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12-25-2011, 07:40 PM | #41 | |
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12-25-2011, 07:44 PM | #42 |
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Is this some kind of Scotsman fallacy? Are you saying that no Creationists are Christians or that no Christians are Creationists?
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12-25-2011, 07:45 PM | #43 |
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12-26-2011, 02:10 AM | #44 |
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12-26-2011, 12:25 PM | #45 | |
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12-26-2011, 01:41 PM | #46 | |||
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Which was about the last place they would have kept any contentious records, because the Pharisees had as much access to the Temple as they did. In any case, being landowners and pals of the imperium, they would have had the most secure facilities available for any family genealogies. And in any case, Joseph was not a priest. |
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12-26-2011, 02:46 PM | #47 | |||
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I apologize. I haven't read every post in the thread and was just commenting on your post.
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Next, their connections with Rome were in large part based on their connection with the temple. The high priesthood after the Hasmonean line was eradicated were mostly Sadducees, and the high priest was Judaism's representative to Rome (he was also appointed by Rome). The temple owned the majority of the land in and around Jerusalem, collected virtually all funds that came into Jerusalem from other lands, and was the quickest route to wealth as well as to peace or unrest in Judea. On a side note, while there are different propositions regarding the etymology of the name Sadducee, the majority of scholars today favor the conclusion that they derived the name from the name of the high priest Zadok. Whether or not they were actual descendants of the high priest is another story and is, again, immaterial. Quote:
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I'm not arguing that he was. |
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12-26-2011, 03:50 PM | #48 |
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12-26-2011, 05:08 PM | #49 | |
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You're really grasping at straws there! |
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12-26-2011, 07:42 PM | #50 | |
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If the temple aparatus really controlled much of the land in Judea (aside from royal land managed by the Romans and land gifted to Greek cities and key figures such as the emperor's family and power interests), someone in that apparatus had to keep records to see who was responsible for the tithes. So centralized records would be expected. How far back they were saved, that is another matter altogether. That wouldn't stop folks from extracting from them for their own purposes. That would not, though, cover control of land outside of Judea.
Some interesting studies on these matters are: Fabian Udoh, To Caesar What Is Caesar's: Tribute, Taxes, and Imperial Administration in Early Roman Palestine: 63 BCE - 70 CE (or via: amazon.co.uk), (Brown Judaic Studies, No. 343), 2006 Jack pastor, Land and Economy in Ancient Palestine (or via: amazon.co.uk), 1997 David A Fiensy, The Social History of Palestine in the Herodian Period (or via: amazon.co.uk), 1991 However, these cannot agree as to the significance of the temple in the subject of land tenancy. Udoh, for instance, speaks of tracts of land under control of a sort of "temple state" operating with the authorization of the ruler (Herod or later the Roman governors). The good description of "temple lands" as they operated in Asia and Egypt can be found in Henry A. Green, "The Socio-Economic Background of Christianity in Egypt" in Pearson, B and Goehring, J E, The Roots of Egyptian Christianity, 1986, pp 100-113 Six distinct land ideologies were identified in Jewish scripture by Norman Habel in The Land is Mine: Six Biblical Land Ideologies (or via: amazon.co.uk), 1995: 1) The Royal Ideology (1 King 3-10 & Royal Psalms) 2) The Theocratic Ideology (Deuteronomy) 3) The Ancestral Household Ideology (Joshua) 4) The Prophetic Ideology (Jeremiah) 5) The Agrarian Ideology (Leviticus 25-27) 6) The Immigrant Ideology (Abraham narratives)* Three of these six imply or guarantee perpetual right to land tenure (Theocratic & Ancestral Household actually give rights to ancestral households, not individuals. Only the Agrarian ideology gave that right to individual peasant farmers). The other three do not. In fact, the Royal ideology came closest to that employed by Hellenistic kings, who claimed a right of conquest (conquered land became "spear-won" land, belonging exclusively to the king). In the case of Ptolemy I of Egypt, who captured Palestine in 301 BCE, Jack Pastor emphasizes that most researchers (Rostovtzeff, Schalit, Hengel and Bagnall) have accepted that Ptolemaic policies of land tenure in Palestine probably resembled that known in other parts of the Ptolemaic empire: Egypt, Galilee, Beth Shean valley, etc): "The Ptolemaic king ruled Egypt as his personal property; all the soil, the subsoil, and ultimately the products of the soil were his.This was also the basic model adopted by the Seleucids. David Fiensy agrees with this view (that tenure policy in Palestine resembled this Egyptian model), but also emphasizes that land "still belonged to the king and could be recalled." (Social History of Palestine, pp 21-22. He also makes it abundantly clear that the vast majority of land throughout the region was in the form of private estates of either the kings or their retainers. It is clear from this that hereditary ancestral plots were the norm, rather than the exception, and then only on conditions! What I suggest was that what passed for ancestral land in Herod's time was granted "temple land" that was distributed according to the Agrarian Ideology of Leviticus 25-27. Considerable record keeping was apparently involved in this kind of system, no matter who the ruler was. DCH Quote:
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