Saint
John Chrysostom
(c.347-407)
Eight Homilies Against the Jews
HOMILY V
"And when did this happen?
When were prophecies completely done away with?...(2) Pay careful attention to
me here, because here lies the whole question. The seven weeks and the
sixty-two weeks make four hundred and eighty-three years, for he is here
speaking not of weeks of days or months but weeks of years. From Cyrus to
Antiochus Epiphanes and the captivity there were three hundred and ninety-four
years. However, Daniel makes it clear that he is not talking about the
destruction of the temple under Antiochus but the subsequent destruction under
Pompey, Vespasian, and Titus."
HOW IS IT THAT we have a larger throng
assembled here today? Surely, you have come together to demand that I keep my
promise; you are here to receive the silver tried in the fire which I pledged
to pay over to you. For as the Psalmist says: "The words of the Lord are pure
words: silver tried by the fire, purged from the earth." Blessed be God
because Ire has put in your hearts the yearning to hear words good for your
souls.
(2) When wine-tipplers get up each
morning, they start their meddlesome probing to discover where they will find
the day's drinking-bouts, carousals, parties, revels, and drunken brawls; they
busy themselves searching for bottles, mixing bowls, and drinking cups. But
when you get up each day, you go around asking where you will find exhortation
and counsel, encouragement, and instruction, the kind of discourse which draws
you to give glory to Christ.
This makes me the more eager to hold
fast to my topic and, from the fullness of my heart, to keep the promises I
have made.
(3) My battle against the Jews did
come to a fitting end. The monument marking their rout has been set up, the
victory crown belongs to me, and I have captured the prize I sought from my
previous discourse. For the task I had undertaken was to prove that what the
Jews now do by way of ritual transgresses and violates the Law. It was my
desire to show that in these rites we have men doing battle with God,
creatures waging war against him. And with God's help, I did give precise
proof of this. For even if the Jews were going to recover their own city, if
they were about to return to their old commonwealth and way of life and see
their temple rebuilt-an event which will never come to pass-even so, they have
no defense for their present practices.
(4) The three boys in Babylon, Daniel,
and all the others who spent their days in captivity kept expecting to recover
their own city and, after seventy years, to see the soil of their fatherland;
they kept looking forward to living again under their ancestral laws They had
a clear pledge and promise that this would come to pass. However, until the
promise was fulfilled, until they did return, they did not dare to perform any
of the prescribed rites the way the Jews of today do. [error in text here?]
(5) This is the way you, too, can
silence and gag the Jews. Ask the Jew why he observes the fast when he has no
city. If he shall say: "Because I expect to recover my city," you say to him:
"Stop fasting, then, until you do recover it. Certainly, until the holy ones
of old returned to their own fatherland, they practiced none of the rites
which you now practice. From this it is clear that you are violating the law,
even if you are going to recover your city, as you say; you are transgressing
your covenant with God and outraging that old commonwealth and way of life."
What I have said to your loving assembly both here and in my previous
discourse is enough to silence and gag the shameless arguments of the Jews and
to prove that they are transgressing the Law.
(6) It was not my sole purpose to
stitch shut the mouths of the Jews. I also was anxious to give you more
extensive instruction in the teachings of the Church . Come now, and let me
give you abundant proof that the temple will not be rebuilt and that the Jews
will not return to their former way of life. In this way you will come to a
clearer understanding of what the Apostles taught, and the Jews will be all
the more convicted of acting in a godless way. As witness I shall produce not
an angel, not an archangel, but the very Master of the whole world, our Lord
Jesus Christ. When he came into Jerusalem and saw the temple, he said:
"Jerusalem will be trodden down by many nations, until the times of many
nations be fulfilled."
By this he meant the years to come
until the consummation of the world. And again, speaking to his disciples
about the temple, he nude the threat that a stone would not remain upon a
stone in that place until the time when it be destroyed. His threat was a
prediction that the temple would come to a final devastation and completely
disappear.
(7) But the Jew totally rejects this
testimony. He refuses to admit what Christ said. What does the Jew say? "The
man who said this is my foe. I crucified him. so how am I to accept his
testimony?" But this is the marvel of it. You Jews did crucify him. But after
he died on the cross, he then destroyed your city; it was then that he
dispersed your people; it was then that he scattered your nation over the face
of the earth. In doing this, he teaches us that he is risen, alive, and in
heaven.
(8) Because you were not willing to
recognize his power through his benefactions, he taught you by his punishment
and vengeance that no one can struggle with or prevail against his might and
strength. But even so, you do not believe in him, you do not recognize that he
is God and Master of all the world, but you consider him just another man.
(9) Come then and let us conduct a
test as we would in the case of a man. How do we test human beings? If we see
that a man tells the truth in all things and never ill any way lies to
another, we accept his word, even if he happens to be a foe. At least we do so
if we have any sense. In the same way, when we see that a man is a liar, even
if he tells the truth in some instances, we do not readily accept his word.
II
Let us look, then, at the character
and habits of Christ. Not only did he predict and foretell the destruction of
the temple but he also prophesied during his life many other things which were
going to come to pass a long time afterwards. Let us, then, bring these
predictions into the open. If you see that he is lying in these predictions,
then do not accept his prediction about the temple, nor consider it deserving
of your belief. But if you see that he tells the truth in all things and that
this prediction has been fulfilled, if you see that long years have passed but
still testify to the truth of what he foretold, let us have no more of your
impudence and stubbornness in matters which are clearer than the light of the
sun.
(2) Let us see what else he predicted.
There once came up to him a woman with an alabaster jar of precious ointment
and she poured it on him. His disciples were indignant at what happened and
said: "Why was this not sold for three hundred denarii and given to the poor?"
He reproved them, however, and said "Why do you trouble the woman. She has
done a good deed. For I say to you, wherever on the whole earth this gospel is
preached, this also that she has done shall be told in memory of her? Did he
or did he not tell the truth? Was his prediction fulfilled or did it fail to
come true? Put these questions to the Jew. Even if he counts his shameless
acts in the tens of thousands, he will not be able to look at this prophecy in
the face and stare it down.
(3) Certainly we do hear her story
told in all the churches. Consuls have stood listening to it, and generals,
too; men, women, the renowned, the distinguished, the famous ones in every
city. Wherever in the world you may go, everyone respectfully listens to the
story of her good service; her action is known in every corner of the earth.
(4) How many kings brought many and
great blessings on their cities, how many kings waged successful wars, set up
many trophies of victory, saved nations, built cities, and in addition,
acquired countless revenues? Yet they, for all their great exploits, are
buried in the silence of oblivion. Many queens and great ladies have conferred
benefits beyond number on those subject to them. Yet some people do not even
know them by name. But this worthless woman, who only poured out her ointment,
is praised everywhere in the world; the long passage of years has failed to
blot out the memory of her, and the time to come will never quench her fame.
(5) And yet hers was not a deed of
renown. For what renown was there in pouring out some ointment? Nor was she a
distinguished person, for she was a low woman and an outcast. Nor was there a
large audience to see, for only the disciples were gathered around her. Nor
was the place one where she could be easily seen. She made no entrance onto a
theater stage to perform her service but did her good deed in a house with
only ten people present.
(6) Nonetheless, even though she was a
lowly person, even though only a few were there to witness it, even though the
place was undistinguished, neither these facts nor any others could obscure
the memory of that woman. Today, she is more illustrious than ally king or
queen; no passage of years has buried in oblivion the service she performed.
