Commentary
Matthew arranges these scenes as a chain of responses to Jesus. Nazareth stumbles over the carpenter's son and remains unbelieving. Herod hears of Jesus through the echo of the prophet he killed. In the wilderness Jesus feeds the crowd; on the sea he quiets the disciples' fear and receives their worship; at Gennesaret people seek him for healing. The dispute in 15:1-20 then names the deeper problem: not unwashed hands, but a heart that can hide behind tradition while producing evil speech and actions.
Matthew 13:53-15:20 shows that the decisive obstacle to receiving Jesus is not insufficient evidence but the kind of heart revealed in these scenes: offended unbelief at Nazareth, guilty fear in Herod, wavering trust in the boat, and tradition-driven hypocrisy in the Pharisees. Against all of them, Jesus' works and words disclose who he is and where true defilement lies.
13:53 Now when Jesus finished these parables, he moved on from there. 13:54 Then he came to his hometown and began to teach the people in their synagogue. They were astonished and said, "Where did this man get such wisdom and miraculous powers? 13:55 Isn't this the carpenter's son? Isn't his mother named Mary? And aren't his brothers James, Joseph, Simon, and Judas? 13:56 And aren't all his sisters here with us? Where did he get all this?" 13:57 And so they took offense at him. But Jesus said to them, "A prophet is not without honor except in his hometown and in his own house." 13:58 And he did not do many miracles there because of their unbelief. 14:1 At that time Herod the tetrarch heard reports about Jesus, 14:2 and he said to his servants, "This is John the Baptist. He has been raised from the dead! And because of this, miraculous powers are at work in him." 14:3 For Herod had arrested John, bound him, and put him in prison on account of Herodias, his brother Philip's wife, 14:4 because John had repeatedly told him, "It is not lawful for you to have her." 14:5 Although Herod wanted to kill John, he feared the crowd because they accepted John as a prophet. 14:6 But on Herod's birthday, the daughter of Herodias danced before them and pleased Herod, 14:7 so much that he promised with an oath to give her whatever she asked. 14:8 Instructed by her mother, she said, "Give me the head of John the Baptist here on a platter." 14:9 Although it grieved the king, because of his oath and the dinner guests he commanded it to be given. 14:10 So he sent and had John beheaded in the prison. 14:11 His head was brought on a platter and given to the girl, and she brought it to her mother. 14:12 Then John's disciples came and took the body and buried it and went and told Jesus. 14:13 Now when Jesus heard this he went away from there privately in a boat to an isolated place. But when the crowd heard about it, they followed him on foot from the towns. 14:14 As he got out he saw the large crowd, and he had compassion on them and healed their sick. 14:15 When evening arrived, his disciples came to him saying, "This is an isolated place and the hour is already late. Send the crowds away so that they can go into the villages and buy food for themselves." 14:16 But he replied, "They don't need to go. You give them something to eat." 14:17 They said to him, "We have here only five loaves and two fish." 14:18 "Bring them here to me," he replied. 14:19 Then he instructed the crowds to sit down on the grass. He took the five loaves and two fish, and looking up to heaven he gave thanks and broke the loaves. He gave them to the disciples, who in turn gave them to the crowds. 14:20 They all ate and were satisfied, and they picked up the broken pieces left over, twelve baskets full. 14:21 Not counting women and children, there were about five thousand men who ate. 14:22 Immediately Jesus made the disciples get into the boat and go ahead of him to the other side, while he dispersed the crowds. 14:23 And after he sent the crowds away, he went up the mountain by himself to pray. When evening came, he was there alone. 14:24 Meanwhile the boat, already far from land, was taking a beating from the waves because the wind was against it. 14:25 As the night was ending, Jesus came to them walking on the sea. 14:26 When the disciples saw him walking on the water they were terrified and said, "It's a ghost!" and cried out with fear. 14:27 But immediately Jesus spoke to them: "Have courage! It is I. Do not be afraid." 14:28 Peter said to him, "Lord, if it is you, order me to come to you on the water." 14:29 So he said, "Come." Peter got out of the boat, walked on the water, and came toward Jesus. 