Lecture 4 - Beginning in Galilee
There can be no doubt, for example, of the canonical form of the Gospel of Matthew, nor yet of its canonical position. Ever since the fourfold gospel was brought together, the Gospel of Matthew has stood at its head.
In their ICC commentary, W. D. Davies and Dale C. Allison infer from the apparently intentional scriptural analogies, especially the genealogy, that Matthew probably conceived “his gospel as a continuation of the biblical history—and also, perhaps, that he conceived of his work as belonging to the same literary category as the scriptural cycles treating of OT figures.” Moreover
The ἐξουσία of Jesus enables one to override a valid command, at the same time bringing the true will of God into reality.
It is not so much that Jesus replaces Moses or abrogates the law at certain points (Matt. 5:33–48); it is rather that Jesus gives a definitive interpretation of the law as it bears on human relations, fulfilling its deeper intention.273 Doing the will of the heavenly Father is what really counts,274 with the implication that the Father’s will is not to be identified with a narrow reading of the law or a superficial declaration of loyalty.275 We may infer that Paul’s view was similar in his talk of ‘the law of Christ’ (Gal. 6:2)
1:2 Shimon the Righteous was one of the last from the Great Assembly. He used to say: Upon three things the world stands: upon the Torah, upon worship, and upon acts of kindness.
I.12 A. There was another case of a gentile who came before Shammai. He said to him, “Convert me on the stipulation that you teach me the entire Torah while I am standing on one foot.” He drove him off with the building cubit that he had in his hand.
B. He came before Hillel: “Convert me.”
C. He said to him, “ ‘What is hateful to you, to your fellow don’t do.’ That’s the entirety of the Torah; everything else is elaboration. So go, study.”
Rabbi Akiba (early second century) that Lev. 19:18 is ‘the greatest general principle in the Torah’ (Sipra on Lev. 19:18)
The intentional omission of the noun περιτομή indicates clearly154 that Matthew also assumes the historic legacy of Paul’s mission to the gentiles. It was obviously apparent to the Jewish Christian Matthew that, without circumcision, neither Judaism nor inner-Jewish dialogue could exist for an extended period! The intentional omission of the problem of circumcision within an exclusively inner-Jewish standpoint of Matthew can scarcely be explained.155 Rather, in this Gospel it is not circumcision but baptism as well as mission and teaching (cf. Matt. 28:16–20) that are the rites of initiation/the guiding principles of Matthean Christianity.