Thursday, January 18, 2007

Jesus, the Pharisee

In Dr. Ron Moseley’s book, Yeshua, Moseley cites an essay written by Morton Smith, where Smith writes that the ancient world did not have a general term for “religion.” In the Hellenized world, the only word used for “religion” was “philosophy,” which included the religion of the Pharisees. In addition, Smith notes that the ancient Jews used the Hellenistic term “philosophy” to describe what they believed and how they expressed their beliefs.

There are some remarkable similarities between the Pharisees and Greek philosophers.

Pharisaic teachers and Greek Philosophers:
1. were not paid to teach;
2. had disciples who followed and served them;
3. had occupations and were financially supported by those who appreciated their teaching;
4. were exempt from taxes;
5. were recognized in public by the way they walked, talked, and dressed;
6. practiced some level of asceticism.

The philosophy of the Pharisees included believing in the entirety of the Scriptures and the Oral Law (spoken commentary), resurrection of the dead, angels, and eternal judgment.

If it were not for the Pharisaic philosophy, we would not believe in life after death, the resurrection of the body, preaching on the Sabbath, the existence of angels, or the importance of commentaries.

It is widely believed by many scholars of first century Judaism that Jesus was very much in line with the Pharisaic philosophy and that his criticisms of the Pharisees were not criticisms of all Pharisees, but were part of an ongoing debate between those who followed the great teachers, Hillel and Shammai. Jesus was most closely aligned with the teachings of Hillel who was thirty years older than Jesus and was known for his great wisdom and teaching. One of Hillel’s teachings, which was supported and quoted by Jesus, was “what you would not have done to you, do not to another; that is the whole Law, the rest is commentary.”

Those who supported and followed the yoke of Hillel were often debating with those who followed the yoke of Shammai. Jesus often entered the same debate, supporting the teachings of Hillel who taught that it is okay to heal on the Sabbath and clean the outside of a cup at a later time rather than before drinking from it.

The philosophy of Jesus is his yoke, and Jesus' yoke is the yoke that we follow today. Jesus' yoke and Hillel's yoke were very similar. Therefore, the point of this article is to bring attention to the possibilities that the Pharisees, like other ancient philosophers, were varied in their beliefs and teachings, and that Jesus, like the other Jewish sages of his time, was not necessarily enforcing an entirely new philosophy for living out the Word, but was an advocate of a philosophy which was already being taught and practiced in his time by a portion of the Pharisees, a group with which Jesus was most closely aligned.

Forever learning,
Johnny

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

aka Walker said

Recently you have used the concept of "following His yoke" several times.

I'd always though of yoke as the neck thingy used to connect animals to a vehicle of some sort (wagon, plow, etc.)


"Following" doesn't sound right to me. What am I missing?

Namaste

Johnny said...

Good question.

The "yoke" was used to train a young ox by "yoking" the young ox to an older, more experienced ox. Once the young ox was trained to walk with the older ox, the yoke could be removed and the young ox would continue to follow the older without the yoke.

This is where the idea of following the yoke of a rabbi was born. A rabbi would keep his disciples close to him as he taught them to walk where he walked, talk the way he talked, et cetera, and once the disciples who would walk with the rabbi for about 15 years were loosed they would continue to walk and talk in the way of their rabbi, even without his presence.

In His dust,
Johnny

Kathy said...

Yolk is also the yellow part of an egg...not sure if that has any biblical significance or not.
:)

Anonymous said...

Only that really cheezy, pitiful object lesson where a Sunday school teacher tries to explain the Trinity.

Kathy said...

HAHAHAHA!
or the ice, water, steam version...also hysterically inaccurate.