Matthew 12:2

2 Some Pharisees reported them to Jesus: "Your disciples are breaking the Sabbath rules!"

Matthew 12:2 Meaning and Commentary

Matthew 12:2

But when the Pharisees saw it
Who went along with him, or followed him, being employed to make observation on his words and actions,

they said unto him;
Luke says, "unto them", the disciples: it seems, they took notice of this action both to Christ and his disciples, and first spoke of it to the one, and then to the other, or to both together:

behold thy disciples do that which it is not lawful to do upon the
sabbath day!
they mention it with astonishment, and indignation. What they refer to, is not their walking on the sabbath day: this they might do, according to their canons, provided they did not exceed two thousand cubits, which were a sabbath day's journey F6 nor was it their passing through the corn fields; though, according to them F7,

``it was not lawful for a man to visit his gardens, (wytwdvw) , "or his fields", on the sabbath day, to see what they want, or how the fruits grow; for such walking is to do his own pleasure.''

But this they knew was not the case of Christ, and his disciples, who were not proprietors of these fields: nor was it merely their plucking the ears of corn, and rubbing and eating them, which were not their own, but another man's; for this, according to the law, in ( Deuteronomy 23:25 ) was lawful to be done: but what offended the Pharisees was, that it was done on a sabbath day, it being, as they interpret it, a servile work, and all one as reaping; though, in the law just mentioned, it is manifestly distinguished from it. Their rule is F8

``he that reaps (on the sabbath day) ever so little, is guilty (of stoning), (awh ruwq hdlwt vlwtw) , and "plucking of ears of corn is a derivative of reaping";''

and is all one as its primitive, and punishable with the same kind of death, if done presumptuously: so Philo the Jew observes F9, that the rest of the sabbath not only reached to men, bond and free, and to beasts, but even to trees, and plants; and that (ou ernov ou) (kladon, all' oude petalon efeitai temein) , "it was not lawful to cut a plant, or branch, or so much as a leaf", on a sabbath day: and it may be what might make this offence of the disciples the more heinous was, that they plucked these ears, and ate them, and so broke their fast before morning prayer; for a man might not eat any thing on a sabbath day until morning prayers were ended in the synagogue, nor indeed on any other day; for they used not to eat bread till after they had offered the daily sacrifice, which was about the third hour of the day, or nine o'clock in the morning; nor did they eat till the fourth hour, or ten o'clock F11.


FOOTNOTES:

F6 Ib. c. 27. sect. 1.
F7 R. Moses Kotzensis Mitzvot Tora prec. neg. 65.
F8 Maimon. Hilch. Sabbat, c. 8. sect. 3. & 7. 1.
F9 De Vita Mosis, 1. 2. p. 657.
F11 Vid. Targum in Eccl. x. 17. Maimon. Hilch. Tephilla, c. 6. sect. 4.

Matthew 12:2 In-Context

1 One Sabbath, Jesus was strolling with his disciples through a field of ripe grain. Hungry, the disciples were pulling off the heads of grain and munching on them.
2 Some Pharisees reported them to Jesus: "Your disciples are breaking the Sabbath rules!"
3 Jesus said, "Really? Didn't you ever read what David and his companions did when they were hungry,
4 how they entered the sanctuary and ate fresh bread off the altar, bread that no one but priests were allowed to eat?
5 And didn't you ever read in God's Law that priests carrying out their Temple duties break Sabbath rules all the time and it's not held against them?
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.