A HISTORY OF NEW TESTAMENT TIMES IN PALESTINE, 175 BC-70 AD
CHAPTER V.PALESTINE UNDER THE ROMANS AND THE TETRARCHS
Exclusive of the Greek cities, Palestine was broken into three separate
administrative districts, the province of Judea and the tetrarchies of Herod
Antipas and Philip—a division that seems to have outlasted the Jewish nation
itself.
1. Of these three districts, the most important in all respects was
the province of Judea, over which were the procurators. It was composed of
three parts, each historically distinct from each other. Samaria lay between
Judea and Galilee, corresponding roughly to the ancient Northern Kingdom of
Israel, except that it no longer included the plain of Esdraelon, Jenin being
its northern border. It apparently extended from the Jordan to the maritime
plain, but its northern boundary was never long fixed. Josephus gives the
Acrabattene toparchy, the village Annath or Borceas, and Korea, as on the
southern border. It was a fertile region, and although small,—its area
being even less than that of Galilee,—like Judea, it was “full of people” whose
history has already been seen to have been closely interwoven with that of the
Jews proper.
Judea, the most important division of the country, and that which gave
its name to the province, extended from Samaria to the desert, and from the
Jordan to the maritime plain, the cities of which, even Joppa and Jamnia,
thoroughly Jewish though they were, not being counted as a part of it. Its area
was approximately two thousand square miles. It was divided into eleven
toparchies, at the head of which was Jerusalem, although the official residence
of the procurator was Caesarea. Jerusalem, alone of all the towns of Judea, was
a city in anything like the Graeco-Roman sense. The nature of these toparchies
is not altogether clear, but probably they consisted of a town and its
surrounding country. The smaller towns of Judea do not seem to have been very
much organized, and were probably dependent upon some larger city or metropolis. If
this conjecture be correct, we have another parallel between the
Graeco-Egyptian and the Graeco-Jewish administration. These villages had their
own councils or Sanhedrins which tried civil and less important criminal cases,
and were probably administered by “village-clerks” precisely as in Egypt. The
relation of Jerusalem to these toparchies was something more than that of a
merely nominal head. Itself the one great city out of the twenty-nine which Judea
boasted, its Council, or Sanhedrin, not only was the court of appeal, but its
officials collected the tribute paid to the Romans. Its position is to be seen
also in the fact that in the great rebellion it organized all Judea and, at
least imperfectly, Galilee against their enemy. This superiority, however, did
not extend over the Greek cities of Judea, which were either like Caesarea
directly attached to the province of Syria, or held as the private property of
some favored person.
Idumea was the district lying to the south of Judea proper, including
the Negeb and the southern Shephelah. John Hyrcanus conquered it, and compelled
its inhabitants to receive the law of Moses and circumcision. Notwithstanding
the fact that its inhabitants were regarded as the descendants of Isaac only
through Esau and that the Herodian family originated within it, Idumea was
treated as Jewish, since descendants of three generations were regarded as real
Jews. In the time of Christ this was increasingly true, and during the War, the
Idumeans were among the most fanatical of all the revolutionists. It is not
possible to discover the exact political relations of Idumea to the province,
but it would seem to have been treated as a toparchy.
These three little districts were joined into Judea. The fiscal an
imperial province of the second rank, governed by a procurator who was of the
equestrian rank. Strictly speaking, Judea was not a part of Syria, although in
one or two exceptional cases the legate of that province seems to have
possessed some power over the procurators. But apart from these exceptional
cases the procurator was vested with full powers. Primarily a fiscal agent, his
office naturally kept him at the head of the administration of the taxes and
the customs. Of the two, the taxes were more directly under his control,
although under the empire the Roman governors were no longer able to abuse the
provincials as under the republic. In fact, they had become salaried officials,
and whatever taxes were collected—in the case of Judea, probably six hundred
talents—were expended as far as necessary upon the province itself for public
improvements like roads, harbors, public buildings, and the remainder was sent
to the imperial treasury (fiscus). It
was probably for this collection of taxes that Judea had been divided into toparchies,
and to the Sanhedrin of each was probably assigned the duty of collecting the
tax levied upon it. These taxes, however, were no longer farmed, but collected
by imperial officials. Naturally the procurator of Judea could levy no taxes
upon the tetrarchies of Antipas and Philip.
But if the taxes were officially collected, the customs were farmed.
They were of almost every conceivable sort,—export duties, import duties,
octroi, bridge and harbor duties, market taxes, tax on salt—and were sold out
to speculators, who in turn sold their rights to various collectors. The men who
actually did the collecting —the publicans (mokhes)
of the New Testament—were thus exposed to the strongest temptation to misuse
their position, and no class of men was ever more cordially hated. However much
the local authorities might attempt to regulate the impost, the despised
collectors were always able to levy blackmail and practice extortion.
Military and judicial powers of the procurator.
In addition to his fiscal duties the procurator had military and
judicial powers that easily made him master of Judea. Except at feasts, only a
single cohort was stationed at Jerusalem. His troops consisted almost exclusively
of mercenaries, chiefly Samaritans,—a fact that did not make toward good
feeling. As a judge he had the power of life and death, appeal to the emperor
being granted only in case of Roman citizens, and then only after formal
protest had been made. Yet the number of cases actually brought before the
procurator was probably small, for most would doubtless be settled in one of
the toparchical sanhedrins, or in the great Sanhedrin of Jerusalem, where the
Jewish law would be understood. Crimes involving capital punishment were,
however, in his hands, although it is not quite certain at what date the right
was thus restricted.
