The
Messiah and the Land Covenant
The Land Covenant made the
occupation of Israel
conditional on the obedience of the people to the Mosaic Law. One of the
purposes of the Mosaic Law was to prepare Israel to receive their Messiah.
Jesus said, “if you believed Moses, you
would believe Me; for he wrote about Me.” (John 5:46) The rejection of the
Messianic claims of Jesus is a prima facie case against Israel that
they were not keeping the Law. This is also the direct accusation of the Son of
God, the only One who never told a lie. “Did
not Moses give you the law, yet none of
you keeps the law?” (John 7:19) immediately adding, “Why do you seek to kill Me?” thus identifying the final act of His
rejection, which, if the Word of God holds true would have to bring about an
exile of the nation. And so it was. The Messiah who never shed tears over His
own pain shed tears over the judgment that was to fall on Jerusalem . When He saw the city He wept over
it, saying, “If you had known, even you,
especially in this your day, the things that
make for your peace! But now
they are hidden from your eyes. For days will come upon you when your enemies
will build an embankment around you, surround you and close you in on every
side, and level you, and your children within you, to the ground; and they will
not leave in you one stone upon another, because you did not know the time of
your visitation.” (Luke 19:41-44)
Jesus indicated that the exile would
not really end until they reversed the national rejection of His Messianic
office. “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one
who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted
to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing!
See! Your house is left to you desolate;
for I say to you, you shall see Me no
more till you say, ‘Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!’ ” (Matt. 23:37-39;
Luke 13.34) The desolation of Israel
will not end until they repent of national rejection of the Son of God, and
call for His help and assistance. Israel cannot survive without God,
and it is only the believing remnant that maintains the continuity of their existence.
On the way to His place of execution
when His rejection would be finally confirmed by the most unjust and cruel act
imaginable, He repeated His warning to the nation. In view of their statement, “His
blood be on us and on our
children.” (Matt. 27:25) Jesus said, “Daughters of Jerusalem , do not weep for Me, but weep for yourselves and for your children.
For indeed the days are coming in which they will say, ‘Blessed are the barren, wombs that never
bore, and breasts which never nursed!’ Then they will begin ‘to say to the mountains, “Fall on us!” and
to the hills, “Cover us!”’ For if they do these things in the green
wood, what will be done in the dry?” (Luke 23:28-31)
The leaders of the nation, supported by the
majority of the population, had rejected their Messiah with the words, “Away with Him, away with Him!
Crucify Him! … We have no king but Caesar!” (John 19:15) They will find out
what kind of king Caesar is. Not insignificantly, Caesar also claimed the honor
of being a deity.
The physical consequences of the
rejection of Jesus and the fulfillment of His chilling prophecy to the women of
Jerusalem did
not mature until more than three decades later. Gessius Florus, the Roman
governor/procurator of Israel
from AD64 to 66 was not averse to utilizing his power for personal gain.
Josephus blames him for ‘kindling the war’,[1]
that is, it was Florus’ actions that brought about the Jewish revolt that
ultimately led to the fall of Jerusalem and the
destruction of the Temple .
Several Roman commanders were involved. The campaign was begun by the governor
of Syria ,
Cestius Gallus, who with the 12th legion, plus two thousand men from
other legions and reinforced with cavalry and auxiliary troops began the
campaign to subdue a revolt by the disenchanted Jewish people. His campaign
began successfully enough but he failed to take the Temple Mount
and withdrew. Gallus was succeeded by Vespasian and Vespasian’s son, Titus, and
it would be Titus who would finally conquer Jerusalem ,
over-run the opposition on the Temple Mount and destroy the Temple . The Titus arch, erected in Rome to memorialize his
victory, depicts the seven branch Menorah being carried away by Roman
legionaries.
Although the Jews were seriously
depleted and some exiled at the time of the Vespasian war, it would be the
rebellion under the Messianic claimant Bar Cochba that would bring about the
wholesale deportation of the population. In AD 132 Simon Bar Cochba persuaded
many leading Jews that he was the Messiah and would be able to lead a
resistance against Rome
that would be the fulfillment of the word of the prophets and free them from
the Gentile yoke. Initially there was some success, but Rome always had reinforcements and the
ability to put down rebellions, and the revolt was finally subdued in AD 135.
However, the cost to Rome
was heavy, both in the loss of men and resources. The province itself was
reduced to a wilderness. Schurer reports “All Judea
was well-nigh a desert. 50 fortresses, 985 villages were destroyed, 580,000
Jews (?) fell in battle, while the number of those who succumbed to their
wounds and to famine was never reckoned. Innumerable was the multitude of
those who were sold away as slaves. At the annual market at the Terebinth of
Hebron they were offered for sale in such numbers that a Jewish slave was of no
more value than a horse. What could not be disposed of there was brought to Gaza and there sold or sent to Egypt , on the way to which many
died of hunger or by shipwreck”.[2] Jerusalem was converted into a Roman colony
with the name Aelia Capitolina. The character of the city was transformed from
Jewish to heathen by driving out any remaining Jewish occupants, and replacing
them with colonists. No Jew was allowed to re-enter the city. Any discovered
within its boundaries was put to death. A Temple
to Jupiter was erected to replace the Jewish Temple on the Temple mount. That which Antiochus Epiphanes
had tried to accomplish some centuries earlier was now accomplished by the
Roman conquerors. Thus the Jews finally and completely lost the Temple , the City and the
Land. It would be some 1800 years before they would have a partial foothold in Israel once
again.
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