TD said:
This was an established principle of the Oral Law at the time Jesus of the Bible lived and taught.
Today this is interpreted liberally enough to include filling a tooth or even satisfying the food cravings of a pregnant woman.
Hopefully everyone sees the irony of Jesus denoucing Pharisees for their citing "man-made oral traditions", while ALSO claiming exemptions from the same "oral laws and traditions" to do the "work" of healing on the Sabbath. It's called talking out of both sides of one's mouth.
In so doing, Jesus was setting an example that Xians follow to this day: cherry-picking whatever rules they choose to follow.
Blondie said:
I do believe the Torah was said to be given by God to the Israelites.
The Talmud were man-made rules not from God. So was Jesus obligated to keep the laws of men especially when the went against God's law?
'make the word of God invalid'? So did God support those man-made laws? Based on the account, no.
It's a bit more complicated than that, as Jews believe that YHWH gave Moses an "oral Torah" which is necessary to explain the missing "gaps" in the written Torah:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_Torah
There's some compelling reasons to accept that concept, from the wikipedia page:
Written texts require some explanation and interpretation. (See, hermeneutics.) The significance of the Oral Torah is that Rabbinic Judaism felt it was given by God along side the Torah to Moses therefore binding. To the Rabbis in late antiquity, the Oral Torah is as authoritative as the written law itself (contrast with Karaism below). For more detail here, see Rabbi Nathan Cardozo, The infinite chain: Torah, masorah, and man (ISBN 0-944070-15-9), and Rabbi Gil Student, Proofs for the Oral Torah.
- Biblical verses assuming an oral tradition: Many verses in the Torah require interpretation. Some even presuppose that the reader understands what is being referred to. Many terms used in the Torah are totally undefined, and many procedures are mentioned without explanation or instructions, assuming familiarity on the part of the reader. Some examples follow. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 8 ] The discussion of shechita (kosher slaughter) in Deuteronomy 12 states "you shall kill of your herd and of your flock which God Lord has given you, as I have commanded you," yet the only earlier commandment given by the Torah is "you shall not eat the blood." Similarly, Deuteronomy 24 discusses the laws of divorce in passing; they are assumed knowledge in a discussion about when remarriage would be allowed. Also, that the blue string of tekhelet on the tzitzit is to be dyed with a dye extracted from what some scholars believe to be a snail is a detail only spoken of in the oral Torah. [ 9 ]
- Consistency between the oral tradition and biblical verses: The phrase "An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a hand for a hand, a foot for a foot" Ex 21:22–27 is held in the oral tradition to imply monetary compensation – as opposed to a literal Lex talionis. [ 10 ] This is the only interpretation consistent with Numbers 35:31. Further, personal retribution is explicitly forbidden by the Torah (Leviticus 19:18 ), such reciprocal justice being strictly reserved for the magistrate. A second example: The marriage of Boaz to Ruth as described in the Book of Ruth appears to contradict the prohibition of Deuteronomy 23:3–4 against marrying Moabites – the Oral Torah explains that this prohibition is limited to Moabite men. A third example: The rabbinic practice for the Counting of the Omer (Leviticus 23:15-16 ) is at odds with the Karaite Practice, which appears to accord with a more literal reading of these verses, but is in fact borne out by Joshua 5:10-12 . [ 11 ] The Targum Onkelos (1st century CE) is largely consistent with the oral tradition as recorded in the midrash, redacted into writing only in the 3rd or 4th century. [ 12 ]
Prognoser said:
King Solomon, there is a ton of evidence of the Talmud's existence in Jesus time, even though it wasn't codified until many years later.
Then use the correct term: oral law, NOT Talmud. Use the term 'Talmud' improperly with anyone who knows what it refers to (eg any Jew), and they'll laugh at your ignorance, and nerve for daring to edumacate (sic) them on finer points of Judaism when their 10 y.o. child could correct you on the point.
Think of the advantages to the Pharisaic power structure by not having the Talmud codified. They could act just like the WTBTS and say they received "new light" yet nobody could actually check out the Talmud to verify it.
Maybe you're unaware that there were strict prohibitions AGAINST writing the oral law: read the link above to learn.
Also remember that the oral laws stemmed from a time BEFORE literacy was common, where MUCH of cultural identity HAD to be handed down in oral form. Again, people are superimposing their modern concepts of the World, where literacy is widely taken for granted and assumed to exist, and projecting that to a time when it wasn't the case.