THE SACRED HISTORY OF SULPITIUS SEVERUS, BOOK I
THE SACRED HISTORY OF SULPITIUS SEVERUS.
BOOK I.
CHAPTER I.
I address myself to give a condensed account of those things which are set
forth in the sacred Scriptures from the beginning of the world and to tell of
them, with distinction of dates and according to[1] their importance, down to
period within our own remembrance. Many who were anxious to become acquainted
with divine things by means of a compendious treatise, have eagerly entreated me
to undertake this work. I, seeking to carry out their wish, have not spared my
labor, and have thus succeeded in comprising in two short books things which
elsewhere filled many volumes. At the same time, in studying brevity, I have
omitted hardly any of the facts. Moreover, it seemed to me not out of place that,
after I had run through the sacred history down to the crucifixion of Christ,
and the doings of the Apostles, I should add an account of events which
subsequently took place. I am, therefore, to tell of the destruction of Jerusalem, the
persecutions of the Christian people, the times of peace which followed, and of
all things again thrown into confusion by the intestine dangers of the
churches. But I will not shrink from confessing that, wherever reason required, I have
made use of pro-fine historians to fix dates and preserve the series of events
unbroken, and have taken out of these what was wanting to a complete knowledge
of the facts, that I might both instruct the ignorant and carry conviction to
the learned. Nevertheless, as to those things which I have condensed from the
sacred books, I do not wish so to present myself as an author to my readers, that
they, neglecting the source from which my materials have been derived, should
be satisfied with what I have written. My aim is that one who is already
familiar with the original should recognize here what he has read there; for all the
mysteries of divine things cannot be brought out except from the fountain-head
itself. I shall now enter upon my narrative.
CHAPTER II.
The world was created by God nearly six[1] thousand years ago, as we shall
set forth in the course of this book; although those who have entered upon and
published a calculation of the dates, but little agree among themselves. As,
however, this disagreement is due either to the will of God or to the fault of
antiquity, it ought not to be a matter of censure. After the formation of the
world man was created, the male being named Adam, and the female Eve. Having been
placed in Paradise, they ate of the tree from which they were interdicted, and
therefore were cast forth as exiles into our earth.[2] To them were born Cain
and Abel; but Cain, being an impious man, slew his brother. He had a son called
Enoch, by whom a city was first built,[3] and was called after the name of its
founder. From him Irad, and from him again Matuahel was descended. He had a
son called Mathusalam, and he, in turn, begat Lamech, by whom a young man is said
to have been slain, without, however, the name of the slain man being
mentioned--a fact which is thought by the wise to have presaged a future mystery. Adam,
then, after the death of his younger son, begat another son called Seth, when
he was now two hundred and thirty years old: he lived altogether eight hundred
and thirty years. Seth begat Enos, Enos Cainan, Cainan Malaleel, Malaleel
Jared, and Jared Enoch, who on account of his righteousness is said to have been
translated by God. His son was called Mathusalam who begat Lamech; from whom Noah
was descended, remarkable for his righteousness, and above all other mortals
dear and acceptable to God. When by this time the human race had increased to a
great multitude, certain angels, whose habitation was in heaven, were
captivated by the appearance of some beautiful virgins, and cherished illicit desires
after them, so much so, that filling beneath their own proper nature and origin,
they left the higher regions of which they were inhabitants, and allied
themselves in earthly marriages. These angels gradually spreading wicked habits,
corrupted the human family, and from their alliance giants are said to have sprung,
for the mixture with them of beings of a different nature, as a matter of
course, gave birth to monsters.
CHAPTER III.
GOD being offended by these things, and especially by the wickedness of
mankind, which had gone beyond measure, had determined to destroy the whole human
race. But he exempted Noah, a righteous man and of blameless life, from the
destined doom. He being warned by God that a flood was coming upon the earth,
built an ark of wood of immense size, and covered it with pitch so as to render it
impervious to water. He was shut into it along with his wife, and his three
sons and his three daughters-in-law. Pairs of birds also and of the different
kinds of beasts were likewise received into it, while all the rest were cut off by
a flood. Noah then, when he understood that the violence of the rain had
ceased, and that the ark was quietly floating on the deep, thinking (as really was
the case) that the waters were decreasing, sent forth first a raven for the
purpose of enquiring into the matter, and on its not returning, having settled, as
I conjecture, on the dead bodies, he then sent forth a dove. It, not finding a
place of rest, returned to him and being again sent out, it brought back an
olive leaf, in manifest proof that the tops of the trees were now to be seen. Then
being sent forth a third time, it returned no more, from which it was
understood that the waters had subsided; and Noah accordingly went out from the ark.
This was done, as I reckon, two thousand two hundred[1] and forty-two years after
the beginning of the world.
CHAPTER IV.
Then Noah first of all erected an altar to God, and offered sacrifices
from among the birds.[1] Immediately afterwards he was blessed by God along with
his sons, and received a command that he should not eat blood, or shed the blood
of any human being, because Cain, having no such precept, had stained the
first age of the world. Accordingly, the sons of Noah were alone left in the then
vacant world; for he had three, Shem, Ham, and Japhet. But Ham, because he had
mocked his father when senseless with wine, incurred his father's curse. His
son, Chas by name, begat the giant Nebroth,[2] by whom the city of Babylon is
said to have been built. Many other towns are related to have been founded at
that time, which I do not here intend to name one by one. But although the human
race was now multiplied, and men occupied different places and islands,
nevertheless all made use of one tongue, as long as the multitude, afterwards to be
scattered through the whole world, kept itself in one body. These, after the
manner of human nature, formed the design of obtaining a great name by constructing
some great work before they should be separated from one another. They
therefore attempted to build a tower which should reach up to heaven. But by the
ordination of God, in order that the labors of those engaged in the work might be
hindered, they began to speak in a kind of languages very different from their
accustomed form of speech, while no one understood the others. This led to their
being all the more readily dispersed, because, regarding each other as
foreigners, they were easily induced to separate. And the world was so divided to the
sons of Noah, that Shem occupied the East, Japhet the West, and Ham the
intermediate parts. After this, till the time of Abraham,[8] their genealogy presented
nothing very remarkable or worthy of record.
CHAPTER V.
ABRAHAM, whose father was Thara, was born in the one thousand and
seventeenth year after the deluge. His wife was called Sara, and his dwelling-place was
at first in the country[1] of the Chaldaeans. He then dwelt along with his
father at Charrae. Being at this time spoken to by God, he left his country and
his father, and taking with him Lot, the son of his brother, he came into the
country of the Canaanites, and settled at a place named Sychem. Ere long, owing to
the want of corn, he went into Egypt, and again returned. Lot, owing to the
size of the household, parted from his uncle, that he might take advantage of
more spacious territories in what was then a vacant region, and settled at Sodom.
That town was infamous on account of its inhabitants, males forcing themselves
upon males, and it is said on that account to have been hateful to God. At that
period the kings of the neighboring peoples were in arms, though previously
there had been no[2] war among mankind. But the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah and
of the adjacent territories went forth to battle against those who were making
war upon the regions round about, and being routed at the first onset, yielded
the victory to the opposite side. Then Sodom was plundered and made a spoil of
by the victorious enemy, while Lot was led into captivity. When Abraham heard of
this, he speedily armed his servants, to the number of three hundred and
eighteen, and, stripping of their spoils and arms the kings flushed with victory, he
put them to flight. Then he was blessed by Melchisedech the priest, and gave
him tithes of the spoil. He restored the remainder to those from whom it had
been taken.
CHAPTER VI.
AT the same time God spoke to Abraham, and promised that his seed was to
be multiplied as the sand of the sea; and that his predicted seed would live in
a land not his own, while his posterity would endure slavery in a hostile
country for four hundred years, but would afterwards be restored to liberty. Then
his name was changed, as well as that of his wife, by the addition of one letter;
so that instead of Abram[1] he was called Abraham, and, instead of Sara, she
was called Sarra. The mystery involved in this is by no means trifling, but it
is not the part of this work to treat of it. At the same time, the law of
circumcision was enjoined on Abraham, and he had by a maid-servant a son called
Ishmael. Moreover, when he himself was a hundred years old, and his wife ninety, God
promised that they should have a son Isaac, the Lord having come to him along
with two angels. Then the angels being sent to Sodom, found Lot sitting in the
gate of the city. He supposed them to be human beings, and welcomed them to
share in his hospitality, and provided an entertainment for them in his house, but
the wicked youth of the town demanded the new arrivals for impure purposes.
Lot offered them his daughters in place of his guests, but they did not accept
the offer, having a desire rather for things forbidden, and then Lot himself was
laid hold of with vile designs. The angels, however, speedily rescued him from
danger, by causing blindness to fall upon the eyes of these unchaste sinners.
Then Lot, being informed by his guests that the town was to be destroyed, went
away from it with his wife and daughters; but they were commanded not to look
back upon it. His wife, however, not obeying this precept (in accordance with
that evil tendency of human nature which renders it difficult to abstain from
things forbidden), turned back her eyes, and is said to have been at once changed
into a monument. As for Sodom, it was burned to ashes by fire from heaven. And
the daughters of Lot, imagining that the whole human race had perished, sought a
union with their father while he was intoxicated, and hence sprung the race of
Moab and Ammon.
CHAPTER VII.
ALMOST at the same time, when Abraham was now a hundred years old, his son
Isaac was born. Then Sara expelled the maid-servant by whom Abraham had had a
son; and she is said to have dwelt in the desert along with her son, and
defended by the help of God. Not long after this, God tried the faith of Abraham, and
required that his son Isaac should be sacrificed to him by his father. Abraham
did not hesitate to offer him, and had already laid the lad upon the altar,
and was drawing the sword to slay him, when a voice came from heaven commanding
him to spare the young man; and a ram was found at hand to be for a victim. When
the sacrifice was offered, God spoke to Abraham, and promised him those things
which he had already said he would bestow. But Sara died in her one hundred
and twenty-seventh year, and her body was, through the care of her husband,
buried in Hebron, a town of the Canaanites, for Abraham was staying in that place.
Then Abraham, seeing that his son Isaac was now of youthful[1] age, for he was,
in fact, in his fortieth year, enjoined his servant to seek a wife for him, but
only from that tribe and territory from which he himself was known to be
descended. He was instructed, however, on finding the girl, to bring her into the
land of the Canaanites, and not to suppose that Isaac would return into the
country of his father for the purpose of obtaining a wife. In order that the servant
might carry out those instructions zealously, Abraham administered an oath to
him, while his hand rested on the thigh of his master. The servant accordingly
set out for Mesopotamia, and came to the town of Nachor, the brother of
Abraham. He entered into the house of Bathuel, the Syrian, son of Nachor; and having
seen Rebecca, a beautiful virgin, the daughter of Nachor, he asked for her, and
brought her to his master. After this, Abraham took a wife named Kethurah, who
is called in the Chronicles his concubine, and begat children by her. But he
left his possessions to Isaac, the son of Sara, while, at the same time, he
distributed gifts to those whom he had begotten by his concubines; and thus they
we're separated from Isaac. Abraham died after a life of a hundred and
seventy-five years; and his body was laid in the tomb of Sara his wife.
CHAPTER VIII.
Now, Rebecca, having long been barren, at length, through the unceasing
prayers of her husband to the Lord, brought forth twins about twenty years after
the time of her marriage. These are said to have often leaped[1] in the womb of
their mother; and it was announced by the answer of the Lord on this subject,
that two peoples were foretold in these children, and that the eider would, in
rank, be inferior to the younger. Well, the first that was born, bristling over
with hair, was called Esau, while Jacob was the name given to the younger. At
that time, a grievous famine had taken place. Under the pressure of this
necessity, Isaac went to Gerar, to King Abimelech, having been warned by the Lord not
to go down into Egypt. There he is promised the possession of the whole land,
and is blessed, and having been greatly increased in cattle and every kind of
substance, he is, under the influence of envy, driven out by the inhabitants.
Thus expelled from that region, he sojourned by the well, known as "the well[2]
of the oath." By and by, being advanced in years, and his eyesight being gone,
as he made ready to bless his son Esau, Jacob through the counsel of his mother,
Rebecca, presented himself to be blessed in the place of his brother. Thus
Jacob is set before his brother as the one to be honored by the princes and the
peoples. Esau, enraged by these occurrences, plotted the death of his brother.
Jacob, owing to the fear thus excited, and by the advice of his mother, fled into
Mesopotamia, having been urged by his father to take a wife of the house of
Laban, Rebecca's brother: so great was their care, while they dwelt in a strange
country, that their children should marry within their own kindred. Thus Jacob,
setting out for Mesopotamia, is said in sleep to have had a vision of the
Lord; and on that account regarding the place of his dream as sacred, he took a
stone from it; and he vowed that, if he returned in prosperity, the name a of the
pillar should be the "house of the Lord," and that he would devote to God the
tithes of all the possessions he had gained. Then he betook himself to Laban,
his mother's brother, and was kindly received by him to share in his hospitality
as the acknowledged son of his sister.
CHAPTER IX.
LABAN had two daughters, Leah and Rachel; but Leah had tender eyes, while
Rachel is said to have been beautiful. Jacob, captivated by her beauty, burned
with love for the virgin, and, asking her in marriage from the father, gave
himself up to a servitude of seven years. But when the time was fulfilled, Leah
was foisted upon him, and he was subjected to another servitude of seven years,
after which Rachel was given him. But we are told that she was long barren,
while Leah was fruitful. Of the sons whom Jacob had by Leah, the following are the
names: Reuben, Symeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulon, and a daughter Dinah;
while there were born to him by the handmaid of Leah, Gad and Asher, and by the
hand maid of Rachel, Dan and Naphtali. But Rachel, after she had despaired of
offspring, bare Joseph. Then Jacob, being desirous of returning to his father,
when Laban his father-in-law had given him a portion of the flock as a reward for
his service, and Jacob the son-in-law, thinking him not to be acting justly in
that matter, while he [also] suspected deceit on his part, privately departed
about the thirtieth year after his arrival. Rachel, without the knowledge of
her husband, stole the idols[1] of her father, and on account of this injury
Laban followed his son-in-law, but not finding his idols, returned, after being
reconciled, having straitly charged his son-in-law not to take other wives in
addition to his daughters. Then Jacob, going on his way, is said to have had a
vision of angels and of the army[2] of the Lord. But, as he directed his journey
past the region of Edom, which his brother Esau inhabited, suspecting the temper
of Esau, be first sent messengers and gifts to try him. Then he went to meet
his brother, but Jacob took care not to trust him beyond what he could help. On
the day before the brothers were to meet, God, taking a human form, is said to
have wrestled with Jacob. And when he had prevailed with God, still he was not
ignorant that his adversary was no mere mortal; and therefore begged to be
blessed by him. Then his name was changed by God, so that from Jacob he was called
Israel. But when he, in turn, inquired of God the name of God, he was told that
that should not be asked after because it was wonderful.[3] Moreover, from
that wrestling, the breadth[4] of Jacob's thigh shrank.
CHAPTER X.
ISRAEL, therefore, avoiding the house of his brother, sent forward his
company to Salem, a town of the Shechemites, and there he pitched his tent on a
spot which he had purchased. Emor, a Chorraean prince, was the ruler of that
town. His son Sychem defiled Dinah, the daughter of Jacob by Leah. Symeon and Levi,
the brothers of Dinah, discovering this, cut off by a stratagem all those of
the mate sex in the town, and thus terribly avenged the injury done to their
sister. The town was plundered by the sons of Jacob, and all the spoil carried
off. Jacob is said to have been much displeased with these proceedings. Soon after
being instructed by God, he went to Bethel, and there erected an altar to God.
Then he fixed his tent in a part of the territory belonging to the tower[1]
Gader. Rachel died in childbirth: the boy she bore was called Benjamin. lsrael
died at the age of one hundred and eighty years. Now, Esau was mighty in wealth,
and had taken to himself wives of the nation of the Canaanites. I do not think
that, in a work so concise as the present, I am called upon to mention his
descendants, and, if any one is curious on the subject, he may turn to the
original. After the death of his father, Jacob stayed on in the place where Isaac had
lived. His other sons occasionally left him along with the flocks, for the sake
of pasturage, but Joseph and the little Benjamin remained at home. Joseph was
much beloved by his father, and on that account was hated by his brethren. There
was this further cause for their aversion, that by frequent dreams of his it
seemed to be indicated that he would be greater than all of them. Accordingly,
having been sent by his father to inspect the flocks and pay a visit to his
brothers, there seemed to them a fitting opportunity for doing him harm. For, on
seeing their brother, they took counsel to slay him. But Reuben, whose mind
shuddered at the contemplation of such a crime, opposing their plan, Joseph was let
down into a well? Afterwards, by the persuasions of Judah, they were brought to
milder measures, and sold him to merchants, who were on their way to Egypt.
And by them he was delivered to Petifra, a governor of Pharaoh.
CHAPTER XI.
About this same time, Judah, the son of Jacob, took in marriage Sara,[1] a
woman of Canaan. By her he had three sons,--Her, Onan, and Sela. Her was
allied by concubinage[2] to Thamar. On his death, Onan took his brother's wife; and
he is related to have been destroyed by God, because he spilled his seed upon
the earth. Then Thamar, assuming the garb of a harlot, united with her
brother-in-law, and bore him two sons. But when she brought them forth, there was this
remarkable fact, that, when on one of the boys being born, the midwife had bound
his hand with a scarlet thread to indicate which of them was born first, he,
drawing back again into the womb of his mother, was born[3] the last boy of the
two. The names of Fares and Zarah were given to the children. But Joseph, being
kindly treated by the royal governor who had obtained him for a sam of money,
and having been made manager of his house and family, had drawn the eyes of his
master's wife upon himself through his remarkable beauty. And as she was madly
laboring under that base passion, she made advances to him oftener than once,
and when he would not yield to her desires, she disgraced him by the imputation
of a false crime, and complained to her husband that he had made an attempt
upon her virtue. Accordingly, Joseph was thrown into prison. There were in the
same place of confinement two of the king's servants, who made known their dreams
to Joseph, and he, interpreting these as bearing upon the future, declared
that one of them would be put to death, and the other would be pardoned. And so it
came to pass. Well, after the lapse of two years, the king also had a dream.
And when this could not be explained by the wise men among the Egyptians, that
servant of the king who was liberated from prison informs the king that Joseph
was a wonderful interpreter of dreams. Accordingly, Joseph was brought out of
prison, and interpreted to the king his dream, to this effect, that, for the next
seven years, there would be the greatest fertility in the land; but in those
that followed, famine. The king being alarmed by this terror, and seeing that
there was a divine spirit in Joseph, set him over the department of food-supply,
and made him equal with himself in the government. Then Joseph, while corn was
abundant throughout all Egypt, gathered together an immense quantity, and, by
increasing the number of granaries, took measures against the future famine. At
that time, the hope and safety of Egypt were placed in him alone. About the
same period, Aseneh bore him two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim. He himself, when he
received the chief power from the king, was thirty years old; for he was sold by
his brothers when he was seventeen years of age.
CHAPTER XII.
IN the mean time, affairs having been well settled in Egypt to meet the
famine, a grievous want of corn began to distress the world. Jacob, constrained
by this necessity, sent his sons into Egypt, keeping only Benjamin with himself
at home. Joseph, then, being at the head of affairs, and having complete power
over the corn-supplies, his brothers come to him, and pay the same honor to him
as to a king. He, when he saw them, craftily concealed his recognition of
them, and accused them of having come as enemies, subtly to spy out the land. But
he was annoyed that he did not see among them his brother Benjamin. Matters,
then, are brought to this point, that they promised he should be present,
specially that he might be asked whether they had entered Egypt for the purpose of
spying out the land. In order to secure the fulfillment of this promise, Symeon
was retained as hostage, while to them corn was given freely. Accordingly, they
returned, bringing Benjamin with them as had been arranged. Then Joseph made
himself known to his brothers to the shame of these evil-deservers. Thus, he sent
them home again, laden with corn, and presented with many gifts, forewarning
them that there were still five years of famine to come, and advising them to
come down with their father, their children, and their whole connections to Egypt.
So Jacob went down to Egypt, to the great joy of the Egyptians and of the king
himself, while he was tenderly welcomed by his son. That took place in the
hundred and thirtieth year of the life of Jacob, and one thousand three hundred
and sixty years[1] after; the deluge. But from the time when Abraham settled in
the land of the Canaanites, to that when Jacob entered Egypt, there are to be
reckoned two hundred and fifteen years. After this, Jacob, in the seventeenth
year of his residence in Egypt, suffering severely from illness, entreated Joseph
to see his remains placed in the tomb. Then Joseph presented his sons to be
blessed;[2] and when this had been done, but so that he set the younger before
the elder as to the value of the blessing given, Jacob then blessed all his sons
in order. He died at the age of one hundred and forty-seven years. His funeral
was of a most imposing character, and Joseph laid his remains in the tomb of
his fathers. He continued to treat his brothers with kindness, although, after
the death of their father, they felt alarmed from a consciousness of the wrong
they had done. Joseph himself died in his one hundred and tenth year.
CHAPTER XIII.
It is almost incredible to relate how the Hebrews who had come down into
Egypt so soon increased in numbers, and filled Egypt with their numerous
descendants. But on the death of the king, who kindly cherished them on account of the
services of Joseph, they were kept down by the government of the succeeding
kings. For both the heavy labor of building cities was laid upon them, and
because their abounding numbers were now feared, lest some day they should secure
their independence by arms, they were compelled by a royal edict to drown their
newly-born male children. And no permission was granted to evade this cruel
order. Well, at that time, the daughter of Pharaoh found an infant in the river, and
caused it to be brought up as her own son, giving the boy the name of Moses.
This Moses, when he had come to manhood, saw a Hebrew being assaulted by an
Egyptian; and, filled with sorrow at the sight, he delivered his brother from
injury, and killed the Egyptian with a stone. Soon after, fearing punishment on
account of what he had done, he fled into the land of Midian, and, taking up his
abode with Jothor the priest of that district, he received his daughter Sepphora
in marriage, who bore him two sons, Gersam and Eliezer. At this epoch lived
Job, who had acquired both the knowledge of God and all righteousness simply from
the law[1] of nature. He was exceedingly rich, and on that account all the
more illustrious, because he was neither corrupted by that wealth while it
remained entire, nor perverted by it when it was lost. For, when, through the agency
of the devil, he was stripped of his goods, deprived of his children, and
finally covered in his own person with terrible boils, he could not be broken down,
so as, from impatience of his sufferings, in any way, to commit sin. At length
he obtained the reward of the divine approval, and being restored to health, he
got back doubled all that he had lost.
CHAPTER XIV.
But the Hebrews, oppressed by the multiplied evils of slavery, directed
their complaints to heaven, and cherished the hope of assistance from God. Then,
as Moses was feeding his sheep, suddenly a bush appeared to him burning, but,
what was surprising, the flames did it no harm. Astonished at such an
extraordinary sight, he drew nearer to the bush, and immediately God spoke to him in
words to this effect, that he was the Lord of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and that
he desired that their descendants, who were kept down under the tyranny of the
Egyptians, should be delivered from their sufferings, and that he, therefore,
should go to the king of Egypt, and present himself as a leader for restoring
them to liberty. When he hesitated, God strengthened him with power, and imparted
to him the gift of working miracles. Thus Moses, going into Egypt, after he had
first performed miracles in the presence of his own people, and having
associated his brother Aaron with him, went to the king, declaring that he had been
sent by God, and that he now told him in the words of God to let the Hebrew
people go. But the king, affirming that he did not know the Lord, refused to obey
the command addressed to him. And when Moses, in proof that the orders he issued
were from God, changed his rod into a serpent,[1] and soon after convened all
the water into blood, while he filled the whole land with frogs, as the
Chaldaeans were doing similar things, the king declared that the wonders performed by
Moses were simply due to the arts of magic, and not to the power of God, until
the land was covered with stinging insects brought over it, when the Chaldaeans
confessed that this was done by the divine majesty. Then the king, constrained
by his sufferings, called to him Moses and Aaron, and gave the people liberty
to depart, provided that the calamity brought upon the kingdom were removed.
But, after the suffering was put an end to, his mind, having no control over
itself returned to its former state, and did not allow the Israelites to depart, as
had been agreed upon. Finally, however, he was broken down and conquered by the
ten plagues which were sent upon his person and his kingdom.
CHAPTER XV.
But on the day[1] before the people went out of Egypt, being as yet
unacquainted with dates, they were instructed by the command of God to acknowledge
that month which was then passing by as the first of all months; and were told
that the sacrifice of the day was to be solemnly and regularly offered in coming
ages, so that, on the fourteenth day of the month, a lamb without blemish, one
year old, should be slain as a victim, and that the door-posts should be
sprinkled with its blood; that its flesh was wholly to be eaten, but not a bone of it
was to be broken; that they should abstain from what was leavened for seven
days, using only unleavened bread; and that they should hand down the observance
to their posterity. Thus the people went forth rich, both by their own wealth,
and still more by the spoils of Egypt. Their number had grown from those
seventy-five[2] Hebrews, who had first gone down into Egypt, to six hundred thousand
men. Now, there had elapsed from the time when Abraham first reached the land
of the Canaanites a period of four hundred and thirty years, but from the deluge
a period of five hundred and seventy-five[3] years. Well, as they went forth
in haste, a pillar of cloud by day, and a pillar of fire by night, marched
before them. But since, owing to the fact that the gulf of the Red Sea lay between,
the way led by [4] the land of the Philistines, in order that an opportunity
might not afterwards be offered to the Hebrews, shrinking from the desert, of
returning into Egypt by a well-known road through a continuous land-journey, by
the command of God they turned aside, and journeyed towards the Red Sea, where
they stopped and pitched their camp. When it was announced to the king that the
Hebrew people, through mistaking the road, had come to have the sea right before
them, and that they had no means of escape since the deep would prevent them,
vexed and furious that so many thousand men should escape from his kingdom and
power, he hastily led forth his army. And already the arms, and standards, and
the lines drawn up in the widespreading plains were visible, when, as the
Hebrews were in a state of terror, and gazing up to heaven, Moses being so
instructed by God, struck the sea with his rod, and divided it. Thus a road was opened
to the people as on firm land, the waters giving way on both sides. Nor did the
king of Egypt hesitate to follow the Israelites going forward, for he entered
the sea where it had opened; and, as the waters speedily came together gain, he,
with all his host, was destroyed.
