Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Mary worships


Preparing for Christ’s Death
(26:1–16)
And it came about that when Jesus had finished all these words, He said to His disciples, “You know that after two days the Passover is coming, and the Son of Man is to be delivered up for crucifixion.” Then the chief priests and the elders of the people were gathered together in the court of the high priest, named Caiaphas; and they plotted together to seize Jesus by stealth, and kill Him. But they were saying, “Not during the festival, lest a riot occur among the people.”
Now when Jesus was in Bethany, at the home of Simon the leper, a woman came to Him with an alabaster vial of very costly perfume, and she poured it upon His head as He reclined at the table. But the disciples were indignant when they saw this, and said, “Why this waste? For this perfume might have been sold for a high price and the money given to the poor.” But Jesus, aware of this, said to them, “Why do you bother the woman? For she has done a good deed to Me. For the poor you have with you always; but you do not always have Me. For when she poured this perfume upon My body, she did it to prepare Me for burial. Truly I say to you, wherever this gospel is preached in the whole world, what this woman has done shall also be spoken of in memory of her.”
Then one of the twelve, named Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests, and said, “What are you willing to give me to deliver Him up to you?” And they weighed out to him thirty pieces of silver. And from then on he began looking for a good opportunity to betray Him. (26:1–16)
Chapter 26 begins the last and most pivotal section of Matthew’s presentation of the gospel. Everything else has been a prologue, an introduction to the great conclusion, which focuses on the cross of Jesus Christ—the culmination of the gospel and the culmination of redemptive history, the only eternal hope of fallen mankind.
The hymn writer John Bowring exulted,
In the cross of Christ I glory,
Tow’ring o’er the wrecks of time.
All the light of sacred story
Gathers round its head sublime.
Everything in the sacred story of God’s redemptive plan does indeed center on the cross, apart from which no other revelation or work of God would have any ultimate value for sinful man. It is through the cross of Christ alone that the Lord has provided the way for sinners to be saved and united with Him, the holy God. There is no salvation, no gospel, no biblical Christianity apart from the cross of Christ. It is because he unequivocally believed that central biblical truth Paul could tell the Corinthians, “I determined to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified” (1 Cor. 2:2).
The cross is the essence of redemptive truth-foreshadowed in the acceptable sacrifice of Abel, in the ark that saved Noah and his family, in the substitute ram provided to Abraham on Mount Moriah as the substitute for Isaac, in the deliverance of Israel from Egypt, in the struck rock that brought forth water in the wilderness, in the Levitical sacrifices, in the serpent lifted up in the wilderness for healing, in Boaz as Ruth’s kinsman redeemer, and in countless other Old Testament persons and events. In the deepest sense, all Old Testament truth and history point unerringly to the cross of Jesus Christ. John the Baptist, the last prophet of the Old Covenant, testified of Jesus, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29). Above all else, the Christian gospel is the message of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, and that is the dominant and supreme focus of both testaments, the Old as well as the New.
Matthew deals with the cross in a concise and straightforward way. His gospel could well be called an expanded narrative of the cross, and in the last three chapters he focuses on this central theme in several culminating elements. In chapter 26 he details the preparation for the cross and the arrest of Jesus. In chapter 27, he presents Jesus’ trials, execution, and burial. And in chapter 28 he narrates the Lord’s resurrection victory over death and His final instructions to the disciples.
Chapter 26 picks up the narrative at the end of the Olivet discourse, which Jesus had just finished. It was still Wednesday, an unusually eventful day that had included Jesus’ teaching the multitudes in the Temple and His excoriating the Jewish religious leaders for their hypocritical ungodliness. Upon leaving the Temple, He went with His disciples to the Mount of Olives, where He privately taught them about His second coming (Matt. 24:3–25:46).
Then the Lord abruptly brought them back to the central reality of His first coming. For the fourth and last time (see Matt. 16:21; 17:22–23; 20:18–19) He told them of His inevitable death, which would occur only two days hence (26:2). The crucifixion itself was the next major event in Messiah’s mission. Before He should return in glory and power He must die in willing and humble submission to His Father’s plan.
