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The Roots Of Judaism And Christianity Essay

, Research Paper

The Roots of Judaism and Christianity

(i) Judaism:

The Jews are a people who trace their descent from the biblical Israelites

and who are united by the religion called Judaism. They are not a race; Jewish

identity is a mixture of ethnic, national, and religious elements. An individual

may become part of the Jewish people by conversion to Judaism; but a born Jew

who rejects Judaism or adopts another religion does not entirely lose his Jewish

identity. In biblical times the Jews were divided into 12 tribes: Reuben, Simeon

(Levi), Judah, Issachar, Zebulun, Benjamin, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Ephraim,

and Manasseh.

The word Jew is derived from the kingdom of Judah, which included the

tribes of Benjamin and Judah. The name Israel referred to the people as a whole

and to the northern kingdom of 10 tribes. Today it is used as a collective name

for all Jewry and since 1948 for the Jewish state. (Citizens of the state of

Israel are called Israelis; not all of them are Jews.) In the Bible, Hebrew is

used by foreign peoples as a name for the Israelites; today it is applied only

to the hebrew language.

The origin of the Jews is recounted in the Hebrew Bible. Despite legendary

and miraculous elements in its early narratives, most scholars believe that the

biblical account is based on historic realities. According to the Book of

Genesis, God ordered the patriarch Abraham to leave his home in Mesopotamia and

travel to a new land, which he promised to Abraham’s descendants as a perpetual

inheritance. Although the historicity of Abraham, his son Isaac, and his

grandson Jacob is uncertain, the Israelite tribes certainly came to Canaan from

Mesopotamia. Later they, or some of them, settled in Egypt, where they were

reduced to slavery; they finally fled to freedom under the leadership of an

extraordinary man named Moses, probably about 1200 BC. After a period of desert

wandering, the tribes invaded Canaan at different points, and over a lengthy

period of time they gained control over parts of the country.

For a century or more the tribes, loosely united and sometimes feuding

among themselves, were hard pressed by Canaanite forces based in fortified

strongholds and by marauders from outside. At critical moments tribal chieftains

rose to lead the people in battle. But when the Philistines threatened the very

existence of the Israelites, the tribes formed a kingdom under the rule (1020-

1000 BC) of Saul, of the tribe of Benjamin. Saul died fighting the Philistines

and was succeeded by David of the tribe of Judah.

David crushed the power of the Philistines and established a modest empire.

He conquered the fortress city of Jerusalem, which up to that time had been

controlled by a Canaanite tribe, and made it his capital. His son Solomon

assumed the trappings of a potentate and erected the Temple in Jerusalem, which

became the central sanctuary of the distinctive monotheistic Israelite religion

and ultimately the spiritual center of world Jewry.

The national union effected by David was shaky. The economically and

culturally advanced tribes of the north resented the rule of kings from pastoral

Judah, and after Solomon’s death the kingdom was divided. The larger and richer

northern kingdom was known as Israel; Judah, with Benjamin, remained loyal to

the family of David. Israel experienced many dynastic changes and palace

revolutions. Both Israel and Judah, located between the empires of Egypt and

Assyria, were caught in the struggle between the two great powers. Assyria was

the dominant empire during the period of the divided kingdom. When Israel, with

Egyptian encouragement, tried to throw off Assyrian rule, it was destroyed and a

large number of its inhabitants were deported (722 BC). Judah managed to outlive

the Assyrian Empire (destroyed c.610), but the Chaldean (Neo-Babylonian) Empire

that replaced it also insisted on control of Judah. When a new revolt broke out

under Egyptian influence, the Chaldeans under Nebuchadnezzar II destroyed

Jerusalem and burned the Temple (587 or 586 BC); the royalty, nobility, and

skilled craftsmen were deported to Babylonia.

Loss of state and Temple, however, did not lead to the disappearance of the

Judeans, as it did in the northern kingdom. The peasantry that remained on the

land, the refugees in Egypt, and the exiles in Babylonia retained a strong faith

in their God and the hope of ultimate restoration. This was largely due to the

influence of the great prophets. Their warnings of doom had been fulfilled;

therefore, the hopeful message they began to preach was believed. The universal

prophetic teaching assured Jews that they could still worship their God on alien

soil and without a temple. Henceforth the Jewish people and religion could take

root in the dispersion as well as in the homeland.

