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Chapter 5 - Matthew

from II - SOME EARLY CHRISTIAN SOURCES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

John M. G. Barclay
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow
John Philip McMurdo Sweet
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

Professor Hooker's Continuity and Discontinuity makes a number of suggestions regarding the relationship of Matthew's gospel to Judaism. She notes that the parable of the wine and the wineskins appears in all three synoptic gospels as part of a debate concerning Jewish religious groups who do fast and Jesus' disciples who do not fast, and she observes that Matthew is interested in preserving both wine and wineskins (Matt. 9.17d). This chapter gives support to her conclusion. She sees Matthew's preservation of both wine and wineskins as achieved through a holding together of the revelation of God's will which was given in the past with the new understanding of that will which has come through Jesus, by a refusal to regard the former as wrong, and by the treatment of the latter as its fulfilment. Again Professor Hooker's solution is well-justified; fulfilment is the key to the Matthean reconciliation of the old with the new. A third area of research indicated by Professor Hooker provides the main concern of this chapter: the setting in which the debate between old and new took place. To judge by Matthew 23, that setting involved a very vigorous debate between Jews and Christians. But what was the nature of the debate? Who were the main participants? Given the continuity of the old with the new in Matthew's gospel, and the debate concerning them, what was its setting in relation to Judaism?

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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