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Matthew's Use of the Old Testament: A Preliminary Analysis
by Lee Campbell

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Copyright © 2000
Lee Campbell
APPENDIX A - A SUMMARY OF MATTHEW'S OLD TESTAMENT CITATIONS AND ALLUSIONS
    

Matthew

Citation/Allusion

Topic

Analysis

1:1-17 Various citations Genealogy

This genealogy of Christ tracing his lineage back to Abraham establishes his racial, tribal and Davidic identity through adoption by Joseph (v.20 Joseph son of David). Official genealogies always moved from the oldest to the most recent.

  • The connection to Abraham is important to begin to argue that he was the seed of Abraham, through whom all nations would be blessed (Gen.18:18; 22:15-18).

  • The connection to Judah could indicate fulfillment of the prophecy concerning Judah (Gen.49:10), that the ruling authority would not pass from Judah until the advent of he to whom it belongs.

  • The successive mention of two gentile mothers, who were clearly separated by several generations unmentioned, is meaningful in its irony that the archetypal king of Israel had gentile maternal roots. Not by power, might or genetic purity but by the Spirit of God would his promises be kept.

  • The association with the lineage of David is the beginning of an argument that Jesus could legally be the king from the line of David, through adoption, who would have an eternal kingdom (2Sam.7:2; Isa.11:1,2-6; 9:6).

  • The mention of Jehoiachin (a.k.a. Jeconiah) raises the tacit problem that a genetic descendent of Joseph would not be able to sit on the throne of David (Jer.22:30). A problem resolved by Christ's adoption into Joseph's line rather than descent from Joseph's line.

  • The mention of Zerubbabel is also interesting because of Hag.2:23 where God says that the grandson of Jehoiachin would have ruling authority (i.e. you will be my signet ring is the indicator of authority that God promised he would deny Jehoiachin, Jer.22:24).

1:16   The title Christ

A term used in the OT in several passages that were understood to apply to a single individual by later interpreters, leading to its use as a title. Matthew’s titular use of Christ serves as a reference back to all the recognized messianic OT texts.

1:20   son of David

The genealogy of Christ traces his lineage back to David through adoption by Joseph (v.20 Joseph son of David). This is significant because of the Davidic covenant that an anointed one from the line of David would sit on his throne to rule the world for all time.

1:21-23 Isa.7:14 (8:8,10 LXX)

 

1:22 Fulfill

Virgin conception; transliteration of the term Emmanuel

v.21 The messiah's name Jesus (i.e. Joshua - means the Lord is salvation) is significant because is connects Jesus with the suffering servant narratives of Isaiah (i.e. the one who would bear the sins of Israel).

Formal quote[1] v.23

vv.22-23 Isa.7:14 (8:8-10) - this seemed to have contemporary meaning to Isaiah and yet Matthew indicates it is fulfilled in Christ.

2:4   The title Christ c.f. 1:16
2:6 Mic.5:2 (2Sam.5:2; 1Chr.11:2) Bethlehem birthplace

Formal quote possibly taken from a Targum or Peshitta

Micah 5:2 - a clear prophecy that a ruler born in Bethlehem, whose origins are from (i.e. literally) days of eternity will arise from Judah to rule the whole earth. There is even a preceding prophecy that the ruler of Israel would be struck down.

2:15 Hos.11:1

 

 

2:15 fulfilled

Flight to Egypt

Formal quote possibly taken from the Peshitta

Matthew takes the MT approach of literally translating "son" rather than the LXX "His children"

Matthew may have intended to allude to the entire section through the use of a single citation (c.f. Hosea 11:1-11).

The Exodus type produced an exodus motif with its associated terminology that was recalled for the purpose of instruction [2] and that was repeated in the return of Joshua to Palestine & Judah from the Babylonian exile.

2:16,18 Jer.31:15

2:17 fulfilled

Killing of children

Jer.31:15 - this is clearly a prophecy of the Babylonian captivity of Israel so in what sense does it get fulfilled in Christ’s day?

Formal quote v.18

2:23 Judges 5-7; 16:17; Zech.3:8; 6:12; Isa.4:2

2:23 fulfilled

Nazareth

Formal quote like the way the Qumran community translates it, emphasizing the lowliness of the messiah's origins (Gundry, ppl97-104)

Zech.3:8; 6:12; Isa.4:2 - This may be a play on words by Matthew since the term for branch nezer has the same sound as the root for the name Nazarene; alternatively Matthew may have a scripture in mind that is not part of the canon known to us.

3:1-3 Isa.40:3  

Formal quote

differs only slightly from the LXX.

3:3-11 Isa.40:3-5; also, the language of John is in the style of the OT (c.f. Job 20:26; Isa 34:8-10; 66:24) John the Baptist; in the garb & ministry of Elijah Mt.3:3; Mk.1:3; Lk.3:4-6; Jn.1:23

Matthew's citation is compatible with the MT

Concerning the OT language of John the Baptist see Hosea 9:13. Did John intend a reference to this prophet?

2 Ki.1:8 - the garb and behavior of Elijah and John are remarkably similar…too much so to reject as coincidence. Both had ministries to believing Israel and against apostate Israel as well.

Winnowing fork allusion Hos.6:13

3:9   Abraham cited An illustration
3:12 Old Testament language  

Separation of righteous/unrighteous motif in prophecies of the kingdom of God (Dan.12:1-3).

3:15 3:15 fulfill   Is this an anointing or identification with Israel?
4:2 Gen.6-9; Ex.34:28; 1Ki.19:8  

The 40 days/nights allusion here is a motif echoed from the flood judgment, from Moses fasting before the Lord on Sinai and Elijah's fasting as he traveled to Horeb to receive a commission and reassurance from the Lord.

This also corresponds to the 40 years wilderness experience of Israel.

4:4 Deut. 8:3   Many parallels with the wilderness wanderings.

Formal quote 4:6,7 shared with Luke; LXX

Formal quote 4:4,10 shared with Luke; different from but related to LXX

4:5-6 Ps. 91:11-12  
4:7 Deut. 6:16  
4:10 Deut. 6:13  
4:13-16 Isa.9:1-7

4:14 fulfill

Capernaum ministry

This messianic prophecy follows directly on the heels of a description of profound rebellion in Israel that will lead it to the judgment of God. The imprisonment of John and the subsequent preaching of repentance by Christ, because of the imminent onset of the kingdom, fits that motif nicely.

Notice the Gentile connections.

5:17 fulfill   Christ came to fulfill the Law & Prophets
5:21 Ex.20:13; Deut.5:17   Formal quote

Citation and expansion of the meaning of the Law

5:27 Ex.20:14; Deut.5:18   Formal quote

Citation and expansion of the meaning of the Law

5:31 Deut.24:1   Formal quote

Citation and expansion of the meaning of the Law

5:38 Ex.21:24; Lev.24:20   Formal quote

Citation and expansion of the meaning of the Law

5:43 (c.f. 19:19,22:39) Lev.19:2,18  

Formal quote

An application of Lev.19:2 to Lev.19:18 to refute the rabbinical interpretation of Lev.19:18 that they could hate their enemies…meaning is established by context is the hermeneutical principle used by Christ here.

6:29   Solomon Illustration
8:11   Abraham, Isaac & Jacob cited Illustration

vv.11-12 Ps.107:3; Isa.49:12; 59:19; Mal.1:11 - the separation of righteous and wicked motif as well as allusions to the Abrahamic covenant of blessing to Gentiles.

8:17 Isa.53:4

8:17 fulfill

Healing ministry

Correlation of the ministry of Christ with the predicted ministry of the servant of the Lord.

8:20 Dan 7:13 Son of man

31x in Matthew; Jeremiah takes the title as a reference to humans. God repeatedly addresses Ezekiel as 'son of man.' Dan 7:13 identifies the 'Son of man' with the messiah.

9:6 Dan 7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
9:13 Hos.6:6  

Formal quote

God is expressing his disgust that Israel would offer gifts instead of fidelity to Him (i.e. hesed, translated mercy, means faithful love). In Hosea, even the priests are wicked (6:9)

9:18-26 1Ki.17 & 2Ki.4  

Allusion to Elijah & Elisha in the inauguration of these ministries.

9:27   Son of David

c.f. 1:20

10:1    

12 disciples correspond to the 12 tribes to whom the disciples were commanded to go; win the lost sheep of Israel.

10:15     Sodom & Gomorrah are contrasted with unbelieving Israel using an a fortiori argument.
10:18   Gentile testimony An allusion to the Abrahamic covenant promise and subsequent prophetic revelation that God would redeem the Gentiles.
10:23 Dan 7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
10:34-36 Micah 7:6  

On the face of it this doesn't seem to fit b/c Micah describes a depraved situation of familial disintegration but the Micah prophecy does mention a watchman who warns of impending danger (Isa.10:3; Hos.9:7) coming to Israel at the time of their worst sin to warn them of judgment where the most upright are no better than a mesuka (thorny hedge) and so it would be come a time of their mebuka (confusion) (note the alliteration and assonance used by Micah). Perhaps this is an example of the use of OT language rather than prophecy.

11:3 Isa.29:18; 35:5,6; Jer.6:21 The 'expected one' & several messianic passages. Christ cited, particularly Isaiah, as an apologetic that he was the expected messiah.
11:10 Ex.23:20; Mal.3:1  

Formal quote

This is a composite quotation. The first part is compatible with LXX of Ex.23:20. The second part has some similarity with the MT of Mal.3:1.

This melding of Ex.23:20 & Mal.3:1 may precede the NT use of it since it is found in Jewish literature as well.

11:14 Mal.3:1,23 (4:5-6) John = Elijah c.f. 11:10; 17:13; Lk.1:17, 76f
11:19 Dan 7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
11:21-22 Joel 3:4; Amos 1:9   An a fortiori argument against unbelieving Israel.
11:23-24     An a fortiori argument against unbelieving Israel.
11:28-30 Ecclus 51:23ff   A possible citation from the apocryphal book.
12:3-4 Isa.21:6; Lev.24:5,9; Nu.28:9 David

Christ's a fortiori argument challenges the hollow, literalistic way that the spiritual leaders interpreted the Torah. The priests work on the Sabbath, David ate the consecrated bread why shouldn't he who can heal the crippled work on the Sabbath.

12:7 Hos.6:6   Formal quote used as an application.
12:8 Dan 7:13 Son of man is Lord of the harvest c.f. 8:20
12:17-21 Isa.42:1-4; 17-21; 1Sam.42:1-4

12:17 fulfill

Compassion ministry

Formal quote v.18-21 possibly associated with a Targum

A historical analogy between Christ and Jonah shows correlation between the ministry of both to those outside of Israel as well as the intended analogy of a 3 day judgment. It also contrasts the interest of a gentile with the disinterest of Jews.

12:23   Son of David

c.f. 1:20

12:32 Dan 7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
12:39-40   Jonah; Son of man c.f. 8:20
12:42   Queen of Sheba & Solomon

Queen of Sheba - an application from the intense curiosity of the queen contrasted with the lack of interest shown by the Pharisees/Sadducees/scribes of Christ's day. It also contrasts the interest of a gentile with the disinterest of Jews.

13:10-14 Isa.6:9-10; Deut.29:4; Jer.5:21; Ez.12:2

13:14 fulfilled

  the judgment of God is to grant the wicked their wishes to not submit to God
13:14-15 Isa.6:9-10 Polarizing ministry Formal quote v.14f
13:31-35 Ezek.17:22-24  

Formal quote v.35

13:32 Isa.4:2; 11:1; 14:19; Jer.23:5; 33:15; Zech.3:8  

This had clear application to Israel in Isaiah’s day and so either God intended the saying to be a prediction or a historical analogy. Seed > Branch > Tree ?

13:35 Ps.78:2

13:35 fulfilled

Parabolic teaching Mark 4:33f
13:37,41 Dan 7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
15:4 Ex.20:12, 17; Deut.5:16   Formal quote v. 4a

Mk.7:10; Lk.18:20; Ex.20:12

The form is akin to the LXX but it is different than LXX, MT or Mark in its omission of a possessive pronoun but the following reasons offered by Gundry may explain the departure from the LXX: 1. The citation is used as an oral instruction, this may justify the authorial drop of the possessive pronoun 2. The LXX frequently drops possessive pronouns 3. Hebrew texts sometimes let suffixes be implied 4. The omission may be stylistic, letting the definite articles play a partial role in showing the possessives 5. Galilean Aramaic tends to use emphatic nouns

Formal quote v. 4b

Mk.7:10; Ex21:17…this is probably an LXX quote

15:8-9 Isa.29:13   Formal quote

Similar to Mk.7:6-7

Both are shortened renderings of the LXX

15:22   Son of David

c.f. 1:20

16:4   Jonah Jonah’s experience in the fish is used to predict the death, burial & resurrection of Christ.
16:13 Dan 7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
16:14   Elijah, Jeremiah Cited as possible identities of Christ by the disciples.
16:20   The title Christ  
16:27-28 Dan 7:13 Son of man; retributive justice The retributive justice passage is an allusion to Pss 28:4; 62:12 (c.f. Prov 24:12).
17:3-4   Moses; Elijah Appeared at the transfiguration.
17:5 Ps.2:7; Isa.42:1; Deut. 18:15 God's words at the transfiguration Possible allusive use of three OT passages:

Ps.2:7 This is my beloved son

Isa. 42:1…with whom I am well pleased

Deut.18:15…listen to him

17:9 Dan.7:13 Son of man; resurrection c.f. 8:20
17:12 Mal.4:5-6 John = Elijah; Son of man c.f. 11:14

c.f. 8:20

17:22 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
18:11 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
18:16 Deut.19:15   Citation of the law
19:4,5 Gen.2:24  

Formal quote

Mk.10:7; Eph.5:31 – Mark’s citation is LXX. Matthew differs from Mark & LXX: 1. Matthew’s use of duo shows a Hebrew variant 2. Eis sarxa mian contains an over literal rendering of the Hebrew character (p.17 Gundry) 3. Xai eipen is inserted between verses 4 & 5 which is a Targum-like difference between Matthew & Mark.

19:18-19 Ex.20:12; Lev.19:18; Deut.5:16-20; a formal quote  

Formal quote

Mk.10:19; Lk.18:20 – since it serves as an oral instruction in the Q&A format it is difficult to correlate with any OT translations; some think it correlates with Lev.19:13 since that is a precept derived from the earlier material (i.e. rather than Dt.24:14 or Ex.21:10); Matthew here seems to be interacting with the MT

19:28 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
20:18 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
20:28 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
20:30-31   Son of David c.f. 1:20
21:5 (Isa.62:11) Zech.9:9

21:4 fulfill

Young donkey entrance Formal quote

Jn.12:15; According to Gundry, "Ambiguity in the gender of onos, however, gave him opportunity to make a distinction. That the male colt had not been ridden opens the possibility of a historical reminiscence in the mention of the two animals. For the sight of an unridden donkey colt accompanying its mother has remained common in Palestine up to modern times."

21:9, 15 Ps.118:25f Hosanna & Son of David Mk. 11:9f; Lk.19:37f

c.f. 1:20

21:13 Isa.56:7; Jer.7:11; a formal quote   Formal quote 13a – Mk.11:17; Lk.19:46; Isa.56:7…Lk & Mt. Both seem to use the LXX here.

Formal quote 13b – Mk.11:17; Lk.19:46; Jer.7:11…dependent on LXX lhston (robbers) is used for the Hebrew (violent men)

21:16 Ps.8:2   Formal quote

not LXX; peculiar to Matthew

21:42 Ps.118:22-23 Rejection of Christ by Jews Formal quote
22:32 Ex.3:6  

Formal quote

differs from LXX and Mark.

22:37 Deut.6:4-5   Formal quote

differs from LXX and Mark.

22:39 Lev.19:18   Formal quote
22:41-45   David, Son of David, the Christ title c.f. 1:20
22:43-44 Ps.110:1 Davidic descent & exhalation of Christ. Formal quote v.44

c.f. 1:20

23:2   Moses seat Illustration
23:35   Abel, Zechariah Illustration
23:39 Ps.118:26   Lk.13:35

Gundry sees the desolation in terms of Jesus’ absence.

24:5   The title Christ  
24:15 Dan.9:27; 12:11   Mk.13:14
24:23   The title Christ  
24:27 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
24:30 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
24:37-38 Dan.7:13 Noah; son of man Illustration; c.f. 8:20
24:39 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
24:44 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
25:31 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
26:2 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
26:24 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
26:31 Zech.13:7 Cowardice of disciples Formal quote

differs from LXX and Mark.

26:45 Dan.7:13 Son of man c.f. 8:20
26:54-56 Zech.13:7

26:54, 56 fulfilled

Jesus arrest An allusion
26:63,68   The title Christ  
26:64 Dan 7:13 Son of Man c.f. 8:20
27:9-10 Zech.11:12-13

27:9 fulfilled

Judas destruction Formal quote v.9f

Matthew attributes this prophecy to Jeremiah suggesting either that he got it wrong or that he was simultaneously alluding to Jeremiah 19, the potter's field (i.e. a similar thing is done in 2 Chron.36:21 in relation to Lev.26:34f & Jer.25:12; 29:10)

27:35 Ps.22:18   Alllusion
27:46 Ps.22:1   Allusion
27:15, 57 Isa.53:9 Joseph = rich man March 15:43 calls Joseph a respected member of the council but Matthew describes him in a manner that fits the prophecy.

NOTES

[1] There are around 40 formal quotes in Matthew and over 100 allusions. Return to Text

[2] e.g. Ps 66:6-12 that it refined Israel; Ps. 77:10-20 that is showed God's might as Israel's redeemer; Ps.114 that it was the onset of God's presence with Israel - fulfillment of the promise to Shem in Gen.9:27; Ps.136:10-22 that it showed Israel God's lovingkindness. Return to Text

 


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