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The Agricultural Background of the Harvest Logion in Matthew 9.37–8 and Luke (Q) 10.2

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 December 2022

Llewellyn Howes*
Affiliation:
Department of Languages, Cultural Studies and Applied Linguistics, Faculty of Humanities, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Email: llewellynh@uj.ac.za
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Abstract

The saying in Matthew 9.37–8 and Luke (Q) 10.2 reads as follows: ‘He said to his disciples: The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. So ask the Lord of the harvest to dispatch workers into his harvest’. The present study attempts to illuminate this logion by considering its setting in first-century Palestine. The focus here is not on the logion's possible metaphorical application, but on the literal saying, which involves ancient agriculture.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

A while ago, Crossan bemoaned the trend in scholarship that interpreters are often unable to distinguish between the literal and metaphorical sides to the parables of Jesus.Footnote 1 In his view, interpreters should first devote all their attention to the literal or ‘image’ side of a parable and only thereafter consider the metaphorical or ‘meaning’ side of the same parable.Footnote 2 If one wants to hear and understand a parable as it was heard and understood by its first listeners, one has to be intimately familiar with the parable's socio-historical background and narrative world.Footnote 3 The parables of Jesus typically take for granted that the audience is familiar with this background, which is usually unknown to modern interpreters unless they make an effort to become familiar with it.Footnote 4 The same is true for Q.Footnote 5 Although most scholars would not regard the harvest saying in Matthew 9.37–8 and Luke 10.2 to be a parable,Footnote 6 I am yet to come across a scholar who does not regard this logion as intrinsically metaphorical. If this consensus is correct, the same observations as above would apply to this saying as well. The present study focuses exclusively on the literal or ‘image’ part of the harvest logion in Matthew 9.37–8 and Luke 10.2. To my knowledge, there has not been any thoroughgoing investigation of the first-century Palestinian background to the harvesting imagery in Q 10.2. Apart from one or two side comments about harvesting in ancient Palestine or the ancient world generally, the focus is always on the metaphorical or ‘meaning’ side of the logion. The current article attempts to address this lacuna. In order to understand the literal side of this logion, it is crucial to become familiar with its socio-historical background, which involves agriculture in this particular case.Footnote 7 The focus of this study will therefore be on first-century Palestinian agriculture, especially harvesting.

There is widespread agreement that the harvest logion in Matthew 9.37–8 and Luke 10.2 belongs in the Sayings Gospel Q.Footnote 8 The International Q Project provides the following reconstruction and translation of Q 10.2 in their Critical Edition of Q:

[..]λɛγɛ[…] τοῖς μαθηταῖς αὐτοῦ⋅ ὁ μὲν θɛρισμὸς πολύς, οἱ δὲ ἐργάται ὀλίγοι⋅ δɛήθητɛ οὖν τοῦ κυρίου τοῦ θɛρισμοῦ ὅπως ἐκβάλῃ ἐργάτας ɛἰς τὸν θɛρισμὸν αὐτοῦ.

He said to his disciples: The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. So, ask the Lord of the harvest to dispatch workers into his harvest.Footnote 9

Although the focus will be on first-century Palestine, other sources and periods will also be considered. On the one hand, this comparative approach is necessary because we have very little information about harvesting and harvest workers in the ancient world, including Palestine.Footnote 10 On the other hand, this comparative approach is valid not only because agricultural practices and customs tended to change very little over extended periods of time, but also because the same or very similar agricultural practices tended to be diffused over large areas, like the Mediterranean.Footnote 11 Even (quite) modern descriptions of agriculture in the same geographical area as ancient Palestine have value in this regard, since many agricultural practices have changed little since biblical times.Footnote 12 A good example is terracing, which ‘has been practised continuously from its introduction by the Israelites at the beginning of the Iron Age till the present day’.Footnote 13 As long as the known distinctive aspects of first-century Palestinian agriculture are not lost out of sight,Footnote 14 there should be no problem drawing on information outside of these geographic and temporal boundaries to collect information about agricultural practices and customs that they most likely shared in common with other groups and that remained stable over long periods.

2. The Farm of Q 10:2

In a separate publication, I argued that Q 10.2 deals with a hypothetical farm (not an actual farm) as representative of Palestinian agriculture more generally.Footnote 15 Even if Q 10.2 does not use the word ‘farm’, it does reveal quite a bit about this hypothetical farm. The mentioning of a ‘large’ (πολύς) harvest assumes a large farm, probably larger than the typical smallholding.Footnote 16 This is confirmed by the use of an impersonal word like ‘workers’ (ἐργάται) to describe the harvesters. Smallholders typically relied on family and assisted one another when bringing in the harvest, which means that the ‘workers’ would have been one or more of the following: members of the extended family, neighbours, members from the same tribe or clan, friends, fellow villagers, and, on very rare occasions, locally hired workers, typically paid in kind.Footnote 17 Varro makes mention of this: ‘All agriculture is carried on by men — slaves, or freemen, or both; by freemen, when they till the ground themselves, as many poor people do with the help of their families’.Footnote 18 Family was central to Judean-Israelite society, especially the village peasantry.Footnote 19

Tenant farmers would in all likelihood have made more use of hired workers and less use of neighbours, friends, and fellow villagers than smallholders, although members of the extended family would still have done their part.Footnote 20 Some of the workers hired by tenant farmers included fellow smallholders and tenant farmers in the area who survived by hiring themselves out when not tending to their own fields.Footnote 21 Other hired hands were the poor generally, including former smallholders who had lost their lands.Footnote 22 These workers were commonly ‘part of the native population and of its social structure’.Footnote 23 Many of these people lived in caves and other natural shelters outside the village.Footnote 24 The point of all this is to show that smallholders and tenant farmers personally knew most or all of the workers helping them to bring in the harvest. As such, the repeated use of the impersonal word ‘workers’ in Q 10.2, instead of terms like ‘family’, ‘village’, ‘brothers’,Footnote 25 ‘friends’, or ‘neighbours’, and without once identifying these workers as such, suggests a larger operation than a mere smallholding. This is especially true in the context of Q, where the idea of ‘family’, whether biological or symbolic, is front and centre.Footnote 26 In contrast to the use of family and friends on smallholdings, large estates supplemented their workforce during harvest time largely or exclusively with hired workers and day-labourers.Footnote 27 Stegemann and Stegemann explicitly confirm this general portrayal: ‘Wage earners were apparently needed only in larger agricultural units. In the smaller rural household, the division of work was determined by the organization of households’.Footnote 28 Rollens understands the term ἐργάτης in Q 10.2 as denoting day-labourers specifically, including struggling and dispossessed peasants.Footnote 29 If this is correct, it adds further support to our case that the imagined farm should be understood as a large estate.

The most compelling proof, however, comes from the title ‘master of the harvest’ (κύριος τοῦ θɛρισμοῦ), which clearly stands for someone greater than a mere paterfamilias who owned a small plot of land.Footnote 30 This term probably refers to the owner or manager of a large estate.Footnote 31 According to Crook, non-servile farm workers in the Roman world had to obey the orders of either the landowner or the farm manager.Footnote 32 These and other possibilities will be considered in more detail in a forthcoming publication. For our current purposes, it is sufficient to note that the ‘master of the harvest’ is highly unlikely to be a mere smallholder. In addition to being called ‘master’ (κύριος), the hierarchical superiority of the ‘master of the harvest’ in Q 10.2 is indicated both by his ability to ‘send’ (ἐκβάλλω) the workers into his harvest, and by the fact that people have to ‘beseech’ (δέομαι) him to send workers into his harvest. Bazzana and Roth note that the use of ἐκβάλλω is odd here.Footnote 33 On the (presumed) metaphorical level of the saying, a verb like ἀποστέλλω would be more fitting. This oddity is even more noticeable when considering that the rest of the mission discourse features ἀποστέλλω.Footnote 34 On the literal level, the verb μισθόω (‘hire (workers)’) might have been expected.Footnote 35 The verb ἐκβάλλω has a wide range of lexical meanings, most of which are decidedly negative.Footnote 36 These semantic possibilities all revolve around the central and most straightforward meaning of the word, which is to ‘throw out’ or ‘cast out’.Footnote 37 Whatever the reason might be for choosing this verb here, it fits much better with the idea of a social superior commanding his workforce than a smallholder rounding up peers in the village to help with the harvest. Whereas the verb ἐκβάλλω reveals the superior position of the ‘master of the harvest’ towards his workers, the verb δέομαι reveals the inferiority of others towards this individual.