In general the establishment of the Roman administration probably
affected Jewish society but little. It may even have been acceptable to the
Pharisees, if, as Josephus says, the government fell really into the hands of
native aristocracy with the high priest at its head. The Jews were indeed
required to take the oath of allegiance to each new emperor, and the procurator,
except at feasts, kept the robe of the high priest locked up in the castle of
Antonia, but such requirements were more than offset by the religious liberty given
the Jews, the guaranteed sanctity of the temple, and the general leniency shown
their intense religious feeling. Apart from the Zealots it is probable that there
was but a minority of the inhabitants of Judea that did not assent heartily to
the daily sacrifices of two lambs and an ox for the welfare of the emperor.
Such examples of tolerance as the recognition of the Sabbath, the
omission of the emperor’s head on the copper coinage of the country, the
leaving of military standards outside Jerusalem, the recognition of the Jews’
right to kill even a Roman citizen who went beyond the court of the Gentiles in
the temple, are as creditable to the Romans as indicative of the extraordinary
religious fervor of the Jews themselves. Indeed, from the days of Julius Caesar
the Jews had enjoyed special favors from the Romans, who, it will be
remembered, seldom interfered with a conquered people’s customs and
institutions further than was absolutely necessary in the interest of good administration.
In the case of Judea the native courts or sanhedrins were also left in
possession of considerable powers of local jurisdiction and administration, and
the people were thus allowed large opportunity for pursuing the practice as
well as the study of the Law.
The Sanhedrin
It is here that one meets the culminating institution of legalistic
Judaism—the Sanhedrin of Jerusalem. If
the various rabbinical traditions concerning its origin
be disregarded, the Sanhedrin of Jerusalem may be said to have been essentially
the Gerousia of that city with changed powers and character. As merely a
town-council its powers had sensibly diminished from the death of Simon, and it
had become increasingly judicial and academic in character. At the same time it
had doubtless grown in the estimation of the people at large, and, as it grew
predominantly Pharisaic, its prestige and influence still more increased. Under
Aristobulus II and Antigonus it is true its membership was largely from the
Sadducees, but the massacre of forty-five of its members by Herod immediately
after his victory over Antigonus again opened the way for Pharisaic
predominance. Thus under Herod, the Sanhedrin first became the Creature of the
king, ready even to condemn the unfortunate Hyrcanus, but lost practically all
of such administrative powers as it still retained. With the Powers of
establishment of the provincial government, it regained many of such powers,
and, in addition, became the supreme court for all cases of importance—civil,
criminal, and religious—under the Mosaic law. That it had any jurisdiction in
Galilee during the reign of Herod Antipas seems unlikely, although its
decisions on legal points, especially concerning marriage, divorce,
genealogies, heresies, and the calendar, would undoubtedly be received as final
by all Jews. In Judea proper it could make arrests, try and condemn
criminals to any punishment except death, without any ratification on
the part of the procurator. In all capital cases condemnation could not be
pronounced until after a night had passed, but no such restriction applied to
acquittal. All decisions were apparently made by a majority, but in convictions
this must not be less than two.
The Sanhedrin met on Mondays and Thursdays in its own building, which
probably stood on the west side of the temple mount. It was composed of
seventy-two members of pure Hebrew descent; twenty-three constituting a quorum.
How the members were appointed is uncertain, but they were inducted into the
body by the laying on of hands. They were not all of equal rank; the members of
the high priestly families being naturally the more important. The other
members of the body were called scribes, or simply elders. The latter two classes were
doubtless Pharisees. The Sanhedrin seems to have been organized with the high
priest as president, and with the Committee of Ten, so
common in Graeco-Roman towns.
Procurators.
Of the early procurators there is very little known. They had the power
of removing and appointing high priests, but judged Jews according to Jewish
law. Their office was not an easy one, and the fanatical hatred of the Jews and
Samaritans was constantly leading to outbreaks requiring severe punishment. Of
them all, Pontius Pilate is best known, not merely from the gospels, but from
Philo and Josephus. The former describes
him as of an “unbending and recklessly hard character”, while the latter gives
various incidents of his alleged oppression. At this distance, however, one of
these acts seems to have been due to inexperience; and the others —the use of
temple treasures to build an aqueduct, and the punishment of the Samaritans for
what certainly looks like an incipient revolution—seem those of a man very much
in earnest to maintain order and give a good administration. The fact that
Tiberius, who was especially attentive to the provinces, left him in office for
ten years, is distinctly in his favor—a fact that his condemnation under
Caligula does not seriously affect.
The Tetrarchy of Philip
2. Altogether independent of the procurators
were the tetrarchies given the two sons of Herod. Of
these two, that of Philip embraced the territory lying between the Yarmuk, the
Jordan, Mount Hermon, and Damascus and the desert, but its boundaries are very
difficult to locate exactly. It was composed of a number of small districts
(Batanea, Trachonitis, Gaulanitis, Iturea, Auranitis), which had been conquered
by Jewish rulers, especially Herod I, or which had been given Herod I by Rome.
This heterogeneous tetrarchy, after having been raised to a kingdom by
Caligula, continued its political life after the destruction of Jerusalem.
The tetrarch Philip (4 BC-34 AD) was the most respectable of the three
brothers who succeeded Herod. His territory was not Jewish, and was far less
productive than that of either Archelaus or Antipas, yet he seems to have been
content to live within it, especially seeking to administer justice. One of the
most peaceful pictures of these years is that of Philip travelling through his
rough dominions attended by a few chosen friends, and sitting as judge in the
market-places of the cities and towns, or wherever a case had to be tried. Like
his father, he was fond of building. Banias was made into a noble city, with
rights of asylum, which he named Caesarea (Philippi), and on the east bank of
the Jordan, just above its entrance into the Lake of Galilee, he made the
village of Bethsaida into a city, which, in honor of the daughter of Augustus,
he called Julias. Removed from the influences of the Jewish life, he grew
increasingly Hellenistic, and again like his father, built many temples to the
heathen gods. He seems to have had some interest in scientific matters, for it
is related of him that he proved (at least to the satisfaction of his own time)
that the springs at Banias mark the emergence of an underground river, by
throwing chaff into the pool of Phiala. Further than this, little is known of
his reign, except that he stamped his image on his coins, which, although not
unprecedented in the history of the Jews, is sufficient to show his Hellenistic
sympathies. At his death, his territory, though still controlling its
revenues, was added to Syria, but later was given by Caligula to Herod Agrippa
I (37 AD), with the title of king.
