Commentary
Matthew depicts Jesus moving toward his appointed death with full awareness, while everyone around him fractures into betrayal, bravado, sleep, flight, and violence. At the meal he interprets his death as covenant blood poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. In Gethsemane he faces the cup in deep anguish yet yields to the Father's will, and at the arrest he makes clear that he is not being overpowered but surrendering in line with the Scriptures. The scene binds together covenant institution, prediction, prayer, and arrest to show both divine purpose and human accountability.
This unit presents Jesus as knowingly accepting the Father's appointed path to death, naming it as covenant blood poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins, while exposing Judas's guilt and the disciples' collapse within the outworking of Scripture.
26:17 Now on the first day of the feast of Unleavened Bread the disciples came to Jesus and said, "Where do you want us to prepare for you to eat the Passover?" 26:18 He said, "Go into the city to a certain man and tell him, 'The Teacher says, "My time is near. I will observe the Passover with my disciples at your house."'" 26:19 So the disciples did as Jesus had instructed them, and they prepared the Passover. 26:20 When it was evening, he took his place at the table with the twelve. 26:21 And while they were eating he said, "I tell you the truth, one of you will betray me." 26:22 They became greatly distressed and each one began to say to him, "Surely not I, Lord?" 26:23 He answered, "The one who has dipped his hand into the bowl with me will betray me. 26:24 The Son of Man will go as it is written about him, but woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would be better for him if he had never been born." 26:25 Then Judas, the one who would betray him, said, "Surely not I, Rabbi?" Jesus replied, "You have said it yourself." 26:26 While they were eating, Jesus took bread, and after giving thanks he broke it, gave it to his disciples, and said, "Take, eat, this is my body." 26:27 And after taking the cup and giving thanks, he gave it to them, saying, "Drink from it, all of you, 26:28 for this is my blood, the blood of the covenant, that is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. 26:29 I tell you, from now on I will not drink of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father's kingdom." 26:30 After singing a hymn, they went out to the Mount of Olives. 26:31 Then Jesus said to them, "This night you will all fall away because of me, for it is written: 'I will strike the shepherd, and the sheep of the flock will be scattered.' 26:32 But after I am raised, I will go ahead of you into Galilee." 26:33 Peter said to him, "If they all fall away because of you, I will never fall away!" 26:34 Jesus said to him, "I tell you the truth, on this night, before the rooster crows, you will deny me three times." 26:35 Peter said to him, "Even if I must die with you, I will never deny you." And all the disciples said the same thing. 26:36 Then Jesus went with them to a place called Gethsemane, and he said to the disciples, "Sit here while I go over there and pray." 26:37 He took with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, and became anguished and distressed. 26:38 Then he said to them, "My soul is deeply grieved, even to the point of death. Remain here and stay awake with me." 26:39 Going a little farther, he threw himself down with his face to the ground and prayed, "My Father, if possible, let this cup pass from me! Yet not what I will, but what you will." 26:40 Then he came to the disciples and found them sleeping. He said to Peter, "So, couldn't you stay awake with me for one hour? 26:41 Stay awake and pray that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak." 26:42 He went away a second time and prayed, "My Father, if this cup cannot be taken away unless I drink it, your will must be done." 26:43 He came again and found them sleeping; they could not keep their eyes open. 26:44 So leaving them again, he went away and prayed for the third time, saying the same thing once more. 26:45 Then he came to the disciples and said to them, "Are you still sleeping and resting? Look, the hour is approaching, and the Son of Man is betrayed into the hands of sinners. 26:46 Get up, let us go. Look! My betrayer is approaching!" 26:47 While he was still speaking, Judas, one of the twelve, arrived. With him was a large crowd armed with swords and clubs, sent by the chief priests and elders of the people. 26:48 (Now the betrayer had given them a sign, saying, "The one I kiss is the man. Arrest him!") 26:49 Immediately he went up to Jesus and said, "Greetings, Rabbi," and kissed him. 26:50 Jesus said to him, "Friend, do what you are here to do." Then they came and took hold of Jesus and arrested him. 26:51 But one of those with Jesus grabbed his sword, drew it out, and struck the high priest's slave, cutting off his ear. 26:52 Then Jesus said to him, "Put your sword back in its place! For all who take hold of the sword will die by the sword. 26:53 Or do you think that I cannot call on my Father, and that he would send me more than twelve legions of angels right now? 26:54 How then would the scriptures that say it must happen this way be fulfilled?" 26:55 At that moment Jesus said to the crowd, "Have you come out with swords and clubs to arrest me like you would an outlaw? Day after day I sat teaching in the temple courts, yet you did not arrest me. 26:56 But this has happened so that the scriptures of the prophets would be fulfilled." Then all the disciples left him and fled.