(7) Tell me, now. How do you explain
this? Who brought this about? Is it not the work of the God to whom this
service was paid? Is it not God who has spread the story of her deed to every
corner of the earth? Is it within the scope of human power to predict such
things as these? Who in his right mind could say that? We marvel and are
astounded when Christ foretells what he, himself, will do. But when he
predicts what others will do and then makes these actions of others clear to
all the world and worthy of every man's belief, it is still more astounding
and marvelous.
(8) Again, he said to Peter: "Upon
this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it." You Jews tell me how you can attack this prediction of his. How
can you show that this prophecy is false? The testimony of the facts will not
allow it, even if you are obstinate and dispute it ten thousand times. low
many conflagrations of war have been kindled against the Church? Many armies
have taken the field, many weapons have been used, every form of' punishment
and torture has been contrived. There were frying-pans, racks caldrons, ovens,
cisterns, cliffs, fangs of wild beasts, seas, confiscations, and ten thousand
other means of torture, unmentionable and unendurable? And these were used not
only by foreigners but by our own countrymen. Indeed, a sort of civil war held
everything in its grip; rather, it was more bitter than ally civil war. Not
only did citizens do battle with citizens but kinsmen with kinsmen, members of
the same household with each other; friends fought friends. Yet none of these
things destroyed the Church nor made it weaker.
(9) Certainly, the wonderful and
unexpected thing about this is that all these attacks were made against the
Church when it was just beginning. If these dread persecutions were let loose
against it after it had taken root and after the Gospel message had been
planted everywhere in the world, it would not be so strange that the Church
had resisted these attacks. But it was at the beginning of her teaching
mission, when the seed of faith had just been sown and the understanding of
those who heard the word was still somewhat weak, that these violent wars
broke out in all their fury. The fact that they did not weaken our position
but even made us prosper all the more is the miracle that surpasses all
miracles.
(10) You may say that the Church now
stands firm because of the peace granted to it by the emperors. To keep you
from saying this, God permitted the Church to be attacked and persecuted at a
time when it was smaller and seemed to be weaker. God wanted you to learn that
the security the Church enjoys today does not come to it from the peace
granted by emperors, but front the power of God.
III
To help you see the truth of this,
consider how many men wished to introduce their teachings among the Greeks and
to establish a new commonwealth and way of life. Think of such men as Zeno,
Plato, Socrates, Diagoras, Pythagoras, and countless others. Yet they fell so
far short of success that many people do not even now know them by name. But
Christ not only wrote a constitution but even brought a new way of life to the
whole world. How many miracles do they say that Apollonius of Tyana worked?
But all his deeds were a fraud, a vain show, and devoid of truth. And you may
learn this from the fact that, in an instant, they vanished and disappeared.
(2) Let no one consider it an insult
to Christ that, while speaking of him, I mentioned Pythagoras, Plato, Zeno and
the man from Tyana. I am not doing this of my own choice but out of
consideration for the weakness of the Jews, who see in Christ a mere man. This
is what Paul did when he came to Athens. On entering the city, he took the
topic for his exhortation not from the prophets or the gospels, but from the
Athenians' altar to the unknown God. He did not consider their altar more
deserving of faith than the gospels, nor did he account the inscription on it
more worthy of honor than the prophets. But he was speaking to pagan Greeks,
who believed in none of our sacred books, and so he used arguments from their
own beliefs to subdue them. He did the same thing at Corinth when he said: "I
have become to the Jews a Jew, to those without the Law, as one without the
Law (though I am not without the law of God, but am under the law of Christ).
(3) The Old Testament does this, too,
in speaking to the Jews about God. It says: "Who is like to you among the
gods, O Lord?" What do you mean, Moses? Is there any comparison at all
between the true God and false gods? Moses would reply: "1 did not say this
to make a comparison; but since I was talking to the Jews, who had a lofty
opinion of demons, I condescended to their weakness and brought in the lesson
I was teaching in this way." Let me also say that since my discussion is with
the Jews, who consider that Christ is mere man and one who violated their Law,
I compared him with those whom the pagan Greeks admire.
(4) If you wish me to make a
comparison with men from among the Jews themselves, men who tried to do what
Christ did, men who gathered disciples and were proclaimed as leaders and
chiefs but who were immediately forgotten, let me try to prove it in this way.
Surely this was what Gamaliel did to stop their mouths. When he saw the
Sanhedrin in a rage and eager to shed the blood of the disciples, he wished to
put a stop to their ungovernable anger. So he gave orders for the apostles to
be put outside for a little while and then had this to say to the Jews.
(5) "Take care what you are about to
do to these men. For some time ago there rose up Theudas, claiming to be
somebody, and four hundred men followed him, but he perished and all his
followers were scattered abroad. And after him there rose up Judas the
Galilean, who drew a considerable crowd; he too died and his disciples
perished. So now I say to you, Take care, for if this work is of men, it will
be overthrown; but if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow it. Else
perhaps you may find yourselves fighting even against God."
(6) Where, then, is the proof that if
this is the work of men, it will perish? You had proof of this, said Gamaliel,
from the cases of Judas and Theudas. So if the man whom the Apostles proclaim
is a leader such as Judas and Theudas, if Ire does not do all Ire does by the
power of God, wait a little while, and the outcome of events will give
credibility to what you say. You will know from the way things turn out
whether he is a deceiver, as you say, and one who violates the Law, or the God
who rules all things and, with ineffable power, orders and arranges our
affairs.
(7) And this did come to pass. They
did wait. The very outcome of events did prove that his power was divine and
unconquerable. That trick which had deceived many men was turned around and
back on the devil's own head. When Satan saw that Christ had come, he wished
to cover up the reality of his coming and to hide the true purpose of his
Incarnation. So he brought on stage the rogues whom we mentioned, so that
Christ might be considered one of them. And he did this on the cross, too,
when he had two thieves crucified with Christ; he did the same thing in the
case of Christ's coming when he strove to conceal the truth by putting it
alongside the false. But he failed in both cases, and his very effort provided
the strongest proof of Christ's power.
(8) Tell me this. If three men were
crucified in the same place, at the same time, by the same judges, wily have
the two thieves been lost in silence, while He alone is worshipped? Again, if
many men introduced new governments, got themselves adherents, and today not
even their names are known, how is it that Christ is paid divine service
throughout the world?
(9) Comparison makes facts especially
clear. You Jews make this comparison, then, and learn how the truth has
prevailed. What deceiver has gotten for himself so many churches all over the
world, what rogue extended his worship to the ends of the earth, what imposter
has every man bowing down before him, and this in the face of ten thousand
obstacles? No one did. It is clear, then, that Christ was not a deceiver: he
has saved us, he confers blessings upon us, he takes care of us, he protects
our lives.
(10) Let me add one more prediction
before I return to the topic on which I proposed to speak. Christ said: " I
did not come to send peace upon the earth, but a sword." However, he did not
speak of what he would himself desire but he was foretelling the end to which
things would come. He went on to say: "For I have come to set a man at
variance with his father, and a daughter-in-law with her mother-in-law, and a
daughter with her mother."
(11) Tell me this. How did he foretell
this if he was a mere man and one of the crowd? For this is what he meant. It
sometimes happened that in one and the same house one person would believe,
and another would not; then the father would want to lead his own son to deny
his faith. This is why Christ predicted this very thing. What he was saying
was this: "The power of the gospel will be so strong that sons despise their
fathers, daughters their mothers, and parents their children. For they will
choose not only to scorn members of their own household, but even to lay down
their lives, to endure and suffer all things rather than deny their religion."
(12) How could he have managed to know
this if tie was just another man out of the crowd? How did it occur to him to
reach the conclusion that sons would pay greater veneration to him than to
their fathers, that parents would find him dearer than their own children,
that wives would have a more ardent love for him than for their own husbands?
And how did he know that this would happen not in one home only, nor in two,
nor three, nor ten, nor twenty, nor a hundred, but in every corner of the
world, in every city and country, on land and sea, in populous places and in
those with few, if any, dwellings? No one can say that he foretold this and
then failed to fulfill his prediction. Certainly it was not only at the very
beginning but it is true even today that, because of their religion, many are
hated and cast forth from their fathers' houses. However, they pay no heed to
this; the fact that they suffer it for the sake of Christ is consolation
enough for them.
(13) Tell me this. What human being
ever had the power to do this? Yet this man made all these predictions about
that woman, about the Church, and about the wars which would be waged against
it. He also predicted that the temple would be destroyed, that Jerusalem would
be captured, and that the city would no longer be the city of the Jews as it
had been in the past.
(14) If he was wrong and deceived you
in all those other predictions, and they did not come true, then refuse to
believe what he foretold of Jerusalem and the temple. But you do see those
other predictions gloriously fulfilled and their truth waxing stronger with
each passing day. The gates of hell did not prevail against the Church, after
so many years the story of what that woman did is still told all over the
world, and men who believed in him did pay greater veneration to him than to
their own parents, wives, and children. If this is true, tell me, why do you
reject this one prediction about the temple, especially since the testimony of
time puts the gag of silence on your shameless words?
(15) Suppose a mere ten, twenty,
thirty, or fifty years were to have passed since the capture of Jerusalem.
Even then you would have absolutely no right to show your impudence by
rejecting his prediction, but if you wished to be obstinate, you might have
had some pretext for protest left to you. But not only fifty years but many
more than one, two, or three centuries have passed since Jerusalem was
captured. And never has there been seen a single trace or shadow of the change
for which you are waiting. Why, then, are you so rash and foolish as to keep
up your shameless objections?
IV
We have said enough to prove that the
temple will never be rebuilt. But since the abundance of proofs which support
this truth is so great, I shall turn from the gospels to the prophets, because
the Jews put their belief ill them before all others. And from the words of
the prophets I shall make it clear that the Jews will recover neither their
city nor their temple in days to come. And yet the need was not mine to prove
that the temple will not be restored. This was not my obligation; the Jews
have the obligation to prove the opposite, namely, that the temple will be
rebuilt. For the years that have elapsed stand by my side in the combat and
bear witness to the truth of my words.
(2) Even though the outcome of events
defeats them, even though they cannot prove in deeds what they maintain in
words, even though they are simply making a rash boast, they have a right to
present their testimony. The proof for my position is that the events of which
I speak did actually occur: Jerusalem did fall and has not been restored after
so many years. Their position rests on their unsupported words.
(3) Yet the burden of proof was on
them to show that the city would rise again. This is the procedure for giving
proofs in courts of law. Suppose two people are in dispute over some matter
and the first party presents the claim for his position in writing, while the
second party attacks his statement. The second party must then bring forward
witnesses or other proofs in refutation of what is said in the written
deposition; but the plaintiff need not do so. This is what the Jews must now
do. They must produce a prophet who says that by all means Jerusalem will be
rebuilt. For if there was going to be an end to the present captivity for you
Jews, there was every need for the prophets to foretell this, as is clear to
anyone who has even so much as glanced at the prophetic books. For it was the
custom of old among the Jews that. under inspiration from above, their
prophets would foretell the good or evil things which were going to befall the
people.
(4) What was the reason for this? It
was because the Jews were so arrogant and obstinate. They immediately forgot
what God had done for them, they ascribed his kindness to demons and reckoned
that his blessings had come from them. Even when the sea was divided for them,
as they went forth from Egypt, and while other wonderful things were happening
to them, they forgot the God who was performing these miracles and attributed
them to others who were not gods. For they said to Aaron: "Make for us gods
who will be our leaders?" And they said to Jeremiah: 'We will not listen to
what you say in the name of the Lord. Rather we will continue doing what we
had proposed: we will burn incense to the queen of heaven and pour out
libations to her, as we and our fathers, our kings and princes have done. Then
we had enough food to eat and we were well off; we suffered no misfortune But
since we stopped burning incense to the queen of heaven and pouring out
libations to her, we are in need of everything and are being destroyed by the
sword and by hunger. The inspired prophets, then, foretold what would happen
to the Jews so that they would ascribe none of the events to idols, but would
believe that both punishments and blessings always come from God: the
punishment came for their sins, and the blessings because of God's love and
kindness.
(5) So that you may learn that this is
the reason for the prophecy, hear what Isaiah, the most eloquent of prophets,
had to say to the Jewish people. "I know that you are stubborn and that your
neck is an iron sinew" (that is, unbending), "and your forehead bronze" (that
is, incapable of blushing)." We, too, make a practice of giving the name
'bronze-faced to those who cannot blush. And Isaiah went on to say: "I
foretold what things would come upon you before they took place and I let you
hear of them. "Then he added the reason for the prophecy when he said: "So
that you may never say: 'My idols did them, my statues and molten images
commanded them.'
(6) At another time some of the Jews
who were quarrelsome and boastful and, even after the prophecies were
fulfilled, were acting as impudently as if they had never heard them. Then the
prophets not only foretold what would come to pass but even had witnesses of
what they were doing. Again it was Isaiah who said: "Make reliable men my
witnesses, Uriah the priest, and Zechariah, son of Jeberechiah." And this was
not all Isaiah did. He set his prophecy down in writing in a new book so that,
after his prophecy was fulfilled, what he had written might bear witness
against the Jews of what the inspired prophet predicted to them a long time
before. This is wily he did not simply write it in a book, but in a new book,
a book capable of staying sturdy for a long time without easily falling apart,
a book which could last until the events described in it would come to pass.
V
I shall prove that this is true, and
that God foretold everything which was going to befall the Jews. I shall do so
not only from what Isaiah said but from all the things which happened to them,
both good and bad. Indeed, the Jews three times endured bondage, very harsh
and most severe: but none of these came upon them unpredicted. God saw to it
that each captivity was prophesied. He carefully foretold the place, the
duration, the kind, the form of their misfortune, the return from slavery, and
everything else.
(2) First, I shall speak of the
prediction of their slavery in Egypt. Surely, in speaking to Abraham, God
said: "Know for certain that your posterity will be strangers in a land not
their own; they shall be subjected to slavery and shall be oppressed four
hundred years. But I will judge that nation which they shall serve, said God.
And in the fourth generation they shall return here with great possessions."
