Kingsbury 1987
Kingsbury 1987
Kingsbury 1987
I.
What is the place of the Sermon on the Mount within the ground plan of
Matthew's Gospel? Of the several answers given this question in this
century, the one by Benjamin Bacon has been advocated by more scholars
over a longer period of time than any other. In Bacon's view, the Sermon
on the Mount dominates the whole of Matthew's Gospel, for from it one
gains insight into the structure of the Gospel and into its nature and
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1. Cf. Benjamin Bacon, Studies in Matthew (London: Constable, 1930), pp. xiv-xvii, 29,
40-41,47,81-82,165-68.
2. For a review of the arguments against Bacon's position, cf. Jack Dean Kingsbury,
Matthew: Structure, Christology, Kingdom (Philadelphia and London: Fortress Press and
SPCK, 1975), pp. 1-7; and especially David R. Bauer, "The Structure of Matthew's Gospel,
Diss. Union Theological Seminary in Virginia 1985, pp. 75-81 (forthcoming from Almond
Press).
3. For a literary-critical treatment of Matthew that also explains the method, cf. Jack
Dean Kingsbury, Matthew as Story (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1986).
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II.
Although Matthew's story of Jesus culminates in the passion, It IS
nonetheless testimony to the great store that Matthew sets by Jesus'
teaching that the Sermon on the Mount is the imposing composition it is.
In what capacity does Jesus deliver the Sermon on the Mount, and to
whom does he deliver it?
Bacon's views have been almost as instrumental in determining schol-
arly opinion on the Christology of Matthew in this century as they have
been in determining how scholars have understood the structure of
Matthew. Bacon himself describes Matthew's jesus as a "second Moses" or
"Lawgiver.l'" Topping this, another scholar has referred to him as "Torah
incarnate.?" Still other scholars, while designating Jesus more typically as
"Messiah," nonetheless attest to Bacon's influence on their thinking by
4. To see how this is the case, cf. Jack Dean Kingsbury, "The Developing Conflict
between Jesus and the Jewish Leaders in Matthew's Gospel: A Study in Literary Criticism"
(forthcoming in CBQ).
5. Cf. Benjamin W. Bacon, "Jesus and the Law: A Study of the First 'Book' of Matthew
(Mt. 3-7)," JBL 47 (1928),207-08.
6. J. M. Gibbs, "The Son of God as the Torah Incarnate in Matthew," Studia Evangelica,
IV (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1968), 38-46.
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7. Cf. Willi Marxsen, Introduction to the New Testament, trans. G. Buswell (Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1968), pp. 151-52; Norman Perrin, The New Testament: An Introduction (New
York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974), pp. 174-77.
8. Cf., e.g., Paul S. Minear, "The Disciples and the Crowds in the Gospel of Matthew,"
Gospel Studies in Honor ofSherman Elbridge Johnson, ed. M. H. Shepherd,Jr. and E. C. Hobbs
(Anglican Theological Review, 1974), pp. 28-44.
9. Cf. Matt. 4:24-25; 7:28-29; 8: 1, 9:8, 33.
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Yet even to read the Sermon on the Mount with the idea that the
disciplesjust called by Jesus are the recipients is not wholly unproblematic.
Passages like 5: 11-12 and 7: 15-23, which speak of enduring persecution
on account of Jesus or tell of followers of Jesus who prophesy, cast out
demons, and perform many miracles in his name but are in reality workers
of lawlessness, simply have no place in the picture the narrator paints of
the disciples during the earthly ministry of Jesus.
Consequently, as fitting as it is from the standpoint of the flow of
Matthew's story that the crowds and the first disciples should be named as
the recipients of the Sermon on the Mount, the contents themselves of the
Sermon indicate that they are meant not at all for non-disciples such as the
crowds and only in part for the first disciples, and that they therefore have
in view still other persons. Who are these other persons? Are they those
first-century Christians who comprised the membership of Matthew's
church? Yes, but this is not the most accurate answer one can give, for
these first-century Christians are obviously not to be regarded as living
within the "world of the story" Matthew is narrating but apart from it, in
the real world. The answer to be preferred, therefore, is that the persons
indicated by the contents themselves of the Sermon on the Mount as being
its recipients are the "implied readers" (or the "implied reader") of Mat-
thew's Gospel. Still, to say this is merely to prompt another question: Who
is this "implied reader"? To ascertain this, one must probe the "world" of
Matthew's story. .
In two or perhaps three passages, Matthew, as implied author, provides
indicators of who the implied reader is whom he envisages as the recipient
of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. At 27:8, Matthew remarks through the
voice of the narrator that "to this day" the field bought with Judas' money
is known as the Field of Blood. At 28: 15, Matthew similarly remarks that
"to this day" false rumors are being spread to the effect thatJesus did not
rise from the dead. At 24: 15, Matthew has the narrator abruptly interrupt
the story so as to issue the reader a challenge to comprehend the meaning
of the signs of the times ("Let the reader understand!"). What dis-
tinguishes these three passages is that they all point beyond the immediate
story being told of Jesus, which extends from birth to resurrection, to a
place in time and space following the resurrection from which one can
look back upon the earthly life of Jesus. This place beyond Jesus' earthly
life to which Matthew points and which he includes in the world of his story
is that of the implied reader. The implied reader, then, is to be looked
upon as one who is a disciple of Jesus and who lives in the perilous times
between the resurrection and the Parousia which are so vividly described
in such passages of the Gospel as chapters 24-25.
