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"If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy 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 trench about thee, and compass thee round, and keep
thee in on every side, and shall lay thee even with the ground,
and thy children within thee; and they shall not leave in thee one
stone upon another; because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation."
Luke 19:42-44.
From the crest of Olivet, Jesus looked upon Jerusalem. Fair and
peaceful was the scene spread out before Him. It was the season
of the Passover, and from all lands the children of Jacob had gathered
there to celebrate the great national festival. In the midst of
gardens and vineyards, and green slopes studded with pilgrims' tents,
rose the terraced hills, the stately palaces, and massive bulwarks
of Israel's capital. The daughter of Zion seemed in her pride to
say, I sit a queen and shall see no sorrow; as lovely then, and
deeming herself as secure in Heaven's favor, as when, ages before,
the royal minstrel sang: "Beautiful for situation, the joy of the
whole earth, is Mount Zion, . . . the city of the great King." Psalm
48:2. In full view were the magnificent buildings of the temple.
The rays of the setting sun lighted up the snowy whiteness of its
marble walls and gleamed from golden gate and tower and pinnacle.
"The perfection of beauty" it stood, the pride of the Jewish nation.
What child of Israel could gaze upon the scene without a thrill
of joy and admiration! But far other thoughts occupied the mind
of Jesus. "When He was come near, He beheld the city, and wept over
it." Luke 19:41. Amid the universal rejoicing of the triumphal entry,
while palm branches waved, while glad hosannas awoke the echoes
of the hills, and thousands of voices declared Him king, the world's
Redeemer was overwhelmed with a sudden and mysterious sorrow. He,
the Son of God, the Promised One of Israel, whose power had conquered
death and called its captives from the grave, was in tears, not
of ordinary grief, but of intense, irrepressible agony.
His tears were not for Himself, though He well knew whither His
feet were tending. Before Him lay Gethsemane, the scene of His approaching
agony. The sheepgate also was in sight, through which for centuries
the victims for sacrifice had been led, and which was to open for
Him when He should be "brought as a lamb to the slaughter." Isaiah
53:7. Not far distant was Calvary, the place of crucifixion. Upon
the path which Christ was soon to tread must fall the horror of
great darkness as He should make His soul an offering for sin. Yet
it was not the contemplation of these scenes that cast the shadow
upon Him in this hour of gladness. No foreboding of His own superhuman
anguish clouded that unselfish spirit. He wept for the doomed thousands
of Jerusalem--because of the blindness and impenitence of those
whom He came to bless and to save.
The
history of more than a thousand years of God's special favor and
guardian care, manifested to the chosen people, was open to the
eye of Jesus. There was Mount Moriah, where the son of promise,
an unresisting victim, had been bound to the altar--emblem of the
offering of the Son of God. There the covenant of blessing, the
glorious Messianic promise, had been confirmed to the father of
the faithful. Genesis 22:9, 16-18. There the flames of the sacrifice
ascending to heaven from the threshing floor of Ornan had turned
19 aside the sword of the destroying angel (1 Chronicles 21)--fitting
symbol of the Saviour's sacrifice and mediation for guilty men.
Jerusalem had been honored of God above all the earth. The Lord
had "chosen Zion," He had "desired it for His habitation." Psalm
132:13. There, for ages, holy prophets had uttered their messages
of warning. There priests had waved their censers, and the cloud
of incense, with the prayers of the worshipers, had ascended before
God. There daily the blood of slain lambs had been offered, pointing
forward to the Lamb of God. There Jehovah had revealed His presence
in the cloud of glory above the mercy seat. There rested the base
of that mystic ladder connecting earth with heaven (Genesis 28:12;
John 1:51)--that ladder upon which angels of God descended and ascended,
and which opened to the world the way into the holiest of all. Had
Israel as a nation preserved her allegiance to Heaven, Jerusalem
would have stood forever, the elect of God. Jeremiah 17:21-25. But
the history of that favored people was a record of backsliding and
rebellion. They had resisted Heaven's grace, abused their privileges,
and slighted their opportunities.
Although Israel had "mocked the messengers of God, and despised
His words, and misused His prophets" (2 Chronicles 36:16), He had
still manifested Himself to them, as "the Lord God, merciful and
gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth" (Exodus
34:6); notwithstanding repeated rejections, His mercy had continued
its pleadings. With more than a father's pitying love for the son
of his care, God had "sent to them by His messengers, rising up
betimes, and sending; because He had compassion on His people, and
on His dwelling place." 2 Chronicles 36:15. When remonstrance, entreaty,
and rebuke had failed, He sent to them the best gift of heaven;
nay, He poured out all heaven in that one Gift.