14:30 But when he saw the strong wind he became afraid. And starting to sink, he cried out, "Lord, save me!" 14:31 Immediately Jesus reached out his hand and caught him, saying to him, "You of little faith, why did you doubt?" 14:32 When they went up into the boat, the wind ceased. 14:33 Then those who were in the boat worshiped him, saying, "Truly you are the Son of God." 14:34 After they had crossed over, they came to land at Gennesaret. 14:35 When the people there recognized him, they sent word into all the surrounding area, and they brought all their sick to him. 14:36 They begged him if they could only touch the edge of his cloak, and all who touched it were healed. 15:1 Then Pharisees and experts in the law came from Jerusalem to Jesus and said, 15:2 "Why do your disciples disobey the tradition of the elders? For they don't wash their hands when they eat." 15:3 He answered them, "And why do you disobey the commandment of God because of your tradition? 15:4 For God said, 'Honor your father and mother' and 'Whoever insults his father or mother must be put to death.' 15:5 But you say, 'If someone tells his father or mother, "Whatever help you would have received from me is given to God," 15:6 he does not need to honor his father.' You have nullified the word of God on account of your tradition. 15:7 Hypocrites! Isaiah prophesied correctly about you when he said, 15:8 'This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me, 15:9 and they worship me in vain, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.'" 15:10 Then he called the crowd to him and said, "Listen and understand. 15:11 What defiles a person is not what goes into the mouth; it is what comes out of the mouth that defiles a person." 15:12 Then the disciples came to him and said, "Do you know that when the Pharisees heard this saying they were offended?" 15:13 And he replied, "Every plant that my heavenly Father did not plant will be uprooted. 15:14 Leave them! They are blind guides. If someone who is blind leads another who is blind, both will fall into a pit." 15:15 But Peter said to him, "Explain this parable to us." 15:16 Jesus said, "Even after all this, are you still so foolish? 15:17 Don't you understand that whatever goes into the mouth enters the stomach and then passes out into the sewer? 15:18 But the things that come out of the mouth come from the heart, and these things defile a person. 15:19 For out of the heart come evil ideas, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony, slander. 15:20 These are the things that defile a person; it is not eating with unwashed hands that defiles a person."
Observation notes
- The unit opens immediately after the kingdom parables, showing in narrative form the mixed responses those parables described.
- Nazareth's questions acknowledge Jesus' wisdom and mighty works but refuse their implication; familiarity becomes a stumbling block.
- They took offense at him' and 'because of their unbelief' interpret the Nazareth scene explicitly.
- Herod's statement that Jesus is John raised from the dead reveals fear and confusion, not insight; Matthew then explains that reaction by recounting John's execution.
- John is called a prophet by the crowd, linking rejection of God's messenger with rejection of the one greater than John.
- Jesus' withdrawal after hearing of John's death is followed not by self-protection alone but by compassion, healing, and feeding, which displays royal and shepherd-like provision.
- The feeding account is narrated with deliberate concreteness: five loaves, two fish, all ate, all were satisfied, twelve baskets left, and about five thousand men besides women and children.
- The sea episode combines fear, revelation, rebuke, rescue, and worship; Peter's experience embodies both genuine response and unstable faith.
Structure
- 13:53-58: Jesus teaches in Nazareth; amazement turns into offense, and local unbelief limits mighty works there.
- 14:1-12: Herod interprets Jesus through the lens of his guilt over John's execution; John's death foreshadows the cost of prophetic fidelity.
- 14:13-21: Jesus withdraws after hearing of John's death, yet receives the crowds with compassion, heals them, and feeds them abundantly.
- 14:22-33: Jesus prays alone, comes to the disciples on the sea, rescues Peter in his wavering, and receives the confession, 'Truly you are the Son of God.
- 14:34-36: At Gennesaret, widespread recognition of Jesus leads to mass healing through contact with his cloak.
- 15:1-9: Jerusalem Pharisees challenge the disciples' handwashing practice; Jesus counters that their tradition nullifies God's commandment and cites Isaiah against their hypocrisy.
- 15:10-20: Jesus teaches the crowd and then the disciples that defilement arises from the heart's evil output, not from food entering the body.
