Commentary
Matthew presents Jesus calling a tax collector with sovereign simplicity, then defending table fellowship with tax collectors and sinners as the fitting expression of his mission. The unit moves from a concrete act of discipleship to two controversy exchanges: first over eating with the morally compromised, then over his disciples' failure to fast. Jesus answers both objections by identifying himself as the physician for the sick, grounding his conduct in Hosea's priority of mercy over ritual display, and then explaining that his presence introduces a new situation that cannot be contained within older patterns symbolized by old cloth and old wineskins.
This unit shows that Jesus' authoritative call gathers socially despised sinners into discipleship and fellowship, and that his messianic presence creates a fitting pattern of mercy and joy that cannot be judged by inherited religious forms as though nothing new has arrived.
9:9 As Jesus went on from there, he saw a man named Matthew sitting at the tax booth. "Follow me," he said to him. And he got up and followed him. 9:10 As Jesus was having a meal in Matthew's house, many tax collectors and sinners came and ate with Jesus and his disciples. 9:11 When the Pharisees saw this they said to his disciples, "Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?" 9:12 When Jesus heard this he said, "Those who are healthy don't need a physician, but those who are sick do. 9:13 Go and learn what this saying means: 'I want mercy and not sacrifice.' For I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners." 9:14 Then John's disciples came to Jesus and asked, "Why do we and the Pharisees fast often, but your disciples don't fast?" 9:15 Jesus said to them, "The wedding guests cannot mourn while the bridegroom is with them, can they? But the days are coming when the bridegroom will be taken from them, and then they will fast. 9:16 No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, because the patch will pull away from the garment and the tear will be worse. 9:17 And no one pours new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the skins burst and the wine is spilled out and the skins are destroyed. Instead they put new wine into new wineskins and both are preserved."
Observation notes
- The narrative begins with the direct imperative 'Follow me' and an immediate response, continuing Matthew's portrayal of Jesus' effective authority in word and deed.
- Matthew identifies himself by name and former occupation, which gives the meal scene personal narrative force rather than treating 'tax collectors' as an abstract class.
- The meal is not incidental background; it becomes the flashpoint for controversy because shared table fellowship publicly signals acceptance and association.
- The Pharisees address the disciples rather than Jesus directly, but Jesus answers, showing both awareness and authority over the challenge.
- Jesus' physician saying interprets the sinners as those in need, not as morally acceptable apart from repentance.
- The quotation 'I want mercy and not sacrifice' is introduced with 'Go and learn,' a sharp rebuke aimed at Scripture-trained opponents who have missed the prophetic priority embedded in their own Scriptures.
- I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners' is programmatic for Jesus' mission in this context and should be read against the irony of self-perceived righteousness among critics.
- The second exchange shifts from table fellowship to fasting, but both disputes concern whether Jesus and his disciples conform to recognized pious patterns of the day.
- The bridegroom image makes Jesus himself the decisive factor in the practice of his disciples; the issue is not anti-fasting principle but appropriateness in relation to his presence and coming removal.
- The future clause about the bridegroom being taken away introduces a note of impending loss within an otherwise celebratory image, anticipating suffering or departure.
- The garment and wineskin illustrations function as analogies of mismatch and damage, not merely as generic praise of innovation.
- The final line, that both are preserved, shows the concern is not destruction for its own sake but proper correspondence between content and container.
Structure
- 9:9 narrates Matthew's call: Jesus commands, Matthew rises, and discipleship begins immediately.
- 9:10 places Jesus at table with many tax collectors and sinners in Matthew's house, making fellowship the visible issue.
- 9:11-13 records Pharisaic objection and Jesus' defense: physician image, Hosea 6:6 citation, and mission statement about calling sinners.
- 9:14-15 introduces a second objection from John's disciples concerning fasting; Jesus answers with the bridegroom image and a coming future absence.
- 9:16-17 concludes with two analogies (unshrunk cloth; new wine/new wineskins) explaining the incompatibility between Jesus' present ministry and rigid older forms.
