(In the interests of full disclosure, I'll admit that I've been known to make a fuss.

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I think the word has out lived its use as a slur.Jrosemary wrote:I read this article in The Jewish Daily Forward. It's gives both sides of the argument, although it comes down strong on the side of making a fuss. What do you think?
(In the interests of full disclosure, I'll admit that I've been known to make a fuss.)
Sorry for not answering this sooner! You bring up an excellent point. Judaism and Christianity were in the midst of a nasty divorce by the time the Gospels-- excepting Mark?--were written. That's no doubt one reason why the Gospels have such a negative depiction of the Pharisees. Neither religion, I imagine, had much good to say about the other at the time; it's just a shame that the bitterness of the divorce bled into the Gospels. But we can learn from that divorce now and try to view each other in more positive light.Cathar1950 wrote:I think the word has out lived its use as a slur.Jrosemary wrote:I read this article in The Jewish Daily Forward. It's gives both sides of the argument, although it comes down strong on the side of making a fuss. What do you think?
(In the interests of full disclosure, I'll admit that I've been known to make a fuss.)
Jesus had more in common with the Pharisees then he would with those that would use it as a slur. The in Mark the Pharisees were are pretty good terms with Jesus and there is good reasons to think he may have been thought of as one of their own.
The later gospels the situation has changed and now the Christian communities that produced the later gospels were competing with the Pharisees that were not the leading group where the other groups bound to the temple lost their positions and the Jewish Christian leadership had vanished with the temple too.
They also competed for the interpretaion of the Hebrew writings where the Christian was an obvious reinterpretation. The later depictions of the Pharisees in the gospels is propaganda.
They seem to be on rather friendly terms in Mark written sometime around the destruction of the temple. They warn Jesus of Herod and he even agrees with one young man. The next generation the Pharisees were leading even is Diaspora and the Christians Gentiles were competing for the reinterpretation of the Hebrew writings. You can find sectarian Jews calling each other Satan in the two centuries before Jesus and you see Christians kind of inherited it now calling Jewish assemblies synagogue of Satan.Jrosemary wrote:Sorry for not answering this sooner! You bring up an excellent point. Judaism and Christianity were in the midst of a nasty divorce by the time the Gospels-- excepting Mark?--were written. That's no doubt one reason why the Gospels have such a negative depiction of the Pharisees. Neither religion, I imagine, had much good to say about the other at the time; it's just a shame that the bitterness of the divorce bled into the Gospels. But we can learn from that divorce now and try to view each other in more positive light.Cathar1950 wrote:I think the word has out lived its use as a slur.Jrosemary wrote:I read this article in The Jewish Daily Forward. It's gives both sides of the argument, although it comes down strong on the side of making a fuss. What do you think?
(In the interests of full disclosure, I'll admit that I've been known to make a fuss.)
Jesus had more in common with the Pharisees then he would with those that would use it as a slur. The in Mark the Pharisees were are pretty good terms with Jesus and there is good reasons to think he may have been thought of as one of their own.
The later gospels the situation has changed and now the Christian communities that produced the later gospels were competing with the Pharisees that were not the leading group where the other groups bound to the temple lost their positions and the Jewish Christian leadership had vanished with the temple too.
They also competed for the interpretaion of the Hebrew writings where the Christian was an obvious reinterpretation. The later depictions of the Pharisees in the gospels is propaganda.