A handful of scholars have recently focused on the importance of “the deportation to Babylon” in Matt 1:11, 12, 17 and the determinative role it plays for understanding the author’s conceptualization of redemptive history. Others, however, demur. This article draws attention to three observations heretofore neglected in the discussion of what “the deportation to Babylon” might mean for appreciating the narrative’s theological setting, as well as interpreting the entire gospel: (1) an “interrupted chiasm"; (2) the precise meaning of μετοικεσία in 1:11, 12, 17; and (3) the enumeration of the generations in 1:17. The aggregate effect is to read Matthew’s genealogy in apocalyptic terms as an attempt to assert Yahweh’s covenantal faithfulness despite the chaos of historical events—namely, the exile that inhibits the path to fulfilling Davidic and therefore also Abrahamic promises.
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Research Article|
January 01 2015
“After the Deportation”: Observations in Matthew’s Apocalyptic Genealogy
Bulletin for Biblical Research (2015) 25 (2): 189–203.
Citation
Nicholas G. Piotrowski; “After the Deportation”: Observations in Matthew’s Apocalyptic Genealogy. Bulletin for Biblical Research 1 January 2015; 25 (2): 189–203. doi: https://doi.org/10.2307/26371271
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