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A Thousand Years of Jewish History / From the days of Alexander the Great to the Moslem Conquest of Spain

Chapter 13: Priest and Synagogue.
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About This Book

The narrative surveys roughly a thousand years of Jewish life beginning with Hellenistic influence and Persian antecedents, and follows political and religious transformations under Greek and Roman rule. It recounts struggles for religious fidelity and independence, the rise of sects and institutions, the creation and circulation of apocryphal and biblical texts, and the emergence of rabbinic law, lore, and academies. Revolts, sieges, and the remaking of communal structures after Roman suppression are set alongside intellectual figures who blended Jewish thought with Hellenistic philosophy. The account concludes by tracing diaspora communities and the transmission of Jewish law and culture into the early medieval period culminating in Iberian encounters under Muslim rule.

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Title: A Thousand Years of Jewish History

Author: Maurice H. Harris

Release date: December 11, 2013 [eBook #44409]

Language: English

Credits: E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Julia Neufeld, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team

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"For a thousand years in thy sight, are but ... as a watch in the night"

Psalms, xc, 4.

A Thousand Years
of Jewish History

From the Days of Alexander the Great
To the Moslem Conquest of Spain

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS,
MAPS AND NOTES.

BY THE
Rev. Maurice H. Harris, A. M., Ph. D.

Author of "People of the Book."
"History of the Mediæval Jews"
"Modern Jewish History"
"Selected Addresses," etc.

SIXTH EDITION.
Revised and Enlarged


NEW YORK:
BLOCH PUBLISHING CO., 40 EAST 14TH ST.,

1914.

Copyright, 1911
By MAURICE H. HARRIS

PRESS OF
PHILIP COWEN
NEW YORK


 

Introduction

"Wenn es eine Stufenleiter von Leiden giebt, so hat Israel die höchste Staffel erstiegen; wenn die Dauer der Schmerzen und die Geduld, mit welcher sie ertragen werden, adeln, so nehmen es die Juden mit den Hochgeborenen aller Länder auf; wenn eine Literatur reich genannt wird, die wenige klassische Trauerspiele besitzt, welcher Platz gebührt dann einer Tragödie, die anderthalb Jahrtausende währt gedichtet und dargestellt von den Helden selber?"

Zunz: Die Synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters.

When the impatient youth demands, like the heathen from Hillel, a definition of Judaism, bid him "go and learn" the history of the Jew. Let him follow the fascinating story from hoar antiquity, when the obscure Hebrews, "leaving kindred and father's house," took a bold and new departure for the land that God would show—the land that would show God.

Point to the colossal figure of Moses on Sinai, "greatest of the prophets," who gave the first uplifting impulse with his Ten Words of Faith and Duty. Trace with him the soul struggle of this "fewest of all peoples" to reach the truth of divinity—beginning with a crude conception that became steadily more exalted and more clarified with each successive age, until, at last, the idea is realized of an all-pervading Spirit, with "righteousness and justice as the pillars of His throne," the "refuge of all generations."

Make clear to him how the revelation of the divine will came to be expressed in Law. And, how the preservation and development of this Law, in the interpreting hands of prophets, scribes, rabbis, poets and philosophers, became henceforth the controlling motif of the history of the Jew, his modus vivendi, whether under Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians or Franks. Help him to see that through it the Jew held in his keeping the religious fate of Orient and Occident, that took from him their respective impressions of Islamism and Christianity.

Let him see the "God-intoxicated" teaching his message by living it; the Suffering Servant whose martyrdom brought healing to his smiters.

Then, perhaps, he may understand that no one definition can completely express the Faith of the Jew and his place in the divine economy. But with this glimpse of his history the grandeur of his inheritance will sink into his consciousness, becoming part of himself, and he will be thrilled with the tremendous responsibility devolving upon him as a member of the priest-people, the witnesses of God, whose mission was and is to "bring light to the Gentiles—that salvation may reach to the ends of the earth."


Preface to the Revised Edition

The dual purpose of the revision of this work has been simplification and amplification.

The language has been recast in parts and there have been added sub-titles within each chapter, cross-references and an index. Ideas such as "Religion as law," the Logos of Philo and the development of Messianism have been made as simple as these subjects admit of.

In seeking illustrations to vivify the narrative it is unfortunate that so little is available. Ah! if we had pictures of Hillel, of Akiba the Martyr, of Judah the Saint, of the Jamnia Academy, of the splendor of the Babylonian Exilarch. But this very absence of pictures is in itself a bit of Jewish history.

