A HISTORY OF NEW TESTAMENT TIMES IN PALESTINE, 175 BC-70 AD
CHAPTER IIIJOHN HYRCANUS AND POLITICAL INDEPENDENCE(135-105 BC)
The tragedy which brought John Hyrcanus to the high-priesthood was
prolonged during the first months of his reign. For when he attempted to
besiege Ptolemy in Dok, near Jericho, he was repeatedly hindered in his attack
by the sight of his mother being tortured death on the walls of the
fortress. The siege dragged along until a sabbatical year, when it was
abandoned, and Ptolemy escaped after having murdered his heroic
prisoner.
Other difficulties came upon the State. Antiochus VII, who, after the
severe defeat administered by John and Judas to Kendebaus, had allowed the Jews
to remain in peace, now took advantage of the death of Simon and invaded Judea
in the first year of Hyrcanus. One of the last of strong Syrian monarchs, his
forces were more than a match for those of the Jews, and he soon shut John up
in Jerusalem and besieged him vigorously. The city
was& surrounded with a trench and earthworks, and on its north side
were erected a hundred towers three stories in height. Then followed a time,
certainly a year in length, in which the Jews within the walls were reduced to
the last extremities. The men useless for war were forced to leave the city, but,
since Antiochus would not receive them, wandered between the lines, dying miserably
of hunger, until the defenders, at the Feast of Tabernacles, readmitted the
wretched survivors. But just as Antiochus was about to reduce the city, he
raised the siege upon the conditions that the Jews should deliver up their
arms, pay tribute for Joppa and the other cities which they had gained, give
hostages, break down the city walls, and pay 500 talents of silver (three
hundred down) in lieu of admitting a new Syrian garrison into the city.
This sudden leniency on the part of an ambitious king who had victory
almost within his grasp was undoubtedly due to some interference of Rome
rather than to the fact that “he was religious to the Deity”, as Josephus
piously remarks. We have thus a victory of the Maccabean policy rather than of
Maccabean arms. In fact, the brilliant career of Antiochus demonstrated that
the only hope of the Jews’ maintaining the position reached by Simon lay either
in disturbed Syrian politics or in Roman interference. The little state was too
weak to withstand by itself the full strength of Syria. From this time forward
dependence upon Rome as an ally and superior becomes increasingly prominent as
a feature in the traditional policy of the Asmonean house.
The subsequent relations of Hyrcanus with Antiochus VII were those of
friendship. After having thus accepted a vassal’s position he supplied his
suzerain with military supplies and accompanied him in his expedition against the
Parthians. On his part, Antiochus seems to have been considerate of the Jews’
religious peculiarities, and on this expedition against the Parthians halted
for a couple of days that the Jews need not be forced to march upon Pentecost
and the Sabbath.
But Hyrcanus was freed from the strong hand of Antiochus VII by the
defeat and death of that monarch among the Parthians, between whom and the
Romans Syria was so surely being ground to powder, and in Demetrius II, who was
now reinstated on his throne by his captors, Hyrcanus saw if not a friend at
least a satisfactorily weak ruler. The inefficiency of Syria was increased,
also, by the war between Demetrius II and Alexander Zabinas. Under these favoring
circumstances John took up the development of Judea at the point where it had
been checked by Antiochus VII, and throughout his long reign was able almost at
will to conquer new territory. Medaba fell after a siege of six months, and the
fall of Samega, a town probably near Lake Huleh, with its surrounding region
followed. Shechem (Xablus) and its dependencies were reduced, the Samaritan
temple on Gerizim destroyed. Idumea was thoroughly conquered, and its inhabitants
were forced to submit to circumcision under penalty of expulsion, and some of
them were colonized in the three Samaritan toparchies given Judea by Demetrius
II. So far from being able to oppose such conquests, Demetrius was himself in
desperate straits and at last was killed by Alexander Zabinas, who was quite
ready to make any treaty Hyrcanus might propose. Even when after a few years
Alexander was defeated (122-121 BC) and executed by Antiochus VIII (Grypos),
Hyrcanus was not disturbed, for the new king was barely able to maintain
himself during the first eight years of his reign, and then was deposed by his
half-brother, Antiochus Cyzicenus.
The struggle between the two rivals lasted for years, and throughout it all
Hyrcanus lived in peace. Indeed, since the death of Antiochus Sidetes, he no longer
paid the Syrians the least regard, either as their subject or their friend.
Thus secure because of Syria’s weakness, he again turned upon the ancient enemy
of the Jews, “the foolish people who dwelt at Shechem”. When the Jews returned
to Judea from Babylon they found the land occupied by a people, Jewish in
stock, but mixed with the older inhabitants of the land and with the colonists
who had been brought by the Assyrians from the Mesopotamian cities,—Cutha, Ava,
Hamath, and Sepharvaim. For awhile the newcomers mingled with this mixed
people, and even the high priest was not averse to seeing the Jewish stock
corrupted by intermarriage. Ezra and Nehemiah, however, enforced the separation
of the “holy seed” from the mixed race and began the erection of a distinctly
Jewish state. The Samaritans, who were the most influential of the old people,
at first despised and then opposed the reform. But to no purpose. The new
Jerusalem was built, the new citizens were separated, and the seeds of lasting
enmity were sown. Throughout the centuries that followed each city did its best
to injure the other. Each alike honored Moses, but neither would yield to the
religious supremacy of the other. If the temple was in Jerusalem, the
Samaritans obtained from Darius Nothus, and again from Alexander, permission to
build another upon their holy Mount Gerizim, over which a descendant of Aaron
presided. By 170 BC the new temple had become a serious rival to that of
Jerusalem, and Jews and Samaritans were involved in fierce disputes concerning
the relative importance of their two versions of the Law, and the true place of
worship. The very fact that the Samaritans were sectaries rather than heathen
doubtless deepened the hatred between the two people, and when the Samaritans
sided with Syria, war was unavoidable.
Hyrcanus had already destroyed Shechem and the temple upon Gerizim, and
now he appeared before the capital city, Samaria, to punish it for the recent
injuries done, at the instigation of Syria, to Idumeans he had established as
colonists in the three Samaritan toparchies.Despite the aid of Antiochus,
the city fell after a siege of a year, and Hyrcanus razed it to the ground, cut
canals through it, and made a lake of its site.
With the fall of its ancient rival, Judea reached its greatest
prosperity. Like so many other city-states during the decay of the Syrian
Empire, it had become independent, and, thanks to its arms and its alliance
with Rome, was growing in influence.
But the reign of John Hyrcanus was to do more for Judaism than to give
it political independence. It was under him that the two tendencies in the
state already mentioned first crystallized into parties with distinctive names,
— Pharisee and Sadducee.
The Pharisees constituted the more efficient of two fraternities that
grew out of the Chasidim, the Essenes being the second. Their chief inheritance
was the legalism of Ezra and Nehemiah, and their central principle was the
avoidance of impurity of all sorts. It was this that gave them their name—the
Separated.
Throughout the entire revival of Mosaism under the Asmoneans, under the
impulse for purity there had been growing up by the side of the Law a rapidly
increasing mass of unwritten but authoritative comments and interpretations,—the
“ancestral tradition” of Paul and the Mishna of the rabbis. Nothing nobler
could be asked than the motive from which this “oral law” sprang, and it was
its passion for righteousness through obedience to the oral as well as the
written law and for purity through separation from everything defiling that
made Pharisaism the great influence it became.
So far as their theological and philosophical opinions are concerned,
Josephus, who was one of their number, in his formal comparison of their views
with those of the Sadducees, declares that the Pharisees held to the
immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the body, at least in the case
of the righteous—a belief that at times runs close to some form of
reincarnation or migration of the soul, and is characteristic of most later
Jewish religious faith. He also somewhat too sharply describes their position
as to free will as a mean between the determinism of the Essenes and the absolute
liberty of the Sadducees. The Pharisees he represents as holding that fate
cooperates with man in every act, and again states as their opinion that some
things are not dependent upon fate, but upon human will. Of their further
belief in angels and spirits, Josephus makes no mention, but it is altogether
in keeping with their general teaching and the spirit of later Jewish
literature in general.
