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High Priest of Israel

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Religious official of the Temple in Jerusalem
This article is about the position in historic Israel. For the religious leaders of current-day Israel, seeChief Rabbinate of Israel.
This articlerelies excessively onreferences toprimary sources. Please improve this article by addingsecondary or tertiary sources.
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(July 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Part of a series of articles on
Priesthood in Judaism
 Menorah

Priestly covenant
The ten gifts given in the Temple
  • Sin offering
  • Guilt offering
  • Communal peace offering
  • Fowl sin offering
  • Leftovers from the suspensive guilt offering
  • Oil from the offering for the leper
  • Bread from First Fruits
  • Showbread
  • Leftovers of themeal offering
  • Leftovers of the First Sheaf
.
Four gifts given in Jerusalem
Ten gifts given (even) outside of Jerusalem
High Priest in the Holy Place.

TheHigh Priest of Israel (Hebrew:כֹּהֵן גָּדוֹל,romanizedkohēn gaḏol,lit.'great priest')[1] was the head of thekohanim (Israelite priesthood). He played a unique role in the worship conducted in theTabernacle and later in theTemple in Jerusalem, as well as in some non-ritual matters. Like all priests, he was required to be descended fromAaron, the first priest in theTorah. But unlike other priests, the high priest followed more restrictive laws, wore unique priestly garments, and was the only priest allowed to perform certain ceremonies.

There is still aSamaritan High Priest, but inJudaism, the High Priesthood is defunct.

Titles

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The high priest is referred to by a number of titles in theHebrew Bible; the titlekohen gadol did not become dominant until well into theSecond Temple period.[1]

In addition to the title of "great priest", which later became the standard Hebrew title, the term "head priest" (כֹּהֵן הָרֹאשׁkohēn hāroš) was used, as was "anointed priest" (כֹּהֵן מָשִׁיחָkohēn māšiḥ). TheTorah sometimes uses longer descriptions: "the great priest who was anointed with the holy oil" inNumbers 35:25, "the priest who was anointed and invested to serve in place of his father",inLeviticus 16:32 “the priest who is greater than his brothers, whom oil was poured on his head and who was invested to wear the garments" inLeviticus 21:10, and "the priest in place of him [Aaron] from his sons, who will come to theTent of Meeting for the holy service" inExodus 29:30.

Some verses refer by name to a specific individual who is understood to be "the" priest, i.e. the high priest at that moment.

Hebrew Bible

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Individuals

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A traditional list of the Jewish high priests.
Jewish high priest andLevite inancient Judah (the depictions of theMenorah,Table of Showbread andtrumpets are inspired by theArch of Titus).
Main article:List of high priests of Israel

The first high priest was Aaron himself, the ancestor of all priests; he was appointed to this role byYahweh according toExodus 28:1–2 and 29:4–5.

Other notable high priests in the Bible include Aaron's sonEleazar, Eleazar's sonPhinehas,Eli, andZadok.

After theBabylonian captivity, the first high priest wasJoshua the High Priest, who is mentioned as a prominent leader alongside the political rulerZerubbabel.[2] Joshua wasTzadokite according to1 Chronicles 5:38-40 andHaggai 2:2 in accordance withEzekiel's prophecy.[3]

It was presumed that the high priest's son would succeed him,[4] but this did not always happen. The role eventually passed from Phinehas (or his descendants) toEli, who was descended fromIthamar, brother of Eleazar. However, Eli's family eventually lost rights to the high priesthood due to their sin in1 Samuel 2:27-35, a prophecy fulfilled whenSolomon appointed Zadok, a descendant of Eleazar, in place ofAbiathar, a descendant of Eli, according to1 Kings 2:35 and1 Chronicles 24:2–3.

Rabbinic Judaism supports the positions thatEzra was an ordinary member of the priesthood and that he actually served as a high priest.[5]

Roles

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The distinguished rank of the high priest is apparent from the fact that his sins are regarded as belonging also to the people.[6] He was entrusted with theUrim and Thummim,[7] which were worn in his garments.[8]

OnYom Kippur, he alone performed theYom Kippur Temple service, entering theHoly of Holies in theTemple in Jerusalem to atone for himself and for the people.[9] Only he could offer the sacrifices for the sins of the entire people inLeviticus 4:16. He also offered a meal-offering twice daily, on behalf of himself and the whole priesthood inLeviticus 6:13-15, though the wording of the law is not altogether definite. An unintentional killer was required to remain in one of theCities of Refuge until the death of the high priest, at which point the killer could return home inNumbers 35:25, 28, 32.