Although δέομαι is typically translated as ‘ask’, it literally means to beg or plead for something.Footnote 38 Whoever is tasked in this logion with approaching the ‘master of the harvest’, they are not portrayed as making a polite suggestion to a peer, but as speaking in a way more at home with social inferiors addressing a superior. What is more, the notion that the ‘master of the harvest’ needs to be reminded to send workers into his harvest certainly does not point to a smallholder, who was dependent on the harvest for survival and would have watched his field like a hawk.Footnote 39 Instead, such inattentive indifference points to an absent landowner or a lazy estate manager, both of whom, incidentally, appear in Q 12.42–6.Footnote 40 Finally, although one should be careful not to read too much into the singular grammar of the noun ‘harvest’ (θɛρισμός), it does seem to assume a context of monocropping typical of large estates, over against the polycropping of traditional smallholdings in ancient Palestine.Footnote 41 All these factors point in the direction of the hypothetical farm being a large estate, perhaps with a sizable workforce, even if insufficient during harvest time, as was generally the case.Footnote 42

This goes against the assumption by some scholars that Q 10.2 alludes to a peasant's smallholding. One example is Bazzana, who answers the verisimilitude question in the affirmative, but does so while assuming that the farm is a smallholding and the workers are peasants:

The short saying [in Q 10.2] envisages a situation that would have been quite common in the Land of Israel as well as in Egypt and other Mediterranean regions in antiquity. Come harvest time, the crop is plentiful and the peasants working on it need help immediately and for the short time during which it is possible to collect the product in order to avoid the risk of ruining the entire fruit of their labor.Footnote 43

Against this view, and in line with the argument outlined above, Horsley states: ‘The model on which this harvest [of Q 10.2 and 2 Cor 11.13] is conceived is a large estate of a “master/lord” who hires and sends out laborers, as portrayed in the parable of the laborers in the vineyard (Matt. 20.1–16).’Footnote 44 To be fair, Bazzana does consider the possibility that Q 10.2 might also have in mind ‘farmers managing the fields of a landowner’ – a phrase that could denote either tenant farmers or estate managers.Footnote 45 Bazzana then goes on to remark: ‘It is commonly observed by commentators that Q 10.2 presupposes the second option [i.e. “farmers managing the fields of a landowner”].’Footnote 46 At any rate, it is accepted here, based on the evidence presented, that Q 10.2 has a large estate in mind.

3. Estates and Labourers in Ancient Palestine

Although Palestinian estates were not nearly as large as the latifundia of Rome,Footnote 47 there were certainly large estates in first-century Palestine.Footnote 48 Papyrological evidence from Roman Egypt shows that large estates were a feature of the Roman provinces during this period.Footnote 49 A few of these papyri actually make mention of the large estates in Palestine, including Galilee, from as early as the third century bce.Footnote 50 For example, Glaukias, who managed Apollonios’ estates in Palestine, writes the following in 257 bce to Apollonios: ‘But when I arrived at Baitanota [that is, Beth Anath in Galilee], I took Melas with…’.Footnote 51 These papyri are correct to trace the existence of large estates back to earlier periods, although the number of large estates increased dramatically during the Roman period. King David certainly had a number of large farms with estate managers, all of whom were mentioned by name.Footnote 52 Back to the first century, Josephus recounts that he himself owned large estates in Judea and the coastal plain, and that the same was true for many others, including Ptolemy, a friend of Herod, in Samaria; Costobar, a governor of Herod, in Idumaea; Crispus, an eparch of Agrippa, in the Transjordan; and Philip, a lieutenant of Agrippa, near Gamla.Footnote 53 Although Philo trivialises the institution of slavery by subordinating it to Stoic paradigms, he does recount that some wealthy Jewish landowners utilised both Jewish and gentile slaves on their farming estates.Footnote 54 In addition, the existence of large farming estates in Palestine is both assumed and described by the canonical Gospels.Footnote 55 Although archaeological evidence seems to suggest that large estates were not a feature of the area between Nazareth and the tip of the Galilean Sea, literary evidence supports archaeology in showing that large farming estates did exist on the great plain directly south of Nazareth.Footnote 56 At the end of the day, Fiensy has argued persuasively and decisively that large farming estates did exist in Palestine during the Herodian period.Footnote 57 In addition to large estates, some wealthy landholders owned multiple smaller plots scattered throughout the region.Footnote 58 As such, the size of a smallholding is not necessarily an indication of the affluence or poverty of its owner, with many smallholdings belonging to larger conglomerates farmed by tenants or supervised by managers.Footnote 59

For a variety of reasons, including chiefly military and political success, there were far more slaves on Roman farms than on the farms of the Roman provinces and other nations of the first century.Footnote 60 Even in Rome, slaves were not used as much for agricultural labour during the first century as in earlier times.Footnote 61 During all periods, slaves represented a minority of the agricultural workforce in Italy as a whole, while non-servile peasants and labourers represented the majority.Footnote 62 This was true to a much greater extent in the Roman provinces.Footnote 63 Unlike Roman Italy, mass slavery was simply not a feature of Roman Palestine, especially the countryside.Footnote 64 Although there were undoubtedly a few large estates in Palestine run entirely by slaves,Footnote 65 it was much more common for these Palestinian estates to be worked by resident (contract) labourers, headed by a tenant farmer or estate manager, who hired additional workers during laborious periods.Footnote 66 When it came to farming in the Roman provinces generally, it was commonplace to make use of indigenous non-servile labour rather than slave labour.Footnote 67 Even in Italy, landowners were sometimes forced to hire contract labourers when slaves were unavailable.Footnote 68 If a farm did have slaves, wage earners would work alongside these slaves, and sometimes even under the supervision of a servile manager or foreman.Footnote 69 Generally speaking, non-servile workers could hire themselves out for different durations of service, from the day-labourer who typically worked for one day and had to find new work each morning, to the wage earners who signed contracts with their employers for lengthy periods, to the political administrators who earned annual salaries.Footnote 70 Many ancient examples of lengthy contracts exist, like the one between non-servile labourer, Memmius Asclepi, and his temporary employer, Aurelius Adiutor, to work in the goldmines of Transylvania for six months in exchange for 70 denarii plus accommodation.Footnote 71 Bazzana rightly notes that when it comes to Egyptian documentary papyri, ‘we possess several contracts, in which laborers […] set down the amount of work they are going to perform and the payment they are going to receive in exchange’.Footnote 72 Here is a fragment of one such contract dating from the first-to-second century ce:

[… …] the 4 reapers to [T… /… and] to Metokos, both sons of Eudemos. Greetings! We a[gree…] (to reap) the wheat fields seeded in (the district of) Pa[… / …] the arourai on the kleros of Ptolemaios [of those arourai where the crops] have grown ripe, in the [year … x … of Our] Lord Caesar.

The pay of two-thirds of an artaba [… the reaping? For ea]ch aroura of wheat, making two-thirds of an artaba […] per aroura of grain reaped. When we finish there we will receive from you sixteen [silver] dragmai making a total of 16 silver dragmai.Footnote 73

All non-servile workers who hired out their labour, including struggling peasants, dispossessed peasants, tenant farmers, and the poor in general, were collectively known in the Roman world as mercennarii.Footnote 74 In De re rustica 1.17.2, Varro distinguishes between three categories of non-servile agricultural workers, namely smallholders, hired labourers (mercennarii), and debt-labourers (obaeratii).Footnote 75 An important sub-category under hired labourers (mercennarii) is of course day-labourers (laboriosi, operarii, operae).Footnote 76 The Greeks referred to a non-servile (agricultural) worker as πένης (‘one who works for his living, day-labourer, poor man’); μισθουργός (‘hired workman’); μισθωτός (‘hireling, hired servant’); μίσθιος (‘hired labourer, servant, mercenary’); ἔριθος (‘day-labourer, hired servant, mower, reaper’); θής (‘serf, bondsman, hired labourer’); σύργαστρος (‘day-labourer’); or χɛρνητικός (‘day-labourer, the proletariat’).Footnote 77 The Hebrew word for a day-labourer or hired worker was שׂכיר.Footnote 78 Such a worker could also be hired for periods longer than a day, and was known as a שׂכיר שׁנה when hired for a full year.Footnote 79 It was not uncommon in ancient Palestine for workers to hire themselves out for a three-year period.Footnote 80 Even so, it seems that in ancient Palestine hired agricultural workers consisted mostly of day-labourers.Footnote 81 Another Hebrew word for an agricultural labourer was אכר, usually translated as ‘ploughman’ or ‘husbandman’.Footnote 82 The exact position and status of the latter group of workers is uncertain, but they seem to have worked both for others and in a semi-feudal capacity for their employers.Footnote 83

