He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him over for us all, how will He
not also with Him freely give us all things?[4])
But, think of it, Judas was standing there listening to Jesus – the Judas who
later "delivered/betrayed" Jesus into the hands of the Jewish leaders, who then
"delivered" Jesus into the hands of the Romans to be crucified (Matt. 27:2-3).
Jesus could well have been giving His disciples a cue that He was going to start
letting things escalate with the religious establishment and quit stepping back
and letting things cool down.
But the responses of Jesus and His disciples to the injustice of His death can
teach us two good ways to respond to injustices in our world today:
Jesus' disciples "grieved." Grief can be an appropriate response to injustice.
The grief NAS,NIV/ sorrow KJV/ distress ESV that came over the disciples must
have been due to hearing that Jesus was going to be caught by the authorities
and killed.
We are not told that they understood the whole statement, so some of their grief
may have been foreboding that something bad was about to happen, but they
weren't sure what. It's entirely likely that the disciple's noble love for Jesus
was mixed with selfish and wrong-headed thoughts, but who of us doesn't have
that problem? Mark's parallel account (9:32) adds that they did not understand
and were afraid to ask, and Luke (9:45) explains that they did not understand
because it was "concealed" from them.
Other godly people in the Bible also expressed grief appropriately:
When David discovered that his town of Ziklag had been raided by Amalak-ites and
that his wife and children were missing, he wept. (1 Sam. 30:4)When Lazarus died, Jesus wept. (John 11:35)
It is entirely appropriate to let your face fall in sorrow when evil things
happen - like the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School or the armed
pillaging of the church in Yemen this past week.
It's entirely appropriate to wear black on Fridays to mourn the 42 million
unborn babies killed with government permission this year.
Grieving can be a way of showing love and showing the value of the people who
are hurt by injustice.
There is a place for crying out to God in sorrow, "Oh, Lord, how long [5]?"
Psalm 13:1-2 How long, O LORD? Will You forget me forever? How long will You
hide Your face from me? How long shall I take counsel in my soul, Having sorrow
in my heart all the day? How long will my enemy be exalted over me? (NASB)Matthew 17:17 And Jesus answered and said, "O faithless and wayward generation,
how long will I be with you? How long will I bear you up? …" (NAW)Rev. 6:10 …[the martyrs] cried out with a loud voice, saying, "How long, O Lord,
holy and true, will You refrain from judging and avenging our blood on those who
dwell on the earth?" (NASB)
Grief is one way we can respond to injustices, but we cannot stop there. We must
go on and bear up under injustice. We see this in the example of Christ:
Jesus embraced the injustice of the cross in order to deliver helpless victims.
We saw back in Matthew 15:4 that "God issued commands" like "Honor your father
and your mother," and that whoever breaks those commands "must end in death." (NAW)
But Jesus never broke a single law of God or of man – never did anything wrong,
and so it was not just for Him to be killed. He did not deserve death.
So why did Jesus die? "to save sinners" (1 Tim. 1:15). He offered His life up to
pay the price of sin in the place of sinners who would otherwise die and go to
hell. He accepted injustice in order to deliver us.
"Nothing less would satisfy God's justice and answer His undertaking; if He be a
Sacrifice of atonement, He must be killed, for ‘without blood [there is] no
remission [of sin]." (Hebrews 9:22[6]) ~Matthew Henry
Our world is so messed up that every one of us has suffered injustice. We all
end up suffering from someone else's faults from time to time while they get off
scot-free. Are there any ways that we could purposefully suffer an injustice in
order to lift a burden off of another person like Jesus did?
Well, let us go on to look at another injustice which Jesus bore:
17:24 Then as they came into Capernaum, the two-drachma collectors approached
Peter and said, "Yall's teacher, doesn't He fulfill the two-drachma
[ordinance]?"
Ελθοντων δε αυτων εις Καπερναουμ προσηλθον ‘οι τα διδραχμα λαμβανοντες τω Πετρω
και ειπον ‘Ο διδασκαλος ‘υμων ου τελει τα[7] διδραχμα;
Matthew is the only Gospel-writer who records this incident. It might have
particularly impressed him since he was formerly a kind of tax-collector
himself.
