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12-12-2010, 09:17 AM | #11 | |
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The change itself is ad hoc because Zerubbabel remains in earlier contexts of Zechariah. Be that as it may, Jeshua is the only person left in the crowning ceremony in the text we have. It follows then that it is Jeshua who has by default become the one who bears the royal crown and sits on the throne. That's what the text now says. I have no trouble in seeing that Zerubbabel is lurking behind the narrative: putting two crowns on Jeshua's head even raises a smile (though I'm sure someone could mock up a headdress that could carry two crowns unbeknownst to the text). But the text has been waylaid. How do you think that happened and why was it let remain that way? spin |
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12-12-2010, 03:36 PM | #12 |
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But the rabbinic interpretation necessarily excludes Jeshua as the high priest can't be the royal messiah. Indeed the earlier statement makes it obvious that the branch is someone other than Jeshua:
Hear now, O Joshua the high priest, you and your fellows that sit before you; for they are men that are a sign; for behold, I will bring forth my servant the Branch. 9For behold, the stone that I have set before Joshua And ibn Ezra makes it explicit: He is Zerubbabel, as it is said, “His name is branch” [Zech. 6:12], and the end of the passage proves it, [stating] “before Zerubbabel” [Zech. 4:7]. And many interpreters say that this branch is the Messiah, and he is called Zerubbabel because he is from his seed, as in, “and David my servant will be their prince forever” [Ezek. 37:25]. And I too can interpret this homiletically [derek derash], for tsemach [branch] by Gematria [i.e., numerically interpreted] equals Menachem, that is, Ben Ammiel [in the Talmud Menachem Ben Ammiel is a name for the Messiah (b. Sanhedrin 99b) I think you always argue for what the right interpretation SHOULD BE from the original Hebrew and I argue for the answer from the surviving traditions. The dominant tradition that stretches throughout the rabbinic literature is that tsemach is the royal messiah. Indeed he is a 'little one' who will grow into the messiah like David. |
12-12-2010, 09:28 PM | #13 | |
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12-12-2010, 10:16 PM | #14 | |||||
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12-12-2010, 10:51 PM | #15 |
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I'm sure that ibn Ezra. Maimonides and the rest based part of their interpretation on the Targum and the rest on an oral tradition which ultimately shaped that reading.
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12-12-2010, 11:06 PM | #16 |
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12-13-2010, 09:58 AM | #17 |
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I am not arguing that your understanding is unworkable. I am only saying that since the Targum established an interpretation of the text which seems to have dominated the literature. The idea that Jeshua is called 'the sprout' has difficulties, though. Again if the reference to 'the ninth vision' is on the throne and this is supposed to reference Zech 6:9f then its interpretation as a 'vision' implies that it is something which happened AFTER the age of Zerubbabel and is more in keeping with the Philonic understanding of the material (Philo sees it as foreseeing the appearance of a divine god-man).
Again, I never put this argument in a paper because it has difficulties. I happen to believe that 'the ninth vision' is there and that it explains the core 'vision' of the gospel - i.e. Jesus βαπτίζω St. Mark with his glory and thus making the perfect man. I think these develop from Philo's repeated reference to the passage but these things can't be proved and belong outside of any serious academic discussion. At least for now, until I find something to support it. |
12-13-2010, 11:58 AM | #18 |
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I've done some further research online. While some websites claim that the Hebrew name for Spica was Tsemach, I cannot find any substantiation for the claim. In "Star Names, Their Lore and Meaning" (1889), Richard Hinckley Allen (citing Thomas Hyde) states that the Hebrew name for Spica was Shibboleth, meaning "ear of wheat".
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