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<h3> CHAPTER 10. How Herod Sent His Sons To Rome; How Also He Was Accused By Zenodorus And The Gadarens, But Was Cleared Of What They Accused Him Of And Withal Gained To Himself The Good-Will Of Caesar. Concerning The Pharisees, The Essens And Manahem. </h3>
<p>1. When Herod was engaged in such matters, and when he had already
re-edified Sebaste, [Samaria,] he resolved to send his sons Alexander and
Aristobulus to Rome, to enjoy the company of Caesar; who, when they came
thither, lodged at the house of Pollio, <SPAN href="#link15note-19"
name="link15noteref-19" id="link15noteref-19"><small>19</small></SPAN> who
was very fond of Herod's friendship; and they had leave to lodge in
Caesar's own palace, for he received these sons of Herod with all
humanity, and gave Herod leave to give his, kingdom to which of his sons
he pleased; and besides all this, he bestowed on him Trachon, and Batanea,
and Auranitis, which he gave him on the occasion following: One Zenodorus
<SPAN href="#link15note-20" name="link15noteref-20" id="link15noteref-20"><small>20</small></SPAN>
had hired what was called the house of Lysanias, who, as he was not
satisfied with its revenues, became a partner with the robbers that
inhabited the Trachonites, and so procured himself a larger income; for
the inhabitants of those places lived in a mad way, and pillaged the
country of the Damascenes, while Zenodorus did not restrain them, but
partook of the prey they acquired. Now as the neighboring people were
hereby great sufferers, they complained to Varro, who was then president
[of Syria], and entreated him to write to Caesar about this injustice of
Zenodorus. When these matters were laid before Caesar, he wrote back to
Varro to destroy those nests of robbers, and to give the land to Herod,
that so by his care the neighboring countries might be no longer disturbed
with these doings of the Trachonites; for it was not an easy firing to
restrain them, since this way of robbery had been their usual practice,
and they had no other way to get their living, because they had neither
any city of their own, nor lands in their possession, but only some
receptacles and dens in the earth, and there they and their cattle lived
in common together. However, they had made contrivances to get pools of
water, and laid up corn in granaries for themselves, and were able to make
great resistance, by issuing out on the sudden against any that attacked
them; for the entrances of their caves were narrow, in which but one could
come in at a time, and the places within incredibly large, and made very
wide but the ground over their habitations was not very high, but rather
on a plain, while the rocks are altogether hard and difficult to be
entered upon, unless any one gets into the plain road by the guidance of
another, for these roads are not straight, but have several revolutions.
But when these men are hindered from their wicked preying upon their
neighbors, their custom is to prey one upon another, insomuch that no sort
of injustice comes amiss to them. But when Herod had received this grant
from Caesar, and was come into this country, he procured skillful guides,
and put a stop to their wicked robberies, and procured peace and quietness
to the neighboring people.</p>
<p>2. Hereupon Zenodorus was grieved, in the first place, because his
principality was taken away from him; and still more so, because he envied
Herod, who had gotten it; So he went up to Rome to accuse him, but
returned back again without success. Now Agrippa was [about this time]
sent to succeed Caesar in the government of the countries beyond the
Ionian Sea, upon whom Herod lighted when he was wintering about Mitylene,
for he had been his particular friend and companion, and then returned
into Judea again. However, some of the Gadarens came to Agrippa, and
accused Herod, whom he sent back bound to the king without giving them the
hearing. But still the Arabians, who of old bare ill-will to Herod's
government, were nettled, and at that time attempted to raise a sedition
in his dominions, and, as they thought, upon a more justifiable occasion;
for Zenodorus, despairing already of success as to his own affairs,
prevented [his enemies], by selling to those Arabians a part of his
principality, called Auranitis, for the value of fifty talents; but as
this was included in the donations of Caesar, they contested the point
with Herod, as unjustly deprived of what they had bought. Sometimes they
did this by making incursions upon him, and sometimes by attempting force
against him, and sometimes by going to law with him. Moreover, they
persuaded the poorer soldiers to help them, and were troublesome to him,
out of a constant hope that they should reduce the people to raise a
sedition; in which designs those that are in the most miserable
circumstances of life are still the most earnest; and although Herod had
been a great while apprized of these attempts, yet did not he indulge any
severity to them, but by rational methods aimed to mitigate things, as not
willing to give any handle for tumults.</p>
<p>3. Now when Herod had already reigned seventeen years, Caesar came into
Syria; at which time the greatest part of the inhabitants of Gadara
clamored against Herod, as one that was heavy in his injunctions, and
tyrannical. These reproaches they mainly ventured upon by the
encouragement of Zenodorus, who took his oath that he would never leave
Herod till he had procured that they should be severed from Herod's
kingdom, and joined to Caesar's province. The Gadarens were induced
hereby, and made no small cry against him, and that the more boldly,
because those that had been delivered up by Agrippa were not punished by
Herod, who let them go, and did them no harm; for indeed he was the
principal man in the world who appeared almost inexorable in punishing
crimes in his own family, but very generous in remitting the offenses that
were committed elsewhere. And while they accused Herod of injuries, and
plunderings, and subversions of temples, he stood unconcerned, and was
ready to make his defense. However, Caesar gave him his right hand, and
remitted nothing of his kindness to him, upon this disturbance by the
multitude; and indeed these things were alleged the first day, but the
hearing proceeded no further; for as the Gadarens saw the inclination of
