The Jewish-Christian schism in Late Antiquity has been studied from numerous points of view. This paper will approach these events by investigating the manner in which halakhic issues (questions of Jewish law) motivated the approach of the early Rabbis to the rise of the new faith, and the manner in which Rabbinic legal enactments expressed that approach as well. The eventual conclusion of the Rabbis and the Jewish community that Christianity was a separate religion and that Christians were not Jews, was intimately bound up with the Jewish laws and traditions governing personal status in the Jewish community, both for Jews by birth and proselytes. These laws, as known today, were already in full effect by the rise of Christianity. ...
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Monday, March 17, 2014
Schiffman on the Rabbis and early Christianity
ANOTHER BLOG SERIES BY LAWRENCE H. SCHIFFMAN: The Halakhic Response of the Rabbis to the Rise of Christianity (5 posts).