Matthew Chapter 2
Immanuel Context and
Substance
By Ron Corson
For
some time I have had a distaste for the book of Matthew. The biggest problem I
have with Matthew is the author’s way of taking material out of context from the
Old Testament and applying them to the life of Christ. Now we don’t know who
the author of Matthew was for certain. It is set forth by tradition to be the
disciple Matthew; it may or may not be. We do see that in the book of Matthew
at least in the first several chapters, an intentional literary device is
employed. The book tries to recapitulation the events of ancient
To Christians the most
important of these Old Testament verses
is that found in Isaiah 7:14 Therefore
the Lord himself will give you a sign: The
virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call him
Immanuel.(NIV)
Thanks to the book of Matthew’s use of this verse it is often
only considered to be a prophecy of Christ. Even though there is no place other
then Matthew which calls Jesus Immanuel.
However it is not to the name Immanuel that Matthew wants to draw
attention it is to the idea of what the name means, “God with us”. In fact it
was the idea of “God with us” that Isaiah had presented to the Israelites
hundreds of years before. In our ardor to insist upon Immanuel as a Messianic
Prophecy we often ignore the repetition Isaiah uses of the terms with the
meaning of “God with us”. Besides the reference in Isaiah
Isaiah
8:8
And sweep on into
Isaiah
8:10
Devise your strategy, but it will be thwarted; propose your
plan, but it will not stand, for God is with us. (NIV)
God is with us is Isaiah’s
words of comfort to a people about to suffer a major defeat by their enemies.
And even when the enemies appear to be winning God notes that even the purposes
of the enemy will not stand because God is with his people. So like the sign to
Ahaz, the child born is a reminder that “God is with
us”, though bad may come, God will not abandon his people, He does not leave
them alone. In the echoes of Immanuel we see that though the people may have
failed in their covenant with God, God has not nor will He fail. For we see an
inherent promise of hope in Isaiah.
In the book of Matthew the
author has taken this hope, this certainty of God with us and applied it to the
person of Jesus Christ. Not because Jesus was to literally be named Immanuel
and not even because of a virgin birth but because Jesus Christ was now seen as
truly “God with us”. Remember the author is writing after all the events in
Christ’s life had happened. He is going back in time to state his case as to
why this Jesus is the Messiah. In some ways the book of Matthew is very much
like the book of John. When they both begin to tell about the person of Jesus
they both tell us that it is God with us, Matthew by means of Immanuel and John
by means of the Logos, the Word become flesh.
Many people become sidetracked
by the part of Isaiah 14:7 about a virgin conceiving a child however in the
Hebrew it just means a young woman. It works out well for the book of Matthew’s
purposes but again it is a foreshadowing of events to come rather then a clear
straight forward prophecy. There seems to be no indication that the child born
was from a literal virgin as we use the term today. Interestingly Isaiah in the
first part of Chapter 8 also has a son who is used to foreshadow what will
happen to
After the proclamation of the
good news that God is with us Matthew moves on to the recapitulation of the
Messiah with
"When
Herod’s death decree against
baby boys reminds us of the death decree
Like the miraculous deliverance
of Moses, Jesus is delivered from Herod’s evil also. Matthew then quotes
Jeremiah 31:15-17 to show the sorrow of the people under Herod’s decree. 13
Then maidens will dance and be glad, young men and old as well. I will turn
their mourning into gladness; I will give them comfort and joy instead of
sorrow. 14 I will satisfy the priests with abundance, and my people will be
filled with my bounty," declares the LORD. 15 This is what the LORD says: "A voice is heard in Ramah,
mourning and great weeping, Rachel weeping for her children and refusing to be
comforted, because her children are no more." 16 This is what the LORD
says: "Restrain your voice from weeping and your eyes from tears, for your
work will be rewarded," declares the LORD. "They will return from the
land of the enemy. 17 So there is hope for your future," declares the
LORD. "Your children will return to their own land. (NIV)
The verses in Jeremiah are
referring to the exile of
The book of Matthew then moves a
step farther then we today can comprehend.
…and he went and lived in a town called
Since there is no Old Testament
reference like this it may be that the author was using an expression of scorn
used against the Messiah. Such as that expressed by Nathanael,
"
But Matthew’s failure to
reference something in the Old Testament while stating it was something said
through the prophets is perhaps the key to unfolding Matthew’s intent in the
second chapter of Matthew. The history might not be accurate, but the concepts
are what the author found most important. The Messiah has come, God with us,
the deliverer miraculously inserting Himself into mankind’s world. The precious
gold of God presented to a world that would kill its very savior. So in the
book of Matthew the author tells us of the myrrh given to child, an aromatic
resin used for the preparation of a corpse for burial. The gift of incense, the
sweet fragrance that for centuries was used in the worship of God, even the
gifts of the Magi have deeper meanings.
Matthew 2 is not the simplistic
story I was indoctrinated to believe. It is a piece of in depth literature with
more substance then history. But then isn’t that the way of so much of the
Bible. Literature, poetry, Chiastic Structure, and
analogy all and more find themselves used within the Bible. Human creativity
and God given inspiration can create amazing things. Yet we can in our
excitement of discovery often trample all over what was written in our haste to
explain what our tradition has taught us.