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The Transformation of the Synagogue After 70 C.E.: Its Import for Early Christianity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2009
Extract
It is instructive to see the similarities and the differences between the account of the origins of the synagogue in the Jewish Encyclopedia of 1907 and the more extended discussion of the subject in the Encyclopedia Judaica of 1971. In the earlier work, Wilhelm Bacher observes that by the time the synagogue had become the central institution in Judaism, it was already regarded as of ancient origin, dating back to Moses.1 He was of the opinion that the synagogue as a permanent institution originated during the Babylonian captivity,2 and conjectured that the reference in Isa 56. 7 to the temple as a ‘house of prayer’ was to be understood as connected with the term for place of prayer, proseuche, which was used during the exile and among Jews in the diaspora in later centuries. Balcher's theory continues that it was Ezra and his successors who reorganized the religious life of Israel into congregational worship, with special place for prayers and the reading of the scriptures. This development, he proposed, took place in parallel with the revival of the temple cult and led to the building of synagogues. He finds evidence for synagogues in Palestine in the pre-exilic period in Ps 74. 8, although in fact this psalm comes from the Maccabean period or even later.3 Then, astonishingly and without any attempt to explain, he asserts that the complete absence of allusions to synagogue in 1 or 2 Maccabees is the result of the author's primary concern for the purity of the temple ritual.
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References
1 Among the texts cited are Yer. Targ. on Ex 18. 20 and 1 Chron 16. 39; Pesik 129b; Philo, Life of Moses 3. 27; Josephus, Contra Apionem 2.17; Acts 15. 21. The author notes in passing that from this perspective, no period of the history of Israel was conceivable without the synagogue.Google Scholar
2 In the Prolegomenon to his excellent collection of essays, The Synagogue: Studies in Origins, Archaeology and Architecture (New York: KTAV, 1975), Joseph Gutmann notes that ‘the most widely held theory’ [that the synagogue originated in Babylonia during the captivity] was first advocated by the Italian humanist, Carlo Sigonio in the sixteenth century.Google Scholar
3 Bacher also understood the reference to ‘the house appointed for all living’ to be the synagogue, but it obviously is an allusion to the grave, to which all finally go!Google Scholar
4 One inscription is from the reign of Ptolemy Euergetes (246–221); and there is a reference in 3 Maccabees 7. 20 to a synagogue in the reign of his successor, Ptolemy IV (221–204).Google Scholar
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