Robertson Word Pictures - Matthew 26:7 - 26:7

Online Resource Library

Commentary Index | Return to PrayerRequest.com

Robertson Word Pictures - Matthew 26:7 - 26:7


(Show All Books | Show All Chapters)

This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

An alabaster cruse of exceeding precious ointment (alabastron murou barutimou). The flask was of alabaster, a carbonate of lime or sulphate of lime, white or yellow stone, named alabaster from the town in Egypt where it was chiefly found. It was used for a phial employed for precious ointments in ancient writers, inscriptions and papyri just as we speak of a glass for the vessel made of glass. It had a cylindrical form at the top, as a rule, like a closed rosebud (Pliny). Matthew does not say what the ointment (murou) was, only saying that it was “exceeding precious” (barutimou), of weighty value, selling at a great price. Here only in the N.T. “An alabaster of nard (murou) was a present for a king” (Bruce). It was one of five presents sent by Cambyses to the King of Ethiopia (Herodotus, iii. 20).

She poured it upon his head (katecheen epi tēs kephalēs autou). So Mark (Mar 14:3), while John (Joh 12:3) says that she “anointed the feet of Jesus.” Why not both? The verb katecheen is literally to pour down. It is the first aorist active indicative, unusual form.