The Rise and Decline of Rabbinical Judaism

Rabbinism (Rabbinical Judaism) has been the principal form of Judaism since the sixth century CE (AD).  Its thesis is that Moses received not one but two Torahs at Mount Sinai.

Rabbinism advances the proposition that one Torah, the Written Torah, was transcribed from the preserved laws and history provided to Moses and was delivered to the Second Temple in Judea by Ezra, on or about 440 BCE. That Torah, the Written Torah, is the one which is known as the Masoretic text and today resides in the sanctuary of temples worldwide.

Rabbinism maintains that there was another Torah delivered at Mount Sinai at the same time as the Written Torah, called the “Oral Torah”. Rabbinism insists that God simultaneously provided the Written Torah with the Oral Torah so as to help interpret and understand the Written Torah.  That proposition, of necessity, compels several questions. 1. Why would God create a document so complex that the people to whom it was directed would not understand it? 2. If the Torah were difficult to understand, why did God not just provide the explanations within the Written Torah itself? 3. What was the value of an explanatory document that was not reduced to writing until almost 1000 years after the Written Torah was delivered to the Jewish people at the Second Temple?

Rabbinism’s thesis suggests that the Oral Torah passed orally for a period of 1785 years (1285 BCE-500 CE) from person-to-person, i.e., 58 generations, before it was finally “accurately” transcribed on or about 500 CE.  The Oral Torah is in fact the recharacterization of the rabbinically produced Talmud, which includes the Mishnah and the Gomorrah.

The Mishnah was commenced at the beginning of the third century AD by Yehudah ha-Nasi who, fearing that the oral traditions of the second Temple might be forgotten, undertook the mission of consolidating various opinions into one body of law. The Mishnah, together with the Gomorrah, a series of commentaries and debates regarding the Mishnah, constitute the “Talmud. Within Rabbinism, especially amongst the more traditional branches, the Talmud is identified as the Oral Torah. It is important to note that while all Jews apparently respect the rabbinical concepts and effort of the Talmud, there are Judaic religious disciplines which do not adopt its credo and remain dedicated only to the express provisions of the Written Torah.  During biblical times, they included the Sadducees and the Essenes. Existing Judaic disciplines include Karaites, Samaritans, and Beta Torah.

The Analysis

For many Jews (especially those whose Jewish education was limited to one or two hours of Hebrew School focused on Bible stories and holidays) a review of the elements of their faith might well be helpful. Be forewarned, however, elements are not necessarily elementary.

The Written Torah

A divine code for Judaic conduct, coupled with the early history of the Jewish people, the Torah, was delivered by God to Moses at Mount Sinai on or about 1285 BCE.  It is the only historical record of the Israelite/Jewish people from the birth of Abraham in the 19th century BCE until the Israelites were released from slavery and poised for the conquest of Canaan.  It is the embodiment of the sacred laws given to the People of Israel by their God, and was later compiled and ultimately delivered by Ezra to the Second Temple in 440 BCE as the Written Torah. Many Orthodox Jews of today believe that the Torah was written by God. Within conservative Judaism, one would more frequently hear that the Torah was divinely inspired. However, current academics who studied the text of the Torah believe that the Masoretic text of the Torah was assembled and transcribed by four different individuals.

Jews

The Written Torah recounts that Jews are genetically the direct lineal descendants of the zera (zerais Hebrew for semen or seed) of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the Patriarchs. See Genesis 12(7), Genesis 17(6-8), Genesis 17 (10-12), Genesis 26 (2-4), Genesis 28 (14), and Deuteronomy 34 (4-5). The Written Torah does not provide for conversion, or any other means by which a person can become a Jew. A person born a Jew does not cease to be a Jew because he is an atheist or has adopted a different faith. Conversely, a person not born a Jew does not become a Jew because he or she has adopted the Jewish faith. The Written Torah does, however, exquisitely provide and protect the rights of non-Jews who are residing in Jewish communities.

Judaism

Judaism is a religious faith that originated with the God of Israel, and whose tenets and requirements are documented in the Written Torah. Without a transcribed series of religious laws available to a population which it serves, no formal religion would be viable.  Without such available transcription, there would be no way in which a community could identify, engage or confirm a common faith or practice.

Although there were laws and history described to Moses at Mount Sinai, no written document was available to the Jewish population until the Masoretic text of the Torah was delivered to the Second Temple. It was only at that point that the God of Israel curtailed his direct communication to the tribes of Israel through prophecy, and allowed his documentation of the laws of the Torah to establish a faith by which the Jews could conduct their lives in accordance with His precepts. 

Resolve in Judaism must be born of faith study and conviction.  Jews and Judaism have often been the subject of unjustified criticism.

Most have heard the tale of Jesus overturning of the tables of the money changers in the entry of the Temple. The suggestion of such act, for which he is acclaimed, is that he confronted wickedness in the Temple which took place with the permission and authority of the temple priests.  Nothing could be further from the reality.  Jesus and his disciples were Jews who were present, as it was customary to be, in Jerusalem for the holiday of Passover.  For many, it was an opportunity to make a sacrifice of animals for foostuffs at the temple.  If they did not have the local currency, there was a need for exchange to acquire the appropriate animal for sacrifice.  The persons who were professionally engaged in that exchange were absolutely essential to the normal operation of the temple.  It was not at all, as implied by some, a “wicked” activity.  How many of those who criticized its necessary function would achieve a spiritual experience by throwing a brick through the window of an airport currency exchange?

Rabbi

With the Roman destruction of the Second Temple in 70 AD and the inability to sacrifice food animals and agricultural products, the Jews did not end their relationship with the God of Israel. They gathered together to read the law as the Torah required. Instead of sacrifices, they substituted prayers and benedictions. For religious leadership, they often used the same Pharisees who served them in the temple. The term priest no longer applied, and so, the term Rabbi (teacher) ultimately evolved.

