Can you refer us to a few of those examples. The traditions you are referring to are prophecies written in scripture.
Every time Jesus speaks about tradition, He strangely refutes it by quoting scripture.
Certainly.
First, this is not a Scripture text that Jesus is speaking about. He is speaking about a Jewish tradition.
True, the tradition is based upon Malachi chapter 3, but it is an
interpretation that is not mentioned at all in the text. Note:
Remember the law of Moses my servant,
whom I charged at Horeb
With statutes and ordinances
for all Israel.
Now I am sending to you
Elijah the prophet,
Before the day of the Lord comes,
the great and terrible day;
He will turn the heart of fathers to their sons,
and the heart of sons to their fathers,
Lest I come and strike
the land with utter destruction.–Malachi 3:22-24.
Note that the text says nothing about the Messiah. The Hebrew word
meshiach doesn’t even appear. The scripture only says that before God comes to destroy the wicked, Elijah will come. Nothing in Malachi says that Elijah “comes first” before the Messiah as mentioned by Jesus in Matthew 17.
Where does this tradition actually come from? Rabbinic tradition of the day. It eventually became part of the written Oral Tradition of Judaism and as such appears in the Talmud at Tractate Sanhedrin 98a.
Look closely at the text of Matthew 17;10-11 again. The disciples asks Jesus not about the text in Malachi, but of the Jewish
scribes. "Why do the
scribes say that Elijah must come first?”
Note that Malachi does not say that “Elijah must come first” before the Messiah does. It is the scribes that do.
Who were the “scribes”? They were not merely copyists of the Scriptures. They were the exegetes, the interpreters of Scripture in Judah. In fact they specialized in being interpreters of the Torah.
Jesus does not counter the interpretation of the scribes. In fact he says their expectation is correct:
“Elijah will indeed come and restore all things; but I tell you that Elijah has already come, and they did not recognize him but did to him whatever they pleased. So also will the Son of Man suffer at their hands.” Then the disciples understood that he was speaking to them of John the Baptist.–Matthew 17:11-13.
So even though Malachi does not say that Elijah will come before the Messiah, and even though this is merely Oral Tradition, Jesus not only says the tradition is true, he claims it was even
fulfilled.
Here is one example where Jesus relies on Jewish Oral Tradition to highlight himself as the Messiah. I will return shortly with other examples.