The Son of God Himself was sent to plead with the impenitent city.
It was Christ that had brought Israel as a goodly vine out of Egypt.
Psalm 80:8. His own hand had cast out the heathen before it. He
had planted it "in a very fruitful hill." His guardian care had
hedged it about. His servants had been sent to nurture it. "What
could have been done more to My vineyard," He exclaims, "that I
have not done in it?" Isaiah 5:1-4. Though when He looked that it
should bring forth grapes, it brought forth wild grapes, yet with
a still yearning hope of fruitfulness He came in person to His vineyard,
if haply it might be saved from destruction. He digged about His
vine; He pruned and cherished it. He was unwearied in His efforts
to save this vine of His own planting.
For three years the Lord of light and glory had gone in and out
among His people. He "went about doing good, and healing all that
were oppressed of the devil," binding up the brokenhearted, setting
at liberty them that were bound, restoring sight to the blind, causing
the lame to walk and the deaf to hear, cleansing the lepers, raising
the dead, and preaching the gospel to the poor. Acts 10:38; Luke
4:18; Matthew 11:5. To all classes alike was addressed the gracious
call: "Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden, and
I will give you rest." Matthew 11:28.
Though rewarded with evil for good, and hatred for His love (Psalm
109:5), He had steadfastly pursued His mission of mercy. Never were
those repelled that sought His grace. A homeless wanderer, reproach
and penury His daily lot, He lived to minister to the needs and
lighten the woes of men, to plead with them to accept the gift of
life. The waves of mercy, beaten back by those stubborn hearts,
returned in a stronger tide of pitying, inexpressible love. But
Israel had turned from her best Friend and only Helper. The pleadings
of His love had been despised, His counsels spurned, His warnings
ridiculed.
The hour of hope and pardon was fast passing; the cup of God's long-deferred
wrath was almost full. The cloud that had been gathering through
ages of apostasy and rebellion, now black with woe, was about to
burst upon a guilty people; and He who alone could save them from
their impending fate had been slighted, abused, rejected, and was
soon to be crucified. When Christ should hang upon the cross of
Calvary, Israel's day as a nation favored and blessed of God would
be ended. The loss of even one soul is a calamity infinitely outweighing
the gains and treasures of a world; but as Christ looked upon Jerusalem,
the doom of a whole city, a whole nation, was before Him--that city,
that nation, which had once been the chosen of God, His peculiar
treasure.
Prophets had wept over the apostasy of Israel and the terrible desolations
by which their sins were visited. Jeremiah wished that his eyes
were a fountain of tears, that he might weep day and night for the
slain of the daughter of his people, for the Lord's flock that was
carried away captive. Jeremiah 9:1; 13:17. What, then, was the grief
of Him whose prophetic glance took in, not years, but ages! He beheld
the destroying angel with sword uplifted against the city which
had so long been Jehovah's dwelling place. From the ridge of Olivet,
the very spot afterward occupied by Titus and his army, He looked
across the valley upon the sacred courts and porticoes, and with
tear-dimmed eyes He saw, in awful perspective, the walls surrounded
by alien hosts. He heard the tread of armies marshaling for war.
He heard the voice of mothers and children crying for bread in the
besieged city. He saw her holy and beautiful house, her palaces
and towers, given to the flames, and where once they stood, only
a heap of smoldering ruins.
Looking down the ages, He saw the covenant people scattered in every
land, "like wrecks on a desert shore." In the temporal retribution
about to fall upon her children, He saw but the first draft from
that cup of wrath which at the final judgment she must drain to
its dregs. Divine pity, yearning love, found utterance in the mournful
words: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets,
and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have
gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens
under her wings, and ye would not!" O that thou, a nation favored
above every other, hadst known the time of thy visitation, and the
things that belong unto thy peace! I have stayed the angel of justice,
I have called thee to repentance, but in vain. It is not merely
servants, delegates, and prophets, whom thou hast refused and rejected,
but the Holy One of Israel, thy Redeemer. If thou art destroyed,
thou alone art responsible. "Ye will not come to Me, that ye might
have life." Matthew 23:37; John 5:40.
Christ saw in Jerusalem a symbol of the world hardened in unbelief
and rebellion, and hastening on to meet the retributive judgments
of God. The woes of a fallen race, pressing upon His soul, forced
from His lips that exceeding bitter cry. He saw the record of sin
traced in human misery, tears, and blood; His heart was moved with
infinite pity for the afflicted and suffering ones of earth; He
yearned to relieve them all. But even His hand might not turn back
the tide of human woe; few would seek their only Source of help.
