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Sefer Toledot Yeshu (ספר תולדות ישו,
The Book of the Generations/History/Life of Jesus), often abbreviated as
Toledot Yeshu, is a medieval text which presents an alternative, anti-
sectarian view, as well as a disputed biography of
Jesus of Nazareth. It exists in a number of different versions, none of which is considered either
canonical or normative within
Rabbinic literature,
[1] but which appear to have been widely circulated in Europe and the Middle East in the
medieval period.
[2][3] A 15th-century
Yemenite version of the text was titled
Maaseh Yeshu, or the "
Episode of Jesus", in which Jesus is described either as being the son of Joseph or the son of
Pandera. The account portrays Jesus as an impostor.
The Toledot portrays Jesus (known as
Yeshu by the author) as an
illegitimate child who
practiced sorcery, taught a
heretical Judaism, seduced women, and died a shameful death.
[4] Interestingly, the author also shows a paradoxical respect for Jesus. Perhaps surprisingly, instead of denying the miracles the New Testament claims Jesus had performed, Toledot Yeshu doubles down. The difference, of course, is that in this polemic his powers are chalked up to sacrilegious sorcery, while the authors of the New Testament portrayed these events as proof of divine power. In some versions of Toledot Yeshu, Jesus is noted to have revived a man from the dead, turn clay statues into flying birds, and lift his arms like the wings of an eagle, ascending towards the heavens for an airborne battle with Judah Iskarioto. As Joseph Dan notes in the
Encyclopaedia Judaica,
A great misfortune struck Israel in the year 3651 (c. 110 BC). A man of the tribe of
Judah, Joseph
Pandera, lived near a widow who had a daughter called Miriam. This virgin was betrothed to Yohanan, a Torah-learned and God-fearing man of the house of
David. Before the end of a certain
Sabbath, Joseph looked lustfully at Miriam, knocked on her door and pretended to be her husband, but she only submitted against her will. When Yohanan came later to see her, she was surprised how strange his behavior was. Thus they both knew of Pandera's crime and Miriam's fault. Without witnesses to punish Pandera, Yohanan left for Babylonia.
Miriam gave birth to
Yeshua, whose name later depreciated to
Yeshu. When he was old enough, she took him to study the Jewish tradition. One day he walked with his head uncovered, showing disrespect, in front of the sages. This betrayed his illegitimacy and Miriam admitted him as Pandera's son. Scandalised, he fled to
Upper Galilee.
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