This new edition contains quotations from the literature of the periods covered, from the Apocrypha, Philo, Josephus and the Mishna. Three chapters have been added, two on "Stories and Sayings of the Sages of the Talmud" and one on "Rabbi Judah and his times." Other chapters have been placed in more logical sequence. Both the Chronological Tables and the Notes are fuller. A new feature has been introduced in a "theme for discussion" at the close of each chapter that may be found helpful to study circles and Chautauqua societies. This has also been introduced in the recently issued "Modern Jewish History."

The author expresses his grateful indebtedness to Dr. David de Sola Pool for a most careful reading of the manuscript and for many corrections and suggestions; also to Mr. Philip Cowen for the aid rendered in collecting the illustrations. The author has availed himself of writings that have appeared on this epoch since the edition of 1904. He hopes he has succeeded in producing a more readable book.


Contents

Preface to revised editionv.
Introductionvi.
Themes for Discussionxiii.
Maps and Illustrationsxii.
Chronological Tablesxii.
Index311
BOOK I. JUDEA A VASSAL STATE.
Chapter I. Under Persian Sway.

Political Silence — Religious activity — The Bible Canon. Notes: Persian influence — Judaism as law — Bible books.

17-25
Chapter II. Greek and Jew.

Alexander the Great — Judea part of Greco-Egypt — Joseph the Satrap. Note: Greek and Jew.

26-32
Chapter III. Judea Fights for its Faith.

The High Priest's office sold — Religious Persecution — Judas Maccabeus — Feast of Hanukkah — The Book of Daniel. Note: Immortality.

33-44
Chapter IV. Judea Fights for its Independence.

Death of Judas — Jonathan — Death of Eleazar — Independence

45-51
Chapter V. The Apocrypha.

I. Esdras — II. Esdras — Tobit — Judith — Additions to Esther — Wisdom Literature: Wisdom of Solomon — Ecclesiasticus — Baruch — Song of the Three Holy Children — History of Susanna — Bel and the Dragon — Prayer of Manasses — I. Maccabees — II. Maccabees

52-66
Chapter VI. In the Diaspora.

Egypt — The Septuagint — Onias and his temple

67-71
BOOK II. JUDEA INDEPENDENT.

Chapter VII. Pharisees and Sadducees.

Simon — Hyrcanus I. — Pharisees and Sadducees — Essenes

77-84
Chapter VIII. A Royal House Again.

Aristobulus — Alexander Janneus — Queen Salome Alexandra — The "Pairs."

85-90
Chapter IX. Rival Claimants for the Throne.

Aristobolus II. — Prayer of Onias — Pompey takes Jerusalem.

91-94
Chapter X. Judea Under Roman Suzerainty.

Growth of Rome — From First Triumvirate to Empire — Herod enters on the scene — The last Hasmonean ruler.

95-101
Chapter XI. Herod.

Herod as man — Herod as builder — Herod as father. Note: Edom, type of Rome.

102-110
Chapter XII. Hillel.

Hillel as moralist — Hillel as legislator — Last days — Shammai. Note: Law and equity.

111-117
Chapter XIII. Herod's Successors.

Antipas and John the Baptist — The last Herodian — Judea part of a Roman province.

117-122
BOOK III. JUDEA UNDER ROME.

Chapter XIV. Pilate the Procurator.

Procurators in general — Pilate in particular — Proselytes.

123-126
Chapter XV. Jesus of Nazareth.

The Messianic hope — Jesus the man — Jesus the Messiah — Christianity — Teachings of Jesus. Note: The Crucifixion.

127-135
Chapter XVI. The Alexandrian School.

Jew and Greek — Jewish Missionaries.

136-140
Chapter XVII. Philo-Judeus.

His Bible Commentary — His philosophy — The Logos — His Ethics.

141-146
Chapter XVIII. A Jewish King Once More.

The mad emperor Caligula — Agrippa's youth — Agrippa the king — Agrippa slain — Agrippa II.

147-152
Chapter XIX. The Last Procurators.

The Zealots — The Sicarii.

153-156
Chapter XX. Judea's War With Rome.

Revolution — A peace party — Josephus.

157-160
Chapter XXI. The Siege.

The North succumbs — Rival parties in Jerusalem.

161-167
Chapter XXII. The Fall of Jerusalem.

Masada, the last fortress — The remnant again.

168-171
Chapter XXIII. Josephus and his Works.

His early life — Josephus vs. Jeremiah — His "History of the Jews" — "Contra Apion." Note: Josephus and Christianity.