He was willing to pour out His soul unto death, to bring salvation
within their reach; but few would come to Him that they might have
life.
The
Majesty of heaven in tears! the Son of the infinite God troubled
in spirit, bowed down with anguish! The scene filled all heaven
with wonder. That scene reveals to us the exceeding sinfulness of
sin; it shows how hard a task it is, even for Infinite Power, to
save the guilty from the consequences of transgressing the law of
God. Jesus, looking down to the last generation, saw the world involved
in a deception similar to that which caused the destruction of Jerusalem.
The great sin of the Jews was their rejection of Christ; the great
sin of the Christian world would be their rejection of the law of
God, the foundation of His government in heaven and earth. The precepts
of Jehovah would be despised and set at nought. Millions in bondage
to sin, slaves of Satan, doomed to suffer the second death, would
refuse to listen to the words of truth in their day of visitation.
Terrible blindness! strange infatuation!
Two days before the Passover, when Christ had for the last time
departed from the temple, after denouncing the hypocrisy of the
Jewish rulers, He again went out with His disciples to the Mount
of Olives and seated Himself with them upon the grassy slope overlooking
the city. Once more He gazed upon its walls, its towers, and its
palaces. Once more He beheld the temple in its dazzling splendor,
a diadem of beauty crowning the sacred mount.
A thousand years before, the psalmist had magnified God's favor
to Israel in making her holy house His dwelling place: "In Salem
also is His tabernacle, and His dwelling place in Zion." He "chose
the tribe of Judah, the Mount Zion which He loved. And He built
His sanctuary like high palaces." Psalms 76:2; 78:68, 69. The first
temple had been erected during the most prosperous period of Israel's
history. Vast stores of treasure for this purpose had been collected
by King David, and the plans for its construction were made by divine
inspiration. 1 Chronicles 28:12, 19. Solomon, the wisest of Israel's
monarchs, had completed the work. This temple was the most magnificent
building which the world ever saw. Yet the Lord had declared by
the prophet Haggai, concerning the second temple: "The glory of
this latter house shall be greater than of the former." "I will
shake all nations, and the Desire of all nations shall come: and
I will fill this house with glory, saith the Lord of hosts." Haggai
2:9, 7.
After the destruction of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar it was rebuilt
about five hundred years before the birth of Christ by a people
who from a lifelong captivity had returned to a wasted and almost
deserted country. There were then among them aged men who had seen
the glory of Solomon's temple, and who wept at the foundation of
the new building, that it must be so inferior to the former. The
feeling that prevailed is forcibly described by the prophet: "Who
is left among you that saw this house in her first glory? and how
do ye see it now? is it not in your eyes in comparison of it as
nothing?" Haggai 2:3; Ezra 3:12. Then was given the promise that
the glory of this latter house should be greater than that of the
former.
But the second temple had not equaled the first in magnificence;
nor was it hallowed by those visible tokens of the divine presence
which pertained to the first temple. There was no manifestation
of supernatural power to mark its dedication. No cloud of glory
was seen to fill the newly erected sanctuary. No fire from heaven
descended to consume the sacrifice upon its altar. The Shekinah
no longer abode between the cherubim in the most holy place; the
ark, the mercy seat, and the tables of the testimony were not to
be found therein. No voice sounded from heaven to make known to
the inquiring priest the will of Jehovah.
For centuries the Jews had vainly endeavored to show wherein the
promise of God given by Haggai had been fulfilled; yet pride and
unbelief blinded their minds to the true meaning of the prophet's
words. The second temple was not honored with the cloud of Jehovah's
glory, but with the living presence of One in whom dwelt the fullness
of the Godhead bodily--who was God Himself manifest in the flesh.
The "Desire of all nations" had indeed come to His temple when the
Man of Nazareth taught and healed in the sacred courts. In the presence
of Christ, and in this only, did the second temple exceed the first
in glory. But Israel had put from her the proffered Gift of heaven.
With the humble Teacher who had that day passed out from its golden
gate, the glory had forever departed from the temple. Already were
the Saviour's words fulfilled: "Your house is left unto you desolate."
Matthew 23:38.
The
disciples had been filled with awe and wonder at Christ's prediction
of the overthrow of the temple, and they desired to understand more
fully the meaning of His words. Wealth, labor, and architectural
skill had for more than forty years been freely expended to enhance
its splendors. Herod the Great had lavished upon it both Roman wealth
and Jewish treasure, and even the emperor of the world had enriched
it with his gifts. Massive blocks of white marble, of almost fabulous
size, forwarded from Rome for this purpose, formed a part of its
structure; and to these the disciples had called the attention of
their Master, saying: "See what manner of stones and what buildings
are here!" Mark 13:1.
