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BIRTH OF JESUS NARRATIVES BIRTH OF JESUS NARRATIVES

BIRTH OF JESUS NARRATIVES - PowerPoint Presentation

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BIRTH OF JESUS NARRATIVES - PPT Presentation

INTRODUCTION Birth narratives of Jesus are found in Matthew and Luke Mark does not have birth narratives Very few thing are common between Matthew and Luke The few commonalities contain significance differences ID: 736520

luke jesus birth matthew jesus luke matthew birth son herod joseph mary amp born king god years david bethlehem

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Slide1

BIRTH OF JESUS

NARRATIVESSlide2

INTRODUCTION

Birth narratives of Jesus are found in Matthew and Luke.

Mark does not have birth narratives.

Very few thing are common between Matthew and Luke.

The few commonalities contain significance differences.Slide3

COMMONALITIES

1. Main characters:

Mary, Joseph, Jesus.

2. Supporting characters:

Angels, Holy Spirit.

3. Titles attributed to Jesus:

Christ, son of David.

4. Heritage:

children of Abraham/Israel, house of David.

5. Place names:

Nazareth in Galilee, Bethlehem in Judea.

6. Historical period:

during the reign of King Herod.

7. Genealogies.Slide4

DIFFERENCES

Matthew 1–2

(only 48 verses, including genealogy)

Luke 1–2

(total of 132 verses, plus 16 more in genealogy)

1:1 - Title of the Gospel

1:1-4 - Literary introduction to the Gospel

1:2-17 - The Genealogy of Jesus (from Abraham to King David to Exile to Joseph)

(

Genealogy included later, in Luke 3:23-38

)

-

1:5-25 - Angel Gabriel announces John the Baptist’s birthSlide5

-

2:1-5 - Joseph & Mary journey to Bethlehem for the census

1:25 & 2:1a -

Mary’s son is born

in Bethlehem of Judea, and

named Jesus

2:6-7 -

Mary gives birth to her son

in Bethlehem of Judea

-

2:8-14 - Angels appear to some shepherds (

incl. the "Gloria" of the angels

)

-

2:15-20 - Shepherds visit Mary & Joseph & the infant lying in a manger

-

2:21 - The infant is circumcised &

named Jesus

-

2:22-38 - Jesus is presented to God in the Temple (

incl. Simeon's "

Nunc

Dimittis

"

)Slide6

2:1b-12 - Magi from the East come; they first visit Herod, then Jesus

-

2:13-21 - Joseph & Mary flee to Egypt with the child Jesus;

the Innocents are murdered; the Holy Family returns to Israel

-

2:22-23 - They journey to Nazareth

2:39-40 - The family returns to Nazareth

-

2:41-52 - At age twelve, Jesus & his parents visit the Jerusalem TempleSlide7

DIFFERENT THEOLOGICAL EMPHASIS

.

Matthew 1–2

Luke 1–2

Driving Force:

Hebrew Scriptures

are fulfilled (1:22-23; 2:5-6, 15, 17-18, 23)

Holy Spirit

is at work (1:1, 35, 41, 67; 2:25-27)

Jesus'

Heritage:

* Son of

David

, son of

Abraham

(1:1-17)

* Legal son of Joseph, but child of the Holy Spirit (1:18-25)

* Son of

God

, son of

Mary

by the Holy Spirit (1:26-38)

* Heir to David's throne, over the house of Judah (1:32-33; 2:4)Slide8

Names

& Titles:

* Messiah (1:1, 16-18; 2:4)

* Jesus: "For he will save his people from their sins" (1:21, 25)

*

Emmanuel

: "God with us" (1:23)

*

King of the Jews

(2:2)

* "A ruler who is to shepherd my people Israel" (2:6)

*

Nazorean

(2:23)

* Jesus (1:31; 2:21)

* Son of the Most High; Son of God (1:32, 35)

* He will be great, holy, full of wisdom and grace (1:32, 35; 2:40)

* "Of his kingdom there will be no end" (1:33)

* A

Savior

is born... who is Messiah and

Lord

(2:11, 26)

* A light for revelation to Gentiles and for glory to Israel (2:32)Slide9

Characters

Emphasized:

Men:

King David, Joseph of Nazareth, Magi from the East,

King Herod, chief priests & scribes, Ethnarch Archelaus

Women:

Virgin Mary of Nazareth, Elizabeth, Anna

Poor & Aged:

Shepherds, Zechariah, Simeon

Themes:

obstacles, conflict, fear, murder, politics

glory, praise, joy;  poverty, humility, faithSlide10

OT Parallels:

Dreamer Joseph (Genesis 37–41)

Baby Moses (Exodus 1–2)

Birth of Samson (Judges 13)

Birth of Samuel (1 Sam 1–2)

Number

Symbolism:

[King] David = 14 (DVD = 4+6+4);

three groups of 14 generations in genealogy; focus on royalty

70 weeks from Gabriel's first Annunciation to Presentation in Temple?

related to 70-week prophecy by angel Gabriel in Daniel 9:24-27?Slide11

DIFFERENCES

 

1.

Matthew

places the birth of Jesus during the rule of Herod the Great, who died in 4 B.C.E.