But such matters are secondary. The indispensable element of
Pharisaism is its insistence upon
righteousness through obedience to Jehovah’s law, and upon
the withdrawal from everything that might defile. In personal life it led to
isolation from the common people, to repeated washings of the hands, person,
dishes, and utensils. In thought it led to infinite devotion to details and preternaturally
refined distinctions and warnings. In religion it led to the formation of a
fraternity, a church within a church, composed of “Neighbors” who were
exclusively scribes, and who were admitted by the laying on of hands. In
politics it led to a determination to make Judea complete in itself—an isolated
religious commonwealth, as far as possible removed from the contamination of
heathen life. The Pharisees, like the Chasidim, at bottom a religious sect,
were forced by circumstances into political struggles. But when once they had
become the party of the government they looked with apprehension upon foreign
alliances, and desired nothing more than an insularity in which they could
train up a true Israel—their own fraternity (Chaberim, Neighbors). They were, in fact, by no means a popular
party. At the greatest they probably never numbered more than six thousand,
each of whom had joined the fraternity in some formal way. Their great
political influence was therefore due to the regard in which they were held by
the people, both on account of their recognised religious superiority and
knowledge of the Law and also because of their hostility to the aristocratic
party of the Sadducees.
The Sadducees were not opposed by the Pharisees because of theological
differences, although Josephus artificially distinguishes the two parties on
such grounds. The ground of opposition lay in the struggles between the
latitudinarian aristocrats and the Chasidim. The Pharisees were by origin a
body of religionists forced into politics; the Sadducees, a body of aristocrats
opposed to the oral law and the later developments of Judaism. Indifferent to
religion except as a profession open to priests, disbelievers in immortality of
the soul, believers in absolute free will, the Sadducees had been the party of
the opposition while Judea had been struggling for liberty; but now that the
Asmoneans looked toward national life on a larger scale, they suddenly found
themselves brought into new political importance.
From the days of Mattathias, the Asmonean house had been most successful
when supported by the Chasidim and their successors. Hyrcanus, no more than his
father, desired to break with so virile a following and had been himself
counted a Pharisee, yet he was forced to transfer his friendship to the
Sadducees.
The occasion for such a revolution in policy as given by Josephus contains
too much of the conventional legendary element to be trustworthy, but none the
less it may represent some actual occurrence. He represents Hyrcanus as
complacently asking his Pharisaic friends at a banquet to point out to him the
most certain road to righteousness. All declare him entirely virtuous until the
question reaches one Eleazar. This uncompromising servant of the Law declared
that if Hyrcanus really would be righteous, he must lay down the
high-priesthood and content himself with the civil government. On being
pressed for the reason for such an opinion, he declared that it was known that
the mother of Hyrcanus had been a captive in the days of Antiochus Epiphanes—the
implication being that Hyrcanus was not the legitimate son of Simon. Incensed at
the insult, Hyrcanus followed the advice of a Sadducee who wished to involve
all his opponents in disfavor, and asked the Pharisees to pronounce judgment
upon Eleazar. They declared him deserving only of stripes and imprisonment.
Hyrcanus, under the insinuations of the Sadducee Jonathan, believed all
Pharisees his enemies, and therefore broke with them.
While this story may preserve for us an evidence of the Pharisees’
hatred of a warrior high priest, the real reason for the action of Hyrcanus
lies deep in the inner life of Judaism. On the one hand the Pharisees must have
been deeply disappointed that what had been a holy war should have produced no “kingdom
of the saints”—some thoroughly impossible theocracy administered by scribes.
They must also have opposed the policy of international treaties, so repugnant to
their separatist spirit. The Sadducees, on the other hand, were in sympathy
with a broad international policy and looked with favor upon a government of any
high priest whatever. It was, therefore, to be expected that they should have
been judged to be more serviceable by so thoroughly statesmanlike a man as Hyrcanus.
Prom this time the Sadducees are the party of monarchical nationalism and the
Pharisees that of a self-centered, provincial aristocracy.
The new status of the Gerousia. Development of Judaism.
The break with the “little Judea” party was marked by an undoing of some
of their legislation, but even more by expansion in the life of the
state. Judea was probably more prosperous than at any time since the reign
of Solomon. It is true that its limits were subsequently to be enlarged; but at
no time was it to be freer from internecine struggles or more truly independent
of foreign powers. Almost for the first time in its history, commerce began to
be of importance. Now that Joppa was safely a Jewish port, the grain, oil, and
salt of Judea were exchanged for the luxuries of Egypt and other foreign
countries. Already the wealth of the new family was great, while Rome was everywhere
enforcing respect for the scattered subjects of its confederate state.
Constitutionally, Judea progressed along the lines ordinarily followed by
Oriental states, and had lost much of even the half-aristocratic character
which it had possessed under Simon. This appears not alone in the fact that,
first of all the later Jewish rulers, John Hyrcanus employed mercenaries; the
coins of the period furnish some striking evidence of this constitutional
change. Some of these bear the inscription, “John the high priest and the congregation
of the Jews”, but others are inscribed, “John the high priest, head of the
congregation of the Jews”—a change full of suggestion as to his position as
head Incipient of the Jewish state. These facts, coupled with the transference
of his sympathies from the Pharisees to the Sadducees, argue strongly that as
national independence had succeeded religious liberty, a monarchy disguised as
a theocracy was now displacing the city-state. It is in accordance with
this general tendency that the Gerousia grows less prominent. A century later
it was still the highest court in certain cases, and the very fact that John
felt the need of relying upon something corresponding to a modern party, argues
that in his day it was possessed of some legislative functions as well. Yet it
is not mentioned in the scanty records of the time, and the inference is unavoidable
that the Gerousia lost political importance before the rising monarchy. It is,
therefore, probably at this time that there began the more academic era in its
life which was to reach such development later in the Sanhedrin. Judea had thus
all but become a small Oriental monarchy, none the less absolute because its
ruler bore the name and exercised the functions of high priest.
Along with these constitutional and political changes, the reign of John
Hyrcanus was marked by other important developments within the inner life of
Judaism. The Gerousia attacked mixed marriages, classing heathen women with
slaves, and, in order to fix more firmly the religious significance of the
history in which they had played so large a part, the rabbis drew up a calendar
of feast days, commemorating such events as the taking of Akra and Bethzur.
During this period probably still further steps were taken in the completion of
the third group of canonical books, the “Sacred Writings”. Already the great
rabbis had begun to appear—the Zugoth, or “couples”,— and in the time of
Hyrcanus lived the second “couple”, Joshua ben Perachia and Nitai of Arbela,
the former of whom taught “Procure a companion for study, and judge all men
according to the favorable side”.
Alexandria, dazzled by the success of the new dynasty, began to hope for
the end of Syrian and Roman supremacy, and, in the alleged words of the heathen
Sibyl, could look forward to the time when the “nation of the mighty God should
once again be strong, and become to all people the guide of life”; and when an
end should be put to all distress, and “from the rising sun, God should send a
king who should make all the earth to cease from cruel war, killing some and
making faithful treaties with others”. Then would “he who formerly gave the Law
to the pious, take the kingdom forever over all men”.
But this hope for a triumphant Israel was fiercer in the breasts of the
Pharisees of Judea, to whom the Asmonean house seemed less of God. If,
according to the seer of Alexandria, the nations, seeing how God loved all men,
were to throw away their idols and worship in his temple; to the mind of the
unknown Pharisee who, in the name of Enoch, burst out in Pharisaic apocalyptic
imagery and personification half inspired, forebodings half grotesque, the
success of the heathen kingdoms and the dominance of the Sadducees, with their
“unrighteousness and sin and blasphemy and violence,” their “apostasy and
transgression and uncleanness”, were to bring a merited punishment from the
holy Lord, who would execute vengeance upon heathen and apostates in an eternal
judgment. Woe was to be theirs who built houses with sin, who acquired gold and
silver, who set at naught the words of the righteous, and transgressed the
eternal law. Even on the earth they were to suffer, and in the world to come
they would confront the record of their evil deeds and go down into a hell of
darkness and flame forever; while the righteous should be raised, pure spirits,
the joy of angels, to shine as the stars of heaven.
The Essenes.
Still another evidence of a rapidly completing Judaism and of
differentiating parties is to be seen in one of the enigmas of Jewish history,
the esoteric brotherhood of the Essenes, or, more properly, the Essees. Like
the fraternity of the Pharisees, it was a descendant of the Chasidim, whose
very name, in fact, it still bore. Its genealogical relations with Pharisaism
are thus clear. Neither is the offshoot of the other, but both brotherhoods sprang
from the same anti-Hellenistic Judaism which it had been the mission of the
persecution of Antiochus Epiphanes to consolidate and energies. The continuity
of Jewish development is here unbroken. However much Pharisee and Essene might
differ as regards important details, each was profoundly devoted to the Thorah,
the Sabbath, and to the maintenance of ceremonial purity. Each fraternity,
however, had a different future. The Pharisees were swept out into politics;
the Essenes were increasingly removing from politics toward the loneliness of
the wilderness and the Dead Sea.
Just when the passion for immaculate purity found its first formally organized
expression it is impossible to say, but by the time of Hyrcanus, or at least
that of his son Aristobulus, it appears to have been complete.