Key terms
skandalizo
Strong's: G4624
Gloss: to stumble, be offended
The verb marks not mere irritation but a rejecting response to Jesus that explains the absence of many miracles there.
apistia
Strong's: G570
Gloss: lack of faith, unbelief
Matthew ties diminished reception of Jesus' mighty works to human refusal to trust rather than to any deficiency in Jesus' power.
splanchnizomai
Strong's: G4697
Gloss: to be moved with compassion
The term interprets the feeding miracle as an expression of Jesus' merciful character, not merely a display of power.
oligopistos
Strong's: G3640
Gloss: one of little faith
The word does not deny Peter's faith altogether but exposes its instability under pressure, a recurring Matthean diagnosis of the disciples.
proskyneo
Strong's: G4352
Gloss: to bow down, worship
Within Matthew's narrative this response rises beyond amazement and contributes to the deepening recognition of Jesus' identity.
paradosis
Strong's: G3862
Gloss: tradition handed down
The term is central to the controversy because the issue is not tradition in the abstract but tradition functioning as a rival authority over Scripture.
Syntactical features
Causal clause explaining reduced miracles
Textual signal: 13:58 'because of their unbelief'
Interpretive effect: Matthew explicitly interprets the Nazareth outcome; readers should not treat the scarcity of miracles as arbitrary or as inability in Jesus.
Flashback introduced to explain Herod's reaction
Textual signal: 14:3 'For Herod had arrested John...'
Interpretive effect: The narrative steps back to recount John's death as the explanatory basis for Herod's present fear about Jesus.
Imperative sequence in the feeding narrative
Textual signal: 14:16 'You give them something to eat'; 14:18 'Bring them here to me'
Interpretive effect: Jesus involves the disciples in the provision, exposing their inadequacy and directing them to his sufficiency.
Self-identification formula amid fear
Textual signal: 14:27 'Have courage! It is I. Do not be afraid.'
Interpretive effect: The combination of reassurance and 'It is I' frames Jesus as the one whose presence overturns terror, heightening the theophanic tone of the scene.
Question-rebuke exposing divided trust
Textual signal: 14:31 'You of little faith, why did you doubt?'
Interpretive effect: Jesus' rebuke interprets Peter's sinking as a failure of sustained trust rather than mere failure of daring.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 29:13
Connection type: quotation
Note: In 15:8-9 Jesus cites Isaiah to expose worship that is verbally orthodox in appearance yet inwardly distant from God because human rules have displaced divine command.
Exodus 20:12 / Deuteronomy 5:16
Connection type: quotation
Note: The command to honor father and mother grounds Jesus' critique of a tradition that lets religious dedication override concrete filial responsibility.
Exodus 21:17 / Leviticus 20:9
Connection type: quotation
Note: The death sanction for reviling parents reinforces the seriousness of the commandment the Pharisaic tradition has effectively emptied.
Psalm 107:23-30
Connection type: echo
Note: Jesus' mastery over the stormy sea invites comparison with the Lord's rule over the waters and deliverance of those in distress.
Job 9:8
Connection type: echo
Note: Jesus walking on the sea resonates with Old Testament language about God alone treading on the waves, contributing to the scene's christological force.
Interpretive options
Why did Jesus not do many miracles in Nazareth?
- Their unbelief morally occasioned and limited the exercise of mighty works there, though not Jesus' intrinsic power.
- Matthew means Jesus was unable to act because unbelief made miracles impossible in an absolute sense.
Preferred option: Their unbelief morally occasioned and limited the exercise of mighty works there, though not Jesus' intrinsic power.
Rationale: The text attributes the outcome to unbelief, but Matthew elsewhere presents Jesus' authority as intact; the point concerns fitting response and judicial restraint, not loss of power.
How should 'It is I' in 14:27 be read?
- As ordinary self-identification meant mainly to calm the disciples.
- As ordinary self-identification with an added theophanic resonance in the setting of sea mastery and fear-dispelling presence.
Preferred option: As ordinary self-identification with an added theophanic resonance in the setting of sea mastery and fear-dispelling presence.
Rationale: The phrase can be common speech, yet Matthew's surrounding details—walking on the sea, immediate calming, worship, and confession—encourage more than a flat mundane reading.
What is Jesus' main point in 15:11-20?
- He addresses ritual handwashing specifically and, by implication, relativizes food-based purity categories in light of heart defilement.
- He speaks only about Pharisaic handwashing custom and says nothing that touches broader food purity questions.
