The Passover in Temple Times
Pharisee Traditions!
THE JEWISH FESTIVALS #2 by Hayyim Schauss (1938) PASSOVER IN TEMPLE DAYS Pilgrims in Jerusalem At no time in its long and varied histoy was Jerusalem a beautiful as in the years preceding the destruction of the second Temple. In addition to the permanent dwellers, the three great festivals would bring countless pilgrims from near and from far, from every country to which Jews had wandered. It is estimated that Jerusalem, at that time, had a permanent population of close to one hundred thousand and that this was more than doubled by the pilgrims who came for the holidays, especially at Pesach. No matter in what corner of the world Jews lived, Jerusalem was a holy place to them, and the greatest wish of each and every Jew was to enter the inner court of the Temple at least once in his lifetime and to pray to God, to the accompaniment of the holy music of the Levites. At no other time of the year did so many pilgrims descend upon Jerusalem as at the season of Pesach, when nature newly carpeted the brown earth with green, and the fields of Judah seemed a tapestry of flowers gleaming and glistening in the sun. Jerusalem was never so crowded as during the Pesach holiday. Every inn was filled to overflowing, and whoever had a bit of room in his house made it available to the visiting pilgrims, never accepting any payment. It was customary, however, for the pilgrims to offer their hosts the skins of the animals they had sacrificed in the Temple. Many of the pilgrims set up tents in the squares and open places of the town, living there during their entire pilgrimage. Jerusalem was so crowded at this period that the very fact that everybody was able to find accommodations somehow, somewhere, was declared to be one of the miracles of God. These thousands of pilgrims did not form a single, homogeneous group; they were as varied as the world and as full of color. There were Jews and Jewish converts from every country of the known world, from Syria and Asia Minor, from Babylonia and Medea, from Cyprus and Greece, and from Egypt and Rome. They did not speak the same language; those from Mesopotamia and thereabouts spoke various dialects of Aramaic; most of the Jews who came from the west spoke Greek. There was, too, a great difference in the outward appearance of these pilgrims. Side by side one would see poor Jewish peasants who had traveled from various districts of Palestine on donkeys, and rich Jewish merchants or bankers that had arrived from distant lands by boat. All these pilgrims did not come to Jerusalem solely because of pious motives. Many merchants arrived laden with wares, ready to do business, for a holy city that attracted so many pilgrims offered a fine opportunity for sale and barter. Jerusalem was a ready market, even during ordinary times. There was always trade in cattle and other live stock, which were needed for the sacrifices, and in raw materials and finished products of all kinds. Jerusalem was an especially fine sheep and cattle market before Pesach, for so many animals were needed for the Pesach sacrifices. There was also a large sale of the spices needed for Pesach eve. Most of the cattle came from the immediate neighborhood, but the spices were, in the main, imported from Mesopotamia. Long camel trains from Mesopotamia, laden with spices and herbs, were a common sight at this time of the year. Preparations for Pesach Jerusalem is crowded with people and tumultous with their noise. A steady succession of pilgrims pours into the town from every side and through every gate. Further confusion is caused by the near-by peasants, driving their cattle and sheep to market. The Roman Procurator has already arrived from Caesaria, with additional soldiers to guard against any possible uprising during that period. He is quartered in Herod's Palace, which is more than a dwelling, being built like a fortress, encircled by a high wall, studded with soaring towers. It is early morning. The morning services has been completed in the Temple and the worshipers have left the synagogues. The market place, a broad street that stretches its way through the entire town, is now filled with people. Both sides of the thoroughfare are lined with booths, stands, and tables. Everything is on sale here, whatever the eye can see or the heart long for. Look! There are cakes made from wheat grown on Mount Ephraim! And there, fish from the depths of Lake Kinnereth! A third sells wine and a fourth calls to the passers-by to purchase spices and condiments for the Pesach feast. Here is a booth offering for sale jewelry and adornments which are the fashion in Alexandria and Rome, and there is a street merchant offering a syrup pressed from grapes. One dealer offers golden adornments for the head, a specialty of the goldsmiths of Jerusalem, and he calls, "Buy golden Jerusalems as a souvenir of the holy city." (a golden souvenir which the goldsmiths of Jerusalem sold to the people) Not an inch of space is wasted. In front of the houses and between the booths and stands sit tradesmen, using the street as their workshop. A tailor sits cross-legged and sews fringes on a coat; opposite him sits a shoemaker repairing the torn sandals of a pilgrim; a blacksmith stands nearby, hammering away on the handle of a sword. Each of the little side streets that lead off the market street has its particular trade. There is the street of the butchers and the street of the wool-combers; each little street has its