3. The tetrachy of Herod Antipas Much more important was the tetrarchy of Herod
Antipas, consisting of Galilee and Perea. In popular speech, Galilee was
divided into two parts—Upper and Lower. Upper Galilee is much higher and more
mountainous, some of its peaks reaching nearly four thousand feet; while Lower
Galilee has rolling hills and fine valleys in which sycamores grow—a prime
distinction in the Talmud. As, however, the two were politically a unit, it is
hardly necessary to retain the division.
On the north Galilee was bounded by Tyre, the line running approximately
through Tell-el-kadi to the Litani; on the east by the Jordan and
the Sea of Galilee and again the Jordan; on the south by the region of
Scythopolis and Samaria, the line running along the southern edge of Esdraelon;
and on the west by the regions of Tyre, which included Carmel and Ptolemais.
Altogether it measured fifty or sixty miles north and south, and from
twenty-five to thirty-five east and west, its area being about sixteen hundred
square miles. It was an exceedingly prosperous region, full of vineyards and
gardens, villages and cities, while its beautiful lake —the Sea of Galilee—had
upon its northwestern side the plain of Gennesaret, regarded by Josephus as “an
ambitious effort of nature doing violence to herself in bringing together
plants of discordant habits, with an admirable rivalry of the seasons, each as
it were, asserting her rights to the soil; a spot where grapes and figs grew
during ten months without intermission, while the other varieties of fruit
ripened the year round”. Its capital was Sephoris, until Herod Antipas
transferred that honor to his new city of Tiberias. Under the later Maccabees
and Herod I, Galilee had been a part of the kingdom of the Jews, but after the
death of Herod I it was separated from the rest of Palestine and given as a tetrarchy
to Herod Antipas. Thereafter it retained to some degree its identity, being
treated probably as an administrative unit; for we find it added entire to the
kingdom of Herod Agrippa I, and at the time of the Jewish war assigned to
Josephus for organization. There is, however, no certain evidence that it was
ever treated as a separate procuratorial district.
Galilee was inhabited by Gentiles and Jews, although the latter
undoubtedly predominated. They are called Galileans, but whenever contrasted
with other peoples, like the Romans, they are called Jews, as, indeed, are also
the Samaritans and Pereans. But it should be remembered that in the time of
Jesus this Jewish element had not been long resident in Galilee. Whatever
colonists had settled there prior to the Maccabean revolt had been removed by
Simon. It was probably not until after Aristobulus conquered and
circumcised the Itureans, or North Galileans, that the tide of Jewish colonization
really set in again.
In the days of Josephus the region was densely populated, and judging
from the ruins surrounding the Sea of Galilee it is difficult to believe that
he is exaggerating seriously when he declares that it possessed three walled
cities and two hundred and four villages. The Galileans were a sturdy,
impulsive people, with the virtues of all colonists, inured to war, ready for
resistance to oppression, and although thorough Jews in their devotion to the
Law and the temple, without the arid fanaticism of the Judeans. In many
particulars their moral life was more healthy than that of the inhabitants of
other portions of Palestine, and as regards marriage public sentiment was much
purer. Farmers and fishermen, they were marked by considerable idealism, for it
is worth noticing that Galileans were always ready to accept Messianic claims.
No region was more punctual in the observance of the Sabbath and the feasts. At
the same time they were much more than the Judeans in constant relations with
Graeco-Roman civilization, and this perhaps gave them a freer and broader life
than that of their southern brethren.
Grouped with Galilee was the somewhat larger
region of Perea. It lay on the east of Jordan and extended from the Yarmuk to
the Arnon, and from the regions of Gerasa, Philadelphia, and the desert to the
Jordan. Within it, though politically independent, were many of the cities of
the Decapolis, but this fact did not prevent its being considered as second to
Judea alone in the purity of its Judaism. Politically it was of but little
importance.
Herod Antipas, to whom these prosperous regions Herod were entrusted,
although far from being Herod’s equal, had more of his father’s abilities than
either of his two brothers. He is called a king in the gospels; and, although
the title is not strictly correct, it probably represents popular terminology.
As in the case of his brother, Philip, we are left in doubt as to the course of
his long reign (4 BC-39 AD), Josephus telling us but little except certain
gossipy details. Like his father, he was a great builder. Sephoris, the most
important city of Galilee, which had suffered at the hands of the robber chief,
Judas, he once more surrounded with a wall and made again the metropolis. He
also walled the city of Bethar-amptha, in which the palace of Herod had been
destroyed during the anarchy following his death, renaming it Livias, or
Julias, in honor of the emperor’s wife. He seems also to have done some similar
service to Cos and Delos, as tablets in his honor have been found in those
islands. But the most important of such undertakings was his building of the
new city of Tiberias, on the western bank of the Sea of Galilee, not far from
the celebrated hot springs. The ruins of this city, which yet remain stretched
along the lake and the highlands above it, show but imperfectly its original
importance. To judge from the order of events as recorded by Josephus, Herod
built it after the coming of Pilate, as procurator of Judea (26 AD), naming it
in honor of the Emperor Tiberius. It had a number of large buildings, including
a stadium; a royal palace, ornamented with the golden tile and figures of
animals; and a great proseuche, or
prayer house, of the Jews. As appears from its ruins, it was surrounded by
walls, with bastions extending into the lake, and had colonnaded streets. In organization
it was thoroughly Greek, having a council of six hundred members, with an
archon at its head, and a Committee of Ten, together with other officials. Its
population was mixed. As it was partly built over sepulchers, it was at first shunned
by the stricter Jews; but many were compelled to settle in it by Herod Antipas,
and others were attracted by gifts of homes and lands, and by the time of the
great war it was evidently filled with fanatical Jews. So rapidly did it grow,
and so much was it in favor with Antipas, that he made it his capital, superior
even to Sepphoris, though it was not as large.
