View of the Hebrews
(1825 edition)

By Ethan Smith
Chapter 1b
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To add to the horrid calamities of the times occasioned by the
bloody factions, Judea was infested by bands of robbers and murderers, plundering their
towns and cutting in pieces such as made any resistance, whether men, women or children.
Here were exhibited the most horrid pictures of what fallen man is capable of perpetuating
when restraints are taken off; that they would turn their own towns and societies into
scenes of horror like kennels of mad animals.
One Simon became commander of these factions; John of
another. Simon entered Jerusalem at the head of forty thousand banditti. A third faction
rose: and discord blazed with terrific fury. The three factions were intoxicated with rage
and desperation, and went on slaying and trampling on piles of the dead, with an
indescribable fury. People coming to the temple to worship, were murdered, both natives
and foreigners. Their bodies lay in piles, and a collection of blood defiled the sacred
courts.
John of Gischala, head of a faction, burned a store of
provisions. Simon, at the head of another faction, burned another. Thus the Jews were
weakening and destroying themselves, and preparing the way for "wrath to come upon
them to the uttermost."
In the midst of these most dismal events, an alarm was
made that a Roman army was approaching the city! Vespasian becoming emperor, and learning
the factious and horrid state of the Jews, determined to prosecute the war against them,
and sent his son Titus to reduce Jerusalem and Judea. The Jews, on hearing of the approach
of the Roman army, were petrified with horror. They could have no hope of peace. They had
no means of flight. They had no time for counsel. They had no confidence in each other.
What could be done? Several things they possessed in abundance. They had a measure of
iniquity filled up; a full ripeness for destruction. All seemed wild disorder and despair.
Nothing could be imagined but the confused noise of the warrior, and garments rolled in
blood. They knew nothing was their due from the Romans, but exemplary vengeance. The
ceaseless cry of combatants, and the horrors of faction, had induced some to desire the
intervention of a foreign foe to give them deliverance from their domestic horrors. Such
was the state of Jerusalem when Titus appeared before it with a besieging army. But he
came not to deliver it from its excruciating tortures; but to execute upon it divine
vengeance; to fulfil the fatal predictions of our Lord Jesus Christ, that "when ye
see the abomination of desolation standing in the holy place--when ye see Jerusalem
compassed
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about with armies,--then know that the
desolation thereof is nigh." "Wheresoever the carcass is, there shall the eagles
be gathered together." Jerusalem was now the carcass to be devoured; the Roman eagles
had arrived to tear it as their prey.
The day on which Titus had encompassed
Jerusalem, was the feast of the passover. Here let it be remembered, that it was the time
of this feast, (on a preceeding occasion) that Christ was taken, condemned and executed.
It was at the time of this feast, that the heifer, in the
hands of the sacrificing priests, brought forth a lamb. And just after this feast
at another time, that the miraculous besieging armies were seen over Jerusalem, just
before sunset. And now at the time of the passover, the antitype of this prodigy appears
in the besieging army of Titus. Multitudes of Jews had convened at Jerusalem from
surrounding nations to celebrate this feast. Ah, miserable people,--going with intent to
feed on the paschal lamb; but really to their own final slaughter, for rejecting "the
Lamb of God who taketh away the sins of the world!" The Jews had imprecated the blood
of the true Paschal Lamb, (by them wantonly shed) on themselves and on their children. God
was now going in a signal manner to take them at their word. He hence providentially
collected their nation, under sentence of death, as into a great prison, for the day of
execution. And as their execution of Christ was signal, low, degrading,--the death of the
cross; so their execution should be signal and dreadful. The falling city was now crowded
with little short of two millions of that devoted people. The event came suddenly and
unexpectedly to the Jews, as the coming of a thief, and almost like lightning. Josephus
notes this; and thus without design, shows the fulfillment of these hints of Christ, that
his coming should be like a thief in the night, and like lightning shining under the whole
heavens.
The furious contending factions of the Jews,
on finding themselves environed with the Roman armies, laid aside (for the moment) their
party contentions, sallied out, rushed furiously on their common foe, and came near
utterly destroying the tenth legion of the Roman army. This panic among the Romans
occasioned a short suspension of hostilities. Some new confidence hence inspired the hopes
of the Jews; and they now determined to defend their city. But being a little released
from their terrors of the Romans, their factious resentments again rekindled, and broke
out in great fury. The faction under Elezer was swallowed up in the other two, under John
and Simon. Slaughter; conflagration and plunder ensued. A portion of the centre of the
city
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was burned, and the inhabitants became as prisoners to
the two furious parties. The Romans here saw their own proverb verified: "Quos Deus
vult perdere prius dementat." "Whom God will destroy, he gives up to
madness."
The invading armies knew how to profit by the madness
of the Jews. They were soon found by the Jews to have possession of the two outer walls of
their city. This alarm reached the heart of the factions, and once more united them
against the common enemy. But they had already proceeded too far to retreat from the
effects of their madness. Famine, with its ghastly horrors, stared them in the face. It
had (as might be expected) been making a silent approach; and some of the more obscure had
already fallen before it. But even this did not annihilate the fury of faction, which
again returned with redoubled fury, and presented new scenes of wo. As the famine
increased, the sufferers would snatch bread from each other's mouths, and devour their
grain unprepared. To discover handfuls of food, tortures were inflicted. Food was
violently taken by husbands from wives, and wives from husbands; and even by mothers from
their famishing infants. The breast itself was robbed from the famishing suckling, as our
Lord denounced: "Wo to them that give suck in those days."
This terror produced a new scene of righteous
retribution. Multitudes of the Jews were forced by hunger to flee to the enemy's camp.
Here instead of pitying and relieving them, the Romans cut off the hands of many, and sent
them back; but most of them they crucified as fast as they could lay their hands on them;
till wood was wanting for crosses, and space on which to erect them! Behold here thousands
of those despairing Jews suspended on crosses round the walls of Jerusalem! Verily
"the Lord is known by the judgements that he executeth!" Yea, this did not
suffice. Behold two thousand Jews, who had fled to the mercy of their invaders, ripped
open alive (two thousand in one night!) by Arabs and Syrians in the Roman armies, in hopes
of finding gold, which these Jews had (or their enemies fancied they had) swallowed
to carry off with them!
Titus being a merciful general, was touched to the
heart at the miseries of the Jews; and in person he tenderly entreated the besieged to
surrender. But all the answer he obtained for his tenderness was base revilings. He now
resolved to make thorough work with this obstinate people; and hence surrounded the city
with a circumvallation of thirty nine furlongs in length, strengthened with thirteen
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towers. This, by the astonishing activity of the
soldiers, was effected in three days. Then was fulfilled this prediction of our blessed
Lord; " Thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and keep thee in on every
side."
As the city was now cut off from all possible supplies,
famine became more dreadful. Whole families fell a sacrifice to it; and the dead bodies of
women, children, and the aged, were seen covering roofs of houses, and various recesses.
Youth and the middle aged appeared like spectres; and fell many of them dead in public
places. The dead became too numerous to be interred. Many died while attempting to perform
this office. So great and awful became the calamities, that lamentation ceased; and an
awful silence of despair overwhelmed the city. But all this failed of restraining the more
abandoned from most horrid deeds. They took this opportunity to rob the tombs; and with
loud infernal laughter, to strip the dead of their habiliments of death; and would try the
edge of their swords on dead bodies, and on some while yet breathing. Simon Georas now
vented his rage against Matthias, the high priest, and his three sons. He caused them to
be condemned, as though favouring the Romans. The father asked the favour to be first
executed, and not see the death of his sons; but the malicious Simon reserved him for the
last execution. And as he was expiring he put the insulting question, whether the Romans
could now relieve him?
Things being thus, one Mannaeus, a Jew, escaped to
Titus, and informed him of the consummate wretchedness of the Jews; that in less than
three months one hundred and fifteen thousand and eight hundred dead bodies of Jews had
been conveyed through one gate, under his care and register; and he assured him of
the ravages of famine and death. Other deserters confirmed the account, and added, that
not less than six hundred thousand dead bodies of Jews had been carried out at different
gates. The humane heart of Titus was deeply affected; and he, under those accounts, and
while surveying the piles of dead bodies of Jews under the walls, and in the visible parts
of the city, raised his eyes and hands to heaven in solemn protestation, that he would
have prevented these dire calamities; that the obstinate Jews had procured them upon their
own heads.
Josephus, the Jew, now earnestly entreated the leader
John and his brethren to surrender to the Romans, and thus save the residue of the Jews.
