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PHARISEES , a See also: sect of the Jews first mentioned by See also: Josephus, in his account (See also: Ant. xiii
.
5, 9) of the reign of Jonathan, the See also: brother and successor of Judas Maccabaeus
.
The name, which may be translated " Separatists," indicates their devotion to the ideal, enforced by See also: Ezra and Nehemiah upon the reluctant Jews, of a nation See also: separate from all other nations in virtue of its
See also: peculiar relation to Yahweh (Neh. ix.)
.
This ideal nation consisted of all who were prepared to obey the See also: Law of Moses, irrespective of their natural descent
.
Consequently the Pharisees, who seem to have been an See also: order of religious teachers, were concerned to make converts (proselytes), and some of their greatest teachers were of non-Jewish parentage
.
They were also concerned to insist upon the strict observance of the Law, so far as it was compatible with the exigencies of ordinary See also: life, and to train disciples who should seta proper example to the mass of the See also: people
.
The ideal of separation descended from the See also: Great Synagogue (See also: Assembly) of the See also: time of Ezra to the Synagogue of the Hasidaeans (Assidaeons), who allied themselves with Judas Maccabaeus when his followers decided to suspend the law of the See also: Sabbath, in order that the true Jews might preserve themselves from annihilation and survive to keep the Law as a whole
.
This See also: action of the Hasidaeans is clearly the See also: practical outcome of the principle which Josephus describes in the language of philosophy as the characteristic of the Pharisees—" some things and not all are the See also: work of See also: Fate " (Ant. xiii
.
5, q)
.
Fate is the Stoic See also: term for See also: God; and these forerunners of the Pharisees judged that the time had come for them to take action rather than to wait passively on God
.
But then and always the See also: prime concern of the Pharisees was the extension of God's See also: sovereignty (the See also: Kingdom of God) throughout the See also: world
.
God's will, which all men should obey, was revealed in the Law, and though He might appoint See also: governors over them, He remained their See also: King, and no governor who was not a prophet—God's
See also: mere mouthpiece—could command their unquestioning obedience
.
When Judas reconquered Jerusalem and re-dedicated the desecratedSee also: Temple, his work, from the Pharisees' point of view, was done
.
The Temple-worship was See also: part and parcel of the Divine See also: plan, and a legitimate High See also: Priest was necessary
.
Alanius was, therefore, welcomed by the Hasidaeans, and only his treacherous See also: murder of sixty of their number taught them that any Syrian nominee was their enemy
.
Later they acquiesced in the election of See also: Simon to the high-priesthood with the condition " until there should arise a faithful See also: prophet "; but some of them remonstrated against the combination of the sacred office with the position of See also: political ruler in the See also: person of See also: John
See also: Hyrcanus as contrary to the precedent set by Moses at his See also: death
.
When Alexandra came to the See also: throne the Pharisees were the real rulers and imposed upon the people the deductions from the written Law which formed the growing See also: body of their oral tradition
.
Their reign was long enough to establish this tradition in respect of ritual, and even when this See also: golden age—as it seemed to later Scribes—was over they exercised a paramount influence upon the See also: common people
.
They had learned to read God's will in the events of See also: history, and deduced (for example) the See also: doctrine of the resurrection of the dead from the death of the martyrs under See also: Antiochus Epiphanes and Alcimus
.
And what they learned from current history and from the See also: ancient history of the nation recorded in Scripture they taught in the synagogues, which corresponded not merely to the parish churches but also to the schools—day See also: schools and See also: Sunday schools—of to-See also: day
.
Apart from their control of public See also: education, their power was enhanced by their efforts to better the position of See also: women, and by their notorious leniency in the See also: matter of punishments
.
Everything—the repeated statements of Josephus
and the facts of Jewish history after A.D
.
7a—goes to show that
the Pharisees moulded the See also: religion of the people
.
Attempts
have been made in See also: modern times to represent the Apocalyptists
as opposed to the Pharisees and as occupying the position in
popular estimation which Josephus ascribes to the Pharisees
.
But for such representations there is no solid ground . Superficially the language of apocalypses differs from that of rabbinic deci- sions., and where the seer takes a comprehensive view of the ages the See also: rabbi legislates for particular cases
.
But even in the See also: Talmud
the reign of Alexandra is described in apocalyptic language such
as is commonly applied to the future age, and if allowance be
made for the symbolism proper to revelations it is clear that
essentially the scribe and the seer have the same purpose and
even the same doctrines
.
The Pharisees were occupied with thepiecemeal realization of the dreams of their supposed opponents, which gain a vague See also: glory from their being far off
.
The gospels generally have See also: left upon the minds of men an impression unfavourable to the Pharisees
.
They contain denunciations attributed to our See also: Lord and assigned—with obvious injustice in some cases—to the See also: scribes of this sect
.
It is to be remembered that the Pharisees were the only sect of the Jews who survived in Christian times and that the Pharisees were never a homogeneous body possessed of a definite policy or body of doctrine
.
Moreover it is clear that our Lord denounced not all the Pharisees but the hypocrites only, as did the rabbis whose sayings are reported in the Talmud and other Jewish books
.
Again the third gospel in particular betrays relations between the Pharisees and Jesus very different from those of the common Christian view, which conjures up an impossible picture of an absolute breach between the Prophet of See also: Nazareth and the whole corporation of the Pharisees as a result of a See also: quarrel with certain members of that dissident sect of See also: independent thinkers
.
See also: Gamaliel and his pupil St See also: Paul are better representatives of the non-hypocritical Pharisee; and the Pauline Epistles or the writings of See also: Philo are the best extant examples of the manner and matter of their teaching
.
As for the denunciations, apart from the See also: charge of insincerity, it appears that the scribes in question are pilloried for the defects—or the excesses—of their qualities
.
Indeed they are corroborative evidence for the reverence with which the Pharisees were regarded by the people generally, and for the zeal with which they strove to fulfil God's will as contained in the Law and elucidated by the Tradition
.
(J . H . A . |
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