In 26:1–16, Matthew presents four incidents that give distinct perspectives on the preparations for Jesus’ imminent death: the preparation of sovereign grace (v. 2), the preparation of hateful rejection (vv. 3–5), the preparation of loving worship (vv. 6–13), and the preparation of betraying hypocrisy (vv. 14–16). Each of those events was in the eternal plan of God for the redemption of the world, and each one transpired precisely according to that divine master plan.
The Preparation of Sovereign Grace
You know that after two days the Passover is coming, and the Son of Man is to be delivered up for crucifixion. (26:2)
In His incarnation, Jesus voluntarily limited the use of His omniscience, His glory, and certain other attributes of His deity (cf. Phil. 2:7–8). In His humility and self-imposed limitations as a man, Jesus taught only the divine truth that His heavenly Father revealed to Him. “The Father Himself who sent Me,” Jesus said, “has given Me commandment, what to say, and what to speak” (John 12:49; cf. Matt. 24:36).
Now Jesus knew it was the Father’s time for Him to die, and He not only declared again that He must suffer and be crucified but specified that His death was only two days away, at the beginning of the Passover. At that divinely appointed time the Son of Man would be delivered up for crucifixion.
Unbelieving skeptics have long tried to explain Jesus’ death as a quirk of fate, the unintended termination of a well-meaning revolution that was discovered and crushed or the sad end to the delusions of a madman. Others picture Jesus as a visionary whose dreams were ahead of the age in which He lived, or as a prophet who overstated His claims and thereby roused the ire of the religious establishment. But such assertions do not square with the gospel accounts and are blasphemous.
As already noted, Jesus had predicted at least three times previously that He would suffer to the death but would rise again. He had even indicated that His death would be in Jerusalem and that He would rise on the third day. He was on a divine timetable, and no human plans or power could cause that timetable to vary in a single detail. “No one has taken [My life] away from Me,” He declared, “but I lay it down on my own initiative. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it up again” (John 10:18). When Pilate said to Jesus, “ ‘Do You not know that I have authority to release You, and I have authority to crucify You?’ Jesus answered, ‘You would have no authority over Me, unless it had been given you from above’ ” (John 19:10–11).
There were many times when people sought to kill Jesus but were unable to do so. The Jewish religious leaders began plotting His death soon after He began His public ministry (John 5:18), but they were not able to fulfill that intention until it fit into God’s timetable.
The first attempt on Jesus’ life was made shortly after He was born, when Herod massacred all the male infants in the vicinity of Bethlehem. God sent an angel to warn Joseph to take Jesus and His mother to Egypt until the danger was over. On one occasion when He was ministering in a synagogue in His home town of Nazareth, the people became incensed by His claim to be fulfilling Isaiah’s prophecy and by His reminding them of several instances when God chose to bless certain Gentiles rather than Jews. They succeeded in leading Him to the edge of a high cliff on the outskirts of the city, but before they could throw Him to His death, He miraculously passed through their midst and went His way (Luke 4:16–30).
After Jesus healed the crippled man at the pool of Bethesda, the Jewish leaders began “seeking all the more to kill Him, because He not only was breaking the Sabbath, but also was calling God His own Father, making Himself equal with God” (John 5:18). To some people Jesus became known as “the man whom they are seeking to kill” (John 7:25). But when the Temple police were sent to arrest Him for healing a man on the Sabbath, they returned empty-handed. When the chief priests and Pharisees asked the officers why they did not bring Jesus back with them, they replied, “Never did a man speak the way this man speaks” (John 7:44–46).
All of those attempts to kill Jesus, and perhaps others that are not recorded, failed because it was not God’s time or God’s way for the Son to die. Only the sovereign grace of God could have brought Jesus to the cross. No human power could have accomplished it apart from God’s will, and no human power could now prevent it, because it was now God’s plan. As Jesus declared at the Last Supper, “the Son of Man is going as it has been determined” (Luke 22:22). And as Peter declared at Pentecost, Jesus was “delivered up by the predetermined plan and foreknowledge of God” (Acts 2:23).
The appropriate time for Jesus to die was at Passover, when the sacrificial lambs were slain, because that celebration pointed to “the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29). The sacrifices of all the other lambs were but faint symbols of what the true Lamb was soon to accomplish in reality.