Despising wealth and scholastic virtue, the Essene brothers chose a
life of celibacy and communism, of devotion to extravagant laws of purity,
agriculture, and meditation. Though by no means shunning towns, they kept
themselves from all contaminating influences, repudiating animal sacrifices and
slavery. Many of their monastic communities lived in solitudes like Engedi,
while others lived in monasteries in the midst of cities, where all who wore
the white robe of the fraternity were always welcome.
Entrance to the order was possible only after a novitiate of three
years, and this in turn led to further years of instruction in the mysteries of
the faith. So far was the principle of purity carried that even among the
brothers themselves a higher grade was defiled by contact with a lower.
Industrious, modest, profoundly moral and religious, living temperately that
they might practice charity, eating their eucharistic meals in solemnity and
under the eyes of one whom they had elected their priest, obedient to their
president and council, prophets revered by people and kings alike, working
their simple cures by magical formulas, herbs, and sacred stones, the Essenes
were the admiration of all classes. If it be true that at one time their
numbers nearly equaled those of the Pharisees, the fact shows again the respect
with which they were held by their fellow-countrymen for their regard for the
Law and the Sabbath, as well as the purity of their life. That they had little
influence upon national life, that the Pharisees disliked them, that they objected
to bloody sacrifices, that they were shut out from the courts of the temple,
does not argue the foreign origin sometimes assigned them. Indeed, although
they may possibly have originated in Egypt, and although certain of their rites
suggest Persian influences, the Essenes were essentially Jewish. They were, in
fact, simply carrying to its inevitable conclusion the programme of the
Chasidim, and if their belief in angels and heavenly intermediaries, their
mysticism and esoteric teachings, find expression, as some believe, in apocalyptic
literature like Enoch, it would be only what would be expected.
Thus, in the days of Hyrcanus, the history of the rise and fall of the
Jewish state becomes clearly the history of the rise of the party of the
Thorah—of the Essenes in their protest against form and defilement, and, above all,
of the Pharisees in their struggle against Sadduceeism and monarchy.
THE STRUGGLE OF THE PHARISEES WITH THE
ASMONEANS AND SADDUCEES
(105-69 BC)
John Hyrcanus, by his will, made his widow his successor as the political
head of the state, and appointed his eldest son, Aristobulus, to the
high-priesthood. The arrangement was not only novel; it was fatal to all
parties concerned. Aristobulus was not content to share the state with his
mother, but shut her up in prison, where she starved to death. With her he
imprisoned three of his brothers, thus in genuine Oriental fashion removing all
possible claimants to the throne. Strangely enough, however, probably because
of some deep attachment, he did not include in the fate of his family his brother
Antigonus, with whom he had long been associated in war, but shared his throne
with him. This arrangement resulted in the inevitable conspiracy and death that
attend divided despotisms. Aristobulus was led to mistrust Antigonus, and by a
trick of his queen and his courtiers became the unwitting cause of his death.
He died soon after of a loathsome disease and remorse, having reigned but one
year.
The reign of Aristobulus, however, though brief (105-104 BC), was by no means unimportant.
Josephus speaks of him as a friend of the Greeks, although at the same time he
is ready to admit that Aristobulus served his country by extending its
boundaries. Like his father, Aristobulus endeavored to build his state upon a
common religion. As Hyrcanus had forced circumcision upon the Idumeans, so
Aristobulus forced it upon the Itureans of Northern Galilee, and thus completed
the Judaising of that region.
But even more important was the constitutional step taken by
Aristobulus. Hitherto the Asmonean rulers had laid no claim to the title or
insignia of royalty, but Aristobulus broke with the precedents of his house,
and marked his entrance into power by assuming a diadem and doubtless the title
of king. There is no evidence or, in fact, probability, that the Gerousia regained
any of its prestige during his short reign. On the contrary, it probably lost
even more of its administrative functions, and became even more judicial or
theologically academic. The Jewish theocratic monarchy, in the third generation
of the new high-priestly dynasty, crossed the threshold of an absolutism no
longer limited by tradition or inherited institutions.
So brief was the reign of this first king of the Jews that no time was
given for the Pharisees to organize any strong opposition against his
innovation, but opportunity enough was given during the reign of the third son
of Hyrcanus, Alexander Jonathan, or, as the word is in Greek, Jannaeus (104-78
BC). He, with his brothers, had been imprisoned by Aristobulus, but had been
released, married, and raised to the throne by his brother's widow, Queen
Salome or Alexandra. The high-priesthood was his, also, by virtue of his
kingship, and his abuse of this office, coupled with hatred of the monarchy and
its aims, was sufficient to arouse all Pharisees to desperate opposition. A war
that had begun for the preservation of the Jewish religion had called to the
leadership of the state a family which, after accomplishing religious liberty,
had relegated the ancient Gerousia together with the scribes to political
insignificance, and turned toward international alliances, foreign conquests,
monarchy, and all but declared imperialism. Three toparchies of Samaria,
Gazara, and Joppa, as well as other cities, had been added to Judea by Jonathan
and Simon, but the ambition of the family of Hyrcanus had been farther
reaching. Medaba and Samega, with other cities to the east of Jordan, Shechem,
Samaria, Idumea, Bethshean, and Lower Galilee had been conquered and in part
made Jewish by the father, and now with the conquest of Upper Galilee by
Aristobulus, the ambition of the Asmonean house to found a great kingdom was
brought into sharpest contrast with the Pharisees’ policy of exclusion and
separation.
His conquests
Alexander set about completing the conquests of his father and brother
with all the strength of a reckless nature. With the highlands on the west
of Jordan from Lebanon to the desert already his, he turned upon the cities and
petty kingdoms to the east of Jordan, and upon the cities of the
coast,—Ptolemais, Gaza, Strato’s Tower, and Dora. While Antiochus Cyzicenus was
engaged with Antiochus Philometor, Alexander attacked Ptolemais, beat back its
army, and besieged the city. He was not able to take it, however, because of
the coming of Ptolemy Lathyrus from Cyprus. Unable to cope with so formidable
an antagonist, Alexander raised the siege and tried treachery. Making a treaty
with Ptolemy, he also summoned Cleopatra, the mother of Ptolemy, who had but
recently driven her son out from Egypt. Ptolemy learned of his ally’s
unfaithfulness, and immediately marched with most of his force to conquer
Judea. He captured and sacked Asochis in Galilee on a Sabbath, attacked
Sepphoris unsuccessfully, and then advanced against Alexander. The battle was
fought at Asophon, an unidentified spot on the eastern side of the Jordan
valley, and, thanks to Alexander’s lack of generalship, the tactics of Ptolemy’s
general, Philostephanus, and the discipline of his mercenaries, resulted in a
complete defeat for the Jews. Thereupon Ptolemy took Ptolemais, which, like
Alexander, had proved untrue to him, and ravaged Judea; according to Josephus,
boiling and eating women and children. In the meantime Cleopatra had come up
from Egypt in pursuit of her son, and proceeded to besiege Ptolemais. Ptolemy,
seizing this opportunity, invaded Egypt, but only to be defeated. Thus, by a
strange turn of fortune Judea was again about to be subject to Egypt. In fact,
nothing prevented such a misfortune except the advice of Ananias, one of
Cleopatra’s generals, himself a Jew, who foretold a revolt of the Egyptian Jews
if such a step were taken. Cleopatra, therefore, renewed her treaty with Alexander,
and returned to Egypt.
Alexander was thus left once more free to pursue his policy of expansion.
He took Gadara after siege of ten months, and Amathus, but having lost his
baggage and a large number of his men in a sudden attack by Zeno, the local
sovereign, he crossed again to the coast. There he captured and sacked Raphia
and Anthedon. Gaza was betrayed into his hands after a year’s siege, and was
plundered and burned, its Council of Five Hundred perishing in the burning
temple of Apollo (96 BC). He then made a fresh attack upon the region east of
Jordan, and succeeded in overcoming the cities and tribes in Moab and Gilead.
Amathus, which had revolted, he again took and utterly destroyed. The campaign
ended in misfortune, however, as the Arabian Obedas, whose kingdom, or, at
least, suzerainty, embraced much of the region between Petra and Hermon, drew
the Jews into a narrow ravine near Gadara, and then drove troops of camels down
upon them, completely destroying the army. Barely escaping with his life, Alexander
fled to Jerusalem, only to find his people in open rebellion.
Revolt of the Jews
The explanation of this first revolt against the
Maccabean house is not difficult to discover. Alexander had already drawn
down upon himself the hatred of the Pharisees and their sympathizers by his
disregard of his priestly office. On one occasion, as he had been
officiating at the altar during the Feast of Tabernacles, the crowds of worshippers
had pelted him with citrons they had brought to the temple, shouting insults to
his mother. As a punishment, he had sent his mercenaries against the crowd, and
six thousand of the Jews had been killed. Thereafter, Alexander had officiated
behind a wooden fence he had built within the Court of the Priests.
