There are five marked quotations from Psalms in the Gospel of Matthew. These are: (1) Ps 91:1–12 in Matt 4:6; (2) Ps 78:2 in Matt 13:35; (3) Ps 8:3 in Matt 21:16; (4) Ps 118:22–23 in Matt 21:42; and (5) Ps 110:1 in Matt 22:44. Piotr Herok argues that the investigated texts are related to each other not only by the presence of the introductory formulas, making clear that a given citation comes from Scripture, but also through mutual thematic convergence, concerning in various degrees king David, the temple, and the theme of Jesus' identity. Thanks to the new literary context, in which the quotations are embedded, Matthew reinterprets them significantly while giving them a new dimension clearly distinguishing them from the rest of the psalm quotations found in his work. This aims at presenting Jesus as not only the Son of David, but first of all the Son of God.
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The Church in the Face of Crises and Challenges over the Centuries : Selected Issues from the History of the Church

The Spirit in Romans 8 : Paul, the Stoics, and Jewish Authors in Dialogue

The Holy Spirit of Communion : A Study in Pneumatology and Ecclesiology

Anti-Epicurean Polemics in the New Testament Writings

Ierousalem or Hierosolyma : Exploring the Semitic and Hellenistic Onomastic Notions in Luke's Work

Anti-Judaism and the Gospel of John : A New Look at the Fourth Gospel's Relationship with Judaism

Bloodshed by King Manasseh, Assyrians and Priestly Scribes : Theological Meaning and Historical-Cultural Contextualization of 2 Kings 21:16, 24:3-4 in Relation to the Fall of Judah

Catholic Social Teaching and Social Entrepreneurship

Ratzinger: Apologetics for (not only) Our Time

Christian Economic Heterodoxy : The Protestant Critique of Capitalism

The Christological Metaphors of Wine, Water, and Bread in the Gospel of John in Relation to Their Sapiential Background : An Intertextual Study
