Gospel Of Matthew: Chapter Outline Thesis

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Jesus' Sermon on the Mount is a dogmatic illustration of the role of Jesus as teacher to his followers. Jesus also teaches his disciples and others through parables, through miracles, and by quoting and interpreting scripture in a prophetic style. The final genre of the Gospel of Matthew is that of the Passion story, the narrative present in all of the gospels, of Jesus' death and resurrection. Atmosphere: The atmosphere of the Gospel of Matthew is of a world of great hypocrisy. There is a tension between the exterior world and the interior world. Jesus teaches his followers to look beyond the surface. In the world, unjust and hypocritical people have power. The truth is revealed through inward actions, not exterior manifestations of wealth and pious display. This is why little children may lead, and the meek shall inherit the earth.

Critical questions:

Author: The author is identified as Matthew, one of the disciples, although not self-identified during the actual narration, which depicts many conflicted scenes, between Jesus and his disciples where the author 'sides' with Jesus.

Place: Roman-occupied Jerusalem

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Does this contract his approving comments about being anointed with the expensive ointment that could feed the poor? (the fulfillment of the poor does not seem to be designed to be achieved in today's time, but the life to come).
Why is Jesus so hostile to the Pharisees (his denial of the need to keep the laws of kashrut seems to hint at the reasons). "Not that which entereth into the mouth defileth the man; but that which proceedeth out of the mouth, this defileth the man." 15:12

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