Daniel Daley is Fellow in the Department of Biblical Studies at Australian Catholic University and Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.

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Description
1. Introduction: Matthew and Jewish Tradition 2. Inheritance in the Hebrew Bible 3. Inheritance in the Second Temple Period: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha 4. Inheritance in the Second Temple Period: The Qumran Scrolls 5. Inheritance in the Gospel of Matthew 6. Conclusion: Matthew and the Promise of Discipleship
The result is a treatment of the Matthean Beatitudes that is admirably guided by a sensitivity towards the intentions of the evangelist. Despite eschewing a quest for 'newness' for its own sake, this act of close and attentive reading results in fresh understandings of the purpose of these foundational statements as an expression of Matthew's perspective on the radical and transformative nature of discipleship. This is a book that deserves careful and close attention. --Paul Foster "The Expository Times" Daley has succeeded at writing an informative, carefully researched, and well-argued book about inheritance within the Old Testament, Second Temple literature, and the Gospel of Matthew. Researchers interested in the subject will be well-served by Daley's detailed analysis of a host of relevant texts. --Richard M. Blaylock "Reading Religion" This work succeeds in showing that inheritance is a vital theological notion for grasping the richness of Matthew's Gospel. It explains the Gospel's fusion of the sapiential and the apocalyptic, its portrait of God as Father, and the dynamics between Jews and gentiles. Reading it yields immense profit and a fuller picture of the inheritance in store for God's children. --Francis M. Macatangay "Southeastern Theological Review" ...this material tills soil outside specialized Matthean studies and will serve as a valuable resource for research in these fields. This is a most welcome contribution to Matthean scholarship. --Daniel Gurtner "Journal of Gospels and Acts Research"
