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Matthew 1a: HG Bishop Youssef
00:00-20:0004-33:40
Introduction to the GospelGenealogy of St. MatthewChrist
TheWhy Gospelthree sets of St Matthew has always occupied a position of high esteem in the faith and life of the Early Church
Most of the Early Church Fathers frequently quoted the Gospel of St Matthew
Gospel of St Matthew was the most read gospel during the first two centuries of Christianity
Author: St. Matthew
All the Church Fathers agree that the author is St Matthew, himself
Matthew means "Gift of the Lord"
Also called Levi
He was a tax-collector before being called to be one of the disciples of Christ
One of the Lord's earliest disciples
Because he followed the Lord Jesus Christ so closely, his account is considered a first-hand eyewitness account (contrast with St Luke who depended on others to write his gospel)
Timing:
Irenaeus said it was written while St Peter and St Paul were preaching in Rome
Eusebius, the Church Historian, said it was written after St Matthew left Palestine and started to preach outside Palestine
Clement of Alexandria said that the first two gospels written were the Gospel of St Matthew and the Gospel of St Luke
Two Versions
Hebrew/Aramaic Version (39-42 AD)
All of the Church Fathers reference this, but this work is lost
Possibly lost when Jerusalem was destroyed; or destroyed by the Judaizers
Greek Version (60-67 AD)
The version that we are using now
There is no consensus among scholars as to whether the Greek version is a translation of the Hebrew/Aramaic version, or if it is a different gospel
Regardless, the Gospel was written by St Matthew
Audience: Jews who believed in Christ and became Christian
Gives details of Jewish Religious Observances
Uses Jewish style of argument
Starts with a Genealogy to show that Jesus is Son of Abraham and Son of David
Prophetic Formula
St Matthew Mentions many evidences that Christ rose from the dead
Purpose
St Matthew wants to prove to them that Jesus of Nazareth is the Messianic King of the Old Testament whom they are waiting for
He refers many times to prophecies from the Old Testament to prove that Jesus is the Messiah and in Him the prophecies are fulfilled
To make clear that the New Testament is a continuation of the Old Testament
Christ came to fulfill the Law not to destroy it
To show that Christ was sent to the Jews (Matthew 15:24 - "I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel")
Theme: Jesus is the King of the Jews
Sections
Matthew 1-4:11 - The Advent of the Messiah
Christ is the Son of David
Christ was born of a Virgin at Bethlehem
His way was prepared by John the Baptist
His Baptism
The Temptation on the Mountain
Matthew 4:12-16:12 - The Public Proclamation of the Messiah's Kingdom
He chose His first disciples and started His ministry in Galilee
Sermon on the Mount
Many miracles performed by Christ
Matthew 16:13-Matthew 23 - Distinct and Public Claim of the Messiahship
Who do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?
Account of the Transfiguration
Entering Jerusalem as the Son of David
Assuming Messianic Authority in the Temple
Matthew 24-27 - Sacrifice of the Messiah, the High Priest, on the Cross
Prepared His Disciples for His Sacrificial Death
The Crucifixion
Matthew 28 - Victory of the Messiah, the Savior and the King
Numerology14?
- In Scripture in general, numbers usually have more significance than just a quantity
- (e.g. 7 is a symbol of
perfection
perfection)
- Gematria
- Each letter has a corresponding number
- So a name or a word has a number
- D = 4
V = 6
DVD = 14 (in Hebrew, there aren't any vowels so the name David is DVD)
St Matthew uses numerology a lot
- 14 = King David's Number
- St Matthew wants to establish the link between Christ and King David
- Three sets of 14 in the Genealogy in Ch 1
- Total 42
- 42 is 6x7
- 6 is the number of man (since man was made on the 6th day)
- 7 is the number of God (perfect number)
- So 42 is the conflict between man and God
- Man rebelled against God
- But God sent His Son to reconcile man with God
7 is a perfect number
7 Beautitudes (Matthew 5)
7 Repetitions in the Lord's Prayer (Matthew 6)
7 Parables (Matthew 13)
7 Woes (Matthew 23)