The word here in Greek for the payment is literally "the two drachma."
Drachmas were Greek silver coins roughly equivalent to the Roman Denarius and
worth a quarter- to half of a day's wages. Four drachama coins equaled one
Jewish Shekel.
This two-drachma payment is interpreted accurately by the New King James
translation as "the temple tax." This was not a civil tax like the one that had
to be paid with a Roman coin in Matthew 22, but rather was a part of the Jewish
tithes-and-offerings system that the scribes said had to be paid in Shekels
minted by the priests, so Jewish men had to exchange their Drachmas and Denarii
for these special Shekels to pay this particular tribute.
This was stipulated in Exodus 30:11-16 The LORD also spoke to Moses, saying,
"When you take a census of the sons of Israel to number them, then each one of
them shall give a ransom for himself to the LORD, when you number them, so that
there will be no plague among them when you number them. This is what everyone
who is numbered shall give: half a shekel[8] according to the shekel of the
sanctuary… half a shekel as a contribution to the LORD. Every-one who is
numbered, from twenty years old and over, shall give the contribution to the
LORD. The rich shall not pay more and the poor shall not pay less than the half
shekel, when you give the contribution to the LORD to make atonement for
yourselves. You shall take the atonement money from the sons of Israel and shall
give it for the service of the tent of meeting, that it may be a memorial for
the sons of Israel before the LORD, to make atonement for yourselves." (NASB)
We see it again in 2 Chronicles 24 when King Joash used this type of payment
system to underwrite the restoration of the temple after wicked queen Athaliah
had ruined the temple.
Later on, when Jerusalem was rebuilt under Nehemiah after the Babylonian
captivity, the ordinance was again revived to make a fund for repairs on the
temple. (Neh. 10:32 – but there it was only 1/3 of a didrachma, according to the
LXX.)
John Gill, an 18th Century expert on ancient Jewish customs wrote: "in process
of time, from these instances and examples, it became a fixed thing, that every
year, a half shekel should be paid by every Israelite (excepting women,
children, and servants) towards defraying the necessary charges of the temple
service... There is a whole tract in the Jewish Mishna, called ‘Shekalim,' in
which an account is given of the persons who are obliged to pay this money, the
time and manner of collecting it, and for what uses it is put… [A]ll are bound
to give the half shekel, priests, Levites, and Israelites; and the strangers, or
proselytes, and servants, that are made free; but not women, nor servants, nor
children; though if they gave, they received it of them.… [O]n the fifteenth
(i.e. of the month Adar,) the collectors sit in every province or city… ‘and
mildly ask everyone.' He that gives to them, they receive it of him; and he that
does not give, ליתן אין כופין אותו, ‘they do not oblige him to give.' [O]n the
five and twentieth they sit in the sanctuary to collect, and from hence and
onward, they urge him that will not give, until he gives..."
So while it was not a compulsory tax, there was social pressure put on every
head of household to pay it. It went toward the expenses of maintaining the
physical plant of the temple. (Although different, it could be compared to the
social pressure that businesses put on employees to donate to United Way.)
A.T. Robertson, in his Harmony of the Gospels, charted a timeline of Jesus'
ministry and wrote that this tribute would have come due 6 months before this
incident occurred, but Jesus had been out of town and had not been around to add
a contribution, hence the uncertainty as to whether Jesus was going to pay.
Why do they ask Peter? John Calvin and Matthew Henry suggested that Jesus was
living with Peter and that the officials were therefore assessing Peter's
household. Perhaps that was the case, but we don't really know.
The question, however is framed with some social pressure behind it. The Greek
grammar (Ou + an indicative verb) indicates that they expected Peter to say,
"Yes."
Peter gives the anticipated answer, "Yes, of course my teacher participates in
these donations." His confident answer may indicate that Jesus had paid it in
years past.
17:25 He says, "Yes." And when he entered into the house, Jesus got in front of
him saying, "What do you think, Simon? The kings of the earth, from whom do they
collect income tax or property tax – from their children or from the others?"
