
The death penalty in classical Judaism has been a highly politicized subject in modern scholarship. Enlightenment attacks on the Talmud's legitimacy led scholars to use the Talmud's criminal law as evidence for its elevated morals. But even more pressing was the need to prove Jews' innocence of the charge of killing Christ. The reconstruction of a just Jewish death penalty was a defense against the accusation that a corrupt Jewish court was responsible for the death of Christ.In Execution and Invention, Beth A. Berkowitz tells the story of modern scholarship on the ancient rabbinic death penalty and offers a fresh perspective using the approaches of ritual studies, cultural criticism, and talmudic source criticism. Against the scholarly consensus, Berkowitz argues that the early Rabbis used the rabbinic laws of the death penalty to establish their power in the wake of the destruction of the Temple. Following recent currents in historiography, Berkowitz sees the Rabbis as an embattled, almost invisible sect within second-century Judaism. The function of their death penalty laws, Berkowitz contends, was to create a complex ritual of execution under rabbinic control, thus bolstering rabbinic claims to authority in the context of Roman political and cultural domination.Understanding rabbinic literature to be in dialogue with the Bible, with the variety of ancient Jews, and with Roman imperialism, Berkowitz shows how the Rabbis tried to create an appealing alternative to the Roman, paganized culture of Palestine's Jews. In their death penalty, the Rabbis substituted Rome's power with their own. Early Christians, on the other hand, used death penalty discourse to critique judicial power. But Berkowitz argues that the Christian critique of execution produced new claims to authority as much as the rabbinic embrace. By comparing rabbinic conversations about the death penalty with Christian ones, Berkowitz reveals death penalty discourse as a significant means of creating authority.
How did early rabbinic and Christian communities utilize discourse surrounding the death penalty to construct and assert their own institutional authority? Beth A. Berkowitz, a scholar of rabbinic literature, examines the intersection of legal theory, ritual studies, and cultural criticism to challenge traditional historiography. She argues that early Rabbis utilized death penalty laws as a mechanism to establish legitimacy and power following the destruction of the Temple, while early Christians employed similar discourse to critique judicial power and simultaneously forge their own authoritative claims.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of rabbinic law and its sociopolitical context. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous engagement with both primary sources and modern historiographical trends.
Page Count:
362
Publication Date:
2006-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190292539
ISBN-13:
9780190292539
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