James the Brother of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls II (63 page)

BOOK: James the Brother of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls II
5.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

The version of this encounter one finds in Matthew 8:5–13 is somewhat different. It directly follows another ‘
touching
’ and ‘
cleansing
’ episode in Matthew 8:3 – in this case, the ‘
cleansing
’ of ‘
a leper
’ (‘
Simon the Leper
’?), who ‘
came
and
worshipped him
’. In Luke 7:18–22 following these curings and raisings, it should be appreciated that these motifs drift into the allusion to ‘
the lepers being cleansed
’ and the multiple references to ‘
coming
’ we shall discuss further below. In this exchange between Jesus and John, just as the ‘
Centurion
’ sends his ‘
two servants
’ to Peter in Acts 10:7, John is now pictured as sending ‘
two ce
r
tain (ones) of his Disciples
’ to query Jesus with the apocalyptically charged, ‘
Are you the one who is to
come
?’. This is language we shall eventually see reflected in ‘
the
Doresh ha-Torah
’ (‘
the Seeker after the Law
’)
who
came
to Damascus
’ in Ms. A of the Damascus Document and ‘
the coming of the Messiah of Aaron and Israel
’ in Ms. B and in ‘
the Star who would come out of Israel
’ from Numbers 24:17 in Ms. A and the Qumran
Testimonia
below.
27

But in Matthew 8:5, it is neither the ‘
Elders of the Jews
’ or the ‘
Friends of the Centurion
’ who come to Jesus on
the Ce
n
turion
’s behalf, but now ‘
the Centurion

himself
; and here, not only does he refer to his servant ‘
being
laid out
in the house
’ (8:6) – as in the ‘
garments
’/‘
cushions
’ being ‘
laid out
’ in Talmudic scenarios or Luke’s ‘
Poor Man Lazarus at the Rich Man

s door
’ – but now even, after commenting as in Luke on the Centurion’s ‘
great Faith
’, the ‘
Go your way
’ (8:13) of the several Talmudic stories attributed to either
Yohanan ben Zacchai
or
Eleazar ben Zadok
about the ‘
hair
’ or ‘
feet
’ of these same
Rich Men

s daughters
. Moreover, the perspicacious reader will also immediately discern that this same ‘
Go your way
’ has now m
i
grated down in Luke 7:22 into the outcome of Jesus’ exchanges with
the Disciples of John
over the question of ‘
the One who is
to come
’.

Finally, in this healing, Matthew is even more anti-Semitic and pro-Pauline than Luke – if this is possible. To his version of Jesus’ compliment to the Centurion of ‘
not even in Israel have I found such great Faith
’ (8:10) – also more or less repeated in Matthew 15:28 later in his version of the ‘
cleansing
’ of the ‘
Cananaean woman

s daughter
’,
viz
., ‘
O woman
,
great is your Faith
’ – is now attached the additional ideologically-charged and pointed comment, including this
Centurion
among ‘
the Many

who

shall come from East and West

and

recline
(
at the table
)
with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of the Heavens
’ (
sic
). In the portrait of ‘
Heaven and Hell
’ that concludes the ‘
certain Poor Man
’ laid at the gate of the ‘
Rich Man clothed in purple and fine linen
’ in Luke 16:22–31, this will be ‘
Lazarus on the bosom of Abraham
’. In the same breath, Ma
t
thew reverses the ‘
casting out
’ language Josephus used to illustrate
Essene
treatment of backsliders, to say nothing of his own later ‘
casting out down the toilet bowl
’ parable and the way Luke will portray the Jewish crowd as ‘
casting

Stephen

out of the city
’ in Acts 7:58: ‘
But the Sons of the Kingdom shall be cast out into the outer darkness’
(8:12; this is pure ‘
Gentile Mission
’ material).
To add insult to injury, Matthew adds here, ‘
and there shall be much weeping and gnashing of teeth
’.

To go back to the further resurrection episode in Luke 7:11–17 that intercedes between this
healing
of
the Centurion’s servant
and the exchange between ‘
the Disciples
’ of John and Jesus, Luke portrays Jesus as resurrecting the ‘
only son
’ ‘
in a city called Nain
’ of a bereaved ‘
widow
’ – another of the
Talmud
-like ‘
widow
’ scenarios which Luke, in particular (but also Mark), appears to have found so attractive. Not only should one note in this regard, for example, ‘
the widows overlooked in the
daily serving
’ in Luke’s introduction of ‘
Stephen
’ in Acts 6:1, but in both Luke 21:1–5 and Mark 12:41–44, there is the proverbial and particularly charged episode of the ‘
certain Poor widow casting her two mites into the Treasury
’ – ‘charged’ because it is so similar to the later scenario in Matthew 27:3–10 of Judas
Iscariot
casting his ‘
thirty pieces of silver
’ (‘
the price of blood
’ – here in Matthew 23:30, this is ‘
communion
’/‘
partaking in the blood of the Prophets
’ – more ‘
blood libel
’ accusations) into
the Temple Treasury
prior to his alleged
suicide
, that it too probably has simply been transferred and revamped.

