Villanova University Legal Working Paper Series

Villanova University School of Law Working Paper Series

 

Jesus’ Legal Theory—A Rabbinic Interpretation

Chaim Saiman, 1567

Abstract

This article locates the ancient debates between Jesus and the Talmudic rabbis within the discourse of contemporary legal theory. By engaging in a comparative reading of both Gospel and rabbinic texts, I show how Jesus and his rabbinic interlocutors sparred over questions we now conceptualize as the central concerns of jurisprudence. Whereas the rabbis approach theological, ethical and moral issues through an analytical, lawyerly interpretation of a dense network of legal rules, Jesus openly questions whether law is the appropriate medium to structure social relationships and resolve interpersonal conflicts. Through an examination of Talmudic sources, this paper argues the controversies between early Christianity and the nascent rabbinic Judaism (summarized by Paul in terms of Letter vs. Spirit) have the same argumentative architecture as the ongoing debates over law vs. equity, procedural vs. substantive justice, rules vs. standards, formalism vs. instrumentalism, and textualsim vs. contextualism. Moreover, the contrast between the Gospels and the emerging rabbinic discourse brings Jesus’ bold claims about the role, rule and domain of the law to the fore. Thus while the mainstream representation of Christian legal theory tends towards rules, procedural justice, formalism and textualism, this analysis of primary sources shows that Jesus argued for exactly the opposite.

Subject Area

Jurisprudence, Religion

Recommended Citation

Chaim Saiman, "Jesus’ Legal Theory—A Rabbinic Interpretation" (August 2007). Villanova University Legal Working Paper Series. Villanova University School of Law Working Paper Series. Working Paper 84.
http://law.bepress.com/villanovalwps/papers/art84

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