Matthew within Sectarian Judaism

Updated by: 
Shiran Shevah
Research notes: 
SHS/not checked/14/07/2019
Reference type: 
Book
Author(s): 
Kampen, John
year: 
2019
Full title: 

Matthew within Sectarian Judaism

Place of Publication: 
New Haven
Publisher: 
Yale University Press
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

A renowned scholar of the Dead Sea Scrolls argues for reading the Gospel of Matthew as the product of a Jewish sect

In this masterful study of what has long been considered the “most Jewish” gospel, John Kampen deftly argues that the gospel of Matthew advocates for a distinctive Jewish sectarianism, rooted in the Jesus movement. He maintains that the writer of Matthew produced the work within an early Jewish sect, and its narrative contains a biography of Jesus which can be used as a model for the development of a sectarian Judaism in Lower Syria, perhaps Galilee, toward the conclusion of the first century CE.

Rather than viewing the gospel of Matthew as a Jewish-Christian hybrid, Kampen considers it a Jewish composition that originated among the later followers of Jesus a generation or so after the disciples. This method of viewing the work allows readers to understand what it might have meant for members of a Jesus movement to promote their understanding of Jewish history and law that would sustain Jewish life at the end of the first century.

Label: 
15/07/2019
Record number: 
105 667