The Historical Situation
1. When Tacitus, the Roman historian,
records the attempt of Nero to charge the Christians
with the burning of Rome, he has patience for no more
than the cursory remark that the sect originated with
a Jew who had been put to death in Judea during the
reign of Tiberius. This province was small and
despised, and Tacitus could account for the influence
of the sect which sprang thence only by the fact that
all that was infamous and abominable flowed into Rome.
The Roman’s scornful judgment failed to grasp
the nature and power of the movement whose unpopularity
invited Nero’s lying accusation, yet it emphasizes
the significance of him who did “not strive,
nor cry, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street,”
whose influence, nevertheless, was working as leaven
throughout the empire.
2. Palestine was not under immediate
Roman rule when Jesus was born. Herod the Great
was drawing near the close of the long reign during
which, owing to his skill in securing Roman favor,
he had tyrannized over his unwilling people.
His claim was that of an adventurer who had power to
succeed, even as his method had been that of a suspicious
tyrant, who murdered right and left, lest one of the
many with better right than he should rise to dispute
with him his throne. When Herod died, his kingdom
was divided into three parts, and Rome asserted a
fuller sovereignty, allowing none of his sons to take
his royal title. Herod’s successors ruled
with a measure of independence, however, and followed
many of their father’s ways, though none of
them had his ability. The best of them was Philip,
who had the territory farthest from Jerusalem, and
least related to Jewish life. He ruled over Iturea
and Trachonitis, the country to the north and east
of the Sea of Galilee, having his capital at Caesarea
Philippi, a city built and named by him on the site
of an older town near the sources of the Jordan.
He also rebuilt the city of Bethsaida, at the point
where the Jordan flows into the Sea of Galilee, calling
it Julias, after the daughter of Augustus. Philip
enters the story of the life of Jesus only as the
ruler of these towns and the intervening region, and
as husband of Salome, the daughter of Herodias.
Living far from Jerusalem and the Jewish people, he
abandoned even the show of Judaism which characterized
his father, and lived as a frank heathen in his heathen
capital.
3. The other two who inherited
Herod’s dominion were brothers, Archelaus and
Antipas, sons of Malthace, one of Herod’s many
wives. Archelaus had been designated king by
Herod, with Judea, Samaria, and Idumea as his kingdom;
but the emperor allowed him only the territory, with
the title ethnarch. Antipas was named a tetrarch
by Herod, and his territory was Galilee and the land
east of the Jordan to the southward of the Sea of
Galilee, called Perea. Antipas was the Herod under
whose sway Jesus lived in Galilee, and who executed
John the Baptist. He was a man of passionate
temper, with the pride and love of luxury of his father.
Having Jews to govern, he held, as his father had
done, to a show of Judaism, though at heart he was
as much of a pagan as Philip. He, too, loved building,
and Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee was built by him
for his capital. His unscrupulous tyranny and
his gross disregard of common righteousness appear
in his relations with John the Baptist and with Herodias,
his paramour. Jesus described him well as “that
fox” (Luke xii, for he was sly, and worked
often by indirection. While his father had energy
and ability which command a sort of admiration, Antipas
was not only bad but weak.
4. Both Philip and Antipas reigned
until after the death of Jesus, Philip dying in A.D.
34, and Antipas being deposed several years later,
probably in 39. Archelaus had a much shorter
rule, for he was deposed in A.D. 6, having been accused
by the Jews of unbearable barbarity and tyranny, a
charge in which Antipas and Philip joined. The
territory of Archelaus was then made an imperial province
of the second grade, ruled by a procurator appointed
from among the Roman knights. In provinces under
an imperial legate (propraetor) the procurator was
an officer for the administration of the revenues;
in provinces of the rank of Judea he was, however,
the representative of the emperor in all the prerogatives
of government, having command of the army, and being
the final resort in legal procedure, as well as supervising
the collection of the customs and taxes. Very
little is known of the procurators appointed after
the deposition of Archelaus, until Tiberius sent Pontius
Pilate in A.D. 26. He held office until he was
deposed in 36. Josephus gives several examples
of his wanton disregard of Jewish prejudice, and of
his extreme cruelty. His conduct at the trial
of Jesus was remarkably gentle and judicial in comparison
with other acts recorded of his government; yet the
fear of trial at Rome, which finally induced him to
give Jesus over to be crucified, was thoroughly characteristic;
in fact, his downfall resulted from a complaint lodged
against him by certain Samaritans whom he had cruelly
punished for a Messianic uprising.
