fbpx
Wikipedia

Flight into Egypt

The flight into Egypt is a story recounted in the Gospel of Matthew (Matthew 2:1323) and in New Testament apocrypha. Soon after the visit by the Magi, an angel appeared to Joseph in a dream telling him to flee to Egypt with Mary and the infant Jesus since King Herod would seek the child to kill him. The episode is frequently shown in art, as the final episode of the Nativity of Jesus in art, and was a common component in cycles of the Life of the Virgin as well as the Life of Christ. Within the narrative tradition, iconic representation of the "Rest on the Flight into Egypt" developed after the 14th century.

The Flight into Egypt by Giotto di Bondone (1304–1306, Scrovegni Chapel, Padua)

The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates this event on 26 December; pre-1962 editions of the Roman Missal of the Catholic Church provide a Mass commemorating the event for 17 February.[1][2]

Matthew's gospel account edit

 
Fra Bartolomeo, Rest on the Flight into Egypt, c. 1500 (Pienza)
 
Print of the flight into Egypt. Made by Johannes Wierix.[3]

The flight from Herod edit

When the Magi came in search of Jesus, they went to Herod the Great in Jerusalem to ask where to find the newborn "King of the Jews". Herod became paranoid that the child would threaten his throne, and sought to kill him (2:1–8). Herod initiated the Massacre of the Innocents in hopes of killing the child (Matthew 2:16Matthew 2:18). But an angel appeared to Joseph in a dream and warned him to take Jesus and his mother into Egypt (Matthew 2:13).

Egypt was a logical place to find refuge, as it was outside the dominions of King Herod, but both Egypt and Judea were part of the Roman Empire, linked by a coastal road known as "the way of the sea",[4] making travel between them easy and relatively safe.

Return from Egypt edit

 
The Return of the Holy Family from Egypt by Jacob Jordaens (c. 1616)

After a time, the holy family returned from Egypt. The text states that Herod had died. Herod is believed to have died in 4 BC, and while Matthew does not mention how, the Jewish historian Josephus vividly relates a gory death.

The land that the holy family return to is identified as Judah, the only place in the entire New Testament where Judah acts as a geographic description of the whole of Judah and Galilee (Matthew 2:20), rather than referring to a collection of religious people or the Jewish people in general. It is, however, to Judah that they are described as initially returning, although upon discovering that Archelaus had become the new king, they went instead to Galilee. Historically, Archelaus was such a violent and aggressive king that in the year 6 AD he was deposed by the Romans, in response to complaints from the population.

Prophecy of Hosea edit

Matthew 2:15 cites Hosea 11:1 as prophetically fulfilled in the return of Joseph, Mary and Jesus from Egypt:

"... and out of Egypt I called My son".

Matthew's use of Hosea 11:1 has been explained in several ways. A sensus plenior approach states that the text in Hosea contains a meaning intended by God and acknowledged by Matthew, but unknown to Hosea. A typological reading interprets the fulfillment as found in the national history of Israel and the antitypical fulfillment as found in the personal history of Jesus. Matthew's use of typological interpretation may also be seen in his use of Isaiah 7:14 and 9:1, and Jeremiah 31:15. Thus according to the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible, "Hosea 11.1 points back to the Exodus, where God's 'first-born son' (Ex 4:22), Israel, was delivered from slavery under the oppressive Pharaoh. Matthew sees this text also pointing forward, when Jesus, the eternal first-born Son (Rom 8:29), is delivered from the tyrant Herod and later brought out of Egypt (2:21)."[5] Likewise, The Orthodox Study Bible states that the citation of Hosea 11.1 "refers first to Israel being brought out of captivity. In the Old Testament 'son' can refer to the whole nation of Israel. Here Jesus fulfills this calling as the true Son of God by coming out of Egypt.[6] The Anglican scholar N. T. Wright has pointed out that "The narrative exhibits several points of contact with exodus and exile traditions where Jesus' infancy recapitulates a new exodus and the end of exile, marking him out further as the true representative of Israel."[7]

 
Flight into Egypt, by Gentile da Fabriano (1423)

Another reading of Hosea's prophetic declaration is that it only recounts God summoning of the nation of Israel out of Egypt during the Exodus, referring to Israel as God's son in accordance with Moses' declaration to Pharaoh:

"Israel is my first-born son; let my son go, that he may serve me" (Exodus 4:22–23).

The Masoretic Text reads my son, whereas the Septuagint reads his sons or his children;[8] the Masoretic Text is to be preferred, the singular being both consonant with the other words which are in the singular in Hosea 11:1 and with the reference to Exodus 4:22–23. The Septuagint reading may be explained as having been made to conform to the plurals of Hosea 11:2, they and them.

Historicity edit

The Gospel of Luke does not recount this story, relating instead that the Holy Family went to the Temple in Jerusalem, and then home to Nazareth.[9] Followers of the Jesus Seminar thus conclude that both Luke's and Matthew's birth and infancy accounts are fabrications.[10][11] A theme of Matthew is likening Jesus to Moses for a Judean audience, and the Flight into Egypt illustrates just that theme.[12]

Regarding Matthew's infancy narrative, the 20th-century British scholar William Neil has said that "when we look beneath the engaging poetic decor, we come face to face with highly probable history. ... The flight of the Holy Family to nearby Egypt until after Herod's death, and the reason for their settling in Galilee on their return, apart altogether from Luke's information that Nazareth was their home, are also circumstantially probable."[13]

In their commentary on Matthew in the Anchor Bible Series, W. F. Albright and C. S. Mann state that "there is no reason to doubt the historicity of the story of the family's flight into Egypt. The Old Testament abounds in references to individuals and families taking refuge in Egypt, in flight either from persecution or revenge, or in the face of economic pressure."[14]

British scholar R. T. France has also argued in support of the historicity of the narrative. "[Joseph's] choice of Egypt as a place of exile ... was in line with the practice of other Palestinians who feared reprisals from the government; as a neighbouring country with a sizeable Jewish population it was an obvious refuge. And his subsequent avoidance of Judea under Archelaus, and expectation of safety in Galilee, accords with the political circumstances as we know them."[15]

Extra-Biblical accounts edit

 
Christ calms the dragons by Giovanni Battista Lucini (1680-81)

Christian edit

The story was much elaborated in the "Infancy Gospels" of the New Testament apocrypha with, for example, palm trees bowing before the infant Jesus, Jesus taming dragons, the beasts of the desert paying him homage, and an encounter with the two thieves who would later be crucified alongside Jesus.[16][17] In these later tales the family was joined by Salome as Jesus' nurse. These stories of the time in Egypt have been especially important to the Coptic Church, which is based in Egypt, and throughout Egypt there are a number of churches and shrines marking places where the family stayed. The most important of these is the church of Abu Serghis, which claims to be built on the place the family had its home.