To these words, Jesus made the solemn and startling reply: "Verily
I say unto you, There shall not be left here one stone upon another,
that shall not be thrown down." Matthew 24:2.
With the overthrow of Jerusalem the disciples associated the events
of Christ's personal coming in temporal glory to take the throne
of universal empire, to punish the impenitent Jews, and to break
from off the nation the Roman yoke. The Lord had told them that
He would come the second time. Hence at the mention of judgments
upon Jerusalem, their minds reverted to that coming; and as they
were gathered about the Saviour upon the Mount of Olives, they asked:
"When shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of Thy coming,
and of the end of the world?" Verse 3.
The future was mercifully veiled from the disciples. Had they at
that time fully comprehend the two awful facts--the Redeemer's sufferings
and death, and the destruction of their city and temple--they would
have been overwhelmed with horror. Christ presented before them
an outline of the prominent events to take place before the close
of time. His words were not then fully understood; but their meaning
was to be unfolded as His people should need the instruction therein
given. The prophecy which He uttered was twofold in its meaning;
while foreshadowing the destruction of Jerusalem, it prefigured
also the terrors of the last great day.
Jesus declared to the listening disciples the judgments that were
to fall upon apostate Israel, and especially the retributive vengeance
that would come upon them for their rejection and crucifixion of
the Messiah. Unmistakable signs would precede the awful climax.
The dreaded hour would come suddenly and swiftly. And the Saviour
warned His followers: "When ye therefore shall see the abomination
of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy
place, (whoso readeth, let him understand:) then let them which
be in Judea flee into the mountains." Matthew 24:15, 16; Luke 21:20,
21. When the idolatrous standards of the Romans should be set up
in the holy ground, which extended some furlongs outside the city
walls, then the followers of Christ were to find safety in flight.
When the warning sign should be seen, those who would escape must
make no delay. Throughout the land of Judea, as well as in Jerusalem
itself, the signal for flight must be immediately obeyed. He who
chanced to be upon the housetop must not go down into his house,
even to save his most valued treasures. Those who were working in
the fields or vineyards must not take time to return for the outer
garment laid aside while they should be toiling in the heat of the
day. They must not hesitate a moment, lest they be involved in the
general destruction.
In the reign of Herod, Jerusalem had not only been greatly beautified,
but by the erection of towers, walls, and fortresses, adding to
the natural strength of its situation, it had been rendered apparently
impregnable. He who would at this time have foretold publicly its
destruction, would, like Noah in his day, have been called a crazed
alarmist. But Christ had said: "Heaven and earth shall pass away,
but My words shall not pass away." Matthew 24:35. Because of her
sins, wrath had been denounced against Jerusalem, and her stubborn
unbelief rendered her doom certain.
The Lord had declared by the prophet Micah: "Hear this, I pray you,
ye heads of the house of Jacob, and princes of the house of Israel,
that abhor judgment, and pervert all equity. They build up Zion
with blood, and Jerusalem with iniquity. The heads thereof judge
for reward, and the priests thereof teach for hire, and the prophets
thereof divine for money: yet will they lean upon the Lord, and
say, Is not the Lord among us? none evil can come upon us." Micah
3:9-11.
These words faithfully described the corrupt and self-righteous
inhabitants of Jerusalem. While claiming to observe rigidly the
precepts of God's law, they were transgressing all its principles.
They hated Christ because His purity and holiness revealed their
iniquity; and they accused Him of being the cause of all the troubles
which had come upon them in consequence of their sins. Though they
knew Him to be sinless, they had declared that His death was necessary
to their safety as a nation. "If we let Him thus alone," said the
Jewish leaders, "all men will believe on Him: and the Romans shall
come and take away both our place and nation." John 11:48. If Christ
were sacrificed, they might once more become a strong, united people.
Thus they reasoned, and they concurred in the decision of their
high priest, that it would be better for one man to die than for
the whole nation to perish.
Thus the Jewish leaders had built up "Zion with blood, and Jerusalem
with iniquity." Micah 3:10. And yet, while they slew their Saviour
because He reproved their sins, such was their self-righteousness
that they regarded themselves as God's favored people and expected
the Lord to deliver them from their enemies. "Therefore," continued
the prophet, "shall Zion for your sake be plowed as a field, and
Jerusalem shall become heaps, and the mountain of the house as the
high places of the forest." Verse 12.
