24. Ye blind guides, which strain at a gnat--The proper rendering--as
in the older English translations, and perhaps our own as it came from
the translators' hands--evidently is, "strain out." It was the custom,
says TRENCH, of the stricter Jews to strain
their wine, vinegar, and
other potables through linen or gauze, lest unawares they should drink
down some little unclean insect therein and thus transgress
(Le 11:20, 23, 41, 42)
--just as the Buddhists do now in Ceylon and Hindustan--and to this
custom of theirs our Lord here refers.
and swallow a camel--the largest animal the Jews knew, as the "gnat"
was the smallest; both were by the law unclean.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible