To read the texts click on the texts: Eph 4:1-7,11-13; Mt 9:9-13
Most
scholars hold today that the Gospel of Matthew was written after Mark.
Matthew’s Gospel was the one that was used most often in the early Church and
so it has been placed before Mark in the Bible.
It
is known as the Ecclesial Gospel or the Gospel of the Church. One reason for
this is that Matthew’s thesis seems to be that since Israel for whom Jesus came
rejected Jesus as Messiah, the Church has become now the new and true Israel.
Also Matthew is the only one of the four Evangelists who uses the word “Ekklesia”
translated “Church” in his Gospel (16:18;18:17). There is however, throughout
the Gospel the tension between Particularism on the one hand and Universalism
on the other. The Jesus of the Gospel of Matthew is sent “only to the lost
sheep of Israel” (15:24; see also 10:6) and the same Jesus can tell Israel “the
kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a nation producing the
fruits of it” (21:43).
Matthew’s
Gospel begins with the genealogy of Jesus, which goes back to Abraham. Joseph
is not called the father of Jesus but the husband of Mary (1:16) since Matthew
is clear that Joseph was not the biological father of Jesus. The birth of Jesus
is then narrated, followed by the visit of the wise men to Bethlehem and
Herod’s plan to kill Jesus. This leads the family to go to Egypt where they
remain till Herod’s death and then return to Nazareth. The birth, flight into
Egypt and return to Nazareth all fulfil scripture. Matthew then goes on to
narrate the Baptism of Jesus by John and Jesus’ temptations and his overcoming
them. Jesus then begins his public ministry in Galilee after calling the first
four disciples. Unlike Mark, which is a story, Matthew intersperses his
narrative with long discourses. The first of these is the Sermon on the Mount
(5:1-7,29). There are four other discourses in the Gospel. These are The
Mission Discourse (10:1-11:1), The parable Discourse (13:1-53), The Community
Discourse (18:1-19:1) and the Eschatological Discourse (24:1-26:1). Each of
these discourses ends in a similar manner with the words, “and when Jesus had
finished (7:28; 11:1; 13:53; 19:1; 26:1). This is also Matthew’s way of
focussing on the teaching of Jesus and giving it as much if not more importance
that the deeds of Jesus. Like in Mark, Jesus enters Jerusalem triumphantly, but
soon encounters opposition, which grows and leads to his arrest, passion and
death. The Gospel ends with accounts of the resurrection appearances of Jesus
to his disciples and what is known as the Great Commission, in which the disciples
are commanded to go to all nations and make disciples of them and assured of
the presence of the ever present Lord to whom all authority in heaven and earth
has been given (28:16-20).
The
text chosen for the feast contains the call of Matthew, and Jesus’ fellowship
with tax collectors and sinners. It is only in the Gospel of Matthew that the
tax collector is called Matthew. In Mark and Luke he is called Levi. However,
in the lists of the Twelve in both Mark and Luke, the disciple is named Matthew
and Levi does not appear. It is unlikely that Matthew and Levi refer to the
same person. It was rare for Jews to have two different Jewish names. The
reason for the author choosing the name Matthew remains unknown. However, in
the text what strikes one is that whereas most people who passed by the tax
office would see a corrupt official; Jesus was able to see a potential
disciple. It was Jesus’ way of looking that led to the transformation and the
response of Matthew to the call. In his response to the objection of the
Pharisees, Jesus responds with a common proverb about the sick needing a
doctor, and also quotes from Hoses 6:6, which here is interpreted to mean that
the mercy of God in Jesus is extended to all humanity and takes precedence over
everything else. All else must be understood in this light.
There
are times when we judge people too easily and many of these times our judgement
of them is negative. This is also how we often look at the whole of creation
and because we put labels on things, people and all else in creation, we may
miss out on the uniqueness that each possesses.
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