Key terms
akolouthei
Strong's: G190
Gloss: follow, accompany as a disciple
The command's brevity and Matthew's immediate response display Jesus' authority to claim allegiance from a socially compromised man.
telonai
Strong's: G5057
Gloss: revenue collectors
Their presence sharpens the scandal of Jesus' fellowship and illustrates the kind of people his mission reaches.
hamartoloi
Strong's: G268
Gloss: sinners, morally disreputable people
Jesus does not deny their need; he frames his mission precisely in relation to such people.
iatros
Strong's: G2395
Gloss: doctor, healer
The metaphor explains that proximity to the sick is appropriate to a healer's vocation and thus appropriate to Jesus' mission.
eleos
Strong's: G1656
Gloss: mercy, compassionate covenantal kindness
This term controls the critique of the Pharisees by showing that their objection misreads God's own priorities.
kalesai
Strong's: G2564
Gloss: to summon, invite, call
The verb connects the narrative event with Jesus' purpose and implies summons toward response rather than mere social approval.
Syntactical features
Imperative followed by immediate narrative compliance
Textual signal: "Follow me" ... "And he got up and followed him"
Interpretive effect: The compressed sequence presents Jesus' command as effectual in the narrative sense and foregrounds decisive discipleship.
Rhetorical question with implicit answer
Textual signal: "Those who are healthy don't need a physician, but those who are sick do"
Interpretive effect: Jesus' answer is not a detached proverb but a pointed justification of his conduct that exposes his critics' failure to grasp the obvious logic of his mission.
Imperatival rebuke using Scripture-learning language
Textual signal: "Go and learn what this saying means"
Interpretive effect: The form turns the objection back onto the Pharisees and presents their problem as deficient scriptural understanding, not merely faulty social judgment.
Purpose statement of mission
Textual signal: "For I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners"
Interpretive effect: This clause gives a programmatic rationale for the meal scene and should govern interpretation of Jesus' table fellowship.
Temporal contrast with present and future
Textual signal: "while the bridegroom is with them ... the days are coming when the bridegroom will be taken from them"
Interpretive effect: The syntax distinguishes a present season of fitting celebration from a future season in which fasting will become appropriate.
Textual critical issues
Longer reading in Matthew 9:13
Variants: Some manuscripts read "I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance," while others read simply "but sinners."
Preferred reading: "I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners."
Interpretive effect: The shorter reading leaves repentance implicit rather than explicit in this verse, though the broader Gospel and Synoptic parallels make clear that Jesus' call is transformative, not permissive.
Rationale: The shorter reading is better supported and the longer form likely reflects harmonization with parallel tradition, especially Luke 5:32.
Old Testament background
Hosea 6:6
Connection type: quotation
Note: Jesus cites Hosea directly to show that covenant faithfulness expressed in mercy outranks sacrificial religiosity detached from right heart orientation. The citation rebukes opponents on their own scriptural ground.
Hosea's wider prophetic pattern
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The prophetic critique of ritual without covenant loyalty forms the backdrop for Jesus' opposition to religious scruples that ignore God's merciful purpose toward the needy.
Isaiah 54:5; 62:4-5
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The bridegroom image resonates with Old Testament marriage imagery for God's joyful relation to his people. In this unit it heightens the significance of Jesus' presence without requiring a formal quotation.
Interpretive options
Who are 'the righteous' in 9:13?
- Jesus refers ironically to those who regard themselves as righteous, especially his critics.
- Jesus refers to genuinely righteous persons who are not the focus of his present mission statement.
Preferred option: Jesus refers ironically to those who regard themselves as righteous, especially his critics.
Rationale: In the immediate context the Pharisees challenge Jesus from a posture of moral superiority, and the physician metaphor contrasts acknowledged need with presumed health. The saying exposes self-righteousness more naturally than it distinguishes classes of actually sinless people.
What is the main point of the fasting answer?
- Jesus abolishes fasting for his followers altogether.
- Jesus suspends fasting during his earthly presence as bridegroom but anticipates its appropriateness after his removal.
- Jesus only rejects Pharisaic fasting customs while leaving the principle untouched.
Preferred option: Jesus suspends fasting during his earthly presence as bridegroom but anticipates its appropriateness after his removal.