172-180
BOOK IV. THE TALMUDIC ERA.
Chapter XXIV. Jochanan Ben Zakkai.

The Academy at Jamnia — Prayer replaces sacrifice — Halacha and Agada.

183-189
Chapter XXV. The Palestinian Academies.

R. Gamaliel — R. Joshua — Ordination of rabbis — The Prayer Book.

190-196
Chapter XXVI. Judaism and the Church.

The development of Christianity — Old and New Testaments — Gnostics. Note: Jewish Scripture and Church doctrine.

197-200
Chapter XXVII. Rome's Regime After Judea's Overthrow.

Proselytes again — Revolt against Trajan — Hadrian's "Promise."

201-205
Chapter XXVIII. Akiba.

Love and Law — Akiba's Ethics.

206-210
Chapter XXIX. Last Struggle for Liberty.

Bar Cochba — General Severus — Martyrdom.

211-216
Chapter XXX. Judah "the Saint" and His Times.

Mair and Beruria — Judah ha-Nasi — Other famous teachers.

217-221
Chapter XXXI. The Mishna.

Written and Oral Law — Quotations — Amoraim.

222-228
Chapter XXXII. Babylonia and its Schools.

The Resh Galutha — Rab and Samuel — Babylonian Schools. Note: Patriotism and Judaism.

229-238
Chapter XXXIII. Christianity the State Church of Rome.

Rome's decline — Why Christianity appealed to Romans — Judaism and Christianity contrasted — The Calendar.

239-244
Chapter XXXIV. Division of the Roman Empire.

Julian — Two Roman Empires — Goths and Vandals — Persecution of the Jews.

245-249
Chapter XXXV. The Talmud.

The Gemara — The contents — Talmudic Literature — Saboräim. Note: Law of the Talmud.

250-255
Chapter XXXVI. Sayings and Stories of the Sages of the Talmud.

God — Providence — Prayer — Righteousness — Study of the Law — Education in general — Parents and children — Woman.

256-263
Chapter XXXVII. Sayings and Stories of the Sages. (continued.)

Work — Truth — Justice and Honesty — Kindness — Charity — Humility and Patience — Sin — Repentance — Death and immortality — Wit and Humor.

264-279
BOOK V. SHEM AND JAPHETH.
Chapter XXXVIII. Beginning of the Jewish Middle Ages.

In the Byzantine Empire — Laws of Justinian — Jews again involved in war — Rome's successors — Italy — The Popes — Slavery and trade.

281-287
Chapter XXXIX. In the Spanish Peninsula.

Gaul and the Franks — Vicissitudes in Spain.

288-292
Chapter XL. Arabia.

The land and the people — Arabian Jews — Jussef the Proselyte — Samuel the chivalrous.

293-298
Chapter XLI. Mohammed.

The Hegira.

299-304
Chapter XLII. Islam and the Jews.

Christianity and Islam — The Koran or the Sword — The Spread of Islam — Fall of Visigothic Spain.

304-310

List of Illustrations

 PAGE
Jerusalem besieged by TitusFrontispiece
Antiochus Epiphanes42
Half Shekel, Simon Maccabeus50
Shekel, Simon Maccabeus51
Goat-skin water bottles66
The Temple of Jerusalem74
Ground plan of Temple Area75
Coin of Johanan the High Priest84
Coin of the Time of Alexandra87
The Pool of Siloam90
Julius Caesar97
Coin of Antigonus on his accession101
Emperor Augustus105
Coin of Agrippa I.148
Coin of Agrippa II.152
Battlement on a house-top160
Emperor Titus164
Coin of the Reign of Titus166
The Golden Candlestick (on Arch of Titus depicting carrying the spoil of Judea)169
Flavius Josephus173
The Arch of Titus, raised to commemorate the overthrow of Judea180
Brass Coin struck in Rome during reign of Vespasian, indicating Judea's overthrow189
Brass Coin of Nerva, marking the withdrawal of certain abuses in connection with the Jewish Tax205
Coin of the Second Revolt of Bar Cochba216
————
Map, Palestine Before the War, 66 B.C.E.Front
Map, The DiasporaBack

CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES.

