The most significant event to occur in the province of Judaea in the first century of direct Roman rule did not involve any miraculous birth, death and ‘resurrection’ of a godman, but rather, was the vicious war waged by Roman legions against rebellious Jewish ‘nationalists.’ What drove the Jews into suicidal confrontation with the legions of Rome? With Herod’s death, Judaea had first come under direct Roman rule in 6 AD and from then on the pace of Romanisation quickened. The Jews themselves were fragmented by this process. Many Jews, particularly in the rich cities of the ‘diaspora’, enjoyed a higher prosperity than ever and were decidedly pro-Roman. Others doggedly resisted assimilation. The more extreme of these ‘traditionalists’ castigated not only their conquerors but also the temple priesthood.
The Jews, in fact, had long been a divided people. In Samaria, a rival temple and Yahweh cult existed at Mount Gerizim, established in the days of the Maccabees by Jews who rejected any ‘Law’ later than the five books of Moses. For them, Moses was the sole legitimate prophet of Israel, and imminently, he would return as the Messiah. These Jews were actually descendants of Assyrian settlers, who were outside the ‘racial purity’ sought by the Jews of Judaea. Hence, Samaritans were regarded by them as both religiously and racially inferior, as counterfeit Jews.
Some Jews, reading signs of an imminent end to the world, retreated into militant religious communities. Interpreting recent political reversals for the Jewish nation as evidence of God’s displeasure, they anticipated and longed for a messiah who would lead the nation back to God and righteousness. Most notably, the Hassidim or Essenes, with a major centre at Qumran, had been preparing themselves for the coming ‘final battle’ of good and evil since the time of the Maccabees. Led by a so-called ‘Teacher of Righteousness’, the Essenes (also referred to as Zadokites in the Dead Sea Scrolls) regarded the Herodian princes as puppets of Rome and the Sadduccean priesthood as hopelessly corrupt, evil-doers who had led God to abandon of his chosen people.
The Essenes claimed themselves to be the true Zadokite priesthood (and used their own Egyptian-style solar calendar). Rejecting temple sacrifice, Essenes offered instead baptism in water as the way to ritual purity and closeness to god. For them, the divine could be experienced first-hand, without temple ritual or priestly intermediaries. Though fundamental purists in one sense, they were themselves influenced by Greek and Egyptian mystery cults. They were steeped in esoterics – astrology, numerology, herbalism, etc. – and introduced reincarnation into their particular variant of Judaism. But it was their apocalyptic vision of the Last of Days which galvanized them into a fighting force. Far from being confined to celibates in desert ‘monasteries’, some essenoi were wanderers, spreading the word of impending doom, while others organised centres of urban resistance.
Certain groups, under various names, were more immediately involved in terrorist operations, harassing Roman garrisons, raiding supply caravans and wreaking as much havoc as possible. Judas of Gamala led an insurrection in Galilee early in the 1st century, founding a group known as the Zealots (‘zealous for the law’). Assassins, known as Sicarii for their use of a small curved dagger, began to pick off collaborators. In the year 35/36 AD Samaria produced its own messiah who led a short-lived rebellion against Rome.
Others were less combative. The Nazerites swore an oath and thereafter never cut their hair as a sign of their commitment to the Lord. They took themselves into the desert to await the Messiah’s arrival. The legendary Samson had been such a Nazerite. The name Nazerite will prove to have an interesting future – as we shall see. All were convinced that the ‘Nation of Israel’ had been specially chosen by their god to lead all the world – as the instrument of a divine plan – and the Maccabean revolt had set a precedent of successful rebellion. If the Greeks could be defeated, then, with the assistance of their god Yahweh, so could the Romans.
Many ‘signs’ seemed favourable. Of course other conquered peoples attempted to free themselves from Rome’s grip. Britain had come under Roman control at about the same time as Judaea and Boudicca had led her rebellion in the 60s AD. Unlike the Iceni, however, the Jews had been schooled in Babylon and were driven by a powerful religious ideology, one…
‘ .. derived from their ancient oracles, that a conquering Messiah would soon arise to break their fetters, and to invest the favourites of heaven with the empire of the earth.’
– Gibbon, Decline & Fall
While many factions of the Jews careened on a collision course with Rome, others – perhaps horrified by what they saw as the inevitable consequences of this confrontation – applied their talents to working out a new accommodation with the imperium. An embassy from the Jews of Alexandria, led by the writer Philo, arrived in Rome in 39 AD, to plead with Caligula for Jewish exemption from emperor worship. The twenty five year old Caligula had come to the throne two years earlier. Initially celebrated as a liberalising benefactor by the Romans, after the austere and remote Tiberias, five months into his reign an illness left him seriously deranged. The death in June, 38 AD of his sister Drusilla, with whom he had had an incestuous relationship since adolescence, left him distraught and even more manic.
Raising the dead Drusilla to a goddess named ‘Panthea’ (‘encompassing and surpassing all of the other gods’) he initiated his own, still living, deification. He bled Gaul dry to pay for three months of games which culminated in his godhood in August, 40 AD and ordered his effigy be placed in temples throughout the empire. Caligula’s response to the Jews was to dispatch troops carrying his statue to Jerusalem with the threat to destroy the Jewish Temple. But within months, in January 41 AD, he had been murdered, certain evidence to some Jews that Yahweh was supporting their resistance.
The godhead, said Philo, gave existence to various ‘emanations’ or subordinate gods that could be known. These emanations (‘aeons’ or ‘archons’) created and governed the world. Philo identified several: the Logos (The Word or logic ); Sophia (Wisdom) – already present in Judaism, probably as a residual element of the time when Yahweh had a female consort; Nous (Mind); Phronesis (Judgement); and Dynamis (Power). Thus the supreme god’s will, justice, power, etc., made its presence felt through these ‘emanations’, which might take various forms.
The Logos was present in the Egyptian pantheon, identified with the god Horus/Serapis, and similarly, in Stoic philosophy which held that the Logos made itself manifest through various gods – Zeus, Hermes, etc. The Stoics, who originated in 4th century BC Athens and took their name from the stoa, or meeting hall – were the first thoroughgoing pantheists, holding that ‘God is the universe, the universe is God.’ For Stoics, a wise and virtuous person learns his place in the scheme of things. Stoicism, ironically, was to influence both the Roman intelligentsia and the emerging Christians it held in contempt. The stoic philosopher Seneca became tutor to the young Nero and a century later, the emperor Marcus Aurelius was himself a Stoic philosopher.
The simplistic notion that pagan religions were ‘polytheistic’ and that Judaism was ‘monotheistic’ does justice to neither. Late paganism had evolved a notion of a supreme god, which Stoics identified with the material universe itself and Cynics with a spiritual realm outside of matter. The Jews, for all their hostility to ‘images’, lived happily with Yahweh’s disembodied ‘forces’, quite forgetting, for example, that Wisdom had once been the Phoenician goddess Astarte.
The philosophic schools, however, were essentially elitist. Popular tastes were coarser and it required individuals with a taste for ‘evangelising’ to take their message to the masses.
More than one such zealot was to take up Philo’s thesis and re-work it into a format more accessible to the less educated.