written about 439 A.D. |
||
|
Though the emperor [Julian]
hated and oppressed the Christians, he manifested benevolence and
humanity towards the Jews. He wrote to the Jewish patriarchs and
leaders, as well as to the people, requesting them to pray for him, and
for the prosperity of the empire. In taking this step he was not
actuated, I am convinced, by any respect for their religion; for he was
aware that it is, so to speak, the mother of the Christian religion, and
he knew that both religions rest upon the authority of the patriarchs
and the prophets; but he thought to grieve the Christians by favoring
the Jews, who are their most inveterate enemies. But perhaps he also
calculated upon persuading the Jews to embrace paganism and sacrifices;
for they were only acquainted with the mere letter of Scripture, and
could not, like the Christians and a few of the wisest among the
Hebrews, discern the hidden meaning. Events proved that this was his
real motive; for he sent for some of the chiefs of the race and exhorted
them to return to the observance of the laws of Moses and the customs of
their fathers. On their replying that because the Temple in Jerusalem
was overturned, it was neither lawful nor ancestral to do this in
another place than the metropolis out of which they had been cast, he
gave them public money, commanded them to rebuild the Temple, and to
practice the cult similar to that of their ancestors, by sacrificing
after the ancient way. The Jews entered upon the undertaking, without
reflecting that, according to the prediction of the holy prophets, it
could not be accomplished. They sought for the most skillful artisans,
collected materials, cleared the ground, and entered so earnestly upon
the task, that even the women carried heaps of earth, and brought their
necklaces and other female ornaments towards defraying the expense. The
emperor, the other pagans, and all the Jews, regarded every other
undertaking as secondary in importance to this. Although the pagans were
not well-disposed towards the Jews, yet they assisted them in this
enterprise, because they reckoned upon its ultimate success, and hoped
by this means to falsify the prophecies of Christ. Besides this motive,
the Jews themselves were impelled by the consideration that the time had
arrived for rebuilding their Temple. When they had removed the ruins of
the former building, they dug up the ground and cleared away its
foundation; it is said that on the following day when they were about to
lay the first foundation, a great earthquake occurred, and by the
violent agitation of the earth, stones were thrown up from the depths,
by which those of the Jews who were engaged in the work were wounded, as
likewise those who were merely looking on. The houses and public
porticos, near the site of the Temple, in which they had diverted
themselves, were suddenly thrown down; many were caught thereby, some
perished immediately, others were found half dead and mutilated of hands
or legs, others were injured in other parts of the body.
|