Qualifications

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The high priest alone was anointed withholy anointing oil upon his consecration,[10] hence the title of the "anointed priest"[11] (though in the initial consecration of Aaron and his sons, all of them were anointed[12]). The consecration also required wearing the special high priestly vestments for seven days.[13]

He was permitted to marry only an Israelite virgin.[14]

He was required to strictly avoidritual defilement. He was forbidden to come in contact with the bodies of the dead, not even those of his parents, according toLeviticus 21:11, unlike regular priests, who may become ritually impure for the death of an immediate relative according to Leviticus 21:1-3. He was also forbidden to leave his hair dishevelled or exposed, or to rend his garments as signs of mourning per Leviticus 21:10.

Vestments

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Main article:Kohen § Vestments

TheTorah provides for specific vestments to be worn by the priests when they are ministering in theTabernacle.[15] The high priest wore eight special garments. Of these, four were of the same type worn by all priests, and four were unique to the high priest.

Those vestments which were common to all priests were thepriestly tunic,priestly sash,priestly turban, andpriestly undergarments.

The vestments that were unique to the high priest were thepriestly robe,ephod (vest or apron),priestly breastplate, andpriestly golden head plate. In addition to the above "golden garments", he also had a set of white "linen garments" (bigdei ha-bad), which he wore only for the Yom Kippur Temple service.[16]

In rabbinic literature

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Even thoughAaron was the first high priest mentioned in theBook of Exodus,Louis Ginzberg inLegends of the Jews noted that in legends the first man that assumed the title of high priest of God isEnoch, who was succeeded byMethuselah,Lamech,Noah,Shem,Melchizedek,Abraham,Isaac andLevi.[17]

The high priest is the chief of all the priests; he should be anointed and invested with the priestly garments; but if the sacred oil were not obtainable,[18] investiture with the additional four garments is regarded as sufficient.[19] A high priest so invested is known asmerubbeh begadim. This investiture consists of arraying him in the eight pieces of dress and in removing them again on eight successive days, though (the anointing and) the investiture on the first day suffices to qualify him for the functions of the office.[20] The only distinction between the "anointed" and the "invested" high priest is that the former offers the bull for an unintentional transgression.[21]

The age of eligibility for the office is not fixed in theTorah; but according to rabbinical tradition it was twenty.[22] (For comparison,Levites began working at age 30.[23])Aristobulus, however, was only seventeen when appointed byHerod the Great;[24] but the son ofOnias III was too young (νήπιος) to succeed his father.[25]

Legitimacy of birth and lineage was essential, hence the care in keepinggenealogical records[26] and distrust of one whose mother had been captured in war.[27] According to Josephus, birth on foreign soil was no disqualification.[28]

The high priest, like all priests, would minister barefoot when he was serving in the Temple. Like all priests, he had to immerse himself in themikvah before vesting, and wash his hands and his feet before performing any sacred act. Neither common nor high priests could serve unless they wore their priestly vestments.[29] It is further taught that just as thesacrifices facilitate anatonement forsin, so do the priestly garments.[30]

Though other priests would serve only when it was their week on rotation and on festivals (and even then their function was decided by lot), the high priest could choose to perform any priestly rite at any time.Josephus contends that the high priest almost invariably participated in the ceremonies onShabbat,Rosh Chodesh, and thethree festivals.[31] This may also be inferred from the glowing description given in theWisdom of Sirach 1 of the high priest's appearance at thealtar.

Powers

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The GreatSanhedrin alone had the right to appoint, or confirm the appointment of, the high priest. His consecration could take place only in the daytime. Two high priests could not be appointed together. Every high priest had a deputy—called thesegan (deputy),mishneh (second), or "memunneh" (appointed)—to stand at his right; another assistant was called the "Catholicos".[32]

For offenses which entailed flagellation, the high priest could be sentenced by a court of three; after submitting to the penalty, he could resume his office.[33] The high priest was expected to be superior to all other priests in physique, in wisdom, in dignity, and in material wealth; if he was poor, his brother priests contributed to make him rich;[34] but none of these conditions was indispensable.

The high priest was required to be mindful of his honor. He was not allowed to mingle with the common people, nor permit himself to be seen disrobed, or in a public bath, etc.; but he could invite others to bathe with him.[35] He was not allowed to participate in a public banquet, but he could pay a visit of consolation to mourners, though even then, his dignity was guarded by prescribed etiquette.[36]

Restrictions

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The high priest was not allowed to follow the bier of one in his own family who had died, nor leave the Temple or his house during the time of mourning. The people visited him to offer consolation; in receiving them, theSegan was at his right, the next in rank and the people at his left. The people said: "We are thy atonement." He answered: "Be ye blessed from heaven".[37] During the offering of consolation he sat on a stool, the people on the floor; he rent his garments, not from above, but from below, near the feet, the penalty for rending them from above being flagellation.[38] He could not permit his hair to be disheveled, nor could he cut it.[39] He had one house attached to the Temple,[40] and another in the city of Jerusalem. His honor required that he should spend most of his time in the Sanctuary,[41] The high priest was subject to the jurisdiction of the courts, but if accused of a crime entailing capital punishment he was tried by the Great Sanhedrin; he could, however, refuse to give testimony.[42]

The high priest needed to be married, and "should only marry a virgin"; to guard against contingencies, it was proposed to hold a second wife in readiness immediately beforeYom Kippur;[43] but he was to have only one wife at a time.[44] He could performhalizah, and it could be given to his widow, as she also was subject to the Levirate; his divorced wife could marry again.[45] When entering the Temple, he was supported to the curtain by three men.[46] He could take part in the service whenever he desired.[47] On Yom Kippur, he wore white garments, while on other occasions he wore his golden vestments.[48] The seven days preceding Yom Kippur were devoted to preparing for his high function, precautions being taken to prevent any accident that might render him Levitically impure.[49] The ceremonial for that day is described in detail in Mishnah Yoma.[50]

Succession

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Thesuccession was to be through one of his sons, and was to remain in his own family.[51] If he had no son, the office devolved upon the brother next of age: such appears to have been the practice in theHasmonean period.

Late Second Temple

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See also:List of High Priests of Israel

In this period, the high priests belonged to priestly families from thesons of Zadok. This tradition came to an end in the 2nd century BCE during the rule of theHasmoneans, when the position was occupied by other priestly families unrelated to Zadok.[52]

After theExile, the succession seems to have been, at first, in a direct line from father to son; but later the civil authorities arrogated to themselves the right of appointment.Antiochus IV Epiphanes for instance, deposedOnias III in favor ofJason, who was followed byMenelaus.[53]

Beginning with the death ofZerubbabel, there was a tendency to combine political and priestly leadership in a single office; the final link in this development was the assumption of monarchy by theHasmonean high priests after their successful revolt. But after Hasmonean national independence came to an end, the high-priesthood changed again in character, ceasing to be a hereditary and a life office. High priests were appointed and removed with great frequency. This may account for the references to multiple contemporaneous "high priests" (ἀρχιερεῖς) inJosephus.[54] The deposed high priests seem to have retained the title, and to have continued to exercise certain functions.[55] Even in the latest periods, the office was apparently restricted to a few families of great distinction (probably thebenei kohanim gedolim, "[members of] high-priestly families").[56]

Herod the Great nominated no less than six high priests;Archelaus, two. The Roman legateQuirinius and his successors exercised the right of appointment, as didAgrippa I,Herod of Chalcis, andAgrippa II. Even the people occasionally elected candidates to the office. The high priests before the Exile were apparently appointed for life;[57] in fact, from Aaron to the exile fewer high priests served than in the 60 years preceding the fall of theSecond Temple.

Josephus enumerates only 52 high priests under the Second Temple, omitting the second appointments ofHyrcanus II,Hananeel, andJoazar.

Connection with Sanhedrin

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The high priest was the presiding officer of the Sanhedrin.[citation needed] This view conflicts with the later Jewish tradition according to which thePhariseetannaim (theZugot) at the head of theyeshivot presided over the great Sanhedrin also (Ḥag. ii. 2). However, a careful reading of the sources ("Ant." xx. 10; "Contra Ap." ii., § 22; comp. "Ant." iv. 8, § 14; xiv. 9, §§ 3–5 [Hyrcanus II. as president]; xx. 9, § 1 [Ananus]), as well as the fact that in the post-Maccabean period the high priest was looked upon as exercising in all things, political, legal, and sacerdotal, the supreme authority, shows it to be almost certain that the presidency of the Sanhedrin was vested in the high priest (see Isidore Loeb in "R. E. J." 1889, xix. 188–201; Jelski, "Die Innere Einrichtung des Grossen Synhedrions", pp. 22–28, according to whom theNasi was the high priest, while theAv Beth Din was a Pharisaictanna).

