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Matthew 4:25 - Exposition

The mention of the multitudes here serves as a transition to the sermon on the mount. The description of the con stituent paris of the multitudes is very similar to that found in Mark 3:7 , Mark 3:8 , and is probably derived from the same source, Mark preserving in most respects the fuller form. Great multitudes ; ὄχλοι πολλοί (not "many multitudes," but as plural of ὄχλος πολύς , Matthew 20:29 ); almost ( Luke 5:15 ) peculiar to this Gospel ( Matthew 8:1 , where see note [18, Received Text; Matthew 12:15 , Received Text]; Matthew 13:2 ; Matthew 15:30 ; Matthew 19:2 ). Decapolis . A kind of confederacy, originally of ten towns, the organization being apparently the work of Pompey. All were east of Jordan except Bethshan (Scythopolis). The names, as given in Pliny, are—Damascus, Philadelphia, Raphana, Scythopolis, Gadara, Hippus, Dium, Pella, Galasa (read Gerasa ) , Kanatha. Schurer adds, Abila (not Abila of Lysanias) and Kanata (distinct from Kanatha ) These towns, like the great maritime cities, e.g. Joppa, and Caesarea Stratonis, were independent political communities, which—at least, after the time of Pompey—were never internally blended into an organic unity with the Jewish region, but were at most externally united with it under the same ruler". The population in them was chiefly heathen. Across Jordan ; equivalent to Peraea, as in verse 15 and Matthew 19:1 , i.e. from Mount Hermon to the river Arnon (Weiss-Meyer); but according to Josephus ('Bell. Jud.,' Matthew 3:3 . 3), between the rivers Jabbok and Amen (Alford). "The country east of Jordan was known as Peraea (the country beyond) in the wider sense, but Peraea proper was the small district extending from the river Amen ( Mojib ) to the Zerka, and now called Belka". To the places mentioned here as those whence people came, Mark adds Idumaea; Mark and Luke add Tyre and Sidon.

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