2 September A.D. 70. Jerusalem was destroyed
2 September A.D. 70. Jerusalem was destroyed.
Jesus offered some tough talk. Like, er, well, judgment. Nah, not from the loving Jesus?!?! Covenantal curses from Leviticus? Nah, please don’t raise that nasty little
subject. Did He really say those things
in Matt. 23? And Revelation too? Here’s Jesus.
Ask your Schleiermachian-based Episcopal Rectors for an explanation; they’ll just love you for it, but here’s
a "different" Jesus.
Luke 21: 5-7, 20:
“5 Then, as
some spoke of the temple, how it was adorned with beautiful stones and
donations, He said, 6 “These things which you
see—the days will come in which not one stone shall be left upon another
that shall not be thrown down.” 7 So they
asked Him, saying, “Teacher, but when will these things be? And what sign will
there be when these things are about to take place?”
“20 “But when
you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its desolation is near.”
About 33 years later, A.D. 66, chaos began for Israel.
In A.D. 66, a Jewish
revolt broke out against the Roman over-lords.
A Roman official put his hand into the financial cookie jar of the
Temple. One thing led to another and a
full scale revolt heated up. Some Romans in Jerusalem were killed. Extremists took over.
A war broke out lasting
near-wise four years. Jerusalem was
“full when the Roman siege began in earnest” (492).
On September
2, A.D. 70, “the conquest was complete.” The Temple was burned. Stones were
upended and overturned. Josephus claimed that 1 million Jews lost their lives
in this conflict. 97,000 were taken captive.
Titus’s Arch in Rome, a football field away from
the Colisseum, commemorates the Roman victory over the covenantally-cursed
rebels (Gal.3.13; Rom.9.1ff).
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