POMPEY AND THE JEWS
Max R. Miller
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, or Pompey the Great (106-48 B.C.) was one of the most
distinguished of many of the great Roman soldiers and statesmen. His military
exercise, his eloquent and persuasive oratory and his strict honor and personal
integrity marked him as a man destined to success and to be joyously received
by the people.
Pompey had a meteoric rise to fame and glory. He was a general of the Army at
the age of twenty-three. He was amoral, a pagan far removed from Divine law.
He married five times, casting aside a wife, or taking a wife, purely as political
expediency demanded. He warred against nations from political motivation and
often for the booty of victory. It was his vanity that finally drove him to
assault Julius Caesar at Pharsalus and meet defeat-a defeat he expected.
Pompey had a day with the Jews. It was little more than an insignificant incident
in the long and bloody career of the noble Roman. To the Jews, Pompey's invasion
was an insult to them and their God and the end of Israel's independence. One
turns to the Apocryphal The Books of the Maccabees and Josephus' The Wars of
the Jews and his Antiquities of the Jews for the most complete record of the
fall of Judah. Josephus, Jewish historian, records the assault, the siege itself,
and the destruction of the city of Jerusalem.
Israel had returned to their homeland after seventy years of Babylonian bondage.
Under Zerubabbel, Ezra and Nehemiah, a new nation was formed. The Temple was
rebuilt, the law was restored to the people and national glory was in the offing.
But-again an alien nation, Syria, floods her borders and subjugates the land.
But there were saviors in Israel. The Maccabees arose to meet the Syrian's threats
and secure freedom and liberty to Israel. The age of the Maccabees was the most
brilliant political period for Judah since the days of David and Solomon.
Antiochus Epiphanes IV, Seleucid, king of the Hellenistic Syrian kingdom reigned
(175-164 B.C.), encouraged Greek culture and sought to impose it in his domain.
In this, his purpose was to destroy the religion of the Jews. He sent pagan
priests to the village of Modin to offer polluting sacrifices on the altar of
God. The old priest Maccabeus Mattathias arose on this occasion, slew the first
apostate Jew that dared approach the idolatrous altar, and then, turning upon
the king's commissioner, dispatched him and all his attendants. Then he and
his family fled to the hills and began a long and bloody war with superior forces
of the Syrians. This was the beginning of the Wars of the Maccabees.
Mattathias had five sons who, with their followers, came to be known as the
Maccabees. One after another they led Israel in her struggles for independence.
First old Mattathias, then Judas, Jonathan, and finally Simon the Jewel (167-135
B. C.), each gives their life for the cause of Judah. On Simon's assassination
his son John Hyrcanus succeeded him. He then passed the rulership to his Hellenistic
son, Aristobulus (104-103 B. C.) who was the first member of the Hasmonaean
family to take the title "king." Aristobulus' widow, Salome Alexandra,
then married Aristobulus' half-brother, Alexander Jannaeus, thus enabling him
to take his late brother's place as king and high priest. Under this cruel and
treacherous ruler Judah had, when he died in 76 B.C., won control of the territories
claimed in earlier days by the twelve tribes of Israel. At his death, he bequeathed
his kingdom not to a son but to his wife, Salome Alexandra, who began to reign
in her sixty-fourth year and reigned well until her death nine years later.
Salome had borne two sons to Alexander Jannaeus, Hycranus and Aristobulus. Alexander
names Aristobulus, the younger of the two, as heir apparent to his throne. After
Alexander's death Salome appointed Hycranus the high priest. Aristobulus becomes
a strong right arm in the administration of the Queen's affairs. He, on prodding
of certain factions in Judah, pressured Salome to surrender to him the regal
power of the kingdom. Hyrcanus was the legal heir to the throne. Aristobulus
feared the mild Hyrcanus could not withstand the intimidation's of the Pharisees.
Aristobulus began to gather support from men of prominence and power throughout
Judah.
With the queen's death, Hyrcanus and Aristobulus warred with each other. Hyrcanus
soon surrendered to him the kingship of the nation. After a time, a rich and
influential Idumean, Antipater, a friend of Hyrcanus and at the same time at
enmity with Aristobulus, persuaded Hyrcanus that his brother sought his life
and that he should go with him to Aretas, the king of Arabia, for assistance
in overcoming Aristobulus. The newly formed alliance proceeded against Aristobulus
and quickly reduced his forces with Aristobulus shutting himself in the Temple
with only the priests and a few others for support. In this time (c. 66-65 B.C.)
