The Final Decade Before The End by Ed. Stevens

Page 183

182 of the Temple was now finished [Antiq. 20.219 (20.9.7)]. Over eighteen thousand workers were now unemployed. The Jews wanted to put them back to work on rebuilding the eastern cloisters, but Agrippa II denied that petition, and instead authorized their paving the streets of Jerusalem with white stone [Antiq. 20.222 (20.9.7)]. This was another one of those events which stimulated many disgruntled unemployed workers to join the bands of robbers (and Sicarii) to plunder the Judean countryside. Some of them also became sympathetic to the Zealot cause at this time. What is also interesting here, is that this is also the time when the new spiritual heavenly temple was pretty much complete and ready for the saints to dwell in.

Late 64 – Matthias b. Theophilus was appointed High Priest

(grandson of Ananus b. Seth) was appointed as High Priest by Agrippa II, in place of Jesus b. Gamaliel. His appointment supposedly occurred at about the same time the Temple was finished and the streets were paved with white stone [Antiq. 20.222 (20.9.7)]. Matthias ruled for at least two years (AD 64-66), and probably as long as four years (AD 64-68). It seems that he continued as High Priest after the outbreak of the war in AD 66, and was not replaced until later in the midst of the war when the Zealots selected their own High Priest by casting lots (Phannias b. Samuel). According to Derenbourg (Essai 249), cited in VanderKam (p. 487n), Matthias was the last of the High Priests to be installed according to the normal procedure – appointed by Agrippa II and then ratified by the Sanhedrin [VanderKam 487]. VanderKam says it is quite possible that Matthias was the grandson of Ananus I, the high priest who condemned Jesus and sent him to Pilate for crucifixion. However, Josephus does not verify this one way or the other. There is also some reason to suspect that the Neronic persecution, which began in the Summer of 64, might have been the impetus for a change in both the procuratorship and the high priesthood. Florus may have been sent to Judea in the late Summer of 64 for the express purpose of enforcing the Neronic persecution, while Agrippa II at the same time may have appointed a new high priest (Matthias b. Theophilus) who would be willing and able to carry out the dirty work of Nero against the Christians. This would have been late Summer or early Fall of AD 64. A number of scholars suggest that the father of Matthias, named Theophilus, was the son of Ananus I, thus making Matthias the grandson of Ananus I (the eighth and last member of the Ananus family to be high priest). Josephus for some strange reason does not say much about Matthias, raising some speculations about his identity and possible connections with Josephus. He was high priest at the time the war broke out in AD 66, and was supposedly appointed about the same time that Gessius Florus became the Procurator (in place of Albinus), which is probably Late 64 just as the Neronic persecution was getting underway. VanderKam thinks he might be mentioned by Josephus in the Wars [6.114 (6.2.2)], but the only thing that text says about him is that he had four sons who escaped to the Romans during the siege (AD 70). Matthias was the High Priest at the time of the Neronic persecution, which Josephus also does not say anything about, even though he was in Rome at the time the fire broke out, and afterwards when the Neronic persecution was raging. The name Matthias was very common in the family of Josephus (i.e., his father and brother and several ancestors had that name). According to the autobiography of Josephus (Life 5), the name of Josephus’s father was Matthias, who was born in the tenth year of Archelaus (AD 6). He would have been 58 years old at the time this Matthias b. Theophilus became high priest. Some have wondered if this Matthias might have been the father of Josephus, but Josephus does not provide any clear support for that connection. If there was a family connection here, it would explain why Josephus was so complimentary to Ananus II. However, the most interesting thing about this Matthias is the fact that he became high priest during the time when Christians were being rounded up and slaughtered by Nero and his Jewish helpers (late 64 or early 65), and while the Zealots and Sicarii were trying to stir up interest in a


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They were not expecting to be left behind not even knowing it happened

14min
pages 271-274

BIBLIOGRAPHY

5min
pages 281-284

Aug 66 – Cessation of Sacrifices for the Romans and all Gentiles

7min
pages 263-264

Aug 66 – Josephus returned from Rome

4min
page 261

Apr 66 – Abomination of Desolation (“Jerusalem encompassed by armies”

8min
pages 247-248

Questions About Pella and the Rapture

3min
page 249

Pentecost and Wheat Harvest Typology

3min
page 256

Neronic persecution was the great tribulation (upon the church

3min
page 251

What Did the Priests Experience?

3min
page 257

Apr 66 – Eleazar, the Man of Lawlessness?