 PAGE
Under Persian Sway17
Greek and Jew26
Greco-Syria and the Maccabees33, 45
The Hasmonean House73
Emperors and Procurators120, 152
Rome and Jewry after Judea's overthrow201
Emperors and Rabbis229
The Talmud's compilation and Rome's fall250
In Christian Europe and Moslem Arabia281

Themes for Discussion

CHAPTERPAGE
I.Discuss the relations between Judaism as law and Mendelssohn's statement that "Judaism is not a revealed religion but a revealed legislation."25
II.What was the significance of the defeat of Persia by Greece for civilization in general and for the Jew in particular?30
IV.Had the Hasmoneans the right to assume the office of High Priest?51
V.Compare the treatment of wisdom in Proverbs (viii) and in Ecclesiasticus.66
VI.Are there traces of Greek philosophy in the Septuagint?71
VII.Compare modern with ancient parties in Israel.84
VIII.Contrast the Wood Festival of ancient Judea with Arbor Day in modern America.90
X.Single out great events in Israel influenced by, and influencing the Jews.101
XI.Did Herod succeed or did he fail?110
XII.Is it possible, as Hillel said, to evolve the whole law from the Golden Rule?116
XIV.Does official Judaism discourage conversion? Why did the Jews oppose a census on religious grounds?126
XV.Why cannot Jesus be accepted by the synagogue to-day?135
XVI.Why did most heathen converts to Judaism ultimately become Christians?140
XVII.Why did rabbinic Judaism neglect Philo?146
XVIII.If Agrippa had lived and reigned as long as Herod——?152
XIX.Compare the Zealots of antiquity with to-day's Russian revolutionists; the Sicarii with the anarchists; the procurators with the Czar's local governors.156
XX.Make clear the difference in principle between Judea's "Peace Party" and the "Royalist Party" among the American revolutionists.160
XXIII.Should Josephus be regarded as a traitor?179
XXIV.Whether the Temple's fall abolished or suspended animal sacrifice is a point of difference between Judaism's two schools to-day.189
XXV.In what respect did the "Academy" differ from a school?196
XXVI.Contrast the ancient gnostic with the modern agnostic.200
XXVIII.Should Akiba's method of law deduction be called casuistic?210
XXIX.What degree of pain or peril justifies disregard of ceremonial law?216
XXX.Can the number of our duties be specified?221
XXXI.What is Revelation, and how did the sages apply it to the Oral Law?228
XXXII.Is the Jew's first duty to his countrymen or to his coreligionists?238
XXXIV.What right had the Byzantine Empire to the title "Roman"?249
XXXV.Compare Bible and Talmud as literatures. In what sense can it be said that the Talmud made the Jew?255
XXXVIII.In what respect did mediaeval slavery differ from Russian serfdom and from the bond service in the early colonial era of America?287
XXXIX.Why did the higher clergy oppose the mingling of Jews and Christians, and the lower favor it?292
XL.Why did Judaism not succeed as a proselytising religion?298
XLI.Should Mohammed be called a prophet?303
XLII.Amplify the probable consequences of the acceptance of Mohammed by the Jews.311

BOOK I.

JUDEA, A VASSAL STATE.


CHAPTER I.

UNDER PERSIAN SWAY.

PERSIA JUDEA FAMOUS
    CONTEMPORARIES
 B.C.E. B.C.E. B.C.E
Cyrus conquers Return of Judah 
the Babylonians538from Exile536
Cambyses529Haggai and 
Darius522Zechariah, 
defeated at prophets520-516
Marathon490Second Temple FLOURISHED
Xerxes485rebuilt516
Artaxerxes I Esther and Gautama Buddha500
(Longimanus)465Mordecai485Confucius500
  Ezra goes to 
  Jerusalem with 
  second group 
  of exiles458
  Nehemiah's first 
  visit444
  Nehemiah Governor 
  of Judah432Socrates430
  Malachi the prophet 
  about430
Darius II424  Xenophon400
Artaxerxes II   
Artaxerxes III     Plato d.347
(Mnemon)404  
(Ochus)358  
Alexander, the Greek, overthrows the Persian Empire332


The story covered by the early dates in this table is not yet post-Biblical. It is already told in the later Books of Ezra, Nehemiah, Haggai and Zechariah i-viii. The history of this volume begins with the close of the life-work of these men.

The restoration of the Jews to Judea did not materialize as gloriously as Isaiah of Babylon had prefigured in his sublime addresses (Isaiah xl-xlvi.) Life's realizations very often disappoint their anticipations. Cyrus, the Persian king, opened the door; but only a poor remnant returned to a poor land. Even then, enemies made their appearance, envious of the royal grant, and plotted against their welfare. So it took many years to rebuild the Temple and many more to rebuild Jerusalem and to reorganize a new community. This service we owe to Nehemiah.

Political Silence.

