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The New Jerusalem in Matthew 5.14
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2009
Extract
The picture of the hilltop city in Mt. 5.14b is an image within an image. It is one of those pictures employed by Jesus which is almost too familiar to us; its meaning appears on the surface to be perfectly simple and obvious, so that although frequently cited in support of various arguments, it is rarely subjected to scholarly scrutiny. It will be argued here that, far from being a casual illustration or simple cliché, it in fact constitutes a profoundly theological statement on the part of Jesus.
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References
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page 342 note 3 Other terms include ‘city of David’, ‘city of Judah’, ‘Temple Mount’, ‘Mount Moriah’, ‘Ariel’, ‘Jebus’, ‘;salem’.
page 343 note 1 Thus ‘Zion’ cannot always be restricted to the inhabitants of Jerusalem proper, but may encompass all Israel, whose representatives they are.
page 343 note 2 cf. Ps. 137.7—in retrospect, ‘the day of Jerusalem’. Zion was inviolable so long as she remained the holy city; God would defeat all her enemies. But when Zion became the city of sin, then God himself is said to have fought against her; cf. Lutz, H.-M., Jahwe, Jerusalem und die Völker (Neukirchen-Vluyn, 1968), 33–204.Google Scholar
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page 346 note 1 sib. 5.249f.
page 346 note 2 cf. Jub. 1.28; 2 Bar. 32.4; 6.9; T. Dan. 5.13; Sir. 36.18; Tob. 13.10.
page 346 note 3 Sib. 3.787; 5–420f; 4 Ezra 10.18.
page 346 note 4 Sib. 5.420.
page 346 note 5 Sib. 3.787.
page 346 note 6 Tob. 13.11.
page 346 note 7 Recently an inscription has been found on the western wall of the Temple area in Jerusalem, dating about A.D. 4; it consists of Is. 66.14a—‘And you shall see it and your heart shall rejoice and your bones shall flourish like tender grass’. The ‘it’ is the ‘comfort of Jerusalem’ promised in the preceding verse. This suggests the continuing hope that prophecy was about to be fulfilled at this time of the reconstruction of the old city (cf. Talmon, S., ‘The Biblical Concept of Jerusalem’, JES, VIII [1971], 314f.)Google Scholar
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page 346 note 13 cf. B.K. 82b; Arak IX.6; Tos Maas I.12; Tos Sukk 2.3.
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page 347 note 8 Ber. IV.3; 8a; Kidd 49a; Sukk 51b; Meg III.1; Ket 105a.
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page 348 note 6 Yom 69a; Betz 14b; R. Sh. 19b; Tarn 27b.
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page 348 note 8 4Q.pIspage b; cf. also 4Q, pIsd.
page 348 note 9 4Q, Test.
page 349 note 1 IQM I.3; III.11; VII.4.
page 349 note 2 IQM XII.13; cf. XIX.5.
page 349 note 3 4Q.pPs 37.21–22.
page 349 note 4 QFlor I.11f.
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page 350 note 1 cf. DJD, IV, 87ff. Gärtner, claims that in this psalm ‘the reference (is) to the community as the true Israel’ (The Temple and Community in Qumran and in the New Testament [Cambridge, 1965], 1)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. But there seems no reason to refer this song to the Qumran community—rather it refers to the eternal city, personified.
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page 351 note 1 cf. Bowman, J., ‘Pilgrimage to Mount Gerizim’, Eretz-Isracl, VII (1964), 21f.Google Scholar
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page 352 note 3 Ap., I, 273;B.J., V, 136–237.
page 352 note 4 B.J., III, 54.
page 352 note 5 B.J., VI, 437.
page 352 note 6 cf. K.-L. Schmidt, Die Polis op. cit., 84–94.
page 353 note 1 cf. Lohse, ‘σιών’, op. cit., 327.
page 353 note 2 Lk. 9.31, 51, 53; 13–22, 33, 34; 17–11; 19.11. cf. De Young, J. C., Jerusalem in the New Testament (Kampen, 1960), 64–74Google Scholar; Simson, P., ‘The Drama of the City of God’, Scripture, XV (1963), 66, 70f.Google Scholar
page 353 note 3 ‘The whole of the Jews’ religion, centred at the temple, was for Jesus the revealed religion according to the authority of the Law, the only valid, true religion. He had not come to destroy this God-ordained system of redemption, but to be its fulfilment’—de Young, Jerusalem, 60.
