Jesus the Pharisee: A New Look at the Jewishness of Jesus
by Rabbi Harvey Falk
I don't agree with the conclusions of Rabbi Falk's book, because it more or less writes Yeshua off as "something for the Gentiles," rather than focusing on his Repentance Movement, which was directed toward his own people. Many Jewish authors have written about the historical Yeshua and sadly more than a few have done so in order to marginalize him or to turn his movement into a cabal of conspirators. Still, there are many things that Rabbi Falk says about the historical Yeshua that are absolutely right on target and his work does shed important light on the wrangling between Hillel and Shammai and the nature of this Plebeian vs. Patrician strife.
In this book, "Jesus the Pharisee: A New Look at the Jewishness of Jesus," Rabbi Falk covers in detail the history behind the intrigue that set the Patrician School of Shammai against the Plebeian School of Hillel.
Rabbi Falk explains that the seemingly anti-Semitic remarks found in the "New Testament" are simply comments made by plebeian (Galilean) Hillelites venting against patrician (Judean) Shammaites, which have parallels in the rabbinic literature! Further, Rabbi Falk clearly shows that it was the anti-Gentile attitude of the Shammaites and their Zealot associates that laid the groundwork for the destruction of the Temple by Rome in 70 C.E.
In no small part, the Zealot Shammaites anti-Gentile attitude had been influenced by their disdain for the Hellenized Zadokites (Sadducees) and the mafia-like family of Annas ben Seth, the High Priest, with whom they had to contend. It should be noted here that "annas" became a byword for "a cruel official of the Gentiles," because of the role Annas ben Seth played in cowtowing to Rome in as much as his family had to keep the Pax Romana and pay a hefty sum in order to maintain their cushy position.
Also, Rabbi Falk explains why these two schools that opposed each other so strongly during Yeshua's time eventually buried the hatchet and, after the First Jewish Revolt, started working together to preserve proto-rabbinic Separatism as a belief system, which evolved into Normative Rabbinic Judaism.
Where Rabbi Falk misses the mark, IMO, is that he sees Yeshua's movement as something geared to create a new religion for the Gentiles, rather than seeing it for what it realy was - a Repentance Movement geared to build a grassroots base of support for the Hillelites to draw upon and thereby strengthen the position of the Plebeian Cause against patrician oppression and the misguided anti-Gentile/Zealot agenda to purge the Holy Land of Hellenistic influences and Roman domination by force of arms.
Still.... It's a good read and well worth the $23 price tag.
by Rabbi Harvey Falk
I don't agree with the conclusions of Rabbi Falk's book, because it more or less writes Yeshua off as "something for the Gentiles," rather than focusing on his Repentance Movement, which was directed toward his own people. Many Jewish authors have written about the historical Yeshua and sadly more than a few have done so in order to marginalize him or to turn his movement into a cabal of conspirators. Still, there are many things that Rabbi Falk says about the historical Yeshua that are absolutely right on target and his work does shed important light on the wrangling between Hillel and Shammai and the nature of this Plebeian vs. Patrician strife.
In this book, "Jesus the Pharisee: A New Look at the Jewishness of Jesus," Rabbi Falk covers in detail the history behind the intrigue that set the Patrician School of Shammai against the Plebeian School of Hillel.
Rabbi Falk explains that the seemingly anti-Semitic remarks found in the "New Testament" are simply comments made by plebeian (Galilean) Hillelites venting against patrician (Judean) Shammaites, which have parallels in the rabbinic literature! Further, Rabbi Falk clearly shows that it was the anti-Gentile attitude of the Shammaites and their Zealot associates that laid the groundwork for the destruction of the Temple by Rome in 70 C.E.
In no small part, the Zealot Shammaites anti-Gentile attitude had been influenced by their disdain for the Hellenized Zadokites (Sadducees) and the mafia-like family of Annas ben Seth, the High Priest, with whom they had to contend. It should be noted here that "annas" became a byword for "a cruel official of the Gentiles," because of the role Annas ben Seth played in cowtowing to Rome in as much as his family had to keep the Pax Romana and pay a hefty sum in order to maintain their cushy position.
Also, Rabbi Falk explains why these two schools that opposed each other so strongly during Yeshua's time eventually buried the hatchet and, after the First Jewish Revolt, started working together to preserve proto-rabbinic Separatism as a belief system, which evolved into Normative Rabbinic Judaism.
Where Rabbi Falk misses the mark, IMO, is that he sees Yeshua's movement as something geared to create a new religion for the Gentiles, rather than seeing it for what it realy was - a Repentance Movement geared to build a grassroots base of support for the Hillelites to draw upon and thereby strengthen the position of the Plebeian Cause against patrician oppression and the misguided anti-Gentile/Zealot agenda to purge the Holy Land of Hellenistic influences and Roman domination by force of arms.
Still.... It's a good read and well worth the $23 price tag.
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