Caesar and of his assessors, and expected, as they had reason to do, that
they should be delivered up to the king, some of them, out of a dread of
the torments they might undergo, cut their own throats in the night time,
and some of them threw themselves down precipices, and others of them cast
themselves into the river, and destroyed themselves of their own accord;
which accidents seemed a sufficient condemnation of the rashness and
crimes they had been guilty of; whereupon Caesar made no longer delay, but
cleared Herod from the crimes he was accused of. Another happy accident
there was, which was a further great advantage to Herod at this time; for
Zenodorus's belly burst, and a great quantity of blood issued from him in
his sickness, and he thereby departed this life at Antioch in Syria; so
Caesar bestowed his country, which was no small one, upon Herod; it lay
between Trachon and Galilee, and contained Ulatha, and Paneas, and the
country round about. He also made him one of the procurators of Syria, and
commanded that they should do every thing with his approbation; and, in
short, he arrived at that pitch of felicity, that whereas there were but
two men that governed the vast Roman empire, first Caesar, and then
Agrippa, who was his principal favorite, Caesar preferred no one to Herod
besides Agrippa, and Agrippa made no one his greater friend than Herod
besides Caesar. And when he had acquired such freedom, he begged of Caesar
a tetrarchy <SPAN href="#link15note-21" name="link15noteref-21" id="link15noteref-21"><small>21</small></SPAN> for his brother Pheroras,
while he did himself bestow upon him a revenue of a hundred talents out of
his own kingdom, that in case he came to any harm himself, his brother
might be in safety, and that his sons might not have dominion over him. So
when he had conducted Caesar to the sea, and was returned home, he built
him a most beautiful temple, of the whitest stone, in Zenodorus's country,
near the place called Panlure. This is a very fine cave in a mountain,
under which there is a great cavity in the earth, and the cavern is
abrupt, and prodigiously deep, and frill of a still water; over it hangs a
vast mountain; and under the caverns arise the springs of the river
Jordan. Herod adorned this place, which was already a very remarkable one,
still further by the erection of this temple, which he dedicated to
Caesar.</p>
<p>4. At which time Herod released to his subjects the third part of their
taxes, under pretense indeed of relieving them, after the dearth they had
had; but the main reason was, to recover their good-will, which he now
wanted; for they were uneasy at him, because of the innovations he had
introduced in their practices, of the dissolution of their religion, and
of the disuse of their own customs; and the people every where talked
against him, like those that were still more provoked and disturbed at his
procedure; against which discontents he greatly guarded himself, and took
away the opportunities they might have to disturb him, and enjoined them
to be always at work; nor did he permit the citizens either to meet
together, or to walk or eat together, but watched every thing they did,
and when any were caught, they were severely punished; and many there were
who were brought to the citadel Hyrcania, both openly and secretly, and
were there put to death; and there were spies set every where, both in the
city and in the roads, who watched those that met together; nay, it is
reported that he did not himself neglect this part of caution, but that he
would oftentimes himself take the habit of a private man, and mix among
the multitude, in the night time, and make trial what opinion they had of
his government: and as for those that could no way be reduced to acquiesce
under his scheme of government, he prosecuted them all manner of ways; but
for the rest of the multitude, he required that they should be obliged to
take an oath of fidelity to him, and at the same time compelled them to
swear that they would bear him good-will, and continue certainly so to do,
in his management of the government; and indeed a great part of them,
either to please him, or out of fear of him, yielded to what he required
of them; but for such as were of a more open and generous disposition, and
had indignation at the force he used to them, he by one means or other
made away, with them. He endeavored also to persuade Pollio the Pharisee,
and Satneas, and the greatest part of their scholars, to take the oath;
but these would neither submit so to do, nor were they punished together
with the rest, out of the reverence he bore to Pollio. The Essens also, as
we call a sect of ours, were excused from this imposition. These men live
the same kind of life as do those whom the Greeks call Pythagoreans,
concerning whom I shall discourse more fully elsewhere. However, it is but
fit to set down here the reasons wherefore Herod had these Essens in such
honor, and thought higher of them than their mortal nature required; nor
will this account be unsuitable to the nature of this history, as it will
show the opinion men had of these Essens.</p>
<p>5. Now there was one of these Essens, whose name was Manahem, who had this
testimony, that he not only conducted his life after an excellent manner,
but had the foreknowledge of future events given him by God also. This man
once saw Herod when he was a child, and going to school, and saluted him
as king of the Jews; but he, thinking that either he did not know him, or
that he was in jest, put him in mind that he was but a private man; but
Manahem smiled to himself, and clapped him on his backside with his hand,
and said, "However that be, thou wilt be king, and wilt begin thy reign
happily, for God finds thee worthy of it. And do thou remember the blows
that Manahem hath given thee, as being a signal of the change of thy
fortune. And truly this will be the best reasoning for thee, that thou
love justice [towards men], and piety towards God, and clemency towards
thy citizens; yet do I know how thy whole conduct will be, that thou wilt
not be such a one, for thou wilt excel all men in happiness, and obtain an
everlasting reputation, but wilt forget piety and righteousness; and these
crimes will not be concealed from God, at the conclusion of thy life, when
thou wilt find that he will be mindful of them, and punish time for them."