For nearly forty years after the doom of Jerusalem had been pronounced
by Christ Himself, the Lord delayed His judgments upon the city
and the nation. Wonderful was the long-suffering of God toward the
rejectors of His gospel and the murderers of His Son. The parable
of the unfruitful tree represented God's dealings with the Jewish
nation. The command had gone forth, "Cut it down; why cumbereth
it the ground?" (Luke 13:7) but divine mercy had spared it yet a
little longer. There were still many among the Jews who were ignorant
of the character and the work of Christ. And the children had not
enjoyed the opportunities or received the light which their parents
had spurned. Through the preaching of the apostles and their associates,
God would cause light to shine upon them; they would be permitted
to see how prophecy had been fulfilled, not only in the birth and
life of Christ, but in His death and resurrection. The children
were not condemned for the sins of the parents; but when, with a
knowledge of all the light given to their parents, the children
rejected the additional light granted to themselves, they became
partakers of the parents' sins, and filled up the measure of their
iniquity.
The long-suffering of God toward Jerusalem only confirmed the Jews
in their stubborn impenitence. In their hatred and cruelty toward
the disciples of Jesus they rejected the last offer of mercy. Then
God withdrew His protection from them and removed His restraining
power from Satan and his angels, and the nation was left to the
control of the leader she had chosen. Her children had spurned the
grace of Christ, which would have enabled them to subdue their evil
impulses, and now these became the conquerors. Satan aroused the
fiercest and most debased passions of the soul. Men did not reason;
they were beyond reason--controlled by impulse and blind rage. They
became satanic in their cruelty. In the family and in the nation,
among the highest and the lowest classes alike, there was suspicion,
envy, hatred, strife, rebellion, murder. There was no safety anywhere.
Friends and kindred betrayed one another. Parents slew their children,
and children their parents. The rulers of the people had no power
to rule themselves. Uncontrolled passions made them tyrants. The
Jews had accepted false testimony to condemn the innocent Son of
God. Now false accusations made their own lives uncertain. By their
actions they had long been saying: "Cause the Holy One of Israel
to cease from before us." Isaiah 30:11. Now their desire was granted.
The fear of God no longer disturbed them. Satan was at the head
of the nation, and the highest civil and religious authorities were
under his sway.
The leaders of the opposing factions at times united to plunder
and torture their wretched victims, and again they fell upon each
other's forces and slaughtered without mercy. Even the sanctity
of the temple could not restrain their horrible ferocity. The worshipers
were stricken down before the altar, and the sanctuary was polluted
with the bodies of the slain. Yet in their blind and blasphemous
presumption the instigators of this hellish work publicly declared
that they had no fear that Jerusalem would be destroyed, for it
was God's own city. To establish their power more firmly, they bribed
false prophets to proclaim, even while Roman legions were besieging
the temple, that the people were to wait for deliverance from God.
To the last, multitudes held fast to the belief that the Most High
would interpose for the defeat of their adversaries. But Israel
had spurned the divine protection, and now she had no defense. Unhappy
Jerusalem! rent by internal dissensions, the blood of her children
slain by one another's hands crimsoning her streets, while alien
armies beat down her fortifications and slew her men of war!
All the predictions given by Christ concerning the destruction of
Jerusalem were fulfilled to the letter. The Jews experienced the
truth of His words of warning: "With what measure ye mete, it shall
be measured to you again." Matthew 7:2.
Signs and wonders appeared, foreboding disaster and doom. In the
midst of the night an unnatural light shone over the temple and
the altar. Upon the clouds at sunset were pictured chariots and
men of war gathering for battle. The priests ministering by night
in the sanctuary were terrified by mysterious sounds; the earth
trembled, and a multitude of voices were heard crying: "Let us depart
hence." The great eastern gate, which was so heavy that it could
hardly be shut by a score of men, and which was secured by immense
bars of iron fastened deep in the pavement of solid stone, opened
at midnight, without visible agency.--Milman, The History of the
Jews, book 13.
For seven years a man continued to go up and down the streets of
Jerusalem, declaring the woes that were to come upon the city. By
day and by night he chanted the wild dirge: "A voice from the east!
a voice from the west! a voice from the four winds! a voice against
Jerusalem and against the temple! a voice against the bridegrooms
and the brides! a voice against the whole people!"--Ibid. This strange
being was imprisoned and scourged, but no complaint escaped his
lips. To insult and abuse he answered only: "Woe, woe to Jerusalem!"
"woe, woe to the inhabitants thereof!" His warning cry ceased not
until he was slain in the siege he had foretold.
Not one Christian perished in the destruction of Jerusalem. Christ
had given His disciples warning, and all who believed His words
watched for the promised sign. "When ye shall see Jerusalem compassed
with armies," said Jesus, "then know that the desolation thereof
is nigh. Then let them which are in Judea flee to the mountains;
and let them which are in the midst of it depart out." Luke 21:20,
21. After the Romans under Cestius had surrounded the city, they
unexpectedly abandoned the siege when everything seemed favorable
for an immediate attack. The besieged, despairing of successful
resistance, were on the point of surrender, when the Roman general
withdrew his forces without the least apparent reason. But God's
merciful providence was directing events for the good of His own
people. The promised sign had been given to the waiting Christians,
and now an opportunity was offered for all who would, to obey the
Saviour's warning. Events were so overruled that neither Jews nor
Romans should hinder the flight of the Christians. Upon the retreat
of Cestius, the Jews, sallying from Jerusalem, pursued after his
retiring army; and while both forces were thus fully engaged, the
Christians had an opportunity to leave the city. At this time the
country also had been cleared of enemies who might have endeavored
to intercept them. At the time of the siege, the Jews were assembled
at Jerusalem to keep the Feast of Tabernacles, and thus the Christians
throughout the land were able to make their escape unmolested. Without
delay they fled to a place of safety--the city of Pella, in the
land of Perea, beyond Jordan.
The Jewish forces, pursuing after Cestius and his army, fell upon
their rear with such fierceness as to threaten them with total destruction.
It was with great difficulty that the Romans succeeded in making
their retreat. The Jews escaped almost without loss, and with their
spoils returned in triumph to Jerusalem. Yet this apparent success
brought them only evil. It inspired them with that spirit of stubborn
resistance to the Romans which speedily brought unutterable woe
upon the doomed city.
Terrible were the calamities that fell upon Jerusalem when the siege
was resumed by Titus. The city was invested at the time of the Passover,
when millions of Jews were assembled within its walls. Their stores
of provision, which if carefully preserved would have supplied the
inhabitants for years, had previously been destroyed through the
jealousy and revenge of the contending factions, and now all the
horrors of starvation were experienced. A measure of wheat was sold
for a talent. So fierce were the pangs of hunger that men would
gnaw the leather of their belts and sandals and the covering of
their shields. Great numbers of the people would steal out at night
to gather wild plants growing outside the city walls, though many
were seized and put to death with cruel torture, and often those
who returned in safety were robbed of what they had gleaned at so
great peril. The most inhuman tortures were inflicted by those in
power, to force from the want-stricken people the last scanty supplies
which they might have concealed. And these cruelties were not infrequently
practiced by men who were themselves well fed, and who were merely
desirous of laying up a store of provision for the future.
Thousands perished from famine and pestilence. Natural affection
seemed to have been destroyed. Husbands robbed their wives, and
wives their husbands. Children would be seen snatching the food
from the mouths of their aged parents. The question of the prophet,
"Can a woman forget her sucking child?" received the answer within
the walls of that doomed city: "The hands of the pitiful women have
sodden their own children: they were their meat in the destruction
of the daughter of my people." Isaiah 49:15; Lamentations 4:10.
Again was fulfilled the warning prophecy given fourteen centuries
before: "The tender and delicate woman among you, which would not
adventure to set the sole of her foot upon the ground for delicateness
and tenderness, her eye shall be evil toward the husband of her
bosom, and toward her son, and toward her daughter, . . . and toward
her children which she shall bear: for she shall eat them for want
of all things secretly in the siege and straitness, wherewith thine
enemy shall distress thee in thy gates." Deuteronomy 28:56, 57.
The Roman leaders endeavored to strike terror to the Jews and thus
cause them to surrender. Those prisoners who resisted when taken,
were scourged, tortured, and crucified before the wall of the city.
Hundreds were daily put to death in this manner, and the dreadful
work continued until, along the Valley of Jehoshaphat and at Calvary,
crosses were erected in so great numbers that there was scarcely
room to move among them. So terribly was visited that awful imprecation
uttered before the judgment seat of Pilate: "His blood be on us,
and on our children." Matthew 27:25.
Titus would willingly have put an end to the fearful scene, and
thus have spared Jerusalem the full measure of her doom. He was
filled with horror as he saw the bodies of the dead lying in heaps
in the valleys. Like one entranced, he looked from the crest of
Olivet upon the magnificent temple and gave command that not one
stone of it be touched. Before attempting to gain possession of
this stronghold, he made an earnest appeal to the Jewish leaders
not to force him to defile the sacred place with blood. If they
would come forth and fight in any other place, no Roman should violate
the sanctity of the temple. Josephus himself, in a most eloquent
appeal, entreated them to surrender, to save themselves, their city,
and their place of worship. But his words were answered with bitter
curses. Darts were hurled at him, their last human mediator, as
he stood pleading with them. The Jews had rejected the entreaties
of the Son of God, and now expostulation and entreaty only made
them more determined to resist to the last. In vain were the efforts
of Titus to save the temple; One greater than he had declared that
not one stone was to be left upon another.