5. There were two sorts of Roman
taxes in Judea: direct, which were collected
by salaried officials; and customs, which were farmed
out to the highest bidder. The direct taxes consisted
of a land tax and a poll tax, in the collection of
which the procurator made use of the local Jewish
courts; the customs consisted of various duties assessed
on exports, and they were gathered by representatives
of men who had bought the right to collect these dues.
The chiefs as well as their underlings are called
publicans in our New Testament, although the name strictly
applies only to the chiefs. These tax-gatherers,
small and great, were everywhere despised and execrated,
because, in addition to their subserviency to a hated
government, they had a reputation, usually deserved,
for all sorts of extortion. Because of this evil
repute they were commonly drawn from the unscrupulous
among the people, so that the frequent coupling of
publicans and sinners in the gospels probably rested
on fact as much as on prejudice.
6. In Samaria and Judea soldiers
were under the command of the procurator; they took
orders from the tetrarch, in Galilee and Perea.
The garrison of Jerusalem consisted of one Roman cohort from
five to six hundred men which was reinforced
at the time of the principal feasts. These and
the other forces at the disposal of the procurator
were probably recruited from the country itself, largely
from among the Samaritans. The centurion of Capernaum
(Matt. vii; Luke vi-5) was an officer in the
army of Antipas, who, however, doubtless organized
his army on the Roman pattern, with officers who had
had their training with the imperial forces.
7. The administration of justice
in Samaria and Judea was theoretically in the hands
of the procurator; practically, however, it was left
with the Jewish courts, either the local councils
or the great sanhédrin at Jerusalem. This
last body consisted of seventy-one “elders.”
Its president was the high-priest, and its members
were drawn in large degree from the most prominent
representatives of the priestly aristocracy. The
scribes, however, had a controlling influence because
of the reverence in which the multitude held them.
The sanhédrin of Jerusalem had jurisdiction only
within the province of Judea, where it tried all kinds
of offences; its judgment was final, except in capital
cases, when it had to yield to the procurator, who
alone could sentence to death. It had great influence
also in Galilee, and among Jews everywhere, but this
was due to the regard all Jews had for the holy city.
It was, in fact, a sort of Jewish senate, which took
cognizance of everything that seemed to affect the
Jewish interests. In Galilee and Perea, Antipas
held in his hands the judicial as well as the military
and financial administration.
8. To the majority of the priests
religion had become chiefly a form. They represented
the worldly party among the Jews. Since the days
of the priest-princes who ruled in Jerusalem after
the return from the exile, they had constituted the
Jewish aristocracy, and held most of the wealth of
the people. It was to their interest to maintain
the ritual and the traditional customs, and they were
proud of their Jewish heritage; of genuine interest
in religion, however, they had little. This secular
priestly party was called the Sadducees, probably from
Zadok, the high-priest in Solomon’s time.
What theology the Sadducees had was for the most part
reactionary and negative. They were opposed to
the more earnest spirit and new thought of the scribes,
and naturally produced some champions who argued for
their theological position; but the mass of them cared
for other things.
9. The leaders of the popular
thought, on the other hand, were chiefly noted for
their religious zeal and theological acumen. They
represented the outgrowth of that spirit which in
the Maccabean time had risked all to defend the sanctity
of the temple and the right of God’s people to
worship him according to his law. They were known
as Pharisees, because, as the name ("separated”)
indicates, they insisted on the separation of the
people of God from all the défilements and snares
of the heathen life round about them. The Pharisees
constituted a fraternity devoted to the scrupulous
observance of law and tradition in all the concerns
of daily life. They were specialists in religion,
and were the ideal representatives of Judaism.
Their distinguishing characteristic was reverence
for the law; their religion was the religion of a book.
By punctilious obedience of the law man might hope
to gain a record of merit which should stand to his
credit and secure his reward when God should finally
judge the world. Because life furnished many situations
not dealt with in the written law, there was need
of its authoritative interpretation, in order that
ignorance might not cause a man to transgress.
These interpretations constituted an oral law which
practically superseded the written code, and they were
handed down from generation to generation as “the
traditions of the fathers.” The existence
of this oral law made necessary a company of scribes
and lawyers whose business it was to know the traditions
and transmit them to their pupils. These scribes
were the teachers of Israel, the leaders of the Pharisees,
and the most highly revered class in the community.
Pharisaism at its beginning was intensely earnest,
but in the time of Jesus the earnest spirit had died
out in zealous formalism. This was the inevitable
result of their virtual substitution of the written
law for the living God. Their excessive reverence
had banished God from practical relation to the daily
life. They held that he had declared his will
once for all in the law. His name was scrupulously
revered, his worship was cultivated with minutest
care, his judgment was anticipated with dread; but
he himself, like an Oriental monarch, was kept far
from common life in an isolation suitable to his awful
holiness. By a natural consequence conscience
gave place to scrupulous regard for tradition in the
religion of the scribes. The chief question with
them was not, Is this right? but, What say the elders?
The soul’s sensitiveness of response to God’s
will and God’s truth was lost in a maze of traditions
which awoke no spontaneous Amen in the moral nature,
consequently there was frequent substitution of reputation
for character. The Pharisees could make void
the command, Honor thy father, by an ingenious application
of the principle of dedication of property to God
(Mark vi-13), and thus under the guise of scrupulous
regard for law discovered ways for legal disregard
of law. Their theory of religion gave abundant
room for a piety which made broad its phylacteries
and lengthened its prayers, while neglecting judgment,
mercy, and the love of God.
10. Yet the earnest and true
development in Jewish thinking was found among the
Pharisees. The early hope of Israel was almost
exclusively national. In the later books of the
Old Testament, in connection with an enlarged sense
of the importance of the individual, the doctrine of
a personal resurrection to share the blessings of
the Messiah’s kingdom began to appear.
It had its clear development and definite adoption
as part of the faith of Judaism, however, under the
influence of the Pharisees. Along with this increased
emphasis on the worth of the individual came a large
development of the doctrine of angels and spirits.
Towards both of these doctrines the Sadducees took
a reactionary position. Politically the Pharisees
were theocratic in theory, but opportunists in practice,
accommodating themselves to the existing state of things
so long as the de facto government did not
interfere with the religious life of the people.
They looked for a kingdom in which God should be evidently
the king of his people; but they believed that his
sovereignty was to be realized through the law, hence
their sole interest was in the obedience of God’s
people to that law as interpreted by the traditions.
11. The theocratic spirit was
more aggressive in a party which originated in the
later years of Herod the Great, and found a reckless
leader in Judas of Galilee, who started a revolt when
the governor of Syria undertook to make a census of
the Jews after the deposition of Archelaus. This
party bore the name Cananeans or Zealots. They
regarded with passionate resentment the subjection
of God’s people to a foreign power, and waited
eagerly for an opportune time to take the sword and
set up the kingdom of God; it was with them that the
final war against Rome began. They were found
in largest numbers in Galilee, where the scholasticism
of the scribes was not so dominating an influence
as in Judea. Dr. Edersheim has called them the
nationalist party. In matters belonging strictly
to the religious life they followed the Pharisees,
only holding a more material conception of the hope
of Israel.
12. Another development in Jewish
religious life carried separatist doctrines to the
extreme. Its representatives were called Essenes,
though what the significance of the name was is no
longer clear. Although they were allied with
the Pharisees in doctrine, they show in some particulars
the influence of Hellenistic Judaism. This is
suggested not only by the attention which Philo and
Josephus give to them, but also by certain of their
views, which were very like the doctrines of the Pythagoreans.
