What did early Christians
believe about...?
(Before 400 AD)
Uninspired records of how early
Christians worshipped and what doctrine they believed!
Matthew 24 Fulfilled in 70AD
Destruction of Jerusalem
- 71+AD The
Jewish Sibylline Oracles (On Jerusalem) But now a certain insignificant
and impious king has gone up, cast it down, and left it in ruins with a
great horde and illustrious men. He himself perished at immortal hands
when he left the land, and no such sign has yet been performed among men
that others should think to sack a great city" (5:408-413; OTP
1:403.)
- 71+AD The
Jewish Sibylline Oracles (On Jerusalem) For murder and terrors are in
store for all men because of the great city and righteous people which is
preserved throughout everything which Providence held in special place. .
(5:225-227; OTP 1:398.)
- 71+AD The
Jewish Sibylline Oracles (On Jerusalem) He seized the divinely built
Temple and burned the citizens and peoples who went into it, men whom I
rightly praised. ... For on his appearance the whole creation was shaken and
kings perished, and those in whom sovereignty remained destroyed a great
city and righteous people. . . . (5: 150-154 OTP 1:396.)
- 71+AD The
Jewish Sibylline Oracles (On the cause of the desolation) "And then
Israel, intoxicated, will not perceive nor yet will she hear, afllicted
with weak ears. But when the raging wrath of the Most High comes upon the
Hebrews it will also take faith away from them, because they did harm to
the son of the heavenly God. . . . "Then when the Hebrews reap the
bad harvest, a Roman king will ravage much gold and silver. Thereafter
there will be other kingdoms continuously, as kingdoms perish and they
will afflict mortals. But there will be a great fall for those men when
they launch on unjust haughtiness. But when the temple of Solomon falls in
the illus-trious land cast down by men of barbarian speech with bronze
breastplates, the Hebrews will be driven from their land; wandering, being
slaughtered, they will mix much darnels in their wheat. There will be evil
strife for all men; and the cities, violated in turn, will weep for each
other on receiving the wrath of the great God in their bosom, since they
committed an evil deed. (A.D.150; 1:360-364, 387-400)
- 71+AD The
Jewish Sibylline Oracles (On the cause of the desolation) "An evil
storm of war will also come upon Jerusalem from Italy, and it will sack
the great Temple of God whenever they put their trust in folly and cast
off piety and commit repulsive murders in front of the Temple. . . . A leader
of Rome will come to Syria who will burn the Temple of Jerusalem with
fire, at the same time slaughter many men and destroy the great land of
the Jews with its broad roads. Then indeed an earthquake will destroy at
once Salamis and Paphos when the dark water overwhelms Cyprus, which is
washed by many waves." (A.D. 80; 4115-118, 125-129)
- 71+AD The
Jewish Talmud (On the Significance of the Forty Year Period) "Our
Rabbis taught: During the last forty years before the destruction of the
Temple.. the doors of the Hekal would open by themselves, until R. Johanan
b. Zakkai rebuked them, saying: Hekal, Hekal, why wilt thou be the alarmer
thyself (Predict thy own destruction) ? I know about thee that thou wilt
be destroyed, for Zechariah ben Ido has already prophesied concerning
thee: Open thy doors, O Lebanon, that the fire may devour thy cedars"
(The Soncino Talmud, Seder Mo'ed, vol. III Toma, p. 186) [Note: This was
fulfilled to the letter! See: The History Of The Destruction Of Jerusalem]
- 75AD
Flavius Josephus (note: Josephus was not a Christian but a Jewish
historian) "A false prophet was the occasion of these people's
destruction, who had made a public proclamation in the city that very day,
that God commanded them to get up upon the temple, and that there they
should receive miraculous signs of their deliverance. Now, there was then
a great number of false prophets suborned by the tyrants to impose upon
the people, who denounced this to them, that they should wait for
deliverance from God; and this was in order to keep them from deserting,
and that they might be buoyed up above fear and care by such hopes. Now, a
man that is in adversity does easily comply with such promises; for when
such a seducer makes him believe that he shall be delivered from those miseries
which oppress him, then it is that the patient is full of hopes of such
deliverance." ( The History Of The Destruction Of Jerusalem Book VI,
Chapter V, Section 2).
- 90AD
Clement of Rome (Displaying Fulfillment of Matthew 24:14) The Martyrdom Of
Peter And Paul. "But not to dwell upon ancient examples, let us come
to the most recent spiritual heroes.(11) Let us take the noble examples
furnished in our own generation. Through envy and jealousy, the greatest
and most righteous pillars [of the Church] have been persecuted and put to
death.(12) Let us set before our eyes the illustrious(13) apostles. Peter,
through unrighteous envy, endured not one or two, but numerous labours and
when he had at length suffered martyrdom, departed to the place of glory
due to him. Owing to envy, Paul also obtained the reward of patient
endurance, after being seven times thrown into captivity,(14)
compelled(15) to flee, and stoned. After preaching both in the east and
west, he gained the illustrious reputation due to his faith, having taught
righteousness to the whole world, and come to the extreme limit of the
west,(16) and suffered martyrdom under the prefects.(17) Thus was he
removed from the world, and went into the holy place, having proved
himself a striking example of patience." (Chap. V.-- The First
Epistle to the Corinthians)
- 90AD
Clement of Rome (On the Last Days) "the Books and the Apostles teach
that the church is not of the present, but from the beginning. For it was
spiritual, as was also our Jesus, and was made manifest at the end of the
days in order to save us. (Chap. XIV.-- The Second Epistle to the
Corinthians)
- 130AD
Barnabus (On the demise of the Temple in the last days) "Moreover I
will tell you likewise concerning the temple, how these wretched men being
led astray set their hope on the building, and not on their God that made
them, as being a house of God. . . . So it cometh to pass; for because
they went to war it was pulled down by their enemies. . . . Again, it was
revealed how the city and the temple and the people of Israel should be
betrayed. For the scripture saith; and it shall be in the last days, that
the Lord shall deliver up the sheep of the pasture and the fold and the
tower thereof to destruction. And it so happened as the Lord had spoken.
" Epistle of Barnabus16:1 ff.)
- 130AD
Barnabus (On the fulfillment of prophecy) "Moreover understand this
also, my brothers. When ye see that after so many signs and wonders
wrought in Israel, even then they were abandoned, let us give heed, lest
haply we be found, as the scripture saith, many called but few chosen. .
." (4:14, Epistle of Barnabus)
- 130AD
Barnabus (On the fulfillment of prophecy) "Therefore the Son of God
came in the flesh to this end, that He might sum up the complete tale of
their sins against those who persecuted and slew His prophets."
(5:11, Epistle of Barnabus)
- 150AD
Justin Martyr (On the fulfillment of Isaiah 2:4) CHAP. XXXIX.--Direct
Predictions By The Spirit. "And when the Spirit of prophecy speaks as
predicting things that are to come to pass, He speaks in this way:
"For out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord
from Jerusalem. And He shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke
many people; and they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their
spears into pruning-hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more."(12) And that it did so come
to pass, we can convince you. For from Jerusalem there went out into the
world, men, twelve in number, and these illiterate, of no ability in
speaking: but by the power of God they proclaimed to every race of men
that they were sent by Christ to teach to all the word of God; and we who
formerly used to murder one another do not only now refrain from making
war upon our enemies, but also, that we may not lie nor deceive our
examiners, willingly die confessing Christ." (First Apology of Justin
Martyr, ch. 39)
- 150AD
Justin Martyr (On the 'Millennial Reign' of Christ) CHAP. XI.--What
Kingdom Christians Look For. And when you hear that we look for a kingdom,
you suppose, without making any inquiry, that we speak of a human kingdom;
whereas we speak of that which is with God, as appears also from the
confession of their faith made by those who are charged with being
Christians, though they know that death is the punishment awarded to him
who so confesses. For if we looked for a human kingdom, we should also
deny our Christ, that we might not be slain; and we should strive to
escape detection, that we might obtain what we expect. But since our
thoughts are not fixed on the present, we are not concerned when men cut
us off; since also death is a debt which must at all events be paid.
(First Apology of Justin Martyr, ch. 11)
- 150AD
Justin Martyr (On The Power of the Jews in the First Century) "The
power of the Jews was now grown so great, that after this Antiochus they
would not bear any Macedonian king over them; and that they set up a
government of their own, and infested Syria with great wars." (Quoted
by Whiston, p. 2009)
- 150AD
Justin Martyr (On the Significance of A.D.70) CHAP. XLVII.--Desolation Of
Judaea Foretold. That the land of the Jews, then, was to be laid waste,
hear what was said by the Spirit of prophecy. And the words were spoken as
if from the person of the people wondering at what had happened. They are
these: "Sion is a wilderness, Jerusalem a desolation. The house of
our sanctuary has become a curse, and the glory which our fathers blessed
is burned up with fire, and all its glorious things are laid waste: and
Thou refrainest Thyself at these things, and hast held Thy peace, and hast
humbled us very sore."(6) And ye are convinced that Jerusalem has
been laid waste, as was predicted. And concerning its desolation, and that
no one should be permitted to inhabit it, there was the following prophecy
by Isaiah: "Their land is desolate, their enemies consume it before
them, and none of them shall dwell therein."(7) And that it is
guarded by you lest any one dwell in it, and that death is decreed against
a Jew apprehended entering it, you know very well.(8)
- 150AD
Justin Martyr Chap. Xlvii.--Desolation Of Judaea Foretold. That the land
of the Jews, then, was to be laid waste, hear what was said by the Spirit
of prophecy. And the words were spoken as if from the person of the people
wondering at what had happened. They are these: "Sion is a
wilderness, Jerusalem a desolation. The house of our sanctuary has become
a curse, and the glory which our fathers blessed is burned up with fire,
and all its glorious things are laid waste: and Thou refrainest Thyself at
these things, and hast held Thy peace, and hast humbled us very
sore."(6) And ye are convinced that Jerusalem has been laid waste, as
was predicted. And concerning its desolation, and that no one should be
permitted to inhabit it, there was the following prophecy by Isaiah:
"Their land is desolate, their enemies consume it before them, and
none of them shall dwell therein."(7) And that it is guarded by you
lest any one dwell in it, and that death is decreed against a Jew
apprehended entering it, you know very well.(First Apology, Ch. 47.)
