Sadducees

Sadducees, a sect of the Jews of high priestly origin that first came into prominence by their opposition to the Pharisees, being the party in power when Pharisaism arose in protestation against their policy as tending to the secularisation of the Jewish faith, or the prostitution of it to mere secular ends. They represented the Tory or Conservative party among the Jews, as the Pharisees did the High Church party among us. The antagonism which thus arose on political grounds gradually extended to religious matters. In regard to religion they were the old orthodox party, and acknowledged the obligation of only the written law, and refused to accept tradition at the hands of the Scribes. They denied the immortality of the soul, the separate existence of spirits, and this they did on strictly Old Testament grounds, but this not from any real respect for the authority of Scripture, only as in accord with the main article of their creed, which attached importance only to what bears upon this present life, and which in modern times goes under the name of secularism. They were at bottom a purely political party, and they went out of sight and disappeared from Jewish history with the fall of the Jewish State, only the Pharisaic party surviving in witness of what Judaism is.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Sadda * Sade, Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de
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Sackville, Thomas, Earl of Dorset
Sacrament
Sacramentarian
Sacramento
Sacramento
Sacred Wars
Sacrifice
Sacring-bell
Sacy, Antoine Isaac, Baron Silvestre de
Sadda
Sadducees
Sade, Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de
Sádi
Sadler, Sir Ralph
Sadoleto, Jacopo
Sadowa
Safed
Safety Lamp
Saffi
Sagar
Sagas

Nearby

Sadducees in Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable

Links here from Chalmers

Acosta, Uriel
Antigonus Sochæus
David, George
Scot, Reynolde
Trigland, James