The services of dispossessed peasants, obaeratii, day-labourers, and other ‘freelancing’ workers were typically required on large estates during laborious periods, especially at harvest time.Footnote 84 Hiring non-servile workers for harvesting work, especially reaping, was common practice and an accepted fact throughout the Roman Empire, including first-century Palestine.Footnote 85 In the fourth century, Greco-Roman authors typically presume that reapers were non-servile workers. Discussing the Roman world in general, Garnsey writes: ‘freeholders, tenant-farmers, and the landless poor of the rural and urban centres all made major contributions of [agricultural] labour, and in all cases on a temporary basis’.Footnote 86 The distinction between these different categories was fluid.Footnote 87 Again, it is worth quoting Garnsey: ‘It can be agreed that tenant-farmers, freedmen employees and hired labourers were heterogeneous groups who occupy no fixed point on the continuum […] the several categories which make up the free [i.e. non-servile] rural labour force were separated by fluid boundaries which were frequently crossed.’Footnote 88 In this regard, it is noteworthy that the Latin word colonus can mean either ‘farmer’ or ‘tenant’.Footnote 89 One can imagine, for example, the same individual acting as a tenant on his appropriated plot, helping a neighbouring peasant reap his harvest, and occasionally working as a day-labourer on a large estate.

4. Harvests in Ancient Palestine

The emphasis in Q 10.2 is on the harvest, given that the word ‘harvest’ (θɛρισμός) is repeated no less than three times in this short saying.Footnote 90 All three occurrences of θɛρισμός in Q 10.2 can reference either the crop being harvested or the process of harvesting that crop.Footnote 91 It is further possible to understand the logion as intending both meanings simultaneously. Let us first consider the crop being harvested, before turning to the process of harvesting. Most commonly, θɛρισμός refers to the harvesting of grain, that is, the seeds of wheat and other cereals.Footnote 92 However, it can also refer to any crop being harvested, including fruit.Footnote 93 Deuteronomy 8.8 describes Canaan, which corresponds geographically to later Palestine, as ‘a land of wheat and barley, of vines and fig trees and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and honey’.Footnote 94 Wheat and barley, to which one may add millet, are mentioned first because cereals were the primary field crops in Palestine.Footnote 95 Out of these, wheat constituted the staple food, while barley was known as the food of animals and the poor.Footnote 96 In Galilee, adequate rainfall made barley unnecessary, which is why they mainly cultivated wheat.Footnote 97

Some of the species of wheat favoured in Palestine included triticum monococcum (einkorn), triticum dicoccum (emmer or kussemet), triticum durum (hard wheat), and triticum aestivum (bread wheat).Footnote 98 These cereals were used to bake bread, cook porridge or gruel, and make beer.Footnote 99 Grain was the most common produce to be stored in peasant houses, as well as the large storehouses of the political and socio-economic elite.Footnote 100 In addition to eating grain raw or parched, the grain could be ground using either a mortar and pestle to produce a pulp that was used for various dishes, or grinding stones to produce flour for baking bread.Footnote 101 Grinding grain to produce flour was a daily activity commonly performed by women and slaves.Footnote 102

Olives and grapes share the second position when it comes to the popularity of produce in ancient Palestine.Footnote 103 Grain, wine, and oil are commonly associated in the Hebrew Scriptures, probably because they were the most popular produce.Footnote 104 Olive trees were cultivated in olive groves, mainly for oil, and grapevines were grown in vineyards, mainly for wine.Footnote 105 Grapes and olives were usually cultivated on mountains and hills, which meant that arable land remained available for the cultivation of cereals.Footnote 106 The hilly terrain of Palestine necessitated agricultural innovation. The valleys might have been suitable for field crops, but the hills were less than ideal.Footnote 107 The slopes of these hills were put to effective use by constructing terraces with levelled ground (or strips that elevate gradually) and planting fruit trees on these artificial plots, including olives and grapes.Footnote 108 Some grapevines were planted in mixed orchards with other trees, although vineyards were much more common.Footnote 109 Olive oil had multiple uses, including culinary, medicinal, cosmetic, fuelling lamps, anointing kings, and offering libation.Footnote 110 Wine was the most common beverage in Palestine, sometimes even outperforming water, which was often contaminated.Footnote 111 Together with cereals, wine and olive oil were produced in bulk by wealthier and elite landowners, exported, and sold to foreigners.Footnote 112 In addition to making wine, grapes could be eaten as they were, pressed to make grape juice, used to make vinegar, and dried to make raisins.Footnote 113 In modern Palestine, wealthier peasant families tend to also prepare grape molasses, jam, and marmalade for the winter.Footnote 114 Olives were initially only used to make oil, but started being eaten raw when pickling or salting was introduced during the Greco-Roman period.Footnote 115

Other fruit trees were often combined in the same terrace or in an orchard near the house and included trees of pomegranate, apple, fig, sycamore, apricot, carob, date, blackberry and black mulberry.Footnote 116 Apart from being eaten or squeezed for juice, these fruits were also used to make dried fruit (which was sometimes pressed into cakes), marmalade-like products, honey-like syrup, and even alcoholic drinks.Footnote 117 Quite often, the groves of fruit trees also included nut trees, like pistachio, walnut, pine nut, and almond.Footnote 118 A very popular category of field crops was legumes, which included fenugreek, lentils, peas, fava beans, broad beans, chickpeas, bitter vetch, and grass-peas.Footnote 119 Besides legumes, other vegetables were also grown, often in the same groves as the fruit trees or in vegetable gardens near the house, including melons, carrots, gourds, cucumbers, garlic, musk, onions, and leeks.Footnote 120 Other agricultural produce included sesame and flax seeds, as well as spices like cumin, coriander, and dill.Footnote 121 This general picture is confirmed by the account of Sinuhe, an Egyptian official who settled in Yaa (probably Canaan) around 2000–1900 bce: ‘Figs were in it, and grapes. It had more wine than water. Plentiful was its honey, abundant its olives. Every (kind of) fruit was on its trees. Barley was there, and emmer [a species of wheat]’.Footnote 122 For the most part, the need for additional help during harvest time applied only to olives, grapes, and cereals, especially wheat. Given that θɛρισμός most commonly refers to the harvesting of grain (see above), it is likely that a cereal harvest would have been foremost in the minds of those listening to Q 10.2. However, the capacity of θɛρισμός to reference the harvesting of any produce (see above) means that a few of these listeners might also have called to mind grape and olive harvests.

The Israelite-Judean people longed for a time when agricultural produce would be harvested throughout the year, so that ‘the plowman shall overtake the reaper and the treader of grapes him who sows the seed’.Footnote 123 In reality, however, there were months when nothing was harvested, due mainly to the rainfall patterns.Footnote 124 According to King and Stager, ‘Palestine has only two seasons – the dry season in summer, from May-June through September, when there is usually no rain; and the wet season from mid-October through March, with most of Palestine's rainfall occurring between November and February’.Footnote 125 Since rainfall increased moving north, Galilee received much more rain than Judea, with Upper Galilee receiving the most rain.Footnote 126

Within the wet season, different types of rain predictably fell during certain times of the year, which determined the agricultural calendar.Footnote 127 As a result, different types of produce were harvested at different times, as the Gezer Calendar, discovered in Judea and dating to the time of Solomon, indicates:

  1. 1 two months of ingathering (olives)/ two months

  2. 2 of sowing (cereals)/ two months of late sowing (legumes and vegetables)

  3. 3 a month of hoeing weeds (for hay)

  4. 4 a month of harvesting barley

  5. 5 a month of harvesting (wheat) and measuring (grain)