Λεγει Ναι και ‘οτε εισηλθεν[9] εις την οικιαν προεφθασεν[10] αυτον ‘ο Ιησους
λεγων Τι' σοι δοκει Σιμων; ‘οι βασιλεις της γης απο τί́́νων λαμβανουσιν
τελη[11] η κηνσον[12], απο των ‘υιων αυτων η απο των αλλοτριων;
17:26 Peter says to Him, "From the others." Jesus says to him, "So indeed the
sons are free,
Λεγει αυτω ‘ο Πετρος[13] Απο των αλλοτριων. Εφη αυτω ‘ο Ιησους Αρα γε ελευθεροι
εισιν ‘οι ‘υιοι
Jesus sees that the time is ripe for another spiritual lesson for Peter, so
Jesus Prevented KJV/ anticipated NKJ/ spoke first NAS,ESV,NIV – got "in front
of" Peter and started his lesson as soon as Peter got back in the door of his
house.
He calls Peter by his given name, "Simon," the name the tax assessor would have
used, and begins with a question about mill LeviesStrong/ Custom KJV,NAS /duty
NIV/ toll ESV and tribute KJV/ tax. "Do kings tax their own kids?" He asks.
The Greek word for strangers KJV,NAS/ othersNIV,ESV is often used to indicate a
foreigner, an outsider – certainly not a family member.
Now in our culture we might answer this question differently because our country
is oriented toward being extra nice to immigrants and treating everybody, but in
Jesus' day, the Roman empire thought the other way around. Romans did not have
to pay taxes, but Romans expected all the other ethnic groups that they had
conquered throughout the world to pay taxes to them, and Rome used that tax
money to provide entertainment and security and other government resources to
Romans for free.
Here, "Jesus as the Son of God claims exemption from the temple tax… [for] royal
families do not pay taxes, but get tribute from the foreigners or aliens,
subjects in reality." ~A.T. Robertson
Sons are Free KJV,ESV/ exempt NAS,NIV/ not bound by obligation Thayer. In the
Greek translation of the O.T., this word is used exclusively to denote people
who are not slaves, and almost all of the N.T. references use this word to speak
of the opposite of slavery.
Although Jesus is going to pay the tribute, He is impressing on His followers
that paying this tax is not a denial of His kingly Messiahship.
The temple was His Father's house (Luke 2:49; John 2:16)
And, in fact Malachi calls it "His temple" (Mal. 3:1 "The Lord whom you seek
will suddenly come into His temple.")
17:27 but, in order that we might not scandalize them, go to the lake, cast a
hook, and pull up the first fish that comes up, and after you open its mouth you
will find a shekel. Once you get this, make a donation to them for me and you."
‘ινα δε μη σκανδαλισωμεν αυτους πορευθεις εις [την[14]] θαλασσαν βαλε
αγκιστρον[15] και τον αναβαντα[16] πρωτον ιχθυν αρον και ανοιξας το στομα αυτου
ευρησεις στατηρα, εκεινον λαβων δος αυτοις αντι εμου και σου.
Jesus does not want to create a scandal, something that would trip people up.
These tax collectors were just doing their job. To explain why He was exempt
would be like offering an excuse to the Salvation Army bell-ringer. They can't
judge you for not giving or excuse you for not giving, they're just ringing the
bell and taking collections.
What's worse, Jesus' refusal to chip in to this fund could cause ignorant people
to think He was irreverent toward holy things. "He does not wish to create the
impression that he and the disciples despise the temple and its worship." ~A.T.
Robertson
But the problem is, Jesus doesn't have the money. Perhaps the moneybag that
Judas carried had gone empty, or perhaps Jesus didn't think it appropriate to
reallocate the donations designated for Him to buy food as donations to the
temple fund. Whatever the case, He solves the problem miraculously with the
money in the fish's mouth.
This piece of money KJV was a silver coin called a "statera" in Greek, and was
equal in value to 4 Drachmas NIV or 1 shekel NAS,ESV.
And so it is that Jesus' own creation pays Him the tribute money, and He turns
around and uses that to pay His own tribute.
