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Matthew 14:2 - Exposition

And said unto his servants. According to Luke, the following assertion was brought forward by some, but was, it would seem, summarily rejected by Herod ( Luke 9:7 , Luke 9:9 ); according to Mark ( ἔλεγον , Westcott and Hort, text ) it was common talk, and agreed to by Herod. If a reconciliation of so unimportant a verbal disagreement be sought for, it may perhaps lie in Luke representing Herod's first exclamation, and Matthew, with Mark, his settled belief. Clearly Herod did not originate it, as the summary account in our Gospel would lead us to suppose. This is John the Baptist ( Matthew 3:1 and Matthew 4:12 , notes). (For this opinion about our Lord, compare, besides the parallel passages referred to in the last note, also Matthew 16:14 .) He ( αὐτός , Matthew 1:21 , note) is risen from the dead. The other dead still lie in Hades ( ἀπὸ τῶν νεκρῶν ). Plumptre, on Mark, adduces a curious passage from Persius, 5:180-188, which he thinks is based on a story that when Herod celebrated another of his birthdays (cf. verse 6) in Rome, in A.D. 39, he was terrified by a Banquo-like appearance of the murdered prophet. The superstition that already suggested to Herod the resurrection of John might well act more strongly on the anniversary of the murder, and after he had connived at the death of the One who, by his miracles, showed that he possessed greater power than John. And therefore ; "because he is no ordinary man, but one risen from the dead" (Meyer). Mighty works do show forth themselves in him ( αἱδυνάμεις ἐνεργοῦσιν ἐν αἰ τῷ ) do these powers work in him (Revised Version). "These" ( αἱ , the article of reference), i.e. these which are spoken of in the report (verse 1). αἱδυνάμεις may be

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