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Matthew 21

Matthew 21 is the twenty-first chapter in the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament section of the Christian Bible. Jesus triumphally or majestically arrives in Jerusalem and commences his final ministry before his Passion.

Matthew 21
Gospel of Matthew 21:34–37 on the recto side of Papyrus 104, from c. AD 250
BookGospel of Matthew
CategoryGospel
Christian Bible partNew Testament
Order in the Christian part1

Structure Edit

The narrative can be divided into the following subsections:

Text Edit

 
Matthew 21:19-24 on Uncial 087, 6th century.

The original text was written in Koine Greek. This chapter is divided into 46 verses.

Textual witnesses Edit

Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are:

Old Testament references Edit

New Testament parallels Edit

Triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem (21:1–11) Edit

The narrative takes some topics from previous chapters:

  • the fulfillment of prophecies (cf. 1:22-3, etc.)
  • Jesus' entry into Jerusalem (cf. 16:21; 20:17)
  • his 'meekness' (cf. 11:29)
  • his status as 'king' (cf. 2:1-12)
  • 'Son of David' (cf. 1:1—18)
  • 'the coming one' (cf. 3:11; 11:3), and
  • 'prophet' (cf. 13:57)[4]

The "great multitude" (verse 8) had followed Jesus through the neighbouring city of Jericho in the previous chapter.[5]

The initial part of the narrative also offers two "firsts":

  • (1) Jesus' (indirect) 'public claim to messianic kingship', and
  • (2) the crowds' 'recognition of that kingship' (contrast 16:13–14).

These two "firsts" challenge the people of Jerusalem to make a decision about "who is this Jesus" (cf. verse 10).[4]

Verse 2 Edit

"Go into the village opposite you, and immediately you will find a donkey tied, and a colt with her. Loose them and bring them to Me."[6]

Commentator Dale Allison is reminded of the finding of donkeys for King Saul recorded in 1 Samuel 10:1–9.[7]

Verse 3 Edit

"If anyone says anything to you, say that the Lord needs them, and he will send them right away.”

For Arthur Carr, this account "leads to the inference that the owner of the ass was an adherent of Jesus, who had perhaps not yet declared himself".[8] To William Robertson Nicoll, "it was to be expected that the act would be challenged".[9] For Henry Alford, it is the LORD Jehovah who needs them, for the service of God;[10] for Nicoll, it is Jesus who is the Lord or master who needs them, using the term Ὁ κύριος, ho kurios, in the same manner as where it refers to Jesus in Matthew 8:25: "Lord, save us! We’re going to drown!"[9]

Verse 4 Edit

This took place to fulfill what was spoken through the prophet:[11]

Some versions read "All this took place ...",[12] but the word ὅλον (holon, "all") does not appear in a number of early texts.[13]

Verse 11 Edit

And the multitude said,
This is Jesus the prophet of Nazareth of Galilee.[14]

Cleansing of the Temple (21:12–17) Edit

Verse 12 Edit

And Jesus went into the temple of God,
and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple,
and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers,
and the seats of them that sold doves,[15]

"Money changers": are certain people who sat in the temple at certain times, to receive the "half shekel", and sometimes change the money for it to themselves. It was a custom for every Israelite, once a year, to pay half a shekel towards the temple charge and service, based on the orders given by God to Moses in the wilderness during the numbering of the Israelites, to take half a shekel out of everyone twenty years of age and older, rich or poor (Exodus 30:13), though this does not seem to be designed as a perpetual rule. However, it became a fixed rule, and was annually paid.[16] Every year a public notice was given in all the cities in Israel, that the time of paying the half shekel was nearing, so the people will be ready with their money, for everyone was obliged to pay it, as stated,[17] Notice being thus given,[18] "on the fifteenth day (of the same month), "tables" were placed in the province, or city (which Bartenora [18] interprets [as] Jerusalem; but Maimonides says,[17] the word used is the name of all the cities in the land of Israel, excepting Jerusalem), and on the twenty fifth they sit "in the sanctuary". The same is related by Maimonides.[19] This gives a plain account of these money changers, their tables, and their sitting in the temple, and on what account. These exchangers had a profit, called "Kolbon", in every shekel they changed.[20] This "Kolbon" gives the name "Collybistae" for these exchangers in this text.[21][22] The large gain must amount to a great deal of money. They seemed to work within the frame of law when Christ overturned their table, unless it should be objected, that this was not the time of their sitting, because that happened a few days before the Passover, which was in the month Nisan (the tenth of Nisan, when Christ entered the temple), whereas the half shekel should be paid in the month Adar until the twenty fifth of Adar. Moreover, these men had other business, such as money exchange, especially at such a time as the passover, when persons came from different parts of world to attend it; and might want to exchange their foreign money for current money.[23][24]