Luke

places it around ten years later, at the time of the Census (6-7 C.E.)

2. In

Matthew

, Jesus's parents lived in a house in Bethlehem. In

Luke

, they came to Bethlehem from elsewhere (Nazareth, a town which didn't exist until several hundred years after the time of the Biblical narratives).

3. In

Matthew

, Jesus was born in a house. In

Luke

, there was no room at the inn so he was born in a stable. Slide12

4. In

Matthew

, kings/wise men/noble visitors of some sort came from afar. In

Luke

, it was shepherds from the fields. You know those nativity scenes that show both shepherds and kings? That's a third version that nobody ever wrote about!

5. In

Matthew,

the kings attracted the attention of Herod, who ordered the slaughter of the innocents to try to kill Jesus. In

Luke

, that never happened. Slide13

6. In

Matthew,

Joseph and Mary fled with Jesus to Egypt. In

Luke

, they calmly stayed in Bethlehem until Mary could be purified, then went to the Temple (in public!) where the priest Simeon made a major scene.

7. In

Matthew

, the family didn't return from Egypt for several years. In

Luke

, they went from Jerusalem directly back home to Nazareth and stayed there.

8. There are two completely different genealogies for Jesus.Slide14

DIFFRENCES IN GENEALOGIES

1. Matthew starts from Abraham, Luke starts from Adam and God.

2. Five matriarchs: Ruth, Bathsheba,

Rahab

, Tamar, and Marry are included in Matthew, but not in Luke.

3. Different names.

4. Luke has more ancestors than Mt. (Matthew - 41, Luke - 76)

5. Matthew traces the genealogy through Joseph, but Luke does it through Mary’s father/grandfather.Slide15

WOMEN IN THE GENEALOGY

1.

Tamar

: Disguised herself as a prostitute and conceived a son with her father-in-law (Gen 38).

2.

Rehab

: She was the harlot of Jericho whose life was spared because she aided Joshua’s spies

(Josh 2, 3).

3.

Ruth

: Was a Moabite woman who joined herself to Israel through her husband’s family.

4.

Bathsheba

: Was Uriah’s wife with whom King David had Solomon (2 Sam 11-12).

5.

Mary

: A virgin who was betrothed to Joseph. Slide16

SOURCES

The Birth of Jesus: Comparing the Gospel Infancy Narratives

by Felix Just, S.J., Ph.D. 

Daniel J. Harrington,

The Gospel Of Matthew.

Luke T. Johnson,

The Gospel of Luke.Slide17

JESUS’ YEAR OF BIRTH

A RECONSTRUCTIONSlide18

The early church was not so worried about the year of the birth of Jesus.

It valued

epiphany

(revelation of God through Jesus).

Epiphany was celebrated on the

6

th

January

.

Christmas

was not their bother.

Dionysius

Exiguus

, a Russian monk who died about 544, was tasked by

Pope John I

to set out the dates for Easter from the years 527 to 626.

The Pope wanted some order in the celebration of

Easter

. Slide19

 Dionysius began with what he considered to be the year of Jesus' birth.

He chose the year in which

Rome

had been founded and determined, that Jesus had been born

754 years later

(Anno Urbis Conditae (AUC) – in the year of the founding of the city (Rome)Ab

Urbe

Condita (AUC) – from the founding of the city).

He maintained

25 December

as the day of birth.

So according to him,

754 = 1 AD

.

Any year before 754 becomes

BC

(Before Christ) and any year after 754 inclusive becomes

AD

(Anno Domini).Slide20

Dionysius

Exiguus

decided that Christians were to celebrate the birth day of Jesus on December 25.

In 274, in Rome, the

Emperor Aurelian

had declared December 25 a civic holiday in celebration of the birth of

Mithras

, the sun god.

By

336,

in that same city, Christians countered by celebrating the birth of Jesus, the son of God, on December 25. Slide21

PROBLEMS

 

King Herod died in

750 AUC

, and Jesus was born when King Herod was alive.

If Herod died in 750 AUC, yet Jesus was born when Herod was alive, then Dionysius’ calendar was

4 years

off the mark.Slide22

2. According to Mat 2:16, the wise men were led by a star. Can this help us? Astrologists agree that between 6 and 7 BC there was some strange movement of stars. Probably one of such stars was Jesus’ star.

The star which Matthew mentions is no ordinary star but a mysterious and miraculous one, yet astrologists are talking of ordinary stars.

We cannot use a miraculous star to establish historical facts.Slide23

3. When Jesus was born the gospels say that there was a census.

A census should be recorded in the archives of a nation.

Unfortunately the census which the historian Josephus recorded took place in 6 AD by Herod

Archelaus

.

It was carried out in Judaea in order to estimate the amount of taxes to be collected.Slide24

So apart from the Herod fact, there is no other help in the gospels. Herod died in 750AUC/ 4BC. Jesus could have been born two years earlier, 6 BC. 

Luke 3:23 says that Jesus started his ministry when he was thirty years old. However, thirty might be a symbolic figure which points to maturity. But since Luke was a gentile he might not have been in touch with Jewish symbolism. So Jesus was born between

6 and 4 BC

.