Looking back upon Jesus' earthly life from a point beyond the resur-
rection, the implied reader can relate without difficulty both to the place of
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III.
We have seen thus far that the Sermon on the Mount is the example par
excellence ofJesus' teaching, that he delivers it in his authority as the Son
of God, and that whereas according to the dramatic setting of the story it is
the crowds and the first disciples he has called who receive it, the tenor of
the Sermon itself indicates that the primary addressees are such "disciples"
as the implied reader. With these matters in mind, two questions arise:
What is the structure of the Sermon on the Mount, and what is its theme
and its message?
The narrative frame of the Sermon on the Mount describes Jesus as
ascending the mountain to teach (5: 1-2) and, after finishing, as descend-
ing again (7:28-8: I). This aside, the Sermon on the Mount divides itself
into five parts: (1) Introduction: On Those who Practice the Greater
Righteousness (5:3-16); (2) On Practicing the Greater Righteousness
Toward the Neighbor (5: 17-45); (3) On Practicing the Greater Right-
eOUSIIess Before God (6: 1-18); (4) On Practicing the Greater Righteous-
ness in Other Areas of Life (6: 19-7: 12); and (5) Conclusion: Injunctions
on Practicing the Greater Righteousness (7: 13-27).
As is apparent from this outline, the theme of the Sermon on the Mount
is the "greater righteousness." Perhaps the passage in which this theme
finds expression most clearly is the pronouncement Jesus makes at 5:20:
"For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and
Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven." What is one to
understand by the "greater righteousness"?
The "greater righteousness" is that style of life intended to be the mark
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10. For this and the following paragraph, thanks go to Harper's Bible Dictionary, ed. Paul
J. Achtemeier (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1985), p. 100.
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fulfillment of the law, giving it abiding validity, and that to do the law (or
will of God), is to do the greater righteousness, at the heart of which, one
will recall, is love toward God and neighbor.
Jesus continues the second part of the Sermon on the Mount by pro-
claiming the six Antitheses, one of the more famous sections of the
Sermon (5:21-48). Each "antithesis" overrides in some respect a "thesis" of
the Mosaic law. Since the law as Jesus teaches it has abiding validity, the
antithesis intensifies, or radicalizes, the thesis. Introducing each thesis is a
formula that may be longer or shorter in length. Always intended, how-
ever, is the formula in its entirety, which reads: "You have heard that it was
said to the people of old ... " (5:21, 33). As is apparent, this formula
divides itself into three parts. 11 The first part ("You have heard") reminds
disciples of the traditional custom (e.g., in the Jewish synagogue) of
hearing the law read and expounded in services of worship. The second
part ("it was said") features the use of the "divine passive" and is a
periphrasis for "God said." The third part ("to the people of old") envis-
ages the Israelites at Sinai who received the law but includes as well the
generations subsequent to them who have likewise received it. In its
totality, therefore, the formula introducing each thesis reminds disciples
that it has been taught them that God, at Sinai, delivered Israel his law.
In stark contrast to this introductory formula stands the formula with
which Jesus introduces each of his antitheses. It reads: "But I say to you
..." (cf., e.g., 5:22). The force of this formula is unparalleled, for Jesus, in
uttering it, is in effect pitting his word against the word God spoke at Sinai,
that is to say, against the law as known through Moses. In the last analysis,
therefore, the astonishing thing about the Antitheses is that in themJesus
Son of God dares to place his word and his authority above those of Moses.
To turn now to the Antitheses, Jesus commands, variously, that disciples
are not only not to kill, but not even to become enraged (5:21-26); not only
not to commit adultery, but not even to lust (5:27-30); not merely to
comply with the law in obtaining a divorce, but not to divorce at all
(5:31-32); not merely to obey the law and not swear falsely, but not to
swear at all (5:33-37); not merely to adhere to the law in securing
retribution, but to offer no resistance at all to one who would harm or
exploit them (5:38-42); and not merely to love the neighbor while hating
the enemy, but not to hate the enemy at all but instead to love him
(5:43-48).
A special word is in order concerning the third antithesis, about divorce
11. For a discussion of the meaning of these three parts, cf. Robert A. Guelich, The
Sermon on the Mount (Waco: Word Books, 1982), pp. 179-82.
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12. Cf., e.g., Bruce Vawter, "The Divorce Clauses in Mt 5,32 and 19,9," CBQ 16 (1956),
165-67; Robert Banks, Jesus and the Law in the Synoptic Tradition (Cambridge: University
Press, 1975), pp. 146-59 (esp. 156).
13. Cf., e.g., John P. Meier, Law and History in Matthew's Gospel (Rome: Biblical Institute
Press, 1976), pp. 140-50; also Guelich, pp. 209-10.
