My views have been variously received, but terms as 'establishment violence' end 'vigilantism' are now finding their way into studies of both Philo and of, e.g., the actions taken against Stephen in the Lucan Acts of the Apostles, a text also dealt with in my study.
Now, these issues have come up for discussions in two recent studies, one supporting my view, the other not.
The first one to be mentioned here, argues against my view: C. Batsch, La Guerre et les rites de guerre dans le judaïsme du deuxième Temple (Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism 93; Leiden Boston: Brill, 2005). His main arguments against my view, as far as I understand him, are that Philo's passages, in which he discusses these issues, are allegorical interpretations of the Phinehas episode. While there admittedly are several allegorical expositions of Phinehas in Philo's works, this can, in my view, hardly be said of the passages drawn upon from Specialibus Legibus (1,54-57; 1,314-318 and 2,252-254). Batsch is here not distinguishing between Philo's various expositions: when he says that "le terme est utilisé par Philon seulement dans des représentations allégoriques" (p. 158), he is certainly wrong. He is also arguing that the term 'zelos' is not used in the expositions of Phinehas; but this is also hardly defendable in light of Spec.leg 1,54-57. Thirdly, he argues that Philo does not support the vigilantes mentioned in the texts. When he presents the ideology of the zealots, Philo says that they 'nomisantas autous' etc. According to Batch, this description signals that Philo is distancing himself from them. But then Batsch fails to consider that Philo just before this expression in fact says that "it is well that all who have a zeal for virtue should be permitted to exact the penalties offhand and with no delay" (1,55).
The other recent study published is quite favorably to my view of Philo here: see K. Berthelot, “Zeal for God and Divine Law in Philo and the Dead Sea Scrolls,” The Studia Philonica Annual: Studies in Hellenistic Judaism 19 (2007) 113–29.
She strongly argues, that Philo is here presenting Phinehas as an example --indeed , the example of those who are zealous. Her conclusions are thus very similar to my own: " On a theoretical level, it is thus beyond doubt that Philo advocated the killing on the spot of Jews who publicly apostatized, committed idolatry or uttered blasphemy. His works probably testify to such a practice in his days, although not necessarily in Alexandria itself" (127). Furthermore, due to Philo's rhetoric, is is difficult to say "with any degree of certainty", "that, in a concrete situation, Philo would have gone so far as to advocate the killing of a Jew caught worshipping a foreign god or blaspheming. This issue must be left open, but one should not ignore the weight of the evidence contained in Philo's works themselves."
With this weighted conclusion, I would concur. We cannot predict how Philo himself would have reacted, but I still do think that Philo's own expositions indicate a living trajectory of interpretation of the influence of the Phinehas episode even in his time and his world.
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