- 160AD
Clement of Alexandria (On Matthew 24:15, The Abomination of Desolation)
"We have still to add to our chronology the following, -- I mean the
days which Daniel indicates from the desolation of Jerusalem, the seven
years and seven months of the reign of Vespasian. For the two years are
added to the seventeen months and eighteen days of Otho, and Galba, and
Vitellius; and the result is three years and six months, which is
"the half of the week," as Daniel the prophet said. For he said
that there were two thousand three hundred days from the time that the abomination
of Nero stood in the holy city, till its destruction. For thus the
declaration, which is subjoined, shows: "How long shall be the
vision, the sacrifice taken away, the abomination of desolation, which is
given, and the power and the holy place shall be trodden under foot? And
he said to him, Till the evening and morning, two thousand three hundred
days, and the holy place shall be taken away." ... "These two
thousand three hundred days, then, make six years four months, during the
half of which Nero held sway, and it was half a week; and for a half,
Vespasian with Otho, Galba, and Vitellius reigned. And on this account
Daniel says, "Blessed is he that cometh to the thousand three hundred
and thirty-five days." For up to these days was war, and after them
it ceased. And this number is demonstrated from a subsequent chapter,
which is as follows: "And from the time of the change of
continuation, and of the giving of the abomination of desolation, there
shall be a thousand two hundred and ninety days. Blessed is he that
waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and thirty-five
days." " (The Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 2, p. 334)
- 160AD
Clement of Alexandria (On Matthew 24:3,34) "But our Master did not
prophesy after this fashion; but, as I have already said, being a prophet
by an inborn and every-flowing Spirit, and knowing all things at all
times, He confidently set forth, plainly as I said before, sufferings,
places, appointed times, manners, limits. Accordingly, therdore,
prophesying concerning the temple, He said: "See ye these buildings?
Verily I say to you, There shall not be left here one stone upon another
which shall not be taken away [Matt. 24:3]; and this generation shall not
pass until the destruction begin [Matt. 24:34]. . . ." And in like
manner He spoke in plain words the things that were straightway to happen,
which we can now see with our eyes, in order that the accomplishment might
be among those to whom the word was spoken. (Clementine Homilia, 3:15. See
Roberts and Donaldson, Ante-Nicene Fathers, 8:241.)
- 160AD
Clement of Alexandria (On the Significance of the A.D.70) "Whence
also Peter, in his Preaching, speaking of the apostles, says: 'But we,
unrolling the books of the prophets which we possess, who name Jesus
Christ, partly in parables, partly in enigmas, partly expressly and in so
many words, find His coming and death, and cross, and all the rest of the
tortures which the Jews inflicted on Him, and His resurrection and
assumption to heaven previous to the capture of Jerusalem. As it is written,
That things are all that He behooves to suffer, and what should be after
Him. Recognizing them, therefore, we have believed in God in consequence
of what is written respecting Him.' " (Miscellanies 4:15)
- 160AD
Tertullian Chap. Viii.--Of The Times Of Christ's Birth And Passion, And Of
Jerusalem's Destruction. "Accordingly the times must be inquired into
of the predicted and future nativity of the Christ, and of His passion,
and of the extermination of the city of Jerusalem, that is, its
devastation. For Daniel says, that "both the holy city and the holy
place are exterminated together with the coming Leader, and that the
pinnacle is destroyed unto ruin."(7) And so the times of the coming
Christ, the Leader,(8) must be inquired into, which we shall trace in
Daniel; and, after computing them, shall prove Him to be come, even on the
ground of the times prescribed, and of competent signs and operations of
His. Which matters we prove, again, on the ground of the consequences
which were ever announced as to follow His advent; in order that we may
believe all to have been as well fulfilled as foreseen. ... "Therefore,
when these times also were completed, and the Jews subdued, there
afterwards ceased in that place "libations and sacrifices,"
which thenceforward have not been able to be in that place celebrated; for
"the unction," too,(6) was "exterminated" in that
place after the passion of Christ. For it had been predicted that the
unction should be exterminated in that place; as in the Psalms it is
prophesied, "They exterminated my hands and feet."(7) And the
suffering of this "extermination" was perfected within the times
of the lxx hebdomads, under Tiberius Caesar, in the consulate of Rubellius
Geminus and Fufius Geminus, in the month of March, at the times of the passover,
on the eighth day before the calends of April,(8) on the first day of
unleavened bread, on which they slew the lamb at even, just as had been
enjoined by Moses.(9) Accordingly, all the synagogue of Israel did slay
Him, saying to Pilate, when he was desirous to dismiss Him, "His
blood be upon us, and upon our children;"(10) and, "If thou
dismiss him, thou art not a friend of Caesar;"(11) in order that all
things might be fulfilled which had been written of Him.(12)" (Against
the Jews, Ch.8) (On the Significance of A.D. 70)
- 160AD
Tertullian CHAP. XXIII.--The Dispersion Of The Jews, And Their Desolate
Condition For Rejecting Christ, Foretold. "Now, since you join the
Jews in denying that their Christ has come, recollect also what is that
end which they were predicted as about to bring on themselves after the
time of Christ, for the impiety wherewith they both rejected and slew Him.
For it began to come to pass from that day, when, according to Isaiah,
"a man threw away his idols of gold and of silver, which they made
into useless and hurtful objects of worship;" in other words, from
the time when he threw away his idols after the truth had been made clear
by Christ. Consider whether what follows in the prophet has not received
its fulfilment: "The Lord of hosts hath taken away from Judah and
from Jerusalem, amongst other things, both the prophet and the wise
artificer;" that is, His Holy Spirit, who builds the church, which is
indeed the temple, and household and city of God. For thenceforth God's
grace failed amongst them; and "the clouds were commanded to rain no
rain upon the vineyard" of Sorech; to withhold, that is, the graces
of heaven, that they shed no blessing upon "the house of
Israel," which had but produced "the thorns" wherewith it
had crowned the Lord, and "instead of righteousness, the cry"
wherewith it had hurried Him away to the cross. And so in this manner the
law and the prophets were until John, but the clews of divine grace were
withdrawn from the nation. After his time their madness still continued,
and the name of the Lord was blasphemed by them, as saith the Scripture:
"Because of you my name is continually blasphemed amongst the
nations" (for from them did the blasphemy originate); neither in the
interval from Tiberius to Vespasian did they learn repentance. Therefore
"has their land become desolate, their cities are burnt with fire,
their country strangers are devouring before their own eyes; the daughter
of Sion has been deserted like a cottage in a vineyard, or a lodge in a
garden of cucumbers," ever since the time when "Israel
acknowledged not the Lord, and the people understood Him not, but forsook
Him, and provoked the Holy One of Israel unto anger." So likewise
that conditional threat of the sword, "If ye refuse and hear me not,
the sword shall devour you," has proved that it was Christ, for
rebellion against whom they have perished. In the fifty-eighth Psalm He
demands of the Father their dispersion: "Scatter them in Thy
power." By Isaiah He also says, as He finishes a prophecy of their
consumption by fire: "Because of me has this happened to you; ye
shall lie down in sorrow." But all this would be unmeaning enough, if
they suffered this retribution not on account of Him, who had in prophecy
assigned their suffering to His own cause, but for the sake of the Christ
of the other god. Well, then, although you affirm that it is the Christ of
the other god who was driven to the cross by the powers and authorities of
the Creator, as it were by hostile beings, still I have to say, See how
manifestly He was defended by the Creator: there were given to Him both
"the wicked for His burial," even those who had strenuously
maintained that 342. ... His corpse had been stolen, "and the rich for
His death," even those who had redeemed Him from the treachery of
Judas, as well as from the lying report of the soldiers that His body had
been taken away. Therefore these things either did not happen to the Jews
on His account, in which case you will be refuted by the sense of the
Scriptures tallying with the issue of the facts and the order of the
times, or else they did happen on His account, and then the Creator could
not have inflicted the vengeance except for His own Christ; nay, He must
have rather had a reward for Judas, if it had been his master's enemy whom
they put to death. At all events, if the Creator's Christ has not come
yet, on whose account the prophecy dooms them to such sufferings, they
will have to endure the sufferings when He shall have come. Then where
will there be a daughter of Sion to be reduced to desolation, for there is
none now to be found? Where will there be cities to be burnt with fire,
for they are now in heaps? Where a nation to be dispersed, which is
already in banishment? Restore to Judaea its former state, that the
Creator's Christ may find it, and then you may contend that another Christ
has come. But then, again, how is it that He can have permitted to range
through His own heaven one whom He was some day to put to death on His own
earth, after the more noble and glorious region of His kingdom had been
violated, and His own very palace and sublimest height had been trodden by
him? Or was it only in appearance rather that he did this? God is no doubt
a jealous God! Yet he gained the victory. You should blush with shame, who
put your faith in a vanquished god! What have you to hope for from him,
who was not strong enough to protect himself? For it was either through
his infirmity that he was crushed by the powers and human agents of the
Creator, or else through maliciousness, in order that he might fasten so
great a stigma on them by his endurance of their wickedness. (Against
Marcion, Ch. 23) (On the Significance of A.D. 70)
- 170AD
Melito, Bishop of Sardis (On the Siginificance of A.D.70) "Thou
smotest thy Lord: thou also hast been smitten upon the earth. And thou
indeed liest dead; but He is risen from the place of the dead, and
ascended to the height of heaven." (ANF 8:757, His Various Works,
Including Homily of the Pascha)
- 174AD
Irenaeus (On Significance of A.D. 70) Chap. Iv.--Answer To Another Objection,
Showing That The Destruction Of Jerusalem, Which Was The City Of The Great
King, Diminished Nothing From The Supreme Majesty' And Power Of God, For
That This Destruction Was Put In Execution By The Most Wise Counsel Of The
Same God. 1. Further, also, concerning Jerusalem and the Lord, they
venture to assert that, if it had been "the city of the great
King,"(12) it would not have been deserted.(13) This is just as if
any one should say, that if straw were a creation of God, it would never
part company with the wheat; and that the vine twigs, if made by God,
never would be lopped away and deprived of the clusters. But as these
[vine twigs] have not been originally made for their own sake, but for
that of the fruit growing upon them, which being come to maturity and
taken away, they are left behind, and those which do not conduce to
fructification are lopped off altogether; so also [was it with] Jerusalem,
which had in herself borne the yoke of bondage (under which man was
reduced, who in former times was not subject to God when death was
reigning, and being subdued, became a fit subject for liberty), when the
fruit of liberty had come, and reached maturity, and been reaped and
stored in the barn, and when those which had the power to produce fruit
had been carried away from her [i.e., from Jerusalem], and scattered
throughout all the world. Even as Esaias saith, "The children of
Jacob shall strike root, and Israel shall flourish, and the whole world
shall be filled with his fruit."(1) The fruit, therefore, having been
sown throughout all the world, she (Jerusalem) was deservedly forsaken,
and those things which had formerly brought forth fruit abundantly were
taken away; for from these, according to the flesh, were Christ and the
apostles enabled to bring forth fruit. But now these are no longer useful
for bringing forth fruit. For all things which have a beginning in time
must of course have an end in time also. ... 2. Since, then, the law
originated with Moses, it terminated with John as a necessary consequence.
