"Judaism" in the time of Jesus is more properly designated
"Judaisms" as it can include a rich variety of forms and practices
that flourished during late Second Temple times (200 B.C.E.-70 C.E.).
In one way or the other this diverse "Jewish" culture traces itself
back to the Hebrew Bible and the history of the ancient Israelites.
By Roman times, with the northern Ten Tribes long ago carried away
into Assyrian captivity and largely lost to history, it became customary
to refer to all those of Hebrew or Israelite ancestry who lived
in the Roman Mediterranean world as "Jews," and to their religious-cultural
life as "Judaism."
AN HISTORICAL
SKETCH
The Hebrews settled the land of Canaan in the late second millennium
B.C.E.. In about 1000 B.C.E. the monarchy of King David and his
son King Solomon emerged. About 921 the united monarchy split.
In 721 B.C.E. the northern kingdom (Israel) was crushed by the
Assyrians. The population created by the exile and replacement
of these peoples eventually came to be known as those whom the
New Testament calls the Samaritans, who had a rival holy place:
Mt. Gerizim. Later, the southern kingdom (Judah) was destroyed
by the Babylonian Empire, which deported much of the Judean population
(the Babylonian Exile) and in 587 destroyed Jerusalem and its
holy Temple. Thus began the "dispersion" of Jews from the homeland
(Greek Diaspora), a phenomenon that continued down to our
own time.
The Babylonian Exile marked a major turning point in the history
of the Jewish people. When Cyrus the Great of Persia conquered
Babylon he permitted various native peoples, including the Jews,
to return home. Beginning in 538 B.C.E., groups of exiles began
to return to the Land in a series of waves, though many Jews elected
to remain in Babylonia and it remained a center of Jewish life
and thought for a thousand years. First they laid the Temple foundations.
They also hoped for the reestablishment of the monarchy under
Zerubbabel upon whom they pinned messianic hopes (cf. the prophets
Haggai 2:23 and Zechariah 3:8; 6:12). About 515 B.C.E. a modest
Temple was dedicated. Despite Samaritan opposition Nehemiah rebuilt
the walls of Jerusalem (437 B.C.E.). Ezra, "a scribe skilled in
the Law of Moses" (Ezra 7:6) came, bringing with him the sacred
Law, or Torah, which included the sacred traditions that embodied
the very life of the people. By now, the people no longer spoke
its language, Hebrew, but a sister language, which had become
the standardized international language of administration in the
Persian Empire: Aramaic.
Nonetheless, Ezra promulgated the Torah and the people celebrated
the festival of Succoth, acts which symbolized Jewish identity--in
fact, some marriages with non-Jews were dissolved (Ezra 10:18-44).
The book of Nehemiah stresses the necessity of following Torah,
avoiding trade with non-Jews on the Sabbath, observing rules that
the land was to lie fallow and that slaves were to be released
every seventh year (the Sabbatical Year), and paying Temple taxes
promptly. All this should not be interpreted to mean that Judaism
had become simply an ingrown, protective, and national-chauvinistic
religion legalistically seeking repentance in order to gain God's
favor. Archaeological evidence indicates that extensive contact
with surrounding nations existed in this period; in fact, there
were temples outside of Jerusalem. Indeed, Babylonian ideas of
wisdom, astrology, and magic, as well as Persian views of resurrection
of the dead and final judgment, made their way into Jewish thinking.
Perhaps most important, this was a period of intense literary
activity; this is the time much that of what later became Scripture
in Judaism was collected, edited, and written. Yet, Judaism did
evolve emphases on Torah and its interpretation. Gradually prophecy
waned and the High Priests gained in political power and religious
authority as interpreters of the sacred books. Ultimately, the
Torah, centered in the Pentateuch (Five Books of Moses: Genesis,
Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy), and its interpretation
would rival and even surpass the Temple and the priesthood in
authority . Judaism became a "religion of the book" and Torah
and its interpretation were central to life and thought.
Then came Alexander and Hellenization. Archeological evidence
indicates that the upperclasses in Palestine were probably already
influenced by Greek culture in the third century B.C.E.. Indeed,
Greek ways soon entered the city of Jerusalem, while Babylonian
astronomical, meteorological, and calendrical speculations seem
to have continued to influence the Jews. One gets the impression
that Hellenization, had it proceeded at its own pace, might have
continued a progressive and uninterrupted alteration of Jewish
life and culture, at least in the urban areas. But this did not
happen.
When the Seleucid Greeks finally overcame the Ptolemies in 198
B.C.E., Palestine came under Seleucid domination. Although the
Jews welcomed the Seleucids, in 190 B.C.E. the Romans defeated
the Seleucids (but allowed them to remain in office) and forced
them to pay an enormous indemnity, which was passed on to their
own subjected peoples, including the Jews. The fortunes of the
Jews took a turn for the worse.
The Maccabean
Revolt
In 175 B.C.E. Antiochus IV Epiphanes ("[god] manifest") took
the Seleucid throne. Antiochus was an eccentric despot who sought
to enforce Hellenization throughout his empire. When Jason,
a priest who was pro-Greek offered a huge sum of money for the
High Priesthood and promised to turn Jerusalem into a Greek city,
Antiochus accepted and Hellenization proceeded at a rapid pace.