One of the most extensive and, in Eastern Christianity, influential accounts of the Flight appears in the perhaps seventh-century Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew, in which Mary, tired by the heat of the sun, rested beneath a palm tree. The infant Jesus then miraculously has the palm tree bend down to provide Mary with its fruit, and release from its roots a spring to provide her with water.[18]

Muslim edit

The Qur'ān does not include the tradition of the Flight into Egypt, though sūra XXIII, 50 could conceivably allude to it: “And we made the son of Maryam and his mother a sign; and we made them abide in an elevated place, full of quiet and watered with springs”. However, its account of the birth of Jesus is very similar to the account of the Flight in the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew: Mary gives birth leaning against the trunk of a date-palm, which miraculously provides her with dates and a stream. It is therefore thought that one tradition owes something to the other.[19][20]

Numerous later Muslim writers on the life of Jesus did transmit stories about the Flight into Egypt. Prominent examples include Abū Isḥāḳ al-Thaʿlabī, whose ʿArāʾis al-madjālis fī ḳiṣaṣ al-anbiyāʾ, an account of the lives of the prophets, reports the Flight, followed by a stay in Egypt of twelve years; and al-Ṭabarī's History of the Prophets and Kings.[21]

In art edit

 
The Flight into Egypt (top), depicted on Moone High Cross, Ireland (10th century)

The Flight into Egypt was a popular subject in art, showing Mary with the baby on a donkey, led by Joseph, borrowing the older iconography of the rare Byzantine Journey to Bethlehem. Nevertheless, Joseph is sometimes holding the child on his shoulders.[22] Before about 1525, it usually formed part of a larger cycle, whether of the Nativity, or the Life of Christ or Life of the Virgin.

 
Russian icon of the Flight into Egypt; the bottom section shows the idols of Egypt miraculously falling down before Jesus and being smashed (17th century).

From the 15th century in the Netherlands onwards, the non-Biblical subject of the Holy Family resting on the journey, the Rest on the Flight into Egypt became popular, by the late 16th century perhaps more common than the original traveling family. The family were often accompanied by angels, and in earlier images sometimes an older boy who may represent James the Brother of the Lord, interpreted as a son of Joseph, by a previous marriage.[23]

The background to these scenes usually (until the Council of Trent tightened up on such additions to scripture) included a number of apocryphal miracles, and gave an opportunity for the emerging genre of landscape painting. In the Miracle of the corn, the pursuing soldiers interrogated peasants, asking when the Holy Family passed by. The peasants truthfully said it was when they were sowing their wheat seed; however the wheat has miraculously grown to full height. In the Miracle of the idol a pagan statue fell from its plinth as the infant Jesus passed by, and a spring gushed up from the desert (originally separate, these are often combined). In other less commonly seen legends, a group of robbers abandoned their plan to rob the travelers, and a date palm tree bent down to allow them to pluck the fruit.[24]

During the 16th century, as interest in landscape painting grew, the subject became popular as an individual subject for paintings, often with the figures small in a large landscape. The subject was especially popular with German Romantic painters, and later in the 19th century was one of a number of New Testament subjects which lent themselves to Orientalist treatment. Unusually, the 18th century artist Gianbattista Tiepolo produced a whole series of etchings with 24 scenes from the flight, most just showing different views of the Holy Family travelling.[25]

 
Flight Into Egypt, by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1923

A subject taking place after the arrival in Egypt is the meeting of the infant Jesus with his cousin, the infant John the Baptist, who, according to legend was rescued from Bethlehem before the massacre by the Archangel Uriel, and joined the Holy Family in Egypt. This meeting of the two Holy Children was to be painted by many artists during the Renaissance period, after being popularized by Leonardo da Vinci and then Raphael with works like Leonardo's Virgin of the Rocks.

The "Flight into Egypt" was a favorite theme of Henry Ossawa Tanner, depicting the Holy Family's clandestine evasion of King Herod's assassins (Matthew 2:12–14). In it Tanner expresses his sensitivity to issues of personal freedom, escape from persecution, and migrations of African-Americans from the South to the North.[26]

Two plays of the medieval Ordo Rachelis cycle contain an account of the flight into Egypt, and the one found in the Fleury Playbook contains the only dramatic representation of the return from Egypt.

In music edit

The oratorio L'enfance du Christ (1854) by French composer Hector Berlioz relates the events from Herod's dream and his meeting with the Magi through the angels' warning and the flight into Egypt until the Holy Family arrive at Sais.

Two choral works by the German composer Max Bruch take the flight into Egypt as their theme - The Flight of the Holy Family (1863)[27] and The Flight into Egypt (1871).[28]

The German composer Valentin Ruckebier wrote an opera called The Flight To Egypt which was produced and performed in 2021/22 at Teatro Comunale Modena, Linz State Theatre and Serbian National Theatre Novi Sad.[29][30][31]


 
Die Flucht nach Ägypten by Carl Spitzweg, 1875–1879

Nazarenes, Nazareth, and Nazirites edit

 
Fountain in Nazareth, reputed to have been used by the Holy Family (photograph, 1917)

While Luke places Jesus' family as being originally from the town of Nazareth, Matthew has the family moving there, fearing Archelaus who was ruling in Judea in place of his father Herod. Nazareth, now a town, is not mentioned by the Old Testament, Josephus or rabbinical sources,[32] though many Christian Bible archaeologists, such as the evangelical and egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen, state that they are fairly sure that a village existed in the area at the time of Jesus.[33] Clarke notes that the location of Nazareth is just to the north of where the large town Sepphoris was located. At the time, Sepphoris had been largely destroyed in the violence following the death of Herod the Great, and was being rebuilt by Herod Antipas, hence Clarke speculates that this could have been seen as a good source of employment by Joseph, a carpenter.