Observation notes
- The passage repeatedly marks Jesus' awareness and control: 'My time is near,' 'one of you will betray me,' 'after I am raised,' 'the hour is approaching,' and His appeal to fulfilled Scripture.
- Matthew keeps betrayal and divine purpose together without confusing them: the Son of Man goes 'as it is written,' yet 'woe' remains on the betrayer.
- Judas is distinguished from the others by addressing Jesus as 'Rabbi' rather than 'Lord' in 26:25, 49, which coheres with Matthew's portrait of hollow association.
- The words over the cup are more expansive than over the bread and carry the explicit interpretive weight: covenant, poured out, many, forgiveness, and future kingdom fellowship.
- The citation about striking the shepherd and the sheep scattering interprets the disciples' imminent failure as foreknown within God's redemptive plan, but not excused.
- Gethsemane is narrated with real emotional depth: Jesus is anguished, distressed, and sorrowful to death, yet His prayer moves from possibility language to resolute acceptance of the cup.
- The disciples' sleeping is not incidental; it prepares for their falling away and illustrates Jesus' warning that willing intention is insufficient against fleshly weakness.
- In the arrest scene Jesus denies that force has trapped Him; His reference to angelic aid shows voluntary surrender rather than inability to escape.
Structure
- 26:17-19: Jesus directs the Passover preparations and signals that His appointed time is near.
- 26:20-25: At table Jesus announces that one of the Twelve will betray Him and pronounces woe on the betrayer while affirming the scriptural necessity of His path.
- 26:26-29: Jesus interprets the bread and cup in relation to His body, covenant blood, forgiveness of sins, and future kingdom fellowship.
- 26:30-35: On the way to the Mount of Olives Jesus predicts the disciples' scattering, cites Scripture, promises resurrection and regathering in Galilee, and foretells Peter's denial.
- 26:36-46: In Gethsemane Jesus prays three times concerning the cup, submits His will to the Father, and exhorts sleepy disciples to watch and pray against temptation.
- 26:47-56: Judas arrives with the arresting crowd, betrays Jesus with a kiss, Jesus rejects armed resistance, grounds the arrest in scriptural fulfillment, and the disciples flee.
Key terms
kairos
Strong's: G2540
Gloss: appointed time, decisive moment
The term frames the whole unit as moving according to divine schedule, not merely human plotting.
paradidomi
Strong's: G3860
Gloss: hand over, deliver up, betray
Its repetition links human treachery with the broader handing over of Jesus to suffering, while preserving Judas's culpability.
soma
Strong's: G4983
Gloss: body
The term ties the meal directly to Jesus' self-giving person rather than to a vague spiritual idea.
haima tes diathekes
Strong's: G129, G1242
Gloss: covenant blood
The phrase interprets His death sacrificially and covenantally, invoking covenant ratification and inaugurating significance.
aphesis
Strong's: G859
Gloss: release, forgiveness
This makes explicit that Jesus' death is not merely martyrdom or example but effective redemptive provision regarding sins.
poterion
Strong's: G4221
Gloss: cup
The narrative juxtaposition connects atoning benefit for others with the suffering obedience Jesus Himself must undergo.
Syntactical features
Scripture-necessity plus moral denunciation
Textual signal: 26:24 'The Son of Man will go as it is written... but woe to that man'
Interpretive effect: The adversative construction prevents a deterministic reading that would erase personal responsibility.
Purpose clause for atonement
Textual signal: 26:28 'poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins'
Interpretive effect: The double prepositional construction gives Jesus' blood a directed benefit and purpose, supporting a sacrificial, redemptive reading.
Future temporal contrast
Textual signal: 26:29 'from now on... until that day'
Interpretive effect: Jesus' abstention from the cup creates eschatological tension between present suffering and future kingdom consummation.