Now at that time Herod did not at all attend to what Manahem said, as
having no hopes of such advancement; but a little afterward, when he was
so fortunate as to be advanced to the dignity of king, and was in the
height of his dominion, he sent for Manahem, and asked him how long he
should reign. Manahem did not tell him the full length of his reign;
wherefore, upon that silence of his, he asked him further, whether he
should reign ten years or not? He replied, "Yes, twenty, nay, thirty
years;" but did not assign the just determinate limit of his reign. Herod
was satisfied with these replies, and gave Manahem his hand, and dismissed
him; and from that time he continued to honor all the Essens. We have
thought it proper to relate these facts to our readers, how strange soever
they be, and to declare what hath happened among us, because many of these
Essens have, by their excellent virtue, been thought worthy of this
knowledge of Divine revelations.</p>
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<h3> CHAPTER 11. How Herod Rebuilt The Temple And Raised It Higher And Made It More Magnificent Than It Was Before; As Also Concerning That Tower Which He Called Antonia. </h3>
<p>1. And now Herod, in the eighteenth year of his reign, and after the acts
already mentioned, undertook a very great work, that is, to build of
himself the temple of God, <SPAN href="#link15note-22" name="link15noteref-22" id="link15noteref-22"><small>22</small></SPAN> and make it larger in compass,
and to raise it to a most magnificent altitude, as esteeming it to be the
most glorious of all his actions, as it really was, to bring it to
perfection; and that this would be sufficient for an everlasting memorial
of him; but as he knew the multitude were not ready nor willing to assist
him in so vast a design, he thought to prepare them first by making a
speech to them, and then set about the work itself; so he called them
together, and spake thus to them: "I think I need not speak to you, my
countrymen, about such other works as I have done since I came to the
kingdom, although I may say they have been performed in such a manner as
to bring more security to you than glory to myself; for I have neither
been negligent in the most difficult times about what tended to ease your
necessities, nor have the buildings. I have made been so proper to
preserve me as yourselves from injuries; and I imagine that, with God's
assistance, I have advanced the nation of the Jews to a degree of
happiness which they never had before; and for the particular edifices
belonging to your own country, and your own cities, as also to those
cities that we have lately acquired, which we have erected and greatly
adorned, and thereby augmented the dignity of your nation, it seems to me
a needless task to enumerate them to you, since you well know them
yourselves; but as to that undertaking which I have a mind to set about at
present, and which will be a work of the greatest piety and excellence
that can possibly be undertaken by us, I will now declare it to you. Our
fathers, indeed, when they were returned from Babylon, built this temple
to God Almighty, yet does it want sixty cubits of its largeness in
altitude; for so much did that first temple which Solomon built exceed
this temple; nor let any one condemn our fathers for their negligence or
want of piety herein, for it was not their fault that the temple was no
higher; for they were Cyrus, and Darius the son of Hystaspes, who
determined the measures for its rebuilding; and it hath been by reason of
the subjection of those fathers of ours to them and to their posterity,
and after them to the Macedonians, that they had not the opportunity to
follow the original model of this pious edifice, nor could raise it to its
ancient altitude; but since I am now, by God's will, your governor, and I
have had peace a long time, and have gained great riches and large
revenues, and, what is the principal filing of all, I am at amity with and
well regarded by the Romans, who, if I may so say, are the rulers of the
whole world, I will do my endeavor to correct that imperfection, which
hath arisen from the necessity of our affairs, and the slavery we have
been under formerly, and to make a thankful return, after the most pious
manner, to God, for what blessings I have received from him, by giving me
this kingdom, and that by rendering his temple as complete as I am able."</p>
<p>2. And this was the speech which Herod made to them; but still this speech
aftrighted many of the people, as being unexpected by them; and because it
seemed incredible, it did not encourage them, but put a damp upon them,
for they were afraid that he would pull down the whole edifice, and not be
able to bring his intentions to perfection for its rebuilding; and this
danger appeared to them to be very great, and the vastness of the
undertaking to be such as could hardly be accomplished. But while they
were in this disposition, the king encouraged them, and told them he would
not pull down their temple till all things were gotten ready for building
it up entirely again. And as he promised them this beforehand, so he did
not break his word with them, but got ready a thousand waggons, that were
to bring stones for the building, and chose out ten thousand of the most
skillful workmen, and bought a thousand sacerdotal garments for as many of
the priests, and had some of them taught the arts of stone-cutters, and
others of carpenters, and then began to build; but this not till every
thing was well prepared for the work.</p>
<p>3. So Herod took away the old foundations, and laid others, and erected
the temple upon them, being in length a hundred cubits, and in height
twenty additional cubits, which [twenty], upon the sinking of their
foundations <SPAN href="#link15note-23" name="link15noteref-23" id="link15noteref-23"><small>23</small></SPAN> fell down; and this part it
was that we resolved to raise again in the days of Nero. Now the temple
was built of stones that were white and strong, and each of their length
was twenty-five cubits, their height was eight, and their breadth about
twelve; and the whole structure, as also the structure of the royal