The original concept of the designation rabbi (between 360 –425 CE) was one who achieved Semikhah “transmission of authority from Moses”, pursuant to Deuteronomy 17 (9-11). It was presented to be the transmission by Moses of his authority to the priests and the judges in a similar manner as he did for Joshua by laying on of the hands.  Of course, recipients of such authority could have no more power than Moses himself. No one, including Moses, had the authority to change, add to, diminish, or reject God’s law expressly articulated in the Torah. Deuteronomy 4 (2) provides: “You shall not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall you diminish ought from it, that he may keep the commandments of the Lord, your God which I command you.”.  The only authority was to apply Torah law to a given fact situation over which they had jurisdiction.  There has been an attempt over the years to revive the notion of Semikhah, but without significant success.

Today, in the contemporary Jewish community, the Rabbi functions as a teacher, and often the religious leader and authority in a Hebrew congregation. Modern Jewish life has conferred upon today’s rabbis a multitude of other social and community obligations. The Rabbi has no closer connection to God than anyone else in the Jewish community. The title of Rabbi, in former years limited to men only, is now conferred on women.Now women rabbis frequently occupy the pulpit of many synagogues, save and except those of strong Orthodox orientation.

Jewish law is that law which is expressed in the Written Torah and which was accepted by the Jewish community as the sacred law provided to them by the God of Israel. There is no credential that authorizes alteration of the Torah by interpretation or any other means.  The Torah is not a Wikipedia amendable by the reader.

Tradition

For centuries, Jews have been charmed by notions of “tradition”.  It is a form of cultural and religious connective tissue that binds Jews and their community together and often serves in lieu of prayer.  It is lionized and regaled in Jewish theater, as in the case of “Fiddler on the Roof”.  Yet, tradition is singularly one of the most dangerous cultural tools that the Jewish community can use.  It celebrates age and endurance without examination of the verity or relevance of the event about to be iterated.  An appropriate protective label should be assigned to all traditions: Read the history and use with care.

From Temple Sacrifice to Synagogue Prayers

In both the First and Second Temples, Jews would commune with their God through the sacrifice of food animals and foodstuffs.  With the gift of the sacrifice from both their heart and their pocket, Jews could ask God for his forgiveness or convey appreciation for a happy event in their life.  The sacrifice served another significant purpose. The animals and foodstuffs ultimately went to the priests and the Levites and their families as a source of income for their services.

When the Second Temple was destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD, the Pharisee/rabbis, in the inventive phase of their stewardship, designed prayer in lieu of sacrifice, which, because of the destruction, could no longer be performed.  Presumptively, it was a temporary measure until the temple could be reconstructed, but it never was.  Because the Torah required the periodical reading of the law, community prayers were added to the agenda.  More and more, the communal prayer phase became the focus of the gathering.  The prayers were largely devotionals written and designed by the early rabbis and uttered by the congregants.  With the advent of printing, they became part of the universally accepted prayer book (Siddur) from which congregants could read and recite simultaneously.

While individual or personal, spontaneous prayers were not prohibited or discouraged, rabbis suggested that a more efficacious communication would occur if done uniformly in the presence of a minyan (ten males over the age of 13 years).  Presently, some prayers cannot be uttered in the absence of a minyan.  Ultimately, prepared prayers were designed to be recited with the presence of a minyan three times a day (Shachrus (morning), Minchah (afternoon) and Maariv (evening)).

With a small exception for the prayers of Sabbath and holidays, Rabbinism has, for hundreds of years, required those three sets of stylized prayers to be uttered by religious Jews every day of their lives. Sadly, in many synagogues, those prescribed prayers are uttered with such speed, acquired by repetition, that is more like a mantra than a heartfelt communication with one’s deity.

It is a sign of a sincere religious commitment that Jews would repeat the same scripted prayers three times a day during all of their lives.  It is a sign of a loving God, that He would endure such a continuum without giving up his human experiment.  Examination of the Torah, and especially Deuteronomy, confirms God’s goals for His designed people.  The service required of the Jewish people was, and is, faithfulness to the one God of Israel, and to the commandments and laws provided to Moses and the Jewish people at Mount Sinai.  Infinite daily repetitive lip service was not one of them.

While it may be argued that the real benefit of a lifetime of communal repetition of designer prayers is for the benefit of the supplicant, that argument appears more than marginally specious.  Any such assembly would best serve both God and man in pursuit of the goals of Tikkun Olam by precept, example, and outreach for which the Jewish people were originally designed.

Can the Torah be Updated?

In most synagogue services, the reading from portions of the Torah which occur on Saturday, Monday, and Thursday are flanked by communal prayers.  In the Torah scroll itself, the Hebrew script is without vowels and is not capable of being read by most of the Hebrew reading congregation.  For that reason, many temples have a special Bal Korah (Torah reader).

Since it was accepted that the Torah originated from the revealed word of God, it was viewed as immutable and as a divine resource. The Mishnah and the Gomorrah, on the other hand, surfaced as rabbinical opinions in service of the interpretation of the Torah. Occasionally, the zeal of the rabbis, in trying to identify the outer limits of Mosaic law, resulted in creative endeavors, not unlike their antecedent Pharisees. However, alterations, additions, or rejection of Torah law were absolutely prohibited by the Torah itself, as we have seen in Deuteronomy 4 (2).

Clearly, this did not mean that biblical law could not be interpreted fairly and honestly within the spirit and intent of the Torah. With equal clarity, it did mean that one could not enlarge, diminish, distort or reject the letter and spirit of Torah law by interpretation or devious device.

Since the Torah would not allow modification of its language, spirit or intent in any form, why could it not be broadened by amendment,like the United States Constitution?  The answer, of course, lies in the source of authority from which the document originated.  With regard to the United States Constitution, its source was the people of the United States of America.  They, through their elected representatives, agreed to be governed by the language of the law of the Constitution.  Additionally, the Constitution, itself, provided for its amendment in the event of a desire for change.

The Torah, on the other hand, contained laws that were promulgated by the authority of God, who is the only entity authorized to amend that document.  Unfortunately, the world has not had word from God for a very long time. Indeed, who would step forward and suggest that he or she had the power to amend the Torah?

Yet, ironically, Rabbinical Judaism was, in fact, changing the Torah in multiple ways, most often under the guise of rabbinical interpretation.  Traditionally, rabbis have never served as intermediaries between God and humans.  The profession of rabbi is not an occupation found in the Torah. There has never been a process in which rabbis who, by interpretation or declaration, had any right to effectively change the Written Torah.

