Friday, July 06, 2007

The Gospel of Matthew (literally, "according to Matthew"; Greek, Κατά Μαθθαίον or Κατά Ματθαίον, Kata Maththaion or Kata Matthaion) is one of the four Gospel accounts of the New Testament. It narrates an account of the life and ministry of Jesus, from his genealogy to his post-resurrection commissioning of his Apostles to "go and make disciples of all nations." Bibles traditionally print Matthew as the first gospel, followed in order by Mark, Luke and John. The Christian community traditionally ascribes authorship to Matthew the Evangelist, one of Jesus's twelve disciples, while secular scholarship generally agrees it was written by an anonymous non-eyewitness to Jesus's ministry.

OverviewFor convenience, the book can be divided into its four structurally distinct sections: Two introductory sections; the main section, which can be further broken into five sections, each with a narrative component followed by a long discourse of Jesus; and finally, the Passion and Resurrection section.

Containing the genealogy, the birth, and the infancy of Jesus (Matthew 1; Matthew 2). The discourses and actions of John the Baptist preparatory to Christ's public ministry (Matthew 3; Matthew 4:11).


  1. Containing the genealogy, the birth, and the infancy of Jesus (Matthew 1; Matthew 2).
    The discourses and actions of John the Baptist preparatory to Christ's public ministry (Matthew 3; Matthew 4:11).

  2. The discourses and actions of Christ in Galilee (4:12–26:1).

    1. The Sermon on the Mount, concerning morality (Ch. 5–7)

    2. The Missionary Discourse, concerning the mission Jesus gave his Twelve Apostles. (10–11:1
    3. )
    4. The Parable Discourse, stories that teach about the Kingdom of Heaven (13).

    5. The "Church Order" Discourse, concerning relationships among Christians (18–19:1).

    6. The Eschatological Discourse, which includes the Olivet Discourse and Judgement of the Nations, concerning his Second Coming and the end of the age (24–25).


  3. The sufferings, death and Resurrection of Jesus, the Great Commission (28:16–20).



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