The difficulty with the brief quote he will be called a Nazarene is that it occurs nowhere in the Old Testament, or any other extant source. The most similar known passage is Judges 13:5 where of Samson it says the child shall be a Nazirite, where a nazirite was a specific type of religious ascetic. That the Nazirite and Nazareth are so similar in name, while Nazareth isn't mentioned in any other source until after the Gospels have been written, and that the passage almost parallels one about the birth of a hero who was a Nazirite, has led many to propose that Matthew originally had Jesus being a Nazirite, but it was changed to Nazarene, inventing a location named Nazareth, when the ascetic requirements fell foul of later religious practices. Biblical scholar R. T. France rejects this explanation, stating that Jesus was not a Nazirite and claiming that he is never described as one.[citation needed]

Another theory is that it is based on a prophecy at Isaiah 11:1, which states there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out of his roots: — the Hebrew for branch is נצר (netzer). The priestly clan of the "netzerites" possibly settled in the place which became known as Netzereth/ Nazareth. Bargil Pixner[34] in his work "With Jesus Through Galilee" says that the title Nazarene, given to Jesus, alludes not so much to his town of origin as to his royal descent. While this piece of wordplay is meaningless when translated into Greek, Hebrew wordplay is not unknown in Matthew, underlining the opinion that some parts of this gospel were originally written in Hebrew.

 
Rest on the Flight into Egypt by Lucas Cranach the Elder (1504)

Christian traditions associated with the Flight into Egypt edit

The Flight into Egypt is one of the listed Seven Sorrows of Mary.

A local French tradition states that Saint Aphrodisius, an Egyptian saint who was venerated as the first bishop of Béziers, was the man who sheltered the Holy Family when they fled into Egypt.[35]

In Coptic Christianity, it is also held that the Holy family visited many areas in Egypt, including Musturud (where there is now the Church of the Virgin Mary), Wadi El Natrun (which has four large monasteries), and Old Cairo,[36] along with Farama, Tel Basta, Samanoud, Bilbais, Samalout, Maadi, Al-Maṭariyyah,[37] Arganus[38] and Asiut among others.[39] It is likewise tradition that the Holy Family visited Coptic Cairo and stayed at the site of Saints Sergius and Bacchus Church (Abu Serga)[40] and the place where the Church of the Holy Virgin (Babylon El-Darag) stands now. At Al-Maṭariyyah, then in Heliopolis and now part of Cairo, there is a sycamore tree (and adjacent chapel) that is a 1672 planting replacing an earlier tree under which Mary was said to have rested, or in some versions hidden from pursuers in the hollow trunk, while pious spiders covered the entrance with dense webs.[41]

Commentary edit

Cornelius a Lapide, commenting on the flight into Egypt wrote that, "tropologically, Christ fled into Egypt that He might teach us to despise exile, and that we, as pilgrims and exiles on the earth, might pant after and strive for heaven as our true country. Whence Peter Chrysologus says (Serm. 115), “Christ fled that He might make it more tolerable for us, when we have to flee in persecution.” S. Gregory Nazian. (Orat. 28) says—“Every land, and no land is my country.” No land was Gregory’s country, because heaven was his country. Again, every land was his country, because he looked upon the whole world as his country. Thus Socrates, when he was asked what countryman he was, replied, “A citizen of the world.”[42]

Justus Knecht notes that the flight shows The Omniscience of God, writing, "God knew that in the morning Herod would send soldiers to Bethlehem, to slay the little boys under two years old; therefore He ordered St. Joseph to flee in the middle of the night. The Lord God knew also the moment of Herod’s death, as well as the evil disposition of his son and successor, Archelaus. He therefore warned St. Joseph not to return to Judaea, but to take up his abode at Nazareth in Galilee."[43]

Roger Baxter reflects on the flight in his Meditations writing, "How different are the thoughts of God from the thoughts of men! Christ was no sooner born, than sent into banishment. The Almighty could easily have rid the world of Herod, or have appeased his anger, or have rendered His divine Son invisible; but He adopted the ordinary means of safety, and His Son must fly. Reflect how derogatory this was to the dignity of the Redeemer, and how full of inconveniences. Thus God always treats those whom He loves best. Are you greater or better than the Son of God? Why, then, do you complain when His providence prepares crosses for you?"[44]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "СВЯТОЕ СЕМЕЙСТВО - Древо". drevo-info.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-10-02.
  2. ^ Rock, William (17 February 2023). "The Mass of the Flight into Egypt". fssp.com. Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  3. ^ "De vlucht naar Egypte". lib.ugent.be. Retrieved 2020-10-02.
  4. ^ Von Hagen, Victor W. The Roads that Led to Rome published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1967. p. 106.
  5. ^ Ignatius Catholic Study Bible, New Testament (2010). San Francisco: Ignatius Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-1586174842
  6. ^ The Orthodox Study Bible (2008). Nashville: Thomas Nelson. p. 1268. ISBN 978-0718003593
  7. ^ Wright, N. T. and Michael F. Bird (2019). The New Testament in its World. London: SPCK; Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic. p. 590. ISBN 978-0310499305
  8. ^ Brenton's Septuagint Translation of Hosea 11, accessed 4 December 2016
  9. ^ Luke 2, v 22–40
  10. ^ Funk, Robert W. and the Jesus Seminar. The acts of Jesus: the search for the authentic deeds of Jesus. Harper, San Francisco, 1998. "Matthew," pp. 129–270
  11. ^ Funk, Robert W. and the Jesus Seminar. The acts of Jesus: the search for the authentic deeds of Jesus. Harper, San Francisco. 1998. "Luke", pp. 267–364
  12. ^ Harris, Stephen L., Understanding the Bible. Palo Alto: Mayfield. 1985. "Matthew" pp. 272–285
  13. ^ Neil, William (1962). Harper's Bible Commentary. New York: Harper & Row. p. 336.
  14. ^ Albright, W. F.; Mann, C. S. (1971). Matthew. Anchor Bible. Vol. 26. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-3850-8658-5.
  15. ^ France, R. T. (1981). "Scripture, Tradition and History in the Infancy Narratives of Matthew". In France, R. T.; Wenham, David (eds.). Gospel Perspectives: Studies of History and Tradition in the Four Gospels. Vol. 2. Sheffield (UK): JSOT Press. p. 257. ISBN 0-905774-31-0.
  16. ^ First Infancy Gospel of Jesus. chapter VIII
  17. ^ The Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew at The Gnostic Society Library, Christian Apocrypha and Early Christian Literature
  18. ^ Mustafa Akyol, The Islamic Jesus: How the King of the Jews Became a Prophet of the Muslims (New York: St Martin's Press, 2017), pp. 114-15.
  19. ^ A.J. Wensinck and Penelope C. Johnstone, “Maryam”, in Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, ed. by P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Consulted online on 30 September 2018. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0692, ISBN 9789004161214.
  20. ^ Mustafa Akyol, The Islamic Jesus: How the King of the Jews Became a Prophet of the Muslims (New York: St Martin's Press, 2017), pp. 114-16.
  21. ^ Oddbjørn Leirvik, Images of Jesus Christ in Islam, 2nd edn (London: Continuum, 2010), pp. 59, 64.
  22. ^ Terrier Aliferis, L., "Joseph christophore dans la Fuite en Egypte", Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte, 2016
  23. ^ The subject only emerges in the second half of the fourteenth century. In some Orthodox traditions the older boy is the one who protects Joseph from the "shepherd-tempter" in the main Nativity scene. G Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. I,1971 (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, p. 124, ISBN 0-85331-270-2.
  24. ^ Schiller:117–123. The date palm incident is also in the Quran. There are two different falling statue legends, one related to the arrival of the family at the Egyptian city of Sotina, and the other usually shown in open country. Sometimes both are shown.
  25. ^ Catalogued as Baudi di Vesme nos 1–27 (with three plates of frontispiece etc.)
  26. ^ Flight into Egypt, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Metropolitan Museum of Art
  27. ^ "Max Bruch". myorchestra.net. MyOrchestra. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  28. ^ Prieser, Marcus. "Flight of the Holy Family Op. 20 for choir and orchestra/ Flight into Egypt Op. 31, 1 for soprano, choir and orchestra". repertoire-explorer.musikmph.de. Musikproduktion Hoeflich. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
  29. ^ "CrossOpera: otherness, fear and discovery". CrossOpera. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  30. ^ "Landestheater Linz detail". www.landestheater-linz.at. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  31. ^ "CrossOpera: Otherness, fear and discovery, Cinque | Landestheater Linz". Operabase (in German). Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  32. ^ Perkins, P. (1996). Nazareth. In P. J. Achtemeier (Ed.), The HarperCollins Bible dictionary, pp. 741–742. San Francisco: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-060037-3.
  33. ^ Galilee 2006-05-09 at the Wayback Machine.
  34. ^ Bargil Pixner
  35. ^ St. Aphrodisius – Catholic Online
  36. ^ J. W. Meri, W. Ende, Nelly van Doorn-Harder, Houari Touati, Abdulaziz Sachedina, Th. Zarcone, M. Gaborieau, R. Seesemann and S. Reese, “Ziyāra”, in Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, edited by P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Consulted online on 30 September 2018 doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_1390 ISBN 9789004161214.
  37. ^ Egypt voyager
  38. ^ "Dayr Al-Jarnus". Claremont Coptic Encyclopedia. 1991.
  39. ^
  40. ^ Coptic Cairo December 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  41. ^ Commons category; tourist info
  42. ^ Lapide, Cornelius (1889). The great commentary of Cornelius à Lapide. Translated by Thomas Wimberly Mossman.
  43. ^ Knecht, Friedrich Justus (1910). "Chapter IX. The Flight into Egypt" . A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. B. Herder.
  44. ^ Baxter, Roger (1823). "Christ's Flight into Egypt" . Meditations For Every Day In The Year. New York: Benziger Brothers.

Further reading edit

  • Albright, W.F. and C.S. Mann. "Matthew." The Anchor Bible Series. New York: Doubleday & Company, 1971.
  • Brown, Raymond E. The Birth of the Messiah: A Commentary on the Infancy Narratives in Matthew and Luke. New York: Doubleday; London: G. Chapman, 1977. Updated ed. 1993.
  • Clarke, Howard W. The Gospel of Matthew and its Readers: A Historical Introduction to the First Gospel. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2003.
  • France, R.T. The Gospel According to Matthew: an Introduction and Commentary. Leicester: Inter-Varsity, 1985.
  • France, R.T. "The Formula Quotations of Matthew 2 and the Problem of Communications." New Testament Studies. Vol. 27, 1981.
  • Gabra, Gawdat (ed.). Be Thou There: The Holy Family's Journey in Egypt. Cairo and New York: The American University in Cairo Press, 2001.
  • Goulder, M.D. Midrash and Lection in Matthew. London: SPCK, 1974.
  • Gundry, Robert H. Matthew a Commentary on his Literary and Theological Art. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1982.
  • Jones, Alexander. The Gospel According to St. Matthew. London: Geoffrey Chapman, 1965.
  • Schweizer, Eduard. The Good News According to Matthew. Atlanta: John Knox Press, 1975

External links edit

  • Further reading on the Flight into Egypt in art
  • on Matthew 2:19
  • Orthodox Wiki article on the Flight into Egypt Includes map, info and links to various articles and videos on the subject.
Flight into Egypt
Preceded by New Testament
Events
Succeeded by

flight, into, egypt, other, uses, disambiguation, flight, into, egypt, story, recounted, gospel, matthew, matthew, testament, apocrypha, soon, after, visit, magi, angel, appeared, joseph, dream, telling, flee, egypt, with, mary, infant, jesus, since, king, her. For other uses see Flight into Egypt disambiguation The flight into Egypt is a story recounted in the Gospel of Matthew Matthew 2 13 23 and in New Testament apocrypha Soon after the visit by the Magi an angel appeared to Joseph in a dream telling him to flee to Egypt with Mary and the infant Jesus since King Herod would seek the child to kill him The episode is frequently shown in art as the final episode of the Nativity of Jesus in art and was a common component in cycles of the Life of the Virgin as well as the Life of Christ Within the narrative tradition iconic representation of the Rest on the Flight into Egypt developed after the 14th century The Flight into Egypt by Giotto di Bondone 1304 1306 Scrovegni Chapel Padua The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates this event on 26 December pre 1962 editions of the Roman Missal of the Catholic Church provide a Mass commemorating the event for 17 February 1 2 Contents 1 Matthew s gospel account 1 1 The flight from Herod 1 2 Return from Egypt 1 3 Prophecy of Hosea 2 Historicity 3 Extra Biblical accounts 3 1 Christian 3 2 Muslim 4 In art 5 In music 6 Nazarenes Nazareth and Nazirites 7 Christian traditions associated with the Flight into Egypt 8 Commentary 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksMatthew s gospel account edit nbsp Fra Bartolomeo Rest on the Flight into Egypt c 1500 Pienza nbsp Print of the flight into Egypt Made by Johannes Wierix 3 The flight from Herod edit When the Magi came in search of Jesus they went to Herod the Great in Jerusalem to ask where to find the newborn King of the Jews Herod became paranoid that the child would threaten his throne and sought to kill him 2 1 8 Herod initiated the Massacre of the Innocents in hopes of killing the child Matthew 2 16 Matthew 2 18 But an angel appeared to Joseph in a dream and warned him to take Jesus and his mother into Egypt Matthew 2 13 Egypt was a logical place to find refuge as it was outside the dominions of King Herod but both Egypt and Judea were part of the Roman Empire linked by a coastal road known as the way of the sea 4 making travel between them easy and relatively safe Return from Egypt edit Main article Return of the family of Jesus to Nazareth nbsp The Return of the Holy Family from Egypt by Jacob Jordaens c 1616 After a time the holy family returned from Egypt The text states that Herod had died Herod is believed to have died in 4 BC and while Matthew does not mention how the Jewish historian Josephus vividly relates a gory death The land that the holy family return to is identified as Judah the only place in the entire New Testament where Judah acts as a geographic description of the whole of Judah and Galilee Matthew 2 20 rather than referring to a collection of religious people or the Jewish people in general It is however to Judah that they are described as initially returning although upon discovering that Archelaus had become the new king they went instead to Galilee Historically Archelaus was such a violent and aggressive king that in the year 6 AD he was deposed by the Romans in response to complaints from the population Prophecy of Hosea edit Further information Hermeneutics and Pardes Jewish exegesis Matthew 2 15 cites Hosea 11 1 as prophetically fulfilled in the return of Joseph Mary and Jesus from Egypt and out of Egypt I called My son Matthew s use of Hosea 11 1 has been explained in several ways A sensus plenior approach states that the text in Hosea contains a meaning intended by God and acknowledged by Matthew but unknown to Hosea A typological reading interprets the fulfillment as found in the national history of Israel and the antitypical fulfillment as found in the personal history of Jesus Matthew s use of typological interpretation may also be seen in his use of Isaiah 7 14 and 9 1 and Jeremiah 31 15 Thus according to the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible Hosea 11 1 points back to the Exodus where God s first born son Ex 4 22 Israel was delivered from slavery under the oppressive Pharaoh Matthew sees this text also pointing forward when Jesus the eternal first born Son Rom 8 29 is delivered from the tyrant Herod and later brought out of Egypt 2 21 5 Likewise The Orthodox Study Bible states that the citation of Hosea 11 1 refers first to Israel being brought out of captivity In the Old Testament son can refer to the whole nation of Israel Here Jesus fulfills this calling as the true Son of God by coming out of Egypt 6 The Anglican scholar N T Wright has pointed out that The narrative exhibits several points of contact with exodus and exile traditions where Jesus infancy recapitulates a new exodus and the end of exile marking him out further as the true representative of Israel 7 nbsp Flight into Egypt by Gentile da Fabriano 1423 Another reading of Hosea s prophetic declaration is that it only recounts God summoning of the nation of Israel out of Egypt during the Exodus referring to Israel as God s son in accordance with Moses declaration to Pharaoh Israel is my first born son let my son go that he may serve me Exodus 4 22 23 The Masoretic Text reads my son whereas the Septuagint reads his sons or his children 8 the Masoretic Text is to be preferred the singular being both consonant with the other words which are in the singular in Hosea 11 1 and with the reference to Exodus 4 22 23 The Septuagint reading may be explained as having been made to conform to the plurals of Hosea 11 2 they and them Historicity editThe Gospel of Luke does not recount this story relating instead that the Holy Family went to the Temple in Jerusalem and then home to Nazareth 9 Followers of the Jesus Seminar thus conclude that both Luke s and Matthew s birth and infancy accounts are fabrications 10 11 A theme of Matthew is likening Jesus to Moses for a Judean audience and the Flight into Egypt illustrates just that theme 12 Regarding Matthew s infancy narrative the 20th century British scholar William Neil has said that when we look beneath the engaging poetic decor we come face to face with highly probable history The flight of the Holy Family to nearby Egypt until after Herod s death and the reason for their settling in Galilee on their return apart altogether from Luke s information that Nazareth was