 Rabbinical Judaism Speaks in “Tongues”

Since the beginning of the 19th century and the advent of Reform Judaism, there are now multiple independent segments of Rabbinical Judaism, which include Orthodoxy, Conservatism, Reform, Reconstruction, Renewal, Humanistic and others.  There is no hierarchy and no central authority in Rabbinical Judaism that supervises the singularity of operative Jewish law.  Among Rabbinism’s denominations, there is no one single standard of ordination, Torah compliance and authority to effectuate change. Rabbinical Judaism does not, and cannot, speak or interpret with one mindset or voice.

Sadly, over the centuries, Rabbinism has knowingly altered a significant number of the express provisions of the Written Torah.  Some of the more prominent alterations are:

1. Early on, it rejected the Torah’s genetic patrilineal origin of Jews by substituting a Jewish mother in place of a Jewish father in order for the child to qualify as a Jew.  This change alone is sufficient to change the identity and character of the Jewish people.  It might even pose the question as to whether the current composition of the Jewish community includes those to whom God had promised the Land of Israel.

2.  While Rabbinical Judaism’s Talmud does not discuss future worlds, it is not uncommon for its adherents to postulate a world to come, known as Leolum Habah or Gan Eden, where one who did good deeds, or was scrupulous with Halacha, might reside after his earthly journey.

 3.  The Torah’s warning against changing its law applies equally to additions as to subtractions or alterations. A classic example of such prohibited additions is found in the Torah’s thrice expressed provision which instructs: “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk” (Exodus 23 (19). 

That simple mother-child animal relationship has Rabbinically been expanded to include: a) the milk and meat of unrelated animals of the same species, b) the milk and meat of unrelated animals of any specie or species, c) the meat of birds like chickens or other fowls that do not even give milk, with the milk of any specie.  Yet, in what appears to be a clear violation, it permits the consumption of a kosher chicken and its egg in the same meal.  What was it that the rabbis did not understand about a mother-child relationship?

For two centuries, in order to accommodate meat and dairy for both regular and Passover use, that bizarre interpretation has caused Jewish households to maintain four sets of dishes, pots and pans, silverware, dishtowels, etc.  Was this really what God intended with this simple moral provision?             

4. There are few religious moments that are as sensitive, warm and welcoming as observing the women of one’s household, with a napkin over the head, and hands over the eyes, blessing the Friday evening candles.  The candle blessing, Rabbinical in its origin, recites as follows: “Praised be thou O, Lord our God, King of the universe, who hast sanctified us by Thy commandments, and hast commanded us to light the Sabbath candles.”  In truth and in fact, God never commanded the lighting of Sabbath candles.  Such command was a fiction created by the rabbis to allow light into one’s household after sundown on Friday evening because fire could not be kindled after dark.  Howsoever charming the blessing of the candles may be, it is nevertheless a blatant untruth.  More important than that, it is violative of the third of the 10 Commandments, which enjoins us not to take God’s name in vain.

Growing Resistance Against Rabbinical Changes to Torah Law

By the eighth through the tenth century AD, there was a sizable part of the religious diaspora Jewish community, called Karaites, who were disturbed and offended by the way in which Rabbinism altered the Torah.  Historians see Karaites as having channeled the views of the Second Temple Sadducees in order to protect the integrity of the Torah.

Karaites maintained that the Jewish people are patrilineal in origin and rejected the biblically unauthorized change to matrilineal-ism.  They did not accept the notion of life after death in a world to come.  The Karaites were especially affronted by Rabbinism’s attempt to bootstrap themselves to the level of the deity by elevating the Talmud to the Oral Torah. Karaites established their own institutions, and, at one point, represented 40% of world Jewry.

In the tenth century, the Saadia Gaon (Gaon, usually referred to the head of a yeshiva), led Rabbinism’s organized effort against Karaism, which, though weakened by the controversy, survived and is alive to this day.

Karaite Jews today, most of whom remain very religiously oriented and dedicated to the Written Torah, do not light Friday evening candles because of the absence of God’s direction to do so. They do not utilize phylacteries or mezuzahs because they deem less as words curious mean the Torah language “and thou shall bind them for a sign upon thy hand and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes” as figurative, metaphorical and aspirational, in the same spiritual category as the Torah reference to the circumcision of one’s heart in Leviticus 26 (41). It is estimated that there are now approximately 40,000 Karaites living in Israel, with smaller communities in Turkey, Europe and the United States.

Rabbinate’s Infinite Additions to Torah Law

Not at all discouraged by its battle against Karaism, Rabbinical Judaism kept adding to Rabbinism infinitely more spurious rules, regulations, extensions and traditions.  Nowhere is it more evident than in the Shulchan Aruch (Code of Jewish Law), assembled and written by Joseph Karo in 1563.  Reference to some of his chapters might prove enlightening:

Laws relating to the conduct upon rising in the morning

Laws relating to dressing and manner of walking

Laws relating to decency in the lavatory

Laws relating to making up of omitted prayers

Laws concerning the separation of (Hallah) dough

Laws concerning the bread, cooked food and milk of a non-Jew

Laws regarding one who desires to eat or drink before meals

While the foregoing codes and others in the Code of Jewish Law may be well-stated practices relating to cleanliness, physical health, and orderliness, they do not, for the most part, state Torah laws or reasonable interpretation thereof.  If this is, in fact, the case, then they are in clear violation of Deuteronomy 4 (2), which prohibits adding to the rules provided in the Torah.

The Deification of the Talmud into the Oral Torah

The Talmud, a work of the rabbis, was viewed by them as indispensable to the understanding of the Written Torah.  Traditional rabbis refer to the Talmud, as “the Oral Torah”. Examination of the two sets of laws, the Written Torah and the alleged Oral Torah, identified that they are uniquely different in significant ways.  For example:

1. The people to be served by these biblical laws are genetically different. Under the Written Torah, Jews are children of Jewish fathers.  Under the Oral Torah, Jews can only be children of Jewish mothers.  In the modern American era of over 50% of mixed marriages, those are two different populations.

