Page 167 - Advanced Biblical Backgrounds Student Textbook
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The Pharisees:
               The Pharisees are thought to have arisen after the Maccabean revolt. The first time they are mentioned
               anywhere is when they were being persecuted for resisting the Hasmonean dynasty. 201  They were
               influential among the people because of their focus on personal purity and piety. This as we mentioned
               was part of a culture that was seeking to entice Messiah to return and establish the Kingdom. They often
               controlled the synagogue and therefore held great influence in an honor/shame society. They cared
               deeply about the Word of Yahweh and are responsible for most of the commentaries on it that survive.
               The Midrash is the rabbi’s commentary on what we call the Old Testament. The Targums were the
               Arabic translations of the Old Testament. The Mishnah, though it was compiled well after Christ’s time,
               was primarily focused on legal issues in Old Testament interpretation. Between 200AD and 500AD they
               compiled the Mishnahs, and the commentary on the Mishnah, into what is known as the Talmud’s. You
               will often hear of the Babylonian Talmud and the Jerusalem Talmud. The Jerusalem Talmud was the
               earlier version. The Babylonian Talmud was the final and more complete version of rabbinic
               commentaries.

               There were two major schools in Pharisee thought. One school was taught by Rabbi Shammai and the
               other Rabbi Hillel. The Shammai school was strict. They were the school that usually opposed Jesus.
               They for instance said paying taxes to Caesar was wrong. They also demanded the purification laws be
               strictly observed. Which meant that Jew and Gentile interaction was opposed. The Hillel school on the
               other hand was more open. They approved interaction and were far less strict. Alfred Kolatch describes
               them this way:

                       “Hillel's rulings were often based on concern for the welfare of the individual. For example with
                       regard to the remarriage of an aguna, whose husband is not known with certainty to be alive or
                       dead, the view of Hillel (and most of his colleagues) was that she can remarry even on the basis
                       of indirect evidence of the husband's death. Bet Shammai required that witnesses come forth
                       with direct testimony before she was permitted to remarry. Another example of his leniency as
                       compared with Shammai involves converts; Hillel favored the admission of proselytes into
                       Judaism even when they made unreasonable demands, such as one did by demanding that the
                       whole Torah be taught to him quickly "while standing on one foot." Hillel accepted this person
                       as eligible for conversion, whereas Shammai dismissed him as not serious about Judaism.” 202

               The pharisees were known for believing in the resurrection, life after death, the coming of a messiah
               and the establishment of a literal kingdom. They also affirmed miracles and the existence of the angelic
               realms.

               The Sadducees

               This sect of Judaism denied that there was life after death. They also denied the existence of an angelic
               realm (Acts 23:8). The denied the possibility of resurrection as well. They were primarily concerned with
               political power. By the time of Jesus, they had established themselves under Roman rule as powerful in
               Judea. As a result of this they strongly opposed Jesus’ rise to prominence. His rise threatened their rule.


               201  Gary M. Burge, Gene L. Green, and Lynn H. Cohick, The New Testament in Antiquity (Grand Rapids, Mich.:
                       Zondervan, 2009), 63.
               202  https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/hillel-and-shammai summarizing Judaism 101; Kolatch, Alfred J. The
                       Second Jewish Book of Why. Jonathan David Publishers, Inc.; Middle Village, New York, 1985; “The
                       Nullification of the Commandments"

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