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The Gospel of Matthew portrays Jesus as a celibate 'bridegroom',
whose presence disrupts traditional understandings of marriage and
family and whose role as bridegroom involves not only joy but
violence and separation. The bridegroom in John has received recent
discussion, in Adeline Fehribach, 's Women in the Life of the
Bridegroom: A Feminist Historical-Literary Analysis of the Female
Characters in the Fourth Gospel (Liturgical Press, 1998), and in
several articles published in A Feminist Companion to John, vol. 2,
edited by Amy-Jill Levine (Sheffield Academic Press, 2003). But the
bridegroom in Matthew has not received scholarly attention. This
study offers an analysis of the bridegroom and wedding imagery in
the Gospel of Matthew, specifically in the bridegroom saying
(9.15), the two wedding parables (22.1-14, 25.1-13; the latter is
unique to Matthew), and Matthew's teachings on marriage, divorce
and family formation (e.g., 5.31-32; 19:1ff; 12:46-50). The eunuch
saying (19:10-12) is explored in the context of a brideless and
celibate bridegroom. Warren Carter's Matthew in the Margins (Orbis,
2000), and Barbara Reid's Violent Endings in Matthew's Parables and
an End to Violence CBQ 66 (2004), pp. 237-55. This study builds on
such concerns about Matthean violence and applies them specifically
to Matthew's portrayal of Jesus as a bridegroom and the
implications for marriage, family, gender and sexuality. For
example, the slaughter of the innocents is discussed in terms of
the bridegroom's association with violence and formation of a
fictive family. No other books address the combined issues of Jesus
as a bridegroom and attendant violence of that role and how this
association affects Matthew's teachings on marriage or divorce,
gender and sexuality, and the formation of family
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