3. crieth in the wilderness--So the Septuagint and
Mt 3:3
connect the words. The Hebrew accents, however, connect them thus:
"In the wilderness prepare ye," &c., and the parallelism also requires
this, "Prepare ye in the wilderness," answering to "make straight
in the desert." Matthew was entitled, as under inspiration, to vary
the connection, so as to bring out another sense, included in the Holy
Spirit's intention; in
Mt 3:1,
"John the Baptist, preaching in the wilderness," answers thus to
"The voice of one crying in the wilderness." MAURER takes the participle as put for the finite verb
(so in
Isa 40:6),
"A voice crieth." The clause, "in the wilderness," alludes to
Israel's passage through it from Egypt to Canaan
(Ps 68:7),
Jehovah being their leader; so it shall be at the coming restoration of
Israel, of which the restoration from Babylon was but a type (not the
full realization; for their way from it was not through the
"wilderness"). Where John preached (namely, in the wilderness; the type
of this earth, a moral wilderness), there were the hearers who
are ordered to prepare the way of the Lord, and there was to be
the coming of the Lord [BENGEL]. John, though he
was immediately followed by the suffering Messiah, is rather the herald
of the coming reigning Messiah, as
Mal 4:5, 6
("before the great and dreadful day of the Lord"),
proves.
Mt 17:11
(compare
Ac 3:21)
implies that John is not exclusively meant; and that though in one
sense Elias has come, in another he is yet to come. John was the
figurative Elias, coming "in the spirit and power of Elias"
(Lu 1:17);
Joh 1:21,
where John the Baptist denies that he was the actual Elias, accords
with this view.
Mal 4:5, 6
cannot have received its exhaustive fulfilment in John; the Jews always
understood it of the literal Elijah. As there is another consummating
advent of Messiah Himself, so perhaps there is to be of his forerunner
Elias, who also was present at the transfiguration.
the Lord--Hebrew, Jehovah; as this is applied to Jesus, He must be
Jehovah
(Mt 3:3).
JFB.
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