Triple prayer sequence
Textual signal: 26:39, 42, 44 repeated prayer movement
Interpretive effect: The repetition displays settled submission rather than momentary hesitation and heightens the contrast with the disciples' repeated failure.
Conditional petition subordinated to divine will
Textual signal: 26:39 'if possible... yet not as I will, but as you will'
Interpretive effect: Jesus' request is real, but the syntax clearly places His human desire under obedient submission to the Father's will.
Textual critical issues
Addition of 'for remission of sins' in some witnesses to 26:28
Variants: Some later manuscripts expand or harmonize wording around the cup saying; the main issue is not the phrase itself, which is well supported, but minor harmonizing tendencies in the tradition.
Preferred reading: The standard Matthean text including 'for the forgiveness of sins.'
Interpretive effect: The supported reading preserves Matthew's distinctive explicit statement of the saving purpose of Jesus' blood.
Rationale: The phrase is strongly attested and fits Matthew's theological and literary style rather than looking like a secondary insertion.
Wording of Jesus' address to Judas in 26:50
Variants: Some witnesses reflect slight differences in how Jesus' brief statement is phrased, often influenced by idiomatic smoothing in translation tradition.
Preferred reading: A concise address equivalent to 'Friend, do what you are here to do.'
Interpretive effect: The nuance affects tone slightly but not the larger meaning that Jesus confronts Judas without surprise and allows the arrest to proceed.
Rationale: The shorter, harder wording best explains later smoothing and suits Matthew's restrained narrative style.
Old Testament background
Exodus 12
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The Passover setting frames Jesus' death within deliverance imagery and covenant memory, while Matthew lets Jesus reinterpret the meal around His own impending sacrifice.
Exodus 24:8
Connection type: allusion
Note: 'Blood of the covenant' echoes Moses' covenant-ratifying blood, now applied by Jesus to His own death as the basis of covenant relation.
Isaiah 53:10-12
Connection type: echo
Note: The language of life given 'for many' and the righteous sufferer's vicarious role likely stands behind the saying over the cup.
Zechariah 13:7
Connection type: quotation
Note: Jesus explicitly cites the struck shepherd and scattered sheep to interpret the disciples' collapse as scripturally anticipated.
Psalms 42:5,11; 43:5
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Jesus' sorrowful prayer language resonates with the righteous sufferer's deep distress before God, though not as a formal quotation.
Interpretive options
Meaning of 'this is my body... this is my blood'
- A strongly literal identification of the elements with Jesus' physical body and blood.
- A sacramental-real presence view in which the elements truly mediate Christ's presence without crude physicalism.
- A covenantal-representational reading in which the bread and cup signify and convey the meaning of His impending sacrificial death within the meal context.
Preferred option: A covenantal-representational reading in which the bread and cup signify and convey the meaning of His impending sacrificial death within the meal context.
Rationale: The Passover-meal setting, the explanatory language about blood 'poured out' and forgiveness, and the narrative's forward-looking interpretation favor a symbolic-covenantal identification tied to His death rather than a material transformation reading.
Scope of 'for many' in 26:28
- A restrictive reading meaning only a limited subset are intended by the atoning provision.
- An idiomatic Semitic reading meaning many people, with emphasis on breadth rather than numerical restriction.
- A contrastive-vicarious reading in which one gives His life on behalf of the many, without settling every later systematic question about extent in this verse alone.
Preferred option: A contrastive-vicarious reading in which one gives His life on behalf of the many, without settling every later systematic question about extent in this verse alone.
Rationale: The phrase most naturally highlights representative substitution and Isaianic resonance; the unit's concern is the saving significance of Jesus' death, not a later intramural debate about extent.
Meaning of 'the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak'
- A contrast between the human spirit's sincere intention and bodily frailty in the disciples.
- A contrast between the Holy Spirit and sinful human nature.
- A proverbial statement about humanity in general with no immediate disciplinary focus on the disciples.
Preferred option: A contrast between the human spirit's sincere intention and bodily frailty in the disciples.
Rationale: The immediate context is the disciples' failure to stay awake after professing loyalty; Jesus diagnoses their actual weakness rather than giving a developed pneumatological statement.