You know, "Christ could as easily have commanded a bag of money as a piece of
money; but by this He teaches us… to be content when we have enough for our
present occasions…"
Furthermore, it is instructive that Jesus didn't do the old magician's trick of
pulling a coin out of Peter's ear or anything easy and convenient, no, He sends
Peter back to his income-earning trade of fishing so that this money would be
properly earned. "Even in miracles, Jesus would use means to encourage industry
and endeavour…This is to teach us diligence in the employment we are called to
and called in. Do we expect that Christ should give to us? Let us be ready to
work for Him." ~Matthew Henry
Conclusion
One principle that ties together these two anecdotes from Jesus' life is the
common theme of how to respond to injustice.
1. We looked at grief as a response to injustice, for there is an appropriate
time to express grief,
2. but in addition to grief, we must choose to either suffer or resist
injustice.
a. These two stories from the life of Christ do not address the principle of
resisting injustice; that principle is illustrated in other places,
i. such as Jesus' instruction to His disciples to carry a couple of swords (Lk.
22:36-38),
ii. and Paul's legal use of his Roman citizenship to protect himself from being
killed by mobs from Jerusalem (Acts 25:9-10).
iii. There is a place for resisting injustice and using the means God has given
you to protect the innocent from injustice.
b. But in these snapshots of Jesus' life, we see two situations where it was not
time to resist, and where it was good and right to choose to suffer injustice.
i. In the case of Jesus' crucifixion, He willingly suffered the injustice of a
criminal death and of God's wrath against sin because He was doing it to save us
from having to die that death ourselves.
1. Christians sometimes encounter situations where we literally have the
opportunity to lay down our life and die to save another person's life.
a. My wife recently read a blog of a woman who was pregnant but whose life was
threatened by cancer. The only treatment that would be effective against the
cancer would also kill her baby. So she chose to die of the cancer rather than
abort her baby.
b. An acquaintance of mine by the name of John was sitting in a church service
in Kabul, Afghanistan several years ago when someone threw a grenade in through
the window. John had just enough time to place his body in front of his wife
before the grenade went off, leaving him with severe burns.
c. The motivation for this kind of suffering is love: "Greater love has no one
than this that he lay down his life for a friend." (John 15:13)
2. Now, you may not be in such a dramatic situation of suffering death in order
to save someone else's life, but are their other sacrifices you can make to
shield others from suffering?
a. I'm reminded of a humorous story my Dad told me about his boyhood: One of
Dad's brothers (or sisters) had gotten their clothes extremely dirty and then
taken them off and left them where they didn't belong. Grandpa wanted to find
out who did it so he could straighten them out, so he lined up my dad along with
his brothers and sisters and asked them one by one, Phillip, "Are those your
clothes?" Kenny, "Are those your clothes?" Patti, "Are those your clothes?"
Well, none of Dad's brothers or sisters were willing to "fess up", so Grandpa
went down the line again, "Are these your clothes?" By about the third time, my
Dad realized that Grandpa wasn't going to quit until he had given somebody a
whuppin, and it was obvious to him that the guilty party was not about to admit
it. Meanwhile, some of my Dad's friends showed up, and he wanted to go fishing
with them, so finally Dad piped up and claimed that it was his fault, and he
took the spanking so everybody could get on with life.
b. Of course, we shouldn't lie or overprotect people from important
cause-and-effect relationships, but… you get the idea.
c. On the other hand, suffering injustice might not be to save anybody else from
suffering, it may just be something not worth fighting.
ii. In the case of the temple tax, the problems that would have resulted from
Jesus asserting that He was exempt would have outweighed any financial benefit
from being down a couple of Drachmas.
1. In fact, despite the injustice, there was important symbolism and
example-setting in Jesus paying the tax, as Matthew Henry explained: "Christ,
that in every thing he might appear in the likeness of sinners, paid [the
atonement price (Ex. 30:15) of the temple tax] though he had no sin to atone
for. Thus it became Him to fulfill all righteousness, (Matt. 3:15). He did this
to set an example, [1.] Of rendering to all their due, tribute to whom tribute
is due, (Rom. 13:7). [2.] Of contributing to the support of the public worship
of God in the places where we are. (If we reap spiritual things, it is fit that
we should return carnal things.) … notwithstanding church-corruptions. We must
take care not to use our liberty as a cloak of covetousness or maliciousness, (1
Pet. 2:16)."