After the chronicle of Nehemiah's service in placing the Jewish settlement on a working basis, we are told hardly anything more of the doings of Israel in this epoch. Either there was no further historic incident of the Jews under Persian sway, or it has never been told. There is a silence of about a hundred years after the last chapter of Nehemiah, which is, roughly speaking, the last chapter of Jewish history in the Bible. One reason for this silence of course, is that the Jews had no separate political life. They were a subject people; their State was gone. What there is to tell can be disposed of in a few sentences.

We perhaps infer from the sixty-third chapter of Isaiah that they suffered during the campaigns of the two Artaxerxes against Egypt. We know that some were banished to the Caspian Sea because they were implicated in a wide-spread insurrection against the fast declining Persia, instigated by the different peoples settled around the Mediterranean shore. We are told further that an upstart named Bagoas heavily taxed the Jews and made a quarrel over the priesthood an excuse to desecrate their Temple.

That is really all. When this intriguer attempted to place his own candidate on the Persian throne the knell had been rung. Persia's days were numbered. Like its Babylonian predecessor, it had been "weighed in the balance and found wanting." The Greek forces of Alexander were advancing and about the year 332 the Persian dynasty, founded by Cyrus—let us say "The Great"—passed away.

Religious Activity.

But silent though the period was in external doings, it was a stirring time in Israel for what we might call the experience of the soul. When we turn to the religious life of the Jews, the epoch, apparently so barren, is full of significance. Great achievements are here disclosed behind the historian's silence.

To tell the religious story, we must go back to Ezra again—the Ezra who came to Judea with the second group of Babylonian exiles and who revived the religious life of the community (People of the Book, vol. iii, ch. xxxiv), was the father of the Scribes. A scribe was not merely, as the name might imply, one who copied the writings of others, but one who expounded them. The Pentateuch, which contains many codes of law in Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy, came to be called "the Law" as a whole. (Torah.) We shall learn how this term later came to include the vaster code that was gradually deduced from these Biblical books. In fact, from now on, Judaism is interpreted as law.

How did it happen that the Jewish religion was accepted by its observers as a Law? In ancient times Religion and State were one. There was not that division between sacred affairs and secular that we are familiar with to-day. Duty to God and the King were allied; patriotism merged into piety. Hence the Pentateuch contains laws touching civil as well as spiritual relations, and regulates affairs both secular and sacred. For example, it contains laws about kings, servants, agriculture, war, food, dress, courts of justice, loans, inheritance, in fact every need that arose in the civilization of the time. It contains the Decalogue, regulations for festivals and sacrificial worship, duties to the poor, the stranger, the dumb animal, the code of Holiness (Levit. xvii-xxvii), and exhortations to noble living. It is beautiful to notice how the moral pervades the secular and gives to all a sanctifying touch.

Thus the scribes of this latter day had to interpret Scripture for the daily affairs of public life as well as for the regulation of the holy seasons and the religious ceremonial in Israel's semi-independent state. So the Sanhedrin (a Greek word), a body of seventy members, was both a House of Legislature and an ecclesiastical council. It numbered 70 like the Council of Elders appointed by Moses (Exodus xxiv, 1).

Thus it happened when all political power was taken, from the Jews, the presentation of religion through the forms of law very naturally survived.

There is yet another reason for Judaism being interpreted as Law, which touches the genius of Judaism. Judaism has always been less a faith to be confessed than a life to be lived. The emphasis was laid on deed rather than on dogma, on law rather than creed. We shall later see (p. 133) that it was on this very distinction that Christianity broke away from the parent religion to become a separate Faith.

The reduction of religion to law had its abuses as well as its excellences. It led to the multiplication of ceremonials. The laws of ritual cleanliness, especially for the priests and of Sabbath observance, were very voluminous and very minute. Perhaps too much importance was laid on minor detail; there was little room for voluntary and spontaneous action. On the other hand, too much freedom in religious observance has its dangers and pitfalls too. At its best the Jewish Law tended to sanctify every act of life and to bring the humblest obligation into relationship with God. But whenever a religion crystallizes into an institution, as it inevitably must, the spirit occasionally gets lost in the form. Then it becomes the function of the prophet to bring back the emphasis to religion's vital issues.

Priest and Synagogue.

A further word on the religious life of post-exilic Israel. We must remember at the start that Judea was a colony subject to Persia, but enjoyed complete autonomy in the management of its internal affairs. The head of the community was the High Priest. He not only regulated all functions in the Temple (the religious centre), but because religion and government could not be entirely separated, as explained above, he exercised secular power too. As the high-priesthood became a hereditary office it acquired quite a royal distinction. This regal splendor and "temporal" power in the High Priest's hands were to cause Israel much woe later and became one of the causes of its downfall.

