Commentary
Matthew opens the passion narrative by linking Jesus’ explicit prediction of crucifixion at Passover with three human responses to him: the leaders’ covert plot, a woman’s costly anointing at Bethany, and Judas’s bargain to hand him over. The sequence makes clear that Jesus is not swept along by events; he names their timing and interprets the anointing as preparation for burial. Matthew also sets enduring honor beside treachery: what the disciples call waste, Jesus calls a beautiful deed, while one of the twelve turns intimate access into a sale.
Matthew 26:1-16 marks the turn from Jesus’ public teaching to the passion by showing that his death at Passover proceeds under his own foreknowledge and interpretation, while those around him divide between hostile calculation, costly honor, and mercenary betrayal.
26:1 When Jesus had finished saying all these things, he told his disciples, 26:2 "You know that after two days the Passover is coming, and the Son of Man will be handed over to be crucified." 26:3 Then the chief priests and the elders of the people met together in the palace of the high priest, who was named Caiaphas. 26:4 They planned to arrest Jesus by stealth and kill him. 26:5 But they said, "Not during the feast, so that there won't be a riot among the people." 26:6 Now while Jesus was in Bethany at the house of Simon the leper, 26:7 a woman came to him with an alabaster jar of expensive perfumed oil, and she poured it on his head as he was at the table. 26:8 When the disciples saw this, they became indignant and said, "Why this waste? 26:9 It could have been sold at a high price and the money given to the poor!" 26:10 When Jesus learned of this, he said to them, "Why are you bothering this woman? She has done a good service for me. 26:11 For you will always have the poor with you, but you will not always have me! 26:12 When she poured this oil on my body, she did it to prepare me for burial. 26:13 I tell you the truth, wherever this gospel is proclaimed in the whole world, what she has done will also be told in memory of her." 26:14 Then one of the twelve, the one named Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests 26:15 and said, "What will you give me to betray him into your hands?" So they set out thirty silver coins for him. 26:16 From that time on, Judas began looking for an opportunity to betray him.
Observation notes
- Verse 1 marks a major hinge in Matthew: 'when Jesus had finished saying all these things' closes the discourse section of chapters 24-25 and turns the Gospel into passion action.
- Jesus predicts not only death but crucifixion in verse 2, giving the reader interpretive control before the leaders speak.
- The temporal marker 'after two days' and the mention of Passover connect Jesus’ death to covenant-redemptive timing, not merely to political conspiracy.
- The leaders’ plan in verses 3-5 is driven by stealth and crowd management; they want Jesus dead but fear public reaction.
- The Bethany episode is placed between the leaders’ plot and Judas’s bargain, so the woman’s costly act is framed against escalating hostility and betrayal.
- The woman remains unnamed in Matthew, which keeps the narrative focus on the act itself and Jesus’ interpretation of it.
- The disciples call the anointing a 'waste,' but Jesus names it a 'good service' or beautiful deed, reversing their valuation.
- Jesus’ statement 'you will always have the poor with you, but you will not always have me' contrasts ongoing duties of mercy with the unique, unrepeatable moment before his death; it does not cancel care for the poor within the Gospel’s wider ethic. 26:12 interprets the anointing specifically in burial terms, so the symbolic meaning is supplied by Jesus, not inferred independently by the reader alone. 26:13 elevates the act into enduring memorial status by tying it to the proclamation of 'this gospel in the whole world.' 26:14 identifies Judas as 'one of the twelve,' making the betrayal more shocking because it comes from intimate association rather than distant opposition. The payment of thirty silver coins gives the betrayal a starkly transactional character and prepares for later fulfillment reflection in Matthew 27. Verse 16 shows Judas’s betrayal as a sustained process; once he agrees, he begins seeking a strategic opportunity.
Structure
- 26:1-2 closes Jesus’ final discourse and announces the nearness and manner of his death at Passover.