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^abMorgenstern, Julian (October 1938). "A Chapter in the History of the High-Priesthood (Concluded)".The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures.55 (4). The University of Chicago Press:360–377.doi:10.1086/amerjsemilanglit.55.4.3088118.JSTOR 3088118.S2CID 147434998.
  2. ^Haggai 2:2–4;Zechariah 3
  3. ^Ezekiel 44:15
  4. ^Leviticus 16:32
  5. ^Klein, Reuven Chaim (2013)."Was Ezra a High Priest?"(PDF).Jewish Bible Quarterly.41 (3):181–187.doi:10.17613/M6BJ95.
  6. ^Leviticus 4:3
  7. ^Numbers 27:21
  8. ^Exodus 28:30
  9. ^Leviticus 16
  10. ^Leviticus 16:32,21:10,Numbers 35:25,Psalms 133:2
  11. ^Leviticus 4:3,5,Leviticus 4:16,6:15
  12. ^Exodus 28:41,30:30;Leviticus 7:36,10:7;Numbers 3:3
  13. ^Exodus 29:29–30
  14. ^Leviticus 21:13–14
  15. ^Exodus 28,Exodus 39 andLeviticus 8
  16. ^Leviticus 16:4
  17. ^Ginzberg, Louis (1909).The Legends of the JewsVolume I - II (Translated by Henrietta Szold) Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society.
  18. ^see Horayot 13a; "Semag", 173, end
  19. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 4:12
  20. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 4:13
  21. ^Horayot 11b
  22. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:15; Chullin 24b; Arakhin 13b
  23. ^Numbers 4:3,30
  24. ^"Antiquities" 15:3 § 3
  25. ^"Antiquities" 12:5, § 1.
  26. ^Josephus,Contra Apion 1, § 7.
  27. ^"Antiquities" 13:10 § 5;Adolf Jellinek, "B. H." i. 133-137; Kiddushin 66a; seeJohn Hyrcanus
  28. ^Josephus.Antiquities 15:3, § 1.
  29. ^Talmud Bavli,Zevachim 17b
  30. ^Zevachim 88b
  31. ^Flavius Josephus,Wars of the Jews 5:5 § 7
  32. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 4:16–17
  33. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash, 4:22
  34. ^Yoma 18a; Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:1
  35. ^Tosefta, Sanhedrin 4; Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:3
  36. ^Sanhedrin 18–19; Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:4
  37. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:5; and Mishneh Kesef, ad loc.
  38. ^Semag, Lawin, 61-62
  39. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:6
  40. ^Middot 71b
  41. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:7
  42. ^Sanhedrin 18
  43. ^Yoma 1:1
  44. ^Yoma 13a; Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:10
  45. ^l.c.; Sanhedrin 18
  46. ^Tamid 67a; this may perhaps have reference to his entering the Holy of Holies; but see Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:11, and the Mishneh Kesef ad loc.
  47. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 5:12; Yoma 1:2; Tamid 67b; see Rashi ad loc.
  48. ^Yoma 60a; compare Yoma 68b
  49. ^Yoma 1:1-5
  50. ^see alsoHaneberg, "Die Religiösen Alterthümer der Bibel", pp. 659–671, Munich, 1869
  51. ^Mishneh Torah, Kelei haMikdash 4:20; Ketubot 103b; Sifra, Kedoshim; seeJosephus,Antiquities of the Jews 20:10 § 1;Leviticus 6:15
  52. ^"Zadok".www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org.
  53. ^Josephus,Antiquities 12:5 § 1;II Maccabees 3:4, 4:23
  54. ^The Life of Flavius Josephus §38;Jewish Wars 2:12§6; 4:3§§7,9; 4:4§3
  55. ^Mishnah Horayot 3:1–4; compare Megillah 1:9; Maccabees 2:6
  56. ^Ketubot 13:1-2; Ohalot 17:5; compare Josephus,Jewish War 6:2§2; see Schürer, "Gesch." 3d ed., 2:222
  57. ^cf.Numbers 35:25,28;Joshua 20:6

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainHirsch, Emil G. (1901–1906)."High Priest". InSinger, Isidore; et al. (eds.).The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

Bibliography

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  • Schulz, Sarah (2023).Joschua und Melchisedek. Berlin: De Gruyter.ISBN 9783110793413.

External links

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