2. Furthermore, "Christian prudence and humility teach us, in many cases, to
recede from our right, rather than give offence by insisting upon it. [Now,] We
must never decline our duty for fear of giving offence. (Christ's preaching and
miracles offended, yet He went on with them - Matt. 15:12-13); but we must
sometimes deny ourselves in that which is our secular interest, rather than give
offence; as Paul, in 1 Cor. 8:13 (‘If food causes my brother to stumble, I will
never eat meat again.' cf. Rom. 14:13.)" ~Matthew Henry
3. When people were getting upset at each other in the Church of Corinth, and
started suing each other, the Apostle Paul said it would be better just to suck
it up after being wronged or defrauded (1 Cor. 6:7).
4. Later the Apostle Peter wrote to Christians who were being persecuted and
said, "If it's God's will for you to suffer, it's o.k. for you to suffer for
doing right" (1 Peter 3:17 my paraphrase). That leads me to my final point:
3. Even as we show grief and as we choose to suffer or resist injustice, there
is one more response to that Christians are called to exhibit, and that is
faith. Faith in God to work things out:
a. In this temple tax scenario, Peter trusted that Jesus had the knowledge and
power to oversee the entire sequence of events necessary for this miraculous
provision in the fish. By dropping his hook in the lake, Peter believed Jesus
would see to it that somebody lost just the right denomination of coin and that
a fish would catch that very coin in his mouth – but not swallow it or spit it
out, and then that this very fish would be the first one that his hook brought
up.
b. That is how tightly God's providence works. This is the God we worship and
serve. He is worthy of our trust when we need to depend upon Him to take care of
us.
c. Later on Peter would write that Jesus gave us an example of trusting God
during suffering: 1 Pet. 2:23 "…When He suffered, He made no threats. Instead,
He entrusted Himself to Him who judges justly."
d. As the Christmas carol goes, "God is not dead, nor doth He sleep. The wrong
will fail; the right prevail, with peace on earth goodwill to men."
Brothers and sisters, let us follow the example of Jesus and His disciples by
suffering injustice redemptively with faith in God to work it all out for good.
References:
[1] Critical texts read συστρεφομενων "turned together" following the Sinaiticus
and Vaticanus manuscripts, with which family 1 of minuscules and the Vulgate
concur. This word is used of political conspirators in 2 Sam.15:31, and of
gathering wood for a fire in Acts 28:3. Neither variant appears in the parallel
Gospel accounts. I would like to see more manuscript evidence before adopting an
alternative to the traditional text. The meaning, however, is not very
different.
[2] Patriarchal text has the synonym eis here. Above is the reading of the
Textus Receptus and the Critical editions.
[3] In the Septuagint translation of the Pentateuch, the Greek word upon which
the KJV "abode/staying" is based, seems exclusively to mean "return," but in the
later writings and prophets, it also takes on a meaning of "inhabit." However,
in the NT, the meaning of "inhabit" seems to be entirely replaced by the meaning
of "conducting oneself," so it would be an anomaly if it meant "abide/stay" here
in the Gospels. The more foundational meaning of "return" continues to be used
in a minority of cases in the NT, so I have chosen it here.
[4] (Cf. Acts 2:22-24 which uses a different Greek word to express the same
idea.)
[5] cf. Psalm 35:17 Lord, how long will You look on? Rescue my soul from their
ravages, My only life from the lions.
Psalm 74:10 How long, O God, will the adversary revile, And the enemy spurn Your
name forever?
Psalm 79:5 How long, O LORD? Will You be angry forever? Will Your jealousy burn
like fire?
Psalm 80:4 O LORD God of hosts, How long will You be angry with the prayer of
Your people?
Psalm 82:2 How long will you judge unjustly And show partiality to the wicked?
Psalm 89:46 How long, O LORD? Will You hide Yourself forever? Will Your wrath
burn like fire?
Psalm 90:13 Do return, O LORD; how long will it be? And be sorry for Your
servants.