their home are also circumstantially probable 13 In their commentary on Matthew in the Anchor Bible Series W F Albright and C S Mann state that there is no reason to doubt the historicity of the story of the family s flight into Egypt The Old Testament abounds in references to individuals and families taking refuge in Egypt in flight either from persecution or revenge or in the face of economic pressure 14 British scholar R T France has also argued in support of the historicity of the narrative Joseph s choice of Egypt as a place of exile was in line with the practice of other Palestinians who feared reprisals from the government as a neighbouring country with a sizeable Jewish population it was an obvious refuge And his subsequent avoidance of Judea under Archelaus and expectation of safety in Galilee accords with the political circumstances as we know them 15 Extra Biblical accounts edit nbsp Christ calms the dragons by Giovanni Battista Lucini 1680 81 Christian edit The story was much elaborated in the Infancy Gospels of the New Testament apocrypha with for example palm trees bowing before the infant Jesus Jesus taming dragons the beasts of the desert paying him homage and an encounter with the two thieves who would later be crucified alongside Jesus 16 17 In these later tales the family was joined by Salome as Jesus nurse These stories of the time in Egypt have been especially important to the Coptic Church which is based in Egypt and throughout Egypt there are a number of churches and shrines marking places where the family stayed The most important of these is the church of Abu Serghis which claims to be built on the place the family had its home One of the most extensive and in Eastern Christianity influential accounts of the Flight appears in the perhaps seventh century Gospel of Pseudo Matthew in which Mary tired by the heat of the sun rested beneath a palm tree The infant Jesus then miraculously has the palm tree bend down to provide Mary with its fruit and release from its roots a spring to provide her with water 18 Muslim edit The Qur an does not include the tradition of the Flight into Egypt though sura XXIII 50 could conceivably allude to it And we made the son of Maryam and his mother a sign and we made them abide in an elevated place full of quiet and watered with springs However its account of the birth of Jesus is very similar to the account of the Flight in the Gospel of Pseudo Matthew Mary gives birth leaning against the trunk of a date palm which miraculously provides her with dates and a stream It is therefore thought that one tradition owes something to the other 19 20 Numerous later Muslim writers on the life of Jesus did transmit stories about the Flight into Egypt Prominent examples include Abu Isḥaḳ al Thaʿlabi whose ʿAraʾis al madjalis fi ḳiṣaṣ al anbiyaʾ an account of the lives of the prophets reports the Flight followed by a stay in Egypt of twelve years and al Ṭabari s History of the Prophets and Kings 21 In art edit nbsp The Flight into Egypt top depicted on Moone High Cross Ireland 10th century The Flight into Egypt was a popular subject in art showing Mary with the baby on a donkey led by Joseph borrowing the older iconography of the rare Byzantine Journey to Bethlehem Nevertheless Joseph is sometimes holding the child on his shoulders 22 Before about 1525 it usually formed part of a larger cycle whether of the Nativity or the Life of Christ or Life of the Virgin nbsp Russian icon of the Flight into Egypt the bottom section shows the idols of Egypt miraculously falling down before Jesus and being smashed 17th century From the 15th century in the Netherlands onwards the non Biblical subject of the Holy Family resting on the journey the Rest on the Flight into Egypt became popular by the late 16th century perhaps more common than the original traveling family The family were often accompanied by angels and in earlier images sometimes an older boy who may represent James the Brother of the Lord interpreted as a son of Joseph by a previous marriage 23 The background to these scenes usually until the Council of Trent tightened up on such additions to scripture included a number of apocryphal miracles and gave an opportunity for the emerging genre of landscape painting In the Miracle of the corn the pursuing soldiers interrogated peasants asking when the Holy Family passed by The peasants truthfully said it was when they were sowing their wheat seed however the wheat has miraculously grown to full height In the Miracle of the idol a pagan statue fell from its plinth as the infant Jesus passed by and a spring gushed up from the desert originally separate these are often combined In other less commonly seen legends a group of robbers abandoned their plan to rob the travelers and a date palm tree bent down to allow them to pluck the fruit 24 During the 16th century as interest in landscape painting grew the subject became popular as an individual subject for paintings often with the figures small in a large landscape The subject was especially popular with German Romantic painters and later in the 19th century was one of a number of New Testament subjects which lent themselves to Orientalist treatment Unusually the 18th century artist Gianbattista Tiepolo produced a whole series of etchings with 24 scenes from the flight most just showing different views of the Holy Family travelling 25 nbsp Flight Into Egypt by Henry Ossawa Tanner 1923A subject taking place after the arrival in Egypt is the meeting of the infant Jesus with his cousin the infant John the Baptist who according to legend was rescued from Bethlehem before the massacre by the Archangel Uriel and joined the Holy Family in Egypt This meeting of the two Holy Children was to be painted by many artists during the Renaissance period after being popularized by Leonardo da Vinci and then Raphael with works like Leonardo s Virgin of the Rocks The Flight into Egypt was a favorite theme of Henry Ossawa Tanner depicting the Holy Family s clandestine evasion of King Herod s assassins Matthew 2 12 14 In it Tanner expresses his sensitivity to issues of personal freedom escape from persecution and migrations of African Americans from the South to the North 26 Two plays of the medieval Ordo Rachelis cycle contain an account of the flight into Egypt and the one found in the Fleury Playbook contains the only dramatic representation of the return from Egypt In music editThe oratorio L enfance du Christ 1854 by French composer Hector Berlioz relates the events from Herod s dream and his meeting with the Magi through the angels warning and the flight into Egypt until the Holy Family arrive at Sais Two choral works by the German composer Max Bruch take the flight into Egypt as their theme The Flight of the Holy Family 1863 27 and The Flight into Egypt 1871 28 The German composer Valentin Ruckebier wrote an opera called The Flight To Egypt which was produced and performed in 2021 22 at Teatro Comunale Modena Linz State Theatre and Serbian National Theatre Novi Sad 29 30 31 nbsp Die Flucht nach Agypten by Carl Spitzweg 1875 1879 nbsp Simple medieval wall painting in a German church in Bochum Stiepel nbsp Presentation at the Temple and Flight with legends of the idol and spring Melchior Broederlam Burgundy c 1400 nbsp The miracles of the palm tree and corn on the Flight from a book of hours ca 1400 nbsp Joachim Patinir 1510s the inventor of the world landscape painted several versions of the subject At right the miracle of the corn at top left the falling idol nbsp The Flight into Egypt Adam Elsheimer c 1605 as a night scene nbsp Rubens 1614 nbsp Jan Asselyn c 1640 nbsp Romantic Rest on the Flight by Philipp Otto Runge 1806 nbsp British Orientalist artist Edwin Long Anno Domini 1883 shows the arrival in Egypt the idols seem intact nbsp Saint Catherine s Monastery 12th century nbsp The Flight into Egypt stained glass in a choir chapel Notre Dame de Paris cathedral Paris France nbsp Rest on the Flight into Egypt by Luc Olivier Merson 1879 Museum of Fine Arts Boston nbsp Statue by Legs F van Hamme 17th centuryNazarenes Nazareth and Nazirites editSee also Matthew 2 23 nbsp Fountain in Nazareth reputed to have been used by the Holy Family photograph 1917 While Luke places Jesus family as being originally from the town of Nazareth Matthew has the family moving there fearing Archelaus who was ruling in Judea in place of his father Herod Nazareth now a town is not mentioned by the Old Testament Josephus or rabbinical sources 32 though many Christian Bible archaeologists such as the evangelical and egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen state that they are fairly sure that a village existed in the area at the time of Jesus 33 Clarke notes that the location of Nazareth is just to the north of where the large town Sepphoris was located At the time Sepphoris had been largely destroyed in the violence following the death of Herod the Great and was being rebuilt by Herod Antipas hence Clarke speculates that this could have been seen as a good source of employment by Joseph a carpenter The difficulty with the brief quote he will be called a Nazarene is that it occurs nowhere in the Old Testament or any other extant source The most similar known passage is Judges 13 5 where of Samson it says the child shall be a Nazirite where a nazirite was a specific type of religious ascetic That the Nazirite and Nazareth are so similar in name while Nazareth isn t mentioned in any other source until after the Gospels have been written and that the passage almost parallels one about the birth of a hero who was a Nazirite has led many to propose that Matthew originally had Jesus being a Nazirite but it was changed to Nazarene inventing a location named Nazareth when the ascetic requirements fell foul of later religious practices Biblical scholar R T France rejects this explanation stating that Jesus was not a Nazirite and claiming that he is never described as one citation needed Another theory is that it is based on a prophecy at Isaiah 11 1 which states there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse and a Branch shall grow out of his roots the Hebrew for branch is נצר netzer The priestly clan of the netzerites possibly settled in the place which became known as Netzereth Nazareth Bargil Pixner 34 in his work With Jesus Through Galilee says that the title Nazarene given to Jesus alludes not so much to his town of origin as to his royal descent While this piece of wordplay is meaningless when translated into Greek Hebrew wordplay is not unknown in Matthew underlining the opinion that some parts of this gospel were originally written in Hebrew nbsp Rest on the Flight into Egypt by Lucas Cranach the Elder 1504 Christian traditions associated with the Flight into Egypt editThe Flight into Egypt is one of the listed Seven Sorrows of Mary A local French tradition states that Saint Aphrodisius an Egyptian saint who was venerated as the first bishop of Beziers was the man who sheltered the Holy Family when they fled into Egypt 35 In Coptic Christianity it is also held that the Holy family visited many areas in Egypt including Musturud where there is now the Church of the Virgin Mary Wadi El Natrun which has four large monasteries and Old Cairo 36 along with Farama Tel Basta Samanoud Bilbais Samalout Maadi Al Maṭariyyah 37 Arganus 38 and Asiut among others 39 It is likewise tradition that the Holy Family visited Coptic Cairo and stayed at the site of Saints Sergius and Bacchus Church Abu Serga 40 and the place where the Church of the Holy Virgin Babylon El Darag stands now At Al Maṭariyyah then in Heliopolis and now part of Cairo there is a sycamore tree and adjacent chapel that is a 1672 planting replacing an earlier tree under which Mary was said to have rested or in some versions hidden from pursuers in the hollow trunk while pious spiders covered the entrance with dense webs 41 Commentary editCornelius a Lapide commenting on the flight into Egypt wrote that tropologically Christ fled into Egypt that He might teach us to despise exile and that we as pilgrims and exiles on the earth might pant after and strive for heaven as our true country Whence Peter Chrysologus says Serm 115 Christ fled that He might make it more tolerable for us when we have to flee in persecution S Gregory Nazian Orat 28 says Every land and no land is my country No land was Gregory s country because heaven was his country Again every land was his country because he looked upon the whole world as his country Thus Socrates when he was asked what countryman he was replied A citizen of the world 42 Justus Knecht notes that the flight shows The Omniscience of God writing God knew that in the morning Herod would send soldiers to Bethlehem to slay the little boys under two years old therefore He ordered St Joseph to flee in the middle of the night The Lord God knew also the moment of Herod s death as well as the evil disposition of his son and successor Archelaus He therefore warned St Joseph not to return to Judaea but to take up his abode at Nazareth in Galilee 43 Roger Baxter reflects on the flight in his Meditations writing How different are the thoughts of God from the thoughts of men Christ was no sooner born than sent into banishment The Almighty could easily have rid the world of Herod or have appeased his anger or have rendered His divine Son invisible but He adopted the ordinary means of safety and His Son must fly Reflect how derogatory this was to the dignity of the Redeemer and how full of inconveniences Thus God always treats those whom He loves best Are you greater or better than the Son of