Its authorship .—That this Gospel was written by the apostle Matthew there is no reason to doubt. Seventeen independent witnesses
of the first four centuries attest its genuineness.
Its original language .—The testimony of the early Church is unanimous that Matthew wrote originally in the Hebrew language.
On the otherhand doubt is thrown over this opinion, both statements of by an examination of the fathers and by a consideration
of peculiar forms of language employed in the Gospel itself. The question is unsettled, the best scholars not agreeing in
their Judgment concerning it. If there was a Hebrew original, it disappeared at a very early age. The Greek Gospel which we
now possess was it is almost certain, written in Matthew’s lifetime; and it is not at all improbable that he wrote the Gospel
in both the Greek and Hebrew languages.—Lyman Abbolt. It is almost certain that our Lord spoke in Greek with foreigners, but
with his disciples and the Jewish people in Aramaic (a form of language closely allied to the Hebrew).—Schaff. The Jewish
historian Josephus furnishes an illustration of the fate of the Hebrew original of Matthew. Josephus himself informs us that
he, wrote his great work “The History of the Jewish Wars,” originally in Hebrew, his native tongue, for the benefit of his
own nation, and he afterward translated it into Greek. No notices of the Hebrew original now survive.—Professor D.S. Gregory.
The date .— The testimony of the early Church is unanimous that Matthew wrote first of the early Church is among the evangelists.
Irenieus relates that Matthew wrote his Gospel while Peter and Paul were preaching, and founding the Church at Rome, after
A.D. 61. It was published before the destruction of Jerusalem, A.D. 50.—Alford. We would place our present Gospel between
A.D. 60 and 66. If there was an original Hebrew Gospel, an earlier date belongs to it—Ellicott.
Its object .— This Gospel was probably written in Palestine for Jewish Christians. It is an historical proof that Jesus is
the Messiah. Matthew is the Gospel for the Jew. It is the Gospel of Jesus, the Messiah of the prophets. This Gospel takes
the life of Jesus as it was lived on earth, and his character as it actually appeared, and places them alongside the life
and character of the Messiah as sketched in the prophets, the historic by the side of the Prophetic, that the two may appear
in their marvellous unity and in their perfect identity.—Professor Gregory.