LEARNING ACTIVITY #44
The Church During the Destruction of Jerusalem
Part One
We have discovered from Learning Activities #32, #33, and #34, that Jerusalem
was destroyed in AD 70. The question might arise as to what happened to those believers
who were living in the city at that time?
By way of an introductory analogy,
let us suppose that you were living in a geographical area that was susceptible to
the path of hurricanes and that the weather service issued an alert that in twelve
hours a ferocious hurricane with devastating winds and flooding was headed into your
area. The severe weather advisory indicated you should evacuate your home and travel
out of the path of the hurricane immediately for your personal safety. I think the
majority, if not all people would leave the area immediately!
Let us now look
at some scripture that was uttered by our Lord Jesus Christ Himself to those He had
been ministering to before His death at Calvary.
1. Mark 13:1 __________________________________________________________________
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2.
What were the disciples of Jesus telling Him in the verse above? ___________________
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3.
Mark 13:2 ________________________________________________________________
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4.
What was Jesus' response to what the disciples had told Him about the Temple? ____________________________________________________________________________
5.
Mark 13:4 ________________________________________________________________
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6.
What did Peter, James, John and Andrew ask Jesus in the verse above? _____________
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Jesus
answered them by giving some specific signs they could look for.
7. Mark 13:5–6
(Note: This same passage appears in Matt.24:4–5). ___________________
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8.
What was the "sign" of the destruction of the Temple that Jesus gave in
the verse above? _____________________________________________________________________
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It
is a historical fact that under the procuratorship of Pontius Pilate, one such false
Christ appeared in Samaria and deluded great multitudes. In AD 45, another appeared
under the procuratorship of Cuspius Fadus. During the government of Felix (AD 53–60),
Josephus tells us the country was full of robbers, magicians, false prophets, and
impostors who deluded the people with promises of great events. This account is found
in The Antiquities of the Jews, Book 20, Chapter 8, Paragraphs 5–6.
9.
Mark 13:7 ________________________________________________________________
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10.
What sign did Jesus give in the verse above that would precede the destruction of
the Temple? ____________________________________________________________________
Early
in the decade of AD 60–69, skirmishes began to break out between the Jews and the
Romans. Wars and rumors of wars were rampant during that time period. In AD 66, Roman
armies commanded by Cestius Gallus came to put down a Jewish rebellion in the city
of Jerusalem. After surrounding the city, they began their siege. Then, for no apparent
reason, Cestius withdrew his troops and left. The Jews pursued the Romans slaughtering
many and capturing their abandoned war machinery. This withdrawal by the Romans gave
the Jews a false sense of security and an atmosphere of "peace and safety."
These same words were used by Paul in 1 Thessalonians 5:1–4 which was written
in about AD 50. Notice that Paul also says in verse four that "ye, brethren,
are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief." The
reason Paul can make that statement is because the "brethren" had
been instructed as to what the signs would be to warn them when the destruction was
coming. Paul also says this in verse one of the same passage, "But of the
time and the seasons, brethren, ye have no need that I write unto you." The
coming of the Lord and the destruction of Jerusalem would come as a thief to unbelievers,
but not to believers! The believers would remember "these things" that
Jesus had told them. Although Jesus would have ascended to the Father by that time,
He would send the Holy Spirit to bring "these things" to memory.
Dr.
John Gill, wrote in his work entitled, An Exposition of the New Testament, 1809,
"...it is remarked by several interpreters, and which Josephus takes notice
of with surprise, that Cestius Gallus having advanced with his army to Jerusalem,
and besieged it, on a sudden without any cause, raised the siege, and withdrew his
army, when the city might have been easily taken; by which means a signal was made,
and an opportunity given to the Christians, to make their escape: which they accordingly
did, and went over to Jordan, as Eusebius says, to a place called Pella; so that
when Titus came a few months after, there was not a Christian in the city..."
More on this later!
