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“Let the Dead Bury Their Own Dead”; Secondary Burial and Matt 8:21–22
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
Extract
New Testament interpreters have long puzzled over the meaning of the saying, “Let the dead bury their own dead” (Matt 8:22; Luke 9:60), and although many ingenious solutions have been proposed, none has been generally convincing. It is surprising that Jewish burial practices have not been brought into this discussion. For the burial practices of first-century Jews in Palestine are well known: many tombs have been carefully excavated, and several rabbinic texts explicitly discuss the care of the dead. Yet this information has never (to my knowledge) been brought to bear on Matt 8:21–22. In this paper, I propose that secondary burial, a widespread burial custom among Jews in first-century Palestine, can solve the riddle of these verses. Against the background of secondary burial, both the meaning of the disciple's question and the force of Jesus' response become clear. In particular, it is not necessary to suppose, as many interpreters do, that Jesus was talking about the “spiritually” dead. On the contrary, if the references to the dead are taken literally, the saying sounds both ironic and eschatological.
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References
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45 Among recent interpreters, only R. H. Gundry has seen the full irony of the saying: “Alternatively, the statement refers only to the physically dead and is laden with irony: ‘Let those who have been dead for some time bury those who have just died.’ Impossible? Yes, and in the very impossibility lies an irony…” (, Gundry, Matthew, 153)Google Scholar. But Gundry does not adduce secondary burial to support this reading of the text.
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48 Ibid., 14.
49 Ibid.
50 Perhaps current discussion of the historical Jesus, especially the question of whether Jesus was an eschatological prophet, might be enriched by a fresh consideration of Matt 8:21-22.
I am especially grateful to Eric M. Meyers, along with the members of the NT Colloquium at Duke, including D. Moody Smith, Jr., Dan Via, Dale Martin, Bart Ehrman, and William Adler, who heard an earlier version of this paper and made several constructive criticisms.
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