CHAPTER XVI.
Then Moses, exulting in the safety of his own people, and in the
destruction of the enemy, by such a miracle,[1] sang a song of praise to God, and the
whole multitude, both of males and females, took part in it. But, after they had
entered the desert, and advanced a journey of three days, want of water
distressed them; and, when it was found, it proved of no use on account of its
bitterness. And then for the first time the stubbornness of the impatient people
showed itself, and burst forth against Moses; when, as instructed by God, he cast
some wood into the waters, and its power was such that it rendered the taste of
the fluid sweet. Thence advancing, the multitude found at Elim twelve fountains
of waters, with seventy palm-trees, and there they encamped. Again the people,
complaining of famine, heaped reproaches upon Moses, and longed for the slavery
of Egypt, accompanied as it was with abundance to please their appetite, when
a flock of quails was divinely sent, and filled the camp. Besides, on the
following day, those who had gone forth from the camp perceived that the ground was
covered with a sort of pods,[2] the appearance of which was like a
coriander-seed of snowy whiteness, as we often see the earth in the winter months covered
with the hoar-frost that has been spread over it. Then the people were
informed, through Moses, that this bread had been sent them by the gift of God; that
every one should gather in vessels prepared for the purpose only so much of it as
would be sufficient for each, according to their number, during one day; but
that on the sixth day they should gather double, because it was not lawful to
collect it on the Sabbath. The people, however, as they were never prone to
obedience, did not, in accordance with human nature, restrain their desires,
providing in their stores not merely for one, but also for the following day. But that
which was thus laid up swarmed with worms, while its fetid odor was dreadful,
yet that which was laid up on the sixth day with a view to the, Sabbath
remained quite untainted. The Hebrews made use of this food for forty years; its taste
was very like that of honey; and its name is handed down as being manna.
Moreover, as an abiding witness to the divine gift, Moses is related to have laid up
a full gomer of it in a golden vessel.
CHAPTER XVII.
The people going on from thence, and being again tried with want of water,
hardly restrained themselves from destroying their leader. Then Moses, under
divine orders, striking with his rod the rock at the place which is called
Horeb, brought forth an abundant supply of water. But when they came to Raphidin,
the Amalekites destroyed numbers of the people by their attacks. Moses, leading
out his men to battle, placed Joshua at the head of the army; and, in company
with Aaron and Hur, was himself simply to be a spectator of the fight, while, at
the same time, for the purpose of praying to the Lord, he went up to the top of
a mountain. But when the armies had met with doubtful issue, through the
prayers of Moses, Joshua slew the enemy until nightfall. At the same time, Jothor,
Moses' father-in-law, with his daughter Sepphora (who, having been married to
Moses, had remained at home when her husband went into Egypt), and his children,
having learned the things which were being done by Moses, came to him. By his
advice Moses divided the people into various ranks; and, setting tribunes,
centurions, and decurions[1] over them, thus furnished a mode of discipline and
order to posterity. Jothor then returned to his own country, while the Israelites
came on to Mount Sinai. There Moses was admonished by the Lord that the people
should be sanctified, since they were to hearken to the words of God; and that
was carefully seen to. But when God rested on the mountain, the air was shaken
with the loud sounds of trumpets, and thick clouds rolled around with frequent
flashes of lightning. But Moses and Aaron were on the top of the mountain beside
the Lord, while the people stood around the bottom of the mountain. Thus a law
was given, manifold and full of the words of God, and frequently repeated; but
if any one is desirous of knowing particulars regarding it, he must consult
the original, as we here only briefly touch upon it. "There shall not be," said
God, "any strange gods among you, but ye shall worship me alone; thou shall not
make to time any idol; thou shall not take the name of thy God in vain; thou
shall do no work upon the Sabbath; honor thy father and thy mother; thou shall
not kill; thou shalt not commit adultery; thou shall not steal; thou shalt not
bear false witness against thy neighbor; thou shalt not covet anything
belonging to thy neighbor."
CHAPTER XVIII.
These things being said by God, while the trumpets uttered their voices,
the lamps blazed, and smoke covered the mountain, the people trembled from
terror; and begged of Moses · that God should speak to him alone, and that he would
report to the people what he thus heard. Now, the commandments of God to Moses
were as follows: A Hebrew servant purchased with money shall serve six years,
and after that he shall be free; but his ear shall be bored, should he willingly
remain in slavery. Whosoever slays a man shall be put to death; he who does so
unwittingly shall in due form be banished. Whosoever shall beat his father or
his mother, and utter evil sayings against them, shall suffer death. If any one
sell a Hebrew who has been stolen, he shall be put to death. If any one strike
his own man-servant or maidservant, and he or she die of the blow, he shall be
put on his trial for doing so. If any one cause a woman[1] to miscarry, he
shall be put to death. If any one knock out the eye or the tooth of his servant,
that servant shah receive his liberty in due form. If a bull kill a man, it
shall be stoned; and if its master, knowing the vicious temper of the animal, did
not take precautions in connection with it, he also shall be stoned, or shall
redeem himself by a price as large as the accuser shall demand. If a bull kill a
servant, money to the amount of thirty double-drachmas shall be paid to his
master. If any one does not cover up a pit which has been dug, and an animal fall
into that pit, he shall pay the price of the animal to its master. If a bull
kill the bull of another man, the animal shall be sold, and the two masters shall
share the price; they shall also divide the animal that has been killed. But
if a master, knowing the vicious temper of the bull, did not take precautions in
connection with it, he shall give up the bull. If any one steals a calf, he
shall restore five; if he steals a sheep, the penalty shall be fourfold; and if
the animals be found alive in the hands of him who drove them off, he shall
restore double. It shall be lawful to kill a thief by night, but not one by day. If
the cattle of any one has eaten up the corn of another, the master of the
cattle shall restore what has been destroyed. If a deposit disappears, he, in whose
hands it was deposited, shall swear that he has not been guilty of any deceit.
A thief who is caught shall pay double. An animal given in trust, if devoured
by a wild beast, shall not be made good. If any one defile a virgin not yet
betrothed, he shall bestow a dowry on the girl, and thus take her to wife; but, if
the father of the girl shall refuse to give her in marriage, then the ravisher
shall give her a dowry. If any one shall join himself to a beast, he shall be
put to death. Let him who sacrifices to idols perish. The widow and orphan are
not to be oppressed; the poor debtor is not to be hardly treated, nor is usury
to be demanded: the garment of the poor is not to be taken as a pledge. A ruler
of the people is not to be evil spoken of. All the first-born are to be
offered to God. Flesh taken from a wild beast is not to be eaten. Agreements to bear
false witness, or for any evil purpose, are not to be made. Thou shalt not pass
by any animal of thine enemy which has strayed, but shalt bring it back. If
you find an animal of your enemy fallen down under a burden, it will be your duty
to raise it up. Thou shall not slay the innocent and the righteous. Thou shall
not justify the wicked for rewards. Gifts are not to be accepted. A stranger
is to be kindly treated. Work is to be done on six days: rest is to be taken on
the Sabbath. The crops of the seventh year are not to be reaped, but are to be
left for the poor and needy.
CHAPTER XIX.
MOSES reported these words of God to the people, and placed an altar of
twelve stones at the foot of the mountain. Then he again ascended the mountain on
which the Lord had taken his place, bringing with him Aaron, Nabad, and
seventy of the elders. But these were not able to look upon the Lord; nevertheless,
they saw the place[1] in which God stood, whose form is related to have been
wonderful, and his splendor glorious. Now, Moses, having been called by God,
entered the inner cloud which had gathered round about God, and is related to have
remained there forty days and forty nights: During this time, he was taught in
the words of God about building the tabernacle and the ark, and about the ritual
of sacrifice-things which I, as they were obviously told at great length, have
not thought proper to be inserted in such a concise work as the present. But
as Moses stayed away a long time, since he spent forty days in the presence of
the Lord, the people, despairing of his return, compelled Aaron to construct
images. Then, out of metals which had been melted together, there came forth the
head of a calf. The people, unmindful of God, having offered sacrifices to this,
and given themselves up to eating and drinking, God, looking upon these
things, would in his righteous indignation, have destroyed the wicked people, had he
not been entreated by Moses' not to do so. But Moses, on his return, bringing
down the two tables of stone which had been written by the hand of God, and
seeing the people devoted to luxury and sacrilege, broke the tables, thinking the
nation unworthy of having the law of the Lord delivered to them. He then called
around himself the Levites, who had been assailed with many insults, and
commanded them to smite the people with drawn swords. In this onset twenty-three
thousand[2] men are said to have been slain. Then Moses set up the tabernacle
outside the camp; and, as often as he entered it, the pillar of cloud was observed
to stand before the door; and God spoke, face to face, with Moses. But when
Moses entreated that he might see the Lord in his peculiar majesty, he was answered
that the form of God could not be seen by mortal eyes; yet it was allowed to
see his back parts; and the tables which Moses had formerly broken were
constructed afresh. And Moses is reported, during this conference with God, to have
stayed forty days with the Lord. Moreover, when he descended from the mountain,
bringing with him the tables, his face shone with so great brightness, that the
people were not able to look upon him. It was arranged, therefore, that when he
was to make known to them the commands of God, he covered his face with a veil,
and thus spoke to the people in the words of God. In this part of the history
an account is given[3] of the tabernacle, and the building of its tuner parts.
Which having been finished, the cloud descended from above, and so overshadowed
the tabernacle that it prevented Moses himself from entering. These are the
principal matters contained in the two books of Genesis and Exodus.
CHAPTER XX.
Then follows the book of Leviticus, in which the precepts bearing upon
sacrifice are set forth; commandments also are added to the law formerly given;
and almost the whole is full of instructions connected with the priests. If any
one wishes to become acquainted with these, he will obtain fuller information
from that source. For we, keeping within the limits of the work undertaken,
touch upon the history only. The tribe of Levi, then, being set apart for the
priesthood, the rest of the tribes were numbered, and were found to amount to six
hundred and three thousand five hundred persons.[1] When, therefore, the people
made use of the manna for food, as we have related above, even amid so many and
so great kindnesses of God, showing themselves, as ever, ungrateful, they
longed after the worthless viands to which they had been accustomed in Egypt. Then
the Lord brought an enormous supply of quails into the camp; and as they were
eagerly tearing these to pieces, as soon as their lips touched the flesh, they
perished. There was indeed on that day a great destruction in the camp, so that
twenty and three thousand men are said to have died. Thus the people were
punished by the very food which they desired. Thence the company went forward, and
came to Faran; and Moses was instructed by the Lord that the land was now near,
the possession of which the Lord had promised them. Spies, accordingly, having
been sent into it, they report that it was a land blessed with all abundance,
but that the nations were powerful, and the towns fortified with immense walls.
When this was made known to the people, fear seized the minds of all; and to
such a pitch of wickedness did they come, that, despising the authority of Moses,
they prepared to appoint for themselves a leader, under whose guidance they
might return to Egypt. Then Joshua and Caleb, who had been of the number of the
spies, rent their garments with tears, and implored the people not to believe
the spies relating such terrors; for that they themselves had been with them, and
had found nothing dreadful in that country; and that it behooved them to trust
the promises of God, that these enemies would rather become their prey than
prove their destruction. But that stiff-necked race, setting themselves against
every good advice, rushed upon them to destroy them. And the Lord, angry on
account of these things, exposed a part of the people to be slain by the enemy,
while the spies were slain for having excited fear among the people.
CHAPTER XXI.
THERE followed the revolt of those, who, with Dathan and Abiron as
leaders, endeavored to set themselves up against Moses and Aaron; but the earth,
opening, swallowed them alive. And not long after, a revolt of the whole people
arose against Moses and Aaron, so that they rushed into the tabernacle, which it
was not lawful for any but the priests to enter. Then truly death mowed them down
in heaps; and all would have perished in a moment, had not the Lord, appeased
by the prayers of Moses, turned aside the disaster. Nevertheless, the number of
those slain amounted to seven hundred and fourteen thousand.[1] And not long
after, as had already often happened, a revolt of the people arose on account of
the want of water. Then Moses, instructed by God to strike the rock with his
rod, with a kind of trial new familiar to him, since he had already done that
before, struck the rock once and again, and thus water flowed out of it. In
regard, however, to this point, Moses is said to have been reproved by God, that,
through want of faith, he did not bring out the water except by repeated blows;
in fact, on account of this transgression, he did not enter the land promised to
him, as I shall show farther on. Moses, then, moving away from that place, as
he was preparing to lead his company along by the borders of Edom, sent
ambassadors to the king to beg liberty to pass by; for he thought it right to abstain
from war on account of the connection by blood; for that nation was descended
from Esau. But the king despised the suppliants, and refused them liberty to
pass by, being ready to contend in arms. Then Moses directed his march towards
the mountain, Or, keeping clear of the forbidden road, that he might not furnish
any cause of war between those related by blood, and on that route he destroyed
the king of the nation of the Canaanites. He smote also Seon the king of the
Amorites, and possessed himself of all their towns: he conquered, too, Basan and
Balac. He pitched his camp beyond Jordan, not far from Jericho. Then a battle
took place against the Midianites, and they were conquered and subdued. Moses
died, after he had ruled the people forty years in the wilderness. But the
Hebrews are said to have remained in the wilderness for so long a time, with this
view, until all those who had not believed the words of God perished. For, except
Joshua and Caleb, not one of those who were more than twenty years old on
leaving Egypt passed over Jordan. That Moses himself only saw the promised land,
and did not reach it, is ascribed to his sin, because, at that time when he was
ordered to strike the rock, and bring forth water, he doubted, even after so
many proofs of his miraculous power. He died in the one hundred and twentieth year
of his age. Nothing is known concerning the place of his burial.
CHAPTER XXII.
AFTER the death of Moses, the chief power passed into the hands of Joshua
the son of Nun, for Moses had appointed him his successor, being a man very
like himself in the good qualities which be displayed. Now, at the commencement of
his rule, he sent messengers through the camp to instruct the people to make
ready supplies of corn, and announces that they should march on the third day.
But-the river Jordan, a very powerful stream, hindered their crossing, because
they did not have a supply of vessels for the occasion, and the stream could not
be crossed by fords, as it was then rushing on in full flood. He, therefore,
orders the ark to be carried forward by the priests, and that they should take
their stand against the current of the river. On this being done, Jordan is said
to have been divided, and thus the army was led over on dry ground. There was
in these places a town called Jericho, fortified with very strong walls, and
not easy to be taken, either by storm or blockade. But Joshua, putting his trust
in God, did not attack the city either by arms or force; he simply ordered the
ark of God to be carried round the walls, while the priests walked before the
ark, and sounded trumpets. But when the ark had been carried round seven times,
the walls and the towers fell; and the city was plundered and burnt. Then
Joshua is said to have addressed the Lord, and[1] to have called down a curse upon
any one who should attempt to restore the town which had thus by divine help
been demolished. Next, the army was led against Geth, and an ambuscade having been
placed behind the city, Joshua, pretending fear, fled before the enemy. On
seeing this, those who were in the town, opening the gates, began to press upon
the enemy giving way. Thus, the men who were in ambush took the city, and all the
inhabitants were slain, without one escaping: the king also was taken, and
suffered capital punishment.
CHAPTER XXIII.
When this became known to the kings of the neighboring nations, they made
a warlike alliance to put down the Hebrews by arms. But the Gibeonites, a
powerful nation with a wealthy city, spontaneously yielded to the Hebrews, promising
to do what they were ordered, and were received under protection, while they
were told to bring in wood and water. But their surrender had roused the
resentment of the kings of the nearest cities. Accordingly, moving up their troops,
they surround with a blockade their town, which was called Gabaoth. The
townspeople, therefore, in their distress, send messengers to Joshua, that he would help
them in their state of siege. Accordingly, he by a forced march came upon the
enemy at unawares, and many thousands of them were completely destroyed. When
day failed the victors, and it seemed that night would furnish protection to the
vanquished, the Hebrew general, through the power of his faith, kept off the
night, and the day continued, so that there was no means of escape for the
enemy. Five kings who were taken suffered death. By the same attack, neighboring
cities also were brought under the power of Joshua, and their kings were cut off.
But as it was not my design, studious as I am of brevity, to follow out all
these things in order, I only carefully observe this, that twenty-nine kingdoms
were brought under the yoke of the Hebrews, and that their territory was
distributed among eleven tribes, to man after man. For to the Levites, who had been set
apart for the priesthood, no portion was given, in order that they might the
more freely serve God. I desire not, in silence, to pass over the example thus
set, but I would earnestly bring it forward as well worthy of being read by the
ministers of the Church. For these seem to me not only unmindful of this
precept, but even utterly ignorant of it--such a lust for possessing has, in this
age, seized, like an incurable disease, upon their minds. They gape upon
possessions; they cultivate estates; they repose upon gold; they buy and sell; they
study gain by every possible means. And even, if any of them seem to have a better
aim in life, neither possessing nor trading, still (what is much more
disgraceful) remaining inactive, they look for gifts, and have corrupted the whole glory
of life by their mercenary dispositions, while they present an appearance of
sanctity, as if even that might be made a source of gain. But I have gone
farther than I intended in expressing my loathing and disgust over the character of
our times; and I hasten to return to the subject in hand. The vanquished
territory, then, as I have already said, having been divided among the tribes, the
Hebrews enjoyed profound peace; their neighbors, being terrified by war, did not
venture to attempt hostilities against those distinguished by so many victories.
At the same period died Joshua in the hundred and tenth year of his age. I do
not express any definite opinion as to the length of time he ruled: the
prevalent view, however, is, that he was at the head of the Hebrew affairs during
twenty-seven years. If this were so, then three thousand eight hundred and
eighty-four years had elapsed from the beginning of the world to his death.
CHAPTER XXIV.
AFTER the death of Joshua, the people acted without a leader. But a
necessity of making war with the Canaanites having arisen, Judah was appointed as
general in the war. Under his guidance, matters were successfully conducted: there
was the greatest tranquillity both at home and abroad: the people ruled over
the nations which had either been subdued or received under terms of surrender.
Then, as almost always happens in a time of prosperity, becoming unmindful of
morals and discipline, they began to contract marriages from among the
conquered, and by and by to adopt foreign customs, yea, even in a sacrilegious manner to
offer sacrifice to idols: so pernicious is all alliance with foreigners. God,
foreseeing these things long before, had, by a wholesome precept enjoined upon
the Hebrews to give over the conquered nations to utter destruction. But the
people, through lust for power, preferred (to their own ruin) to rule over those
who were conquered. Accordingly, when, forsaking God, they worshiped idols,
they were deprived of the divine assistance, and, being vanquished and subdued by
the king of Mesopotamia, they paid the penalty of eight years' captivity,
until, with Gothoniel as their leader, they were restored to liberty, and enjoyed
independence for fifty years. Then again, corrupted by the evil effect of a
lengthened peace, they began to sacrifice to idols. And speedily did retribution
fall upon them thus sinning. Conquered by Eglon, king of the Moabites, they served
him eighteen years, until, by a divine impulse, Aod slew the enemies' king by
a stratagem, and, gathering together a hasty army, restored them to liberty by
force of arms. The same man ruled the Hebrews in peace for forty years. To him
Semigar sucseeded, and he, engaging in battle With the Philistines,[1] secured
a decisive victory. But again, the king of the Canaanites, Jabin by name,
subdued the Hebrews who were once more serving idols, and exercised over them a
grievous tyranny for twenty years, until Deborah, a woman, restored them to their
former condition. They had to such a degree lost confidence in their generals,
that they were now protected by means of a woman. But it is worthy of notice,
that this form of deliverance was arranged beforehand, as a type of the Church,
by whose aid captivity to the devil is escaped. The Hebrews were forty years
under this leader or judge. And being again delivered over to the Midianites for
their sins, they were kept under hard rule; and, being afflicted by the evils of
slavery, they implored the divine help. Thus always when in prosperity they
were unmindful of the kindnesses of heaven, and prayed to idols; but in adversity
they cried to God. Wherefore, as often as I reflect that those people who lay
under so many obligations to the goodness of God, being chastised with so many
disasters when they sinned, and experiencing both the mercy and the severity
of God, yet were by no means rendered better, and that, though they always
obtained pardon for their transgressions, yet they as constantly sinned again after
being pardoned, it can appear nothing wonderful that Christ when he came was
not received by them, since already, from the beginning, they were found so often
rebelling against the Lord. It is, in fact, far more wonderful that the
clemency of God never failed them when they sinned, if only they called upon his
name.[2]
CHAPTER XXV.
ACCORDINGLY, when the Midianites, as we have related above, ruled over
them, they turned to the Lord, imploring his wonted tender mercy, and obtained it.
There was then among the Hebrews one Gideon by name, a righteous man who was
dear and acceptable to God. The angel stood by him as he was returning home from
the harvest-field, and said unto him; "The Lord is with thee, thou mighty man
of valor." But he in a humble voice complained that the Lord was not[1] with
him, because captivity pressed sore upon his people, and he remembered with tears
the miracles wrought by the Lord, who had brought them out of the land of
Egypt. Then the angel said, "Go, in this spirit in which you have spoken, and
deliver the people from captivity." But he declared that he could not, with his[2]
feeble strength, since he was a man of very small importance, undertake such a
heavy task. The angel, however, persisted in urging him not to doubt that those
things could be done which the Lord said. So then, having offered sacrifice,
and overthrown the altar which the Midianites had consecrated to the image of
Baal, he went to his own people, and pitched his camp near the camp of the enemy.
But the nation of the Amalekites had also joined themselves to the Midianites,
while Gideon had not gathered more than an army of thirty-two thousand men. But
before the battle began, God said to him that this was a larger number than he
wished him to lead forth to the conflict; that, if he did make use of so many,
the Hebrews would, in accordance with their usual wickedness ascribe the
result of the fight, not to God, but to their own bravery; he should therefore
furnish an opportunity of leaving to those who desired to do so. When this was made
known to the people, twenty and two thousand left the camp. But of the ten
thousand who had remained, Gideon, as instructed by God, did not retain more than
three hundred: the rest he dismissed from the field. Thus, entering the camp of
the enemy in the middle watch of the night, and having ordered all his men to
sound their trumpets, he caused great terror to the enemy; and no one had
courage to resist; but they made off in a disgraceful flight wherever they could. The
Hebrews, however, meeting them in every direction, cut the fugitives to
pieces. Gideon pursued the kings beyond Jordan, and having captured them, gave them
over to death. In that battle, a hundred and twenty thousand of the enemy are
said to have been slain, and fifteen thousand captured. Then, by universal
consent, a proposal was made to Gideon that he should be king of the people. But he
rejected this proposal, and preferred rather to live on equal terms with his
fellow-citizens than to be their ruler. Having, therefore, escaped from their
captivity, which had pressed upon the people for seven years, they now enjoyed
peace for a period of forty years.
CHAPTER XXVI.
BUT on the death of Gideon, his son Abimelech, whose mother was a
concubine, having slain his brothers with the concurrence of a multitude of wicked men,
and especially by the help of the chief men among the Shechemites, took
possession of the kingdom. And he, being harassed by civil strife, while he pressed
hard upon his people by war, attempted to storm a certain tower, into which
they, after losing the town, had betaken themselves by flight. But, as he
approached the place without sufficient caution, he was slain by a stone which a woman
threw, after holding the government for three years. To him succeeded Thola, who
reigned two and twenty years. After him came Jair; and after he had held the
chief place for a like period of twenty-two years, the people, forsaking God,
gave themselves up to idols. On this account, the Israelites were subdued by the
Philistines and Ammonites, and remained under their power for eighteen years.
At the end of this period, they began to call upon God; but the divine answer to
them was that they should rather invoke the aid of their images, for that he
would no longer extend his mercy to those who had been so ungrateful. But they
with tears confessed their fault, and implored forgiveness; while, throwing away
their idols, and earnestly calling upon God, they obtained the divine
compassion, though it had been at first refused. Accordingly, under Jephtha as general,
they assembled in great numbers for the purpose of recovering their liberty by
arms, having first sent ambassadors to King Ammon, begging that, content with
his own territories, he should keep from warring against them. But he, far from
declining battle, at once drew up his army. Then Jephtha, before the signal
for battle was given, is said to have vowed that, if he obtained the victory, the
person who first met him as he returned home, should be offered to God as a
sacrifice. Accordingly, on the enemy being defeated, as Jephtha was returning
home, his daughter met him, having joyfully gone forth with drums and dances to
receive her father as a conqueror. Then Jephtha, being overwhelmed with sorrow,
rent his clothes in his affliction, and made known to his daughter the stringent
obligation of his vow. But she, with a courage not to be expected from a
woman, did not refuse to die; she only begged that her life might be spared for two
months, that she might before dying have the opportunity of seeing the friends
of her own age. This being done, she willingly returned to her father, and
fulfilled the vow to God. Jephtha held the chief power for six years. To him Esebon
succeeded, and having ruled in tranquillity for seven years, then died. After
him, Elon the Zebulonite ruled for ten years, and Abdon also for eight years;
but, as their rule was peaceful, they performed nothing which history might
record.