As Philip explained to the Ethiopian, Jesus was the Lamb predicted by Isaiah, led to slaughter but not opening His mouth (Acts 8:32–34). As Paul declared to the Corinthian believers, Jesus was “Christ our Passover [who] also has been sacrificed” (1 Cor. 5:7). As Peter proclaimed to the scattered and persecuted saints of the first-century church, Jesus was the unblemished Lamb “foreknown before the foundation of the world, but [who] has appeared in these last times for the sake of you” (1 Pet. 1:19–20). As John saw on Patmos, Jesus was “the Lamb that was slain to receive power and riches and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing” (Rev. 5:12).
The Preparation of Hateful Rejection
Then the chief priests and the elders of the people were gathered together in the court of the high priest, named Caiaphas; and they plotted together to seize Jesus by stealth, and kill Him. But they were saying, “Not during the festival, lest a riot occur among the people.” (26:3–5)
As Jesus was speaking to His disciples that Wednesday evening on the Mount of Olives, the Sanhedrin, composed primarily of the chief priests and the elders of the people, was gathered together in the court of the palace of the high priest, named Caiaphas. The chief priests represented the wealthy and influential religious nobility and the elders represented the wealthy and influential lay nobility. Scribes were present when Jesus was taken to Caiaphas’s house after He was arrested (Matt. 26:57), and it is likely that some of them were also there at this time.
According to the famous Jewish historian Josephus, the full name of the high priest was Joseph Caiaphas. He was a conniving, treacherous, and deceitful man depicted in Scripture in the one-dimensional role of Jesus’ antagonist. In every passage where he is mentioned, he is seen pursuing the destruction of Jesus. Like Herod, his hatred and fear of Jesus was not theological but political. Caiaphas wanted to destroy Jesus because he feared that He posed a serious threat to his position and power over the Jewish people. Driven purely by greed and selfish, jealous ambition, he had no sense of justice, righteousness, or propriety. He had no regard for his country, his people, or his religion, except as those could be used to personal advantage. His basic operating principle was expediency, epitomized for all time in his infamous declaration: “It is expedient for you that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation should not perish” (John 11:50).
The high priesthood traditionally was passed on through the Levitical line, but during the Roman occupation the position generally was sold or bestowed as a political favor. Because the Jewish people would not have tolerated a high priest without some Levitical heritage, Caiaphas married the daughter of Annas, his predecessor in the high priesthood. The two men even served jointly for a period of time (see Luke 3:2). Caiaphas served as high priest from a.d. 15 to 37, an unparalleled tenure. To hold the office for that long required a close relationship with Rome, and over the period of some hundred years, 28 different men served as high priest. Caiaphas’s successor lasted only 50 days in office.
Caiaphas was the epitome of the decadent religious system that now dominated Israel. Wicked as he was, he alone could enter the Holy of Holies on the Day of Atonement and offer the sacrifice. He supervised all the priestly functions in the Temple and profited from the merchandising there that had so incensed Jesus that He twice drove out the money changers and sellers of sacrificial animals (John 2:14–16; Matt. 21:12–13).
The Sanhedrin had assembled in Caiaphas’s house for one purpose: to plot how they could seize Jesus. They wanted to do it by stealth in order not to antagonize the masses in the city where Jesus was popular; and once they had Him firmly in their grasp they would then kill Him when it seemed propitious. They had endured more of Him than they could tolerate and were determined to put an end to His exposure of their hypocrisy and ungodliness and His threat to their power and wealth. Apparently they planned to arrest Him as soon as possible, before He had opportunity to escape or amass further support among the people. He would then be held in custody until the Passover crowds had left Jerusalem, making it safer to put Him to death, perhaps also in secret. Therefore they were saying, “Not during the festival.”
Jerusalem was swollen to near bursting with pilgrims from all parts of the world who had come to worship at the Passover festival. According to Josephus, some 256,500 sacrificial lambs were slain during a typical Passover. And because tradition required that no fewer than ten people were to eat of one lamb, the number of celebrants could have exceeded two million. Many of the worshipers would have been from Galilee and other places where Jesus had ministered and gained great popularity for His powerful preaching and miracle working. And a large number of those admirers doubtlessly were among the multitudes who, only a few days earlier, had strewn garments and palm branches on the road before Jesus and acclaimed Him with shouts of “Hosanna to the Son of David; blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord” (Matt. 21:9).