Nature of Jesus' request that the cup pass
- A sinful reluctance incompatible with perfect obedience.
- A real human shrinking from the suffering and judgment-symbolized cup, yet without disobedience because He submits fully to the Father's will.
- A purely dramatic statement with no disclosure of Jesus' inner struggle.
Preferred option: A real human shrinking from the suffering and judgment-symbolized cup, yet without disobedience because He submits fully to the Father's will.
Rationale: Matthew explicitly narrates anguish and repeated prayer, but the wording equally insists on obedient submission; the scene reveals true humanity joined to sinless fidelity.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read in light of 26:1-16 and 26:57-75: prior anointing and Judas's arrangement set up burial and betrayal, while the subsequent trial and Peter's denial confirm Jesus' predictions.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: Do not build a full doctrine of the Lord's Supper from Matthew alone; this unit mentions the meal chiefly to interpret Jesus' death in its immediate narrative setting.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus' messianic identity governs the passage: Son of Man, shepherd, covenant mediator, obedient Son, and future kingdom host all converge here.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: Scriptural fulfillment does not cancel human accountability; Judas, the armed crowd, sleeping disciples, and sword-bearing resistance are morally evaluated within the narrative.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: high
Note: Passover and covenant-blood imagery should be handled typologically and symbolically where the text itself invites it, without over-literalizing the meal language.
prophetic
Relevance: high
Note: Explicit quotation and fulfillment statements require readers to see the passion as the outworking of prophetic Scripture, not as a merely tragic reversal.
Theological significance
- Jesus explains his death before it happens; the cross is his mission, not an unforeseen defeat.
- The cup saying gives Jesus' death covenantal and redemptive meaning: his blood is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.
- Matthew keeps scriptural necessity and human guilt side by side: Judas betrays, the crowd arrests, the disciples fail, and none of this is morally excused by fulfillment language.
- Gethsemane shows sinless obedience under real distress, not detachment or theatrical resolve.
- The disciples' failure appears in several forms at once: betrayal, overconfidence, prayerlessness, sleep, flight, and sword-drawing zeal.
- Resurrection hope is already threaded through the scene in Jesus' promise to meet the scattered disciples again in Galilee.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Matthew's wording links institution and passion through recurring temporal and symbolic markers: time, hour, betray, cup, and fulfillment. The meal sayings interpret the narrative, while Gethsemane and the arrest enact what the meal declared. Language of covenant and forgiveness gives conceptual precision to the death that the plot is bringing near.
Biblical theological: The unit gathers Passover, covenant ratification, shepherd imagery, suffering-servant resonance, and kingdom expectation into one concentrated moment. Jesus stands as the obedient Son who secures forgiveness through His own blood and as the risen shepherd who will regather scattered disciples.
Metaphysical: Reality in this passage is neither governed by blind fate nor reducible to human intention. Divine purpose orders events without nullifying creaturely agency, and moral evil becomes the very sphere in which God's redemptive design is accomplished without God becoming the author of sin.
Psychological Spiritual: The scene gives a sober account of human frailty: sincere loyalty can coexist with unreadiness, and fear can overtake bold speech when prayer is neglected. Jesus' own prayer models ordered desire, where natural aversion is brought under trustful obedience rather than denied or indulged.
Divine Perspective: The Father is not absent from the passion but the One whose will governs it, whose kingdom lies beyond it, and whose purposes are fulfilled through it. The Son's obedience and the possibility of angelic deliverance show that the cross is embraced under divine wisdom, not imposed by sheer helplessness.
Category: character
Note: God's holiness and mercy meet in the covenant blood that addresses sins rather than ignoring them.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The sequence of betrayal, prayer, and arrest displays providential rule over events without erasing human choices.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus discloses God's saving purpose by interpreting His death as covenantal and forgiveness-bringing.
Category: personhood
Note: The Father's will and the Son's obedient prayer reveal personal relation, not impersonal necessity.
- Jesus is sovereignly in control of events and yet truly suffers under them.
- Scripture must be fulfilled and the betrayer remains under woe.
- The disciples genuinely love Jesus and yet abandon Him.
- The kingdom feast is promised in the future even as the covenant meal is instituted in the shadow of death.
