Monday, July 11, 2011

The Road to Redemption: The Jewish Context Part One

    Jesus was a Jew. That statement is one that ought to cause most of us 21st Century Christians to stop and take notice. It ought to do so because across the centuries the church has often tried to remove Jesus from his Jewish roots. We have pretended that Jesus existed in some sort of religious neutral territory with the Jews on one side and the Romans on the other. This could not be farther from the truth. Jesus was born a Jew. He grew up as a Jew. He lived and worked within a Jewish context. Finally he envisioned his mission and ministry as an extension of God's work through the Jewish people as laid out in the Jewish scriptures.

    The Jewish community of the First Century within Judea was fragmented into a wide variety of religious/political denominations. These divisions were complicated even more by geographical divisions within Judea itself (an example is that the Galileans were considered by Jews in Jerusalem to be low class rebels who were always advocating for political independence). The Jewish community into which Jesus was born then was not a monolithic religious community, but a highly fractured faith family. In order to help make sense of Jesus' interaction with this fractured family we will take a few moments to find out who the players were.

    Pharisees: the Pharisees were a populist/democratic movement. The Pharisees (and we are not sure where the name comes from) were a logical outgrowth of the struggle for Judaism to maintain its traditions after the destruction of the Temple by the Babylonians in 587 B.C. The issue for the Jews was how to remain faithful without the rituals of the Temple. Jews did so by congregating in small worshipping, praying and learning communities eventually called synagogues. After the restoration of Israel and the rebuilding of the Second Temple in 515 B.C. these communities did not vanish. Instead they became the gathering and learning centers for the poor and middle class. Their focus was on following the Law (both written and oral) and not on Temple ritual. Again we need to note that the Pharisees were subdivided into a wide variety of sects and never spoke with a single voice. One of their sayings was, "A learned illegitimate child (mamzer) takes precedence over an ignorant High Priest."

Sadducees: The Sadducees in general were conservative, aristocratic monarchists. They were responsible for upkeep of the Temple, administration of the state as well as international relations, collecting Jewish taxes to support the Temple and the priesthood, equipping and leading the Jewish Army, regulating relations with the Romans and mediating domestic disputes. Theologically they focused only on the written Torah (they did not believe in the writings or the work of the prophets), did not believe in eternal life and taught that human beings had complete free will. Because of their association with the Second Temple (which had been built with foreign funds) and the Romans they were always slightly suspect to many Jews. They looked down on the Pharisees and members of the early Jesus movement.

Herodians: the Herodians were a minor political party associated with the family and lineage of Herod the Great. It is possible that the Herodians wanted to maintain the concept of theocracy (a Jewish king over Judea insisting on the keeping of Jewish laws) and the idea that somehow Herod the Great had actually been the Messiah. In the Gospels they are usually mentioned with the Pharisees, though they are distinct.

The existence of each of these groups (along with the Essenes who are not mentioned in the Gospels) demonstrates the fractured nature of Second Temple Judaism in the time of Jesus. It also makes it clear why Jesus' mission and ministry would be viewed with suspicion by a wide variety of Jewish groups even while being lauded by the populous.

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