From the standpoint of the Jewish leaders, therefore, Passover was the worst possible time for them to take direct action against Jesus, especially to put Him to death. They feared it would surely cause a riot … among the people. But Passover was the time God had chosen, and those hateful rejecters would crucify Jesus according to God’s plan rather than their own. During the many times when they wanted to kill Jesus immediately, they could not. Now, when they wanted to postpone putting Him to death, they could not. God’s time was not eight days hence but two, not after the Passover but at its commencement. When, by God’s sovereign allowance, Jesus’ enemies finally succeeded in putting Him to death, it was at the very time they most wanted to avoid.
The Preparation of Loving Worship
Now when Jesus was in Bethany, at the home of Simon the leper, a woman came to Him with an alabaster vial of very costly perfume, and she poured it upon His head as He reclined at the table. But the disciples were indignant when they saw this, and said, “Why this waste? For this perfume might have been sold for a high price and the money given to the poor.” But Jesus, aware of this, said to them, “Why do you bother the woman? For she has done a good deed to Me. For the poor you have with you always; but you do not always have Me. For when she poured this perfume upon My body, she did it to prepare Me for burial. Truly I say to you, wherever this gospel is preached in the whole world, what this woman has done shall also be spoken of in memory of her.” (26:6–13)
Matthew here presents a flashback to the previous Saturday, when Jesus came into the area of Bethany and Bethphage, just east of Jerusalem near the Mount of Olives (see Matt. 21:1; Mark 11:1). In this touching account, a third preparation for Jesus’ crucifixion is portrayed. It is in stark contrast to that of the Sanhedrin, reflecting loving worship rather than hateful rejection.
While in Bethany Jesus and the disciples were invited to the home of Simon the leper for supper. From John’s account we learn that Mary, Martha, and Lazarus were also present and that Martha served the meal, probably as a gesture of friendship to Simon as well as to the Lord (John 12:1–3).
Since a leper was not allowed to live in towns or cities or to associate with nonlepers, it is clear that Simon had been cleansed. And because that dread disease was incurable by medical means, he apparently had been healed miraculously by Jesus. In deep gratitude for that deliverance, he had asked Jesus and the others to his house for a meal.
During the supper a woman, whom Matthew does not identify but John tells us was Mary (12:3), came to Him with an alabaster vial of very costly perfume, and she poured it upon His head as He reclined at the table. From Mark we learn that the very costly perfume was worth “over three hundred denarii,” a year’s wages for a common laborer or soldier, and that the expensive alabaster vial was broken, making Mary’s act even more costly (Mark 14:3–5).
Mary had always been specially attentive to the Lord’s teaching (see Luke 10:39), and it seems that on this occasion she accepted the reality and understood the significance of Jesus’ impending death better than the Twelve. She may have sensed that in His tragic death somehow lay her redemption. She understood what the disciples did not want to understand, that Jesus had to die in order to be raised again. Unlike them, she was not caught up in the carnal, selfish desire for Christ to establish His earthly kingdom immediately in order to share in the glory and privilege that event would bring.
In an act of unmeasured love, Mary poured the perfume upon His head as He reclined at the table. The perfume was a pound of pure nard, John tells us, which she also used to anoint Jesus’ feet (John 12:3). In that adoring testimony of love and honor Mary poured out her soul in worship even as she poured out the perfume. Being absolutely controlled by adoration for her Lord, she lost all sense of restraint and economy.
Mary did not offer that valuable possession to support a program or a ministry but offered it to Christ Himself. She did not selfishly seek a visible and tangible result from her generosity but without hesitation offered her most expensive earthly possession to the Lord in an act of effusive, adoring worship.
Having no comprehension of what prompted Mary to do what she was doing, the insensitive disciples were indignant when they saw this, and piously asked, “Why this waste?” At the instigation of the traitorous Judas (see John 12:4–5) they suggested that the “perfume might have been sold for a high price and the money given to the poor.” Even had that pragmatic and seemingly altruistic notion been pursued, however, it would not likely have benefited many poor people. Because Judas was treasurer of the group and also a thief, he no doubt would have embezzled most of the money for himself (see John 12:6). Now that he was totally disillusioned with Jesus, he probably felt even more justified in stealing whatever he could before going his own way.