  6. 6 two months of grape harvesting

  7. 7 a month of ingathering summer fruitFootnote 128

The months listed here add up to twelve, constituting a full calendar year.Footnote 129 According to this calendar, seven months of the year were spent harvesting and gathering produce, including two months for olives, one month for barley, one month for wheat, two months for grapes, and one month for fruit. With the help of other sources, including Israel's feast calendar celebrating specific harvests, these periods can be determined more precisely as follows: spring equinox to late April harvesting barley; late April to late May harvesting wheat; June and July harvesting grapes; late July to late August collecting summer fruit; and late August to late October gathering in olives.Footnote 130 Within these window periods, the same crops might ripen at different times on separate farms, depending on the weather and when they were planted.Footnote 131 Differences in climate throughout ancient Palestine also accounted for regional variations to the agricultural calendar.Footnote 132 Since different produce ripens in different months of the year, and the same produce often ripens at different times in different regions and on separate farms during those months, non-servile farm workers could potentially find work and food throughout the seven-month harvesting season.Footnote 133 In the Roman world generally, workers could earn enough during the harvesting season to survive during the off season.Footnote 134 They could also make ends meet during the off season by performing other tasks, like weeding and hoeing, especially on vineyards, which required a lot of additional labour at certain times during the off season.Footnote 135 Despite these opportunities, the precariousness of being a hired agricultural labourer was amplified by the seasonality and availability of work.Footnote 136 It was customary at the time to calculate the size of the return in relation to the amount of seed that had been sown in the first place.Footnote 137 For example, Columella hardly recalls any harvest greater than a fourfold yield in most of Italy.Footnote 138 According to Oakman, first-century Palestine on average produced a fivefold yield, compared to modern yields of thirty to fortyfold.Footnote 139 Biblical returns of thirtyfold, sixtyfold, and a hundredfold are probably exaggerations.Footnote 140

5. Harvesting Work in Ancient Palestine

Let us turn now to the process of harvesting, that is, the actual work of securing the harvest. This harvesting process involved several different activities. In the case of cereals, for example, these activities included reaping, binding, collecting, transporting, threshing, and winnowing.Footnote 141 In the case of grapes and olives, threshing and winnowing would be replaced by other activities, including primarily pressing.Footnote 142 In economic terms, agricultural tasks can be broadly divided into front-end activities, like ploughing and reaping, and back-end activities, like binding, transporting, pressing, threshing, and winnowing.Footnote 143 Out of these activities, the word θɛρισμός denotes reaping in particular, which sometimes included gathering the wheat in bundles as well.Footnote 144 Reaping activities were further categorised based on whether the stalks were cut near the top, just below the heads of grain, or near the bottom, just above the ground, and whether there were one or two rounds of cutting.Footnote 145 A second round of cutting was sometimes necessary to collect the stalks, which were often used as fodder. With high cutting, the grain heads were often carried away in baskets, and the stalks that were left over in the field had to be cut during a second round, which was not at all urgent and earned much less wages.Footnote 146 With low cutting, the grain heads could be separated from the stalks in the field during a second round of cutting, but it was much more common to transport whole sheaves to the threshing floor, sometimes using pack animals like donkeys, mules, and camels.Footnote 147 Low cutting was probably more popular in ancient Palestine.Footnote 148 Small fields could be harvested without any tools by simply uprooting the whole plant, but more commonly a sickle was used.Footnote 149 Depending on the skill of the worker and the conditions of the field, one reaper could reap between one-third and three-quarters of a Roman iugerum per day, with one iugerum being roughly equivalent to a quarter hectare.Footnote 150 Timing was very important when it came to harvesting. On the one hand, waiting too long could lead to loss, either due to birds and animals eating the crops, or due to the produce spoiling or falling from the stalks or trees.Footnote 151 On the other hand, harvesting could happen prematurely when the produce was not ripe yet, which likewise resulted in significant losses.Footnote 152 Inclement weather was also a constant threat, leading some agronomists to advise reaping earlier rather than later, allowing some ripening to happen after the harvest.Footnote 153

Reaping was extremely hard physical labour.Footnote 154 For hours on end, the reaper had to swing hard with a hand-held sickle to cut the stalks, which required being constantly bent over with an arched back.Footnote 155 The replacement of the sickle with the scythe in later periods meant that physical strength was a requirement for reaping.Footnote 156 Even if men were almost exclusively responsible for reaping in antiquity, there is evidence that at least some women in the Mediterranean and elsewhere also partook in this backbreaking work.Footnote 157 More typically, however, women would focus their attention on the back-end of the harvesting process.Footnote 158 In addition, women were typically involved in ‘service’ activities like cooking and weaving, meaning that they were effectively employed as support staff for labourers, who needed to be housed, fed, and clothed.Footnote 159 If measured by modern and ancient servile practices, peasant children started helping out with farming activities at a young age.Footnote 160 The physical toll of the labour was not made any easier by the horrid conditions, especially the heat of the sun and the hindrance of insects, like the swarms of gnats in Palestine, as well as flies, mosquitoes, and wasps.Footnote 161 Even in modern Palestine, sunstroke is not uncommon among villagers.Footnote 162 Roman mosaics, frescoes, and coins typically depict harvest workers with wide-brimmed hats and traditional headgear as protection against the sun, and a mosaic of a harvester wearing a hat was discovered at a synagogue in Sepphoris, Galilee.Footnote 163

For the most part, estate owners and managers treated non-servile workers and day-labourers far worse than slaves, regarding their position as inferior to that of slaves.Footnote 164 Hired workers tended to get the heavy and unhealthy work, since slaves were more valuable as the landowner's acquired property.Footnote 165 Varro writes: ‘With regard to these [referring to obaerarii] in general this is my opinion: it is more profitable to work unwholesome lands with hired hands than with slaves; and even in wholesome places it is more profitable thus to carry out the heavier farm operations, such as storing the products of the vintage or harvest.’Footnote 166 On the upside, Roman agronomists emphasise the importance of providing adequate food, clothing, and accommodation to slaves in order to keep them content and thereby maximise productivity.Footnote 167 Yet hired workers were easily let go when circumstances like bad weather interfered with harvesting.Footnote 168 The day-labourer would customarily not get any payment if the work for that day was cancelled.Footnote 169 In fact, there is evidence that hired workers would at times simply get paid less than the agreed wage or not get paid at all after completing their work.Footnote 170 Such practices made regulations like the one in Deuteronomy 24.14–15 necessary: ‘Do not take advantage of a hired worker who is poor and needy, whether that worker is a fellow Israelite or a foreigner residing in one of your towns. Pay them their wages each day before sunset, because they are poor and are counting on it’.Footnote 171 The need for this directive indicates that hired workers were exploited, even in earlier times, but probably much more so in the first century ce. The same is indicated by a number of Egyptian papyri, like the letter written around 250 bce to Zenon, manager of Apollonios’ large estates, by a vinedresser named Menon: ‘Three dr(agmas) are still owed me for the [month] of Hathyr as wages. Therefore, please give orders that [the wages] be paid to me. For you know that I do not, as others do, have [other income] – neither a vegetable garden nor anything else, but rely solely on my wages’.Footnote 172 Shaw comments as follows about harvesting work in the ancient world as a whole: ‘The erratic nature of the labour demands created uncertainties about employment, wages, and work conditions that led to serious contentions between employers and those seeking employment’.Footnote 173 What Garnsey refers to as ‘the seasonality and irregularity of agricultural work’ must have been the cause of some anxiety for these labourers, who would have received at least some comfort from the message of Jesus in Q 12.22–31.Footnote 174

On large estates, the manager and resident staff would often live on the property itself, which meant that the house and barracks were usually very close to the field.Footnote 175 First-century Roman agronomist, Columella, who farmed with olives, grapes, and grain, resided in a comfortable home apart from the farmhouse that held his slaves, together with facilities like a threshing floor, press rooms, stalls, pens, a mill, and bakery ovens.Footnote 176 Such a farmhouse had more than enough space to house a sizable group of day-labourers during harvest. Columella further recommended building a sizable kitchen with a high ceiling and enough natural light so that the slave household could rest and sleep there.Footnote 177 Archaeological excavations in western Samaria have uncovered farmsteads that clearly separate the owner or manager's dwelling from accommodation for labourers.Footnote 178 There is also some evidence of towers standing in the fields of ancient Palestine, where entire families could live and work during harvest time.Footnote 179 These towers were particularly popular in vineyards and were used to store farming equipment, but also functioned as housing for workers during the harvest season, when they were expected to guard the harvest against pilfering.Footnote 180 Sometimes, non-servile, non-resident workers were also allowed to stay on the premises for the duration of the harvest, especially on large estates.Footnote 181 For workers who were homeless, this would have been a very welcome supplementary benefit.Footnote 182 Agricultural workers who entered into longer contracts were customarily provided with lodging.Footnote 183 These individuals were sometimes left to do as they pleased on the farm and only paid at the end of these contracts.Footnote 184