The character of Herod Antipas is summed up by the word of Jesus,—“fox”.
Singularly enough, we have an illustration of his cunning. At one time he
accompanied Vitellius on an embassy to Artabanus, king of Parthia. The
meeting was held in a rich tent, pitched by Herod on a bridge over the Euphrates.
As soon as the desired treaty was concluded, in order to forestall Vitellius
and be the first to report the good news to Tiberius, Herod hurried off a full
report to the emperor. That of Vitellius was therefore unnecessary, and Herod
may be supposed to have gained in the estimation of Tiberius. But he made
Vitellius his enemy, as he was to discover later to his cost. The same trait of
character appears in his attitude toward the Jews, to whom, much more than in
the case of Philip, it was necessary to be gracious. Here he followed closely in
the footsteps of his father, balancing his friendship for Rome and heathen
customs by his attendance upon the feasts at Jerusalem. He put no image on his
coins, and joined in a protest against Pilate for having set up a votive shield
in the temple. As far as we can judge from the material at our disposal, the
Pharisees never regarded him with the same suspicion and hatred they had shown
his father during his later years.
It was characteristic of his house that misfortune should reach him
through his domestic relations. Antipas had been married to the daughter of the
king of Arabia, but on one occasion, when in Rome, he had fallen in love with
Herodias, the wife of the Herod who lived as a private citizen at the capital.
The fact that she was his own niece caused no hesitation, and they had arranged
to be married as soon as Antipas could rid himself of his legal wife. In
some way, however, this wife learned of his plans and fled to her father, who
thereupon made war upon his faithless son-in-law. Antipas was defeated through
treachery, and complained to Tiberius, who ordered Vitellius to assist him.
Tiberius died, however, before Vitellius had fairly begun the campaign, and the
expedition was given up. Herodias had, in the meantime, divorced her husband
and married Antipas. Later she had seen her brother, Agrippa I, made king over
the former tetrarchy of Philip (37 AD), and had grown ambitious for her new
husband to be made king also. With considerable difficulty she persuaded
Antipas to ask the emperor Caligula for the title, but he met with an
unexpected reply. The preparations made for carrying on his war with Arabia
gave Agrippa I an opportunity to get revenge for certain quarrels, and he wrote
the emperor that Antipas was preparing to revolt. As the unhappy tetrarch was
unable to deny that his arsenals were full of weapons, Caligula refused to
listen to explanations, and forthwith banished him to Lyons, whither Herodias
accompanied him.
4. The Decaolis
Interspersed within the regions of Galilee, Perea, and the tetrarchy of
Philip, was the Decapolis. It would be incorrect to speak of it as a
region or district, for it was nothing more politically than a confederation of
great Graeco-Roman cities. Scythopolis, its capital, was on the west of Jordan,
and on the various roads that spread out like the sticks of a fan from the
fords and bridge it controlled, were Pella, Gadara, Hippos, Dium, Gerasa,
Philadelphia, Raphana, Kanatha, and at one time Damascus. The union of these
ten cities, for military and commercial purposes, was probably brought about
during the time of Pompey, and although the Romans gave Hippos and Gadara to
Herod, and the latter city seems to have joined in the great revolt against Rome,
the league maintained itself for centuries, and at the time of Ptolemy embraced
eighteen towns, most of them lying in the region between Damascus and the
Yarmuk. Each of these cities had a considerable territory attached to it, and
was thus an example of the city-state; and although several of them were in the
midst of some of the main political divisions already described, they were not
subject to either procurator or tetrarch. For this reason their territories
were not Greek cities continuous, and it is impossible to speak of a “region of
the Decapolis” in anything more than a popular sense. But it should be further
noted that not merely in the Decapolis were there cities clearly differing from
Jewish towns and called distinctly Hellenistic by Josephus4 All over the
region west of the Jordan were such cities to be found. Ptolemais, Dora,
Caesarea, Apollonia, Jamnia, Azotus, Ascalon, Gaza, Anthedon, Phasaelis, and
others crowded along the coast; Antipatris and Sebaste lay further inland, and
Archelais, in the Jordan valley. Each city had some dependent region, and in
all of them it is probable were Jewish quarters, as in Alexandria. Several like
Caesarea, Sebaste, Tiberias, and Gaba, had been built by Jewish rulers, but
they were organized after Greek rather than Jewish models, and were filled with
a vigorous anti-Semitism that needed only incipient anarchy to break out in
massacres, or even, as in the case of Caesarea, to occasion revolution.
But such anti-Semitism was far enough from proselytism, and whatever may
have been the suffering it caused Jews, it was far enough from repressing Judaism.
That vigorous faith has always thriven whenever social customs have been
hostile to its spirit and rites. In the modern world alone has it been exposed
to those subtle influences which, distinct from politics and indifferent to
differences in religious practices, affect individuals through a catholic
social mind.
