My guess: Aramaic was his mother tongue, but that he also spoke Hebrew.

 

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Sent: Friday, May 30, 2014 2:29 PM
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Subject: [RC] What language did Jesus speak?

 

 

 

 

Your Holiness, Bibi was right – Jesus spoke Hebrew!

 
<http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/bibi-was-right-jesus-spoke-hebrew/#ixzz33EUdTeiJ>
 R. Steven Notley | Ops & Blogs | The Times of Israel

 

 

May 28, 2014,

The recent tête-à-tête 
<http://www.timesofisrael.com/pope-wraps-up-delicate-mideast-pilgrimage/>  
between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Pope Francis has set the 
blogosphere atwitter. While their exchange was amicable, the prime minister’s 
correction of the holy father ushered into public discourse a subject more at 
home in the arcane halls of scholarly deliberation. 

What language did Jesus speak? 

Their differences of opinion reflect changes taking place among scholars, but 
which have yet to make their way fully to mainstream, popular understanding. 
Beginning in the middle of the nineteenth century a mistaken notion took hold 
that has by-and-large continued to dominate both scholarly and popular opinion.

Today many still assume that by the first century C.E. Hebrew was a dead 
language, or existed only among sparse pockets of the highly educated – not 
dissimilar to Medieval Latin.

As a consequence, it is commonly thought that Jesus only knew Aramaic.

Yet, the results of a century of archaeological evidence have challenged this 
assumption and brought a sea change of understanding regarding the linguistic 
environment of first-century Judaea.

The inscriptional and literary evidence reflects a reality not unlike what we 
find with the Dead Sea Scrolls. Of the 700 non-biblical texts from the Qumran 
library, 120 are in Aramaic and 28 in Greek, while 550 scrolls were written in 
Hebrew.

Jesus lived in a trilingual land in which Hebrew and Aramaic were widely in 
use. A relative latecomer, Greek was introduced in the 4th century B.C.E. with 
the arrival of Alexander the Great and his Hellenistic successors.

By the first century C.E. Aramaic served as the lingua franca of the Near East, 
and there is little question that Jesus knew and spoke Aramaic. Hebrew, on the 
other hand, was in more limited use as the language of discourse among the 
Jewish people.

The New Testament presents Jesus knowledgeable of both written and spoken 
Hebrew.

He is portrayed reading and teaching from the Bible, and there are clear 
indications in these accounts that he used the Hebrew Scriptures. In this he 
was not alone. We have not a single example of a Jewish teacher of the first 
century in the land of Israel teaching from any other version of the scriptures 
than Hebrew.

In addition, Jesus is often described speaking in parables. These were 
delivered orally in popular, non-scholarly settings. They were also in Hebrew. 
Outside of the Gospels, story-parables of the type associated with Jesus are to 
be found only in rabbinic literature, and without exception they are all in 
Hebrew. We have not a single parable in Aramaic, so it seems that according to 
Jewish custom one did not tell parables in Aramaic. To suggest that Jesus told 
his parables in Aramaic is to ignore overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

Old ideas die hard, and it appears this also to be the case concerning the 
languages of Jesus. Why scholars and others continue to believe Hebrew was not 
Jesus’ mother tongue is another question, but it is not for lack of evidence.

 

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