The Boethusians () were a sect closely related to, if not a development of, the Sadducees.[The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion - Adele Berlin, Maxine L. Grossman - 2011 - Page 148 "The rabbis considered them primarily a religious sect, founded by Boethus, a heretical disciple of the Mishnaic authority ... Other scholars connect the Boethusians with Shimon ben Boethus, high priest in King Herod's time; the family is "]
Origins according to the Talmud
The post-
Talmud work
Avot of Rabbi Natan gives the following origin of the schism between the Pharisees and Sadducees/Boethusians: Antigonus of Sokho having taught the maxim, "Be not like the servants who serve their masters for the sake of the wages, but be rather like those who serve without thought of receiving wages",
[Pirkei Avot 1:3] his two pupils, Zadok and Boethus, repeated this maxim to their pupils. In the course of time, either the two teachers or their pupils understood this to express the stance that there was neither an
afterlife nor a resurrection of the dead, and founded the sects of the
Sadducees and the Boethusians. They lived in luxurious splendor; using silver and golden vessels all their lives, not because they were haughty, but because (as they claimed) the
Pharisees led a hard life on earth and yet would have nothing to show for it in the world to come.
[Avot of Rabbi Natan 5:2] It is known to historians that these two groups denied the immortality of the soul and the
resurrection, and also that the sects found their followers chiefly among the wealthy, but the origin of the sects is unconfirmed.
The Mishnah, as well as the Baraita, mentions the Boethusians as saying that the omer offering must be offered on the Sunday of Passover (in opposition to the Pharisees who offered it on the second day of Passover), resulting in different dates for the Shavuot holiday.[Menachot 10:3; compare also Hagigah 2:4.] Elsewhere, it is narrated that the Boethusians hired false witnesses in order to mislead the Pharisees in their calculation of the new moon.[Tosefta, Rosh Hashana 1:14; Bavli Rosh Hashana 22b; Yerushalmi Rosh Hashana 2 (57d), below; compare Geiger, "Urschrift," p. 137, 138.] Another point of dispute between the Boethusians and the Pharisees was whether the high priest should prepare the incense inside or outside the Holy of Holies on Yom Kippur[Tosefta, Yoma, 1:8; Yerushalmi Yoma 1 (39a).]
As the beginnings of this sect are shrouded in obscurity, so also is the length of its duration. The Talmud mentions a Boethusian in a dispute with a pupil of Rabbi Akiva,[Shabbat 108a; Soferim 1:2] yet it is likely that the word here means simply a sectarian, a heresy, just as the term "Sadducee" was used in a much wider sense later on. A Boethus, son of Zonim, and nearly contemporaneous with Rabbi Akiva[compare Yerushalmi l.c. 10b] is mentioned in the Mishnah;[Bava Metzia 5:3] he was not, however, a Boethusian, but a pious merchant. An Amoraim, , was also called "Boethus".
Relationship to other groups
Some scholars have identified the Boethusians with the
Essenes, the sect that produced the Dead Sea Scrolls.
[Y. Sussmann (1989), The History of the Halakha and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Preliminary Talmudic Observations on Miqṣat Ma‘aśe ha-Torah. Tarbiz 59] Some of the scrolls express views similar to those attributed to the Boethusians by the Talmud.
[Sigalit Ben-Zion, A Roadmap to the Heavens: An Anthropological Study of Hegemony Among Priests, Sages, and Laymen. Academic Studies Press, 2009. p. 105] According to this theory, the word "Boethusian" is a corruption of "Beit Essaya", meaning "House of Essenes".
[ Encyclopedia Britannica, "".]
A high-priestly family
The Boethusians are believed to have been associated with the members of the high-priestly family of Boethus. The family of Boethus produced the following high priests:
-
Simon, son of Boethus from Alexandria,
was made a high priest about 25 BCE by Herod the Great, in order that his marriage with Boethus's daughter, Mariamne, might not be regarded as a mésalliance, a marriage with a person thought to be unsuitable or of a lower social position.[Josephus, "Antiquitates", 15:9§3; 19:6§2.]
-
Joazar, son of Simon Boethus
(4 BCE and before 6 CE), unpopular and an advocate of compliance with the Census of Quirinius[Josephus, "Antiquitates", 18:1§1.]
-
Eleazar, son of Simon Boethus
(4–3 BCE)[Josephus, "Antiquitates", 17:13§1] independently attested in the Mandaean Book of John.
-
Simon Cantheras, son of Simon Boethus
(41–42 CE)[Josephus, "Antiquitates", 19:6§2.]
-
Elioneus, son of Simon Cantheras
[Josephus, "Antiquitates", xix. 8, § 1.]
-
Joshua ben Gamla (64 CE), whose wife Martha, daughter of Simon Boethus,
belonged to the house[Yevamot 6:4]
The hatred of the Pharisees toward this high-priestly family is shown by the words of the tanna Abba Saul ben Batnit, who lived about the year 40 CE at Jerusalem.[Pesachim 57a; Tosefta, Menachot 12:23] "The house of Boethus" heads the list of the wicked and sinful priestly families enumerated by Abba.
Its bibliography:
-
Eduard Baneth, "Ueber den Ursprung der Sadokäer und Boethus." Berliner-Hoffmann, Magazin, ix.1-37, 61-95 (also printed separately, Dessau, 1882);
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Geiger, Urschrift, 1857, pp. 105 et seq.;
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Heinrich Grätz, Gesch. der Juden, iii.89, 223, 4th ed.;
-
Emil Schürer, Gesch. ii.217-218, 409–419.
External links