Asia Minor and Armenia had submitted to Pompey and Roman rule. The last remnant
of Selecuid power had collapsed in Syria. Pompey sends his lieutenant, Scaurus,
to secure the area and add it to Rome's spreading empire. Scaurus, arriving
in Damascus, learns of civil strife at Jerusalem and inquires as how he may
take advantage of it for Rome's glory.
Both Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, neither being able to stabilize their power and
position, seek the favors of Scaurus. Scaurus favored Aristobulus, took his
tribute money, and expelled Aretas and his Arabian soldiers from Judaea. Quickly
Aristobulus gathered an army and marched on the retreating army of Aretas. The
balance of power between the brothers had shifted again.
Pompey came to Damascus. Each of the brothers, Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, appeared
before Pompey, seeking his favors. The irreconcilable brothers were told to
live in quietness until he came into Judaea and then would he make his judgments
of their affairs. Aristobulus, impatient, musters an army and marched into Judaea.
Pompey was angered by the obstinate disposition of Aristobulus and put him in
prison. Aristobulus' party within the walled city of Jerusalem chose to close
the gates to Pompey and resist him. However, the party of Hyrcanus favored Pompey's
intercession and opened the city to him as well as the king's palace. Pompey,
with little difficulty, gained the lower city. He lay siege to the Temple. The
siege proceeded with patience. Earthworks were raised; a path was laid to bring
in battening rams from Tyre. Pompey took exceptional advantages of the Jewish
custom of keeping the Sabbath day holy. With "the ox in the ditch,"
Israel rested on the seventh day and Rome built the assault approach to the
city. The battering machine quickly broke open the great towers and a portion
of the fortifications. Roman legionaries pour through the breech. A great slaughter
followed with the Romans killing many and also Jews, in panic, falling on one
another. Some of the Jews committed suicide by jumping from the walls and towers.
Others fled to their houses and burned them and themselves. Josephus credits
12,000 Jews to the Roman sword and spear. The Temple fell on a Sabbath day while
the priests faithfully performed their services, being distracted not at all
by heathen Gentiles or by the blood dripping swords by which they would soon
perish. Again, the streets of Jerusalem swirled in the blood of her citizens-and
that not for the last time.
Pompey surveys his conquest: another city in a far off place; the dead and dying
litter the ground; heroic deeds done by both defender and assailant, again he
experiences the stillness and quietness that follows the clash of battle. Pompey's
gaze rested on the Holy Temple. His curiosity led him to enter into the very
Holy of Holies where no Gentile had ever stood. He was impressed by its simplicity.
There were no icons of either gods, spirits or angels. There was the golden
table for the shewbread, the candlestick, vessels for sacred services, spices
and two thousand
talents of money. Pompey touched nothing and defiled only the ground on which
he stood. He went away wondering at a religion which had no visible God.
Pompey proved himself to be a gracious conqueror and reconciled the people to
himself more so by benevolence than by terror. The day after the Temple fell
into his hands, he provided means for its purification and established Hyrcanus
as the high priest. Jerusalem, once again, in 63 B.C., had fallen to her enemy.
The discord between the brothers Hyrcanus II and Aristobulus II cost the suffering
Hebrews much more than 12,000 dead. Pompey exacted an immediate indemnity of
100,000 talents ($36,000,000). All the conquests of the Hasmoneans were transferred
from the Judaeans to Rome. The independent monarchy was ended, and Judea became
a part of the Roman province of her age-old enemy, Syria. Aristobulus and his
family soon found themselves captives, marching in Pompey's victory parade at
Rome.
Pompey had brought an end to the glory of Israel. Her glory was never in herself
but had always been in God. Now, for future glory, she must await her King,
the Christ of God. He would give her glory eternal. But, alas, "He came
unto his own, and His own received Him not." He was despised and rejected
and the glory of God in Israel departed from them forever. "Behold, your
house is left unto you desolate" (Matthew 23:38).-10726 Hwy. 59 W., Burlison,
TN 38015