God Why then do you complain when His providence prepares crosses for you 44 See also edit nbsp Bible portalChapel of the Milk Grotto Exsul Familia L enfance du Christ Massacre of the Innocents Rest on the Flight into Egypt Caravaggio Saint Joseph s dreams Biblical EgyptReferences edit SVYaTOE SEMEJSTVO Drevo drevo info ru in Russian Retrieved 2023 10 02 Rock William 17 February 2023 The Mass of the Flight into Egypt fssp com Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter Retrieved 16 October 2023 De vlucht naar Egypte lib ugent be Retrieved 2020 10 02 Von Hagen Victor W The Roads that Led to Rome published by Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1967 p 106 Ignatius Catholic Study Bible New Testament 2010 San Francisco Ignatius Press p 9 ISBN 978 1586174842 The Orthodox Study Bible 2008 Nashville Thomas Nelson p 1268 ISBN 978 0718003593 Wright N T and Michael F Bird 2019 The New Testament in its World London SPCK Grand Rapids Zondervan Academic p 590 ISBN 978 0310499305 Brenton s Septuagint Translation of Hosea 11 accessed 4 December 2016 Luke 2 v 22 40 Funk Robert W and the Jesus Seminar The acts of Jesus the search for the authentic deeds of Jesus Harper San Francisco 1998 Matthew pp 129 270 Funk Robert W and the Jesus Seminar The acts of Jesus the search for the authentic deeds of Jesus Harper San Francisco 1998 Luke pp 267 364 Harris Stephen L Understanding the Bible Palo Alto Mayfield 1985 Matthew pp 272 285 Neil William 1962 Harper s Bible Commentary New York Harper amp Row p 336 Albright W F Mann C S 1971 Matthew Anchor Bible Vol 26 p 17 ISBN 978 0 3850 8658 5 France R T 1981 Scripture Tradition and History in the Infancy Narratives of Matthew In France R T Wenham David eds Gospel Perspectives Studies of History and Tradition in the Four Gospels Vol 2 Sheffield UK JSOT Press p 257 ISBN 0 905774 31 0 First Infancy Gospel of Jesus chapter VIII The Gospel of Pseudo Matthew at The Gnostic Society Library Christian Apocrypha and Early Christian Literature Mustafa Akyol The Islamic Jesus How the King of the Jews Became a Prophet of the Muslims New York St Martin s Press 2017 pp 114 15 A J Wensinck and Penelope C Johnstone Maryam in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition ed by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs Consulted online on 30 September 2018 doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 0692 ISBN 9789004161214 Mustafa Akyol The Islamic Jesus How the King of the Jews Became a Prophet of the Muslims New York St Martin s Press 2017 pp 114 16 Oddbjorn Leirvik Images of Jesus Christ in Islam 2nd edn London Continuum 2010 pp 59 64 Terrier Aliferis L Joseph christophore dans la Fuite en Egypte Zeitschrift fur Kunstgeschichte 2016 The subject only emerges in the second half of the fourteenth century In some Orthodox traditions the older boy is the one who protects Joseph from the shepherd tempter in the main Nativity scene G Schiller Iconography of Christian Art Vol I 1971 English trans from German Lund Humphries London p 124 ISBN 0 85331 270 2 Schiller 117 123 The date palm incident is also in the Quran There are two different falling statue legends one related to the arrival of the family at the Egyptian city of Sotina and the other usually shown in open country Sometimes both are shown Catalogued as Baudi di Vesme nos 1 27 with three plates of frontispiece etc Flight into Egypt Henry Ossawa Tanner Metropolitan Museum of Art Max Bruch myorchestra net MyOrchestra Retrieved 6 December 2022 Prieser Marcus Flight of the Holy Family Op 20 for choir and orchestra Flight into Egypt Op 31 1 for soprano choir and orchestra repertoire explorer musikmph de Musikproduktion Hoeflich Retrieved 8 December 2022 CrossOpera otherness fear and discovery CrossOpera Retrieved 2022 01 21 Landestheater Linz detail www landestheater linz at Retrieved 2022 01 21 CrossOpera Otherness fear and discovery Cinque Landestheater Linz Operabase in German Retrieved 2022 01 21 Perkins P 1996 Nazareth In P J Achtemeier Ed The HarperCollins Bible dictionary pp 741 742 San Francisco HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 060037 3 Galilee Archived 2006 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Bargil Pixner St Aphrodisius Catholic Online J W Meri W Ende Nelly van Doorn Harder Houari Touati Abdulaziz Sachedina Th Zarcone M Gaborieau R Seesemann and S Reese Ziyara in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition edited by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs Consulted online on 30 September 2018 doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 1390 ISBN 9789004161214 Egypt voyager Dayr Al Jarnus Claremont Coptic Encyclopedia 1991 St Mary Mons Coptic Cairo Archived December 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine Commons category tourist info Lapide Cornelius 1889 The great commentary of Cornelius a Lapide Translated by Thomas Wimberly Mossman Knecht Friedrich Justus 1910 Chapter IX The Flight into Egypt A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture B Herder Baxter Roger 1823 Christ s Flight into Egypt Meditations For Every Day In The Year New York Benziger Brothers Further reading editAlbright W F and C S Mann Matthew The Anchor Bible Series New York Doubleday amp Company 1971 Brown Raymond E The Birth of the Messiah A Commentary on the Infancy Narratives in Matthew and Luke New York Doubleday London G Chapman 1977 Updated ed 1993 Clarke Howard W The Gospel of Matthew and its Readers A Historical Introduction to the First Gospel Bloomington Indiana University Press 2003 France R T The Gospel According to Matthew an Introduction and Commentary Leicester Inter Varsity 1985 France R T The Formula Quotations of Matthew 2 and the Problem of Communications New Testament Studies Vol 27 1981 Gabra Gawdat ed Be Thou There The Holy Family s Journey in Egypt Cairo and New York The American University in Cairo Press 2001 Goulder M D Midrash and Lection in Matthew London SPCK 1974 Gundry Robert H Matthew a Commentary on his Literary and Theological Art Grand Rapids William B Eerdmans Publishing Company 1982 Jones Alexander The Gospel According to St Matthew London Geoffrey Chapman 1965 Schweizer Eduard The Good News According to Matthew Atlanta John Knox Press 1975External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flight into Egypt Further reading on the Flight into Egypt in art John Calvin s commentary on Matthew 2 19 Orthodox Wiki article on the Flight into Egypt Includes map info and links to various articles and videos on the subject Flight into EgyptLife of JesusPreceded byVisit of the Wise Men New TestamentEvents Succeeded byMassacre of the Innocents Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flight into Egypt amp oldid 1185772301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.