God-Worshipers and God-Fearers

Some gentiles attached themselves to Judaism by worshiping in synagogues and observing some laws and traditions, even as they retained a non-Jewish identity. Josephus distinguishes Jews from “those who worship God,” or God-worshipers (Greek: theosebeis, sebomenoi). Depending on context, the term God-fearers (Greek: phoboumenoi, Latin: metuentes, or Hebrew: yir’ei shamayim) can be applied to Jews or gentiles. When referring to gentiles, it may connote a gentile who has affiliated to some degree with Jewish observance and tradition, as is suggested in the Josephus text. Philo asserts that the term proselyte (the Septuagint Greek translation for Hebrew ger, sometimes translated into English as “sojourner”) can refer not only to persons who undergo circumcision and thereby join the covenant but also to persons of moral character who take “refuge in God the savior.”

The rabbinic texts here make a distinction between full converts and yir’ei shamayim. Mekhilta de-Rabbi Ishmael, Nezikin 18, interprets Exodus 22:20, the same text discussed by Philo in an excerpt included here. The Mekhilta describes four categories of worshipers of God, including heaven-fearers and full converts. The final text, y. Megillah 1:10, 72b, seeks to determine whether the Roman emperor Antoninus was a full convert to Judaism or a sympathizer who observed some, but not all, Jewish practices (see “Antoninus and Judah the Prince”).

Related Primary Sources

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God-Worshipers Supporting the Temple

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And let no one wonder that there was so much wealth in our Temple, since all the Jews throughout the habitable earth, and those who worshiped God, even those from Asia and Europe, had been sending…

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The Sojourner as One Who Honors God

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Why does (Scripture) in admonishing, “Thou shalt not oppress a sojourner,” add, “For ye were sojourners in the land of the Egyptians”? (Scripture) first makes it clearly…

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Proselytes and God-Fearers

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Beloved are the strangers. It was for their sake that our father Abraham was not circumcised until he was ninety-nine years old. Had he been circumcised at twenty or thirty years of age, only those…

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Antoninus the God-Fearer

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There are (some) things which indicate (lit., say) that Antoninus converted. There are (other) things [that—Ed.] indicate (lit., say) that Antoninus did not convert. They saw him go out with a torn…