Lecture 13-14 2014 The Sabbath in Judaism - From Saturday To Sunday

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Shaye J.D.

Cohen 1

[email protected] Bible to Judaism and Christianity

Lecture 13: The Sabbath (M Mar 10) Uniqueness of seven day week in antiquity Seven day astrological week Indications of the unusual importance of the Sabbath in the Bible: Very rich and variegated biblical legacy Built into the nature of the cosmos: at the creation God rested on the seventh day (Genesis 2:1-4), therefore Israelites are to rest as well (Exodus 20:11, 31:17) o In the Deuteronomic version of the Decalogue (5:16) Sabbath is connected with the Exodus (theme of rest) rather than creation, therefore it is not universal but Israelite-specific Shabbat, like Israel and like God, is holy (Genesis 2:3; Exodus 20:8, 31:14, 35:2; Deuteronomy 5:12; Jeremiah 17:22, Isaiah 58:13, Ezekiel 20:20) Sabbath is a sign between Israel and God (Exodus 31:13, 17; Ezekiel 20:12, 20), an eternal covenant (Exodus 31:16), a covenant (Isaiah 56:4). o Note similarity to circumcision o As punishment for rejecting the Sabbath, God punished the Israelites in the wilderness (Ezekiel 20)
Some modern scholars argue that circumcision and Sabbath (and perhaps the food laws) became prominent only in the period of exile (post 587 BCE)

Do not do any manner of work on the Sabbath day (Exodus 20:9) what does this mean? Inevitability of exegesis Exodus 35:3 not to kindle a fire Numbers 15:32-36 the story of the wood-chopper (wood-gatherer?) Exodus 16 re manna in the desert: prepare food on Friday for the morrow; gather manna on Friday (16:22); bake and cook on Friday (16:23); do not leave your tent on the seventh day (16:29)
21

So they gathered it every morning, each as much as he needed to eat; for when the sun grew hot, it would melt. 22On the sixth day they gathered double the amount of food, two omers for each; and when all the chieftains of the community came and told Moses, 23he said to them, This is what the LORD meant: Tomorrow is a day of rest, a holy sabbath of the LORD. Bake what you would bake and boil what you would boil; and all that is left put aside to be kept until morning. 24 So they put it aside until morning, as Moses had ordered; and it did not turn foul, and there were no maggots in it. 25Then Moses said, Eat it today, for today is a sabbath of the LORD; you will not find it today on the plain. 26Six days you shall gather it; on the seventh day, the sabbath, there will be none. 27 Yet some of the people went out on the seventh day to gather, but they found nothing. 28And the LORD said to Moses, How long will you men refuse to obey My commandments and My teachings? 29Mark that the LORD has given you the sabbath; therefore He gives you two days' food on the sixth day. Let everyone remain where he is: let no one leave his place on the seventh day. 30So the people remained inactive on the seventh day.

Shaye J.D. Cohen 2

[email protected] Bible to Judaism and Christianity

Jeremiah 17:19-25: not to conduct business on Shabbat by carrying a burden or removing a burden from one s house: 19 Thus said the Lord to me: Go and stand in the
Peoples Gate, by which the kings of Judah enter and by which they go out, and in all the gates of Jerusalem, 20and say to them: Hear the word of the Lord, you kings of Judah, and all Judah, and all the inhabitants of Jerusalem, who enter by these gates. 21Thus says the Lord: For the sake of your lives, take care that you do not bear a burden on the Sabbath day or bring it in by the gates of Jerusalem. 22And do not carry a burden out of your houses on the Sabbath or do any work, but keep the Sabbath day holy, as I commanded your ancestors. 23Yet they did not listen or incline their ear; they stiffened their necks and would not hear or receive instruction. 24 But if you listen to me, says the Lord, and bring in no burden by the gates of this city on the Sabbath day, but keep the Sabbath day holy and do no work on it, 25then there shall enter by the gates of this city kings who sit on the throne of David, riding in chariots and on horses, they and their officials, the people of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem; and this city shall be inhabited for ever.

Isaiah 58:13: series of broad and obscure generalizations (if on account of the
Sabbath you turn back your foot from doing your own desires on my holy day; if you call the Sabbath a delight, the holy day of the Lord honorable; if you honor it by not going your own ways, finding your own interests, or speaking words then you will be rewarded)

M. Shabbat 7:2 the creation of 39 prohibited labors; shows rabbinic creativity; Sabbath as inversion of the temple. Goldenberg: the list as a statement of rabbinic vision of culture o Cf. Matthew 12:5, Or have you not read in the law how on the Sabbath the priests in
the temple profane the Sabbath and are guiltless? I tell you, something greater than the temple is here.

