Sunday, August 18, 2019

On Matthew 5:21 through 5:22

Hello, brother or sister.  Welcome back to The Moral Vision of Jesus Christ.  This is an in-depth Gospel study.  If you'd like to read it from the beginning, you can click this link.

Last time we met, we finished off Jesus' "Teaching About the Law," which we largely dismissed as contrary to the greater body of Jesus' ministry, and thus of little value to us in our search for the moral code of the historical, true Jesus.  We even ventured to guess that the "Teaching About the Law," as it appears in the Gospel According to Matthew in the latest revision of the New American Bible, may not be historical at all

Today, we will begin the next subset of verses, the "Teaching About Anger."  The "Teaching About Anger" contains phrasings that, unlike those in the previous teaching, can only be seen as congruent with the greater body of the teaching of Jesus' Galilean ministry.  It contains phrasings that, if they are historical, count among the most important recorded sayings of Jesus' in terms of understanding his true moral philosophy.

As a brief aside, in regard to the christening of these sets of verses, I should mention that the titles were added by various translators and transcribers long after the Gospel was first written, and were not present in the original Greek writings.  The headings of these verse subsets vary some from Bible to Bible, but are mostly ubiquitous.  Just keep in mind that, in the original scripture, there was no line break between the "Teaching About the Law" and the "Teaching About Anger" to let the reader know that the subject was changing.  The verses just kept coming.

That said, let's let the verses keep coming.

Enjoy.
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Matthew 5:21 through 5:22
21 “You have heard that it was said to your ancestors, ‘You shall not kill; and whoever kills will be liable to judgment.’ 
22 But I say to you, whoever is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment, and whoever says to his brother, ‘Raqa,’ will be answerable to the Sanhedrin, and whoever says, ‘You fool,’ will be liable to fiery Gehenna.
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Today's verses constitute the first of the Six Antitheses.  The Six Antitheses of Jesus are a short, very structured series of sayings or teachings that appear back-to-back here in the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount.  We describe the Antitheses as "structured" because they all follow a common pattern: in each Antithesis, Jesus will mention a particular portion of the old Law of Moses ("you have heard that it was said...") and then immediately he will contradict the Law and augment it with his own words ("...but I say to you...").

There is much of interest to mention and consider here with these verses, and with these Antitheses.  The first thing I would point out is how Jesus' "Teaching About the Law" from last week relates to the twenty-eight verses that follow it.  Recall that Jesus has just told his followers that "not the smallest letter or the smallest part of a letter will pass from the law."  In unequivocal terms, he said that the Law will remain unchanged.  Then, in the subsequent teaching, Jesus seems to change the Law, contradicting everything he just saidThis fact is part of what I consider the evidence that Jesus' "Teaching About the Law" didn't occur the way it is recorded in Matthew, if it occurred at all. 

Let's imagine this, though: we're on the northwest side of the Sea of Galilee.  The sun shines down and the air is hot and still.  Jesus has ascended a short way up the side of what was once known as the Mount of Eremos.  He is giving a definitive sermon explaining his doctrine.  Slightly below Jesus, where everyone can see, we sit amongst a throng of his new followers, anxious to hear what he will say next.  It is a certainty that we are, and everyone in the crowd around us is, Jewish.  It is a certainty that everyone in the crowd believes in the Law of the Torah.

In a law-obsessed culture such as that of first-century Palestine, it would have been quite a bold thing for anyone, even a High Priest or an official of the court, to have said anything about changing the Law.  The Law, of course, was up for interpretation within certain confines, but no man would have been permitted to alter the Law itself.  We can imagine, then, that as their teacher begins his talk about changing the Law, some of Jesus' followers are uncomfortably shuffling their feet or shifting in their seats.

We can imagine murmuring under the hot desert sun: "did he say that he is changing the Law?"

"Can he say that?"

"Who does this guy think he is?"

Shock.

We know that Galilee was, at that time, a hotbed of alternative thought, and so we can imagine that some in the crowd are not murmuring and spitting but nodding in agreement with Jesus, or offering the kinds of verbal support a crowd often offers a speaker.  "Hear, hear!"

So what exactly is Jesus saying in this First Antithesis?  To find out, first we'll look at these verses from the linguistic side and define a couple of terms.  After that, we'll paraphrase these verses and consider the logical implication of the First Antithesis.  Then, we'll tease four take-away facts out from all of this.

First, let's get some Greek going.

The word "kill" here is from the Greek "phoneuó," which can alternatively be translated as "slay, murder, dispatch or slaughter."

The word "judgment" comes from the original Greek "krisis," meaning, alternatively, "decision, trial, tribunal, or accusation."*  It is interesting to know that the English word "crisis" comes from the ancient Greek "krisis" by way of Latin.

The word we have translated in English here as "is angry with" comes from the Greek "orgizomenos" meaning, alternatively, "is infuriated with," or "is enraged with."

The word "brother" comes from the Greek "adelphos," meaning simply "brother," but deriving from a Proto-Indo-European term meaning "of the same womb." (We will argue later that when Jesus uses terms like "brother" he is referring to any other human, not just to one's literal siblings, and not just to one's religious kinfolk.)

"Raqa" is likely an ancient Aramaic term meaning "empty headed."  It appears only once in the entirety of the New American Bible.  Scholars argue over just how offensive this slight would have been.

The "Sanhedrin" were a system of courts that existed in first-century Palestine to administer and maintain the Law.  Usually, in the Gospel, "Sanhedrin" refers to the large, main court in Jerusalem.  Many towns in the area had their own smaller Sanhedrin court, but the larger Sanhedrin in Jerusalem held dominion over the others, and served as a kind of Supreme Court.  As we've mentioned elsewhere, the totality of the Law of Jesus will nullify any court of men, so when Jesus talks about the Sanhedrin, we sometimes have to search for alternative interpretations.

Finally, the term "Gehenna" refers to a place called the Hinnom Valley on the southern border of Jerusalem.  Some scholars think that the Hinnom Valley served at times as a kind of trash incineration site, and also as a place to burn the bodies of those who had been denied a proper burial, both lending to the "fiery" description.  The land of the Hinnom Valley was considered cursed because, as we see in 2 Chronicles, it is there that Ahaz, King of Judah, sacrificed his sons to Moloch, a Canaanite God.**  As it appears in the lexicon of Jesus Christ, "Gehenna" refers to "a real bad time," but, I would challenge, not necessarily "hell."

Ok, enough of the Greek and Aramaic.  Now let's do some processing.

To paraphrase our first verse here, Jesus is saying: "you know what God told Moses: 'do not kill.  Any Jew who kills another human will be judged harshly by the Court of Law.' "  The commandment to which Jesus refers here appears both in Exodus 20:13 and in Deuteronomy 5:17, and is known to all Christians and all Jews.

Continuing our paraphrasing, Jesus says: "What God told Moses didn't go far enough, though!  I say that even if you are simply angry with another human, you will be held to account by the judgment of God.  I say that if you call someone "empty headed," you will be held to account by the judgment of God.  I say that if you call someone a "fool," that you should be exiled by God to the place where they burn the trash and the bodies of the unholy."

"Wow!"  I can almost guarantee that's what his followers were thinking.

We see here that the immorality of killing is a far gone conclusion for Jesus.  He says that not only is killing immoral, but that the first step on the road towards murder, that being anger, is, in and of itself, immoral.  He says that merely verbally attacking another human is immoral, and worthy of some punishment or judgment.

If one believes that Christ's words were divine revelation, then, in Matthew 5:21 and 5:22, the Law has officially been changed.  If one believes that Christ's words constitute divine revelation, then the Jews and all followers of Christ are now obligated to rid their hearts and minds of anger.

"Wow!"

Imagine the implications of this commandment; this new Law of Christ.  Jesus is asking his followers to reform themselves from the inside.  He is asking them not only to refrain from an outward action, but to refrain from an inward disposition.  He is telling his followers that it is not right for them to become indignant at the actions or beliefs of other human beings.  This commandment of Jesus is a tall order, indeed.

In fact, from one vantage point, Jesus appears here to command the impossible from his followers.  After all, who among us can say that we never become angry with another person?  Indeed, there is a strong argument to be made that anger is subconscious, at times, and not always under the control of the person experiencing it.

Is Jesus asking the impossible from his followers here?  One would think not.  So, assuming that some human anger is subconscious, and that no human is fully capable of being completely rid of anger, and that Jesus understands this fact, then, at the end of the day, what can we take away for certain from these verses?

We can, for certain, take away the following four things:

1 - Jesus does intend, after all, to change the Law of Moses.

2 - Jesus agrees with the Law of Moses in regards to the sinfulness of killing another human.

3 - Jesus deems killing so sinful that he would judge even the first mental step toward killing, that being anger, as sinful.

4 - Jesus deems slander or verbal insults as sinful.

That's your takeaway, and we'll leave it at that.  We will definitely be revisiting these verses as we read the rest of the Gospel.  We have not said everything that could be said in their regard.

Next time, the "Teaching About Anger" will continue, and we will learn how important it is to Jesus that we be reconciled fully with our brethren when we've offended them.  Until then, thank you so much for reading.

Please share this writing.

Love.
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* As we slowly illuminate Jesus' worldview, we will realize that Jesus refers to a kind of cosmic or Godly "judgment" here, and not to an earthly judgment by a human authority.  We can say this for certain because, again and again as we shall see, Jesus warns his followers not to judge one another, not to commit violence or coercion against one another, and not to resist the evil in others.  It follows logically that, in a society where no single human is allowed to judge another human, commit violence or coercion against another human, or even resist the evil that might exist in another human, there would be no single human capable of sitting on a court bench in judgment of other humans.  No human court can exist, so Jesus must be referring to some higher "judgment."

** Recall that King Ahaz appeared in the list of genealogy at the beginning of Matthew, and that scholars place his reign in the eighth-century BC.
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To read what's next, click here.
To read what came prior to this, click here.
For the index of Christ's words, click here.

Saturday, August 10, 2019

On Matthew 5:20

Welcome back to The Moral Vision of Jesus Christ, the longest Gospel study you will ever read.  If this is your first time, check this out from the beginning by clicking here.

My apologies about my absence last week.  I was offered some weekend hours at work and could not turn them down.

Recall that, last we met, we decided to discount the historicity of Jesus' "Teaching About the Law" as it occurs in Matthew, because it is totally incongruous with much of Jesus' later actions and teaching.  

Recall, also, that we are still right near the beginning of Jesus' "Sermon on the Mount," a sermon that stretches three whole chapters and sums up, perhaps better than any other extant text, the morality of Jesus Christ.

Next time, we will move on to Jesus' "Teaching About Anger."  Today, we have one verse left of the "Teaching About the Law," which we will use as a springboard into a discussion about the "scribes" we hear about over and over again in the Synoptic Gospels.

Let's get started.

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Matthew 5:20
20 I tell you, unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into the kingdom of heaven.
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To review, Jesus has just told his followers "do not worry, I have not come to undermine the Law of Moses.  I have come to uphold the Law of Moses in the strictest possible sense.  Anyone who breaks the Law of Moses will not experience heaven."  Today, we see Jesus really driving the point home by saying "if you are not better than the scribes and the Pharisees, you will not experience heaven."  

Today's verse should probably be discarded along with its three brethren, but not because it is incongruous with Jesus' philosophy.  Since we don't see the preceding three verses as historical, this verse simply has no context here between the Similes of Salt and Light and the Teaching About Anger.  However, the crux of today's verse is reiterated again and again by Jesus, and could easily fit into any number of spots within the Gospel narrative.  It is totally in synchronicity with the greater body of Joshua's teachings.

Today's reading is interesting because, to the average first-century Jew living in Palestine, it would have appeared as though these "scribes and Pharisees" were the most righteous, pious, Law conscious people around.  The average Jew at the time would have likely seen a scribe or a Pharisee as more righteous than even the Sadducean priests, since the priests had all capitulated to foreign rule repeatedly.  At first glance, then, it would seem that Jesus is here telling his followers to go to extremes in their pursuit of righteousness.  His followers must be "better than the best" in their righteousness.* 

We've met the Pharisees before in our studies; they were an elite class or sect of Judaism who existed in relatively small numbers around Jerusalem at the time of Jesus.  Josephus describes the Pharisees thus, in Antiquities of the Jews, Book 17:
"For there was a certain sect of men that were Jews, who valued themselves highly upon the exact skill they had in the law of their fathers, and made men believe they were highly favored by God (...) These are those that are called the sect of the Pharisees, who were in a capacity of greatly opposing kings.  A cunning sect they were, and soon elevated to a pitch of open fighting and doing mischief.  Accordingly, when all the people of the Jews gave assurance of their goodwill to Caesar, and to the king's government, these very men did not swear, being above six thousand(...)"
So, perhaps not many more than six thousand Pharisees existed at the time of Caesar Augustus.  The word "Pharisee" comes from the Aramaic "prīšayyā," meaning "separated ones," and we can see in Josephus' account an example of their being "separate" in their refusal to welcome the rule of Rome along with the average Jew at the time.