specialty. But the big street, the really interesting street, is the great market place. Every moment it becomes more crowded and noisy, and the scene becomes more varied and exciting. The buyers, the sellers, and the idlers crush and jostle each other for space. Here comes a group of pilgrims from Alexandria, dressed in Grecian garments and speaking Greek to each other. In contrast, a group of pilgrims from Galilee, very pious Jewish peasants from the north of Palestine, follow them. Their voices are heard high above the tumult of the market place, and by the Galilean dialect of their Aramaic speech it is recognized where they are from. Perhaps the greatest noise and the greatest crowds are in the cattle market near the Mount of the Temple. Sheep and goats are sold there by the thousands. Poor Jews bargain over the prices of the animals; the richer pilgrims do not deign to bargain and so pay higher prices for their sacrifical animals. It is, however, not enough just to buy a sheep or goat in order to be ready for Pesach eve. The sacrificial animal is not eaten for one alone, but in groups that are made up in advance, for one man cannot eat an entire animal and it is forbidden to leave any part of the animal for the next day. So Jews rush about making arrangements to form groups or to become part of one. A group cannot consist of less than ten people, for it takes at least that many to eat an entire sheep at one sitting. But some Jews form huge groups, numbering so many that each member can get no more than a mere taste of the sacrificial animal, a piece no larger than an olive, entirely too small to satisfy one's hunger. IT is customary, then, for such groups to slay another animal, an additional festive offering called "chagigoh. This animal is always useful. Unlike the official sacrifice, which had to be eaten before dawn, the "chagigoh" may be held for a second day. The Morning Before Thousands of priests and Levites are gathered in the Temple. There are twenty-four divisions of them on duty throughout the land and, generally, there is only one division present in Jerusalem to take care of the Temple service. However, during the three great festivals, when there are so many people in town and so many, to be sacrificed, all divisions come to Jerusalem. (What you are going to read now is the traditions of the Pharisees, as they added to the word of Moses and even got the wrong time to observe the eating of the Passover meal. The correct observance is covered in detail in my studies on the Passover on this Website - Keith Hunt) The "chomets," the bread and sour dough, is cleaned out of „ the houses. The night before, by the light of oil lamps, every, corner is searched and every bit of "chomets" removed. All the people in Jerusalem wait for the official signal to burn the "chomets." This signal is given by the priests in the Temple who use two disqualified loaves of the thanks offering. These loaves are placed on top of the outside colonnade of the Temple. As long as these two loaves are in view, "chomets" may still be eaten. When one loaf is removed, the people cease eating "chomets." When the second loaf is removed, then the people begin to burn their "chomets." But this system of signals is not sufficient for all of Jerusalem and another is arranged. Two kine are set to plowing the earth on top of the Mount of Olives and as long as both are attached to the plow, "chomets" may still be eaten. The unhitching of one is a signal to cease eating "chomets" and the removal of the second is a sign to burn "chomets." (None of this tradition of course can be found in the books of Moses. And the discription that follows is as the Pharisees taught it on the daylight part of the 14th of Nisan - Keith Hunt) Midday The spirit of the holiday has permeated every nook and canny of Jerusalem. By now all have ceased working; even the tailors, the shoemakers, the haircutters, and washers have finished the last piece of work for the pilgrims. Thousands of Jews march through the town, this one with a sheep, that one with a goat, riding high on his shoulder. All direct their steps to the Temple, to be among the first to offer their Pesach sacrifice. The regular afternoon sacrifice at the Temple is offered an hour earlier than usual and at about three o'clock the people begin the slaughtering of the Pesach sacrifice. The ritual is repeated three times. When the court of the Temple is filled with the first comers, the gates are shut. The Levites blow the ceremonial "t'kioh, t'ruoh, t'kioh" (a threefold blast) on their trumpets and the sacrifice begins. The owner himself slays the animal. The priests stand in rows, bearing aloft gold and silver trays, each metal borne by a different row of priests. They perform their share of the ritual and the Levites stand on a platform and sing "Hallel," Psalms of praise for holidays, to the accompaniment of musical instruments. The elaborateness of the ritual and the singing and playing of the Levites add dignity and beauty to the scene, and the Jews gathered in the court are filled with devotion and piety. The first section files out of the court and the second section files in. The same ritual is performed again. It is repeated once more for the third and final section. Members of the third section are called "Lazybones." The entire ceremony and ritual is carried on in a comparatively quiet and orderly manner. Once, in the time of the famous Hillel, there was such a surge and crowding at the sacrifice