by jimwalton » Wed Feb 21, 2018 3:07 pm
I believe that came from
https://www.rabbinicalassembly.org/site ... 6.2011.pdfThe bottom of pg. 5 - all of p. 6. "if it was found that in the family ancestry of the woman being investigated there was a priest who had served in the Temple, or a Levite who sang in the Temple,or a member of the Sanhedrin, there was no need to investigate further through the entire number of genrations specified above. ... In other words, the examination is not required when it is assumed that if any problem existed it would already have been known. ... Thus despite the words of the Mishnah, in the Talmud there is agreement that according to the Sages one need not investigate every woman before marriage. Only in special cases where there is reason to suspect a problem, and even then not through all the degrees mentioned if other factors show her fitness. ... All of this applies only in the case of a family whose status has been questioned in that two people have said that this family is unfit, but in the case of a family that is not suspect, there is no need to examine them since we accept the general rule that all families stand in the presumption of fitness."
So the point I was making was that if there were no question about the lineage of the parents, there would also be no investigation of the lineage of the child, i.e., he was considered to be a legitimate heir.
> Does Keener then imply that Joseph, a Jew, was following Roman practice when accepting Jesus as his son? If so, why?
No. Joseph accepts Jesus as his son because of the angel's instruction in his dream (Mt. 1.20-21, 24).
> It was my understanding that Matthew had referred to Joseph as Jesus’s adoptive father (please see my original post for this).
You asked...
> Does this imply that Joseph, in a way, adopted Jesus? Was this completed by taking Mary as his wife, by naming the baby Jesus, or by consummating his marriage to Mary upon Jesus's birth?
Adoption may be our cultural way of understanding it, but that was probably not Joseph's cultural way of understanding it. It's really difficult for us to fully get into the mindset and worldview of another culture. In 1st-c. Palestinian Jewish culture there were various categories of offspring, according to Kiddushin 4.1: kohanim, chalalim, mamzerim, netinim, shetukim, and asufim. Joseph would most likely think in categories like this rather than using a word like adoption, though it is common for us to think in such ways.
So, Matthew doesn't refer to Joseph as Jesus's adoptive father. Those are terms our minds go to, but probably not their worldview.
I believe that came from https://www.rabbinicalassembly.org/sites/default/files/public/halakhah/teshuvot/2011-2020/JewishIdentity6.2011.pdf
The bottom of pg. 5 - all of p. 6. "if it was found that in the family ancestry of the woman being investigated there was a priest who had served in the Temple, or a Levite who sang in the Temple,or a member of the Sanhedrin, there was no need to investigate further through the entire number of genrations specified above. ... In other words, the examination is not required when it is assumed that if any problem existed it would already have been known. ... Thus despite the words of the Mishnah, in the Talmud there is agreement that according to the Sages one need not investigate every woman before marriage. Only in special cases where there is reason to suspect a problem, and even then not through all the degrees mentioned if other factors show her fitness. ... All of this applies only in the case of a family whose status has been questioned in that two people have said that this family is unfit, but in the case of a family that is not suspect, there is no need to examine them since we accept the general rule that all families stand in the presumption of fitness."
So the point I was making was that if there were no question about the lineage of the parents, there would also be no investigation of the lineage of the child, i.e., he was considered to be a legitimate heir.
> Does Keener then imply that Joseph, a Jew, was following Roman practice when accepting Jesus as his son? If so, why?
No. Joseph accepts Jesus as his son because of the angel's instruction in his dream (Mt. 1.20-21, 24).
> It was my understanding that Matthew had referred to Joseph as Jesus’s adoptive father (please see my original post for this).
You asked...
> Does this imply that Joseph, in a way, adopted Jesus? Was this completed by taking Mary as his wife, by naming the baby Jesus, or by consummating his marriage to Mary upon Jesus's birth?
Adoption may be our cultural way of understanding it, but that was probably not Joseph's cultural way of understanding it. It's really difficult for us to fully get into the mindset and worldview of another culture. In 1st-c. Palestinian Jewish culture there were various categories of offspring, according to Kiddushin 4.1: kohanim, chalalim, mamzerim, netinim, shetukim, and asufim. Joseph would most likely think in categories like this rather than using a word like adoption, though it is common for us to think in such ways.
So, Matthew doesn't refer to Joseph as Jesus's adoptive father. Those are terms our minds go to, but probably not their worldview.