Unit
Six centuries before Jesus
was born, the Jews went through an experience which nearly destroyed them as a
nation but in the end had an import effect on their religion and way of life.
The Babylonian conquest Judah with the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple
and the captivity and exile of thousands of Jews left the country devastated
for much the sixth century B.C. Most of the Jews who were forced to leave Judah
never returned accepting that they had no alternative but to live as best they
could in Babylonia, and also Egypt where some had fled. In time these
settlements of exiles became permanent Jewish communities When Cyrus of Persia
conquered Babylonia and decreed in 539 B.C that the Jews who wanted to return
to Judah could do so, many of t descendants of the exiles did return. They went
back with great hope determined to rebuild Jerusalem and the Temple and
re-establish their way of life and religion. In the Old Testament, Isaiah 40-55
contains some of the great hopes which sustained the exiles who believed that
God would restore them to their homeland, but the books of Nehemiah and Ezra
show something of the great difficulties which the Jews who returned had to
face. Judaea remained under Persian control, as Province, but the Persians were
tolerant rulers and allowed the Jews to reorganize their national life and
religion with little interference.
During the exile, the
prophet Ezekiel wrote his vision of the restored Temple (Ezekiel 40-46). Along with the
restoration of the Temple, its priesthood and its worship, Ezekiel looked towards
the total reorganization of the religious-political life of his people. After
the return from the exile, Ezra and Nehemiah set out to make a reality of
Ezekiel' vision, with the life of the people centered around the Temple and
observance of the Law.
The Jews no longer had kings
and in time the most important person came to be the High Priest of the Temple.
Never again did idol worship recur. At a time in history when religion was
.generally polytheistic, the Jewish religion was explicitly monotheistic and
rejected any use of idols in worship. From the time of Ezra, obedience to the
written Law was the explicit basis of Jewish life. Ezra forbade mixed
marriages, as part of the reform of national life and religion.
The rebuilt Temple became
the centre of Jewish worship, the place of sacrifice, but there was a new
development in the establishment of local synagogues which were meeting places
for prayer, teaching and worship of a simple kind. The religious education of
the youth was given in the synagogues. The written scrolls, not only of the
Law, but also of the prophetic teachings, the traditions of Israel's history
and the other writings which are in the Old Testament, were regarded with great
reverence. Although politically insignificant, the Jewish people, whether
living in Judaea or in one of the distant communities in another land,
developed a great sense of being a special people, bound together by ancient
traditions, common ancestry and their religion.