NT Background, Canonization, and Interpretation
intertestamental period: 400 years btwn old testament and new testament
4 Political Stages: Ptolemaic, Seleucid, Maccabean, Roman
Ptolemaic Stage: 301-198 BCE, process of hellenization in palestine under Ptolemy
Hellenization: the process of incorporating greek culture/rules into jewish society
Seleucid Stage: 198-167 BCE, Seleucid general antiochus III takes palestine from ptolemaic rulers
What happeneded in 169 BCE: Antiochus Epiphanes banned the practice of judaism, burned scripture, and desecrated the temple by sacrficing a pig on the altar, the jews then revolted
Maccabean Stage: 167-163 BCE, mattathius and his 5 sons started the revolt
Judas the hammer Maccabeus: led jews to victory after father’s death
What 2 conditions did Judas the hammer agree to end the revolt on: The temple was purified and jews are granted religious freedom
Hanukkah: 164 BCE, temple was purified and rededicated
When did jews win their political freedom: 142 BCE
Pro-Hellenistic/Sadducees: focused more on political freedom and maintaining religious and political power
Anti-Hellenistic/Pharisees: focused more on religious freedom/power after temple was redidcated
Roman Stage: jews allowed to govern themselves as allies of rome
Which side of the Jewish Leader civil war did the romans ally with: The pharisees/anti-hellenistic group
What did the roman general Pompey do when he entered jerusalem in 63 BCE: began a 3 month seige, taking the temple and killing 12,000 defenders
When did rome take palestine as a province and who was the local king: 47-4BCE and herod the great
Archelaus: governed judea and samaria, but removed in 6CE in favor of roman governor
Antipas: governed galilee and perea
Philip: governed in the districts North and East of Galilee
Who was the roman governor headquarted in Caesarea in 33CE: Pontus Pilate
Caesar Augustus: 27B.C.E. 14 C.E., Jesus Born
Tiberius: 14-37 C.E., Jesus’s Ministry
Claudius: 41-54 C.E., Expels Jews, Acts 18
Nero: 54-68 C.E., Peter and Paul Martyred?
Vespasian: 69·79 C.E., Crushed Jewish revolt in 70, destruction of Temple
Domitian: 81-96 C.E., Persecuted Church, Book of Revelation
Jews in Palestine spoke what languages: Latin, greek, aramaic, and a little bit of hebrew
christianity: emerged from first century judaism
What is the difference between jews and christians: whether or not Jesus is the messiah
Which of the NT writers was not jewish: Luke
temple: represented God’s presence
between mt. gerezim and mt. ebal, where God told Moses to go and worship Him when they get into the promise land (Due. 11:29)
Natural amphitheater at shechem: where Joshua read the law
the temple shifted meaning in the New Testament to what: the physical body
synagogue: established during Babylonian exile, 586-537 BCE, an exile creation to pass on faith customs and traditions
synagogue required how many males to create: 10
authority of rabbi grew because they can now read and interpret the torah
synagogue became the model fo worship for early church
what distinguished jew from jew in the first century: one recites Jesus is Lord
Sanhedrin: jewish high court, led by Chief Priest, had power to rule over civil and religious matters
pharisees: power found in synagogue, they were laymen, scribes, and lawyers
What did the pharisees do with the torah: put a fence around it by using commentary
talmud: commentary on torah, and way to control normal jews
Sabbath Laws: 39 categories of law regarding what is forbidden on the sabbath
religious liberals but cultural conservatives: pharisees
Sadducees: claim to be descendants of Zadok, were priests who served in the temple and were wealthy landowners and artistocrats, hellenized jews who cooperated with the ruling authorities and were mediators btwn people and romans, disappeared from jewish life in 70CE after temple was destroyed
religious conservatives but cultural liberals: saducees
rejected oral commentary in favor of torah: sadducees
Theological beliefs of pharisees: total sovereignty of God, immortal soul and resurrection, believed in angels and demons, authority is torah and rabbinical Oral/Written Traditions
Theological beliefs of sadducees: free will, no immortal soul or resurrection, no angels or demons, only written torah