- 26:3-5 presents the chief priests and elders secretly plotting Jesus’ arrest and death while trying to avoid festival unrest.
- 26:6-13 narrates the anointing at Bethany, the disciples’ objection, and Jesus’ interpretation of the act as preparation for his burial and as a memorial linked to worldwide gospel proclamation.
- 26:14-16 records Judas’s approach to the chief priests, the agreement for thirty silver coins, and his ongoing search for an opportunity to betray Jesus.
Key terms
paradidomi
Strong's: G3860
Gloss: to hand over, deliver up, betray
The verb binds divine foreknowledge, hostile human action, and Judas’s betrayal into one unfolding movement without collapsing moral responsibility.
pascha
Strong's: G3957
Gloss: Passover festival/meal
The timing frames Jesus’ death within Israel’s redemptive calendar and prepares for the covenantal meaning of the meal in the following section.
stauroo
Strong's: G4717
Gloss: to crucify
Matthew presents the manner of death as known and embraced by Jesus, not as an unforeseen end to his mission.
kalon ergon
Strong's: G2570, G2041
Gloss: good/beautiful deed
This expression overturns the disciples’ charge of waste and directs readers to judge the act by Jesus’ worth and the hour of his death.
mnemosynon
Strong's: G3422
Gloss: remembrance, memorial
The deed becomes a lasting witness embedded in gospel proclamation, showing that true recognition of Jesus’ death is itself part of the church’s memory.
paradidoi
Strong's: G3860
Gloss: hand over, betray
The term exposes Judas’s agency and mercenary intent while echoing Jesus’ prior prediction.
Syntactical features
Discourse-closing formula
Textual signal: 26:1 'When Jesus had finished saying all these things'
Interpretive effect: This formula marks a major compositional seam in Matthew and signals that the teaching of chapters 24-25 now gives way to the narrated events that fulfill Jesus’ warnings and predictions.
Temporal coordination of prediction and event
Textual signal: 26:2 'after two days the Passover is coming' followed by 26:3 'then' the leaders gathered
Interpretive effect: Matthew first gives Jesus’ prediction and only then the leaders’ plotting, so the reader interprets the conspiracy under Jesus’ prior knowledge.
Adversative contrast in leaders’ plan
Textual signal: 26:5 'But not during the feast'
Interpretive effect: The adversative reveals a tension between the leaders’ murderous intent and their political caution, which heightens the sense that the actual timing will not finally be controlled by them.
Rhetorical question and evaluative reversal
Textual signal: 26:8-10 'Why this waste?' / 'Why are you bothering this woman?'
Interpretive effect: The paired questions stage a clash of judgments; Jesus overturns the disciples’ utilitarian assessment and establishes the act’s true meaning.
Grounding clauses introduced by 'for'
Textual signal: 26:11-12 'For you always have the poor... For when she poured this oil...'
Interpretive effect: Jesus’ explanation is reasoned, not sentimental; the clauses show why the act is fitting in this particular moment.
Textual critical issues
Object of giving the money in verse 9
Variants: Some witnesses read 'given to the poor,' while others specify 'given to poor people.'
Preferred reading: given to the poor
Interpretive effect: The sense is unchanged; the variant does not materially affect the disciples’ objection.
Rationale: The shorter and more widely supported reading adequately explains the expansion in other witnesses.
Old Testament background
Exodus 12
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Passover forms the redemptive backdrop for Jesus’ announced death, preparing the reader to see the passion in relation to deliverance and covenant memory.
Deuteronomy 15:11
Connection type: allusion
Note: Jesus’ statement about always having the poor likely echoes the continuing reality of poverty in Israel and should be heard as a summons to ongoing generosity, not indifference.
Psalm 41:9
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Though not quoted here, the betrayal by a close associate fits the scriptural pattern later made explicit in passion tradition.
Zechariah 11:12-13
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The thirty silver coins anticipate Matthew’s later explicit use of prophetic fulfillment in connection with Judas’s payment and remorse.
Interpretive options
Why does Jesus say, 'you will always have the poor with you, but you will not always have me'?
- Jesus relativizes ordinary almsgiving in view of a unique and unrepeatable moment before his death.
- Jesus dismisses concern for the poor as spiritually inferior to acts of worship.
- Jesus merely states a social fact without ethical force.
Preferred option: Jesus relativizes ordinary almsgiving in view of a unique and unrepeatable moment before his death.
Rationale: The immediate context is burial preparation, and the likely echo of Deuteronomy 15:11 assumes continuing responsibility toward the poor rather than abolishing it.
Did the woman knowingly anoint Jesus for burial?
- She consciously intended a burial anointing based on messianic understanding.
- Jesus assigns a meaning deeper than her full awareness, interpreting the act in light of his approaching death.
- The anointing is only a general act of honor with no burial significance.
Preferred option: Jesus assigns a meaning deeper than her full awareness, interpreting the act in light of his approaching death.
Rationale: The text centers on Jesus’ interpretation rather than on the woman’s internal understanding, yet his words make the burial significance decisive for the reader.
Why does Matthew place the Bethany anointing here?
- He preserves strict chronological sequence from surrounding events.
- He arranges the material thematically to contrast devotion with hostility and betrayal as the passion begins.
- He inserts an unrelated tradition without narrative purpose.
Preferred option: He arranges the material thematically to contrast devotion with hostility and betrayal as the passion begins.
Rationale: The surrounding plot and Judas scenes frame the anointing in a deliberate contrast of responses to Jesus.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read as the transition from the Olivet discourse to the passion narrative; Jesus’ prior warnings about readiness, faithfulness, and judgment form a moral backdrop, but the immediate context is now his announced death.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: Jesus’ statement about the poor mentions an abiding reality without canceling the broader biblical obligation of mercy; mention of one priority in one moment must not be universalized against other duties.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus’ self-designation as Son of Man, his precise prediction of crucifixion, and his interpretation of the anointing require the passage to be read with his messianic identity and mission at the center.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The passage distinguishes outwardly plausible reasoning from true moral perception; what appears wasteful to disciples can be righteous devotion when measured by Jesus’ worth and the hour of redemptive history.
prophetic
Relevance: medium
Note: Passover timing, betrayal, and the silver payment should be read in light of Matthew’s fulfillment-oriented narrative world, but without forcing every detail into an explicit quotation in this unit.
Theological significance
- Jesus approaches the cross with deliberate knowledge and interpretive authority; the coming death is not an accident of politics.
- Passover gives the timing theological weight, placing Jesus’ death within Israel’s redemptive memory and the movement toward covenant fulfillment.
- Matthew holds divine purpose and human culpability together: the leaders scheme, Judas negotiates, the disciples misjudge, and the woman honors Jesus.
- The woman’s act shows that devotion to Jesus can be fitting precisely because of who he is and because of the hour in which he stands.
- Jesus grants lasting memorial to this deed, tying true recognition of his death to the proclamation of the gospel itself.
- Judas’s identity as one of the twelve warns that nearness to Jesus and participation in the disciple circle do not by themselves secure fidelity.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The scene turns on competing judgments. Jesus says 'crucified' before the rulers act, the disciples say 'waste,' Jesus says 'a beautiful deed,' and Judas asks for a price. Matthew lets these words expose rival ways of reading the same moment: by utility, by greed, or by Jesus’ own worth and approaching death.
Biblical theological: Passover, burial preparation, betrayal, and gospel memory meet in one tightly arranged scene. Jesus’ death is not presented as a collapse of messianic hope but as the appointed way by which the mission moves toward the covenant meal, the cross, and the worldwide proclamation named in verse 13.
Metaphysical: The passage portrays history as purposeful without making human action unreal. Jesus knows what is coming and gives it meaning in advance, yet the chief priests, Judas, and the disciples act from their own intentions and remain answerable for them.