2.  The Written Torah creates only one world.  There is no mention of afterlife or resurrection.  The Rabbinical world appears comfortable, in the ideation of a world to come called Leolam Habah in which Jews can receive their just reward after death and in notions of resurrection (see prayer in the Amidah which exalts God for M’chai Hamaysim [God who calls the dead to life everlasting] and “The Treatise on Resurrection” by Maimonides.

3.  The Written Torah does not support or provide for conversion of Gentiles to Jews.  Rabbinical Judaism conducts such procedures regularly.

4.  The Written Torah does not allow modifications, additions, reduction or rejection of its laws.  There are multiple examples of Rabbinical modification of the Torah, including a pervasive one relating to rules regarding the mixing all meat with all milk from any source.

 5.   For Rabbinical Judaism to maintain that the Written Torah and the “Oral Torah”, which contain conflicting provisions, are the product of the same God, delivered at the same time, for the same population defies credibility. The alternative to that concept is that there are two different gods promulgating two different codes of law, a notion that would fly directly in the face of Judaic dedication to monotheism.

A more plausible concept is that Rabbinic Judaism could not sustain its rejection of, and changes to, portions of the Written Torah without some divine authority.  By dubbing the Talmud (opinions of its rabbis) as a Torah emanating from Mount Sinai, it sought to provide a divine veneer or patina on those Rabbinical writings.

Doing that is worse than a Chillul Hashem (the desecration of the name of God).  It is worse than taking God’s name in vain in violation of the third Commandment.  It is, in fact, co-opting God’s persona in service of their own agenda, which includes rejection or modification of portions of the Written Torah.

Sadly, not all of Rabbinical Judaism’s avoidance of total precepts are accomplished by rejection or alteration.  Sometimes, they involve avoidance by sham or device.  This is especially sad because it can involve the assistance of the Rabbinate:

 1.The Eruv- Jews are required to remain and rest in their home during the entire Sabbath, Exodus 16 (29).  However, that would not allow them to attend services in the synagogue, visit with friends and neighbors or other outside activity.  With the help of fictional imagination, the Rabbis allow for the extension of one’s home, often by miles, by public power or telephone lines. On the island of Manhattan, a home can be as much as 18 miles long.

2. The Documented Sale- The Torah does not permit business activities during the Sabbath. Not infrequently, Jews who wish to keep their business open during the Sabbath enter a sham contract of sale with a Gentile, which is effective Friday afternoon, with repurchase on Sunday morning.

3. The Lease of Israeli Agricultural Land Every Seventh Year-The Torah mandates, under the laws of Shmitah, Exodus 23 (10-11), that agricultural land in Israel must be allowed to rest uncultivated every seventh year.  A number of Israeli farmers, during the seventh year, lease their farm to an Arab neighbor. The owners have the benefit of that year’s lease income, but the land is not rested during that year.

4. Painful, but relevant, is viewing the ceremony of lighting of Friday evening candles to welcome the Sabbath, when you know that its real purpose was simply to provide light for a dining room or kitchen on Sabbath.

5.  The Shabbos Goy – is simply a device to avoid the violation of the Sabbath by assigning the task of turning on the lights or air conditioning or other prohibited act to one who is not Jewish.  Under no system of law or civilization can a principle avoid responsibility for a prohibited act by assigning it to an agent.  Imagine the response if someone hired an assassin to do in his neighbor and then claimed innocence because “He did it.  I didn’t do it.”.

6.  The Use of Baking Powder on Passover- In prescribing for the holiday of Passover, the Torah provides that “no leaven shall be found in your houses for seven days.  For whoever eats what is leavened, that person shall be cut off from the community of Israel” Exodus 12 (15-20)  The Torah does not identify any particular form of leaven that would escape that injunction.  In recent years, Rabbinism, through some unjustified rationale, has concluded that baking soda and baking powder, modern chemical products, are authorized for use on Passover, although they are clearly chemical leavening agents.  That Rabbinical notion stems from the alleged “logic” that since the original biblical leavening experience occurred when water was added to flour and resulted in in fermentation, then fermentation is the only form of leaven that is prohibited.  Such a clear violation of the Torah leaves one to wonder who, if anyone, benefits from such illogic.

While these and similar devices may appear clever to some, they nevertheless, originate in sham and are directed to fool none other than the God of Israel, who claims the right of vengeance.

Conclusion

Rabbinical Judaism maintains and endorses as sacred the Written Torah.  It does so while, at the same time, it has rejected, altered and expanded a number of those provisions by means other than reasonable interpretation.  That situation prompts the old Yiddish expression “one cannot dance at two weddings at the same time”.

If Rabbinical Judaism, now fragmented into multiple, incongruent denominations, wishes to survive, it must distance itself from asserting total Torah compliance and establish its own unique individuality.  That can include the position that Rabbinical Judaism recognizes the spiritual inspiration of the Torah, but reserves, for itself, the right to alter such policies or practices as it deems appropriate.

A similar, but reverse posture has been adopted by both the Karaites and the Samaritans.  The Karaites and the Samaritans are totally dedicated to the language and the law of the Written Torah.  However, though familiar with and respectful of the Talmud, neither require its adherence to comply with its precepts.

Douglas Kaplan

Crossroads of Judaic History from Deity to Diaspora

                                      Preface

The children of Israel existed for over 2200 years before the Written Torah was delivered by Ezra to the Second Temple on or about 440 BCE.  With the Written Torah, the Jews had a transcribed set of laws by which they could conduct their lives in accordance with the laws given to Moses at Mount Sinai.

The relationship between the Jewish people and the God of Israel is unique.  To truly consider it, one must necessarily view the historical and political events in which that relationship came to life. 

In this article, the word Torah, or Written Torah, refers to the Masoretic text of the Torah that presently resides in the sanctuaries of synagogues throughout the world. When references are made to the Talmud or the Oral Torah, they will be specifically identified as such.  Additionally, Rabbinical Judaism and Rabbinism refer to the same religious doctrine and are used interchangeably throughout the document.

                                           *

The Written Torah is the only existing history of the Israelite people from the birth of Abraham in the 19th Century BCE until the 12 Tribes of Israel were poised to enter and conquer Canaan in 1285 BCE.  That document revealed not only God’s formula for the genetic origin of the Israelite people, i.e., direct lineal descendants through the “Zera” (semen) of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, but also the nation of Israel’s appointed mission (Genesis 12(7), Genesis 17 (6-8), Genesis 17 (10-12), Genesis 26(2-4), Genesis 28 (14), and Deuteronomy 34 (4-5). That mission was to disseminate to the known world God’s rules of civil conduct, so as to ensure that his creation would not descend into the wickedness that he sought to erase with the “flood”.

