Commentary Companion Dictionary Selective-depth dictionary for the AI Bible Commentary website
Canonical dictionary entry

Sadducees

Sadducees are the priestly-aristocratic Jewish group tied to the temple and known for denying the resurrection. The Sadducees are important because their…

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At a glance

Definition: Sadducees are the priestly-aristocratic Jewish group tied to the temple and known for denying the resurrection.

  • They were closely associated with the Jerusalem establishment and priestly power.
  • The Gospels and Acts highlight their rejection of resurrection and spirits.
  • Their influence was tied strongly to the temple order that ended in AD 70.

Simple explanation

Sadducees are a priestly and aristocratic Jewish group tied strongly to the temple establishment.

Academic explanation

Sadducees are the priestly-aristocratic Jewish group tied to the temple and known for denying the resurrection. The Sadducees are important because their denial of resurrection places them at odds with a major biblical hope and with the heart of apostolic proclamation.

Extended academic explanation

Sadducees are the priestly-aristocratic Jewish group tied to the temple and known for denying the resurrection. The Sadducees confront Jesus over resurrection and are prominent among those opposing apostolic preaching in Acts. Their doctrinal differences from the Pharisees provide important background for several New Testament scenes. Historically, the Sadducees were associated with the temple elite and with aristocratic interests in Jerusalem under late Second Temple conditions. Much of what we know about them comes through opponents or external observers. The Sadducees are important because their denial of resurrection places them at odds with a major biblical hope and with the heart of apostolic proclamation. Their role also exposes how institutional power can harden against truth.

Biblical context

The Sadducees confront Jesus over resurrection and are prominent among those opposing apostolic preaching in Acts. Their doctrinal differences from the Pharisees provide important background for several New Testament scenes.

Historical context

Historically, the Sadducees were associated with the temple elite and with aristocratic interests in Jerusalem under late Second Temple conditions. Much of what we know about them comes through opponents or external observers.

Jewish and ancient context

The Sadducees help explain debates over resurrection, angels, scriptural interpretation, and power structures around the temple.

Key texts

  • Matthew 22:23-33 - Sadducees challenge Jesus on the resurrection.
  • Acts 4:1-3 - Sadducees oppose apostolic preaching about Jesus' resurrection.
  • Acts 23:6-8 - The Sadducees are distinguished from the Pharisees on resurrection and spirits.

Secondary texts

  • Mark 12:18-27 - Jesus answers Sadducean denial of resurrection.
  • Acts 5:17-18 - Sadducean jealousy contributes to apostolic arrest.
  • Acts 23:6-8 - Luke explicitly contrasts Sadducean and Pharisaic doctrinal positions.
  • Luke 20:27-40 - Luke's parallel highlights the same Sadducean challenge on resurrection.

Theological significance

The Sadducees are important because their denial of resurrection places them at odds with a major biblical hope and with the heart of apostolic proclamation. Their role also exposes how institutional power can harden against truth.

Interpretive cautions

Do not collapse Sadducees into a timeless stereotype or assume every reference uses the group in the same way. Ask who is in view, when they appear, and how Scripture or later history uses the group within the storyline.

Doctrinal boundaries

This entry touches resurrection, temple theology, authority, and the conflict between revealed truth and religious power.

Practical significance

The Sadducees remind readers that privileged religious status can coexist with doctrinal error and resistance to God's saving work.