Such a punishment of orthodox Jews, the first on the part of any
Asmonean, was, in itself, enough to excite the stricter classes, who had
already been embittered by the reorganization of the Gerousia, which, since the
last years of Hyrcanus, had been composed wholly of Sadducees, unless we make
an exception of the redoubtable Simon ben Shetach, brother of the queen. But
more potent than all must have been the deep-seated opposition of the Pharisees
to the undisguised usurpations of the high priest. The scandalous stories told
of him by Josephus must be in some degree charged to the historian’s bias, but
the hatred of the Pharisees was intense, and when, after eight years of
endurance, it once seemed possible to crush the fugitive king and restore the
old constitution, they and their followers rose as a man.
For six years the religious and civil war raged, and fifty thousand Jews
are said to have fallen. Then, with one of the
untactful attempts at compromise which are to be seen throughout
his life, even in the midst of Pharisaic libels, Alexander attempted to treat
with his subjects. But their only condition of submission was that he should
kill himself, and in a rage of hate they turned for aid to the Syrian king,
Demetrius Eucaerus. Such a course was desperate but characteristic of the
Pharisees, who now, as later, preferred a foreign ruler and a Gerousia which
they might control, to independence and an irresponsible monarch. Demetrius
came to the aid of the rebels with a large army, in which were many Jews. Alexander,
also with an army of mercenaries and Jews, met him near Shechem. For a while
each army endeavored to cause the defection of their kinsmen from the ranks of
the other, but to no purpose, and a battle was finally fought in which
Alexander was utterly and hopelessly beaten. Judea was again at the mercy of
the Syrians, while the Arabians were kept from invasion only by Alexander’s
ceding them his conquests in Moab and Gilead.
But the very misfortune of Alexander was to prove his salvation. Six
thousand of the Jews who had fought under Demetrius, seeing the dangers to
which their land had been exposed by their victory, suddenly deserted Demetrius
and joined themselves to their wretched king. Immediately the entire scene
changed. Demetrius retired. Alexander, with his new army, repeatedly defeated
the rebels, and at last shut up their leaders in the unidentified town of
Bethome. The city fell into his hands, and he crucified eight hundred of his
prisoners at Jerusalem, after having had their wives and children massacred
before their eyes.
With this fearful vengeance the civil war came to an end. Eight thousand
of the rebels fled from the land, and for the rest of his reign Alexander—known
now as the Thracian—kept the peace from his castles of Alexandrium and Machaerus
with equal severity and success.
Freed from the opposition of the Pharisees, Alexander could again take
up the extension of his kingdom. For a moment, it is true, it seemed possible
that the dying Syrian Empire might be revitalized by the energetic Antiochus
Dionysius, who would not be kept back by Alexander’s ditch and wooden wall across
the plain from Antipatris; but Antiochus was defeated and killed by Aretas,
king of Arabia, who then came into possession of Coele-Syria and Damascus.
Again the fortunes of Alexander looked dark, for Aretas defeated him at Adida.
But the two kings arranged some sort of conditions of peace, and Alexander was
again unhampered for foreign war. In this he was brilliantly successful. Within
three years Dium, Essa, with the treasures of Alexander’s old enemy Zeno,
Gaulana, and Gamala, cities on the east of Jordan, together with Seleucia near
Lake Huleh, fell into his hands, and doubtless, in accordance with his general
relentless policy, were forced to conform to Jewish practices. He returned to
Jerusalem, where he was received with great rejoicings. And with reason, for at
last the ambition of his house and the pride of the un-Pharisaic portion of his
people were in some way satisfied. Thanks to the indomitable warrior, careless
as high priest though he may have been, the boundaries of Judea were now
approximately those of the best days of David. From the desert to the sea,
and from Lebanon to the River of Egypt, there were but few cities which had not
accepted Jewish sovereignty and Jewish rites, or, like Pella, been laid in
ruins because of their refusal to yield such obedience. Even Damascus seems to
have been a subject, or at least under the protection of Alexander. Ascalon on
the plain, Ragaba and Philadelphia, on the east of Jordan, alone maintained
their independence, and Ragaba fell just as Alexander died.
Death of Alexander
Yet it would be a mistake to think of the new kingdom as unified.
Despite the strenuous efforts of the king, it is clear that the land remained broken up into little regions
centring about cities, and also that the heathen were still in the land. These
subject cities it was, undoubtedly, that paid the taxes which supported the
Jewish state, but they were also liable at any time to fall into the hands of
some princeling, like Zeno, and then throw off the Jewish yoke, perhaps,
indeed, to rise into actual rivalry with Judea. In fact, they never were
thoroughly assimilated, and remained to the end centers of deepening
anti-Semitism in the midst of the Jewish territory.
After a reign of twenty-seven years Alexander died, worn out by hardship
and dissipation. But he died as he had lived, a warrior. Through
these years of failing health he carried on his wars, and at last was overcome
by death at the siege of Ragaba, though telling his wife to conceal the fact
until the city had fallen.
Alexander’s death was to work important changes in Judea. He had
never been a friend of the Greeks, and his very wars had been in part for
religion. His struggle with the Pharisees had grown from political, rather
than religious causes, and it is not improbable that his last years had been
marked by something like attempts at reconciliation. At all events, when he found
death upon him, he advised Alexandra, who was to succeed him, to depend upon
the Pharisees once more. That he was not altogether abandoned by the party of
the Law appears in almost the only literary survival of Sadduceeism, the book
of 1 Maccabees — the work of some sincere but unknown friend of the Asmonean
family. Full of devotion to the Law and of hatred of the Hellenizing priests
and people of the early days, the book breathes the spirit of un-Pharisaic Judaism.
Silent as to the oral law, and deeply religious though it is, it never mentions
the name of God. It is something more than the work of a pamphleteer, and in
its simple, direct style it tells how the deliverance from Syria resulted, not
from the miraculous interposition of Jehovah or the patriotism of the Jews as a
people, but from the work of the Maccabees, by whose hand alone was deliverance
given unto Israel.
But it was Pharisaism that most found expression during Alexander’s
reign. Without venturing upon Maccabees, unqualified statements, it
may have been at this time that another unknown writer epitomized such portions
of an historical work of Jason of Cyrene as told of the early days of the
Maccabean house, entitling it the second book of Maccabees. In many particulars
it retells more elaborately the story of 1 Maccabees, but its divergences are
sufficient to prove its independence of that work. It is, in fact, a Pharisaic
reply to 1 Maccabees, avowedly written to show “the manifestation made from
heaven in behalf of those who were zealous to believe manfully in defence of
Judaism”. So full is it of legendary material introduced with this motive, that
its chief value (outside its account of certain of the doings of Antiochus IV)
lies in its expression of the interpretation put by the Pharisees upon history.
A much more important element of the Pharisaic spirit is seen in those
portions of the Book of Enoch which may be with safety referred
to the reign of Alexander. The oppressions of Alexander called for
vengeance from heaven, and for the establishment of the Messianic
kingdom. This latter hope was, it is true nothing new. It is hard to find
a period in the history of the Jews when the more trustful hearts had not been
sustained by hope of the coming of some specially empowered person who should
cause righteousness and justice to go hand in hand with Jewish victories. But
now the misery of those who made God’s law their especial delight intensified
faith and imagination. They had hoped that the Messiah would appear in some member
of the Maccabean house—in Judas or John Hyrcanus. But they had been bitterly disappointed.
The ‘kingdom of the saints’, which had risen triumphant over the ruins of
Syria, had turned out to be but another vulgar monarchy, and the royal high
priest only a very earthly ruler, more interested in foreign alliances and in
conquered cities than in the Law. And at last a Maccabee had turned his arms
against the righteous! With one accord Pharisaism looked to its Bible for
encouragement. In the house of David there was some hope, but in the visions of
Daniel more. The Son of Man, whom the prophet saw, would certainly once more be
seen. He would come to judge the world, to champion and avenge the oppressed,
to bring to life all those in Sheol, and give the righteous the earth for an
inheritance. A new kingdom would be founded in the place of the Maccabean, composed
exclusively of the righteous, forever prosperous and resplendent because of the
immediate presence of the Lord of Spirits, Jehovah Himself.
Alexandra the Queen.
