David Mishkin

The Wisdom of Alfred Edersheim


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Decline of the two Kingdoms to the Assyrian and Babylonian Captivity; Edition quoted: (Peabody, Hendrickson, 1995)

      1885, On a Theory of the Origin and Composition of the Synoptic Gospels by G. Wetzel

      (“Synoptic”) Clarendon Press, Oxford. This essay appeared in Studia Biblica: Essays in Biblical Archaeology and Criticism and kindred subjects by Members of the University of Oxford, Edited by S. R. Driver, William Sanday and John Wordsworth.

      1885, Prophecy and History in Relation to the Messiah

      (“Prophecy”) Longman’s Publishing, London. This is also known as the Warburton Lectures, addresses given at the Chapel of Lincoln’s Inn between the years 1880 – 1884. The stated purpose of this series as a whole was, “to prove the truth of reveled religion in general, and of the Christian in particular, from the completion of those prophecies in the Old and New Testaments which relate to the Christian Church, especially to the apostacy of Papal Rome.” Published in the days of great liberalism and skepticism (especially from the German school of Higher Criticism), these lectures offer an apologetic in defense of the reliability of the Scriptures and the Messiahship of Jesus. Edition quoted: (Eugene, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2005.)

      1887 Dictionary of Christian Biography

      (“DCB”) Edited by Dr. William Smith and Henry Wace, DD. Edersheim wrote the entries for Philo and Josephus.

      1888, Ecclesiasticus

      (“Eccl”) This article, along with an exegetical commentary on the Apocryphal book of Ecclesiasticus appeared in: The Holy Bible According to the Authorised Version, with an Explanatory and Critical Commentary by Clergy of the Anglican Church. Apocrypha, Volume II, Edited by Henry Wace., London.

      1890, Tohu-Va-Vohu

      (“Tohu”) Published a year after his death, this is a collection of “fragmentary thoughts” compiled by his daughter, Ella. The title means “formless and void,” taken from Genesis 1:2. This is the best source for getting his personal opinions on a variety of subjects.

      In addition to the above, he also translated and edited books by German scholars:

      1854, The Historical Development of Speculative Philosophy from Kant to Hegel, by H.M. Chalybaus.

      1859, Theological and Homiletical Commentary on the Gospel of St. Matthew, by Johann Peter Lange

      1860, The History of the Christian Church to the Reformation, by Johann Kurtz. Along with translating this work, Edersheim added the remaining history, “From the Reformation to the Present Time.”

      His Legacy

      In the days when Edersheim wrote, it was an increasingly new and profound idea among Jews to re-inhabit the land of their forefathers. He died just eight years before Theodore Herzl called the first Zionist Congress in 1897. It was fifty nine years after his death that the nation of Israel was reborn. Yet, Edersheim had an unyielding commitment to the reality of a future for Israel. It was not wishful thinking, but simply his understanding and trust of the scriptures. Based on God’s promise to Abraham and the later words of the great Hebrew prophets, a Jewish return to the Land was seen as a guarantee. And in conjunction with this, Edersheim believed whole- heartedly in the turning of his people to God’s true Messiah.

      The 19th century witnessed more than just the roots of Zionism. The Jewish community as a whole in Europe was undergoing a renaissance (Haskala) of its own. The writings of Moses Mendelssohn and others at the end of the 18th century paved the way for what would become Reform Judaism. Likewise, there was a new freedom in Europe for Jews to study in Universities. Previously this had been forbidden. There was also an undeniable wave of Jews coming to faith in Jesus as Messiah. They were known as Hebrew Christians, an extremely important link in the historic chain of Jews who have believed in Jesus throughout the ages. Edersheim’s own definition of a Hebrew Christian is as follows: