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| The Egyptian, who is mentioned also in the Acts of the Apostles. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXI.—The Egyptian, who
is mentioned also in the Acts of the Apostles.
1. After other matters he proceeds as follows:464
464 Jos.
B. J. II. 13. 5. | “But the Jews were afflicted with a
greater plague than these by the Egyptian false prophet.465
465 An
Egyptian Jew; one of the numerous magicians and false prophets that
arose during this century. He prophesied that Jerusalem, which had made
itself a heathen city, would be destroyed by God, who would throw down
the walls as he had the walls of Jericho, and then he and his
followers, as the true Israel and the army of God, would gain the
victory over the oppressors and rule the world. For this purpose he
collected his followers upon the Mount of Olives, from whence they were
to witness the falling of the walls and begin their attack. | For there appeared in the land an impostor
who aroused faith in himself as a prophet, and collected about thirty
thousand of those whom he had deceived, and led them from the desert to
the so-called Mount of Olives whence he was prepared to enter Jerusalem
by force and to overpower the Roman garrison and seize the government
of the people, using those who made the attack with him as body
guards.
2. But Felix anticipated his
attack, and went out to meet him with the Roman legionaries, and all
the people joined in the defense, so that when the battle was fought
the Egyptian fled with a few followers, but the most of them were
destroyed or taken captive.”
3. Josephus relates these events
in the second book of his History.466
466 Josephus gives two different accounts of this event. In the B.
J. he says that this Egyptian led thirty thousand men out of the
desert to the Mount of Olives, but that Felix attacked them, and the
Egyptian “escaped with a few,” while most of his followers
were either destroyed or captured. In Ant. XX. 8. 6, which was
written later, he states that the Egyptian led a multitude “out
from Jerusalem” to the Mount of Olives, and that when they were
attacked by Felix, four hundred were slain and two hundred taken
captive. There seems to be here a glaring contradiction, but we are
able to reconcile the two accounts by supposing the Egyptian to have
brought a large following of robbers from the desert, which was
augmented by a great rabble from Jerusalem, until the number reached
thirty thousand, and that when attacked the rabble dispersed, but that
Felix slew or took captive the six hundred robbers, against whom his
attack had been directed, while the Egyptian escaped with a small
number (i.e. small in comparison with the thirty thousand), who may
well have been the four thousand mentioned by the author of the Acts in
the passage quoted below by Eusebius. It is no more difficult therefore
to reconcile the Acts and Josephus in this case than to reconcile
Josephus with himself, and we have no reason to assume a mistake upon
the part of either one, though as already remarked, numbers are so
treacherous in transcription that the difference may really have been
originally less than it is. Whenever the main elements of two accounts
are in substantial agreement, little stress can be laid upon a
difference in figures. Cf. Tholuck, Glaubwürdigkeit, p. 169
(quoted by Hackett, Com. on Acts, p. 254). | But it is
worth while comparing the account of the Egyptian given here with that
contained in the Acts of the Apostles. In the time of Felix it was said
to Paul by the centurion in Jerusalem, when the multitude of the Jews
raised a disturbance against the apostle, “Art not thou he who
before these days made an uproar, and led out into the wilderness four
thousand men that were murderers?”467
These are the events which took place in the time of Felix.468
468 Valesius and Heinichen assert that Eusebius is incorrect in
assigning this uproar, caused by the Egyptian, to the reign of Nero, as
he seems to do. But their assertion is quite groundless, for Josephus
in both of his accounts relates the uproar among events which he
expressly assigns to Nero’s reign, and there is no reason to
suppose that the order of events given by him is incorrect. Valesius
and Heinichen proceed on the erroneous assumption that Festus succeeded
Felix in the second year of Nero, and that therefore, since Paul was
two years in Cæsarea before the recall of Felix, the uprising of
the Egyptian, which was referred to at the time of Paul’s arrest
and just before he was carried to Cæsarea, must have taken place
before the end of the reign of Claudius. But it happens to be a fact
that Felix was succeeded by Festus at the earliest not before the sixth
year of Nero (see chap. 22, note 2, below). There is, therefore, no
ground for accusing either Josephus or Eusebius of a blunder in the
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