THE SOCIAL LIFE OF THE PALESTINIAN JEWS
It was among those Jews who lived outside
of Palestine that the positive influences of Graeco-Roman civilization are
mostly seen. From the time of Antiochus III, indeed from that of Alexander
the Great, the Jews had been regarded as especially good colonists, and by the
time of Augustus there was no city of any importance in the
empire that did not possess its Jewish quarter. Sometimes, as at
Alexandria, such colonies were very large; in other cities they could
not even boast a place of prayer. Often, even if not generally, these “Grecians” as they were called, had some sort
of political recognition, being organized into wards with ethnarchs of
their own. They had their synagogues, their rabbis, their Law, and in
Alexandria, it will be recalled, their temple. They were as devoted to Judaism
as their brethren of Palestine, the “Hebrews”, and their annual contributions
to the maintenance of the temple at Jerusalem were enormous. Once, during his
lifetime, every Jew hoped to attend the Passover at Jerusalem, and wherever he
might live, whenever he prayed he turned his face toward the Holy
City. Yet, despite this truly Jewish spirit, the members of the Dispersion
were less narrow than the Palestinian Jews, and at times appear
anti-Pharisaical. So far from wishing to set limits to Judaism, by proselyting,
by interpreting their sacred books according to the spirit of various Greek
philosophies, they endeavored to bring about a universal Mosaism. In this they
were by no means unsuccessful; but in the effort their own point of view was
changed, and without any weakening of their national character there grew up
among the Dispersion a new style of thinking and literature, in which Jewish
and Greek elements are strangely mixed. To some extent these influences
affecting the Dispersion were transmitted by its members to the Jews in
Palestine, but the influence exerted by the Greek population of the land itself
was undoubtedly reactionary. However much the Palestinian Jew might feel the
influence of Alexandria, the sight of so many thousand men and women
indifferent to Jehovah and the Law; of idolatry with all its attendant customs;
of contempt for the Sabbath and Jewish rites; even the occasional submission of
individuals to circumcision or some less pronounced confession of proselytism;
conspired to make the Pharisee and his devoted disciples the more zealous for
their faith. Danger of a new period of degeneration, like that under Menelaus
and Jason, there was none. Judaism grew sterner and the more exclusive under
the pressure of Graeco-Roman life, and the scribes increased the number of
cases in which any intercourse with a Gentile would defile a Jew. If
politically the heathen possessed the land, religiously, Judaism under the
inspiration of the Pharisees and Zealots was subject to no master except its
God, and awaited in faith the establishment of His kingdom in the Holy Land.
But politics and religion by no means exhausted the interest of the Jews
of Palestine. They had a social life as well developed as that of any other
people. While to an understanding of the New Testament and the rise of
Christianity a knowledge of the social aspects of Judaism is not as essential
as that of the state and the religion, it yet throws no little light on the
life of Jesus and the development of the Christian community. For in no other
nation was culture more inspired and simultaneously repressed by religion.
We have already called attention to the fact that Palestine was not exclusively
Jewish, but it is altogether impossible to estimate with accuracy the numbers
of either population. Josephus, indeed, gives us data as regards the Jews, but
they can hardly be taken seriously. It is difficult to see how in the 6000
square miles on the west of the Jordan there could ever have been more than
three million Jews. Especially does this estimate seem probable when it is
recalled that much of the land must have been uninhabited, and that the towns,
though close together, could not have been extensive. Jerusalem itself
could hardly have had a population of more than a hundred thousand within its
walls.
The Jewish population used at least three languages : Aramaic, Greek,
and Latin. The use of the first two must have been all but universal. The last,
however, was the official language, and it is not likely that it was used by
the masses. In addition to these three languages the Biblical Hebrew was used
in religious services, but it was not universally understood.
The cities and towns which by the hundred were scattered over Palestine
must have presented striking contrasts. In cities like Caesarea, Tiberias, and
Jerusalem the noble buildings erected by the Herodians and the Greeks towered
above the flat houses of the masses. The small towns could have differed little
from the appearances of the same towns today. The houses were exceedingly
simple, flat roofed, with walls built of mud mixed with straw, packed in around
wattlework and baked in the sun. Streets were narrow, sanitary arrangements
altogether lacking, the water supply that of some neighboring spring, reservoir
or aqueduct, and, with the exception of the synagogue, public buildings were
lacking. Such architectural remains as are found in Palestine are chiefly those
of the Greek settlers. The strictly Jewish town has passed away, leaving little
trace of itself.
Life within these towns and cities, as far as the Jewish population was
concerned, was Semitic rather than
Greek. The social classes were few, hardly more
than those of slave and freemen. In the large towns there were the
aristocracy of wealth and the aristocracy of learning and office, but such distinction
was not strictly hereditary. The Jewish people had no such social
classification as is to be found throughout the Greco-Roman world, the nearest
approach to it being that of the priestly families. Their position was,
however, less that of aristocracy than that of a religious caste, and even this
description is sure to be misleading. The distinction which is made everywhere
by the rabbis between themselves and the ‘amha
arets’ is not to be taken as indicative of anything more in kind than that which
is made today between the so-called classes and the masses.
Slavery among the Jews was merciful as slavery goes. The owner had no
right to kill his slave, and was compelled to allow him to observe the Sabbath.
While it is not possible to know just how far the old Hebrew codes were in use,
it was apparently true that the Hebrew slaves were circumcised and treated with
comparative leniency. Slaves of heathen descent probably enjoyed less favorable
conditions. It is to the honor of the Pharisees and Essenes that they were
opposed to slavery, and probably because of this opposition the number of
slaves was decreasing in New Testament times.
The position of women among the Jews was much higher than that
which exists among the people in modern Syria. While they did
not have the same rights that belonged to the women of certain strata in Roman
society, they were permitted to go abroad freely and were not compelled to be
completely veiled. At the same time they were not as carefully educated as men,
and were uniformly treated as an inferior sex. The birth of a boy was more
celebrated than that of a girl. “The world cannot exist without males and
females”, said one rabbi, “but blessed are they whose children are sons; woe to
them whose children are daughters”. The inferior status of women may be further
seen from rabbinical opinion where among the nine miseries brought women by the
Fall are: “The covering of her head like one in mourning, the wearing of her
hair long like Lillith, the boring of her ear like a slave, serving her husband
like a maidservant, and not being able to testify in court”. None the less the
rabbis abound in praises of good wives and of marriage in general. When one married,
his sins were said to decrease. The sphere of women, however, the rabbis wished
to be strictly domestic. The ideal Jewess was the good housekeeper of Proverbs,
and unless she could afford servants the housewife’s duties are stated
succinctly in the Mishna as that of grinding corn, baking, washing, cooking,
nursing her children, making the beds, and working in wool.