Cyrus the Great of Persia conquered Babylonia in 536 BC. Subsequently he

permitted the exiles to return to Judah and rebuild the Temple. (Many chose,

however, to remain in Mesopotamia, where the Jewish community existed without

interruption for more than 2,500 years until the virtual elimination of Jewish

presence in Iraq after World War II.) Leadership of the reviving Judean center

was provided largely by returning exiles–notably Nehemiah, an important

official of the Persian court, and Ezra, a learned priest. They rebuilt the

walls of Jerusalem and consolidated spiritual life by a public ceremony of

allegiance to the Torah and by stringent rules against mixed marriage. In the

following centuries leadership was provided mainly by priests, who claimed

descent from Moses’ brother Aaron; the high priest usually represented the

people in dealings with the foreign powers that successively ruled the land.

Alexander the Great conquered Palestine in 322; his successors, the

Macedonian rulers of Egypt (the Ptolemies) and Syria; vied for control of this

strategically important area; eventually the Syrians won. Hellenistic influences

penetrated Jewish life deeply, but when the Seleucid king Antichus IV tried to

impose the worship of Greek gods upon the Jews, a rebellion ensued (168 BC).

The popular revolt was led by the Maccabees, a provincial priestly family

(also called Hasmoneans). By 165 they recaptured the Temple, which had been

converted into a pagan shrine, and rededicated it to the God of Israel.

Hostilities with Syria continued; but Simon, the last of the Maccabean brothers,

consolidated his power and was formally recognized in 131 BC as ruler and high

priest. His successors took the title of king and for about a century ruled an

independent commonwealth. Dynastic quarrels, however, gave the Roman general

Pompey the Great an excuse to intervene and make himself master of the country

in 63 BC.

In subsequent decades a family of Idumaean adventurers ingratiated

themselves with the successive Roman dictators; with Roman help, Herod the Great

made himself ruler of Judea, eventually (37 BC) with the title of king. Able but

ruthless, he was hated by the people, although he rebuilt the Temple with great

magnificence. The Romans allowed Herod’s sons less authority and in 6 BC put the

country formally under the control of their own officials, known as procurators.

New spiritual forces emerged during the Maccabean and Herodian periods. The

leadership of hereditary priests was contested by laymen distinguished for their

learning and piety, who won the respect and support of the people. The priestly

conservatives came to be known as Sadducees, the more progressive lay party as

the Pharisees. The latter came to dominate the Sangedrin, which was the highest

religious and legal authority of the nation.

Burdoned by excessive taxation and outraged by acts of brutality, the

Judeans became more and more restive under Roman rule, all the more because they

were confident that God would ultimately vindicate them. Revolutionary groups

such as the Zealots emerged calling for armed revolt. The Sadducees were

inclined to collaborate with the Romans; the Pharisees advocated passive

resistance but sought to avoid open war.

In AD 66 the moderates could no longer control the desperate populace, and

rebellion against Roman tyranny broke out. After bitter fighting the Romans

captured Jerusalem and burned the Temple in 70; at Masada the Zealots held out

until 73, when most of the 1,000 surviving defenders killed themselves to defy

capture by the Romans. As a result of the revolt thousands of Jews were sold

into slavery and thus were scattered widely in the Roman world. The last

vestiges of national autonomy were obliterated.

The Pharisaic leaders, shortly thereafter given the title of Rabbi, rallied

the people for a new undertaking–the reconstruction of religious and social

life. Using the institution of the Syanagogue as a center of worship and

education, they adapted religious practice to new conditions. Their assembly,

the Sanhedrin, was reconvened at Jabneh, and its head was recognized by the

Romans and given the title of patriarch; the Diaspora Jews accepted his

authority and that of the Sanhedrin in matters of Jewish law.

Many Diaspora Jewish communities rebelled against Rome early in the 2d

century; however, their rebellions were crushed, with much bloodshed. Still more

bitter was the revolt of Palestinian Jewry led by Bar Kochba in 132; it was put

down after three years of savage fighting. For a time thereafter observance of

basic Jewish practices was made a capital crime, and Jews were banned from

Jerusalem. Under the Antonine emperors (138-92), however, milder policies were

restored, and the work of the scholars was resumed, particularly in Galilee,

which became the seat of the partriarchate until its abolition (c.429) by the

Romans. There the sages called tannaim completed the redaction of the Mishnah

(oral law) under the direction of Judah Ha-Nasi.

