The Significance of A.D. 70
"For
these be the days of vengeance, that all things which are written may be
fulfilled."
"It has been a standard feature of Christian
preaching through the ages that the Roman destruction of
Jerusalem in A.D. 70 was really God's decisive punishment of the Jewish people
for their rejection of Jesus, who died around the year 30." (Steve
Mason, Josephus and the New Testament)
See Also:
Christian History and Its Preterist
Presuppositions
Henry Alford (1868)
'We may observe that our Lord makes "when the Lord cometh" coincide
with the destruction of Jerusalem, which is incontestably the overthrow of
the wicked husbandmen. This passage therefore forms an important key to our
Lord's prophecies, and a decisive justification for those who, like myself,
firmly hold that the coming of the Lord is, in many places, to be identified,
primarily, with that overthrow." (On Matt. 21:33-46)
Athanasius (345)
"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 )
S.G.F. Brandon (1951)
"The apparent cruciality of this event for Christianity has
been the subject of our investigation, and the conclusion has been reached that
that cruciality is a fact of profound historical significance for the
understanding of the nature of Christian Origins. It would indeed not be an
exaggeration to say that Christianity was in a certain sense reborn as a result
of the Jewish catastrophe of A.D. 70... in the overthrow of the Jewish state
the old wine-skins of Judaism were burst asunder and perished, liberating the
new wine to flow freely abroad and to reach maturity in places more congenial
to the original genius of its creator. Thus we may conclude that, after the
Resurrection experiences, the next most crucial event in the life of the Christian
Church was the overthrow of the Jewish nation, which was dramatically
epitomized in the destruction of its holy city of Jerusalem in A.D. 70" (The
Fall of Jerusalem and the Christian Church, pp. 249, 251)
Chrysostom
(375)
"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.
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. " (Homilies)
"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)
Adam Clarke (1837)
"I conclude, therefore, that this prophecy has not the least relation
to Judas Maccabeus. It may be asked, to whom, and to what event does it relate?
.. to the destruction of Jerusalem and the Jewish polity; which in the Gospel
is called the coming of Christ and the days of vengeance, Matthew 16:28; Luke
21:22." (Isaiah 65, p. 513)
William Cox (1966)
(On Matthew 24:21)
"We know that the great tribulation of A.D. 70 brought the Jewish state to
its complete and final end." (Cox, p. 103)
Cyprian (approx. AD 250)
6. 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)
P.S. Desprez (1854)
"The Lord came, as he said, to destroy Jerusalem, and to close the
dispensation." (The Apocalypse Fulfilled Preface,
p. vi).
"NO scriptural statement is capable of more decided proof than that the
coming of Christ is the destruction of Jerusalem, and the close of the Jewish
dispensation." (The Apocalypse Fulfilled, p.9)
Jonathan Edwards (1736)
"Thus there was a final end to the Old Testament world: all was
finished with a kind of day of judgment, in which the people of God were saved,
and His enemies terribly destroyed." (vol. i. p. 445)
Eusebius (325)
"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)
"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)
F.W. Farrar (1882)
"the Fall of Jerusalem and all the events which accompanied and
followed it in the Roman world and in the Christian world, had a significance
which it is hardly possible to overestimate. They were the final end of the Old
Dispensation. They were the full inauguration of the New Covenant. They were
God's own overwhelming judgment on that form of Judaic Christianity which threatened
to crush the work of St. Paul, to lay on the Gentiles the yoke of abrogated
Mosaism, to establish itself by threats and anathemas as the only orthodoxy.
Many of the early Christians and those especially who lived at Jerusalem were
at the same time rigid Jews... No event less awful than the desolation of
Judea, the destruction of Judaism, the annihilation of all possibility of
observing the precepts of Moses, could have opened the eyes of the Judaisers
from their dream of imagined infallibility. Nothing but God's own unmistakable
interposition - nothing but the manifest coming of Christ - could have
persuaded Jewish Christians that the Law of the Wilderness was annulled."
(The Early Days of Christianity, p. 489, 490)
"It was to this event, the most awful in history - 'one of the most
awful eras in God's economy of grace, and the most awful revolution in all
God's religious dispensations' - that we must apply those prophecies of
Christ's coming in which every one of the Apostles and Evangelists fixed these
three most definite limitations - the one, that before that generation passed
away all these things would be fulfilled; another, that some standing there
should not taste death till they saw the Son of Man coming in His kingdom; and
third, that the Apostles should not have gone over the cities of Israel till
the Son of Man be come. It is strange that these distinct limitations should
not be regarded as a decisive proof that the Fall of Jerusalem was, in the
fullest sense, the Second Advent of the Son of Man which was primarily
contemplated by the earliest voices of prophecy" (ibid., Vol. 2,
p. 489)
Hippolytus of Rome (II/III
Centuries)
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)
Irenaeus (Approx. AD 174)
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.
Justin Martyr (Approx. AD 150)
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.)
