Postby EricTheFred » Sat Jan 09, 2010 9:35 pm
[quote="Momo-P (post: 1364791)"]I know this may sound like weird question, but I've never received a clear answer. I did look it up, but what I got didn't really strike me as straightforward, not to mention I obviously need a Christian perspective of it. Each time I do hear Christians talk of it, they never regard it in a positive light. Something about how it's not really God's laws and has more to do with their personal opinions? I mean, I don't think I've even heard modern day Jews really mention it well either so...anyone wanna tell me? ^^]
First, careful with statements like 'it's not really God's laws' around the faithful of Judaism; they're likely to take offense.
Basically, the Talmud is the thing that separates modern Rabbinical Judaism from it's predecessors, such as those mentioned in the bible, like Pharisitical and whatever the adjective form of 'Sadducee' is. The Essenes who left us the Dead Sea Scrolls were yet another sect with their own teachings, and a large part of the Scrolls are made up of these. Rabbinical Judaism began in the late Roman Empire, after the Diaspora, as Jews were trying to reassemble the shattered remains of their various sects into a cohesive whole again (things got very confused after they were spread out over the Empire, and in many cases beyond it, since quite a number of Jews fled to lands beyond Roman law during that time.) Early Rabbis began recovering and codifying older teachings, especially those of the Pharisees, and coming up with agreements among them on various things that once separated the different sects.
The Talmud starts with Mosaic Law (the Ten Commandments + the Mitzvot, meaning the rest of the law found in the Torah) This is what Christianity sees as the 'Old Testament Law.' It then builds upon it with all the various and sundry conclusions by Jewish scholars, which they have made by reasoning first from Mosaic Law, then as a lesser source the rest of the Tanakh (the entire Bible as accepted in Judaism), then as a third-tier source the conclusions of prior scholars.
The first compilation of these teachings is late second century, so it reflects fairly strongly Pharisee teachings, with influence from early Christianity (early Christians and post-Diaspora Jews often intermixed communities and even congregations.) A few centuries later, a longer Talmud was written, which was basically the original + revisions and extensions made after the original compilation. It's this Talmud that I believe is largely the same as is taught today.
So, the Talmud relates to the Tanakh in pretty much the same way as the Sharia relates to the Koran, or the teachings of whatever denomination you belong to relate to the Christian Bible.
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May He cause His face to shine upon you.
May He lift up His countenance and grant you peace.
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