While many Orthodox and Conservative Jews believe that the Torah

was entirely written by God, or at the least inspired by God, modern scholars suggest that it had four independent transcribers.  That study implies that they used existing oral history and records in an effort to transcribe the origin of the people of Israel and their relationship with their God. When the Written Torah was received in the fifth century BCE at the Second Temple, it was adopted by the Jewish people as their sacred history and of the law which God had delivered to them at Mount Sinai.

Many great historic civilizations, like those of Egypt, Greece and Rome, sought to assign to their early founding fathers and deities imaginary powers and extraordinary capabilities in an effort to magnify their authority and that of their community.  In some instances, their founders were identified with sexually active gods who produced a host of other deities and half deities whose exploits, they believed, magnified the importance of their culture.

The Torah, on the other hand, is singularly one of the most candid historical documents to describe the genesis of a nation. The patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, were simple individuals who were called upon by God to originate a people dedicated to His service.  For that commitment, God promised to provide and protect them and their descendants, and to make them into a great nation.  It is interesting, and perhaps a bit disconcerting, to examine those three men whose seeds were, and are, the wellspring of the Jewish people.

Abraham, Paternal Origin of the Israelite People

Late in life, Abraham, in good faith, entered into a covenant of mutual commitment with God.

Since Abraham’s wife, Sarah was childless, she offered her servant Hagar to her husband so that he may have an heir to survive him.  After Hagar became pregnant, the relationship between Sarah and Hagar disintegrated.  When Sarah inquired of Abraham for a solution, he responded to her that she should do whatever she wished with Hagar because Hagar was her servant.  Some 13 years later, after Sarah gave birth to Isaac, her relationship soured with Hagar.  In that event, Abraham agreed to send Hagar and their son Ishmael into the desert with bread and water.  The two were ultimately saved by the angel of God, Genesis 16(1-16) 21(8-21).

                                                                                                                                                Seeking proof of Abraham’s personal commitment, God required Abraham to sacrifice his only lawful son, Isaac.  Abraham’s loyalty to God was dedicated and true, and thus he commenced to prove his fidelity.  But, who among us could or would find any moral authority in proving their loyalty to God by slitting the throat of their son?  It was an act that was only stayed in the last moment by the hand of an angel of God. Did God have the right to request a human sacrifice to prove fidelity?  Should Abraham have said no? 

 As a footnote to history, on the death of Sarah, Abraham’s wife and mother of Isaac, Abraham remarried and had six additional sons.  The Torah tells us that he ended up giving his entire estate to Isaac, and provided only nominal or token gifts to Ishmael, his child with the handmaiden, Hagar, and the six sons of his old age.

Isaac

Isaac, too, entered into a mutual covenant with God, agreeing to accept God’s direction and control.  The greatest part of his life constituted a pleasant, interesting but ordinary spacer between the lives of his father, Abraham, and his son, Jacob.

Jacob, Also Known As Israel, Father of the Israelite People

Jacob was the father of the 12 sons, who became the 12 Tribes of Israel. It was he, after whom the Israelite people are named.  When gloss is removed, his unenviable character is revealed.  For a mess of pottage, he swindled his starving brother Esau out of Esau’s right of the firstborn. That right entitled the firstborn to a double portion of the father’s estate.

The real firstborn, Esau, was also entitled to an important special blessing from his father Isaac.  With the help of his mother Rebecca, Jacob appeared to his aged and blind father Isaac, dressed in Esau’s clothes and other prepared coverings, to deliberately suggest the presence of his brother Esau.   When asked by Isaac, Jacob fraudulently identified himself as Esau and accepted the blessing directed to his brother.  On learning the truth, Esau threatened the life of Jacob, who then took refuge in the home of his mother’s brother Laban.  After a period of time, Jacob cozied his father-in-law Laban out of a good portion of his flock of domestic animals, and then stole away quietly before he was confronted.

These were the patriarchs of the Israelite people as their lives were candidly and honestly described without embellishment or concealment in the Torah.

The Torah’s Unenhanced Description of God

The Written Torah was no less candid and forthright in the description of God, the Creator.  It is not uncommon, in other faiths and disciplines, to describe God as the embodiment of love, kindness, warmth and forgiveness.  The Written Torah candidly views the Creator in the context of the Creator’s own self-description and documented responses to biblical events.  To identify the God of Israel as jealous and vengeful is simply to recite back God’s own description of himself in Exodus 20 (5) and Deuteronomy 32 (35).

The candor, detail, and honesty of the Torah simply challenge those who dismiss it, out of hand, as an allegory. It would make all Jews bit players in a 4000-year-old allegory.

By virtue of the jealousy of his 11 brothers, Joseph, favored son of Jacob, was sold into slavery in Egypt. While there, because of his ability to read the dreams of the Pharaoh, he was awarded an elevated position in the Egyptian court. After a dramatic episode where he revealed himself to his brothers, Jacob’s entire household was invited to Egypt to reside in Goshen. After the death of Joseph, as the Jewish community grew in Goshen, the new Pharaoh feared that the descendants of Jacob might rise up against his rule. To prevent that occurrence, Egypt enslaved the descendants of Jacob for nearly 400 years. Ultimately, with the help of God, under the leadership of Moses, the Hebrew people were able to leave Egypt.

The Hebrews who escaped from slavery in Egypt were a motley group of former slaves.  Each person’s principal identity was with the tribe of the children of Israel from which he or she originated.  Moses, on advice from his Midianite father-in-law, appointed Judges (Shoftim) to head each tribe.  The duties of the Shoftim were not only judicial in nature, they also served as tribe administrators and military governors of the tribe to which they were appointed.

The Israelite People, Who Received the Torah at Mount Sinai

When God, early on, recognized that the slave mentality of those freed from Egypt lacked the spirit necessary to conquer Canaan, the judgment was made to abide in the desert and await a new and more vital generation.  During that period, the number of tribes changed from 12 to 13.  Joseph and his later descendants had remained part of the community of Egypt.  His first two sons, Efraim and Manasseh, were substituted as half tribes in his stead, thus raising the number of tribes to 13.

