Commentary
As Jesus goes up to Jerusalem, he tells the Twelve that the Son of Man will be condemned, handed to the Gentiles, mocked, flogged, crucified, and raised on the third day. The Zebedee family's request for the seats at his right and left shows that the disciples still imagine kingdom greatness in terms of rank. Jesus answers with the cup of suffering, forbids lordly patterns of rule among his followers, and grounds true greatness in his own mission: the Son of Man came to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. The healing of the two blind men then closes the scene with a living contrast: they ask for mercy rather than status, recognize him as Son of David, receive sight, and follow him.
This unit presents Jesus moving deliberately toward his sacrificial death while correcting the disciples' ambition by teaching that greatness in his kingdom is measured not by privileged rank but by costly service patterned after the Son of Man, whose life will be given as a ransom for many.
20:17 As Jesus was going up to Jerusalem, he took the twelve aside privately and said to them on the way, 20:18 "Look, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be handed over to the chief priests and the experts in the law. They will condemn him to death, 20:19 and will turn him over to the Gentiles to be mocked and flogged severely and crucified. Yet on the third day, he will be raised." 20:20 Then the mother of the sons of Zebedee came to him with her sons, and kneeling down she asked him for a favor. 20:21 He said to her, "What do you want?" She replied, "Permit these two sons of mine to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your kingdom." 20:22 Jesus answered, "You don't know what you are asking! Are you able to drink the cup I am about to drink?" They said to him, "We are able." 20:23 He told them, "You will drink my cup, but to sit at my right and at my left is not mine to give. Rather, it is for those for whom it has been prepared by my Father." 20:24 Now when the other ten heard this, they were angry with the two brothers. 20:25 But Jesus called them and said, "You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and those in high positions use their authority over them. 20:26 It must not be this way among you! Instead whoever wants to be great among you must be your servant, 20:27 and whoever wants to be first among you must be your slave - 20:28 just as the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many." 20:29 As they were leaving Jericho, a large crowd followed them. 20:30 Two blind men were sitting by the road. When they heard that Jesus was passing by, they shouted, "Have mercy on us, Lord, Son of David!" 20:31 The crowd scolded them to get them to be quiet. But they shouted even more loudly, "Lord, have mercy on us, Son of David!" 20:32 Jesus stopped, called them, and said, "What do you want me to do for you?" 20:33 They said to him, "Lord, let our eyes be opened." 20:34 Moved with compassion, Jesus touched their eyes. Immediately they received their sight and followed him.
Observation notes
- The unit begins with spatial and narrative urgency: Jesus is 'going up to Jerusalem,' and the prediction is delivered 'privately' to the Twelve, marking the passion as intentional rather than accidental.
- This third prediction is more specific than earlier ones, adding condemnation by the chief priests and scribes, delivery to Gentiles, mocking, flogging, crucifixion, and resurrection on the third day.
- The request for enthronement immediately after the prediction creates a sharp irony: Jesus speaks of suffering, while the disciples angle for status in the kingdom.
- Jesus addresses the sons directly after the mother's request, showing that the ambition belongs to them as well, not merely to maternal enthusiasm.
- The 'cup' image links future glory with participation in suffering; Jesus affirms that they will share his cup, but not that they grasp its meaning at the moment.
- The anger of the ten does not signal superior understanding; it reveals shared rivalry within the group.
- Jesus' contrast with Gentile rulers is ethical and paradigmatic: the issue is domineering exercise of authority, not the mere existence of authority structures.
- Verses 26-27 move from 'servant' to 'slave,' intensifying the demand and redefining 'great' and 'first' by downward movement rather than upward advancement within the group hierarchy of discipleship aspirations is corrected by the pattern of the Son of Man himself in verse 28, which functions as the unit's interpretive center.
- The title "Son of David" in the Jericho scene is significant because, on the eve of the Jerusalem entry, the blind men perceive royal identity more truly than the seeing crowd and disciples do in this episode.
- The blind men are rebuked by the crowd yet persist in pleading for mercy, a recurring Matthean pattern in which needy faith presses through social obstruction.
- Their healing leads immediately to following Jesus, so the miracle is not a detached wonder story but a discipleship-shaped conclusion to the section.
Structure
- 20:17-19: Jesus privately predicts his suffering, death, and resurrection as they go up to Jerusalem.
- 20:20-23: The mother of James and John requests places of honor; Jesus answers with the imagery of sharing his cup and with the Father's prerogative in assigning places.
- 20:24-28: Jesus addresses the indignation of the ten and contrasts Gentile models of rule with kingdom greatness defined by servanthood and slavery, climaxing in his own ransom saying.
- 20:29-34: Two blind men appeal to Jesus as Son of David, receive compassionate healing, and follow him, providing a narrative embodiment of proper recognition and response.
Key terms
paradidomi
Strong's: G3860
Gloss: to deliver over, hand over, betray
The repeated transfer language shows a chain of human culpability within divine foreknowledge and sets Jesus' death inside a concrete judicial process rather than vague hostility.
poterion
Strong's: G4221
Gloss: cup, allotted portion
The metaphor points to suffering appointed in the Father's plan and exposes that participation in Messiah's path entails costly identification with him, not mere proximity to his glory.
diakonos
Strong's: G1249
Gloss: servant, minister
Jesus redefines greatness in functional, others-directed terms rather than honor, prestige, or rank.
doulos
Strong's: G1401
Gloss: slave, bondservant
The stronger term deepens the inversion of worldly ambition and presses the disciples beyond token humility to self-giving availability.
lytron
Strong's: G3083
Gloss: ransom price, release-payment
This saying interprets Jesus' death as substitutionary and liberating, not merely exemplary; it is the theological ground of the servant pattern he commands.
polloi
Strong's: G4183
Gloss: many
In this context 'many' evokes the beneficiaries of the servant's sacrificial act and should not be reduced to a narrow arithmetic contrast with 'all'; it points to a multitude effectively served by his self-giving death.
Syntactical features
Predictive future sequence
Textual signal: "will be handed over ... will condemn ... will turn him over ... will be raised"
Interpretive effect: The chained futures present the passion as a definite, ordered sequence under Jesus' foreknowledge, reinforcing deliberate movement toward the cross.
Adversative contrast in kingdom ethics
Textual signal: "It must not be this way among you! Instead..."
Interpretive effect: Jesus sharply contrasts the disciples' community with Gentile domination, making servant leadership an essential kingdom norm rather than optional counsel.
Comparative paradigm introduced by 'just as'
Textual signal: "just as the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve"
Interpretive effect: Verse 28 is not an isolated christological statement; it grounds and patterns the exhortation of verses 26-27 in Jesus' own mission.
Infinitival purpose/result construction
Textual signal: "to give his life as a ransom for many"
Interpretive effect: The infinitive clarifies Jesus' service in its climactic form: his mission culminates in self-giving death with redemptive purpose.
Ironical question-and-answer repetition
Textual signal: "What do you want?" to the mother and "What do you want me to do for you?" to the blind men
Interpretive effect: The repeated question invites comparison: one request seeks status, the other seeks mercy and sight, thereby sharpening Matthew's contrast between misguided ambition and humble faith.
Textual critical issues
Addition of 'and be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized' in 20:22-23
Variants: Some manuscripts expand Jesus' saying with baptism language, likely influenced by Mark 10:38-39; shorter text lacks the added phrase.
Preferred reading: The shorter Matthean text without the baptism expansion.
Interpretive effect: The shorter reading keeps Matthew's focus on the cup motif and avoids importing Mark's fuller wording into this scene.
Rationale: The expansion is well explained as harmonization to Mark; the shorter reading fits Matthew's style and is strongly supported in critical editions.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 53:10-12
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The language of giving his life for many strongly resonates with the suffering servant who bears sin and serves many through his sacrificial self-offering.
Daniel 7:13-14
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Jesus' self-designation as Son of Man brings royal and eschatological authority into deliberate tension with the humiliation of suffering and death.
Psalm 110:1
Connection type: echo
Note: The request to sit at Jesus' right and left evokes royal enthronement imagery and messianic honor, though the disciples seek it without reckoning with the path of suffering.
Isaiah 42:1-4
Connection type: pattern
Note: Jesus' refusal of domineering rule and his compassionate action toward the blind fit the servant pattern of gentle, justice-bringing messianic ministry.
Interpretive options
Meaning of 'ransom for many' in 20:28
- A primarily exemplary reading in which Jesus' death models sacrificial service without implying substitution.
- A redemptive-substitutionary reading in which Jesus' life is given as the price securing release for others, while also functioning as the paradigm for discipleship.