Whether provided with shelter or not, workers were expected to keep the same hours that a traditional peasant would, meaning that they had to be at the field at daybreak and could only leave at twilight.Footnote 185 It was common, especially at harvest time, for hired workers to be provided with lunch (or brunch) during the day, sometimes followed by a brief siesta.Footnote 186 Lunch could be eaten at the associated dwelling or in the relevant field, under the shade of a tree if one was available, and would typically include foodstuff like bread, pulse, yoghurt, grain, cheese, (dried) fruit, vegetables, and water.Footnote 187 Food and water were often specified as an expectation to be provided by the estate manager or landowner in harvesting contracts, together with beer or wine on the last day of work.Footnote 188 Consider, for example, this excerpt from a contract that was discovered at Hermopolis, Egypt, and dates to 125 ce:

54 arourai, 6 arourai to each. As the wages for reaping, you will give to [each of] us 5/6ths of an artaba [i.e., about 3.75 modii] of wheat for each aroura [i.e., about a iugerum]; and after the harvest you will measure out the above-mentioned wage for the above-mentioned aroura, on the condition that you, Eudaimon [i.e., the landowner], are responsible for gathering the sheaves of wheat. You will also supply us with drinking water until we finish the reaping of the said arourai of land. […] The above-mentioned wheat you will pay to us according to the Athenian sixth-part measure, and in addition you will give us a keramion of beer on the last day.Footnote 189

This corresponds to the portrayal in Ruth 2.8–9, 14, where workers have ready access to food and water:

Then Boaz said to Ruth, ‘Now, listen, my daughter, do not go to glean in another field or leave this one, but keep close to my young women. Let your eyes be on the field that they are reaping, and go after them. Have I not charged the young men not to touch you? And when you are thirsty, go to the vessels and drink what the young men have drawn. […] And at mealtime Boaz said to her, ‘Come here and eat some bread and dip your morsel in the wine.’ So she sat beside the reapers, and he passed to her roasted grain. And she ate until she was satisfied, and she had some left over.Footnote 190

Workers were also typically allowed to eat from the produce being harvested.Footnote 191 Consider, for example, this ruling from the Mishnah: ‘One who brought his workers into the field, when he is not obligated to provide for them, they may eat and be exempt from tithes. If, however, he is obligated to provide for them they may eat of the figs one at a time, but not from the basket, nor from the large basket, nor from the storage yard’.Footnote 192 On the other hand, harvesting contracts from Roman Egypt commonly specified that workers were not allowed to steal from the produce, and that thievery would result in deductions from their final payment.Footnote 193 If they were not allowed to eat from the crops, the estate manager or landowner was expected in these contracts to provide food.Footnote 194 In fact, it was a ubiquitous expectation during different periods and regions that the estate manager, tenant farmer, or landowner would provide food, drink, and temporary shelter to hired harvesters.Footnote 195 Contracted harvesters could be paid in kind or in cash.Footnote 196 Shaw writes: ‘A harvester's entire reimbursement was usually a per diem payment that was an amalgam of money, payments in kind of the produce itself, and living arrangements during the harvest that included shelter, food, and drink.’Footnote 197 Harvesting contracts from Roman Egypt show that labourers received between one-and-a-half and three times more money or crops for reaping than they did for other agricultural work.Footnote 198 In Syria-Palestine, day-labourers could earn up to four times the typical daily fee of one denarius for reaping and harvesting work, especially during periods when such labour was in high demand due to shortages of available temporary farm workers.Footnote 199 It is likely, however, that day-labourers received less payment than contract workers.Footnote 200 It was much more common for estate managers or other responsible parties (like procuratores or actores) to enter into these contracts with seasonal workers than for landowners to do so.Footnote 201

Slaves and other resident workers were typically provided with clothing and shoes in addition to food.Footnote 202 Some wage earners were also lucky enough to receive clothing and shoes, especially on large estates.Footnote 203 Cato the Elder, for example, writes: ‘Clothing allowance for the [farm]hands: A tunic 3½ feet long and a blanket every other year. When you issue the tunic or the blanket, first take up the old one and have patchwork made of it. A stout pair of wooden shoes should be issued every other year’.Footnote 204

6. Findings

The aim of this study was to illuminate the literal or ‘image’ side of Q 10.2 by considering its setting in first-century Palestine. After arguing that the imagined farm of Q 10.2 is a large agricultural estate, it was determined that such estates were a prominent feature of first-century Palestine. It was common to use non-servile labourers on these estates during harvest time, especially for reaping. These wage earners consisted mainly of struggling peasants, dispossessed peasants, tenant farmers, and the poor in general. Although Q 10.2 primarily calls the grain harvest to mind, it does not prevent the audience from imagining a grape or olive harvest. Since different produce ripened in different months of the year in ancient Palestine, and the same produce often ripened at different times in different regions, non-servile farm workers could potentially find harvesting work and food throughout Palestine's seven-month harvesting season. Yet harvesting work was essentially seasonal, irregular, and unpredictable. From among the different harvesting activities in antiquity, Q 10.2 is about reaping. Reaping was extremely hard physical labour that lasted from sunrise to sunset under very unpleasant conditions. What is more, these workers were often treated worse than slaves and were vulnerable to exploitation by owners and managers. On the upside, the non-servile farmhands of large estates were typically provided with food, drink, shelter, and sometimes even clothing and shoes. These benefits were in addition to their wages, which could be paid in cash or in kind, or a combination of both. The wages for reaping were typically much higher than the usual fee for other occasional work performed by wage earners.

Competing interests

The author declares none.

References

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2 Cf. Hunter, A. M., The Parables Then and Now (London: SCM, 1971) 11–12Google Scholar; Ukpong, J., ‘The Parable of the Talents (Matt 25.14–30): Commendation or Critique of Exploitation? A Social-Historical and Theological Reading’, Neotestamentica 46/1 (2012) 190207, at 190–91Google Scholar, 195.

3 Via, D. O., The Parables: Their Literary and Existential Dimension (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1967) 91Google Scholar; See E. van Eck, ‘Die gelykenisse van Jesus: Allegorieë of simbole van sosiale transformasie?’, HTS Theological Studies (2015) 71/3, 10 pages: http://www.hts.org.za/index.php/HTS/article/view/3030/pdf_1.

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8 E.g. R. Bultmann, The History of the Synoptic Tradition (trans. John Marsh; New York: Harper & Row, 2nd ed. 1968) 145, 325; W. D. Davies and D. C. Allison, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel according to Saint Matthew, Volume II: Commentary on Matthew VIII–XVIII (ICC; London: T&T Clark, 1991) 143–4, 148; Luz, U., Matthew 8–20: A Commentary (Hermeneia; Minneapolis: Fortress, 2001) 61–2, 64Google Scholar; Fleddermann, H. T., Q: A Reconstruction and Commentary (Biblical Tools and Studies 1; Leuven: Peeters, 2005) 403, 404Google Scholar; Robinson, J. M., Jesus: According to the Earliest Witness (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2007) 21Google Scholar; G. B. Bazzana, Kingdom of Bureaucracy: The Political Theology of Village Scribes in the Sayings Gospel Q (BETL 274; Leuven: Peeters, 2015) 86; Roth, The Parables in Q, 274.

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12 Grant, E., The People of Palestine: An Enlarged Edition of ‘The Peasantry of Palestine, Life, Manners and Customs of the Village’ (Philadelphia/London: J. B. Lippincott, 1921), 45Google Scholar; Borowski, Agriculture, xxi.

13 Borowski, Agriculture, 17.

14 P. A. Brunt, ‘Labour’, The Roman World, Volume II (ed. John Wacher; London: Routledge, 1990) 701–16, at 708–9.

15 See L. Howes, ‘“The Harvest Is Plentiful but the Workers Few”: Reflecting on the Verisimilitude of Q 10.2’, HTS Theological Studies (forthcoming).

16 R. A. Horsley (with J. A. Draper), Whoever Hears You Hears Me: Prophets, Performance, and Tradition in Q (Harrisburg: Trinity, 1999) 243.

