Early Judaism- A Comprehensive Overview

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lenders (Flacc.57). Alexander the Alabarch, Philo’s brother, belonged in the
highest stratum of Jewish society and held an important administrative
role probably connected with customs collection on the Nile. He was rich
enough to donate nine massive gates of silver and gold to the Jerusalem
Temple (Josephus,J.W.5.205). Philo himself no doubt received a thorough
training in a gymnasium, and his familiarity with theatrical and sporting
events suggests that he enjoyed the regular entertainments of Alexandrian
citizens.
Cases of local inhabitants being attracted to Judaism are also well at-
tested. According to Josephus, each city in Syria had its “Judaizers” (J.W.
2.463); at Damascus, many women had “submitted to the Jewish religion”
(J.W.2.559-61); at Antioch, the Jews were constantly attracting to their reli-
gious practices “a considerable body of Greeks, whom they had in some
measure made a part of themselves” (J.W.7.45). Attraction to Judaism may
have taken various forms, from a general interest and sympathy to real ad-
herence to Jewish practices. The statement of the New Testament that the
Pharisees “compass sea and land to make one proselyte” (Matt. 23:15) may
be exaggerated, but the testimony of later Jewish sources — which take
pride in the claim that some of the greatest Jewish figures descended from
proselytes — suggests a policy of acceptance.
Friendly relations, however, are not attested always and everywhere.
Josephus also reports that serious controversies and disputes arose be-
tween the Jews and their Greek neighbors in various places around the
Mediterranean. A reconstruction of these episodes and their causes is ex-
tremely difficult, since we get only the Jewish point of view. Even when
Josephus quotes non-Jewish documents, for example, his choice is always
subjective and leads him to cite only those texts attesting favorable deci-
sions concerning the Jews.

Controversies between Jews and Greeks


Mesopotamia


Jews arrived at Seleucia in the first part of the first centuryc.e., having es-
caped from Babylon, where they had been always “quarreling with the
Babylonians because of the contrariety of their laws” (Ant.18.371). In
Seleucia they got caught up in conflicts between Syrians and Greeks. An
armed attack against the Jews ensued in which an enormous number of

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Jews among Greeks and Romans

EERDMANS -- Early Judaism (Collins and Harlow) final text
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