But he received in return nothing but insolent reproaches and imprecations; John declaring
his firm persuasion that God would
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never suffer his own city, Jerusalem, to be taken by
the enemy! Alas, had he forgotten the history of his own nation, and the denunciations of
the prophets? Micah had foretold that in this very calamity they would presumptuously
"lean upon the Lord, and say, Is not the Lord among us? No evil shall come upon
us." So blind and presumptuous are hypocrisy and self-confidence! "The temple of
the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord are these."
The famine in the city became (as might be expected)
still more deadly. For want of food the Jews ate their belts, sandals, skins of their
shields, dried grass, and even ordure of cattle. Now it was that a noble Jewess, urged
by the insufferable pangs of hunger, slew and prepared for food her own infant child!
She had eaten half the horrible preparation, when the smell of food brought in a hoard of
soldiery, who threatened her with instant death, if she did not produce to them the food
she had in possession. She being thus compelled to obey, produced the remaining half of
her child! The soldiers stood aghast; and the recital petrified the hearers with horror;
and congratulations were poured on those whose eyes death had closed upon such horrid
scenes. Humanity seems ready to sink at the recital of the woful events of that day. No
words can reach the horrors of the situation of the female part of the community at that
period. Such scenes force upon our recollection the tender pathetic address of our Saviour
to the pious females who followed him, going to the cross: "Daughters of Jerusalem,
weep not for me; but weep for yourselves and for your children; for behold the days are
coming, in which they shall say, Blessed are the barren, and the wombs that never bare,
and the breasts that never gave suck." Moses had long predicted this very scene.
"The tender and delicate woman among you, (said he.) who would not venture to set the
sole of her foot on the ground for delicateness; her eye shall be evil towards her young
one, and toward her children, which she shall bear; for she shall eat them, for want of
all things, secretly in the siege and straitness wherewith thine enemy shall distress thee
in thy gates." Probably the history of the world will not afford a parallel to this.
God prepared peculiar judgments for peculiarly horrid crimes! "These be the days of
vengeance; that all things that are written may be fulfilled." Josephus declares,
that if there had not been many credible witnesses of that awful fact, he never would have
recorded it; for, said
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he, "such a shocking violation of nature never has
been perpetrated by any Greek or barbarian."
While famine thus spread desolation, the Romans finally
succeeded in removing part of the inner wall, and in possessing themselves of the high and
commanding tower of Antonio, which seemed to overlook the temple. Titus with his council
of war had formed a determination to save the temple, to grace his conquest, and remain an
ornament to his empire.---But God had not so determined. And "though there be many
devices in a man's heart; nevertheless the counsel of the Lord that shall stand." A
Roman soldier, violating the general order of Titus, succeeded in hurling a brand of fire
into the golden window of the temple; and soon (as righteous Heaven would have it!) the
sacred edifice was in flames. The Jews perceiving this, rushed with horrid outcries to
extinguish the fire. Titus too flew to the spot in his chariot, with his chief officers
and legions. With loud command, and every token of anxiety, he enforced the extinguishing
of the fire; but in vain. So great was the confusion, that no attention was paid to him.
His soldiers, deaf to all cries, assiduously spread the flames far and wide; rushing at
the same time on the Jews, sword in hand, slaying and trampling down, or crushing them to
death against the walls. Many were plunged into the flames, and perished in the burning of
the out buildings of the temple. The fury of the Roman soldiers slaughtered the poor, the
unarmed, and the rich, as well as men in arms. Multitudes of dead bodies were piled round
about the altar, to which they had fled for protection. The way leading to the inner court
was deluged with blood.
Titus finding the fire had not yet reached the inner
temple, entered it with his superior officers, and surveying its magnificence with silent
admiration. He found it to exceed all he had heard. This view led him to renew his efforts
to save this stupendous pile of building, though so many of the out-buildings were gone.
He even entreated his soldiers to extinguish the flames, and appointed an officer to
punish any who should disobey. But all his renewed efforts were still in vain. The
feelings of his soldiery were utterly unmanageable. Plunder, revenge, and slaughter had
combined to render them deaf and most furious. A soldier succeeded in firing the door
posts of the inner temple, and the conflagration soon became general.