In the 3d and 4th centuries scholarly activity in Palestine declined as a

result of bad economic conditions and oppression by Christian Rome. Meanwhile,

two Babylonian pupils of Judah ha -Nasi had returned home, bringing the Mishnah

with them, and established new centers of learning at Sura and Nehardea. A

period of great scholarly accomplishment followed, and leadership of world Jewry

passed to the Babylonian schools. The Babylonian Talmud became the standard

legal work for Jews everywhere. Babylonian Jewry enjoyed peace and prosperity

under the Parthian and Sassanian rulers, with only occasional episodes of

persecution. In addition to the heads of the academies, the Jews had a secular

ruler, the exilarch. This situation was not significantly changed by the Muslim

conquest of the Persian empire. At the end of the 6th century, the heads of the

academies had adopted the title of gaon (Hebrew, “excellency”), and the next

four centuries are known as the gaonic period; communities throughout the world

turned to the Babylonian leaders for help in understanding the Talmud and

applying it to new problems. About 770 the sect of Karaites, biblical

literalists who rejected the Talmud, appeared in Babylonia. Despite the vigorous

opposition of the great Saadia Ben Joseph Gaon and other leaders, the Karaites

continued to flourish for centuries in various lands; today the sect has only a

few small remnants.

Jews had long been accustomed to living in neighborhoods of their own, for

security and for ready access to a synagogue. From the 16th century, however,

they were systematically compelled to live in walled enclosures, to be locked in

at night and on Christian holidays, and to wear a distinguishing badge when

outside the walls. The Jewish quarter of Venice (established 1516) was called

the GHETTO, and this local name became a general term for such segregated areas.

Cut off from normal relations with non-Jews, few Jews had any idea of the

cultural revival of the Renaissance. Even in the field of Jewish law they

tended to a rigid conservatism.

In Poland and Lithuania, social conditions also had a segregatory effect.

The Jews continued to speak a German dialect, mixed with many Hebrew words and

with borrowings from Slavic languages–now known as Yiddish). Intellectual life

was focused on study of the Talmud, in which they achieved extraordinary mastery.

They enjoyed a large measure of self- government, centralized in the Council of

the Four Lands. Persecutions became more frequent, however, inspired by

competition from the growing Christian merchant class and by overly zealous

churchmen. In 1648 a rebellion of Cossacks and Tatars in the Ukraine–then under

Polish rule–led to an invasion of Poland, in which hundreds of thousands of

Jews were massacred. Polish Jewry never recovered from this blow. A little over

a century later, Poland was partitioned (1772, 1793, 1795) among Prussia,

Austria, and Russia, and most of Polish Jewry found itself under the heartless

rule of the Russian tsars.

Some 18th-century liberals began to advocate an improvement of Jewish

status; at the same time Moses Mendelssohn and a few other Jews were urging

their coreligionists to acquire secular education and prepare themselves to

participate in the national life of their countries. Such trends were

intensified by the French Revolution. The French National Assembly granted

(1791) Jews citizenship, and Napoleon I, although not free from prejudice,

extended these rights to Jews in the countries he conquered, and the ghettos

were abolished. After Napoleon’s fall (1814-15), the German states revoked the

rights he had granted the Jews, but the struggle for emancipation continued.

Equal rights were achieved in the Netherlands, and more slowly in Great Britain.

Germany and Austria, even after 1870, discriminated against Jews in military and

academic appointments; in these countries much popular hostility continued, now

called Anti-Semetism and supposedly justified on racial rather than religious

grounds. In the American colonies the Jews had suffered relatively minor

disabilities; with the founding of the United States, Jews became full citizens-

- although in a few states discriminatory laws had to be fought.

Jews entered the life of the Western world with keen enthusiasm; they

contributed significantly to commercial, scientific, cultural, and social

progress. But the old structure of Jewish life was severely damaged: community

controls became less effective, and neglect of religious observance, mixed

marriage, and conversion to Christianity occurred. In response to such

challenges, new modernist versions of Judaism were formulated; these movements

originated in Germany and had their greatest development in North America.