Verse 13 Edit

And said unto them, It is written, My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves.[25]

Citing from Isaiah 56:7; Jeremiah 7:11
Cross reference: Mark 11:17; Luke 19:46

Authority of Jesus questioned (21:23–27) Edit

Verses 24–27 Edit

Jesus ... said to them, “I also will ask you one thing, which if you tell Me, I likewise will tell you by what authority I do these things: the baptism of John — where was it from? From heaven or from men?” And they reasoned among themselves, saying, “If we say, ‘From heaven’, He will say to us, ‘Why then did you not believe him?’ But if we say, ‘From men’, we fear the multitude, for all count John as a prophet”. So they answered Jesus and said, “We do not know.”[26]

Allison notes that "this section is less about Jesus ... or [John] the Baptist than it is about the chief priests and elders, characterising these as (a) less spiritually aware and perceptive than the multitudes over whom they preside, and (b) moral cowards driven by expediency.[7]

Parable of two sons (21:28-32) Edit

Occurring only in Matthew, this parable refers to two sons. Their father asked both of them to work in his vineyard. One of the sons said that he wouldn't do it, but he later changed his mind and did the work anyway. The other son said he would do it, but he didn't go.

Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen (21:33–46) Edit

Verse 43 Edit

Therefore I say to you, the kingdom of God will be taken from you and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it.[27]

