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Matthew 3:9 - Exposition

And . An additional warning against any false feeling of security based on natural privileges. As this feeling was common to all Jews, the reference to the larger audience ( Matthew 3:7 , note) was probably begun here. Think not to say . Not do not think, consider, with a view to saying; but do not think it right to say, do not be of opinion you may say ( Luke 3:8 , "Begin not to say ). St. Luke deprecates the commencement of such an utterance in their heart; S t. Matthew denies its justice. Within yourselves ; cf. Esther 4:13 (Hebrew). We have Abraham to our father . As it was recognized on all hands that the promise of blessing was made to Abraham and his seed, it is no wonder that many Jews presumed upon their descent from him, "supposing,", as Justin Martyr says, that the everlasting kingdom will assuredly be given to those who are of the seed of Abraham according to the flesh, although they be sinners and unbelieving and disobedient towards God." In later times, when the doctrine of merit was more fully established, God could be represented as saying to Abraham, "If thy children were like dead bodies without sinews or bones, thy merit would avail for them" ('Ber. Rabb.,' on Genesis 10:5 :11. § 44, middle). In John's words, on the contrary, we have the germ of the doctrine afterwards Brought out by St. Paul ( e.g. Galatians 3:9 , Galatians 3:29 ), that not natural descent, but spiritual relationship by faith, leads to inheriting the promises. The argument in John 8:39 , etc., is closely akin to that presented here. In both passages the Jews lay stress on their origin from Abraham; in both the answer is that morally they are sprung from a very different source (supra, John 8:7 , note). But in John 8:1-59 . the Jews are thinking chiefly of their present state, of not being as sinful as Jesus makes them out to be, while here they are thinking more of the future, that they have no need to take trouble, because promises for the future belong to them. Hence, perhaps, the exact expression (contrast John 8:33 ), "We have Abraham as father," which brings out the protecting influence of Abraham as still available. For I say unto you ( λέγω γὰρ ὑμῖν ). The solemnity of the phrase ( Matthew 6:25 , Matthew 6:29 ; Matthew 8:11 ; Matthew 11:9 ) lies in the self-consciousness which it implies. The absence of the ἐγώ shows that the speaker has no desire to bring out his own personality (contrast Matthew 5:22 , etc.), but the message only. That God. Not "the LORD ," because

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