Position Paper #3
The Destruction of the Jerusalem Temple
"There shall not be left here one stone upon another, that shall not
be thrown down...This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled"
(Mt.24:2, 34).
The scripture above is one of the great eye opening prophecies
of the Bible which, to my thinking, does not receive the kind of attention it should
in the spiritual life of the believer. When properly understood this scripture opens
the way to a deeper understanding of the Scriptures and ultimately affects the knowledge
of our relationship in God.
The temple that Jesus and the disciples were looking
at the day that Jesus made the statement cited above was a great wonder in the world
at that time. The stones that Jesus said would be "thrown down" during
the "generation" of the disciples were magnificent and massive,
the largest being about forty–six feet by fifteen feet by twenty-two feet and weighing
in at four hundred fifteen tons (Josephus, The Antiquities of the Jews, Book
15, Chapter 11, Paragraph 3, Line 392)! This was indeed a colossal prophecy made
by Jesus and must have been difficult for His disciples to comprehend, consequently,
they could not resist asking Jesus, "when shall these things be..."
(Mt.24:3). How and when was this temple reduced to nothing?
During the
time that Jesus of Nazareth was engaged in His earthly ministry (33 – 33 1/2 AD,
approximately), Rome was the dominant world power. Judea, at this time was ruled
by Roman procurators most of whom knew little or nothing about the Jewish religion
which resulted in continuous irritations to the Jews from the Romans. A group within
the city of Jerusalem, known as the Zealots, were active at this time. The Zealots
convinced the temple priests to discontinue the daily offerings for the emperor and
the empire which was basically a rebellion against Rome.
When Rome heard of
the uprising, she dispatched Roman military under the command of Cestius Gallus in
66 AD to put down the rebellion. After surrounding Jerusalem they began a siege of
the city, but, after a short time, for no apparent reason, Cestius withdrew his troops
and left in retreat. The Jews pursued the Romans killing many and capturing their
abandoned war machinery. This humiliating withdrawal by the Romans gave the Jews
a false sense of being unconquerable. In addition, it helped to create an atmosphere
of having "...Peace and safety..." (1 Thess.5:3), before the destruction
of the day of the Lord that was soon to suddenly come upon them (See also 1 Thess.5:3).
When
the news of Rome's defeat at the hand of the Jews reached the emperor Nero, he was
upset with the poor performance of Cestius. Nero dispatched Vespasian, a veteran
general, back to Jerusalem in 67 AD to crush the Jewish revolt and avenge Rome's
humiliation and the damage to its ruling prestige. Vespasian advanced into Galilee,
the region north of Jerusalem. He conquered its major cities and subdued the land.
After the Galilean campaign in the north he marched south and encamped around Jerusalem,
but when word came of Nero's death back in Rome, Vespasian abandoned his plan for
taking Jerusalem, withdrew his troops, and returned home to become Emperor. Once
again the Jews prevailed.
Shortly before Passover in April, 70 AD, Titus,
the son of Vespasian arrived at Jerusalem with his legions at the northern outskirts
to finally put an end to the Jewish revolt and crush the insurrection. He had marched
south through Galilee and set up three camps overlooking the city. Initial efforts
were made to persuade the Jews to surrender thereby preserving the city, but these
failed.
Titus then encircled the city to prevent help from reaching the Jews
and began his final siege. During this time those who attempted to flee were either
prevented from doing so, killed by the Jewish factions inside the city, or captured
by the Romans, tortured and crucified by the city wall so that all could see. An
embankment or rampart was constructed just as Jesus had foretold in Luke 19:43, 44.
Titus'
soldiers breached the third (outer) wall of Jerusalem on May 25th and captured the
newer portion of the city. By June the siege had progressed into the second wall
area and the Jewish people retreated behind that last wall that protected the city.
The Fortress of Antonia was taken by Titus on July 22nd followed by the Romans setting
fire to the gates of the temple. Against the desires of Titus, during the attack
a soldier threw a firebrand through a window into one of the temple side chambers
followed by a second firebrand being thrown into the Holy Place which set the sanctuary
ablaze. The Royal Portico was also consumed by fire killing about 6,000 people who
were seeking refuge there. All Jewish resistance had been quelled in the city on
September 26, 70 AD. For those who are interested in such details, the Works of
Josephus, War of the Jews, Book 6, will provide interesting reading. To read
about the reliability of the writings of Josephus, click on Learning
Activity 50.
According to Josephus, one point one million Jews were killed
in the attack on the city and 97,000 were taken into captivity. Over the next three
years the temple stones were dismantled and leveled to the ground which Josephus
describes as, "it was so thoroughly laid even with the ground by those that
dug it up to the foundation, that there was nothing to make those that came thither
believe it had ever been inhabited." Caesar gave orders to level everything
with the exception of what we can still see today. Part of the wall was left standing
to provide a camp for the soldiers and other parts to demonstrate to the world what
kind of city it had been that the Roman valor had subdued.
War of the Jews,
Book 7, Chapter 1
To totally describe the implications of this historic
event would require writing that far exceeds the intent of this position paper. I
do feel it necessary to list just a few items that should be "food for much
thought" in the mind of the Christian.
1. Josephus makes note that it
was God, himself, that was behind the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple: "...are
not both the city and the entire temple now full of dead bodies
of your countrymen?
It is God therefore, it is God himself who is bringing on this fire, to purge that
city and temple by means of the Romans, and is going to pluck up this city, which
is full of your pollutions." Wars of the Jews, Book 6, Chapter 2, Line
110
2. The above historical event is the fulfillment of the prophecy
given
by Jesus in Matthew 24:2, 34. A biblical "generation"
is defined
in the Scriptures as a period encompassing
approximately forty years a number
that is addressed in Learning Activity 34A. That "generation"
clearly fits the time period of 30 AD to 70 AD as we have
seen in this position
paper as the approximate time interval
between the prophecy and its fulfillment.
3.
If we can agree to date the writing of 1 Peter to be in the
early 60's AD, we
can see it was more than coincidental that
prior to the arrival of the first
Roman siege attempt that
Peter announced that judgment was about to begin at
the
house of God (1 Peter 4:17).
4. John, in writing 1 John 2:18, proclaims
twice in that verse that
"the last time [hour] had come. The word
translated "time"
in the KJV should be translated "hour."
5.
Even John the Baptist in 27 AD asked his generation in Luke
3:7 who had warned
them of the wrath that was to come?
6. Contrary to another 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 Iraqi army
invading from the north.
Rather, it was the Roman army of
the first century in all three campaigns that
came from the
north as it systematically marched south to the siege of the
city of Jerusalem!
It is our position that there is no need to sidestep or
try to explain away these passages of scripture as they are quite clear when considered
in the light of what took place in 70 AD!
Return to Home Page