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Having read about the "Jubilee" I was left with the question "Was it ever observed?" and its corollary, "If not, why not?"
To date, I have found no real answer but it does seem a shame that there is little evidence either way. There is a claim in Leviticus that the harvest in the sixth year would be treble the normal harvest. Did this happen?
Similarly for the Jubilee.
At the risk of being cynical one might expect court cases about disputes where property was supposed to be returned or insurance against "Jubilee" claims or a list of precedence cases to establish the extent and liability of Jubilee claims.
I hope I am just "ignorant" or "asking the wrong questions" but I would be delighted if someone could enlighten me. Accordingly, my email address presented: roger@bowens.net.
This seems an awfully lot like a progressive styled interventionist setup, can we be correct about this assertion that the Biblical government was a little more left-leaning in matters of economics (and of course, remember that the ideal H'Il seems to have for human society, in both Testaments no less, is one that seems to be collectivist, similar to Far-East Asian societies)?
Thanks, IdeArchos 07:08, 15 August 2006 (UTC)
To do: hope to add a section on how the Yovel is regarded in contemporary traditional Judaism in the near future. As with many other issues in Judaism, the Talmud and other rabbinic works expanded on the written Biblical rules and hence the practice as traditionally understood by the Jewish religion and its religious scholars is not necessarily the same thing as what other scholars might regard as the "Biblical" practice. Best, --Shirahadasha 19:07, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
Assuming the Jubilee Year was still observed, is there agreement on its cycle; ie which CE year(s) the next one would fall in? If so, shouldn't it be mentioned in the article? cheers, Moyabrit (talk) 01:20, 22 November 2007 (UTC)
I guess that's the direct effect of returning property. Came across this interesting piece, which has a much different emphasis to the article:
PS: Whoever wrote The Old Testament (whether you believe it was God or man) understood this, which is why "Jubilee" - that is, the wiping of all debt by decree on specified intervals - was written into the Torah. They understood that only such an act halted the exponential "runaway" in the economy and thus prevented the ruin of the economy and the people. Is it not amusing that we claim to be "so advanced" and yet not one person in 100 in this country seems to understand that which an ancient people, living in a time before electricity, automobiles, The Internet and even running water had figured out exponents - but the huge majority of our citizens haven't? And you wonder why I rant and rave about our so-called "education" system and "teachers"?
Is there any substance to that?--Shtove (talk) 20:53, 6 January 2009 (UTC)
Ywaz (talk) 15:02, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
I'm going to replace the bible verse Lev 25:10 quoted on this page with a different translation, one that has somehow escaped corruption by powerful men (who do not wish it to be known that debt ever should be cancelled). May Wikipedia also escape from those evil corrupting accursed usurers. --Sswam
I have restored from the edits on 27 January 2009 the omission of three sentences that brought out a practical consideration that scholars interpreting the Jubilee have always had to deal with. If you're still around, 71.137.252.167, you can respond giving your reasons here. If you have a valid citation you can give why this is not important, please give it; don't just delete because you may not agree. You could also request a userid and a Talk page to go with it. Thanks, Chronic2 (talk) 23:02, 24 January 2009 (UTC)
''''Applying forgiveness of debt to the economies of the world just one time would end this financial crisis we are in once and for all.'I can't imagine why it is expedient for the taxpayers to shore up the banks and it is beyond reason for the banks to forgive all debt in relation to real estate. For if the banks/government did this our crisis would be over. And we would forgive them as well. One would argue, Oh the investors! this is not fair. Yet even the investors who own real estate. Their debts would be forgiven. What's not fair about that?
Our economies would be rebuilt overnight and the burdens forgiven would enable the people of the nations to spend/save and stimulate the economies.
Don
It might be fair and legal (by the book) to:
1. Cancel existing accumulated interest above quadruple the principal. That is the "doubled and redoubled" limit. 2. Outlaw usurious interest rates. 2.8% is the maxmimum rate for compound interest, and 6% is the maximum rate for simple interest. This prevents a debt from quadrupling over 50 years before the jubilee. 3. Warn creditors that after 50 years, and every 50 years thereafter, there will be a Jubilee; at which time all debt is to be cancelled. 4. Warn creditors that it is illegal to loan money at usurious rates to _anyone_; regardless of their race, religion, or prosperity. 5. It would be nice to allocate the land fairly, too. We may dream.
Regardless of religion these are good ideas, although as a man of little faith I doubt we can achieve it. The third point in there would give creditors time enough to get some of their loan back, rather than a sudden loss of the entire 'investment'. Perhaps 38 years would be enough. We can hold the Jubilee on the 0th and 50th year of each AD / ISO century. Wikipedia is not for original thought. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sswam (talk • contribs) 07:41, 20 June 2012 (UTC)
There seems to be lots of discussion about whether this is a 50 year cycle or a 49 year cycle. Obviously, they are both correct! The seven year cycle was not disturbed by the Jubilee year. If we were to call the Sabbath years the Saturday-years then the Jubilee would be the Sunday-year after the seventh Saturday-year. The Jubilee year is the 50th year but it is also the first year of the next sabbatical cycle. The Jubilee year is the 50th year but the cycle or interval between Jubilee years is 49 years. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.91.173.42 (talk) 11:59, 14 October 2010 (UTC)
Kudos for bringing this up. Indeed the article would benefit from such an entry. I can't write it myself, though, as my head is perhaps too full of conspiracy for an encyclopedic entry. The fact is, though, I believe, that the Rothschild's, who happen to control most of the world's central banking, and are therefore the creditors of the creditors of the creditors, were quite aware of the problem the Jubilee was meant to address, when they invented central banking; but what they were trying to obtain was precisely a problem, --not a solution--, for their debtor nations. You will thus NOT find any mention at all of general forgiveness of debt as a solution for the financial crisis, anywhere in the mainstream media, or even most of the Internet. Instead, they keep muddying the issue by spreading the fallacy that the problem is "fiat currencies" through economic ideologues that they control, such as a number of gold-standard pushing gold-bugs, the Austrian School of Economics, and Tea Party activists. Gold backing of currencies was used throughout history by many nations and empires, and so was the use of gold in coinage ("commodity money"), yet the end result was always excessive debts, leading to monetization, leading to inflation. Or one could ask, if non-fiat currencies were so good, how come they are all dead? The problem is debt, and what's needed is debt forgiveness at the global scale; --never mind new currencies; and the nationalization of all (privately owned) central banks. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.210.1.159 (talk) 09:50, 17 September 2011 (UTC)
Only 1/3 of 1 sentence in the lengthy intro actually attempts to tell the reader what Jubilee *is*. When I finally get the the "Regulation" section, I am again bombarded with counting years rather than what the Jubilee Year requires. The shortest paragraph of 3 in that section gives a vague hint of the encyclopedic reference I sought. Would someone mind writing an encycopdic reference that tells what Jubilee *is*. Ywaz (talk) 15:10, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
While visiting a foreign country I became aware that the locals were unable to harvest shellfish in the bay one day every week. This was due to there being two high tides during the day, and they referred to it as their Sabbath when they did other things like shopping, housework, and going to church. Confused the heck out of me......but basically once a day for six days in a row the bay emptied completely at low tide allowing locals access to it's bottom. On the 7th day, there was no low tide during the daylight hours, the bay didn't empty, and so the locals did other things on that day.
Knowing how important Tyrian Purple (shellfish dye) was to the economy of ancient peoples, these circumstances suggest that the real cause of Sabbath or 'day of rest' were the tides that prevented the harvest of dye snails, and that these tides presumably had other effects on ancient sailing and fishing practices of which I'm not aware. While this theory would seem far fetched for mountain farmers and nomads; my impression of the Hebrews of Ur and Om is that they were originally delta dwellers occupying the same ecological niche as the latter day delta Arabs. When the Hebrews moved inland, it is natural that they should have kept some of their old delta customs, and that these customs should be subject to interpretation and new explanations for the lack of any observable cause.
Or perhaps what we are getting is the Hebrew explanation for what was already the general custom in the Levant.
Along these lines I saw the 2009 Nova documentary 'Rat Attack' regarding bamboo and rat populations in which was described how the bamboo forests flower and go to seed, all at once, regular as clockwork. I don't remember the species or it's interval, but Melocanna bambusoides, the bamboo that grows around the Bay of Bengal, flowers and fruits once every 30–35 years, and Phyllostachys bambusoides, Japanese Timber, has the longest interval known at 130 years. On eating the bamboo seeds, the fertility of the rats goes into overdrive. It is then useless to permit fruit trees to fruit or plant crops as the over-population of rats becomes a veritable plague, consuming crops in the field and silo, stored goods, leathers, textiles, and anything else not rat proofed. Their effect on poultry, livestock and children must be equally devastating as the normally timid forest rat becomes vicious from hunger and brazen in numbers. In addition, they often carry dangerous diseases like Rabies, Typhus, Typhoid, and Bubonic Plague, which can easily reach epidemic proportions as the rodent population increases.
As I seriously don't like rats, it certainly looked like a good year to pack up the wives and kiddies, and take the year long vacation with the livestock in the desert. :-) However, for the ancients, by selling/shipping out their excess goods and failing to plant crops for one or two years, the rats would have been starved out that much sooner, esp. if they burned their fields and field huts, and, of course, the fertility of fields would have been much improved by burning, lying fallow and losing the salt from prior irrigation. It also follows that due to the expected lack of work and possible famine, the slave markets and temples would have been glutted, and so unable to sell them, ancient governments and families might sacrifice, execute, or release their slaves. On their return from "vacation", it does seem likely that the fields would have to be resurveyed and redivided simply because they had laid fallow for a year, and also because of the extra deaths from accident, famine and plague. Again merely as a practical matter, it would seem prudent for any government re-establishing public order to forgive debt and taxes, and start off with a clean slate, because the rats had destroyed the records, for fear of riots, or more simply they didn't haven't the army of scribes and computers required for the need.
I'm sorry to say this and I don't mean to offend, but I just don't believe any ancient religion or government that permitted slavery, concubinage and prostitution could have been anything but corrupt, and I sincerely doubt the Hebrews could have codified Jubilee, even as an example of God's love and mercy, AND made it stick nationwide, unless it were a new law permitting a new modified form of slavery that before this had been entirely forbidden in the urreligion of the Hebrews, and/or it was a superstitious response to a regularly occurring national disaster, AND such policy carried with it it's own natural penalty for it's violation.
So my questions are : Did the Levant have a species of bamboo that set seed every 49 years causing plagues of rats and disease? Or was there some other equally devastating natural event that could be expected to occur like clockwork every 49 years?
Some original research into these questions likely needs doing that I don't have the time or education for so I place the info and my questions here in the hope of encouraging investigation and solid scholarship on the subject instead of the priestly speculations that mar this article.
Otherwise many of Wikipedia's articles regarding religion, religious practices and religious terms, modern or ancient, are greatly flawed for their lack of complete description, newsy reports of controversy/debates instead of solid content, broken links, and an obvious bias/ignorance on the part of the writer. While it's very easy to to forgive the young people their errors, I often find these articles limp noodles where they should have been strong ladders assisting further study. This article is no exception. I sincerely hope it's priority for improvement is raised.
Mrs. C — Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.17.137.31 (talk) 02:50, 16 March 2012 (UTC)
The interpretation of James Ussher was that the Jubilee year was not an extra year inserted after the 7 x 7 years, but just the 49th year of each cycle. According to his calculations, the Jubilee years began in 1445 BC, and were the years 1396, 1347, ..., 710, ..., 563 (the first during Captivity), ..., 24 BC and 26 AD (the 30th year of Jesus). Albmont (talk) 18:31, 30 October 2012 (UTC)
I am a professor of biblical studies and an ordained rabbi, and this article is a mess from a Jewish perspective,from an academic perspective, and simply from an organizational perspective. I'm trying to figure out how to flag the article, but I can't figure out how... --14:40, 21 September 2015 (UTC)Dsbogard (talk)
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The final paragraph of the "Textual and practical considerations" section which begins "In contrast, the consideration that the Jubilee year [...]" seems to be a misinterpretation of the previous portion of the article. ie.: Instead of the 49th year is the 50th by inclusive counting, it builds a strawman that the 1st year is the 50th year and then argues against that to disprove it. There are no sources to compare this paragraph with, and it was added by an IP editor (50.96.93.73 on 2014-12-23) with no other contributions. On the face, it appears as if it were an OR edit. I'd suggest the paragraph be removed until reliable sources for an opposing argument can be included. — al-Shimoni (talk) 07:35, 13 December 2019 (UTC)