CHAPTER XXVII.
THE Israelites yet again turned to idols; and, being deprived of the
divine protection, were subdued by the Philistines, and paid the penalty of their
unfaithfulness by forty years of captivity. At that time, Samson is related to
have been born. His mother, after being long barren, had a vision of an angel,
and was told to abstain from wine, and strong drink, and everything unclean; for
that she should bear a son who would be the restorer of liberty to the
Israelites, and their avenger upon their enemies. He, with unshorn locks, is said to
have been possessed of marvelous strength, so much so that he tore to pieces with
his hands a lion which met him in the way. He had a wife from the Philistines,
and when she, in the absence of her husband, had entered into marriage with
another, he, through indignation on account of his wife being thus taken from
him, wrought destruction to her nation. Trusting in God and his own strength, he
openly brought disaster on those hitherto victors. For, catching three hundred
foxes, he tied burning torches to their tails, and sent them into the fields of
the enemy. It so happened that at the time the harvest was ripe, and thus the
fire easily caught, while the vines and olive-trees were burnt to ashes. He was
thus seen to have avenged the injury done him in taking away his wife, by a
great loss inflicted on the Philistines. And they, enraged at this disaster,
destroyed by fire the woman who had been the cause of so great a calamity, along
with her house and her father. But Samson, thinking himself as yet but poorly
avenged, ceased not to harass the heathen race with all sorts of evil devices. Then
the Jews, being compelled to it, handed him over as a prisoner to the
Philistines; but, when thus handed over, he burst his bonds and seizing the jaw-bone[1]
of an ass, which chance offered him as a weapon, he slew a thousand of his
enemies. And, as the heat of the day grew violent, and he began to suffer from
thirst, he called upon God, and water flowed forth from the bone which he held in
his hand.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
AT that time Samson ruled over the Hebrews, the Philistines having been
subdued by the prowess of a single individual. They, therefore, sought his life
by stratagem, not daring to assail him openly, and with this view they bribe his
wife (whom he had received after what has been stated took place) to betray to
them wherein the strength of her husband lay. She attacked him with female
blandishments; and, after he had deceived her, and staved off her purpose for a
long time, she persuaded him to tell that his strength was situated in his hair.
Presently she cut off his hair stealthily while he was asleep, and thus
delivered him up to the Philistines; for although he had often before been given up to
them, they had not been able to hold him fast. Then they, having put out his
eyes, bound him with fetters, and cast him into prison. But, in course of time,
his hair which had been cut off began to grow again, and his strength to return
with it. And now Samson, conscious of his recovered strength, was only waiting
for an opportunity of righteous revenge. The Philistines had a custom on their
festival days of producing Samson as if to make a public spectacle of him,
while they mocked their illustrious captive. Accordingly, on a certain day, when
they were making a feast in honor of their idol, they ordered Samson to be
exhibited. Now, the temple, in which all the people and all the princes of the
Philistines feasted, rested on two pillars of remarkable size; and Samson, when
brought out, was placed between these pillars. Then he, having first called upon
the Lord, seized his opportunity, and threw down the pillars. The whole multitude
was overwhelmed in the ruins of the building, and Samson himself died along
with his enemies, not without having avenged himself upon them, after he had
ruled the Hebrews twenty years. To him Simmichar succeeded, of whom Scripture
relates nothing more than that simple fact. For I do not find that even the time
when his rule came to an end is mentioned, and I see that the people was for some
time without a leader. Accordingly, when civil war arose against the tribe of
Benjamin, Judah was chosen as a temporary leader in the war. But most of those
who have written about these times note that his rule was only for a single
year. On this account, many pass him by altogether, and place Eli, the priest,
immediately after Samson. We shall leave that point doubtful, as one not positively
ascertained.
CHAPTER XXIX.
ABOUT these times, civil war, as we have said, had broken out; and the
following was the cause of the tumult. A certain Levite was on a journey along
with his concubine, and, constrained by the approach of night, he took up his
abode in the town of Gabaa, which was inhabited by men of Benjamin. A certain old
man having kindly admitted him to hospitality, the young men of the town
surrounded the guest, with the view of subjecting him to improper treatment. After
being much chidden by the old man, and with difficulty dissuaded from their
purpose, they at length received for their wanton sport the person of his concubine
as a substitute for his own; and they thus spared the stranger, but abused her
through the whole night, and only restored her on the following day. But she
(whether from the injury their vile conduct had inflicted on her, or from shame, I
do not venture to assert) died on again seeing[1] her husband. Then the
Levite, in testimony of the horrible deed, divided her members into twelve parts, and
distributed them among the twelve tribes that indignation at such conduct
might the more readily be excited in them all. And when this became known to all of
them, the other eleven tribes entered into a warlike confederacy against
Benjamin. In this war, Judah, as we have said, was the general. But they had bad
success in the first two battles. At length, however, in the third, the Benjamites
were conquered, and cut off to a man; thus the crime of a few was punished by
the destruction of a multitude. These things also are contained in the Book of
Judges: the Books of Kings follow. But to me who am following the succession of
the years, and the order of the dates, the history does not appear marked by
strict chronological accuracy. For, since after Samson as judge, there came
Semigar, and a little later the history certifies that the people lived without
judges, Eli the priest is related in the Books of Kings to have also been a
judge,[2] but the Scripture has not stated how many years there were between Eli and
Samson. I see that there was some portion of time between these two, which is
left in obscurity. But, from the day of the death of Joshua up to the time at
which Samson died, there are reckoned four hundred and eighteen years, and from
the beginning of the world, four thousand three hundred and three. Nevertheless,
I am not ignorant that others differ from this reckoning of ours; but I am at
the same time conscious that I have, not without some care, set forth the order
of events in the successive years (a thing hitherto left in obscurity), until
I have fallen upon these times, concerning which I confess that I have my
doubts. Now I shall go on to what remains.
CHAPTER XXX.
THE Hebrews, then, as I have narrated above, were living according to
their own will, without any judge or general. Eli was priest; and in his days
Samuel was born. His father's name was Elchana, and his mother's, Anna. She having
long been barren, is said, when she asked a child from God, to have vowed that,
if it were a boy, it should be dedicated to God. Accordingly, having brought
forth a boy, she delivered him to Eli the priest. By and by, when he had grown
up, God spoke to him. He denounced wrath against Eli the priest on account of the
life of his sons, who had made the priesthood of their father a means of gain
to themselves, and exacted gifts from those who came to sacrifice; and,
although their father is related to have often reproved them, yet his reproofs were
too gentle to serve the purpose of discipline. Well, the Philistines made an
incursion into Judaea, and were met by the Israelites. But the Hebrews, being
beaten, prepare to renew the contest: they carry the ark of the Lord with them into
battle, and the sons of the priests go forth with it, because he himself, being
burdened with years, and afflicted with blindness, could not discharge that
duty. But, when the ark was brought within sight of the enemy, terrified as if by
the majesty of God's presence, they were ready to take to flight. But again
recovering courage, and changing their minds (not without a divine impulse), they
rush into battle with their whole strength. The Hebrews were conquered; the
ark was taken; the sons of the priest fell. Eli, when the news of the calamity
was brought to him, being overwhelmed with grief, breathed his last, after he had
held the priesthood for twenty [1] years.
CHAPTER XXXI.
The Philistines, victorious in this prosperous battle, brought the ark of
God, which had fallen into their hands, into the temple of Dagon in the town of
Azotus. But the image, dedicated to a demon, fell down when the ark was
brought in there; and, on their setting the idol up again in its place, in the
following night it was torn in pieces. Then mice, springing up throughout all the
country, caused by their venomous bites the death of many thousand persons.[1] The
men of Azotus, constrained by this source of suffering, in order to escape the
calamity, removed the ark to Gath. But the people there being afflicted with
the same evils, conveyed the ark to Ascalon. The inhabitants, however, of that
place, the chief men of the nation having been called together, formed the
design of sending back the ark to the Hebrews. Thus, in accordance with the opinion
of the chiefs, and augurs, and priests, it was placed upon a cart, and sent
back with many gifts. This remarkable thing then happened, that when they had
yoked heifers to the conveyance, and had retained their calves at home, these
cattle took their course, without any guide, towards Judaea, and showed no desire of
returning, from affection toward their young left behind. The rulers of the
Philistines, who had followed the ark into the territory of the Hebrews, were so
struck by the marvelousness of this occurrence that they performed a religious
service. But the Jews, when they saw the ark brought back, vied with each other
in joyously rushing forth from the town of Betsamis to meet it, and in
hurrying, exulting, and returning thanks to God. Presently, the Levites, whose
business it was, perform a sacrifice to God, and offer those heifers which had brought
the ark. But the ark could not be kept in the town which I have named above,
and thus severe illness fell by the appointment of God, upon the whole city. The
ark was then transferred to the town of Cariathiarim,[2] and there it remained
twenty years.
CHAPTER XXXII.
AT this time, Samuel the priest[1] ruled over the Hebrews; and there being
a cessation of all war, the people lived in peace. But this tranquillity was
disturbed by an invasion of the Philistines, and all ranks were in a state of
terror from their consciousness of guilt. Samuel, having first offered sacrifice,
and trusting in God, led his men out to battle, and the enemy being routed at
the first onset, victory declared for the Hebrews. But when the fear of the
enemy was thus removed, and affairs were now prosperous and peaceful, the people,
changing their views for the worse, after the manner of the mob, who are always
weary of what they have, and long for things of which they have had no
experience, expressed a desire for the kingly name--a name greatly disliked by almost
all free nations. Yes, with an example of madness certainly very remarkable,
they now preferred to exchange liberty for slavery. They, therefore, come m great
numbers to Samuel, in order that, as he himself was now an old man, he might
make for them a king. But he endeavored in a useful address, quietly to deter
the people from their insane desire; he set forth the tyranny and haughty rule of
kings, while he extolled liberty, and denounced slavery; finally, he
threatened them with the divine wrath, if they should show them,selves men so corrupt in
mind as that, when having God as their king, they should demand for themselves
a king from among men. Having spoken these and other words of a like nature to
no purpose, finding that the people persisted in the determination, he
consulted God. And God, moved by the madness of that insane nation, replied that
nothing was to be refused to them asking against their own interests.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
ACCORDINGLY, Saul, having been first anointed by Samuel with the
sacerdotal oil, was appointed king. He was of the tribe of Benjamin, and his father's
name was Kish. He was modest in mind, and of a singularly handsome figure, so
that the dignity of his person worthily corresponded to the royal dignity. But in
the beginning of his reign, some portion of the people had revolted from him,
refusing to acknowledge his authority, and had joined themselves to the
Ammonites. Saul, however, energetically wreaked his vengeance on these people; the
enemy were conquered, and pardon was granted to the Hebrews. Then Saul is said to
have been anointed by Samuel a second time. Next, a bloody war arose by an
invasion of the Philistines; and Saul had appointed Gilgal as the place where his
army was to assemble. As they waited there seven days for Samuel, that he might
offer sacrifice to God, the people gradually dropped away owing to his delay,
and the king, with unlawful presumption, presented a burnt-offering, thus taking
upon him the duty of a priest. For this he was severely rebuked by Samuel, and
acknowledged his sin with a penitence that was too late. For, as a result of
the king's sin, fear had pervaded the whole army. The camp of the enemy lying at
no great distance showed them how actual the danger was, and no one had the
courage to think of going forth to battle: most had be-taken themselves to the
marshes[1] For besides the want of courage on the part of those who felt that God
was alienated from them on account of the king's sin, the army was in the
greatest want of iron weapons; so much so that nobody, except Saul and Jonathan his
son, is said to have possessed either sword or spear. For the Philistines, as
conquerors in the former wars, had deprived the Hebrews of the use of arms,[2]
and no one had had the power of forging any weapon of war, or even making any
implement for rural purposes. In these circumstances, Jonathan, with an audacious
design, and with his armor-bearer as his only companion, entered the camp of
the enemy, and having slain about twenty of them, spread a terror throughout the
whole army. And then, through the appointment of God, betaking themselves to
flight, they neither carried out orders nor kept their ranks, but placed all the
hope of safety in flight. Saul, perceiving this, hastily drew forth his men,
and pursuing the fugitives, obtained a victory. The king is said on that day to
have issued a proclamation that no one should help himself to food until the
enemy were destroyed. But Jonathan, knowing nothing of this prohibition, found a
honey-comb, and, dipping the point of his weapon in it, ate up the honey. When
that became known to the king through the anger of God which followed, he
ordered his son to be put to death. But by the help of the people, he was saved from
destruction. At that time, Samuel, being instructed by God, went to the king,
and told him in the words of God to make war on the nation of the Amalekites,
who had of old hindered the Hebrews when they were coming out of Egypt; and the
prohibition was added that they should not covet any of the spoils of the
conquered. Accordingly, an army was led into the territory of the enemy, the king
was taken, and the nation subdued. But Saul, unable to resist the magnitude of
the spoil, and unmindful of the divine injunctions, ordered the booty to be saved
and gathered together.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
GOD, displeased with what had been done, spoke to Samuel, saying that he
repented that he had made Saul king. The priest reports what he had heard to the
king. And ere long, being instructed by God, he anointed David with the royal
oil, while be was as yet only a little boy[1] living under the care of his
father, and acting as a shepherd, while he was accustomed often to play upon the
harp. For this reason, he was taken afterwards by Saul, and reckoned among the
servants of the king. And the Philistines and Hebrews being. at this time hotly
engaged in war, as the armies were stationed opposite to each other, a certain
man of the Philistines named Goliath, a man of marvelous size and strength,
passing along the ranks of his countrymen, cast insults, in the fiercest terms,
upon the enemy, and challenged any one to engage in single combat with him. Then
the king promised a great reward and his daughter in marriage to any one who
should bring home the spoils of that boaster; but no one out of so great a
multitude ventured to make the attempt. In these circumstances, though still a
youth,[2] David offered himself for the contest, and rejecting the arms by which his
yet tender age was weighed down, simply with a staff and five stones which he
had taken, advanced to the battle. And by the first blow, having discharged one
of the stones from a sling, he overthrew the Philistine; then he cut off the
head of his conquered foe, carried off his spoils, and afterwards laid up his
sword in the temple. In the meanwhile, all the Philistines, turning to flight,
yielded the victory to the Hebrews. But the great favor shown to David as they were
returning from the battle excited the envy of the king. Fearing, however, that
if he put to death one so beloved by all, that might give rise to hatred
against himself and prove disastrous, he resolved, under an appearance of doing him
honor, to expose him to danger. First then he made him a captain, that he might
be charged with the affairs of war; and next, although he had promised him his
daughter, he broke his word, and gave her to another. Ere long, a younger
daughter of the king, Melchol by name, fell violently in love with David.