One needs a heart of steel to contemplate the scenes
which followed. The triumphant Roman soldiers were in a most ungovernable rage and
fury.---- They were indeed instruments prepared for
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their work, to execute the most signal vengeance of
Heaven; the flame of which was now reaching its height! The Romans slew of the Jews all
before them; sparing neither age, sex or rank. They seemed determined to annihilate the
Jewish race on the spot. Priests and common people; those who surrendered, and those who
still fought; all were alike subjects of an indiscriminate slaughter. The fire of the
temple at length completely enveloped the stupendous pile of building. The fury of the
flames exceeded description. It impressed on distant spectators an idea that the whole
city was in flames. The ensuing disorder and tumult, Josephus pronounces to have been such
as to baffle all description. The outcry of the Roman legions was as great as they could
make. And the Jews finding themselves a prey to the fury of both fire and sword, exerted
themselves in the wildest accents of screaming. The people in the city, and those on the
hill, mutually responded to each other in groans and screeches. People who had seemed just
expiring through famine derived new strength from unprecedented scenes of horror and
death, to deplore their wretchedness. From mountain to mountain, and from places distant,
lamentations echoed to each other.
As the temple was sinking under the fury of the raging
element, the mount on which it stood seemed in that part of it, (says the historian) to
"impress the idea of a lake of liquid fire!" The blood of the slain ran in
rivulets. The earth around became covered with the slain; and the victorious Romans
trampled over those piles of the dead, in pursuit of the thousands who were fleeing from
the points of their swords. In a word, the roar and crackling of fire; the shrieks of
thousands in despair; the dying groans of thousands, and the sights which met the eye
whereever it was turned, were such as never before had any parallel on earth. They
probably as much exceeded all antecedent scenes of horror, as the guilt which occasioned
them, in their treatment of the Lord of Glory, exceeded all guilt ever before known among
men.
A tragical event had transpired worthy of particular
detail. Before the temple was wrapped in flames, an imposter appeared among the Jews,
asserting a divine commission; and that if the people would follow him to the temple, they
would see signs, wonders and deliverance. About six thousand (mostly women and children)
followed him, and were in the galleries of the temple, waiting for this promised
deliverance, when fire was set to that building. Not one
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escaped. All were consumed in the conflagration of the
sacred edifice! What multitudes are by false prophets plunged in eternal fire!
The place of the temple now presented a vast pile of
ruins. Here terminated the glory and existence of this stupendous building, this type of
the body of Christ and of his church; this type of the Millennium, and of heaven. Here it
reached its close, after the period of one thousand and thirty years, from the time of its
dedication by Solomon; and of six hundred and thirty-nine years, from its being rebuilt in
the days of Haggai, after the seventy years captivity. It is singular, that it should be
reduced to ashes not only soon after the feast of the passover, which convened so many
thousands of Jews to Jerusalem to meet the ruins of their city and nation; but that it
should be consumed on the same month, on the same day of the month, on which the
Babylonians had before destroyed it by fire.
Josephus records another striking event, which seemed a
sign of the destruction of Jerusalem. He says; (addressing the Jews who survived this
ruin) "The fountains flow copiously for Titus, which to you were dried up. For before
he came, you know that both Siloam and all the springs without the city failed; so that
water was brought by the amphora, (a vessel.)--- But now they are so abundant to your
enemies, as to suffice for themselves and their cattle. This wonder you also formerly
experienced, when the king of Babylon laid siege to your city."
The priests of the temple, after the destruction of
their sacred edifice, betook themselves (those who had thus far escaped the general
slaughter) to the top of one of its broken walls, where they sat mourning and famishing.
On the fifth day necessity compelled them to descend, and humbly to ask pardon of the
Roman general. But Titus at this late period rejected their petition, saying; "As the
temple, for the sake of which I would have spared you, is destroyed; it is but fit the
priests should perish also." All were put to death.
The obstinate leaders of the great Jewish factions,
beholding now the desperateness of their cause, desired a conference with Titus. One would
imagine they would at least now lay down their arms. Their desiring an interview with the
triumphant Roman general, appeared as though they would be glad to do this. But righteous
Heaven designed their still greater destruction. Titus, after all their mad rebellions,
kindly offered to spare the residue of the Jews, if they would now submit. But strange to
relate, they refused to comply. The noble general then, as must have been expected, was
highly exasperated;
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and issued his general order that he would grant no
further pardon to the insurgents. His legions now were ordered to "ravage and
destroy." " With the light of the next morning, arose the tremendous flame
of the castle of Antonio, the council chamber, register's office, and the noble palace of
the queen Helena. These magnificent piles were reduced to ashes. The furious legions,
(executioners of divine vengeance, Ezek. ix. 5,6) then flew through the lower city, of
which they soon became masters, slaughtering and burning in every street. The Jews
themselves aided the slaughter.--- In the royal palace, containing vast treasures, eight
thousand four hundred Jews were murdered by their seditious brethren. Great numbers of
deserters from the furious leaders of faction, flocked to the Romans; but it was too late.
