Monday, June 22, 2026

Leroy A. Huizenga on Matthew 20:28 Not Being Informed by the Servant Tradition

  

It may here again be advisable to seek first not intertextual but intratextual references. In Matt 23:35 Jesus speaks of πᾶν αἷμα δίκαιον ἐκχυννόμενον ἐπὶ τῆς γῆς coming upon the scribes and Pharisees, who are responsible for the blood of all the righteous from Abel to Zechariah. The shedding of Jesus’ blood in the Gospel of Matthew results both from a murderous human conspiracy as well as the divine will. Further, Lev 4–16 is peppered with the language of περὶ [τῆς] ἁμαρτίας, which may therefore contain better candidates for a precursor text than Isa 53. In short, finding an allusion to the Servant here is a dubitable prospect, as Luz rightly observes: “Mir ist der Anklang an Jes 53 wie bei 20,28 sehr fraglich, da kaum wörtliche Übereinstimmungen festzustellen sind.” [RB: I find the connection to Isaiah 53, as in 20:28, very questionable, since there are hardly any literal correspondences to be found.] (Luz, Mattäus, 4:115) Other intratextual or intertextual options are much more efficient and fruitful. (Leroy A. Huizenga, The New Isaac: Tradition and Intertextuality in the Gospel of Matthew [Supplements to Novum Testamentum 131; Leiden: Brill, 2009], 245, comment in square brackets added for clarification)

 

Leroy A. Huizenga's Appropriation of Hays's Criteria for Perceiving Intertextuality in Light of the Use of Genesis 22 in the Gospel of Matthew

  

Hays’s Criteria Revised: Echoes of Scripture and Tradition

 

would propose, then, that Hays’s criteria should be revamped in the following ways:

 

Availability can no longer be taken for granted but is now the decisive criterion. Which facets of the Akedah were present in the Jewish encyclopedia at the time of the composition of the Gospel of Matthew? Was the concept of a willing, active Isaac available? Was Isaac’s deed understood as salvific in some sense prior to its composition? Here we come upon the difficult but necessary historical task of reconstructing a small part of the ancient Jewish encyclopedia potentially relevant for the Gospel of Matthew.

 

Volume retains its importance, but perceived syntactic similarities to a proposed Old Testament text must be evaluated not solely on the basis of its coherence with the putative content of the precursor text itself but also in light of possible coherence with traditions of interpretation attached to that text in the Jewish encyclopedia. Further, the significance of the “precursor text” is to be judged not only in terms of the prominence of the text itself within Scripture but by the prominence of the traditions of interpretation attached to it. (Of course, we often determine the importance of an Old Testament text precisely by means of its significance in Jewish interpretive tradition.)

 

Recurrence or Clustering is expanded to include allusions to postbiblical traditions. If we can conclude that there are allusions to traditions of the Akedah in the Gethsemane and arrest sequence, we may be more certain that such is the case in other, less certain passages, such as the baptism or transfiguration. Note that this involves a coherent, holistic view of a Gospel; since redaction criticism largely ignores narrative factors, the principle of recurrence or clustering is seldom taken seriously.

 

Thematic Coherence helps confirm perceived syntactic allusions. It must include extrabiblical traditions under its purview. Most commentators can make no sense of potential references to Isaac in the Gospels precisely because they do not take extrabiblical traditions of the Akedah fully into consideration. It is also important to note here that different facets of an interpretive tradition such as the Akedah develop over time. Thus, an allusion to Gen 22 in Matthew could produce echoes of a single aspect of the Akedah present in the encyclopedia; that certain aspects developed later in the tradition does not mean that other aspects were not available earlier. Further, the text can actualize one particular aspect without actualizing others.

 

Historical Plausibility becomes more important. It implicitly acknowledges the role and importance of the Jewish cultural encyclopedia, for it explicitly considers “what might have been intended and grasped by particular first-century [C.E.] figures.” It recognizes the particular historical location in which the New Testament texts were produced and read, and thus necessitates the inclusion of traditions of interpretation attached to the biblical texts. Since it concerns the presence of traditions in the encyclopedia, it is now intimately connected to availability.

 

History of Interpretation remains a most helpful guide but is not ultimately decisive. In the same way that early Christian interpreters may have lost Paul’s sense of urgency about relating the gospel to Israel, many may have lacked the intimate knowledge of Jewish traditions of interpretation likely familiar to many New Testament writers. Thus, the import of Hays’s judgment with regard to Paul stands with regard to the possibility of the presence of Isaac in various passages in the Gospel of Matthew: “this criterion should rarely be used as a negative test to exclude proposed echoes that commend themselves on other grounds.” That said, many Fathers see connections between Isaac and Jesus that prove fruitful for the interpretation of the Gospel of Matthew, as examined in the excursus below.

 

Satisfaction. This criterion still concerns the sense of the whole. Given its broad scope and generality, we may move into the realm of questions concerning general typological relationships and narrative coherence. Does the Matthean presentation of Jesus require a typological model, particularly that of Isaac? Does the intertextual frame of the ready martyr, of which Isaac is the paradigmatic example, support underlying narrative coherence? Might the Akedah help smooth the narrative transition and Christological relationship between Jesus the teacher and Jesus the God-ordained sacrifice? (Leroy A. Huizenga, The New Isaac: Tradition and Intertextuality in the Gospel of Matthew [Supplements to Novum Testamentum 131; Leiden: Brill, 2009], 63-65)

 

Matthew Bryce Ervin on Isaiah 56:6-8 and 19:18-21

On Isa 56:6-8:

 

Some Gentiles will work right alongside the Jewish people in serving and loving the name of the LORD (v. 6). This is exactly the kind of equality we would expect among those in the New Covenant. However, it would have been an unthinkable partnership in Isaiah’s day. Gentiles will be brought to Jerusalem’s mountain, being made joyful in the temple as they offer sacrifices. These offerings are distinctly said to be acceptable on the LORD’s altar. In that day, the temple will be known as a house of prayer for every nation (v. 7). This level of participation in temple ordinances is quite astonishing. There is no other time in history in which Gentiles could make legitimate sacrifices in the temple. Sacrifices were previously not even acceptable from an Israelite who was not also a Levite (cf. Deut 33:10). Recall that when Saul attempted a sacrifice, God removed his throne (1 Sam 13:9–14). King Uzziah was struck with leprosy because he offered incense to the LORD (2 Chr 26:18–21). Because Gentile sacrifices have not yet been accepted, it can only be that they will be so in the future. Previously, you were either born a Levite or you were not. During the Millennium, God will make new priests and Levites (Isa 66:21). He will not only ingather the dispersed of Israel but will add to them ingathered Gentiles (v. 8). Ezekiel placed this final ingathering of the Jews and their inclusion in the New Covenant shortly before he covered the future sacrifices (Ezek 36:24–27). Isaiah’s narrative on temple sacrifices complements Ezekiel’s remarkably well, assuring us that the prophets agree. (Matthew Bryce Ervin, One Thousand Years with Jesus: The Coming Messianic Kingdom [Eugene, Oreg.: Resource Publications, 2017], 108)

 

On Isa 19:18-21:

 

The five cities represent the whole of Egypt in the millennial day of the LORD. All of the inhabitants will speak Hebrew, the language of the Promised Land (v. 18). The City of Destruction, likely called so on account of the blood previously spilled there, is referred to as the City of the Sun in the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Targumim, and some other manuscripts. This is Heliopolis, a city where sacrifices used to be made to the sun-god Ra. In the Millennium an altar will be erected, not for Ra, but for the LORD God (v. 19). The altar will serve as a tribute and memorial to the LORD out of gratitude for him sending Egypt a Savior, the Messiah Jesus (v. 20). This follows the pattern of Abraham and Joshua building altars to the LORD out of appreciation and commitment to him (Gen 12:8; Josh 24:26–27), and that of Jacob raising a stone pillar in honor of his covenant with God (Gen 28:18–22). The LORD will reveal himself to the Egyptians and they will come to personally know him. They will worship their Creator with sacrifices and offerings (v. 21). A city that was once dedicated to offering sacrifices to a false god will be repurposed for the offering of sacrifices to the one true God. The Egyptians will not make these offerings to point to what the Savior will do, but out of remembrance for what he has done. (Ibid., 108-9)

 

Lucy Mack Smith's 1844/1845 Recollection of a Prophecy of Joseph Smith c. 1824

In 1844/1845, Lucy Mack Smith recalled that Joseph, shortly after Alvin’s burial, that Joseph refused to attend any of the religious revivals at the time. She noted that

 

He would say Mother I do not wish to prevent you from going to meeting or joining any church you like or any of the Family who desire the like only do not ask me to go <do so> for I do not wish to go But I will take my Bible and go out into the woods and learn more in two hours than you could if you were to go to meeting two years. (Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1844–1845, Page [8], bk. 4)

 

Adding that:

 

Now you look at deacon Joseph <Jessup> & you heart heare him talk very piously well you think he is a very good man but suppose that Mr. (one of his poor neighbors) <who had 8 children)> owed him the value of one cow well this man has eight small children suppose the poor man should be taken sick & die leaving his wife with one cow but destitute of every means of support for herself and family Now I tell you that deacon Joseph Jessup good <religious> as he is would not hesitate to take the last cow from the widow and orphans rather than loose the debts although he has an abundance of everything (Ibid.)

