LEARNING ACTIVITY #50
The Jewish Historian Josephus
Because I have used and quoted the Jewish historian Josephus a number of times
in the material on this web site, I thought it would be helpful to devote a brief
description of this man and the part he played in recording the history of the Jewish
people.
Flavius Josephus (AD 37–c.100) is the author of what has become for
Christianity perhaps the most significant extra-biblical writings of the first century.
His works are the principal source for the history of the Jews from the reign of
Antiochus Epiphanes (175–163 BC) to the fall of Masada in AD 73, and are of incomparable
value for determining what happened during the late inter-testamental and New Testament
time period.
Josephus, born the son of a priest, was a descendant of the Hasmoneans.
He was well educated and rose to a respected position in the Jewish community. After
a short association with the Essenes (the community believed to be responsible for
writing the Dead Sea Scrolls found by the shepherd boy in 1947), and a somewhat longer
period as a disciple of an ascetic hermit named Banus, he decided at the age of nineteen
to join the Pharisees. When he was twenty-six (AD 63) he traveled to Rome and successfully
pleaded for the release of some fellow priests who had been sent there to be tried
by Nero. As a result of that visit he returned to his homeland impressed by the power
of the Roman Empire and strongly opposed the Jewish revolt against Rome in AD 66,
being convinced of its ultimate futility and fearing the consequences for his nation.
Being
unable to restrain the rebellion, he reluctantly joined it and assumed a command
in Galilee where he fortified a number of cities, storing up provisions and training
his army in anticipation of the arrival of Vespasian and his forces. But Josephus
had no military experience and his men were no match for the Roman army. By the spring
of AD 67, Josephus and his army had been forced to retreat to the fortified city
of Jotapata where they held out for 47 days before hiding in a well for several days
before being captured. When Josephus was brought before Vespasian he managed to flatter
him into keeping him as an aide instead of sending him to Nero in Rome. During this
time Josephus became directly acquainted with and gained the favor of Vespasian but
was considered a traitor by his own people.
When Vespasian became emperor
in AD 69, Josephus was officially set free. He returned to Jerusalem with Titus,
Vespasian's son and future emperor, where he served the Roman commander as an interpreter
and mediator. Faced with the inevitability of the Roman forces' ultimate victory,
Josephus attempted to convince the Jews fighting for the city of Jerusalem to surrender
and thereby save the city. He was unsuccessful, and in AD 70 the city fell to the
Romans and was demolished. After the destruction of Jerusalem, Josephus returned
to Rome with Titus and settled there on an imperial pension of the emperor gaining
the rights of a Roman citizen and adopting the emperor's family name, Flavius, and
began his literary endeavors.
His first work, The War of the Jews, was
written to give a general history of the wars from the time of the Maccabees to the
great war with Rome which resulted in the final demise of the nation of Israel. Josephus'
eyewitness account of the last years of resistance and particularly of the destruction
of Jerusalem and the Temple by Titus are valuable to a proper understanding of those
events and how they interrelate with Jewish and Christian history. Josephus' other
major work and his longest, The Antiquities of the Jews, published some twenty
years later, was written primarily for the benefit of the non-Jewish world.
This work is a history of the Jewish nation from the earliest times (he begins with
an account of the biblical creation narrative) to Josephus' own time and was intended
to show that the Jews enjoyed an even greater antiquity than did the Greeks.
It
is impossible to overemphasize the contribution of Josephus to our understanding
of the social, political and religious milieu of the New Testament era. Archeological
discoveries at Qumran (the Essene community of the Dead Sea Scrolls) and Masada indicate
that the writing of Josephus is remarkably accurate.
Most of what we know
about the Jewish/Roman war is because of what Josephus has recorded. Even the great
church historian Eusebius, and many others, gained most of their information from
Josephus. His accounts are from an eye witness Jew and this makes his point of view
very valuable as he would not relate his recordings to favor the Christian viewpoint,
yet this is what happens by his accurate historical record. Since Josephus had so
many enemies in the Jewish nation who would have readily convicted him of any falsification,
had he been guilty of any, they certainly would have surfaced and been revealed in
history. No such critique has been found to exist.
Josephus was a writer who
neither favored Christianity nor his own nation, however we must marvel at the fact
that in spite of his bias he recorded much striking evidence which historically verifies
the prophesies contained in the Gospels and the book of Revelation.
Adam Clarke
(1715–1832) concerning Josephus writes that, "Every thing which our Lord foretold
should come on the temple, city, and people of the Jews, has been fulfilled in the
most correct and astonishing manner; and witnessed by a writer [Josephus] who was
present during the whole, who was himself a Jew, and is acknowledged to be an historian
of indisputable veracity in all those transactions which concern the destruction
of Jerusalem. Without having designed it, he [Josephus] has written a commentary
on our Lord's words, and shown how every detail was punctually fulfilled, though
he knew nothing of the Scripture which contained this remarkable prophecy."
Thomas Newton in his 1754 writing entitled, Dissertations on the Prophecies,
writes, "As a general in the wars [Josephus] must have had an exact knowledge
of all transactions, and as a Jewish priest he would not relate them with any favour
of partiality to the Christian cause. His history was approved by Vespasian and Titus
(who ordered it published) and by King Agrippa and many others, both Jews and Romans,
who were present in those wars. He designed nothing less, and yet as if he had designed
nothing more, his history of the Jewish wars may serve as a larger comment on our
Saviours prophecies of the destruction of Jerusalem" (Newton, Page 433).
Given
this brief historical background of the man Josephus and the material he recorded,
it is probable that most serious students of the Bible would have a copy of his material
on their bookshelf. Although it is not to be taken as the inspired word of God, the
works of Josephus are valuable tools in gaining insight and verification of many
historical aspects of the Scriptures, therefore, I will make use of statements made
by Josephus in the materials on this web site.
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