Property might be settled upon a wife by her husband, and she was to
have one-tenth of her dowry for pin money. But such arrangements were to be
made definitely, since the wife’s property after marriage usually went to her husband,
and in no case did property of a deceased son pass to the mother. Daughters,
however, shared in the inheritance at least to the extent of a dowry.
As to religion, the position of women was also inferior to that of men,
in that they were not expected to keep the law in its entirety. They could not
wear phylacteries, and were not obliged to recite the Shama or wear fringes on
their mantles. They could not testify in a court of law except to prove the
death of a husband.
The Jewish family was monogamous, but polygamy was doubtless practiced
in Palestine during the New Testament times. So far as we can discover,
however, such polygamous relations would exist only among the most wealthy. The
increasing ease of divorce made polygamy unnecessary. Marriage among the Jews
was a purely private affair. It consisted in the exchange of certain promises
and the public and somewhat formal passage of the bride from her father’s to
her future husband’s house. At least in theory, the wife was the property of
her husband, as is evident, not only in the wedding ceremony, but also in the
fact that fathers sometimes sold young daughters to men on the condition that
they should subsequently be made their wives.
Betrothal was an incomplete marriage. The terms between the two
families represented might be made by a third party, the friend of the
bridegroom. They involved the formal sale and purchase. The young woman— or
even girl, for betrothal was often arranged between children and even infants—was
given a piece of money and a document containing the various promises which her
future husband made. In this was included the amount of money which he was
willing to pay the father. At the same time a public declaration was made by
the prospective bridegroom or his representative to the effect that he had
betrothed the woman. After this betrothal the two could live together as man
and wife and their children would be legitimate, but ordinarily the betrothal
was followed after some time by the wedding. This was in most particulars
similar to the betrothal, and was without religious ceremony except the
priestly benediction if a priest was present. The woman was expected to bring a
dowry to her husband. The wedding festivities were conducted during several
days and, especially in Judea, were marked by rough hilarity.
In New Testament times the practice of divorce was rapidly increasing,
the liberal rabbis in particular making it easy. The right to bring about a
divorce was generally restricted to the husband, although there are cases in
which it was exercised by the wife. Subsequently the right to divorce was given
women by the rabbis. By the more serious, however, the breaking of marriage
ties was regarded as dangerous. “He who divorces his wife is hated before God”,
was the opinion of the strictest school. But unfortunately divorce, like
marriage, was a private matter rather than that of law, and it seems to have
degenerated by the end of the first Christian century until husbands were
permitted to divorce their wives on merely nominal causes. At the same time
this practice was doubtless checked by the requirement that in case of divorce
the husband was obliged to repay the dowry and the jointure.
The children followed the status of their father, and were regarded as a
great blessing. The Jews never practiced that exposure of children that clouded
Greek family life. When eight days old, the child, if a boy, was circumcised
and named. When two years old, it was weaned, the event being celebrated in a
feast. As soon as a boy could speak he was taught texts of Scripture, and by
degrees was taught his letters and to read, most families having at least
portions of the Scriptures either in Aramaic or Greek.
The education of the Jews was essentially religious, intended to make
men in the first place servants of Jehovah and in the second place good
citizens. Whether there were public schools throughout Palestine before the
fall of Jerusalem is uncertain. Simon ben Shetach, brother of Queen Alexandra,
is said to have founded a school in Jerusalem, but the children of people
living at a distance from the city could not well be sent there and the rabbis
ordered elementary schools for children to be established in each hyparchy. But
these were not always successful. By 65 AD schools were prescribed for boys in
every town under penalty of excommunication. This penalty is said to have been
necessary in order to prevent teachers running away from troublesome pupils.
Such a school could be held in the synagogue, if the people of the town were poor.
After the destruction of Jerusalem the rabbis gave particular attention to the
education of children. “Perish the sanctuary, but let the children go to school”.
“Knowledge is to take the place of sacrifice”. The number of these schools it
is, however, impossible to state, although the likelihood is that all of the
chief towns had places of regular instruction for the boys.
The instruction given in these schools was viva voce, and until the pupil was ten years of age was entirely
from the Scriptures. The teacher was not supposed to be paid for teaching the
sacred text, but for taking care of the boys or for teaching some extra
subject, like grammar. From ten to fifteen years of age the boy was taught the
Mishna and probably some few rudiments of science. After that, if he planned to
become a rabbi, he went to the professional school at Jerusalem or, after the
fall of the Jewish state, at Tiberias. Girls do not seem to have been permitted
to attend these schools, although among the rabbis we find several learned
women. Ordinarily the girls were taught embroidery and music. A woman once
asked Rabbi Eliezer a question as to a point in science. He replied that “no
other wisdom is becoming a woman than that of the distaff”. Other extremists
declared that, “He who teaches his daughter the law, teaches her immorality”.
Such statements, however, are to be regarded as epigrams of conservativism
rather than as legal decisions.
