To read the text click on the texts: Gen49:2, 8-10; Mt 1:1-17
The Gospel of Matthew begins with the genealogy of
Jesus. One important reason he begins this way is because it is theologically
important to him to begin by referring to Jesus as the son of David and the son
of Abraham. Jesus is, for Matthew, the Messiah who has descended from David, as
foretold by the scriptures. Another reason why Matthew begins with the
genealogy of Jesus is to show that God continues to act in human history, and
that he acts now, in a decisive way, in the sending of his Son. God is not
simply a God in the heavens, but a God who is Emmanuel, God with us.
Matthew’s genealogy consists of three parts. The first,
which begins with Abraham, ends with the Davidic kingship. The second begins
with David and ends with the deportation or exile to Babylon. The third begins
with the exile and ends with the birth of the Messiah, Jesus Christ.
Matthew calls attention to the number fourteen at
the end of the genealogy and, though a variety of suggestions have been offered
as to why he chose fourteen, the simplest explanation is that the numerical
value of “David” in Hebrew (DWD) is fourteen (d, 4; w, 6; d, 4). By this symbolism,
Matthew points out that the promised "son of David" (1:1), the
Messiah, has come. And, if the third set of fourteen is short one member (to
solve this problem some count Jechoniah twice), perhaps it suggests that, just
as God cuts short the time of distress for the sake of his elect, so also he
mercifully shortens the period from the Exile to Jesus, the Messiah.
Unlike Luke’s genealogy, which does not name a
single woman, Matthew’s genealogy mentions four women besides Mary. These are
Tamar, Ruth, Rahab, and Uriah’s wife, Bathsheba. Several reasons have been
offered as to why Matthew mentioned these four women. Three of these reasons
are widely accepted today: (a) there was something extraordinary about their
union with their partners; (b) they showed initiative or played an important
role in God’s plan and so came to be considered as instruments of God’s
providence or of his Holy Spirit; and (c) all four women (except Mary) were
Gentiles and Matthew wants to show that in God’s plan of salvation, the
Gentiles were included from the beginning.
Through this, Matthew probably wants to show that
God wants all to be saved and that he uses the unexpected to triumph over human
obstacles and that he intervenes on behalf of his planned Messiah. This
combination of scandalous and irregular union, and divine intervention,
explains Matthew’s choice of the four women.
What are the points that Matthew makes in his
genealogy and what does he want to achieve by it? Matthew clearly wants to show
that Jesus is the fulfillment of all Israel’s hopes. The story of Jesus is part
of the story of God’s constant saving acts throughout the history of Israel.
God involves himself in the nitty-gritty of life. Despite the constant
infidelity of Israel, God remained faithful and, in a definitive way, directed
its history towards its fulfillment in Jesus Christ.
Matthew is also interested in affirming that the
plan of God has often been fulfilled in history in unanticipated and
“irregular” ways, as was the case in the birth of Jesus from Mary, and that
Matthew is interested in showing that God worked through irregular, even
scandalous ways, and through women who took initiative, like Tamar and Ruth.
Yet the main reason for Matthew’s inclusion of these women corresponds to one
of the Gospel’s primary themes: the inclusion of the Gentiles in the plan of
God from the beginning. All of the men in Jesus’ genealogy are necessarily
Jewish. But the four women mentioned, with the exception of Mary, are Gentiles,
“outsiders,” or considered to be such in Jewish tradition. Just as the
following story shows Jesus to be the fulfillment of both Jewish and Gentile
hopes, so also the genealogy shows that the Messiah comes from a Jewish line
that already includes Gentiles.
By showing Jesus as descended from David, Matthew
wants to explicate that Jesus is the royal heir to the throne. Jesus, however,
thorough his life, cross, death and resurrection will redefine the meaning of
Kingship as never before.
Finally, Matthew wants to stress that God is active
constantly in history and involved in the lives of his people. He works not
only miraculously but also ordinarily in human effort, pain, and struggle to
bring people to the kingdom.
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