Do you see how he mentioned the number
of years? Four hundred. The nature of their slavery? He did not simply say:
"They shall be subjected to slavery," but: "They shall be oppressed." Listen
to Moses' explanation of their misfortune. He said: "No straw is supplied to
your servants, and still we are told to make bricks." And each day they were
flogged so that you may learn the meaning of the words: "They shall be
subjected to slavery and shall be oppressed." When He said: "I will judge that
nation which they shall serve," He was speaking of the drowning of the
Egyptians in the Red Sea, which Moses described in his canticle when he said:
"Horse and chariot he has cast into the sea." Then he also mentioned the
manner of their return when he said that they will return here with great
possessions: "Each of you take from his neighbor and comrade gold and silver
vessels." Since they had been subjected to slavery a long time and had
received no pay, God permitted them to make this demand of the Egyptians even
though their masters might be unwilling to pay. And the prophet exclaimed and
said: "And he led them forth laden with silver and gold, with not a weakling
among their tribes." So here we have one bondage which was precisely
predicted.
(3) Come now and let us turn our
discussion to the second captivity. What one is that? The bondage in Babylon.
Jeremiah certainly foretold it exactly when he said: "Thus says the Lord: Only
after seventy years have elapsed for Babylon will I visit you and fulfill for
you my promise to bring you back to this place. I shall change your bondage; I
shall gather you from all the nations and all the places to which I have
banished you, says the Lord, and bring you back to the place from which I have
exiled you." Do you see how here again he spoke of the city, the number of
years, and the places from which and to which he was going to lead them?
(4) This explains why Daniel did not
make his prayer for the Jews until he saw that the seventy years had elapsed.
Who says so? It was Daniel himself, when he said: "I, Daniel, took care of the
king's affairs. But I was appalled at the vision, nor was there anyone to
understand it." "And I understood in the Scriptures the counting of the years
of which the Lord spoke to the prophet Jeremiah: that for the ruins of
Jerusalem seventy years must be fulfilled. I turned to the Lord God, seeking
to pray and entreat him with fasting, sackcloth, and ashes."
(5) Did you hear how this bondage was
foretold and how the prophet did not dare to bring his prayer and entreaty to
God before the appointed time? He feared that his prayer might be rash and in
vain. He was afraid he would hear what Jeremiah had heard: "Do not pray for
this his people, and do not make demand of me for them for I shall not hear
your voice." But when he saw that the sentence pronounced against them had
been fulfilled and that the time was summoning them to return, he did pray for
them. And he did not merely pray, he made his entreaty with fasting,
sackcloth, and ashes.
(6) The prophet acted toward God in a
way quite common among men. When we see that a master has cast his slaves into
prison for many serious crimes, we do not make a plea for them immediately,
nor at the outset, nor at the beginning of their punishment. We let them be
punished for a few days; then we go to the master with our plea and we have
time working on our side. This is exactly what the prophet did. Although the
penalty the Jews paid was not as severe as their sins deserved, nonetheless
they did pay it. And it was only then that the prophet went to God to plead on
their behalf.
(7) If you would like to hear it, let
us listen to the prayer he made for them. He said: "I confessed and said,
'Lord great and awesome God, you who keep your covenant and your mercy toward
those who love you and observe your commandments!' What are you doing, Daniel?
When you intercede for those who have sinned and quarreled with God, are you
talking about men who keep God's laws? Do those who transgress his
commandments deserve pardon? What did Daniel say? "I am not making this prayer
for their sake but for the sake of their forefathers, for the sake of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob. The promise and pledge was made to those who kept God's
commandments. These men, then, have no just claim to salvation; this is why I
mention their forefathers.
(8) Daniel was not speaking of the
Jews in bondage when he said: "You who keep your covenant and your mercy
toward those who love you and observe your commandments." That is why he
immediately added: "We have sinned, acted lawlessly, done evil, and departed
from your commandments and your laws. We have not obeyed your servants the
prophets." For there is one defense left to sinners after they have sinned: to
confess their sins.
(9) Do you now please consider the
virtue of the just man and the arrogance of the Jews. He who is conscious of
no evil in himself pronounces a most severe judgment on himself when he says:
"We have sinned, acted lawlessly, done evil." But those who were fulfilled
with ten thousand evils did quite the opposite when they said: "We kept your
commandments; and now we call strangers blessed and evildoers are exalted.
Just men usually act modestly after they have done just deeds; the wicked
generally exalt themselves after they have sinned. The man who was conscious
of no wickedness in himself said: "We have acted lawlessly, we have departed
from your laws"; those who are aware of the burden of ten thousand sins say:
"We have kept your commandments." I tell you this so that we may shun the
sinner and emulate the just.
VI
After he ran through their lawless
acts, the prophet next spoke of the penalty they paid, because he wanted to
use this to win God over to pity them. For he said: "And there came upon us
the malediction recorded in the law of Moses, the servant of God, because we
sinned." What is that malediction? Do you wish us to read it?
'"If you will not serve the Lord your
God, I shall lead forth against you a shameless national l, a nation whose
tongue you will not understand, and you will be few in number." The three boys
in Babylon also made this same point clear when they showed that the kind of
punishment visited upon them came about because of what they had done. They
made confession to God for the sins of all Jews when they said: "You have
handed us over to our enemies, lawless and hateful rebels; to an unjust king;
the worst in all the world. Do you see how God fulfilled the curse which said:
"You will be few in number?" And the one which said: "I shall lead forth
against you a shameless nation?
(2) This is the very thing which
Daniel was hinting at when he said: "There came upon us evils such as never
occurred under heaven according to what happened in Israel." What evils were
these? Mothers ate their own children. Moses foretold this, but Jeremiah shows
that it came true. For Moses said: "The refined and delicate woman, so
delicate and refined that she would not venture to put her foot upon the step,
shall put her hand to the unholy table and eat her own children." But Jeremiah
shows that this came true when he said: "The hands of compassionate women
boiled their own children."
(3) But even after he had spoken of
the sills of those who had sinned and after he brought into the open the
punishment they endured, he did not ask that this should save them. See, then,
the prudence of the servant. For after he had made clear that they had not yet
paid the penalty their sins deserved, nor had their sufferings discharged the
debt for their offenses, he then fled to the mercy of God and the
loving-kindness of his way and says: "And now, O Lord, our God, who led your
people out of the land of Egypt, and made a name for yourself even to this
day, we have sinned and acted against your law." What he is saying is: "You
did not save the Jews of old for their good actions but because you saw their
affliction and distress, because you heard their cry. In the same way, free us
from our present evils because of your loving-kindness and because of that
alone. We have no other claim to salvation."
(4) So he spoke and, after many a
lament, he brought forward the city of Jerusalem, like a captive woman, and
said: "Let your face shine upon your sanctuary. Give ear, O my God, and
listen, open your eyes and see our ruins and the ruins of your city, in which
your name is invoked." For when he looked among the men and saw no man who
could make God propitious, he turned to the buildings and brought tip the
city. He showed its desolation and, after he completed his discourse on these
things, he made God propitious. And this became clear from the events which
followed.
(5) But back to what I was talking
about. For I must return again to the topic I proposed. Yet I had good reason
for bringing in these digressions: I waited to give your minds a brief
breathing space, since they were growing weary from the constant conflicts
with the Jews. But let me return to the point where I departed from my topic
to speak of these matters. Let me prove that the evils which were going to
overtake the Jews had been accurately predicted by God's inspiration. My
discourse had already shown that those two captivities came upon the Jews
neither by chance nor unexpectedly.
(6) It remains for me now to bring up
the third captivity. After I have done that, I must speak about the bondage
which now encompasses them; I must give clear proof that no prophet ever
predicted that there would be any freedom or escape from the ills which now
encircle them.