It was this intense Pharisaism, as full of revenge as of faith, that
came into power in the person of Alexander’s widow, Alexandra (78-69 BC). She
must have been no ordinary woman who now, after having made her husband king
and high priest, established her son Hyrcanus in the high-priesthood, reversed
the family policy, and abandoned the Sadducees. Josephus himself, misogynist
though he is, pauses to admit that notwithstanding all her faults “she showed
no sign of the weakness of her sex”, and that “she preserved the nation in
peace”. In large measure, probably, this success was due to her reliance upon
the Pharisees, who had great influence over the people. But, notwithstanding
the increased power of the Gerousia, Alexandra was no puppet, and was, as she
appears on her coins, a queen.
Secure in the favor of this energetic ruler, the Pharisaic Pharisees
began at once the reorganization of the state. First of all they released those
of their number who had been imprisoned, and recalled those who had been
banished. But their desire for revenge did not allow them to stop at such
beginnings. There began a systematic assassination of Sadducean leaders, which
especially sought to cut off the officers of Alexandra, who had had a share in
the crucifixion of the eight hundred. So extensive did this mafia become that
the old generals of Alexander requested Alexandra to allow them to leave
Jerusalem and find safety in control of the frontier fortresses—a request that
when granted put into the hands of Sadducean sympathizers all the strongholds
except Hyrcanium, Machaerus, and Alexandrium. It is doubtful when this request
was granted, and whether it was a part of a widespread plot to gain the kingdom
for Aristobulus; but it was to prove serviceable when such a plot came to be
formed, toward the end of Alexandra’s reign. But peace prevailed throughout the
nine years of Alexandra's reign—thanks to her connection with the Pharisees, and
her mercenaries. Unlike those of her husband, however, these troops were
used but little except for preserving the peace, for Alexandra was as
sagacious in foreign relations as Alexander had been headstrong.
Once only does she seem to have undertaken a war. Then she sent her
younger son, Aristobulus, who possessed many of his father’s characteristics,
to aid Damascus in a struggle with a petty tyrant, Ptolemy Mennaeus. The invasion
of Tigranes (70-69 BC) for a moment threatened real danger, but Alexandra won
his friendship by rich presents, and the interference of the Romans soon made
her doubly secure.
That, however, which made the reign of Alexandra most significance, was
the new stage in the development of Judaism consequent upon the ascendancy of
the Pharisees. To the two classes of which the Gerousia had been composed,
hereditary nobles of the Sadducean party and hereditary priests, there now was
added—or probably more accurately recognised as belonging—a third class, that
of the rabbis. From this time forth we can trace the judicial influence of
rabbinical Pharisaism. As members of a judicial body, the Pharisees sent their
old enemies into banishment, and made the oral tradition, which had grown up
within the circle of literati, the
law of the land. Over this body the young Hyrcanus presided as high priest, but
so utterly lacking was he in energy that Simon ben Shetach, the queen’s
brother, was its real, though unofficial, head. Associated with him in his
reforms was Judah ben Tabbai, who had been induced to come to Jerusalem from
Alexandria for this purpose. Under their influence the Gerousia expunged the
severe laws of the Sadducees; ordered more care to be given the examination of
witnesses; and made divorce more difficult by the provision that the husband
must give the wife he put away some portion of his property. Every feast was
better celebrated as a potent reminder of the Pharisees’ triumph over their
opponents, and that of the Wood Gathering in August as a new impulse to
matrimony and patriotism. The support of the national worship in the temple was
made secure by the levying of the “half-shekel” upon all Jews above the age of
twenty, whether in Palestine or the Dispersion, and what was perhaps most
important of all, the foundations of later scribism were laid by the
establishment of public schools, which a century later were to be universal in
Palestine. It was, in truth, a golden age in the eyes of the scribes—a time
when all things prospered and Jehovah was so propitious that the scribes
preserved the grains of wheat, each as large as a kidney, to show later
generations how righteousness exalts a nation, and how sin curses the ground.
But the inevitable reaction came. Oppressed and persecuted in their turn, the Sadducees yet held possession of most of the fortresses of the land, and at the first evidence of the old queen’s illness, hastened to prepare a revolt that should prevent the permanent ascendancy of the Gerousia. Hyrcanus II was too weak and too subservient to Simon for their purposes, and they turned to his younger brother Aristobulus, whose hostility to the Pharisees was already open. With the death of Alexandra the struggle between the two parties burst forth as fiercely as during the days of Alexander Jannaeus, and under the leadership of the two brothers Judea plunged anew into a civil war that once more established foreign rule.
THE STRUGGLE OF THE PHARISEES WITH THE
ASMONEANS AND SADDUCEES
(105-69 BC)
John Hyrcanus, by his will, made his widow his successor as the political
head of the state, and appointed his eldest son, Aristobulus, to the
high-priesthood. The arrangement was not only novel; it was fatal to all
parties concerned. Aristobulus was not content to share the state with his
mother, but shut her up in prison, where she starved to death. Withher he
imprisoned three of his brothers, thus in genuine Oriental fashion removing all
possible claimants to the throne. Strangely enough, however, probably because
of some deep attachment, he did not include in the fate of his family his brother
Antigonus, with whom he had long been associated in war, but shared his throne
with him. This arrangement resulted in the inevitable conspiracy and death that
attend divided despotisms. Aristobulus was led to mistrust Antigonus, and by a
trick of his queen and his courtiers became the unwitting cause of his death.
He died soon after of a loathsome disease and remorse, having reigned but one
year.
The reign of Aristobulus, however, though brief (105-104 BC), was by no means unimportant.
Josephus speaks of him as a friend of the Greeks, although at the same time he
is ready to admit that Aristobulus served his country by extending its
boundaries. Like his father, Aristobulus endeavored to build his state upon a
common religion. As Hyrcanus had forced circumcision upon the Idumeans, so
Aristobulus forced it upon the Itureans of Northern Galilee, and thus completed
the Judaising of that region.
But even more important was the constitutional step taken by
Aristobulus. Hitherto the Asmonean rulers had laid no claim to the title or
insignia of royalty, but Aristobulus broke with the precedents of his house,
and marked his entrance into power by assuming a diadem and doubtless the title
of king. There is no evidence or, in fact, probability, that the Gerousia regained
any of its prestige during his short reign. On the contrary, it probably lost
even more of its administrative functions, and became even more judicial or
theologically academic. The Jewish theocratic monarchy, in the third generation
of the new high-priestly dynasty, crossed the threshold of an absolutism no
longer limited by tradition or inherited institutions.
So brief was the reign of this first king of the Jews that no time was
given for the Pharisees to organize any strong opposition against his
innovation, but opportunity enough was given during the reign of the third son
of Hyrcanus, Alexander Jonathan, or, as the word is in Greek, Jannaeus (104-78
BC). He, with his brothers, had been imprisoned by Aristobulus, but had been
released, married, and raised to the throne by his brother's widow, Queen
Salome or Alexandra. The high-priesthood was his, also, by virtue of his
kingship, and his abuse of this office, coupled with hatred of the monarchy and
its aims, was sufficient to arouse all Pharisees to desperate opposition. A war
that had begun for the preservation of the Jewish religion had called to the
leadership of the state a family which, after accomplishing religious liberty,
had relegated the ancient Gerousia together with the scribes to political
insignificance, and turned toward international alliances, foreign conquests,
monarchy, and all but declared imperialism. Three toparchies of Samaria,
Gazara, and Joppa, as well as other cities, had been added to Judea by Jonathan
and Simon, but the ambition of the family of Hyrcanus had been farther
reaching. Medaba and Samega, with other cities to the east of Jordan, Shechem,
Samaria, Idumea, Bethshean, and Lower Galilee had been conquered and in part
made Jewish by the father, and now with the conquest of Upper Galilee by
Aristobulus, the ambition of the Asmonean house to found a great kingdom was
brought into sharpest contrast with the Pharisees’ policy of exclusion and
separation.
