H
Hodos
Guest
This goes into the area of speculation. When you are recounting a story to your friends, do you take out a recording and state word for word, what they said? Or do you recount the details that seem necessary to you for the audience you are addressing and for the point you are addressing? The other question is this, do you think Jesus only answered this question once? Or is it possible that this was a running issue of his day and Jesus may have answered this question more than once, and Mark and Luke may be recounting difference instances of when Jesus answered the question?Just thinking aloud here… If, as you say, the exception clause was part of Jesus’ original teaching on divorce and not, as I first thought, a parenthetical remark inserted when Matthew wrote his gospel under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit in order to harmonize Jesus’ teaching with the gospel’s mention of Joseph’s intention to divorce the Virgin Mary, then why did Mark and Luke not mention such a seemingly important exception?
That point that I was making is that if you actually read the passage in Deuteronomy which speaks of divorce, you can see that Jesus’ answer in Matthew is perfectly in alignment with what the law as was written in Deuteronomy said. So it isn’t just some parenthetical teaching Jesus made up on the spot, or that Matthew added to his gospel. This was the explanation (and in this instance, the most precise recounting of the law) that Jesus gave.
I think the issue you are having here is you assume that each gospel should be a word for word re-telling of Christ’s ministry rather than independent witnesses recounting it from different perspectives, and different points of view, to different audiences. This doesn’t mean the details where they differ are factually incorrect or made up, it means that the authors were selective of the material they included in their accounts for the benefit of their audiences.
Not really, there were actually two schools of thought on this in that day, and Jesus was siding with the more conservative rendering of what Deuteronomy says. Apparently Jesus was not as theologically liberal as many would have you believe (that was an aside, not aimed at you).Because of his disciples’ adverse reaction to Jesus’ teaching on divorce, I don’t think, as you seem to suggest, Jesus was merely restating the teaching of Moses, “If such is the case of a man with his wife, it is not expedient to marry.” (Matthew 19:10) And, because of the way Jesus set his teaching in opposition to the teaching of Moses, “It was also said, ‘Whoever divorces his wife, let him give her a certificate of divorce.’ But I say to you…” (Matthew 5:31-32a)
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