Matthew closes his infancy narrative with a statement that has perplexed readers for centuries:

“And he went and dwelt in a city called Nazareth, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets, He shall be called a Nazarene.” (Matthew 2:23, KJV)

The difficulty is immediate. There is no Old Testament verse that explicitly says, “He shall be called a Nazarene.” Unlike Matthew’s citation of Micah 5:2 or Hosea 11:1, no obvious textual source stands behind this formula. Yet Matthew is not tentative. He asserts fulfillment. He appeals to “the prophets” in the plural. He clearly believed that Jesus’ residence in Nazareth corresponded to prophetic expectation.

The question, then, is not whether Matthew thought there was a prophetic basis. He did. The question is: what did he have in mind?

What follows is not an attempt to flatten the difficulty, but to survey the most plausible possibilities in a historically responsible and theologically conservative manner.

I. What We Know with Certainty

Three observations must frame the discussion.

First, Matthew says “spoken by the prophets” (plural). This suggests a thematic fulfillment rather than a citation of a single text.

Second, he does not quote a specific verse. Unlike other formula quotations in Matthew, there is no direct wording from the Hebrew Bible.

Third, Matthew is confident in his claim. Whatever interpretive method he employs, he is not speculating. He believes Jesus’ settlement in Nazareth fulfills prophetic Scripture.

Thus, the problem is not Matthew’s uncertainty, but ours.

II. The “Branch” Hypothesis: Netzer and the Davidic Shoot

One longstanding proposal connects “Nazarene” with the Hebrew word נֵצֶר (netzer), meaning “branch” or “shoot.”

Isaiah 11:1

“There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch (netzer) from his roots shall bear fruit.” (Isaiah 11:1)

Isaiah 11 is unmistakably messianic and Davidic. The image is powerful: from the seemingly dead stump of David’s line comes new life.

In Hebrew, Nazareth (likely deriving from a root נ-צ-ר) may be linguistically related to netzer. If so, Matthew could be engaging in prophetic wordplay: Jesus of Nazareth is the promised “Branch.”

The Broader Branch Motif

The “Branch” theme is not confined to Isaiah. Jeremiah 23:5 and 33:15 speak of a “righteous Branch” from David. Zechariah 3:8 and 6:12 refer to “the Branch” (Hebrew tsemach), again in a messianic context.

In Zechariah 6:12–13 we read:

“Behold, the man whose name is the Branch… he shall build the temple of the LORD… and he shall sit and rule upon his throne.” (Zechariah 6:12–13)

Here the prophet performs a symbolic act involving Joshua (Yehoshua), the high priest. Joshua is crowned, yet the text points beyond him to a future royal-priestly figure called “the Branch.” This Branch will build the temple and rule on a throne.

Several features are striking. The Branch is Davidic and royal. He builds the temple. He unites priesthood and kingship. The sign-act involves Joshua, a name equivalent to Greek Iēsous (Jesus).

We must be careful not to press the name parallel beyond the text’s intent. Joshua functions as a prophetic sign; he is not himself the eschatological Branch. Yet the thematic convergence of Branch, temple-building, royal authority, and priesthood forms a rich messianic matrix.

Second Temple Jewish Interpretation

The Branch texts were widely understood messianically in Second Temple Judaism. The Dead Sea Scrolls interpret “Branch of David” as the coming Messiah. The Targums often paraphrase Branch texts with explicit messianic language. Jeremiah’s righteous Branch was received as a Davidic deliverer.

However, we possess no extant Second Temple document that explicitly connects Nazareth with the Branch prophecies. No surviving Jewish writing predicts that the Messiah would be “a Nazarene.”

Thus, the Branch hypothesis is plausible and textually coherent, but not demonstrable beyond reasonable doubt. It rests on linguistic and thematic association rather than explicit documentary evidence.

III. The “Despised” Hypothesis: Nazarene as a Term of Contempt

A second major proposal sees Matthew summarizing prophetic themes about the Messiah’s humiliation.

