Lex Talionis in Early Judaism and the Exhortation of Jesus in Matthew 5.38-42
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Hardback
£170.00
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Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567041500
Number of Pages: 210
Published: 15/02/2005
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm
In Matthew 5:38-42, Jesus overrides the Old Testament teaching of 'an eye for eye and a tooth for a tooth' - the Lex Talionis law - and commands his disciples to turn the other cheek. James Davis asks how Jesus' teaching in this instance relates to the Old Testament talionic commands, how it relates to New Testament era Judaism and what Jesus required from his disciples and the church. Based on the Old Testament texts such as Leviticus 24, Exodus 22 and Deuteronomy 19, a strong case can be made that the Lex Talionis law was understood to have a literal application there are several texts that text of Leviticus 24 provides the strongest case that a literal and judicial application. However, by the second century AD and later, Jewish rabbinic leadership was essentially unified that the OT did not require a literal talion, but that financial penalties could be substituted in court matters. Yet there is evidence from Philo, Rabbi Eliezer and Josephus that in the first century AD the application of literal talion in judicial matters was a major and viable Jewish viewpoint at the time of Jesus.
Jesus instruction represents a different perspective from the OT lex talionis texts and also, possibly, from the Judaism of his time. Jesus commands the general principle of not retaliation against the evil person and intended this teaching to be concretely applied, as borne out in his own life. JSNTS
1. Introduction; 2. The Lex Talionis In Recent Interpretation; 3. The Lex Talionis In The Old Testament; 4. The Lex Talionis In Early Judaism; 5. Historical Background/Context Of Matthew 5:39-42; 6. An Exegesis Of Matthew 5:38-42; 7. Correlation Of Matthew 5:38-42 Past And Present; 8. Final Conclusions
'There should be little doubt that this is an extremely useful book for the analysis of the lex talionis...It is conveniently set out and provides masses of important parallel examples from early Judaism.' James G. Crossley * Journal for the Study of the New Testament * "...cannot and should not be ignored. The work is well researched, carefully written, and will make a valuable addition to Sermon on the Mount studies. Anyonw who enters into studies of the Law in the NT, the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus' view of the Law and of Jesus' ethic would be foolish not to include this work in the bibliography."- Samuel Lamerson, June 2006/ Vol. 49 no.2 * Journal of Evangelical Theological Society *