cloister, was on each side much lower, but the middle was much higher,
till they were visible to those that dwelt in the country for a great many
furlongs, but chiefly to such as lived over against them, and those that
approached to them. The temple had doors also at the entrance, and lintels
over them, of the same height with the temple itself. They were adorned
with embroidered veils, with their flowers of purple, and pillars
interwoven; and over these, but under the crown-work, was spread out a
golden vine, with its branches hanging down from a great height, the
largeness and fine workmanship of which was a surprising sight to the
spectators, to see what vast materials there were, and with what great
skill the workmanship was done. He also encompassed the entire temple with
very large cloisters, contriving them to be in a due proportion thereto;
and he laid out larger sums of money upon them than had been done before
him, till it seemed that no one else had so greatly adorned the temple as
he had done. There was a large wall to both the cloisters, which wall was
itself the most prodigious work that was ever heard of by man. The hill
was a rocky ascent, that declined by degrees towards the east parts of the
city, till it came to an elevated level. This hill it was which Solomon,
who was the first of our kings, by Divine revelation, encompassed with a
wall; it was of excellent workmanship upwards, and round the top of it. He
also built a wall below, beginning at the bottom, which was encompassed by
a deep valley; and at the south side he laid rocks together, and bound
them one to another with lead, and included some of the inner parts, till
it proceeded to a great height, and till both the largeness of the square
edifice and its altitude were immense, and till the vastness of the stones
in the front were plainly visible on the outside, yet so that the inward
parts were fastened together with iron, and preserved the joints immovable
for all future times. When this work [for the foundation] was done in this
manner, and joined together as part of the hill itself to the very top of
it, he wrought it all into one outward surface, and filled up the hollow
places which were about the wall, and made it a level on the external
upper surface, and a smooth level also. This hill was walled all round,
and in compass four furlongs, [the distance of] each angle containing in
length a furlong: but within this wall, and on the very top of all, there
ran another wall of stone also, having, on the east quarter, a double
cloister, of the same length with the wall; in the midst of which was the
temple itself. This cloister looked to the gates of the temple; and it had
been adorned by many kings in former times; and round about the entire
temple were fixed the spoils taken from barbarous nations; all these had
been dedicated to the temple by Herod, with the addition of those he had
taken from the Arabians.</p>
<p>4. Now on the north side [of the temple] was built a citadel, whose walls
were square, and strong, and of extraordinary firmness. This citadel was
built by the kings of the Asamonean race, who were also high priests
before Herod, and they called it the Tower, in which were reposited the
vestments of the high priest, which the high priest only put on at the
time when he was to offer sacrifice. These vestments king Herod kept in
that place; and after his death they were under the power of the Romans,
until the time of Tiberius Caesar; under whose reign Vitellius, the
president of Syria, when he once came to Jerusalem, and had been most
magnificently received by the multitude, he had a mind to make them some
requital for the kindness they had shewn him; so, upon their petition to
have those holy vestments in their own power, he wrote about them to
Tiberius Caesar, who granted his request: and this their power over the
sacerdotal vestments continued with the Jews till the death of king
Agrippa; but after that, Cassius Longinus, who was president of Syria, and
Cuspius Fadus, who was procurator of Judea, enjoined the Jews to reposit
those vestments in the tower of Antonia, for that they ought to have them
in their power, as they formerly had. However, the Jews sent ambassadors
to Claudius Caesar, to intercede with him for them; upon whose coming,
king Agrippa, junior, being then at Rome, asked for and obtained the power
over them from the emperor, who gave command to Vitellius, who was then
commander in Syria, to give it them accordingly. Before that time they
were kept under the seal of the high priest, and of the treasurers of the
temple; which treasurers, the day before a festival, went up to the Roman
captain of the temple guards, and viewed their own seal, and received the
vestments; and again, when the festival was over, they brought it to the
same place, and showed the captain of the temple guards their seal, which
corresponded with his seal, and reposited them there. And that these
things were so, the afflictions that happened to us afterwards [about
them] are sufficient evidence. But for the tower itself, when Herod the
king of the Jews had fortified it more firmly than before, in order to
secure and guard the temple, he gratified Antonius, who was his friend,
and the Roman ruler, and then gave it the name of the Tower of Antonia.</p>
<p>5. Now in the western quarters of the enclosure of the temple there were
four gates; the first led to the king's palace, and went to a passage over
the intermediate valley; two more led to the suburbs of the city; and the
last led to the other city, where the road descended down into the valley
by a great number of steps, and thence up again by the ascent for the city
lay over against the temple in the manner of a theater, and was
encompassed with a deep valley along the entire south quarter; but the
fourth front of the temple, which was southward, had indeed itself gates
in its middle, as also it had the royal cloisters, with three walks, which
reached in length from the east valley unto that on the west, for it was
impossible it should reach any farther: and this cloister deserves to be
mentioned better than any other under the sun; for while the valley was