Preferred option: A redemptive-substitutionary reading in which Jesus' life is given as the price securing release for others, while also functioning as the paradigm for discipleship.
Rationale: The noun lytron naturally carries redemptive-payment force, and verse 28 moves beyond mere example by identifying the Son of Man's death as the climactic act that grounds his teaching on service.
Force of 'many' in 'ransom for many'
- A restrictive numerical reading meant to contrast a limited group over against others excluded from the saving intent of Jesus' death.
- A Semitic-corporate reading in which 'many' denotes the multitude benefited by the servant's act, without functioning as a denial of the broader sufficiency of his death.
Preferred option: A Semitic-corporate reading in which 'many' denotes the multitude benefited by the servant's act, without functioning as a denial of the broader sufficiency of his death.
Rationale: The Isaiah 53 background and the narrative setting favor covenantal-redemptive breadth rather than a polemical arithmetic limitation; Matthew's concern here is the saving efficacy of Jesus' death for others.
Meaning of the Father's prepared places in 20:23
- Jesus denies any role in assigning kingdom honors because only the Father determines them.
- Jesus speaks economically within his mission, affirming the Father's sovereign preparation of roles without denying his own future royal authority.
- The statement means places are reserved specifically for James and John after all, though they do not yet know it.
Preferred option: Jesus speaks economically within his mission, affirming the Father's sovereign preparation of roles without denying his own future royal authority.
Rationale: Matthew elsewhere presents the Son with royal authority, so this saying is best read as functional submission within the Father-Son relation and as a rebuke to ambition, not as an absolute denial of Christ's authority.
Function of the healing of the two blind men in this unit
- A separate miracle report loosely attached by travel sequence.
- A deliberate narrative counterpart to the disciples' blindness, showing true recognition of Jesus' Davidic identity and proper response of mercy-seeking faith that leads to following.
Preferred option: A deliberate narrative counterpart to the disciples' blindness, showing true recognition of Jesus' Davidic identity and proper response of mercy-seeking faith that leads to following.
Rationale: Its placement after the ambition episode, the title 'Son of David,' the mercy motif, and the resulting following strongly support a compositional contrast between physical blindness healed and spiritual blindness exposed.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The immediately preceding teaching about first/last and reward frames the disciples' request; without that context the scene is easily reduced to an isolated lesson on humility.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read through Jesus' own self-interpretation in verse 28; the ethical command is grounded in who the Son of Man is and what he came to do.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The passage contains a direct moral reversal: kingdom greatness is measured by service and slavery, so interpretations that preserve status-seeking as spiritually legitimate misread the unit.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The blind men's restored sight functions narratively as more than a bare healing account; it typologically mirrors the need for true perception among disciples approaching Jerusalem.
prophetic
Relevance: medium
Note: The passion prediction should be taken as genuine prophecy fulfilled in the coming narrative, not as retrojected church theology detached from the historical Jesus.
Theological significance
- Jesus predicts his death in concrete stages—condemnation, transfer to Gentiles, mocking, flogging, crucifixion, and resurrection—showing that the coming passion is neither accidental nor outside divine purpose.
- In this scene, messianic glory and suffering are inseparable. The request for the right and left hand is answered not with a ladder to honor but with the cup Jesus must drink.
- Greatness among Jesus' followers is redefined at the point where the disciples are competing for place. The contrast with Gentile rulers targets domineering rule and makes service the proper shape of kingdom leadership.
- The ransom saying gives Jesus' death theological weight beyond moral example. His self-giving life is presented as the redemptive ground of the servant pattern he requires from his disciples.
- The Father's preparation of places in the kingdom checks grasping ambition and locates final honor within divine appointment rather than human maneuvering.
- The two blind men identify Jesus as Son of David, cry for mercy despite rebuke, and follow once healed. Their response supplies a clearer model of discipleship than the status rivalry of the Twelve.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Matthew arranges the episode so that each scene interprets the next: explicit passion prediction, request for thrones, correction about service, then the healing of blind men. The repeated question, 'What do you want?', sharpens the contrast between grasping for rank and pleading for mercy, while 'servant,' 'slave,' and 'ransom' move the argument downward from status to self-giving.