of the Pesach that an old man was crushed to death, but that never happened again. So orderly is the crowd that all three sections have finished in less than two hours, and the priests are left alone to clean up the court. (At the crucifixion of Christ with darkness coming from about noon to His final death, the Temple curtain being split in two that divided the holy place from the most holy place, there would have been so much fear and confusion in the Temple, it is not possible what you have read above, would have been administered. And besides that, the books of Moses carry no such instructions as needed in the Tabernacle or Temple as pertaining to the Passover slaying. For it is clear from the books of Moses that the individual groups could slay and eat the Passover, without any priest being involved. No "out of the norm" ritual service was needed in the Temple apart from that which was designated by the laws of Moses, certainly the slaying of the Passover lambs DID NOT have to be done in the Temple - Keith Hunt) Towards Evening Thousands of Jews rush from the Mount of the Temple through the streets of Jerusalem, each bearing on his shoulder the sacrificial animal wrapped in its own skin. All are busy and expectant, preparing themselves for the great night of the year, the night of redemption. Darkness descends on the holy city. Everywhere sheep and goats, spitted on fragrant pomegranate wood, are roasting in the clay stoves which stand in the courtyards of the homes. These stoves are called "Pesach-ovens" and are movable; should there be heavy rain they are carried into the house. The groups are now gathering. Relatives and friends assemble from near and from far. Every large room is a meetingplace for a group. Nobody is omitted. The poor are invited to the homes of the rich and a spirit of brotherliness, of national unity, binds all together at the feast. All are partners: masters and slaves, men and women, the aged and youthful. All are dressed in white, festive clothes, much adorned and bedecked. The women, especially, wear jewelry in honor of the occasion. The Babylonian women are easily differentiated from the native women, since they wear brilliantly colored garments; the Palestinian women, however, wear only clothes made of bleached linen. The celebration begins. All is quiet in the streets. The full moon moves over the flat roofs of Jerusalem and bedecks every thing in silver. In the homes people lounge on sofas placed around the room. The left hand rests on soft cushions, the right hand takes food and drink from small, individual tables set before each feaster. One sits at the head of the room and leads in the ceremonial observance. First a glass of wine mixed with water is taken. Then the right hand and is washed and all partake of lettuce dipped in a tart liquid. Then the sacrificial animal is served and is eaten with matsoh and bitter herbs, dipped in charoses, a mixture of ground nuts and fruits in wine. Then begins the second part of the ceremonial of the evening; the reciting of the story of the festival, and the discussion of the ceremonies that go with it. A second glass of diluted wine is drunk and the son of the household asks why this night is different from all other nights. His father answers him with excerpts from the Bible telling about the deliverance from Egypt and then explains the meaning of the sacrificial lamb, the matsoh, and the bitter herbs. All listen to him with great attention and devotion. And when he starts to sing Hallel, they all join in loudly. They conclude with the benediction for redemption and are filled with the hope of immediate deliverance from their enemies and the removal of the foreign governor and his foreign soldiers from the holy city. It is now quite late in the night. The third and fourth glasses of wine have been finished and the feast, with its atten- ant ceremonies, is over. The older members of the group, however, still recline on their sofas and relate and interpret the story of the Exodus. Here and there a member of the group nods, or falls fast asleep. Some of the younger element would like to celebrate further, but their elders restrain them. After eating the sacrificial animal, no entertainment is allowed, such as is common after ordinary feasts. The feasters must satisfy themselves with going from one group to another, greeting and hailing friends. Once more the streets of Jerusalem are filled with promenading Jews, natives and pilgrims side by side. Many of them are on their way to the Mount of the Temple, for the Levites now open the gates of the Holy House and Jews spend the rest of the night there, praying and singing hymns of praise to God. ............................... Such was the observance of the Passover as the Pharisees had formed it over the centuries after the Jews came forth from the Babylon captivity. Many things had been added and adopted, the two worst being the added Temple slaying of the Passover lambs, and secondly, even more incorrect, the Passover being on the 15th day and not the 14th, hence the blending of the Passover meal with the first holy day of the feast of Unleavened Bread, which then blended what was originally TWO feasts, making up 8 days in total, into a Feast of 7 days. Truly the words of Christ in Mark 7 about "traditions" making void the commandments of God, come to clear view in the Pharisee teaching on how and when to observe the Passover - Keith Hunt |
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