https://www.etsjets.org/files/JETS-PDFs/61/61-1/JETS_61.1_83-103_Cruise_Corrected.pdf
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https://www.etsjets.org/files/JETS-PDFs/61/61-1/JETS_61.1_83-103_Cruise_Corrected.pdf
From the Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society (JETS)
JETS 61.1 (2018): 83–103
"A METHODOLOGY FOR DETECTING AND MITIGATING
HYPERBOLE IN MATTHEW 5:38–42"
CHARLES CRUISE
Abstract: Matthean scholars have struggled to interpret a positive benefit for the radical commandment of Jesus against resistance and/or retaliation in the face of evil in Matt 5:38–42. The thesis of this article is that Jesus’s true intention can be discovered only when it is realized that he was speaking hyperbolically. Although others have claimed as much, no one has yet applied a comprehensive methodology for detecting and interpreting (mitigating) the hyperbole in this passage. The present study aims to do just that. Drawing from insights from the ancient rhetorical handbooks and modern linguistic studies of hyperbole, a reading of Matt 5:38–42 is proposed based on logical, linguistic, and rhetorical features of the text. In the end, it may be seen that turning the other cheek can be conceptualized in terms of a continuum within an economy of giving and taking. Rather than giving extra to an enemy (the hyperbolic response), the mitigated (though still radical) response is to forgive the enemy’s “theft” of honor, clothing, or freedom and not to repay in kind. Jesus’s teaching of forgiveness toward enemies may therefore operate as a hedge against the abuses of the OT principle of lex talionis.
Key words: Sermon on the Mount, hyperbole, rhetoric, non-retaliation, lex talionis
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| Added Date | Feb 02, 2021 18:40:52 |
| Modified Date | Aug 06, 2021 20:47:26 |