Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (156 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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should properly be attributed only to a later period.
5
Among the major supports for such a construction are the similarities between Paul and Philosimilarities that cannot easily be accounted for by assuming influence, since both were active at the same time in quite widely separated places (Chadwick 1966 and Borgen 1980). The affinities between Philo and such texts as the fourth gospel and the Letter to the Hebrews are only slightly less compelling evidence, because of the possibility that the authors of these texts already know Philo (Borgen 1965; Williamson 1970). I take these affinities as prima facie evidence for a Hellenistic Jewish cultural
koine
throughout the eastern Mediterranean, undoubtedly varying from place to place in many respects but sharing some common elements throughout the region.
Moreover, as Wayne Meeks (1983, 33) and others have pointed out, it is impossible to draw hard and fast lines between Hellenistic and rabbinic Jews in the first century.
6
On the one hand, the rabbinic movement per se does not yet exist, and on the other hand, Greek-speaking Jews like Paul and Josephus refer to themselves as Pharisees, and Paul is allegedly a disciple of Rabban Gamaliel, the very leader of the putative proto-rabbinite party. Nonetheless, I am going to suggest that there were tendencies, which, while not sharply defined, already separated first-century Greek speakers, who were relatively acculturated to Hellenism, from Semitic speakers, who were less acculturated. These tendencies were, on my hypothesis, to become polarized as time went on, leading
in the end
to a sharp division between Hellenizers, who became absorbed into Christian groups, and anti-Hellenizers, who formed the nascent rabbinic movement.
7
The adoption of Philo exclusively in the Church and the fact that he was ignored by the Rabbis are symptomatic of this relationship,
5. I am aware that I am placing myself in the middle here of a great contest in the interpretation of Paul. Suffice it to say here that I am cognizant of the different ways to read the Pauline corpus, including in particular the stimulating (but ultimately unconvincing) revisionist reading of Gaston (1987). In my work in progress,
A Radical Jew: Paul and the Politics of Identity,
I will, Deo volente, detail my reasons for making these judgments.
6. Several of the essays edited by Neusner, Frerichs, and McCracken-Flesher (see Collins 1985) also deal with these issues, particularly those in the section entitled "Defining Difference: The First Century" (73282).
7. We must not forget that there were anti-Hellenists in later Christianity as well. Tertullian is the most obvious example, and in some respects, his sensibility about the materiality or corporeity of human essence is similar to that of the Rabbis, although his ideology of sexuality is in total opposition to theirs.
 
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Regardless of whether or not the community of Therapeutae ever really existed, the description is testimony to Philo's translation of anthropology into social practice. If the community did exist, we have further evidence that Philo is representative of larger religious traditions and groups. But whether Philo's Therapeutae were actual or only ideal, there certainly were many other groups throughout the early Christian world that believed that the first human being was a non-corporeal androgyne, and that "male and female" of Genesis 1:27 meant really "neither male nor female." Not surprisingly, such groups, whether gnostic, Encratite, or "Orthodox" Syrian Christians, all held to a rigid celibate ideal. Dennis Macdonald has documented how widespread among them was an (apocryphal?) Dominical saying to the effect that salvation in Christ consisted of putting off the garments of shame (the body and sexuality), "making the two one," and erasing the distinction between male and female (Macdonald 1987 and 1988). The loss of virginity parallels the Fall, representing a descent from or disturbance to the oneness of perfection. As Meeks puts it, ''Baptism restores the initiate to the virginal innocence of Adam, who had 'no understanding of the begetting of children'" (1973, 194).
19
Such notions, widespread in early Christianity, underlie the near-universal privileging of celibacy and virginity in all branches of the early church, however much they differed in that privilege's extent.
There was, to be sure, extraordinary variety in the views on sexuality and marriage among the ancient Christiansranging from extreme condemnation to warm appreciation (Jeremy Cohen 1989, 22170). The most extreme Montanists and others like them denied the lawfulness of sex and marriage entirely. For them, the "male and female" of Genesis 1:27 could only be understood allegorically or as referring to the androgyny of the disembodied spirit. Less extreme ancient Christian authors also interpreted it in this fashion. Thus, Origen held a view of the dual creation quite similar to that of Philo. The anthropos of Genesis 1 consisted of pure soul created after the image of God (Crouzel 1989, 94), but "
differentiation within the human species subverted that primal perfection
" (Jeremy Cohen 1989, 236). Origen permitted marriage, "yet a whole series of texts
19. Meeks has discussed Gnostic rituals which consist of a reconstitution of the androgyny of the first human and moreover considered the interpretation of various Pauline passages in their light in his excellent paper (Meeks 1973, 18896). I have purposely omitted any discussion of Paul in this section, because the interpretation of his doctrine is so contested.
 
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