Jewish Contemporaries of Jesus Review

Jewish Contemporaries of Jesus
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This is an excellent, restrained and well-balanced study of the three most prominent Jewish religious groups around Jesus' time.
The author successfully integrates all the available sources, including: the New Testament, rabbinical sources, Yosef Ben Mattathias, a.k.a. Josephus Flavius, Dead Sea scrolls and apocrypha. This is a daunting task because their perspectives and agendas are incongruent. Throughout, he maintains lucidity and caution in judging how useful they are for the purpose of delineating who's who and what's what in Jewish society in the first century A.D. Usually, he cautions, these sources are not very helpful. The gaping holes in our knowledge tempt the creativity of the researcher to fill them up with his intuitions. For example, a basic assumption of writers in this field is that the New Testament Pharisees represent the same group as the rabbinical "Prushim." I am not even convinced that this identification is correct. Stemberger does not address this issue explicitly. He has his theories, but he exercises academic discipline and points out the limits of our knowledge. I felt the book added a lot to my grasp of the contentious nature of the New Testament and of the rabbinical sources, as well as Ben Mattathias' disregard for consistency.
Stemberger was in his element in his comparison of the shifts in the portrait of the Pharisees in the New Testament, particularly his emphasis on Luke's surprising description of the Pharisees. According to Luke, Jesus' relationship to the Pharisees could not have been as bad as they are portrayed in the other Gospels. "In the banquet scenes, Luke emphasizes the closeness of the Pharisees to Jesus, and in Acts he clarifies the points of association between the Pharisees and the Christian community." This is one of the few areas where the author indulges in some connecting of the dots. It is worth quoting him at length.
"If it were possible, using various arguments, to doubt that Paul had been a Pharisee at first, it would still be difficult to question the role of the Pharisees among the first Christians. What reason might Luke have had for such a position, if corresponding tendencies did not exist? This might shed some light on the anti-Pharisee polemic in the Gospel tradition, especially in Matthew and John. Is this not at least partially an intra-Christian polemic in the process of the community freeing itself from the roots of the law? It is not contradictory that we find the polemic especially sharp in the Gospels to which we credit a Jewish-Christian background. It was there that the problem of differentiation was greatest!"
One can stretch this insight to understand the anti-Jewish tenor of parts of the Gospels, which is grounded in early church politics. Parts of the Gospels seem to have a clear agenda to distance Jesus from his Jewish milieu. This is done without much subtlety. This tension determined editing decisions the authors of the Gospels made with their source material. Their work has fostered a perpetuation and fixation of the then contemporary animosities. In that sense centuries of strife between Judaism and Christianity stem from first century tensions between different communities, vying to differentiate from and to de-legitimize each other.
Stemberger sees through Ben Mattathias' Hellenic posturing. Overall, I felt his intuitions regarding rabbinical sources were also right on target. (The exception is when he speculates on page 102 on a possible connection between Daniel's "ba-halaqlaqqot" and the Qumran's "dorshei-halaqot." However, the two are unrelated. One comes from the word "halaq," "smooth," and the other from "halakha," "the law." Elsewhere in the text, the author implies that he is aware of these semantics.) He opines that the various Jewish schools had more in common with one another than not. For instance, he mentions the issue of the Sabbath. There is no evidence for significant points of conflict between the various schools of Judaism at the time regarding the Sabbath. Uncompromising withdrawal from all forms of labor on the Sabbath has always been one of the very basic and holiest tenets of Judaism, biblical as well as rabbinical. He then goes on to juxtapose this with his assessment of the Gospels and their sources regarding the Sabbath. He points out that there is no way to interpret the sources other than that both Jesus as well as the early Christian community disregarded the Sabbath regulations.
This is a difficult point. This was after all a legalistic society obsessed with the smallest details of observance of even lesser aspects of Moses' law. Therefore, it is hard to grasp how Jesus could have survived even one Sabbath if he openly disregarded its observance, let alone made public pronouncements condemning it. To the author's credit, he is not tempted to smooth over this issue by trying to find a way to bridge historical common sense with faith.

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