Although the disciples’ indignation was not voiced openly but only among themselves (Mark 14:4) and to Mary, Jesus was aware of this and rebuked them for it. “Why do you bother the woman?” He asked, “For she has done a good deed to Me. For the poor you have with you always; but you do not always have Me.”
In the parable of the sheep and the goats the Lord had just graphically taught that meeting the physical needs of His people is of the utmost importance and is a mark of genuine salvation (Matt. 25:34–36). But He was very soon to end His earthly ministry and return to His Father in heaven. And before He returned He would suffer, die, and be raised up. This was therefore not the time for philanthropy but adoration, not the time for charity but for worship. Just as she had done on an earlier occasion, Mary now had “chosen the good part” (Luke 10:42) and was performing a beautiful good deed to her Lord.
Genuine worship is the supreme service a Christian can offer to Christ. There is a time for ministering to the poor, the sick, the naked, and the imprisoned. There is a time for witnessing to the lost and seeking to lead them to the Savior. There is a time for discipling new believers and helping them grow in the faith. There is a time for careful study and teaching of God’s Word. But above all else that the Lord requires of His people is their true worship, without which everything else they may do in His name is empty and powerless.
The worshiper emulated by Mary does not ask, “How much is it going to cost?” or, “Do I have the time?” Like her, the true worshiper gives Jesus whatever he has, knowing it is trifling compared to what has been received from Him.
In this particular and unique act of worship, when Mary poured this perfume upon Jesus’ body, without her even realizing it she did it to prepare Him for burial. It became a symbolic deed that anticipated His death and burial.
What Mary did was of such lasting significance that Jesus declared, “Truly I say to you, wherever this gospel is preached in the whole world, what this woman has done shall also be spoken of in memory of her.” Through the accounts of this story in three of the gospels, the Holy Spirit secured for posterity a memorial to her love and generous worship. In fulfillment of the Lord’s prediction, for nearly two thousand years what this woman did has indeed been spoken of in memory of her. She is perpetually an example to all Christians of unselfish, sacrificial adoration.
The Preparation of Betraying Hypocrisy
Then one of the twelve, named Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests, and said, “What are you willing to give me to deliver Him up to you?” And they weighed out to him thirty pieces of silver. And from then on he began looking for a good opportunity to betray Him. (26:14–16)
In contrast to Mary, who gave an open testimony of loving worship, Judas Iscariot gave clandestine testimony of betraying hypocrisy.
Going to the chief priests, probably while they were still assembled in Caiaphas’s house, Judas asked callously, “What are you willing to give me to deliver Him up to you?” No doubt pleasantly amazed that one of Jesus’ own disciples would be the means of their destroying Him, the religious leaders eagerly weighed out to Judas thirty pieces of silver. For the price of a slave (see Ex. 21:32), Judas not only sold out his teacher and leader and friend but betrayed the very Son of God, who had come to be his Savior.
Having irrevocably committed himself to the treachery, from then on, Judas began looking for a good opportunity to betray the Lord. In the eyes of Jesus’ enemies, the good opportunity would be when He was “apart from the multitude” (Luke 22:6), as He soon would be in the Garden of Gethsemane. In the greatest example of forsaken opportunity the world has ever known, Judas forever turned his back on the Lord and on his own salvation. And the Lord forever turned His back on Judas.
THE ANOINTING AT BETHANY
Matthew 26:1–13

As we move into Matthew 26, we cross a line of demarcation. There is a sense in which everything changes at this point in this Gospel. Matthew tells us, “Now it came to pass, when Jesus had finished all these sayings …” (v. 1a). This is the end of Matthew’s record of Jesus’ teachings. When we read the Synoptic Gospels, we note that each of them reports substantially the same accounts, but they sometimes appear at very different points in the narrative. That is, particular sayings of Jesus might appear in one location in Matthew, another in Mark, and still another in Luke. It is the almost universal opinion of biblical scholars that the Gospel writers worked from a set of sayings called the logia (“words”) of Jesus, which words were maintained by an oral tradition with no efforts to keep them in a sequential context. So, the work of the Gospel writers consisted in setting these teachings down in written form, and they were free to use their literary creativity to put each saying where it was most fitting from the perspective of that author. That is what Matthew has been doing to this point.