The blind obstinacy of the Jewish leaders, and the detestable crimes
perpetrated within the besieged city, excited the horror and indignation
of the Romans, and Titus at last decided to take the temple by storm.
He determined, however, that if possible it should be saved from
destruction. But his commands were disregarded. After he had retired
to his tent at night, the Jews, sallying from the temple, attacked
the soldiers without. In the struggle, a firebrand was flung by
a soldier through an opening in the porch, and immediately the cedar-lined
chambers about the holy house were in a blaze. Titus rushed to the
place, followed by his generals and legionaries, and commanded the
soldiers to quench the flames. His words were unheeded. In their
fury the soldiers hurled blazing brands into the chambers adjoining
the temple, and then with their swords they slaughtered in great
numbers those who had found shelter there. Blood flowed down the
temple steps like water. Thousands upon thousands of Jews perished.
Above the sound of battle, voices were heard shouting: "Ichabod!"--the
glory is departed.
"Titus found it impossible to check the rage of the soldiery; he
entered with his officers, and surveyed the interior of the sacred
edifice. The splendor filled them with wonder; and as the flames
had not yet penetrated to the holy place, he made a last effort
to save it, and springing forth, again exhorted the soldiers to
stay the progress of the conflagration. The centurion Liberalis
endeavored to force obedience with his staff of office; but even
respect for the emperor gave way to the furious animosity against
the Jews, to the fierce excitement of battle, and to the insatiable
hope of plunder. The soldiers saw everything around them radiant
with gold, which shone dazzlingly in the wild light of the flames;
they supposed that incalculable treasures were laid up in the sanctuary.
A soldier, unperceived, thrust a lighted torch between the hinges
of the door: the whole building was in flames in an instant. The
blinding smoke and fire forced the officers to retreat, and the
noble edifice was left to its fate.
"It was an appalling spectacle to the Roman--what was it to the
Jew? The whole summit of the hill which commanded the city, blazed
like a volcano. One after another the buildings fell in, with a
tremendous crash, and were swallowed up in the fiery abyss. The
roofs of cedar were like sheets of flame; the gilded pinnacles shone
like spikes of red light; the gate towers sent up tall columns of
flame and smoke. The neighboring hills were lighted up; and dark
groups of people were seen watching in horrible anxiety the progress
of the destruction: the walls and heights of the upper city were
crowded with faces, some pale with the agony of despair, others
scowling unavailing vengeance. The shouts of the Roman soldiery
as they ran to and fro, and the howlings of the insurgents who were
perishing in the flames, mingled with the roaring of the conflagration
and the thundering sound of falling timbers. The echoes of the mountains
replied or brought back the shrieks of the people on the heights;
all along the walls resounded screams and wailings; men who were
expiring with famine rallied their remaining strength to utter a
cry of anguish and desolation.
"The slaughter within was even more dreadful than the spectacle
from without. Men and women, old and young, insurgents and priests,
those who fought and those who entreated mercy, were hewn down in
indiscriminate carnage. The number of the slain exceeded that of
the slayers. The legionaries had to clamber over heaps of dead to
carry on the work of extermination."--Milman, The History of the
Jews, book 16.
After the destruction of the temple, the whole city soon fell into
the hands of the Romans. The leaders of the Jews forsook their impregnable
towers, and Titus found them solitary. He gazed upon them with amazement,
and declared that God had given them into his hands; for no engines,
however powerful, could have prevailed against those stupendous
battlements. Both the city and the temple were razed to their foundations,
and the ground upon which the holy house had stood was "plowed like
a field." Jeremiah 26:18. In the siege and the slaughter that followed,
more than a million of the people perished; the survivors were carried
away as captives, sold as slaves, dragged to Rome to grace the conqueror's
triumph, thrown to wild beasts in the amphitheaters, or scattered
as homeless wanderers throughout the earth.
The Jews had forged their own fetters; they had filled for themselves
the cup of vengeance. In the utter destruction that befell them
as a nation, and in all the woes that followed them in their dispersion,
they were but reaping the harvest which their own hands had sown.
