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| The Time of his Appearance among Men. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
V.—The Time of his Appearance among
Men.
1. And
now, after this necessary introduction to our proposed history of the
Church, we can enter, so to speak, upon our journey, beginning with the
appearance of our Saviour in the flesh. And we invoke God, the Father
of the Word, and him, of whom we have been speaking, Jesus Christ
himself our Saviour and Lord, the heavenly Word of God, as our aid and
fellow-laborer in the narration of the truth.
2. It was in the forty-second
year of the reign of Augustus74
74 Eusebius here makes the reign of Augustus begin with the death of
Julius Cæsar (as Josephus does in chap. 9, §1, below), and he
puts the birth of Christ therefore into the year 752 U.C. (2 b.c.), which agrees with Clement of
Alexandria’s Strom. I. (who gives the twenty-eighth year
after the conquest of Egypt as the birth-year of Christ), with
Epiphanius, Hær. LI. 22, and Orosius, Hist. I. 1.
Eusebius gives the same date also in his Chron. (ed.
Schœne, II. p. 144). Irenæus, III. 25, and Tertullian,
Adv. Jud. 8, on the other hand, give the forty-first year of
Augustus, 751 U.C. (3 b.c.). But all these
dates are certainly too late. The true year of Christ’s birth has
always been a matter of dispute. But it must have occurred before the
death of Herod, which took place in the spring of 750 U.C. (4 b.c.). The most widely accepted opinion is that
Christ was born late in the year 5, or early in the year 4 b.c., though some scholars put the date back as far as 7
b.c.
The time of the year is also
uncertain, the date commonly accepted in the occident (Dec. 25th)
having nothing older than a fourth century tradition in its favor. The
date accepted by the Greek Church (Jan. 6th) rests upon a somewhat
older tradition, but neither day has any claim to
reliability.
For a full and excellent
discussion of this subject, see the essay of Andrews in his Life of
our Lord, pp. 1–22. See, also, Schaff’s Church
Hist. I. p. 98 sq. | and the
twenty-eighth after the subjugation of Egypt and the death of Antony
and Cleopatra, with whom the dynasty of the Ptolemies in Egypt came to
an end, that our Saviour and Lord Jesus Christ was born in Bethlehem of
Judea, according to the prophecies which had been uttered concerning
him.75 His birth took place during the first
census, while Cyrenius was governor of Syria.76
76 Cf. Luke ii. 2
Quirinius is the original Latin
form of the name of which Luke gives the Greek form κυρήνιος or Cyrenius (which is the form given also by
Eusebius).
The statement of Luke
presents a chronological difficulty which has not yet been completely
solved. Quirinius we know to have been made governor of Syria in a.d. 6; and under him occurred a census or
enrollment mentioned by Josephus, Ant. XVII. 13. 5, and XVIII.
1. 1. This is undoubtedly the same as that referred to in Acts v.
37.
But this took place some ten years after the birth of Christ, and
cannot therefore be connected with that event. Many explanations have
been offered to account for the difficulty, but since the discovery of
Zumpt, the problem has been much simplified. He, as also Mommsen, has
proved that Quirinius was twice governor of Syria, the first time from
b.c. 4 (autumn) to b.c. 1. But as Christ must have been born before the
spring of b.c. 4, the governorship of
Quirinius is still a little too late. A solution of the question is
thus approached, however, though not all the difficulties are yet
removed. Upon this question, see especially A. M. Zumpt, Das
Geburtsjahr Christi (Leipzig, 1869), and compare Schaff’s
Church Hist., I. 121–125, for a condensed but excellent
account of the whole matter, and for the literature of the
subject. |
3. Flavius Josephus, the most
celebrated of Hebrew historians, also mentions this census,77
77 Eusebius here identifies the census mentioned by Josephus
(Ant. XVIII. 1. 1) and referred to in Acts v. 37, with the one
mentioned in Luke ii. 2; but this is an obvious
error, as an interval of ten years separated the two. Valesius
considers it all one census, and hence regards Eusebius as correct in
his statement; but this is very improbable. Jachmann (in Illgen’s
Zeitschrift f. hist. Theologie, 1839, II. p. 35 sq.), according
to his custom, charges Eusebius with willful deception and perversion
of the facts. But such a charge is utterly without warrant. Eusebius,
in cases where we can control his statements, can be shown to have been
always conscientious. Moreover, in his Chron. (ed. Schoene II.
