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Pastors and Missionaries interested in consultation on establishing school work in their ministry mail.

 

Haggadah Catenae Beth-midrash = to relate extracts of ecclesiastical writers about "Houses of Explanation".

"The Company of Prophets"

 

Public meetings of learned men: "Where there are ten men whose occupations do not prevent them from devoting their whole time to sacred learning; a house for their meetings must be built"

 

I.                   Private tutors:

 

1.      Children taught by parents.

2.      Children of kings had tutors.

3.      Host of sages and learned men.

4.      John the herald of Jesus, teacher of his nation.

5.      Apostle Paul taught many nations and ages.

6.      Today religious institutions of higher learning.        

 

II.                Past Traditions: "A Company of Prophets" I Samuel 10:5,6 9 (chebel) (verb)

 

1.      A measuring line.

2.      A district or inheritance as measured.

3.      A company as if tied together

4.      To wind tightly as a rope.

5.      To bind especially by a pledge.

6.      To travail                    

 

1.      Soon after the Babylonian exile assemblies of the learned not only existed but also had increased to a considerable extent.

 

2.      Not only took place at Jerusalem but Galilee, Idumea, Lebanon and heathen countries.

 

3.      Meeting places were connected to synagogues, after worship and reading met in upper apartment.

 

4.      Beth-midrash academic lectures were for higher students who aspired to fill in time the place of teachers themselves.

 

5.      These companies were likened to academies or learned societies of Greece and Rome.

 

6.      Assemblies of the wise proposed questions more suited to the sacred.

 

7.      These companies selected their president capable of partaking in a discussion on some proposed learned question.

 

8.      Pupils were men or youths of more or less advanced education to profit by listening to the learned discussions, to participate in them themselves, paving the way and preparing themselves for the office of the presidency at some future time.

 

9.      These meetings were public to admit anyone and allowing proposed questions.

 

10.  Subjects: 1. Songs in which audience joined in. 2. Learned members delivered their thoughts and opinions on a certain proposed question. 3. Adages: an old saying or proverb. 4. Solutions of obscure questions and problems, enigmas: a perplexing, baffling, no explanation matter, persons, statements, etc. 5. Preserved remains of the olden times by collecting and writing them down.

 

11.  Assemblies and meetings were still in existence in the times of Christ and his apostles: Col. 2:8: "beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the traditions of men, after the rudiments of the world and not after Christ."  I Tim. 1:1-7, 4:7, 6:4, 20

 

12.  Ambitious views of sages on whose character depended to shine and to say something new and original.

 

13.  There was bantering and quarrels among little Jewish academies and literary societies.

 

 

III.             Present teaching: "school" Acts 19:9 (schole) (derivative of verb)

 

  1. Loitering as a withholding of oneself from work.
  2. Leisure: a school as vacation from physical employment
  3. To have, hold, keep possession (schoo), (a primary verb)
  4. To have, hold, keep abilities
  5. To have, hold, keep near
  6. To have, hold, keep relations
  7. To have, hold, keep conditions
  8. To have, hold, keep followers
  9. To have, hold, keep amendments
  10. To have, hold, keep the conceived
  11. To have, hold, keep the count
  12. To have, hold, keep the diseased
  13. To have, hold, keep enjoyment
  14. To have, hold, keep fear
  15. To have, hold, keep following
  16. To have, hold, keep recovery
  17. To have, hold, keep reign
  18. To have, hold, keep rest
  19. To have, hold, keep return
  20. To have, hold, keep sick