The History Of The Christian Church Volume 1, Philip Shaff 1819-1893

Page 191

190

CHAPTER VII

ST. JOHN, AND THE LAST STADIUM OF THE APOSTOLIC PERIOD.

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.”538 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.”539 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.”540 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 gladi538 B. Jud., V. 13, 6. 539 Merivale, l.c., p. 445. 540 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).

atorial 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.541 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,542 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.543 The thoughtful Christian, 541 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. 542 The Temple of Peace was afterwards burned under Commodus, and it is not known what became of the sacred furniture. 543 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. Schürer, l .c. 321, 322.


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The Parousia Mary, Mary Quite Contrary

14min
pages 445-450

Trojan Warriors

3min
page 440

The Bierton Crisis

3min
page 438

The Everlasting Covenant

2min
page 436

The Cause of God And Truth, Part 1

1min
page 424

The Cause of God And Truth, Part II

3min
pages 425-426

The West And The Quran

2min
page 435

A Body of Practical Divinity , III, IV, V

3min
page 423

A Body of Doctrinal Divinity, V, VI

2min
page 421

A Body of Doctrinal Divinity II, II,IV

3min
page 420

FURTHER PUBLICATIONS A Body Of Doctrinal Divinity Book 1

3min
page 419

Index of German Words and Phrases

36min
pages 405-418

101. The Apocalypse

1hr
pages 377-390

Criticism

18min
pages 391-394

Index of Citations

22min
pages 399-404

100. The Epistle To The Hebrews

30min
pages 370-376

99. The Pastoral Epistles

17min
pages 366-369

97. The Epistle to the Philippians

9min
pages 362-363

Vindicated

13min
pages 359-361

98. The Epistle to Philemon

8min
pages 364-365

93. The Epistles of the Captivity

4min
page 352

95. The Epistle to the Ephesians

13min
pages 356-358

92. The Epistle to the Romans

4min
page 351

94. The Epistle to the Colossians

13min
pages 353-355

91. The Epistles to the Galatians

4min
page 350

89. The Epistles to the Thessalonians

4min
page 347

90. The Epistles to the Corinthians

8min
pages 348-349

88. The Epistles of Paul

13min
pages 344-346

87. The Catholic Epistles

12min
pages 341-343

85. The Acts of the Apostles

24min
pages 334-339

86. The Epistles

4min
page 340

Problem

22min
pages 329-333

83. John

1hr
pages 314-328

81. Mark

44min
pages 292-301

80. Matthew

26min
pages 286-291

82. Luke. Lucas

51min
pages 302-313

79. The Synoptists

44min
pages 275-285

77. Literature on the Gospels

8min
pages 268-269

78. The Four Gospels

20min
pages 270-274

76. Character of the New Testament

4min
page 267

75. Rise of the Apostolic Literature

4min
page 266

72. John and the Gospel of Love

31min
pages 256-262

Teaching

9min
pages 263-264

71. The Gentile Christian Theology

50min
pages 245-255

69. The Jewish Christian Theology

8min
pages 241-242

70. II. Peter and the Gospel of Hope

9min
pages 243-244

68. Different Types of Apostolic Teaching

4min
page 240

Christ

4min
page 237

67. Unity of Apostolic Teaching

3min
page 239

64. The Council at Jerusalem

8min
pages 235-236

62. Deacons and Deaconesses

4min
page 233

63. Church Discipline

4min
page 234

60. Apostles, Prophets, Evangelists

8min
pages 228-229

61. Presbyters or Bishops

13min
pages 230-232

to the Christian Community

7min
pages 226-227

57. Sacred Times—The Lord’s Day

8min
pages 223-224

51. The Synagogue

37min
pages 214-222

46. Christianity in Individuals

4min
page 208

49. Christianity and Society

4min
page 211

45. The Spiritual Gifts

8min
pages 206-207

43. Traditions Respecting John

4min
page 203

42. Apostolic Labors of John

13min
pages 200-202

41. Life and Character of John

22min
pages 195-199

Victory— Peter and Paul at Antioch

18min
pages 169-172

on the Christian Church

4min
page 191

Jerusalem. a.d. 70

21min
pages 186-190

36. Christianity in Rome

26min
pages 173-178

Christianity

35min
pages 161-168

33. Paul’s Missionary Labors

27min
pages 155-160

32. The Work of Paul

8min
pages 153-154

31. The Conversion of Paul

42min
pages 144-152

Fiction

22min
pages 124-128

of Peter

13min
pages 121-123

23. Chronology of the Apostolic Age

4min
page 107

30. Paul before his Conversion

21min
pages 139-143

Gentiles

4min
page 136

27. James the Brother of the Lord

30min
pages 129-135

Events In The Roman Empire

6min
pages 108-109

Concluding Reflections. Faith and

17min
pages 103-106

of the Apostolic Age

13min
pages 100-102

Colossians and Ephesians Compared and

12min
pages 97-99

21. General Character of the Apostolic Age

3min
page 96

18. Apocryphal Traditions

22min
pages 80-84

Heretical Perversions of the Apostolic

26min
pages 74-79

The Forty-Six Years of Building of Herod’s Temple

8min
pages 64-65

17. The Land and the People

27min
pages 68-73

The Lord’s Supper. 220

4min
page 56

The Christian Ministry, and its Relation

18min
pages 60-63

The Church and the Kingdom of

9min
pages 66-67

Baptism. 217

4min
page 55

The Several Parts of Worship. 215

4min
page 54

Christian Worship. 215

4min
page 53

13. Judaism and Heathenism in Contact

8min
pages 45-46

Spiritual Condition of the

3min
page 51

15. The Founder of Christianity

3min
page 52

12. Grecian Literature, and the Roman Empire

17min
pages 41-44

10. The Law, and the Prophecy

4min
page 37

Effects of the Destruction of Jerusalem

4min
page 40

The Roman Conflagration and the Neronian

4min
page 38

The Conservative Reaction, and the Liberal

4min
page 36

The Synod of Jerusalem, and the Compromise between Jewish and Gentile

4min
page 35

9. Judaism

8min
pages 33-34

7. Literature of Church History

12min
pages 20-22

3. Sources of Church History

4min
page 14

FROM THE PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION

4min
page 7

GENERAL INTRODUCTION

3min
page 10

1. Nature of Church History

4min
page 11

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.

1min
pages 2-3

PREFACE TO THIRD REVISION

3min
page 8
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