Psalm 94:3 How long shall the wicked, O LORD, How long shall the wicked exult?
Jer. 47:6 "Ah, sword of the LORD, How long will you not be quiet? Withdraw into
your sheath; Be at rest and stay still.
Habakkuk 1:2 How long, O LORD, will I call for help, And You will not hear? I
cry out to You, "Violence!" Yet You do not save.
Zechariah 1:12 Then the angel of the LORD said, "O LORD of hosts, how long will
You have no compassion for Jerusalem and the cities of Judah, with which You
have been indignant these seventy years?" (NASB)
[6] Hebrews 9:22 And according to the Law, one may almost say, all things are
cleansed with blood, and without shedding of blood there is no forgiveness.
(NASB)
[7] Due to its non-presence in the Sinaiticus and Bezae manuscripts, some
critical texts omit "the," but it's in Nestle-Aland's1979 edition of the GNT and
does not change the meaning.
[8] The Septuagint renders this "half a didrachma" instead of "half a shekel."
[9] Because the Vaticanus and Cairo Uncials (and family 1 of minuscules) do not
have the preposition "eis/into" attached to this verb, this prefix is omitted in
Critical editions of the Greek New Testament. This is not enough reason in my
mind to change the Majority text (which, by the way, is supported by the
Sinaiticus). There is no harm done to the meaning, because the preposition eis
"into" appears in stand-alone form after the verb, making "go into" the clear
meaning of the verb. There are other complications, for the Cairo supports the
Indicative spelling in the Majority of manuscripts, yet the Critical editions
have chosen a Participial form supported by the Sinaiticus, Koridethi, and
Vaticanus Uncials (and families 1 and 13 of the minuscules, although not the
majority of the minuscules), so there's somewhat more support for the Participle
form than there is for the un-prefixed form, but not much more. The Participle
form doesn't affect the meaning because the manuscripts that have an Indicative
also have the temporal oti so that either way the translation is "when… entered"
the house. In one more regard there is a difference among texts, and that is in
the Person of this verb: א, Β, C, D, Θ, f1, and f13 all render this verb in the
Plural as opposed to the Singular in the Majority text. That's fairly convincing
support to me, but again, the context makes clear that Jesus entered and so did
His disciples, so neither the singular nor the plural form of the verb would
change the story.
[10] The 16 occurrences of this Greek word προεφθασεν in the LXX seem to
indicate "go before/go in front of" either in the sense of physically
"preceding" something in a sequence, or in the sense of commanding someone's
attention by being "in front of" their eyes or thoughts. This is the only
occurrence in the NT.
[11] Rom. 13:7 is only other NT reference "custom to whom custom is due," and
Num. 31 – the portion of the spoils of war donated to the temple – is the only
reference in the LXX Penteteuch – roughly equivalent to income tax. Hendricksen
said it was a toll on goods.
[12] This is the root of the word "census" – a poll tax – only here and Mt.
22:17-19 || Mk. 12:14. Hendriksen says this was on persons. I went with
"property tax" because it is somewhat analogous in that it is not based on
increase/profit but on things themselves registered with the local government,
however, it is also analogous to contemporary income taxes in that they are
based on the person as a citizen.
[13] Critical editions read ειποντος δε "and after he said," following the
Sinaiticus, Vaticanus, and Koridethi, and f1 manuscripts. There is no difference
in meaning, as both wordings indicate the same sequence of conversation.
[14] The definite article is not in the Critical editions, but it doesn't affect
the meaning. Even in English translations based upon the Critical Greek text,
they include the definite article because there's only one large body of water
near Capernaum where Peter could fish, and that was the Sea of Galilee.
[15] This word for "hook" is found only here in the GNT and in 2Kings 19:28; Job
40:25; Isa. 19:8; Ezek. 32:3; and Hab. 1:15 in the LXX.
[16] The Byzantine, Textus Receptus, and Critical editions are agreed on this
spelling for some reason, although a bare majority of Greek manuscripts spells
it in the present tense (αναβαινοντα). The difference is so nuanced it wouldn't
really affect an English translation.
See Also:
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