Biblexika

On the Special Laws (Philo)

jewishgreek~20-50 CE

Philo's four-book treatise classifying Mosaic legislation under the Ten Commandments. The most detailed first-century philosophical commentary on Jewish law — essential context for Paul's letters on law and grace.

Translation: Loeb Classical Library (via Sefaria) (public-domain)

Overview

On the Special Laws (Greek: De Specialibus Legibus) is Philo of Alexandria's most comprehensive legal work, spanning four books and providing the fullest surviving ancient Jewish philosophical treatment of Mosaic law. It follows directly from On the Decalogue, which treated the Ten Commandments as the organizing headings of all Mosaic legislation. On the Special Laws then catalogs and interprets the individual laws of Moses under those ten headings, presenting them as rational, philosophically defensible expressions of natural law.

Philo's approach throughout is both systematic and apologetic. He addresses an audience that includes philosophically educated Alexandrian Jews and curious Gentile readers who might find the Torah's specific regulations puzzling or arbitrary. His strategy is to demonstrate that every particular Mosaic regulation — dietary laws, purity rules, festival observances, agricultural commandments, laws of commerce, inheritance, and judicial procedure — embodies principles that any rational person, instructed by philosophy, could recognize as true and good.

The treatise is Philo's most practically oriented work, engaging directly with the lived reality of Jewish observance rather than with abstract philosophical interpretation. It contains some of his most personally revealing passages, including the famous autobiographical section of Book I in which Philo describes the tension between his beloved contemplative philosophical life and the demands of communal leadership and civic responsibility in Alexandria. On the Special Laws together with On the Decalogue constitutes the most comprehensive ancient philosophical presentation of the Mosaic legal system and is indispensable for understanding how educated first-century Jews understood their own tradition.

Bible connections
  • Exodus 20-23 (covenant law code underlying Book I-II)
  • Leviticus 17-27 (Holiness Code underlying Books I-III)
  • Deuteronomy 12-26 (Deuteronomic legislation underlying all four books)
  • Romans 2:28-29 (spiritual versus physical circumcision)
  • Romans 7:12 (the law as holy, righteous, and good)
  • Galatians 3:19-25 (the purpose and limits of the Mosaic law)
  • James 2:1-13 (social justice as fulfillment of the law)
Key terms
Covenantal nomismE.P. Sanders's term for the pattern of Second Temple Jewish religion in which law observance occurs within the framework of God's prior gracious covenant rather than as a means of earning merit; Philo's On the Special Laws is a primary witness to this pattern
Special lawsPhilo's term for the individual specific regulations of the Mosaic code, as distinguished from the Decalogue (the ten headings) and the patriarchal narratives (the unwritten living laws); De Specialibus Legibus catalogs and interprets these specific regulations
Halakhathe Jewish legal tradition governing practical observance; Philo's philosophical interpretation of the Mosaic laws has been compared to early rabbinic halakha to identify shared legal traditions and divergent interpretive methods
Purity regulationsthe Mosaic laws governing ritual cleanness and uncleanness (Leviticus 11-15); Philo interprets these not merely as ritual requirements but as disciplines of bodily and mental purity that facilitate the soul's philosophical contemplation
Did you know?

Philo describes in On the Special Laws I how he was pulled away from his beloved life of philosophical contemplation by the demands of civic and communal life in Alexandria — one of the most personal and autobiographical passages in all his writings. This passage reveals that Philo himself experienced the tension between the contemplative philosophical life he idealized and the active communal responsibilities he could not avoid, making him simultaneously a philosopher of the ascent to God and a man deeply embedded in the political realities of Diaspora Jewish life.