(7) What, then, is this third
captivity? It is the bondage that came upon them in the days of Antiochus
Epiphanes. After Alexander, king of the Macedonians, conquered the Persian
king, Darius, he took over the kingdom. After Alexander died, four kings
followed him to the throne. Antiochus was the son of one of Alexander's four
successors. Many years later Antiochus burned the temple, laid waste the holy
of holies, put an end to the sacrifices, subjected the Jews, and destroyed
their whole state.
VII
Daniel foretold all this with the
greatest accuracy, even to the very day. He foretold when it would be, how, by
whom, the manner of it, where it would find all end, and what change it would
bring about. You will understand this better after you have heard the vision
which the prophet set forth in the form of a parable. The ram is Darius, the
Persian king; the goat is the Greek king, Alexander of Macedon; the four horns
are Alexander's successors; the last horn is Antiochus himself. But it will be
better for you to hear the vision itself.
(2) Daniel said: "For I saw in a
vision and I was silting at the river Ubal." (The spot ill question he calls
by a Persian name.) "And I looked up and saw standing by the Ubal a ram with
his horns held high; and the one horn was higher than' the other, and the high
one mounted to the very heights. And I saw the ram butting toward the sea,
north, and south. No beast will stand before it, nor was there anyone to
rescue a beast from its grasp; it did what it pleased and became very
powerful. And as I sat, I understood.'" He was speaking of the Persian power
and domain which overran the whole earth.
(3) Next he spoke of Alexander of
Macedon and said: "Behold, a he-goat came from the southwest across the whole
earth without touching the ground. And the goat had a horn to be seen midway
between his eyes." He then spoke of Alexander's encounter with Darius and the
victory won by Macedonian might. "The goat came up to the horned ram, grew
savage, struck the ram,"-I must cut short the account-"broke both his horns
and there was no one to rescue the ram from his power."
(4) After that Daniel spoke of
Alexander's death and the four kings who succeeded him: "And at the height of
its power the great horn was shattered, and in its place there came up four
others, facing the four winds of heaven." Daniel then passed from this point
to the reign of Antiochus and showed that he came from one of those four when
he said: "Out of one of them came one strong horn, and it became very
powerful toward the south and the east." Daniel then went on to show that
Antiochus destroyed the Jewish commonwealth and way of life when he said: "And
through him the sacrifice was disordered by transgression; and it came to
pass. that he prospered. And the holy place will be laid waste and sin
replaced the sacrifice. After' the altar was destroyed and the holy places
trampled underfoot, he set up an idol within and offered unlawful sacrifices
to the demons; righteousness was cast to the ground. He both did this and
prospered.
(5) Then again, for a second time, he
spoke of the same reign of Antiochus Epiphanes, the bondage, and the capture
and desolation of the temple; this time, however, he gave the date of these
events. He again began, toward the end of the book, with the empire of
Alexander and described all the intervening accomplishments of the Seleucids
and the Ptolemies in their wars against each other, the exploits of their
generals, the strategies, the victories, the armies, the battles fought on
land and sea. When he came to Antiochus he ended by saying: "His armed forces
shall rise up, defile the sanctuary, and remove the continuity" (and by the
continuity he meant the uninterrupted daily sacrifices) "and in its place they
will put an abomination. By treachery they will lead off those who violate the
covenant" (that is, the transgressors among the Jews whom they will remove and
keep with themselves); "but the people who know their God shall take strong
action" (he means the events in the time of the Maccabees: Judas. Simon, and
John). "And the wise men of the people will have understanding of many things
but they will fall by the sword and by fire" (here again he describes the
burning of Jerusalem) "and by exile and the plunder days. And when they fall,
they will receive a little help" (he means that, in the midst of those evils,
they will be able to draw a breath and rise from the dread things which have
overtaken them), "but many will join them out of treachery. And they shall
fall from the number of the wise?° He said this to show that even many of
those who stood firm will fall.
(6) Next, Daniel gave the reason why
God permitted them to be involved in such trials. What is the reason? "To
purge them, to choose them, and to make them white until the time of the end."
This is why, said Daniel, God
permitted these evils so as to cleanse them and to show who among them was
genuine and approved. In telling of the same king's power and might he said:
"He shall do as he pleases, he shall exalt himself and become very powerful.
In speaking of the king's blasphemous spirit, he went on to say: "He shall
utter excessive haughty thoughts against the God of gods: he shall prosper
until the wrath be accomplished."' Daniel was here making it clear that it was
not of Antiochus' own will but because of God's wrath against the Jews that he
was so victorious.
(7) After Daniel told in many other
passages what evils the king would bring on Egypt and Palestine, how he would
return, at whose bidding, and under the pressure of what cause, the prophet
then recounted a change of fortune and said that, after enduring all these
evils, the Jews would find some aid from an angel sent to help them as "At
that time there shall arise Michael, the great prince, guardian over the sons
of your people. It shall be a time unsurpassed in distress since nations began
on earth until that time. At that time your people will escape, everyone who
is found written ill the book." By that he meant those deserving to be saved.
VIII
But I have not yet given a proof for
the question I am investigating. What is that question? That God set a time
limit for those involved in these trials, just as he set a limit of four
hundred years for the exile in Egypt and seventy years for the bondage in
Babylon. Let us see, then, if he set any time limit for this third slavery.
Where can we find the answer to this? In what Daniel said in the verses
following those I discussed. (2) Since he had heard of the many great evils
which would befall the Jews -the burning of Jerusalem. the toppling of their
state, the bondage of his people he then wanted to learn what would be the end
of these trials, and if there would be any change in their disastrous
condition. So he asked the angel who had appeared to him and said: "Lord, what
is to be the outcome of this? .... Come here, Daniel," he said, "because the
words are to be kept secret and sealed" (indicating the obscurity of the
words) "until the time of the end. Then the angel mentioned the reason why God
consented to these evils: "As long as many are chosen, made white, and purged,
as long as the lawless act lawlessly, as long as all the unholy ones shall not
understand and the holy ones do understand."
(3) Next, ill predicting the length of
time these evils would last, Daniel's angel said: "From the time of the
changing of the continuity." The daily sacrifice was called the continuity,
for what is continuous is frequent and unceasing. And among the Jews it was
customary to offer sacrifice to God in the evening and about dawn each day;
this is why they called that daily sacrifice a continuity.
(4) But when Antiochus came, he
completely did away with this practice. That is what the angel meant when he
said: "From the time of the changing of the continuity" (that is, from the
time the sacrifice was abolished) "there shall be one thousand two hundred and
ninety days," that is, three and a half years and a little more. Then to show
that there will be an end and deliverance from these woes, the angel went on
to say: "Blessed is the man who stands firm and attains one thousand three
hundred and thirty-five days," adding forty-five days to the one thousand and
two hundred and ninety days. He did this because it happened that the conflict
lasted a month and a half and in that time the victory became complete, as did
also the deliverance of the Jews from the evils which weighed heavy upon them.
And when he said: "Blessed is the man who stands firm one thousand three
hundred and thirty-five days," he revealed their deliverance. He did not
simply say, "the man who attains," but "the man who stands firm and attains."
The reason for this is that many of the unholy ones saw the change, but he
does not call them happy; he calls blessed only those who gave witness during
the time of troubles, who did not desert their religion, and who then found
abatement of their ills. This is why he did not simply say: "the man who
attains," but "the man who stands firm and attains."
(5) What could be clearer than this?
