Matthew's Gospel from Scratch
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Matthew's Gospel from Scratch

The New Testament for Beginners

  1. 112 pages
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eBook - ePub

Matthew's Gospel from Scratch

The New Testament for Beginners

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About This Book

From Matthew's matter-of-fact genealogy demonstrating Jesus' status as a descendant of King David, through the soaring words of the Sermon on the Mount, to the lessons found in the Seven Parables of the Kingdom, Matthew's Gospel is rich and wonderfully relevant to contemporary Christians. Under the wise guidance of Donald Griggs and Earl Johnson, Matthew's Gospel is also easily accessible to those with little or no knowledge of the Bible.

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Part One

PARTICIPANT’S
GUIDE

EARL S. JOHNSON, JR.

Preface to Part One

The First Book

For many Christians Matthew is the first Gospel they read simply because it is the first book in the New Testament. Certainly that was the case for me. I started studying it seriously when I was in college, and I was fascinated by the vital stories about Jesus’ teaching and actions found there. For many years it has remained the Gospel I turn to when I try to understand who Jesus is and what he has to say to me today.
Matthew was the subject of my first Bible class when I worked as a seminary student with junior high youth in Newark, New Jersey, and I have preached through parts of it many times in the four different churches I have served since then. When I was working on my doctoral dissertation on Mark’s Gospel, I became interested in the similarities and differences between Matthew’s presentation of Jesus and the one found in Mark. I still find it exciting to try and figure out why Matthew changed his source the way he did. So when Don Griggs invited me to write a volume in this new series, I quickly chose Matthew’s Gospel and could hardly wait to get started.

Why Is Matthew the First Book in the New Testament?

It seems logical to begin reading any book like the New Testament at the beginning. But why is Matthew the first Gospel when the church had three others to select? And why is it the first writing in the whole New Testament when there are twenty-six other choices? Why not put Paul’s letter to the Romans first, the Acts of the Apostles, or the first epistle of John?
According to the church historian Eusebius, the bishop of Caesarea who lived around 263–339 CE, a number of considerations caused the early church to give it front-page recognition.
  1. Christians believed, Eusebius said, that it was the first of the Gospels to be written and therefore the oldest, and by implication the most reliable.
  2. Papias (ca. 60–130 CE) wrote that Matthew was of primary importance because it contained the actual sayings (Gk., logia) of Jesus himself, written in the Hebrew (Aramaic) language.
  3. Eusebius also points out that later writers went on to argue that the first Gospel was written by a person who should really know what Jesus said, namely, Matthew, who was not only a disciple but also an apostle, one who wrote a message for the Hebrews while Peter and Paul were preaching in Rome and forming the church there.1 The comment that Matthew was an apostle is significant because the first Christians placed high priority on the witness and writings of those who were the actual disciples of Jesus and were apostles appointed by him after the resurrection (like Paul was on the Damascus road in Acts 9), or knew Jesus’ disciples (like Mark did).

What Is the Understanding of Matthew’s Importance Today?

Since the time when Eusebius compiled his information about the formation of the New Testament, a great deal has been learned about the background of the Gospels and times in which they were written. Today, for example, it is known from careful comparisons and contrasts of the first three Gospels that Matthew was not the first Gospel written after all. In fact, Matthew and Luke both used Mark’s Gospel for a model and source to write their accounts. Mark’s story of Jesus is actually the first and the oldest. Matthew and Luke also had access to another collection of sayings of Jesus that circulated throughout the church (called the Q document), as well as their own individual sources of information (often referred to as M and L). Neither of them, however, appears to have been aware of the work of the other.
It is also unlikely that the whole book was written first in Aramaic. Although Jesus and the disciples certainly spoke that first-century CE version of Hebrew (the one used in the movie The Passion of Christ produced by Mel Gibson in 2004), and it is evident that some verses are a translation of an earlier Aramaic version, many scholars now think that Matthew was originally written in Greek (the international language of diplomacy and business) so that more people could read it throughout the Roman Empire. Since one of the main purposes of Matthew was to make disciples in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit throughout the world (28:16–20), it would make sense to put it in the language most people could understand.
Today, of course, there are other reasons why Matthew is of primary importance to Christians and why it is still on a Christian best-seller list. For one thing, the main themes in Matthew are especially valuable now as Christians struggle to maintain their faith at a time in history that is filled with violence, political intrigue, and racial and ethnic prejudice. It is worth reading again as the world faces severe economic recession and as the church struggles with diminishing attendance and membership in many places, leading some to think that belief in God and commitment to the kingdom of heaven is declining in an increasingly secularized society. Matthew is also significant to readers in the twenty-first century for a number of other reasons:
  • The emphasis that the first Christians placed on the Old Testament and the way it can be understood afresh in light of Jesus’ life and ministry and their appreciation of the unity of the Scriptures
  • The ethical values that Jesus taught in the Sermon on the Mount (chaps. 5–7) and the new interpretation he gave to the Ten Commandments for a new day
  • The importance of the church’s ministry to the poor, the sick, the aliens, and the lost and the reasons that its ministry can only occur through strong and resilient faith (chaps. 8–13)
  • The process that Matthew describes that can be used to solve internal problems in churches today and run them more effectively and powerfully (chap. 18)
  • Jesus’ example of how to respond to systemic religious and political oppression by showing how he resisted the power of the elite religious leaders in Jerusalem as well as the Roman government and military officials who occupied the whole country (chaps. 1–2, 14–27)2
  • The absolute importance of mission in all times and places (chap. 28) as the church reaches out to those who say no to Jesus (Jews and Gentiles alike) and why, on the basis of the Old Testament, and the truth about Jesus’ identity as God’s Son, they should say yes.3

What Kind of a Book Is Matthew?

