Pagans in Early Jewish Literature

2nd Century BCE–1st Century CE
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Hellenistic Jewish texts deride idolatry as religiously and morally corrupting. The denunciation of pagan religion in the Wisdom of Solomon is followed by a description of “idolaters” in terms reminiscent of the stereotype of the barbarian, the quintessentially depraved Other denounced in the late antique period. Josephus echoes criticism of popular mythology leveled by Greek philosophers. The Letter of Aristeas, a Hellenistic letter from the third or second century BCE, warns against the morally corrupting influence of gentiles and extols the wisdom of Israel’s lawgiver for erecting barriers to interaction. Separatism is encouraged by both Philo and Josephus, who deplore intermarriage with idolaters because of the moral corruption it will bring, although they permit marriage to converts. By contrast, the separatism found in works from the sectarian community at Qumran (the Dead Sea Scrolls), including Jubilees and the Damascus Document, is grounded in an ontological conception of non-Israelites and Israelites as distinct seeds—one profane, one holy—that can never be mixed.

Related Primary Sources

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Wisdom of Solomon on Idolatry

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Text
For the idea of making idols was the beginning of fornication, and the invention of them was the corruption of life. [ . . . ]…

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Josephus on Greek Mythology

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Then the Lysimachuses, Molons, and other such disreputable sophists, those deceivers of young men, revile us as the most inferior of men. I, on the other hand, would not have wished to inquire into…

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Letter of Aristeas on Separation from Non-Jews

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“You observe,” he said, “what kind of result is produced by conduct and associations, since people who associate with evildoers become perverted, and they are miserable in the whole of life. But if…

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Philo on Separation from Non-Jews

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But also, he says, do not enter into the partnership of marriage with a member of a foreign nation, lest some day conquered by the forces of opposing customs you surrender and stray unawares from the…

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Josephus on Solomon’s Transgression

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Driven mad over women and mired in the heat of sexual passion, he [Solomon] was not satisfied with the native women alone, also marrying many women among the foreign peoples: the Sidonians, Tyrians…

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Jubilees on Israel as a Holy Progeny

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Text
All the descendants of his [Abraham’s—Ed.] sons would become nations and be numbered with the nations. But one of Isaac’s sons…