very deep, and its bottom could not be seen, if you looked from above into
the depth, this further vastly high elevation of the cloister stood upon
that height, insomuch that if any one looked down from the top of the
battlements, or down both those altitudes, he would be giddy, while his
sight could not reach to such an immense depth. This cloister had pillars
that stood in four rows one over against the other all along, for the
fourth row was interwoven into the wall, which [also was built of stone];
and the thickness of each pillar was such, that three men might, with
their arms extended, fathom it round, and join their hands again, while
its length was twenty-seven feet, with a double spiral at its basis; and
the number of all the pillars [in that court] was a hundred and sixty-two.
Their chapiters were made with sculptures after the Corinthian order, and
caused an amazement [to the spectators], by reason of the grandeur of the
whole. These four rows of pillars included three intervals for walking in
the middle of this cloister; two of which walks were made parallel to each
other, and were contrived after the same manner; the breadth of each of
them was thirty feet, the length was a furlong, and the height fifty feet;
but the breadth of the middle part of the cloister was one and a half of
the other, and the height was double, for it was much higher than those on
each side; but the roofs were adorned with deep sculptures in wood,
representing many sorts of figures. The middle was much higher than the
rest, and the wall of the front was adorned with beams, resting upon
pillars, that were interwoven into it, and that front was all of polished
stone, insomuch that its fineness, to such as had not seen it, was
incredible, and to such as had seen it, was greatly amazing. Thus was the
first enclosure. In the midst of which, and not far from it, was the
second, to be gone up to by a few steps: this was encompassed by a stone
wall for a partition, with an inscription, which forbade any foreigner to
go in under pain of death. Now this inner enclosure had on its southern
and northern quarters three gates [equally] distant one from another; but
on the east quarter, towards the sun-rising, there was one large gate,
through which such as were pure came in, together with their wives; but
the temple further inward in that gate was not allowed to the women; but
still more inward was there a third [court of the] temple, whereinto it
was not lawful for any but the priests alone to enter. The temple itself
was within this; and before that temple was the altar, upon which we offer
our sacrifices and burnt-offerings to God. Into none of these three did
king Herod enter, <SPAN href="#link15note-24" name="link15noteref-24" id="link15noteref-24"><small>24</small></SPAN> for he was forbidden, because
he was not a priest. However, he took care of the cloisters and the outer
enclosures, and these he built in eight years.</p>
<p>6. But the temple itself was built by the priests in a year and six
months; upon which all the people were full of joy; and presently they
returned thanks, in the first place, to God; and in the next place, for
the alacrity the king had showed. They feasted and celebrated this
rebuilding of the temple: and for the king, he sacrificed three hundred
oxen to God, as did the rest every one according to his ability; the
number of which sacrifices is not possible to set down, for it cannot be
that we should truly relate it; for at the same time with this celebration
for the work about the temple fell also the day of the king's
inauguration, which he kept of an old custom as a festival, and it now
coincided with the other, which coincidence of them both made the festival
most illustrious.</p>
<p>7. There was also an occult passage built for the king; it led from
Antonia to the inner temple, at its eastern gate; over which he also
erected for himself a tower, that he might have the opportunity of a
subterraneous ascent to the temple, in order to guard against any sedition
which might be made by the people against their kings. It is also
reported, <SPAN href="#link15note-25" name="link15noteref-25" id="link15noteref-25"><small>25</small></SPAN> that during the time that the
temple was building, it did not rain in the daytime, but that the showers
fell in the nights, so that the work was not hindered. And this our
fathers have delivered to us; nor is it incredible, if any one have regard
to the manifestations of God. And thus was performed the work of the
rebuilding of the temple.</p>
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<h3> FOOTNOTES: </h3>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-1" id="link15note-1">
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<p class="foot">
1 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-1">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The city here called
"Babylon" by Josephus, seems to be one which was built by some of the
Seleucidae upon the Tigris, which long after the utter desolation of old
Babylon was commonly so called, and I suppose not far from Seleueia; just
as the latter adjoining city Bagdat has been and is often called by the
same old name of Babylon till this very day.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-2" id="link15note-2">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
2 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-2">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Here we have an eminent
example of Herod's worldly and profane politics, when by the abuse of his
unlawful and usurped power, to make whom he pleased high priest, in the
person of Ananelus, he occasioned such disturbances in his kingdom, and in
his own family, as suffered him to enjoy no lasting peace or tranquillity
ever afterward; and such is frequently the effect of profane court
politics about matters of religion in other ages and nations. The Old
Testament is full of the miseries of the people of the Jews derived from
such court politics, especially in and after the days of Jeroboam the son
of Nebat, "who made Israel to sin;" who gave the most pernicious example