Although Matthew is usually referred to as a Gospel in the inscription added to Bibles today, the author himself simply calls his work a book in 1:1. The Greek word for book there is biblos and is translated in the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible (NRSV) as “an account.” It can also refer to the type of manuscript it was, that is, a text written on a document with pages that could be turned rather than on a piece of papyrus that had to be unrolled to be read. John uses the same word to describe his work (John 20:30; 21:25), and it is from biblos that the English word Bible is derived. Mark calls what he writes a gospel (Mark 1:1), but that term is reserved in Matthew for the preaching of Jesus (usually translated “good news,” 4:23; 9:35; 24:14; 26:13). Gospel was applied later to all four of the first books of the New Testament, but it was not one used by Matthew, Luke, or John to describe their own works.
What kind of book was it? Although the author appears to present a history of Jesus’ life, ministry, death, and resurrection, his intention is much more than that. Rather than trying to write a biography of Jesus in the modern sense, Matthew was composed as a message to the church, particularly Jewish Christians, about what it means to follow Jesus, understand the Old Testament in a new way, maintain faith in a hostile and dangerous world, and forge ahead with ministry and mission, no matter what happens.
As William Barclay put it, there are two ways to tell a story. One tries to get all the facts in order, detail by detail, day by day, week by week, attempting to leave nothing out. The other takes a series of significant incidents and episodes and uses them as windows to see into the mind and heart of a person one is seeking to know. It is this second way that Matthew uses in his book. As Barclay says, it is like the difference between a photograph and a portrait. A photograph reproduces what a person looks like in every detail. A portrait is designed to reveal inner character and special qualities. Thus Matthew can be said to be a portrait. It is not just a description of Jesus; it is an invitation to see the mind of God in him and believe in him as the Son of God to whom the whole of life must be given.4 Rather than trying to read Matthew as a precise historical presentation of what Jesus said and did, one will find it more instructive to see it as a careful description of who he is and what it means to follow him.

The Author

According to the inscription of the book that was added later, the author’s name is Matthew. Early Christians believed that its author was the Matthew who had been a tax collector (9:9–13; 10:3) and changed his life when he met Jesus (see Mark 2:13–17 and Luke 5:27–32, where the name Levi is used). He is mentioned again in Acts 1:13 as one of the eleven remaining disciples (after Judas’s death) when a meeting was held in an upper room in Jerusalem. Ancient church traditions say that he died as a martyr in Pontus, Persia, or Ethiopia. Modern scholars are not certain that one author wrote or edited the entire book, but the name Matthew was attached to it by the early church to give it importance as one written by a disciple of Jesus. Whoever wrote it, the author or a final editor, Matthew was certainly one who was deeply committed to Jesus Christ, was concerned about Jewish resistance to him, was open to a broad mission to Gentiles, and was dedicated to the careful formation of a fledgling church during tumultuous and perilous times.

When Was the Book Written and Who Were Its Readers?

Because of the concern expressed throughout Matthew about the harsh opposition inveighed against Jesus by the Jewish leaders in both Galilee and Jerusalem, and because of Jesus’ resistance to Roman oppression, most scholars think that Matthew’s Gospel was written sometime after the fall of Jerusalem and the rest of Palestine to the Roman generals Vespasian and Titus in 70 CE and the years following. Such a date locates the writing of the book several years after Paul’s death and the writing of Mark, and a few years prior to John, and about the same time as the composition of Luke, probably somewhere in the time frame from 80–90 CE. Although it is clear that the book was sent to people who were Jewish Christian in background (Jews who had converted to Christianity), it is not certain where they lived. Suggestions have been made that it may have been written for a church in one of the large cities in Galilee (Sepphoris or Tiberias), in Syria (perhaps Antioch), in Caesarea Maritima on the west coast of Palestine, or maybe even in Damascus.
Wherever Matthew’s readers lived, it is likely that they had experienced a time of terrible chaos after the Romans had invaded city after city. During this period the Jews were struggling with their identity now that their Temple in the capital and many of their meeting places (synagogues) elsewhere had been destroyed, and the church, as chapter 18 shows, was working hard to establish itself (often in competition with Judaism) and to bring its message to Jews and Gentiles alike. Truly, it was a trying period when Christians had to move beyond “little faith” (8:26; 17:20) to the powerful trust that could move mountains of fear and doubt (21:21).

