In the introductory comments to Jesus oft-quoted sermon recorded in Matthew
chapters 5-7, the first verse sets the stage
for His astonishing teachings. Matthew indicates that seeing the
multitudes, Jesus went up on a
mountain, and when He was seated His disciples came to Him (emp. added). When Luke gives
the setting for Jesus
masterful sermon, he says that Jesus came down with them and stood on a level
place (emp. added). The question that
has been asked by many people is why Matthew recorded Jesus preaching this sermon from a
mountain, while Luke said it was while
He stood on a level place. Could Matthew or Luke have made a legitimate geographical error
here, or is there a reasonable
explanation for the difference that exists?
First of all, for these passages to be contradictory one must assume the two sermons were
delivered at the same place and at the
same time. But, as H. Leo Boles stated in his commentary on Luke, this sermon may have been
repeated a number of times and Luke
gives a record of the sermon which was repeated at some later time than the record given by
Matthew (1940, p. 134). It is more
than possible that Jesus repeated His teachings on various occasions. He easily could have
preached the beatitudes in Capernaum as well
as in Cana. He could have taught the model prayer in both Bethany and Bethsaida. Who are we to say
that Jesus preached the principles
and commands found in Matthew 5-7 only once? There are some men today who travel to a
different city nearly every week preaching
the same sermons—and do so effectively. Could Jesus not have done something similar?
A more likely solution to this geographical problem is simply to understand that
Matthew and Luke were referring to the
same sermon, and that Jesus was preaching it while being both on a mountain and on a
plain (KJV) at
the same time. The word plain (tópou pedinoú) simply means
level place (Wycliffe, 1985),
and is translated thusly in nearly all modern versions of the Bible. Since a mountain can have
level places on it, no one can assert
logically that Matthew 5:1 and Luke 6:17 are contradictory. I have been to the top of a mountain
in Anchorage, Alaska, that is so level
it is known as Flattop Mountain. To say Jesus stood on a level place on a
mountain is no oxymoron.
REFERENCES
Boles, H. Leo (1940), A Commentary on the Gospel According to Luke (Nashville, TN:
Gospel Advocate).
Wycliffe Bible Commentary (1985), Electronic Database: Biblesoft.
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