Preferred option: He addresses ritual handwashing specifically and, by implication, relativizes food-based purity categories in light of heart defilement.
Rationale: The immediate controversy concerns handwashing, but Jesus' principle is framed more broadly in terms of what enters and exits the mouth, grounding impurity in the heart rather than external ingestion.
Who are the 'plants' not planted by the Father in 15:13?
- Primarily the Pharisaic teachers and their teaching within this controversy.
- A sweeping metaphysical statement about every unbeliever in all contexts without regard to the immediate scene.
Preferred option: Primarily the Pharisaic teachers and their teaching within this controversy.
Rationale: The saying answers the disciples' report that the Pharisees were offended, and the following description 'blind guides' keeps the reference tied to the present opponents.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The flow from kingdom parables to episodes of mixed response controls interpretation; these narratives enact the very sifting and hearing themes of chapter 13.
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus' words about defilement must be read in light of what is actually mentioned—handwashing tradition, parental obligation, speech from the heart—not as a detached treatise on all purity questions.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The sea miracle, worship, and Son-of-God confession require a reading that gives full weight to Matthew's escalating presentation of Jesus' identity.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The text itself locates corruption in unbelief, hypocrisy, fear of man, and the heart's evil output; moral categories are not incidental but interpretively central.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The feeding and sea scenes carry strong scriptural resonance, but interpretation should remain anchored in Matthew's narrative signals rather than free allegory.
Theological significance
- Jesus is shown in deeds as well as words: he teaches with wisdom, feeds the crowd abundantly, rules the sea, heals the sick, and receives worship as the Son of God.
- Nazareth shows that familiarity with Jesus can become a cause of offense rather than faith; recognition of his background does not amount to recognition of his identity.
- John's execution places Jesus' ministry in the shadow of prophetic rejection and exposes how moral compromise and fear of public opinion can harden resistance to God's word.
- Peter's rescue on the water portrays discipleship honestly: real faith comes to Jesus, falters under pressure, cries for help, and is corrected by him.
- In the handwashing controversy, Jesus does not reject obedience; he rejects a use of tradition that overrides God's command and masks disobedience with religious language.
- Defilement is traced to the heart and its outputs—evil thoughts, speech, and acts—so purity cannot be secured by external management alone.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The unit is full of evaluations spoken aloud: Nazareth asks where Jesus got his wisdom and powers, Herod misidentifies him through guilty imagination, the disciples cry out in fear, and the Pharisees accuse his followers of violating tradition. Jesus' own words cut through those evaluations by naming unbelief, little faith, hypocrisy, and heart defilement. Speech in these scenes is not incidental; it reveals the moral and perceptual state of the speaker.
Biblical theological: These episodes translate the kingdom parables of chapter 13 into narrative form. The hiddenness and mixed reception of the kingdom now appear in concrete scenes: a prophet dishonored at home, a corrupt ruler haunted by John, bread multiplied in a deserted place, the sea subdued by Jesus' presence, and a purity dispute relocated from ritual surface to the heart. The result is a sharper contrast between genuine recognition of Jesus and covenantal language emptied by tradition.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes a world in which moral and created order alike stand under God's rule. The sea is not autonomous before Jesus, and inward corruption is not concealed behind religious observance. Reality is therefore not defined by appearances—ordinary family origin, royal status, or ritual scruple—but by what God sees and by the authority active in Jesus.
Psychological Spiritual: Each scene exposes a different inner posture. Nazareth displays contempt born of overfamiliarity. Herod shows how unresolved guilt distorts perception. Peter embodies trust that is real yet unstable when fear takes over. The Pharisees illustrate the spiritual danger of defending inherited practice while the heart remains far from God. Matthew's diagnosis is consistently inward before it is institutional.
Divine Perspective: The Father's concern is not satisfied by public piety, social honor, or ritual exactness. Jesus heals the crowd after hearing of John's death, rescues the sinking disciple, and exposes teaching that nullifies God's command. The saying about unplanted plants also frames divine judgment as active against authority that lacks the Father's establishment.
Category: character
Note: Jesus' compassion for the crowd after John's death shows mercy expressed in healing and provision, not in sentiment alone.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The feeding miracle and the stilling of fear on the sea display power that sustains, rescues, and evokes worship.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus becomes known through concrete acts and fitting words, culminating in the boat's confession that he is the Son of God.