Enrichment summary
Passover, covenant blood, and the cup supply the main frame for this scene. Jesus is not simply sharing a farewell meal; he places Israel's deliverance meal around his own death as the act that secures covenant relation and forgiveness. Matthew then sets the cup given to the disciples beside the cup Jesus must drink in Gethsemane. The quotation about the struck shepherd explains the disciples' collapse as the scattering of the flock around its messianic shepherd. These local features keep the passage from shrinking into a sacramental quarrel, a private devotional scene, or a story of events spinning beyond Jesus' control.
Traditions of men check
Reducing the Lord's Supper to bare memorialism with little reference to covenant or atonement.
Why it conflicts: Matthew's wording over the cup is thick with covenantal and redemptive meaning, not mere recollection of a departed teacher.
Textual pressure point: 26:28 explicitly ties the cup to covenant blood 'poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.'
Caution: The correction should not be used to import later sacramental systems wholesale into Matthew's narrative.
Treating sincere intention as spiritually sufficient without disciplined prayer.
Why it conflicts: The disciples' promises collapse because willingness alone does not withstand temptation when fleshly weakness is unaddressed.
Textual pressure point: 26:40-41 links sleeping, temptation, willing spirit, and weak flesh.
Caution: The point is not to deny grace but to reject presumption.
Portraying Jesus' arrest as proof that events spun beyond His control.
Why it conflicts: Jesus repeatedly presents the arrest as voluntary submission under Scripture and declares that angelic rescue was available.
Textual pressure point: 26:53-54 states that He could appeal for heavenly aid, but Scripture must be fulfilled.
Caution: This should not minimize the injustice of the arrest or the reality of suffering.
Sanitizing discipleship into bold public declarations detached from the possibility of failure.
Why it conflicts: Peter and the others profess steadfastness immediately before sleeping, scattering, and denial.
Textual pressure point: 26:33-35 is answered by 26:40-45 and 26:56.
Caution: The passage exposes weakness in order to humble and restore, not to deny the reality of later faithful service.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: 'Blood of the covenant' in a Passover setting evokes sacrificial and covenant-ratifying categories, not mere farewell symbolism. Jesus interprets his death as the decisive act that establishes covenant relationship and addresses sin.
Western Misread: Reading the supper only as an inward remembrance exercise or as an abstract doctrinal proof-text detached from Israel’s sacrificial story.
Interpretive Difference: The bread and cup function as Jesus’ own interpretation of his death within Israel’s cultic-covenantal world: forgiveness is tied to a sacrificial, covenant-establishing death.
Dynamic: corporate_vs_individual
Why It Matters: Passover is a people-defining meal, and Zechariah’s shepherd-struck/sheep-scattered pattern casts the disciples’ failure as the collapse of the messianic community around its struck shepherd.
Western Misread: Treating the scene as a set of isolated individual spiritual moments—Judas’s betrayal, Peter’s pride, Jesus’ private prayer—without seeing the corporate disintegration of the flock.
Interpretive Difference: The unit portrays both atonement and disciple failure in communal terms: Jesus dies to form and secure a people even as that people temporarily scatters.
Idioms and figures
Expression: "blood of the covenant"
Category: metonymy
Explanation: The phrase uses blood to signify Jesus’ violent sacrificial death as the means of covenant ratification, echoing Exodus covenant language rather than referring to blood as a detached substance.
Interpretive effect: It pushes interpretation toward covenant-establishing sacrifice and forgiveness, not toward a merely sentimental or purely ceremonial meal reading.
Expression: "for many"
Category: idiom
Explanation: This is best heard in Semitic-vicarious terms: the one acts on behalf of the many, with likely Isaianic resonance. It stresses representative benefit more than a numerical headcount formula.
Interpretive effect: It foregrounds substitutionary force without requiring this verse alone to settle later debates about the exact extent of the atonement.
Expression: "let this cup pass from me"
Category: metaphor
Explanation: In biblical usage the cup can symbolize one’s appointed portion, often involving suffering and judgment. Here Jesus is not asking to avoid an ordinary death merely as such, but the divinely assigned suffering bound up with his mission.
Interpretive effect: The prayer reveals real human shrinking before the ordained passion while preserving full obedience to the Father’s will.