Protestant biblical commentator Heinrich Meyer notes that "Jesus is not here referring to the Gentiles, as, since Eusebius’ time, many ... have supposed, but, as the use of the singular already plainly indicates, to the whole of the future subjects of the kingdom of the Messiah, conceived of as one people, which will therefore consist of Jews and Gentiles, [the] new Messianic people of God",[13] the "holy nation" addressed as such in 1 Peter 2:9. The phrase "the fruits of it" means "the fruits of the kingdom".[28]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Liste Handschriften". Münster: Institute for New Testament Textual Research. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
  2. ^ Thomas, J. David. The Oxyrhynchus Papyri LXIV (London: 1997), pp. 7–9.
  3. ^ Kirkpatrick, A. F. (1901). The Book of Psalms: with Introduction and Notes. The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges. Vol. Book IV and V: Psalms XC-CL. Cambridge: At the University Press. p. 838. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
  4. ^ a b Allison 2007, p. 871.
  5. ^ Matthew 20:29
  6. ^ Matthew 21:2 NKJV
  7. ^ a b Allison 2007, pp. 871–2.
  8. ^ Carr, A. (1893), Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges: Matthew 21, accessed 12 March 2021
  9. ^ a b Nicoll, W. R., The Expositor's Greek Testament: Matthew 21, accessed 12 March 2021
  10. ^ Alford, H., Greek Testament Critical Exegetical Commentary: Matthew 21, accessed 12 March 2021
  11. ^ Matthew 21:4: New International Version
  12. ^ Matthew 21:4: NKJV
  13. ^ a b Meyer, H. A. W., Meyer's NT Commentary on Matthew 21, accessed 5 October 2019
  14. ^ Matthew 21:11 NKJV
  15. ^ Matthew 21:12 NKJV
  16. ^ "On the first day of Adar (corresponds to February) they proclaimed concerning the shekels. Misn. Shekalim, c. 1. sect. 1.
  17. ^ a b Maimonides. Hilch. Shekalim, c. 1. sect. 1. 7. Quote: "it is an affirmative command of the law, that every man in Israel should pay the half shekel every year; even though a poor man that is maintained by alms, he is obliged to it, and must beg it of others, or sell his coat upon his back and pay it, as it is said, Exodus 30:15. The rich shall not give more, etc.--All are bound to give it, priests, Levites, and Israelites, and strangers, and servants, that are made free; but not women, nor servants, nor children."
  18. ^ a b Misn. Shekalim, c. 1. sect. 3.
  19. ^ Maimonides. Hilch. Shekalim, c. 1. sect. 9. Quote: "On the first of Adar they proclaim concerning the shekels, that every man may prepare his half shekel, and be ready to give it on the fifteenth; "the exchangers" sit in every province or city, and mildly ask it; everyone that gives them it, they take it of them; and he that does not give, they do not compel him to give: on the twenty fifth, they sit in the sanctuary to collect it; and henceforward they urge him that does not give, until he gives; and everyone that does not give, they oblige him to give pledge, and they, take his pledge, whether he will or not, and even his coat."
  20. ^ Maimonides. Hilch. Shekalim, c. 3. sect. 1. Quote: "When a man went to an exchanger, and changed a shekel for two half shekels, he gave him an addition to the shekel; and the addition is called "Kolbon"; wherefore, when two men gave a shekel for them both, they were both obliged to pay the "Kolbon".
  21. ^ The gain which these men had, is clarified in Misn. Shekalim, c. 1. sect. 7. Quote: "How much is the "Kolbon?" A silver "meah", according to R. Meir; but the wise men say, half an one." (Maimonides. Hilch. Shekalim, c. 3. sect. 7)
  22. ^ Maimonides & Bartenora in Misn. Shekalim, c. 1, sect. 7. & Cholin, c. 1. sect. 7. Quote: "what is the value of the "Kolbon?" At that time they gave two pence for the half shekel, the "Kolbon" was half a "meah", which is the twelfth part of a penny; and since, "Kolbon" less than that is not given." A "meah" was the half of a sixth part of the half shekel, and the twenty fourth part of a shekel, and weighed sixteen barley corns: half a "meah" was the forty eighth part of a shekel, and weighed eight barley"
  23. ^ Maimonides. Hilch. Shekalim, c. 2. sect. 2. Quote "In the sanctuary there were before them, "continually", or "daily", thirteen chests (and there were as many tables according to Misn. Shekalim, c. 6. sect 1.); every chest was in the form of a trumpet: the first was for the shekels of the present year, the second for the shekels of the year past; the third for everyone that had a "Korban", or vow upon him to offer two turtledoves, or two young pigeons; the one a burnt offering, the other a sin offering: their price was, cast into this chest: the fourth for everyone that had the burnt offering of a fowl only on him, the price of that was cast into this chest. The fifth was for him, who freely gave money to buy wood, to be laid in order on the altar; the sixth, for him that freely gave money for the incense; the seventh, for him that freely gave gold for the mercy seat; the eighth, for the remainder of the sin offering; as when he separated the money for his sin offering, and took the sin offering, and there remained of the money, the rest he cast into this chest; the ninth, for the remainder of the trespass offering; the tenth, for the remainder of the doves for men and women in fluxes, and women after childbirth; the eleventh, for the remainder of the offerings of the Nazarite; the twelfth, for the remainder of the trespass offering of the leper: the thirteenth, for him that freely gave money for the burnt offering of a beast."
  24. ^ John Gill. John Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible. Exposition of the Old and New Testament. Published in 1746-1763.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  25. ^ Matthew 21:13 KJV
  26. ^ Matthew 21:24–27 NKJV
  27. ^ Matthew 21:43 NKJV
  28. ^ Matthew 21:43 footnote in Holman Christian Standard Bible

Sources Edit

External links Edit

  • Matthew 21 King James Bible - Wikisource
  • English Translation with Parallel Latin Vulgate
  • Online Bible at GospelHall.org (ESV, KJV, Darby, American Standard Version, Bible in Basic English)
  • Multiple bible versions at Bible Gateway (NKJV, NIV, NRSV etc.)
Preceded by
Matthew 20
Chapters of the New Testament
Gospel of Matthew
Succeeded by
Matthew 22

