Synagogue in Smiths Bible Dictionary
1. History. --The word synagogue (sunagoge), which means a
"congregation," is used in the New Testament to signify a
recognized place of worship. A knowledge of the history and
worship of the synagogues is of great importance, since they
are the characteristic institution of the later phase of
Judaism. They appear to have arisen during the exile, in the
abeyance of the temple-worship, and to have received their
full development on the return of the Jews from captivity.
The whole history of Ezra presupposes the habit of solemn,
probably of periodic, meetings. Ezr 8:15; Ne 8:2; 9:1; Zec
7:5 After the Maccabaean struggle for independence, we find
almost every town or village had its one or more synagogues.
Where the Jews were not in sufficient numbers to be able to
erect and fill a building, there was the proseucha
(proseuche), or place of prayer, sometimes open, sometimes
covered in, commonly by a running stream or on the seashore,
in which devout Jews and proselytes met to worship, and
perhaps to read. Ac 16:13 Juven. Sat. iii. 296. It is hardly
possible to overestimate the influence of the system thus
developed. To it we may ascribe the tenacity with which,
after the Maccabaean struggle, the Jews adhered to the
religion of their fathers, and never again relapsed into
idolatry.
2. Structure. --The size of a synagogue varied with
the population. Its position was, however, determinate. If
stood, if possible, on the highest ground, in or near the
city to which it belonged. And its direction too was fixed.
Jerusalem was the Kibleh of Jewish devotion. The synagogue
was so constructed that the worshippers, as they entered and
as they prayed, looked toward it. The building was commonly
erected at the cost of the district. Sometimes it was built
by a rich Jew, or even, as in Lu 7:5 by a friend or
proselyte. In the internal arrangement of the synagogue we
trace an obvious analogy to the type of the tabernacle. At
the upper or Jerusalem end stood the ark, the chest which,
like the older and more sacred ark contained the Book of the
Law. It gave to that end the name and character of a
sanctuary. This part of the synagogue was naturally the
place of honor. Here were the "chief seats," for which
Pharisees and scribes strove so eagerly, Mt 23:6 and to
which the wealthy and honored worshipper was invited. Jas
2:2,3 Here too, in front of the ark, still reproducing the
type of the tabernacle, was the eight-branched lamp, lighted
only on the greater festivals. Besides this there was one
lamp kept burning perpetually. More toward the middle of the
building was a raised platform, on which several persons
could stand at once, and in the middle of this rose a
pulpit, in which the reader stood to read the lesson or sat
down to teach. The congregation were divided, men on one
side, women on the other a low partition, five or six feet
high, running between them. The arrangements of modern
synagogues, for many centuries, have made the separation
more complete by placing the women in low side-galleries,
screened off a lattice-work.
3. Officers. --In smaller towns there was often but
one rabbi. Where a fuller organization was possible, there
was a college of elders, Lu 7:3 presided over by one who was
"the chief of the synagogue." Lu 8:41,49; 13:14; Ac 18:8,17
The most prominent functionary in a large synagogue was
known as the sheliach (= legatus), the officiating minister
who acted as the delegate of the congregation and was
therefore the chief...
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