p. 144) he identifies the two censuses in the same way. But his
Chronicles were written some years before his History,
and he cannot have had any object to deceive in them such as Jachmann
assumes that he had in his History. It is plain that Eusebius
has simply made a blunder, a thing not at all surprising when we
remember how frequent his chronological errors are. He is guilty of an
inexcusable piece of carelessness, but nothing worse. It was natural to
connect the two censuses mentioned as taking place under the same
governor, though a little closer attention to the facts would have
shown him the discrepancy in date, which he simply
overlooked. | which was taken during
Cyrenius’ term of office. In the same connection he gives an account of the
uprising of the Galileans, which took place at that time, of which also
Luke, among our writers, has made mention in the Acts, in the following
words: “After this man rose up Judas of Galilee in the days of
the taxing, and drew away a multitude78
78 The
New Testament (Textus Rec.) reads λαὸν
ἱκανόν, with
which Laemmer agrees in his edition of Eusebius. Two mss., followed by Stephanus and Valesius, and by the
English and German translators, read λαὸν
πολύν. All the other
mss., and editors, as well as Rufinus,
read λαόν
alone. | after him: he
also perished; and all, even as many as obeyed him, were
dispersed.”79
4. The above-mentioned author,
in the eighteenth book of his Antiquities, in agreement with these
words, adds the following, which we quote exactly: “Cyrenius, a
member of the senate, one who had held other offices and had passed
through them all to the consulship, a man also of great dignity in
other respects, came to Syria with a small retinue, being sent by
Cæsar to be a judge of the nation and to make an assessment of
their property.”80
80 Josephus, Ant. XVIII. 1. 1. Upon Josephus and his works,
see below, Bk. III. c. 9. |
5. And after a little81
he says: “But Judas,82
82 Judas
the Gaulonite. In Acts v. 37, and in Josephus, B.
J. II. 8. 1 (quoted just below), and 17.8, and in Ant.
XVIII. 1. 6 and XX. 5. 2, he is called Judas of Galilee. But in the
present section Josephus gives the fullest and most accurate account of
him. Gaulonitis lay east of the Jordan, opposite Galilee. Judas of
Galilee was probably his common designation, given to him either
because his revolt took rise in Galilee, or because Galilee was used as
a general term for the north country. He was evidently a man of
position and great personal influence, and drew vast numbers to his
standard, denouncing, in the name of religion, the payment of tribute
to Rome and all submission to a foreign yoke. The revolt spread very
rapidly, and the whole country was thrown into excitement and disorder;
but the Romans proved too strong for him, and he soon perished, and his
followers were dispersed, though many of them continued active until
the final destruction of the city. The influence of Judas was so great
and lasted so long that Josephus (Ant. XVIII. 1. 1 and 6) calls
the tendency represented by him the “fourth philosophy of the
Jews,” ranking it with Pharisaism, Sadduceeism, and Essenism. The
distinguishing characteristic of this “fourth philosophy”
or sect was its love of freedom. For an excellent account of Judas and
his revolt, see Ewald’s Geshichte des Volkes Israel, V. p.
16 sq. | a Gaulonite, from a city called Gamala,
taking with him Sadduchus,83
83 Greek, Σ€δδοχον; Rufinus, Sadduchum. He, too, must have been a man
of influence and position. Later in the same paragraph he is made by
Josephus a joint founder with Judas of the “fourth
philosophy,” but in §6 of the same chapter, where the author
of it is referred to, Judas alone is mentioned. | a Pharisee, urged
the people to revolt, both of them saying that the taxation meant
nothing else than downright slavery, and exhorting the nation to defend
their liberty.”
6. And in the second book of his
History of the Jewish War, he writes as follows concerning the same
man: “At this time a certain Galilean, whose name was Judas,
persuaded his countrymen to revolt, declaring that they were cowards if
they submitted to pay tribute to the Romans, and if they endured,
besides God, masters who were mortal.”84
84 Josephus, B. J. II. 8. 1. |
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