Ultimately, after 40 years in the desert, with the assistance of the God of Israel, and the combined effort all of the tribes of Israel, they were successful in conquering and occupying the land of Canaan.

Occupancy of Canaan and the Nationalization of the Tribes

In conducting the aggressive battles against the tribes of Canaanites who had long occupied the land, God directed the Israelites to slay all living creatures, including men, women, children and animals, and to thereupon take occupancy of the land, Deuteronomy 7 (1-2), and Deuteronomy 20 (16-18). It must have been very difficult for those Israelite soldiers who had internalized the morality of the Torah’s 10 Commandments against killing and stealing, Exodus 20 (2-17), to enter passive communities and kill all inhabitants, and take their land.

It did not take long for the individual tribes to recognize that they were surrounded by hostile neighbors and that their interest would best be served by a strong, unified Israelite monarchy.  That joinder of the tribes took the form of the United Kingdom of Israel, under Kings Saul, David and Solomon.  While it did provide a strong national existence, it lasted only a little over 100 years.

The Torah Makes No Mention of the City of Jerusalem

Both King David and King Solomon, his son, were from the tribe of Judah.  King David, who was beloved by all the tribes, established his capital in the south in a conquered old Canaanite city called Jerusalem, which was close to the land assigned to the Tribe of Judah.  While David was still alive, he acquired property in the city of Jerusalem for the purpose of building a temple to the God of Israel.  That Temple was built after David’s death by his son, King Solomon.  It is important to note that the name Jerusalem appears nowhere in the Torah, nor does the Torah designate that site for a temple mount.  In fact, the Written Masoretic text of the Torah (which resides in all of our temples today), in all likelihood, did not even exist at the time of the construction of Solomon’s Temple.  Its first appearance takes place when Ezra delivered it from Babylon to the Second Temple on or about 440 BCE.

By the time of Solomon’s death, on or about 931 BCE, there were a number of accumulated grievances between the majority of the tribes in the north (Samaria) and three tribes in the South, whose territory included the Temple at Jerusalem.  They involved:

1. Both the Capital and the Temple in Jerusalem were located too far from the population center in the north, making it difficult for the majority of people to get there for worship and administrative purposes.

2. Members of David and Solomon’s Tribe of Judah appeared to be getting special prerogatives that were not available to the other tribes.

3. There was an element that believed that the appropriate place for a temple mount was on Mount Gerizim in Samaria and not in Jerusalem.  That locale was specifically mentioned in the Torah, in Deuteronomy 11(29). To this day, the Samaritans, which comprised the Tribes of the Efraim and Menasha, still maintain that position and live and pray in that vicinity.

4. By far, the most aggravating factor between the North and the South was brought about under the reign of Solomon, who, in addition to the temple, was building pavilions and palaces for himself and his many wives and concubines.  To do this, he placed a weighty burden on the people by way of heavy taxes and personal labor.  When he died in 931 BCE, elders of all the tribes met with his son and successor, Rehoboam, to make sure that there would be some relief under his administration. When asked about his future reign, Rehoboam responded that his father disciplined the tribes with whips, but he would discipline the tribes with scorpions.  The effect of that response was immediate. The 10 Northern tribes severed from the United Kingdom and established their own monarchy called “Israel” in the north. The remaining three tribes in the south, Judah, Simon and Benjamin, whose adjoining territories included Jerusalem, became the Southern Kingdom under the name of “Judah”.  Each kingdom had its own series of kings. 

Judah’s Real and Imagined Salience Amongst the Tribes

Why was the Southern Kingdom called Judah, the name of only one of the three tribes?  For the longest time, Judah had been asserting its prominence amongst the tribes.  It had two out of three Kings from the Unified Kingdom.  It was prominent in the selection of Jerusalem and the construction of Solomon’s Temple.  Judah fostered the notion that any king of Israel had to be a direct lineal descendant of King David (from the Tribe of Judah) which ensured Judah’s continued leadership amongst the tribes.   It is from that remnant of Israelites that the Jewish community of today survives and why its members are called Jews.

In Disunity There is Weakness and in Weakness There is Submission

The defenses of both Israelite tribes were substantially weakened by the split.

It did not take long for the two weakened Israelite states to fall under the dominance of Assyria, a rising military power.  In 722 BCE, the Assyrians successfully invaded the Northern Kingdom of Israel and exported the vast majority of population to other lands that the Assyrians had conquered.  That dispersion identifies what is known as The Lost 10 Tribes of Israel.

The monarchy of Judah continued to exist, struggling with other neighbor states, until it was invaded by the Babylonians in 587 BCE, during which struggle Jerusalem and Solomon’s Temple were destroyed.  Instead of exporting Judah’s population, (as the Assyrians had done in Northern Israel), the Babylonians, over a period 30 years, transferred the elite of the Judah population to Babylon.  The rest of the Jews were allowed to remain in Judah.

The Persian Act of Kindness

In 539 BCE, Persian “King Cyrus the Great” conquered Babylon and took possession of its captive Jewish community. King Cyrus and his successors, in a historical act of kindness, sent a group of Jews to Jerusalem to rebuild their temple.  The Persians were so committed to that project that they authorized the return to the Jews of all of the items confiscated by the Babylonians from Solomon’s Temple.  King Cyrus furnished the reconstruction crews with food and supplies to assist them in their endeavor.

Sometime later, the Persians received word that issues in Jerusalem were unsettled and they sent an additional contingent of Jews to resolve the issues.  This group was led by Ezra, a respected scribe, who still resided in Babylon. The Second Temple was completed in 516 BCE. Thereafter, the Persians allowed those Jews who wished to return to Jerusalem the freedom to do so. Ironically, the expatriate Babylonian Jewish community was doing quite well for itself, and many chose, at that time, not to return to Israel.

The Transition from Tribal to Spiritual Community

Prior to the advent of the Torah, the Jewish people were comprised of patriarchal families that evolved into a series of related tribes.  Judaism, as a religion, did not evolve until the Torah’s transcription of a uniform set of written laws and rules which identified one’s relationship with God and with the rest of society.  While the Torah was delivered in 1285 BCE at Mount Sinai, it lacked documentation until the arrival of the Masoretic text in the fifth century BCE when a Jewish faith became possible.