Rationale: Verse 15 explicitly says 'then they will fast,' so the saying cannot mean absolute abolition. The controlling point is redemptive-historical appropriateness in relation to Jesus' presence and absence.
How should the cloth and wineskin analogies be read?
- They mainly teach the total rejection of all prior revelation and institutions.
- They explain that Jesus' present kingdom-bringing ministry cannot simply be fitted into inherited religious forms without rupture.
- They are generic proverbs about preferring novelty over tradition.
Preferred option: They explain that Jesus' present kingdom-bringing ministry cannot simply be fitted into inherited religious forms without rupture.
Rationale: The analogies arise directly from the fasting controversy and explain mismatch, not disdain for Scripture or simple celebration of innovation. Matthew's Gospel elsewhere shows continuity with Israel's Scriptures even amid real newness in Jesus.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read within Matthew 8-12 as part of rising response to Jesus' authority; the call of Matthew, controversy over fellowship, and question about fasting form one coherent argument rather than isolated sayings.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: Jesus mentions 'the righteous' and 'sinners' in a controversy setting; the terms should not be absolutized into fixed anthropological categories without regard to the ironic and polemical context.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The bridegroom metaphor and mission statements make Jesus himself the interpretive center; the issue is not bare ethics but what his presence means.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: Hosea 6:6 prevents readings that equate external religious rigor with covenant fidelity while neglecting merciful engagement with the needy.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: medium
Note: The contrast between present feast-like joy and future fasting reflects a time-sensitive shift tied to Jesus' earthly presence and coming removal; practices are evaluated according to their place in salvation history.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The garment and wineskin sayings are analogical illustrations of incompatibility and preservation; they should not be allegorized in excessive detail.
Theological significance
- Jesus' call reaches persons publicly identified with moral compromise, showing that his mission is directed toward the needy rather than the socially validated.
- Mercy is not set against God's prior revelation but identified as its true burden when ritual and piety are misused to exclude those whom God summons.
- Jesus' table fellowship is missional and restorative, not a denial of sin; he names sinners as sick people who need the healer's presence.
- Jesus implicitly claims exceptional authority by defining the proper conduct of his disciples in relation to himself as bridegroom.
- The unit holds together continuity and discontinuity: Jesus stands within Israel's Scriptures by citing Hosea, yet his presence introduces a new phase that cannot be reduced to inherited patterns.
- Discipleship begins with Jesus' summons and includes visible reordering of social space, including fellowship that reflects his redemptive mission.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The unit's language moves from command ('Follow me') to accusation ('Why does your teacher eat...?') to explanatory metaphor ('physician,' 'bridegroom,' 'patch,' 'wineskins'). Each metaphor interprets the same basic issue from a different angle: need, presence, and fit. The wording does not merely defend unconventional behavior; it reclassifies reality around Jesus' mission and presence.
Biblical theological: This passage fits Matthew's larger pattern in which Jesus fulfills Scripture while confronting religious leadership that mishandles Scripture. The Hosea citation anchors continuity with the prophetic tradition, while the bridegroom and wineskin sayings indicate that the Messiah's arrival brings a distinct phase in God's dealings that reshapes piety and communal life.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes a moral order in which human beings are not self-healing but require divine intervention. It also presents history as qualitatively ordered by God's redemptive action: the presence of the bridegroom changes what is fitting. Religious forms are not ultimate realities; they must correspond to the reality God is bringing about in his Son.
Psychological Spiritual: The contrast between the sick and the presumed healthy exposes the danger of moral self-perception detached from self-knowledge. Matthew's immediate response models a will conquered by Jesus' authority, while the Pharisees' objection displays how zeal for purity can harden into distance from mercy. The fasting question shows that sincere religious practitioners can still misread the spiritual meaning of the moment they are in.
Divine Perspective: God values mercy in a way that exposes ritual exactness when it becomes a shield against compassion. In Jesus' conduct, God's redemptive purpose moves toward sinners without affirming their sin. The mention of the bridegroom reveals divine joy in the Messiah's presence, yet the coming removal of the bridegroom also signals that this joy will pass through suffering.
