Thirty Pieces of Silver
“Matthew 27 attributes the thirty pieces of silver to "Jeremiah" when the text is in Zechariah. Is this a scribal error?”
"I told them, 'If you think it best, give me my pay; but if not, keep it.' So they paid me thirty pieces of silver... And the LORD said to me, 'Throw it to the potter' , the handsome price at which they valued me! So I took the thirty pieces of silver and threw them to the potter at the house of the LORD." , Zechariah 11:12-13 (NIV) / "Then what was spoken by Jeremiah the prophet was fulfilled: 'They took the thirty pieces of silver...'" , Matthew 27:9 (NIV)
Matthew 27:3-10 narrates Judas returning the thirty pieces of silver, the chief priests buying a potter's field, and Matthew citing this as fulfillment of prophecy "spoken by Jeremiah." The problem is immediately apparent to any reader who looks up the source: the thirty pieces of silver and the potter are in Zechariah 11:12-13, not Jeremiah. Matthew does not cite a Jeremiah passage that mentions these details. The question has generated dozens of proposed solutions over two millennia of commentary: from scribal errors to elaborate composite-citation theories to intentional allusion to Jeremiah's symbolic acts.
Hard verses are where our biases and assumptions do the most damage. Before diving into scholarly perspectives, consider which thinking patterns might be shaping how you read this passage.
The simplest explanation, accepted by many critical scholars including Gundry, is that Matthew (or a copyist) made an attribution error. Ancient authors cited scripture from memory, and confusing two prophets who both have passages about potters (Jeremiah 18-19 and Zechariah 11) is an understandable mistake. Some ancient manuscripts read "Zechariah" or "Isaiah," suggesting scribes recognized the discrepancy and attempted correction.
This explanation does not require Matthew to be wrong about the content of the prophecy, only about which prophet's book it came from. The manuscript variation at this point (some Greek manuscripts simply omit the attribution entirely) itself suggests ancient readers were troubled by the discrepancy and tried to resolve it.
Many conservative scholars propose that Matthew is citing a composite of texts, naming only the more prominent prophet Jeremiah (as Paul names Isaiah when citing a composite in Romans 9:27-29 from Hosea and Isaiah). The relevant Jeremianic background includes: Jeremiah's purchase of a field (Jeremiah 32:6-15), his symbolism with a potter (Jeremiah 18-19), and the Valley of Ben Hinnom as a place of condemnation (Jeremiah 19:1-13). Matthew may be invoking the entire Jeremianic tradition about clay, potters, blood, and the valley of slaughter, with Zechariah 11 providing the specific thirty-silver figure.
This composite-citation technique was standard in Qumran pesher exegesis and in rabbinic literature, where multiple texts could be woven together under the name of the more prominent source.
R. T. France and others have noted that in some ancient Jewish canonical arrangements, the minor prophets were grouped together as a single scroll and that the order sometimes placed Zechariah before other books.
More significantly, some scholars point to evidence that in certain Hebrew canonical traditions the "book of Jeremiah" may have referred to a larger prophetic collection that included the minor prophets. This remains speculative but would explain Matthew's attribution without positing an error. The Talmud (Bava Batra 14b) lists Jeremiah before the other major and minor prophets, and some ancient arrangements differ significantly from our standard canonical order.
A minority view proposes Matthew was deliberately alluding to Jeremiah as the primary prophetic echo, with Zechariah 11 as a secondary source. Jeremiah purchased a field (Jeremiah 32) as a sign of restoration even in the face of Babylonian destruction; the "potter's house" symbolism in Jeremiah 18-19 is connected to the condemnation of Jerusalem; and "Akeldama" (Field of Blood) resonates with the Valley of Hinnom where Jeremiah proclaimed judgment. Matthew may be reading Judas's act and the potter's field as the dark fulfillment of Jeremianic themes, with the specific silver-and-potter language drawn from Zechariah to confirm the pattern.
The deliberateness of this midrashic reading would be consistent with Matthew's sophisticated use of composite citations elsewhere.
Zechariah 11:13 presents its own textual difficulty: the MT reads "to the potter" (el hayotser), but the LXX reads "into the treasury" (eis to choneuterion), suggesting a Hebrew variant reading of otsar (treasury) rather than yotser (potter). The difference is graphically slight and was a recognized scribal confusion point. Matthew 27:6 uses "treasury" and verse 10 uses "potter's field," which may reflect Matthew's awareness of both readings or his use of a Hebrew text that differed from the Masoretic tradition.
This textual complexity within Zechariah itself makes the attribution problem more, not less, interesting: Matthew may be interpreting a textually unstable passage with interpretive freedom.
Zechariah 11:12-13 contains its own text-critical difficulties. The LXX differs from the Masoretic Text in verse 13: where the MT reads "to the potter" (el hayotser), some LXX manuscripts read "into the treasury" (eis to choneuterion), suggesting a possible misreading of yotser (potter) as otsar (treasury). Matthew 27:6 uses thesauron ("treasury"), while verse 10 uses the phrase "for the potter's field," suggesting Matthew may have had access to both readings or deliberately conflated them in a creative interpretive move.
The Hebrew phrase translated "the handsome price at which they valued me" (hayekar asher yaqarti me'aleihem) is deeply ironic, meaning something like "the magnificent price they reckoned me worth," echoing the price of a slave gored by an ox in Exodus 21:32. Matthew's fulfillment formula in 27:9 uses the verb pleroo (to fill/fulfill), the same formula used in his other fulfillment citations, but the wording of his quotation is not a verbatim match to either the MT or LXX of Zechariah, suggesting he may be paraphrasing from memory or harmonizing multiple texts.
Zechariah 11 is one of the most obscure chapters in the prophetic corpus. " The shepherd breaks both staffs in sequence, symbolizing the annulment of the covenant and of the brotherhood between Judah and Israel. The thirty pieces of silver is the wage the shepherd receives for his work, which God contemptuously calls "the handsome price" before commanding it thrown to "the potter" in the temple.
Whether this refers to the temple treasury or an actual potter is itself debated. Matthew's appropriation of this obscure passage as a passion narrative fulfillment demonstrates early Christian pesher interpretation, finding hidden eschatological meaning in prophetic allegory. The Jeremianic background texts (chapters 18-19, 32) add substantial contextual weight: Jeremiah's potter imagery was used to announce the destruction of Jerusalem, his field purchase was a prophetic sign of restoration, and the Valley of Ben Hinnom was the site of both child sacrifice and prophetic judgment.
Whether or not Matthew's Jeremiah attribution is a scribal error, the Jeremianic resonances are theologically rich and appear to be deliberate.
Sources: Published scholarship View all →
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