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Appendix
to “The Nativity”, Page 4
Eusebius
opens his account as follows (1 Nicene-3 p. 91):
Matthew and Luke in their gospels have given us the genealogy of Christ
differently, and many suppose that they are at variance with one another.
Since as a consequence every believer, in ignorance of the truth, has
been zealous to invent some explanation which shall harmonize the two
passages, permit us to subjoin the account of the matter which has come
down to us, and which is given by Africanus . . . in his epistle to
Aristides, where he discusses the harmony of the gospel genealogies.
In the light of anthroposophy, one can wonder if perhaps the darkening
that progressively occurred after the first century might not indicate
that some of the earlier “explanations,” which Eusebius alleges to have
been “in ignorance of the truth,” actually knew and expressed the truth
which had become completely veiled by the third century. The light of
Steiner’s teachings might be taken as hinting strongly thus. It is notable,
however, that the seeming discrepancy bothered Christians early on,
as knowledge of the truth of the “Mystery” of Golgotha would take further
human evolution (e.g., Jn 16,12; Heb 5,11; 9,5) and then the revelation
of truth by another prophet to appear in the early twentieth century.
Modern Christians seem inclined to ignore the genealogies as hopeless
muddles. No Bible commentary has yet quoted Steiner on anything to my
knowledge, presumably either out of unawareness of, or disdain for,
his prophecy, more likely the former since no mention is made of him.
That apparently leaves only the Africanus letter as a possible reconciliation,
and no great affinity for that has developed, even where it has been
noted.
Edersheim’s late nineteenth century work, The Life and Times of Jesus
the Messiah, while commencing with the Jewish world in the days of Christ,
omits any reference whatsoever to the genealogies. The twentieth-century
commentaries listed in the bibliography contain the following comments
upon Africanus’ letter as follows:
1. 8 Interp 81 (Luke)—”Early in the third century (see the letter of
Julius Africanus to Aristides as quoted by Eusebius Church History I.
7) the theory was current that Matthew’s genealogy symbolized Christ’s
royalty, and Luke’s his priesthood.”
2.
Barc (Luke) 41—“(iii) The most ingenious explanation is as follows.
In Matthew l:16 Joseph’s father is Jacob; in Luke 3:23 it is Heli. According
to the Jewish law of levirate marriage (Deut 25:5f) if a man died childless
his brother must, if free to do so, marry the widow and ensure the continuance
of the line. When that happened a son of such a marriage could be called
the son either of the first or of the second husband. It is suggested
that Joseph’s mother married twice. Joseph was in actual fact the son
of Heli, the second husband, but he was in the eyes of the law the son
of Jacob, the first husband who had died. It is then suggested that
while Heli and Jacob had the same mother they had different fathers
and that Jacob’s father was descended from David through Solomon and
Heli’s father was descended from David through Nathan. This ingenious
theory would mean that both genealogies are correct. In fact, all we
can say is that we do not know.”
3.
28 AB 497 (Luke)—“Even more crucial is the listing of Jesus’ grandfather
as Jacob in Matt 1:16 and as Heli in Luke 3:23. Various solutions have
been suggested to solve this part of the problem. Julius Africanus (cited
in Eusebius Historia ecclesiastica 1.7,2-15) explained the Lucan text
by invoking levirate marriage, as in Deut 25:5-10, whereby on the death
of a husband who was childless the next of kin would have intercourse
with the widow to beget children in his brother’s name and continue
his lineage. Thus Luke 3:23 would be understood: ‘Being the son, as
it was supposed of Joseph, (but really) of Heli,’ so that Joseph could
still be the son of Jacob (according to Matthew). But the solution has
many problems (on which see Brown, The Birth, App. I, 503-504), and
in reality solves nothing.”
4. 8 NIB 131 (Matthew)—“Beginning with Julius Africanus in the early
third century attempts have been made to harmonize some points in the
two genealogies by postulating levirite [sic] marriages or adoptions
in cases where Matthew and Luke present different names (cf. Deut 25:5-10).
But even if this theory (for which no evidence is offered) were to be
accepted as resolving some problems, many others remain.”
While not one of the listed commentaries as such, Brown, The Birth of
the Messiah, Doubleday, NY, 1977, 1993, is a part of “The Anchor Bible
Reference Library, and is that to which reference is made in #3 above.
After a general discussion in which Brown points to Julius Africanus
(ca. A.D. 225) as “our oldest attested witness to this [i.e., levirate]
solution,” he states, “Ingenious as it is, this solution faces [the
following] serious difficulties:
a) Jacob and Eli would have been full or blood brothers if ‘Matthan’
(Matthew’s name for the grandfather of Joseph and father of Jacob) and
‘Matthat’ (Luke’s name for the same ancestor) are variants of a name
borne by one man. But the father of Matthan/Matthat was Eleazar according
to Matthew, while he was Levi according to Luke. Are we to assume a
second levirate marriage to explain this? To avoid this difficulty,
some have argued that Jacob and Eli were half brothers, with the same
mother but different fathers (Matthan and Matthat respectively). Then,
however, one has the dubious coincidence that their mother married two
men who had almost the same names.
b) We are not certain how widely levirate marriage was practiced in
Jesus’ time [here his lengthy fn 2, showing gradual waning of an ancient
custom, is omitted], although Mark 12:18-27 . . . would suggest that
it was still a known custom.
c)
The whole point of the levirate marriage was that a child be born to
the deceased father. Therefore, it would be very strange, if Joseph
were the son of a levirate marriage, to have a genealogical list tracing
his ancestry through his natural father.
d) The levirate marriage hypothesis could explain, at most, only the
discrepancies at the very end of the genealogies; it offers little help
with the other divergencies between the lists. If we accept the levirate
hypothesis that both genealogies of Jesus are family lists traced respectively
through the legal and natural fathers of Joseph, how do we explain the
fact that earlier in the lists Matthew traces the descent through Zerubbabel’s
son Abiud, while Luke traces it through Zarubbabel’s son Rhesa? Why
does Matthew trace descent through David’s son Solomon, while Luke traces
it through David’s son Nathan?
The
theory of a levirate marriage solves so little and has so many difficulties
that it should be abandoned as a solution in the problem of the two
genealogies, and even in the more restricted problem of Jesus’ overabundance
of grandfathers.”
Thus, we see that traditional theology has no acceptable answer and
that, one exception aside, the Biblical genealogies of Jesus must remain
a muddle. Rudolf Steiner’s entirely plausible and coherent account offers
us the only known opportunity to embrace the genealogies of the nativity
accounts as powerful and accurate statements of the descent of “Jesus
according to the flesh” (Rom 1,3).
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