After the Exile: God's People Return to Judea
In Babylon
The Bible provides
little information about the years in the sixth century B.C. when many
of the Israelite people lived in exile in Babylonia. Though the people
could no longer worship God in the temple in Jerusalem, the Babylonians
allowed them to gather and practice their religion. The Israelites told
the stories of their ancestors, heard the words of prophets, and
studied the Law of Moses. Some believe that it was during the time of
the exile that some of Israel's priests added to the old Scriptures and
wrote new ones, so the people would not forget who they were and where
they came from.
Back Home in Judea
Many
of the Jewish people had been sent into exile between the years 597 to
582 B.C. In 539 B.C., Cyrus of Persia conquered Babylonia. About one
year later he gave the Jewish people permission to return to their
homeland of Judea. The books of Ezra and Nehemiah in the Old Testament
tell about the hundred-year period that followed the time of the exile.
The books of the prophets Haggai and Zechariah also come from this
time. Sometime between 500 and 425 B.C. the priest named Ezra
encouraged the people to return to their Jewish traditions and to obey
the Law of Moses. He went so far as to force Jewish men to give up
their foreign wives (Ezra 9,10).
Two
religious issues were most important to the people who had returned
from exile: (1) worship of the God of Israel in the rebuilt temple in
Jerusalem, and (2) study of the Law of Moses to see how God's people
were to live in the present situation. Also in this period, Nehemiah
served for a time as governor of Judea and helped supervise the
rebuilding of Jerusalem's walls. Though the people had the freedom to
worship as they wished, their land was still under control of the
Persians.
Outside of Judea
While
some of the Jewish people were settling back in Jerusalem, others
stayed in the lands ruled by Persia or moved on to other major cities
in the eastern Mediterranean world. Some of these groups developed
their own collections of the Jewish Scriptures and their own methods of
interpreting them. Jewish groups also appeared in Syria and Asia Minor,
in North Africa, and on islands in the Mediterranean. Many Jewish
writings of the period after the exile come from Alexandria in Egypt,
where Jewish teachers read their Scriptures along with Greek
philosophy. These teachers believed that this approach would help
people to understand the basic truths of the Bible.
The Influence of Alexander the Great
Between
336 B.C. and 323 B.C., Alexander the Great of Macedonia conquered much
of the eastern Mediterranean world, including Egypt, Palestine (where
Jerusalem was located), and much of Persia. After Alexander died, these
lands were ruled for over a century by his generals or those who
followed them. The most important of these rulers were the Seleucids,
who controlled Syria, and the Ptolemies, who controlled Egypt. One or
the other of these royal families ruled Palestine, the land of the
Jewish people, for much of this time. However, in 168 B.C. the Seleucid
king, Antiochus IV, began to try to stop people from practicing the
Jewish religion. He declared that it was forbidden to study the Law of
Moses, observe the Sabbath, or practice circumcision. Antiochus IV also
set up a statue of the Greek god Zeus in the Jewish temple. His actions
deeply offended the Jewish people.
Most Jews continued to worship
in Jerusalem and to pay yearly fees to support the temple and its
priests. From the time of their captivity in Babylonia, Jews had met
informally in homes or in public halls to study the Scriptures. The
moral teachings and the understanding of God contained in the Jewish
Scriptures attracted many non-Jews (Gentiles) to these meetings. Some
non-Jewish men were circumcised in order to become full members of the
Jewish community (see Acts 2.11; 16.1-3; see also the note on circumcision at Gen 17.10-11).
Greek,
Roman, and Persian philosophies and ideas influenced Jewish writings of
the time. This influence is apparent in many of the books that are
included in some editions of the Bible and known as “deuterocanonical”
or “apocryphal.” (See the article called What Books Belong in the Bible?)
Jewish writers also copied the style and form of a kind of popular
Roman literature called “sibylline oracles,” which told of prophecies
concerning Caesar and the Roman people. The Jewish Sibylline Oracles
told about God's plan for the future of his people.
The religion
of the Jewish people after the exile in Babylonia did not move toward
one single pattern or style. People were practicing Judaism and living
as Jews in a variety of ways. This was the situation when Jesus came to
teach the people many new things about God and God's kingdom. For a
description of this next phase in Jewish history, see the articles
called People of the Law: The Religion of Israel and The World of Jesus: Peoples, Powers, and Politics. See also the mini-article called Synagogues.
The Jewish People Reclaim Their Land
The
Jewish people revolted against Antiochus. The rebellion broke out
suddenly. Soon the rebellion had a leader named Judas Maccabeus. (One
of the possible meanings for his last name is “the hammer.”) Led by
Judas Maccabeus, the small bands of Jewish fighters defeated the mighty
army of Antiochus. This revolt is described in 1and 2 Maccabees in the Apocrypha. (See the article What Books Belong in the Bible?). Eventually the rebels purified the temple, an event still remembered by Jews today in the celebration of Hanukkah.
Finally,
the Maccabees set up their own government. Those Maccabean rulers who
came after Judas called themselves by the title of king, even though
they were not descendants of King David or from the tribe of Judah.
This upset many Jews, who did not like the Maccabeans' cruel style of
control and the agreements they made with Rome in order to remain in
power. The rule of the Maccabees lasted until the Roman general Pompey
invaded Jerusalem and brought all the land under direct Roman control
in 63 b.c.
Because they were bitterly disappointed over the
Maccabean style of political rule, some of the Jewish people turned to
other kinds of religions or philosophies. For example, one group of
Jews became very disappointed with the temple priests in Jerusalem who
seemed to love the wealth and power connected with running the temple.
This group withdrew from Jewish society and lived as a separate
community in a barren area near the Dead Sea. They remained there,
living in complete obedience to God's Law as they understood it. They
believed that God would help them drive out the present priests and
rebuild the city of Jerusalem and the temple. In the middle of the
twentieth century, many books and writings of this group were
discovered in a place called Qumran near the Dead Sea. These writings
are known as the Dead Sea Scrolls. Included in these scrolls is the
oldest surviving copy of isaiah, as well as the rule books for this
community.