Paint Sinner


A Critique of Uri Yosef's "Sinless Jesus"

James Patrick Holding


A few days ago it was Donald Morgan we defended Jesus' character against; now it's time for another, this one a Jewish "anti-missionary" styling himself "Uri Yosef". His article titled "Sinless Jesus?" as might be expected addresses the claim of Jesus as the perfect sacrifice by trying to show that Jesus wasn't, well, perfect. After a decent summation of the Christian view on this subject, and a few words on the consistency of Jesus' words with Jewish teachings of his era, Yosef starts off with the question, "Did Jesus Violate Any Torah Commandments?" His first objection is that Jesus violated Genesis 1:28:

And G-d blessed them [Adam and Eve], and G-d said to them, "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the air, and over every living thing that moves upon the earth."

Jesus did not procreate; so, Yosef says, scratch that command and Jesus' perfect record. But before Yosef gets too happy, let's consider these words from Glenn Miller's article, "Did the Bible lie about Jesus being married?" -- which shows that the rabbis of Jesus' day sure didn't seem to think Gen. 1:28 had the force Yosef thinks it did:

It would have been 'normal' for [Jesus] to have been married, but not obligatory for that time (or any other time, for that matter).

The rabbinic literature--which is what people sometimes use to argue that celibacy was a capital offense(!)--notes and gives rules for exceptions to rules which were themselves non-binding:

"Celibacy was, in fact, not common, and was disapproved by the rabbis, who taught that a man should marry at eighteen, and that if he passed the age of twenty without taking a wife he transgressed a divine command and incurred God's displeasure. Postponement of marriage was permitted students of the Law that they might concentrate their attention on their studies, free from the cares of support a wife. Cases like that of Simeon be 'Azzai, who never married, were evidently infrequent. He had himself said that a man who did not marry was like one who shed blood, and diminished the likeness of God. One of his colleagues threw up to him that he was better at preaching that at practicing, to which he replied, What shall I do? My soul is enamored of the Law; the population of the world can be kept up by others...It is not to be imagined that pronouncements about the duty of marrying and the age at which people should marry actually regulated practice." [HI:JFCCE:2.119f]...

Philo describes another Jewish sect of both men and women--the Therapeutae --who were celibate in their studies and pursuit of wisdom and the holy life (De Vita Contemplativa 68f).

But the dominant class of individuals who were 'allowed' or 'expected' to be celibate were prophetic figures, throughout Jewish history:

The prophet Jeremiah:

"But the Essenes, Qumran, and the Therapeutae were not the only examples of Jewish religious celibates who were considered in a reverent light around the time of Jesus. The OT was not lacking in at least one celibate religious figure, and later interpretation of the OT added some others. The one case from the OT is the tragic prophet Jeremiah. Far from being some positive religious commitment, celibacy was for Jeremiah a tragic personal sign, a lived-out prophetic symbol of the destruction of life that awaited the sinful people of Judah (Jer 16:1-4)." We have, then, at least one example of an OT prophet for whom celibacy was not a minor matter, an optional life style. It was, by the order of Yahweh, a very literal and painful "embodiment" of Jeremiah's prophetic message of judgment, pronouncing imminent doom as punishment for the apostasy of God's people." [MJ:1.339]

John the Baptist (and possibly his prototype Elijah]:

"We should not be completely surprised that another fiery prophet of judgment around the time of Jesus also seems to have been celibate, namely, John the Baptist. Granted, our sources do not speak explicitly of John's celibacy; as usual, we are left with arguments from indirection and inference. But, even apart from Luke's picture of the boy John being raised in the wilderness until the time he began his ministry (at Qumran?),"' the mere fact that this ascetic prophet feeding on locusts and wild honey roamed up and down the Jordan Valley and the Judean wilderness, apparently with no fixed abode as he proclaimed a radical message of imminent judgment on Israel, makes it probable that John was a celibate (Mark 1:4-8).... It may be no accident that Mark closes the story of John's execution by Antipas with the words: ". . . his [John's] disciples came and took his corpse and laid it in a tomb" (6:29). Without intending to reflect on the fact directly, Mark may be in effect seconding what Luke implies: there was no wife, children, or other family around John to see to one of the most sacred obligations incumbent on family members in Judaism: arranging for and participating in the obsequies of a husband or parent. In his radical itinerant prophetic ministry, John may have consciously been imitating Elijah, an OT itinerant prophet of judgment, who not only was interpreted as an eschatological figure in later Judaism (as early as Malachi and Ben Sira) but was also interpreted as a celibate by various patristic writers (e.g., Ambrose and Jerome). [MJ:1.339f]