Psychological Spiritual: The disciples’ protest shows that apparently moral reasoning can miss the moment entirely when it fails to reckon with Jesus himself. Judas shows a different distortion: long familiarity with Jesus can coexist with a heart increasingly governed by advantage.
Divine Perspective: In this scene, heaven’s valuation does not follow political caution, group indignation, or market price. Jesus vindicates the woman’s hidden discernment and exposes the ugliness of both conspiracy and betrayal.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God’s providential ordering appears in the Passover timing and in Jesus’ prior announcement of the cross.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus interprets the anointing and the coming death, disclosing their meaning rather than leaving the events mute.
Category: character
Note: Jesus’ defense of the woman shows divine approval of sincere, costly honor offered to the Son.
- Jesus is about to be handed over, yet he speaks as the one who understands and governs the meaning of the hour.
- The poor remain a continuing obligation, yet this particular moment calls for a singular act directed toward Jesus before his burial.
- One of the twelve shares the circle of discipleship while already moving toward betrayal.
Enrichment summary
The opening movement of the passion places Jesus’ death inside Passover’s redemptive setting and then frames him through sharply different valuations. The rulers treat him as a threat to be removed, the disciples briefly measure the woman’s act by usefulness, the woman honors him with costly perfume, and Judas names a price. Jesus’ explanation of the anointing keeps the episode from becoming a vague lesson in generosity or sentiment: it is fitting because his burial is near. The scene therefore resists both utilitarian reduction and any attempt to turn Judas into a mere instrument with no moral agency.
Traditions of men check
Reducing Christian ethics to social usefulness alone
Why it conflicts: The disciples’ efficiency argument sounds compassionate, yet Jesus judges it inadequate because it ignores the unique worth of his person and the redemptive moment.
Textual pressure point: 26:8-13, especially the contrast between 'waste' and 'good service' and the burial explanation.
Caution: This should not be used to excuse neglect of the poor; Jesus’ wording likely assumes the continuing duty of mercy.
Treating Jesus as a tragic victim overtaken by political powers
Why it conflicts: Jesus announces the timing and mode of his death before the leaders’ plan is narrated.
Textual pressure point: 26:1-2 preceding 26:3-5.
Caution: Divine purpose here must not be turned into denial of the genuine guilt of the conspirators and Judas.
Assuming outward ministry proximity guarantees perseverance
Why it conflicts: Judas is identified as one of the twelve and still moves deliberately into betrayal.
Textual pressure point: 26:14-16.
Caution: The warning should lead to sober self-examination, not rash judgments about every struggling believer.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: Passover is more than a calendar note. By naming it in verse 2, Jesus places his death within Israel’s remembered deliverance and signals that the coming crucifixion belongs to God’s redemptive timetable.
Western Misread: Treating Passover as incidental chronology and missing the covenantal freight it gives the prediction.
Interpretive Difference: The rulers’ plot and Judas’s bargain unfold within a date already thick with deliverance memory, so the death of Jesus is heard against that scriptural horizon.
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: The woman’s anointing publicly honors Jesus at table, while Judas’s silver payment publicly devalues him. Matthew sets these acts side by side so that honor and contempt are embodied, not merely stated.
Western Misread: Reducing the scene to a debate about budgeting and overlooking the social and symbolic force of honor shown to Jesus.
Interpretive Difference: The anointing appears as a fitting acknowledgment of Jesus’ worth and impending death, while the coins expose betrayal as calculated dishonor.
Idioms and figures
Expression: she poured it on his head
Category: symbolic_action
Explanation: In this setting the act signals conspicuous honor and can naturally bear burial resonance when costly perfume is poured over the body. Jesus supplies the decisive interpretation, but the gesture itself would already communicate more than private sentiment.
Interpretive effect: Prevents treating the act as random excess; it is a meaningful embodied tribute that Jesus identifies as preparation for burial.
