Bible Commentary

Matthew 11:7

The Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 11:7

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

And as they departed; and as these went their way (Revised Version). Fulfilling his command (). It' we may combine the language of St. Matthew and St. Luke ("when the messengers of John were departed"), we may say that they had left the circle immediately round our Lord, but were hardly further than the outskirts of the crowd.

What went ye out into the wilderness to see? to behold (Revised Version); θεάσασθαι (cf. θέατρον,). It almost suggests that they went out as though to see a spectacle. They were stirred by no deeper motive.

Bengel compares . A reed shaken with the wind? If the reed referred to by our Lord was the papyrus, which still grows freely in certain parts of the Jordan valley, the description of this plant in 'Rob Roy on the Jordan,' .

, is specially interesting: "There is first a lateral trunk, lying on the water and half-submerged. This is sometimes as thick as a man's body, and from its lower side hang innumerable string-like roots from three to five feet long, and of a deep purple colour ..

These pendent roots … retard much of the surface-current where the papyrus grows On the upper surface of the trunks the stems grow alternately in oblique rows;, their thickness at the junction is often four inches, and their height fifteen feet, gracefully tapering until at the top is a little round knob, with long, thin brown, wire-like hairs eighteen inches long, which rise and then, recurving, hang about it in a thyrsus-shaped head."

He also says, "The whole jungle of papyrus was floating upon the water, and so the waves raised by the breeze were rocking the green curtain to and fro." This explained "a most curious hissing, grinding, bustling sound, that was heard like waves upon a shingly beach," as "the papyrus stems were rubbing against each other as they nodded out and in."

It is, however, much more probable that the reed referred to was "the Arundo donax, a very tall cane, growing twelve feet high, with a magnificent panicle of blossom at the top, and so slender and yielding that it will lie perfectly fiat under a gust of wind, and immediately resume its upright position."

It grows especially on the western side of the Dead Sea. To our Lord's question no answer was needed. John had rejected the overtures of the nationalists (), and had not feared to rebuke a king ().

Recommended reading

More for Matthew 11:7

Continue with other commentaries and DiscipleDeck content connected to this verse, chapter, or topic.

commentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 11:1-30EXPOSITIONJoseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 11:1-11John's inquiry. I. THE MOTIVE OF THIS INQUIRY OF JOHN'S is not at once apparent. What was causing him perplexity, if not disappointment, about our Lord? He was disappointed because the works he heard of were not the kin…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 11:2-24JESUS THE ONE THAT SHOULD COME.Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryMatthew Henry on Matthew 11:7-15What Christ said concerning John, was not only for his praise, but for the people's profit. Those who attend on the word will be called to give an account of their improvements. Do we think when the sermon is done, the…Matthew HenrycommentaryChrist's Testimony of JohnCHRIST'S TESTIMONY OF JOHN. We have here the high encomium which our Lord Jesus gave of John the Baptist; not only to revive his honour, but to revive his work. Some of Christ's disciples might perhaps take occasion fro…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 11:7-19The Lord's testimony to John the Baptist. I. HIS CHARACTER. 1. He was no reed shaken by the wind. The multitudes who had now heard John's message and the Lord's answer had once gone into the wilderness to see the Baptis…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 11:7-19John and Jesus: children in the market-place. After dismissing the messengers of John, there appeared to our Lord urgent need of indicating with precision the merits and defects of the Baptist's work, so that the people…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 11:7-15Jesus' recognition of the greatness of John as herald. Verses 7-11: parallel passage: Luke 7:24-28.Joseph S. Exell and contributors