Category: character
Note: God's character is disclosed in the Hosea citation: he desires mercy, not external religiosity severed from covenant faithfulness.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus reveals God's priorities and mission not only by teaching but by the concrete social act of eating with sinners.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God's saving work unfolds in a new redemptive moment marked by the Messiah's presence, which reorders appropriate religious practice.
Category: personhood
Note: The bridegroom image presents God's redemptive relation to his people in relational and covenantal, not merely procedural, terms.
- Jesus welcomes sinners, yet his welcome is framed as a healing call, not moral indifference.
- The unit affirms Israel's Scriptures through Hosea while also insisting that Jesus' arrival cannot be contained within established religious expectations.
- There is a proper time for feasting and a proper time for fasting; spirituality is not measured by one practice abstracted from redemptive context.
Enrichment summary
The sharpest enrichment lies in seeing this unit as a public dispute over covenantal boundaries, not merely private compassion. Eating with tax collectors and sinners signaled accepted association, so Jesus' table fellowship visibly enacted his mission to reclaim the morally compromised. Hosea 6:6 therefore rebukes a form of scriptural piety that protects ritual seriousness while resisting covenant mercy. The fasting exchange then turns on redemptive timing: with the bridegroom present, mourning practices are out of season. The cloth and wineskin sayings press not novelty for novelty's sake, but the inability of older religious patterns to contain the messianic moment unchanged.
Traditions of men check
Treating separation from compromised people as a higher mark of holiness than redemptive engagement with them.
Why it conflicts: Jesus' meal fellowship is not presented as defilement but as mission consistent with his calling of sinners.
Textual pressure point: The physician metaphor and the statement 'I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners.'
Caution: The text does not endorse careless participation in sin; it just refuses a holiness model that withholds merciful contact from those needing repentance and restoration.
Using external disciplines such as fasting as a universal index of spiritual seriousness without regard to context and purpose.
Why it conflicts: Jesus ties the appropriateness of fasting to the presence or absence of the bridegroom rather than treating the practice as automatically superior in every moment.
Textual pressure point: "The days are coming when the bridegroom will be taken from them, and then they will fast."
Caution: This should not be used to belittle fasting itself, since Jesus explicitly envisages it as fitting in a later season.
Reading Jesus' embrace of sinners as if he removes the need for repentance or moral transformation.
Why it conflicts: Jesus frames sinners as sick people needing a physician and speaks of calling them, which implies summons away from their former state.
Textual pressure point: The physician image and the call motif linking Matthew's conversion to Jesus' broader mission.
Caution: Even though Matthew 9:13 likely lacks the explicit phrase 'to repentance,' the wider context of Jesus' ministry forbids a permissive reading.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: Table fellowship in this setting functions as a public marker of belonging and association. Jesus is not simply being sociable; he is reconfiguring who may be gathered around him under a mercy-shaped summons.
Western Misread: Treating the meal as a private act of friendliness or generic inclusion with little communal meaning.
Interpretive Difference: The controversy becomes a clash over who can be openly received within the orbit of God's renewing work, not just over manners.
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: Sharing a meal with stigmatized people crosses status lines and exposes Jesus to criticism as one who accepts the dishonorable. His physician metaphor reframes that apparent shame as the proper conduct of a healer.
Western Misread: Reading the scene only as an abstract theological statement about grace while missing the social scandal of Jesus' association.
Interpretive Difference: Jesus is not merely teaching mercy; he is bearing the public cost of merciful solidarity with the discredited in order to call them.
Idioms and figures
Expression: Go and learn what this means
Category: idiom
Explanation: A rebuking instruction formula. Jesus sends Scripture-trained opponents back to their own Bible because their objection reveals failed reading, not superior holiness.
Interpretive effect: It intensifies the critique: the problem is not lack of ritual concern but misreading God's stated priorities in Hosea.
Expression: I desire mercy and not sacrifice
Category: merism
Explanation: A prophetic contrast that prioritizes covenant mercy over ritual observance when the two are torn apart by hypocrisy. It does not abolish sacrifice in principle.
Interpretive effect: It blocks readings that make Jesus anti-ritual or anti-Scripture; the target is religious performance detached from covenant faithfulness.
Expression: The wedding guests cannot mourn while the bridegroom is with them, can they?