Do you see how very carefully the prophet foretold their captivity and release
from bondage? He gave the time not in terms of years, or months, but to the
very day. That you may know that my words are not based on mere conjecture,
come, let us bring in another witness to what I have said, a witness whom the
Jews regard with the highest trust, I mean Josephus, who has made their
disasters a subject of tragic history and who has paraphrased the entire Old
Testament. He was born after Christ's coming and, in speaking of the
captivity predicted by Christ, he also discussed this captivity and set forth
Daniel's vision about the ram, the goat, the four horns, and the last horn
which arose after the others. I do not wish anyone to be suspicious of what I
have said; come, then, and let us compare his words with mine.
(6) Josephus praised Daniel and showed
exceedingly high admiration for hint, setting him above all the other
prophets. When he came to the story of Daniel's vision, he had this to say.
Daniel left us a book in which he made clear the accuracy and fidelity to
truth's of his prophecy. For he tells us that after he and some companions had
gone forth to a plain at Susa, the metropolis of Persia, suddenly the earth
quaked and shook violently. His friends fled and he was left alone. He fell
face down and was fixed fast to the spot leaning on both hands. Then someone
touched him and at the same time ordered him to get up and see what would
happen to his people after many generations
(7) Daniel then arose and was shown a
large ram with many horns growing from his head, but the last horn was the
highest. Then he looked to the west and saw a goat borne through the air. The
goat rushed at the ram, struck him twice with his horns, knocked him to the
ground, and trampled on him. Next he saw the goat grown larger and putting
forth a very large horn from his forehead. This born was broken off, but four
others grew up, turned to the four winds. As Josephus told the story, Daniel
saw a smaller horn rise up from these and it grew strong. God, who showed
Daniel the vision, was telling him that war would come upon his nation, that
Jerusalem would be taken by storm, the temple would be pillaged, the
sacrifices would be hindered and cut short, and that this would last for one
thousand two hundred and ninety days?
(8) Daniel wrote that he had seen
these events in the plain at Susa; he also made it clear that God explained to
him what he had seen in the vision. God said that the ram signified the empire
of the Persians and Medes, and the horns, those who would hold royal power. He
further said that the last horn signified that there would come a king who
would surpass those others in wealth and glory. God then explained that the
goat would be a ruler from among the Greeks who would twice clash with the
Persian king, defeat him in battle, and take over all his empire. The first
large horn on the goat's forehead signified the first king. After this fell
off, the growth of the four horns and the turning of each of these to the four
regions of the earth was a sign that, after the death of the first king, who
had neither sons nor family, his successors would divide the empire among them
and would rule the world for many years.
(9) And from these successors, the
explanation continued, there would arise a king who would make war on the
Jewish laws, take away their from of government, pillage their temple, and
prevent their sacrifices from being offered for three years. And it did happen
that the nation of our fathers underwent these sufferings under Antiochus
Epiphanes just as Daniel had seen many years before and had written would come
to pass.
IX
What could be clearer than this? Now
it is time, unless you think I am making you weary, now it is time to come
back to the question we proposed for investigation, namely, the Jews' present
slavery and their bondage of today. This was the reason for going through all
their exiles. Pay careful heed to me, for our contest is not concerned with
ordinary, everyday matters. At the Olympic contests people have the patience
to sit from midnight to noon waiting to see who will win the crown; they take
the hot rays of the sun on their bare heads, and do not leave before the
winners are decided. Our contest today is not for an Olympic prize but for an
incorruptible crown. It would be a shame, then, for us to grow weary and give
in to our fatigue.
(2) What I have said has sufficiently
proved that the three captivities were predicted, the first lasting for four
hundred years, the second for seventy, and the third for three and a half
years. Now let us talk about the present bondage of the Jews. To show that the
prophet also predicted this one, I shall offer as my witness that same
Josephus, who is on the side of the Jews. Listen to what he says subsequence
to his account of Daniel's vision. He said: "In the same manner Daniel also
wrote about the empire of the Romans and that they would capture Jerusalem and
devastate the temple."
(3) Please consider that even if the
man who wrote that was a Jew, he did not, on that account, let himself emulate
the obstinacy of you Jews. After he said that Jerusalem would be captured, he
did not dare to go on to say that it would be rebuilt, nor to mention a
definite time for its restoration, because he knew that the prophet had not
fixed a definite time. Yet when Josephus spoke previously of the victory of
Antiochus and his devastation of Jerusalem, he did state how many days and
years the captivity was going to last.
But Josephus said nothing of this sort
about the bondage under the Romans. He wrote that Jerusalem and the temple
would be despoiled, but he did not add that what had been devastated would be
restored. For he saw that the prophet had not added anything about such a
restoration. Josephus did say: "All these things, as God revealed them to him,
Daniel left behind in his writings, so that those who read them and observe
how they have come to pass must wonder that Daniel was so honored by God."
(4) But let us consider where it was
that Daniel said that the temple would be despoiled. After he had made his
prayer in sackcloth and ashes, Gabriel came to him and said: "Seventy weeks
are cut short for your people and for your holy city. Look," the Jews will
say, "he did mention the time." Yes, but the time is not the time of the
captivity; what is mentioned is the length of time after which the captivity
is going to come upon them. It is one thing to speak of how long the captivity
will last and another thing to state the number of years before it will arrive
and be upon them.
(5) We read: "Seventy weeks are cut
short for your people"; no longer does God say: "for my people." And yet the
prophet said: "Let your face shine upon your people," but God thereafter was
estranged from them because of the bold crime they were going to commit.
Presently the prophet gave the reason: "Until transgression will stop and sin
will end? What does he mean by the words: "Until sin will end?" What the
prophet is saying is that the Jews are committing many sills, but the end of
their evil deeds will be the day they slay their Master. Christ also said
this: "Fill up the measure of your fathers." "You killed your servants," he
said. "Now add to that the blood of your Master."
(6) See how the thoughts of Christ and
Daniel agree, Christ said: "Fill up"; the prophet says: "Until transgression
will stop and sin will end." What does "end" mean? That no sin thereafter is
left to commit. "And until everlasting justice will be introduced." But what
is everlasting justice except the justification given by Christ? "And until
the sealing of the vision and the prophet and a holy of holies be anointed,"
that is, until prophecies shall cease. For this is what is meant by "to seat,"
namely, to bring anointing to an end, to bring vision to an end. This is why
Christ said: "The law and the prophets until John." Do you see how this
threatens utter desolation and the payment for sins and acts of injustice? For
God did not threaten that he will forgive the sins of the Jews but that he
will execute vengeance upon then.
X
And when did this happen? When were
prophecies completely done away with? When was anointing ended so as never
again to return? Even if we be silent, the stones will shout out, because the
voice of the facts is so clear. For we could not mention a time at which these
predictions were accomplished other than the long and many years already past
and the years which are going to be longer and more numerous still. Daniel put
it more precisely when he said:
"And you will know and understand that
from the going forth of the word of the answer that Jerusalem was to be
rebuilt until the coming of an anointed leader, there will be seven weeks and
sixty-two weeks.
(2) Pay careful attention to me here,
because here lies the whole question. The seven weeks and the sixty-two weeks
make four hundred and eighty-three years, for he is here speaking not of weeks
of days or months but weeks of years. From Cyrus to Antiochus Epiphanes and
the captivity there were three hundred and ninety-four years. However, Daniel
makes it clear that he is not talking about the destruction of the temple
under Antiochus but the subsequent destruction under Pompey, Vespasian, and
Titus. He further extends the time and instructs us from what point we must
start counting by showing us that our reckoning is not to start from the day
of the return from captivity. From what point must we reckon? "From the going
forth of the word of the answer that Jerusalem was to be rebuilt."
