by jimwalton » Wed Jul 17, 2013 4:43 pm
You're right about so many things. I'm glad we're having this conversation. I would point to how Matthew arrives at what is prophecy. In Mt. 1.23, he quotes Isa. 7.14, but that verse had no place in Jewish messianic expectation. Isaiah most likely saw nothing more than that a woman of his era would have a son, and that after a few years Ahaz would be delivered from Syria and Israel with the coming of the Assyrians. But Matthew, fully convinced that Mary was a virgin when she delivered Jesus (and there would be little rationale to invent it for many reasons), sees that prophecy "filled up" as he applies it to Jesus. In Mt. 2.6, he doesn't quote the MT or the LXX directly as he "quotes" Micah 5.2, but does a wordplay on the word "ruler" to heighten the status he is attributing to Jesus as a ruler. In 2.15 he quotes Hos. 11.1, which also was not intended by the prophet as a prediction. Hosea was reflecting on history and talking about the nation of Israel, but Matthew "fills up" the verse, giving it a prophetic flag, and using it as a "type" of the Messiah, whom he identifies as Jesus. But there is some justification in his doing that, because Numbers 24 speaks of a king of Israel coming out of Egypt (Num. 24.7-9), which appears to be partly alluded to in Hos. 11.10-11.
So you are absolutely right that there is nothing important to Messianic prophecy concerning him being a Nazarene, or about him taking a vow, except that Matthew's thesis (whether or not you agree with it) is that Jesus, as Messiah, fulfills everything that Israel failed to be: He is the new Israel, the new Law, the new Moses, etc. He is portrayed as the Branch of David, Abraham's true son, the great deliverer out of Egypt, etc. It wouldn't surprise me at all that Matthew wants to depict him as the one wholly devoted to God, the branch of Jesse, or the guardian of Jer. 31.6. I don't see an inconsistency in what Matthew is trying to do.
As far as Zechariah 4.14, there is widespread agreement that the two "sons of oil" are Zerubbabel and Joshua, governing ruler and high priest. The interpretation of the two "olive branches" as two messiahs doesn't emerge until the era of Qumran and apocalyptic literature in the 200s or so BC. Zech. 3.8 confirms that Zechariah spoke of the Branch as a singular entity.
As far as my citing rabbinical practice, it was fair of me to do that. Jesus even commended the Pharisees for their righteousness. They were the backbone of Judaism, eager students of the Law, and avid teachers of it. Jesus admitted they spoke the truth (Mt. 23.2-3), but he challenged them when their behavior failed to match their teachings. He praised them for their zeal, their desire to avoid evil, and their faithfulness in tithing. what he castigated them for is their hypocrisy, so I thought my use of that practice to explain Matthew's approach was legitimate. Jesus' rebuke of them doesn't nullify their exegetical techniques.
You're right about so many things. I'm glad we're having this conversation. I would point to how Matthew arrives at what is prophecy. In Mt. 1.23, he quotes Isa. 7.14, but that verse had no place in Jewish messianic expectation. Isaiah most likely saw nothing more than that a woman of his era would have a son, and that after a few years Ahaz would be delivered from Syria and Israel with the coming of the Assyrians. But Matthew, fully convinced that Mary was a virgin when she delivered Jesus (and there would be little rationale to invent it for many reasons), sees that prophecy "filled up" as he applies it to Jesus. In Mt. 2.6, he doesn't quote the MT or the LXX directly as he "quotes" Micah 5.2, but does a wordplay on the word "ruler" to heighten the status he is attributing to Jesus as a ruler. In 2.15 he quotes Hos. 11.1, which also was not intended by the prophet as a prediction. Hosea was reflecting on history and talking about the nation of Israel, but Matthew "fills up" the verse, giving it a prophetic flag, and using it as a "type" of the Messiah, whom he identifies as Jesus. But there is some justification in his doing that, because Numbers 24 speaks of a king of Israel coming out of Egypt (Num. 24.7-9), which appears to be partly alluded to in Hos. 11.10-11.
So you are absolutely right that there is nothing important to Messianic prophecy concerning him being a Nazarene, or about him taking a vow, except that Matthew's thesis (whether or not you agree with it) is that Jesus, as Messiah, fulfills everything that Israel failed to be: He is the new Israel, the new Law, the new Moses, etc. He is portrayed as the Branch of David, Abraham's true son, the great deliverer out of Egypt, etc. It wouldn't surprise me at all that Matthew wants to depict him as the one wholly devoted to God, the branch of Jesse, or the guardian of Jer. 31.6. I don't see an inconsistency in what Matthew is trying to do.
As far as Zechariah 4.14, there is widespread agreement that the two "sons of oil" are Zerubbabel and Joshua, governing ruler and high priest. The interpretation of the two "olive branches" as two messiahs doesn't emerge until the era of Qumran and apocalyptic literature in the 200s or so BC. Zech. 3.8 confirms that Zechariah spoke of the Branch as a singular entity.
As far as my citing rabbinical practice, it was fair of me to do that. Jesus even commended the Pharisees for their righteousness. They were the backbone of Judaism, eager students of the Law, and avid teachers of it. Jesus admitted they spoke the truth (Mt. 23.2-3), but he challenged them when their behavior failed to match their teachings. He praised them for their zeal, their desire to avoid evil, and their faithfulness in tithing. what he castigated them for is their hypocrisy, so I thought my use of that practice to explain Matthew's approach was legitimate. Jesus' rebuke of them doesn't nullify their exegetical techniques.