*12:1 The Text actually has ‘the Sabbaths’; the parallel passage in Luke 6:1 has ‘a second-first Sabbath’. This was evidently a special day, but we have lost the relevant cultural information.
†12:2 Most probably the Pharisees had ‘observers’ tagging along everywhere Jesus went.
‡12:7 The quote is from Hosea 6:6.
§12:8 Who but the Messiah, or God Himself, could be Lord of the Sabbath? Jesus was hitting the Pharisees where they lived (they used the Sabbath as an instrument of domination). He had also just said that He was greater than the temple.
*12:14 They could not answer Him, but did not want to submit to Him either; He threatened all that they held dear.
†12:15 He did not go looking for sick people to cure, but He healed all who came to Him.
‡12:20 The quote in verses 18-21 (see Isaiah 42:1-4) is tied to verse 16. Since after His resurrection the Lord commanded them to go to the whole world and preach the Gospel to every person, I take it that the “until He sends justice forth to victory” was fulfilled at His death and resurrection. So the description in verses 19-20 is limited to His earthly ministry and is not an example for us to follow now—see Matthew 10:27, etc.
§12:22 A chiasmus—AB,BA
*12:23 I follow the best line of transmission [20%] in reading ‘the Christ’, although it is alone against the rest.
†12:27 Jesus seems to be affirming that their sons did indeed cast out demons; the implication is that they were doing so by Satan's power. Further, if they did not protest when their sons did it, why did they protest when He did it?
‡12:29 The use of the definite article with “strong man” (its first occurrence) means that the entity has already been introduced in the previous context—the reference is to Satan. Here is biblical basis for binding him.
§12:30 There is no ‘neutrality’; you are either for or against. There are only two teams, two sides, two kingdoms in this world. Either God or Satan, light or darkness, truth or falsehood. Whose side are you on? Really.
*12:32 Statements like this need to be interpreted against the background of all other Scriptures that bear on the subject. Forgiveness depends on confession (1 John 1:9).
†12:32 Mark 3:30 makes clear that “the blasphemy against the Spirit” is to ascribe His working to Satan.
‡12:34 At no time did the Lord make any effort to conciliate the Pharisees. They are ‘serpents’ because their father is a serpent (Revelation 12:10).
§12:34 Jesus appears to be saying that a malignant person is incapable of speaking good.
*12:37 “Every useless word whatever”—do we really believe that? This may be why certain orders of monks took an oath of silence (but how can you be ‘justified’ by your words if you never say anything?).
†12:38 Jesus had already performed hundreds of signs, and doubtless they had seen some of them. Their request was not honest.
‡12:40 “In the heart of the earth”—here we seem to have instruction from the Lord on the location of Hades—it is inside the earth, somehow. Compare 1 Samuel 28:13 where Samuel (literally), returning from Hades/Sheol, comes up from inside the earth.
§12:42 Jonah, and the sea monster, are just as historical as Solomon, the queen of Sheba, Nineveh—we have it on the authority of the Lord Jesus Christ.
*12:45 Jesus does not say why the demon left, but obviously a vacuum is dangerous. Jesus seems to be implying that the Pharisees are already demonized, but will become worse! Actually, in verse 34 He said they were malignant, poisonous snakes; to be malignant is to be aggressively evil, the term is regularly used of Satan. In fact, later on Jesus says they are sons of Satan.
†12:50 Notice again that the key is doing the Father's will.