Accordingly, Saul sets before David as the condition of obtaining her in marriage the
following proposal: that if he should bring in a hundred foreskins of the enemy,
the royal maiden would be given him in marriage; for he hoped that the youth,
venturing on so great dangers, would probably perish. But the result proved very
different from what he imagined, for David, according to the proposal made to
him, speedily brought in a hundred foreskins of the Philistines; and thus he
obtained the daughter of the king in marriage.
CHAPTER XXXV.
The hatred of the king towards him increased daily, under the influence of
jealousy, for the wicked always persecute the good. He, therefore, commanded
his servants and Jonathan his son, to prepare snares against his life. But
Jonathan had even from the first had a great regard and affection for David; and
therefore the king, being taken to task by his son, suppressed the cruel order he
had given. But the wicked are not long good. For, when Saul was afflicted by a
spirit of error, and David stood by him, soothing him with the harp under his
trouble, Saul tried to pierce him with a spear, and would have done so, had not
he rapidly evaded the deadly blow. From this time forth, the king no longer
secretly but openly sought to compass his death; and David no longer trusted
himself in his power. He fled, and first betook himself to Samuel, then to
Abimelech, and finally fled to the king of Moab. By-and-by, under the instructions of
the prophet Gad, he returned into the land of Judah, and there ran in danger of
his life. At that time, Saul slew Abimelech the priest because he had received
David; and when none of the king's servants ventured to lay hands upon the
priest, Doeg, the Syrian, fulfilled the cruel duty. After that, David made for the
desert. Thither Saul also followed him, but his efforts at his destruction were
in vain, for God protected him. There was a cave in the desert, opening with a
vast recess. David had thrown himself into the inner parts of this cave. Saul,
not knowing that he was there, had gone into it for the purpose of taking[1]
bodily refreshment, and there, overcome by sleep, he was resting. When David
perceived this, although all urged him to avail himself of the opportunity, he
abstained from slaying the king, and simply took away his mantle. Presently going
out, he addressed the king from a safe position behind, recounting the services
he had done him, how often he had exposed his life to peril for the sake of the
kingdom, and how last of all, he bad not, on the present occasion, sought to
kill him when he was given over to him by God. Upon hearing these things, Saul
confessed his fault, entreated pardon, shed tears, extolled the piety of David,
and blamed his own wickedness, while he addressed David as king and son. He was
so much changed from his former ferocious character, that no one could now
have thought he would make any further attempt against his son-in-law. But David,
who had thoroughly[2] tested and known his evil disposition, did not think it
safe to put himself in the power of the king, and kept himself within the
desert. Saul, almost mad with rage, because he was unable to capture his son-in-law,
gave in marriage to one Faltim his daughter Melchol, who, as we have related
above, had been married to David. David fled to the Philistines.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
AT that time Samuel died. Saul, when the Philistines made war upon him,
consulted God, and no answer was returned to him. Then, by means of a woman whose
entrails a spirit of error[1] had filled, he called up and consulted Samuel
Saul was informed by him that on the following day he with his sons, being
overcome by the Philistines, would fall in the battle. The Philistines, accordingly,
having pitched their camp on the enemy's territory, drew up their army in
battle array on the following day, David, however, being sent away from the camp,
because they did not believe that he would be faithful to them against his own
people. But the battle taking place, the Hebrews were routed and the sons of the
king fell; Saul, having sunk down from his horse, that he might not be taken
alive by the enemy, fell on his own sword. We do not find any Certain statements
as to the length of his reign, unless that he is said in the Acts of the
Apostles to have reigned forty years. As to this, however, I am inclined to think
that Paul, who made the statement in his preaching, then meant to include also the
years of Samuel under the length of that king's reign.[2] Most of those,
however, who have written about these times, remark that he reigned thirty years. I
can, by no means, agree with this opinion, for at the time when the ark of God
was transferred to the town of Cariathiarim, Saul had not yet begun to reign,
and it is related that the ark was removed by David the king out of that town
after it had been there twenty years. Therefore, since Saul reigned and died
within that period, he must have held the government only for a very brief space of
time. We find the same obscurity concerning the times of Samuel, who, having
been born under the priesthood of Eli, is related, when very old, to have
fulfilled the duties of a priest. By some, however, who have written about these
times (for the sacred history has recorded almost nothing about his years),[3] but
by most he is said to have ruled the people seventy years. I have, however,
been unable to discover what authority there is for this assumption. Amid such
variety of error, we have followed the account of the Chronicles,[4] because we
think that it was taken (as said above) from the Acts of the Apostles, and we
repeat that Samuel and Saul together held the government for forty years.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
SAUL having thus been cut off, David, when the news of his death was
brought to him in the land of the Philistines, is related to have wept, and to have
given a marvelous proof of his affection. He then betook himself to Hebron, a
town of Judaea; and, being there again anointed with the royal oil, received the
title of king. But Abenner, who had been master of the host of King Saul,
despised David, and made Isbaal. king, the son of King Saul. Various battles then
took place between the generals of the kings. Abenner was generally routed; yet
in his flight he cut off the brother of Joab, who had the command of the army
on the side of David. Joab, on account of the sorrow he felt for this,
afterwards, when Abenner had surrendered to King David, ordered him to be murdered, not
without regret on the part of the king, whose honor he had thus tarnished. At
the same time, almost all the older men of the Hebrews conferred on him by
public consent the sovereignty of the whole nation; for during seven years he had
reigned only in Hebron. Thus, he was anointed king for the third time, being
about thirty years of age. He repulsed in successful battles the Philistines making
inroads upon his kingdom. And at that time, he transferred to Zion the ark of
God, which, as I have said above, was in the town of Cariathiarim. And when he
had formed the intention of building a temple to God, the divine answer was
given him to the effect, that that was reserved for his son. He then conquered the
Philistines in war, subjugated the Moabites, and subdued Syria, imposing
tribute upon it. He brought back with him an enormous amount of booty in gold and
brass. Next, a war arose against the Ammonites on account of the injury which had
been done by their king, Annon. And when the Syrians again rebelled, having
formed a confederacy for war with the Ammonites, David intrusted the chief
command of the war to Joab, the master of his host, and he himself remained in
Jerusalem far from the scene of strife.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
AT this time, he knew in a guilty way Bersabe, a woman of remarkable
beauty. She is said to have been the wife of a certain man called Uriah, who was
then in the camp. David caused him to be slain by exposing him to the enemy at a
dangerous place in the battle. In this way, he added to the number of his wives
the woman who was now free from the bond of marriage, but who was already
pregnant through adultery. Then David, after being severely reproved by Nathan the
prophet, although he confessed his sin, did not escape the punishment of God.
For he lost in a few days the son who was born from the clandestine connection,
and many terrible things happened in respect to his house and family. At last
his son Absalom lifted impious arms against his father, with the desire of
driving him from the throne. Joab encountered him in the field of battle, and the
king entreated him to spare the young man when conquered; but he, disregarding
this command, avenged with the sword his parricidal attempts. That victory is said
to have been a mournful one to the king: so great was his natural affection
that he wished even his parricidal son to be forgiven. This war seemed hardly
finished when another arose, under a certain general called Sabaea, who had
stirred up all the wicked to arms. But the whole commotion was speedily checked by
the death of the leader. David then engaged in several battles against the
Philistines with favorable results; and all being subdued by war, both foreign and
home disturbances having been brought to accord, he possessed in peace a most
flourishing kingdom. Then a sudden desire seized him of numbering the people, in
order to ascertain the strength of his empire; and accordingly they were
numbered by Joab, the master of the host, and were found to amount to one million
three hundred thousand[1] citizens. David soon regretted and repented of this
proceeding, and implored pardon of God for having lifted up his thoughts to this,
that he should reckon the power of his kingdom rather by the multitude of his
subjects than by the divine favor. Accordingly, an angel was sent to him to reveal
to him a threefold punishment, and to give him the power of choosing either
one or another. Well, when a famine for three years was set before him, and
flight before his enemies for three months, and a pestilence for three days,
shunning both flight and famine, he made choice of pestilence, and, almost in a
moment of time, seventy thousand men perished. Then David, beholding the angel by
whose right hand the people were overthrown, implored pardon, and offered himself
singly to punishment instead of all, saying that he deserved destruction
inasmuch as it was he who had sinned. Thus, the punishment of the people was turned
aside; and David built an altar to God on the spot where he had beheld the
angel. After this, having become infirm through years and illness, he appointed
Solomon, who had been born to him by Bersabe, the wife of Uriah, his successor in
the kingdom. He, having been anointed with the royal oil by Sadoc the priest,
received the title of king, while his father was still alive. David died, after
he had reigned forty years.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
SOLOMON in the beginning of his reign surrounded the city with a wall. To
him while asleep God appeared standing by him, and gave him the choice of
whatever things he desired. But he asked that nothing more than wisdom should be
granted him, deeming all other things of little value. Accordingly, when he arose
from sleep; taking his stand before the sanctuary of God, he gave a proof of
the wisdom which had been bestowed upon him by God. For two women who dwelt in
one house, having given birth to male children at the same time, and one of these
having died in the night three days afterwards, the mother of the dead child,
while the other woman slept, insidiously substituted her child, and took away
the living one. Then there arose an altercation between them, and the matter was
at length brought before the king. As no witness was forthcoming, it was a
difficult matter to give a judgment between both denying guilt. Then Solomon, in
the exercise of his gift of divine wisdom, ordered the child to be slain and its
body to be divided between the two doubtful claimants. Well, when one of them
acquiesced in this judgment, but the other wished rather to give up the boy
than that he should be cut in pieces, Solomon, concluding from the feeling
displayed by this woman that she was the true mother, adjudged the child to her. The
bystanders could not repress their admiration at this decision, since he had in
such a way brought out the hidden truth by his sagacity. Accordingly, the kings
of the neighboring nations, out of admiration for his ability and wisdom,
courted his friendship and alliance being prepared to carry out his commands.
CHAPTER XL.
TRUSTING in these resources, Solomon set about erecting a temple of
immense size to God, funds for the purpose having been got together during three
years, and laid the foundation of it about the fourth year of his reign. This was
about the five hundred and eighty-eighth year after the departure of the Hebrews
from Egypt, although in the third Book of Kings the years are reckoned at four
hundred and forty.[1] This is by no means accurate; for it would have been
more likely that, in the order of dates I have given above, I should perhaps
reckon fewer years than more. But I do not doubt that the truth had been falsified
by the carelessness of copyists, especially since so many ages intervened,
rather than that the sacred[2] writer erred. In the same way, in the case of this
little work of ours, we believe it will happen that, through the negligence of
transcribers, those things which have-been put together, not without care on our
part, should be corrupted. Well, then, Solomon finished his work of building
the temple in the twentieth year from its commencement. Then, having offered
sacrifice in that place, as well as uttered a prayer, by which he blessed the
people and the temple, God spoke to him, declaring that, if at any time they should
sin and forsake God, their temple should be razed to the ground. We see that
this has a long time ago been fulfilled, and in due time we shall set forth the
connected order of events. In the meantime, Solomon abounded in wealth, and was,
in fact, the richest of all the kings that ever lived. But, as always takes
place in such circumstances, he sunk from wealth into luxury and vice, forming
marriages (in spite of the prohibition of God) with foreign women, until he had
seven hundred wives, and three hundred concubines. As a consequence, he set up
idols for them, after the manner of their nations, to which they might offer
sacrifice. God, turned away from him by such. doings, reproved him sharply, and
made known to him as a punishment, that the greater part of his kingdom would be
taken from his son, and given to a servant. And that happened accordingly.