They carried the pharisaic demand for separateness
to the extreme of asceticism. While they were
found in nearly every town in Palestine, some of them
even practising marriage, the largest group of them
lived a celibate, monastic life near the shores of
the Dead Sea. This community was recruited by
the initiation of converts, who only after a novitiate
of three years were admitted to full membership in
the order. They were characterized by an extreme
scrupulousness concerning ceremonial purity, their
meals were regarded as sacrifices, and were prepared
by members of the order, who were looked upon as priests,
nor were any allowed to partake of the food until
they had first bathed themselves. Their regular
garments were all white, and were regarded as vestments
for use at the sacrificial meals, other
clothing being assumed as they went out to their work.
They were industrious agriculturists, their life was
communistic, and they were renowned for their uprightness.
They revered Moses as highly as did the scribes; yet
they were opposed to animal sacrifices, and, although
they sent gifts to the temple, were apparently excluded
from its worship. Their kinship with the Pythagoreans
appears in that they addressed an invocation to the
sun at its rising, and conducted all their natural
functions with scrupulous modesty, “that they
might not offend the brightness of God” (Jos.
Wars, i, 9). Their rejection of bloody sacrifices,
and their view that the soul is imprisoned in the body
and at death is freed for a better life, besides many
features of their life that are genuinely Jewish,
such as their regard for ceremonial purity, also show
similarity to the Pythagoreans. It has always
been a matter of perplexity that these ascetics find
no mention in the New Testament. They seem to
have lived a life too much apart, and to have had little
sympathy with the ideals of Jesus, or even of John
the Baptist.
13. The common people followed
the lead of the Pharisees, though afar off. They
accepted the teaching concerning tradition, as well
as that concerning the resurrection, conforming their
lives to the prescriptions of the scribes more or
less strictly, according as they were more or loss
ruled by religious considerations. It was in consequence
of their hold on the people that the scribes in the
sanhédrin were able often to dictate a policy
to the Sadducean majority. Jesus voiced the popular
opinion when he said that “the scribes sit in
Moses’ seat” (Matt, xxii. Their
leaders despised “this multitude which knoweth
not the law” (John vi, yet delighted to
legislate for them, binding heavy burdens and grievous
to be borne. Many of the people were doubtless
too intent on work and gain to be very regardful of
the minutiae of conduct as ordained by the scribes;
many more were too simple-minded to follow the theories
of the rabbis concerning the aloofness of God
from the life of men. These last reverenced the
scribes, followed their directions, in the main, for
the conduct of life, yet lived in fellowship with
God as their fathers had, trusting in his faithfulness,
and hoping in his mercy. They are represented
in the New Testament by such as Simeon and Anna, Zachariah
and Elizabeth, Joseph and Mary, and the majority of
those who heard and heeded John’s call to repentance.
They were Israel’s remnant of pure and undefiled
religion, and constituted what there was of good soil
among the people for the reception of the seed sown
by John’s successor. They had no name,
for they did not constitute a party; for convenience
they may be called the Devout.
14. Two other classes among the
people are mentioned in the gospels, the
Herodians and the Samaritans. The Herodians do
not appear outside the New Testament, and seem to
have been hardly more than a group of men in whom
the secular spirit was dominant, who thought it best
for their interests and for the people’s to
champion the claims of the Herodian family. They
were probably more akin to the Pharisees than to the
Sadducees, for the latter were hostile to the Herodian
claims, from the first; yet in spirit they seem more
like to the worldly aristocracy than to the pious scribes.
The Samaritans lived in the land, a people despising
and despised. Their territory separated Galilee
from Judea, and they were a constant source of irritation
to the Jews. The hatred was inherited from the
days of Ezra, when the zealous Jews refused to allow
any intercourse with the inhabitants of Samaria.