The general order was given, all should be slain. Such therefore fell.
The Roman soldiers however, being at length weary with
butchery, and more than satisfied with blood, for a short time sheathed their swords, and
betook themselves to plunder. They collected multitudes of Jews, ---husbands, wives,
children, and servants; formed a market; and set them up at vendue for slaves. They sold
them for any trifle; while purchasers were but few. Their law-giver, Moses, had forewarned
them of this; Deut. xxviii. 68: "And ye shall be sold for bond men, and bond women;
and no man shall buy you." Tremendous indeed must the lot of those be, who reject the
Messiah, and are found fighting against the Son of God. Often had these Jews heard read
(but little it seems did they understand the sense of the tremendous passage) relative to
the Jewish rejectors of Christ, "He that sitteth in the Heavens shall laugh; the Lord
shall have them in derision. Then shall he speak unto them in his wrath, and vex them in
his sore displeasure. Yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion. Thou shalt break
them with a rod of iron; thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel."
"Thus saith the Lord, say, A sword, a sword is sharpened, and also furbished: it is
sharpened to make a sore slaughter; it is furbished that it may glitter; (said God by the
prophet, Ezek. xxi. alluding to this very event;) the sword is sharpened, and it is
furbished to give it into the hand of the slayer. Cry and howl, son of man; smite upon thy
thigh; smite thy hands together, and let the sword be doubled a third time; the sword of
the slain. I have set the point of the sword against all their gates, that their hearts
may faint, and their ruins be multiplied: Ah, it is made bright! it is wrapped up for the
slaughter."--- Such,
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and much more, were the divine denunciations of this
very scene, which the infidel Jews would not escape, but would incur! And even a merciful
God shrunk not from the execution! Let antichristian powers, yea. let all infidels and
gospel despisers, consider this and tremble!
The whole lower city now in the possession of the Roman
legions, (after the respite noted,) was set on fire. But the insolence of the devoted Jews
in a part of the higher city remained unabated. They even insulted and exasperated their
enemies, as though afraid the work of vengeance might not be sufficiently executed.
The Romans brought their engines to operate upon the
walls of this higher branch of the city, still standing; which soon gave way before them.
Before their demolition, Titus reconnoitred the city, and its fortifications; and
expressed his astonishment that it should ever fall before his arms. He exclaimed,
"Had not God himself aided our operations, and driven the Jews from their fortresses,
it would have been absolutely impossible to have taken them. For what could men and the
force of engines have done against such towers as these?" Yes, unless their Rock had
sold them for their iniquities, no enemy could have prevailed against Jerusalem. Josephus,
who was an eye witness of all the scene, says; "All the calamities, which ever befel
any nation, since the beginning of the world, were inferior to the miseries of the Jews at
this awful period."
The upper city too fell before the victorious arms of
the Roman conquerors. Titus would have spared all who had not been forward in resisting
the Romans; and gave his orders accordingly. But his soldiers, callous to all the feelings
of humanity, slaughtered the aged and sick, as well as the mass of the people. The tall
and most beautiful young men, however, were spared by Titus to grace his triumph at Rome.
Of the rest, many above the age of seventeen were sent in chains to Egypt to be disposed
of as slaves. Some were reserved to be sacrificed on their amphitheatres, as gladiators;
to be slain in sham fights, for the sport of their conquerors. Others were distributed
through the empire. All who survived, under the age of seventeen, were exposed for sale.
The triumphant general commanded what remained of the
city, to be razed to its foundation, except three of the most stately towers, Mariamne,
Hippocos, and Phasael. These should stand as monuments of the magnificence of the place
and of his victory. A small part of the wall of the city at the west also, he commanded
should be spared,
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as a rampart for his garrison. The other parts of the
city he wished to have so effectually erased, as never to be recognized to have been
inhabited. The Talmud and Mamonides relate that the foundations of the temple were so
removed, that the site of it was ploughed by Terentius Rufus. Thus our Saviour predicted,
that " there should not be left one stone upon another."
One awful occurrence is noted as transpiring during
these scenes; that eleven thousand Jews, under the guard of one Fronto, a Roman general,
were (owing to their own obstinacy, and to the scarcity of provisions) literally
starved to death!
Josephus informs that eleven hundred thousand Jews
perished in this siege of Jerusalem; that two hundred and thirty-seven thousand perished
in that last war in other sieges and battles; besides multitudes who perished by famine
and pestilence: making a total of at least fourteen hundred thousand. Some hundreds of
thousands, in sullen despair, laid violent hands on themselves. About ninety-seven
thousand were captured, and dispersed. Relative to the two great leaders of the Jewish
factions, Simon and John, they were led to Rome, to grace the triumph of Titus; after
which Simon was scourged and executed as a malefactor; and John was committed for life to
dungeon. Thus ended their violent factious contentions.
The Roman army, before they left Jerusalem, not only
demolished the buildings there, but even dug up their foundations. How fatal was the
divine judgment on this devoted city. Five months before it was the wonder of the world;
and contained, at the commencement of the siege, more than a million and a half of Jews,
natives and visiters; now it lay in total ruins, with not "one stone upon
another;" as Christ had denounced. These ruins Eusebius informs us he beheld. And
Eleazer is introduced by Josephus as exclaiming; "Where is our great city, which it
was believed God inhabited." The prophet Micah had predicted; "Therefore shall
Zion for your sakes be ploughed as a field, and Jerusalem shall become heaps, and the
mountain of the Lord's house as the high places of the forest." A captain of the army
of Titus, did in fact plough where some part of the foundation of the temple had stood, as
the Talmud records, and thus fulfilled this prediction.
Jesus Christ had foretold of this destruction, that
"there should be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the
world." And of the event Josephus says; "If the misfortunes of all nations from
the beginning of the world, were compared with those
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which befel the Jews, they would appear far less."
Again; "No other city ever suffered such things; as no other generation from the
beginning of the world, was ever more fruitful in wickedness."
Other parts of Judea were still to be subdued. Macherus
was attacked. Seventeen hundred Jews surrendered and were slain; also three thousand
fugitives taken in the woods of Jardes. Titus at Caesarea celebrated in great splendour
the birth day of his brother Domitian. Here a horrid scene, according to the bloody
customs of those times, was presented. To grace this occasion, more than two thousand five
hundred Jews fell; some by burning; some by fighting with wild beasts; and some by mutual
combat with the sword.
Massada was besieged. The Jewish commander, in despair,
induced the garrison first to destroy their stores, and then themselves. They (nine
hundred and sixty in number) consented to the horrid proposal. Men, women, and children
took their seats upon the ground, and offered their necks to the sword. Ten men were
selected to execute the fatal deed. The dreadful work was done. One of the ten was then
chosen to execute the nine, and then himself. The nine being put to death, and fire being
set to the place, the last man plunged his dagger into his own heart.
Seven persons, (women and children,) found means to
conceal themselves, and escape the ruin. When the Romans approached, these seven related
to them these horrid events.
Most of the remaining places now, through sullen
despair, gave up all opposition, and submitted to the conquerors. Thus Judea became as a
desolate wilderness; and the following passage in Isaiah had at least a primary
accomplishment; "Until the cities be wasted without inhabitant; and the houses
without man; and the land be utterly desolate; and the Lord have removed man far away, and
there be a great forsaking in the midst of the land."
A line of prophecies is found in the sacred oracles,
which relate to a signal temporal destruction of the most notorious enemies of the kingdom
of Jesus Christ. Those were to have a two-fold accomplishment; first upon the Jews; and
secondly upon the great Antichrist of the last days, typified by the infidel Jews.
