Eduard Schweizer was a SwissNew Testament scholar who taught at the University of Zurich for an extended period. The New Testament, sometimes called the Greek Testament or Greek Scriptures is the name given to the part of the Christian Bible that was written after the birth of Jesus. ... The University of Zurich (in German: Universität Zürich) is the largest university of Switzerland, in the city of Zurich. ...
He wrote a number of influential books, many translated into English, including: The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
Jesus (1971)
The Good News According to Mark
The Good News According to Matthew
The Good News According to Luke
The Church as the Body of Christ
Church Order in the New Testament
The Lord's Supper in the New Testament
The Spirit of God
A Theological Introduction to the New Testament (ISBN:0281046026)
EduardSchweizer agrees that Luke is the earlier version because Matthews focus is the practical conduct of the Christian community -- a later concern (366).
EduardSchweizer clarifies this: "Matthew speaks admonishingly of the will of God which must also be binding on the community" (367).
As Jeremias and Schweizer both explain clearly, [3] the lost sheep is a weak one, one of the "little ones" in Matthew.
Schweizer's approach runs afoul of the fundamental insight of Albert Schweitzer, that theologies of that sort are the product, not the presupposition, of the Church.
Schweizer is, however, entirely correct in the assertion that Jesus' reference to his "body" and his "blood" is far from transparently sacrificial.
Indeed, it should also be stressed that the form of sacrificial construal Schweizer denies, that Jesus is himself a sacrificial victim, replacing the cult of the Temple, does not come into question at the present stage.