Interpreting the Ethical Teaching of Jesus
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Transcript Interpreting the Ethical Teaching of Jesus
MOSES AND JESUS
pp. 85-89
Matthew’s Gospel
Written in 70-90 A.D. in Antioch (today’s Turkey), after
the destruction of the Temple (70 A.D.)
It was written for a Jewish community that was
concerned with the division between Jewish followers of
Christ (Christians) and those who saw Christ as
subversive to Jewish tradition (Rabbinical Judaism).
The Pharisees and Rabbis refused followers of Jesus the
right to participate in synagogue.
The community of Matthew’s followers had been living
the gospel as an oral tradition, before it was written
down.
The gospel was written down so followers could continue
the tradition after the apostles had died.
Matthew presents the gospel as a perspective or point
of view. He interprets Jesus’ words and deeds to
address the concerns of his community (hermeneutics).
It is the only gospel where Jesus speaks of the
Church.
He wants followers to remain united and not judge
one another. He emphasizes Jewish tradition and
Jesus’ connectedness to the patriarchs and prophets
of the Old Testament.
Matthew’s interpretation has Jesus speaking to the
church of 70-90 A.D.
Matthew’s Jesus – The Ultimate Teacher
For Matthew, Jesus will be a constant presence in his
Church as a teacher.
The Gospel starts with a genealogy of Jesus linking
Jesus to Abraham (1st Patriarch of Judaism) and King
David (the house from which the Messiah was to come)
The genealogy ends with Joseph. While Joseph is not
Jesus’ father, we are told Jesus’ origins are of God as
Mary conceives of the Holy Spirit.
At the end of the Gospel, Jesus is risen and instructs
the apostles to teach the world about the him (make
disciples of all nations, baptize and teach them to
obey all that has been commanded.)
Matthew presents Jesus as the long awaited
Messiah, who brings the teaching of Moses to
perfection.
Jesus took the Torah and its commandments and
gave them a more spiritual interpretation, rather
than a literal interpretation.
Jesus is seen as a fulfillment of the Torah and as the
new Torah.
Jesus’ life is often compared to that of Moses in
Matthew’ s gospel.
Jesus and Moses
Both threatened as infants
Moses was protected from Pharaoh; Jesus from Herod
Moses leads Israel from Egypt to the promised land; the
Holy Family flees from the promised land to Egypt.
Both teachers of God’s Law
Matthew inserted 5 teachings of Jesus into his account
which was otherwise very similar to Mark’s; Moses left 5
teaching (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and
Deuteronomy)
Moses taught the Torah to Israel; Jesus teaches the new
law to the Church. Jesus makes five direct comparisons
between his teaching and Moses’ teaching (Matthew
5.21-48 - teachings about anger, adultery, divorce,
oaths and retaliation)
Matthew passes on to us, Jesus’ authority as teacher.
In the Old Testament Moses receives and delivers
the Torah from Mount Sinai.
In Matthew’s gospel, Jesus delivers the Sermon on
the Mount (the new Torah) on a mount.
Jesus provides a platform for the life of his disciples
through teachings and beatitudes (blessings).