Category: attributes
Note: The exposure of heart defilement shows God's moral penetration: outward performance does not hide inward corruption.
- Jesus is locally known and yet truly unknown; Nazareth recognizes his family and misses his identity.
- Peter's faith is genuine enough to come onto the water and weak enough to sink in fear.
- Tradition can appear to defend holiness while actually voiding God's command.
- Jesus withdraws after John's death, yet that withdrawal becomes the setting for healing, provision, and deeper revelation.
Enrichment summary
These scenes sharpen Matthew's portrait of misrecognition. Nazareth dismisses Jesus because they think they already know where he comes from; Herod interprets him through the memory of John whom he murdered; the disciples move from terror to worship only as Jesus reveals himself on the sea. The feeding and sea narratives also echo scriptural patterns of provision and divine rule over the waters, so the confession in 14:33 carries real christological weight. In 15:1-20 the dispute stays concrete: elder tradition is condemned where it overrides the command to honor parents, and defilement is relocated from ritual intake to the heart's moral output.
Traditions of men check
Treating familiarity with Jesus, church culture, or Christian family background as equivalent to faith.
Why it conflicts: Nazareth knew Jesus' family connections and still took offense at him; proximity did not produce submission.
Textual pressure point: 13:55-58 ties rejection precisely to overfamiliar recognition of his ordinary background and resulting unbelief.
Caution: Do not turn this into contempt for ordinary upbringing; the problem is unbelief, not natural family knowledge.
Using religious donations, ministry commitments, or spiritualized language to excuse neglected obligations to parents or family.
Why it conflicts: Jesus explicitly condemns a tradition that labels resources as devoted to God in a way that cancels filial honor.
Textual pressure point: 15:5-6 shows a concrete case where a pious formula nullifies a divine command.
Caution: This should not be used to deny legitimate sacrificial giving; the target is manipulative religion that evades clear duty.
Reducing holiness to external rule-keeping while leaving speech, desire, and thought largely unaddressed.
Why it conflicts: Jesus locates defilement in the heart and in what comes out from it, including slander, false testimony, and sexual immorality.
Textual pressure point: 15:18-20 lists heart-generated evils as the true source of defilement.
Caution: Jesus is not endorsing moral laxity; he relocates the center of holiness from ritual externals to inward moral reality.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: Nazareth's offense and Herod's treatment of John are both shaped by public honor. Nazareth cannot honor one they classify by family familiarity, and Herod's oath before guests helps drive the execution he knows is wrong.
Western Misread: Reducing the scenes to private feelings or poor individual choices.
Interpretive Difference: Public reputation and social ranking intensify unbelief here. The issue is not only what people think inwardly, but what they refuse to honor or fear to lose before others.
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: The handwashing dispute concerns visible faithfulness within Israel's life before God. Jesus' objection is not to holiness as such, but to a traditional ruling that overrides divine command and mislocates impurity.
Western Misread: Reading Matthew 15 either as a dismissal of Judaism altogether or as a generic attack on every tradition.
Interpretive Difference: The conflict is an intra-Jewish dispute over authority, obedience, and the true locus of defilement.
Idioms and figures
Expression: A prophet is not without honor except in his hometown and in his own house
Category: idiom
Explanation: A proverb about the refusal often shown to God's messenger by those closest to him. 'Honor' refers to proper public regard and acknowledgment, not mere fondness.
Interpretive effect: It casts Nazareth's reaction as prophetic rejection rather than simple surprise.
Expression: It is I. Do not be afraid
Category: other
Explanation: The wording can function as ordinary self-identification, yet in this setting—Jesus on the sea, the disciples' terror, the calming of the wind, and the ensuing worship—it likely carries more than bare recognition.
Interpretive effect: The line helps move the episode from rescue story to disclosure of Jesus' identity.
Expression: Every plant that my heavenly Father did not plant will be uprooted
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Persons or teachings are pictured as growth lacking divine origin. In context the image points especially to the Pharisaic leadership and what they are advancing in this dispute.
Interpretive effect: Their authority is presented as temporary and liable to God's judgment, not merely mistaken.
Expression: Blind guides... both will fall into a pit
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Blindness signifies spiritual incapacity, and the pit signifies ruin.