His conquests
Alexander set about completing the conquests of his father and brother
with all the strength of a reckless nature. With the highlands on the west
of Jordan from Lebanon to the desert already his, he turned upon the cities and
petty kingdoms to the east of Jordan, and upon the cities of the
coast,—Ptolemais, Gaza, Strato’s Tower, and Dora. While Antiochus Cyzicenus was
engaged with Antiochus Philometor, Alexander attacked Ptolemais, beat back its
army, and besieged the city. He was not able to take it, however, because of
the coming of Ptolemy Lathyrus from Cyprus. Unable to cope with so formidable
an antagonist, Alexander raised the siege and tried treachery. Making a treaty
with Ptolemy, he also summoned Cleopatra, the mother of Ptolemy, who had but
recently driven her son out from Egypt. Ptolemy learned of his ally’s
unfaithfulness, and immediately marched with most of his force to conquer
Judea. He captured and sacked Asochis in Galilee on a Sabbath, attacked
Sepphoris unsuccessfully, and then advanced against Alexander. The battle was
fought at Asophon, an unidentified spot on the eastern side of the Jordan
valley, and, thanks to Alexander’s lack of generalship, the tactics of Ptolemy’s
general, Philostephanus, and the discipline of his mercenaries, resulted in a
complete defeat for the Jews. Thereupon Ptolemy took Ptolemais, which, like
Alexander, had proved untrue to him, and ravaged Judea; according to Josephus,
boiling and eating women and children. In the meantime Cleopatra had come up
from Egypt in pursuit of her son, and proceeded to besiege Ptolemais. Ptolemy,
seizing this opportunity, invaded Egypt, but only to be defeated. Thus, by a
strange turn of fortune Judea was again about to be subject to Egypt. In fact,
nothing prevented such a misfortune except the advice of Ananias, one of
Cleopatra’s generals, himself a Jew, who foretold a revolt of the Egyptian Jews
if such a step were taken. Cleopatra, therefore, renewed her treaty with Alexander,
and returned to Egypt.
Alexander was thus left once more free to pursue his policy of expansion.
He took Gadara after siege of ten months, and Amathus, but having lost his
baggage and a large number of his men in a sudden attack by Zeno, the local
sovereign, he crossed again to the coast. There he captured and sacked Raphia
and Anthedon. Gaza was betrayed into his hands after a year’s siege, and was
plundered and burned, its Council of Five Hundred perishing in the burning
temple of Apollo (96 BC). He then made a fresh attack upon the region east of
Jordan, and succeeded in overcoming the cities and tribes in Moab and Gilead.
Amathus, which had revolted, he again took and utterly destroyed. The campaign
ended in misfortune, however, as the Arabian Obedas, whose kingdom, or, at
least, suzerainty, embraced much of the region between Petra and Hermon, drew
the Jews into a narrow ravine near Gadara, and then drove troops of camels down
upon them, completely destroying the army. Barely escaping with his life, Alexander
fled to Jerusalem, only to find his people in open rebellion.
Revolt of the Jews
The explanation of this first revolt against the
Maccabean house is not difficult to discover. Alexander had already drawn
down upon himself the hatred of the Pharisees and their sympathizers by his
disregard of his priestly office. On one occasion, as he had been
officiating at the altar during the Feast of Tabernacles, the crowds of worshippers
had pelted him with citrons they had brought to the temple, shouting insults to
his mother. As a punishment, he had sent his mercenaries against the crowd, and
six thousand of the Jews had been killed. Thereafter, Alexander had officiated
behind a wooden fence he had built within the Court of the Priests.
Such a punishment of orthodox Jews, the first on the part of any
Asmonean, was, in itself, enough to excite the stricter classes, who had
already been embittered by the reorganization of the Gerousia, which, since the
last years of Hyrcanus, had been composed wholly of Sadducees, unless we make
an exception of the redoubtable Simon ben Shetach, brother of the queen. But
more potent than all must have been the deep-seated opposition of the Pharisees
to the undisguised usurpations of the high priest. The scandalous stories told
of him by Josephus must be in some degree charged to the historian’s bias, but
the hatred of the Pharisees was intense, and when, after eight years of
endurance, it once seemed possible to crush the fugitive king and restore the
old constitution, they and their followers rose as a man.
For six years the religious and civil war raged, and fifty thousand Jews
are said to have fallen. Then, with one of the
untactful attempts at compromise which are to be seen throughout
his life, even in the midst of Pharisaic libels, Alexander attempted to treat
with his subjects. But their only condition of submission was that he should
kill himself, and in a rage of hate they turned for aid to the Syrian king,
Demetrius Eucaerus. Such a course was desperate but characteristic of the
Pharisees, who now, as later, preferred a foreign ruler and a Gerousia which
they might control, to independence and an irresponsible monarch. Demetrius
came to the aid of the rebels with a large army, in which were many Jews. Alexander,
also with an army of mercenaries and Jews, met him near Shechem. For a while
each army endeavored to cause the defection of their kinsmen from the ranks of
the other, but to no purpose, and a battle was finally fought in which
Alexander was utterly and hopelessly beaten. Judea was again at the mercy of
the Syrians, while the Arabians were kept from invasion only by Alexander’s
ceding them his conquests in Moab and Gilead.
But the very misfortune of Alexander was to prove his salvation. Six
thousand of the Jews who had fought under Demetrius, seeing the dangers to
which their land had been exposed by their victory, suddenly deserted Demetrius
and joined themselves to their wretched king. Immediately the entire scene
changed. Demetrius retired. Alexander, with his new army, repeatedly defeated
the rebels, and at last shut up their leaders in the unidentified town of
Bethome. The city fell into his hands, and he crucified eight hundred of his
prisoners at Jerusalem, after having had their wives and children massacred
before their eyes.
With this fearful vengeance the civil war came to an end. Eight thousand
of the rebels fled from the land, and for the rest of his reign Alexander—known
now as the Thracian—kept the peace from his castles of Alexandrium and Machaerus
with equal severity and success.
Freed from the opposition of the Pharisees, Alexander could again take
up the extension of his kingdom. For a moment, it is true, it seemed possible
that the dying Syrian Empire might be revitalized by the energetic Antiochus
Dionysius, who would not be kept back by Alexander’s ditch and wooden wall across
the plain from Antipatris; but Antiochus was defeated and killed by Aretas,
king of Arabia, who then came into possession of Coele-Syria and Damascus.
Again the fortunes of Alexander looked dark, for Aretas defeated him at Adida.
But the two kings arranged some sort of conditions of peace, and Alexander was
again unhampered for foreign war. In this he was brilliantly successful. Within
three years Dium, Essa, with the treasures of Alexander’s old enemy Zeno,
Gaulana, and Gamala, cities on the east of Jordan, together with Seleucia near
Lake Huleh, fell into his hands, and doubtless, in accordance with his general
relentless policy, were forced to conform to Jewish practices. He returned to
Jerusalem, where he was received with great rejoicings. And with reason, for at
last the ambition of his house and the pride of the un-Pharisaic portion of his
people were in some way satisfied. Thanks to the indomitable warrior, careless
as high priest though he may have been, the boundaries of Judea were now
approximately those of the best days of David. From the desert to the sea,
and from Lebanon to the River of Egypt, there were but few cities which had not
accepted Jewish sovereignty and Jewish rites, or, like Pella, been laid in
ruins because of their refusal to yield such obedience. Even Damascus seems to
have been a subject, or at least under the protection of Alexander. Ascalon on
the plain, Ragaba and Philadelphia, on the east of Jordan, alone maintained
their independence, and Ragaba fell just as Alexander died.
Death of Alexander
Yet it would be a mistake to think of the new kingdom as unified.
Despite the strenuous efforts of the king, it is clear that the land remained broken up into little regions
centring about cities, and also that the heathen were still in the land. These
subject cities it was, undoubtedly, that paid the taxes which supported the
Jewish state, but they were also liable at any time to fall into the hands of
some princeling, like Zeno, and then throw off the Jewish yoke, perhaps,
indeed, to rise into actual rivalry with Judea. In fact, they never were
thoroughly assimilated, and remained to the end centers of deepening
anti-Semitism in the midst of the Jewish territory.
After a reign of twenty-seven years Alexander died, worn out by hardship
and dissipation. But he died as he had lived, a warrior. Through
these years of failing health he carried on his wars, and at last was overcome
by death at the siege of Ragaba, though telling his wife to conceal the fact
until the city had fallen.
Alexander’s death was to work important changes in Judea. He had
never been a friend of the Greeks, and his very wars had been in part for
religion. His struggle with the Pharisees had grown from political, rather
than religious causes, and it is not improbable that his last years had been
marked by something like attempts at reconciliation. At all events, when he found
death upon him, he advised Alexandra, who was to succeed him, to depend upon
the Pharisees once more. That he was not altogether abandoned by the party of
the Law appears in almost the only literary survival of Sadduceeism, the book
of 1 Maccabees — the work of some sincere but unknown friend of the Asmonean
family. Full of devotion to the Law and of hatred of the Hellenizing priests
and people of the early days, the book breathes the spirit of un-Pharisaic Judaism.
Silent as to the oral law, and deeply religious though it is, it never mentions
the name of God. It is something more than the work of a pamphleteer, and in
its simple, direct style it tells how the deliverance from Syria resulted, not
from the miraculous interposition of Jehovah or the patriotism of the Jews as a
people, but from the work of the Maccabees, by whose hand alone was deliverance
given unto Israel.