17 Aberbach, M., Labor, Crafts and Commerce in Ancient Israel (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, 1994) 4Google Scholar; E. W. Stegemann and W. Stegemann, The Jesus Movement: A Social History of Its First Century (transl. O. C. Dean; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1999) 28–9; R. Boer and C. Petterson, Time of Troubles: A New Economic Framework for Early Christianity (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2017) 67, 71; Brunt, ‘Labour’, 707; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 18, 20, 81; Bazzana, Kingdom, 86; cf. Varro, Rust. 1.17.2.

19 See K. C. Hanson and D. E. Oakman, Palestine in the Time of Jesus: Social Structures and Social Conflicts. (2nd ed.; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1998) 5, 21; D. E. Oakman, Jesus and the Peasants (Matrix: The Bible in Mediterranean Context 4; Eugene: Cascade Books, 2008) 248–9; Dever, W. G., The Lives of Ordinary People in Ancient Israel: Where Archaeology and the Bible Intersect (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012) 186–7Google Scholar, 203–5.

20 Cf. Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 8; Bazzana, Kingdom, 86; cf. P.Giss.Bibl. 1.5, lines 9–10.

21 See P. Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour in the Roman World’, Non-Slave Labour in the Greco-Roman World (ed. P. Garnsey; Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society, 1980) 34–47, at 37–9.

22 See Borowski, O., Daily Life in Biblical Times (ABS 5; Atlanta: SBL, 2003) 114–15Google Scholar.

23 Burford, A., Land and Labor in the Greek World (Ancient Society and History; Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1993) 186Google Scholar.

24 Borowski, Daily Life, 115.

25 Q often uses non-inclusive patriarchal language by referencing ‘brothers’ and ‘sons’ without ‘sisters’ and ‘daughters’ when discussing both biological families and the symbolic family of God that the Q people represents: e.g. A.-J. Levine, ‘Women in the Q Communit(ies) and Traditions’, Women and Christian Origins (ed. R. S. Kraemer and M. R. D'Angelo; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999) 150–70, at 156; cf. Q 6.35, 41–2; 10.6; 11.19, 48; 17.3–4. At the same time, Q often features female characters as well as male-female gender pairs: e.g. Batten, A. J., ‘More Queries for Q: Women and Christian Origins’, BTB 24 (1994) 44–51Google Scholar, at 47–9; cf. Q 7.35; 11.31–2; 12.53; 13.18–21, 34; 14.26; 16.18; 15.4–5, 7, [8–10]; 17.27, 34–5. The latter should not be overemphasised, since Q both recognises (positively) and reinforces (negatively) traditional gender roles: Levine, ‘Women’, 156, 162–4.

26 See esp. A. D. Jacobson, ‘Divided Families and Christian Origins’, The Gospel behind the Gospels: Current Studies on Q (ed. R. A. Piper; NovTSup 75; Leiden: Brill, 1995) 361–380; H. Moxnes, Putting Jesus in His Place: A Radical Vision of Household and Kingdom (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2003) 54–5, 115–21, 152; I. Park, ‘Oral Metonymy in Q: Mothering Images of God from the Daily Lives of Women’, presented at the Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, 2014: 11 pages, at 7–9; L. Howes, ‘“Your Father Knows that You Need All of This”: Divine Fatherhood as Socio-Ethical Impetus in Q's Formative Stratum’, Neotestamentica 50/1 (2016) 9–33; L. Howes, Judging Q and Saving Jesus: Q's Contribution to the Wisdom-Apocalypticism Debate in Historical Jesus Studies (Cape Town: AOSIS, 2015) 144–50; cf. Q 3.8; 4.3, 9; 6.35, 41–2; 7.3, 7, 28, 35; 9.59–60; 10.21, 22; 11.2, 11–13, 19, 48; 12.6–7, 30, 42, 53; 13.34; 14.26; 16.18; 17.3–4, 27, 34–5.

27 J. Toutain, The Economic Life of the Ancient World (New York: Barnes & Noble, 1951) 278; P. Garnsey, ‘Introduction’, Non-Slave Labour in the Greco-Roman World (ed. P. Garnsey; Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society, Supplementary Volume 6, 1980) 3; P. Garnsey, Cities, Peasants and Food in Classical Antiquity: Essays in Social and Economic History (ed. Walter Scheidel; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998) 137; D. A. Fiensy, The Social History of Palestine in the Herodian Period: The Land Is Mine (Studies in the Bible and Early Christianity 20; Lewiston: Edwin Mellen, 1991) 76; Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 36, 42; Brunt, ‘Labour’, 713; Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 28; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 288, 289, 292; Bazzana, Kingdom, 86; Boer and Petterson, Time of Troubles, 93. Consider, for example, this account written in 250 bce to Zenon, manager of Apollonios' large estate in ancient Philadelphia, Egypt: ‘And under your name I wrote [to pay] the workers: to […]chas, 2 dragmas, 1 obol; to Panes, 2 dragmas 2.25 obol; and to his son, 2 dragmas 2.25 obol; to Horos, 3 obol’ (P.Cair.Zen. 59827, my translation; cf. also P.Cair.Zen. 4.59748; P.Mich. 3.200; Varro, Rust. 1.17.2–3).

28 Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 28.

29 S. E. Rollens, Framing Social Criticism in the Jesus Movement: The Ideological Project in the Sayings Gospel Q (WUNT 374; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2014) 156.

30 Cf. Valantasis, The New Q, 96; Robinson, Jesus, x; Bazzana, Kingdom, 86–7, 95.

31 Bazzana, Kingdom, 86–7.

32 J. A. Crook, Law and Life of Rome (London: Cornell University Press, 1967) 196; cf. K. D. White, Roman Farming (Aspects of Greek and Roman Life; London: Thames & Hudson, 1970) 347, 350, 404; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 77.

33 Bazzana, Kingdom, 88; Roth, The Parables in Q, 275 n. 252; cf. e.g. Matt 20:2.

34 I.e., Q 10:3, 16.

35 Bazzana, Kingdom, 88.

36 See H. G. Liddell and R. Scott 1996. A Greek-English Lexicon (9th ed., revised and augmented by H. Stuart Jones and R. McKenzie; Oxford: Clarendon, 1996) 501.

37 Cf. W. E. Arnal, ‘Redactional Fabrication and Group Legitimation’, Conflict and Invention: Literary, Rhetorical and Social Studies on the Sayings Gospel Q (ed. J. S. Kloppenborg; Valley Forge: Trinity, 1995) 165–80, at 172.

38 R. Brannan, The Lexham Analytical Lexicon to the Greek New Testament (Lexham Bible Reference Series; Bellingham: Logos Bible Software, 2011) s.v. δέομαι; Liddell and Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, 383.

39 Cf. Borowski, Daily Life, 22; Roth, The Parables in Q, 276.

40 Cf. R. MacMullen, Roman Social Relations: 50 B.C. to A.D. 284 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1974) 5–6; Hanson and Oakman, Palestine, 78; C. Hezser, Jewish Slavery in Antiquity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005) 85; J. A. Harrill, Slaves in the New Testament: Literary, Social, and Moral Dimensions (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2006) 103–5; Oakman, Jesus and the Peasants, 102–3; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 8; Bazzana, Kingdom, 86–7; Roth, The Parables in Q, 279; pace Roth, ‘“Master” as Character’, 392; cf. P.Giss.Bibl. 1.5, lines 9–10.

41 Cf. Aberbach, Labor, 170; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 287, 290.

42 Cf. Horsley, Whoever Hears You, 243.

43 Bazzana, Kingdom, 86.

44 Horsley, Whoever Hears You, 243.

45 Bazzana, Kingdom, 86.

46 Bazzana, Kingdom, 86.

47 C. Chandezon, ‘Some Aspects of Large Estate Management in the Greek World during Classical and Hellenistic Times’, The Economies of Hellenistic Societies, Third to First Centuries BC (ed. Z. H. Archibald, J. K. Davies, and V. Gabrielsen; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011) 96–121, at 96.

48 Aberbach, Labor, 171.

49 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 284.

50 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 285, 297.

51 P.Lond. 7.1948, my translation; cf., e.g., also Papiri Greci e Latini 6.554.

52 See 1 Chr 27.25–31; cf. 1 Sam 8.12; 2 Sam 9.10; cf. R. de Vaux, Ancient Israel: Its Life and Institutions (London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1965) 167.

53 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 286–7; cf. Josephus, A.J. 15.264; 17.289; B.J. 2.69; Vita 33, 47, 422, 429.

54 See P. DuBois, Slavery: Antiquity and Its Legacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009) 63–6.

55 Cf. D. A. Fiensy, ‘Ancient Economy and the New Testament’, Understanding the Social World of the New Testament (ed. D. Neufeld and R. E. DeMaris; London: Routledge, 2010) 194–206, at 197; Fiensy, The Social History, 55–6; Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 111; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 136, 279.

56 Fiensy, ‘Ancient Economy’, 196.

57 Fiensy, The Social History, 21–73.

58 Cf. J. E. Skydsgaard, ‘Non-Slave Labour in Rural Italy during the Late Republic’, Non-Slave Labour in the Greco-Roman World (ed. P. Garnsey; Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society, Supplementary Volume 6, 1980) 65–72, at 68; Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 111.

59 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 299.

60 C. R. Whittaker, ‘Rural Labour in Three Roman Provinces’, Non-Slave Labour in the Greco-Roman World (ed. P. Garnsey; Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society, Supplementary Volume 6, 1980) 73; see S. R. Joshel, Slavery in the Ancient World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010) 8, 53–6, 65–9; Boer and Petterson, Time of Troubles, 95–6; De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 80, 84; White, Roman Farming, 411; Hezser Jewish Slavery, 85.

61 Garnsey, Cities, Peasants and Food, 136; Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 28; Hezser, Jewish Slavery, 122.

62 Brunt, ‘Labour’, 707.

63 Brunt, ‘Labour’, 707.

64 See J. Jeremias, Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus: An Investigation into Economic and Social Conditions during the New Testament Period (London: SCM, 1969) 110–11; cf. Brunt, ‘Labour’, 703; Aberbach, Labor, 38, 170; Hanson and Oakman, Palestine, 104; Hezser, Jewish Slavery, 85, 295, 300.

65 Aberbach, Labor, 171, 173; see De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 167; cf. 1 Sam. 8.12; 2 Sam 9.10.

66 Cf. Jeremias, Jerusalem, 110–11; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 136, 279; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 8.

67 Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 35, 41; Cities, Peasants and Food, 135–6.

68 White, Roman Farming, 375; Brunt, ‘Labour’, 714.

69 K. R. Bradley, Slavery and Society at Rome (Key Themes in Ancient History; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994) 65, 72.

70 S. M. Treggiari, ‘Urban Labour in Rome: Mercennarii and Tabernarii’, in Peter Garnsey (ed.), Non-Slave Labour in the Greco-Roman World (ed. P. Garnsey; Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society, 1980) 52.

71 Treggiari, ‘Urban Labour’, 51.

72 Bazzana, Kingdom, 87.

73 PSI 289; translation from Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 273.

74 White, Roman Farming, 347; Joshel, Slavery, 166; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 46, 80; see Treggiari, ‘Urban Labour’.

75 Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 41; Cities, Peasants and Food, 143.

76 E. van Eck, The Parables of Jesus the Galilean: Stories of a Social Prophet (Matrix: The Bible in Mediterranean Context; Eugene: Cascade Books, 2016) 27; Aberbach, Labor, 166; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 80, 263.

77 Liddell and Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, 688, 800, 1136, 1137, 1359, 1731, 1988.

78 F. Brown, S. R. Driver, and C. Briggs, The Enhanced Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon: A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament with an Appendix Containing the Biblical Aramaic, based on the Lexicon of William Gesenius (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1977) 969; Borowski, Agriculture, 25.

79 Borowski, Agriculture, 25; cf. Lev 25.50, 53; Isa 16.14; 21.16.

80 Aberbach, Labor, 169.

81 Aberbach, Labor, 166; cf. Van Eck, The Parables, 27.

82 Brown, Driver, and Briggs, The Enhanced Lexicon, 38.

83 See Aberbach, Labor, 168–9; cf. Isa 61:5.

84 J.-J. Aubert, Business Managers in Ancient Rome: A Social and Economic Study of Institores, 200 B.C. – A.D. 250 (Columbia Studies in the Classical Tradition 21; Leiden: Brill, 1994) 163; Toutain, The Economic Life, 278; Burford, Land and Labor, 183, 191; Garnsey, Cities, Peasants and Food, 136; Hezser, Jewish Slavery, 85; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 288, 289; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 79; Boer and Petterson, Time of Troubles, 93; cf. Varro, Rust. 1.17.2–3; P.Cair.Zen. 4.59748, 59827; P.Mich. 3.200.

85 Brunt, ‘Labour’, 713; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 84; cf. John 4:36.

86 Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 43; Cities, Peasants and Food, 145; cf. Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 7, 8, 28, 51; Borowski, Agriculture, 25; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 289, 292.

87 E. C. Welskopf, ‘Free Labour in the City of Athens’, Non-Slave Labour in the Greco-Roman World (ed. P. Garnsey; Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society, 1980) 23; Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 92.

88 Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 34, 38; cf. Cities, Peasants and Food, 135, 139.

89 Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 38; Cities, Peasants and Food, 139.

90 Horsley, Whoever Hears You, 242; Fleddermann, Q, 429; Roth, The Parables in Q, 281.

91 I. H. Marshall, The Gospel of Luke: A Commentary on the Greek Text (NIGTC; Exeter: Paternoster, 1978) 416; Roth, The Parables in Q, 281; see J. P. Louw and E. A. Nida, eds., Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament based on Semantic Domains, Volume 1: Introduction & Domains (2nd ed., New York: United Bible Societies, 1996) 516, domains 43.14 and 43.15.

92 Cf. J. Swanson, A Dictionary of Biblical Languages with Semantic Domains: Greek (New Testament) (electronic ed., Oak Harbor: Logos, 1997) domain 2546; Louw and Nida, Greek-English Lexicon, 516, domain 43.14.

93 Cf. W. A. Williams, ‘Agriculture’, Lexham Theological Wordbook (ed. D. Mangum, D. R. Brown, R. Klippenstein, and R. Hurst; Bellingham: Lexham, 2014) s.v. agriculture; Liddell and Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, 793; Swanson, A Dictionary of Biblical Languages, domain 2546.

94 ESV; see also Ezek 27:17.

95 See Borowski, Daily Life, 28–9.

96 P. J. King and L. E. Stager, Life in Biblical Israel (LAI; Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2001), 94, 95; cf. 1 Kgs 4.28 (MT 5.8); Arnal, Village Scribes, 103, 107, 114. It is important to note that barley was more important than wheat during earlier periods (Borowski, Agriculture, 7).

97 Arnal, Village Scribes, 103.

98 King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 94.

99 Borowski, Agriculture, 7, 89, 92; Daily Life, 28; Dever, The Lives, 170; cf. Deut 8.9.

100 See Borowski, Agriculture, 71–83; Daily Life, 72, 111; cf. Q 12.24, 33–4.

101 Aberbach, Labor, 4; King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 93; Dever, The Lives, 170; cf. Lev 23.14; 1 Sam 17.17; 2 Kgs 4.42; Q 17.2.

102 Arnal, Village Scribes, 108; King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 94; Borowski, Daily Life, 73, 124; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 102; cf. Isa 47.1–2.

103 Cf. Hanson and Oakman, Palestine, 99; Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 105; Arnal, Village Scribes, 108, 110, 114; Oakman, Jesus and the Peasants, 99.

104 E.g., Deut 11.14; Hos 2.24; cf. Silver, M., Prophets and Markets: The Political Economy of Ancient Israel (Boston: Kluwer-Nijhoff, 1983) 23CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Dever, The Lives, 170.

105 Borowski, Agriculture, 7, 103, 118, 119; Daily Life, 29, 71; see King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 95–101.

106 Arnal, Village Scribes, 107, 109; King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 95, 98.

107 Borowski, Daily Life, 70.

108 Arnal, Village Scribes, 107, 109, 111–12; Borowski, Agriculture, 17; Daily Life, 70, 109. Rising strips were much more common in Galilee than terracing (Arnal, Village Scribes, 107–8).

109 Borowski, Agriculture, 103.

110 Grant, The People of Palestine, 39, 80; Silver, Prophets and Markets, 16–17; cf. Exod 25.6; Lev 2.4–7; Num 6.15; 1 Kgs 17.12–13; 1 Chr 12.40–1; Eccl 10.1; Isa 1.6; Ezek 16.13; Mic 6.15.

111 King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 101.

112 King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 194; see Silver, Prophets and Markets, 13, 16–17, 23–4; cf. 1 Kgs 5.20–5; 2 Chr 2.9; Ezra 3.7; Ezek 27.17; Hos 12.2.