of it; who brought on the grossest corruption of religion by it; and the
punishment of whose family for it was most remarkable. The case is too
well known to stand in need of particular citations.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-3" id="link15note-3">
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<p class="foot">
3 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-3">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Of this wicked Dellius,
see the note on the War, B. I. ch. 15. sect. 3.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-4" id="link15note-4">
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<p class="foot">
4 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-4">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ When Josephus says here
that this Ananelus, the new high priest, was "of the stock of the high
priests," and since he had been just telling us that he was a priest of an
obscure family or character, ch. 2. sect. 4, it is not at all probable
that he could so soon say that he was "of the stock of the high priests."
However, Josephus here makes a remarkable observation, that this Ananelus
was the third that was ever unjustly and wickedly turned out of the high
priesthood by the civil power, no king or governor having ventured to do
so, that Josephus knew of, but that heathen tyrant and persecutor
Antiochus Epiphanes; that barbarous parricide Aristobulus, the first that
took royal authority among the Maccabees; and this tyrant king Herod the
Great, although afterward that infamous practice became frequent, till the
very destruction of Jerusalem, when the office of high priesthood was at
an end.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-5" id="link15note-5">
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<p class="foot">
5 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-5">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This entirely confutes
the Talmudists, who pretend that no one under twenty years of age could
officiate as high priest among the Jews.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-6" id="link15note-6">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
6 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-6">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ A Hebrew chronicle, cited
by Reland, says this drowning was at Jordan, not at Jericho, and this even
when he quote Josephus. I suspect the transcriber of the Hebrew chronicle
mistook the name, and wrote Jordan for Jericho.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-7" id="link15note-7">
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<p class="foot">
7 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-7">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The reading of one of
Josephus's Greek MSS. seems here to be right, that Aristobulus was "not
eighteen years old" when he was drowned, for he was not seventeen when he
was made high priest, ch. 2. sect. 6, ch. 3. sect. 3, and he continued in
that office but one year, as in the place before us.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-8" id="link15note-8">
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<p class="foot">
8 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-8">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The reader is here to
take notice, that this seventh year of the reign of Herod, and all the
other years of his reign, in Josephus, are dated from the death of
Antigonus, or at the soonest from the conclusion of Antigonus, and the
taking of Jerusalem a few months before, and never from his first
obtaining the kingdom at Rome, above three years before, as some have very
weakly and injudiciously done.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-9" id="link15note-9">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
9 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-9">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Herod says here, that as
ambassadors were sacred when they carried messages to others, so did the
laws of the Jews derive a sacred authority by being delivered from God by
angels, [or Divine ambassadors,] which is St. Paul's expression about the
same laws, Galatians 3:19; Hebrews 2;2.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-10" id="link15note-10">
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<p class="foot">
10 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-10">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This piece of religion,
the supplicating God with sacrifices, by Herod, before he went to this
fight with the Arabians, taken notice of also in the first book of the
War, ch. 19. sect. 5, is worth remarking, because it is the only example
of this nature, so far as I remember, that Josephus ever mentions in all
his large and particular accounts of this Herod; and it was when he had
been in mighty distress, and discouraged by a great defeat of his former
army, and by a very great earthquake in Judea, such times of affliction
making men most religious; nor was he disappointed of his hopes here, but
immediately gained a most signal victory over the Arabians, while they who
just before had been so great victors, and so much elevated upon the
earthquake in Judea as to venture to slay the Jewish ambassadors, were now
under a strange consternation, and hardly able to fight at all.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-11" id="link15note-11">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
11 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-11">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Whereas Mariamne is
here represented as reproaching: Herod with the murder of her father
[Alexander], as well as her brother [Aristobulus], while it was her
grandfather Hyrcanus, and not her father Alexander, whom he caused to be
slain, [as Josephus himself informs us, ch. 6. sect. 2,] we must either
take Zonaras's reading, which is here grandfather, rightly, or else we
must, as before, ch. 1. sect. 1, allow a slip of Josephus's pen or memory
in the place before us.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-12" id="link15note-12">
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<p class="foot">
12 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-12">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Here is a plain example
of a Jewish lady giving a bill of divorce to her husband, though in the
days of Josephus it was not esteemed lawful for a woman so to do. See the
like among the Parthians, Antiq. B. XVIII. ch. 9. sect. 6. However, the
Christian law, when it allowed divorce for adultery, Matthew 5:32, allowed
the innocent wife to divorce her guilty husband, as well as the innocent
husband to divorce his guilty wife, as we learn from the shepherd of
Hermas, Mand. B. IV., and from: the second apology of Justin Martyr, where
a persecution was brought upon the Christians upon such a divorce; and I
think the Roman laws permitted it at that time, as well as the laws of
Christianity. Now this Babas, who was one of the race of the Asamoneans or
Maccabees, as the latter end of this section informs us, is related by the
Jews, as Dr. Hudson here remarks, to have been so eminently religious in
the Jewish way, that, except the day following the tenth of Tisri, the
great day of atonement, when he seems to have supposed all his sins
entirely forgiven, he used every day of the whole year to offer a
sacrifice for his sins of ignorance, or such as he supposed he had been
guilty of, but did not distinctly remember. See somewhat like it of
Agrippa the Great, Antiq. B. XIX. ch. 3. sect. 3, and Job 1:4, 5.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-13" id="link15note-13">
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<p class="foot">
13 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-13">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These grand plays, and
shows, and Thymelici, or music meetings, and chariot races, when the
chariots were drawn by two, three, or four pair of horses, etc.,
instituted by Herod in his theatres, were still, as we see here, looked on
by the sober Jews as heathenish sports, and tending to corrupt the manners
of the Jewish nation, and to bring them in love with paganish idolatry,
and paganish conduct of life, but to the dissolution of the law of Moses,
and accordingly were greatly and justly condemned by them, as appears here
and every where else in Josephus. Nor is the case of our modern
masquerades, plays, operas, and the like "pomps and vanities of this
wicked world," of any better tendency under Christianity.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-14" id="link15note-14">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
14 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-14">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Here we have an eminent
example of the language of Josephus in his writing to Gentiles, different
from that when he wrote to Jews; in his writing to whom he still derives
all such judgments from the anger of God; but because he knew many of the
Gentiles thought they might naturally come in certain periods, he complies
with them in the following sentence. See the note on the War. B. I. ch.
33. sect. 2.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-15" id="link15note-15">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
15 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-15">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This famine for two
years that affected Judea and Syria, the thirteenth mid fourteenth years
of Herod, which are the twenty-third and twenty-fourth years before the
Christian era, seems to have been more terrible during this time than was
that in the days of Jacob, Genesis 41., 42. And what makes the comparison
the more remarkable is this, that now, as well as then, the relief they
had was from Egypt also; then from Joseph the governor of Egypt, under
Pharaoh king of Egypt; and now from Petronius the prefect of Egypt, under
Augustus the Roman emperor. See almost the like case, Antiq. B. XX. ch. 2.
sect. 6. It is also well worth our observation here, that these two years
were a Sabbatic year, and a year of jubilee, for which Providence, during
the theocracy, used to provide a triple crop beforehand; but became now,
when the Jews had forfeited that blessing, the greatest years of famine to
them ever since the days of Ahab, 1 Kings 17., 18.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-16" id="link15note-16">
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<p class="foot">
16 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-16">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This Aelius Gallus
seems to be no other than that Aelius Lagus whom Dio speaks of as
conducting an expedition that was about this time made into Arabia Felix,
according to Betarius, who is here cited by Spanheim. See a full account
of this expedition in Prideaux, at the years 23 and 24.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-17" id="link15note-17">
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<p class="foot">
17 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-17">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ One may here take
notice, that how tyrannical and extravagant soever Herod were in himself,
and in his Grecian cities, as to those plays, and shows, and temples for
idolatry, mentioned above, ch. 8. sect. 1, and here also; yet durst even
he introduce very few of them into the cities of the Jews, who, as
Josephus here notes, would not even then have borne them, so zealous were
they still for many of the laws of Moses, even under so tyrannical a
government as this was of Herod the Great; which tyrannical government
puts me naturally in mind of Dean Prideaux's honest reflection upon the
like ambition after such tyrannical power in Pompey and Caesar: "One of
these [says he, at the year 60: could not bear an equal, nor the other a
superior; and through this ambitions humor and thirst after more power in
these two men, the whole Roman empire being divided into two opposite
factions, there was produced hereby the most destructive war that ever
afflicted it; and the like folly too much reigns in all other places.