Says the prophet: "O Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself;" "for
thou hast fallen by thine iniquity." Hosea 13:9; 14:1. Their sufferings
are often represented as a punishment visited upon them by the direct
decree of God. It is thus that the great deceiver seeks to conceal
his own work. By stubborn rejection of divine love and mercy, the
Jews had caused the protection of God to be withdrawn from them,
and Satan was permitted to rule them according to his will. The
horrible cruelties enacted in the destruction of Jerusalem are a
demonstration of Satan's vindictive power over those who yield to
his control.
We cannot know how much we owe to Christ for the peace and protection
which we enjoy. It is the restraining power of God that prevents
mankind from passing fully under the control of Satan. The disobedient
and unthankful have great reason for gratitude for God's mercy and
long-suffering in holding in check the cruel, malignant power of
the evil one. But when men pass the limits of divine forbearance,
that restraint is removed. God does not stand toward the sinner
as an executioner of the sentence against transgression; but He
leaves the rejectors of His mercy to themselves, to reap that which
they have sown. Every ray of light rejected, every warning despised
or unheeded, every passion indulged, every transgression of the
law of God, is a seed sown which yields its unfailing harvest. The
Spirit of God, persistently resisted, is at last withdrawn from
the sinner, and then there is left no power to control the evil
passions of the soul, and no protection from the malice and enmity
of Satan. The destruction of Jerusalem is a fearful and solemn warning
to all who are trifling with the offers of divine grace and resisting
the pleadings of divine mercy. Never was there given a more decisive
testimony to God's hatred of sin and to the certain punishment that
will fall upon the guilty.
The Saviour's prophecy concerning the visitation of judgments upon
Jerusalem is to have another fulfillment, of which that terrible
desolation was but a faint shadow. In the fate of the chosen city
we may behold the doom of a world that has rejected God's mercy
and trampled upon His law. Dark are the records of human misery
that earth has witnessed during its long centuries of crime. The
heart sickens, and the mind grows faint in contemplation. Terrible
have been the results of rejecting the authority of Heaven. But
a scene yet darker is presented in the revelations of the future.
The records of the past,--the long procession of tumults, conflicts,
and revolutions, the "battle of the warrior . . . with confused
noise, and garments rolled in blood" (Isaiah 9:5),--what are these,
in contrast with the terrors of that day when the restraining Spirit
of God shall be wholly withdrawn from the wicked, no longer to hold
in check the outburst of human passion and satanic wrath! The world
will then behold, as never before, the results of Satan's rule.
But in that day, as in the time of Jerusalem's destruction, God's
people will be delivered, everyone that shall be found written among
the living. Isaiah 4:3. Christ has declared that He will come the
second time to gather His faithful ones to Himself: "Then shall
all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of
man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. And
He shall send His angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they
shall gather together His elect from the four winds, from one end
of heaven to the other." Matthew 24:30, 31. Then shall they that
obey not the gospel be consumed with the spirit of His mouth and
be destroyed with the brightness of His coming. 2 Thessalonians
2:8. Like Israel of old the wicked destroy themselves; they fall
by their iniquity. By a life of sin, they have placed themselves
so out of harmony with God, their natures have become so debased
with evil, that the manifestation of His glory is to them a consuming
fire.
Let men beware lest they neglect the lesson conveyed to them in
the words of Christ. As He warned His disciples of Jerusalem's destruction,
giving them a sign of the approaching ruin, that they might make
their escape; so He has warned the world of the day of final destruction
and has given them tokens of its approach, that all who will may
flee from the wrath to come. Jesus declares: "There shall be signs
in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth
distress of nations." Luke 21:25; Matthew 24:29; Mark 13:24-26;
Revelation 6:12-17. Those who behold these harbingers of His coming
are to "know that it is near, even at the doors." Matthew 24:33.
"Watch ye therefore," are His words of admonition. Mark 13:35. They
that heed the warning shall not be left in darkness, that that day
should overtake them unawares. But to them that will not watch,
"the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night." 1 Thessalonians
5:2-5.
The
world is no more ready to credit the message for this time (Revelation
14:6-12) than were the Jews to receive the Saviour's warning concerning
Jerusalem. Come when it may, the day of God will come unawares to
the ungodly. When life is going on in its unvarying round; when
men are absorbed in pleasure, in business, in traffic, in money-making;
when religious leaders are magnifying the world's progress and enlightenment,
and the people are lulled in a false security--then, as the midnight
thief steals within the unguarded dwelling, so shall sudden destruction
come upon the careless and ungodly, "and they shall not escape."
Verse 3.
To read this in its original source see chapter #1 of The
Great Controversy between Christ and Satan (a .pdf
viewer is required)
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Century of The Sabbath in History
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