Now, however, his focus shifts completely to the narrative of Jesus’ passion, the suffering and death of Christ. Matthew is beginning to bring his account to a climax, which is the climax of the redemptive activity of Jesus. The cross was now looming directly ahead.
Plotting on the Eve of the Passover
Appropriately, Jesus Himself set the stage for the final act: He said to His disciples, “You know that after two days is the Passover, and the Son of Man will be delivered up to be crucified” (vv. 1a–2).
Jesus knew what was going to happen. He knew His destiny; indeed, He had known it from the beginning and had told His disciples about it several times (16:21; 17:22–23; 20:17–19). He knew that the hour that had been drawing near was about to come to pass (John 13:1; 17:1). He also knew that all of the things that were about to transpire were fully under the sovereign ordination of His Father; no one could take His life from Him. He knew very clearly that all the machinations of the scribes, the Pharisees, the Sadducees, the Sanhedrin, and even His own disciple Judas would not have any power over Him unless He allowed Himself to be taken by the Jewish authorities and delivered to the Romans. He stated that He had the authority and the power to call on legions of angels to stop this drama from working itself out and save Him from the suffering He was about to endure (26:53). But as we have seen, He had set His face like flint to go to Jerusalem (Isa. 50:7) so that He might fulfill the mission He had accepted in the covenant of redemption in eternity past.
Jesus tied the moment of His passion to the Passover, which was two days away. The Passover was the most important festival on the Jewish calendar. It was conjoined with the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and together the festival lasted seven full days. Literally hundreds of thousands of pilgrims would find their way to Jerusalem for this celebration.
In the economy of God’s plan, it was absolutely fitting that the Lamb of God should be sacrificed at the time of the Passover. The national identity of the Jewish people was established at that point in antiquity when they were spared from the wrath of God in Egypt and then delivered by the exodus. You remember the story. God had brought nine plagues on Egypt as Pharaoh refused God’s direct command that he let the Israelites leave (Exodus 7–10). So God vowed to send one more plague. He said that He would go out into the midst of Egypt and cause all of the firstborn of the mighty ones, the firstborn of the lowliest slaves, and even the firstborn of the animals to die (Ex. 11:4–5). But He promised that if the Israelites would put the blood of a lamb on the doorposts of their homes, their firstborn would be spared (Ex. 12:1–13). So it was. The people of God were delivered from the wrath of God when He struck the Egyptians. Where God saw the blood of the lamb on the doorposts, He passed by. Egypt was subdued and the Israelites were freed, for which reason the Passover became a time of unparalleled celebration. Thus, it was appropriate that this feast should be the time for the ultimate atonement, for the sacrifice of the Lamb of God, whose blood delivers from God’s wrath.
Matthew then adds one other brief note as He continues to set the stage for the climax of his account: Then the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders of the people assembled at the palace of the high priest, who was called Caiaphas, and plotted to take Jesus by trickery and kill Him. But they said, “Not during the feast, lest there be an uproar among the people” (vv. 3–5). These were not mafia chieftains gathered in a manor house in New Jersey. These were the most consecrated men of the Jews, chief priests, scribes, and elders, and even the reigning high priest, Caiaphas, in whose palace they met. These supposedly godly leaders came together for one purpose—to find a way to trap Jesus so that they might execute Him and be rid of Him once and for all.
Stop and think for a moment about what was going on here. The priests of the land were trying to figure out a way to kill the Son of God. I do not believe we can fully grasp the egregiousness of what they were doing. God Himself had taken a human nature and appeared in human history to redeem His people. He came to give His life as a ransom for many (20:28). But these people hated Him with every fiber of their beings. They were of one mind—Jesus had to go. Was there ever a more literally diabolical conspiracy in the history of the world?
But they said to one another, “Not during the feast, lest there be an uproar among the people.” They knew many people from Galilee would be in Jerusalem for the feast, and they knew Jesus had a widespread following and a great reputation there. So they agreed to wait until the Passover feast was over before they set their snare. Of course, God had other plans. It was God’s will that the Lamb of God should die during the Passover. God would decide the time of the death of His Son, not the holy men of Israel.