The economic life of the Jew was by no means primitive, the stories of
the Old Testament life being inapplicable to the more highly developed civilization
of New Testament times. Life in Palestine outside the great cities was
largely agricultural. Farmers, however, lived in villages, to
which they returned from the fields at nightfall. Most of the chief
forms of agriculture were known to the Jews. Vineyards, olives groves,
grain fields, and fruit orchards abounded in all parts of the land. Root
crops, however, do not seem to have been largely raised. Sowing began
after the early rains had fallen, in the end of October and the early part of
November. Harvest began about the middle of April, and
was completed in& about seven weeks,—grapes and fruit ripening
later than wheat and barley. Thus we have the origin of the great feasts:
Passover, at the beginning of the barley harvest; Pentecost, at the end of the
grain harvest, and Tabernacles, after all crops are gathered in.
Terracing and irrigation were absolutely necessary, and even at this
date, when Palestine is hardly more than a suggestion of its former self, one
can see the hills still terraced and frequently meets the remains of reservoirs
and aqueducts. The dressing of the soil seems to have been left almost entirely
to the process of rotation of crops and to “ploughing under” what grew in the
land during the sabbatical year. Further than that the soil was constantly
being enriched naturally by the disintegration of the limestone rocks. Dressing
by manure does not seem to have been usual. The fertility of the soil is
surprising when one considers its rockiness. Even to this day, although it has
been in use for thousands of years, the land of Palestine when properly tilled brings
forth abundant harvests.
Commerce
In New Testament times Palestine had grown to some extent commercial,
although it is probable that the great bulk of trade was in the hands of the
Greeks. The rise of the commercial class among the Jews was a grief to the
rabbis, but it was a part of the outcome of the Maccabean policy. There were
said to be one hundred and ten different articles of import, included among
which were fancy food stuffs, dresses, articles of luxury in general. Among the
exports were agricultural products, oil, balsam, figs, and salt from the Dead
Sea. The Sea of Galilee abounded in fish, and there were considerable pickling
establishments at Tarichaea. Commerce at Tiberias had become sufficiently
extensive to establish a market with an inspector.
Manual trades were regarded as on the whole honorable pursuits, and it
was the duty of parents to see that their sons were trained in some such
occupation. Even the rabbis had their trades. All occupations were not of the
same value, and it was the ambition of a father to have his sons adopt the more
important.
How highly developed industrially was Jewish society appears from the variety
of trades which are mentioned in Jewish literature. It would seem as if the
division of labor had been carried practically to the limit possible in an age
that did not use machinery.
Some of these trades had developed embryonic unions. This was
particularly true of those persons engaged in transportation, like muledrivers
and sailors. If the situation in Alexandria is to be treated as at all
characteristic, these unions seem to have developed into bodies which resembled
those of the Greco-Roman world and anticipated to some extent the trade guilds
of the Middle Ages. The wages paid it is impossible to state with accuracy, but
would probably be approximately a denarius a day.
Professions.
The professions were also represented among the Jews. It is somewhat
difficult to distinguish the lawyers from the scribes, but there seem to have
been two classes, those practising in Jewish courts and those in Roman. Medical
knowledge was probably inferior among the Jews to that of the Greco-Roman
world, since the Jews could hardly overcome the fear of defilement which came
from touching a corpse. This would almost certainly stop anything like
anatomical knowledge. Yet physicians were numerous. “A wise man”, says one
rabbi, “will not live in a town where there is no physician”. Bleeding was
common, but was done by the barber, and it seems to have been customary to practice
it regularly. The ordinary procedure of medicine was, however, conditioned
by belief in devils, and it was customary to use charms and exorcisms and
nauseous drinks to rid the sick person of the evil spirit.
Art
In so far as arts were concerned the Jews were inferior to the Greeks.
This was doubtless due to the religious prejudice against the making of graven
images, the command of the Decalogue being interpreted to cover all forms of
representations of living creatures. Among all the ruins of Palestine there is
practically nothing which may be said to argue a high development of
architecture, sculpture, or painting. The noble buildings of the temple area
were built after the Greek style, although the work was conducted by the
priests. There was, however, no decoration except carvings representing products
of the vegetable kingdom. The same is true in the case of coins and seals,
although in the latter case there seems to have been a certain relaxation in
the severity of the regulation. Music, however, was brought to a considerable
perfection, and musical instruments were commonly used in the temple services.
Few periods in the world’s history have been more filled with literary
activity than that of New Testament times, but the Palestinian Jews seemed to
have been little interested in anything except their own history and religion.
Roman, Greek, Alexandrian, Syrian writers flooded the world with every form of
literature. The Jews of the Dispersion were not unaffected by this literary
spirit, but their contributions to belles
lettres were scanty and mostly confined to Alexandria. There also belonged
that great contemporary of Jesus, Philo of Alexandria, but his writings were
concerned with religion. The apocalyptic and historical literature of Judaism
has already been briefly described, and there is need here only to refer to the
works of Josephus and of the rabbis.
Flavius Josephus was a Palestinian Jew in descent, born about 37 or 38
AD After having received a thorough rabbinical education he studied with the
Pharisees, Sadducees, and the Essenes, and finally with a hermit. At the age of
nineteen he joined the fraternity of the Pharisees. When twenty-six years of
age, he went to Rome on an embassy on behalf of certain priests who had been
arrested by Felix. Successful there through the influence of Poppaea, he
returned to Judea in time to take a prominent part in the revolt of 66-70.
After having been taken prisoner in Galilee he was able to make friends with
Vespasian and continued to enjoy the favor of the Flavian family through life.
As he mentions the death of Agrippa II he must have lived into the second
century. As a contemporary of many of the persons whose lives he describes his
works are of first importance, although they are marked with many
defects. The first of his works was the
War of the Jews, written in Aramaic, and later rewritten in Greek,
consisting of seven books, the first two of which treat briefly of the period
of the Maccabees and more fully of the reign of Herod I, and written before 79.