When the news of Rome's defeat at the hands of the Jews
reached Nero he was upset with Cestius' poor generalship. He ordered Vespasian, a
veteran general, back to Jerusalem in AD 67 to crush the Jewish uprising and to avenge
Rome's humiliation and the damage to its ruling prestige. Vespasian advanced into
Galilee, a region north of Jerusalem. He conquered its major cities and subdued the
land of that area. After his Galilean campaign in the north, he marched south and
encamped around Jerusalem. But when word came of Nero's death, Vespasian delayed
his plan for taking Jerusalem, withdrew his troops, and returned to Rome to become
Emperor. Again, the Jews prevailed and the church had additional time to leave the
city (if not already gone!).
Shortly before Passover in AD 70, Titus, the
son of Vespasian, arrived with his legions at the northern outskirts of Jerusalem
to finally put an end to the Jewish revolt and crush the insurrection. He marched
south through Galilee and set up three camps overlooking the city. During the final
siege, those who sought to flee were either prevented from doing so, killed by the
Jewish factions inside, or captured, tortured, and crucified by the Romans at the
city wall so that all could see. By this time it was too late to flee. All inside
the walls were entrapped by Titus and his Roman legions.
Josephus, a Jewish
historian, details how the Romans encircled and built an embankment or rampart to
breach the city walls, just as Jesus had foretold in Luke 19:43–44. Josephus further
notes that five hundred or more were captured daily and that soldiers out of rage
and hatred amused themselves by nailing their prisoners in different postures; so
great was their number, that space could not be found for the crosses nor crosses
for their bodies (The Wars of the Jews, Book five, Chapter eleven, 451). Josephus
goes on to say that 1.1 million Jews were killed in the city and 97,000 were taken
into captivity during the destruction of Jerusalem!
It is more than coincidental
that sometime around AD 63, and prior to the arrival of the first invasion, the Apostle
Peter made the following statement.
11. 1 Peter 4:17 ______________________________________________________________
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12.
What is Peter's message in the verse above? ___________________________________
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13.
1 John 2:18 (Note: The KJV has translated the Greek word "hora" as
"time" while it should be "hour"). ___________________________________________________________
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14.
In the verse above, what statement does John make twice? _______________________
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Even
John the Baptist in AD 27 warned his generation to flee from the coming wrath in
Luke 3:7. There is no need to side-step or try to explain away these passages. Nor
should we believe that we have been living in the "last hour" for almost
2,000 years as some in the church do. Also, contrary to another popular end-time
notion, the king or invader from the north spoken of in Daniel eleven and Ezekiel
thirty-eight and thirty-nine is not a modern-day Russian or an Iraqi army invading
from countries located directly north of Israel. Rather, it was the Roman army of
that first century. In all three campaigns against the Jews, the Roman army came
from the north and fought many battles as it systematically marched south. It is
both historically and prophetically significant that the Romans chose to invade from
the same direction from which Babylon invaded in 597 BC, just as Ezekiel and Daniel
had prophesied.
15. Mark 13:14 (Note: This passage also appears in Matt.24:15).
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16.
What was the "sign" of the destruction of the Temple that Jesus gave in
the verse above? _____________________________________________________________________
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Jesus
expected those to whom He was speaking to understand what He was talking about without
having to explain any details because most of them were schooled in Jewish history.
They knew that the last abomination of desolation that stood or took place was the
Temple desecration and temporary cessation of religious practices caused by Antiochus
Epiphanes in 167–164 BC.
Early in the decade of AD 60–69, an unqualified Jew
was appointed to the position of high priest. Prior to that time, nothing secular
or unholy was allowed in the Temple. This high priest and his staff of other priests
failed to properly perform the daily sacrifices and many other required Temple duties.
Instead, they made a mockery of the holy ordinances. In AD 66, priests and zealots
fought each other in the Temple courts. Josephus reports that the floors swam with
the blood of more than eight thousand who stabbed each other. Many more atrocities
(abominations) between the zealots and other Jewish factions occurred in the holy
place between AD 66–70. The final abomination that caused the final desolation was
similar to that of Antiochus Epiphanes. What happened before, happened again. It
came in the same way, when another foreign Gentile army, the Roman army, stood in
the Temple, and raised and honored its standards, as was the custom. Thereafter,
the Romans destroyed the Temple and tore it down stone-by-stone.
This material
will be continued in the next Learning Activity.
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