Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- 1 The sources of impurity: the human corpse
- 2 The corpse in the tent: an excursus
- 3 The sources of impurity: menstruation
- 4 The sources of impurity: childbirth: the zabah and zab
- 5 Normal emission of semen
- 6 Animals and purity
- 7 Impurity and sacrifices
- 8 The Red Cow: the paradoxes
- 9 The Red Cow and niddah
- 10 Leprosy
- 11 The purification of the leper
- 12 Corpse and leper: an excursus
- 13 Ritual purity in the New Testament
- 14 Milgrom on purity in the Bible
- 15 From demons to ethics
- 16 Ritual purity and morality
- Appendix A The haberim
- Appendix B The rabbinic system of grades of impurity
- References
- Index of quotations
- General index
13 - Ritual purity in the New Testament
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- 1 The sources of impurity: the human corpse
- 2 The corpse in the tent: an excursus
- 3 The sources of impurity: menstruation
- 4 The sources of impurity: childbirth: the zabah and zab
- 5 Normal emission of semen
- 6 Animals and purity
- 7 Impurity and sacrifices
- 8 The Red Cow: the paradoxes
- 9 The Red Cow and niddah
- 10 Leprosy
- 11 The purification of the leper
- 12 Corpse and leper: an excursus
- 13 Ritual purity in the New Testament
- 14 Milgrom on purity in the Bible
- 15 From demons to ethics
- 16 Ritual purity and morality
- Appendix A The haberim
- Appendix B The rabbinic system of grades of impurity
- References
- Index of quotations
- General index
Summary
There are a few overt references to ritual purity in the New Testament, but most of the ritual purity aspects which scholars have read into the text are non-existent. For example, there is no basis for the idea that Jesus' association with sinners and tax gatherers was opposed by the Pharisees on ritual purity grounds. The text does not say so, and it would not make sense to say so. The vast majority of Jews were not expected to be in a state of ritual purity except at festival times, when they entered the Temple area. Only a tiny minority of Jews, known as haberim, or Associates (see Appendix A), made a special undertaking to keep themselves in a state of ritual purity, as an exercise in piety and in order to perform the service to the community of separating the priestly dues (terumah) from the crop without causing them defilement. It was not a sin to be in a state of ritual impurity: in fact, it was often a duty. Some of the most respected members of the Jewish community were members of burial societies, which, without pay, looked after the corpses of the dead and prepared them for burial. Such people dedicated themselves to impurity, just as the haberim dedicated themselves to purity, and with equal sense of service and general approval.
The sinners and tax gatherers with whom Jesus associated, with the aim of inducing them to repent, were real criminals, not just unwashed. The tax gatherers, for example, formed the Jewish part of the infamous Roman tax farming system.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ritual and MoralityThe Ritual Purity System and its Place in Judaism, pp. 149 - 164Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999