But Jason was soon out-bought by Menelaus, a rival for the post.
Eventually civil war broke out among the various rival factions.
Antiochus, disgruntled because of his setback in the war with
Egypt, interpreted the civil strife in Jerusalem as a revolt against
his Hellenizing efforts. He attacked Jerusalem, exterminated all
males who resisted, and sold women and children into slavery.
The city walls were torn down and the old citadel of the Temple
was fortified as a Greek garrison (the Akra). Then Antiochus attempted
to obliterate the Jewish religion by forbidding Temple sacrifices,
traditional festivals, Sabbath worship, and the rite of circumcision
(the sign of the covenant), upon pain of death. Torah scrolls
were ordered destroyed, and every town in Judea was commanded
to sacrifice to the Greek gods. An altar was erected over the
altar of burnt offering in the Jerusalem Temple; sacrifices were
offered to the Olympian high god, Zeus. This event was etched
on the memory of the Jews as "the abomination of desolation" (1
Macc 1:54, 59; Dan 11:31; 12:11). This was no mere assimilation
of Greek ways; it was a threat of the annihilation of traditional
Judaism.
The response to these events was the Maccabean Revolt in 167
B.C.E.. When Antiochus' emissary came to the little town of Modein
and demanded that the people offer sacrifices, Mattathias, of
priestly stock, refused. Seeing one of the Jews about to comply,
he rushed forward and slew him at the altar and then killed the
king's emissary, "acting zealously for the law of God, as Phinehas
had done" (cf. Num 25:6-15). Then he and his sons fled to the
hills and were joined by many others. At his death, his son Judas
Maccabeus took charge and waged a successful guerilla war against
the Seleucids, retook Jerusalem, and in 164 restored and rededicated
the Temple, giving birth to the Feast of Hanukkah ("Dedication")
or "Lights." Thus began a long war which, despite great odds,
ended in victory and the establishment of the Maccabean, or Hasmonean
kingdom, an independent kingdom which lasted until 63 BCE.
In summary, the Greek period (333-63 B.C.E.) was marked by two
trends: the Hellenization of Palestine, and the reaction of the
Jews to forced Hellenization resulting in the Maccabean
Revolt and the independent Hasmonean kingdom. From this history
we can see several forces at work: the tendency of some to come
to terms with Hellenization; the tendency of others to hold onto
the traditional ways; and the willingness of still others to revolt
because of "zealousness" for the Law when the traditions are severely
attacked. Similar responses will occur in the first century CE.
Moreover, in the period of the independent Hasmonean kingdom,
three religious movements appear for the first time: the Sadducees,
the Pharisees, and the Essenes. We shall discuss them further
when we take up Jewish religion.
The Arrival of
Rome in Palestine
In 63 B.C.E. the Roman general Pompey was invited to settle
a dispute between two Maccabeans. He sided with Hyrcanus II and
his supporters, one of whom was Antipater II, the ruler of Idumea.
However, from this point forward, Palestine was considered to
be controlled by Rome, and in the reorganization by Augustus it
fell under the administration of the imperial province of Syria.
Unlike senatorial provinces, imperial provinces were governed
by a military governor called a "Legate" (who, in this case resided
at Antioch), and Roman troops were stationed to keep order. There
were also "districts" that were testy enough to be governed directly
by the emperor through his "prefect" (later "procurator"). The
chief responsibilities of the governors were civil order, the
administration of justice (including the judicial right of life
and death), and the collection of taxes. This last responsibility
was often farmed out to local tax companies whose income was what
they collected in excess, a system open to abuse. The Roman army--in
the legions only Roman citizens, in the auxiliary units, local
recruits--policed the system. The Romans were sensitive enough
to permit the Jews some special privileges: exemptions from military
service, from going to court on the Sabbath, from being required
to portray the emperor's head on their coins (hence, the need
for money changers at the Temple), and from having to offer sacrifices
to the emperor as a deity (this being replaced by sacrifices "for
Caesar and the Roman nation" twice daily). Furthermore, the Romans
were not to represent the image of the emperor on their military
standards in areas of heavy Jewish population. Yet, it is also
clear that these concessions were not always carried out in practice,
and in Palestine there were a number of occasions when more restless
elements in the population resisted Roman abuses and followed
the tradition of "zealousness for the Law."
In the meantime, the Idumean Antipater and especially one of
his sons, Herod ("the Great"), were crafty enough to shift allegiances
to a succession of Romans--Pompey, Julius Caesar, Cassius, Anthony,
and finally Octavian--and by this means Herod emerged as a powerful
puppet king (ethnarch) under the Romans (ruled 37-4 B.C.E.). Herod
proved to be an extremely capable tyrant. To consolidate his power,
he had numerous opponents and relatives executed, including his
wife Miramme, thus eliminating the possibility of the return of
the Hasmoneans. To win the favor of the emperor he became an ardent
Hellenizer. He surrounded himself with Greek scholars and undertook
many building projects, including a magnificent and fortified
palace. He rebuilt the Temple in Jerusalem with a fortress on
its corner (Antonia), and in other non-Jewish areas he built whole
cities with the usual manifestations of Greek culture such as
theaters, baths, and amphitheaters. Herod also built many military
fortifications, the most famous of which was the fortress of Masada
along the Dead Sea. In his final years, Herod was plagued by domestic
problems. He died unloved and unmourned by both family and nation.
Before he died, Jesus of Nazareth was born.
Herod's final will, slightly modified by Augustus, divided his
kingdom among his three sons. Philip (4 B.C.E. to 33 or 34 C.E.)
was named "tetrarch" of the largely non-Jewish regions northeast
of the Sea of Galilee. Herod Antipas (4 B.C.E. to 39 C.E.) became
tetrarch of Galilee and Perea, an area across the Jordan River.
Herod Antipas is the king of Galilee in the gospel stories (cf.
Luke 13:31-33, "that fox") and is remembered for the execution
of John the Baptist (cf. Mark 6:17-29) and for his contemptuous
treatment of Jesus (Luke 23:6-12). During his long reign, which
spans the life of Jesus, his magnificent capital city Sepphoris
was rebuilt in splendor, located just 5 miles NW of the little
village of Nazareth. Jesus, accordingly, grew up in the "suburb"
of the major urban city of Galilee. The Roman emperor Caligula
finally exiled Antipas. The third son, Archelaus, was given Samaria
and Judea in the South. He was opposed by his subjects and by
his brother, Herod Antipas. Also at this time there was unrest
in Galilee caused by a certain Judas the Galilean so that there
was soon total revolt in Judea. Archelaus went to Rome to appeal
his position, while the Legate of Syria intervened with troops
to restore peace. When he returned Archelaus treated his subjects
so brutally that he was eventually summoned back to Rome, dismissed,
and banished to Gaul in 6 C.E.. Except for the short period of
the reign of Herod Agrippa I over all of Palestine from 41-44
C.E., Samaria and Judea fell under the authority of procurators
appointed directly from Rome, as did most of the land after 44
C.E.. Thus, during the adult life of Jesus, Galilee was ruled
by Herod Antipas and Judea-Samaria by the procurator Pontius Pilate
(26-36 C.E.).
Life for the Jews under the procurators was exceedingly difficult.
For example, Pontius Pilate was described by Agrippa I as unbending
and severe with the stubborn, and was accused of bribery, cruelty,
and countless murders. This protrait is confirmed by the Jewish
historian Josephus who chronicled a number of events that provoked
the Jews under Pilate and other procurators, leading to riots,
beatings, and executions. The Legate of Syria eventually removed
Pilate on the complaints of the Samaritans, whom he had mistreated.
After the interim reign of Herod Agrippa I ended in 44 C.E., the
situation under the procurators deteriorated even further. In
one case, Josephus (who likes to inflate figures) says 20,000
Jews were killed in a riot prompted when a Roman soldier ridiculed
some Passover pilgrims with an indecent gesture. There thus emerged
within Judaism groups of revolutionaries who looked back to the
militaristic Maccabees and their zeal for the Law as great heroes.
These "Zealots" were already active in spirit, if not in name,
in the period prior to the birth of Jesus. In 6 or 7 C.E., Judas
the Galilean and a Pharisee named Zaddok attempted to arouse the
people to revolt against the first Roman census. Self-styled prophets
and messiahs appeared from time to time and eventually an even
more radical group, the Sicarii (Latin sicarius, "dagger"),
emerged to foment revolution by assassination. Clearly, the policy
of the tyrannical and brutal procurators, like that of the Seleucid
Hellenizer Antiochus IV over 150 years earlier, met with increasing
opposition led by more revolutionary Jews; ultimately, the forces
of moderation could not contain them.
The Jewish Revolts
The last of the procurators, Gessius Florus (64-66 C.E.), was
probably the worst. In the spring of 66 C.E., he robbed the Temple
treasury of a great sum of money. The outraged populace mocked
him by taking up a collection. Florus took revenge by allowing
his troops to plunder part of the city of Jerusalem. Attempts
at mediation by the priests failed, and when departing troops
did not respond to friendly overtures of the Jewish crowds, the
people began slinging insults at Florus. Slaughter ensued. But
in a bloody street battle, the people eventually gained the upper
hand, took possession of the Temple mount, and cut off the passage
between the Temple and the Roman-held fortress of Antonia. Further
attempts at mediation by Agrippa II, leading Pharisees, and the
priestly aristocracy could not quell the revolt. Rebels retook
the fortress of Masada, taken earlier by the Romans, and, at the
direction of the son of the High Priest, Eleazar, the sacrifices
in behalf of the emperor were stopped. This was, in effect, a
declaration of war.
An initial success in routing the army of the Legate of Syria
encouraged the rebels and the land was organized for battle. The
emperor Nero (54-68 C.E.) dispatched his experienced commander
Vespasian, who organized the legions at Antioch and sent his son,
Titus, to Alexandria to bring up the fifteenth legion. The newly
organized army contained a formidable force of 60,000 troops.
Galilee, organized for the Jews by the future historian Josephus,
offered only moderate resistance, causing the radicals to believe--with
some justification--that the leadership was not fully dedicated.
The Zealots under the leadership of John of Gischala sought to
replace them with more dedicated patriots, while the Christians
fled to Pella across the Jordan. Now Jerusalem found herself in
a bloody civil war between the moderate and radical forces. The
experienced Vespasian subdued the surrounding areas, deciding
to let the Jews exhaust themselves. Then, in 68 C.E., news came
of Nero's suicide and Vespasian again delayed. In quick succession,
Galba, Otho, and the western commander, Vitellius, became emperor.
But the East was not to be denied; Vespasian was also acclaimed
emperor and after the assassination of Vitellius, Vespasian left
for Rome to assume his role, leaving his son Titus to complete
the war.
When in the spring of 70 C.E. Titus began the siege of Jerusalem,
the Jewish factions of the city united against a common enemy.
Though they fought valiantly, Titus built a wall around the city
making it impossible for the Jews to get provisions. Hunger and
thirst began to take their toll. Gradually the various walled
divisions of the city fell, one by one, and the fortress of Antonia
was retaken. Titus attempted to save the Temple, but in the heat
of battle it was ravaged by fire. The Jews refused to surrender.
Women, children, and the elderly, all were butchered, and the
city and most of its walls destroyed. The major battle over, Titus
set sail for Rome with 700 handsome prisoners for the victory
parade through Rome, commemorated by the arch of Titus, still
to be seen in the Roman Forum.
The victory belonged to the Romans. Several fortresses still
remained to be subdued, however. The most difficult was the mesa
along the Dead Sea fortified by Herod the Great, the fortress
of Masada. Commanded by the descendant of Judas the Galilean,
Eleazar son of Yair, it was almost impenetrable. The task fell
to Flavius Silva who, because of the steepness of the cliffs,
built a tremendous wall of earth as a bridge across which the
huge battering ram could be rolled into place. When Eleazar saw
that the Jewish cause was hopeless, he addressed the garrison;
he asked that they kill their families, and then each other. It
was done. The Romans finally breached the wall, but there was
no battle left to be fought.
With Jerusalem and the Temple destroyed, the heart of Judaism
was pierced. What survived was a totally reorganized Judaism under
the Pharisees who met at the coastal town of Jamnia, and those
Jewish communities of the Diaspora. To be sure, Palestinian Judaism
still flickered--enough that another revolt in Judea broke out
in 132 C.E., probably in response to the emperor Hadrian's empirewide
ban on circumcision (not exclusively a Jewish practice), his attempt
to establish a Greco-Roman city (Aelia Capitolina) where the Jewish
holy city had stood, and his intention to build a temple to Jupiter
Capitolinus on the site of the previous Jerusalem Temple. The
leader of the revolt, bar Kosiba, called bar Kochba ("Son of the
Star," a messianic title, cf. Num 24:17) by his supporters, but
bar Koziba ("Son of the Lie" = "Liar") by his detractors, also
failed. Hadrian's plans were carried out; Jews living in Jerusalem
were driven out and not permitted to return upon punishment by
death. From that time on, Judaism became primarily Diaspora Judaism,
a Judaism without a homeland, until the establishment of the state
of Israel in 1948.
THE RELIGION
OF JUDAISM
As Judaism emerged from the Babylonian conquest and exile, it
inherited the stress of Israelite religion on monotheism: "Hear,
O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one . . ." (Deut 6:4).
God's name, Yahweh, had become too holy to pronounce, being substituted
with Adonai ("lord"). According to Genesis 15 and 17, God
had made an agreement, or covenant, with Abraham that the land
of Canaan would be given to Abraham and his descendants. A sign,
circumcision of every male child, had sealed this agreement. The
covenant meant that the Jews believed themselves to be the special
people of God, his elect or chosen people, with a mission to become
"a light to the nations." As the writers of the historical traditions
of Israel expressed it, God had created the world, had delivered
his people from bondage in Egypt, and had given them the land
of Canaan. God also made other covenants, that is, agreements
about the Law and the monarchy, one with Moses and another with
David. God had revealed himself and his plan for his people; but
if the king or the people disobeyed the covenant, they were subject
to God's just punishment.
Temple and Priesthood
The first Temple was built by David's son, Solomon, in the tenth
century B.C.E. and destroyed by the Babylonians in 587 B.C.E..
A modest Temple was rebuilt by the returning exiles in 515 B.C.E.
and further reconstructed on a grand scale in the Roman-Herodian
period. This reconstruction was begun by Herod the Great in 20
B.C.E. and was not completed until about 60 C.E., only to be destroyed
a decade later. In the Persian period, the priests gained power
due to the absence of an actual king and the decline of prophecy;
in fact, the High Priest, as leader of the cultus and interpreter
of religious traditions became the most powerful figure in Judaism.
Under the Seleucid Greeks, the High Priesthood became something
of a political position; then the Maccabees (who were also of
priestly descent, though of an undistinguished line) assumed control
of the High Priesthood and eventually assumed royal perogatives
as well, thus succumbing to the politicization of the office.
Hence, other priestly parties made their appearance, among them
the Essenes and the Sadducees. Under the Herodians and procurators,
High Priests were of varying families, and they were appointed
to the post; nonetheless, they maintained a measure of political
power, for they continued to preside over the central cultus at
the Temple and over the religious Sanhedrin, Judaism's highest
court. The destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple in 70 C.E.
meant the end of their power.
Apart from the political functions of the priests, their major
religious functions consisted of the maintenance of purity by
the sacrificial system at the Temple. In Judaism, sin was not
only a moral question; it also concerned the practice of ritual
and notions of the sacred and profane, purity and impurity--distinctions
that are often lost to the modern consciousness. In ancient Israel
a whole system of sacrifices had arisen to atone for sin, that
is, to set sinful humankind right with the one, holy God. The
priests administered the system and sacrifices were offered at
least twice a day. Even the architectural plans of the successive
temples reflect the various degrees of holiness. For example,
only the outermost area of the Herodian Temple was accessible
to Gentiles; beyond it they could not go "under penalty of death."
Moving toward the center in the Sacred Enclosure (for Jews) was
the Court of Women, the Court of Israel (men), the Court of Priests,
and the Holy Place--the forecourt where the sacrifices took place,
and finally the Holy of Holies into which the High Priest entered
only once a year, on the Day of Atonement. Thus the Temple was
the holy center of the holy city in a holy land. Yet, like all
oriental temples, it was also the hub of much economic and commercial
activity, for it housed the national treasury. Every Jew was expected
to pay the annual Temple tax.
Synagogue and
Prayer
Sacrifice was an enacted prayer, that is, a means of human communication
with God. There were also other forms of liturgical prayer; for
example, the whole tradition of chants and psalms which in New
Testament times had become the special province of a class of
Temple priests, the Levites. This form of public prayer was continued
even where there was no access to the Jerusalem Temple. When the
synagogue (from the Greek for "gathering together") developed
sometime in the post-exilic period (the earliest archeological
evidence is from the first century C.E.), it served as a "house
of prayer" as well as a gathering place for meetings, meditation,
and instruction. No sacrifice was offered there. Rather, the synagogue
services probably consisted of a recitation of the Shema
("Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one . . ."), Scripture,
sermon, blessing, and, of course, prayer. Prayer0s could be offered
at any time and any place; yet, they should be oriented toward
Jerusalem--specifically the Holy of Holies--and it was customary
to offer them three special times a day, namely, morning, midday,
and evening. Standing or kneeling with hands raised to heaven
were the usual positions.
The Centrality
of Torah
In the post-exilic period, Judaism sought God's will more and
more in sacred tradition and the written word and its interpretation
became the very basis of life. Torah meant "instruction":
in its widest sense any form of revelation; in a somewhat narrower
sense, Scripture and its written and (especially) oral interpretation;
and in a still narrower sense the Pentateuch (Five Books of Moses)--most
specifically the legal materials in the Pentateuch. It was therefore
"law" but included narrative materials as well. For a summary
of its main elements see the document on this Web page: Summary
of the Torah.
Apocalyptic Eschatology
The term eschatology is from the Greek terms eschaton,
"the end," and ho logos, "the word," "the teaching." It
means therefore, "teaching concerning the end of things"--specifically,
teaching concerning the end of the world. A particular form of
eschatology is called "apocalyptic" (from the Greek
apocalypsis, "an uncovering," "a revelation,"); it describes
both a movement and a literature that characteristically claimed
that God had revealed to a writer the secrets of the imminent
end of the world and so had given him a message for his people.
As with Wisdom, the literature dates after 200 B.C.E. and is largely
non-Biblical (that is, outside the Old Testament). It reveals
a very diversified Judaism prior to 70 C.E., one marked by a number
of movements which, if measured by the Judaism that survived the
wars, appears in many respects non-normative or unusual. Much
of that literature is the literature of apocalyptic eschatology.
There is no absolute agreement about what constitutes apocalyptic
eschatology either with respect to its origins or content. It
shows influences of Old Testament prophecy and Wisdom literature;
but there are also currents of Persian dualism and Babylonian
astrology. It is a child of hope and despair: hope in the invincible
power of God, the world he created, and his plan and purpose for
his people, but despair over the present course of human history
in that world. The primary tenent of Jewish faith was that one
true God was the creator and the ruler of all within it. At the
same time, the actual experience of the people of God in the world
was catastrophic: Assyrian and Babylonian conquest, exile in foreign
lands, Persian domination, the coming of the Greeks, and finally
the Romans. The burdens of war, occupation, forced Hellenization,
and taxation by imperialistic powers produced an intolerable experience
of alienation and powerlessness. Human history was a virtual descent
into hell. But God was the ruler of all things and, therefore,
he must have foreordained the tragic events of human history.
Thus, there was some divine plan through which the horrors of
history would reach a climax and everything would change. The
hope was that the world would become much the same as it had been
in the beginning of time: a paradise in which God's elect people
would be vindicated. This change would be marked by tremendous
historical and cosmic catastrophes. In the meantime the people
of God had to prepare themselves for the change and watch for
the signs of its coming.
