SM:

>>What is not being said is that "Zadokite" is the same word as
"Sadducee," the Greekish NT term for the established priesthood (the
successors of Zadok).<<

Most of the sources I went through just assume you know they are
synonyms, just as they assume
you know they are often associated with Samaritans (because any
priestly class with a temple-based form of Judaism might invoke
legends of Zadok and lines of descent to legimate their status,
including).

The problem with what we know fo the Sadducees is that the sources are
hostile and, of course, not historic in any modern sense. So how do we
figure out in a modern historic sense who they were and what they
believed? Note well, though, the treatment the term gets in the JE's
section on 'In Literature'.

CJ


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Name from High Priest Zadok.

Name given to the party representing views and practises of the Law
and interests of Temple and priesthood directly opposite to those of
the Pharisees. The singular form, "Ẓadduḳi" (Greek, Σαδδουκαῖος), is
an adjective denoting "an adherent of the Bene Ẓadoḳ," the descendants
of Zadok, the high priests who, tracing their pedigree back to Zadok,
the chief of the priesthood in the days of David and Solomon (I Kings
i. 34, ii. 35; I Chron. xxix. 22), formed the Temple hierarchy all
through the time of the First and Second Temples down to the days of
Ben Sira (II Chron. xxxi. 10; Ezek. xl. 46, xliv. 15, xlviii. 11;
Ecclus. [Sirach] li. 12 [9], Hebr.), but who degenerated under the
influence of Hellenism, especially during the rule of the Seleucidæ,
when to be a follower of the priestly aristocracy was tantamount to
being a worldly-minded Epicurean. The name, probably coined by the
Ḥasidim as opponents of the Hellenists, became in the course of time a
party name applied to all the aristocratic circles connected with the
high priests by marriage and other social relations, as only the
highest patrician families intermarried with the priests officiating
at the Temple in Jerusalem (Ḳid. iv. 5; Sanh. iv. 2; comp. Josephus,
"B. J." ii. 8, § 14). "Haughty men these priests are, saying which
woman is fit to be married by us, since our father is high priest, our
uncles princes and rulers, and we presiding officers at the
Temple"—these words, put into the mouth of Nadab and Abihu (Tan.,
Aḥare Mot, ed. Buber, 7; Pesiḳ. 172b; Midr. Teh. to Ps. lxxviii. 18),
reflect exactly the opinion prevailing among the Pharisees concerning
the Sadducean priesthood (comp. a similar remark about the "haughty"
aristocracy of Jerusalem in Shab. 62b). The Sadducees, says Josephus,
have none but the rich on their side ("Ant." xiii. 10, § 6). The party
name was retained long after the Zadokite high priests had made way
for the Hasmonean house and the very origin of the name had been
forgotten. Nor is anything definite known about the political and
religious views of the Sadducees except what is recorded by their
opponents in the works of Josephus, in the Talmudic literature, and in
the New Testament writings.

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Legendary Origin.

Josephus relates nothing concerning the origin of what he chooses to
call the sect or philosophical school of the Sadducees; he knows only
that the three "sects"—the Pharisees, Essenes, and Sadducees—dated
back to "very ancient times" (ib. xviii. 1, § 2), which words, written
from the point of view of King Herod's days, necessarily point to a
time prior to John Hyrcanus (ib. xiii. 8, § 6) orthe Maccabean war
(ib. xiii. 5, § 9). Among the Rabbis the following legend circulated:
Antigonus of Soko, successor of Simon the Just, the last of the "Men
of the Great Synagogue," and consequently living at the time of the
influx of Hellenistic ideas, taught the maxim, "Be not like servants
who serve their master for the sake of wages [lit. "a morsel"], but be
rather like those who serve without thought of receiving wages" (Ab.
i. 3); whereupon two of his disciples, Zadok and Boethus, mistaking
the high ethical purport of the maxim, arrived at the conclusion that
there was no future retribution, saying, "What servant would work all
day without obtaining his due reward in the evening?" Instantly they
broke away from the Law and lived in great luxury, using many silver
and gold vessels at their banquets; and they established schools which
declared the enjoyment of this life to be the goal of man, at the same
time pitying the Pharisees for their bitter privation in this world
with no hope of another world to compensate them. These two schools
were called, after their founders, Sadducees and Boethusians (Ab. R.
N. v.).

