Difference between revisions of "From Politics to Piety: The Emergence of Pharisaic Judaism (1973 Neusner), book"

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==ABSTRACT==
'''From Politics to Piety: The Emergence of Pharisaic Judaism''' (1973) is a book by [[Jacob Neusner]].


==Abstract==
''From Politics to Piety'' (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1973) traces the transformation of the Pharisees from political activism in the first century BCE to a less political, more quietistic religious group after the Great Revolt and into the rabbinic era.  Neusner pioneered a critical approach to rabbinic literature, demonstrating a staunch refusal to blindly accept their stories as historical fact.  His perspective on Josephus and the gospels was equally skeptical.  He questions how much Josephus really knew about the Pharisees, and he argues that the gospels’ presentation of the Pharisees reveals more about their lives and influence after the Great Revolt than before.  In this approach he is adopting the position of his own teacher, Morton Smith.  A provocative work reflecting a critical approach to the sources, this is one of Neusner's better publications.  Not only a valuable basic introduction to the Pharisees, but a worthy example of how to analyze religious literature.  - '''Ronald Ruark''', University of Michigan
''From Politics to Piety'' (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1973) traces the transformation of the Pharisees from political activism in the first century BCE to a less political, more quietistic religious group after the Great Revolt and into the rabbinic era.  Neusner pioneered a critical approach to rabbinic literature, demonstrating a staunch refusal to blindly accept their stories as historical fact.  His perspective on Josephus and the gospels was equally skeptical.  He questions how much Josephus really knew about the Pharisees, and he argues that the gospels’ presentation of the Pharisees reveals more about their lives and influence after the Great Revolt than before.  In this approach he is adopting the position of his own teacher, Morton Smith.  A provocative work reflecting a critical approach to the sources, this is one of Neusner's better publications.  Not only a valuable basic introduction to the Pharisees, but a worthy example of how to analyze religious literature.  - '''Ronald Ruark''', University of Michigan


==TABLE OF CONTENTS==
==Editions and translations==
Published at Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1973 / 2nd ed. New York, NY:  KTAV, 1979.


==Table of contents==


1.  The Problem of the Historical Pharisees
1.  The Problem of the Historical Pharisees
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Appendix II.  Luke and the Pharisees by J. A. Ziesler
Appendix II.  Luke and the Pharisees by J. A. Ziesler


 
==External links==
==EDITIONS==
*[ Google Books]
 
1st edition.  Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1973.
[[Category:Scholarship]]
 
[[Category:Books|1973 Neusner]]
2nd edition.  New York: KTAV, 1979.
[[Category:English language|1973 Neusner]]
[[Category:Made in the 1970s|1973 Neusner]]
[[Category:Pharisees (subject)|1973 Neusner]]

Revision as of 23:27, 9 December 2009

From Politics to Piety: The Emergence of Pharisaic Judaism (1973) is a book by Jacob Neusner.

Abstract

From Politics to Piety (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1973) traces the transformation of the Pharisees from political activism in the first century BCE to a less political, more quietistic religious group after the Great Revolt and into the rabbinic era. Neusner pioneered a critical approach to rabbinic literature, demonstrating a staunch refusal to blindly accept their stories as historical fact. His perspective on Josephus and the gospels was equally skeptical. He questions how much Josephus really knew about the Pharisees, and he argues that the gospels’ presentation of the Pharisees reveals more about their lives and influence after the Great Revolt than before. In this approach he is adopting the position of his own teacher, Morton Smith. A provocative work reflecting a critical approach to the sources, this is one of Neusner's better publications. Not only a valuable basic introduction to the Pharisees, but a worthy example of how to analyze religious literature. - Ronald Ruark, University of Michigan

Editions and translations

Published at Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1973 / 2nd ed. New York, NY: KTAV, 1979.

Table of contents

1. The Problem of the Historical Pharisees

2. Hillel

3. Josephus' Pharisees: "The Real Administrators of the State"

4. The Gospels' Pharisees: "Brood of Vipers"

5. The Rabbinical Traditions about the Pharisees

6. Traditions of Yavneh (70-125 A.D.)

7. Traditions of Usha (140-170 A.D.)

8. The Pharisees in History

Appendix I. The Pharisees in the Gospels by Morton Smith

Appendix II. Luke and the Pharisees by J. A. Ziesler

External links

  • [ Google Books]