The most apocalyptic book in the Old Testament is the book of
Daniel, which contains the Son of Man vision in 7:13-14, highly
influential in the gospels:
I saw in the night visions,
and behold, with the clouds of heaven
there came one like a son of man,
and he came to the Ancient of Days
and was presented before him.
And to him was given dominion
and glory and kingdom,
that all peoples, nations, and languages
should serve him;
his dominion is an everlasting dominion,
which shall not pass away,
and his kingdom one
that shall not be destroyed.
There are many other forms of the apocalyptic hope. The Assumption
of Moses, a work contemporary with the New Testament, is particularly
interesting because of its use of "Kingdom of God," a key concept
in the teaching of Jesus. Another form of this hope is associated
with the Coming of a Son of David found in the first century B.C.E.
document called the Psalms of Solomon. Despite the variety
of the forms of expression, the hope for a climactic series of
events that will lead to the final, eschatological intervention
of God into human history, directly or through intermediary figures
is constant. Through these events the world would be forever changed,
transformed into a perfect world in which the people of God would
be forever blessed for their fidelity, and their enemies and God's
forever punished.
This hope is called the "apocalyptic" hope because the characteristic
claim of the literature that expresses it is that God has uncovered
or revealed to the writer or seer his plan for the further course
of history and the coming of the End. This revelation frequently
takes the form of dreams or visions, which are then interpreted
by a heavenly figure. The dreams or visions generally use symbols
to recount the history of the Jewish (or Christian) people and
to express the hope for the immediate future. So, for example,
Daniel 7 tells in symbols the history of the Near Eastern world
from the Babylonian Empire through the Persian Empire to the conquests
of Alexander the Great and his ten successors as kings of the
Macedonian Seleucid Kingdom of Syria. The final symbol used to
represent a king is the "little horn" (Dan 7:8), which represents
Antiochus IV Epiphanes, who began persecuting the Jews in 167
B.C.E. in an attempt to consolidate his empire. The result was
the Jewish revolt. The author of Daniel 7 is living at the time
of this Maccabean revolt, writing to inspire his people with confidence
that the war is the beginning of the End, that it will shortly
be ended by the coming of the Son of Man as judge and ruler of
the world.
The book of Daniel is pseudonymous, that is, it was written
under an assumed name long after the time of most of the events
it pretends to prophesy. This is characteristic of Jewish apocalyptic
writings, and usually a name of some importance--Abraham, Moses,
David, or the like--would be chosen. This feature, of course,
lent the writing a certain authority and there was no modern notion
of fraud or copyright. The history would be portrayed in symbolic
form leading up to the symbolic vision of the seer. The seer also
dreamed and thought in traditional symbolic images, and frequently
he alluded to previously written texts that contained them.
These are the most important characteristics of apocalyptic
eschatology: a sense of alienation and of despair about history
that bred the belief that the world was rushing to a foreordained
tragic climax, a hope in God that fostered the conviction that
he would act in the climactic moment to change things utterly
and forever, and a conviction that it would be possible to recognize
the signs of the coming of that climactic moment. Its chief literary
characteristics were pseudonymity, symbolism, and quotation from
previously existing texts.
Associated with some apocalyptic eschatological texts is the
hope for a future redeemer, a Messiah. Originally the term "Messiah"
(Hebrew mashiach; Greek Christos) meant "anointed;"
in the Old Testament it was applied to any figure that was installed
into office by anointing, that is, prophets, priests, and kings.
Any of these figures was an "anointed one" or messiah. In the
eschatological materials, there are several types of expectation.
We have just noted a future redeemer and judge, the Son of Man.
Other Jews hoped for a descendant of David to come, overthrow
the enemies, and reestablish the Davidic kingdom. In the Dead
Sea Scrolls, there is evidence for a triple expectation: a prophet
like Moses, a royal Messiah of the line of David ("the Messiah
of Israel"), and a priestly Messiah ("the Messiah of Aaron").
The following passage combines this with adherence to the Torah:
And they shall not depart from any maxim of the Law
to walk in all the stubbornness of their heart.
And they shall be governed by the first ordinances
in which the members of the Community began their instruction,
until the coming of the Prophet and the
Anointed (Ones) of Aaron and Israel.
The Community Rule 9:9-11
Jewish Movements
and Groups in Palestine
The major radical political movement in Palestine, the Zealot
movement, has been discussed; it cut across many party lines and
included within its ranks priests, Pharisees, and common folk.
Besides the Zealots, there were three major groups which are first
mentioned in the texts of the second century B.C.E.: Sadducees,
Pharisees, and Essenes. References to the first two appear frequently
in the New Testament. We shall also note some more esoteric movements
and figures.
The Sadducees, whose name seems to be derived from the
High Priest Zadok of Solomon's time, were a group largely composed
of priests of the Zadokite line. They are first mentioned in connection
with the non-Zadokite priest and Maccabee, John Hyrcanus I (134-104
B.C.E.). Because the Temple was destroyed (70 C.E.), priestly
groups and, apparently, their literatures, disappeared. Knowledge
of the Sadducees comes therefore through secondary references
to them in ancient Jewish and Christian writings. From all indications,
the Sadducees were members of influential Jerusalem families,
and therefore of the "upper classes." Historically, they had come
into conflict with the Pharisees and thus were opposed to them
for political and religious reasons. As priests, they sacrificed
at the Jerusalem Temple, dominated the Sanhedrin and, as political
leaders, attempted to maintain cordial relations with their Roman
overlords. This conservative political stance was paralleled by
a conservatism in religion. They held to a more literal reading
of the Torah, which for them was the Pentateuch, and did not accept
the oral tradition, which was the special perogative of the Pharisees.
They also rejected those views which were most developed in the
non-Pentateuchal, post-exilic Scriptures, namely angels, demons,
and the resurrection of the dead (Acts 23:8; Mark 12:18-27). Correspondingly,
they were strict in matters they believed were based in the Torah,
for example, Sabbath laws. When the war with Rome became imminent,
they attempted to mediate, but to no avail.
The name Pharisee is probably derived from the Hebrew
perushim or the Aramaic perishaya, which means "the
separated (ones)," though it is debated as to from what or whom
they were separated. Like the Sadducees, they first made their
appearance in the late second century B.C.E. under the Maccabees
whom they initially supported, but from whom they later separated.
After John Hyrcanus took bloody revenge on them for a Pharisee's
criticism of his mother, they once again came into their own under
Queen Alexandra (76-69 B.C.E.) and gradually gained in stature.
Unlike the Sadducees, most Pharisees were not priests, but lay
scholars whose main influence was in their development and preservation
of the oral legal tradition mentioned above. Thus, they were rooted
in the synagogue and known for pious living (alms, tithing, prayer,
and fasting) and interpretation of the Torah, especially in areas
such as food purity, crops, Sabbaths and festivals, and family
affairs. In these areas, the Pharisees "made a hedge for the Torah."
In direct contrast to the Sadducees, they accepted the larger
notion of Scripture, as well as newer views such as angels, demons,
and the resurrection of the dead. In the New Testament, Jesus
is pictured as frequently in debate with the "scribes and the
Pharisees," the former having perhaps formed still another, separate
group. The Pharisees were divided into various "schools," the
best known being those of Hillel and Shammai in the first century.
Their most renowned teachers became rabbis, though the beginning
of the use of this term is also debated. Unlike the Sadducees,
then, many of the Pharisaic traditions have been preserved in
the so-called rabbinic literature, for it was the Pharisees who
survived the war with Rome and reorganized Judaism along Pharisaic
lines at the coastal town of Javneh (Jamnia). Here the books of
the Jewish Scriptures were decided, the oral traditions collected,
and the prayer against the Christians (Nazarenes) and Heretics
added to the important set of Jewish prayers, the Eighteen Benedictions.
Henceforth, the heart of Judaism was the Torah, the synagogue,
and the interpretation of Torah by the rabbis.
The Essenes, who are not mentioned in the rabbinic literature
or the New Testament, are described by the ancient writers Philo,
Josephus, and Pliny the Elder. They first appear under the Maccabean
High Priest Jonathan (161-143/2 B.C.E.) and subsequently disappear
during the wars with Rome, about 68 C.E.. Though some Essenes
lived in the towns and cities, the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls
in 1947 and the subsequent excavation of nearby Khirbet Qumran
(the ruins of a Jewish "monastery" along the Dead Sea near the
Wadi Qumran) have convinced most modern scholars that most of
the scrolls were composed and copied by the Essenes, and that
Pliny is correct when he says that an Essene community lived there,
apparently in the caves in the cliffs. The name "Essene" (Greek
Essenoi, Essaioi = possibly from Hebrew ossim meaning "the
Doers" of the Torah) or perhaps the Aramaic 'asayyah, "healers")
reflects possible origins among the Hasidim, the "Pious
Ones" who temporarily joined the Maccabees in the Revolt of 167
B.C.E.. In any case, the founder of the community was a certain
Teacher of Righteousness; a Zadokite priest who opposed one of
the Maccabean priests as "the wicked priest" in the second half
of the second century. In fulfillment of this passage which early
Christians said prophesied John the Baptist (Isa 40:3: "... in
the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord..."), the Teacher took
his followers to the Dead Sea and established a priest-directed,
scribal, and apocalyptic community which interpreted the prophecies
to refer to themselves. There they worked, copied religious texts,
wrote religious literature, worshipped according to their own
calendar and customs, baptized, had a common meal, and sought
to live pure and undefiled quasi-ascetic lives. Their literature,
community organization, and eschatological orientation have become
extremely important for understanding the rise of early Christianity.
Magic and Miracles
We have seen that in the Greco-Roman world at large there was
an abundance of magicians and miracle workers, healers and physicians.
Palestine was no exception, though some circles were very cautious
because of the belief that God, not a powerful human being, was
the ultimate source of healing. Nonetheless, the Babylonian and
Persian beliefs about angels and demons which influenced the apocalyptic
literary tradition also influenced popular religious views about
the origins of sickness and disease. One widespread view about
the origin of evil was based on the interpretation of Genesis
6:1-4, namely, that the "sons of God" (interpreted as angels)
lusted after the "daughters of men" (human women) and produced
a race of giants (interpreted as demons). In a reinterpretation
of a Genesis story in the Dead Sea Scrolls, Abraham is said to
have exorcized a demon from Pharaoh by prayer, the laying on of
hands, and rebuking the evil spirit (GenApoc 20:16-19).
