Christianity Unearthed
When does an argument turn into a fracture? Matthew is not a calm biography of Jesus. It is a gospel written under pressure, by a community trying to stay inside Israel's story while being pushed toward a gentile future. And you can watch the temperature rise inside the text itself. This episode follows Matthew's arc from continuity to break. Early on, the gospel still sounds at home in Jewish renewal. By Matthew 23, the Pharisees are denounced in a drumbeat of woes. In the passion narrative, Pilate washes his hands and the crowd speaks a line that later centuries would weaponize. By the end, the mission turns outward to all nations and the community has learned to say "their synagogues" as though the place is no longer theirs. We trace the seams where the shift becomes visible. The Israel-first mission of Matthew 10 sitting beside the universal commission of Matthew 28. The Galilee ending that walks away from Temple power. The parable in which a king burns a city, written with the ash of 70 CE in its mouth. The Birkat ha-minim pushing back from the synagogue side. And Matthew 18 building a portable court so a community without a center can still be an assembly. Matthew is fracture before empire. It is intra-Jewish conflict caught mid-break, not the later Christian polemic it became. This episode shows how to hear it that way.
25 episodios
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