Distinct from the Temple, Houses of Prayer were springing up, called Synagogues. The Synagogue gradually developed a distinct ritual, and Sabbath readings from the Pentateuch and the Prophets became a permanent institution. This is treated in fuller detail in chapter xxv.

The religious activities and conditions here described were not limited to the Persian era, but continued in the Greek period that immediately followed.


A word about the literature of this Second-Temple or post-exilic epoch. The most important of the later Biblical books are ascribed to it, notably the Holy Writings, specified below.


It was further the time of literary activity in editing Bible books already written and deducing new law from Scripture. But nothing of the Prophetic style of writing appeared. Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi were the last, and already we miss in them the earlier Prophetic grandeur. Ah, the days of prophecy were over! There were no more great names. But there was a general body called "Men of the Great Synagogue." "Synagogue" does not here mean House of Worship, but a Council of Scholars, consisting of 120 members. Under this title some noble masters of the Law contributed splendid literary service, satisfied to sink their identity in this general term.

The Bible Canon.

A sacred collection of writings, accepted as books of authority on religious life is called a Canon, a Greek word meaning rule. The task of deciding what was worthy to be admitted into the Canon of the Hebrew Scripture was a task of great responsibility. Nor was it completed at one time. Begun by the Men of the Great Synagogue, its final completion was postponed until nearly a century after the Christian era.

The Bible Books were placed in three groups, namely: Law, Prophets, Holy Writings. This sequence marked both the order of their importance in rabbinic estimate and to some extent, the sequence of their production. 1st, The Law consists of the five books of the Pentateuch, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy. 2d, The Prophets fall into two groups: (a) the Former Prophets, comprising the historical books—Joshua, Judges, First and Second Samuel, First and Second Kings, illustrative of the divine guidance of Israel; (b) the Later Prophets, the Prophetic Books proper: the three largest, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel; the twelve smaller Prophets, Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi. 3rd, The Hagiographa (Holy Writings), was a miscellaneous collections of Scriptures, some written very late indeed. It included Psalms, Proverbs, Job; five little books called Megilloth (Scrolls): Song of Songs, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes and Esther; Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah and First and Second Chronicles.


These were doubtless selected from the larger library of Jewish literature only after long discussion. All were well weighed before being admitted into this sacred Canon. Some of those not chosen are doubtless lost. Some found their way into another collection, known as the Apocrypha, to be considered later.


Enough is assuredly indicated here to show that the post-exilic epoch was not a time of empty silence, but one of tremendous activity—one of the most fruitful literary periods in our history.

Notes and References.

Persian Influence:

Persian ideas unconsciously exercised their influence on Jews living under Persian rule. As a result, conceptions of the future life and retribution beyond the grave became more definite than in their earlier Biblical presentation; the belief in angels and evil spirits received further development.

Judaism as Law:

That Israel laid small stress on creed is further proved by the late date of the formulation of any articles of faith. Even the thirteen creeds of Maimonides (see History Medieval Jews, p. 157), were drawn up rather to differentiate Judaism from Christianity and Mohammedanism, than to explain its teachings to Jews.

Israel's detractors say that Judaism interpreted as Law tended to blur moral distinctions. This is a superficial and erroneous inference, for it quite as often re-inforced them and prevented temporizing with duty.

Read "The Law and Recent Criticism," in the eleventh volume of the Jewish Quarterly Review (London, Macmillan) in reply to a criticism against Judaism as Law; Montefiore, "Bible for Home Reading," vol. ii, pages 12-18, on the Law; Hibbert Lectures, 1892, Montefiore, parts of chapters vi and ix on the Scriptures. Introduction Literature of the Old Testament. Driver, (Scribner.)

Bible Books:

The order of the Bible Books in the Septuagint, which order is followed by all Church translations of the Bible, differs from the Hebrew order, as follows: 1st, the Writings precede the Prophets. 2d, Ruth, Lamentations, Daniel and Chronicles are taken from the Writings and placed as follows: Ruth after Judges, Lamentations after Jeremiah, Daniel after Ezekiel, Chronicles after Kings. 3d, Job precedes Psalms.

Theme for discussion:

Discuss the relation between Judaism as law, and Mendelssohn's statement that "Judaism is not a revealed religion, but a revealed legislation." See Modern Jewish History, p. 78.


Chronological Table.