matthew, twenty, first, chapter, gospel, matthew, testament, section, christian, bible, jesus, triumphally, majestically, arrives, jerusalem, commences, final, ministry, before, passion, chapter, 20chapter, gospel, recto, side, papyrus, from, 250bookgospel, ma. Matthew 21 is the twenty first chapter in the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament section of the Christian Bible Jesus triumphally or majestically arrives in Jerusalem and commences his final ministry before his Passion Matthew 21 chapter 20chapter 22 Gospel of Matthew 21 34 37 on the recto side of Papyrus 104 from c AD 250BookGospel of MatthewCategoryGospelChristian Bible partNew TestamentOrder in the Christian part1 Contents 1 Structure 2 Text 2 1 Textual witnesses 2 2 Old Testament references 2 3 New Testament parallels 3 Triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem 21 1 11 3 1 Verse 2 3 2 Verse 3 3 3 Verse 4 3 4 Verse 11 4 Cleansing of the Temple 21 12 17 4 1 Verse 12 4 2 Verse 13 5 Authority of Jesus questioned 21 23 27 5 1 Verses 24 27 6 Parable of two sons 21 28 32 7 Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen 21 33 46 7 1 Verse 43 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksStructure EditThe narrative can be divided into the following subsections Triumphal entry into Jerusalem 21 1 11 Cleansing of the Temple 21 12 17 Cursing the fig tree 21 18 22 Authority of Jesus questioned 21 23 27 Parable of the Two Sons 21 28 32 Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen 21 33 46 Text Edit nbsp Matthew 21 19 24 on Uncial 087 6th century The original text was written in Koine Greek This chapter is divided into 46 verses Textual witnesses Edit Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are Papyrus 104 AD 250 extant verses 34 37 43 45 1 2 Codex Vaticanus 325 350 Codex Sinaiticus 330 360 Codex Bezae c 400 Codex Washingtonianus c 400 Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus c 450 Codex Purpureus Rossanensis 6th century Codex Petropolitanus Purpureus 6th century extant verses 7 34 Codex Sinopensis 6th century extant verses 1 18 Uncial 087 6th century extant verses 19 24 Old Testament references Edit Verse 5 Isaiah 62 11 Zechariah 9 9 Verse 13 Isaiah 56 7 Jeremiah 7 11 Verse 16 Psalm 8 2 3 New Testament parallels Edit Matthew 21 13 Mark 11 17 Luke 19 46Triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem 21 1 11 EditMain article Triumphal entry into Jerusalem The narrative takes some topics from previous chapters the fulfillment of prophecies cf 1 22 3 etc Jesus entry into Jerusalem cf 16 21 20 17 his meekness cf 11 29 his status as king cf 2 1 12 Son of David cf 1 1 18 the coming one cf 3 11 11 3 and prophet cf 13 57 4 The great multitude verse 8 had followed Jesus through the neighbouring city of Jericho in the previous chapter 5 The initial part of the narrative also offers two firsts 1 Jesus indirect public claim to messianic kingship and 2 the crowds recognition of that kingship contrast 16 13 14 These two firsts challenge the people of Jerusalem to make a decision about who is this Jesus cf verse 10 4 Verse 2 Edit Go into the village opposite you and immediately you will find a donkey tied and a colt with her Loose them and bring them to Me 6 Commentator Dale Allison is reminded of the finding of donkeys for King Saul recorded in 1 Samuel 10 1 9 7 Verse 3 Edit If anyone says anything to you say that the Lord needs them and he will send them right away For Arthur Carr this account leads to the inference that the owner of the ass was an adherent of Jesus who had perhaps not yet declared himself 8 To William Robertson Nicoll it was to be expected that the act would be challenged 9 For Henry Alford it is the LORD Jehovah who needs them for the service of God 10 for Nicoll it is Jesus who is the Lord or master who needs them using the term Ὁ kyrios ho kurios in the same manner as where it refers to Jesus in Matthew 8 25 Lord save us We re going to drown 9 Verse 4 Edit This took place to fulfill what was spoken through the prophet 11 Some versions read All this took place 12 but the word ὅlon holon all does not appear in a number of early texts 13 Verse 11 Edit And the multitude said This is Jesus the prophet of Nazareth of Galilee 14 dd Cleansing of the Temple 21 12 17 EditMain article Cleansing of the Temple Verse 12 Edit And Jesus went into the temple of God and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers and the seats of them that sold doves 15 dd Money changers are certain people who sat in the temple at certain times to receive the half shekel and sometimes change the money for it to themselves It was a custom for every Israelite once a year to pay half a shekel towards the temple charge and service based on the orders given by God to Moses in the wilderness during the numbering of