Biblical theological: The passage holds together Son of Man authority, the suffering cup, royal seats, and redemptive service. Jesus is not merely a king who later suffers, nor merely a sufferer who lacks royal identity; his kingship is revealed precisely in the path by which he gives his life for others.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes that reality is not finally ordered by visible power. Social instincts treat nearness to the throne as greatness; Jesus treats self-giving service as the truer measure because divine purpose overturns ordinary prestige.
Psychological Spiritual: The disciples hear the clearest prediction yet and still reach for precedence. Ambition survives close proximity to Jesus. The blind men display the opposite posture: need, persistence, mercy-seeking, and readiness to follow once helped.
Divine Perspective: The Father is not moved by bids for advantage, and the Son does not use his role to secure status for favorites. Divine action appears instead in the prepared path of suffering, the gift of ransom, and compassion toward those crying from the roadside.
Category: character
Note: God's kingdom order overturns status-seeking by honoring service rather than self-advancement.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The detailed prediction of arrest, condemnation, Gentile abuse, death, and resurrection shows providential purpose within historical events.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus discloses his mission most clearly in the claim that he gives his life as a ransom for many.
Category: attributes
Note: His response to the blind men shows mercy joined to royal authority.
- The Son of Man speaks as the destined ruler, yet he approaches that destiny through condemnation and crucifixion.
- The disciples seek places at Jesus' sides, but Jesus speaks first of sharing his cup.
- Those with physical sight misperceive greatness, while the blind recognize the Son of David and follow him.
- Final places are prepared by the Father, yet the disciples remain responsible for renouncing rivalry and becoming servants.
Enrichment summary
The request for the right and left hand is a bid for the highest public honor in the expected kingdom order, not a minor family favor. Jesus answers by shifting the discussion from seats to the cup: participation in his reign cannot be detached from participation in his suffering. He then contrasts the coercive style of Gentile rulers with the life he requires among his followers and anchors that demand in verse 28, where service reaches its climax in his life given as a ransom for many. The final healing scene completes the contrast. The blind men ask for mercy, not position; they recognize the Son of David more clearly than the disciples do in the preceding exchange, and their restored sight issues in following.
Traditions of men check
Leadership success in the church is measured mainly by platform, influence, and visible rank.
Why it conflicts: Jesus defines greatness by becoming servant and slave of others, not by securing prestigious position.
Textual pressure point: 20:25-27 explicitly contrasts Gentile power patterns with the norm that must govern Jesus' followers.
Caution: This should not be used to erase legitimate leadership or structure; the target is domineering ambition, not all forms of authority.
Jesus is chiefly a moral example, and talk of atonement as ransom is secondary or optional.
Why it conflicts: Jesus' own summary of his mission centers on giving his life as a ransom for many.
Textual pressure point: 20:28 interprets his coming and service climactically in terms of his sacrificial death.
Caution: The passage includes example and atonement together; one should not cancel the other.
Closeness to Jesus or ministry involvement automatically produces spiritual understanding.
Why it conflicts: The Twelve hear the passion prediction and still pursue honor, while marginalized blind men perceive Jesus as merciful Davidic Lord.
Textual pressure point: The juxtaposition of 20:17-28 with 20:29-34 exposes persistent disciple misunderstanding.
Caution: The point is not cynicism about discipleship, but a warning that privilege without humble faith does not guarantee clarity.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: The request to sit at Jesus' right and left seeks supreme public honor in the expected kingdom order. Jesus' response addresses a struggle over rank, precedence, and status, not merely private pride.
Western Misread: Reading the scene as only an inner lesson about humility misses that the disciples are contesting visible position within the messianic community.
Interpretive Difference: Jesus does not simply tell them to feel humbler; he overturns the normal route to honor by making greatness consist in serving others rather than securing precedence over them.
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: "Many" in the ransom saying is best heard in the servant-shaped scriptural world as the people benefited by one representative life given on their behalf, not as a narrow headcount statement.
Western Misread: Turning "for many" into a technical arithmetic formula can distract from the unit's actual burden: Jesus' death is for others and defines the community shaped by him.
Interpretive Difference: The verse carries redemptive force and corporate reach without inviting the reader to make this scene primarily about later extent-of-atonement debates.
Idioms and figures
Expression: drink the cup I am about to drink
Category: metaphor
Explanation: In Israel's scriptural idiom, the cup can signify the portion assigned by God, often bitter suffering or judgment. Here it refers to sharing Messiah's path of suffering, not sharing a festive royal privilege.