These Samaritans were spurned as of impure blood and
mixed religion (ii. Kings xvi-41).
The severe attitude adopted towards them by Ezra and
Nehemiah led to the building of a temple on Mount
Gerizim, and the establishment of a worship which sought
to rival that of Jerusalem in all particulars.
Very little is known of the tenets of the Samaritans
in the time of Jesus beyond their belief that Gerizim
was the place which, according to the law, God chose
for his temple, and that a Messiah should come to
settle all questions of dispute (John i.
15. Although the religious life
of the Jews centred ideally in the temple, it found
its practical expression in the synagogue. This
in itself is evidence of the relative influence of
priests and scribes. There was no confessed rivalry.
The Pharisee was most insistent on the sanctity of
the temple and the importance of its ritual.
Yet with the growing sense of the religious significance
of the individual as distinct from the nation, there
arose of necessity a practical need for a system of
worship possible for the great majority of the people,
who could at best visit Jerusalem but once or twice
a year. The synagogue seems to have been a development
of the exile, when there was no temple and no sacrifice.
It was the characteristic institution of Judaism as
a religion of the law, furnishing in every place opportunity
for prayer and study. The elders of each community
seem ordinarily to have been in control of its synagogue,
and to have had authority to exclude from its fellowship
persons who had come under the ban. In addition
to these officials there was a ruler of the synagogue,
who had the direction of all that concerned the worship;
a chazzan, or minister, who had the care of
the sacred books, administered discipline, and instructed
the children in reading the scripture; and two or
more receivers of alms. The Sabbath services consisted
of prayers, and reading of the scriptures both
law and prophets, and an address or sermon.
It was in the sermon that the people learned to know
the “traditions of the elders,” whether
as applications of the law to the daily life, or as
legendary embellishments of Hebrew history and prophecy.
The preacher might be any one whom the ruler of the
synagague recognized as worthy to address the congregation.
16. The religious life which
centred in the synagogue found daily expression in
the observance of the law and the traditions.
In the measure of its control by the scribes it was
concerned chiefly with the Sabbath, with the various
ablutions needful to the maintenance of ceremonial
purity, with the distinctions between clean and unclean
food, with the times and ways of fasting, and with
the wearing of fringes and phylacteries. These
lifeless ceremonies seem to our day wearisome and
petty in the extreme. It is probable, however,
that the growth of the various traditions had been
so gradual that, as has been aptly said, the whole
usage seemed no more unreasonable to the Jews than
the etiquette of polite society does to its devotees.
The evil was not so much in the minuteness of the
regulations as in the external and superficial notion
of religion which they induced.
17. Optimism was the mood of
Israel’s prophets from the earliest times.
Every generation looked for the dawning of a day which
should banish all ill and realize the dreams inspired
by the covenant in which God had chosen Israel for
his own. In proportion as the rabbinic formalism
held control of the hearts of the people, the Messianic
hope lost its warmth and vigor. Yet the scribes
did not abandon the prophetic optimism; they held
to the letter of the hope, but as its fulfilment was
for them dependent on perfect obedience to the law,
oral and written, their interest was diverted to the
traditions, and their strength was given to legal
disputations. Of the rest of the people, the Sadducees
naturally gave little thought to the promise of future
deliverance, they were too absorbed with regard for
present concerns. Nor is there any evidence that
the Essenes, with all their reputed knowledge of the
future, cherished the hope of a Messiah. The
other elements among the people who owned the general
leadership of the scribes looked eagerly for the coming
time when God should bring to pass what he had promised
through the prophets. While some expected God
himself to come in judgment, and gave no thought to
an Anointed one who should represent the Most High
to the people, the majority looked for a Son of David
to sit upon his father’s throne. Even so,
however, there were wide differences in the nature
of the hope which was set on the coming of this Son
of David. The Zealots were looking for a victory,
which should set Israel on high over all his foes.
To the rest of the people, however, the method of
the consummation was not so clear, and they were ready
to leave God to work out his purpose in his own way,
longing meanwhile for the fulfilment of his promise.
