History
- Evolution of Judaism - Post-Exilic Religion
The most profound spiritual
and cognitive crisis in Hebrew history was the Exile. Defeated by the
Chaldeans under Nebuchadnezzar in 597 BC, the Judaean population was in
part deported to Babylon, mainly the upper classes and craftsmen. In
586, incensed by Judaeans shifting their loyalty, Nebuchadnezzar
returned, lay siege to Jerusalem, and burned it down along with the
Temple. Nothing in the Hebrew world view had prepared them for a tragedy
of this magnitude. The Hebrews had been promised the land of Palestine
by their god; in addition, the covenant between Yahweh and Abraham
promised Yahweh's protection. The destruction of Jerusalem, the Temple,
and the deportation of the Judaeans, shook the Hebrew faith to its
roots.
The literature of the Exile and shortly after betrays the despair and
confusion of the population uprooted from its homeland. In Lamentations
and various Psalms, we get a profound picture of the sufferings of those
left in Judaea, who coped with starvation and massive privation, and the
community of Hebrews wandering Babylon. In Job, a story written a
century or so after the Exile, the central character suffers endless
calamities— when he finally despairs of Yahweh's justice, his only
answer is that Yahweh is not to be questioned.
But Hebrew religion shifted profoundly in the years of Exile. A small
group of religious reformers believed that the calamities suffered by
the Jews were due to the corruption of their religion and ethics. These
religious reformers reoriented Jewish religion around the Mosaic books;
in other words, they believed that the Jews should return to their
foundational religion. While the Mosaic books had been in existence
since the seventh or eighth centuries BC, they began to take final shape
under the guidance of these reformers shortly after the Exile. Above
everything else, the Torah, the five Mosaic books, represented all the
law that Hebrews should follow. These laws, mainly centered around
cultic practices, should remain pure and unsullied if the Jews wished to
return to their homeland and keep it.
So the central character of post-Exilic Jewish religion is reform, an
attempt to return religious and social practice back to its original
character. This reform was accelerated by the return to Judaea itself;
when Cyrus the Persian conquered the Chaldeans in 539, he set about
re-establishing religions in their native lands. This included the
Hebrew religion. Cyrus ordered Jerusalem and the Temple to be rebuilt,
and in 538 BC, he sent the Judaeans home to Jerusalem for the express
purpose of worshipping Yahweh . The reformers, then, occupied a central
place in Jewish thought and life all during the Persian years (539-332
BC).
Beneath the surface, though, foreign elements creeped in to the Hebrew
religion. While the reformers were busy trying to purify the Hebrew
religion, the Persian religion, Zoroastrianism, creeped into it among
the common run of people. Why this happened is anyone's guess, but
Zoroastrianism offered a world view that both explained and mollified
tragedies such as the Exile. It seems that the Hebrews adopted some of
this world view in the face of the profound disasters they had
weathered.
Zoroastrianism, which had been founded in the seventh century BC by a
Persian prophet name Zarathustra (Zoroaster is his Greek name), was a
dualistic, eschatological, and apocalyptic religion. The universe is
divided into two distinct and independent spheres. One, which is light
and good, is ruled by a deity who is the principle of light and good;
the other, dark and evil, is ruled by a deity who is the principle of
dark and evil. The whole of human and cosmic history is an epic struggle
between these two independent deities; at the end of time, a final
battle between these two deities and all those ranged on one side or the
other, would permanently decide the outcome of this struggle. The good
deity, Ahura-Mazda, would win this final, apocalyptic battle, and all
the gods and humans on the side of good would enjoy eternal bliss.
Absolutely none of these elements were present in Hebrew religion before
the Exile. The world is governed solely by Yahweh; evil in the world is
solely the product of human actions—there is no "principle of evil"
among the Hebrews before the Exile. The afterlife is simply a House of
Dust called Sheol in which the soul lasts for only a brief time. There
is no talk or conception of an end of time or history, or of a world
beyond this one. After the Exile, however, popular religion among the
Judaeans and the Jews of the Diaspora include several innovations:
Dualism
After the Exile, the Hebrews invent a concept of a more or less
dualistic universe, in which all good and right comes from Yahweh, while
all evil arises from a powerful principle of evil. Such a dualistic view
of the universe helps to explain tragedies such as the Exile.
Eschatology and Apocalypticism
Popular Jewish religion begins to form an elaborate theology of the end
of time, in which a deliverer would defeat once and for all the forces
of evil and unrighteousness.
Messianism
Concurrent with the new eschatology, there is much talk of a deliverer
who is called "messiah," or "anointed one." In Hebrew culture, only the
head priest and the king were anointed, so this "messiah" often combined
the functions of both religious and military leader.
Otherworldliness
Popular Judaism adopts an elaborate after-life. Since justice does not
seem to occur in this world, it is only logical that it will occur in
another world. The afterlife becomes the place where good is rewarded
and evil eternally punished.
While the reformers resist these innovations, they take hold among a
large part of the Hebrew population. And it is from this root — the
religion of the common person — that a radical form of Yahwism will
grow: the religion of Jesus of Nazareth.
From:
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/HEBREWS/HEBREWS.HTM
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