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ConfusedTim
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Did jesus ever condemn the levitical priesthood? I know he seemed to have a go at the the Pharisees.
The only hint of a condemnation of the levites seemed to be an implication in the Parable of the Good Samaritan, other than, of course, the high priest.Did jesus ever condemn the levitical priesthood? I know he seemed to have a go at the the Pharisees.
I hope you are speaking only of the “high priesthood” and not all priests. The high priest would certainly seem to be corrupted, and Annias seemed to be the most corrupt.Only 3 foreign magi and 2 Jewish elders either worked their way to or waited to find the Christ child at the Temple. Where were the high priests?
Even after King Herod I asked the priests about the prophecy, there’s no indication that the priesthood took anymore interest in finding Jesus.
I’ve done a bit of research on the Maccabean / Hasmonean priesthood (who were not Levites) and their ultimate demise by King Herod at the time of Jesus birth. Needless to say, the priesthood by the time Jesus was 30, was corrupted by power, money and privledge.
They were not irredeemable.
But, time and time again, Jesus showed them to be unwilling servants, prideful, compassionless, overly concerned with rule creation (613), vindictive, conspiratorial and ultimately willing to commit murder to save their positions.
As far as we know, Jesus did not have much verbal clashes with the priesthood at Jerusalem (though there is this one time where the Gospels record that He talked with ‘Sadducees’, which could be them or their affiliates). Of course, actions speak louder than words, and the one action Our Lord did in the Temple - under priestly, and thus (mainly) Sadducee control - at Jerusalem is to drive out the moneychangers and vendors! Which, as we all know, may have factored in Jesus’ eventual demise.Did jesus ever condemn the levitical priesthood? I know he seemed to have a go at the the Pharisees.
There were actually daily sacrifices offered twice a day for the Roman emperor’s and his family’s well-being as a sort of compromise, because of course the Jews couldn’t and wouldn’t dare offer sacrifice to him or to any other Roman god, as was the case for other pagan peoples. Its suspension was actually virtually tantamount to an open declaration of revolt against Rome!I also understand that there was a bull sacrificed each day (I’m not sure if it was daily, but it was done regularly) to the Roman Emperor. This had to have been sanctioned by the high priest, even though it would seem to chafe at any devout priest.
Thanks for that. I understand that the Roman emperor was considered a diety, but only after his death… well, at least until Diocletian (or some other idiot emperor late in the 1st or 2nd century).There were actually daily sacrifices offered twice a day for the Roman emperor’s and his family’s well-being as a sort of compromise, because of course the Jews couldn’t and wouldn’t dare offer sacrifice to him or to any other Roman god, as was the case for other pagan peoples. Its suspension was actually virtually tantamount to an open declaration of revolt against Rome!
NoDid jesus ever condemn the levitical priesthood? I know he seemed to have a go at the the Pharisees.
Good question. BTW, we don’t really know whether there were actually three magi: there could easily have been two, four, or even twelve of them!Only 3 foreign magi and 2 Jewish elders either worked their way to or waited to find the Christ child at the Temple. Where were the high priests?
I just came across a rather interesting page on Caiaphas, and it had this section:I hope you are speaking only of the “high priesthood” and not all priests. The high priest would certainly seem to be corrupted, and Annias seemed to be the most corrupt.
I just came across a rather interesting page on Caiaphas, and it had this section:
(1) A corrupt priesthood?
“Of all men mentioned in the crucifixion records, Caiaphas is surely the most despicable. He was that not uncommon phenomenon - a man of low character in a high place. In religion he found, not a conviction, but a career; and so there fell upon him the nemesis of those who traffic in high things, without making to them an adequate spiritual response” (Hastings’ Dictionary). [3]
Hair splitting a preposition in Greek is difficult since the same word can be used for ‘for’ and ‘to’.There were actually daily sacrifices offered twice a day for the Roman emperor’s and his family’s well-being as a sort of compromise, because of course the Jews couldn’t and wouldn’t dare offer sacrifice to him or to any other Roman god, as was the case for other pagan peoples. Its suspension was actually virtually tantamount to an open declaration of revolt against Rome!
I wasn’t talking about Greek there, though.Hair splitting a preposition in Greek is difficult since the same word can be used for ‘for’ and ‘to’.
It is just as difficult in Hebrew.
Again, as my quote shows, whether the popular picture of a ‘corrupt’ high priesthood is actually historically reliable is actually a point of debate, because most surviving sources are either biased or “extremely difficult both to date with any kind of accuracy and to interpret correctly”. While much light has been shed on the Pharisees beyond the rather negative portrayals found in the New Testament, leading to a reevaluation of who they were and a partial rehabilitation, the same has not yet happened for the Sadducees/priests. That doesn’t mean, however, that we can’t assume that there were weeds among the wheat.[/INDENT][/INDENT] Warning - personal opinion here, and nothing more!
Although Caiaphas was certainly corrupt, I think Annas was the one who was the man behind the scenes (Think of George Soros and the Progressive movement of today). Again, he had 3 sons and 1 son-in-law who were chosen by the Romans to be high priest, in addition to his role as high priest.
Oh yes, James the Just (aka Adelphotheos, ‘brother of God’)!BTW, if I recall correctly, wasn’t it his son (or grandson), the high priest Annas, who had James, the Bishop of Jerusalem, martyred. This event so offended the Christian AND JEWISH community, that both appealed to Rome and Annas was removed from his position by the Romans.