Matthew in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
("the gift of Jehovah"), contracted from Mattathias. The
evangelist and apostle. Son of Alphaeus (not the father of
James the Less, for Matthew and James are never coupled as
brothers). Mark (Mark 2:14, compare Mark 3:18) and Luke
(Luke 5:27, compare with Luke 6:15) veil his former less
honorable occupation of a publican under his original name
Levi; but Matthew himself gives it, and humbly puts himself
after Thomas, an undesigned mark of genuineness; whereas
Mark (Mark 3:18) and Luke (Luke 6:15) put Matthew before
Thomas in the list of apostles. (See PUBLICAN.) As
subordinate to the head farmers of the Roman revenues he
collected dues at Capernaum on the sea of Galilee, the route
by which traffic passed between Damascus and the Phoenician
seaports. But Matthew is not ashamed to own his identity
with "the publican" in order to magnify Christ's grace
(Matthew 9:9), and in his catalogue of the apostles (Matthew
10:3).
Christ called him at "the receipt of custom," and he
immediately obeyed the call. Desiring to draw others of his
occupation with him to the Savior he made in His honor a
great feast (Matthew 9:9-13; Luke 5:29; Mark 2:14). "Many
publicans and sinners" thus had the opportunity of hearing
the word; and the murmuring of the Pharisee, and the reply
of our Lord "they that be whole need not a physician but
they that are sick ... I am not come to call the righteous
but sinners to repentance," imply that his effort was
crowned with success. With the undesigned propriety which
marks genuineness Matthew talks of Jesus' sitting down in
"the house" without telling whose house it was, whereas Mark
mentions it as Levi's. He was among those who met in the
upper room at Jerusalem after our Lord's ascension (Acts
1:13). Eustathius (H. E. iii. 24) says that after our Lord's
ascension Matthew preached in Judaea and then in foreign
nations (Ethiopia, according to Socrates Scholasticus, H. E.
i. 19).
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