(3) Jerusalem, however, was not
rebuilt under Cyrus but under Artaxerxes, who was called the Long-handed. For
after the return of the Jews, Cambyses was ruler, then the Magians, and after
them Darius Hystaspes. Next came Darius' son, Xerxes, and after him Artabanus.
After Artabanus, Artaxerxes the Long-handed, ruled Persia. During the
twentieth year of his kingship Nehemiah returned and restored Jerusalem. Ezra
has given us an exact account of this. So then, if we count four hundred and
eighty-three years from this point, we will surely come to the time of the
last destruction. And so it is that the prophet said: "It shall be rebuilt
with streets and a surrounding wall." Therefore what he says is this: after
the city has been rebuilt and has recovered its own appearance and form, count
the seventy weeks from that point and you will see the slavery which has not
yet come to an end.
(4) To make still more clear this very
point, namely, that the evils which now grip the Jews will not come to an end,
he goes on to say: "After the seventy weeks the anointing will be utterly
destroyed and there will be no judgment on it; he will destroy the city and
the sanctuary with the help of a leader who comes and they will be cut off as
in a deluge? There will be no remnant left, nor a root to grow up again,
"until the end of a war which is brought to an end by the vanishing of the
people."
(5) And again, in speaking of this
slavery, he said: "The incense and the oblation will be abolished and,
furthermore, on the holy place will be the abomination of desolation: and
accomplishment shall be given to the desolation until the end of time." When
you hear him say: "Until the end of time," what else is left for you Jews to
look forward to? "And furthermore." What does this mean? "Furthermore," that
is, in addition to what he has said, that is, in addition to the destruction
of the sacrifice and the oblation, there will be some other greater evil. What
is that evil? "On the holy place will be the abomination of desolation." By
the holy place he means the temple; by the abomination of desolation he means
the statue set up in the temple by Antiochus, who destroyed the city.
(6) And he went on to say: "Desolation
until the end." It is true that Christ came into the world according to the
flesh long after the day of Antiochus Epiphanes, but when he prophesied the
captivity to come, he showed that Daniel had predicted it. This was his reason
for saying: "When you see the abomination of desolation which was spoken of by
Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place-let him who reads understand.'
The Jews called every image and statue made by man an abomination. So by his
veiled reference to that statue, Daniel showed both when and under whom the
captivity would take place. As I showed before, Josephus also assured us that
these words were spoken about the Romans.
(7) What is there for me to say to you
now that has not already been said? When the prophets predicted the other
captivities, they spoke not only of the captivity but also of the length of
time it was appointed for each bondage to last; for this present captivity,
however, they set no time but, to the contrary, said that the desolation would
endure until the end. And to prove that what they said is true, come now and
let me offer as witnesses the events themselves.
If the Jews had never attempted to
rebuild the temple, they could say: "If we had wished to set our hands to the
task and to begin to rebuild it, we could by all means have completed the
task." But now I shall show that not once, nor twice, but three times they did
attempt it and three times, like wrestlers in the Olympic games, they were
thrown to the ground. Therefore there can be no dispute or question but that
the Church has won the victory crown.
XI
Yet what kind of men were they who set
their hands to the task? They were men who constantly resisted the Holy
Spirit, revolutionists bent on stirring up sedition. After the destruction
which occurred under Vespasian and Titus, these Jews rebelled during the reign
of Hadrian and tried to go back to the old commonwealth and way of life. What
they failed to realize was that they were fighting against the decree of God,
who had ordered that Jerusalem remain forever in ruins.
(2) But it is impossible for a man to
wage war on God and win So it was that, when these Jews made their attack
against the Emperor, they forced him again to destroy Jerusalem completely.
For Hadrian came and utterly subdued them; he obliterated every remnant of
their city. To prevent the Jews from making such an impudent attempt in the
future, he set up a statue of himself. But he realized that, with the passage
of time, his statue would one day fall. So he gave his own name to the ruined
city and, in this way, burned on the Jews a permanent brand which would mark
their defeat and testify to the impudence of their revolt. Since he was called
Aelius Hadrianus, he ordained that from this name the city was to be called
Aelia and to this day it is called by the name of the Emperor who conquered it
and destroyed it.
(3) Do you see the first attempt of
the impudent Jews? Now look at the next. They tried the same thing in the time
of Constantine. But the Emperor saw what they tried to do, cut off their ears,
and left on their bodies this mark of their disobedience. He then had them led
around everywhere, like runaway slaves and scoundrels, so all might see their
mutilated bodies and always think twice before ever attempting such a revolt.
"Yet these things happened very long ago," the Jews will say. But I tell you
that the incident is well known to those of us who are somewhat on in years
and are already old men.
(4) But what I am going to tell you is
clear and obvious even to the very young. For it did not happen in the time of
Hadrian or Constantine, but during our own lifetime, in the reign of the
Emperor of twenty years ago. Julian, who surpassed all the emperors in
irreligion, invited the Jews to sacrifice to idols in an attempt to drag them
to Iris own level of ungodliness. He used their old way of sacrifice as an
excuse and said: "In the days of your ancestors, God was worshipped in this
way."
(5) They refused his invitation, but,
at that time, they did admit to the very things I just lately proved to you,
namely, that they were not allowed to offer their sacrifices outside
Jerusalem. Their answer was that those who offered any sacrifice whatsoever in
a foreign land were violating the Law. So they said to the Emperor: "If you
wish to see us offer sacrifices, give us back Jerusalem, rebuild the temple,
show us the holy of holies, restore the altar, and we will offer sacrifices
again just as we did before."
(6) These abominable and shameless men
had the impudence to ask these firings from an impious pagan and to invite him
to rebuild their sanctuary with his polluted hands. They failed to see that
they were attempting the impossible. They did not realize that if human hands
had put an end to those things, then human hands could get them back for
them. But it was God who destroyed their city, and no human power could ever
change what God had decreed. "For what God, the Holy One, has planned who
shall dissipate? His hand is stretched out; who will turn it back?" What God
has reared up and wishes to remain, no man can tear down. In the same way,
what he has destroyed and wishes to stay destroyed, no man can rebuild.
(7) I grant you that the Emperor did
give you Jews back your temple and did build you an altar, just as you
foolishly suspected he would. But he could not send down to you the heavenly
fire from on high, could he? Yet if you could not have this fire, your
sacrifice had to be an abomination and unclean. This is why the sons of Aaron
perished; they brought ill a foreign fire.
(8) Nonetheless, these Jews, who were
blind to all things, called on the Emperor for help and begged him to aid them
in undertaking to rebuild the temple. The Emperor, for his part, spared no
expense, sent engineers from all over the empire to oversee the work, summoned
craftsmen from every land; he left nothing undone, nothing untried. He
overlooked nothing but worked quietly and a little at a time to bring the Jews
to offer sacrifice; in this way he expected that it would be easy for them to
go from sacrifice to the worship of idols. At the same time, in his mad folly,
he was hoping to cancel out the sentence passed by Christ which forbade the
rebuilding of the temple. But tie who catches the wise in their craftiness
straightway made clear to him by His action that the decrees of God are
mightier than any man's and that works get their strength from the word of
God.