Lactantius (3rd Century)
"But He also opened to them all things which were about to happen,
which Peter and Paul preached at Rome; 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)
"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)
Philip
Mauro (1921)
"It is greatly to be regretted that those who, in our day, give
themselves to the study and exposition of prophecy, seem not to be aware of the
immense significance of the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70, which was
accompanied by the extinction of Jewish national existence, and the dispersion
of the Jewish people among all the nations. The failure to recognize the
significance of that event, and the vast amount of prophecy which it fulfilled,
has been the cause of great confusion, for the necessary consequence of missing
the past fulfilment of predicted events is to leave on our hands a mass of
prophecies for which we must needs contrive fulfilments in the future. The
harmful results are two fold; for first, we are thus deprived of the evidential
value, and the support to the faith, of those remarkable fulfilments of
prophecy which are so clearly presented to us in authentic contemporary
histories; and second, our vision of things to come is greatly obscured and
confused by the transference to the future of predicted events which, in fact,
have already happened, and whereof complete records have been preserved for our
information."
"Yet, in the face of all this, we have today a widely held scheme of
prophetic interpretation, which has for its very cornerstone the idea that,
when God's time to remember His promised mercies to Israel shall at last have
come, He will gather them into their ancient land again, only to pour upon them
calamities and distresses far exceeding even the horrors which attended the
destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. This is, we are convinced, an error of
such magnitude as to derange the whole program of unfulfilled
prophecy." (Seventy Weeks and the Great Tribulation)
Thomas Newton (1754)
"As a general in the wars (Josephus) must have had an exact knowledge of
all transactions, and a Jewish priest he would not relate them with any favour
of partiality to the Christian cause. His history was approved by Vespasian and
Titus (who ordered it to be published) and by King Agrippa and many others,
both Jews and Romans, who were present in those wars..He designed nothing less,
and yet as if he had designed nothing more, his history of the Jewish wars may
serve as a larger comment on our Saviour's prophecies of the destruction of
Jerusalem." (Newton, p. 433)
Origen (2nd Century)
"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.)
"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)
"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)
James Stuart Russell (1887)
"There are not a few who seem to think that if our Lord's prophecy on
the Mount of Olives, and the predictions of the apostles of the coming of
Christ in glory, meant no more than the destruction of Jerusalem, and were
fulfilled in that event, then all their announcements and expectations ended in
a mere fiasco, and the historical reality answers very feebly and
inadequately to the magnificent prophecy. There is reason to believe that the
true significance and grandeur of that great event are very little apprehended
by many. The destruction of Jerusalem was not a mere thrilling incident in the
drama of history, like the siege of Troy or the downfall of Carthage, closing a
chapter in the annals of a state or a people. It was an event which has no
parallel in history. It was the outward and visible sign of a great epoch in
the divine government of the world. It was the close of one dispensation and
the commencement of another. It marked the inauguration of a new order of
things. The Mosaic economy, which had been ushered in by the miracles of Egypt,
the lightenings and thunderings of Sinai, and the glorious manifestations of
Jehovah to Israel, after subsisting for more than fifteen centuries was now
abolished.. It was not an isolated fact, a solitary catastrophe, it was the
center of a group of related and coincidental events, not only in the material,
but in the spiritual world; not only on earth, but in heaven and hell; some of
them being cognizable by the senses and capable of historical confirmation, and
others not." (The Parousia, pp. 546,
547)
Philip Schaff (1877)
"The destruction of Jerusalem would be a worthy theme for the genius
of a Christian Homer. It has been called "the most soul-stirring of all
ancient history." But there was no Jeremiah to sing the funeral dirge of
the city of David and Solomon. The Apocalypse was already written, and had
predicted that the heathen "shall tread the holy city under foot forty and
two months." (p. 397-398)
"A few years afterwards followed the destruction of Jerusalem, which
must have made an overpowering impression and broken the last ties which bound
Jewish Christianity to the old theocracy. . . .
"The awfiul catastrophe of the destruction of the Jewish theocracy must
have produced the profoundest sensation among the Christians. . . . It was the
greatest calamity of Judaism and a great benefit to Christianity; a refutation
of the one, a vindication . . . of the other. It separated them forever. . . .
Henceforth the heathen could no longer look upon Christianity as a mere sect of
Judaism, but must regard and treat it as a new, peculiar religion. The
destruction of Jerusalem, therefore, marks that momentous crisis at which the
Christian church as a whole burst forth forever from the chrysalis of Judaism,
awoke to a sense of maturity, and in government and worship at once took its
independent stand before the world. (1:196,403-4.)
C.H. Spurgeon (1868)
"The destruction of Jerusalem was more terrible than anything that the
world has ever witnessed, either before or since. Even Titus seemed to see in
his cruel work the hand of an avenging God. (Commentary on Matthew, p. 412)
Truly, the blood of the martyrs slain in Jerusalem was amply avenged when
the whole city became veritable Aceldama, or field of blood." (Commentary
on Matthew, p. 412,413)
Tertullian (Approx. AD 200)
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.)
John Wesley (1754)
"Josephus' History of the Jewish War
is the best commentary on this chapter (Matt. 24). It is a wonderful instance
of God's providence, that he, an eyewitness, and one who lived and died a Jew,
should, especially in so extraordinary a manner, be preserved, to transmit to
us a collection of important facts, which so exactly illustrate this glorious
prophecy, in almost every circumstance." (Explanatory Notes Upon the
New Testament)
William Whiston (1737)
"Josephus speaks so, that it is most evident he was fully satisfied that
God was on the Romans' side, and made use of them now for the destruction of
the Jews, which was for certain the true state of this matter, as the prophet
Daniel first, and our Saviour himself afterwards had clearly foretold.
See Lit. Accompl. of Proph. p. 64, etc. (Wars
of the Jews, VI,II,1)