The Antiquities consist of
twenty books, the first ten of which were hardly more than half-legendary and
half-rationalistic rewriting of the Old Testament. The second ten books covered
Jewish history until the outcome of the revolt of 66. For this period Josephus
is wholly dependent upon his sources and his narrative varies greatly in fullness
and reliability. The other works of Josephus are his Life and his Treatise against
Apion, which are of less historical value, partly because of their
misrepresentation of facts, partly from their polemical tone. In the former he endeavors
to show that even in Galilee he was faithful to the Romans, while in the latter
he defends the Jews against the attacks of all heathen writers.
The rabbinical Literature
The strictly rabbinical literature that belongs to this period was not
reduced to writing for centuries, but it was shaping itself in the Mishna or
the oral law. The Mishna consists of six books or sedars, subdivided into sixty-three treatises, and these are
subdivided into chapters. It was arranged by Rabbi Juda the Holy who died about
220 AD, but even he did not write it
out. The rabbinical schools taught their pupils to commit it verbatim. This
oral law was intended to protect the Thorah, but in all its forms it was
regarded as a part of a divine will, all being included in what was given Moses
from Sinai. The Mishna was not completely reduced to writing until 550 AD. It includes the oldest collection of
rabbinical teachings, the Pirqe Aboth or Sayings of the Fathers.
The religious aspects of the social life of the Jews are not easily
grasped, for in most particulars it is as foreign to a Christian civilization
as to the men of Rome. Two contradictory dangers especially confront the
student—that of overestimating and that of underestimating this religious
element.
On the one hand, it is perfectly clear that the people at large did not
share in the punctilious religious life of the Pharisees, however much they
might admire it. In Palestine, as in modem lands, the proportion of those
actively engaged in religious service was undoubtedly small. The fact that a
village became a town when once it possessed ten men who agreed to be regular
attendants upon the synagogue service, and the additional fact that later it
became customary to pay these men for attending service, certainly do not
heighten one’s confidence in popular piety. It would seem, further, as if one
synagogue sufficed for a town of considerable size. The ‘amha-arets’ (people of the land)—the uneducated masses—were
despised by the Pharisee, not so much because of their poverty as because of
their indifference to the Law and its discipline. They were sinners, whose
presence defiled the person and the house of the Pharisee.
Pietism.
It is not improbable, though hardly to be proved, that there were those
Jews who were filled more with the quiet spirit of the Second Isaiah rather
than with the obtrusive piety of Pharisaism,—persons like the aged Simeon and Anna,
who waited for the consolation of Israel, untroubled by and perhaps indifferent
to the mass of rabbinical laws.
Yet on the other hand, while ultra-Judaism can be given too great an
extent, its intensity can hardly be exaggerated. Legally centered about the
Temple and the high priest, its real soul was in scribism. Feasts, ritual,
sacrifices, pilgrimages, tithes, Sabbaths, and fasts,—these were all alike but
expressions of the profound determination to keep God’s law as expounded in the
synagogue. In the services of this newer place of worship we see the prototype
of Christian public worship through prayer and sermon. It was in the synagogue
that Judaism really came to its completed form. But the synagogue was no mere
showplace for theological pedantry. The note of idealism in that summary of
synagogue instruction, the Mishna, though weaker, is as sincere as in the
apocalypses. Complain though the people might of Pharisees who were but
hypocrites, and of teachers who laid rather than removed burdens, they followed
them by the thousands, if need be to death. The legalistic spirit had been too
great an element in Jewish life, and its representatives—the Chasidim, the ‘Couples’,
the rabbis, the Pharisees, the Essenes—had furnished too many heroes, to be
disregarded.
Of this more exacting religious life it is not possible to speak in
detail. Its provisions are easily to be seen in the gospels, and to a far
greater degree in the Talmud. For scrupulosity, unhesitating logic, conscientiousness
as regards the moral aspect of every act in life it stands unparalleled. It is
easy and even customary to see absurdity in talmudic discussions. Absurdity
there may be, but a sympathetic reader will also feel that some determination as to the
morality of every trivial detail is inevitable if righteousness is to be gained
by obedience to any law. Thus in the case of the Sabbath, the minute
grouping of all sorts of forbidden work into thirty-nine classes is no mere
play of scholastic casuistry, but, if once the principle of legalism be
granted, is a legitimate exposition of the distinction between permissible and
forbidden actions. The great danger to which scribism yielded was that of moral
pedantry and pride, but this was involved in legalism itself, and no one before
Jesus felt the danger more keenly than the greater rabbis themselves. Despite
its excesses, Pharisaism succeeded in grinding into the very soul of Jewish
life, be it never so humble or degraded, moral distinctions as regards the acts
of the individual, such as Hellenism even at its best never enforced.
When, however, all this and even more has been granted, it is
abundantly clear that Pharisaism laid
upon the people burdens impossible to be borne.
The rabbis’ insistence upon tithes and other religious charges must have been
burdensome in the extreme, but even more deadening must have been their
insistence that righteousness was impossible except through an unbroken
observance of the Mosaic and the oral Law; for who among the people could hope
to master the accumulation of rabbinical teaching? In proportion as legalism
grew did the old prophetic teaching retreat, and life became less a direct
service of a loving Jehovah and an ever increasingly fettered and hopeless
succession of impossible tasks.
Yet legalism could not kill the idealism that lay in the prophetical
side of Jewish life. Whether learned or ignorant, gentle or fanatic, the Jew
never lost his belief that the future held in store for his nation a universal
empire, a kingdom of God. Other nations of antiquity had not been without
ideals, but they had been either regretful recollections of a past Golden Age
or philosophical and impossible Utopias like the republic of Plato. The Jew’s
hope was something other. His prophets spoke God’s promises through God’s
inspiration. And these promises were of a new and glorious Kingdom whose king
was to be the Lord Messiah.
CHAPTER VITHE MESSIANIC HOPE AND JESUS THE MESSIAH
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HISTORY OF THE JEWS
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