113 Borowski, Agriculture, 113.

114 Grant, The People of Palestine, 81.

115 Borowski, Agriculture, 123.

116 Borowski, Agriculture, 7, 101, 103, 114–17, 126–131; Daily Life, 29, 70, 71, 109, 118; see King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 94, 103–6.

117 Borowski, Daily Life, 29, 70.

118 Grant, The People of Palestine, 86; see Borowski, Agriculture, 131–3; Daily Life, 29, 71; cf. Gen 43.11.

119 Borowski, Agriculture, 93–7; Daily Life, 28.

120 Packer, J. I., Tenney, M. C., and White, W., Daily Life in Bible Times (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1980) 107Google Scholar; see Borowski, Agriculture, 135–9; Daily Life, 29, 71, 109, 118, 124.

121 See King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 106–7; Borowski, Agriculture, 97–9; Daily Life, 28; cf. Isa 28.27.

122 Wilson, J. A., ‘Egyptian Myths, Tales, and Mortuary Texts’, Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (3rd ed. with supplement; ed. Pritchard, J. B.; Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1969) 3–36Google Scholar, at 19; King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 85.

123 Amos 9.13, ESV; cf. Lev 26.5.

124 Cf. Deut 11.14.

125 King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 86; cf. Grant, The People of Palestine, 22–3; Oakman, Jesus and the Peasants, 99.

126 Arnal, Village Scribes, 103; Oakman, Jesus and the Peasants, 99.

127 See King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 86–9; cf. Deut 11:14.

128 Translation from Borowski, Daily Life, 27; see King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 87–8; Borowski, Agriculture, 32–44.

129 King and Stager, Life in Biblical Israel, 87–8; Borowski, Daily Life, 28.

130 Borowski, Daily Life, 28.

131 Cf. Grant, The People of Palestine, 25, 40; Skydsgaard, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 69.

132 Borowski, Agriculture, 57, 110.

133 Cf. Arnal, Village Scribes, 110; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 69–70, 73–4, 77.

134 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 77, 88.

135 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 288.

136 Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 42; Cities, Peasants and Food, 144; Aberbach, Labor, 166.

137 Roth, The Parables in Q, 281.

138 Roth, The Parables in Q, 281 n. 275; cf. Columella, Rust. 3.3.4.

139 Oakman, Jesus and the Peasants, 100.

140 E.g., Gen 26:12; Matt 13:23; cf. Roth, The Parables in Q, 281 n. 275.

141 See Grant, The People of Palestine, 135–8.

142 See Hanson and Oakman, Palestine, 109–110; cf. Jer 48.33.

143 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 11, 102.

144 Liddell and Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, 793; Louw and Nida, Greek-English Lexicon, 516, domain 43.14; Swanson 1997, domain 2546.

145 See Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 103–4.

146 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 104.

147 See Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 103–4, 106–7.

148 Cf. Grant, The People of Palestine, 136.

149 Borowski, Agriculture, 58, 59; Dever, The Lives, 199.

150 See Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 14–15, 76; cf. Varro, Rust. 1.16.5.

151 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 288; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 25.

152 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 25–6.

153 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 27, 28, 33–4.

154 Fisher, N., ‘Work and Leisure’, The Cambridge Illustrated History of Ancient Greece (ed. Cartledge, P.; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998) 193–218Google Scholar, at 193; see Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 3–4, 10, 14, 35, 79.

155 Dever, The Lives, 199; Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 38, 102, 136.

156 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 136.

157 Dever, The Lives, 199; see Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 38–40.

158 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 102, 136.

159 See Saller, R., ‘Women, Slaves, and the Economy of the Roman Household’, Early Christian Families in Context: An Interdisciplinary Dialogue (ed. Balch, D. L. and Osiek, C.; Religion, Marriage, and Family; Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, 2003) 185–204Google Scholar, at 192–3, 196, 199.

160 Grant, The People of Palestine, 68, 91; Bradley, Slavery and Society, 68.

161 See Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 4, 33–8, 101; Borowski, Agriculture, 61; Daily Life, 115.

162 Grant, The People of Palestine, 95.

163 See Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 35–6.

164 White, Roman Farming, 348, 352.

165 White, Roman Farming, 359–360, 368; Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 41; Cities, Peasants and Food, 143; Fiensy, The Social History, 77, 91; Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 28; Hezser, Jewish Slavery, 85; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 307; Rollens, Framing Social Criticism, 156.

167 Lago, E. Dal and Katsari, C.Ideal Models of Slave Management in the Roman World and in the Ante-Bellum American South’, Slave Systems: Ancient and Modern (ed. Lago, E. Dal and Katsari, C.; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008) 187–213CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 190, 204.

168 White, Roman Farming, 348, 372.

169 Treggiari, ‘Urban Labour’, 52.

170 Glotz, G., Ancient Greece at Work: An Economic History of Greece from the Homeric Period to the Roman Conquest (New York: Barnes & Noble, 1926) 32, 33Google Scholar; De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 76; see Aberbach, Labor, 167, 169–170; cf. Jer 22.13; Mal 3.5; Sir 7.20–1; 34.22.

171 NIV; cf. Lev 19.13; Matt 20.8.

172 PSI 4.414; translation from Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 402; cf., e.g., also P.Cair.Zen. 3.59317; P.Zen.Pestm. 37; P.Lond. 7.2061; PSI 4.421.

173 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 35; cf. Glotz, Ancient Greece at Work, 33; Jeremias, Jerusalem, 111; Rollens, Framing Social Criticism, 156.

174 Garnsey, ‘Non-Slave Labour’, 42; Cities, Peasants and Food, 144; cf. Stegemann and Stegemann, The Jesus Movement, 51; Aberbach, Labor, 166; Fisher, ‘Work and Leisure’, 201.

175 Cf. Treggiari, ‘Urban Labour’, 50, 51; Brunt, ‘Labour’, 709; Aubert, Business Managers, 175, 181; Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 287; Joshel, Slavery, 124, 136–40, 176; cf. Columella, Rust. 1.6.7–8; Varro, Rust. 1.13.2.

176 Joshel, Slavery, 173.

177 Columella, Rust. 1.6.3; Dal Lago and Katsari, ‘Ideal Models’, 190.

178 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 287.

179 Dever, The Lives, 196; cf. Isa 5:1–7.

180 Kloppenborg, The Tenants, 155, 287, 296, 321.

181 Cf. Jeremias, Jerusalem, 111; Aubert, Business Managers, 175, 181.

182 Cf. Burford, Land and Labor, 187; Bradley, Slavery and Society, 91.

183 Aberbach, Labor, 169.

184 Aberbach, Labor, 169.

185 White, Roman Farming, 362; Aberbach, Labor, 57, 174; cf. B. Meṣ 83a.

186 White, Roman Farming, 363; Borowski, Daily Life, 115; cf. Cato, Agr. 56–9.

187 See Borowski, Daily Life, 72–4, 115–6.

188 See Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 74, 77, 83, 217–19.

189 P.Sarap 51; translation from Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 74.

190 ESV.

191 Aberbach, Labor, 101, 167.

192 m. Ma‘as. 3.2, translation from www.sefaria.org; cf. Deut 23.25; B. Meṣ 83a.

193 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 74.

194 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 77.

195 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 83, 219; e.g. P.Sarap 51.

196 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 76, 77, 82.

197 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 84.

198 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 83, 88, 90.

199 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 83; cf. m. ’Abot 2.15. Aberbach (Labor, 167) claims that the pay of day-labourers was low, but fails to elaborate.

200 See Bazzana, Kingdom, 87–8; cf. Egytpian ostracon BGU 7 1536.

201 Shaw, Bringing in the Sheaves, 77.

202 Massey, M. and Moreland, P., Slavery in Ancient Rome (Inside the Ancient World; Surrey: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1992) 29Google Scholar; Joshel, Slavery, 57, 123–4, 132–6, 173, 175, 177; see Saller, ‘Women, Slaves’, 192–3, 196, 199; Harrill, Slaves, 109–10; cf. Columella, Rust. 1.8.9, 16; 11.1.21; Cato, Agr. 5.2; 56–9; Varro, Rust. 1.17.7; Epictetus, Diatr. 4.1.34–7.

203 Cf. Burford, Land and Labor, 187, 198; Bradley, Slavery and Society, 89; Joshel, Slavery, 57, 173.

204 Cato, Agr. 59, translation from https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Cato/De_Agricultura/B*.html; cf. also Homer, Od. 18.357–61.