THE MANDAEAN AND RELATED JEWISH TRADITION
The Coptic tradition is adamant that “the apostle” Mark went by another name. He was called “Mark” among the Gentiles and “John” among the Jews (Acts
The most famous Jewish “John” in this age was a figure later remembered as “John the son of blamelessness” or “John the son of purity” – Johanan ben Zakkai. To put the Tarot cards on the table, my hypothesis identifies him, too, with Julius Marcus Agrippa. I cannot hope, in a matter of a few lines in this book, to dislodge the belief that an actual, distinct rabbinic figure of this name lived and preserved Judaism. Nevertheless, some interesting coincidences do deserve mention here with the hope that they can be developed more fully in a subsequent work.
Consider the coincidence of names of “John” figures from the period leading up to the destruction of the temple: “John the son of Zakkai,” a leading figure in Judaism; “John the son of Zakariah,” a leading figure in Christianity. Neither person is known to the other tradition: the rabbinic authorities have never heard of “John the Baptist;” the Christians have no information about “John the son of Zakkai” other than what their Jewish neighbors tell them, but they both held prominent positions in
One of the most important commonalities between all these John figures is that they are all connected with a vision regarding the destruction of the
When John finally appears he announces "Who is my equal, who is my equal, that thou shouldst look on him and forget me? Before my voice and the voice of my proclamations the Torah disappeared in
In a parallel but now entirely subdued manner we see the rabbinic tradition recast its “John the son of Zakkai” as one who saw the end of the temple coming but who strove to preserve the “goodness of Judaism” in spite of it. The story, told in slightly different ways in the Palestinian and Babylonian Talmuds, is that John received a “vision” about the destruction which was to come upon Jerusalem about forty years later (i.e. around the exact time that the Christian John who was called Mark witnessed the “little apocalypse” of the angelic figure named Jesus). The Old Testament Zechariah is the prophet who seems to have revealed the coming destruction in
"Said Rabban Yohanan Ben Zakkai to the
Can we hope to find “John” among the rabbinic texts? As Jacob Neusner has shown, traditional rabbinical biography has been completely pre-critical in its methods and its aims, taking almost all of the traditions of the rabbis at face value. This presents a problem when we confront the now-dominant traditions of the figure named “John,” Johanan ben Zakkai. Neusner shows how unreliable and entirely symbolic/polemical is the character as tradition presents him (just as critical scholars now recognize concerning Jesus). Johanon has been transformed into the furthest thing from someone whom we might think “fits in” with the likes of the Samaritan Marqeh, the Catholic Mark-who-was-called-John, or the heretical “Marcion.” The rabbinic “John” is now made into a loyal Pharisee of the House of Hillel, just as we see “Paul” reinvented among the Catholics.
According to the claim of the Mishnah (Aboth ii. 8), Judaism as we know it was “handed down through an unbroken chain of scholars; Johanan, in receiving the teachings of Hillel and Shammai, formed the last link in that chain.” In this way the John of history is not someone who reinvented Judaism after the temple was destroyed but only a faithful custodian who preserved the original message. By now John isn’t the very messiah heralded by the words of Zechariah, he isn’t even a king but a mere “rabbi” who leads the congregation through the darkness of the period, waiting, it seems, for the Mishnah to be invented in the age of Antoninus. He is completely divorced, it seems, from Jesus and yet the surviving tradition recognizes that, like Marcion, he was devotedly attached to the principle of Chesed i.e. “loving kindness.”
So it is that the Jewish tradition goes so far as to have the man they now credit as reconstituting Judaism in the period after the destruction of the temple (not Marcus Agrippa now but “John”) as explicitly denying that he was the messiah. "Prepare a throne for Hezekiah, king of Judah, who is coming,” [Berakoth 28b] the Jewish “John” is made to say. The Hillel tradition of course is made to also use Hezekiah himself as a kind of proof not to hope in the messiah at all – viz. "There will be no Messiah for
Yes it must have been comforting for Jewish believers to see in their “John” a kind of selfless servant of the “old ways” rather than what he really was – viz. Marcus Julius Agrippa. His royal scepter lurks everywhere under the stories associated with the “John” of Jewish legend. Of course it would be far too problematic for the later rabbinic tradition to admit who their “John” really was. Just look at the associates who gather round him – they are almost all identified as “sons of Hyrcanus” on some level. So it is once the reader stops and thinks where Marcus Agrippa’s own appellation Jannai derived from it is perhaps a little easier to see how he was purified and stripped from his true historical identify only to appear again in later times as our now familiar “blameless John.”
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