Notes

1. Eusebius, in Ecclesiastical History, not only cites Papias but also Ireneus (around 130–200 CE) and Origen (around 185–254 CE).
2. I am indebted to the careful research of Warren Carter for this insight. See Matthew and the Margins: A Sociopolitical and Religious Reading, Initial Explorations (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2000); and Matthew and Empire (Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press International, 2001).
3. According to Ulrich Luz, “The Gospel of Matthew is a response to the no of Israel’s majority to Jesus. It is the attempt to come to terms with this no by defining the community’s position and to contribute to forming and preserving its identity in a situation of crisis and transition” (Matthew 1–7, Hermenia [Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2007], 55).
4. William Barclay, Introducing the Bible (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1972, 1979), 52.

Chapter One
Family Tree, Birth,
and Early Life of Jesus

A Study of Matthew 1:1–2:23

Jesus’ Family Tree (1:1–17)

It is not surprising that Matthew begins with a genealogy outlining Jesus’ lineage. In ancient cultures, oral lists of a person’s family tree were often memorized and passed down from generation to generation so that no one would forget one’s ancestral background. In a television series popular in 1977, viewers saw how such a tradition worked in Africa in the story of Kunta Kinte adapted from Alex Haley’s novel Roots.
In 1:1–17 Jesus’ roots are traced back to King David. Matthew is keen to show that Jesus is not just the son of a carpenter and a young woman but that he is king’s-blood royal (“the Messiah,” v. 17). He goes further to extend the lines all the way back to Abraham because this founder of Israel was promised by God: “ ‘I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.’” (Gen. 12:2–3). A similar genealogy in the Old Testament traces David’s family to Adam, the first man (1 Chron. 1–2). Luke does the same thing for Jesus in his report about Jesus’ childhood (Luke 3:23–38).
The different ways in which the two Gospel writers trace Jesus’ lineage are worth noting. Matthew brings it through his legal father, Joseph, whereas Luke focuses on Mary’s family tree. The divergence probably occurs because it was not clear how the writers should regard Jesus’ unique virgin birth. If Joseph was not his biological father, should he be called the Son of Joseph or not? Matthew thinks he should and stays within the normal Jewish tradition (see Matt. 13:55, “Is this not the carpenter’s son?”). With his introduction, however, Matthew goes one step further. Since Joseph is a “Son of David” (1:20), Jesus can claim this title as well (9:27; 12:23; 22:42).
In this family tree, moreover, Matthew does not worry about being precise chronologically. Although there were more than forty-two generations between Jesus and Abraham, Matthew may have adopted the formula of three fourteen-member groups for symbolic purposes (1:17). He also includes more than Jewish men in his outline, listing four Gentile women: Tamar (v. 3), Ruth (v. 5), Rahab (v. 5), and Bathsheba (“the wife of Uriah,” v. 6). No doubt he wants to demonstrate that Jesus is the savior of all people and all the nations, non-Jews and Jews alike, as well as both women and men, as the key verse in Matthew 28:19 demonstrates. What is more, since three of the women (Tamar, Rahab, and Bathsheba) and many of the men all have unsavory backgrounds, it is clear that Matthew is not trying to “doctor” Jesus’ family tree to make it appear purer than it really is.
Two key words appear in this section that need to be defined. Matthew begins and ends it by referring to Jesus as Messiah. In Greek the word Christos means “the anointed one,” “someone ordained by God for a specific duty.” In Jesus’ case the first Christians believed that he was the one called by God to fulfill Jewish expectations that one would come who would save God’s people (Rom. 9:5; 1 Thess. 1:11; 5:9; Gal. 1:4; 1 Cor. 1:8). Throughout the Gospel various people debate what that means until Jesus appears to claim the title for himself on the cross (Matt. 26:64; 27:11).
Deportation (v. 17) refers to the time of the exile, when the Jews were driven out of their homeland and were forced to live as refugees in Babylon for forty years (see 2 Kgs. 24:8–25:30 and the books of Ezra and Nehemiah) until they were allowed to return and rebuild Jerusalem.

The Story of Jesus’ Unique Birth
and Modern Interpretations (1:18–21)

Matthew’s story of Jesus’ birth has created many wonderful memories for millions of Christians over the centuries. Believers can remember past Christmas eves: the singing of favorite carols, the lighting of candles, and perhaps even snow on the ground after services were over.
A close examination of Matthew’s text demonstrates, however, that his account is not quite as romantic as readers might expect. The tension created between a husband and wife when Joseph suspects Mary of adultery, the brutal political intrigue of King Herod many months after Jesus’ birth, the necessary deception of the magi, and the forced flight of the first family to Egypt (a kind of reverse exodus) make Matthew’s story more like a modern murder mystery than a Christmas-card portrait. Nevertheless, despite the challenging aspects of the story of Jesus’ birth, Matthew’s major emphasis remains: in Jesus Christ God is with us and the world is changed because he came.
Culturally it is necessary to understand the relationship between Joseph and Mary. In the first century CE it was customary for a young girl...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Part 1: Participant’s Guide
  6. Part 2: Leader’s Guide
  7. Appendix