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#Matthew lets the reader know that the criteria with which he judges Israel apply to the church as well, discouraging any attempt to assume a stance of religious superiority.
 
#Matthew lets the reader know that the criteria with which he judges Israel apply to the church as well, discouraging any attempt to assume a stance of religious superiority.
  
Having said all that, it remains true that an uncritical use of texts from Matthew can lead to a distorted view of Judaism and contribute unwittingly to anti-Semitism. How can preachers and teachers guard against that? Among other things, we can keep calling attention to the way conflict between the church and synagogue in Matthew’s day colored his picture of Judaism. In addition, we can lift up ancient and contemporary materials that show Jewish tradition as vital and constructive—to offset texts that portray Judaism in a negative light. Further, we can use Matthew’s critique of Jewish leaders and tradition as a generic critique that applies to all religious institutions, including our own, rather than as a means to vilify one particular people. Finally, we can engage in dialogue with Jewish brothers and sisters, a dialogue in which we may discover that God is indeed working through their history as well as through our own. (For further comment, cf. TBC and TLC on 21:18-22:14; TLC on 23:1-39; and TLC on 27:11-56]).
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Having said all that, it remains true that an uncritical use of texts from Matthew can lead to a distorted view of Judaism and contribute unwittingly to anti-Semitism. How can preachers and teachers guard against that? Among other things, we can keep calling attention to the way conflict between the church and synagogue in Matthew’s day colored his picture of Judaism. In addition, we can lift up ancient and contemporary materials that show Jewish tradition as vital and constructive—to offset texts that portray Judaism in a negative light. Further, we can use Matthew’s critique of Jewish leaders and tradition as a generic critique that applies to all religious institutions, including our own, rather than as a means to vilify one particular people. Finally, we can engage in dialogue with Jewish brothers and sisters, a dialogue in which we may discover that God is indeed working through their history as well as through our own. (For further comment, cf. TBC and TLC on 21:18–22:14; TLC on 23:1-39; and TLC on 27:11-56]).
  
 
=== Bibliography ===
 
=== Bibliography ===

Revision as of 13:28, 22 May 2012

Anti-Semitism in Matthew

Anti-Semitism is the technical term for hostility toward Jews, whether ethnic, sociocultural, or religious in character. Already widespread in the ancient Greco-Roman world, anti-Semitism has been a recurring and often violent phenomenon throughout the Christian era. The most traumatic expression of anti-Semitism in modern times was the Holocaust, or the Shoah, in which millions of Jews perished as a result of the policies of Hitler’s Third Reich. In more subtle forms, anti-Semitism continues to affect the way many Christians feel and think about the Jewish community.

According to some critics, the NT itself fosters anti-Semitism by the way it portrays Jewish leaders and Jewish religion. Along with the Fourth Gospel, Matthew’s Gospel is frequently singled out as particularly troublesome. Harsh language abounds in references to Jewish leaders, including epithets such as hypocrites, vipers, blind guides (cf. Matt 15:6; 23:13-28). The same leaders are accused of perpetrating a bloody heritage of murdering God’s servants (Matt 23:29-36). As the plot of the Gospel develops, the picture of Israel becomes increasingly one of unbelief. The climax comes in the trial of Jesus when the crowds cry out “his blood be on us and our children” (Matt 27:25). The Contemporary English Version does somewhat better here: “We and our own families will take the blame for his death!” The consequence, according to some translations of Matthew, is that God abandons Israel’s holy place (Matt 23:38) and takes the kingdom away from Israel (Matt 21:43).

It is clear that material such as this has the potential to incite anti-Jewish feelings. But is Matthew in fact pursuing an anti-Semitic agenda? Several considerations prompt us to say no:

  1. Matthew views the story he tells as a fulfillment of God’s promises to Israel, not as a negation of Israel’s story.
  2. Matthew depicts the new community that responds to Jesus as followers of Israel’s Messiah and obedient to Israel’s Torah.
  3. The critique of Judaism which pervades the Gospel is primarily a critique of a religious establishment, not of an ethnic group.
  4. Matthew carries on his debate with Judaism as a Jewish-Christian, reflecting the pain and pathos of one who stands within Jewish tradition, not the prejudice of an outsider.
  5. Matthew lets the reader know that the criteria with which he judges Israel apply to the church as well, discouraging any attempt to assume a stance of religious superiority.

Having said all that, it remains true that an uncritical use of texts from Matthew can lead to a distorted view of Judaism and contribute unwittingly to anti-Semitism. How can preachers and teachers guard against that? Among other things, we can keep calling attention to the way conflict between the church and synagogue in Matthew’s day colored his picture of Judaism. In addition, we can lift up ancient and contemporary materials that show Jewish tradition as vital and constructive—to offset texts that portray Judaism in a negative light. Further, we can use Matthew’s critique of Jewish leaders and tradition as a generic critique that applies to all religious institutions, including our own, rather than as a means to vilify one particular people. Finally, we can engage in dialogue with Jewish brothers and sisters, a dialogue in which we may discover that God is indeed working through their history as well as through our own. (For further comment, cf. TBC and TLC on 21:18–22:14; TLC on 23:1-39; and TLC on 27:11-56]).

Bibliography

D. E. Garland. The Intention of Matthew 23. NovTSup 51. Leiden: Brill, 1979.

Reinhart Hummel. Die Auseinandersetzung zwischen Kirche und Judentum im Matthäusevangelium. Munich: Chr. Kaiser, 1963.

L. T. Johnson. “The New Testament’s Anti-Jewish Slander and the Conventions of Ancient Rhetoric.” JBL 108 (1989): 419-41.

Steve Mason. “Pharisaic Dominance before 70 C.E. and the Gospels’ Hypocrisy Charge.” HTR 83 (1990): 363-81.

Scot McKnight. “A Loyal Critic: Matthew’s Polemic with Judaism in Theological Perspective.” In The New Testament and Anti-Semitism, ed. C. A. Evans and D. A. Hagner. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993. 55-79.

Jacob Neusner. First Century Judaism in Crisis. Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon Press, 1975.

F. A. Niedner. “Rereading Matthew on Jerusalem and Judaism.” BTB 19 (1989): 43-47.

Hayim Goren Perelmutter. Siblings: Rabbinic Judaism and Early Christianity at Their Beginnings. New York: Paulist Press, 1989.

E. A. Russell. “‘Antisemitism’ in the Gospel of Matthew.” IBS 8 (1986): 183-96.

Richard B. Gardner