which, for example, there could be any number of temples to a god like Zeus. To be sure, Jews could worship God anywhere they lived, but they could perform their religious obligations of sacrifice to God only at the Temple in Jerusalem. In other places, though, they could gather together in âsynagoguesâ for prayer and to discuss the ancestral traditions at the heart of their religion.
These traditions involved both stories about Godâs interaction with the ancestors of the people of Israelâthe patriarchs and matriarchs of the faith, as it were: Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Rachel, Jacob, Rebecca, Joseph, Moses, David, and so onâand detailed instructions concerning how this people was to worship and live. One of the thingsthat made Judaism unique among the religions of the Roman Empire was that these instructions, along with the other ancestral traditions, were written down in sacred books.
For modern people intimately familiar with any of the major contemporary Western religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam), it may be hard to imagine, but books played virtually no role in the polytheistic religions of the ancient Western world. These religions were almost exclusively concerned with honoring the gods through ritual acts of sacrifice. There were no doctrines to be learned, as explained in books, and almost no ethical principles to be followed, as laid out in books. This is not to say that adherents of the various polytheistic religions had no beliefs about their gods or that they had no ethics, but beliefs and ethicsâstrange as this sounds to modern earsâplayed almost no role in religion per se. These were instead matters of personal philosophy, and philosophies, of course, could be bookish. Since ancient religions themselves did not require any particular sets of âright doctrinesâ or, for the most part, âethical codes,â books played almost no role in them.
Judaism was unique in that it stressed its ancestral traditions, customs, and laws, and maintained that these had been recorded in sacred books, which had the status, therefore, of âscriptureâ for the Jewish people. During the period of our concernâthe first century of the common era, 1 when the books of the New Testament were being writtenâJews scattered throughout the Roman Empire understood in particular that God had given direction to his people in the writings of Moses, referred to collectively as the Torah, which literally means something like âlawâ or âguidance.â The Torah consists of five books, sometimes called the Pentateuch (the âfive scrollsâ), the beginning of the Jewish Bible (the Christian Old Testament): Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. Here one finds accounts of the creation of the world, the calling of Israel to be Godâs people, the stories of Israelâs patriarchs and matriarchs and Godâs involvement with them, and most important (and most extensive), the laws that God gave Moses indicating how his people were to worship him andbehave toward one another in community together. These were sacred laws, to be learned, discussed, and followedâand they were written in a set of books.
Jews had other books that were important for their religious lives together as well, for example, books of prophets (such as Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Amos), and poems (Psalms), and history (such as Joshua and Samuel). Eventually, some time after Christianity began, a group of these Hebrew booksâtwenty-two of them altogetherâcame to be regarded as a sacred canon of scripture, the Jewish Bible of today, accepted by Christians as the first part of the Christian canon, the âOld Testament.â 2
These brief facts about Jews and their written texts are important because they set the backdrop for Christianity, which was also, from the very beginning, a âbookishâ religion. Christianity began, of course, with Jesus, who was