Misplaced Pages

Joshua the High Priest

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Joshua (High Priest)) High Priest of Israel
Joshua as imagined by Guillaume Rouille, from his 1553 work containing woodcut portraits in medallion form, Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum.
Part of a series of articles on
Priesthood in Judaism
 Menorah

Priestly covenant
Roles
High Priests
(First Temple)
(Second Temple)
Twenty-four priestly giftsThe 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 the meal offering
  • Leftovers of the First Sheaf
.
Four gifts given in Jerusalem
Ten gifts given (even) outside of Jerusalem
Priestly garmentsAll Priests
High Priest
Miscellaneous topics

Joshua the son of Jehozadak (Hebrew: יְהוֹשֻׁוּעַ Yəhōšūaʿ‍), also spelled Yeshua or Jeshua (Hebrew: יֵשׁוּעַ Yēšūaʿ‍) was the first High Priest during the reconstruction of the Jewish Temple after the return of the Jews from the Babylonian Captivity.

Life

In the common List of High Priests of Israel, Joshua served as High Priest around 515–490 BCE.

The biblical text names Joshua among the leaders who inspired a momentum towards the reconstruction of the temple, in Ezra 5:2. Later, some of his sons and nephews are found guilty of intermarriage.

In the Book of Zechariah 3:6–10, Zechariah the prophet experiences a vision given to him by an angel of the Lord in which the restoration and cleansing of Joshua's priestly duties are affirmed. Included in the visions were requirements in which Joshua was expected to uphold. These included: (1) walk in the ways of God, (2) keeping the requirements (the law), (3) ruling God's house, (4) take charge of His courts; by fulfilling these duties, the angel granted access to the inner temple to Joshua and his fellow priest. The vision also functioned to purify Joshua and to sanctify him for the preparations of his priestly duties.

Joshua is also named alongside Persian governor Zerubbabel in the Book of Haggai as the high priest to whom that prophet directed his messages from God. Theologian Albert Barnes observes that "Haggai addresses these two, the one of the royal, the other of the priestly, line, as jointly responsible for the negligence of the people".

Tomb

In 1825, the traditional tomb of Joshua was reported to have been found at "one hour's distance from Baghdad".

Significance

The name Joshua is of the same origin as the name Jesus, and Joshua the High Priest is interpreted by Christians to be a foreshadowing of Jesus: "Together , they are types of Him, the true King and true priest, Christ Jesus, who by the resurrection raised again the true temple, His Body, after it had been destroyed."

Patrilineal ancestry

As per 1 Chronicles chapter 5:

Patrilineal descent
  1. Abraham
  2. Isaac
  3. Jacob
  4. Levi
  5. Kehath
  6. Amram
  7. Aaron
  8. Eleazar
  9. Phinehas
  10. Abishua
  11. Bukki
  12. Uzzi
  13. Zerahiah
  14. Meraioth
  15. Azariah
  16. Amariah
  17. Ahitub
  18. Zadok
  19. Ahimaaz
  20. Azariah
  21. Yohanan
  22. Azariah II
  23. Amariah
  24. Ahitub
  25. Zadok II
  26. Shallum
  27. Hilkiah
  28. Azariah IV
  29. Seraiah
  30. Jehozadak
  31. Joshua the High Priest

Notes

  1. This dating is based on the period of service at age 25–50 (per Numbers 8) rather than age 30–50 (per Numbers 4).

References

  1. Zechariah 6:9–14 and Ezra 3
  2. Ezra 10:18
  3. Haggai 1:1, 14, 2:2
  4. ^ Barnes, A. (1834), Barnes' Notes on Haggai 1, accessed on 25 December 2024
  5. United Foreign Missionary Society (1825). American Missionary Register. J. & J. Harper. p. 280. Retrieved 4 October 2010.

External links

High Priests of Israel (List)
Tabernacle
First Temple
Post-exilic
Hasmonean
dynasty
Herodians
to the
Jewish Revolt
Categories: