Ishtar wrote:seeker wrote:
I think that the roots of literalism are in the Sadducee approach of only following the written word. The Sadducees did that because they knew who wrote it. That's why the traditional priests, the Pharisees, were suc a thorn in their sides. the Pharisees knew there was more than just what was written.
That sounds interesting, Seeker... but I don't know enough about this part of history to fully understand what you mean. Could you unravel this a bit?
By the time of the Maccabees the people who lived in Judah had been practicing a form of Zoroastrianism that their Persian rulers convinced was really the ancient belief they had all along. Their Parese (the Aramaic word for Persian) priests instructed them in all matters of religion and its observance, somewhere along the line becoming thought of as Pharisee, probably early in the Greek period to avoid being thought of by the Greeks as a bad influence.
Before the time of the Maccabees the Jewish were a few scraps of official decrees, laws and religious sayings. When the Maccabees came along and decided to begin a kingdom they created a national identity by making up stories about an 'Old Israel' and it's line of kings, linking it to the region by using the folk tales of the region and the historical annals of Egypt.
The Maccabees were priests, they already had followers but they needed the wealthy class and merchants to go along with them but one of the tenets of Zoroastrianism and thus the teaching of the Pharisee priests was that one must reject material wealth because the material world is inherently evil. That wasn't going to fly with the wealthy people that the Maccabees needed.
Simply put the OT was written in such a way as to allow the people in Judah who had wealth and power to justify keeping it by simply not mentioning some of the Pharisee principals even though those had been traditional to the beliefs people in Judah had. instead the emphasis was on obedience to God and his representatives because they were sent by God. The wealthy (oh what the heck, lets call them sons of Zadok) were excused from the prohibitions against wealth because it wasn't in the written law. The new group could enjoy the perks and benefits they got from the Greeks and the Pharisees were excluded from the process.
Of course the people still relied on their priests but the Sadducees held all the positions of power. This all happens close enough to the Roman period that I don't doubt that Roman and certainly Greek leaders knew about the subterfuge.
The Pharisees were stuck with it, they had forgotten about being Parese long ago and what was in the bible was close enough to their beliefs that they couldn't object but the Phariseees also knew that an entire set of beliefs about other aspects of Judaism, the 'oral torah' had been left out. By the time they got around to writing the Mishnah they were locked into their own denials of syncretism with christianity, Gnosticism etc.