ochus IV Epiphanes as a rebellion against Seleucid rule, this provoked
not only a military reaction but also an enforced Hellenization. Jews
were compelled “to depart from the laws of their fathers and to cease liv-
ing by the laws of God. Further, the sanctuary in Jerusalem was to be
polluted and called after Zeus Olympius” (2 Macc. 6:1-2). This forced
Hellenization lasted only a few years, but it made clear that Jewish free-
dom always depended on the personal goodwill of the ruler who hap-
pened to be in power.
Cultural Antagonism between Jews and Greeks in Egypt
Since the beginning of their settlement in Egypt early in the third century
b.c.e., the Jews were active in most branches of economic activity. Extant
papyri show them as farmers, artisans (CPJ1:33-47), tax farmers and tax
collectors, bankers, granary officials (CPJ1:48-124, 127, 132, 137), and sol-
diers, even officers, in the Ptolemaic army (CPJ1:18-32; Josephus,J.W.1.175,
190-92;Ant.14.99, 131-32;Ag. Ap.1.200-204; 2.64). The Jews were a strong
presence in the economic life of the country, a fact that created competi-
tion and perhaps friction between them and their Greco-Egyptian neigh-
bors. This was all the more the case because the Jews insisted on forming
their own separate communities and refused to participate in the religious
activities of the Greek cities. The issue was particularly problematic be-
cause these activities often had civil and economic underpinnings; identi-
fication with the gods of one’s city was a fundamental aspect of civic iden-
tity, as in the cases of the cult of the deified Alexander and Ptolemies and
of the patron deities of the Greek city.
Cultural antagonism may have developed in the third centuryb.c.e.
also on account of the translations of the Pentateuch into Greek that were
circulating in Egypt — the best known was the Septuagint — which made
generally known the account of the Exodus, with its strong anti-Egyptian
bias. No source tells us how extensively it may have been read and known,
but there are a number of parallels between the biblical account of the Ex-
odus and its counter-version in the work of Manetho, a priest of the
Greco-Egyptian god Serapis who was influential in the court of Ptolemy
Philadelphus. One of the two passages of Manetho quoted by Josephus as-
sociates the Jews with the tyrannical Hyksos regime, a foreign dynasty that
had ruled Egypt harshly. After five hundred years of domination, they left
Egypt “with their possessions...andjourneyed over the desert into
369
Jews among Greeks and Romans
EERDMANS -- Early Judaism (Collins and Harlow) final text
Tuesday, October 09, 2012 12:04:15 PM