The unhistorical character of this legend is shown by the simple fact,
learned from Josephus, that the Boethusians represent the family of
high priests created by King Herod after his marriage to the daughter
of Simon, the son of Boethus ("Ant." xv. 9, § 3; xix. 6, § 2; see
Boethusians). Obviously neither the character of the Sadducees nor
that of the Boethusians was any longer known at the time the story was
told in the rabbinical schools. Nor does the attempt to connect the
name "Sadducees" with the term "ẓedeḳ" or " ẓedaḳah" (=
"righteousness"; Epiphanius, "Panarium," i. 14; Derenbourg, "Histoire
de la Palestine," p. 454) deserve any more consideration than the
creation by Grätz ("Gesch." 3d ed., iii. 88, 697) and others, for the
purpose of accounting for the name, of a heretic leader called Zadok.
Geiger's ingenious explanation ("Urschrift," pp. 20 et seq.), as given
above, indorsed by Well-hausen ("Die Pharisäer und die Sadducäer," p.
45), is very generally approved to-day (see Schürer, "Gesch." 3d ed.,
ii. 408); and it has received striking confirmation from the special
blessing for "the Sons of Zadok whom God has chosen for the
priesthood" in the Hebrew Ben Sira discovered by Schechter (see
Schechter and Taylor, "Wisdom of Ben Sira," 1899, p.35). In the New
Testament the high priests and their party are identified with the
Sadducees (Acts v. 17; comp. ib. xxiii. 6 with ib. xxii. 30, and John
vii. 30, xi. 47, xviii. 3 with the Synoptic Gospels; see also "Ant."
xx. 9, § 1).

The views and principles of the Sadducees may be summarized as follows:

(1)

Representing the nobility, power, and wealth ("Ant." xviii. 1, § 4),
they had centered their interests in political life, of which they
were the chief rulers. Instead of sharing the 'Messianic hopes of the
Pharisees, who committed the future into the hand of God, they took
the people's destiny into their own hands, fighting or negotiating
with the heathen nations just as they thought best, while having as
their aim their own temporary welfare and worldly success. This is the
meaning of what Josephus chooses to term their disbelief in fate and
divine providence ("B. J." ii. 8, § 14; "Ant." xiii. 5 § 9).

(2)

As the logical consequence of the preceding view, they would not
accept the Pharisaic doctrine of the resurrection (Sanh. 90b; Mark
xii. 12; Ber. ix. 5, "Minim"), which was a national rather than an
individual hope. As to the immortality of the soul, they seem to have
denied this as well (see Hippolytus, "Refutatio," ix. 29; "Ant." x.
11, § 7).

(3)

According to Josephus (ib. xiii. 10, § 6), they regarded only those
observances as obligatory which are contained in the written word, and
did not recognize those not written in the law of Moses and declared
by the Pharisees to be derived from the traditions of the fathers.
Instead of accepting the authority of the teachers, they considered it
a virtue to dispute it by arguments.

(4)

According to Acts xxiii. 8, they denied also the existence of angels
and demons. This probably means that they did not believe in the
Essene practise of incantation and conjuration in cases of disease,
and were therefore not concerned with the Angelology and Demonology
derived from Babylonia and Persia.

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Decline of Sadduceeism.

Whether the Sadducees were less strict in regard to the state of
impurity of woman in her periods (Niddah iv. 2), and what object they
had in opposing the determination by the Pharisees of the appearance
of the new moon (R. H. ii. 1, 22b; Tos. R. H. i. 15), are not clear.
Certain it is that in the time of the Tannaim the real issues between
them and the Pharisees were forgotten, only scholastic controversies
being recorded. In the latter the Sadducees are replaced by the late
Boethusians, who had, only for the sake of opposition, maintained
certain Sadducean traditions without a proper understanding of the
historical principles upon which they were based. In fact, as Josephus
("Ant." xviii. 1, § 3) states in common with the Talmudical sources
(Yoma 19b; Niddah 33b), the ruling members of the priesthood of later
days were forced by public opinion to yield to the Pharisaic doctors
of the Law, who stood so much higher in the people's esteem. In the
course of time the Sadducees themselves adopted without contradiction
Pharisaic practises; it is stated (Shab. 108a) that they did so in
regard to the tefillin, and many other observances appear to have been
accepted by them (Hor. 4a; Sanh. 33b).

With the destruction of the Temple and the state the Sadducees as a
party no longer had an object for which to live. They disappear from
history, though their views are partly maintained and echoed by the
Samaritans, with whom they are frequently identified (see Hippolytus,
"Refutatio Hæresium," ix. 29; Epiphanius, l.c. xiv.; and other Church
Fathers, who ascribe to the Sadducees the rejection of the Prophets
and the Hagiographa; comp. also Sanh. 90b, where "Ẓadduḳim" stands for
"Kutim" [Samaritans]; Sifre, Num. 112; Geiger, l.c. pp. 128-129), and
by the Karaites (see Maimonides, commentary on Ab. i. 3; Geiger,
"Gesammelte Schriften," iii. 283-321; also Anan ben David; Karaites).

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In Literature.