3min
page 246

June 66 – Pentecost - Priests in the Temple heard a multitude of voices

3min
page 255

Apr 66 – Lawlessness Was Increased. (Eleazear’s Lawless Actions

3min
page 245

Apr 66 - This was an attempt to bring idolatrous coinage into the temple

3min
page 244

This attempt to get control of the temple

4min
page 243

Who were those supposed ‘Christians’ in Pella

3min
page 232

Text of the Historical Fulfillments Referenced by Numbers Above

47min
pages 215-228

Matthew 24 Fulfillment Documented (Chart with Reference

14min
pages 207-214

What Did Jesus Promise, What Did They Expect (Chart

4min
pages 204-205

HOW were “these things” fulfilled?

8min
pages 201-203

Explaination of the Chronological Charts Above

6min
pages 199-200

Chronological Arrangement Of The Olivet Discourse

4min
pages 191-198

the Rescue, and the Wrath-Outpouring

2min
page 190

Late 64 – How widespread was the Neronic persecution?

7min
pages 180-181

How the Tribulation Fits into the Olivet Discourse

3min
page 189

Late 64 – Matthias b. Theophilus was appointed High Priest

3min
page 183

The Neronic Persecution and the Great Tribulation (AD 64

3min
page 185

Aug 64 – Was Josephus involved in the plot to kill Christians?

7min
pages 178-179

AD 64 – Correspondence between Paul and Seneca

3min
page 177

Aug 64 – Nero began the Persecution of Christians

6min
pages 175-176

The few remaining went into hiding until the rapture

3min
page 173

June 64 – The Literary Efforts of the Apostles Ceased

3min
page 172

Late 64 – Peter’s Martyrdom in Jerusalem just before the Neronic Persecution

4min
page 169

Comments on Jude and Second Peter

7min
pages 165-166

June 64 – 2 Peter was probably written about the same time as Jude

3min
page 168

Some excellent online resources for Jude and 2 Peter

3min
page 163

Sep 63 – 2 Timothy Written After Paul Was Arrested

7min
pages 156-157

July 63 – Jesus b. Gamaliel was appointed High Priest

3min
page 154

Internal Evidence of 1 Peter for its Date

11min
pages 150-152

Mar 63 – Did Paul visit Jerusalem after his release

3min
page 144

Who was the Courier for Hebrews? (AD 63

3min
page 140

Early Date of Hebrews (AD 62-63

7min
pages 136-137

Why Was Hebrews Written?

7min
pages 138-139

To Whom Was Hebrews Written?

3min
page 135

More Information about Clopas, Symeon, Joseph and Mary

7min
pages 123-124

July 62 – Simeon b. Clopas was appointed Bishop In Place Of James

24min
pages 116-122

Early 63 – Paul’s Epistle to the Philippians Was Written

11min
pages 131-133

2. No Church in Smyrna Before AD 70?

3min
page 103

Don Preston’s Article. “Revelation 2:9 Smyrna: Did It Exist at an Early Date?”

3min
page 108

What Happened to the Seven Churches of Asia?

3min
page 109

The Meaning of Polycarp’s Statement

14min
pages 104-107

1. Laodicea’s Quick Recovery From the Earthquake

6min
pages 101-102

Luke-Acts Written in Rome (AD 61-62

3min
page 75

Two Possible Preterist Solutions

14min
pages 92-95

Apr 62 – Ananus II arrested James and some of his companions

26min
pages 82-88

Here is the story of Jude’s grandsons in Eusebius

3min
page 90

The Identity of Theophilus

7min
pages 77-78

1 John – Two possible dates

4min
page 73

Overview of the Sequence and Dates for John’s Writings

7min
pages 66-67

The Earliest and Best Tradition about John: (external evidence

2min
page 65

AD 61-63 – Paul’s first Roman imprisonment continued for “two full years”

3min
page 61

AD 60 – Earthquake in Laodicea and the Lycus valley

4min
page 57

June 58 – More than forty Jews plotted to kill Paul

7min
pages 50-51

June 58 – Paul arrived in Jerusalem and met with James

7min
pages 46-47

AD 54 – Wars and Rumors

3min
page 40

AD 51-53 – Production of the NT canon was definitely underway

3min
page 38

AD 58-60 – What Kind of Resurrection was Paul preaching?

3min
page 49

AD 52-53 – 2 Thessalonians

3min
page 37

Dating the Gospel of Matthew (AD 31-38

18min
pages 20-24

Galatians: Three Possible Dates (AD 49-55

20min
pages 29-34

Oct 51 – Galatians

3min
page 35

Dating the Gospel of Mark (AD 38-44

7min
pages 25-26

Introduction

11min
pages 16-18

AD 51-52 – 1 Thessalonians

3min
page 36

The Synoptic Problem

6min
pages 27-28
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