 

Lucy noted that this seemed impossible to the family at the time:

 

This seemed to us at that time impossible but it was not one year from the time in which it was spoken when we saw the very act <thing> that was told transpire before our eyes (Ibid.)

 

A. Howard North, after discussing this prophecy, concluded that:

 

The detail matters because it is the kind of detail Lucy did not need to invent—the family had remembered the specific name, Deacon Jessup, and the specific outcome—and this tells us that by 1825 Joseph was already speaking, occasionally, in the prophetic mode that would eventually be a daily mode of his life. Hyrum heard him do so. Hyrum saw the prophecy fulfilled. Hyrum drew a conclusion about his brother. (A. Howard North, Joseph & Hyrum: Two Brothers, One Restoration [2026], 92-93)

 

 

Further Reading:

 

Resources on Joseph Smith’s Prophecies

A. Howard North Discussing the Minister and Effect in Latter-day Saint Baptismal Theology

  

Minister. The minister was an authorized officer. John the Baptist was a man sent from God (John 1:6), with priesthood from his father Zacharias (Luke 1:5) and a divine commission to baptize. The apostles authorized to baptize were those whom the Lord has sent; Paul, recognizing that the Lord had not sent him principally as a baptizer, nonetheless baptized when needed and ensured the work was done by those authorized to do it (1 Corinthians 1:14-17). The matter of who could perform the ordinance was not casual; it was a matter of authority received from those who had it . . .

 

Effect. The effect was real. Baptism was for the remission of sins (Acts 2:38). It was a real saving act, not a symbol of one. Peter is unmistakable: baptism doth also now save us (1 Peter 3:21)—not by the washing of the flesh, he immediately adds, but by the answer of a good conscience toward God and by the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Baptism in the apostolic gospel is an ordinance of salvation, a definite act with covenantal consequences, performed by an authorized minister, received by a believing penitent.

 

Connected to baptism was a second definite ordinance: the laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost. . . . After baptism, the Holy Ghost was given by the laying on of hands of one having authority (Acts 8:14-17; Acts 19:5-6; Hebrews 6:2). The two ordinances together—baptism of water for the remission of sins, and the laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost—were the apostoli doorway into the Church. (A. Howard North, The Apostasy from the Original Church of Jesus Christ: How Christianity Preserved Faith in Christ but Lost His Apostles, Priesthood, Authority, Ordinances, and Church [2026], 197-98, italics in original)

 

Wayne O’Donnell (Protestant): The "Other Sheep" of JOhn 10:16 were Then-Present Believers, not Then-Future Converts

  

The Other Sheep Were Already Saved

 

Jn. 10:16. And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold. Them also I must bring, and they will hear my voice; and there will be one fold, and one shepherd.

 

The other sheep that would eventually be brought into the fold were the already-saved diaspora Jews; and the already-saved, God-fearing, synagogue-attending Gentiles, that met with them. (Wayne O’Donnell, Biblical Predestination to Glory vs. Calvinist Predestination to Faith Romans 9, John 6, Ephesians 1 [rev ed.; 2026], 75)

 

Robert Alter on the Use of “Jew” in Zechariah 8:21

  

ten people from all the tongues of the nations shall grasp the border of a Jew’s garment. This vivid image conveys the sense of throngs of foreigners desperate to join the people with whom God dwells. The term yehudi, “Jew,” never appears in earlier biblical literature, although it occurs frequently in Esther, which also belongs to the Persian period. Yehudi is palpably moving toward the meaning of “Jew” because it is now hard to speak of a “Judahite” (Hebrew, ben yehudah), given that the kingdom of Judah no longer exists, having been replaced by the Persian province of Yehud. (Robert Alter, The Hebrew Bible, 3 vols. [New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2019], 2:1370)

 

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