intertestamental period: 400 years btwn old testament and new testament
4 Political Stages: Ptolemaic, Seleucid, Maccabean, Roman
Ptolemaic Stage: 301-198 BCE, process of hellenization in palestine under Ptolemy
Hellenization: the process of incorporating greek culture/rules into jewish society
Seleucid Stage: 198-167 BCE, Seleucid general antiochus III takes palestine from ptolemaic rulers
What happeneded in 169 BCE: Antiochus Epiphanes banned the practice of judaism, burned scripture, and desecrated the temple by sacrficing a pig on the altar, the jews then revolted
Maccabean Stage: 167-163 BCE, mattathius and his 5 sons started the revolt
Judas the hammer Maccabeus: led jews to victory after father’s death
What 2 conditions did Judas the hammer agree to end the revolt on: The temple was purified and jews are granted religious freedom
Hanukkah: 164 BCE, temple was purified and rededicated
When did jews win their political freedom: 142 BCE
Pro-Hellenistic/Sadducees: focused more on political freedom and maintaining religious and political power
Anti-Hellenistic/Pharisees: focused more on religious freedom/power after temple was redidcated
Roman Stage: jews allowed to govern themselves as allies of rome
Which side of the Jewish Leader civil war did the romans ally with: The pharisees/anti-hellenistic group
What did the roman general Pompey do when he entered jerusalem in 63 BCE: began a 3 month seige, taking the temple and killing 12,000 defenders
When did rome take palestine as a province and who was the local king: 47-4BCE and herod the great
Archelaus: governed judea and samaria, but removed in 6CE in favor of roman governor
Antipas: governed galilee and perea
Philip: governed in the districts North and East of Galilee
Who was the roman governor headquarted in Caesarea in 33CE: Pontus Pilate
Caesar Augustus: 27B.C.E. 14 C.E., Jesus Born
Tiberius: 14-37 C.E., Jesus’s Ministry
Claudius: 41-54 C.E., Expels Jews, Acts 18
Nero: 54-68 C.E., Peter and Paul Martyred?
Vespasian: 69·79 C.E., Crushed Jewish revolt in 70, destruction of Temple
Domitian: 81-96 C.E., Persecuted Church, Book of Revelation
Jews in Palestine spoke what languages: Latin, greek, aramaic, and a little bit of hebrew
christianity: emerged from first century judaism
What is the difference between jews and christians: whether or not Jesus is the messiah
Which of the NT writers was not jewish: Luke
temple: represented God’s presence
between mt. gerezim and mt. ebal, where God told Moses to go and worship Him when they get into the promise land (Due. 11:29)
Natural amphitheater at shechem: where Joshua read the law
the temple shifted meaning in the New Testament to what: the physical body
synagogue: established during Babylonian exile, 586-537 BCE, an exile creation to pass on faith customs and traditions
synagogue required how many males to create: 10
authority of rabbi grew because they can now read and interpret the torah
synagogue became the model fo worship for early church
what distinguished jew from jew in the first century: one recites Jesus is Lord
Sanhedrin: jewish high court, led by Chief Priest, had power to rule over civil and religious matters
pharisees: power found in synagogue, they were laymen, scribes, and lawyers
What did the pharisees do with the torah: put a fence around it by using commentary
talmud: commentary on torah, and way to control normal jews
Sabbath Laws: 39 categories of law regarding what is forbidden on the sabbath
religious liberals but cultural conservatives: pharisees
Sadducees: claim to be descendants of Zadok, were priests who served in the temple and were wealthy landowners and artistocrats, hellenized jews who cooperated with the ruling authorities and were mediators btwn people and romans, disappeared from jewish life in 70CE after temple was destroyed
religious conservatives but cultural liberals: saducees
rejected oral commentary in favor of torah: sadducees
Theological beliefs of pharisees: total sovereignty of God, immortal soul and resurrection, believed in angels and demons, authority is torah and rabbinical Oral/Written Traditions
Theological beliefs of sadducees: free will, no immortal soul or resurrection, no angels or demons, only written torah