Expression: "strike the shepherd, and the sheep... will be scattered"
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Jesus applies Zechariah’s shepherd-flock imagery to himself and the disciples. The language depicts covenant-community disarray when its appointed leader is struck.
Interpretive effect: The disciples’ flight is not random cowardice alone; it is the scripturally anticipated scattering of the flock around the smitten Messiah.
Expression: Judas’s kiss
Category: symbolic_action
Explanation: The kiss functions as a sign of apparent loyalty weaponized into betrayal. The act is not morally neutral identification but treachery disguised as intimacy and honor.
Interpretive effect: It heightens the hypocrisy of the betrayal and deepens the contrast between outward closeness and inward disloyalty.
Application implications
- Receive the Supper in direct relation to Jesus' sacrificial death, covenant blood, and forgiveness of sins rather than as empty ritual.
- Do not trust strong vows by themselves; the sleeping disciples show that resolve without watchful prayer collapses under pressure.
- Bring anguish honestly before God, but let Jesus' prayer set the pattern: desire may be voiced, yet the Father's will must govern.
- Do not defend Jesus' cause by violence or coercive force; in the garden he refused that path and submitted to the Father's scriptural design.
- Let confidence rest in Jesus' faithfulness rather than in personal steadiness, since the scene repeatedly contrasts his obedience with the disciples' instability.
Enrichment applications
- Read the Lord’s Supper with covenant and atonement weight, not as thin memorial routine or as a detached ritual argument.
- Corporate failure in crisis is possible even among sincere disciples; watchfulness and prayer are community-preserving disciplines, not private extras.
- Jesus’ prayer authorizes honest anguish before God while ruling out self-will: faithful obedience may tremble, but it still yields to the Father’s purpose.
Warnings
- Do not detach the meal from the betrayal prediction, the prayers in Gethsemane, and the arrest; Matthew gives the bread and cup their meaning inside this passion sequence.
- Do not make 'for many' settle later theological disputes the verse itself does not fully address.
- Do not read Gethsemane as sinful hesitation; Matthew presents true anguish joined to obedient submission.
- Do not treat fulfillment language as fatalism; Jesus still pronounces woe on the betrayer and the narrative still assigns guilt.
- Do not press the Passover chronology beyond what Matthew is trying to do here; his emphasis is theological and narrative, not merely calendrical.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not import detailed later Passover seder reconstructions into Matthew with confidence the text itself does not warrant.
- Do not overstate the dispute around 'for many': fair conservative alternatives exist, even if the project-preferred reading is vicarious rather than numerically restrictive.
- Do not let background symbolism eclipse Matthew’s plain narrative stress on Jesus’ voluntary surrender, the disciples’ failure, and Scripture’s fulfillment.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Turning the supper sayings mainly into a later sacramental systems debate.
Why It Happens: The wording 'this is my body... this is my blood' has a long reception history, so readers often let later controversies dominate the passage.
Correction: Matthew’s immediate emphasis is Jesus’ interpretation of his impending death as covenantal, sacrificial, and forgiveness-bringing. Stronger sacramental conclusions, where held, should remain subordinate to that local narrative function.
Misreading: Treating 'for many' as if this verse by itself decisively proves either a narrowly limited or a flatly universalized atonement scheme.
Why It Happens: Readers import later theological disputes into a phrase whose local force is representative and Isaianic.
Correction: The phrase most clearly states one-for-many vicarious benefit. Responsible conservative readers differ on how this correlates to larger doctrinal systems, and the passage itself does not require more than that.
Misreading: Reducing the 'cup' in Gethsemane to fear of physical pain alone.
Why It Happens: Modern readers often hear 'cup' literally or psychologically rather than through scriptural symbolism.
Correction: The cup carries biblical overtones of the Father-assigned portion of suffering and judgment. Jesus’ anguish is therefore tethered to the redemptive burden of the passion, not mere instinctive dread.
Misreading: Using fulfillment language to excuse Judas or to flatten the arrest into fatalism.
Why It Happens: Because Jesus says the Scriptures must be fulfilled, some infer that human agents are only puppets in the scene.
Correction: Matthew explicitly keeps both together: what is written must occur, and the betrayer still stands under woe. Divine purpose does not dissolve moral accountability.