In any event, like Judas’ ‘
casting
’ his ‘
thirty pieces of silver
’ into ‘
the Temple Treasury
’, it deals with what emerges as one of the pivotal issues for this period, that of ‘
sacred gifts given to the Temple
’ – in this instance, on the part of ‘
the Rich
casting
their gifts into the Treasury
’ (but also on the part of ‘
Gentiles
’ generally) as opposed to those ‘
cast
’, as Luke 21:4/Mark 12:43 would have it, by ‘
this certain Poor widow
’ (‘
cast
’/‘
casting
’ repeated five times in four lines!) ‘
out of her poverty
’. Of course, as in the resurrection of the ‘
only-begotten son
’ of ‘
the widow of Nain
’ (Adiabene), the overtones of this episode with the gifts to the Temple from another probable ‘
widow
’, Queen Helen
of Adiabene
(whose gifts included the famous seven-branched gold candelabra which was taken to Rome in Titus’ victory celebration and there, presumably melted down to help build – of all places – the  Colosseum!) should be obvious.

Furthermore, Jesus’ attitude towards ‘
the Poor
’ and ‘
poverty
’ in the matter of the ‘certain
Poor widow
’’s
two mites
– again missing, not only from Matthew, but John as well – is a far cry from what it is in John 12:5’s picture of his response to
Judas Iscariot
’s complaints about ‘
the Poor
’ over the wastefulness of
Lazarus
’ sister Mary
anointing Jesus’ feet with expensive oin
t
ment
. On the other hand, this time it does once again bear a resemblance to the
Talmud
’s picture both of Rabbi Akiba’s
po
v
erty
as opposed to his
Rich
father-in-law, Ben Kalba
Sabu

a
’s ‘
superfluity
’ and Rabbi Eliezer’s ‘
poverty
’, whose ‘
fame
’ would in due course, like ‘
this Poor widow
’’s ‘
be worth more than all the rest
’ (Luke 21:3/Mark12:43).

The encounter with this second
widow
here in Luke 21:1–5 whose
two mites
were ‘
worth more than all the rest
’ is pivotal too, because, in both it and Mark, it introduces Jesus’ telltale oracle patently based on Josephus’ description of Titus’ destru
c
tion of the Temple: ‘
There shall not be left a stone on top of a stone that shall not be thrown down
’.
28
Here, too, Jesus is not only called ‘
Teacher
’ (‘
Teacher
’ carrying with it, in the writer’s view, something of the sense of ‘
the Righteous Teacher
’), but the whole discourse he now delivers on ‘
going out from the Temple
’ is replete with multiple allusions to the language of ‘
lea
d
ing astray
’ (in Matthew 24:5 and 11, ‘
leading
Many
astray

29
) as well as that of ‘
the Elect
’, ‘
delivering up
’, ‘
false Christs and false prophets
’, ‘
misleading
’ or ‘
deceiving with (great) signs and wonders
’.

In addition, Jesus is depicted as pointedly characterizing the ‘
Rich
’ and those he pictures as
occupying

the Chief Seats in the Synagogues

as ‘
going to receive a greater
’ or ‘
more abundant Judgement
’ – that is, in proportion to their ‘
Riches
’ (Luke 20:47/Mark 12:40). Furthermore, this phraseology is replicated almost precisely in the Habakkuk
Pesher
’s picture –
in expos
i
tion of
Habakkuk
2
:
4
– of how the punishment ‘
of the Wicked
would be
multiplied upon themselves
’ when they
were judged
’. Moreover, this means, of course, on ‘
the Last
’ or ‘
Day of Judgement
’ (
n.b
.
, in particular, that even here the verb ‘
eating
’ or ‘
devouring
’ is used to express this in both Luke 20:47 and Mark 12:40 just as it is in the Habakkuk
Pesher
30
).

For its part Matthew 24:2, while retaining Mark’s ‘
going forth from the Temple
’ but discarding the ‘
widow

s two mites
’ material, embeds Jesus’ oracle of the destruction of the Temple at the end of its general ‘
woes
’ – ‘
woes
’ not unlike or really separable from those of the curious ‘
prophet
’ in Josephus,
Jesus ben Ananias
, after the death of James leading up to the d
e
struction of the Jerusalem,
31
which we shall consider in more detail below; ‘
woes
’, too, which throughout the whole of Ma
t
thew 23 are used to attack the ‘
Rabbis
’, ‘
Pharisees
’, ‘
Hypocrites
’, ‘
Blind Ones
’, ‘
fools
’, ‘
Blind Guides
’, and just about every pe
r
son or concept of any consequence in this period (in particular, concepts fundamental to Qumran ideology
32
), finally giving way, as in the other two Synoptics, to ‘
the Little Apocalypse
’ in Chapter Twenty-Four and, of course, to the typical proclam
a
tion ascribed to James in all early Church literature of ‘
seeing the Son of Man coming
(together with the ‘
Elect
’)
on the clouds of Heaven with Power and great Glory
’ (Matthew 24:30/Mark 13:26/Luke 21:27).

BOOK: James the Brother of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls II
5.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Village Gossip by Shaw, Rebecca
True Faith by Sam Lang
Palafox by Chevillard, Eric
Eye Sleuth by Hazel Dawkins
Sidekicks by Dan Danko, Tom Mason, Barry Gott
Madness Ends by Beth D. Carter
My Heart Says Yes by Ashley Blake