S2E8 Matthew - How Scripture Was Used to Claim Jesus
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What if Matthew is not a biography but an argument?
Matthew is not a calm story of Jesus. It is a gospel written under pressure, by a community trying to remain inside Israel's story while being pulled toward a gentile future. The community is writing in Greek, in a diaspora world likely centered on Antioch, with synagogue boundaries hardening and gentiles already in the room. Every quotation from scripture is therefore a bid for ownership of Israel's story.
This episode shows how Matthew uses that scripture to claim Jesus as Israel's Messiah. It opens with a genealogy that functions as thesis statement, anchoring Jesus to David and Abraham. It runs a steady drumbeat of fulfillment formulas, "this took place to fulfill," again and again, like an interpretive stamp. It insists that the law is not abolished but intensified, in the most striking words in the Sermon on the Mount: "not one letter, not one stroke of a letter, will pass from the law." And it stages Jesus on a mountain like a new Moses, authoritative interpreter of Torah, not founder of an unrelated religion.
It also shows why Matthew is not flat. The gospel preserves an Israel-first mission next to language that prepares for a wider one. It preserves a Jewish renewal voice next to the earliest use of the word "church" in any gospel. It preserves earlier overlap with Judaism and later institutional drift in the same book. Reading Matthew historically means hearing both at once.
Matthew does not simply tell the story of Jesus. It argues that this community has read Israel correctly.