CHRISTIANITY
BETWEEN THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT – continued from “Search for the Real Parents
of My Soul!”
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© September 25, 2014
THE
MACCABEAN REVOLT
The
Maccabees were a Jewish rebel army led by Mattathias the Hasmonean, and his
five sons. After King Antiochus issued
his decree forbidding Jewish religious practices, this father and his sons,
coming from the small rural village of Modi’in, stood up to oppose Antiochus
and his proclamation.
This sparked
the Maccabean Revolt, a conflict that lasted from B.C. 167 to 160, between
these Judean rebels and the army of the Seleucid Empire.
In the
second century B.C., Judea lay between the Ptolemaic Kingdom based in Egypt and
the Seleucid Empire based in Syria, kingdoms formed after the death of
Alexander the Great (B.C. 356-323).
Judea had
been under Ptolemaic rule, but fell to the Seleucids in B.C. 200. At the time, the Hellenistic influence on
Jews was pervasive. Some Jews, mainly
those of the urban upper class, notably the Tobiad family, wished to dispense
with Jewish law altogether and to adopt the Greek lifestyle, mainly for
economic and political reasons.
Hellenistic Jews even built a gymnasium in Jerusalem to compete in
international Greek games, while desiring to remove their marks of circumcision
and to repudiate the Holy Covenant (First Maccabees).
This
incensed Mattathias the Hasmonean, who rallied Jews for the Maccabean Revolt
with the declaration:
“If anyone be zealous for the laws of
his country and for the worship of God, let him follow me” (Josephus, 1911).
Thousands
flocked to his banner. Mattathias killed
a Hellenistic Jew who stepped forward to offer a sacrifice to an idol in
Mattathias' place. The full revolt was
now underway. He and his five sons fled
to the wilderness of Judah to escape prosecution. He subsequently died in battle. After his death in B.C. 166, his third son,
Judah Maccabee, became general of the Jewish army, which was thereafter known
as the “Maccabees,” a term taken from the Hebrew word for "hammer."
After a long
series of battles, with the Maccabean forces greatly outnumbered, Judah led his
Jewish dissidents to victory over the Seleucid dynasty in guerrilla warfare,
which was directed against Hellenized Jews, of whom there were many.
The
Maccabees destroyed pagan altars in the villages, circumcised boys and forced
reluctant Jews to convert to the cause (Nicholas de Large, 1997).
The
Maccabees gained notoriety among the Seleucid army for their guerrilla tactics,
which were unconventional for the time.
After the victory, the Maccabees entered Jerusalem in triumph in B.C.
165, and ritually cleansed the Temple, reestablishing traditional Jewish
worship, restoring the true ritual of God.
Judah was
killed later in battle but not before his rebel army had taken control of
Judea, which had been ruled as a province of the Seleucid Empire. The Maccabees founded the Hasmonean dynasty,
which ruled from B.C. 164 to B.C. 63, reasserting the Jewish religion, partly
by force conversions, expanding the boundaries of Judea by conquest and
reducing the influence of Hellenism and Hellenistic Judaism.
The only
survivor of Mattathias’ five sons was Jonathan Maccabee. He proclaimed Judea an independent nation
appointing himself as High Priest. The nation was now free of foreign
domination. But the years of religious
anarchy and Hellenistic influence had taken their toll. Dr. Lauterbach writes:
During the seventy or eighty years of
religious anarchy, many new practices had been gradually adopted by the people (Lauterbach, 1951).
The British
scholar Travers Hereford adds:
In the absence of authoritarian
guidance, the people had gone their own way; new customs had found a place
among old religious usages … new ideas had been formed under the influence of
Hellenism, which had permeated the land for more than a century, and here had
been no one to point out the danger which thereby threatened the religious life
of the people
(Hereford, 1933).
A large
Seleucid army was sent to quash the revolt, and reestablish dominance, but it
returned to Syria on the death of Antiochus IV.
Meanwhile, its commander Lysias, preoccupied with internal Seleucid
affairs, agreed to a political compromise that restored religious freedom.
The Jewish
festival of Hanukkah celebrates the re-dedication of the Temple following Judah
Maccabee's victory over the Seleucids.
According to Rabbinic tradition, the victorious Maccabees could only
find a small jug of oil that had remained uncontaminated by virtue of a seal,
and although it only contained enough oil to sustain the Menorah for one day,
it miraculously lasted for eight days, by which time further oil could be
procured (The Talmud).
Professor
John Ma of Oxford University argues that it is possible to read the main
sources of the events covered here as not being the loss of religious and civil
rights by the Jews in B.C. 168, or the result of religious persecution, but
rather as an administrative punishment by the Seleucid Empire in the aftermath of
local unrest. And that the Temple was restored upon petition by the High Priest
Menelaus, rather than liberated and rededicated by the Maccabees (John Ma,
2013).
THE
SANHEDRIN
We are now
at the point where the Pharisees first make their appearance in history,
sometime after the Maccabean War. Before
we note this, we need to examine briefly the rise of the Sanhedrin, the body
which Pharisees (separatists) dominated during much of its existence, emerging
largely out of the group of scribes and sages.
The word
“Pharisee” comes from the Hebrew and Aramaic parush or parushi, which
means “one who is separated.” It may
also mean their separation from Gentiles, sources of ritual impurity or from
irreligious Jews. More on this later..
The term,
Sanhedrin is the name of the Beth Din HaGadol (The Great Court) during the
Second Temple Period. The first part of
the word “sin” refers to the Torah that was received on Mount Sinai combined
with the second part of the word “hedrin,” meaning “glorification” to express
the Great Court’s role.
This ancient
Jewish court system, or the Great Sanhedrin, was the supreme religious body in
the land of Israel during the time of the Holy Temple. Smaller religious Sanhedrins were in towns,
as well as civil political democratic Sanhedrins, and existed until the
abolishment of the rabbinic patriarchate in about A.D. 425.
The earliest
record of a Sanhedrin is by Josephus who wrote of a political Sanhedrin
convened by the Romans in B.C. 57.
Hellenistic sources generally depict the Sanhedrin as a political and
judicial council headed by the country’s ruler.
The origin
of the religious Sanhedrin can be found in the Council of the seventy elders
founded by Moses:
Gather to Me 70 men of the elders of
Israel, and bring them to the Tent of Meeting, so that they should stand there
with you (Numbers
11:16)
This was the
first Sanhedrin, counting Moses himself, it consisted of 71 members. As members within the Sanhedrin passed away,
or became unfit for service, new members underwent ordination. These ordinations continued in an unbroken
line from Moses to the prophets, including Ezra and Nehemiah, to the Knesses
HaGedolah or Great Assembly.
It wasn’t
until several hundred years after the destruction of the Second Temple that
this line was broken, and the Sanhedrin dissolved.
The Great
Sanhedrin dealt with religious and ritualistic Temple matters, criminal matters
pertaining to the secular court, proceedings in connection with the discovery
of a corpse, trials of adulterous wives, tithes, preparation of Torah Scrolls
for the king and the Temple, drawing up the calendar of events, and the solving
of difficulties relating to ritual law.
The Great
Sanhedrin lost its authority in about A.D. 30 to inflict capital
punishment. After the Temple was
destroyed, so was the Great Sanhedrin.
While some
sources would lead us to believe that the Sanhedrin was the direct successor to
the Synagogue, this was not the case. It
was not until B.C. 196, or after the hiatus of some eighty years that the
Sanhedrin was first established.
This was
discovered in the ancient manuscript called “Fragments of a Zadokite Work,” or
“Damascus Document,” as it is also known, having some of the most interesting
texts. It is the only Qumran sectarian
work known before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
The Zadokite
Work is a composite text edited together from different sections of a larger
source. Scholars have attempted to place
the different sections in a chronological order to generate a more complete
work of the original using evidence from the Dead Sea Scrolls.
A number of
fragments from the scroll were found in the Cairo Geniza before the Qumran
discoveries. The Cairo Geniza was located in a room adjoining The Ben Ezra
Synagogue in Old Cairo, which was gradually stuffed full of papers until it was
discovered in 1897 by European scholar Solomon Schechter, who found over
190,000 manuscripts and fragments that were written in mainly Hebrew and
Judaeo-Arabic. Originally called the
“Zadokite Fragments,” after the catch of documents found at Qumran, the name
was changed to “Damascus” for its many references to that city.
The
“Damascus Document” makes no literal reference to Damascus in Syria, but to
what is understood geographically as Babylon or Qumran itself, probably taking
up the Biblical language found in Amos 5:27, "therefore I shall take you
into exile beyond Damascus.”
Damascus was
part of Israel under King David, and the Damascus Document expresses an
eschatological hope of the restoration of a Davidic monarchy.
In any
event, the “Damascus Document” or “Zadokite Work” points to B.C. 196 as the
year the Sanhedrin first met (Lauterbach, 1951). This body is said to consist of “men of
understanding Aaron,” or priests, and “from Israel wise teachers,” that is also
lay teachers who were not priests.
Priests and
lay teachers in the new Sanhedrin was a new innovation. Until that time, the priests with their
assistants, the Levites, were considered to have the only authority to teach
religion to the Jewish people. This
would not have been permitted while the Synagogue was in authority. This is clearly shown from the writings of
Malachi, who was contemporary with the early days of the Synagogue:
For the
priest’s lips should keep knowledge, and they should seek the law at his mouth,
for he (the priest) is the messenger of the Lord of Hosts (Malachi 2:7).
The Law of
Moses, which God had directly commanded him, clearly enjoined that the priests
and Levites were to perform the functions of teachers, not lay teachers who
would presume to do so (Deuteronomy 18:1-7; 33:10, Ezekiel 44:23).
Incidentally,
the Sanhedrin is mentioned in the Gospels relating to the Sanhedrin trial of
Jesus and several times in the Acts of the Apostles, including a Great
Sanhedrin in chapter five, where Gamaliel appeared, and in the stoning of
Stephen the deacon in chapter seven.
The
Hasmonean court in the Land of Israel was presided over by Alexander Jannaeus,
King of Judea until B.C. 76. After his
death, it was presided over by his wife, and called the Sanhedrin.
The exact nature of this early Sanhedrin is not known. It is believed it was a body of sages and priests, or political legislative and judicial institutions. Only after the destruction of the Second Temple was the Sanhedrin made up of only sages.
The exact nature of this early Sanhedrin is not known. It is believed it was a body of sages and priests, or political legislative and judicial institutions. Only after the destruction of the Second Temple was the Sanhedrin made up of only sages.
THE LAY TEACHERS
REJECT THE PREMISE OF THE SANHEDRIN
Why this
radical departure? Again, we must go
back briefly to the period of religious anarchy when the Egyptian Ptolemies
ruled Judea. Both the Ptolemies and the
later Seleucid rulers looked upon the High Priest of Israel as the head of the
Jewish nation. In turn, it was the High
Priest with the assistance of other priests who dealt with the Hellenistic
rulers and acted in behalf of Hellenistic authority with the Jewish people.
Outstanding
among these High Priests was Joseph, the son of Tobias, and his son
Hyrcanus. In order to be successful
diplomats at the Hellenistic court in Alexandria, they felt it necessary to
adopt the Greek ways and the Greek manner.
This culture or mindset was brought back with them to Judea. Thus, it was the priests, the ones who should
have been teaching the Law of Moses and the Law of God to the Jewish people, who by default or
design, as their temperaments varied, became the chief proponents of
Hellenism.
From B.C.
206 to B.C. 196, or during this ten-year period, a series of battles between
the rival Hellenistic kings of Syria and Egypt came to devastate several parts
of Judea. Many Jews blamed Hellenism for
this collateral damage to their sacred places and sought to return to the old
ways and laws of their fathers. But to
whom could they turn?
They felt
betrayed by the High Priests and the Levites for these priests, as a whole, had
become thoroughly Hellenized.
Incredibly, different priests were taking sides in the Hellenistic wars,
and raising armies to help either the Syrians or the Egyptians, while the
Jewish tradition was all but abandoned, except for a few lay teachers and some
minor priests. They appeared to be the
only ones who had studied God’s Word, and remained loyal and committed to God’s
Law. They sat in a new Sanhedrin
refusing to accept the authority of the High Priest, or to teach at his behest.
* * *
NEXT: WHAT
WAS GOD’S WAY ANYWAY? ENTER THE
PHARISEES!
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