The end of Jewish independence; Herod the Great
When the Roman general,
Pompey, set out to conquer what had once been the empires of the descendants of
Alexander the Great, he found the Jewish kingdom an easy prey in 63 B.C. A
vicious power struggle was going on between members of the ruling family and
between the Sadducees and Pharisees. Loyalties in Jerusalem were completely
divided and one group of Jews opened the city gates to the Roman army while
another group barricaded themselves in the Temple area and prepared to fight
the Romans. The Roman army defeated the Jews who had tried to resist and massacred
a large number of the people of Jerusalem. Pompey aroused intense anger in the
Jews by entering the Temple, even going into the Holy of Holies. Pompey
incorporated what had been the Jewish kingdom into a new Roman province of
Syria. He appointed a new Jewish High Priest, a man who was willing to
cooperate with Romans, and gave him the title of 'ethnarch', meaning 'ruler of
t people'. The High Priest was seen by the Romans as the ruler of a religious
sect and personally responsible to the Roman governor for law a order in that
sect. The Jews had to pay annual tax or tribute to the Roman and this was the
responsibility of the High Priest. The Romans did n interfere further in Jewish
life or religion but the Jews were very unhappy about having a High Priest
appointed by their new pagan conquerors once again the Temple was the centre of
political tensions.
In 40 B.C. the High Priest
fell from power and the Romans appointed the man to whom very unflattering references
are made in the second chapter of the gospel of Matthew, to rule over the Jews.
Herod, later called 'The Great', was made a vassal king over the Jewish homeland.
He was an Idumaean by race, a follower of the externals of the Jewish religion,
in cultural sympathies a Greek and a political ally of the Romans Herod was a
descendant of the Idumaeans whose territory had be captured by the descendants
of Simon and who had been forced to accept the Jewish religion and customs. He
was a man of strong personality ambitious and unscrupulous, cruel and ruthless
to his opponents. The area over which he was given authority to rule by the
Romans stretched nearly to Damascus in the north and down to the Egyptian
border in the south. He showed his cruel strength after Rome had named him as
the new ruler of the Jews by fighting a hard and ruthless war to take
possession of his new kingdom where a nephew of the deposed Hi Priest had
seized power without the approval of Rome. Herod, aided by a Roman army, was
forced to besiege Jerusalem and a great massacre of Jews resulted. It was not
until 37 B.C. that Herod was master of his new kingdom but he kept his grip on
the Jews until his death in 4 B.C.
He was hated by the Jews who
despised him because he was not a Jew by race and feared him because of his
ruthlessness. But Herod retained the backing of Rome and set out to try to
placate his subjects in various ways. As time went on, he set up an
administrative bureaucracy in which he placed Jews who stood to gain in wealth
and power from their new positions. He made concessions to the Pharisees,
respecting their religious sensitivity even if this was politically motivated
on his part, to keep peace in the community. He deliberately weakened the power
0, those who had used the Temple and its priesthood to gain political ends: he
made himself responsible for appointing the High Priest who was then under the
king's control. Herod himself did not risk trying to take over the High
Priesthood because he was not a Jew by birth; such a step would have resulted
in a fury of opposition from the Jews.
In the second half of his
reign, Herod was able to reduce the burden of taxation in the country and also
established a standing army to secure the safety of the kingdom; but perhaps the
reason for his being remembered in history as 'The Great' is his enormous
building programme which went on for many years and transformed not only
Jerusalem but many other places in the kingdom. He built entire new cities in
the Greek style. In city after city, there were built theatres, stadiums, gymnasiums,
expansive market places, public baths and elegant wide streets lined with
ornamental columns. He built new fortresses around the borders of his kingdom.
He transformed a small coastal town into a fine new port and the new
administrative centre of Caesarea. He rebuilt, the ancient ruined city of
Samaria, putting up magnificent buildings,• some of the ruins of which can
still be seen today. But the climax of his great programme was seen in
Jerusalem. Not only did he build two great palaces which were strongly
fortified, but he decided that a total reconstruction of the Temple was needed,
by which great building he would always be remembered. He went to great trouble
to avoid offending the Jews during the rebuilding; a thousand priests were
specially trained as masons and carpenters and everything possible was done to
avoid accidental desecration of the holy site. The accounts which have come
down to us of the reconstructed Temple describe a marvelous place, built on its
hill site and dominating the city. It was planned so that the Temple house
itself was approached through great courtyards. The stone and the timber
selected were of the best, chosen for their beauty; the great gates were
covered in gold and silver, which was also used lavishly for decoration. The
pilgrim approaching the city gazed in astonishment at the great white and
golden structure dominating the Temple hill. In Luke 21:5, we read this, 'Some
of the disciples were talking about the Temple, how beautiful it looked with
its fine stones and the gifts offered to God.' Herod's plan was in fact so
ambitious that the rebuilding of the Temple continued long after his lifetime,
until A.D. 63.
But Herod did not only
rebuild the Jewish Temple, he also built temples to pagan gods when it seemed
appropriate to do so. He never overlooked the necessity of pleasing his Roman
masters and amongst the other temples he built there was one, at Samaria,
dedicated to the Roman Emperor Augustus (Luke 2: I). The ruins are still there today.
Ruins of the temple dedicated
to Emperor Augustus
When Herod died in 4 B.C.
the Jews were glad, in spite of the marvelous Temple Herod had built them and
in spite of the stability that had been enforced in his kingdom. The centre of
Herod's interests had preservation of his own power and advancement of his own ambition
he was a willing vassal of Rome because of what he could gain from Underneath
the outward peace of the Jewish homeland there was sub merged opposition to
Rome and smoldering discontent.