Christ had come to fulfil it: wherefore "the law and the prophets
were" with them "until John."(2) And therefore Jerusalem,
taking its commencement from David,(3) and fulfilling its own times, must
have an end of legislation(4) when the new covenant was revealed. "
(Against Heresies, Book 4, ch. 4)
- 185AD
Origen "But if "the children of Israel are to sit many days
without a king, or ruler, or altar, or priesthood, or responses;" and
if, since the temple was destroyed, there exists no longer sacrifice, nor
altar, nor priesthood, it is manifest that the ruler has failed out of
Judah, and the leader from between his thighs. And since the prediction
declares that "the ruler shall not fail from Judah, and the leader
from between his thighs, until what is reserved for Him shall come,"
it is manifest that He is come to whom (belongs) what is reserved--the
expectation of the Gentiles. And this is clear from the multitude of the
heathen who have believed on God through Jesus Christ. (Principles, 4:1:3)
- 185AD Origen
"Therefore he, also, having separated from her, married, so to speak,
another, having given into the hands of the former the bill of
divorcement; wherefore they can no longer do the things enjoined on them
by the law, because of the bill of divorcement. And a sign that she has
received the bill of divorcement is this, that Jerusalem was destroyed
along with what they called the sanctuary of the things in it which were
believed to be holy, and with the altar of burnt offerings, and all the
worship associated with it... And what was more unseemly than the fact,
that they all said in His case, "Crucify Him, crucify Him," and
"Away with such a fellow from the earth"? And can this be freed
from the charge of unseemliness, "His blood be upon us, and upon our
children"? Wherefore, when He was avenged, Jerusalem was compassed
with armies, and its desolation was near, and their house was taken away
from it, and "the daughter of Zion was left as a booth in a vineyard,
and as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers, and as a besieged city."
And, about the same time, I think, the husband wrote out a bill of
divorcement to his former wife, and gave it into her hands, and sent her
away from his own house, and the bond of her who came from the Gentiles
has been cancelled about which the Apostle Says, "Having blotted out
the bond written in ordinances, which was contrary to us, and He hath
taken it out of the way, nailing it to the cross;" for Paul also and
others became proselytes of Israel for her who came from the
Gentiles." (COMMENTARY ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW, Book 2.,
sec. 19.)
- 200AD
Hippolytus of Rome (On the Significance of A.D.70) "And whereas thou
didst pour out His blood in indignation, hear what thy recompense shall
be: "Pour out Thine indignation upon them, and let Thy wrathful anger
take hold of them;" and, "Let their habitation be
desolate," to wit, their celebrated temple. ... 7. But why, O prophet,
tell us, and for what reason, was the temple made desolate? Was it on
account of that ancient fabrication of the calf? Was it on account of the
idolatry of the people? Was it for the blood of the prophets? Was it for
the adultery and fornication of Israel? By no means, he says; for in all
these transgressions they always found pardon open to them, and benignity;
but it was because they killed the Son of their Benefactor, for He is
coeternal with the Father. Whence He saith, "Father, let their temple
be made desolate; for they have persecuted Him whom Thou didst of Thine
own will smite for the salvation of the world;" that is, they have
persecuted me with a violent and unjust death, "and they have added
to the pain of my wounds." In former time, as the Lover of man, I had
pain on account of the straying of the Gentiles; but to this pain they
have added another, by going also themselves astray. Wherefore "add
iniquity to their iniquity, and tribulation to tribulation, and let them
not enter into Thy righteousness," that is, into Thy kingdom; but
"let them be blotted out of the book of the living, and not be
written with the righteous," that is, with their holy fathers and
patriarchs. (Expository Treatise Against The Jews, 6,7)
- 200AD
Hippolytus of Rome (On the Significance of A.D.70) 30. Come, then, O
blessed Isaiah; arise, tell us clearly what thou didst prophesy with
respect to the mighty Babylon. For thou didst speak also of Jerusalem, and
thy word is accomplished. For thou didst speak boldly and openly:
"Your country is desolate, your cities are burned with fire; your
land, strangers devour it in your presence, and it is desolate as
overthrown by many strangers. The daughter of Sion shall be left as a
cottage in a vineyard, and as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers, as a
besieged city." ... What then? Are not these things come to pass? Are
not the things announced by thee fulfilled? Is not their country, Judea,
desolate? Is not the holy place burned with fire? Are not their walls cast
down? Are not their cities destroyed? Their land, do not strangers devour
it? Do not the Romans rule the country? And indeed these impious people
hated thee, and did saw thee asunder, and they crucified Christ. Thou art
dead in the world, but thou livest in Christ." (Fragments of Dogmatic
and Historical Works, 30)
- 200AD
Hippolytus of Rome Come, then, O blessed Isaiah; arise, tell us clearly what
thou didst prophesy with respect to the mighty Babylon. For thou didst
speak also of Jerusalem, and thy word is accomplished. For thou didst
speak boldly and openly: "Your country is desolate, your cities are
burned with fire; your land, strangers devour it in your presence, and it
is desolate as overthrown by many strangers. The daughter of Sion shall be
left as a cottage in a vineyard, and as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers,
as a besieged city." ... What then? Are not these things come to pass?
Are not the things announced by thee fulfilled? Is not their country,
Judea, desolate? Is not the holy place burned with fire? Are not their
walls cast down? Are not their cities destroyed? Their land, do not
strangers devour it? Do not the Romans rule the country? And indeed these
impious people hated thee, and did saw thee asunder, and they crucified
Christ. Thou art dead in the world, but thou livest in Christ."
(Fragments of Dogmatic and Historical Works, 30)
- 200AD
Tertullian Chap. Viii.-- Of Jerusalem's Destruction. "Accordingly the
times must be inquired into of the predicted and future nativity of the
Christ, and of His passion, and of the extermination of the city of
Jerusalem, that is, its devastation. For Daniel says, that "both the
holy city and the holy place are exterminated together with the coming
Leader, and that the pinnacle is destroyed unto ruin."(7) And so the
times of the coming Christ, the Leader,(8) must be inquired into, which we
shall trace in Daniel; and, after computing them, shall prove Him to be
come, even on the ground of the times prescribed, and of competent signs
and operations of His. Which matters we prove, again, on the ground of the
consequences which were ever announced as to follow His advent; in order
that we may believe all to have been as well fulfilled as foreseen. ...
"Therefore, when these times also were completed, and the Jews
subdued, there afterwards ceased in that place "libations and
sacrifices," which thenceforward have not been able to be in that place
celebrated; for "the unction," too,(6) was
"exterminated" in that place after the passion of Christ. For it
had been predicted that the unction should be exterminated in that place;
as in the Psalms it is prophesied, "They exterminated my hands and
feet."(7) And the suffering of this "extermination" was
perfected within the times of the lxx hebdomads, under Tiberius Caesar, in
the consulate of Rubellius Geminus and Fufius Geminus, in the month of
March, at the times of the passover, on the eighth day before the calends of
April,(8) on the first day of unleavened bread, on which they slew the
lamb at even, just as had been enjoined by Moses.(9) Accordingly, all the
synagogue of Israel did slay Him, saying to Pilate, when he was desirous
to dismiss Him, "His blood be upon us, and upon our
children;"(10) and, "If thou dismiss him, thou art not a friend
of Caesar;"(11) in order that all things might be fulfilled which had
been written of Him.(An Answer to the Jews 8.)
- 225AD
Origen (On Luke 21:20) "But let this Jew of Celsus, who does not
believe that He fore knew all that happened to Him, consider how, while
Jerusalem was still standing and the whole Jewish worship celebrated in
it, Jesus foretold what would befall it from the hand of the Romans. For
they will not maintain that the acquaintances and pupils of Jesus Himself
handed down His teaching contained in the Gospels without committing it to
writing, and left His disciples without the memoirs of Jesus contained in
their works. Now in these it is recorded, that "when ye shall see
Jerusalem compassed about with armies, then shall ye know that the
desolation thereof is nigh." But at that time there were no armies
around Jerusalem, encompassing and enclosing and besieging it; for the
siege began in the reign of Nero, and lasted till the government of
Vespasian, whose son Titus destroyed Jerusalem, on account, as Josephus
says, of James the Just, the brother of Jesus who was called Christ, but
in reality, as the truth makes clear, on account of JesusChrist the Son of
God." (Origen, Against Celsus, 2:13)
- 225AD
Origen (On The Faulty 'Literal Method of Bible Interpretation')
"Many, not understanding the Scriptures in a spiritual sense, but
incorrectly, have fallen into heresies." (Principles, 4:1:7) "8.
Having spoken thus briefly on the subject of the divine inspiration of the
the Holy Spirit, it seems necessary to explain this point also, viz., how
certain persons, not reading them correctly, have given themselves over to
erroneous opinions, inasmuch as the procedure to be followed, in order to
attain an understanding of the holy writings, is unknown to many. The
Jews, in fine, owing to the hardness of their heart, and from a desire to
appear wise in their own eyes, have not believed in our Lord and Saviour,
judging that those statements which were uttered respecting Him ought to
be understood literally, i.e., that He ought in a sensible and visible
manner to preach deliverance to the captives, and first build a city which
they truly deem the city of God, and cut off at the same time the chariots
of Ephraim, and the horse from Jerusalem; that He ought also to eat butter
and honey, in order to choose the good before He should come to how how to
bring forth evil. ...They think, also, that it has been predicted that the
wolf--that four-footed animal--is, at the coming of Christ, to feed with
thelambs, and the leopard to lie down with kids, and the calf and the bull
to pasture with lions, and that they are to be led by a little child to
the pasture; that the ox and the bear are to lie down together in the
green fields, and that their young ones are to be fed together; that lions
also will frequent stalls with the oxen, and feed on straw. And seeing
that, according to history, there was no accomplishment of any of those
things predicted of Him, in which they believed the signs of Christ's
advent were especially to be observed, they refused to acknowledge the
presence of our Lord Jesus Christ; nay, contrary to all the principles of
human and divine law, i.e., contrary to the faith of prophecy, they
crucified Him for assuming to Himself the name of Christ. "
(Principles, 4:1:7) ... "Now the cause, in all the points previously
enumerated, of the false opinions, and of the impious statements or
ignorant assertions about God, appears to be nothing else than the not
understanding the Scripture according to its spiritual meaning, but the
interpretation of it agreeably to the mere letter." (Principles,
4:1:8)
- 225AD
Origen (On The Significance of A.D. 70) "But when he goes on to say
that "those who inflicted death upon Jesus suffered nothing
afterwards through so long a time," we must inform him, as well as
all who are disposed to learn the truth, that the city in which the Jewish
people called for the crucifixion of Jesus with shouts of "Crucify
him, crucify him," preferring to have the robber set free, who had
been cast into prison for sedition and murder and Jesus, who had been
delivered through envy, to be crucified, — that this city not long
afterwards was attacked, and, after a long siege, was utterly overthrown
and laid waste; for God judged the inhabitants of that place unworthy of
living together the life of citizens. And yet, though it may seem an
incredible thing to say, God spared this people in delivering them to
their enemies; for He saw that they were incurably averse to any
amendment, and were daily sinking deeper and deeper into evil. And all
this befell them, because the blood of Jesus was shed at their instigation
and on their land; and the land was no longer able to bear those who were
guilty of so fearful a crime against Jesus. (Origen Against Celcus, Book
8, ch. 42)
- 225AD
Origen (On The Significance of A.D. 70) "I challenge anyone to prove
my statement untrue if I say that the entire Jewish nation was destroyed
less than one whole generation later on account of these sufferings which
they inflicted on Jesus. For it was, I believe, forty-two years from the
time when they crucified Jesus to the destruction of Jerusalem."
(Contra Celsum, 198-199)
- 225AD
Origen (On The Significance of A.D. 70) "Therefore he, also, having
separated from her, married, so to speak, another, having given into the
hands of the former the bill of divorcement; wherefore they can no longer
do the things enjoined on them by the law, because of the bill of
divorcement. And a sign that she has received the bill of divorcement is
this, that Jerusalem was destroyed along with what they called the
sanctuary of the things in it which were believed to be holy, and with the
altar of burnt offerings, and all the worship associated with it. And a
further sign of the bill of divorcement is this, that they cannot keep
their feasts, even though according to the letter of the law designedly
commanded them, in the place which the Lord God appointed to them for
keeping feasts; but there is this also, that the whole synagogue has
become unable to stone those who have committed this or that sin; and
thousands of things commanded are a sign of the bill of divorcement; and
the fact that "there is no more a prophet," and that they say,
"We no longer see signs;" for the Lord says, "He hath taken
away from Judaea and from Jerusalem," according to the word of
Isaiah, "Him that is mighty, and her that is mighty, a powerful
giant," etc., down to the words, "a prudent hearer." Now,
He who is the Christ may have taken the synagogue to wife and cohabited with
her, but it may be that afterwards she found not favour in His sight; and
the reason of her not having found favour in His sight was, that there was
found in her an unseemly thing; for what was more unseemly than the
Circumstance that, when it was proposed to them to release one at the
feast, they asked for the release of Barabbas the robber, and the
condemnation of Jesus? And what was more unseemly than the fact, that they
all said in His case, "Crucify Him, crucify Him," and "Away
with such a fellow from the earth"? And can this be freed from the
charge of unseemliness, "His blood be upon us, and upon our
children"? Wherefore, when He was avenged, Jerusalem was compassed
with armies, and its desolation was near, and their house was taken away
from it, and "the daughter of Zion was left as a booth in a vineyard,
and as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers, and as a besieged city."
And, about the same time, I think, the husband wrote out a bill of
divorcement to his former wife, and gave it into her hands, and sent her
away from his own house, and the bond of her who came from the Gentiles
has been cancelled about which the Apostle Says, "Having blotted out
the bond written in ordinances, which was contrary to us, and He hath
taken it out of the way, nailing it to the cross;" for Paul also and
others became proselytes of Israel for her who came from the
Gentiles." (COMMENTARY ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW, Book 2.,
sec. 19.)
- 225AD
Origen (On The Significance of A.D. 70) "This Jew of Celsus
continues, after the above, in the following fashion: "Although he
could state many things regarding the events of the life of Jesus which
are true, and not like those which are recorded by the disciples, he
willingly omits them." What, then, are those true statements, unlike
the accounts in the Gospels, which the Jew of Celsus passes by without
mention? Or is he only employing what appears to be a figure of speech, in
pretending to have something to say, while in reality he had nothing to
produce beyond the Gospel narrative which could impress the hearer with a
feeling of its truth, and furnish a clear ground of accusation against
Jesus and His doctrine? And he charges the disciples with having invented
the statement that Jesus foreknew and foretold all that happened to Him;
but the truth of this statement we shall establish, although Celsus may
not like it, by means of many other predictions uttered by the Savior, in
which He foretold what would befall the Christians in after generations.
And who is there who would not be astonished at this prediction: "Ye
shall be brought before governors and kings for My sake, for a testimony
against them and the Gentiles;" and at any others which He may have
delivered respecting the future persecution of His disciples? For what
system of opinions ever existed among men on account of which others are
punished, so that any one of the accusers of Jesus could say that,
foreseeing the impiety or falsity of his opinions to be the ground of an
accusation against them he thought that this would redound to his credit,
that he had so predicted regarding it long before? Now if any deserve to
be brought, on account of their opinions, before governors and kings, what
others are they, save the Epicureans, who altogether deny the existence of
providence? And also the Peripatetics, who say that prayers are of no
avail, and sacrifices offered as to the Divinity? But some one will say
that the Samaritans suffer persecution because of their religion. In
answer to whom we shall state that the Sicarians, on account of the
practice of circumcision, as mutilating themselves contrary to the
established laws and the customs permitted to the Jews alone, are put to
death. And you never hear a judge inquiring whether a Sicarian who strives
to live according to this established religion of his will be released
from punishment if he apostatizes, but will be led away to death if he
continues firm; for the evidence of the circumcision is sufficient to
ensure the death of him who has undergone it. But Christians alone,
according to the prediction of their Savior, "Ye shall be brought
before governors and kings for My sake," are urged up to their last
breath by their judges to deny Christianity, and to sacrifice according to
the public customs; and after the oath of abjuration, to return to their
homes, and to live in safety. And observe whether it is not with great
authority that this declaration is uttered: "Whosoever therefore
shall confess Me before men, him will I confess also before My Father who
is in heaven. And whosoever shall deny Me before men," etc. And go
back with me in thought to Jesus when He uttered these words, and see His
predictions not yet accomplished. Perhaps you will say, in a spirit of
incredulity, that he is talking folly, and speaking to no purpose, for his
words will have no fulfillment; or, being in doubt about assenting to his
words, you will say, that if these predictions be fulfilled, and the
doctrine of Jesus be established, so that governors and kings think of
destroying those who acknowledge Jesus, then we shall believe that he
utters these prophecies as one who has received great power from God to
implant this doctrine among the human race, and as believing that it will
prevail. And who will not be filled with wonder, when he goes back in
thought to Him who then taught and said, "This Gospel shall be
preached throughout the whole world, for a testimony against them and the
Gentiles," and beholds, agreeably to His words, the Gospel of Jesus
Christ preached in the whole world under heaven to Greeks and Barbarians,
wise and foolish alike? For the word, spoken with power, has gained the
mastery over men of all sorts of nature, and it is impossible to see any
race of men which has escaped accepting the teaching of Jesus. But let
this Jew of Celsus, who does not believe that He foreknew all that
happened to Him, consider how, while Jerusalem was still standing, and the
whole Jewish worship celebrated in it, Jesus foretold what would befall it
from the hand of the Romans. For they will not maintain that the
acquaintances and pupils of Jesus Himself handed down His teaching
contained in the Gospels without committing it to writing, and left His
disciples without the memoirs of Jesus contained in their works. Now in
these it is recorded, that "when ye shall see Jerusalem compassed about
with armies, then shall ye know that the desolation thereof is nigh."
But at that time there were no armies around Jerusalem, encompassing and
enclosing and besieging it; for the siege began in the reign of Nero, and
lasted till the government of Vespasian, whose son Titus destroyed
Jerusalem, on account, as Josephus says, of James the Just, the brother of
Jesus who was called Christ, but in reality, as the truth makes clear, on
account of Jesus Christ the Son of God." (Origen Against Celcus, Book
2, ch. 13)
- 225AD
Origen (On The Significance of A.D. 70) But if "the children of
Israel are to sit many days without a king, or ruler, or altar, or
priesthood, or responses;" and if, since the temple was destroyed,
there exists no longer sacrifice, nor altar, nor priesthood, it is
manifest that the ruler has failed out of Judah, and the leader from
between his thighs. And since the prediction declares that "the ruler
shall not fail from Judah, and the leader from between his thighs, until
what is reserved for Him shall come," it is manifest that He is come
to whom (belongs) what is reserved--the expectation of the Gentiles. And
this is clear from the multitude of the heathen who have believed on God
through Jesus Christ. (Principles, 4:1:3)
- 250AD
Cyprian (Thascius Caecilius Cyprianus) (On the Fulfillment of Prophecy)
"the Holy Spirit foretells and forewarns us by the apostle, saying,
"In the last days," says he, "perilous times shall come,
and men shall be lovers of their own selves, proud, boasters, covetous, blasphemers,
disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection,
truce-breakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, hatingthe good,
traitors, heady, high-minded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God,
having a sort of form of religion, but denying the power thereof. Of this
sort are they who creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden
with sins, which are led away with divers lusts; ever learning, and never
coming to the knowledge of the truth. And as Jannes and Jambres withstood
Moses, so do these also resist the truth; but they shall proceed no
further, for their folly shall be manifest unto all men, even as theirs
also was." Whatever things were predicted are fulfilled"
(Treatises of Cyprian Treatise I, sec. 16.).
