HISTORY of the CHRISTIAN CHURCH*
CHAPTER VI.
THE GREAT TRIBULATION. (MATT.
24:21.)
§ 37. The Roman Conflagration and the Neronian Persecution.
"And I saw the woman
drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs of
Jesus. And when I saw her, I wondered with a great wonder."_Apoc. 17:6.
Literature.
I. Tacitus: Annales, 1. XV., c.
38-44.
Suetonius: Nero, chs. 16 and 38 (very brief).
Sulpicius Severus: Hist. Sacra, 1. II., c. 41. He gives to the
Neronian persecution a more general character.
II. Ernest Renan: L’Antechrist.
Paris, deuxième ed., 1873. Chs. VI. VIII, pp. 123 sqq. Also his Hibbert
Lectures, delivered
in London, 1880, on Rome and Christianity.
L. Friedländer:
Sittengeschichte Roms, I. 6, 27; III. 529.
Hermann Schiller: Geschichte der röm. Kaiserzeit unter der Regierung des
Nero. Berlin,
1872 (173-179; 424 sqq.; 583 sqq.).
Hausrath: N.
T.liche Zeitgeschichte, III. 392 sqq. (2d ed., 1875).
Theod. Keim: Aus
dem Urchristenthum. ZĂĽrich, 1878, pp. 171-181. Rom u. das
Christenthum,
1881, pp. 132 sqq.
Karl Wieseler:
Die Christenverfolgungen der Cäsaren. 1878.
G. Uhlhorn: The Conflict of
Christianity with Heathenism. Engl. transl. by Smyth and Ropes, N.
Y. 1879, pp. 241-250.
C. F. Arnold: Die Neron.
Christenverfolgung. Leipz. 1888.
The preaching of Paul and Peter
in Rome was an epoch in the history of the church. It gave an impulse to the
growth of Christianity. Their martyrdom was even more effective in the end: it
cemented the bond of union between the Jewish and Gentile converts, and
consecrated the soil of the heathen metropolis. Jerusalem crucified the Lord,
Rome beheaded and crucified his chief apostles and plunged the whole Roman
church into a baptism of blood. Rome became, for good and for evil, the
Jerusalem of Christendom, and the Vatican hill the Golgotha of the West. Peter
and Paul, like a new Romulus and Remus, laid the foundation of a spiritual
empire vaster and more enduring than that of the Caesars. The cross was
substituted for the sword as the symbol of conquest and power.514
But the change was effected at
the sacrifice of precious blood. The Roman empire was at first, by its laws of
justice, the protector of Christianity, without knowing its true character, and
came to the rescue of Paul on several critical occasions, as in Corinth through
the Proconsul Annaeus Gallio, in Jerusalem through the Captain Lysias, and in
Caesarea through the Procurator Festus. But now it rushed into deadly conflict
with the new religion, and opened, in the name of idolatry and patriotism, a
series of intermittent persecutions, which ended at last in the triumph of the
banner of the cross at the Milvian bridge. Formerly a restraining power that
kept back for a while the outbreak of Antichrist,515 it now openly assumed the
character of Antichrist with fire and sword.516
Nero.
The first of these imperial
persecutions with which the Martyrdom of Peter and Paul is connected by
ecclesiastical tradition, took place in the tenth year of Nero’s reign, a.d. 64, and by the instigation of that
very emperor to whom Paul, as a Roman citizen, had appealed from the Jewish
tribunal. It was, however, not a strictly religious persecution, like those
under the later emperors; it originated in a public calamity which was wantonly
charged upon the innocent Christians.
A greater contrast can hardly be
imagined than that between Paul, one of the purest and noblest of men, and
Nero, one of the basest and vilest of tyrants. The glorious first five years of
Nero’s reign (54-59) under the wise guidance of Seneca and Burrhus, make the
other nine (59-68) only more hideous by contrast. We read his life with mingled
feelings of contempt for his folly, and horror of his wickedness. The world was
to him a comedy and a tragedy, in which he was to be the chief actor. He had an
insane passion for popular applause; he played on the lyre; he sung his odes at
supper; he drove his chariots in the circus; he appeared as a mimic on the
stage, and compelled men of the highest rank to represent in dramas or in
tableaux the obscenest of the Greek myths. But the comedian was surpassed by
the tragedian. He heaped crime upon crime until he became a proverbial monster
of iniquity. The murder of his brother (Britannicus), his mother (Agrippina),
his wives (Octavia and Poppaea), his teacher (Seneca), and many eminent Romans,
was fitly followed by his suicide in the thirty-second year of his age. With
him the family of Julius Caesar ignominiously perished, and the empire became
the prize of successful soldiers and adventurers.517
The
Conflagration in Rome.
For such a demon in human shape,
the murder of a crowd of innocent Christians was pleasant sport. The occasion
of the hellish spectacle was a fearful conflagration of Rome, the most
destructive and disastrous that ever occurred in history. It broke out in the
night between the 18th and 19th of July,518 among the wooden shops in the
south-eastern end of the Great Circus, near the Palatine hill.519 Lashed by the wind, it defied all exertions of the firemen and
soldiers, and raged with unabated fury for seven nights and six days.520 Then it burst out again in another part, near the field of Mars,
and in three days more laid waste two other districts of the city.521
The calamity was incalculable.
Only four of the fourteen regions into which the city was divided, remained
uninjured; three, including the whole interior city from the Circus to the
Esquiline hill, were a shapeless mass of ruins; the remaining seven were more
or less destroyed; venerable temples, monumental buildings of the royal,
republican, and imperial times, the richest creations of Greek art which had
been collected for centuries, were turned into dust and ashes; men and beasts
perished in the flames, and the metropolis of the world assumed the aspect of a
graveyard with a million of mourners over the loss of irreparable treasures.
This fearful catastrophe must
have been before the mind of St. John in the Apocalypse when he wrote his
funeral dirge of the downfall of imperial Rome (Apoc. 18).
The cause of the conflagration
is involved in mystery. Public rumor traced it to Nero, who wished to enjoy the
lurid spectacle of burning Troy, and to gratify his ambition to rebuild Rome on
a more magnificent scale, and to call it Neropolis.522 When the fire broke out he was on the seashore at Antium, his
birthplace; he returned when the devouring element reached his own palace, and
made extraordinary efforts to stay and then to repair the disaster by a
reconstruction which continued till after his death, not forgetting to replace
his partially destroyed temporary residence (domus transitoria) by "the golden
house" (domus aurea), as a standing wonder of architectural magnificence and extravagance.
The
Persecution of the Christians.
To divert from himself the
general suspicion of incendiarism, and at the same time to furnish new
entertainment for his diabolical cruelty, Nero wickedly cast the blame upon the
hated Christians, who, meanwhile, especially since the public trial of Paul and
his successful labors in Rome, had come to be distinguished from the Jews as a genus tertium, or as the most dangerous
offshoot from that race. They were certainly despisers of the Roman gods and
loyal subjects of a higher king than Caesar, and they were falsely suspected of
secret crimes. The police and people, under the influence of the panic created
by the awful calamity, were ready to believe the worst slanders, and demanded
victims. What could be expected of the ignorant multitude, when even such
cultivated Romans as Tacitus, Suetonius, and Pliny, stigmatized Christianity as
a vulgar and pestiferous superstition. It appeared to them even worse than
Judaism, which was at least an ancient national religion, while Christianity
was novel, detached from any particular nationality, and aiming at universal
dominion. Some Christians were arrested, confessed their faith, and were
"convicted not so much," says Tacitus, "of the crime of
incendiarism as of hating the human race." Their Jewish origin, their
indifference to politics and public affairs, their abhorrence of heathen customs,
were construed into an "odium generis humani," and this made an attempt on their part to
destroy the city sufficiently plausible to justify a verdict of guilty. An
infuriated mob does not stop to reason, and is as apt to run mad as an
individual.
Under this wanton charge of
incendiarism, backed by the equally groundless charge of misanthropy and
unnatural vice, there began a carnival of blood such as even heathen Rome never
saw before or since.523 It was the
answer of the powers of hell to the mighty preaching of the two chief apostles,
which had shaken heathenism to its centre. A "vast multitude" of
Christians was put to death in the most shocking manner. Some were crucified,
probably in mockery of the punishment of Christ,524 some sewed up in the skins of
wild beasts and exposed to the voracity of mad dogs in the arena. The satanic
tragedy reached its climax at night in the imperial gardens on the slope of the
Vatican (which embraced, it is supposed, the present site of the place and
church of St. Peter): Christian men and women, covered with pitch or oil or
resin, and nailed to posts of pine, were lighted and burned as torches for the
amusement of the mob; while Nero, in fantastical dress, figured in a horse
race, and displayed his art as charioteer. Burning alive was the ordinary punishment
of incendiaries; but only the cruel ingenuity of this imperial monster, under
the inspiration of the devil, could invent such a horrible system of
illumination.
This is the account of the
greatest heathen historian, the fullest we have_as the best description of the
destruction of Jerusalem is from the pen of the learned Jewish historian. Thus
enemies bear witness to the truth of Christianity. Tacitus incidentally
mentions in this connection the crucifixion of Christ under Pontius Pilate, in
the reign of Tiberius. With all his haughty Roman contempt for the Christians
whom he knew only from rumor and reading, he was convinced of their innocence
of incendiarism, and notwithstanding his cold stoicism, he could not suppress a
feeling of pity for them because they were sacrificed not to the public good,
but to the ferocity of a wicked tyrant.
Some historians have doubted,
not indeed the truth of this terrible persecution, but that the Christians,
rather than the Jews, or the Christians alone, were the sufferers. It seems
difficult to understand that the harmless and peaceful Christians, whom the
contemporary writers, Seneca, Pliny, Lucan, Persius, ignore, while they notice
the Jews, should so soon have become the subjects of popular indignation. It is
supposed that Tacitus and Suetonius, writing some fifty years after the event,
confounded the Christians with the Jews, who were generally obnoxious to the
Romans, and justified the suspicion of incendiarism by the escape of their
transtiberine quarter from the injury of the fire.525
But the atrocious act was too
public to leave room for such a mistake. Both Tacitus and Suetonius distinguish
the two sects, although they knew very little of either; and the former
expressly derives the name Christians from Christ, as the founder of the new
religion. Moreover Nero, as previously remarked, was not averse to the Jews,
and his second wife, Poppaea Sabina, a year before the conflagration, had shown
special favor to Josephus, and loaded him with presents. Josephus speaks of the
crimes of Nero, but says not a word of any persecution of his
fellow-religionists.526 This alone
seems to be conclusive. It is not unlikely that in this (as in all previous
persecutions, and often afterwards) the fanatical Jews, enraged by the rapid
progress of Christianity, and anxious to avert suspicion from themselves,
stirred up the people against the hated Galilaeans, and that the heathen Romans
fell with double fury on these supposed half Jews, disowned by their own
strange brethren.527
The
Probable Extent of the Persecution.
The heathen historians, if we
are to judge from their silence, seem to confine the persecution to the city of
Rome, but later Christian writers extend it to the provinces.528 The example set by the emperor in the capital could hardly be
without influence in the provinces, and would justify the outbreak of popular
hatred. If the Apocalypse was written under Nero, or shortly after his death,
John’s exile to Patmos must be connected with this persecution. It mentions
imprisonments in Smyrna, the martyrdom of Antipas in Pergamus, and speaks of
the murder of prophets and saints and all that have been slain on the earth.529 The Epistle to the Hebrews 10:32-34, which was written in Italy,
probably in the year 64, likewise alludes to bloody persecutions, and to the
release of Timothy from prison, 13:23. And Peter, in his first Epistle, which
may be assigned to the same year, immediately after the outbreak of the
persecution, and shortly before his death, warns the Christians in Asia Minor
of a fiery trial which is to try them, and of sufferings already endured or to
be endured, not for any crime, but for the name of "Christians."530 The name "Babylon"531 for Rome is most easily
explained by the time and circumstances of composition.
Christianity, which had just
reached the age of its founder, seemed annihilated in Rome. With Peter and Paul
the first generation of Christians was buried. Darkness must have overshadowed
the trembling disciples, and a despondency seized them almost as deep as on the
evening of the crucifixion, thirty-four years before. But the morning of the
resurrection was not far distant, and the very spot of the martyrdom of St.
Peter was to become the site of the greatest church in Christendom and the
palatial residence of his reputed successors.532
The
Apocalypse on the Neronian Persecution.
None of the leading apostles
remained to record the horrible massacre, except John. He may have heard of it
in Ephesus, or he may have accompanied Peter to Rome and escaped a fearful
death in the Neronian gardens, if we are to credit the ancient tradition of his
miraculous preservation from being burnt alive with his fellow-Christians in
that hellish illumination on the Vatican hill.533 At all events he was himself a victim of persecution for the name
of Jesus, and depicted its horrors, as an exile on the lonely island of Patmos
in the vision of the Apocalypse.
This mysterious book_whether
written between 68 and 69, or under Domitian in 95_was undoubtedly intended for
the church of that age as well as for future ages, and must have been
sufficiently adapted to the actual condition and surroundings of its first
readers to give them substantial aid and comfort in their fiery trials. Owing
to the nearness of events alluded to, they must have understood it even better,
for practical purposes, than readers of later generations. John looks, indeed,
forward to the final consummation, but he sees the end in the beginning. He
takes his standpoint on the historic foundation of the old Roman empire in
which he lived, as the visions of the prophets of Israel took their departure
from the kingdom of David or the age of the Babylonian captivity. He describes
the heathen Rome of his day as "the beast that ascended out of the
abyss," as "a beast coming out of the sea, having ten horns and seven
heads" (or kings, emperors), as "the great harlot that sitteth among
many waters," as a "woman sitting upon a scarlet-colored beast, full
of names of blasphemy, having seven heads and ten horns," as "Babylon
the great, the mother of the harlots and of the abominations of the earth."534 The seer must have in view the Neronian persecution, the most
cruel that ever occurred, when he calls the woman seated on seven hills,
"drunken with the blood of the saints and with the blood of the martyrs of
Jesus,"535 and prophesied her downfall as a matter of rejoicing
for the "saints and apostles and prophets."536
Recent commentators discover
even a direct allusion to Nero, as expressing in Hebrew letters (Neron Kesar)
the mysterious number 666, and as being the fifth of the seven heads of the
beast which was slaughtered, but would return again from the abyss as
Antichrist. But this interpretation is uncertain, and in no case can we
attribute to John the belief that Nero would literally rise from the dead as
Antichrist. He meant only that Nero, the persecutor of the Christian church,
was (like Antiochus Epiphanes) the forerunner of Antichrist, who would be
inspired by the same bloody spirit from the infernal world. In a similar sense
Rome was a second Babylon, and John the Baptist another Elijah.
Notes.
I. The Accounts of the Neronian Persecution.
1. From heathen historians.
We have chiefly two accounts of
the first imperial persecution, from Tacitus,
who was born about eight years before the event, and probably survived Trajan
(d. 117), and from Suetonius, who
wrote his XII. Caesares a little later, about a.d. 120. Dion Cassius
(born circa a.d. 155), in
his History of Rome ( JRwmaikh; jIstoriva , preserved in fragments, and in the abridgment of the
monk Xiphilinus), from the arrival of Aeneas to a.d. 229, mentions the conflagration of Rome, but ignores the
persecutions of the Christians.
The description of Tacitus is in his terse, pregnant, and
graphic style, and beyond suspicion of interpolation, but has some obscurities.
We give it in full, from Annal., XV. 44
"But not all the relief of
men, nor the bounties of the emperor, nor the propitiation of the gods, could
relieve him [Nero] from the infamy of being believed to have ordered the
conflagration. Therefore, in order to suppress the rumor, Nero falsely charged
with the guilt, and punished with the most exquisite tortures, those persons
who, hated for their crimes, were commonly called Christians (subdidit reos,
et quaesitissimis poenis affecit, quos per flagitia invisos vulgus
’Christianos’ appellabat). The founder of that name, Christus, had
been put to death (supplicio affectus erat) by the procurator of Judaea,
Pontius Pilate, in the reign of Tiberius; but the pernicious superstition (exitiabilis
superstitio), repressed for a time,537 broke out again, not only
through Judaea, the source of this evil, but also through the city [of Rome],
whither all things vile and shameful flow from all quarters, and are encouraged
(quo cuncta
undique atrocia aut pudenda confluunt celebranturque). Accordingly, first, those
only were arrested who confessed.538 Next, on their information, a vast multitude (multitudo ingens),
were convicted, not so much of the crime of incendiarism as of hatred of the
human race (odio humani generis).539 And in their deaths they were
made the subjects of sport; for they were wrapped in the hides of wild beasts
and torn to pieces by dogs, or nailed to crosses, or set on fire, and when day
declined, were burned to serve for nocturnal lights (in usum nocturni
luminis urerentur). Nero had offered his own gardens [on the Vatican] for
this spectacle, and also exhibited a chariot race on the occasion, now mingling
in the crowd in the dress of a charioteer, now actually holding the reins.
Whence a feeling of compassion arose towards the sufferers, though justly held
to be odious, because they seemed not to be cut off for the public good, but as
victims to the ferocity of one man."
The account of Suetonius, Nero, c. 16, is very
short and unsatisfactory: "Afflicti suppliciis Christiani, genus
hominum superstitionis novae ac maleficaea." He does not connect the
persecution with the conflagration, but with police regulations.
Juvenal, the satirical poet, alludes,
probably as an eye-witness, to the persecution, like Tacitus, with mingled
feelings of contempt and pity for the Christian sufferers (Sat. I. 155):
"Dar’st thou
speak of Tigellinus’ guilt?
Thou too shalt shine
like those we saw
Stand at the stake
with throat transfixed
Smoking and
burning."
2. From Christians.
Clement
of Rome, near the
close of the first century, must refer to the Neronian persecution when he
writes of the "vast multitude of the elect "who suffered, many
indignities and tortures, being the victims of jealousy; "and of Christian
women who were made to personate "Danaides" and "Dirces," Ad
Corinth., c. 6. I have made no use of this passage in the text. Renan
amplifies and weaves it into his graphic description of the persecution (L’Antechrist,
pp. 163 sqq., almost literally repeated in his Hibbert Lectures).
According to the legend, Dirce was bound to a raging bull and dragged to death.
The scene is represented in the famous marble group in the museum at Naples.
But the Danaides can furnish no suitable parallel to Christian martyrs, unless,
as Renan suggests, Nero had the sufferings of the Tartarus represented.
Lightfoot, following the bold emendation of Wordsworth (on Theocritus, XXVI.
1), rejects the reading Danai>vde"
kai; Divrkai (which
is retained in all editions, including that of Gebhardt and Harnack), and
substitutes for it neanivde", paidivskai, so that Clement would say:,
Matrons (gunai'ke") maidens, slave-girls,
being persecuted, after suffering cruel and unholy insults, safely reached
the goal in the race of faith, and received a noble reward, feeble though they
were in body."
Tertullian (d. about 220) thus alludes to
the Neronian persecution, Ad Nationes, I. ch. 7: "This name of ours
took its rise in the reign of Augustus; under Tiberius it was taught with all
clearness and publicity; under Nero it was ruthlessly condemned (sub Nerone
damnatio invaluit), and you may weigh its worth and character even from the
person of its persecutor. If that prince was a pious man, then the Christians
are impious; if he was just, if he was pure, then the Christians are unjust and
impure; if he was not a public enemy, we are enemies of our country: what sort
of men we are, our persecutor himself shows, since he of course punished what
produced hostility to himself. Now, although every other institution which
existed under Nero has been destroyed, yet this of ours has firmly
remained_righteous, it would seem, as being unlike the author [of its
persecution]."
Sulpicius
Severus, Chron. II.
28, 29, gives a pretty full account, but mostly from Tacitus. He and Orosius (Hist. VII. 7) first
clearly assert that Nero extended the persecution to the provinces.
II. Nero’s Return as Antichrist.
Nero, owing to his youth,
beauty, dash, and prodigality, and the startling novelty of his wickedness
(Tacitus calls him "incredibilium cupitor," Ann. XV.
42), enjoyed a certain popularity with the vulgar democracy of Rome. Hence,
after his suicide, a rumor spread among the heathen that he was not actually
dead, but had fled to the Parthians, and would return to Rome with an army and
destroy the city. Three impostors under his name used this belief and found
support during the reigns of Otho, Titus, and Domitian. Even thirty years later
Domitian trembled at the name of Nero. Tacit., Hist. I. 2; II. 8, 9;
Sueton., Ner. 57; Dio Cassius, LXIV. 9; Schiller, l.c., p. 288.
Among the Christians the rumor
assumed a form hostile to Nero. Lactantius (De Mort. Persecut., c. 2)
mentions the Sibylline saying that, as Nero was the first persecutor, he would
also be the last, and precede the advent of Antichrist. Augustin (De Civil.
Dei, XX. 19) mentions that at his time two opinions were still current in
the church about Nero: some supposed that he would rise from the dead as
Antichrist, others that he was not dead, but concealed, and would live until he
should be revealed and restored to his kingdom. The former is the Christian,
the latter the heathen belief. Augustin rejects both. Sulpicius Severus (Chron.,
II. 29) also mentions the belief (unde creditur) that Nero, whose
deadly wound was healed, would return at the end of the world to work out
"the mystery of lawlessness" predicted by Paul (2 Thess. 2:7).
Some commentators make the
Apocalypse responsible for this absurd rumor and false belief, while others
hold that the writer shared it with his heathen contemporaries. The passages
adduced are Apoc. 17:8: "The beast was, and is not, and is about to come
up out of the abyss and to go into perdition" ... "the beast was, and
is not, and shall be present" (kai; pavrestai, not kaivper ejstivn, "and yet is," as the E. V. reads with the text. ec.); 17:11:
"And the beast that was, and is not, is himself also an eighth, and is of
the seven; and he goeth into perdition;" and 13:3: "And I saw one of
his heads as though it had been smitten unto death; and his death-stroke was
healed: and the whole world wondered after the beast."
But this is said of the beast,
i.e., the Roman empire, which is throughout clearly distinguished from the
seven heads, i.e., the emperors. In Daniel, too, the beast is
collective. Moreover, a distinction must be made between the death of one ruler
(Nero) and the deadly wound which thereby was inflicted on the beast or the
empire, but from which it recovered (under Vespasian).
§ 38. The Jewish War and the Destruction of Jerusalem. a.d. 70.
"And as He went forth out
of the temple, one of his disciples saith unto Him, Master, behold, what manner
of stones and what manner of buildings!
And Jesus said unto him, Seest thou these great buildings? There shall not be left here one stone
upon another, which shall not be thrown down."_Mark 13:1,2.
Sources.
Josephus: Bell.
Jud., in 7 books; and Vita, c. 4-74. The history of the Jewish war was
written by him as eye-witness about a.d.
75. English translations by W. Whiston,
in Works of Jos., and by Rob. Traill,
ed. by Isaac Taylor, new ed., Lond., 1862. German translations by Gfrsörer and
W. Hoffmann, Stuttgart, 1836; and Paret, Stuttg., 1855; French translations by
Arnauld d’andilly, 1667, Joachim Gillet, 1756, and Abbé Glaire, 1846.
Rabbinical
traditions in Derenbourg: Histoire
de la Palestine depuis Cyrus jusqu’à Adrien. Paris, 1867 (first part of his
L’Histoire et la géographie de la Palestine d’après les Thalmuds et les autres
sources rabbiniques), pp. 255-295.
Tacitus: Hist.,
II. 4; V. 1-13. A mere fragment, full of errors and insults towards the
vanquished Jews. The fifth book, except this fragment, is lost. While Josephus,
the Jew, is filled with admiration for the power and greatness of Rome,
Tacitus, the heathen, treats Jews and Christians with scorn and contempt, and
prefers to derive his information from hostile Egyptians and popular prejudice
rather than from the Scriptures, and Philo, and Josephus.
Sulpicius Severus: Chronicon, II. 30 (p. 84, ed. Halm). Short.
Literature.
Milman: The
History of the Jews, Books
XIV.-XVII. (New York ed., vol. II., 219 sqq.).
Ewald: Geschichte
des Folkes Israel, VI. 705-753 (second ed.).
Grätz:
Geschichte der Juden, III. 336-414.
Hitzig: Geschichte
des Volkes Israel, II. 594-629.
Lewin: The
Siege of Jerusalem by Titus. With the Journal of a recent Visit in the Holy
City, and a general Sketch of the Topography of Jerusalem from the Earliest
Times down to the Siege. London, 1863.
Count de Champagny: Rome et la Judie au temps de la chute de Néron (ans
66-72 après Jésus-Christ), 2. éd., Paris, 1865. T. I., pp. 195-254; T. II., pp.
55-200.
Charles Merivale: History of the Romans under the Empire, ch. LIX. (vol. VI., 415
sqq., 4th ed., New York, 1866).
De Saulcy: Les
derniers jours de Jérusalem. Paris, 1866.
E. Renan: L’Antechrist
(ch. X.-XX.,
pp. 226-551). Paris, second ed., 1873.
Emil SchĂĽrer:
Lehrbuch der neutestamentlichen Zeitgeschichte (Leipzig, 1874), pp. 323-350. He
also gives the literature.
A. Hausrath: Neutestamentliche
Zeitgeschichte, Part
III., second ed., Heidelberg, 1875, pp. 424 487.
Alfred J. Church: The Story of the Last Days of Jerusalem, from Josephus. With illustrations. London,
1880.
There is scarcely another period
in history so full of vice, corruption, and disaster as the six years between
the Neronian persecution and the destruction of Jerusalem. The prophetic
description of the last days by our Lord began to be fulfilled before the
generation to which he spoke had passed away, and the day of judgment seemed to
be close at hand. So the Christians believed and had good reason to believe.
Even to earnest heathen minds that period looked as dark as midnight. We have
elsewhere quoted Seneca’s picture of the frightful moral depravity and decay
under the reign of Nero, his pupil and murderer. Tacitus begins his history of
Rome after the death of Nero with these words: "I proceed to a work rich
in disasters, full of atrocious battles, of discord and rebellion, yea,
horrible even in peace. Four princes [Galba, Otho, Vitellius, Domitian] killed
by the sword; three civil wars, several foreign wars; and mostly raging at the
same time. Favorable events in the East [the subjugation of the Jews],
unfortunate ones in the West. Illyria disturbed, Gaul uneasy; Britain conquered
and soon relinquished; the nations of Sarmatia and Suevia rising against us;
the Parthians excited by the deception of a pseudo-Nero. Italy also weighed
down by Dew or oft-repeated calamities; cities swallowed up or buried in ruins;
Rome laid waste by conflagrations, the old temples burned up, even the capitol
set on fire by citizens; sanctuaries desecrated; adultery rampant in high
places. The sea filled with exiles; the rocky islands contaminated with murder.
Still more horrible the fury in the city. Nobility, riches, places of honor,
whether declined or occupied, counted as crimes, and virtue sure of
destruction.540
The
Approaching Doom.
The most unfortunate country in
that period was Palestine, where an ancient and venerable nation brought upon
itself unspeakable suffering and destruction. The tragedy of Jerusalem
prefigures in miniature the final judgment, and in this light it is represented
in the eschatological discourses of Christ, who foresaw the end from the
beginning.
The forbearance of God with his
covenant people, who had crucified their own Saviour, reached at last its
limit. As many as could be saved in the usual way, were rescued. The mass of
the people had obstinately set themselves against all improvement. James the
Just, the man who was fitted, if any could be, to reconcile the Jews to the
Christian religion, had been stoned by his hardened brethren, for whom he daily
interceded in the temple; and with him the Christian community in Jerusalem had
lost its importance for that city. The hour of the "great
tribulation" and fearful judgment drew near. The prophecy of the Lord
approached its literal fulfilment: Jerusalem was razed to the ground, the
temple burned, and not one stone was left upon another.541
Not long before the outbreak of
the Jewish war, seven years before the siege of Jerusalem (a.d. 63), a peasant by the name of
Joshua, or Jesus, appeared in the city at the Feast of Tabernacles, and in a
tone of prophetic ecstasy cried day and night on the street among the people:,
A voice from the morning, a voice from the evening! A voice from the four winds!
A voice of rain against Jerusalem and the Temple! A voice against the bridegrooms and the
brides! A voice against the whole
people! Woe, woe to Jerusalem! "The magistrates, terrified by this
woe, had the prophet of evil taken up and scourged. He offered no resistance,
and continued to cry his "Woe." Being brought before the procurator,
Albinus, he was scourged till his bones could be seen, but interposed not a
word for himself; uttered no curse on his enemies; simply exclaimed at every
blow in a mournful tone: "Woe, woe to Jerusalem!" To the governor’s question, who and whence
he was, He answered nothing. Finally they let him go, as a madman. But he
continued for seven years and five months, till the outbreak of the war,
especially at the three great feasts, to proclaim the approaching fall of
Jerusalem. During the siege he was singing his dirge, for the last time, from
the wall. Suddenly he added: "Woe, woe also to me!"_and a stone of
the Romans hurled at his head put an end to his prophetic lamentation.542
The
Jewish Rebellion.
Under the last governors, Felix,
Festus, Albinus, and Florus, moral corruption and the dissolution of all social
ties, but at the same time the oppressiveness of the Roman yoke, increased
every year. After the accession of Felix, assassins, called
"Sicarians" (from sica, a
dagger), armed with daggers and purchasable for any crime, endangering safety
in city and country, roamed over Palestine. Besides this, the party spirit
among the Jews themselves, and their hatred of their heathen oppressors, rose
to the most insolent political and religious fanaticism, and was continually
inflamed by false prophets and Messiahs, one of whom, for example, according to
Josephus, drew after him thirty thousand men. Thus came to pass what our Lord
had predicted: "There shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and
shall lead many astray."
At last, in the month of May, a.d. 66, under the last procurator,
Gessius Florus (from 65 onward), a wicked and cruel tyrant who, as Josephus
says, was placed as a hangman over evil-doers, an organized rebellion broke out
against the Romans, but it the same time a terrible civil war also between
different parties of the revolters themselves, especially between the Zealots,
and the Moderates, or the Radicals and Conservatives. The ferocious party of
the Zealots had all the fire and energy which religious and patriotic
fanaticism could inspire; they have been justly compared with the Montagnards
of the French Revolution. They gained the ascendancy in the progress of the
war, took forcible possession of the city and the temple and introduced a reign
of terror. They kept up the Messianic expectations of the people and hailed
every step towards destruction as a step towards deliverance. Reports of
comets, meteors, and all sorts of fearful omens and prodigies were interpreted
as signs of the common of the Messiah and his reign over the heathen. The
Romans recognized the Messiah in Vespasian and Titus.
To defy Rome in that age,
without a single ally, was to defy the world in arms; but religious fanaticism,
inspired by the recollection of the heroic achievements of the Maccabees,
blinded the Jews against the inevitable failure of this mad and desperate
revolt.
The
Roman Invasion.
The emperor Nero, informed of
the rebellion, sent his most famous general, Vespasian, with a large force to
Palestine Vespasian opened the campaign in the year 67 from the Syrian
port-town, Ptolemais (Acco), and against a stout resistance overran Galilee
with an army of sixty thousand men. But events in Rome hindered him from
completing the victory, and required him to return thither. Nero had killed himself.
The emperors, Galba, Otho, and Vitellius followed one another in rapid
succession. The latter was taken out of a dog’s kennel in Rome while drunk,
dragged through the streets, and shamefully put to death. Vespasian, in the
year 69, was universally proclaimed emperor, and restored order and prosperity.
His son, Titus, who himself ten
years after became emperor, and highly distinguished himself by his mildness
and philanthropy,543 then undertook the prosecution of the Jewish war, and
became the instrument in the hand of God of destroying the holy city and the
temple. He had an army of not less than eighty thousand trained soldiers, and
planted his camp on Mount Scopus and the adjoining Mount Olivet, in full view
of the city and the temple, which from this height show to the best advantage.
The valley of the Kedron divided the besiegers from the besieged.
In April, a.d. 70, immediately after the
Passover, when Jerusalem was filled with strangers, the siege began. The
zealots rejected, with sneering defiance, the repeated proposals of Titus and
the prayers of Josephus, who accompanied him as interpreter and mediator; and
they struck down every one who spoke of surrender. They made sorties down the valley
of the Kedron and tip the mountain, and inflicted great loss oil the Romans. As
the difficulties multiplied their courage increased. The crucifixion of
hundreds of prisoners (as many as five hundred a day) only enraged them the
more. Even the famine which began to rage and sweep away thousands daily, and
forced a woman to roast her own child,544 the cries of mothers and babes,
the most pitiable scenes of misery around them, could not move the crazy
fanatics. History records no other instance of such obstinate resistance, such
desperate bravery and contempt of death. The Jews fought, not only for civil
liberty, life, and their native land, but for that which constituted their
national pride and glory, and gave their whole history its significance_for
their religion, which, even in this state of horrible degeneracy, infused into
them an almost superhuman power of endurance.
The
Destruction of the City and the Temple.
At last, in July, the castle of
Antonia was surprised and taken by night. This prepared the way for the
destruction of the Temple in which the tragedy culminated. The daily sacrifices
ceased July 17th, because the hands were all needed for defence. The last and
the bloodiest sacrifice at the altar of burnt offerings was the slaughter of
thousands of Jews who had crowded around it.
Titus (according to Josephus)
intended at first to save that magnificent work of architecture, as a trophy of
victory, and perhaps from some superstitious fear; and when the flames
threatened to reach the Holy of Holies he forced his way through flame and
smoke, over the dead and dying, to arrest the fire.545 But the destruction was determined by a higher decree. His own
soldiers, roused to madness by the stubborn resistance, and greedy of the golden
treasures, could not be restrained from the work of destruction. At first the
halls around the temple were set on fire. Then a firebrand was hurled through
the golden gate. When the flames arose the Jews raised a hideous yell and tried
to put out the fire; while others, clinging with a last convulsive grasp to
their Messianic hopes, rested in the declaration of a false prophet, that God
in the midst of the conflagration of the Temple would give a signal for the
deliverance of his people. The legions vied with each other in feeding the
flames, and made the unhappy people feel the full force of their unchained
rage. Soon the whole prodigious structure was in a blaze and illuminated the
skies. It was burned on the tenth of August, a.d.
70, the same day of the year on which, according to tradition, the first temple
was destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar. "No one," says Josephus, "can
conceive a louder, more terrible shriek than arose from all sides during the
burning of the temple. The shout of victory and the jubilee of the legions
sounded through the wailings of the people, now surrounded with fire and sword,
upon the mountain, and throughout the city. The echo from all the mountains
around, even to Peraea (?), increased the deafening roar. Yet the misery itself
was more terrible than this disorder. The hill on which the temple stood was
seething hot, and seemed enveloped to its base in one sheet of flame. The blood
was larger in quantity than the fire, and those that were slain more in number
than those that slew them. The ground was nowhere visible. All was covered with
corpses; over these heaps the soldiers pursued the fugitives."546
The Romans planted their eagles
on the shapeless ruins, over against the eastern gate, offered their sacrifices
to them, and proclaimed Titus Imperator with the greatest acclamations
of joy. Thus was fulfilled the prophecy concerning the abomination of
desolation standing in the holy place."547
Jerusalem was razed to the
ground; only three towers of the palace of Herod_Hippicus (still standing),
Phasael, and Mariamne_together with a portion of the western wall, were left as
monuments of the strength of the conquered city, once the centre of the Jewish
theocracy and the cradle of the Christian Church.
Even the heathen Titus is
reported to have publicly declared that God, by a special providence, aided the
Romans and drove the Jews from their impregnable strongholds.548 Josephus, who went through the war himself from beginning to end,
at first as governor of Galilee and general of the Jewish army, then as a
prisoner of Vespasian, finally as a companion of Titus and mediator between the
Romans and Jews, recognized in this tragical event a divine judgment and
admitted of his degenerate countrymen, to whom he was otherwise sincerely
attached: "I will not hesitate to say what gives me pain: I believe that,
had the Romans delayed their punishment of these villains, the city would have
been swallowed up by the earth, or overwhelmed with a flood, or, like Sodom,
consumed with fire from heaven. For the generation which was in it was far more
ungodly than the men on whom these punishments had in former times fallen. By
their madness the whole nation came to be ruined."549
Thus, therefore, must one of the
best Roman emperors execute the long threatened judgment of God, and the most learned
Jew of his time describe it, and thereby, without willing or knowing it, bear
testimony to the truth of the prophecy and the divinity of the mission of Jesus
Christ, the rejection of whom brought all this and the subsequent misfortune
upon the apostate race.
The destruction of Jerusalem
would be a worthy theme for the genius of a Christian Homer. It has been called
"the most soul-stirring struggle of all ancient history."550 But there was no Jeremiah to sing the funeral dirge of the city
of David and Solomon. The Apocalypse was already written, and had predicted
that the heathen "shall tread the holy city under foot forty and two
months."551 One of the
master artists of modern times, Kaulbach, has made it the subject of one of his
greatest paintings in the museum at Berlin. It represents the burning temple:
in the foreground, the high-priest burying his sword in his breast; around him,
the scenes of heart-rending suffering; above, the ancient prophets beholding
the fulfilment of their oracles; beneath them, Titus with the Roman army as the
unconscious executor of the Divine wrath; below, to the left, Ahasuerus, the
Wandering Jew of the mediaeval legend, driven by furies into the undying
future; and to the right the group of Christians departing in peace from the
scene of destruction, and Jewish children imploring their protection.
The
Fate of the Survivors, and the Triumph in Rome.
After a siege of five months the
entire city was in the hands of the victors. The number of the Jews slain
during the siege, including all those who had crowded into the city from the
country, is stated by Josephus at the enormous and probably exaggerated figure
of one million and one hundred thousand. Eleven thousand perished from
starvation shortly after the close of the siege. Ninety-seven thousand were
carried captive and sold into slavery, or sent to the mines, or sacrificed in
the gladiatorial shows at Caesarea, Berytus, Antioch, and other cities. The
strongest and handsomest men were selected for the triumphal procession in
Rome, among them the chief defenders and leaders of the revolt, Simon Bar-Giora and John of Gischala.552
Vespasian and Titus celebrated
the dearly bought victory together (71). No expense was spared for the pageant.
Crowned with laurel, and clothed in purple garments, the two conquerors rode
slowly in separate chariots, Domitian on a splendid charger, to the temple of
Jupiter Capitolinus, amid the shouts of the people and the aristocracy. They
were preceded by the soldiers in festive attire and seven hundred Jewish
captives. The images of the gods, and the sacred furniture of the temple_the
table of show-bread, the seven-armed candlestick, the trumpets which announced
the year of jubilee, the vessel of incense, and the rolls of the Law_were borne
along in the procession and deposited in the newly built Temple of Peace,553 except the Law and the purple
veils of the holy place, which Vespasian reserved for his palace. Simon
Bar-Giora was thrown down from the Tarpeian Rock; John of Gischala doomed to
perpetual imprisonment. Coins were cast with the legend Judaea capta, Judaea devicta.
But neither Vespasian nor Titus assumed the victorious epithet Judaeus; they despised a people which had
lost its fatherland.
Josephus saw the pompous
spectacle of the humiliation and wholesale crucifixion of his nation, and
described it without a tear.554 The thoughtful Christian, looking at the representation of the
temple furniture borne by captive Jews on the triumphal arch of Titus, still
standing between the Colosseum and the Forum, is filled with awe at the
fulfilment of divine prophecy.
The conquest of Palestine
involved the destruction of the Jewish commonwealth. Vespasian retained the
land as his private property or distributed it among his veterans. The people
were by the five years’ war reduced to extreme poverty, and left without a
magistrate (in the Jewish sense), without a temple, without a country. The
renewal of the revolt under the false Messiah, Bar-Cocheba, led only to a still
more complete destruction of Jerusalem and devastation of Palestine by the army
of Hadrian (132-135). But the Jews still had the law and the prophets and the
sacred traditions, to which they cling to this day with indestructible tenacity
and with the hope of a great future. Scattered over the earth, at home
everywhere and nowhere; refusing to mingle their blood with any other race,
dwelling in distinct communities, marked as a peculiar people in every feature
of the countenance, in every rite of religion; patient, sober, and industrious;
successful in every enterprise, prosperous in spite of oppression, ridiculed
yet feared, robbed yet wealthy, massacred yet springing up again, they have
outlived the persecution of centuries and are likely to continue to live to the
end of time: the object of the mingled contempt, admiration, and wonder of the
world.
§ 39. Effects of the Destruction of Jerusalem on the Christian
Church.
The Christians of Jerusalem,
remembering the Lord’s admonition, forsook the doomed city in good time and
fled to the town of Pella in the Decapolis, beyond the Jordan, in the north of
Peraea, where king Herod Agrippa II., before whom Paul once stood, opened to
them a safe asylum. An old tradition says that a divine voice or angel revealed
to their leaders the duty of flight.555 There, in the midst of a population chiefly Gentile, the church
of the circumcision was reconstructed. Unfortunately, its history is hidden
from us. But it never recovered its former importance. When Jerusalem was
rebuilt as a Christian city, its bishop was raised to the dignity of one of the
four patriarchs of the East, but it was a patriarchate of honor, not of power,
and sank to a mere shadow after the Mohammedan invasion.
The awful catastrophe of the
destruction of the Jewish theocracy must have produced the profoundest
sensation among the Christians, of which we now, in the absence of all
particular information respecting it, can hardly form a true conception.556 It was the greatest calamity of Judaism and a great benefit to
Christianity; a refutation of the one, a vindication and emancipation of the
other. It not only gave a mighty impulse to faith, but at the same time formed
a proper epoch in the history of the relation between the two religious bodies.
It separated them forever. It is true the apostle Paul had before now inwardly
completed this separation by the Christian universality of his whole system of
doctrine; but outwardly he had in various ways accommodated himself to Judaism,
and had more than once religiously visited tile temple. He wished not to appear
as a revolutionist, nor to anticipate the natural course of history, tile ways
of Providence.557 But now the
rupture was also outwardly consummated by the thunderbolt of divine
omnipotence. God himself destroyed the house, in which he had thus far dwelt,
in which Jesus had taught, in which the apostles had prayed; he rejected his
peculiar people for their obstinate rejection of the Messiah; he demolished the
whole fabric of the Mosaic theocracy, whose system of worship was, in its very
nature, associated exclusively with the tabernacle at first and afterwards with
the temple; but in so doing he cut the cords which had hitherto bound, and
according to the law of organic development necessarily bound the infant church
to the outward economy of the old covenant, and to Jerusalem as its centre.
Henceforth the heathen could no longer look upon Christianity as a mere sect of
Judaism, but must regard and treat it as a new, peculiar religion. The
destruction of Jerusalem, therefore, marks that momentous crisis at which the
Christian church as a whole burst forth forever from the chrysalis of Judaism,
awoke to a sense of its maturity, and in government and worship at once took
its independent stand before the world.558
This breaking away from hardened
Judaism and its religious forms, however, involved no departure from the spirit
of the Old Testament revelation. The church, on the contrary, entered into the
inheritance of Israel. The Christians appeared as genuine Jews, as spiritual
children of Abraham, who, following the inward current of the Mosaic religion,
had found Him, who was the fulfilment of the law and the prophets; the perfect
fruit of the old covenant and the living germ of the new; the beginning and the
principle of a new moral creation.
It now only remained to complete
the consolidation of the church in this altered state of things; to combine the
premises in their results; to take up the conservative tendency of Peter and
the progressive tendency of Paul, as embodied respectively in the
Jewish-Christian and the Gentile-Christian churches, and to fuse them into a
third and higher tendency in a permanent organism; to set forth alike the unity
of the two Testaments in diversity, and their diversity in unity; and in this
way to wind up the history of the apostolic church.
This was the work of John, the
apostle of completion.
* Schaff, Philip, History of
the Christian Church, (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc.) 1997.
This material has been carefully compared, corrected¸ and emended (according to
the 1910 edition of Charles Scribner's Sons) by The Electronic Bible Society,
Dallas, TX, 1998.
514 Lange on Romans, p. 29 (Am. ed.): "As the light and darkness
of Judaism was centralized in Jerusalem, the theocratic city of God (the holy
city, the murderer of the prophets), so was heathen Rome, the humanitarian
metropolis of the world, the centre of all the elements of light and darkness
prevalent in the heathen world; and so did Christian Rome become the centre of
all the elements of vital light, and of all the antichristian darkness in the
Christian church. Hence Rome, like Jerusalem, not only possesses a unique
historical significance, but is a universal picture operative through all ages.
Christian Rome, especially, stands forth as a shining light of the nations,
which is turned into an idol of magical strength to those who are subject to
its rule."
515 In 2 Thess. 2:6, 7, to; katevcon is the Roman empire, oJ katevcwn the emperor as its representative. This is the patristic
interpretation to which some of the beat modern commentators have returned.
Mediaeval sects and many Protestant writers found the great apostacy in the
Papacy and the restraining power in the German empire; while papal commentators
took revenge by fastening the charge of apostacy on the Reformation which was
restrained by the Papacy. I believe in a repeated and growing fulfilment of
this and other prophecies on the historic basis of the apostolic age and the
old Roman empire.
516 It is so represented in the Apocalypse 13 -18 after the Neronian
persecution.
517 Comp. Renan’s portraiture of Nero, l.c. ch. I. He thinks
that there is no parallel to this monster, and calls him un
esprit prodigieusement déclamatoire, une mauvaise nature, hypocrite, légère,
vaniteuse; un composé incroyable d’intelligence fausse, de méchanceté profonde,
d’égoïsme atroce et sournois, avee des raffinements inouïs de subtilité."See also the description
of Merivale, ch. LV. (vol. VI. 245 sqq.).
518 Tacitus (Ann. XV. 41) gives the date quarto decimo [ante] Kalendas Sextiles ... quo et Senones captam urbem
inflammaverant.
Friedländer, I. 6, wrongly makes it the 17th July. The coincidence with the day when the Gauls had
set fire to Rome (July 19, A. U. 364, or 453 years before), was considered a
bad omen. It was in the tenth year of Nero’s reign, ie., a.d. 64. See Clinton, Fasti Romani, I. Oxon. 1845, pp. 45, 46;
Friedländer, l.c. I. 6; Schiller, l.c. pp. 173 sq.; Merivale, VI.
131, note. Eusebius, in his Chronicle, erroneously puts the fire in the
year 66.
519 For a description of the Circus Maximus see Friedländer,
III. 293 sqq. The amphitheatrical rows of seats were eight stadia long, with
accommodation for 150,000 persons. After Nero’s reconstruction the seats
amounted to 250,000 under Vespasianum, and subsequent additions raised the
number, in the fourth century to 385,000. It was surrounded by wooden buildings
for shopkeepers (among whom were many Jews), astrologers, caterers,
prostitutes, and all sorts of amusements. Nero was most extravagant in his
expenditure for the circus and the theatre to gratify the people’s passion for Panem et Circenses, to use Juvenal’s words.
520 "Per sex dies septemque noctes," Sueton. Nero, 38 sex dies,"Tacit. Ann. XV. 4
521 The nine days’ duration is proved by an inscription
(Gruter, 61. 3). The great fire in London in 1666 lasted only four days and
swept an area of 436 acres. Comp. Lambert’s Hist. of London,II. 91,
quoted by Merivale. The fire in Chicago lasted only thirty-six hours, October 8
and 9, 1871, but swept over nearly three and one-third square miles (2,114
square acres), and destroyed 17,450 buildings, the homes of 98,500 people.
522 Tacitus XV. 39: "Pervaserat rumor ipso tempore flagrantis urbis
inisse eum domesticam scenam et cecinisse Troianum excedium." Sueton. c. 38: "Quasi offensus deformitate
veterum aedificiorum et angustiis flexurisque vicorum [Nero]incendit Urbem ... Hoc incendium e turre Maecenatiana
prospectans, laetusque ’flammae,’ut ajebat, ’pulchritudine,’a{lwsin Ilii
in illo suo scaenico habitu decantavit."Robbers and ruffians were seen to thrust blazing
brands into the buildings, and, when seized, they affirmed that they acted
under higher orders. The elder Pliny, Xiphilinus, and the author of the
tragedy, Octavia, likewise charge Nero with incendiarism. But Schiller, l.c.
425 sqq., labors to relieve him of it.
523 We do not know the precise date of the massacre. Mosheim
fixes it on November, Renan on August, a.d.
64. Several weeks or months at all events must have passed after the fire. If
the traditional date of Peter’s crucifixion be correct there would be an
interval of nearly a year between the conflagration, July 19, 64, and his
martyrdom, June 29th.
524 "Crucibus affixi,"says Tacitus. This
would well apply to Peter, to whom our Lord had prophesied such a death, John
21:18, 19. Tertullian says:"Romae Petrus passioni Dominicae adaequatur"(De Praescript. Haeret., c. 36; comp. Adv. Marc.,
IV. 5; Scorpiace, 15). According to a later tradition he was, at his own
request, crucified with his head downwards, deeming himself unworthy to be
crucified as was his Lord. This is first mentioned in the Acta Pauli, c.
81, by Origen (in Euseb. H. E., III. 1) and more clearly by Jerome (Catal.
1); but is doubtful, although such cruelties were occasionally practised
(see Josephus, Bell. Jud., V. 11, 1). Tradition mentions also the
martyrdom of Peter’s wife, who was cheered by the apostle on her way to the
place of execution and exhorted to remember the Lord on the cross (mevmnhso tou' Kurivou). Clement of Alexandria, Strom. VII. 11, quoted
by Eusebius, H. E., III. 30. The orderly execution of Paul by the sword
indicates a regular legal process before, or more probably at least a year
after, the Neronian persecution in which his Roman citizenship would scarcely
have been respected. See p. 326.
525 So Gibbon (ch. XVI.), more recently Merivale, l.c.
ch. 54 (vol. VI. 220, 4th ed.), and Schiller, l.c., pp. 434, 585,
followed by Hausrath and Stahr. Merivale and Schiller assume that the
persecution was aimed at the Jews and Christians indiscriminately. Guizot,
Milman, Neander, Gieseler, Renan, Lightfoot, Wieseler, and Keim defend or
assume the accuracy of Tacitus and Suetonius.
527 So Ewald. VI. 627, and Renan, L’Antechist, pp. 159 sqq.
Renan ingeniously conjectures that the "jealousy" to which Clement of
Rome (Ad Cor. 6) traces the persecution, refers to the divisions among
the Jews about the Christian religion.
528 Orosius (about 400), Hist., VII. 7: "Primus Romae Christianos
suppliciis et mortibus adferit [Nero],ac per omnes provincias pari persecutione excruciari imperavit."So also Sulpicius Severus,
Chron. II. 29. Dodwell (Dissert. Cypr. XI., De Paucitate martyrum,
Gibbon, Milman, Merivale, and Schiller (p. 438) deny, but Ewald (VI. 627, and
in his Com. on the Apoc.)and Renan (p. 183) very decidedly affirm the
extension of the persecution beyond Rome. "L’atrocité commandée par
Néron,"says Renan, "dut avor des contre-coups dans les
provinces et y exciter une recrudescence de persécution." C. L. Roth (Werke
des Tacitus, VI. 117) and Wieseler (Christenverfolgungen
der Cäsaren, p.
11) assume that Nero condemned and prohibited Christianity as dangerous to the
state. Kiessling and De Rossi have found in an inscription at Pompeii traces of
a bloody persecution; but the reading is dispated, see Schiller, p. 438,
Friedländer III. 529, and Renan, p. 184.
529 Apoc. 2:9, 10, 13; 16:6; 17:6; 18:24.
530 1 Pet. 2:12, 19, 20; 3:14-18; 4:12-19.
531 At the close, 1 Pet. 5:13. not on page 384
532 "Those who survey," says Gibbon (ch. XVI.)."with a
curious eye the revolutions of mankind, may observe that the gardens and circus
of Nero on the Vatican, which were polluted with the blood of the first
Christians, have been rendered still more famous by the triumph and by the
abuse of the persecuted religion. On the same spot, a temple, which far
surpasses the ancient glories of the capital, has been since erected by the
Christian pontiffs, who, deriving their claim of universal dominion from a
humble fisherman of Galilee, have succeeded to the throne of the Caesars, given
laws to the barbarian conquerors of Rome, and extended their spiritual
jurisdiction from the coast of the Baltic to the shores of the Pacific
Ocean." Comp. Renan, L’Antechr. p. 177: "L’orgie
de Néron fut le grand baptême de sanq qui désiqna Rome, comme la ville des
martyrs, pour jouer un rôle à part dans l’histoire du christianisme, et en étre
la seconde ville sainte. Ce fut la prise de possession de la colline Vatcane
par ces triomphateurs d’un genre inconnu jusque-là ... Rome, rendue
responsable de tout le sang versé, devint comme Babylone une sorte de ville
sacramentelle et symbolique."
533 Tertullian mentions it in connection with the
crucifixion of Peter and the decapitation of Paul as apparently occurring at
the same time; De
Praescript. Haer., c.36: "Ista quam felix ecclesia (the church of Rome) cui totam doctrinam apostoli sanguine suo
profuderunt, ubi Petrus passioni Dominicae adaequatur, ubi Paulus Joannis exitu coronatur, ubi Apostolus
Joannes, posteaquam
in oleum igneum demersus nihil passus est, in insulam relegatur." Comp. Jerome, Adv.
Jovin., 1, 26, and in Matt. 22: 23; and Euseb., H. E., VI.
5. Renan (p. 196) conjectures that John was destined to shine in the
illumination of the Neronian gardens, and was actually steeped in oil for the
purpose, but saved by an accident or caprice. Thiersch (Die Kirche im Apost.
Zeitalter, p. 227, third edition, 1879) likewise accepts the tradition of
Tertullian, but assumes a miraculous deliverance.
534 Rev. 11:7; 13:1; 17:1, 3, 5. Comp. Daniel’s description
of the fourth (Roman) beast, "dreadful and terrible and strong
exceedingly," with "ten horns," Dan. 7:7 sqq.
536 Rev. 18:2. Comp. also Rev. 6:9-11.
537 This refers either to the crucifixion, or more probably to the
edict of Claudius, who banished the Jews and Jewish Christians from Rome. See
above, p. 363.
538 Confessed what? Probably the Christian religion, which was already
regarded as a sort of crime. If they confessed to be guilty of incendiarism,
they must have been either weak neophytes who could not stand the pain of the
torture, or hired scoundrels.
539 This is to be understood in the active sense of the reputed enmity
to mankind, with which Tacitus charges the Jews also in almost the same terms ("Adversus
omnes alios hostile odium," Hist. V. 5). But Thiersch and
others explain it of the hatred of mankind towards the Christians (comp. Matt.
10:22, "Ye shall be hated of all men for my name’s sake").
541 Matt. 24:1,2; Mark 13:1; Luke 19:43, 44; 21:6.
542 Jos, B. Jud., VI. 5, 3 sqq
543 The people called him Amor et Deliciae generis humani. He
was born December 30, a.d. 40,
and died September 13, 81. He ascended the throne 79, in the year when the
towns of Herculaneum, Stabiae, and Pompeii were destroyed. His reign was marked
by a series of terrible calamities, among which was a conflagration in Rome which
lasted three days, and. a plague which destroyed thousands of victims daily. He
made earnest efforts to repair the injuries, and used to say, when a day passed
without an act of philanthropy, "Amici, diem perdidi."
See Suetonius, Titus.
544 Josephus, VI. 3, 4, gives a full account of this horrible and most
unnatural incident.
545 Josephus is, however, not quite consistent; he says first that Titus,
perceiving that his endeavors to spare a foreign temple turned to the damage of
his soldiers, commanded the gates to be set on fire (VI. 4, 1); and then, that
on the next day he gave orders to extinguish it (§ 3, 6, and 37). Sulpicius
Severus (II. 30) makes Titus responsible for the destruction, who thought that
it would make an end both to the Jewish and the Christian religion. This is
defended by Stange, De Titi imperatoris vita, P. I., 1870, pp. 39-43,
but doubted by SchĂĽrer, l.c. p. 346. Renan (511 sqq.), following Bernays, Ueber
die Chronik des Sulpicius Sev., 1861, p. 48, believes that Sulpicius drew
his account from the lost portion of the Histories of Tacitus, and that
Titus neither ordered nor forbade the burning of the Temple, but left it to its
fate, with a prudent reservation of his motives. So also Thiersch, p. 224.
547 Daniel, 9:27; Matt. 24:15; comp. Luke 21:20; Josephus, B. Jud.,
VI.
548 B. Jud., VI. 9, 1. Titus is said to have approved such
passages (Jos. Vita, 65).
550 Merivale, l.c., p. 445.
551 Apoc. 11:2; comp. Luke, 21:24. In Dan. 7:25; 9:27; 12:7, the
duration of the oppression of the Jewish people is given as seven half-years (=
42 months).
552 B Jud. VI. 9, 2-4. Milman (II. 388) sums up the scattered
statements of Josephus, and makes out the total number of killed, from the
beginning to the close of the war, to be 1,356,460, and the total number of prisoners
101,700.
553 The Temple of Peace was afterwards burned under
Commodus, and it is not known what became of the sacred furniture.
554 B. Jud., VII. 5, 5-7. Josephus was richly rewarded for his
treachery. Vespasian gave him a house in Rome, an annual pension, the Roman citizenship,
and large possessions in Judaea. Titus and Domitian continued the favors. But
his countrymen embittered his life and cursed his memory. Jost and other Jewish
historians speak of him with great contempt. King Agrippa, the last of the
Idumaean sovereigns, lived and died an humble and contented vassal of Rome, in
the third year of Trajan, a.d.
100. His licentious sister, Berenice, narrowly escaped the fate of a second
Cleopatra. The conquering Titus was conquered by her sensual charms, and
desired to raise her to the imperial throne, but the public dissatisfaction
forced him to dismiss her, "invitus invitam." Suet., Tit. 7.
Comp. SchĂĽrer, l. c. 321, 322.
555 In Eusebius, H. E., III. 5: katav tina crhsmo;n toi'" aujtovqi dokivmoi" dij
ajpokaluvyew" ejkdoqevnta. Comp. Epiphanius, De pond. et meis. c. 15, and the warring of Christ,
Matt. 24:15 sq. Eusebius puts the, flight to Pella before the war (pro; tou' polevmou), four years before the destruction of Jerusalem.
556 It is alluded to in the Ep. of Barnabas, cap. 16.
557 Comp. 1 Cor. 7:18 sqq.; Acts 21:26 sqq.
558 Dr. Richard Rothe (Die Anfänge der Christl. Kirche, p.
341 sqq.). Thiersch (p. 225), Ewald (VII. 26), Renan (L’Antechr., p.
545), and Lightfoot (Gal., p. 301) ascribe the same significance to the
destruction of Jerusalem. Ewald says: "As by one great irrevocable stroke
the Christian congregation was separated from the Jewish, to which it had
heretofore clung as a new, vigorous offshoot to the root of the old tree and as
the daughter to the mother." He also quotes the newly discovered letter of
Serapion, written about 75, as showing the effect which the destruction of
Jerusalem exerted on thoughtful minds. See above, p. 171.