Jesus Anointed for Burial
Matthew abruptly changes the subject. Instead of telling us more about the plans the religious leaders made and how they set their trap, he instead writes, And when Jesus was in Bethany at the house of Simon the leper, a woman came to Him having an alabaster flask of very costly fragrant oil, and she poured it on His head as He sat at the table (vv. 6–7). This event happened in Bethany, a village just outside Jerusalem, across the Kidron Valley and over the Mount of Olives. Matthew tells us Jesus was in the home of a man known as Simon the leper. We do not know who this Simon was. It seems unlikely he had leprosy at this time because he seems to have been actively involved in the social life of the town rather than isolated as lepers were at that time. Perhaps he had been healed by Jesus. Some have speculated that Simon was the father of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, Jesus’ dear friends who lived in Bethany (John 11:3). Jesus had spent many hours in the home of that family, and perhaps it was there that this remarkable event took place. Matthew also does not identify the woman who came to him with costly oil. However, John identifies her as Mary, presumably that Mary who was the sister of Lazarus and Martha.
Matthew adds some interesting details in this account. He tells us that Mary brought “very costly fragrant oil,” but the fact that it was in an alabaster flask gives away the fact that this was an extremely precious possession. Alabaster is a mineral, and in this case, it probably was gypsum. Both Mark and John report that the flask and the oil were worth three hundred denarii (Mark 14:5; John 12:5). That was the average person’s wages for ten months. Consider how much you make in ten months and then ask yourself whether you would spend that much for one alabaster vial of perfume.
This unidentified woman came to the table where Jesus was reclining with Simon and His disciples, and she poured the flask of oil on His head. She anointed Him with oil. It seems that she recognized Him as the Anointed One, which in Greek is the word Christos, from which we derive the word Christ. She recognized that the one who was reclining at the table was her Messiah, who was anointed by the Holy Spirit at His baptism (3:16).
This scene is such a stark contrast to what was going on behind closed doors at the palace of Caiaphas. There, the Jewish leaders were conferring together about how they could kill Jesus. In Bethany, an unidentified woman was performing an extravagant act of love, devotion, and adoration for her Messiah.
But her extravagant act was interrupted by the disciples. Matthew tells us: But when His disciples saw it, they were indignant, saying, “Why this waste? For this fragrant oil might have been sold for much and given to the poor” (vv. 8–9). The disciples were appalled to see such valuable oil spilled out so copiously. How dare this woman pour all this perfume on Jesus. Did she not realize how much money she was wasting? Did she not realize how much good could have been accomplished if the perfume had been sold and the proceeds given to the poor? I do not know whether this woman had done all the math, but for her, nothing was too good for Jesus. By her act of devotion and sacrifice, she shamed the disciples. They should have praised her, saying, “What a magnificent thing you have done for our Messiah.” Instead, they were indignant.
The disciples’ attitude did not escape Jesus’ attention: But when Jesus was aware of it, He said to them, “Why do you trouble the woman? For she has done a good work for Me. For you have the poor with you always, but Me you do not have always. For in pouring this fragrant oil on My body, she did it for My burial” (vv. 10–12). Jesus defended the woman. He told them she had done “a good work for Me.” I think a better translation would be “a beautiful work for Me.” What she did, the materials she did it with, and her motive in doing it were all beautiful. And what was that motive? Jesus said she did it to prepare Him for His burial. Bodies were often anointed with valuable perfume to show respect to the deceased. Because Jesus was given a hasty burial after He died on the cross and then rose again on the first day of the week before the women could anoint His body with spices, this was the only anointing for burial He was to receive.
As part of this rebuke of His disciples, Jesus uttered a sentence that has often been misunderstood and misapplied: “You have the poor with you always, but Me you do not have always.” Several years ago, I preached at a church in inner-city Cleveland, an area that was afflicted with all the problems of urban blight—drug abuse, crime, and so on. The minister of that church had been there for many years, but he told me that he had had more than fifteen associates during the time he had been the pastor. When I asked him why he had experienced such high turnover, he explained that young ministers would come out of seminary with zeal to do good works, but when they came to inner-city Cleveland, they rarely lasted more than a couple of years because they were defeated by the poverty, the squalor, the crime, and the hopelessness. That made me curious as to how he had been able to stay there so long, so I asked him about it. He said: “Because of what Jesus said: ‘You have the poor with you always.’ I didn’t come here to eliminate poverty, because I knew that wasn’t going to happen. I came here to minister to people in the middle of it.”