In Russia hopes of improvement were soon abandoned; the government engaged

in open war against Jews. Under Nicholas I (r. 1825-55), 12-year-old Jewish boys

were drafted into the army for terms of more than 30 years (whereas other

Russians were drafted at 18 for 25 years); and Jewish conscripts were treated

with the utmost brutality to make them convert to Christianity.

After 1804, Jews were allowed to reside only in Poland, Lithuania, and the

Ukraine; Russia proper was closed to them. This Pale of settlement was later

made smaller. From 1881 on, anti-Jewish riots, tolerated and sometimes

instigated by the government, sent thousands fleeing to Western Europe and the

Americas. Because Russia refused to honor the passports of American Jews, the

United States abrogated a trade treaty in 1913.

In response to these policies, new trends appeared in Russian Jewry. A

movement of Jewish nationalism expressed itself in a revival of Hebrew as a

secular language and in a few attempts at colonization in Palestine. A Jewish

socialist movement, the Bund, appeared in urban centers, stressing the Yiddish

language and folk culture.

The violent outburst of hatred that accompanied the Dreyfus Aaair in France

inspired Theodor Herzl to launch the movement of Zionism, which sought to

establish a Jewish state. Its chief support came from East European Jews;

elsewhere Herzl’s proposals were considered impractical and a threat to newly

won civil status. During World War I, East European Jews suffered heavily from

troops on both sides. American Jewry now found itself for the first time the

leading element in the world Jewish community, bearing the major responsibility

for relief and reconstruction of the ravaged centers. The peace treaties

guaranteed equal rights to minorities in the newly constituted or reconstituted

countries, but these agreements were not consistently upheld with regard to

Jewish minorities, and colonization in Palestine expanded considerably. In the

Balfour Declaration of 1917, Great Britain announced its support for a Jewish

national home; this purpose, approved by the Allied governments, was embodied in

the mandate for Palestine that Britain assumed after the war. British agents had

secretly made contradictory promises to Arab leaders, however, and growing Arab

nationalism expressed itself in anti- Jewish riots in Palestine in 1920-21 and

1929. In the latter year leading non-Zionist Jews, convinced that Palestine

alone offered hope for impoverished and oppressed millions (since Western

nations had rigidly restricted immigration), joined with the Zionists to form

the Jewish Agency to assist and direct Jewish settlement and development in

Palestine.

The Communist Revolution of 1917 did not end the sufferings of the Jewish

population in Russia. Much of the fighting in the Civil War of 1918-20 took

place in the Ukraine, where the White Russian armies conducted savage pogroms in

which thousands of Jews were massacred. Although discriminatory decrees were

abolished and anti-Semitism was banned as counterrevolutionary under the Soviet

system, Judaism suffered the same disabilities as other religious groups. After

the fall of Leon Trotsky, the old anti-Semitism was revived as a government

policy.

In Germany the Weimar Republic for the first time abolished all official

discrimination against Jews. The republic was unpopular, however, and anti-

Semitism was popular. Calculated use of anti-Semitism as an instrument was a

major factor in the rise to power of Adolf Hitler in 1933, whereupon the German

Jews were immediately disfranchised, robbed of possessions, deprived of

employment, barred from the schools, and subjected to physical violence and

constant humiliation. Once World War II occupied the attention of the

democracies, Hitler and his supporters attempted “the final solution,” the

complete extermination of the Jews. About 6 million Jews –almost a third of

their total number–were massacred, starved, or systematically gassed in

concentration camps. In addition to destroying so many individual lives, the

Holocaust eradicated the communities of Central and Eastern Europe, which had

been the chief centers of learning and piety for nearly a thousand years.

The Western democracies all but closed their doors to refugees. Britain

meanwhile had gradually abandoned the Balfour Declaration, reducing the number

of Jews admitted to Palestine in order to placate the Arabs. After repeated

outbreaks of violence, investigations, and abortive British plans, Britain

announced that it was giving up the mandate, and the United Nations adopted a

resolution calling for the partition of Palestine into Jewish and Arab areas.

On May 14, 1948, the State of Israel was proclaimed. Since then Israel has

fought five wars against Arab coalitions to establish and preserve its

independence. A peace treaty (Mar. 26, 1979) between Israel and Egypt was not

accepted by the other Arab states.

Although the USSR voted for the UN partition resolution in 1947, it later

became markedly anti-Israel in its policies. A resurgence of Jewish self-

consciousness, however, occurred within Soviet Jewry despite deprivation of

religious education and other discriminations. Over the years a number of Soviet

Jews emigrated to Israel and the United States, although official restrictions

caused a decline in emigration in the 1980s until 1987, when new legislation

provided a liberal emigration policy.

Since World War II the Jews of the United States have achieved a degree of

acceptance without parallel in Jewish history, and Jews play a significant role

in intellectual and cultural life. The elimination of social barriers has led to

a high rate of mixed marriage. During the same period there has been a growth in

synagogue affiliation and support for Israel.

Recent estimates put the total number of Jews at about 17.5 million, of

whom almost 7 million reside in the United States, more than 2 million in the

republics of the former USSR, and over 4.3 million in Israel. France, Great

Britain, and Argentina also have significant Jewish populations. The once-

substantial communities in North Africa and the Middle East have been reduced to

small fragments. Most of these Oriental Jews have settled in Israel. Thousands

of Ethiopian Jews, for example, were airlifted to Israel in 1984-85 and 1991.

Israel’s Jewish population increased significantly in the early 1990s, when it

received hundreds of thousands of immigrants from the disintegrating Soviet

Union.

(ii) Christianity:

Christianity is the religion of about a billion people whose belief system

centers on the person and teachings of Jesus Christ. To Christians, Jesus of

Nazareth was and is the Messiah or Christ promised by God in the prophecies of

the Old Testament; by his life, death, and resurrection he freed those who

believe in him from their sinful state and made them recipients of God’s saving

grace. Many also await the second coming of christ, which they believe will

complete God’s plan of salvation. The Christian Bible, or Holy Scripture,

includes the Old Testament and also the New Testament, a collection of early

Christian writings proclaiming Jesus as lord and savior. Arising in the Jewish

milieu of 1st-century Palestine, Christianity quickly spread through the

Mediterranean world and in the 4th century became the official religion of the

Roman Empire.

Christians have tended to separate into rival groups, but the main body of

the Christian church was united under the Roman emperors. During the Middle Ages,

when all of Europe became Christianized, this main church was divided into a

Latin (Western European) and a Greek (Byzantine or Orthodox) branch. The Western

church was in turn divided by the Reformation of the 16th century into the Roman

Catholic church and a large number of smaller Protestant churches: Lutheran,

Reformed (Calvinist), Anglican, and sectarian. These divisions have continued

and multiplied, but in the 20th century many Christians joined in the ecumenical

movement to work for church unity. This resulted in the formation of the world

council of churches. Christianity, a strongly proselytizing religion, exists in

all parts of the world.

Certain basic doctrines drawn from Scripture (especially from the Gospels

and the letters of Saint Paul), interpreted by the fathers of the church and the

first four ecumenical councils, historically have been accepted by all three of

the major traditions. According to this body of teaching, the original human

beings rebelled against God, and from that time until the coming of Christ the

world was ruled by sin. The hope of a final reconciliation was kept alive by

God’s covenant with the Jews, the chosen people from whom the savior sprang.

This savior, Jesus Christ, partly vanquished sin and Satan. Jesus, born of the

Virgin Mary by the power of the Holy Spirit, preached the coming of God’s

Kingdom but was rejected by the Jewish leaders, who delivered him to the Romans

to be crucified. On the third day after his death God raised him up again. He

appeared to his disciples, commanding them to spread the good news of salvation

from sin and death to all people. This, according to Christian belief, is the

mission of Christ’s church.

Christians are monotheists (believers in one God). The early church,

however, developed the characteristic Christian doctrine of the Trinity, in

which God is thought of as Creator (Father), Redeemer (Son), and Sustainer (Holy

Spirit), but one God in essence.

Christianity inherited and modified the Jewish belief that the world would

be transformed by the coming of the Reign of God. The Christians held that the

bodies of those who had died would rise again, reanimated, and that the

righteous would be triumphant, the wicked punished. This belief, along with

Jesus’ promise of “eternal life,” developed into a doctrine of eternal rewards

(heaven) and punishments (hell) after death. A source of doctrinal uncertainty

was whether salvation depended on God’s election in advance of a believer’s

faith, or even in a decision of God before the disobedience and fall of the

first man and woman.