Tension between Sabbath as a day of restriction/prohibition and Sabbath as a day of joy, both spiritual and carnal (Goldenberg) Spiritual: gather (prayer) in synagogue, study the Torah (assumed by NT, Philo and Josephus) Carnal: Sabbath is a delight (Isaiah 58:13): food, clothing, sex o According to some ancient non-Jewish authors, the Sabbath was a day of fasting and half-mourning; medieval Jewish sectarians

Shaye J.D. Cohen 3

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Mishnah Shabbat 7:2.

7:2 The primary labors1 [prohibited on the Sabbath] are forty save one: (1) sowing2, (2) plowing, (3) reaping, (4) binding sheaves, (5) threshing, (6) winnowing, (7) selecting, (8) grinding, (9) sifting, (10) kneading, (11) baking; (12) shearing wool, (13) bleaching it, (14) hackling it, (15) dyeing it, (16) spinning, (17) stretching the threads, (18) making two meshes, (19) weaving two threads, (20) dividing two threads, (21) tying, (22) untying, (23) sewing two stitches, (24) tearing in order to sew two stitches; (25) hunting a deer, (26) slaughtering it, (27) flaying it, (28) salting it, (29) curing its hide, (30) scraping it, (31) slicing it, (32) writing two letters, (33) erasing in order to write two letters; (34) building, (35) pulling down; (36) extinguishing, (37) kindling; (38) striking with a hammer; (39) taking out from one domain to another. These, then, are the primary labors: forty save one.
Primary labors: these labors are primary in the sense that there are secondary and tertiary labors that unfold under each of them. Each, then, is an archetype (or father). So, for example, labor 11, baking, includes cooking food and boiling water. Labors 111 are the steps required to get wheat in order to bake bread; labors 12-24 are the steps required to get wool in order to sew a garment; labors 25-33 are the steps required to get leather in order to write something; the remaining six belong to diverse categories This list provides the framework for most of the rest of the tractate. The Mishnah devotes more attention to the prohibition of carrying (no. 39) than to any of the other labors. (39) taking out from one domain to another: I.e. from the private domain to the public, or from the public to the private.

1 2

Lit. labor-fathers; Danby translates main classes of work. Lit. the sower, the plower, etc. In mss. plowing is listed before sowing.

Shaye J.D. Cohen 4

[email protected] Bible to Judaism and Christianity

Lecture 14 From Shabbat to Sunday (F Mar 14) Jesus and the Sabbath: Jesus performs exorcisms/healings on the Sabbath (Mark 1:21-34) and therefore is opposed by the Pharisees (Mk 3:1-6; Lk 14:1-6) or the Jews (John 5:1-18) Not clear what legal violation, if any, is involved Jesus defends himself by saying that the Pharisees themselves would rescue an animal from the pit (Mt 12:11; Lk 14:5; cf. Lk 13:15) - no principled rejection of the Sabbath here General Sabbath observance is assumed by the narrators: o John 5:10, the Jews say to the man who was cured, It is the Sabbath; it is not lawful for you to carry your mat o Mark 1:32, That evening, at sunset, they brought him all who were sick o (Lk 13:14, The ruler of the synagogue says to the people, There are six days on which work ought to be done; come on those days and be cured, and not on the Sabbath day) Jesus defends his disciples who pluck grain on the Sabbath (Mk 2:23-28): 23One Sabbath
Jesus was going through the grainfields, and as his disciples walked along, they began to pick some heads of grain. 24The Pharisees said to him, "Look, why are they doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath?" 25He answered, "Have you never read what David did when he and his companions were hungry and in need? 26In the days of Abiathar the high priest, he entered the house of God and ate the consecrated bread, which is lawful only for priests to eat. And he also gave some to his companions." 27Then he said to them, "The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. 28So the Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath."

More radical; were the disciples starving to death? The Sabbath was made for humanity, and not humanity for the Sabbath (Mk 2:27) is an appeal for the lessening of Sabbath severity; cf. Mekhilta on Exodus 30:14: R. Simeon b. Menasyah says: Scripture says And you shall keep the Sabbath for it is holy unto you. The Sabbath is given to you ; but you are not given to the Sabbath the context is a discussion of the principle that saving a life takes
precedence over the Sabbath

2:28 might be a principled rejection of the Sabbath (so the son of man is lord even of the Sabbath)

Sunday/Saturday two aspects: day of worship; day of rest Sunday as the Lords day, a day of worship: Sunday (Lords Day) supplements and gradually replaces Saturday (seventh day) for gentile Christians because first day of the week is the day of Christs resurrection: o Acts 20:7 Paul met with some Christians on the first day of the week