Could about thirty men be persuaded to live at home in peace, without
enterprising upon the rights of each other, for the vain glory of
conquest, and the enlargement of power, the whole world might be at quiet;
but their ambition, their follies, and their humor, leading them
constantly to encroach upon and quarrel with each other, they involve all
that are under them in the mischiefs thereof; and many thousands are they
which yearly perish by it; so that it may almost raise a doubt, whether
the benefit which the world receives from government be sufficient to make
amends for the calamities which it suffers from the follies, mistakes, and
real-administrations of those that manage it."]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-18" id="link15note-18">
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<p class="foot">
18 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-18">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Cesarea being here said
to be rebuilt and adorned in twelve years, and soon afterwards in ten
years, Antiq. B. XVI. ch. 5. sect. 1, there must be a mistake in one of
the places as to the true number, but in which of them it is hard
positively to determine.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-19" id="link15note-19">
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<p class="foot">
19 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-19">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This Pollio, with whom
Herod's sons lived at Rome, was not Pollio the Pharisee, already mentioned
by Josephus, ch. 1. sect. 1, and again presently after this, ch. 10. sect.
4; but Asinine Pollo, the Roman, as Spanheim here observes.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-20" id="link15note-20">
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<p class="foot">
20 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-20">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The character of this
Zenodorus is so like that of a famous robber of the same name in Strabo,
and that about this very country, and about this very time also, that I
think Dr. Hudson hardly needed to have put a overlaps to his determination
that they were the same.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-21" id="link15note-21">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
21 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-21">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ A tetrarchy properly
and originally denoted the fourth part of an entire kingdom or country,
and a tetrarch one that was ruler of such a fourth part, which always
implies somewhat less extent of dominion and power than belong to a
kingdom and to a king.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-22" id="link15note-22">
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<p class="foot">
22 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-22">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ We may here observe,
that the fancy of the modern Jews, in calling this temple, which was
really the third of their temples, the second temple, followed so long by
later Christians, seems to be without any solid foundation. The reason why
the Christians here followed the Jews is, because of the prophecy of
Haggai, 2:6-9, which they expound of the Messiah's coning to the second or
Zorobabel's temple, of which they suppose this of Herod to be only a
continuation; which is meant, I think, of his coming to the fourth and
last temple, of that future, largest, and most glorious one, described by
Ezekiel; whence I take the former notion, how general soever, to be a
great mistake. See Lit. Accorap. of Proph. p. 2.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-23" id="link15note-23">
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<p class="foot">
23 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-23">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Some of our modern
students in architecture have made a strange blunder here, when they
imagine that Josephus affirms the entire foundations of the temple or holy
house sunk down into the rocky mountain on which it stood no less than
twenty cubits, whereas he is clear that they were the foundations of the
additional twenty cubits only above the hundred [made perhaps weak on
purpose, and only for show and grandeur] that sunk or fell down, as Dr.
Hudson rightly understands him; nor is the thing itself possible in the
other sense. Agrippa's preparation for building the inner parts of the
temple twenty cubits higher [History of the War, B. V. ch. 1. sect. 5:
must in all probability refer to this matter, since Josephus says here,
that this which had fallen down was designed to be raised up again under
Nero, under whom Agrippa made that preparation. But what Josephus says
presently, that Solomon was the first king of the Jews, appears by the
parallel place, Antiq. B. XX. ch. 9. sect. 7, and other places, to be
meant only the first of David's posterity, and the first builder of the
temple.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-24" id="link15note-24">
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<p class="foot">
24 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-24">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ "Into none Of these
three did king Herod enter," i.e. 1. Not into the court of the priests; 2.
Nor into the holy house itself; 3. Nor into the separate place belonging
to the altar, as the words following imply; for none but priests, or their
attendants the Levites, might come into any of them. See Antiq. B. XVI.
ch. 4. sect. 6, when Herod goes into the temple, and makes a speech in it
to the people, but that could only be into the court of Israel, whither
the people could come to hear him.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link15note-25" id="link15note-25">
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<p class="foot">
25 (<SPAN href="#link15noteref-25">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This tradition which
Josephus here mentions, as delivered down from fathers to their children,
of this particular remarkable circumstance relating to the building of
Herod's temple, is a demonstration that such its building was a known
thing in Judea at this time. He was born about forty-six years after it is
related to have been finished, and might himself have seen and spoken with
some of the builders themselves, and with a great number of those that had
seen it building. The doubt therefore about the truth of this history of
the pulling down and rebuilding this temple by Herod, which some weak
people have indulged, was not then much greater than it soon may be,
whether or not our St. Paul's church in London was burnt down in the fire
of London, A.D. 1666, and rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren a little
afterward.]</p>
<p><br/></p>
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