That is precisely what Jesus meant. He was not saying that we are free to ignore the poor. He was giving His disciples a realistic picture of ministry. We are not going to get rid of poverty. We are not going to get rid of pain. We are not going to get rid of suffering. But we are to minister in the middle of it. Thus, selling one alabaster flask of perfume would not have solved the problem of poverty.
Finally Jesus told His disciples, “Assuredly, I say to you, wherever this gospel is preached in the whole world, what this woman has done will also be told as a memorial to her” (v. 13). Jesus knew that the gospel was going to be preached in the whole world. He knew that the good news He had proclaimed was not going to be snuffed out on a cross outside of Jerusalem. Rather, it would spread everywhere, and when it did, the woman’s act of devotion would be told as a memorial to her. She would be honored for her extravagant gift to honor the Lord Jesus Christ.
The great ones of the Jews were meeting in the high priest’s palace to hatch their grand schemes. Most of those men are forgotten and their plots are unknown to history. But the action of a simple woman who loved Jesus has indeed been told all over the world as the gospel has been preached.
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XII. The Death of the King-Messiah (26:1–27:66)
A. The Hateful Plot Against Jesus (26:1–5)
26:1–2. As He was leaving the Mount of Olives, Jesus gave clear instruction about His impending death. The One who will judge will Himself be judged. He mentioned His impending crucifixion (cf. 20:19), suggesting that He knew exactly what was going on. He was no victim (in the truest sense) in what would transpire. After two days the Passover is coming (v. 2) indicates that Matthew is narrating events from late Tuesday afternoon or early evening that, in Jewish reckoning, would have been the start of Wednesday. Note the deliberate effort on Jesus’ part to tie His death to the celebration of the Passover (see the comments on Ex 12–13). He is the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world (Jn 1:29). For a harmonization of the various chronological problems associated with the timing of events around Good Friday, see Carson, “Matthew,” 528–32.
26:3–5. Jesus’ teaching became so caustic against the leaders that they saw the need to kill Him. The high priest (v. 3) was appointed by the Romans to four-year terms, and one of his primary responsibilities, for which he also utilized his family, was to direct the affairs of the temple. The temple cleansing was a frontal attack against them. Caiaphas (a name that means “Inquisitor”) was appointed by procurator Valerius Gratus and held the position from AD 18–36, a much longer tenure than traditionally was allowed, attesting to his political finesse. His father-in-law Annas served before him and continued to wield considerable authority (cf. Lk 3:2; Jn 11:47–53; 18:13–24). Their plot would not be carried out until after the festival (v. 5), the weeklong celebration of Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread. By then the pilgrims, who were enthusiastic about Jesus, would have returned to their homes.
B. The Act of Kindness for Jesus (26:6–13)
26:6–13. The episode at Bethany is a remarkably tender demonstration sandwiched between the most reprehensible deeds. The alabaster vial (v. 7) was probably a fine, translucent white gypsum bottle. Costly perfume was typically made by combining exotic oils and extracts of various spices and flowers. Mark 14:5 and Jn 12:5 indicate that it was worth about 300 denarii, or about 300 days’ wages. The disciples reacted so strongly (vv. 8–9) because, during Passover, it was customary for affluent Jews to offer financial help to the poor. The perfume could have been sold for that. But Jesus defended the woman (vv. 10–13), saying that her act would serve to prepare Me for burial (v. 12). When a rich person died the body was doused in perfume then wrapped in a burial shroud. More spices were placed in its folds, not to mummify the body but to cut the odors of decomposition for tombs were not airtight. However, crucified criminals did not receive such treatment. After a body was left to putrefy on a cross, it was usually cast into the city dump, in Jerusalem’s case the Hinnom Valley on the southeast edge of Jerusalem, and received no burial at all. What this woman did honored Jesus and gave Him burial preparations that, under normal circumstances, He otherwise would not have received.
C. The Plans Judas Formed (26:14–16)2


1 Sproul, R. C. (2013). Matthew (pp. 737–743). Wheaton, IL: Crossway.

2 Vanlaningham, M. G. (2014). Matthew. In M. A. Rydelnik & M. Vanlaningham (Eds.), The moody bible commentary (p. 1506). Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers.

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