(9) They started to work in earnest on
that forbidden task, they removed a great mound of earth and began to lay bare
the foundations. They were just about to start building when suddenly fire
leaped forth from the foundations and completely consumed not only a great
number of the workmen but even the stones piled up there to support the
structure. This put a stop to the untimely obstinacy of those who had
undertaken the project. Many of the Jews, too, who had seen what had happened,
were astonished and struck with shame. The Emperor Julian had been madly eager
to finish the work. But when he heard what had happened, he was afraid that,
if he went on with it, he might call down the fire on his own head. So he and
the whole Jewish people withdrew in defeat.
(10) Even today, if you go into
Jerusalem, you will see the bare foundation, if you ask why this is so, you
will hear no explanation other than the one I gave. We are all witnesses to
this, for it happened not long ago but in our own time. Consider how
conspicuous our victory is. This did not happen in the times of the good
emperors; no one can say that the Christians came and prevented the work from
being finished. It happened at a time when our religion was subject to
persecution. when all our lives were in danger, when every man was afraid to
speak, when paganism flourished. Some of the faithful hid in their homes,
others fled the marketplaces and moved to the deserts. That is when these
events occurred. So the Jews have no excuse left to them for their impudence.
XII
Are you Jews still disputing the
question? Do you not see that you are condemned by the testimony of what
Christ and the prophets predicted and which the facts have proved? But why
should this surprise me? That is the kind of people you are. From the
beginning you have been shameless and obstinate, ready to fight at all times
against obvious facts.
(2) Do you wish me to bring forward
against you other prophets who clearly state the same fact, namely, that your
religion will come to an end, that ours will flourish and spread the message
of Christ to every corner of the world, that a different kind of sacrifice
will be introduced which will put an end to yours? At least listen to Malachi
who came later than the other prophets. Let me not at this time bring in the
testimony of Isaiah and Jeremiah or the other prophets who came before the
captivity. I do not want you Jews to say that their predictions came true
during the bondage. Let me bring forward a prophet who came after the return
from Babylon and after the restoration of Jerusalem, a prophet who clearly
predicted what was to happen to you.
(3) The Jews did return from Babylon,
they did recover their city, they did rebuild their temple, and they did offer
sacrifices. But it was only after all this that Malachi predicted the coming
of the present desolation and the abolition of the Jewish sacrifices. This is
what he said, speaking in God's behalf: "Shall I for your sakes accept your
persons? says the Lord Almighty. For from the rising of the sun, even to its
setting, my name is glorified among the nations; and everywhere they bring
incense to my name, and a pure offering. But you have profaned it."
(4) When do you Jews think that this
happened? When was incense offered to God in every place? When a pure
offering? You could not mention a time other than the time after the coming of
Christ. Suppose Malachi did not speak of our time, suppose he did not speak of
our sacrifice but of the Jewish sacrifice. Then his prophecy will be opposed
to the Law. Moses had forbidden the Jews to bring their sacrifice to any
place other than that which the Lord God would choose, and then he confined
their sacrifices to one particular place. If Malachi said that sacrifices were
going to be offered everywhere and that it would be a pure offering, he was
contradicting and opposing what Moses had said.
(5) But there is no contradiction nor
quarrel. For Moses spoke about one kind of sacrifice, and Malachi later
predicted another. What makes this clear? It is clear both from the prophet's
words and also from many other indications. The first indication has to do
with the place. For Malachi predicted that the sacrifice would be offered not
in one city, as in the time of the Jewish sacrifice, but "from the rising of
the sun even to its setting." The second indication has to do with the kind of
sacrifice. By calling it "a pure offering," he showed the kind of sacrifice of
which he spoke.
(6) A further indication deals with
those who are going to offer this sacrifice. He did not say "in Israel," but
"among the nations." He did not want you to think that the worship given in
this sacrifice would be confined to one, two, or three cities; therefore, he
did not simply say "everywhere," but from the rising of the sun, even to its
setting. By these words he showed that every corner of the earth seen by the
sun will receive the message of the gospel. He called it a "pure offering," as
opposed to the old sacrifice, which was impure. And it was-not by its own
nature but because of the disposition and intention of those who offered it.
This is why the Lord said: "Your incense is loathsome to me."
(7) And yet, in other respects, if you
should put the two sacrifices side by side to compare them, you will find that
the difference between them is so great and unmeasurable that, according to
the nature of comparison, only this new sacrifice is properly called pure.
Paul contrasted the old Law with the new Law of grace and said that the old
Law had been glorified but is now without glory, because of the surpassing
glory of the new Law. I, too, would make so bold as to say in this case that,
if the new sacrifice should be compared to the old, only this new sacrifice
would properly be called pure. For it is not offered by smoke and fat, nor by
blood and the price of ransom, but by the grace of the Spirit.
(8) Now hear another prophet who made
the same prediction and said that the worship of God would not be confined to
one place, but that the time would come when all men would know him. It is
Zephaniah who said: "The Lord shall appear to all nations, and will make all
the gods of the nations waste away; then each from its own place shall adore
Him. Yet this was forbidden to the Jews since Moses commanded them to worship
in one place.
(9) You hear that the prophets
foretold and predicted that men will no longer be bound to come from all over
the earth to offer sacrifice in one city or in one place, but that each one
will sit in his own home and pay service and honor to God. What time other
than the present could you mention as fulfilling these prophecies? At any rate
listen to how the gospels and the Apostle Paul agree with Zephaniah. The
prophet said: "The Lord shall appear"; Paul said: "The grace of God our Savior
has appeared to all men instructing us, Zephaniah said: "To all nations";
Paul said: "To all men." Zephaniah said: "He will make their gods waste away;"
Paul said: "Instructing us, in order that rejecting ungodliness and worldly
lusts, we may live temperately and justly."
(10) Again, Christ said to the
Samaritan woman: "Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when neither on this
mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father. God is spirit, and they
who worship him must worship in spirit and in truth. " I so When Christ said
this, he removed from us for the future the obligation to observe one place of
worship and introduced a more lofty and spiritual way of worship.
(11) These arguments would suffice to
establish that, for the future, there will be no sacrifice, no priesthood, no
king among the Jews. Above all, the destruction of the city has proved all
these points. But I could also bring forward the prophets as my witnesses, and
they distinctly said the same thing. But I see that you have become weary with
the length of my discourse; I am afraid that you may think I am foolish and
rash to keep annoying you. For this reason I promise that I will speak to you
on this same subject at another time.
(12) Meanwhile, I ask you to rescue
your brothers, to set them free from their error, and to bring them back to
the truth. There is no benefit in listening to me unless the example of your
deeds will match my words. What I said was not for your sakes but for the sake
of those who are sick. I want them to learn these facts from you and to free
themselves from their wicked association with the Jews. I want them then to
show themselves sincere and genuine Christians. I want them to shun the evil
gatherings of the Jews and their synagogues, both in the city and in the
suburbs, because these are robbers' dens and dwellings of demons?
(13) So then, do not neglect the
salvation of those brothers. Be meddlesome, be busybodies, but bring the sick
ones to Christ. In this way, we shall receive a far greater reward for our
good deeds both in the present life and in the life to come. And we shall
receive it by the grace and loving-kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, through
whom and with whom be glory to the Father together with the Holy Spirit, the
giver of life, now and forever, world without end. Amen.