David was said to have done the same thing by playing his harp
(LibAntBib 60:1-3) and Noah by medicines and herbs (Jubilees
10:10-14). Solomon was especially remembered for his wisdom--here
we note the influence of the Wisdom tradition--and that wisdom
included his vast knowledge of magic and medicine. Josephus tells
the story of the Jewish exorcist Eleazar who performed the following
exorcism:
He put to the nose of the possessed man a ring which
had under its seal one of the roots prescribed by Solomon, and
then, as the man smelled it, drew out the demon through his nostrils,
and, when the man at once fell down, adjured the demon never to
come back into him, speaking Solomon's name and reciting the incantations
which he had composed.
Antiquities 5:2, 5
In Josephus and the rabbinic literature, Honi the Circle Drawer
was remembered for bringing rain by prayer, and the Galilean Hasid
("Pious One") named Hanina ben Dosa is remembered for healing
by prayer. When the son of Yohanan ben Zakkai became ill, Yohanan
said,
"Hanina, my son, pray for him that he may live." He
put his head between his knees and prayed; and he lived.
Babylonian Talmud, Berakoth 34b
In the stories of the Talmud, the tendency to ascribe the actual
healing to God himself is clear, that is, the cure is effected
through prayer; nonetheless, it is also clear that particular
Holy Men were famous for the ability to heal. Such a man, also,
was Jesus of Nazareth.
The Jewish Diaspora
We have highlighted some of the major movements, groups, and
individuals of Palestinian Judaism: Zealots, Sadducees, Pharisees,
Essenes, magicians and miracle workers. There were others. But
most of the people were the common people, the ordinary people,
whom the rabbis called "the People of the Land." These people
are difficult to identify with precision, except that the rabbis
considered them with some disdain, presumably because they would
or could not keep the Law with precision.
The focus of our sketch of the history and religion of Judaism
has been on Palestine, though it is clear that Hellenism had a
profound impact on Palestinian Judaism. But many Jews no longer
lived in Palestine; many had stayed in Babylonia, and others were
found scattered throughout the cities of the eastern Mediterranean,
the largest and most famous being Alexandria where the Jewish
community almost formed a state within a state. During the Greek
period, Diaspora Jews learned to speak Greek, as did urban Palestinian
Jews, and the need arose for Greek translations of the Scriptures.
Though there are many problems with recovering the earliest Greek
(Old Greek) text and tracing its history in relation to Hebrew
and Aramaic texts, both tradition (the Letter of Aristeas) and
recovered manuscripts, especially from the Dead Sea Scrolls, indicate
that translations were already being made in the second century
B.C.E., that is, prior to the time when the leaders at Jamnia
had settled on the precise books of the Bible (Old Testament).
The Greek translations (and subsequent translations and revisions)
became the holy texts for Diaspora Jews, Greek-speaking Jews in
Palestine, and Greek-speaking Christians. Based on the legend
of their translation in Alexandria (Aristeas), which stated that
70 (or 72) Greek-speaking priests (from Jerusalem!) translated
the Scriptures independently and arrived at precisely the same
translations, the Greek version (including a few other books)
is still called the Septuagint (LXX). The use of Greek-language
Scriptures is an important factor not only in the Hellenization
of the Jews, but in the very understanding of the Jewish religion.
Jews had a special status in the Greco-Roman world; as we have
seen, they were exempt from emperor worship and were permitted
a number of special privileges based on their observance of the
Sabbath and the festivals: exemption from military service, going
to court on the Sabbath, and certain business arrangements. They
were also permitted to settle inter-Jewish legal disputes according
to their Law and tradition, and to administer their own funds
and send money to Jerusalem, especially the Temple tax. It is
a debated question whether Jews also had civic rights as
citizens of the empire, that is, participation in public life,
election of magistrates, and the like. Josephus says they did;
other sources during the Roman period indicate they did not, which
seems more likely. In their relations with Gentiles, Jewish practices
such as the rite of circumcision and ritual purity laws tended
to keep them distinct, and their special privileges under the
Romans brought them some ill will. No doubt many Jews of the Diaspora
became less inclined to follow the Law as strictly as they did
in Palestine, especially since much of it dealt with the Temple.
On the other hand, Judaism bore witness to a high sense of morality
and attracted formal converts or proselytes (especially among
women, who were not circumcised), as well as sympathetic adherents
to the God of Israel and the basic universal morality of the Torah.
These were called "God-fearers" and we have evidence that in every
synagogue, especially in the Diaspora, there were groups of "Gentiles"
or non-Jewish followers who were attracted to Judaism, but not
to formal and full conversion.
This article, with very minor modifications, was
written by Dennis Duling of Canisius College and was published in
his 2nd edition of Norman Perrin and Dennis Duling, The New
Testament: An Introduction (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,1982),
pp. 4-35, now out of print. This excellent work, revised,
expanded, and continually improved, is now published by Wadsworth
and is in its 4th edition with Duling as the sole author.
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