The rhetoric and teaching methods of Jesus and Paul are
best understood as part of the emerging rabbinic movement that would come to
dominate Judaism after the destruction of the second temple. Like the
Pharisees – the contemporaries of Jesus and Paul and the predecessors of the post-temple
rabbis – both Jesus and Paul engaged in public Torah interpretation and controversy.
Jesus' disagreements with his opponents did not mean he
rejected Torah obligations. They meant exactly the opposite. Jesus actively
engaged in the interpretive debates about Torah interpretation between the
early rabbinic schools of Hillel and Shammai – sometimes agreeing with one,
sometimes the other, and sometimes challenging both with his own fresh
application of the Torah to the challenges of the day. Many sayings of Jesus
are halakhic statements that amend or modify traditional Torah precepts to
conform to contemporary conditions. The collected sayings of Jesus in Matthew's
"Sermon on the Mount" are quite simply the "Torah according to
Jesus" – comparable to the collected Torah interpretations of other first
century rabbis. Jesus ethics and eschatology only make sense inside second
temple Judaism.
Paul – a Pharisee probably of the house of Shammai – never
rejected his Jewish roots, education, or affiliation after his
"conversion" to Christ. Although his Jewish worldview was radically
reordered by the resurrection of Jesus and its eschatological implications,
Paul remain a student of the Hebrew scriptures. His letters are replete with
appeals to authoritative scriptural references. It appears that he remained
Torah observant until his death – even though he embraced the prophetic role of
"apostle to the Gentiles." Paul's "rabbinic" rhetoric is on
display in the lively "debates" with his opponents in his letters.
Unlike Jesus, Paul seldom argued with Jewish scholars about
the interpretation of Torah. Rather, his rhetorical flourishes were reserved
for those who attacked the basic premise of his mission: the inclusion of
Gentiles as "Gentiles" (with no Torah demand) in the end time people
of God. Paul's opponents were perhaps Jews who demanded a proselyte conversion
to Judaism before Gentile eligibility for inclusion into God's people. More
likely, these opponents were Gentile proselytes who had themselves already taken
on Torah obligation and felt that their fellow Gentile must follow the same
path into God's end time community. Whichever may be the case, Paul wielded the
Hebrew scriptures and rabbinic forms of rhetoric as weapons in the wars with
those who would deny the validity of his mission to the Gentiles.
Excellent post, Joe! Two additional comments may be in order that support Paul's continuing Jewish identity, even after his encounter with Christ on the Damascus Road. One is his present tense declaration to the Sanhedrin after his arrest in Jerusalem, when he said bluntly, "I am a Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee" (Ac. 23:6). We might have expected him to say, "I once was a Pharisee," or something similar, but his present tense statement (and it is clearly an emphatic present tense ego eimi in the Greek NT) is unmistakable. The other thing that stands out is his Nazirite vow, which he took on his 3rd missions tour while in Cenchrea, the seaport of Corinth (Ac. 18:18). This vow had to be completed at the sanctuary (Nu. 6:13), accompanied by specified sacrifices (Nu. 6:14ff.). No doubt this was one reason Paul as so insistent upon going to Jerusalem in spite of repeated warnings against it and even a prophecy that in ordinary circumstances would have discouraged such a trip (Ac. 20:16, 22-24; 21:10-14). Breaking a vow was certainly not part of Paul's game plan. Upon reaching Jerusalem, he was persuaded by James and other leaders to complete his vow along with several other Jewish Christians, and this certainly required an appearance in the temple (Ac. 21:17-26), purification rites, and the required temple sacrifices according to the law of Moses. Both these incidents clearly indicate that Paul was a Torah-observant Jew--to be sure, one who believed in the resurrected Christ, but thoroughly Jewish nonetheless.
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