- 250AD
Cyprian That the Jews should lose Jerusalem, and should leave the land
which they had received. ... In Isaiah: "Your country is desolate, your
cities are burned with fire: your land, strangers shall devour it in your
sight; and the daughter of Zion shall be left deserted, and overthrown by
foreign peoples, as a cottage in a vineyard, and as a keeper's lodge in a
garden of cucumbers, as a city which is besieged. And unless the Lord of
Sabaoth had left us a seed, we should have been as Sodoma, and we should have
been like unto Gomorrah."[5] Also in the Gospel the Lord says:
"Jerusalem, Jerusalem, that killest the prophets, and stonest them
that are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children as a
hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and thou wouldst not! Behold,
your house shall be left unto you desolate."[6] (Three Books Of
Testimonies Against The Jews., 6)
- 250AD
Lactantius "And the prophets had predicted that all these things
would thus come to pass. Isaiah thus speaks: "I am not rebellious,
nor do I oppose: I gave my back to the scourge, and my cheeks to the hand:
I turned not away my face from the foulness of spitting." The same
prophet says respecting His silence: "I was brought as a sheep to the
slaughter, and as a lamb before its shearers is dumb, so He opened not His
mouth." David also, in the xxxivth Psalm: "The abjects were
gathered together against me, and they knew me not: they were scattered,
yet felt no remorse: they tempted me, and gnashed upon me with their teeth."
The same also says respecting food and drink in the lxviiith Psalm:
"They gave me also gall for my meat, and in my thirst they gave me
vinegar to drink." Also respecting the cross of Christ: "And
they pierced my hands and my feet, they numbered all my bones: they
themselves have looked and stared upon me; they parted my garments among
them, and cast lots upon my vesture." Moses also says in Deuteronomy:
" And thy life shall hang in doubt before thine eyes, and thou shall
fear day and night, and shall have none assurance of thy life." Also
in Numbers: "God is not in doubt as a man, nor does He suffer threats
as the son of man." Also Zechariah says: "And they shall look on
me whom they pierced." Amos thus speaks of the obscuring of the sun:
"In that day, saith the Lord, the sun shall go down at noon, and the
clear day shall be dark; and I will turn your feasts into mourning, and
your songs into lamentation." Jeremiah also speaks of the city of
Jerusalem, in which He suffered: "Her sun is gone down while it was
yet day; she hath been confounded and reviled, and the residue of them
will I deliver to the sword." Nor were these things spoken in vain.
For after a short time the Emperor Vespasian subdued the Jews, and laid
waste their lands with the sword and fire, besieged and reduced them by
famine, overthrew Jerusalem, led the captives in triumph, and prohibited
the others who were left from ever returning to their native land. And
these things were done by God on account of that crucifixion of Christ, as
He before declared this to Solomon in their Scriptures, saying, "And
Israel shall be for perdition and a reproach to the people, and this house
shall be desolate; and every one that shall pass by shall be astonished,
and shall say, Why hath God done these evils to this land, and to this
house? And they shall say, Because they forsook the Lord their God, and
persecuted their. King, who was dearly beloved by God, and crucified Him
with great degradation, therefore hath God brought upon them these
evils." For what would they not deserve who put to death their Lord,
who had come for their salvation? (Lactantius: EPITOME OF THE DIVINE
INSTITUTES, Ch. 46)
- 250AD
Lactantius "But He also opened to them all things which were about to
happen, which Peter and Paul preached at Rome; and this preaching being
written for the sake of remembrance, became permanent, in which they both
declared other wonderful things, and also said that it was about to come
to pass, that after a short time God would send against them a king who
would subdue the Jews, and level their cities to the ground, and besiege
the people themselves, worn out with hunger and thirst. Then it should
come to pass that they should feed on the bodies of their own children,
and consume one another. Lastly, that they should be taken captive, and
come into the hands of their enemies, and should see their wives most
cruelly harassed before their eyes, their virgins ravished and polluted,
their sons torn in pieces, their little ones dashed to the ground; and
lastly, everything laid waste with fire and sword, the captives banished
for ever from their own lands, because they had exulted over the
well-beloved and most approved Son of God. And so, after their decease,
when Nero had put them to death, Vespasian destroyed the name and nation
of the Jews, and did all things which they had foretold as about to come
to pass." (Lactantius: Divine Institutes, Book Iv)
- 325AD
Eusebius "If any one compares the words of our Saviour with the other
accounts of the historian (Josephus) concerning the whole war, how can one
fail to wonder, and to admit that the foreknowledge and the prophecy of
our Saviour were truly divine and marvelously strange." (Book III,
Ch. VII)
- 325AD
Eusebius "It is fitting to add to these accounts the true prediction
of our Saviour in which he foretold these very events. His words are as
follows: "Woe unto them that are with child, and to them that give
suck in those days! But pray ye that your flight be not in the winter,
neither on the Sabbath day; For there shall be great tribulation, such as
was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall
be." The historian, reckoning the whole number of the slain, says
that eleven hundred thousand persons perished by famine and sword, and
that the rest of the rioters and robbers, being betrayed by each other
after the taking of the city, were slain. But the tallest of the youths
and those that were distinguished for beauty were preserved for the
triumph. Of the rest of the multitude, those that were over seventeen years
of age were sent as prisoners to labor in the works of Egypt, while still
more were scattered through the provinces to meet their death in the
theaters by the sword and by beasts. Those under seventeen years of age
were carried away to be sold as slaves, and of these alone the number
reached ninety thousand. These things took place in this manner in the
second year of the reign of Vespasian, in accordance with the prophecies
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who by divine power saw them
beforehand as if they were already present, and wept and mourned according
to the statement of the holy evangelists, who give the very words which be
uttered, when, as if addressing Jerusalem herself, he said: "If thou
hadst known, even thou, in this day, the things which belong unto thy
peace! But now they are hid from thine eyes. For the days shall come upon
thee, that thine enemies shall cast a rampart about thee, and compass thee
round, and keep thee in on every side, and shall lay thee and thy children
even with the ground." And then, as if speaking concerning the
people, he says, "For there shall be great distress in the land, and
wrath upon this people. And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and
shall be led away captive into all nations. And Jerusalem shall be trodden
down of the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled."
And again: "When ye shall see Jerusalem compassed with armies, then
know that the desolation thereof is nigh." (Book III, Ch. VII)
- 325AD
Eusebius "Meander, who succeeded Simon Magus, exhibited himself in
his conduct an instrument of diabolical wickedness, not inferior to the
former. He also, was a Samaritan, and having made no less progress in his
impostures than his master, revelled in still more arrogant pretensions to
miracles; saying that he was in truth the Saviour, once sent from the
invisible worlds for the salvation of men; teaching also, that no one
could overcome even the very angels that formed the heavens in any other
way, than by being first initiated into the magic discipline imparted by
him, and by the baptism conferred by him for this purpose." (Book 3,
Ch. 26)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On James, the Lord's Brother
in A.D. 65) Says James: "Why do ye ask me respecting Jesus the Son of
Man? He is now sitting in the heavens, on the right hand of great Power,
and is about to come on the clouds of heaven." (Book 2, chapter
XXIII)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On Matthew 24:34) "And
when those that believed in Christ had come thither from Jerusalem, then,
as if the royal city of the Jews and the whole land of Judea were entirely
destitute of holy men, the judgment of God at length overtook those who
had committed such outrages against Christ and his apostles, and totally
destroyed that generation of impious men." (Book III, Ch. 5)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On Matthew 24:7) Caius had
held the power not quite four years,[1] when he was succeeded by the
emperor Claudius. Under him the world was visited with a famine,[2] which
writers that are entire strangers to our religion have recorded in their
histories.[3] And thus the prediction of Agabus recorded in the Acts of
the Apostles,[4] according to which the whole world was to be visited by a
famine, received its fulfillment. And Luke, in the Acts, after mentioning
the famine in the time of Claudius, and stating that the brethren of
Antioch, each according to his ability, sent to the brethren of Judea by
the hands of Paul and Barnabas,[5] adds the following account. (Book II,
Ch. VIII)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On Matthew 24:14)
"THUS, under the influence of heavenly power, and with the divine
co-operation, the doctrine of the Saviour, like the rays of the sun,
quickly illumined the whole world;[1] and straightway, in accordance with
the divine Scriptures,[2] the voice of the inspired evangelists and
apostles went forth through all the earth, and their words to the end of
the world. (Book II, Ch.III.)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On Matthew 24:14) "The
same historian records another fact still more wonderful than this. He
says that a certain oracle was found in their sacred writings which
declared that at that time a certain person should go forth from their
country to rule the world. He himself understood that this was fulfilled
in Vespasian. But Vespasian did not rule the whole world, but only that
part of it which was subject to the Romans. With better right could it be
applied to Christ; to whom it was said by the Father, "Ask of me, and
I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the ends of the
earth for thy possession." At that very time, indeed, the voice of
his holy apostles "went throughout all the earth, and their words to
the end of the world." (Book III, Ch. 8)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On Matthew 24:15)
"--all these things, as well as the many great sieges which were
carried on against the cities of Judea, and the excessive. sufferings
endured by those that fled to Jerusalem itself, as to a city of perfect
safety, and finally the general course of the whole war, as well as its
particular occurrences in detail, and how at last the abomination of
desolation, proclaimed by the prophets, stood in the very temple of God,
so celebrated of old, the temple which was now awaiting its total and
final destruction by fire,-- all these things any one that wishes may find
accurately described in the history written by Josephus." (Book III,
Ch. 5)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On Matthew 24:21) "But
the people of the church in Jerusalem had been commanded by a revelation,
vouchsafed to approved men there before the war, to leave the city and to
dwell in a certain town of Perea called Pella." (Book III, Ch. 5)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On Nero and Domition)
"Tertullian also has mentioned Domition in the following words:
'Domition also, who possessed a share of Nero's cruelty, attempted once to
do the same thing that the latter did. But because he had, I suppose, some
intelligence, he very soon ceased, and even recalled those whom he had
banished" (vol. 1, pp. 148-149)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On the 'Millennial Reign' of
Christ) "This same historian (Papias) also gives other accounts,
which he says he adds as received by him from unwritten tradition,
likewise certain strange parables of our Lord, and of His doctrine and
some other matters rather too fabulous. In these he says there would be a
certain millennium after the resurrection, and that there would be a
corporeal reign of Christ on this very earth; which things he appears to
have imagined, as if they were authorized by the apostolic narrations, not
understanding correctly those matters which they propounded mystically in
their representations. For he was very limited in his comprehension, as is
evident from his discourses; yet he was the cause why most of the
ecclesiastical writers, urging the antiquity of man, were carried away by
a similar opinion; as, for instance, Irenaeus, or any other that adopted
such sentiments. (Book III, Ch. 39)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On the Significance of
A.D.70) "If any one compares the words of our Saviour with the other
accounts of the historian (Josephus) concerning the whole war, how can one
fail to wonder, and to admit that the foreknowledge and the prophecy of
our Saviour were truly divine and marvelously strange." (Book III,
Ch. VII)
- 325AD
Eusebius Pamphilius, Ecclesiastical History: (On the Significance of
A.D.70) "It is fitting to add to these accounts the true prediction
of our Saviour in which he foretold these very events. His words are as
follows: "Woe unto them that are with child, and to them that give
suck in those days! But pray ye that your flight be not in the winter,
neither on the Sabbath day; For there shall be great tribulation, such as
was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall
be." The historian, reckoning the whole number of the slain, says
that eleven hundred thousand persons perished by famine and sword, and
that the rest of the rioters and robbers, being betrayed by each other
after the taking of the city, were slain. But the tallest of the youths
and those that were distinguished for beauty were preserved for the
triumph. Of the rest of the multitude, those that were over seventeen
years of age were sent as prisoners to labor in the works of Egypt, while
still more were scattered through the provinces to meet their death in the
theaters by the sword and by beasts. Those under seventeen years of age
were carried away to be sold as slaves, and of these alone the number reached
ninety thousand. These things took place in this manner in the second year
of the reign of Vespasian, in accordance with the prophecies of our Lord
and Saviour Jesus Christ, who by divine power saw them beforehand as if
they were already present, and wept and mourned according to the statement
of the holy evangelists, who give the very words which be uttered, when,
as if addressing Jerusalem herself, he said: "If thou hadst known,
even thou, in this day, the things which belong unto thy peace! But now they
are hid from thine eyes. For the days shall come upon thee, that thine
enemies shall cast a rampart about thee, and compass thee round, and keep
thee in on every side, and shall lay thee and thy children even with the
ground." And then, as if speaking concerning the people, he says,
"For there shall be great distress in the land, and wrath upon this
people. And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led
away captive into all nations. And Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the
Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled." And again:
"When ye shall see Jerusalem compassed with armies, then know that
the desolation thereof is nigh." (Book III, Ch. VII)
- 345AD
Athanasius "So the Jews are indulging in fiction, and transferring
present time to future. When did prophet and vision cease from Israel? Was
it not when Christ came, the Holy One of holies? It is, in fact, a sign
and notable proof of the coming of the Word that Jerusalem no longer
stands, neither is prophet raised up nor vision revealed among them. And
it is natural that it should be so, for when He that was signified had
come, what need was there any longer of any to signify Him? And when the
Truth had come, what further need was there of the shadow? On His account
only they prophesied continually, until such time as Essential
Righteousness has come, Who was made the Ransom for the sins of all. For
the same reason Jerusalem stood until the same time, in order that there
men might premeditate the types before the Truth was known. So, of course,
once the Holy One of holies had come, both vision and prophecy were
sealed. And the kingdom of Jerusalem ceased at the same time, because
kings were to be anointed among them only until the Holy of holies had
been anointed. Moses also prophesies that the kingdom of the Jews shall
stand until His time, saying, "A ruler shall not fail from Judah nor
a prince from his loins, until the things laid up for him shall come and
the Expectation of the nations Himself." And that is why the Savior
Himself was always proclaiming "The law and the prophets prophesied
until John." So if there is still king or prophet or vision among the
Jews, they do well to deny that Christ is come; but if there is neither
king nor vision, and since that time all prophecy has been sealed and city
and temple taken, how can they be so irreligious, how can they so flaunt
the facts, as to deny Christ Who has brought it all about?.. What more is
there for their Expected One to do when he comes? To call the heathen? But
they are called already. To put an end to prophet and king and vision? But
this too has already happened. To expose the Goddenyingness of idols? It
is already exposed and condemned. Or to destroy death? It is already
destroyed. What then has not come to pass that the Christ must do? What is
there left out or unfulfilled that the Jews should disbelieve so
light-heartedly? The plain fact is, as I say, that there is no longer any
king or prophet nor Jerusalem nor sacrifice nor vision among them; yet the
whole earth is filled with the knowledge of God, and the Gentiles,
forsaking atheism, are now taking refuge with the God of Abraham through
the Word, our Lord Jesus Christ. (Incarnation, Ch. VI )
- 375AD
Chrysostom: "What then saith He? "Take heed that no man deceive
you. For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ, and shall
deceive many. And ye shall hear of wars and rumors of wars. See that ye be
not troubled; for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not
yet." ... For since they felt as being told of vengeance falling on
others when hearing of that which was to be brought upon Jerusalem and as
though they were to be out of the turmoils, and were dreaming of good
things only, and looked for these to befall them quite immediately; for
this cause He again foretells to them grievous things, making them
earnest, and commanding them on two grounds to watch, so as neither to be
seduced by the deceit of them that would beguile them, nor to be
overpowered by the violence of ills that should overtake them. ... "For
the war, saith He, shall be twofold that of the deceivers, and that of the
enemies, but the former far more grievous, as coming upon them in the
confusion and turmoils, and when men were terrified and troubled. For
indeed great was the storm then, when the Roman power was beginning to
flourish, and cities were taken, and camps and weapons were set in motion,
and many were readily believed. ... "But of wars in Jerusalem is He
speaking; for it is not surely of those without, and everywhere in the
world; for what did they care for these? And besides, He would thus say
nothing new, if He were speaking of the calamities of the world at large,
which are happening always. For before this, were wars, and tumults, and
fightings; but He speaks of the Jewish wars coming upon them at no great
distance, for henceforth the Roman arms were a matter of anxiety. Since
then these things also were sufficient to confound them, He foretells them
all." (HOMILY ST. MATTHEW )
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 23:36) "For I will
ask them, Did He send the prophets and wise men? Did they slay them in
their synagogue? Was their house left desolate? Did all the vengeance come
upon that generation? It is quite plain that it was so, and no man
gainsays it." (Homily LXXIV on MATT. XXIII. 29, 30.)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:1,2) "And as He
sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came unto Him privately,
saying, Tell us when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of
Thy coming, and of the end of the world?" ... Therefore did they come
unto Him privately, as it was of such matters they meant to inquire. For
they were in travail to know the day of His coming, because of their eager
desire to behold that glory, which is the cause of countless blessings.
And these two things do they ask him, when shall these things be? that is,
the overthrow of the temple; and, what is the sign of thy coming? But Luke
saith, the question was one concerning Jerusalem, as though they were
supposing that then is His coming. And Mark saith, that neither did all of
them ask concerning the end of Jerusalem, but Peter and John, as having
greater freedom of speech.
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:14) "After this
again, what is more grievous than all, they shall not have so much as the
consolation from love. Then indicating, that these things will in no
degree harm the noble and the firm, He saith, Fear not, neither be troubled.
For if ye show forth the patience that becomes you, the dangers will not
prevail over you. And it is a plain proof of this, that the word shall
surely be preached everywhere in the world, so much shall ye be above the
things that alarm you. For, that they may not say, how then shall we live?
He said more, Ye shall both live and preach everywhere. Therefore He added
moreover, "And this gospel shall be preached in the whole world for a
witness to all nations, and then shall the end come," of the downfall
of Jerusalem. "For in proof that He meant this, and that before the
taking of Jerusalem the gospel was preached, hear what Paul saith,
"Their sound went into all the earth;" and again, "The
gospel which was preached to every creature which is under Heaven."
And seest thou him running from Jerusalem unto Spain ? And if one took so
large a portion, consider what the rest also wrought. For writing to
others also, Paul again saith con-coming the gospel, that "it is
bringing forth fruit, and growing up in every creature which is under
Heaven." "But what meaneth, "For a witness to all
nations?" Forasmuch as though it was everywhere preached, yet it was
not everywhere believed. It was for a witness, He saith, to them that were
disbelieving, that is, for conviction, for accusation, for a testimony;
for they that believed will bear witness against them that believed not,
and will condemn them. And for this cause, after the gospel is preached in
every part of the world, Jerusalem is destroyed, that they may not have so
much as a shadow of an excuse for their perverseness. For they that saw
His power shine throughout every place, and in an instant take the world
captive, what excuse could they then have for continuing in the same
perverseness? For in proof that it was everywhere preached at that time,
hear what Paul saith, "of the gospel which was preached to every
creature which is under Heaven." Which also is a very great sign of
Christ's power, that in twenty or at most thirty years the word had
reached the ends of the world. "After this therefore," saith He,
"shall come the end of Jerusalem." For that He intimates this
was manifested by what follows.