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The image assumes wedding joy as the fitting atmosphere in the bridegroom's presence. Fasting is treated here as a mourning-oriented practice whose appropriateness changes with the moment.
Interpretive effect: The issue is timing in relation to Jesus, not whether fasting is intrinsically good or bad.
Expression: new wine into old wineskins
Category: metaphor
Explanation: A mismatch image: fermenting new wine requires flexible skins, or both container and contents are lost. The point is not contempt for the old but damage caused by forcing Jesus' present work into forms unsuited to it.
Interpretive effect: It cautions against trying to preserve inherited religious patterns unchanged when Jesus' messianic presence has altered what is fitting.
Application implications
- Christian discipleship begins with personal response to Jesus' call and may require leaving entrenched social identities, ambitions, or sources of gain, as Matthew leaves the tax booth.
- Churches should test their fellowship patterns by Jesus' mission logic: proximity to morally broken people can be an act of mercy when it serves restoration under his authority.
- Believers should beware forms of biblical seriousness that can parse religious duties yet fail to show mercy to the needy, the stigmatized, and the spiritually sick.
- Ministry to sinners should neither romanticize brokenness nor recoil from it; Jesus joins truthful diagnosis with redemptive presence.
- Spiritual disciplines such as fasting should be practiced with discernment about purpose and season, not as badges of superiority or inherited habits imposed on others.
- Congregations should ask whether cherished structures actually serve the life Jesus brings or function like old wineskins unable to bear faithful adaptation to his mission.
Enrichment applications
- Church fellowship should be examined not only for doctrinal correctness but for whether its social patterns actually embody Jesus' mercy toward the morally compromised.
- Scripture use becomes suspect when it protects respectable distance from needy people while claiming zeal for holiness.
- Spiritual disciplines should be practiced in relation to Christ's purposes and seasons, not as badges of seriousness detached from what he is doing among his people today.
Warnings
- Do not turn 'I desire mercy and not sacrifice' into a dismissal of all ritual, temple, or commanded practices; the prophetic contrast targets distorted priorities, not obedience itself.
- Do not use the wineskin sayings to claim that Jesus rejects the Old Testament or Israel's Scriptures; Matthew consistently presents him as their fulfillment.
- Do not flatten 'the righteous' into an absolute theological category here without noticing the controversy setting and ironic edge.
- Do not read table fellowship as mere social inclusivity detached from Jesus' call, since the passage presents fellowship in connection with healing mission and discipleship.
- The bridegroom image carries christological weight, but interpreters should avoid pressing every implied Old Testament marriage motif beyond what the local context sustains.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overstate the background as though the text explicitly accuses Jesus of breaking Torah purity law; the visible issue is association and boundary maintenance.
- Do not press the bridegroom image into every Old Testament marriage motif; here its primary force is present joy and future loss.
- Do not use the wineskin saying to claim total discontinuity from Israel or from prior revelation; Matthew anchors the scene in Hosea even while stressing real newness.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Jesus' eating with sinners means moral affirmation without repentance.
Why It Happens: Modern readers often equate welcome with endorsement and isolate the meal from the call narrative and physician metaphor.
Correction: In this unit Jesus names such people as sick and presents his presence as a healing summons. The welcome is restorative and mission-shaped, not permissive.
Misreading: 'Mercy not sacrifice' cancels ritual practice or Old Testament worship altogether.
Why It Happens: The prophetic contrast is read as an absolute opposition instead of a priority statement within covenant life.
Correction: Jesus uses Hosea to expose distorted piety, not to reject Scripture. Matthew's Gospel presents Jesus as fulfilling Israel's Scriptures, not discarding them.
Misreading: Jesus abolishes fasting for his followers.
Why It Happens: Readers emphasize present joy but ignore the explicit future clause: 'then they will fast.'
Correction: Responsible conservative readings agree that the passage teaches seasonal appropriateness: no mourning-fast while the bridegroom is present, fasting again after his removal.
Misreading: The wineskin sayings authorize any innovation simply because it is new.
Why It Happens: The image is detached from the controversy about Jesus' mission and turned into a slogan for change.
Correction: The point is not novelty as a virtue but correspondence between Jesus' messianic work and the forms meant to carry it.