page 354 note 1 The old Jerusalem becomes the new Sodom in its destruction; on the analogy cf. Spaemann, H., ‘Die Stadt in der Heilsgeschichte’, Lebendiges Zeugnis, I, (1962), 63f.Google Scholar
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page 354 note 4 The Didache applies this phrase to Jesus: ‘offer me a pure sacrifice, for I am a great King, saith the Lord’ (Didache, XIV, 3).
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page 355 note 1 Brown, R. E., The Gospel of John (Garden City, New York, 1966), I, 176.Google Scholar
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page 356 note 1 cf. Calvin's, comment, that this ‘teaches us that we ought not to attempt anything in religion rashly or at random; because, unless there be knowledge, it is not God that we worship, but a phantom or idol’—Commentary on the Gospel according to John (Grand Rapids, 1949), I, 159.Google Scholar
page 356 note 2 The only such occurrence of μεςin Jesus' teaching.
page 356 note 3 The error committed by such as Bultmann is that they fail to distinguish between the opposition of Jesus (and John) to Judaism as such, and their opposition to the contemporary character of Jewish rule. It is only the latter which the Gospels (like e.g. Jeremiah before) oppose; here Jesus makes it plain that he considers Judaism orthodox when rightly interpreted and practised.
page 356 note 4 Both legitimate (Zion) and illegitimate (Gerizim) make way for the superior; cf. Hoskyns, E. G. and Davey, F. N., The Fourth Gospel (London, 1950), I, 243.Google Scholar
page 356 note 5 Contra Bultmann, our attention is drawn to the force of λλ in v. 23. The opposition implied is comprehensible only if vs. 22 and 23 originally formed a unit, cf. Lagrange: “The order is not that of the rules of written composition, but we are listening to a conversation’—Commentary, 112; cf. also Schnackenburg, R., Das Johannesevangelium (Freiburg, 1967), I, 471.Google Scholar
page 357 note 1 ‘Jesus fills the νν στίν with γώ ɛἰμι’ —P. Ricca, Die Esckatologie des Vierlen Euangeliums, 9, cited in Haacker, op. cit.
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page 357 note 4 So Schnackcnburg, Commentary, I, 471.
page 357 note 5 Not a Spirit; cf. ὀ .
page 357 note 6 is probably an editorial addition by John.
page 358 note 1 cf. Weiss, B., Das Johannes-Evangelium (Göttingen, 1902), 147Google Scholar; Morris, L., The Gospel According to John (Grand Rapids 1971), 273Google Scholar. On Taheb expectations in Samaria, cf. Macdonald, Theology, 362ff.
page 359 note 1 Comblin points out that in the OT there is no mention of a new Tyre or a heavenly Babylon; Jerusalem is unique because it is more than a topographical reference, it is also an ecclesiological term; thus John in the Revelation can equate the images of ‘bride’ and ‘city of God’ because both denote God's people (Rev. 21.2, etc.)—Thiologie, 158.
page 361 note 1 cf. L. M. Muntingh, ‘The city which has foundations’ op. cit., n6f; C. R. Smith, The Bible Doctrine of Society op. cit., 106.
page 361 note 2 cf. Fairbairn, P., The Interpretation of Prophecy (London, 1964), 50f.Google Scholar
page 362 note 1 J. Jeremias, Jesus' Promise, op. cit., 66.
page 363 note 1 Ag. Cat., IV, vi, 11.
page 363 note 2 One of the Arabic terms for city employed in Islam is Umma, which means ‘The nation, the people of Mohammed, for whom the prophet prays …’—Gardet, L., La Cité musulmanc (Paris 1954), 194Google Scholar. It ‘indicates that group of men to whom God sends a prophet, and in particular those who, having heard his preaching, believe in him, making covenant with God through his mediator’—L. Massignon, ‘L'Umma et ses synonymes: notion de “communautfi sociale” en Islam’, REI (1941–46), 151.
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