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:15) "For this
it seems to me that the abomination of desolation means the army by which
the holy city of Jerusalem was made desolate." (The Ante-Nicene
Fathers)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:15) "Or because
he who had desolated the city and the temple, placed his statue within the
temple." (The Ante-Nicene Fathers)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:15) "And see
how He relates the war, by the things that seem to be small setting forth
how intolerable it was to be. For, "Then,"saith He, "let
them which be in Judaea flee into the mountains." Then, When? When
these things should be, "when the abomination of desolation should
stand in the holy place." Whence He seems to me to be speaking of the
armies." (Homily 76, Number 1)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:15) For He brought
in also a prophecy, to confirm their desolation, saying, "But when ye
shall see the abomination of desolation,spoken of by Daniel the prophet,
standing in the holy place, let him that readeth understand."(12) He
referred them to Daniel. And by" abomination" He meaneth the
statue of him who then took the city, which he who desolated the city and
the temple placed within the temple, wherefore Christ calleth it, "of
desolation." Moreover, in order that they might learn that these
things will be while some of them are alive, therefore He said, "When
ye see the abomination of desolation." (Of Matthew 24:1,2)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:16, 17, 18) 1.
HAVING spoken of the ills that were to overtake the city, and of the
trials of the apostles, and that they should remain unsubdued, and should
overrun the whole world, He mentions again the Jews' calamities, showing
that when the one should be glorious, having taught the whole world, the
others should be in calamity. ... And see how He relates the war, by the
things that seem to be small setting forth how intolerable it was to be.
For, "Then," saith He, "let them which be in Judaea flee
into the mountains." Then, When? When these things should be,
"when the abomination of desolation should stand in the holy
place." Whence He seems to me to be speaking of the armies. Flee
therefore then, saith He, for thenceforth there is no hope of safety for
you. (Homily 76, Number 1)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:19) "Woe unto
them that are with child, and to them that give suck," [Matt. 24:19]
to the one because of their greater inertness, and because they cannot
flee easily, being weighed down by the burden of their pregnancy; to the
other, because they are held by the tie of feeling for their children, and
cannot save their sucklings. For money it is a light thing to despise, and
an easy thing to provide, and clothes; but the bonds of nature how could
any one escape? how could the pregnant woman become active? how could she
that gives suck be able to overlook that which she had borne? (Homily 76,
Number 1)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:20,21) Then, to show
again the greatness of the calamity, He saith, "Pray ye that your
flight be not in the winter, neither on the Sabbath day. For then shall be
great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world until
now, neither shall be." [Matt. 24:20, 21] (Homily 76, Number 2) Seest
thou that His discourse is addressed to the Jews, and that He is speaking
of the ills that should overtake them? For the apostles surely were not to
keep the Sabbath day, neither to be there, when Vespasian did those
things. For indeed the most part of them were already departed this life.
And if any was left, he was dwelling then in other parts of the world. But
wherefore neither "in the winter, nor on the Sabbath day?" Not
in the winter, because of the difficulty arising from the season; not on
the Sabbath day, because of the absolute authority exercised by the law.
For since they had need of flight, and of the swiftest flight, but neither
would the Jews dare to flee on the Sabbath day, because of the law,
neither in winter was such a thing easy; therefore, "Pray ye,"
saith He; "for then shall be tribulation, such as never was, neither
shall be." And let not any man suppose this to have been spoken
hyperbolically; but let him study the writings of Josephus, and learn the
truth of the sayings. For neither can any one say, that the man being a
believer, in order to establish Christ's words, hath exaggerated the
tragical history. For indeed he was both a Jew, and a determined Jew, and
very zealous, and among them that lived after Christ's coming. " But
mark, I pray thee, the exceeding greatness of the ills, when not only
compared with the time before, they appear more grievous, but also with
all the time to come. For not in all the world, neither in all time that
is past, and that is to come, shall any one be able to say such ills have
been. And very naturally; for neither had any man perpetrated, not of
those that ever have been, nor of those to come hereafter, a deed so
wicked and horrible. Therefore He saith, "there shall be tribulation
such as never was, nor shall be." (Homily 76, Number 2)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:22) "And except
those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved; but for
the elect's sake those days shall be shortened." [Matt. 24:22] By
these things He shows them to be deserving of a more grievous punishment
than had been mentioned, speaking now of the days of the war and of that
siege. But what He saith is like this. If, saith He, the war of the Romans
against the city had prevailed further, all the Jews had perished (for by
"no flesh" here, He meaneth no Jewish flesh), both those abroad,
and those at home. For not only against those in Judaea did they war, but
also those that were dispersed everywhere they outlawed and banished,
because of their hatred against the former. " "But whom doth He
here mean by the elect? The believers that were shut up in the midst of
them. For that Jews may not say that because of the gospel, and the
worship of Christ, these ills took place, He showeth, that so far from the
believers being the cause, if it had not been for them, all had perished
utterly. For if God had permitted the war to be protracted, not so much as
a remnant of the Jews had remained, but lest those of them who had become
believers should perish together with the unbelieving Jews, He quickly put
down the fighting, and gave an end to the war. Therefore He saith,
"But for the elect's sake they shall be shortened." But these
things He said to leave an encouragement to those of them who were shut up
in the midst of them, and to allow them to take breath, that they might
not be in fear, as though they were to perish with them. And if here so
great is His care for them, that for their sakes others also are saved,
and that for the sake of Christians remnants were left of the Jews, how
great will be their honor in the time for their crowns?" (Homily 76,
Number 2)
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:34) Therefore He
saith, they shall come not by themselves or at once, but with signs. For
that the Jews may not say, that they who then believed were the authors of
these evils, therefore hath He told them also of the cause of their coming
upon them. "For verily I say unto you," He said before,
"all these things shall come upon this generation," having made
mention of the stain of blood on them. Then lest on hearing of the showers
of evils, they should suppose the gospel to be broken through, He added,
"See, be not troubled, for all things must come to pass," i.e
which I foretold, and the approach of the temptations will set aside none
of the things which I have said; but there shall indeed be tumults and
confusion, but nothing shall shake my predictions. "Without were
fightings, within were fears;" and, "perils among false
brethren," and again, "For such are false apostles, deceitful
workers, transforming themselves into the apostles of Christ."
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:4-5) "What then
saith He? "Take heed that no man deceive you. For many shall come in
my name, saying, I am Christ, and shall deceive many. And ye shall hear of
wars and rumors of wars. See that ye be not troubled; for all these things
must come to pass, but the end is not yet." For since they felt as
being told of vengeance falling on others when hearing of that which was
to be brought upon Jerusalem and as though they were to be out of the turmoils,
and were dreaming of good things only, and looked for these to befall them
quite immediately; for this cause He again foretells to them grievous
things, making them earnest, and commanding them on two grounds to watch,
so as neither to be seduced by the deceit of them that would beguile them,
nor to be overpowered by the violence of ills that should overtake them.
For the war, saith He, shall be twofold that of the deceivers, and that of
the enemies, but the former far more grievous, as coming upon them in the
confusion and turmoils, and when men were terrified and troubled. For
indeed great was the storm then, when the Roman power was beginning to
flourish, and cities were taken, and camps and weapons were set in motion,
and many were readily believed. But of wars in Jerusalem is He speaking;
for it is not surely of those without, and everywhere in the world; for
what did they care for these? And besides, He would thus say nothing new,
if He were speaking of the calamities of the world at large, which are
happening always. For before this, were wars, and tumults, and fightings;
but He speaks of the Jewish wars coming upon them at no great distance,
for henceforth the Roman arms were a matter of anxiety. Since then these
things also were sufficient to confound them, He foretells them all.
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: (On Matthew 24:7) Then to show that
He Himself also will assail the Jews with them, and war on them, He speaks
not of battles only, but also of plagues sent from God, famines, and
pestilences, and earthquakes, showing that the wars also He Himself
permitted to come upon them, and that these things do not happen for no
purpose according to what has been before the accustomed course of things
amongst men, but proceed from the wrath on high.
- 375AD
'John' Chrysostom, Homily St. Matthew: Matthew 24:16-18 "Then let
them which be in Judaea flee into the mountains. And let him that is on
the housetop not come down to take anything out of his house. Neither let
him which is in his field return back to take his clothes." HAVING
spoken of the ills that were to overtake the city, and of the trials of
the apostles, and that they should remain unsubdued, and should overrun
the whole world, He mentions again the Jews' calamities, showing that when
the one should be glorious, having taught the whole world, the others
should be in calamity. And see how He relates the war, by the things that
seem to be small setting forth how intolerable it was to be. For,
"Then," saith He, "let them which be in Judaea flee into
the mountains." Then, When? When these things should be, "when
the abomination of desolation should stand in the holy place." Whence
be seems to me to be speaking of the armies. Flee therefore then, saith
He, for thenceforth there is no hope of safety for you. For since it had
fallen out, that they often had recovered themselves in grievous wars, as
under Sennacherib, under Antiochus again (for when at that time also,
armies had come in upon them, and the temple had been seized beforehand,
the Maccabees rallying gave their affairs an opposite turn); in order then
that they might not now also suspect this, that there would be any such
change, He forbids them all thought of the kind. For it were well, saith
He, to escape henceforth with one's naked body. Therefore them also that
are on the housetop, He suffers not to enter into the house to take their
clothes, indicating the evils to be inevitable, and the calamity without
end, and that it must needs be that he that was involved therein should surely
perish. Therefore He adds also, him that is in the field, saying, neither
let this man turn back to take his clothes. For if they that are in doors
flee, much more they that are out of doors ought not to take refuge
within. "Woe unto them that are with child, and to them that give
suck," to the one because of their greater inertness, and because
they cannot flee easily, being weighed down by the burden of their
pregnancy; to the other, because they are held by the tie of feeling for
their children, and cannot save their sucklings. For money it is a light
thing to despise, and an easy thing to provide, and clothes; but the bonds
of nature how could any one escape? how could the pregnant woman become
active? how could she that gives suck be able to overlook that which she
had born? Then, to show again the greatness of the calamity, He saith,
"Pray ye that your flight be not in the winter, neither on the
Sabbath day. For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since
the beginning of the world until now, neither shall be." Seest thou
that His discourse is addressed to the Jews, and that He is speaking of
the ills that should overtake them? For the apostles surely were not to
keep the Sabbath day, neither to be there, when Vespasian did those things.
