Mt ch 2 | Mt 2:1 | Mt 2:2 | Mt 2:3 | Mt 2:4 | Mt 2:5 | Mt 2:6 | Mt 2:7 |
Mt 2:8 | Mt 2:9 | Mt 2:10 | Mt 2:11 | Mt 2:12 | Mt 2:13 | Mt 2:14 | Mt 2:15 |
Mt 2:16 | Mt 2:17 | Mt 2:18 | Mt 2:19 | Mt 2:20 | Mt 2:21 | Mt 2:22 | Mt 2:23 |
Bible references
And was there until the death of Herod: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying, Out of Egypt have I called my son. (Matthew 2:15 KJV)
and was there until the death of Herod: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Lord through the prophet, saying, Out of Egypt did I call my son. (Matthew 2:15 ASV)
And he was there until the death of Herod, that that might be fulfilled which was spoken by [the] Lord through the prophet, saying, Out of Egypt have I called my son. (Matthew 2:15 DBY)
and was there until the death of Herod; that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Lord through the prophet, saying, “Out of Egypt I called my son.” (Matthew 2:15 WEB)
and he was there till the death of Herod, that it might be fulfilled that was spoken by the Lord through the prophet, saying, `Out of Egypt I did call My Son.'(Matthew 2:15 YLT)
Interlinear KJV
Mt 2:15 And /kai/ was /en/ there /ekei/ until /heos/ the death /teleute/ of Herod: /Herodes/ that /hina/ it might be fulfilled /pleroo/ which /ho/ was spoken /rheo/ of /hupo/ the Lord /kurios/ by /dia/ the prophet, /prophetes/ saying, /lego/ Out of /ek/ Egypt /Aiguptos/ have I called /kaleo/ my /mou/ son. /huios/
Albert Barnes’ Commentary
Verse 15. The death of Herod. Herod died in the thirty-seventh year of his reign. It is not certainly known in what year he began his reign, and hence it is impossible to determine the time that Joseph remained in Egypt. The best chronologers have supposed that he died somewhere between two and four years after the birth of Christ; but at what particular time cannot now be determined. Nor can it be determined at what age Jesus was taken into Egypt. It seems probable that he was supposed to be a year old, (Mt 2:16) and of course the time that he remained in Egypt was not long. Herod died of a most painful and loathsome disease in Jericho. See Barnes for Mt 2:16; also Josephus, Ant. xvii. 10.
That it might be fulfilled, etc. This language is recorded in Ho 11:1. It there evidently speaks of God’s calling his people out of Egypt under Moses. See Ex 4:22,23. It might be said to be fulfilled in his calling Jesus from Egypt, because the words in Hosea aptly expressed this also. The same love which led him to deliver his people Israel from the land of Egypt, now led him also to deliver his Son from that place. The words used by Hosea would express both events See Barnes for Mt 1:22. Perhaps, also, the place in Hosea became a proverb, to express any great deliverance from danger; and thus it could be said to be fulfilled in Christ, as other proverbs are in cases to which they are applicable. It cannot be supposed that the passage in Hosea was a prophecy of the Messiah, but was only used by Matthew appropriately to express the event.
{c} “Out of Egypt” Ho 11:1
Adam Clarke’s Commentary
Verse 15. Out of Egypt have I called my son. This is quoted from Ho 11:1, where the deliverance of Israel, and that only, is referred to. But as that deliverance was extraordinary, it is very likely that it had passed into a proverb, so that “Out of Egypt have I called my son,” might have been used to express any signal deliverance. I confess, I can see no other reference it can have to the case in hand, unless we suppose, which is possible, that God might have referred to this future bringing up of his son Jesus from Egypt, under the type of the past deliverance of Israel from the same land. Midrash Tehillin, on Ps 2:7, has these remarkable words: I will publish a decree: this decree has been published in the Law, in the Prophets, and in the Hagiographia. In the Law, Israel is my first-born son: Ex 4:22. In the Prophets, Behold, my servant shall deal prudently: Isa 52:13. In the Hagiographia, The Lord said unto my lord: Ps 110:1. All these passages the Jews refer to the Messiah. See Schoetgen.