the Israelites to take half a shekel out of everyone twenty years of age and older rich or poor Exodus 30 13 though this does not seem to be designed as a perpetual rule However it became a fixed rule and was annually paid 16 Every year a public notice was given in all the cities in Israel that the time of paying the half shekel was nearing so the people will be ready with their money for everyone was obliged to pay it as stated 17 Notice being thus given 18 on the fifteenth day of the same month tables were placed in the province or city which Bartenora 18 interprets as Jerusalem but Maimonides says 17 the word used is the name of all the cities in the land of Israel excepting Jerusalem and on the twenty fifth they sit in the sanctuary The same is related by Maimonides 19 This gives a plain account of these money changers their tables and their sitting in the temple and on what account These exchangers had a profit called Kolbon in every shekel they changed 20 This Kolbon gives the name Collybistae for these exchangers in this text 21 22 The large gain must amount to a great deal of money They seemed to work within the frame of law when Christ overturned their table unless it should be objected that this was not the time of their sitting because that happened a few days before the Passover which was in the month Nisan the tenth of Nisan when Christ entered the temple whereas the half shekel should be paid in the month Adar until the twenty fifth of Adar Moreover these men had other business such as money exchange especially at such a time as the passover when persons came from different parts of world to attend it and might want to exchange their foreign money for current money 23 24 Verse 13 Edit And said unto them It is written My house shall be called the house of prayer but ye have made it a den of thieves 25 Citing from Isaiah 56 7 Jeremiah 7 11 Cross reference Mark 11 17 Luke 19 46Authority of Jesus questioned 21 23 27 EditMain article Authority of Jesus questioned Verses 24 27 Edit Jesus said to them I also will ask you one thing which if you tell Me I likewise will tell you by what authority I do these things the baptism of John where was it from From heaven or from men And they reasoned among themselves saying If we say From heaven He will say to us Why then did you not believe him But if we say From men we fear the multitude for all count John as a prophet So they answered Jesus and said We do not know 26 Allison notes that this section is less about Jesus or John the Baptist than it is about the chief priests and elders characterising these as a less spiritually aware and perceptive than the multitudes over whom they preside and b moral cowards driven by expediency 7 Parable of two sons 21 28 32 EditMain article Parable of the Two Sons Occurring only in Matthew this parable refers to two sons Their father asked both of them to work in his vineyard One of the sons said that he wouldn t do it but he later changed his mind and did the work anyway The other son said he would do it but he didn t go Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen 21 33 46 EditMain article Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen Verse 43 Edit Therefore I say to you the kingdom of God will be taken from you and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it 27 Protestant biblical commentator Heinrich Meyer notes that Jesus is not here referring to the Gentiles as since Eusebius time many have supposed but as the use of the singular already plainly indicates to the whole of the future subjects of the kingdom of the Messiah conceived of as one people which will therefore consist of Jews and Gentiles the new Messianic people of God 13 the holy nation addressed as such in 1 Peter 2 9 The phrase the fruits of it means the fruits of the kingdom 28 See also EditBethany and Bethphage on Mount of Olives Fig tree Parables of Jesus Other related Bible parts Psalm 8 Isaiah 5 Isaiah 56 Jeremiah 7 Zechariah 9 Mark 11 Mark 12 Luke 19 Luke 20 John 2 John 12References Edit Liste Handschriften Munster Institute for New Testament Textual Research Retrieved 27 August 2011 Thomas J David The Oxyrhynchus Papyri LXIV London 1997 pp 7 9 Kirkpatrick A F 1901 The Book of Psalms with Introduction and Notes The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges Vol Book IV and V Psalms XC CL Cambridge At the University Press p 838 Retrieved February 28 2019 a b Allison 2007 p 871 Matthew 20 29 Matthew 21 2 NKJV a b Allison 2007 pp 871 2 Carr A 1893 Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges Matthew 21 accessed 12 March 2021 a b Nicoll W R The Expositor s Greek Testament Matthew 21 accessed 12 March 2021 Alford H Greek Testament Critical Exegetical Commentary Matthew 21 accessed 12 March 2021 Matthew 21 4 New International Version Matthew 21 4 NKJV a b Meyer H A W Meyer s NT Commentary on Matthew 21 accessed 5 October 2019 Matthew 21 11 NKJV Matthew 21 12 NKJV On the first day of Adar corresponds to February they proclaimed concerning the shekels Misn Shekalim c 1 sect 1 a b Maimonides Hilch Shekalim c 1 sect 1 7 Quote it is an affirmative command of the law that every man in Israel should pay the half shekel every year even though a poor man that is maintained by alms he is obliged to it and must beg it of others or sell his coat upon his back and pay it as it is said Exodus 30 15 The rich shall not give more etc All are bound to give it priests Levites and Israelites and strangers and servants that are made free but not women nor servants nor children a b Misn Shekalim c 1 sect 3 Maimonides Hilch Shekalim c 1 sect 9 Quote On the first of Adar they proclaim concerning the shekels that every man may prepare his half shekel and be ready to give it on the fifteenth the exchangers sit in every province or city and mildly ask it everyone that gives them it they take it of them and he that does not give they do not compel him to give on the twenty fifth they sit in the sanctuary to collect it and henceforward they urge him that does not give until he gives and everyone that does not give they oblige him to give pledge and they take his pledge whether he will or not and even his coat Maimonides Hilch Shekalim c 3 sect 1 Quote When a man went to an exchanger and changed a shekel for two half shekels he gave him an addition to the shekel and the addition is called Kolbon wherefore when two men gave a shekel for them both they were both obliged to pay the Kolbon The gain which these men had is clarified in Misn Shekalim c 1 sect 7 Quote How much is the Kolbon A silver meah according to R Meir but the wise men say half an one Maimonides Hilch Shekalim c 3 sect 7 Maimonides amp Bartenora in Misn Shekalim c 1 sect 7 amp Cholin c 1 sect 7 Quote what is the value of the Kolbon At that time they gave two pence for the half shekel the Kolbon was half a meah which is the twelfth part of a penny and since Kolbon less than that is not given A meah was the half of a sixth part of the half shekel and the twenty fourth part of a shekel and weighed sixteen barley corns half a meah was the forty eighth part of a shekel and weighed eight barley Maimonides Hilch Shekalim c 2 sect 2 Quote In the sanctuary there were before them continually or daily thirteen chests and there were as many tables according to Misn Shekalim c 6 sect 1 every chest was in the form of a trumpet the first was for the shekels of the present year the second for the shekels of the year past the third for everyone that had a Korban or vow upon him to offer two turtledoves or two young pigeons the one a burnt offering the other a sin offering their price was cast into this chest the fourth for everyone that had the burnt offering of a fowl only on him the price of that was cast into this chest The fifth was for him who freely gave money to buy wood to be laid in order on the altar the sixth for him that freely gave money for the incense the seventh for him that freely gave gold for the mercy seat the eighth for the remainder of the sin offering as when he separated the money for his sin offering and took the sin offering and there remained of the money the rest he cast into this chest the ninth for the remainder of the trespass offering the tenth for the remainder of the doves for men and women in fluxes and women after childbirth the eleventh for the remainder of the offerings of the Nazarite the twelfth for the remainder of the trespass offering of the leper the thirteenth for him that freely gave money for the burnt offering of a beast John Gill John Gill s Exposition of the Entire Bible Exposition of the Old and New Testament Published in 1746 1763 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Matthew 21 13 KJV Matthew 21 24 27 NKJV Matthew 21 43 NKJV Matthew 21 43 footnote in Holman Christian Standard BibleSources EditAllison Dale C Jr 2007 57 Matthew In Barton John Muddiman John eds The Oxford Bible Commentary first paperback ed Oxford University Press pp 844 886 ISBN 978 0199277186 Retrieved February 6 2019 External links EditMatthew 21 King James Bible Wikisource English Translation with Parallel Latin Vulgate Online Bible at GospelHall org ESV KJV Darby American Standard Version Bible in Basic English Multiple bible versions at Bible Gateway NKJV NIV NRSV etc Preceded byMatthew 20 Chapters of the New TestamentGospel of Matthew Succeeded byMatthew 22 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gospel of Matthew Chapter 21 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matthew 21 amp oldid 1126786536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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