The Written Torah Arrives in Judea

Ezra brought to the Second Temple in Judea the Masoretic text of the Torah. It was accepted by the religious community as the authoritative and sacred history and law of the Jewish People.  On Ezra’s arrival, he noticed that many of the first contingent, who had been sent from Babylon, had partnered with, or married, indigenous wives.  Ezra then went into mourning mode, assembled the partners and husbands, and convinced them to abandon the women and to sever their relationship with their children.  The irony of that direction was that in the patrilineal society that then existed, those children, sired by Jewish fathers, were in fact Jews.  Some scholars believe that it was this act, that later erroneously motivated the Tannaim of the Mishna to change the origin of Jews from patrilineal to matrilineal.

Second Temple Israel became a faith-based community under the authority of the Written Torah. It was interpreted by a large group of scholars called

Anshei Kh’nesset Hagedolah (Men of the Great Assembly), with the Sanhedrin as a judicial and enforcement arm.  The Second Temple itself functioned under the authority of the Cohanim, who were then principally from an elite “Sadducee” group dedicated to the text of the Written Torah.

For the purposes of uniformity and clarity, Second Temple Israel will hereinafter be referred to as “Judea”.

Alexander the Great, the Macedonian Conquest of Persia, and the Greek Culture’s Confrontation with Judaism and the Torah Community

In 332 BCE, Judea capitulated to Alexander the Great as part of his Macedonian conquest of the Persian Empire.  The consequence of the victory of the Macedonian forces was significantly increased by the seductive Greek culture that it brought with it.  That culture captured the attention of many, including the Sadducees who found it attractive and compelling.  Religious zealots, on the other hand, found it alien and a negating influence to the Torah. Upon the death of Alexander, the territory of his conquests was divided among his generals.  Judea ultimately became part of the Seleucid Empire and consisted of Anatolia, Persia, the Levant, and significant other neighboring territories.

In 167 BCE, Antiochus IV, the then Seleucid ruler, ordered an altar to Zeus to be erected in the Second Temple, the cessation of all circumcisions, and the dissolution of the religious laws of Israel. In response, a group of Jewish zealots under the leadership of Mattathias, the Hasmonean, sparked a revolt against the Seleucid Empire.  Mattathias’s son, Judah the Maccabee, led an army of Jewish dissidents to victory over the Seleucid dynasty. The name Maccabee appears to be an acquired one, based on the Aramaic word for “hammer”.  Thus, we have the holiday of Hanukkah which celebrates the cleansing of the Temple and the return to Judaic worship.

Hashmonean Rule

Ultimately, Judah was killed in battle in 160 BCE and succeeded by his brother, Jonathan.  In 142 BCE.  Jonathan, himself, was assassinated by a pretender to the Seleucid throne and was succeeded by the last remaining son of Mattathias, Simon the Maccabee. With the advent of Simon, the politics of the region changed.  Simon supported Demetrius II, the Seleucid King.  In 140 BCE, he was recognized by an assembly of Jewish priests, leaders and elders as the high priest, military commander and ruler of Judea, essentially the initial king of the Hasmonean dynasty.

While the Maccabees had won autonomy, they still remained in a province that was under Seleucid control.  As if it were a family tradition, Simon was murdered, in 134 BCE, by his son-in-law, Ptolemy, and was succeeded as the King and high priest of Judea by John Hyrcanus. John was briefly succeeded by his elder son, Aristobulus, and subsequently by his younger son,  Alexander Janneus, in 103 BCE.  

During this period of time we begin to see the identification and hardening of politico-religious factions within Judea.  When the Second Temple was opened, its priesthood largely came from descendants of those families who had served in the First Temple.  They were called Sadducees, a name believed to have been derived from Saduk, a high priest of the First Temple.

The Sadducees represented an aristocratic, wealthy and traditionally elite group within the hierarchy of Judaism.  They were firm in their belief that there is no fate and that man has free will and can choose between good and evil.  They strongly believed that the soul is not immortal, and that there is no afterlife.  They did not subscribe to the notion that there are rewards and penalties after death.  They were very receptive to the influences of Greek culture that arrived with Alexander the Great and his successors.

The Pharisees, on the other hand, were a group from the middle and lower classes.  They maintained that an afterlife existed and that God punished the wicked and rewarded the righteous in the world to come.  They believed in the notion that a Messiah would come who would herald a new era of world peace.  Ultimately, upon the destruction of the Second Temple, they became the spiritual fathers of the rabbis.

The Essenes were a group that emerged out of the dissent and dissatisfaction with the other two.  They believed that the others had corrupted Jerusalem and the Temple.  Their conclusions led them to the desert where they adopted strict dietary laws and a commitment to celibacy.  It is from their collection of documents that the Dead Sea Scrolls were ultimately found.

The Boethusians were a group closely related to the Sadducees.  They did not believe in an afterlife or the resurrection of the dead.  While the Sadducees were politically opposed to the Pharisees, the Boethusians advanced the religious arguments against them.

During his administration, Alexander Janneus supported the Sadducees and their classic approach to the Torah.  At one point, he became very irritated with the Pharisees, and they were obliged to leave the country in order to save their lives.  Amongst those who left was his bother in law, Shimon Ben Shetach, who was closely associated with the Pharisee movement.  While the Pharisees openly supported the Torah, they had no difficulty in discussing such alien concepts such as “the immortality of the soul” and “reward and punishment after death”.  Ultimately, Alexander lamented his hostility to the Pharisees and encouraged his brother-in-law to return from Egypt, where he took refuge.

Faith and Politics

On the death of Alexander, he was succeeded by his queen, Alexandra, who shortly thereafter, appointed her brother Shimon as head of the Sanhedrin.  From that position of authority, Shimon worked assiduously to politically eliminate Sadducee priests from the temple.  He was so successful that by the time of the destruction of the Temple by the Romans in 70 AD, there were no longer any Sadducees functioning within the templeOne of Shimon ben Shetach’s other claims to fame was that he sentenced 80 women to death by hanging for witchcraft.

