Matthew 8:16-17

Matthew 8:16-17

[16] When  the even  was come,  they brought  unto him  many  that were possessed with devils:  and  he cast out  the spirits  with his word,  and  healed  all  that were  sick:  [17] That it might  be fulfilled  by  Esaias  the prophet,  saying,  Himself  took  infirmities,  and  bare  our sicknesses. 

What does Matthew 8:16-17 Mean?

Contextual Meaning

That evening many other people brought their afflicted friends and relatives to Jesus for healing. In the Jewish inter-testamental literature the writers spoke of demons as responsible for making people ill. [1] Jesus cast out many demonic spirits and healed many who were sick.
Matthew noted that Jesus" healings fulfilled messianic prophecy ( Isaiah 53:4). Matthew"s citation from Isaiah really summarized all the healings in this chapter so far. He interpreted Isaiah freely as predicting the vicarious sufferings of Messiah. This was in accord with Isaiah"s prophecy concerning Messiah that appears in Isaiah 53. The Old Testament taught that all sickness is the direct or indirect result of sin (cf. Matthew 9:5). Messiah would remove infirmities and diseases by dying as a substitute sacrifice for sin. He would deal with the fruit by dealing with the root. Jesus" healing ministry laid the foundation for His destroying sickness with His death. Therefore it was appropriate for Matthew to quote Isaiah 53:4 here. Jesus" healing ministry also previewed kingdom conditions (cf. Isaiah 33:24; Isaiah 57:19).
"Thus the healings during Jesus" ministry can be understood not only as the foretaste of the kingdom [2] but also as the fruit of Jesus" death." [3]
For Matthew , Jesus" healing ministry pointed to the Cross. The healings were signs that signified more than the average observer might have understood. Matthew recorded that Jesus healed all types of people. Likewise when He died, Jesus gave His life as a ransom for many ( Matthew 20:28). Jesus" ministry of destroying sin in death was an extension of the authority that He demonstrated in His ministry of destroying sickness during His life. Many scholars believe that the Jews of Jesus" day did not understand Isaiah 53as messianic prophecy. Jeremias is one exception. Whether they did or not, they should have.
". . . it is to cast Jesus" activity of healing in the mold of "serving" that Matthew informs the reader in a formula-quotation that Jesus, through healing, fulfills the words of the Servant Song of Isaiah: "He took our infirmities and bore our diseases" ( Matthew 8:16-17; Isaiah 53:4). In healing, Jesus Son of God assumes the role of the servant of God and ministers to Israel by restoring persons to health or freeing them from their afflictions ( Matthew 11:5). Through serving in this fashion, Jesus "saves" ( Matthew 9:22)." [4]
Some Christians believe that Isaiah 53:4 and Matthew 8:16-17 teach that Jesus" death made it possible for people today to experience physical healing now by placing faith in Jesus. Most students of these and similar passages have concluded that the healing Jesus" death provides believers today will come when we receive our resurrection bodies, not necessarily before then. [5] This conclusion finds support in the revelation about the purpose of periods of healing that the Bible records. Many Christians today fall into the same trap the Corinthian believers fell into when they demanded future blessings now (cf. 1 Corinthians 4:6-13). [6]
This summary pericope stresses Jesus" power over every human affliction.