Judaism and Hellenism after the Maccabean war
The fight to survive left
its mark on Jewish life. The descendants of those who had fought for their faith
became even more conscious their unique way of life based on the Law which
separated them from all other peoples. The Pharisees emerged during this period
as a strong exclusive religious group, upholding the intensely devoted attitude
the Law and their faith which had been seen in those who had rallied to the
support of Mattathias and his sons. The local synagogues bee very important for
the handing on of tradition in the community -provided the religious education
of the youth, as well as being the Local centre of Sabbath worship.
Unfortunately the Jerusalem
Temple and its priesthood continued to be a centre of power struggles. Simon
had tried to re-establish a theocracy, in which God was acknowledged as King
with the High Priest his human servant,
but Simon's descendants used their religious authority; to prop up their
political ambitions. One of them, a grandson of Simon took the title of 'King'
whilst still retaining the position of High Priest. The party of the Sadducees,
the priestly supporters of the rulers, emerged at this time. It was not a large
group but amongst its members were t most wealthy and influential men of
Jerusalem, anxious to be close the rulers and ambitious for themselves. There
was hostility and suspicion between the Pharisees and the Sadducees, stemming
from their different interests. To the Sadducees, most Pharisees appeared too
pious and exclusive, whilst to the Pharisees; most Sadducees appeared ambitious
and worldly, using their connections with the Temple for their own gain.
Under some of the
descendants of Simon, Judaism also developed a harsh, militant aspect. The
boundaries of the state, or kingdom as i came to be, were pushed out through
local military campaigns again neighbouring peoples, to include such areas as
Galilee in the north and Idumaean in the south, and non-Jews living in those
areas were forced to accept the Jewish religion and customs. Later, an Idumaean
whose people had been forced to accept the Jewish religion was to prove the
most hated ruler of the Jews.
In protest against such
things as the power struggles and intrigues of Jerusalem, new reforming'
groups, puritanical religious communities emerged. The people who were called
the Essenes founded communities in lonely desert places, at this time. They aimed
at a life of holiness removed from all the problems of the unstable Jewish
kingdom. The community at Qumran, where the Dead Sea scrolls were discovered
was founded in this period.
Despite the determined
efforts of many Jews to separate themselves from non-Jews and Jews who did not
live strictly according to the Jewish Law and traditions, the Hellenization
which had so deeply influenced all the parts of the world in which the Jewish
people were to be found, did have an effect on Judaism. By this time there may
have been more Jews living in the many Jewish communities of other countries
than there were living in the Jewish kingdom. In such communities, all the
Jewish Scriptures had by then been translated into Greek, which continued to be
the common language of the time. However faithfully the Jewish way of life was
followed in these communities, the Jews in them could not isolate themselves
completely from the other peoples around them. Some were attracted by aspects
of Hellenism, such as the Jewish philosopher Philo, born in about 20 B.C. in
Alexandria. Philo's writings, which have survived, show a wide knowledge of
Greek philosophical ideas as well as the Jewish Law.
The synagogues of the
communities in other countries were the centres of Jewish teaching and
tradition for the thousands of Jews who could only manage to Visit the Jewish
homeland occasionally in their lives, as pilgrims to Jerusalem. A development
which was to be important for the early Church later was the increasing
interest of Gentiles in the Jewish religion, the teaching of which had become
available to them through the Greek language. Many synagogues in the Jewish communities
of the Gentile world were attended by interested 'God-fearers', Gentiles who
wanted to learn about the Jewish religion and who might eventually take the
step of renouncing their previous religion and way of life and accepting the
absolute demands of the Jewish Law.