The Book of Ecclesiastes in its original form, that is, before its
Epicurean spirit had been toned down by interpolations, was probably
written by a Sadducee in antagonism to the Ḥasidim (Eccl. vii. 16, ix.
2; see P. Haupt, "Koheleth," 1905; Grätz, "Koheleth," 1871, p. 30).
The Wisdom of Ben Sira, which, like Ecclesiastes and older Biblical
writings, has no reference whatsoever to the belief in resurrection or
immortality, is, according to Geiger, a product of Sadducean circles
("Z. D. M. G." xii. 536). This view is partly confirmed by the
above-cited blessing of "the Sons of Zadok" (Hebrew Ben Sira, li. 129;
see also C. Taylor, "Sayings of the Fathers," 1897, p. 115). Also the
first Book of Maccabees is, according to Geiger (l.c. pp. 217 et
seq.), the work of a Sadducee. Allusion to the Sadducees as "sinners"
is found in the Psalms of Solomon (i. 1, iv. 1-10); they are "severe
in judgment" (comp. "Ant." xiii. 10, § 6; xx. 9, § 1), "yet themselves
full of sin, of lust, and hypocrisy"; "men pleasers," "yet full of
evil desires" (ib. viii. 8; see H. E. Ryle and M. R. James, "Psalms of
the Pharisees Commonly Called 'Psalms of Solomon,'" 1891,
xlvi.-xlviii. and elsewhere; Kautzsch, "Apokryphen," pp. 128 et seq.).
Still more distinctly are the Sadducees described in the Book of Enoch
(xciv. 5-9, xcvii.-xcviii., xcix. 2, civ. 10) as: "the men of
unrighteousness who trust in their riches"; "sinners who transgress
and pervert the eternal law." Sadducees, if not in name, at least in
their Epicurean views as opposed to the saints, are depicted also in
the Book of Wisdom (i. 16-ii. 22), where the Hellenistic nobility,
which occupied high positions likewise in Alexandria, is addressed.

In the New Testament the Sadducees are mentioned in Matt. iii. 7 and
xvi. 1, 6, 11, where they are identical with the Herodians (Mark xii.
13), that is, the Boethusians (Matt. xxii. 23, 34; Mark xii. 18; Acts
iv. 1, v. 17, xxiii. 6-8). In John's Gospel they simply figure as "the
chief priests" (vii. 23, 45; xi. 47, 57; xviii. 3).

In rabbinical literature careful discrimination must be made between
the tannaitic period and that of the Amoraim. The Mishnah and Baraita
in the passages quoted above indicate at least a fair knowledge of the
character and doctrines of the Sadducees (see, for instance, R. Akiba
in Yoma 40b), even though the names "Boethusians" and "Sadducees"
occur promiscuously (see Grätz, "Gesch." iii. 693, and Boethusians).
In the amoraic period the name "Ẓadduḳi" signifies simply "heretic,"
exactly like the term "min" = "gnostic"; in fact, copyists sometimes
replaced, it may be intentionally, the word "min" by "Ẓadduḳi,"
especially when Christian gnostics were referred to. However, in many
cases in which "Ẓadduḳim" stands for "minim" in the later Talmud
editions the change was due to censorship laws, as is shown by the
fact that the manuscripts and older editions actually have the word
"minim." Thus the Ẓadduḳi who troubled R. Joshua b. Levi with Biblical
arguments (Ber. 7a; Sanh. 105b), the one who argued with R. Abbahu and
Beruriah, (Ber. 10a), the one who bothered R. Ishmael with his dreams
(ib. 56b), and the one who argued with R. Ḥanina concerning the Holy
Land in the Messianic time (Giṭ. 57a; Ket. 112a) and regarding Jesus
("Balaam," Sanh. 106b), were Christian gnostics; so were also the two
Ẓadduḳim in the company of R. Abbahu (Suk. 48b). But the Ẓadduḳim who
argue in favor of dualism (Sanh. 37a [the original version of the
Mishnah had "apikoresin" or "minim"], 38b-39a; Ḥul. 87 a) are gnostics
or Jewish heretics, as are also those spoken of as "a vile people"
(Yeb. 63b). "Birkat ha-minim," the benediction against Christian
informers and gnostics, is called also "Birkat ha-Ẓadduḳim" (Ber. 28b,
29a). "The writings of the Ẓadduḳim" (Shab. 116a) are gnostic
writings, the same as "Sefarim Ḥiẓonim" (Sanh. x. 1; "Sifre ha-Minim,"
Tos. Shab. xiii. 5). So it is said of Adam that he was a Ẓadduḳi, that
is, a gnostic who did not believe in God as the Giver of the Law
(Sanh. 38b). "The Ẓadduḳim and informers" (Derek Ereẓ Rabbah ii.;
Derek Ereẓ Zuṭa i.) are Christian gnostics. In Hor. 11a a Ẓadduḳi is
declared to be a transgressor of the dietary and other Mosaic laws,
nay, an idolater. On the other hand, the Ẓadduḳim who conversed with
Rab Sheshet (Ber. 58a), with Raba (Shab. 88a), and with R. Judah (Ned.
49b) seem to have been Manicheans. See Pharisees.


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