But it was Pharisaism that most found expression during Alexander’s
reign. Without venturing upon Maccabees, unqualified statements, it
may have been at this time that another unknown writer epitomized such portions
of an historical work of Jason of Cyrene as told of the early days of the
Maccabean house, entitling it the second book of Maccabees. In many particulars
it retells more elaborately the story of 1 Maccabees, but its divergences are
sufficient to prove its independence of that work. It is, in fact, a Pharisaic
reply to 1 Maccabees, avowedly written to show “the manifestation made from
heaven in behalf of those who were zealous to believe manfully in defence of
Judaism”. So full is it of legendary material introduced with this motive, that
its chief value (outside its account of certain of the doings of Antiochus IV)
lies in its expression of the interpretation put by the Pharisees upon history.
A much more important element of the Pharisaic spirit is seen in those
portions of the Book of Enoch which may be with safety referred
to the reign of Alexander. The oppressions of Alexander called for
vengeance from heaven, and for the establishment of the Messianic
kingdom. This latter hope was, it is true nothing new. It is hard to find
a period in the history of the Jews when the more trustful hearts had not been
sustained by hope of the coming of some specially empowered person who should
cause righteousness and justice to go hand in hand with Jewish victories. But
now the misery of those who made God’s law their especial delight intensified
faith and imagination. They had hoped that the Messiah would appear in some member
of the Maccabean house—in Judas or John Hyrcanus. But they had been bitterly disappointed.
The ‘kingdom of the saints’, which had risen triumphant over the ruins of
Syria, had turned out to be but another vulgar monarchy, and the royal high
priest only a very earthly ruler, more interested in foreign alliances and in
conquered cities than in the Law. And at last a Maccabee had turned his arms
against the righteous! With one accord Pharisaism looked to its Bible for
encouragement. In the house of David there was some hope, but in the visions of
Daniel more. The Son of Man, whom the prophet saw, would certainly once more be
seen. He would come to judge the world, to champion and avenge the oppressed,
to bring to life all those in Sheol, and give the righteous the earth for an
inheritance. A new kingdom would be founded in the place of the Maccabean, composed
exclusively of the righteous, forever prosperous and resplendent because of the
immediate presence of the Lord of Spirits, Jehovah Himself.
Alexandra the Queen.
It was this intense Pharisaism, as full of revenge as of faith, that
came into power in the person of Alexander’s widow, Alexandra (78-69 BC). She
must have been no ordinary woman who now, after having made her husband king
and high priest, established her son Hyrcanus in the high-priesthood, reversed
the family policy, and abandoned the Sadducees. Josephus himself, misogynist
though he is, pauses to admit that notwithstanding all her faults “she showed
no sign of the weakness of her sex”, and that “she preserved the nation in
peace”. In large measure, probably, this success was due to her reliance upon
the Pharisees, who had great influence over the people. But, notwithstanding
the increased power of the Gerousia, Alexandra was no puppet, and was, as she
appears on her coins, a queen.
Secure in the favor of this energetic ruler, the Pharisaic Pharisees
began at once the reorganization of the state. First of all they released those
of their number who had been imprisoned, and recalled those who had been
banished. But their desire for revenge did not allow them to stop at such
beginnings. There began a systematic assassination of Sadducean leaders, which
especially sought to cut off the officers of Alexandra, who had had a share in
the crucifixion of the eight hundred. So extensive did this mafia become that
the old generals of Alexander requested Alexandra to allow them to leave
Jerusalem and find safety in control of the frontier fortresses—a request that
when granted put into the hands of Sadducean sympathizers all the strongholds
except Hyrcanium, Machaerus, and Alexandrium. It is doubtful when this request
was granted, and whether it was a part of a widespread plot to gain the kingdom
for Aristobulus; but it was to prove serviceable when such a plot came to be
formed, toward the end of Alexandra’s reign. But peace prevailed throughout the
nine years of Alexandra's reign—thanks to her connection with the Pharisees, and
her mercenaries. Unlike those of her husband, however, these troops were
used but little except for preserving the peace, for Alexandra was as
sagacious in foreign relations as Alexander had been headstrong.
Once only does she seem to have undertaken a war. Then she sent her
younger son, Aristobulus, who possessed many of his father’s characteristics,
to aid Damascus in a struggle with a petty tyrant, Ptolemy Mennaeus. The invasion
of Tigranes (70-69 BC) for a moment threatened real danger, but Alexandra won
his friendship by rich presents, and the interference of the Romans soon made
her doubly secure.
That, however, which made the reign of Alexandra most significance, was
the new stage in the development of Judaism consequent upon the ascendancy of
the Pharisees. To the two classes of which the Gerousia had been composed,
hereditary nobles of the Sadducean party and hereditary priests, there now was
added—or probably more accurately recognised as belonging—a third class, that
of the rabbis. From this time forth we can trace the judicial influence of
rabbinical Pharisaism. As members of a judicial body, the Pharisees sent their
old enemies into banishment, and made the oral tradition, which had grown up
within the circle of literati, the
law of the land. Over this body the young Hyrcanus presided as high priest, but
so utterly lacking was he in energy that Simon ben Shetach, the queen’s
brother, was its real, though unofficial, head. Associated with him in his
reforms was Judah ben Tabbai, who had been induced to come to Jerusalem from
Alexandria for this purpose. Under their influence the Gerousia expunged the
severe laws of the Sadducees; ordered more care to be given the examination of
witnesses; and made divorce more difficult by the provision that the husband
must give the wife he put away some portion of his property. Every feast was
better celebrated as a potent reminder of the Pharisees’ triumph over their
opponents, and that of the Wood Gathering in August as a new impulse to
matrimony and patriotism. The support of the national worship in the temple was
made secure by the levying of the “half-shekel” upon all Jews above the age of
twenty, whether in Palestine or the Dispersion, and what was perhaps most
important of all, the foundations of later scribism were laid by the
establishment of public schools, which a century later were to be universal in
Palestine. It was, in truth, a golden age in the eyes of the scribes—a time
when all things prospered and Jehovah was so propitious that the scribes
preserved the grains of wheat, each as large as a kidney, to show later
generations how righteousness exalts a nation, and how sin curses the ground.
But the inevitable reaction came. Oppressed and persecuted in their turn, the Sadducees yet held possession of most of the fortresses of the land, and at the first evidence of the old queen’s illness, hastened to prepare a revolt that should prevent the permanent ascendancy of the Gerousia. Hyrcanus II was too weak and too subservient to Simon for their purposes, and they turned to his younger brother Aristobulus, whose hostility to the Pharisees was already open. With the death of Alexandra the struggle between the two parties burst forth as fiercely as during the days of Alexander Jannaeus, and under the leadership of the two brothers Judea plunged anew into a civil war that once more established foreign rule.
THE ROMAN CONQUEST OF JUDEA
However legitimate a successor of his mother the young high priest, Hyrcanus,
may have been, it is clear that the sympathies of his troops were with their
old commanders, for when he and Aristobulus met in battle at Jericho, many of
his soldiers deserted to the enemy, and Hyrcanus himself was forced to flee to
Jerusalem. There he gained possession of the temple area and of the citadel in
which the wife and children of Aristobulus had been imprisoned by Alexandra.
Probably because of these circumstances Aristobulus was not eager to push his
advantage, and within three months from the death of their mother the two
brothers came to an amicable agreement. The kingdom and high-priesthood were
taken by Aristobulus, and the weak Hyrcanus, reduced to a mere private citizen,
was left to the enjoyment of his fortune.
And thus affairs might have remained but for the appearance of an
extraordinary man, Antipater, an Idumean, whose father had been
governor of Idumea under Alexander Jannaeus and Alexandra. For some reason,
perhaps from suspicion of Aristobulus II, he attached himself to Hyrcanus, and endeavored
to rouse him into something like self-respect, if not revolt. At first his
efforts were unavailing, but at last he persuaded Hyrcanus that his brother
threatened his life, and induced him to flee to Aretas, king of Arabia. Once
secure in the friendly court at Petra, Antipater found no difficulty in
persuading Hyrcanus to ask aid from Aretas against Aristobulus. The king
consented, but demanded the return of the territory and the twelve cities
Alexander had taken. These terms once granted, Aretas, Antipater, and Hyrcanus,
at the head of fifty thousand men, marched against Aristobulus, defeated him,
and drove him into the temple and citadel of Jerusalem. There they besieged
him, Jerusalem itself being divided, the people favoring Hyrcanus, but the
priests, Aristobulus. The struggle was carried on with great bitterness—the
first war for succession in the history of the Maccabean house. The principal
Jews deserted the city and went to Egypt; but neither party would yield.
Cruelty and bad faith increased the madness, while a furious storm—due, as the
priests believed, to the impiety of the besiegers— brought a famine upon the
entire land.