The Pharisees are mentioned in the same breath as a group called the "scribes" no fewer than a dozen times in the Gospel According to Matthew alone, and many more times in the subsequent two Gospels.  Indeed, "the scribes and Pharisees" becomes a very familiar refrain by the end of Luke.  Jesus speaks of the two groups frequently, and almost as if they are equivalent.  Today we will draw the distinction between them in order to understand who exactly Jesus is talking about here when he says "scribes."

By the simplest, broadest definition, a scribe was a person whose job it was to make manuscript copies.  In the ancient world, there was, of course, no printing-press.  Without the convenience of the printing-press, records, economic data, religious texts, and works of fiction all had to be produced and copied painstakingly by hand.  The vast majority of people in the ancient world were illiterate, so it was an elite few who found themselves responsible for the bulk of the transcription that occurred at the time.  "Scribe" is thus more a job description than a sect.  Scribes existed in most ancient cultures around the world.

Our old friend Herodotus, the "father of history," writing in the fifth-century BC, describes scribes he met or was informed about during his studies and travels.  These included a scribe in Sais, Egypt who was the only person Herodotus could find who claimed to have record of the origin of the Nile River, and another scribe who worked as a record keeper for king Xerxes during the Persian War.

In the specific context of ancient Judaism, a scribe was perhaps one of the most important people in any given town.  In fact, often times there would only be one scribe in a given town.  An ancient Jewish scribe would have occasionally found himself transcribing written material or taking dictation, but, more often, an ancient Jewish scribe would have served as a kind of a lawyer, litigator, or expert in the Law for the people within his town.   

People relied on a scribe to read and interpret the ancient scriptures - especially the Law of Moses - because, again, most people were illiterate and couldn't read the scripture themselves.  People living in Jerusalem might have been able to go to the priests in The Temple for such services, but the priests only lived in Jerusalem, leaving people in other towns wanting.  And, even if they attained some level of literacy, most Jewish people were not wealthy enough to own their own copies of the ancient scripture, because the production of such texts came at a great premium in those days.  Scribes had exclusive access to copies of scripture and other literature that others could never have dreamed of having.

As we've recently seen, there are six-hundred-some commandments within that scripture for the Jews to obey.  When there was some dispute or question over what was just and what was unjust according to the Torah, people would go to a scribe and pay him a fee for his specific interpretation of the Law.  As such, scribes were closely associated with the Law, and were known for their deep knowledge of the minutiae of said Law.

The scribes and the Pharisees were similar in that all scribes and all Pharisees took the Law very very seriously, and in that both parties spent much of their days attempting to make themselves perfect within the confines of the six-hundred and thirteen mitzvot.  We get the feeling from the Gospel that both the scribes and the Pharisees pined for piety in a very public form, as if to let everyone around them know that they had superior righteousness in the eyes of God.  We get the sense that the scribes and Pharisees are leveraging themselves into better socio-economic positions by the exploitation of the law.  We also get the sense that the scribes and Pharisees were very judgemental of the common Jew.  (As we will soon see, Jesus sees the judgement or other humans as sinful.)

The skills of a scribe would have been rare, and his services would not have been cheap.  I believe, and will continue to argue, that Jesus' major problem with the scribes is that they enriched themselves by their work disproportionately to the average first-century Jew.

"...Unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into the kingdom of Heaven."  Today, Jesus points out the first-century groups that were most invested in interpreting and living the Law**, and tells his followers: "you have to do better than these guys."

We will revisit the scribes again and again throughout our studies as we see Jesus continually besting them in public debate or condemning them for various behaviors or ideas.  Whether we consider this verse historical or not, at least now we will know who we are talking about every time Jesus says "woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees."

---

As I mentioned, next time we will embark on our study of Jesus' "Teaching About Anger."  Some of the most important data we have available to us about Jesus Christ's true conception of morality is contained within the upcoming verses, and I am truly excited to share them with you.

In preparation for the next verses, if you care to, join me in considering the acidic effect that anger of all kinds has on our lives, whether at work, at home, or a leisure.  Try to identify patterns of anger in your day-to-day life, if there are any, and then try to modulate or disrupt those patterns to whatever extent you can.  This will put us in a good headspace for what is to come.

Thank you so much for reading, today.  It means the world to me.  Please share this writing.

Love.
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* The original Greek for this word "righteousness" is "dikaiosuné" which means, alternatively, "justice" or "fulfillment of the Law."

** Excepting, perhaps, the Essenes...  
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To read what's next, click here.
To read what came prior to this, click here.
For the index of Christ's words, click here.