44 PROPHECIES OF JESUS. and far too sensible of his own fallibility and imposture, to venture upon any tangible prediction himself: see Porteus's Ev., ch. viii. Rees's Cyclop., Art. Mahometanism. How then does this matter stand with Christianity? Every reader of the Bible must be aware that our religion professes to be attested by prophecies. Do the prophecies, by which it is attested, relate to circumstances of such a nature, and is the accomplishment of such of them as have been fulfilled, so complete and accurate, as to lead us to a sound conclusion that they were inspired by the Almighty, and therefore that the religion which they attest is his religion? A little investigation will enable us to give a satisfactory answer to this interesting inquiry. Jesus Christ himself was a prophet. He did not hesitate to foretel future occurrences of a very extraordinary and complicated nature; and many of his predictions have been already verified by events. In our Lord's being betrayed into the hands of the chief-priests and scribes, by Judas Iscariot; in his being by them delivered to the Gentiles; in his being mocked, scourged, spitted on, and crucified; and in his rising from the dead after three days-there was much that was singular, complicated, and not to be easily calculated on beforehand. Yet we find, from the harmonious testimony of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, that Jesus, during the course of his ministry, predicted all these circumstances in the most explicit terms: see Matt. xvi, 21. xx, 18; Mark x, 33; Luke xviii, 31; John xvi, 32. &c. It was a circumstance placed far out of the reach of any probable conjecture, that the zealous Peter should not only deny his Lord, but deny him three times, PROPHECIES OF JESUS. 45 before the cock crew. Yet this circumstance was predicted by our Saviour with a perfect exactness, while he and his disciples were still in a condition of apparent safety, and immediately after a hearty profession of fidelity on the part of Peter: Matt. xxvi, 33, 34. The effusion of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples of our Lord, after his ascension, was one of the most striking, and, according to mere natural observation, one of the most improbable events which ever happened. This event also was plainly foretold by Jesus: see John xiv, 16. xvi, 7; Acts i, 5. 8. But, among the prophcies uttered by our Saviour, there is no one so much detailed, or clothed in such impressive language, as that which relates to the fall and desolation of Jerusalem, the destruction of the temple, the dispersion of the Jews, and finally the end of the world. This remarkable prediction is related by Matthew (ch. xxiv,) Mark (ch. xiii,) and Luke (ch. xxi,) and is in accordance with the affecting expressions addressed by our Lord to Jerusalem or its inhabitants, on two other occasions: see Matt. xxiii, 37, 38, Luke xxiii, 27-31. We read that when the disciples of Jesus pointed out to him the magnificence and extensive structure of the temple, Jesus declared the days to be coming, when that splendid edifice should be utterly destroyed, and not even one stone be left upon another. This declaration gave birth to an inquiry when these things should be, and what should be the signs of his coming, and of the end of the world? In his answer to the question thus addressed to him, our Lord has plainly mentioned some of the principal circumstances which were to precede or accompany the two periods alluded 46 DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. to by his disciples-periods which they might probably confuse in their own minds, but which were in fact to be separated by a very long interval. At the first of these periods, the temple and city of Jerusalem were to be destroyed, and the power and coming of the Son of Man to be made manifest, in the punishment of the rebellious Jews; and all these things were to take place before the passing away of that very generation. On the arrival of the second period, the Son of Man was to appear in glory as the judge of all flesh; and "of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven," but God only: Matt. xxiv, 34–36. Now, although the consideration of these awful and still future events, which are to take place at the latter of these periods, is obviously placed beyond the scope of our argument, it is enough for our present purpose that the former branch of the prophecy has long since received its exact fulfilment. The various signs which were to precede the destruction of Jerusalem; viz., the rising up of false Messiahs the sore persecution and dismay of the Christians-the wars and rumours of wars among the various factions and petty nations into which Judea and the neighbouring countries were then divided— the famines, and the earthquakes, and other portents of nature—the preaching of the Gospel in every part of the Roman empire-all these things are declared in the prophecy; and we learn from Josephus and other authors, that they all took place during that period of forty years, which elapsed between the death of Christ and the destruction of Jerusalem: vide Gill, on Matt. xxiv. Then came the end; when the holy city was encompassed with armies, and "the DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. 47 abomination of desolation" was found" standing in the holy place"-when that intense suffering was experienced by the wicked and obstinate Jews, to which the annals of history afford no parallel-when the city was utterly demolished, and not one stone of the temple left upon another-and when, lastly, such of the Jews as fell not by the sword were reduced to a condition of bondage and degradation, and were gradually dispersed among all nations-the whole of these circumstances being in precise and punctual accordance with the same prophetic record. Here then was such a prediction of a remarkable, complex, and wholly unexpected series of events, as could arise out of no other source than the foreknowledge of God. It is expressly declared by Jesus, that the days when all these calamities should overtake the Jews, were to be the “days of vengeance." The calamities in question were appointed in the counsels of divine justice, as a punishment for that long course of rebellion against their Lord, which had marked the history of the Jewish people, and especially for that most aggravated of their national sins, the rejection, persecution, and crucifixion of their Messiah. Another purpose to which this remarkable dispensation appears to have been directed (in conformity with a correspondent prophecy uttered by our Lord, respecting the approaching cessation of the Jewish and Samaritan worship, John iv, 21) was to establish the superiority of the Gospel over the law, by forcing to its termination that ritual system, on which the Jews were placing so dangerous and untimely a dependence. Under these circumstances, it is plain that the rebuilding of the temple, which had been thus levelled with the ground, and the restoration of the Jews to their ancient customs and privileges, would have been in direct opposition to the whole bearing and spirit of the remarkable prophecy now under consideration. It was in all probability for the very purpose of contradicting this prophecy (as well as others of the like import) and of thus throwing discredit on the religion of Christ, that the apostate Julian assembled the Jews in their own land, and committed to them, under the command and protection of his favourite Alypius, the task of rebuilding their magnificent temple. That task was eagerly undertaken; vast sums were set apart for the purpose, and multitudes of persons were zealously engaged in the prosecution of the work. But the work was constantly impeded, and was finally relinquished in despair, in consequence of vehement and repeated eruptions of fire from the once consecrated mountain of Moriah. This fact is recorded by Ambrose, Chrysostom, and Gregory Nazianzen, three cotemporary Christian writers, whom Gibbon himself allows to be "respectable witnesses;" and it is fully confirmed by the explicit and perfectly unexceptionable testimony of Ammianus Marcellinus, an historian of acknowledged learning and veracity, a cool philosopher, a personal friend of Julian's, and a pagan: lib. xxiii, cap. 1.9 See Warburton's JulianGibbon's Rom. Emp. ch. xxiii. Thus was the site of the ancient temple of God, notwithstanding the most 9"Et licèt accidentium varietatem sollicita mente præcipiens; multiplicatos expeditionis apparatus flagranti studio perurgeret: diligentiam tamen ubique dividens, (Julianus) imperiíque sui memoriam magnitudine operum gestiens propagare, ambitiosum quondam apud Hierosolymam templum, quod post multa et interneciva certamina obsidente Vespasiano posteáque Tito ægrè est expugnatum, instaurare sumptibus cogitabat immodicis: negotiúmque maturandum Alypio dederat Antiochensi, qui olim Britannias curaverat pro Præfectis. Cùm itaque rei idem fortiter instaret Alypius, juvarétque provinciæ rector, metuendi globi flammarum prope fundamenta crebris assultibus erumpentes, fecere locum exustis aliquoties operantibus inaccessum: hócque modo elemento destinatiùs repellente, cessavit inceptum." |