The first of the Gospels has been assigned by the Church, from the
earliest times, to Matthew, one of the Twelve Apostles, and in all ages
has been given the first place in the New Testament. He was the son of
Alphæus, as we learn from Luke, who also calls him Levi
(Luke 5:27-29).
He calls himself "Matthew the publican,"
refusing to conceal in his own history the
despised calling that had engaged him before he entered the service of
Christ. He was a Jew, but had so far lost the national feeling that he
was a collector of the hateful Roman tribute at Capernaum, and was
sitting at the receipt of custom when called by our Lord to leave all
and to follow him. His history of the Savior shows, however, that he was
more dominated by Jewish ideas than the writers of the other three
gospels. Of the life of Matthew, after the death of the Savior, we have
no information, for no reliance can be placed upon the traditions
concerning his later history.
The Gospel of Matthew shows the methodical habits of a business man, for
of all the writers he is most systematic in his arrangement. He gives by
far the fullest accounts of the Sermon on the Mount, the charge to the
Apostles
(Matt. ch. 10),
the Discourse on Blasphemy against
the Holy Spirit, the Arraignment of the Scribes and Pharisees, of the
Parables, and of the Prophecies concerning the Overthrow of the Jewish
State. It has always been held that Matthew wrote before the other New
Testament writers, and wrote especially for Jewish Christians. It is
therefore supposed that he wrote first either in the common language of
Judea at that time, the Aramaic, which was spoken by the Savior and his
Apostles, or else in the pure Hebrew, which was then generally
understood. This, however, is an unsettled question, and the Greek which
we now possess, was, it is almost certain, written in Matthew's
lifetime. There are no data for determining the exact time and place
where it was written, but it was probably composed about the middle of
the first century, within twenty years of the crucifixion.
Whether written originally in Hebrew or not, it can hardly be doubted
that Matthew wrote for Jewish readers. He takes for granted a
familiarity with Jewish customs, laws, and localities, to a far
greater extent than the other writers. Dean Alford says: "The whole
narrative proceeds more upon a Jewish view of matters, and is
concerned more to establish that point, which to a Jewish convert
would be most important, namely, that Jesus is the Messiah
prophesied in the Old Testament. Hence the commencement of his
genealogy from Abraham and David; hence the frequent notice of the
necessity of this or that event happening, because it was
foretold by the prophets; hence the constant opposition of our Lord's
spiritually ethical teaching to the carnal formalistic ethics of the
Scribes and Pharisees." [17]