Queen Alexandra’s reign ended in 69 BCE.  Succession to her throne resulted in a battle between her two sons, Hyrcanus and Aristobulus II. Aristobulus sought the help of Rome’s military, then in Syria, which assisted in placing him briefly on the throne.  However, in 63 BCE, Pompeii, motivated by the interests of Rome, marched into Judea and conquered it on Rome’s behalf, thus marking of the end of the largely self-indulgent Hasmonean monarchy.

Rome and Herod, Son of a Jewish Convert

In 40 BCE, after the Romans deposed the ruling Hasmonean dynasty, the Roman Senate declared Herod the Great “Tetrarch King of the Jews” (king under Roman authority). Herod, whose father, Antipater, was an Idumean convert to Judaism, was a friend of Julius Caesar, who was the real source of Herod’s authority.  Much of the Judean population was repelled by Herod’s brutality and disturbed by the absence of his genetic Judaic identity. Herod, however, was known for his colossal building projects throughout Judea, including the renovation of the Second Temple in Jerusalem and the expansion of the Temple Mount.  

In six CE, after the Herodian reign, Judea came under direct Roman rule, and was placed under the supervision of a Roman governor.  The Jewish population eventually became resistant to Roman rule and launched a revolt against Rome, in 70 CE, during which conflict the Second Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed.  The destruction of the Second Temple ended all sacrificial worship and changed the way in which the Jewish community could commune with their God.  Not satisfied with the outcome of the revolt against Rome in 70 AD, zealots once again arose under the leadership of Bar Kokhba to initiate a hard-fought revolt (132-135 CE).  It, too, was ultimately unsuccessful and led to the end of all Judaic input and control over the holy land.

The Surviving Jewish Communities Following the Bar Kokhba Revolt in 135 CE

1. Most Judean Jews initially elected to remain in Judea, in what was then newly called by the Romans “Palestina” (Palestine).  The Romans renamed the country after the Jew’s arch enemy, the Philistines.  During the third century, many Judaean Jews emigrated to Babylon, lured by economics and the ability to live a full Jewish life.  Some traveled by sea to the Spanish coast.

In the fourth century CE, Palestine came under the control of the Byzantine Empire, which was the eastern portion of the Roman empire.  It was oriented to Greek rather than Latin culture, and became the center of Eastern Orthodox Christianity, with its capital in Constantinople.  Resident Jews were prohibited from constructing houses of worship, serving in public offices and owning slaves.

In 638 CE, Palestine came under Muslim rule.  With them came an era of liberalization in both religious and civic life.  Later, in 1096 CE, with the first Crusade, Jews in Palestine were indiscriminately massacred and sold into slavery.  This resulted in a major exodus of Jews from Palestine.  By the time that the Turks had conquered Palestine, in 1516, there were just a few thousand Jews still remaining there.  Most of the exiting Jews emigrated to Egypt and other Middle East Arab lands.

 2.  Although the Jews were principally agriculturalists and engaged in animal husbandry, there were several existing Jewish trading posts in lands commercially accessible to Judea.  There were a number of such trading posts on the coast of the Iberian Peninsula (Spain) to which the Jews could travel by ship along the Mediterranean.  During this period, it is believed that there were also small Jewish communities in Afghanistan, Yemen, Tadjiki.  Bukhara, Kaifeng China, the Judeo Berbers of Morocco, Libya, Tunisia, and Ethiopia.

3.  There was still many Jews who had remained in Persian controlled Babylon and who were content with their lives there.  In fact, that is the site from which the Masoretic text of the Torah came to the Second Temple. Some modern scholars believe the Torah was edited and assembled in Babylon. In fact, Babylon remained vital and active in Jewish life for some time. It was ultimately the source from which the Babylonian Talmud originated. 

4.  In Samaria, there remained the remnants of those Israelite tribes that were part of the Northern Kingdom of Israel.  They were the half-tribes of Menasha and Ephraim, who were the replacement sons for Joseph who had remained in Egypt.  They were either not displaced by the Assyrians or returned shortly thereafter.  They had their own Torah similar to the Masoretic text and continued to function as an Israelite community.  Today, they are known as the Samaritans

5.  In Europe, there were a number of Jews who had taken up residence on the European continent for commercial, academic or other reasons and who were present during the wars between Rome and Judea.  Added to them were those Jewish soldiers who ended up in Europe in order to escape Roman captivity and those who were sold as slaves and ultimately released.  They could not, and would not, return to the former Judea which was under the control of the Romans, as their lives might be at risk.  Many remained on what is identified today as the Italian Peninsula, where they married women of European extraction.  This unique group ultimately became the source of the Ashkenazi Jewish community.

The Vital Resilience of Judaism

Yavne: While superior Roman forces were able to destroy the Second Temple, and much of Jerusalem, they were not able to destroy the commitment of the residents of Judea to their God and to their community.  Rabbi Yohanan ben Zakkai, realizing that Jerusalem was about to fall, sneaked out of the city and asked Vespasian, the Roman commander, for the right to settle in Yavne and teach his disciples.  Ultimately upon the fall of Jerusalem, Yavne became a center of Jewish learning and the site for the reestablishment of the Sanhedrin. Yavne played a major role in adapting Judaism to a circumstance where there was no central Temple and where liturgy became the basic Jewish religious practice.  

Babylonian Jewish community: This community retained its Judaic identity even with the fall of its cooperative Persian overlords to the forces of Alexander the Great, in 334 BCE.  Its faith remained dynamic, even as it provided the Babylonian Talmud. In one of those unique twists of Jewish history, this is the group which, several hundred years later, helped develop the Karite movement, which opposed Rabbinical alterations of the Written Torah.

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Obviously, the history of the Israelite people (from whom the modern Jewish community generates) did not end with the Roman destruction of the Second Temple, the death of many brave Jews, or the declaration that their land was thereafter to be a province of Rome called Palestina. Those painful contractions were the events that produced the birth of the Sephardic and Ashkenazi communities in Europe, which now constitute the majority of the Jews in the world today. The growth, pain and suffering, and accomplishments of those two communities during the 2000 years of diaspora is a story well worth being told individually and in detail.

Douglas Kaplan