Nazareth was obscure and culturally insignificant. Nathanael’s question in John 1:46 is telling:

“Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” (John 1:46)

By the first century, “Nazarene” appears to have functioned as a term of derision (cf. Acts 24:5). If so, Matthew may be invoking the prophetic theme that the Messiah would be despised and rejected.

Relevant texts include:

  • Isaiah 53:3: “He is despised and rejected of men.”
  • Psalm 22:6–8: mocked and scorned.
  • Psalm 69:7–12: reproach and alienation.

In this reading, Matthew’s “spoken by the prophets” refers not to a single verse but to the prophetic pattern: the Messiah would be scorned. Being known as “the Nazarene” embodied that scorn.

This interpretation has notable strengths. It explains the plural “prophets.” It fits the sociological reality of Nazareth. It coheres with Matthew’s broader portrayal of Jesus’ rejection.

Its weakness is that it requires “Nazarene” to function conceptually as “despised one,” which is not lexically precise but culturally plausible.

IV. The Nazirite Proposal

Some have attempted to link “Nazarene” with “Nazirite” (Numbers 6). This is linguistically strained and contextually unlikely. Jesus was not a Nazirite in the technical sense. The Gospels depict him drinking wine and not observing Nazirite restrictions. This proposal is generally rejected in serious scholarship.

V. Did Intertestamental Judaism Expect a Nazarene Messiah?

There is no evidence that pre-Christian Judaism expected a Messiah specifically called “a Nazarene.” No Qumran text, no Targum, no apocalyptic writing makes that claim.

What we do see is a well-developed expectation of a Davidic Branch, heightened messianic hope, temple-centered restoration theology, and anticipation of a royal deliverer.

Matthew’s claim, therefore, is not that Judaism universally expected a Nazarene Messiah. Rather, he is asserting that the prophetic Scriptures, rightly understood, converge in Jesus of Nazareth.

Whether this interpretive connection was widely recognized in Judaism or uniquely perceived by the apostolic community is beyond our evidence. It is possible that Jesus himself, in post-resurrection instruction (cf. Luke 24:27), illuminated such connections. It is also possible that Matthew, steeped in Scripture, perceived patterns and wordplays that others had overlooked.

We do not know the mechanism of discovery. We do know that Matthew believed Scripture warranted the claim.

VI. A Conservative and Honest Conclusion

Several conclusions emerge.

First, Matthew believed that Jesus’ residence in Nazareth fulfilled prophetic Scripture.

Second, no single Old Testament verse explicitly predicts a Nazarene.

Third, the Branch motif offers a linguistically and theologically plausible background.

Fourth, the theme of messianic rejection offers another strong explanatory framework.

Fifth, there is no evidence of a widespread Jewish expectation of a Nazarene Messiah prior to Christianity.

A theologically conservative approach does not require us to pretend the difficulty is simple. It requires us to affirm that Matthew was not inventing fulfillment but interpreting Scripture within a robust prophetic framework.

Jesus of Nazareth stands at the intersection of the Davidic Branch who arises from Jesse’s stump, the royal-priestly temple builder of Zechariah, the despised servant of Isaiah, and the rejected stone of the Psalms.

Matthew’s statement may well compress all of these themes into a single phrase. “He shall be called a Nazarene” is not a citation of a verse but a theological summary of prophetic expectation converging in a Messiah whose glory would arise from obscurity.

If Nazareth carried connotations of smallness and contempt, then it was fitting. If its name echoed the Branch, then it was providential. In either case, Matthew’s conviction remains clear: the Messiah’s identity was not accidental. Even the town in which he was raised stood within the sovereign pattern of prophetic Scripture.

The difficulty remains. But the coherence is striking.


Dr. Peter J. Carter is a theologian, author, and the founder of Theology in Focus. He holds a D.Min. with a concentration in theology and apologetics and has spent over two decades teaching, preaching, and writing to make theology accessible to every believer.