14. For a detailed analysis of Matt. 6: 1-18, cf. Hans Dieter Betz, Essays on the Sermon on
the Mount, trans. L. L. Welborn (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), pp. 56-64.
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conclusion. By the same token, the third part itself contains three parts: It
treats of almsgiving, prayer, and fasting. What is more, at the center of the
middle part, on prayer, is the Lord's Prayer. Formally, therefore, the
Lord's Prayer can be seen to lie at the very heart of the Sermon on the
Mount.l '
Materially, too, the third part constitutes the center of the Sermon on
the Mount. Thus far, Jesus has delivered the introduction and addressed
the topic of practicing the greater righteousness toward the neighbor.
Upon completion of this third part, he will speak on practicing the greater
righteousness in other areas of life and conclude the Sermon. Here in this
part, he concerns himself with the fundamental issue of practicing the
greater righteousness before God (6: 1-18). In the Lord's Prayer, the
centerpiece of the Sermon, Jesus highlights the essential element on which
all such practice is predicated: that disciples know God as "Father" (6:9).
Through Jesus Son of God, disciples are invited to live in the sphere of
God's eschatological rule, where they, as sons of God, are rightly related to
God and hence know him as Father. Consequently, as Jesus instructs
disciples on how they are to give alms, pray, and fast, he is instructing them
on how to give expression to their right relationship to God.
To give alms is to perform charitable deeds, to pray is to approach God
in petition as Father, and to fast is to show contrition. In contemporary
Judaism as well as for disciples, these were the three cardinal acts of piety.
As Jesus describes the doing of these acts, he contrasts "to be seen by men"
(6: 1) with "in secret" (6:4, 6, 18). This contrast is manifestly not one
between "public" and "private" per se, as though Jesus were denying
legitimacy to all public expression of charitable activity, prayer, and
fasting. 16 No, "to be seen by men" expresses intent, and the contrastJesus
draws is between "ostentation" and "proper motivation." The hypocrites
who practice their acts of piety ostentatiously do so in order to win public
acclaim for themselves. Such acclaim is all the reward they shall receive
(6:2,5, 16). Disciples are to practice their acts of piety "in secret," that is,
out of heartfelt devotion to God. Such practice God acquits with the
promise of eternal reward at the latter day (6:4, 6, 17-18).
The Lord's Prayer (6:7-15) is recited by Jesus to provide disciples with
an example of how they are to pray (6:9a). It divides itself, including the
doxology, into four parts. The "address" (6:9b) shows that the prayer is
directed to God as Father. The "thou petitions" (6:9c-l0) focus on God and
15. For a diagram of this, cf. Ulrich Luz, Das Evangelium nach Mutthdus, EKK
(Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag, 1985), I, 186.
16. On this point, cf. the remarks by Guelich, pp. 300-06.
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IV.
Matthew holds up Jesus' teaching in the Sermon on the Mount as an
ethic disciples are to live. Disciples have been called by Jesus to enter the
sphere of God's eschatological kingdom, the sphere in which God rules as
Father. The ethic of the Sermon on the Mount describes life in this sphere.
Disciples ofJesus are summoned to lead this life, which is to say that they
are summoned to lead the life of the greater righteousness. They are to
love God with heart, soul, and mind and to love the neighbor as the self.
Does this mean, then, that Matthew is, in his understanding of human
nature, impossibly idealistic and completely unrealistic? Not at all. His
Gospel shows that he is fully aware of the reality of sin and of little faith.
After all, disciples pray in the Lord's Prayer: "And forgive us our debts, as
we also have forgiven our debtors; and lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from the Evil One" (6: 12-13). Matthew is aware that disciples
experience failure as they lead the life of the greater righteousness and
that they are continually in need of forgiveness from the side of both God
and the neighbor.
The thing to observe, however, is that Matthew refuses to make the
reality of sin and of little faith the determining factor in his ethic. Instead,
the determining factor for him is the reality of God's eschatological
kingdom, or rule, which is present even now in the earthly and risenJesus
Son of God. For disciples who live in the sphere where God rules through
the risen Jesus, doing the greater righteousness is the normal order of
things. Until the consummation, disciples will, to be sure, have to contend
with the shadows that invade this normal order, with sin and little faith.
But this notwithstanding, they are indeed summoned to be the kind of
person Jesus describes in the Sermon on the Mount, the kind of person
who loves God perfectly and the neighbor as the self.
Summoned as disciples are to lead the life of the greater righteousness
yet being unable to realize this summons, are they therefore left without
example? Again, not as Matthew sees it. Disciples are also bid to pray: "Our
Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name; thy kingdom come, thy
will be done, on earth as it is in heaven" (6:9-10). The human being in
Matthew's Gospel who is whole in his relationship to the Father, in whom
God's kingdom is a present reality, and who does God's will perfectly is of
courseJesus Son of God. He it is who stands before disciples as the one who
realizes in his life the ethic of the greater righteousness. Accordingly,
bound to him in trust and assured of his forgiveness, disciples "follow after
him" as they hear his call and lead the life of the greater righteousness.
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