Interpretive effect: It turns the brothers' glory request into a revelation of their blindness: proximity to Jesus' reign entails costly participation in his suffering.
Expression: sit at my right hand and at my left
Category: metonymy
Explanation: The right and left side of a ruler signify positions of highest favor and delegated honor in a royal setting.
Interpretive effect: The request is exposed as a claim to chief rank in the kingdom, which makes Jesus' corrective about servanthood much sharper.
Expression: give his life as a ransom for many
Category: metaphor
Explanation: "Ransom" denotes a release-price image. In this context it should not be reduced to bare moral example; Jesus speaks of his life given for others in a redemptive sense, with servant-background resonance.
Interpretive effect: Verse 28 grounds kingdom service in Christ's saving self-gift, so discipleship imitation flows from atonement rather than replacing it.
Application implications
- Ambition in Christian leadership must be tested at the point of desire: is the aim to be near the center of recognition, or to become useful to others at real cost?
- Followers of Jesus should not treat suffering as evidence that the path has gone wrong. In this passage, the road to glory runs through the cup before it reaches the throne.
- Church authority should be exercised in ways that people experience as service, protection, and burden-bearing, not as pressure, self-display, or entitlement.
- Resentment at another person's prominence can expose the same rivalry that appears in the one openly asking for honor; the anger of the ten is not morally cleaner than the request of the two brothers.
- The blind men model the right response to need: cry for mercy, refuse silencing, receive help from Jesus, and then follow him on the road.
Enrichment applications
- Church ambition is often easiest to detect where people welcome service in principle but resist the forms of service that cost prestige, visibility, or control.
- Leaders should ask whether their authority feels to others like care and burden-bearing or like rank being asserted.
- Discussion of 'ransom for many' should not eclipse the scene's concrete demand: those shaped by Jesus' self-giving death must not reproduce status competition as their model of greatness.
Warnings
- Do not isolate verse 28 from the surrounding correction of ambition; the ransom saying is the theological ground for the ethical teaching, not a detached doctrinal slogan.
- Do not flatten 'many' into a later polemic about extent of atonement beyond what this context directly addresses.
- Do not read Jesus' rejection of Gentile lordship as a denial of all authority; the point is the manner and purpose of leadership.
- Do not treat the blind men's healing as merely a miracle appendix; Matthew uses it to sharpen the contrast between true sight and disciple misunderstanding.
- Do not overbuild Trinitarian subordination claims from 20:23; the saying functions within the incarnate mission and the immediate rebuke of status-seeking.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overbuild speculative claims about eternal Trinitarian subordination from 20:23; in context the saying functions chiefly to rebuke status-seeking and affirm the Father's sovereign ordering.
- Do not import a full technical atonement system from 'ransom' alone, but do not weaken the term into mere example; the strongest conservative alternatives still recognize genuinely redemptive force here.
- Do not turn honor-shame background into a generic cultural slogan; in this unit it matters specifically because the disciples are contesting royal proximity and public rank.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating Jesus' contrast with Gentile rulers as a rejection of all authority structures.
Why It Happens: Modern readers can hear any critique of domination as an argument against ordered leadership itself.
Correction: Jesus targets lordly, self-exalting use of authority. The passage reforms leadership's manner and purpose, not the existence of leadership.
Misreading: Reducing verse 28 to an example of sacrificial love with no redemptive or substitutionary force.
Why It Happens: The immediate context stresses service, so readers may flatten the ransom saying into ethics alone.
Correction: Responsible conservative readings acknowledge the exemplary function but see the stronger wording as redemptive: the Son of Man serves climactically by giving his life for others.
Misreading: Using 'for many' as though Matthew's main point were to settle later debates about the numerical extent of the atonement.
Why It Happens: Systematic questions can overshadow the local literary and scriptural context.
Correction: The phrase highlights the beneficiaries of Jesus' representative self-giving. The local emphasis is that his death is for others and forms a servant-shaped kingdom people.
Misreading: Reading the blind men's healing as a detached miracle appendix.
Why It Happens: Narrative readers may stop at the servant-leadership speech and treat the miracle as merely travel sequence.
Correction: Matthew uses the scene to contrast true sight with disciple ambition: the blind recognize the merciful Son of David and follow, while the Twelve are still competing for place.