Expression: you will always have the poor with you, but you will not always have me
Category: idiom
Explanation: The saying likely echoes Deuteronomy 15:11, where the continuing presence of the poor grounds ongoing generosity. Here Jesus does not suspend mercy obligations; he marks the unrepeatable nearness of his death as the reason this act is especially fitting now.
Interpretive effect: Blocks the use of verse 11 as a warrant for indifference to the poor and keeps the focus on the uniqueness of the pre-burial moment.
Expression: thirty silver coins
Category: metonymy
Explanation: The coins are not merely a payment amount; they function as the concrete token of Judas’s transactional betrayal and carry scriptural resonance with contemptuous valuation later made explicit in Matthew 27.
Interpretive effect: Intensifies the moral ugliness of the betrayal by showing Jesus being assigned a price rather than merely being abandoned.
Application implications
- Acts of devotion should be judged by Jesus’ worth and the demands of the moment, not by immediate usefulness alone.
- Disciples should let Jesus’ own interpretation govern their moral judgments; sincere outrage can still be badly aimed.
- Church life should not force a false choice between mercy and fitting honor toward Christ.
- Hidden fidelity matters because Jesus sees it and may give it significance far beyond the moment in which it is done.
- Visible participation in Christian community is not the same as steadfast loyalty; Judas warns against a heart quietly shaped by self-interest.
Enrichment applications
- Congregations should resist treating measurable efficiency as the only criterion for faithful action; some acts are fitting because they honor Christ in a decisive moment.
- Mercy for the poor and costly devotion to Jesus are not competitors in this passage; the scene rejects a false opposition.
- The contrast between the woman’s cost and Judas’s price invites self-examination about what actually governs our choices around Jesus.
- Nearness to sacred things should not be confused with a surrendered heart; Judas stands as a warning against discipleship reduced to access without allegiance.
Warnings
- Do not isolate verse 11 from its context and use it to justify indifference toward the poor; Jesus is interpreting a unique preparatory act before his death.
- Do not flatten the unit into a bare lesson on generosity versus greed; Matthew’s controlling focus is Jesus’ approaching crucifixion at Passover.
- Do not overstate certainty about the woman’s subjective understanding; the text gives decisive authority to Jesus’ interpretation of her act.
- Do not treat the placement of the anointing as proof of strict chronology; Matthew’s narrative arrangement here serves theological and rhetorical contrast as well.
- Do not soften Judas’s responsibility by appealing to divine plan; the next context confirms real moral culpability for the betrayer.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not build a broad anti-poor ethic from verse 11; the passage itself narrows the statement to Jesus’ imminent death.
- Do not overclaim a fixed first-century ritual meaning for anointing; Jesus’ interpretation, not background data alone, establishes the burial significance.
- Do not let Zechariah or later fulfillment discussion overshadow the local force of Judas’s deliberate, mercenary betrayal in this unit.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Verse 11 makes care for the poor secondary or optional whenever devotion to Jesus is in view.
Why It Happens: Readers isolate 'you always have the poor' from both its likely Deuteronomic echo and Jesus’ burial explanation in the next verse.
Correction: Jesus is identifying a singular moment before his death, not revoking ordinary obligations of mercy.
Misreading: The anointing is commendable only as a general act of worship, with burial meaning supplied later by pious reflection.
Why It Happens: Some readers hesitate to let symbolic acts carry meaning unless the actor’s full intention is explicitly stated.
Correction: Matthew gives Jesus the interpretive authority here; his words make burial preparation central to the event’s meaning.
Misreading: Judas is mainly a vehicle of prophecy, so his payment and search for opportunity matter less than the inevitability of the plan.
Why It Happens: The strong emphasis on Jesus’ foreknowledge can lead readers to mute the moral agency of the betrayer.
Correction: The narrative keeps both in view: Jesus knows what is coming, and Judas deliberately negotiates and pursues the betrayal.