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o 1 Corinthians 16:2 on the first day of the week collect alms o Revelation 1:10 Lords Day o Christians meet on Sunday (Didache 14; Justin Apology 67) Rise of Sunday connected with rise of Easter: o Redemption from Egypt becomes redemption from sin, hence Passover is replaced by Easter, and Sabbath (which is a memorial to the Exodus in Deuteronomy) by Sunday o Sunday as a day of rest instead of Saturday God does not want rest on Saturday Sabbath as a day of rest: the only one of the ten commandments not confirmed by Jesus in the NT
God never intended the Sabbath commandment to be taken literally An eschatological symbol of the perfect Sabbath that follows the six thousand years of this world The Eighth day is a prolongation of the seventh, and is also the day on which Christ was resurrected. Later Christian writers frequently refer to Sunday as the Eighth day. Justin 41:4: circumcision on the eighth day is a type for our salvation through Christ (who rose on the eighth day).

Barnabas c. 15:

Justin: Ancient worthies found favor in Gods eyes without observing the Sabbath (19.5, 27.5) Sabbath like circumcision is a sign to mark out the Jews (21.1) Given by Moses and reaffirmed by Isaiah because of the hardness of heart (27.2-4) God wants a perpetual Sabbath (12.1) The new law requires you to keep perpetual
sabbath, and you, because you are idle for one day, suppose you are pious, not discerning why this has been commanded you. This will become a standard Christian idea. o The command to abstain from labor on the Sabbath means to abstain from works of sin every day of the week (Origen, Augustine)

If God really wanted observance of the Sabbath, he would not have had the temple function on that day, or have allowed circumcisions to take place on that day (27.5): For, tell me, did God wish the priests to sin when they offer the sacrifices
on the Sabbaths? or those to sin, who are circumcised and do circumcise on the Sabbaths; since He commands that on the eighth day--even though it happen to be a Sabbath--those who are born shall be always circumcised? or could not the infants be operated upon one day previous or one day subsequent to the Sabbath, if He knew that it is a sinful act upon the Sabbaths? Or why did He not teach those--who are called righteous and pleasing to Him, who lived before Moses and Abraham, who were not circumcised in their foreskin, and observed no Sabbaths--to keep these institutions?

Shaye J.D. Cohen 6

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Sunday as a day of rest, Christian Sabbath Two strategies in the history of Christianity: o Sunday as a day of worship, not a day of rest (Barnabas, Justin) Nice discussion by Craig Blomberg o Sunday as a day of worship and a day of rest (a Christian Sabbath) Emperor Constantine passed a law in 321 CE requiring rest from work on Sunday in order to facilitate attendance at church Rigorous transfer of notion of Sabbath to Sunday becomes common only under Puritans; Christian Sabbatarianism; o Seventh Day Adventists argue that Sabbath was meant by God to be observed at all times by all peoples, including gentile Christians, as day of rest o Chariots of Fire o Laura Wilder, Little House on the Prairie o Sunday blue laws

In case youre interested: (Thanks to Jesse Rainbow for bringing this to my attention.) "Obedience" by Seitze Buning (=Stanley Wiersma), in Purpaleanie and other Permutations (The Middleburg Press, Orange City, IA. 1978.) Were my parents right or wrong not to mow the ripe oats that Sunday morning with the rainstorm threatening? I reminded them that the Sabbath was made for man and of the ox fallen into the pit. Without an oats crop, I argued, the cattle would need to survive on town-bought oats and then it wouldn't pay to keep them. Isn't selling cattle at a loss like an ox in a pit? My parents did not argue. We went to church. We sang the usual psalms louder than usual-we, and the others whose harvests were at stake: "Jerusalem, where blessing waits, Our feet are standing in thy gates." "God be merciful to me; On thy grace I rest my plea."

Shaye J.D. Cohen 7

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Dominie's spur-of-the-moment concession: [*Dominie is a term of endearment for the Dutch Reformed pastor. --J.R.] "He rides on the clouds, the wings of the storm; The lightning and wind his missions perform." Dominie made no concessions on sermon length: "Five Good Reasons for Infant Baptism," Though we heard little of it, for more floods came and more winds blew and beat upon that House than we had figured on, even, more lighting and thunder and hail the size of pullet eggs. Falling branches snapped the electric wires. We sang the closing psalm without the organ and in the dark: "Ye seed from Abraham descended, God's covenant love is never ended." Afterward we rode by our oats field, flattened. "We still will mow it," Dad said. "Ten bushels to the acre, maybe, what would have been fifty if I had mowed right after milking and if the whole family had shocked. We could have had it weatherproof before the storm." Later at dinner Dad said, "God was testing us. I'm glad we went." "Those psalms never gave me such a lift as this morning," Mother said, "I wouldn't have missed it." And even I thought but did not say, How guilty we would feel now if we had saved the harvest.

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