Doubtless, sooner or later, Aristobulus must have yielded, if only from
hunger; but before such an extremity was reached a new factor appeared in Jewish
politics. For years the Romans had been closing in upon the Syrian and neighboring
kingdoms, and at last the desperate struggles of Tigranes had led to the
expedition of Pompey. Armed with unprecedented powers, Pompey had succeeded in
reducing Asia to something like order, and in 65 BC sent his general, Scaurus,
to secure Syria. Scaurus arrived at Damascus only to find himself anticipated
by two of Pompey’s other generals, Lollius and Metellus. At once he started
toward Judea, but before he could reach Jerusalem the two brothers heard of his
approach, and, true to the traditional Roman policy of their family, each sent
an embassy, promising a present of 400 talents for a favorable decision.
Scaurus decided in favour of Aristobulus, as his seemed to be the more
promising cause, ordered Aretas to return to Arabia, and himself returned to
Damascus. Thereupon Aristobulus attacked the besieging force, and completely
defeated it.
Neither party regarded the quarrel settled, however, for when Pompey
himself arrived in Syria, in the winter of 64-63 BC, Aristobulus sent him ambassadors,
and a wonderful golden vine worth 500 talents, and a little later other
ambassadors came from Hyrcanus and Antipater. Postponing all decision, Pompey
devoted himself to the reduction of the petty states of Coele-Syria, and in the
spring arrived in Damascus. There the representatives of the two brothers again
met him, and with them those of the Pharisees, who requested that neither
brother be recognised as king, but that the state be allowed to enjoy its old
government of the high priest and Gerousia.
Revolt of Aristobulus
The latter request Pompey seems to have ignored, and after condemning the
violent proceedings of Aristobulus and ordering both brothers to keep the
peace, he deferred his decision until he had made an expedition against the
Nabateans and had then come into Judea. He then set out upon his campaign,
probably taking Aristobulus and Hyrcanus with him. When they arrived at Dium,
however, Aristobulus suddenly fled to the beautiful fortress of Alexandrium, just
inside the borders of Judea. There in that castle which was later to contain
the bodies of so many of the last unhappy Maccabees, he proposed to stand a
siege. He was, however, forced to surrender all his fortresses to the Romans,
and retired in a rage to Jerusalem to prepare for war.
Hearing of this revolution Pompey marched down to Jericho, then
luxuriant with palms and balsams, and, after a single night’s rest, went up to
Jerusalem. Again Aristobulus weakened, came out to meet Pompey, and promised to
pay over a large sum of money and to surrender the city if only the Romans would
leave the country in peace. With his customary willingness to avoid unnecessary
injury to a dependent people, Pompey agreed to the proposals, and sent Gabinius
to receive the money and the city. But when that general appeared at the gates
of Jerusalem, he found the sympathies of its inhabitants divided. On the one
hand, the great mass of the population was desirous of avoiding bloodshed and
of receiving the Romans; but on the other, the soldiers of Aristobulus would
listen to no proposition of surrender, closed the gates fast, and sent Gabinius
back to Pompey empty-handed. Naturally enraged at this unfaithfulness, Pompey
threw Aristobulus into chains, and proceeded
against Jerusalem. Within the city, the party of Aristobulus
seized the temple, but the other admitted Pompey’s army into the city proper.
Then there began the siege of the temple, which was by no means successful
until, taking advantage of the Jews’ unwillingness to engage in offensive
operations on the Sabbath, Pompey was able to build a great bank opposite the
north wall of the temple, on which to set his artillery. For three months the
siege continued, but the wall was broken on the Day of Atonement (October, 63
BC), and the Romans rushed into the temple, butchering the priests at the
altar. Twelve thousand Jews are said to have fallen. Pompey, with a few of his
friends, entered the Holy of Holies; but left all the treasure of the temple,
amounting to 2000 talents, untouched. The day after the capture, the worship of
the temple began again at his command with Hyrcanus II as high priest.
Aristobulus and his family graced Pompey’s triumph in Rome, and large numbers
of captives were carried to the capital, where they raised the Jewish colony to
great importance, even if they may not be said to have founded it.
Reorganization of Judea by Gabinius.
Thus almost exactly a hundred years from the triumphs of Judas Maccabaeus,
and only eighty since its independence was fairly achieved, Judea once more and
finally fell into the control of a foreign power. Before leaving the country,
Pompey stripped it of most of the territory won since the days of Simon, and
made the remainder, with the high priest, subject to his representative in
Syria, Scaurus, who was left for two years in charge of the entire region between
Egypt and the Euphrates, with full praetorian power.
Just how long Hyrcanus could have maintained this somewhat uncertain
position, is a question; but after six years the revolt of Alexander, the son
of Aristobulus, led to a thorough reorganization of the government under Gabinius,
who at that time (57 BC) was in
charge of the Roman affairs in Syria.
Hyrcanus was left in possession of the high-priesthood, but was deprived
of all political power, which now, quite after the plans of the Pharisees, was
vested in an aristocracy. Judea was divided into five districts, at the head of
each of which was the council of its chief city,—Jerusalem, Gadara, Amathus,
Jericho, Sepphoris.
These councils were primarily courts (sanhedrins), but in addition to their judicial functions probably
had charge of the taxes and local affairs, and were subject to the proconsul of
Syria.
The feelings with which a proud people thus saw a national future
suddenly disappear, a dynasty removed, and a new master established, appear in
part in the bitter comment of Josephus upon the Asmonean house, but even more
in the Psalms of the Pharisees, or as
they are better known, the Psalms of
Solomon. In them appear alike the Pharisees’ contempt for the Asmonean
house, righteous indignation at its disloyalty to its sacred office, sorrow for
the miseries of the nation, and complete assurance that in the death of Pompey
God was punishing the instrument of his wrath. Along with the political feeling
there ran a passionate moral indignation. Divine punishment awaited the
hypocrite and sinner, but justification and help the righteous. In addition,
the new conditions so unfavorable to any political career made the study of the
Thorah a matter of course. “Love work, hate authority, and do not press thyself
upon the great”, was the advice of Shemaiah, the successor of Simon ben
Shetach, and from this time begins a new succession of great teachers of
scribisin, who were almost without exception, members of the Pharisaic society.
With this transformation there went of necessity the end of political
struggles between the Pharisees and the Sadducees. Neither could now hope for
victory over the other and were at one in their hatred of the Romans. Yet each
still pursued its own ends, and in the region of religion, at least, their old
conflict. The Pharisee grew more intense in his search for righteousness in
accordance with the oral law, the Sadducee grew more content to point out the
weaknesses of his opponent, to annoy him by subtle questions, and to await
stoically the decrees of Providence. To each alike God seemed to grow farther
away. If the Sadducee introduced a mediatory Wisdom, the Pharisee saw his God
only at the end of an interminable succession of duties, and represented
on earth by his word (memra; bath qol). Righteousness became increasingly
dependent upon rabbinical learning—a possession possible only to the
aristocracy of the schools. God himself became a rabbi, read every Sabbath in
the Bible, and became entangled in an all embracing scholasticism.
The Messiah of the Psalms of the Pharisees.
Yet, through this arid legalism bred of thought that could not deal with
politics, there ran a genuinely spiritual hope. Sick at heart of all attempts
to found a political kingdom, the faith of Pharisaism looked more eagerly for
the coming of King Messiah. The misery of the days that stirred the indignation
of the writer of the Psalms of the Pharisees, brought with it also the lesson
that God’s kingdom must be something other than that of the Asmoneans. From
this conviction there burst the splendid vision of a new kingdom of saints:
“And a righteous king and taught of God is he that reigneth over them.
And there shall be no iniquity in his days in their midst; for all shall
be holy and their king is the Lord Messiah.
For he shall not put his trust in horse and rider and bow; nor shall he
multiply unto himself gold and silver for war; nor by ships shall he gather
confidence for the day of battle.
The Lord himself is his king, and the hope of him that is strong in the
hope of God.
And he shall have mercy upon all nations that come to him in fear.
He himself also is pure from sin, so that he may rule a mighty people,
and rebuke princes and overthrow sinners, by the might of his word.
And who can stand up against him? He is mighty in his works and strong
in the fear of God,
Tending the flocks of the Lord with faith and righteousness; and he
shall suffer none to faint in their pasture”.
Henceforth the Messianic hope in the hearts of many Pharisees grew less
political, and in its stead there is to be seen a desperate belief that the new
and glorious kingdom must await the triumph of the Law and the resurrection of
the dead. That this eschatological hope was not the hope of the people at
large, goes without saying. That it could not steady a people under extreme
provocation was, unfortunately, also to appear.
CHAPTER IVTHE RISE OF THE HOUSE OF ANTIPATER
|
HISTORY OF THE JEWS
|