Interpretive effect: The saying warns that corrupted leaders do not mislead only themselves; they carry followers toward the same end.
Expression: What goes into the mouth... what comes out of the mouth
Category: metonymy
Explanation: The mouth stands for bodily intake and verbal-moral output as visible signs of a deeper source in the heart.
Interpretive effect: Jesus shifts the argument from ritual contact to the inner origin of defiling acts and speech.
Application implications
- Do not confuse long familiarity with Jesus, church culture, or Christian language with faith. Nazareth knew his household and still took offense at him.
- Herod warns that persistent compromise can deform spiritual judgment. A guilty conscience may speak about Jesus often while refusing the truth that would require repentance.
- When need outruns visible resources, the feeding narrative directs disciples not first to dismissal but to bring what they have to Jesus.
- Peter's cry, 'Lord, save me,' remains a fitting prayer in fear; yet the scene also warns against treating unstable trust as normal maturity.
- Any church custom, ministry practice, or pious formula that cancels a clear command of God must yield. Jesus' example in 15:1-9 requires scrutiny of traditions at their pressure points.
- Serious holiness must address what comes out of the heart—speech, desires, deceit, sexual sin, violence—not merely visible boundary markers.
Enrichment applications
- Church settings can reenact Nazareth by honoring pedigree, familiarity, or social standing while resisting Christ's authority when it confronts them through ordinary means.
- Herod is a warning to leaders: image management, reckless promises, and compromised loyalties can turn political weakness into violence against truth.
- Teaching on Peter should keep the scene's center where Matthew places it—on Jesus' identity and saving presence—rather than turning it into a self-help lesson on boldness.
- Test traditions where obedience becomes costly; that is often where rival authorities are exposed.
- Holiness teaching that fixates on external markers while tolerating slander, deceit, lust, and malice has reversed Jesus' moral order.
Warnings
- This literary unit is broad and includes several linked episodes; analysis should preserve the local distinctiveness of each scene while tracing Matthew's larger response-to-Jesus theme.
- Do not overread 13:58 as teaching that human unbelief negates divine omnipotence; Matthew's concern is narrative and moral, not a metaphysical limitation formula.
- The sea-walking account invites Old Testament resonance, but arguments for explicit theophany should remain tethered to Matthew's wording and narrative context.
- Matthew 15:11-20 should not be flattened either into a narrow handwashing-only remark or into a contextless abolition formula detached from the controversy at hand.
- The critique of tradition in 15:1-9 is not a blanket rejection of every form of tradition; the issue is tradition that nullifies God's word.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overstate the background of vow formulas beyond what the text itself establishes; the practical effect of evading parental duty is Matthew's focus.
- Do not make Matthew 15 settle every later debate about food laws without first honoring the immediate handwashing controversy; yet do not shrink Jesus' principle into a handwashing-only remark.
- Do not flatten the whole unit into a generic theme of 'people respond differently'; Matthew uses these episodes to expose specific distortions of honor, authority, and purity.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Jesus did few miracles in Nazareth because unbelief removed his power.
Why It Happens: Matthew links the scarcity of miracles to unbelief, and that can be overstated into a claim about incapacity.
Correction: The scene is better read as moral and judicial rather than metaphysical: unbelief governs the fitting reception of mighty works there, not Jesus' intrinsic authority.
Misreading: The sea-walking scene is mainly about daring faith like Peter's.
Why It Happens: Application often centers on Peter as a model of risk-taking and leaves Jesus in the background.
Correction: Peter matters, but the episode climaxes in Jesus' identity—his coming on the sea, ending fear, stilling the wind, receiving worship, and being confessed as the Son of God.
Misreading: Matthew 15 rejects Judaism or abolishes every form of tradition.
Why It Happens: Jesus' rebuke is sharp, and the saying about defilement is broad enough to invite overreach.
Correction: The target is specific: tradition that nullifies God's command and a purity framework that misses the heart. The passage should be read within that controversy before being extended further.
Misreading: Declaring resources 'for God' can justify neglect of parents if the intention sounds religious.
Why It Happens: Pious language can make disobedience appear sacrificial.
Correction: Jesus treats honoring parents as a binding divine command and exposes any religious maneuver that cancels it as hypocrisy.