Although Christians today tend to emphasize what unites them rather than

what divides them, substantial differences in faith exist among the various

churches. Those in the Protestant tradition insist on Scripture as the sole

source of God’s revelation. The Roman Catholics and Orthodox give greater

importance to the tradition of the church in defining the content of faith,

believing it to be divinely guided in its understanding of scriptural revelation.

They stress the role of ecumenical councils in the formulation of doctrine, and

in Roman Catholicism the pope, or bishop of Rome, is regarded as the final

authority in matters of belief.

Christian societies have exhibited great variety in ethos, from mutual love,

acceptance, and pacifism on the one hand, to strict authoritarianism and

forcible repression of dissent on the other. Justification for all of these has

been found in various passages in the Bible. A prominent feature of the Roman

Catholic and Orthodox churches is Monasticism. Christians also vary widely in

worship. Early Christian worship centered on two principal rites or sacraments:

Baptism, a ceremonial washing that initiated converts into the church; and the

eucharist, a sacred meal preceded by prayers, chants, and Scripture readings, in

which the participants were mysteriously united with Christ. As time went on,

the Eucharist, or Mass, became surrounded by an increasingly elaborate ritual in

the Latin, the Greek, and other Eastern churches, and in the Middle Ages

Christians came to venerate saints–especially the Virgin Mary–and holy images.

In the West, seven sacraments were recognized. The Protestant reformers retained

2 sacraments–baptism and the Eucharist–rejecting the others, along with

devotion to saints and images, as unscriptural. They simplified worship and

emphasized preaching. Since the 19th century there has been a certain amount of

reconvergence in worship among ecumenically minded Protestants and Roman

Catholics, with each side adopting some of the other’s practices. For example,

the Catholic Mass is now in the vernacular. Among other groups in both

traditions, however, the divergence remains great. In most Christian churches

Sunday, the day of Christ’s resurrection, is observed as a time of rest and

worship. The resurrection is more particularly commemorated at Easter, a

festival in the early spring. Another major Christian festival is Christmas,

which commemorates the birth of Jesus.

The age of Christian antiquity extends from the beginning of the Christian

era (dated from the approximate time of Jesus’ birth) through the fall of the

western half of the Roman Empire in the 5th century.

After Jesus was crucified, his followers, strengthened by the conviction

that he had risen from the dead and that they were filled with the power of the

Holy Spirit, formed the first Christian community in Jerusalem. By the middle of

the 1st century, missionaries were spreading the new religion among the peoples

of Egypt, Syria, Anatolia, Greece, and Italy. Chief among these was Saint Paul,

who laid the foundations of Christian theology and played a key role in the

transformation of Christianity from a Jewish sect to a world religion. The

original Christians, being Jews, observed the dietary and ritualistic laws of

the Torah and required non-Jewish converts to do the same. Paul and others

favored eliminating obligation, thus making Christianity more attractive to

Gentiles. The separation from Judaism was completed by the destruction of the

church of Jerusalem by the Romans during the Jewish Revolt of AD 66-70.

After that Christianity took on a predominantly Gentile character and began

to develop in a number of different forms. At first the Christian community

looked forward to the imminent return of Christ in glory and the establishment

of the Kingdom. This hope carried on in the 2d century by Montanism, an ascetic

movement emphasizing the action of the Holy Spirit. Gnosticism, which rose to

prominence about the same time, also stressed the Spirit, but it disparaged the

Old Testament and interpreted the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus in a

spiritual sense. The main body of the church condemned these movements as

heretical and, when the Second Coming failed to occur, organized itself as a

permanent institution under the leadership of its bishops. Because of their

refusal to recognize the divinity of the Roman emperor or pay homage to any god

except their own, the Christians were subjected to a number of persecutions by

the Roman authorities. The most savage of these were the one under Emperor

Decius (249-51) and that instigated by Diocletian (303-13). Many Christians

welcomed martyrdom as an opportunity to share in the sufferings of Christ, and

Christianity continued to grow despite all attempts to suppress it. Out of the

experience of persecution a controversy grew over whether those who had denied

their faith under press




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