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Matthews Infancy Narrative
Matthews Gospel is the English translation has about 21,000 words (744 sentences). Of those, only about 1,000 words (43 sentences) are devoted to the story of the birth and infancy of Jesus.
Yet these are among the best-known and best-loved words of the entire Gospel, capturing the imagination of young and old, and providing a rich source for poets, artists and storytellers.
Only two Gospel writers tell the infancy story, and each tells it differently. Luke centers on Mary, Matthew centers on Joseph. Each wrote independently of the other, and each had traditions and sources the other did not have.
Their stories are like two portraits of the same person, done by two different artists. In Christmas pageants and crib scenes we tend to blend the two. It may come as a surprise to realize, however, that Matthews account has no annunciation to Mary, no journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem, no need to find a room in the inn, no manger, no angelic choir, no shepherds.
Matthews portrait has a certain heaviness, a touch of sadness, with hints of the Passion Narrative along the way. He emphasized that Jesus was born, not into a make believe world, but into the same imperfect world we know so well.
There is value in each portrait, not only to appreciate the artistry of each, but to understand better the message each intends to convey. In the following reflelctions we will be walking through Matthews story.
Take another look at the Advent plans sketched out yesterday.