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Old 02-15-2013, 01:50 PM   #41
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The Jews were active proselytizers
In line with the OP. But exactly what do we mean when we use the word 'proselytize'? and 'proselyte'?

A Jew who persuades a gentile to believe, and gentile who simply accepts and believes in the 'G-d' and the religion of Israel?

Or are only those gentiles that submit to a physical mutilation of their penile foreskin 'proselytes' ?

There were many gentile servants and 'strangers within the gate' and 'righteous strangers' that lived among the 'Jews' abiding by the Noachide laws, keeping THE Sabbath and worshiping the Holy one of Israel along with the 'Jewish' people.
Gentiles, whom under The Law of Moses, were NOT required to undergo circumcision, and did not undergo circumcision, and thus retained their gentile identities and status. Becuse The Holy one of Israel had promised that He would deliver the GENTILES along with his people Israel.
Gentiles did NOT have to become Jews to find favor with The Holy One of Israel.

Yet whenever evil was released upon the Jews, these uncircumcised gentile Sabbath keepers were usually the very first group to be rounded up, arrested, tortured, and put to death for their 'crime' of 'Judaizing'.
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Old 02-15-2013, 01:50 PM   #42
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What is Jewish?




Well that is a excellent question and understudied.

When is the real question. Judaism has evolved into its current state.

I found pre fall of the temple Judaism to be very interesting because of how diverse and multicultural it had become with Hellenization.

Its diversity is why we have Christians.


Remember, the names we have for different early sects really depends on "who" is using what term.

There is a thin line during these hellenistic times between Proselytes and Jewish, Ive found in the Jewsih encylopedia that Hellenism was accepted with open arms. The line between Proselyte and Jew was very vague depending on geographic location.


Im sure real some Israelite Jewish elite circles looked down on Hellenistic Proselytes, where others not only were the norm, they ran the new governement and temple.



Wide diversity doesnt even begin to explain what was going on then.

The Jews were active proselytizers, and were so successful that this was proscribed more than once and inn a number of places in the Roman empire. We can be assured that there was a wide range of ideas about what constituted Judaism throughout the Empire. Pre and post revolt Judaism of course caused further changes.


Cheerful Charlie

That how I see it.


We have hellenization of Judaism that opened up wide and diverse definitions.


For me to define Paul or Josephas as under Judaism, is painting with a very broad brush using grey tones.
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Old 02-15-2013, 01:54 PM   #43
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There were many gentile servants and 'strangers within the gate' and 'righteous strangers' that lived by the Noachide laws, kept Sabbath and worshipped the Holy one of Israel along with the 'Jewish' people, Whom under The Law of Moses, were NOT required to undergo circumcision, and thus retained their gentile identities and status.
And in many places these same people were seen as hellenistic Jews.


http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/ar...2391-proselyte


The more lenient were ready to accord them full equality with Jews as soon as they had solemnly forsworn idolatry.
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Old 02-15-2013, 02:07 PM   #44
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He doesn't have to be exclusive. His audience need only generally be Jewish. The logic for the Jew will basically apply for the proselyte.
Ah. 'generally be Jewish', and 'the 'proselyte'. So now you allow that there may have been, or were 'proselytes' among these theraputae.

These theraputae were NOT Philo's audience, His De vita contemplativa was not addressed to them, but to the world at large, including us, Jews, and Jewish religion loving proselytes like me.

You are, without directly quoting the material I supplied, conceding the possibility that Philo was writing -of- the theraputae as a 'mixed multitude' of worshipers, to the mixed multitude of the world, and to his fellow Jewish believers in particular.

Philo and most Jews are aware of different types of 'proselytes'. Not all 'proselytes' were circumcised, because by The Laws, circumcision was NOT a requirement upon any gentile believer or worshiper, unless that one wished to become a 'Jew', or enter the Jerusalem Temple, or actually eat of the passover seder.

One could, and one can believe in haShem and 'l'qura b'Shemo' without being circumcised. Abraham did.

If there were any proselyte GENTILES among that group of 'theraputae', Philo was perfectly right and socially correct and polite to be writing 'theraputae' rather than simply 'Jews'.
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Old 02-15-2013, 02:19 PM   #45
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No one denied the possibility of proselytes being part of the make up of the therapeutai. They are still 'Jewish' in the sense that they are part of the Jewish religion. The rest of the stuff you write about is nonsense. Philo does not mention as far as I know different types of proselytes etc.
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Old 02-15-2013, 02:39 PM   #46
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They are still 'Jewish' in the sense that they are part of the Jewish religion.
Even as uncircumcised Gentiles.

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Philo does not mention as far as I know different types of proselytes etc.
He doesn't have to. Any Jew or Gentile familiar with The Law would be aware of the distinctions, and what was (is) allowable and what is not under that Law.

The Nations cannot very well love haShem and His Holy Laws unless they are willing to learn, and to KEEP His Commandments.
(whatever of them apply to Gentile believers)

I may worship as a Gentile even with the strictest of Hassidic Jews, if I know my place, understand my limitations under The Law, and conduct myself peacefully and respectfully with due humility and propriety. (Else there would never be any proselytes)
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Old 02-15-2013, 02:44 PM   #47
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Philo does not mention as far as I know different types of proselytes etc.
He doesn't have to. Any Jew or Gentile familiar with The Laws would be aware of the distinctions, and what was (is) allowable and what is not under that Law.
Doesnt make any sense when you can claim Saducees were Jewish. Distinctions were different wide and varied. Period.


There was no real orthodox Judaism within Hellenization, unless you want to claim Zealots views of opposing hellenization.
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Old 02-15-2013, 02:58 PM   #48
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The parting of the Red Sea means nothing to anyone but to the children of Abraham.
And yet it was a mixed multitude that made that crossing.
Not just Jews, but those Gentiles that had joined themselves to the tribes of the children of Israel.

They weren't all 'Jews', that were delivered, else the multitude would not have been mixed.

(There was not even such thing as a 'Jew' at that time)


ערב 'mixed' in the sense of being 'interwoven', 'knitted' together
In the story, or do you believe this really happened? Abraham, Moses were historical?
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Old 02-15-2013, 03:10 PM   #49
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Originally Posted by spin
He doesn't have to be exclusive. His audience need only generally be Jewish. The logic for the Jew will basically apply for the proselyte.
Ah. 'generally be Jewish', and 'the 'proselyte'. So now you allow that there may have been, or were 'proselytes' among these theraputae.

These theraputae were NOT Philo's audience, His De vita contemplativa was not addressed to them, but to the world at large, including us, Jews, and Jewish religion loving proselytes like me.

You are, without directly quoting the material I supplied, conceding the possibility that Philo was writing -of- the theraputae as a 'mixed multitude' of worshipers, to the mixed multitude of the world, and to his fellow Jewish believers in particular.

Philo and most Jews are aware of different types of 'proselytes'. Not all 'proselytes' were circumcised, because by The Laws, circumcision was NOT a requirement upon any gentile believer or worshiper, unless that one wished to become a 'Jew', or enter the Jerusalem Temple, or actually eat of the passover seder.

One could, and one can believe in haShem without being circumcised. Abraham did.
Way out, rocket man. This is hysterical. Literally.

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If there were any proselyte GENTILES among that group of 'theraputae', Philo was perfectly right and socially correct and polite to be writing 'theraputae' rather than simply 'Jews'.
You still totally miss the simple logic issue. There is no reason for you to think that these adherents to the basic religion of Philo were anything other than Jews. They may have been, but Philo doesn't give you a single hint. He certainly puts them into the context of the religion he accepts. This should make you think they are Jewish unless otherwise stated--and there is nothing to the contrary.
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Old 02-15-2013, 03:25 PM   #50
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The issue of circumcision is an interesting one insofar as it was universally associated with Jews and Judaism but - interestingly - was not included among the ten commandments. So was it a divinely ordained or man-made commandment? Aquila apparently came down on the side that since it was not counted among the ten it was not God-given. But did this position exist before Christianity? It seems unlikely as there is no specific reference to communities of uncircumcised who considered themselves 'Jews.' It seems instead to be a specifically Christian position or at least one that emerged in the Christian era or because of the specifically Christian re-interpretation of the superiority of the ten commandments over the rest of the man-made ordinances.
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