Available Formats
Matthews Presentation of the Son of David
By (Author) H. Daniel Zacharias
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
1st December 2016
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
226.206
Hardback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
494g
H. Daniel Zacharias presents a literary-critical analysis of the Gospel of Matthew and its interaction with Davidic tradition and use of Davidic typology. Throughout the narrative, the evangelist makes pervasive use of Davidic tradition from the Old Testament in his portrayal of Jesus. This begins from the first verse and the declaration that Jesus is the Son of David, and culminates in Jesus usage of Psalm 22s Davidic lament on the cross. Davidic material is present throughout Matthew, in allusion, in specific citations, in thematic material. In addition, Matthew makes use of Davidic typology numerous times, with David as type and Jesus as anti-type. Zacharias shows how the use of Davidic material presents to the reader a scripturally-grounded redefinition of what it means for Jesus to be the Son of David: not as a violent militant leader, as some expected, but as a physical descendant of David, a healing shepherd, and a humble king. Within the Gospel, Matthew utilizes Davidic typology to show how the Son of David even has similar experiences as his royal predecessor. Even Davids own words from the psalms are utilized as testimony to the legitimacy of Jesus as the Davidic Messiah.
the systematic examination of Davidic typology and Son of David themes brought together in one monograph will make this book a helpful and unavoidable reference for in-depth study of the first Gospel for the foreseeable future. * Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society *
H. Daniel Zacharias is Assistant Professor of Biblical Studies at Acadia Divinity College, Canada.