AI-ASSISTED STUDY

Study scripture with guided help

Explore a Bible topic or bring in the passage you are already reading. Responses stay grounded in scripture and include references for continued study.

Matthew 26 (NIV)

Use the tools on this page to summarize, ask about, or reflect on the passage you opened from the reader.

Return to reader
Topic study

Study a Bible topic

Enter a topic, struggle, doctrine, or passage to receive an AI-assisted study guide with related Scriptures, key themes, and a concise explanation.

Search scripture
Enter a topic to study or search scripture.
Passage summary

Summarize this passage

Get the main movement of the selected chapter or verse range in plain language.

Passage question

Ask about this passage

Ask a focused question and keep the answer tied to the passage you opened.

Reflection

Generate reflection prompts

Create a few questions for observation, interpretation, and application.

Study Resources

Related Study Resources

Matthew 26 (NIV)
Commentary 1 source group
Tyndale Commentary 4 notes
TyndaleStudyNotes

Matt.26.12

26:12 to prepare my body for burial: It is not clear whether the woman fully understood the significance of her actions. In addition to preparation for burial, the anointing also speaks of Jesus as king (1 Sam 10:1; 2 Kgs 9:6) and priest (Exod 29:7).

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Matt.26.14-16

26:14-16 Judas sold himself to the authorities (see also John 11:57), concealed it (Matt 26:25), and then took them to Jesus at the appropriate time so they could carry out their plans (26:47-56; see John 18:2). Later, Judas was overcome by guilt and committed suicide (Matt 27:3-10; see Acts 1:15-22). Judas was apparently known for his greed (Matt 26:14-15;...

Read source excerpt

26:14-16 Judas sold himself to the authorities (see also John 11:57), concealed it (Matt 26:25), and then took them to Jesus at the appropriate time so they could carry out their plans (26:47-56; see John 18:2). Later, Judas was overcome by guilt and committed suicide (Matt 27:3-10; see Acts 1:15-22). Judas was apparently known for his greed (Matt 26:14-15; John 12:4-6; 13:29). It is also possible that he was motivated by disappointment over the nature of Jesus’ reign as Messiah, his own humiliation over the anointing of Jesus (see John 12:1-8), or resentment over the leadership of the Galilean apostles, Peter, James, and John. Whatever his motivation, Judas’s betrayal was a part of God’s sovereign plan (Acts 1:16-17).

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Matt.26.18

26:18 My time: The Messiah would now complete the work for which he was commissioned, to die for the sins of the world.

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Matt.26.2

26:2 The irony is that the Son of Man, who is to judge the nations (25:31-46), must first be wrongly judged and condemned to death by evil people. Jesus’ death was the ultimate Passover sacrifice (see John 19:31-37; 1 Cor 5:7).

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
People & Profiles1 item
TyndalePeople and Profiles

The Jewish High Council

The Jewish High Council

Read source excerpt

The Jewish High Council The high council of Jewish aristocrats in Jerusalem was endowed with considerable power in governing the Jewish people. It is traditionally called the Sanhedrin, a transliteration of the Greek word sunedrion (“council”). According to Jewish tradition, the Sanhedrin dates from Moses’ choice of seventy elders (Num 11:16), but the earliest datable reference is found in Josephus (Antiquities 12.3.3) from the time of Antiochus the Great (223–187 BC). The Sanhedrin probably emerged from a self-governing body of leaders under the Persians (see Ezra 5:5-10; Neh 2:16). The high council was controlled by the priestly class under the leadership of the high priest, though these priests were influenced to various degrees by Roman rulers and the Pharisees. Herod the Great exercised a particularly heavy hand over the affairs of the Sanhedrin. The Sanhedrin managed the internal legal and religious affairs of Judaism, including judicial decisions not resolved in lesser courts (called “local sanhedrins”), criminal justice and arrests (see Acts 9:1-2), and official (though unenforceable) decisions regarding Jewish matters. Though the Sanhedrin could not of its own acc...

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
Cross Reference8 items
TyndaleCross References

genesis 12:1-20

genesis 12:1-20

TyndaleCross References

exodus 12:1-51

exodus 12:1-51