CHAPTER XLI.
FOR, on the death of Solomon in the fortieth year of his reign, Roboam his
son having succeeded to the throne of his father in the sixteenth year of his
age, a portion of the people, taking offense, revolted from him. For, having
asked that the very heavy tribute which Solomon had imposed upon them might be
lessened, he rejected the entreaties of these suppliants, and thus alienated from
him the favor of the whole people. Accordingly, by universal consent, the
government was bestowed on Jeroboam. He, sprung from a family of middle rank, had
for some time been in the service of Solomon. But when the king found that the
sovereignty of the Hebrews had been promised to him by a response of the prophet
Achia, he had resolved privately to cut him off. Jeroboam, under the influence
of this fear, fled into Egypt, and there married a wife of the royal family.
But, when at length he heard of the death of Solomon, he returned to his native
land, and, by the wish of the people, as we have said above, he assumed the
government. Two tribes, however, Judah and Benjamin, had remained under the sway
of Roboam; and from these he got ready an army of thirty thousand men. But when
the two hosts advanced, the people were instructed by the words of God to
abstain from fighting, for that Jeroboam had received the kingdom by divine
appointment. Thus the army disdained the command of the king, and dispersed, while the
power of Jeroboam was increased. But, since Roboam held Jerusalem, where the
people had been accustomed to offer sacrifice to God in the temple built by
Solomon, Jeroboam, fearing lest their religious feelings might alienate the people
from him, resolved to fill their minds with superstition. Accordingly, he set up
one golden calf at Bethel, and another at Dan, to which the people might offer
sacrifice; and, passing by the tribe of Levi, he appointed priests from among
the people. But censure followed this guilt so hateful to God. Frequent battles
then took place between the kings, and so they retained their respective
kingdoms on doubtful conditions. Roboam died at the close of the seventeenth year of
his reign.
CHAPTER XLII.
In his room Abiud his son held the kingdom at Jerusalem for six years,
although he is said in the Chronicles[1] to have reigned three years. Asab his son
succeeded him, being the fifth from David, as he was his great-great-grandson.
He was a pious worshiper of God; for, destroying the altars and the groves of
the idols, he removed the traces of his father's faithlessness. He formed an
alliance with the king of Syria, and by his help inflicted much loss on the
kingdom of Jeroboam, which was then held by his son, and often, after conquering the
enemy, carried off spoil as the result of victory. After forty-one years he
died, afflicted with disease in his feet. To him sin of a three-fold kind is
ascribed; first, that he trusted too much to his alliance with the king of Syria;
secondly, that he cast into prison a prophet of God who rebuked him for this;
and thirdly, that, when suffering from disease in his feet, he sought a remedy,
not from God, but from the physicians. In the beginning of his reign died
Jeroboam, king of the ten tribes, and left his throne to his son Nabath. He, from his
wicked works, and, both by his own and his[2] father's doings, hateful to God,
did not possess the kingdom more than two years, and his children, as being
unworthy, were deprived[3] of the government. He had for his successor Baasa, the
son of Achia, and he proved himself equally estranged from God. He died in the
twenty-sixth year of his reign: and his power passed to Ela his son, but was
not retained more than two years. For Zambri, leader of his cavalry, killed him
at a banquet, and seized the kingdom,--a man equally odious to God and men. A
portion of the people revolted from him, and the royal power was conferred on
one Thamnis. But Zambri reigned before him seven years, and at the same time with
him twelve years. And, on the death of Asab, Josaphat his son began to reign
over part of the tribe of Judah, a man deservedly famous for his pious virtues.
He lived at peace with Zambri; and he died, after a reign of twenty-five years.
CHAPTER XLIII.
In the time of his reign, Ahab, the son of Ambri, was king of the ten
tribes, impious above all against God. For having taken in marriage Jezebel, the
daughter of Basa, king of Sidon, he erected an altar and groves to the idol
Bahal, and slew the prophets of God. At this time, Elijah the prophet by prayer shut
up heaven, that it should not give any rain to the earth, and revealed that to
the king, in order that he, in his impiety, might know himself to be the cause
of the evil. The waters of heaven, therefore, being restrained, and since the
whole country, burned up by the heat of the sun, did not furnish food either
for man or beast, the prophet had even exposed himself to the side of perishing
from hunger. At that time, when he betook himself to the desert, he depended for
life on the ravens furnishing him with food, while a neighboring rivulet
furnished him with water, until it was dried up. Then, being instructed by God, he
went to the town of Saraptae, and turned aside to lodge with a widow-woman. And
when, in his hunger, he begged food from her, she complained that she had only
a handful of meal and a little oil, on the consumption of which she expected
death along with her children.[1] But when Elijah promised in the words of God
that neither should the meal lessen in the barrel nor the oil in the vessel, the
woman did not hesitate to believe the prophet demanding faith, and obtained[2]
the fulfillment of what was promised, since by daily increase as much was added
as was day by day taken away. At the same time, Elijah restored to life the
dead son of the same widow. Then, by the command of God, he went to the king, and
having reproved his impiety, he ordered all the people to be gathered together
to himself. When these had hastily assembled, the priests of the idols and of
the groves to the number of about four hundred and fifty, were also summoned.
Then there arose a dispute between them, Elijah setting forth the honor of God,
while they upheld their own superstitions. At length they agreed that a trial
should be made to this effect, that if fire sent down from heaven should consume
the slain victim of either of them, that religion should be accepted as the
true one which performed the miracle. Accordingly, the priests, having slain a
calf, began to call upon the idol Bahal; and, after wasting their invocations to
no purpose, they tacitly acknowledged the helplessness of their God. Then
Elijah mocked them and said, "Cry aloud more vehemently, lest perchance he sleeps,
and that thus you may rouse him from the slumber in which he is sunk." The
wretched men could do nothing but shudder and mutter to themselves, but still they
waited to see what Elijah would do. Well, he slew a calf and laid it upon the
altar, having first of all filled the sacred place with water; and then, calling
upon the name of the Lord, fire fell from heaven in the sight of all, and
consumed alike the water and the victim. Then truly the people, casting themselves
upon the earth, confessed God and execrated the idols; while finally, by the
command of Elijah, the impious priests were seized, and, being brought down to the
brook, were there slain. The prophet followed the king as he returned from
that place; but as Jezebel, the wife of the king, was devising means for taking
his life, he retired to a more remote spot. There God addressed him, telling him
that there were still seven thousand men who had not given themselves up to
idols. That was to ELijah a marvelous statement, for he had supposed that he
himself was the only one who had kept free from impiety.
CHAPTER XLIV.
At that time, Ahab, king of Samaria, coveted the vineyard of Naboth, which
was adjacent to his own. And as Naboth was unwilling to sell it to him, he was
cut off by the wiles of Jezebel. Thus Ahab got possession of the vineyard,
though he is said at the same time to have regretted the death of Naboth.
Acknowledging his crime, he is related to have done[1] penance clothed in sackcloth;
and in this way he turned aside threatening punishment. For the king of Syria
with a great army, having formed a military confederacy with thirty-two kings,
entered the territories of Samaria, and began to besiege the city with its king.
The affairs of the besieged being then in a state of great distress, the Syrian
king offers these conditions in the war,--if they should give up their gold and
silver and women, he would spare their lives. But, with such iniquitous
conditions offered, it seemed better to suffer the greatest extremities. And now when
the safety of all was despaired of, a prophet sent by God went to the king,
encouraged him to go forth to battle, and when he hesitated, strengthened his
confidence in many ways. Accordingly making a sally, the enemy were routed, and an
abundant store of booty was secured. But, after a year, the Syrian king
returned with recruited strength into Samaria, burning to avenge the defeat he had
received, but was again overthrown. In that battle one hundred and twenty
thousand of the Syrians perished; the king was pardoned, and his kingdom and former
position were granted him. Then Ahab was reproved by the prophet in the words of
God, for having abused the divine kindness, and spared the enemy delivered up
to him. The Syrian king, therefore, after three years, made war upon the
Hebrews. Against him Ahab, under the advice of some false prophet, went forth to
battle, having spurned the words of Michea the prophet and cast him into prison,
because the prophet had warned him that the fight would prove disastrous to him.
Thus, then, Ahab, being slain in that battle, left the kingdom to his son
Ochozia.
CHAPTER XLV.
HE being sick in body, and having sent some of his servants to consult an
idol about his recovery, Elijah, as instructed by God, met them in the way,
and, after rebuking them ordered them to inform the king that his death would
follow from that disease. Then the king ordered him to be seized and brought into
his presence, but those who were sent for this purpose were consumed by fire
from heaven. The king died, as the prophet had predicted. To him there succeeded
his brother Joram; and he held the government for the space of twelve years. But
on the side of the two tribes, Josaphat the king having died, Joram his son
possessed the kingdom for eighteen years. He had the daughter of Ahab to wife,
and proved himself more like his father-in-law than his father. After him,
Ochozias his son obtained the kingdom. During his reign, Elijah is related to have
been taken up to heaven. At the same time, Elisha his disciple showed himself
powerful by working many miracles, which am all too well known to need any
description from my pen. By him the son of a widow was restored to life, a leper of
Syria was cleansed, at a time of famine abundance of all things was brought into
the city by the enemy having been put to flight, water was furnished for the
use of three armies, and from a little oil the debt of a woman was paid by the
oil being immensely multiplied, and sufficient means for a livelihood was
provided for herself. In his times, as we have said, Ochozia was king of the two
tribes, while Joram, as we have related above, ruled over the ten; and an alliance
was formed between them. For war was carried on by them with combined forces
both against the Syrians, and against Jeu, who had been anointed by the prophet as
king of the ten tribes; and having gone forth to battle in company, they both
perished in the same fight.
CHAPTER XLVI.
But Jeu possessed the kingdom of Joram. After the death of Ochozia in
Judaea, when he had reigned one year, his mother, Gotholiah, seized the supreme
power, having deprived her grandson (whose name was Joas) of the government, he
being at the time but a little child. But the power thus snatched from him by his
grandmother was, after eight years, restored to him through means of the
priests and people, while his grandmother was driven into exile. He, at the
beginning of his reign, was most devoted to the divine worship, and embellished the
temple at great expense; afterwards, however, being corrupted by the flattery of
the chief men, and unduly honored by them, he incurred wrath. For Azahel, king
of Syria, made war upon him; and, as things went badly with him, he purchased
peace with the gold of the temple. He did not, however, obtain it; but through
resentment for what he had done he was slain by his own people in the fortieth
year of his reign. He was succeeded by his son Amassia. But, on the side of the
ten tribes, Jeu having died, Joachas his son began to reign, displeasing to God
on account of his wicked works, in punishment of which his kingdom was ravaged
by the Syrians, until, through the mercy of God, the enemy was driven back, and
the inhabitants of the land began to occupy their former position. Joachas,
having ended his days, left the kingdom to his son Joa. He raised civil war
against Amassia, king of the two tribes; and, having obtained the victory, conveyed
much spoil into his own kingdom. That is related to have occurred to Amassia as
a punishment of his sin, for, having entered as a conqueror the territories of
the Idumaeans, he had adopted the idols of that nation. He is described as
having reigned nine years, so far as I find it stated in the Books of Kings. But
in the Chronicles[1] of Scripture, as well as in the Chronicles[2] of Eusebius,
he is affirmed to have held the government twenty-nine years; and the mode of
reckoning which may easily be perceived in these Books of Kings undoubtedly
leads to that conclusion. For Jeroboam is said to have begun to reign as king of
the ten tribes in the eighth year of the reign of Amassia, and to have held the
government forty-one years, and to have at length died in the fourth year of the
reign of Ozia, son of Amassia. By this mode of reckoning, the reign of Amassia
is made to extend over twenty-eight years. Accordingly, we, following out
this, inasmuch as it is our purpose to adhere in this work to the dates in their
proper order, have accepted the authority of the Chronicles.[3]
CHAPTER XLVII.
