CHRISTIANITY BETWEEN
THE OLD and NEW TESTAMENT –
continuation of “Search for the
Real Parents of My Soul!”
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© October 1, 2014
WHAT WAS GOD’S WAY ANYWAY?
Prior to and during the
Maccabean Revolt, the outwardly Hellenistic priests and their followers
supported Antiochus Epiphanes. The lay
teachers and the Sanhedrin, as a whole, supported the Maccabees.
The major result of the
Maccabean victory was the total discrediting of Hellenism in Judea. The High Priest was given to Hasmonean
(Maccabean) family, which had itself descended from minor priests. It was no longer popular to be an outright
Hellenist. Instead, there was a
discernible trend to the roots of Judaism and a desire to return to God’s
Way. But whatever religious unity there
was in the euphoria of victory, it was short lived.
The struggle now was
finding the answer to what was God’s Way as Hellenism had clouded that issue as
several generations had been immersed in the Hellenistic culture and
tradition. There was the written word of
the Bible (Old Testament), of course, but the Jewish people were conflicted on
how to apply the Bible’s teachings to the various mundane events and daily
problems of life.
The Jews, remember, had
just emerged from a period where the teachings and practices of God’s Law had
been forbidden. Compounding this, an era
of some eighty years had preceded this during which Hellenism had made great
inroads into the daily life and mindset of the Jewish people. Moreover, there had been no organized body
directing Jewish religious life.
Hundreds of years before,
Ezra, Nehemiah and other priests and Levites assisting them had “read in the
Book in the Law of God distinctly, and (had given) the sense, and caused them
to understand the reading” (Nehemiah 8:8).
Through the ages, God’s servants have been responsible to show the
people, he is saying, how God’s Law applied to their situations in their daily
lives.
This responsibility had
never been a prerogative of someone who wanted to choose the ministry, the
priesthood or the rabbinate as a vocation.
This responsibility was only for those whom God specifically had chosen. Put another way, those who had the
calling.
In ancient Israel, under
the Old Covenant, God chose the priests, the priests didn’t choose God,
assisted by the Levites for the purposes of teaching “the Word.”
PRIESTS OF THE OLD COVENANT
From the very dawn of
history, people have sensed a need for those individuals, who despite having
received a mission in very different ways, act as God's mediators and converse
with Him on behalf of others. Certain men were made responsible for offering
prayers of supplication, sacrifice and expiation to God in the name of the whole
people. The obligation to render public worship to God, to recognize Him as the
Supreme Lord and First Principle, to be directed towards Him as the Ultimate
Goal, to give God thanks and to win over His benevolence has never been lost
sight of although in many periods and places the consciousness of this
obligation has been darkened. The
Hellenistic period of Israel is such an instance.
"Lord, Father of
Holiness... in the Old Covenant the grades of priesthood became ever more
perfect by means of holy signs... when you gave the High Priests, elected to
rule the people, companions of a lesser order and dignity to help them as
collaborators..."
It was a priest of the
Old Covenant, Zechariah, father of John the Baptist, who solemnly announced the
imminent arrival of "the rising Sun to visit us, to give light to those
who live in darkness and the shadow of death, and to guide our feet into the
way of peace" (Luke 1:78-79).
This provides background
and prelude to the entering of one of the most misunderstood groups in the Old
and New Testament, the Pharisees.
ENTER THE PHARISEES
Following the Maccabean
victory, there were many priests who were ready and willing to resume their ancient,
God-given covenant as priests and teachers and expounders of the Law. But there were also lay teachers who had made
notable contributions to the Maccabean cause at a time when many priests were
outright Hellenists and loyal supporters of Antiochus Epiphanes.
Lauterback writes that
the lay teachers “refused to recognize the authority of the priests as a class,
and, inasmuch as many of the priests had proven unfaithful guardians of the
Law, they would not entrust them the regulation of the religious life of the
people” (Lauterback, 1951). It was these
lay teachers who organized themselves into the party of the Pharisees.
The Pharisees were at
various times a political party, a social movement, and a school of thought in
the Holy Land during the Second Temple Period (B.C. 530 to A.D. 70) when the
Second Temple of Jerusalem existed, beginning under the Hasmonean Dynasty (B.C. 140 to A.D. 37) in the wake of the
Maccabean Revolt. After the destruction
of the Second Temple in A.D. 70, Pharisaic beliefs became the liturgical and
ritualistic basis for Babbinic Judaism commonly known simply as Judaism.
Many of the priests had
indeed become Hellenized as charged by the Pharisees. This did not necessarily give the lay
teachers the right under the Law to usurp some of the Priests “God given
authority.” Yet, they insisted on
following the way that seemed right to them (Proverbs 14:12; 16:25). But wrongs did not make a right in that day any
more than they do in our day.
THE SADDUCEES
Conflict between Pharisees and
Sadducees took place in the context of much broader and longstanding social and
religious conflicts among Jews, dating back to the Babylonian Captivity and
then compounded by the Roman conquest.
One conflict was class
between the wealthy and the poor, as Sadducees included mainly the priestly and
aristocratic families. Another was
cultural between those who emphasized the importance of the Second Temple with
its cultic rites and rituals, and those who emphasized the importance of the
other Mosaic Laws. A fourth conflict,
which was specifically religious involved the different expectations of the
Torah and how to apply it to the current Jewish life. Sadducees recognized only the Written Torah
and rejected doctrines that emanated from the Oral Torah and the Resurrection
of the Dead.
The Pharisees believed that
in addition to the written Torah recognized by both the Sadducees and Pharisees,
and believed to have been written by Moses, there exists another Torah,
consisting of oral laws and traditions transmitted by God to Moses, orally and
then memorized and passed down by Moses and his successors over the
generations. The Oral Torah functioned to elaborate and
explicate what was written. The
Pharisees asserted that the sacred scriptures were not complete on their own,
and therefore could not be understood without the complement of the Oral Torah. How significant a group are we talking about?
Historian Josephus (A.D.
37 – 100) was himself a Pharisee, and estimated the total Pharisee population
prior to the fall of the Second Temple at 6,000. He claimed the Pharisees had the backing and
good will of the common people in contrast to the Sadducees.
Pharisees claimed Mosaic
authority for their interpretation of Jewish Law, while the Sadducees represented
the authority of the priestly privileges established since the days of Solomon,
when Zadok, their ancestor, officiated as High Priest.
Josephus use of the term “common
people” suggests that most Jews were just peoples implying that they were
independent of the main liturgical groups.
The New Testament also
makes common references to the “common people” indicating that Jewish identity
was independent and stronger than these groups.
In the epistle to the
Philippians, Paul of tarsus claims that changing liturgical sects in the Diaspora
had occurred while still identifying oneself as Jewish or Hebrew, “circumcised
on the eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew
of Hebrews; in regard to the Law. I am a
Pharisee.” That said the position of
Paul of Tarsus and Judaism is still disputed.
Pharisees have become
more notable to Christians inasmuch as there are many references to them in the
New Testament. There is the conflict
between Pharisees and John the Baptist and with Jesus of which more will be
said later.
There are also many
references in the New Testament to Paul of Tarsus being a Pharisee. However the relationship between Early
Christianity and Pharisees was not always hostile – reference to Gamaliel often
cited as a Pharisee leader who was sympathetic to the Christian cause.
With regard to the
Sadducees, no one questioned the right of the priests to officiate in the
Temple. That was not the problem.
The priests pointed to in
Deuteronomy (17: 8-13) were given the authority to teach and to decide questions
pertaining to religion and not the lay teachers. To protect and sustain this authority,
priests and their supporters organized themselves into a party of the
Sadducees, which was taken from Zadok, the High Priest in Solomon’s day.
As mentioned earlier, the
Sadducees as a whole were wealthy and therefore powerful. This and their previous support of Hellenism
caused the common people not to trust them.
Josephus tells us, “The Sadducees are able to persuade none but the
rich, and have not the populace obsequious to them, but the Pharisees have the
multitude on their side” (Antiquities of the Jews, XIII, x, 6).
LAY TEACHERS JUSTIFY THE PEOPLE’S
ERRORS
Yet, the main reason for
the popularity of the Pharisees and the rejection of the Sadducees was neither
the group’s tainted past in Hellenism nor the wealth of the priests. It was more basic. It was in the teachings of the Pharisees that
resonated with the people.
During the period of
religious anarchy under Hellenistic rule, the continuity of official teachers
of the Law had been broken. Hellenism
had corrupted the Law replacing it with beliefs that were antithetical the
Jewish experience.
Consequently, when the
Maccabean War came to an end, and some teachers did consider returning to God’s
Law. Lauterbach writes:
Many new customs and practices for which there were no
precedents in the tradition of the fathers, and not the slightest indication in
the Book of the Law, were observed by the people and considered by them as a
part of their religious laws and practices” (Lauterbach, 1951).
The people had adopted
many customs and ideas of Hellenism which were in truth clearly pagan. Perhaps the best example of this is the
belief in the immortality of the soul previously mentioned.
“The difficulty was to
find a sanction in the Torah (The Law) for the new customs and practices which
had established themselves in the community” (Herford, 1933). The teachers should have shown the people
they were sinning (Isaiah 58:11).
Instead, lay teachers chose to justify these customs and practices and
assimilated them into their instruction to rally the support of the
people. This should not seem
strange. It was done in the Jeremiah’s
day (Jeremiah 23: 21-22) and in Isaiah’s day (Isaiah 30:10), indeed, the
practice is common in our own day.
It is worthy to note that
the earliest surviving historical record of these lay teachers as Pharisees
comes from Josephus, who was a Jewish-Roman historian.
Josephus describes four
schools of thought or four sects that divided the Jews in the 1st
century A.D.
The other schools were
the Essenes, who were apolitical and emerged as a sect of dissident priests. They rejected the Seleucid-appointed or the
Hasmonean high priests as illegitimate, the main antagonists of the Pharisees. Others associated with the anti-Roman revolutionary
groups were the Sicaril and the Zealots.
Then there were also the Early Christians in Jerusalem and the
Therapeutae in Egypt (Apostle Paul as a Pharisee: Acts 26: 5, Acts 23: 6.
Philippians 3: 5, Acts 5: 34-39).
PAGAN CUSTOMS THAT COME TO BE CALLED
JEWISH
Yes, the Scriptures
plainly states, “Learn not the way of the heathen” (Jeremiah 10:2). Consequently, the lay teachers taught that
the new customs and traditions were not really pagan, but were actually Jewish!
They reasoned, “It is
hardly possible that foreign customs and non-Jewish laws should have met with
such universal acceptance. The total
absence of objection on the part of the people to such customs vouched for
their Jewish origin, in the opinion of the teachers” (Lauterbach, 1951).
These teachers told the
people that it simply was not possible for them, being Jews, to have inherited
any heathen customs or practices.
They further taught that
since the customs were “Jewish,” then they must have been taught by Moses
himself. This is no different than today
when churchgoers by the millions assume that the original apostles observed
Sunday services, and celebrated Easter and Christmas when they clearly had no
such ritualistic customs or practices at all.
Lauterbach writes:
Accordingly, the teachers themselves came to believe that
such generally recognized laws and practices must have been old traditional
laws and practices adopted by the fathers and transmitted to the following
generations in addition to the written law.
Such a belief would naturally free the teachers from the necessity of
finding scriptural proof for all the new practices (Lauterback, 1951).
More precisely, they
claimed that these customs, since they were not written in the Old Testament,
must have been handed down orally from Moses by word of mouth.
There is no evidence that
these traditional laws, these oral laws, were from either Moses or the prophets;
alas, no reference in the Scripture that Moses gave the Israelites any oral or
traditional laws transmitted to posterity along with the written Word.
The Bible states just the
opposite. It plainly says that Moses committed
the whole law to a book:
“And it came to pass,
when Moses had made an end of writing the words of this law in a book, until
they were finished” (Deuteronomy 31:24).
There is no such thing,
then, as an “oral law of Moses.” If that
is so, why such insistence that such a law exists?
* * *
NEXT: Oral Law Gains Acceptance
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