One class in particular gave themselves to visionary
representations of the promised redemption. They
differed from the Zealots in that they saw with unwelcome
clearness the futility of physical attack upon their
enemies; but their faith was strong, and at the moment
when outward conditions seemed most disheartening
they looked for a revelation of God’s power from
heaven, destroying all sinners in his wrath, and delivering
and comforting his people, giving them their lot in
a veritable Canaan situated in a renewed earth.
Such visions are recorded in the Book of Daniel and
the Revelation of John. They are found in many
other apocalypses not included in our Bible,
and indicate how persistently the minds of the people
turned towards the promises spoken by the prophets,
and meditated on their fulfilment. The Devout
were midway between the Zealots and the Apocalyptists.
The songs of Zachariah and Mary and the thanksgiving
of Simeon express their faith. They hoped for
a kingdom as tangible as the Zealots sought, yet they
preferred to wait for the consolation of Israel.
They believed that God was still in his heaven, that
he was not disregardful of his people, and that in
his own time he would raise up unto them their king.
They looked for a Son of David, yet his reign was to
be as remarkable for its purification of his own people
as for its victories over their foes. These victories
indeed were to be largely spiritual, for their Messiah
was to conquer in the strength of the Spirit of God
and “by the word of his mouth.” Such
as these were ready for a ministry like John’s,
and not unready for the new ideal which Jesus was
about to offer them, though their highest spiritualization
of the Messianic hope was but a shadow of the reality
which Jesus asked them to accept.
18. This last conception of the
Messiah is found in a group of psalms written in the
first century before Christ, during the early days
of the Roman interference in Judea. These Psalms
of Solomon, as they are called, are pharisaic in point
of view, yet they are not rabbinic in their ideas.
Their feeling is too deep, and their reliance on God
too immediate; they fitly follow the psalms of the
Old Testament, though afar off. Of another type
of contemporary literature, Apocalypse, at least two
representatives besides the Book of Daniel have come
down to us from the time of Jesus or earlier, the
so-called Book of Enoch, and the fragment known as
the Assumption of Moses. These writings have
peculiar interest, because they are probably the source
of quotations found in the Epistle of Jude; moreover,
some sayings of Jesus reported in the gospels, and
in particular his chosen title, The Son of Man, are
strikingly similar to expressions found in Enoch.
Can Jesus have read these books? The psalms of
the Devout were the kind of literature to pass rapidly
from heart to heart, until all who sympathized with
their hope and faith had heard or seen them. The
case was different with the apocalypses.
They are more elaborate and enigmatical, and may have
been only slightly known. Yet, as Jesus was familiar
with the canonical Book of Daniel, although it was
not read in the synagogue service in his time, it
is possible that he may also have read or heard other
books which had not won recognition as canonical.
If, however, he knew nothing of them, the similarity
between the apocalypses and some of Jesus’
ideas and expressions becomes all the more significant;
for it shows that these writings gave utterance to
thoughts and feelings shared by men who never read
them, which were, therefore, no isolated fancies,
but characteristic of the religion of many of the people.
With these ideas Jesus was familiar; whether he ever
read the books must remain a question.
19. This literature exists for
us only in translations made in the days of the early
church. Most of these books were originally written
in Hebrew, the language of the Old Testament, or in
Aramaic, the language of Palestine in the time of
Jesus. Traces of this language as spoken by Jesus
have been preserved in the gospels, the
name Rabbi; Abba, translated Father; Talitha
cumi, addressed to the daughter of Jairus; Ephphatha,
to the deaf man of Bethsaida; and the cry from the
cross, Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani (John ; Mark xi; ; vi; x. It
is altogether probable that in his common dealings
with men and in his teachings Jesus used this language.
Greek was the language of the government and of trade,
and in a measure the Jews were a bilingual people.
Jesus may thus have had some knowledge of Greek, but
it is unlikely that he ever used it to any extent
either in Galilee, or Judea, or in the regions of
Tyre and Sidon.