Ozias, then, the son of Amassia, succeeded to him. For, on the side of the
ten tribes, Joas, reaching the end of his days, had given place to his son
Jeroboa, and after him, again, his son Zacharias began to reign. Of these kings,
and of all who ruled over Samaria on the side of the ten tribes, we have not
thought it necessary to note the dates, because, aiming at brevity, we have
omitted everything superfluous; and we have thought that the years should be
carefully traced for a knowledge especially of the times of that portion[1] of the
Jews, which being carried into captivity at a later period than the other, passed
through a longer time as a kingdom. Ozias, then, having obtained the kingdom of
Judah, gave his principal care to knowing the Lord, making great use of
Zachariah the prophet (Isaiah, too, is said to have first prophesied under this king);
and, on this account, he carried on war against his neighbors with deservedly
prosperous results, while he also conquered the Arabians. And already he had
shaken Egypt with the terror of his name; but, being elated by prosperity, he
ventured on what was forbidden, and offered incense to God, a thing which it was
the established custom for the priests alone to do. Being, then, rebuked by
Azaria the priest, and compelled to leave the sacred place, he burst out into a
rage, but was, when he finally withdrew, covered with leprosy. Under the influence
of this disease he ended his days, after having reigned fifty-two years. Then
the kingdom was given to Joathas his son; and he is related to have been very
pious, and carried on the government with success: he subdued in war the nation
of the Ammonites, and compelled them to pay tribute. He reigned sixteen years,
and his son Achaz succeeded him.
CHAPTER XLVIII.
The remarkable faith of the Ninevites is related to have been manifested
about these times. That town, rounded of old by Assure, the son of Sere, was the
capital of the kingdom of the Assyrians. It was then full of a multitude of
inhabitants, sustaining one hundred and twenty thousand men, and abounding in
wickedness, as is usually the case among a vast concourse of people. God, moved by
their sinfulness, commanded the prophet Jonah to go from Judaea, and denounce
destruction upon the city, as Sodom and Gomorrah had of old been consumed by
fire from heaven. But the prophet declined that office of preaching, not out of
contumacy, but from foresight, which enabled him to behold God reconciled
through the repentance of the people; and he embarked on board a ship which was bound
for Tharsus, in a very different direction. But, after they had gone forth
into the deep, the sailors, constrained by the violence of the sea, inquired by
means of the lot who was the cause of that suffering. And when the lot fell upon
Jonah, he was cast into the sea, to be, as it were, a sacrifice for stilling
the tempest, and he was seized and swallowed by a whale--a monster of the deep.
Cast out three days afterwards on the shores of the[1] Ninevites, he preached as
he had been commanded, namely that the city would be destroyed in three[2]
days, as a punishment for the sins of the people. The voice of the prophet was
listened to, not in a hypocritical fashion, as at Sodom of old; and immediately by
the order, and after the example, of the king, the whole people, and even
those infants newly born, are commanded to abstain from meat and drink: the very
beasts of burden in the place, and animals of different kinds, being forced by
hunger and thirst, presented an appearance of those who lamented along with the
human inhabitants. In this way, the threatened evil was averted. To Jonah,
complaining to God, that his words had not been fulfilled, it was answered. that
pardon could never be denied to the penitent.
CHAPTER XLIX.
But in Samaria, Zacharia the king, who was very wicked, and whom we have
spoken of above as occupying the throne, was shin by a certain Sella, who seized
the kingdom. He, in turn, perished by the treachery of Mane, who simply
repeated the conduct of his predecessor. Mane held the government which he had taken
from Sella, and left it to his son Pache. But a certain person of the same name
slew Pache, and seized the kingdom. Ere long being cut off by Osee, he lost
the sovereignty by the same crime by which he had received it. This man, being
ungodly beyond all the kings who had preceded him, brought punishment upon
himself from God, and a perpetual captivity on his nation. For Salmanasar, king of
the Assyrians, made war with him, and when conquered rendered him tributary. But
when, with secret plans, he was preparing for rebellion, and had asked the king
of the Ethiopians, who then had possession of Egypt for his assistance,
Salmanasar, on discovering that, cast him into prison with fetters never taken off,
while he destroyed the city, and carried off the whole people into his own
kingdom, Assyrians being placed in the enemy's country to guard it. Hence that
district was called Samaria, because in the language of the Assyrians guards are
called Samaritan.[1] Very many of their settlers accepted the divine rites of the
Jewish religion, while others remained in the errors of heathenism. In this
war, Tobias was carried into captivity. But on the side of the two tribes, Achaz,
who was displeasing to God on account of his impiety, finding he had frequently
the worst of it in wars with his neighbors, resolved to worship the gods of
the heathen, undoubtedly because by their help his enemies had proved victorious
in frequent battles. He ended his days with this crime[2] in his wicked mind,
after a reign of sixteen years.
CHAPTER L.
To him succeeded Ezekias his son, a man very unlike his father in
character. For, in the beginning of his reign, urging the people and the priests to the
worship of God, he discoursed to them in many words, showing how often, after
being chastened by the Lord, they had obtained mercy, and how the ten tribes,
having been at last carried away into captivity, as had lately happened, were
now paying the penalty of their impiety. He added that their duty was carefully
to be on their guard lest they should deserve to suffer the same things. Thus,
the minds of all being turned to religion, he appointed the Levites and all the
priests to offer sacrifices according to the law, and arranged that the
Passover, which had for a long time been neglected, should be celebrated. And when the
holy day was at hand, he proclaimed the special day of assembly by messengers
sent throughout all the land, so that, if any had remained in Samaria, after
the removal of the ten tribes, they might gather together for the sacred
observance. Thus, in a very full assemblage, the sacred day was spent with public
rejoicing, and, after a long interval, the proper religious rites were restored by
means of Ezekias. He then carried on military affairs with the same diligence
with which he had attended to divine things, and defeated the Philistines in
frequent battles; until Sennacherim, king of the Assyrians, made war against him,
having entered his territories with a large army; and then, when the country had
been laid waste without any opposition, he laid siege to the city. For
Ezekias, being inferior in numbers, did not venture to come to an engagement with him,
but kept himself safe within the walls. The king of Assyria, thundering at the
gates, threatened destruction, and demanded surrender, exclaiming that in vain
did Ezekias put his trust in God, for that he rather had taken up arms by the
appointment of God; and that the conqueror of all nations, as well as the
overthrower of Samaria could not be escaped, unless the king secured his own safety
by a speedy surrender. In this state of affairs, Ezekias, trusting in God,
consulted the prophet Isaiah, and from his answer he learned that there would be no
danger from the enemy, and that the divine assistance would not fail him. And,
in fact, not long after, Tarraca, king of Ethiopia, invaded the kingdom of the
Assyrians.
CHAPTER LI.
By this news Sennacherim was led to return in order to defend his own
territories, and he gave up the war, at the same time murmuring and crying out that
victory was snatched from him the victor. He also sent letters to Ezekias,
declaring, with many insulting words, that he, after settling his own affairs,
would speedily return for the destruction of Judaea. But Ezekias, in no wise
disturbed by these threats, is said to have prayed to God that he would not allow
the so great insolence of this man to pass unavenged. Accordingly, in the same
night, an angel attacking the camp of the Assyrians, caused[1] the death of many
thousand men. The king in terror fled to the town of Nineveh, and being there
slain by his sons, met with an end worthy of himself. At the same time, Ezekias,
sick in body, lay suffering from disease. And when Isaiah had announced to him
in the words of the Lord that the end of his life was at hand, the king is
related to have wept; and thus he got fifteen years added to his life. These
coming to an end, he died in the twenty-ninth year of his reign, and left the
kingdom to his son Manasse. He, degenerating much from his father, forsook God, and
took to the practice of impious worship; and being, as a punishment for this,
delivered into the power of the Assyrians, he was by his sufferings constrained
to acknowledge his error, and exhorted the people that, forsaking their idols,
they should worship God. He accomplished nothing worthy of special mention, but
reigned for fifty-five years. Then Amos his son obtained the kingdom, but
possessed it only two years. He was the heir of his father's impiety, and showed
himself regardless of God: being entrapped by some stratagems of his friends, he
perished.
CHAPTER LII.
The government then passed to his son Josia. He is related to have been
very pious, and to have attended to divine things with the utmost care, profiting
largely by the aid of the priest Helchia. Having read a book written with the
words of God, and which had been found in the temple by the priest, in which it
was stated that the Hebrew nation would be destroyed on account of their
frequent acts of impiety and sacrilege, by his pious supplications to God, and
constant tears, he averted the impending overthrow. When he learned through Olda the
prophetess that this favor was granted him, he then with still greater care
set himself to practice the worship of God, inasmuch as he was now under
obligation to the divine goodness. Accordingly, he burned all the vessels which had by
the superstitions of former kings been consecrated to idols. For to such a
height had profane observances prevailed, that they used to pay divine honors to
the sun and moon, and even erected shrines made of metal to these fancied
deities. Josia reduced these to powder, and also slew the priests of the profane
temples. He did not even spare the tombs of the impious; and it was observed that
thus was fulfilled what had of old been predicted by the prophet. In the
eighteenth year of his reign, the Passover was celebrated. And about three years
afterwards, having gone forth to battle against Nechao, king of Egypt, who was making
war upon the Assyrians, before the armies properly engaged, he was wounded by
an arrow. And being carried back to the city, he died of that wound, after he
had reigned twenty and one years.
CHAPTER LIII.
Joachas, his son, having then obtained the kingdom, held it for three
months, being doomed to captivity on account of his impiety. For Nechao, king of
Egypt, bound him and led him away captive, and not long after, while still a
prisoner, he ended his days. An annual tribute was demanded of the Jews, and a king
was given them at the will of the victor. His name was Eliakim, but he
afterwards changed it to Joachim. He was the brother of Joacha, and the son of Josia,
but liker his brother than his father, displeasing God by his impiety.
Accordingly, while he was in subjection to the king of Egypt, and in token thereof paid
him tribute, Nabuchodonosor, the king of Babylon, seized the land of Judaea,
and as victor held it by the right of war for three years. For the king of Egypt
now giving way, and the boundaries of their empire being fixed between them,
it had been agreed that the Jews should belong to Babylon. Thus after Joachim,
having finished his reign of eleven years, had given place to his son of the
same name, and he had excited against himself the wrath of the king of Babylon
(God undoubtedly overruling everything, having resolved to give the nation of the
Jews up to captivity and destruction), Nabuchodonosor entered Jerusalem with an
army, and leveled the walls and the temple to the ground. He also carried off
an immense amount of gold, with sacred ornaments either public or private, and
all of mature age both of the male and female sex, those only being left behind
whose weakness or age caused trouble to the conquerors. This useless crowd had
the task assigned them of working and cultivating the fields in slavery, in
order that the soil might not be neglected. Over them a king called Sedechias was
appointed; but while the empty shadow of the name of king was allowed him, all
real power was taken away. Joachim, for his part, possessed the sovereignty
only for three months. He was carried away, along with the people, to Babylon,
and was there thrown into prison; but being, after a period of thirty years
released, while he was admitted by the king to his friendship, and made a partaker
with him at his table and in his counsels, he died at last, not without some
consolation in that his misfortunes had been removed.
CHAPTER LIV.
Meanwhile Sedechias, the king of the useless multitude, although without
power, being of an unfaithful disposition and neglectful of God, and not
understanding that captivity had been brought upon them on account of the sins of the
nation, becoming at length ripe for suffering the last evils he could endure,
offended the mind of the king. Accordingly, after a period of nine years,
Nabuchodonosor made war against him, and having forced him to flee within the walls,
besieged him for three years. At this time, he consulted Jeremia the prophet,
who had already often proclaimed that captivity impended over the city, to
discover if perhaps there might still be some hope. But he, not ignorant of the
anger of heaven, having frequently had the same question put to him, at length gave
an answer, denouncing special punishment upon the king. Then Sedechias, roused
to resentment, ordered the prophet to be thrust into prison. Ere long,
however, he regretted this cruel act, but, as the chief men of the Jews (whose
practice it had been even from the beginning to afflict the righteous) opposed him, he
did not venture to release the innocent man. Under coercion from the same
persons, the prophet was let down into a pit[1] of great depth, and which was
disgusting from its filth and squalor, while a deadly stench issued from it. This
was done that he might not simply die by a common death. But the king, impious
though he was, yet showed himself somewhat more merciful than the priests, and
ordered the prophet to be taken out of the pit, and restored to the safekeeping
of the prison. In the meantime the force of the enemy and want began to press
the besieged hard, and everything being consumed that could be eaten, famine took
a firm hold of them. Thus, its defenders being worn out with want of food, the
town was taken and burnt. The king, as the prophet had declared, had his eyes
put out, and was carried away to Babylon, while Jeremia, through the mercy of
the enemy, was taken out of his prison. When Nabuzardan, one of the royal
princes, was leading him away captive with the rest, the choice was granted by him to
the prophet, either to remain in his deserted and desolated native country, or
to go along with him in the possession of the highest honors; and Jeremia
preferred to abide in his native land. Nabuchodonosor, having carried away the
people, appointed as governor over those left behind by the conquerors (either from
the circumstances attending the war, or from an absolute weariness of
accumulating spoil) Godolia, who belonged to the same nation. He gave him, however, no
royal ensign, or even the name of governor, because there was really no honor
in ruling over these few wretched persons.