Accordingly those prophecies in the Old Testament are ever found in close connexion with
the Millennium. The predictions of our Saviour, in Matt. xxiv. Mark xiii. and Luke xxi.
are but a new edition of these sacred prophecies. This has been noted as "the
destruction of the city and temple foretold." It
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is so indeed, and more.--- It is also a
denunciation of the destruction of the great Antichrist of the last days. The certainty of
this will appear in the following things, as New Testament writers decide. The
Thessalonians, having heard what our Lord denounced, that all those things he had
predicted should take place on that generation, were trembling with the
apprehension, that the coming of Christ predicted, would then very soon burst upon
the world. Paul writes to them, (2 Thes. ii.) and beseeches them by this coming of Christ,
not to be shaken in mind, or troubled with such an apprehension. For that day ,
(that predicted coming of Christ, as it related to others beside the Jews.) was not to
take place on that generation. It was not to come till the Antichristian apostacy come
first; that man of sin was first to be revealed. This long apostacy was to be accomplished
before the noted coming of Christ in its more important sense be fulfilled. After the
Roman government, which hindered the rise of the man of sin, should be taken out of the
way, Paul says, "Then shall that wicked one be revealed whom the Lord shall consume
with the spirit of his mouth, and destroy with the brightness of his coming."
Here then is the predicted coming of Christ, in its more interesting sense, in the
battle of that great day, which introduces the Millennium. Here is a full decision that
these noted denunciations of Christ alluded more especially (though not primarily) to a
coming which is still future.
The same is decided by Christ himself, in Rev. xvi.
After the sixth vial, in the drying up of the Turkish Euphrates, three unclean spirits of
devils, like frogs, go forth to the kings of the earth, and of all the world, to gather
them to the great battle. The awful account is interrupted by this notice from the mouth
of Christ; verse 15, "Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth and
keepeth his garments; lest he walk naked, and they see his shame." This is as though
our Lord should say; now the time is at hand, to which my predictions of coming as a
thief, principally alluded. Now is the time when my people on earth shall need to
watch, as I directed, when predicting my coming to destroy first the type of
Antichrist, and secondly the antitype.
The predictions in the prophets, which received an
incipient fulfilment in the destruction of Jerusalem, were to receive a more interesting
fulfillment in Christ's coming to destroy his antichristian foes. Hence it is that the
seventh vial is called (Rev. xvi. 14,) "the battle of that great day of God
Almighty;" clearly alluding to that great day noted through the prophets. And of the
same event it is said,
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Rev. x. 7; "the mystery of God shall be finished,
as he hath declared to his servants, the prophets." Here again the allusion clearly
is to the many predictions in the prophets of the destruction of the enemies of Christ's
kingdom, which were to receive an incipient fulfilment in the destruction of Jerusalem;
and a far more interesting one, in the sweeping from the earth the last antichristian
powers, to introduce the millennial kingdom of Christ. We accordingly find those
predictions through the prophets clearly alluding to the last days, and the introduction
of the Millennium.
Viewing the destruction of Jerusalem then, as but a
type of an event now pending upon antichristian nations, we peruse it with new interest;
and it must be viewed in the light of a most impressive warning to this age of the
world.--- The factions, madness, and self-ruin of the former, give but a lively practical
comment upon the various predictions of the latter. Three great and noted factions
introduced the destruction of Jerusalem. And of the destruction of Antichrist we read
(perhaps alluding to that very circumstance) Rev. xvi. 19; "And the great city was
divided into three parts."
Then it follows; "and the cities of the nations
fell; and great Babylon came in remembrance before God to give unto her the cup of the
wine of the fierceness of his wrath." In the desolation of Gog and his bands, faction
draws the sword of extermination. "I will call for a sword against him throughout all
my mountains, saith the Lord God; every man's sword shall be against his brother."
Exek. xxxviii. 21.
The great coalition against the Jews, in the time of
Jehoshaphat, was destroyed by the sword of mutiny and faction: See 2 Chron. xx. And in
allusion to this very battle which God fought for his church, the vast coalitions of
Antichrist, in the last days, when the Jews are restored, is said to be gathered "to
the valley of Jehoshaphat:" See Joel iii. The various circumstances of the
destruction of Jerusalem afforded a lively incipient comment on the many denunciations of
the battle of that great day of God Almighty, which awaits the antichristian world; while
it is fully evident, that the passages more especially allude to the tremendous scenes of
judgment, which shall introduce the Millennium.
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Chapter 1a
Chapter 1b
Chapter 2
Chapter 3a
Chapter 3b
Chapter 3c
Chapter 3d
Chapter 3e
Chapter 3f
Chapter 3g
Chapter 4a
Chapter 4b
Conclusion
Appendix
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