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Matthew 4:23

Context
Jesus’ Healing Ministry

4:23 Jesus 1  went throughout all of Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, 2  preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing all kinds of disease and sickness among the people.

Matthew 9:35

Context
Workers for the Harvest

9:35 Then Jesus went throughout all the towns 3  and villages, teaching in their synagogues, 4  preaching the good news of the kingdom, and healing every kind of disease and sickness. 5 

Matthew 16:12

Context
16:12 Then they understood that he had not told them to be on guard against the yeast in bread, but against the teaching of the Pharisees and Sadducees.

Matthew 28:20

Context
28:20 teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And remember, 6  I am with you 7  always, to the end of the age.” 8 

1 tn Grk “And he.”

2 sn Synagogues were places for Jewish prayer and worship, with recognized leadership (cf. Luke 8:41). Though the origin of the synagogue is not entirely clear, it seems to have arisen in the postexilic community during the intertestamental period. A town could establish a synagogue if there were at least ten men. In normative Judaism of the NT period, the OT scripture was read and discussed in the synagogue by the men who were present (see the Mishnah, m. Megillah 3-4; m. Berakhot 2).

3 tn Or “cities.”

4 sn See the note on synagogues in 4:23.

5 tn Grk “and every [kind of] sickness.” Here “every” was not repeated in the translation for stylistic reasons.

6 tn The Greek word ἰδού (idou) has been translated here as “remember” (BDAG 468 s.v. 1.c).

7 sn I am with you. Matthew’s Gospel begins with the prophecy that the Savior’s name would be “Emmanuel, that is, ‘God with us,’” (1:23, in which the author has linked Isa 7:14 and 8:8, 10 together) and it ends with Jesus’ promise to be with his disciples forever. The Gospel of Matthew thus forms an inclusio about Jesus in his relationship to his people that suggests his deity.

8 tc Most mss (Ac Θ Ë13 Ï it sy) have ἀμήν (amhn, “amen”) at the end of v. 20. Such a conclusion is routinely added by scribes to NT books because a few of these books originally had such an ending (cf. Rom 16:27; Gal 6:18; Jude 25). A majority of Greek witnesses have the concluding ἀμήν in every NT book except Acts, James, and 3 John (and even in these books, ἀμήν is found in some witnesses). It is thus a predictable variant. Further, no good reason exists for the omission of the particle in significant and early witnesses such as א A* B D W Ë1 33 al lat sa.



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