Although the Rabbinic writers stressed the importance of marriage for procreation, it is noteworthy that this prophetic ideal of celibacy still showed up in the rabbinics:

"Judaism saw nothing wrong in portraying as celibate the great primordial prophet, seer, and lawgiver Moses (though only after the Lord had begun to speak to him). We see this interpretation already beginning to develop in Philo in the 1st century A.D. What is more surprising is that this idea is also reflected in various rabbinic passages. The gist of the tradition is an a fortiori argument. If the Israelites at Sinai had to abstain from women temporarily to prepare for God's brief, once-and- for-all address to them, how much more should Moses be permanently chaste, since God spoke regularly to him (see, e.g., b. Yabb. 87a). The same tradition, but from the viewpoint of the deprived wife, is related in the Sipre on Numbers 12.1 (99). Since the rabbis in general were unsympathetic--not to say hostile--to religious celibacy, the survival of this Moses tradition even in later rabbinic writings argues that the tradition was long-lived and widespread by the time of the rabbis. We should note once again the typology seen in Jeremiah, John the Baptist, and the recycled Moses figure: the prophet who directly receives divine revelation that is to be communicated to his beloved yet sinful people Israel finds his whole life radically altered by his prophetic vocation. This alteration, this being set apart by and for God's Word, is embodied graphically in the rare, awesome, and--for many Jews--terrible vocation of celibacy....While accepting the idea of an ancient figure like Moses as celibate (at least during his ministry to Israel), the rabbis did not as a general rule allow celibacy among their rabbinic colleagues and disciples. Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus (end of 1st century A.D.) is said to have equated a man's refusal to procreate offspring with murder. One rare exception, according to the same rabbinic passage, was Rabbi Simeon ben Azzai (a younger contemporary of Eliezer ben Hyrcanus), who paradoxically recommended marriage and procreation, though he himself remained unmarried. When accused of not practicing what he preached, he replied: "My soul is in love with the Torah. The world can be carried on by others" (b. Yeham. 63b).65

Yosef therefore does not even show knowledge of his own religious history. The "command" to marry (and those which Yosef claims follow from it) clearly could be and was superseded in certain circumstances. Presumably Yosef understands that the Sabbath law, absolute though it is, can be circumvented for a greater good; so likewise the marriage "command" -- and nearly all others one wishes to consider.

Sometime recently Yosef updated his article with a response to ideas contained in the above (though whether from here, I do not know). He claims first that a "detailed analysis of the relevant Rabbinic writings is beyond the scope of this essay" though he deigns to cover himself by saying, without any detail, that "when presented in their proper context, they no longer support the claim." No doubt we will never see that "context" actually presented! Yosef thereafter replies to but one example given, that of Jeremiah, which he portends to refute by citing Jer. 16:2 ("Thou shalt not take thee a wife, neither shalt thou have sons or daughters in this place.") and then declares -- in an act worthy of an Olympic gymnast! -- that this "order is tied to a particular geographical location for a specific reason"! Of course Yosef still has not solved the problem, since it is just as answerable to say that Jesus was single as an order "for a specific reason" (here, it would be that the church was his bride!) and thus Yosef only assists our case.

Yosef's next slide into home plate is under the heading, "Honoring and Respecting Parents." After showing this in Exodus, Yosef writes back with examples we have become accustomed to: