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13 And if the house is worthy, let your peace come on it, but if it is not worthy, let your peace return to you.[a] 14 And if anyone will not welcome you or listen to your message, shake the dust off[b] your feet as you leave that house or that town. 15 I tell you the truth,[c] it will be more bearable for the region of Sodom and Gomorrah[d] on the day of judgment than for that town!

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Footnotes

  1. Matthew 10:13 sn The response to these messengers determines how God’s blessing is bestowed—if the messengers are not welcomed, their blessing will return to them. Jesus shows just how important their mission is by this remark.
  2. Matthew 10:14 sn To shake the dust off represented, on one level, shaking off the uncleanness from one’s feet; see Luke 10:11; Acts 13:51; 18:6. At another level, however, it is similar to a prophetic sign, representing the termination of all fellowship with those individuals or localities that have rejected the messengers along with their message of the coming kingdom of heaven. This in essence constitutes a sign of eschatological judgment, as confirmed in the following verse.
  3. Matthew 10:15 tn Grk “Truly (ἀμήν, amēn), I say to you.”
  4. Matthew 10:15 sn Sodom and Gomorrah were widely regarded as the most wicked of OT cities from the actions described in Gen 19:1-29; even in OT times their wickedness had become proverbial (Isa 1:9-10). The allusion to God’s judgment on these cities is not intended to indicate that they might be shown mercy on the day of judgment, but to warn that rejecting the messengers with their current message about the coming kingdom is even more serious than the worst sins of Sodom and Gomorrah and will result in even more severe punishment.