For indeed the most part of them were already departed this life. And if
any was left, he was dwelling then in other parts of the world. But
wherefore neither "in the winter, nor on the Sabbath day?" Not
in the winter, because of the difficulty arising from the season; not on
the Sabbath day, because of the absolute authority exercised by the law.
For since they had need of flight, and of the swiftest flight, but neither
would the Jews dare to flee on the Sabbath day, because of the law,
neither in winter was such a thing easy; therefore, "Pray ye,"
saith He; "for then shall be tribulation, such as never was, neither
shall be." And let not any man suppose this to have been spoken
hyperbolically; but let him study the writings of Josephus, and learn the
truth of the sayings. For neither can any one say, that the man being a
believer, in order to establish Christ's words, hath exaggerated the
tragical history. For indeed He was both a Jew, and a determined Jew, and
very zealous, and among them that lived after Christ's coming. What then
saith this man? That those terrors surpassed all tragedy, and that no such
had ever overtaken the nation. For so great was the famine, that the very
mothers fought about the devouring of their children, and that there were
wars about this; and he saith that many when they were dead had their
bellies ripped up. I should therefore be glad to inquire of the Jews.
Whence came there thus upon them wrath from God intolerable, and more sore
than all that had befallen aforetime, not in Judaea only, but in any part
of the world? Is it not quite clear, that it was for the deed of the
cross, and for this rejection? All would say it, and with all and before
all the truth of the facts itself. But mark, I pray thee, the exceeding
greatness of the ills, when not only compared with the time before, they
appear more grievous, but also with all the time to come. For not in all
the world, neither in all time that is past, and that is to come, shall
any one be able to say such ills have been. And very naturally; for
neither had any man perpetrated, not of those that ever have been, nor of
those to come hereafter, a deed so wicked and horrible. Therefore He
saith, "there shall be tribulation such as never was, nor shall
be." "And except those days should be shortened, there should no
flesh be saved; but for the elect's sake those days shall be
shortened." By these things He shows them to be deserving of a more
grievous punishment than had been mentioned, speaking now of the days of
the war and of that siege. But what He saith is like this. If, saith He,
the war of the Romans against the city had prevailed further, all the Jews
had perished (for by "no flesh" here, He meaneth no Jewish
flesh), both those abroad, and those at home. For not only against those in
Judaea did they war, but also those that were dispersed everywhere they
outlawed and banished, because of their hatred against the former. 2. But
whom doth He here mean by the elect? The believers that were shut up in
the midst of them. For that Jews may not say that because of the gospel,
and the worship of Christ, these ills took place, He showeth, that so far
from the believers being the cause, if it had not been for them, all had
perished utterly. For if God had permitted the war to be protracted, not
so much as a remnant of the Jews had remained, but lest those of them who
had become believers should perish together with the unbelieving Jews, He
quickly put down the fighting, and gave an end to the war. Therefore He
saith, "But for the elect's sake they shall be shortened." But
these things He said to leave an encouragement to those of them who were
shut up in the midst of them, and to allow them to take breath, that they
might not be in fear, as though they were to perish with them. And if here
so great is His care for them, that for their sakes others also are saved,
and that for the sake of Christians remnants were left of the Jews, how
great will be their honor in the time for their crowns? By this He also
encouraged them not to be distressed at their own dangers, since these
others are suffering such things, and for no profit, but for evil upon
their own head. But He not only encouraged them, but also led them off
secretly and unsuspectedly from the customs of the Jews. For if there is
not to be a change afterwards, and the temple is not to stand, it is quite
evident that the law also shall be made to cease. However, He spake not
this openly, but by their entire destruction He darkly intimated it. But
He spake it not openly, lest He should startle them before the time.
Wherefore neither at the beginning did He of Himself fall into discourse
touching these things; but having first lamented over the city, He
constrained them to show Him the stones, and question Him, in order that
as it were in answering them their question, He might declare to them
beforehand all the things to come. But mark thou, I pray thee, the
dispensation of the Spirit, that John wrote none of these things, lest he
should seem to write from the very history of the things done (for indeed
he lived a long time after the taking of the city), but they, who died
before the taking, and had seen none of these things, they write it, in
order that every way the power of the prediction should clearly shine
forth." (Homily 76)
- 403AD
Sulpcius Severus (On The Roman-Jewish War) "SO then, after the
departure of Nero, Galba seized the government; and ere long, on Galba
being slain, Otho secured it. Then Vitellius from Gaul, trusting to the
armies which he commanded, entered the city, and having killed Otho,
assumed the sovereignty. This afterwards passed to Vespasian, and although
that was accomplished by evil means, yet it had the good effect of
rescuing the state from the hands of the wicked. While Vespasian was
besieging Jerusalem, he took possession of the imperial power; and as the
fashion is, he was saluted as emperor by the army, with a diadem placed
upon his head. He made his son Titus, Caesar; and assigned him a portion
of the forces, along with the task of continuing the siege of Jerusalem. Vespasian
set out for Rome, and was received with the greatest favor by the senate
and people; and Vitellius having killed himself, his hold of the sovereign
power was fully confirmed. The Jews, meanwhile, being closely besieged, as
no chance either of peace or surrender was allowed them, were at length
perishing from famine, and the streets began everywhere to be filled with
dead bodies, for the duty of burying them could no longer be performed.
Moreover, they ventured on eating all things of the most abominable
nature, and did not even abstain from human bodies, except those which
putrefaction had already laid hold of and thus excluded from use as food.
The Romans, accordingly, rushed in upon the exhausted defenders of the
city. And it so happened that the whole multitude from the country, and
from other towns of Judaea, had then assembled for the day of the
Passover: doubtless, because it pleased God that the impious race should
be given over to destruction at the very time of the year at which they
had crucified the Lord. The Pharisees for a time maintained their ground
most boldly in defense of the temple, and at length, with minds
Obstinately bent on death, they, of their own accord, committed themselves
to the flames. The number of those who suffered death is related to have
been eleven hundred thousand, and one hundred thousand were taken captive
and sold. Titus is said, after calling a council, to have first
deliberated whether he should destroy the temple, a structure of such
extraordinary work. For it seemed good to some that a sacred edifice,
distinguished above all human achievements, ought not to be destroyed,
inasmuch as, if preserved, it would furnish an evidence of Roman
moderation, but, if destroyed, would serve for a perpetual proof of Roman
cruelty. But on the opposite side, others and Titus himself thought that
the temple ought specially to be overthrown, in order that the religion of
the Jews and of the Christians might more thoroughly be subverted; for
that these religions, although contrary to each other, had nevertheless
proceeded from the same authors; that the Christians had sprung up from
among the Jews; and that, if the root were extirpated, the offshoot would
speedily perish. Thus, according to the divine will, the minds of all being
inflamed, the temple was destroyed, three hundred and thirty-one years
ago. And this last overthrow of the temple, and final captivity of the
Jews, by which, being exiles from their native land, they are beheld
scattered through the whole world, furnish a daily demonstration to the
world, that they have been punished on no other account than for the
impious hands which they laid upon Christ. For though on other occasions
they were often given over to captivity on account of their sins, yet they
never paid the penalty of slavery beyond a period of seventy years."
(CH. XXX, Sacred History)
- 403AD
Sulpcius Severus (On the Significance of A.D.70) "Moreover, they
ventured on eating all things of the most abominable nature, and did not
even abstain from human bodies, except those which putrefaction had
already laid hold of and thus excluded from use as food. The Romans,
accordingly, rushed in upon the exhausted defenders of the city. And it so
happened that the whole multitude from the country, and from other towns of
Judaea, had then assembled for the day of the Passover: doubtless, because
it pleased God that the impious race should be given over to destruction
at the very time of the year at which they had crucified the Lord." ...
"Thus, according to the divine will, the minds of all being inflamed,
the temple was destroyed, three hundred and thirty-one years ago. And this
last overthrow of the temple, and final captivity of the Jews, by which,
being exiles from their native land, they are beheld scattered through the
whole world, furnish a daily demonstration to the world, that they have
been punished on no other account than for the impious hands which they
laid upon Christ. For though on other occasions they were often given over
to captivity on account of their sins, yet they never paid the penalty of
slavery beyond a period of seventy years. (CHAPTER XXX, Sacred History)
- 419AD
Augustine (On Matthew 24:15) "Luke to show that the abomination
spoken of by Daniel will take place when Jerusalem is captured, recalls
these words of the Lord in the same context: When you shall see Jerusalem
compassed about with an army, then know that the desolation thereof is at
hand (xxi. 20). For Luke very clearly bears witness that the prophecy of
Daniel was fulfilled when Jerusalem was overthrown." (vol. 6, p. 170)
- 419AD
Augustine (On the 'Final Destruction' of the Jews) Chapter 48 -- That
Haggai's Prophecy, In Which He Said That The Glory Of The House Of God
Would Be Greater Than That Of The First Had Been, Was Really Fulfilled,
Not In The Rebuilding Of The Temple, But In The Church Of Christ. ...
"This house of God is more glorious than that first one which was
constructed of wood and stone, metals and other precious things. Therefore
the prophecy of Haggai was not fulfilled in the rebuilding of that temple.
For it can never be shown to have had so much glory after it was rebuilt
as it had in the time of Solomon; yea, rather, the glory of that house is
shown to have been diminished, first by the ceasing of prophecy, and then
by the nation itself suffering so great calamities, even to the final
destruction made by the Romans, as the things above-mentioned prove. But
this house which pertains to the new testament is just as much more
glorious as the living stones, even believing, renewed men, of which it is
constructed are better. But it was typified by the rebuilding of that
temple for this reason, because the very renovation of that edifice
typifies in the prophetic oracle another testament which is called the
new. When, therefore, God said by the prophet just named, "And I will
give peace in this place," He is to be understood who is typified by
that typical place; for since by that rebuilt place is typified the Church
which was to be built by Christ, nothing else can be accepted as the meaning
of the saying, "I will give peace in this place," except I will
give peace in the place which that place signifies." (City of God,
Book XVIII, Ch. 48)
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