Pseudo-Phocylides: A Greek-Jewish Gnomic Poem from Alexandria
Karl-Wilhelm Niebuhr
Докладчик
профессор
Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Ключевые слова, аннотация
Hellenistic
Judaism, Ancient Jewish ethics, reception of the Torah, Jewish poetry.
Тезисы
The
pseudonymous gnomic poem attributed to the Milesian poet Phocylides
(6th
c. BCE) consists of about 230 hexametric verses. From Byzantine up to
earlier modern times the work has been used in Christian schools for
moral education or stylistic exercises. Today, there is a consensus
among modern scholars about the Jewish origin of PseudPhoc.
The poem testifies to a very high level of Greek classical education
in ancient Jewish non-rabbinic circles (at least a command of the
language of Homer and some philosophical learning from Plato and the
Stoics!).
By
virtue of its (pseudonymous) author and its literary form, the work
belongs to ancient Greek gnomic poetry. The opening section (vv. 3–8)
functions as an abstract of fundamental ethical admonitions. The last
line before the concluding verses of the poem appears like a summary: «Let there be purity of the soul where there are purifications of
the body». The focus of admonitions lies on interpersonal
behaviour, social relations in the family as well as in the society,
trustworthiness in business and in court and, in particular, on
sexual ethics. Not mentioned at all are specific Jewish regulations
for religious life like circumcision, Sabbath laws, the temple cult
or precepts for ritual purity and food regulations.